Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q
SUNDAY April13,2014
MORETHAN
I'8 Qll'S WQll 8I'S, LIS mOI'8;~.so, TRAVEL• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Alternative energyPacifiCorp is trying to cut back on its reliance on coal E1
New rental market — Buy a new house, keepthe old one and rent it out.E1
— aHCa es oes an o i ereniaeise >
OW
• As the schoolexpands, it facesthe challenge of attracting freshmenfor the first time By Tyler Leeds versity-Cascades Campus attempts to recruit its first
Online security — The
but as a four-year university, the school faces the challenge of differentiating itself from a cheaper local option and larger, storiedhome
NSA will reveal threats to the Internet — unless it decides to benefit from them. A4
Savemoney on art: Let it
hang awhile in Oregon
campus in Corvallis. OSU-Cascades currently enrolls only juniors and seniors, most of whom transfer from Central Oregon Community College after completing a set of general requirements and electives
known as the "two plus two" program, are able to spend
which is about $100 more per credit. OSU-Cascades now finds itself facing two
vince them to come to Bend
instead of Corvallis, where
EUGENE — The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, tucked into a quiet corner
there will be more majors,
of acollege campus here
that can eventually count
questions. First, how do you
toward a university degree.
convincesomeone to come
in the hills of the Pacific Northwest, is hardly the
Students who take this path,
to OSU-Cascades for four
professors and football games? See OSU /A6
The Bulletin
NASA — Federal budget woes may beharsher on the Opportunity rover than Mars' harsh climate.A3
TAX BREAKS
As Oregon State Unifreshman class for a 2015 de-
$87 per credit their first two
years at COCC, before swallowing the university rate,
years when a cheaper option is available with a better view from Awbrey Butte?
By Graham Bowley nnd Patricia Cohen
Second, for those willing to pay more, how do you con-
New Yorh Times News Service
epicenter of the art world. Yet major collectors, fresh
from buying a Warhol or a Basquiat or another mas-
ln Sperte — Coverageof the
terpiece in New York, rou-
Masters, plus local preps and a lookahead at spring NCAA football.D1
tinely choose this small, elegant redbrick building at the University of Oregon to first exhibit their latest
trophy.
Air TWitter — Socialmedia
The museum's intimacy
is a new avenuefor customer service — andairlines are taking note. C6
and scholarship are likely to play some role in their choice. But a primary lure forthe collectorsisoften something more prosaic: a
And a WedexclusiveThe rivalry between South Korean tech giants Samsung and LG: not just sales, but new U.S. headquarters. bemlbunetin.cnm/extrns
• One of Oregon'smal s lest, mostremoteschoolsisalsooneof its most multicultural onesbecausestudents comefrom far andwide, attracted by adspromisingsmaller classesanda chanceto playvarsity sports.
tax break.
Collectors who buy art
'..r'mis>e i
Q
By Beau Eesfes
tens of thousands, even
The Bulletin
millions of dollars in state "use taxes," taxes often
PAISLEY-
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Putin's Plan B: Invading Ukraine? By Carol J. Williams Los Ange(es Times
Russian President Vladimir Putin has amassed
tens of thousands of troops along
ANALYSIS Ukraine's
incurred when someone
aisley High senior
— invading, seizing and annexing territory — the Kremlin would prefer to keep Ukraine weak and divided by forcing a change in how it is governed, analysts say. Increasing regional autonomy at the expense
of the central government would force Ukrainian authorities to constantly
'I
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a III
III
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ups but always the same result. This May, at historic Hayward Field in Eugene, Paisley goes for its fourth straight girls 1,600-meter relay state title, something that would be a first in Oregon, according to Broncos coach Mark Douglas. "If you can run fast here you can
among ethnic Russians in the east. Some analysts argue
chase home. But if they lend the recently pur-
5 %5
chased work first to museums like the Schnitzer,
lll lll RR R
R
located in a handful
um I,
of tax-friendly states, the transaction is often tax-free. See Art /A4
•
"'I I
RyanBrennecke i The Bulletin
The Paisley schoolhouse serves a community of about 200 people located roughly 130 miles southeast of Bend, in Lake County south of Summer Lake.
PAISLEY HIGH: NOW HIRING
probably run real fast on a smooth
With Highway 31 bordering the track to the south and a horse pasture to its
north, the Broncos' running surface isn't even 400 meters long, checking in about 80 meters short. The running
loop is a mix of sun-baked soil, river rocks and dandelions. And when
Paisley's throwers are practicing, runners best keep their heads on a swivel, as the school's discus-throwing
area encompasses a good part of the
On the second floor of the school is a world map,
track. But none of that seems to matter
with little flags marking where Peisley's exchange students have come from and the dates they attended.
in the grand scheme of things to the students at this 33-person high school,
Of Paisley's high school class, in the dozens, almost
one of the smallest public schools in the state.
as far removed as Japan and Kyrgyzstan. The district is looking closer to home, too, advertising in Bend and
See Paisley/A5
e third of them are international students, from places elsewhere to attract Oregoninns.
of the country to hold it er through its influence
S SS
RSR
For the past three years, the Broncos have ended the Class 1A girls state track and field meet with a win in the 1,600-meter relay. Three different line-
balance competing visions together, and in effect give Moscow veto pow-
ships an out-of-state purS SR
r
'I
g g' iES S E S • g, R E S •
mae~jjj
and field championships.
better work ethic."
the "Crimean scenario"
I
recent success at the state track
vow to protect ethnic Rus-
Rather than repeating
I I'p
theory about her school's
eastern border, a reminder ofhis
B.
Qs is '
Jessica Arrington has a
track," Jessica says looking down at the dirt oval that serves as Paisley High's track. "This goat trail helps you build a
sians in the neighboring country. Using his army, however, is probably Plan
in one state but live in another can owe thousands,
"We don't have the best facilities. But it's our work ethic. In this environment, it's all about your work ethic." — Jessica Arrington, a three-sport standout, math Olympian and student body president
Intrigued by the smalltown pleasures of Paisley, the 200-person community in the middle of LakeCounty? Paisley Public Charter School is looking for an individual or couple to supervise the district's high school dormitory. The district expects that between12 and16 students — international and out-of-area residents — will live in the dorm during the 2014-15 school year. The salary depends onthe number of students in the dorm, while benefits include medical, dental and participation in the Public EmployeesRetirement System. Thedorm supervisor or supervisors will live in an apartment in the dorm. Supervisors have select weekends off, as well as winter break, spring break, and thesummer. For more information, contact the Paisley Public Charter School at 541-943-3111.
How to save adying language By Norimitsu Onishii New York Times News Service
EUREKA, Calif. Sitting in a circle in a -
classroom at Eureka High School here, Tenayah Norris and a half-dozen other
students were learning how to express direction in Yurok, a Native Amer-
ican language that nearly became extinct a few years ago. Growing up on the Yurok reservation in Northern California, she sometimes heard her
grandfather speak it to his contemporaries, and she studied it, on and off, in the
community. "But it's starting to click
fasterform enow,"said Tenayah, a 15-year-old with pink hair and a bright smile. "I'm glad it's here — otherwise, I'd have to go somewhere else to take
classes." See Language/A7
that the idea of region-
al autonomy reflects Ukraine's complicated
geography and shouldn't be dismissed just because it is being championed by Putin.
See Ukraine /A5
TODAY'S WEATHER
The Bulletin
INDEX
Sunny High 63, Low34 Page B6
Business Calendar Classified
Ef -6 Community Life Cf -8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts 61-6 Local/State B f -6 Opinion/Books Ff -6 TV/Movies
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Q We use recycled newsprint
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in s osien, on un or'e ooms " There's still a l o t m o r e h is comments from a d a y e arlier, when h e me t w i t h work to be done and I don't Chinese President Xi Jinping w ant anyone to t h ink t h at to brief him on the search for we are certain of success, or the Malaysia Airlines flight, that success, should it come,
By Margie Mason The Associated Press
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PERTH, Australia — After
a week of optimism over four underwater signals believed to be coming from the miss- which was carrying 239 peoing Malaysian plane, the sea ple — most of them Chinesehas gone quiet and Austra- when it disappeared March 8 lia's leader is warning that the en route from Kuala Lumpur, massive search will likely be Malaysia to Beijing. long. After analyzing satellite No new electronic pings data, officials believe the have been heard since April plane flew off course for an 8, and the batteries powering unknown reason and went the locator beacons on the down in the southern Indian jet's black box recorders may Ocean off A u stralia's west already be dead. They only coast. last about a month, and that Abbott expressed confiwindow has already passed. dence that the signals heard Once officials are confident by an Australian ship, which no more sounds will be heard, is towing a U.S. Navy device a robotic submersible will be sent down to slowly scour for
that listens for flight recorder
pings, were coming from the wreckage across a vast area missing Boeing 777's black in extremely deep water. boxes. But he said the fading "No one should underes- batteries were making the job timate the difficulties of the much harder. Recovering the task still ahead of us," Prime plane's flight data and cockMinister Tony Abbott said in pit voice recorders is essential Beijing on Saturday, the last for investigators to try to piece day of his China trip. together what happened to Abbott appeared to couch Flight 370.
is going to happen in the next week or even month. There's a
lot of difficulty and a lot of uncertainty left in this," he said.
The underwater search zone is curr e ntly a 500-square-mile patch of the
seabed, about the size of Los Angeles. The searchers want to pinpoint the exact location of the
source of the sounds — or as close as they can get — before sending the sub down. It will not be deployed until officials are confident that no other
electronic signals are present. The Bluefin 21 submersible takes six times longer to cov-
er the same area as the ping locator, and will need about six weeks to two months to
canvass the current underwaterzone. The signals are also coming from 15,000 feet be-
low the surface, which is the
MARATHON BOMBING SURVIVORS'PHOTOSHOOT
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising JayBrandt.....541-363-0370 Circulation Adam Sears...541-365-5805 FinanceHolly West..........541-363-0321 HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-363-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624
sidering a run for the White House —Sens.Ted Cruzof Texas and Rand Paul of Kentucky, and MikeHuckabee,theformer Arkansas governor — pitched their views Saturday for how conservatives can retake power in Washington. It was anunusually early event for such an overt discussion of 2016, even by today's accelerated electoral calendar. Theevent was the FreedomSummit in Manchester, N.H., a gathering of several hundred people put together by two of the most influential groups on the right, the Americans for Prosperity Foundation and Citizens United. MOre gaS in Syria? —Both sides in Syria's bloody civil war said Saturday that a rural village fell victim to a poisongasattack, an assault that reportedly injured scores of peopleamid anongoing international effort to rid the country of chemical weapons.What exactly happened Friday in KfarZeita, a rebel-held village in Hamaprovince some125 miles north of Damascus, remains unclear andlikely won't be known for sometime. It took United Nations weapons inspectors months to say it was likely somechemical weapons attacks happened last year, including anAugust attack that killed hundreds and nearly sparked Western airstrikes against President BasharAssad's forces. Ihdi8 eleCtiOil —Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party is the front-runner in India's national elections, but his path to the prime minister's office will likely depend on analliance with regional satraps to form a coalition government. Modi will probably needthesupport of at least one of the "three ladies" — Jayalalithaa Jayaram, the chief minister of Tamil Nadu;Mamata Banerjee, the leader of West Bengal; and Mayawati, a former leader of Uttar Pradesh. Eachcan offer Modi amandatestrongenoughtoendorsesweepingchange.Andeach,if left unsatisfied, has theability to extract her pound of flesh. MOSCOw xenOPhObia —In the weekssince Russia's military incursion into Crimea, Russian flags havebeenhung from the windows of apartment buildings all over the city, just as American flags appeared in profusion after the Sept. 11terror attacks. There is also now a website with a namethat translates as "traitor.net" that includes photos and quotations of public figures who havespoken out in some wayagainst Russia's policy toward Ukraine. Boris Nemtsov, a longtime political opposition leader, wrote onFacebookthat the situation seemedworse than during the ColdWar. COwS releaSed —Federal land managers confirmed they released all 400 or so headof cattle rounded up on public land in southern Nevadafrom a rancher who has refused to recognize their authority. The Bureau of LandManagement took the action Saturday afternoon after hundreds of states' rights protesters, including militia and tea party members, showed up atcorrals outside Mesquite to demand the animals' return to rancher Cliven Bundy.Thebureau issued a brief statement saying the cattle were released "due toescalating tensions." Someprotesters were armed with handguns and rifles at the corrals and at anearlier nearby rally.
OST t '/
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SuStaining grOwth —The world's top finance officials expressed confidence Saturday that the global economy finally has turned the corner to stronger growth. This time, they may be right. Despite challenges that include market jitters about the Federal Reserve's bond-buying slowdown and global tensions over Ukraine, policymakers said they believe there is a foundation for sustained growth that can provide jobs for the millions of people still looking for work five years after the worst recession since the Great Depression of the1930s.
rs
— From wire reports
h
c,„.
HAPPY, TIRED DAY GAREDOGS
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CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-363-0356
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Boston Marathon bombing survivor Marc Fucarile, seated, talks Saturday to his sonGavin, 6, at the finish line of the Boston Marathon. At least 2000 people, including survivors and first-responders showed up toparticipate in a Sports
l lustrated photo shoot to commemorate the one-year anniversary of the bombings. Fucarile, a 35-year-old roofer from Stoneham,Mass., lost his right leg above the knee in the bombings onApril15,2013. Hewas the last survivor to leavethe hospital.
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
bound lanes of Interstate 5
Q ts Q2 6Q saQ asQ aa©
ing the students to a tour of Humboldt State University in Northern California. Five students,three adult chaperones
i
The estimated jackpot is now $110 million.
ommended for motor coaches could have allowed more of
Thursday afternoon. Bonnie
the 48 bus occupants to escape
unharmed. Bodiesrecovered from the driver's claim that a FedEx bus were charred beyond tractor-trailer was already on flames were coming from the recognition. Dozens of stufirewhen itcareened across a lower rear of the truck cab. dents had injuries including "I just looked to the left, and burns, and several remained freeway median, sideswiped her car and slammed into a there it was coming through hospitalized. bus carrying high school stu- right at me at an angle. I can dents, killing 10 people in a tell I wasn't going to outrun fiery wreck. him, so I just kind of turned I nvestigators were s t i l l to the right and he hit me," looking for more witnesses to she told the television station. the Thursday crash, National "It was in flames as it came Transportation Safety Board through the median. ... It member Mark Rosekind said. wasn't like the whole thing They also plan to conduct tests was engulfed. It was coming to determine if the truck driver up wrapping around him." inhaled smoke before the colliInitial reports by police sion and examine crash scene made no mention of a fire beevidencefor clues of a fire be- fore the crash. Officer Lacey fore the vehicles exploded into Heitman, a spokeswoman for towering flames and billowing California Highway Patrol, black smoke. said she could not confirm Investigators also found if Duran's account is accuno signs that the truck driv- rate until al l e v idence was e r attempted to b r ake b e - gathered. fore the crash. They found Federal investigators also the truck left no tire marks recovered an electronic conafter it veered off the south- trol module from the bus, but corroborate on Saturday a
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and crashed into the bus tak-
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Duran, who was driving, told federal authorities and KNBC-TV in Los A ngeles that
do not know what information it contains. They were not able
to recover such equipment from the FedEx truck tractor, a 2007 Volvo,but may be able
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
to calculate speed and maneuand both drivers died. Rose- vering using the transmission kind said the bus driver had and marks in its steering box. relievedanother driver whose They are also investigating if shift ended during a stop in the drivers were impaired.
aQr QeQa oQ at Q4 Q
Sacramento. Joe and Bonnie Duran, the
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But in addition to the cause
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, April13, the103rd day of 2014. Thereare262 days left in the year.
SCIENCE
HAPPENINGS
ors ace roe s, e u e ax overs
Lidya —Officials say the first of the country's oil ports could begin exporting.
HISTORY
NASA's rover, Opportunity, has survived more than a decade in Mars' harsh climate, but with no
Highlight:1964,Sidney Poitier becamethe first black performer in a leading role to win an AcademyAward for his performance in "Lilies of the Field." (Patricia Nealwas named best actress for "Hud"; best picture went to "Tom Jones.") In1613, Pocahontas, daughter of Chief Powhatan, was captured by English Capt. Samuel Argall in the Virginia Colony and held in exchange for English prisoners and stolen weapons. (During a yearlong captivity, Pocahontas converted to Christianity and ultimately opted to stay with the English.)
money coming in from Obama's budget for fiscal year 2015, financial constraints might deal it a
In1743, the third president of
posal for fiscal 2015 has an
the United States, ThomasJefferson, was born in Shadwell in the Virginia Colony.
ominously low number for Opportunity: $0. The Lunar
In1861, at the start of the Civil
now circling the moon, also crashes to zero in the budget proposal. This spring, they and five other long-lived robotic mis-
War, Fort Sumter in South Carolina fell to Confederate forces. In1912,the Royal Flying Corps, a predecessor of Britain's Royal Air Force, was created. In1943, President Franklin D. Roosevelt dedicated the Jefferson Memorial in Washington, D.C., onthe 200th anniversary of the third American president's birth. Radio Berlin announced the discovery of thousandsofgravesofmassacred Polish officers in Russia's Katyn Forest; the Nazis blamed the killings on theSoviets, who in turn blamedthe Nazis. (Post-Soviet Russia hasacknowledged the massacrewas carried out by Josef Stalin's secret police.) In1968, Van Cliburn of the United States won the first International Tchaikovsky Competition for piano in Moscow; Russian Valery Klimov won the violin competition. In1970, Apollo 13, four-fifths of the way to the moon,was crippled when atank containing liquid oxygen burst. (The astronauts managed to return safely.) In1974,NASAlaunched Westar1, America's first commercial communications satellite, for Western Union. In1986, Pope JohnPaul II visited the GreatSynagogueof Rome in the first recorded papal visit of its kind to aJewish house of worship. In1992,the GreatChicago Flood took place asthecity's century-old tunnel system and adjacent basements filled with water from the ChicagoRiver. In1999, right-to-die advocate Dr. Jack Kevorkian wassentenced in Pontiac, Mich., to 10 to 25 years in prison for second-degree murder in the lethal injection of a LouGehrig's disease patient. (Kevorkian ended up serving eight years.) Ten years ago: Conceding a couple of "tough weeks in Iraq," President GeorgeW. Bush signaled hewas readyto put more American troops on the front lines andusedecisive force if necessary to restore order despite "gut-wrenching" televised images of fallen Americans. Five years ago: The U.N. Security Council condemned North Korea's April 5 rocket launch. President Barack Obama allowedAmericans to make unlimited transfers of money and visits to relatives in Cuba. One year ago:All108 passengers and crew survived after a new Lion Air Boeing 737 crashed into the oceanand snapped in two while attempting to land on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.
BIRTHDAYS Actor Paul Sorvino is 75. Bandleader/rock musician Max Weinberg is 63. Chess grandmaster Garry Kasparov is 51. Actor Ricky Schroder is 44. Rock singer Aaron Lewis (Staind) is 42. Popsinger Nellie McKay is 32. — From wire reports
said Casey Dreier, director of advocacy for the Planetary
Society, a nonprofit organization that promotes space
crippling blow.
exploration.
Last year Opportunity cost $13.2 million to operate, and By Kenneth Chang
the Lunar
New York Times News Service
Orbiter $8.1 million. For each of the past three
Opportunity, NASA's resilient rover, just keeps rolling across Mars even though it landed a decade ago. It has s urvived m echanical
R econnaissance
years, the administration has
proposed deep cuts in planetary science and Congress
mal-
h as restored some o f
functions, computer glitches, tricky sand traps, ferocious dust storms and long, frigid
the
money. For fiscal 2015, which starts Nov. 1, the Obama ad-
ministration is proposing $1.3 billion, more than in the last couple of years, but less than
Martian winters.
But maybe not the budget
the $1.5 billion that this part
The Obama administration's baseline budget pro-
R econnaissance
s ions are up fo r
of NASA received a few years ago. "It's very discouraging that we have to go through this fight year after year," said Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., whose district includes NA-
Orb i t e r ,
SA's Jet Propulsion Labora-
tory, which operates most of the robotic missions. Schiff wants a
space agency calls a "senior review" to ensure that they
robotic missions. The tea leaves in the bud-
are still producing enough science to justify the cost of
get proposals can be misleading. Last year's proposal from the administration suggested that spending for the
continued operations. Pro-
posals were due Friday, with decisions coming in June. But planetary scientists are
asking whether the budget numbers suggest that NASA
p l anetary science
budget closer to $1.5 billion so NASA can also afford future
what the
NASAvia The New YorkTimes
An undated handout photo of an artist's rendering of the Mars rover Opportunity on the surface of Mars. The Mars rover, still operating after10 years on the planet, and the Cassini spacecraft orbiting
Cassini mission would end
Saturn are amongthe NASAmissions facing budget extinction.
in 2015. This year, the money reappeared in the adminis-
h as already written off t h e
tration's budget, which de-
two spacecraft. The other five missions are the Mars
Lunar and Planetary Science the community not to worry Conference outside Houston about where the money is, Curiosity rover, two Mars orlast month. "We'll reprogram and how they're going to get biters, NASA's contribution as necessary to be able to it, because they need to write to the European Space Agen- cover these missions." a proposal to get it," he said. cy's Mars Express mission, The White House also put But financial constraints and Cassini, which is orbiting forth a $52 billion supple- raise the uncomfortable posSaturn. mental spending proposal " To see Opportunity z ethat included $35 million for roed was a bit shocking and NASA's planetary missions, surprising," said Steven Ruff, enough to sustain Opportua research professor at Arinity and the moon orbiter. zona State University and a But themoney would come member of the rover's science in large part from eliminatteam, "and it contradicted my ing some tax breaks for the understanding of what this wealthy, and House Repubsenior review process was licans have been cool to the supposed to be about." idea. NASA officials have been At the Houston conference, insisting t o s c ientists that Ruff asked why Opportunity they have not come to any had been shunted to the supconclusions, saying that they plementary proposal.
scribes Mars Curiosity and Cassini as "high-priority ex-
sibility that one or two mis-
sions will fall short even if all seven teams make compelling cases. "I would be surprised if any of the missions were ranked very low in science,"
tended missions." "I will bet that Opportunity
finds a way to keep going," Dreier said of the Planetary
Society.
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"What mission would you had to fill in tentative budget numbers before the senior like me to put there?" Green review. replied. "If Opportunity is on top " Something o t her," R u f f or LRO is on top, they will said, to laughter.
be funded," James Green, director of NA SA's planetary
science division, said at the
Green urged the scientists to put aside their budget
worries. "I would love for
SCIENCE QSA
Colder canmeanolder By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service
a lower body temQ ••Does perature mean a longer
the females. As for humans, a large study published in 2011 in
The Journals of Gerontology life'? compared the ages and body • Some studies show a cor- temperatures of 18,630 people • relation between lower from 20 to 98 years old who body temperatures and great- had oral temperature reader longevity, though there is ings as part of a standardized no proofofa cause-and-effect health appraisal at a health relationship in humans. maintenance organization. The first such major study Mean temperature d ein warmblooded animals, re- creased with age, with a difported in the journal Science ference of 0.3 degrees Fahr-
A
in 2006, was an experiment
enheit between th e
o l dest
involving mice at the Scripps
and youngest groups, even Research Institute. after controlling for sex, body Genetically e n g i neeredmass index and white-bloodmice w i t h ex t r a -sensitive cell count. "The results are consistent temperature control switches in the hypothalamus were with low body temperature raised with core body tem- as a biomarker for longevity," peratures just a fraction of a the researchers concluded. degree coolerthan those of As for possible reasons for their litter mates; caloric insuch results, they suggested take was the same. identifying genetic influencT he r e searchers f o u n d es on body temperature and the median life span was 12 examining the effect of body percent greater in the cooler
temperature on multiple cel-
males, 20 percent greater in
lular processes.
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
UPDATE: U.S. AGENCIES AND 'HEARTBLEED'
ama etsN A ee some Internetsecuri aws secret
!'fPO
FIIAIICIS BAC0" ~s
- f e !d! 30
By David E. Sanger
Leah Nash / New York Times News Service
Francis Bacon's "Three Studies of Lucian Freud," which recently sold for $142 million at auction, hangs on loan at the Portland Art Museum. By first displaying the work in Oregon, the purchaser, Elaine Wynn, who lives in Las Vegas, could save up to $11 million, a tsx maneuver that has seen so
many works heading on loan to museums here that some have built special galleries to show them all.
Arf.
what potential revenue they
Continued from A1
laws," said Steven Thomas, a
Beyond the benefit to museums, this lucrative, little-known
lawyer in Los Angeles who advises art collectors on tax
are missing under the current
tax maneuver has produced a matters. startling pipeline of art moving Supporters defend the pracacross the United States as col- tice as an important way to enlectors cleverly — and legallysure public access to significant exploit the tax codes. artbefore it disappears into priDozens of important works vate collections. Robert Storr, have come to the Schnitzer in the dean of the Yale School of recent years, largely because of Art, described it as a "great rethe taxbreak, museum officials source" for museums. At the believe — so many that the Schnitzer, a teaching museum, museum has a program called curatorsand members of the "Masterworks on Loan"; the faculty use the loans in their featured works are housed in a programs. "The two museums, the Portsecond-floor gallery. Similarloans — whichrarely land Art Museum and the Jorextendbeyond afew monthsdan Schnitzer Museum of Art, also flow into other museums are the beneficiaries of getting in Oregon, and occasionally amazing works of art that they New Hampshire and Dela- would not get," said Jordan ware, all states that have nei- Schnitzer, a businessman and ther a sales nor ause tax. collector who donated millions
As long as the painting stays at the museum for an extended period, typically more than three months, before being shipped home, the practice in several states where collectors
live, like California, is to regard the exhibition as a first "use" of the item andwaive any tax. The
result is a tax-free transaction. The Hallie Ford Museum of Art at Willamette Univer-
sity in Salem, the Delaware Art Museum in W i lmington and the Hood Museum of Art
at Dartmouth College in Hanover, N.H., are among other institutions where collectors
have lent art because of tax considerations.
The tax strategy is 100 percent legal, experts say, as long as all stages of the museum
transferarehandledcorrectly. Schnitzer officials said that many C a lifornia c o llectors
The Portland Art Museum, of dollars to the Eugene mu- had taken advantage of the tax for example, has a long histo- seum that bears his name and provision. "We are on their way home," ry of receiving art loans from served on the board of the Portc ollectors, i n d uding,
m o s t land museum.
said Jill Hartz, the executive di-
recently, Francis Bacon's triptych "Three Studies of Lucian
rector of the museum. The rol e ofm useums California explicitly outlines Freud," one of the most exBut critics of the practice a "first use" exemption in its pensive paintings ever sold at also question whether muse- tax code. It says that property, auction. ums curry favor with possible whether a couch or a CaraPortland officials say col- donors by accepting loans, and vaggio, that is first "used" out lectors lend art for a variety they complain that works are of state for more than 90 days of reasons, not just for the tax sometimes exhibited without does not incur the tax. break. But only a few weeks the context or curatorial judgExperts said that for many after the painting sold for a ment that museums tradition- years it was known in art cirstunning $142 million this past ally provide. A recent visit to des as the "Norton Simon rule," fall at Christie's in New York, it the Portland museum found because Simon, an industrialist landed, to the surprise of many, some lent works exhibited hap- who died in 1993, was one of in the Portland museum, where hazardly: a Cubist work from the first art collectors to make it drew large crowds for 15 the 1950s, for example, placed ample use of it with loans to weeks. amid American art from the several museums like the PortBy shipping the painting first 1980s. land Art Museum. "It is an amazing opportuto Oregon, instead of her home States have no reliable calin Las Vegas, the new owner, nity for these smaller cities to culus tomeasure what sort of Elaine Wynn, maybe eligible to show these works," said Mack tax revenue is being lost. But avoid as much as $11 million in McFarland, a curator at the Pa- in a recent example, a CaliforNevada use taxes, though it is cific Northwest College of Art, nia collector is eligible to save not dear whether she intends to in Portland. "But one does have at least $390,000 by employing take advantage of the break.
Increasing public access, or just a tax dodge?
to wonder, doing a cost-benefit
analysis on a more global scale, whether or not the tax break for these wealthy collectors is worth it."
Collectors typically learn of this strategy only through savStates employ use taxes to vy lawyers, dealers and auc- compensate for residents who tion specialists. But within the avoid sales taxes by shopping circle of people who know of in another state. The tax rate is the practice, it generates debate generally the same as the sales between those who appreciate tax, and people are supposed how it fosters public access to to calculate what they owe on art and those who suggest that items bought out of state, then such accesscomes at too high paythat amount as part of their aprice to unwittingtaxpayers. tax filings. For example, do taxpayers Art collectors who seek to in, say, California even under- avoid the tax typically offer a stand that they have given up recently purchased work to a millions of dollars in tax reve- museum in one of five states nue over the years to, in effect, — New Hampshire, Oregon, underwrite the display of paint- Alaska, Montana and Delaware — that do not have a use ings in other states? "Some states are going to be- tax so that the loan does not income aware of this and realize cur atax.
T Rxe s
the NSA to get out of the business of weakening commercial encryption systems or trying to build in "back doors" that would make it far easier for the agency tocrack the communications of U.S. adversaries.
Caitlin Hayden, the spokeswoman for the National Secu-
New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — Step- rity Council, said the review of ping into a heated debate the recommendations was now within the nation's intelli- complete, and it had resulted gence agencies, President in a "reinvigorated" process to Barack Obama has decid- weigh the value of disclosure ed that when the National when a security flaw is disSecurity Agency discovers covered,against the value of major flaws in Internet se- keeping the discovery secret curity, it should — in most for later use by the intelligence circumstances reveal community.
Tempting as it was to create
easy ways to break codesthe reason the NSA was established by Harry S. Truman 62 years ago — the committee concluded that the practice
"This process is biased to-
them to assure that they will be fixed, rather than
ward responsibly disclosing keep mum so that the flaws such vulnerabilities," she said. can be used in espionage Until now, the White House or cyberattacks, senior ad- has declined to say what acministration officials said tion Obama had taken on this
would undercut trust in Amer-
ican software and hardware products. In recent months, Silicon Valley companies have urged the United States to
abandon such practices, while But Obama carved a ident's advisory committee, Germany and Brazil, among broad exception for "a clear whose report is better known other nations, have said they n ational security o r l a w for its determination that the were considering shunning enforcement need," the of- government cease collecting American-made e q u ipment ficials said, a loophole that bulk telephone data about the and software. Their motives is likely to allow the NSA to calls made by every American. were hardly pure:foreign comcontinue to exploit security Obama announced last month panies see the NSA disdosures flaws both to crack encryp- that he would end the bulk col- as a way to bar American tion on the Internet and to lection, and leave the data in competitors. design cyberweapons. the hands of telecommunicaAnother r e commendation The White House has tions companies, with a proce- urged the government to make never publidy d etailed dure for the government to ob- only the most limited, tempoObama's decision, which he tain it with court orders when rary use of what hackers call "zero days," the coding flaws made in January as he be- needed. gan a three-month review of But while the surveillance in software like Microsoft Winrecommendations by apres- recommendationswere note- dows that can give an attacker idential advisory committee worthy, inside the intelligence access to a computer — and on what to do in response to agencies other recommenda- to any business, government recent disdosures about the tions — concerning encryption agency or network connected National Security Agency. and cyberoperations — set off to it. The flaws get their name But elements of the de- a roaring debate with echoes of from the fact that, when idencision became evident Fri- the Cold War battles that dom- tified, the computer user has day, when the White House inated Washington a half-cen- "zero days" to fix them before denied that it had any prior turyago. hackers can exploit the acciknowledge of the HeartOne recommendationurged dentalvulnerability. bleed bug, a newly known Saturday.
recommendation of the pres-
hole in I n ternet security that sent Americans scram-
Priscilla.
bling last week to change their online passwords. The White House statement said that when such flaws are
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A s s
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the tactic.
"It is one thing if you are buying a pair of shoes or pots and pans," said Anne-Marie Rhodes, a Loyola University Chicago law professor, "but in these times, when regular tax-
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payers have it so difficult, to
have such an easy way to avoid the use tax is hard to justify."
•
Brian Ferriso, the Portland
A
Art Museum's director, said his institution insisted in most cases that a work of art be lent for
at least 120 days, not 90, to give it greater public exposure but also to avoid any appearance that itsprogram existspurelyto fit the prerequisites of the Cali-
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"We want to be seen as an
institution that is putting art on the wall in a transparent fash-
ion," he said.
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WOODLANDS M E A D O W S
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Paisley
stayed in the dorm last year. Lizzie, whose family has
Continued from A1
a ranch in Beatty, a small
"Yeah, we don't have the
best facilities," says Jessica, a three-sport standout, math Olympian, and the school's student body president, who plans to attend Oregon Institute of Technology in Klamath Falls this fall. "But it's our work ethic. In this environment, it's all about your work ethic."
Located a p proximately 130 miles southeast of Bend
Alexander Ermochenko/The Associated Press
A member of Ukraine's defunct riot police officers occupies a regional police building Saturday in Donetsk, Ukraine.
BuildingS Seized —Pro-Russianmilitants seized police stations and other securIty facilities in the most populous part of eastern Ukraine onSaturday, in a brush fire of violent unrest that the government in Kiev immediately denounced asRussian "aggression." The attacks on thePolice Headquarters in Donetsk and ona police station and astate security branch in Slovyanskabout 50 miles away,along with reports of shootings in several other towns, suggested acoordinated campaign to destabilize the Donetsk region, a vitally important industrial and coal-mining area that borders RussIa. Six days earlier, pro-Russian activists seized the headquarters of the regional government, declared anindependent People's Republic of Donetsk, anddemanded areferendum on whether to secede from Ukraine andjoin Russia. Ukraine's acting president, Oleksandr Turchynov, called an emergency meeting late Saturday of the country's national security council to discuss the escalating crisis in the mainly Russian-speaking east of the country. Fears that the government Is losing control havebeenfueled by the militants' seizing of a large number of weaponsduring the last week. Some300 automatic rifles were taken from the Donetsk offices of the state securIty service after It was briefly taken over by pro-Russian protesters last weekend, andaccording to the Ukrainian Interior Ministry, 400 Makarov handgUnsand20 automatic weaponswere looted Saturday from the police station in Slovyansk, which hadbeenseized. "The goal of the takeover wastheguns," the ministry said. The demands of the pro-Russian activIsts in eastern Ukraine keep shifting between outright secession andgreater autonomy within Ukraine. But calls for Unity with Russia nowseemto predominate, heightening concerns in theWest that Moscow is orchestrating the disorder to create apretext for an invasion. — New YorkTimesNews Service
Ukraine Continued from A1 Visiting eastern Ukraine on
the regions might gain in a constitutional reform.
ers the interim government
last month for the International
illegitimate.
Republican Institute found just 4 percent of those polled in the
Sergei Lavrov, in a meeting with U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry last week in Paris,
One irony of Putin's feder-
alization project for Ukraine is that he has spent his years as Kremlin leader dismantling Russia's own federal structure in order to centralize power in
sian foreign minister also insisted that the troop presence
parents sent her to live in the
Paisley dorm. "When s omeone i s from Mongolia, you think about Genghis Khan and sheep-herding," Lizzie adds, "but they're from the city....
It's really interesting." The school's international
from the city.... It's
really interesting."
a class of seven and a class
of 10 and a class of 16.... The great thing here with our staff — Sophomore Lizzie Hyde of five or six high-school level teachers, it's easy to get the ball rolling when action needs students who spend their t o be taken or when a k i d entire high school career at needs individual attention." Paisley. While the founda-
All that p ersonalized instruction has led to a steady
component is another draw
tion originally only benefit-
to Paisley, says dorm supervi-
ed students whose parents stream of Paisley grads exwere Lake County residents, celling at the university level. which excluded most dorm Jenna Chiono, a 2009 Bronco
sor Kris Norris. "Our v aledictorian l a st
year, Tess O'Leary, is a sixth-generation cattle rancher," says Norris, who
residents, th e s c holarship alum, attended W i l lamette is now available to students U niversity in Salem on t h e who accumulate all of their Mark O . H a t f ield S ervice
manages the dorm with her high school credits at PaisPaisley P ublic C h a rter husband Michael. "Her roots ley, regardless of where their School built a 16-room dor- run deep here. But her speech parents live. "The amount varies demitory to house out-of-area focused mostly on how open and foreign-exchange stu- she is to the world because pending on financial need," dents, and more recently the she's always had foreign ex- says Paisley guidance coundistrict created an online K-8 change students in her high cilor Mik e J ones, a 1 9 97 distance learning program school classes." graduate of Paisley High who that has doubled the district's While Paisley has tradi- himself was a recipient of the total enrollment to just under tionally relied on internation- Anna F. Jones Scholarship. 300. al students to boost its enroll- "But the amount of grads we "Having the d i stance ment numbers, the Broncos have on scholarship (each learning program, that keeps are hoping to entice more out- year) is typically pretty low, us afloat," says Bill Wurtz, of-area Oregon students in maybe around 10 students. a longtime Bend-La Pine the coming years. The school When that's the case, they're Schools administrator who district is running print and able to divvy up (the money) is in his first year serving radio ads in Bend, Medford in a very helpful way." as Paisley's superintendent and Ashland, among other According to Jones, lowand high school principal. "It places, ideally to secure more need students received bekeeps us solvent." Oregon students who want tween $1,000 and $2,000 this D espite having a h i gh smallerclasssizes,m oreone- school year while high-need school student body roughly on-one attention, and a bet- students were awarded bethe same size — 33 kids — as ter chance at playing varsity tween $12,000 and $14,000. some classes at Bend High sports. Scholarships renew each ac"We don't think we'll get ademic year as long as stuor Mountain View, Paisley High is per capita one of the too many f a m ilies t h at'll dents are in good standing most multicultural schools in move their whole family with their colleges. "The big selling point out Oregon, with i n ternational down to Paisley," Wurtz says. students making up 20 to 30 "But we're trying to target there (to come to school in percent of its enrollment. In families who live in the out- Paisley) is for a student who the last two years Paisley has lying areas that don't want wants some room to grow hosted foreign exchange stu- their kids going to a school and figure out who they are, they're not going to be lost in dents from Kyrgyzstan, Chi- with 1,500 or 1,700 kids." na, Russia, Mongolia, South An added benefit to fam- the crowd in Paisley," says Korea, Thailand, Japan, Ec- ilies wh o a r e in t e rested Jones, who after getting uador, and Germany. in sending their children out of the m i litary moved "The hard thing is you get to Paisley is th e c ounty's his family of seven back to to know them, become really scholarship opportunities. Paisley. "Everyone here is a good friends with them and The Anna F. Jones Scholar- standout. Your individuality then they leave," says Bronco ship, established in 1975, is shines through. " sophomore Lizzie Hyde, who awarded to college-bound The scholarships are just decades. In the m id-1990s,
Scholarship, a full-ride scholarship she earned coming out of Paisley High. "We didn't always have ev-
erything readily available at Paisley, but the opportunity was always there if you wanted to work hard and make-
something happen," says Chiono, 22, who works for a staff-
ing agency in Duluth, Minn. "That's the reality of life and college and work. You have to get the process started, but
peopleare thereto help you as long as you're going to try. "It was such a valuable ex-
perience," adds Chiono, who while at Paisley High went out for volleyball, basketball
and track, presided as the student body president, wrote for the yearbook, worked for the
school radio station, participated in the Future Farmers
of America, and served as a student representative on the state board of education. "At
Paisley, you've got the ability to step into a lot of different roles." — Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin.com.
EVERGREEN
In-Home Gue servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort forall. 541-389-0006
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away from Ukraine and join Russia.
Ukraine to maintain "neutral-
seek to join NATO. The Rus-
ley, was home-schooled until her freshman year, when her
eastern region wanted to break
reiterated Russia's desire for ity," meaning it would never
about 100 miles west of Pais-
part of the Paisley experience, according to Jones. "My biggest class since I've been here (the past three years) is 22 kids," Jones says. "This year my biggest class is 16. I have a class of three,
A rmed s eparatists, w h o
Ukraine and the U.S. say were Friday, interim Prime Minister encouraged by the Kremlin, Arseny Yatsenyuk promised have occupied the regional c onstitutional r e forms t h a t government headquarters in would give the regions more Donetsk since Sunday. autonomy. The prime minister's visit Moscow is pushing its ap- failed to resolve the confronproach at diplomatic gather- tation. But a survey released ings like one planned Thurs- this week has revealed limitday in Geneva. In a sign of its ed support for the separatists. wish to regain influence in Only 16 percent of local peoUkraine without sparking war ple surveyed by the Donetsk and further sanctions, Moscow Institute for Social Research has agreed to inciude acting and Political Analysis said they Ukrainian Foreign Minister supported the armed occupaAndriy Deshchytsia at the tion of government buildings, meeting with the United States the Ukrinform news agency and the European Union, even reported Wednesday. though the Kremlin considA Gallup poll conducted late Russian Foreign M i nister
just south of Summer Lake, the 200-person community of Paisley has ensured its hardworking students have a school to call their own through a series of bold and creative moves the past two
unincorporated community
"When someone is from Mongolia, you think about Genghis Khan and sheepherding, but they're
on Ukraine's border was for exercises and that Moscow
Moscow.
has "absolutely no i ntention
lin helm in 2000, Putin has en-
Since first taking the Krem-
and no interest in crossing the gineered the diversion of local Ukrainian border." tax revenue to Moscow, limited But analysts say Putin is
local authority to choose can-
keeping his options open in didates for regional governorcase he fails to sell the idea ships and deployed troops to before Ukraine's May 25 pres- contain rebellious regions such idential election. as Chechnya. "That's why Putin has troops B ut some say t hat i n on the border. He wants to use the threat of military force to
Ukraine, the federation idea has merit.
impose a solution," said WilA looser federation could be liam Pomeranz, deputy direc- a solution to the social and ethtor of the Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies and a professor of Russian law at Georgetown University. "But construction and rewriting of a constitution is a very slow
nic patchwork that has mired
Ukraine in political turmoil throughout its 23-year post-So-
viet independence, said Anna Vassili eva, a professorofRussianpolitics and culture at Mid-
process and the big question is, dlebury College's Monterey Incan Putin maintain this pres-
sure and be willing to wait, or will he feel compelled to move while he has military advantage on the ground? That is a decision that one man will make."
stitute of International Studies. "If Ukraine is not federalized, the issues that are haunt-
ing it now will continue haunting it," Vassilieva said. "The only way to calm down this hysteria in the eastern cities is
Pro-Russia protesters have to tell the people there that they seized government buildings will remain Ukrainian citizens in the eastern cities of Donetsk but they will be able to speak and Luhansk, but have failed their Russian language and to ignite a broader rebellion, maintain their own ways." Pomeranz noted. Putin is well
"The Kremlin has an idea of
aware that an armed invasion how the Ukraine state should would face much greater re- look in the future, and it is desistance in the eastern regions than in Crimea, where ethnic
termined to make this idea
Russians are a majority.
real," said Sergei Utkin, department head at the Russian
Yatsenyuk visited Donetsk, the center of Ukraine's min-
Academy of Sciences' Center for Situation Analysis.
ing industry, Friday to assure
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If the federation project fails,
the Russian minority that they
Utkin said, Putin could be
would be able to continue using Russian as an official language. He did not provide any details on what kind of powers
forced to implement the more aggressive Plan B for whichthe estimated 40,000 troops on the
border have been preparing.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
OSU Continued fromA1
Classes and community
While Dollar touts the benefits of this integration, what
really excites her is the potential to use those first two years as a way to build connections
Natalie Dollar, an associ-
among students,professors ate dean with a portfolio that and the community. "Right now, our capacity includes research within the D eadhead community, i s is limited because students leading the development of don't come to us until their juthe freshman and sophomore nior year, when they're eager curriculum, which will be to get out," Dollar said. "Boy, based on the "baccalaureate there's so much we can do core"offered to underclass- once we start with freshmen. We'll have four years to build man in Corvallis. The baccalaureate core in- relationships with students, cludes requirements in two and faculty can get to know broad domains — skills and them better, find them betperspectives. For skills, stu-
dents must take courses in writing, math, speech and fitness, while perspectives re-
ter internships. We can also develop a culture where stu-
dents give back the first day they step foot on campus. We
quires students to take cours- can create a campus culture es under various topics relat- that is about more than just ed to the natural sciences, hu-
the campus."
manities and social sciences.
Dollar anticipates bacca"We will use the model in laureate core coursework Corvallis, but what we won't being integrated into off-camdo is offerthe same breadth of pus activities. As an example, courses," Dollar said. To satis- she suggested writing exerfy their students, Dollar said
cises based on a student's ex-
Graduation requirements The following courses are required to complete the OSU baccalaureate core in Corvallis.
SKILL COURS ES Writing I
Mathematics (with optIonsi Speech (with options) Writing II (with options) PERSPECTIVES
COURSES One or two classes in each category: Biology lecture and lab Cultural Diversity Literature and theArts Physical Science lecture and lab Social Processesand Institutions Western Culture Difference, Power, and Discrimination
the university will research perience volunteering at the what courses are popular in Bethlehem Inn, a homeless Corvallis among students en- shelter in Bend. "We want students to be rolled in majors also offered in Bend. connected and embedded be"We're looking for the least ginning their first year here," common denominator, to use Dollar said. Dollar added she an analogy," Dollar said. spent enough time working
the two schools apart? Abasa-Nyarko said the "quality of education you receive at COCC is the same as at OSU," noting that many of the cours-
can come into the chemis-
try department and they will know you and can help you," Dollar said. "It's very different at bigger schools."
es OSU-Cascades will offer will have the same course 'Scrape it together' numbers as those at COCC. Courses require teachers, Both Reynolds and Dollar and currently OSU-Cascades praised the quality of instruc- has no freshman or sophotion at COCC, but they did more courses, leaving the point out differences. question of who will teach. "I think the character of Complicating the hiring what happens at a universi- process is the threat of a delay ty is different than at a com- in construction of the univermunity college," Reynolds sity's new campus. "My understanding cursaid. "It will be a strong concentration of a certain kind rently is that we are going of students, where at COCC four-year in 2015 no matter you have a much broader what," Dollar said. "If we enspectrum of students. We counter setbacks with buildwill have a real emphasis on ing, then we're going to have engagement of students, not to scrape it together. We may only in the classroom but out- not be able to offer the breadth side of it. We will focus on the community of students."
Dollar said students at O SU-Cascades will h a v e more options to perform research with tenure-track faculty actively engaged in their field. She also said the university is considering setting up a
we want, and we will have to
renegotiate for our space at Cascades Hall (on the COCC campus), but I think it will be possible." Dollar said the plan is to recruit a mix of tenure-track
faculty, who will research, an d
c onduct
i n s t ructors,
probably will draw more stu- model that encourages facul- who are not paid to conduct dents to two plus two. ty, especially those in the sci- research, to teach in the bac"I'm not sure it's my job to ences, to incorporate under- calaureate core. Additionally, convince students to come graduates into their research Dollar said current faculty here over COCC," Dollar said. activities. are willing and interested "I believe this, and this is just "No decisions have been in teaching underclassmen, Whereas a student in Cor- in Corvallis to realize the his- me speaking, but we have made, butthat may be one which is not always the case vallis may be able to choose tory of troubled town-gown found that there are certain way to c reate something at other universities. "In my division, the faculty from around 50 courses to partnerships had made future majors that students and their unique in our sciences that meet the cultural diversity re- cooperation difficult. families feel they need every Corvallis cannot offer, be- has come forth and said they "We can start in a different credit to come from a univer- cause their labs are full of quirement in the perspectives want to teach these classes, domain, at O S U-Cascades, place here, and I think that's sity if they hope to move on. graduate students," Dollar which we believe will offer the student may have one really important," she said. Whether this is true or not, it's said. "If Corvallis is looking students the most rigor," Doldifferent option each term in a perception students have, for a place to send smart un- lar said. "We want to fi nd Bend, for a total of three cul- Cost andreward and that drives them to our dergraduates who want to do a balance of offering tentural diversity classes in a givCOCC Vice President for doors. research, we could provide ure-track and instructors. We enyear. I nstruction C h a rles A b a Dollar noted that this is es- that space here." have tenure-track here who "It's a bout fi nding t h at sa-Nyarko was diplomatic pecially true among students Nonetheless, Dollar said are passionate about making sweet spot, which is when we when discussing the expan- in the sciences who want to the goal is not to recruit stu- that early connection with offer enough options to meet sion of OSU-Cascades into go on to postgraduate study, dents away from COCC who students, which you don't ofthe needs of our various ma- a four-year school, pointing noting the example of a fam- would be better served finan- ten see elsewhere." jors yet our options aren't so out that the change will bring ily who was worried their cially by the two-plus-two Dollar acknowledged that broad that we have three peo- benefits and change to both child couldn't get in to veter- model. the uncertainty surrounding "I think what matters is for the campus complicates the ple in each class," Dollar said. schools. Nonetheless, he did inary school with c ommuWhile students will have note that when students com- nity college courses on their a student to talk with their process of hiring new faculty. less variety in their classes, pare the two options, "They transcript. family about what makes However, she was insistent OSU-Cascades D i r e ctor sense for them and what they the university would not sacthey will likely have more will see our lower tuition among their classmates. In and wider array of courses, of Enrollment Services Jane want," she said. "Our goal is rifice the quality of the baccaCorvallis, students prog- as well as the ability to take Reynolds, who noted the uni- to fill in a gap that exists, and laureate core. "The thing not up for disress through the baccalau- courses in the morning, af- versity currently has smaller to offer students who want the reate core in cohorts, which ternoon or night. Our classes classes than COCC, said this four-year option in Central cussion is the quality of those are often composed of stu- will still be smaller, too." perception is false, saying stu- Oregon that opportunity." first two years, we cannot didents from the same major. Nonetheless, both schools dents have gone from COCC As for c ompetition with lute them," Dollar said. "But if With only 1,900 students acknowledge the growth of to OSU-Cascades and onto OSU in Corvallis and other we have to, we will cut back planned for the first phase of OSU-Cascades will l i kely OSU's veterinary school and universities, Dollar held up the number ofclasses to make OSU-Cascades' expansion, lead to more students enroll- medical school at the Oregon the university's small size as a sure that happens." students will be in classes ing at both schools, as more Health & Science University. great strength. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, "If you have a problem, you with those from other majors. options at O SU-Cascades So in reality, what will set tleeds@bendbuIIetin.com
Judge orders man to hold sign saying
he's abully
The Associated Press SOUTH EUCLID, Ohio— A
judge has ordered a man convicted of harassing a neighbor and her disabled children to stand on a street corner with a
sign that says he is a bully. Municipal Court Judge Gayle Williams-Byers ordered 62-year-old Edmond Aviv to hold the sign for five hours today. The sign reads: "I AM A BULLY! I pick on children that
are disabled, and I am intolerant of those that are different
from myself. My actions do not reflect an appreciation for the diverse South Euclid community that I live in."
The judge also said the sign's letters must be large enough for the average person to see from 25 feet away. Aviv pleaded no contest in
February to a misdemeanor charge of disorderly conduct and was sentenced last month,
according to court records. Aviv has feuded with his
neighbor, Sandra Prugh, for the past 15 years. The most recent case stems from Aviv
being annoyed at the smell coming from Prugh's dryer vent when she did laundry, accordingto court records.In retaliation, Aviv hooked up kerosene to a fan, which blew
the smell onto Pugh's property, the records said. Prugh has two adult adopt-
ed children with developmental disabilities, cerebral palsy and epilepsy; a husband with dementia; and a paralyzed son, the Plain Dealer of Cleveland reported.
Prugh said in a letter to the court that Aviv had called her an ethnic slur while she was
holding her adopted black children, spit on her several times, regularly threw dog feces on her son's car windshield and once smeared feces on the
family's wheelchair ramp. The judge also ordered Aviv to serve 15 days in jail.
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Language
T ou tsecure, ooe ensions teeter an a
Continued fromA1 Her goal is to go to college and eventually teach the language. "We need more fluent speak-
ers," she said. "We're getting more, which would be nice to speed up." Eureka began o ff ering Yurok two years ago, bringing
By Mary Williams Walsh New York Times News Service
to four the number of public
high schools in Northern California where the language is taught. Two public elementary Jim Wilson / New YorkTimes News Service schools also offer it, induding Tenayah Norris sits in a second-year Yurok class at Eureka High one as part of a new immersion School in Eureka, Calif. Norris, who grew uphearing the language program. spoken by her grandfather on a reservation to the north, says her The Yurok Tribe's extensive goal is to become ateacher of the language, part of a broad revival campaign to revive the lan- of the native American language in California public schools. guageservesasa m odelto the many other tribes, some rich with gambling revenues, that The situation began chang- "It was predicted that in the are undertaking similar efforts, ing in the 1970s when many year 2010 our language would experts say. No other Native tribes tried to revive their cul- be extinct. There would be no American language is believed tural practices, eventually re- speakers. No speakers." to be taught in as many public ceiving federal grants to do Now nine people are cerschools in California as Yurok, so. For many tribes, efforts to t ified t o t e ach t h e Y u r ok a fact that serves to widen the resurrect their languages fol- language in public schools. cirde of speakers and perhaps lowed, though they accelerat- Thanks to lobbying by a casito secure the next generation of ed a generation later with the no-rich tribe in Southern Caliteachers. growing casino revenues. fornia, the Santa Ynez Band of The Yurok, who are open- Chumash Indians, a law was Redefining a living language ing their first casino this year, passed in 2009 granting certifiT he experience of t h e focused on language early on. cation to teachers recommendYuroks and other tribes is also Susan Masten, the vice chair- ed by tribes themselves. The redefining what it means to woman of the Yurok Tribal change made it easier for public have a living language. A gen- Council, said she believed it schools to offer Yurok and otheration ago, linguists predicted w as becausethe Yurok, isolat- er Nativ eAmerican languages. "A hundred years ago, it was that Yurok and many other ed in this corner of Northern Native American languages California, had been able to our organizations that were would become extinctaround preserve theircustoms more beating the language out of this time with the deaths of than other tribes in more popu- folks, and now we're trying to re-instill it — a little piece of tribal members who grew up lated areas of the state. " We weren't hit l i k e t h e something that's much bigger speaking the languages, the than us," said Rick Jordan,
was supposed to have been SA, the landmark federal emoutlawed 40 years ago: cuts in ployee-benefits law enacted in
The pensions of millions benefits that workers have alof Americans are being ready earned. threatened because of trouFor example, after Carol
southern tribes, with the mis-
sions, so we were able to keep the principal of Eureka High some of our ceremonies intact, School, where 10 percent of
Teamsters' Central States
Karen Ferguson, director of
pension plan, with more
and we still practice them to-
than 400,000 members. In February, the Con-
the Pension Rights Center, a watchdog group in Washing-
the 1,150 students are Native
American. sometimes comparing notes Like all languages, Yurok is Yurok revival with outside linguists. changing, though its turbulent Eureka High School's Yurok The Yurok Tribe, with 6,000 history has made the pace of teacher, James Gensaw, 32, members, is the biggest in Cal- change fiercer. In Berkeley's grewup hearingonlythe Yurok ifornia, where dozens of small rich archives of the Yurok, words for dogs, birds and other tribes used to speak different recordings show how the lananimals from his grandfather. languages, many mutually guage has evolved from the As a young man, he became incomprehensible despite geo- early20th century,when many interested in the Yurok culture graphic proximity. That has Yurok spoke only their own and one day asked an elder for compounded the d i fficulties language, to the past decade, help in composing a songin the of finding fluent speakers who when the r emaining fluent language. could teach. The word "Yurok" speakers, whose main lanThat experience placed him itself means "downriver peo- guage was English, died. "The last speakers who on a path of self-study: learn- ple" in the language of the ing 10 new sentences a week Karuk, a neighboring tribe. passed away a few years ago on flashcards;and eventually working with Andrew Garrett,
a linguist at the University of California, Berkeley, and director of the Yurok Language Project, who assembled a grammar and dictionary that
"They don't have the human
were completely fluent," said
resourcesto do what some of Garrett, the Berkeley linguist. the larger groups in the United "But the people who were reStates are doing, like Hawaii
cordedinthe'50s,'60s and'70s
with immersion schools," said Leanne Hinton, an emeritaprofessor of linguistics at Berkeley and a board member of Advoare now online. cates for Indigenous Califor"I learnedthe grammar from nia Language Survival. The him and was also working with organization has helped train six fluent speakers," Gensaw teachers by pairing them with said. "At first, I didn't know elderly speakers in the United whether this linguist knew States and Canada, as well as what he was talking about. He in aboriginal communities in didn't know how to speak the Australia. language, but he knew how to Among the Yurok, Carole
still had access to phrasal and lexical complexity because they used the language all the time, and the last speakers didn't." At Eureka High School, there
was fresh evidence of change. In a first-year Yurok language dass, most of the 21 students were neither Yurok nor otherwise Native American, but simply students who had chosen
to study the language instead of the two others offered at the trust what he was teaching us. the language revival campaign school, Spanish and German. So I would take what he said for more than two decades. One of the most fluent stuand ask the elders, 'Is this how Lewis, who teaches Yurok at dents was Sophia Brady, a you say that'?' Or, 'What am I a high school near the reser- 17-year-oldsenior whose mothsaying here?' Then they would vation in Weitchpec, about 70 er is from Haiti and whose fasay, 'You're saying this.' And I miles northeast of here, was ther is of Irish-German backwould say, 'Right on!'" in the first generation of tribal ground. She said she became Linguists say that some 300 members to study the language interested in the Yurok lanNative American languages with the goals of reviving it and guage after she and her boywere once spoken throughout raising the next generation of friend, a M e xican-American North America, though most teachers like Gensaw. But it who does not speak Spanish, have disappeared or are at risk was her elders who made the began spending time along the of becoming extinct. The lan- decision not only to revive their Klamath River near the Yurok guages experienced a natural language, but also to spread it reservation. "There are a lot of Yurok dedine amid the dominance of aswidely as possible. "The generation before me people and a lot of signs, and English. Also, under a federal government policy of assimi- had an advisory group, and I thought it'd be cool whenevlation, most Native American they said, 'We want to teach the er we go up there to just know children through the 1940s Yurok language to anybody what they're saying," she said. were forcibly sent to boarding who wants to learn it,' because "I'm a senior, so it's my last schools, where they were pun- they were in a place where our year, but I'm going to keep goished for speaking their native language was disappearing off ing and learn it wherever I can languages. the faceofthe earth,"she said. findit." break it down. I didn't want to
Lewis, 63, has been a leader of
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Corp., or PBGC, the federal insurer that pays benefits to people whose company pension plans fail. "If Congress allows the
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gressional Budget Office with what's happening here." projected that the federThe law she was referring al multiemployer insurer to is the Employee Retirement would run out of money in Income Security Act, or ERIseven years, which would
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anti-cutback rule, which holds
Cascio's husband died of a heart attack at 52, the pension
of the current Yurok teachers came to the language as adults, by painstakingly acquiring it from the last living elders and
day," she said.
1974. It contains a well-estab-
lished provision known as the
that companies can freeze ment world long considered their pension plans at will, so safe that no one gave it a office of his union, the United stopping their workers from second thought. Food and Commercial Work- building up any additional The pensions belong to ers, told her his 33 years as a benefits, but they cannot repeople in multiemployer supermarket meat manager nege on benefits their workers plans — big pooled invest- had earned her a widow's pen- have earned through work alment funds with many sion of $402.31 a month for life. ready performed. sponsoring co m panies It would start in three years, on In the multiemployer world, and a union. Multiemploy- what would have been his 55th the anti-cutback rule was er pensions are not only birthday. amended in 2006, permitting backed by federal insurShe waited, but just before the weakest plans to stop payance, but they also were her first payment should have ing certain benefits to people thought to be even more se- come,she received a letter in- who had not yet retired, incure than single-company stead saying that the pension cluding disability stipends, pensions because when one plan had been "terminated by lump-sum distributions, recompany in a multiemploy- mass withdrawal" and that she cent pension increases, death er pool failed, the others would receive nothing. benefits and early retirement "Now I'm in a real pickle," benefits. The goal was to help were required to pick up its "orphaned" retirees. said Cascio, 62, a stay-at-home those plans conserve their Today, however, the ag- mother in Brooklyn who had money while they try to rehaing of the workforce, the already borrowed against bilitate themselves. Experts decline of unions, dereg- the promised pension to pay say the measures have helped, ulation and two big stock for her daughter's education. but some multiemployer plans crashes have taken a griev- "I have no one. I have a mort- may still fail if they cannot cut ous toll on multiemployer gage on my house. I have my payments to retirees as well. pensions, which cover 10 daughter. How do you do this million A mericans. Doz- to someone'?" "Only a few years ago, it ens of multiemployer plans have already failed, and would have been inconceivsome giant ones are teeter- able that anyone would have ing — induding, notably, the their benefits reduced," said ble in a part of the retire-
criterion used at the time. All
fromthe elders; recordingthem
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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
IN FOCUS:THAILAND'S ETHNIC DIVIDE
Political tensionragesin a iverse nation By ThomasFuller
t he prime minister. But h e
New York Times News Service
laughed at talk of secession. "It's a crazy idea," he said. "Thailand must remain Thailand." Yet from a political stand-
LAMPHUN, T hailand Each time Muean Chimoon
leaves his wooden house in northern Thailand, he pays homage to a portrait of King Bhumibol Adulyadej, a father figure and long a symbol of nationalunity. "We have a king who loves
point, the Thai electoral map
already shows two Thailands: The north has consistently voted for the governing party in recent elections, while the
south has either voted against
everyone," said Muean, a re-
the party or obstructed elec-
tiredbusdriverwho exudes the renowned cheerful insouciance
tions, as protesters did in February. Both sides warn of civil
of rural Thailand. But when the conversation
Giorgio Taraschi/The New YorkTimes
turns to politics, Muean's smile Government supporters, called the red shirts, at the meeting point disappears. He lashes out at in Lampang, Thailand, last month. Three governments have been the "arrogance"of protesters removed from power since 2006 in Thailand, and in the last five in Bangkok who want to overthrow the government, which
months, protesters in Bangkok have demanded the overthrow of the current government and diminished the influence of the Shinawatra clan.
has overwhelming support in the north and northeast.
West Afr ica contends with Ebola outbreak By Pauline Bax, Sadibou Marone and OugnaCamara Bloomberg News
CONAKRY, Guinea
Mohamed Cherif Abdallah, head of the Organized Group of Businessmen in Conakry, said the outbreak is
Ibrahima Capi Camara's hurtingthe economy. "Guinean business owners phone at the Grand Hotel de L'Independence in Guinea's are losing money because of capital hasn't stopped ring- this," he said by phone. "The ing since an Ebola outbreak disease has halted economic began last month, for all the activity in the country's intewrong reasons. rior, and many foreigners are "At least 80 percent of our reluctant to come now." reservations have been canThe Guinean region and celed," Camara, general man- towns of Gueckedou and Ma-
war if tensions escalate.
ager of the 217-room hotel in
Government s u p porters say a sense of solidarity has
the heart of Conakry, said on detected last month produces April 8. "Clients are scared to most of the fruit and vegetacome because of Ebola." bles sold in the capital. "People claim that our baWest Africa is fighting to contain an outbreak of the nanas contain Ebola because disease that has claimed the theycome from Gueckedou," lives of 111 people in Guinea Marie Dore, a market venand Liberia, the worst out- dor in Conakry, said in an break in seven years, and interview. "For the past two kills as many as nine out of weeks, I've had to throw all 10 people who contract it. my bananas away. Business There's no cure or vaccine is dwindling." for the hemorrhagic fever Inadequate health care and that will probably contin- a shortage of doctors make ue to spread in the region fighting the disease more for a few more months, ac- difficult. cording to the World Health In Guinea, residents of a Organization. town with r eported cases Measures such as closing attacked a center run by Meborders and restricting trav- decins Sans Frontieres, blamel "don't make sense," ac- ing its staff for spreading the cording to WHO, which says disease. The Swiss-based aid avoiding close contact with group reopened the facility in patients will help contain the Macenta Thursday, Corinne spread ofthe disease. That Benazech, project manager hasn't stopped Senegal from in Guinea, said in an emailed shutting a border or Ivory statement. It's the first time the disCoast from barring buses from Liberia and Guinea. Rio ease, identified in 1976 near de Janeiro-based Vale, the the Ebola River in what is world's biggest iron-ore pro- now th e D e mocratic Reducer,sentforeignworkersin public of Congo, has caused Guinea back to their homes deaths in west Africa. The last week. virus is transmitted to people "The extreme fear it pro- through blood and other sevokes in populations means cretions of wild animals such that local and regional busi- as chimpanzees, gorillas, nesses are already seeing bats and porcupines, accorddisruption to o perations," ing to the WHO. Humans Charles Laurie, head of Af- pass the virus to each other rica research at Bath, En- through contact with blood gland-based risk consultant and otherbody fl uids.The Maplecroft, said in an email. diseasecauses high fever,di"Regional trade is at risk of arrhea and vomiting, and can grinding to a halt." lead to internal bleeding.
emerged between n orthern
Thailand and the vast northeastern Isaan plateau,where the maternal tongue, a form of
Lao, is similar tothe Lanna language of the north.
"Bangkok has always wantChalida Chusirithanakit, a ed to choose their own prime own written language, which to Thailand and created what pharmacist in the northeast, minister," Muean said. "They used a different alphabet from today are icons as a sort of na- says the current round of prodon't care what northern peo- Thai. tionalist glue for the country. tests has kindled "a real sense plethink — they just care about Less radical have been Pad thai, the stir-fried noodles of pride in being Isaan people," themselves." proposals for devolution of so commonin Thairestaurants, especially among the governthe centralized powers of the was introduced by the authori- ment supporters, called the red Melting pot government. ties as a national dish. The gov- shirts. "They feel they have strugThailand is the land of the Much of the appeal of Mme ernment also promoted the use Thais, of course — but also of Minister Yingluck Shinawatra of a greeting, "sawasdee," that gled and have been oppressed the Lanna, Lao,Mon, Malay, and her family for the north is is used nationwide. Decisions for a long time," said ChaliKhmer and Chinese, among that they have been trying to about everything from the ap- da, who moved to Isaan from other ethnic groups subsumed refocus government resources pointment of Buddhist clergy northern Thailand nearly 40 into the country over the centu- and attention toward rural ar- to the architecture of Thai tem- years ago. ries. Eight years into Thailand's eas in recent years, cementing ples weretransferred from the Support for Yingluck and political crisis over the influ- the loyalty of villagers. That provinces to Bangkok. her partyis so strong in Maha ence of the prime minister's push started under the leadBut perhaps most import- Sarakham province that"even family, some of those ethnic ership of her brother, Thaksin ant for the cementing of a Thai a dog in a red shirt could run in identities are resurfacing. The Shinawatra, a prime minister identity has been the long reign an election and win," she said. country's political divisions who was ousted in a coup sup- of King Bhumibol, who was The red shirts have staged roughly follow the outlines of ported by the Bangkok elites, crowned in 1950. The king is a number of demonstrations ancient kingdoms and prin- the antecedent to the current now ailing, and his absence in recent weeks in what they cipalities, rekindling bygone standoff. from civic life — he has not say is a message to the Bangimpulses for greater autonomy Government supporters say publicly commented on polit- kok establishment showing the from Bangkok. secessionist talk is a measure icaltensions for several years strength of their numbers"I've never seen the country of their feelings of frustration, — has added to a sense that the and their readiness to fightback this divided," said Ponganand but very few are taking it se- country has lost its rudder. if the government is toppled. Srisai, a member of the local riously at this point. Yet the Three governments supportAt a meeting in Chiang Mai council in Baan Nong Tun, notion ofsecession appears to ed by northern and northeast- last month, a leader of the red a rice-farming northeastern have been taken very seriously ern voters have been removed shirts, Nisit Sinthupai, spoke village. by the army, which vowed to from power since 2006, one about a Buddhist monk who Banners strung across roads investigate and bring legal ac- — Thaksin's — by a military is considered the patron saint in the north calling for seces- tion a~ a n y one advocatingcoup and two in highly politi- of northern Thailand, Kru Ba sion have been among the leaving Thailand. cized court judgments. For the Srivichai. The monk, who died most extreme expressions of last five months, protesters in eight decades ago, is lionized the north's bitterness toward ShapingThailand Bangkok have demanded the for his piety and devotion to his Bangkok. The northern Lanna Building modern Thailand overthrow of the government followers. kingdom, including Lamphun, has been a painstaking and and a reduction in the influence was annexed by Bangkok in sometimes bloody process that of the Shinawatra dan, which 1899, and for decades its people took centuries but accelerated is from the northern cityof Chihave spoken a dialect distinct over the past century. ang Mai. from the Thai officially recogLocal languages and dialects B oontham K a ewkard, a nizedand promoted by thecen- were banned from schools. wood carver here, said he was tral government. At the time of Authoritarian leaders changed ready to confront the anti-gov0 0 annexation, the region had its the country's name from Siam ernment forces if they removed
centa where Ebola was first
Pakistan dropsattempted murder
chargesagainst 9-month-old baby By Gerry Mullany
who threw stones at gas comcharge against him, the baby's pany workers who were tryter the police withdrew the
New York Times News Service
HONG K O N G — N i n e- lawyer, Irfan Tarar, told The month-old Musa Khan will not Associated Press.
be going to prison on attemptThe case against the baby ed murder charges. led to widespread ridicule The Pakistani baby drew being heaped against the Painternational attention in re- kistani legal system, particcent days when the local po- ularly after little Musa was lice took the unusual step of photographed crying while charging him along with four being fingerprinted — and he adults in connection with a vi- then had to be comforted with
ing to disconnect homes from
gas servicefornonpayment of bills. The outcry over the charges led Shahbaz Sharif, the chief minister of Punjab province and the brother of Prime Min-
olent protest in Lahore in Feb-
a milk bottle. His family sub-
ruary. Critics say the charges reflected the tendency of the Pakistani police to lodge exaggerated complaints against poor families. On Saturday, though, Musa w as sparedincarceration af-
sequently moved him out of
ister Nawaz Sharif, to order an inquiry into the matter. The child's lawyer, Tarar, had argued that children under age 7 could not be prose-
Lahore to Faisalabad, citing
cuted under Pakistani law.
The 9-month-old had been safety reasons. Musa was charged along free on bail pending a Saturwith his father and grandfa- day hearing in which a judge ther for allegedly being part allowed for the dismissal of of a group of slum residents the case against Musa.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON —On Monday, the Senate passed a bill that would restore emergency unemployment benefits to job seekers who have exhausted their 26 weeks of state benefits. The bill would extend the program for five months, retroactive to the beginning of January. Authorization for the program lapsed on Dec. 28. Roughly 2 million Americans qualify for the extended benefits. The measure passed by a 59-38 margin. Six Republicans voted with 53 Democrats in supporting the bill, while all of the no votes came from members of the GOP.
PRINEVILLE POLICE
BRIEFING
e soon
e o onc i By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
A full report detailing the investigation into Prineville Police Chief Eric Bush
should be delivered to city officials late next week,
according to the head of the organization conducting the investigation. Diana Moffat, executive
director of the Local Gov-
"We never change any ernment Personnel Institute, said investigators were com- f i n dings or anything like pleting their final draft that, we just look for on Friday. any red flags," she Monday, Moffat and , fy' .I, said. "But who knows - -,.' ~l how long this sucker's the institute's in-house i attorney will review , g o nna be? So it could the report to make take him a little bit." sure it is complete Bush The Local Gov-
League of Oregon Cities and the Association of Oregon
and mistake free, she
administrative leave in late
'
~
Counties that provides assis-
tance to local governments on personnel issues. Bush, a member of the
Prineville police force since 1990 and its chief since 2003, was placed on paid
~
said, before forwarding it to Prineville City Hall.
ernment Personnel
In s t itute is a Salem-based
September.
organization created by the
SeeChief IB5
amasin e imei
Mendey (D)...................... I/I/yden (D)........................
ELECTIONCALENDAR Are you holding anevent to educate voters in the lead-up to the Mayelection? Submit the inforPhotos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Jennifer Goors, of Bend, and daughter, Gabby, 2, laugh while seeing a baby Ilama, being held by Amy Prutzman, during the Llama O'Rama atHigh Desert Ranch & Home inBend on Saturday.
• Camelids arefeatured at 'Llama O'Rama' By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
• Bill aimed to close the wage gap betweenmen and women.
With 2-year-old Gabby Geers eyeing him tentatively in the parking lot of High
Mekley (D) ........................ Y Wyden (D).......................... Y
Desert Ranch 8t Home on
• 2015 budget authored by House BudgetCommittee chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis. Walden (R).........................Y Bonamioi (D)...................... Blumenauer (D)................. N DeFazio (D) ........................ Schrader (D) ...................... — Andreyi/Clevenger, Ttre Bulletin
Southwest Obsidian Avenue shortly before 6 p.m. and used fire extinguishers to keepthefire from spreading before firefighters arrived to extinguish the flames. Investigators suspect the fire beganwith a grease fire on the stove.
— Bulletin staff reports
U.S. SENATE VOTE
U.S. HOUSE VOTE
in the1600 block of
A pair of horsesthat sunk into amudbogup to their chests Saturday were rescued byvolunteers with Deschutes County Searchand Rescue. Bonnie Malone,67, of Sisters, was riding with the two horses in the Windigo Horse Trail areasouthwest of Sisters whenthe animals became stuck. Because the areahad nocellphone coverage, Malonehad to leave thehorses to go call for help. Nine SearchandRescue volunteers, Sisters firefighters andU.S. Forest Service personnel helped safely extract the horses from themud. Neither animal hadmajor injuries.
• Bill to restore emergencyunemployment benefits to job seekers who have exhausted their 26 weeks of state benefits.
Also on Thursday, the House of Representatives passed a 2015 budget authored by House BudgetCommittee chairman Paul Ryan, R-Wis. Ryan's blueprint would balance the budget in10 years, largely by cutting $5 trillion in spending over the same period. Many of the cuts come from discretionary domestic spending, including the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program, as food stamps arenow known. Ryan's budget is unlikely to betaken upby the Democrat-controlled Senate, meaning that the budget agreementhe worked out with Senate Budget Committee chairwomanPatty Murray, D-Wash., which set nextyear's discretionary spending at $1.014trillion, will remain in effect. Ryan's budget passedby a 219-205 margin, with all of the yesvotes coming from Republicans. A dozen Republicansvoted with193 Democrats against the bill.
A kitchen fire at a
Redmond homeFriday evening causedan estimated $35,000 in damages, according to a Redmond Fire andRescue news release. Redmond police responded to the house
Horses trapped in mud rescued
U.S. SENATE VOTE
Senate Republicans blocked abill Thursday that aimed toclosethe wage gapbetween men and women.Underthe PaycheckFairnessAct, employers wouldface penalties for retaliating against employeeswho share information about their salaries, andwould bear the burdenfor showing why aworker is paid less than acolleague. Needing 60 votes to overcome the threat of a filibuster, the measure failed to advance, 5344. All of the 53yes votes were cast by Democrats, and Sen.Angus King, I-Maine, voted with 42 Republicans against the bill. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., voted no for procedural reasons, allowing him to bring up the legislation again later.
Fire damages Redmondhome
Well shot!
Miss the event? Checkout a video at:bendbnlletln.coml Ilama
O
I
photos and issue a few well-
Prutzman said the scholar-
timed llama kisses. The O'Rama was held in conjunction with "Spring Baby Day," an annual event at the shop. A pen of baby
ship will be for students inter-
Readerphotos
n
It (7tr/)r
/
4">jg
goats joined the llamas in the parking lot, and inside, visi-
Saturday morning, llama "Night Moves" made his tors crowded around boxes of move, stretching his long neck baby chickens and turkeys. to plant a kiss squarely in the Though less than a year middle of Gabby's face. old, the baby llamas at the Gabby squirmed, laughed center of it all Saturday were and declared llama kisses nearly fully grown, standing "dry," but otherwise, not so between 4 and 5 feet tall and bad. sporting a thick coat of fleece. Llama lovers, the curious Amy Prutzman, a member and a few passers-by gathered of the llama association and at the feed and ranch store on organizerofSaturday'sevent, Bend's north side Saturday said Llama O'Rama came for "Llama O'Rama," a proabout as a way of helping to duction of the Central Oregon boost the group's profile and Llama Association. Half a raise money for a scholarship dozen baby llamas — properly fund for veterinary students at called crias — were on hand to Central Oregon Community nuzzle with visitors, pose for College.
s
J t
t'
,4.E
e
ested in working with camelids, the family of animals that
includes llamas and alpacas. See Llamas/B5
An 8-month-old Ilama ondisplay during the Llama O'Rama at High Desert Ranch & Home in Bend on Saturday.
"There's really only one vet that does llamas, andwe really want all the vets to have some basic understanding, because there'sa lot of llamas in Central Oregon." — Amy Prutzman, Llama O'Rama organizer, on a veterinary student scholarship fund for those wanting to work with camelids
Central Oregon'soutlook in 1914:favorable Compiled by Don Hoiness
YESTERDAY
passage is assured. Locally, there is nothing disturbing, and much that
anticipate any immediate
brightening. The uncertainties of the pending legislation have passed. The new tariff, incometax and banking
burst of sunrise, so far as
laws have gone into effect.
commercial development is concerned, the present rather easy going state of affairs gives opportunity to cast up accounts with Dame
Nothing awful has happened: in truth, so far as gen-
outlook. "Things have been quiet;" granted. But the best
Fortune. Taking all in all, the
words, the decks of commercial life are cleared, the sails
The crop outlook for Central Oregon was never brighter; ample moisture, an early spring and an increasing acreage insure good
are set, a favorable breeze
production.
fromarchivedcopiesofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending April 12, 1914
The General Outlook
(Editoriag Somebody once said the darkest hour is just before
the dawn. While we do not
result is decidedly gratifying. On the broad seas of national business the outlook is
mation toelectlonsO bendbulletin.com.We will not publish information about political fundraisers.
eral business is concerned,
no far reaching effects, good or bad are apparent. In other
is blowing and a prosperous
is heartening, about the
• We want to see your photos showing "spring in full swing" for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work atbendbnlletln.com /sprlng2014and we'll pick the best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbotosO bendbulletln.com and tell us a bit about where and whenyoutook them. We'll choosethe best for publication. Submissionrequirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aswell as your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Streets closed • Northwest Crossing Drive from Mt. Washington Drive to Compass Park is closed. • Fort Clatsop Street from OrdwayAvenueto the business parking lot on the south side of Northwest Crossing Drive is closed. • All roads reopen at 2 a.m. Monday. 0 wa A e. N. .Cros ngDr.
is yet to come.
SeeYesterdayIB2
cu Cl
to
.
co
EN Andyzeigert/The Bulletin
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
E VENT
ENDA R
Poetry Workshop participants share their work inspired by "The Dog Stars"; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend OREGON POETRYASSOCIATION Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541SPRINGCONFERENCE: Featuring 312-1032, lizgodeschuteslibrary.org workshops, public readings, or www.deschuteslibrary.org. consultations, open mics and more; VIVACE: Four "popera" vocalists visit website for schedule and free events; $65; TheDoubleTree,300 present a variety of songs; part of N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 503-916the Redmond Community Concert 3076 or www.oregonpoets.org/ Association series; SOLDOUT; category/conferences. 2 p.m., doors open1:15 p.m.; RidgeviewHigh School,4555 S.W . USA BMXGREAT NORTHWEST Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-350NATIONALS: More than1,000 amateur and professional BMX riders 7222, redmondccaohotmail.com or www.redmondcca.org. compete on a dirt track in multiple age groups; free, VIPparking $10; 8 "HELEN ONWHEELS": Cricket a.m.-3 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & Daniel's play about a gun-totin', Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, whiskey-drinkin' granny in Redmond; 480-961-1903 or www. Oklahoma; $19, $16 for students and usbmx.com. seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 25TH ANNUALCENTRAL OREGON 220 N.E Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. RV DEALERSPRING SHOWAND SALE: Free, open to the public; 10 com. a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair & VIVACE: Four "popera" vocalists Expo Center, 3800 S.W.Airport Way, present a variety of songs; part of Redmond; 541-548-2711. the Redmond Community Concert BEND SPRINGFESTIVAL: A Association series; $60, $25 for celebration of the season with art, studentyoungerthan 18,season live music, food and drinks; free; 11 subscriptions; 6:30 p.m., doors open a.m.-5 p.m.; NorthWest Crossing, 5:45p.m.;Ridgeview HighSchool, Mt. Washington and Northwest 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; Crossing drives;www.nwxevents. 541-350-7222, redmondccao com. hotmail.com or www.redmondcca. Ol'g. SECONDSUNDAY: From Pageto
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
A NOVELIDEA: "LOW & CLEAR":A screening of the documentary about a fly-fishing trip to Canadaand how a friendship has grown apart; free; 6 p.m.; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. DIRECTDIVIDE:The LosAngeles, Calif., alt-rock band performs, with Junk Yard Lords; $5; 9 p.m., doors open8 p.m.;VolcanicTheatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.
TODAY
Yesterday Continued from B1 The railroads may or may not build — probably not from present i n dications. W hichever they
do, Bend
and Central Oregon is advantaged. If Bend remains the terminal, we are benefit-
ed, because of the business which centers here. If the roads go on, an outlet to the
south would be vastly beneficial, especially to lumbering interests, and location upon an important transcontinen-
tal road would enhance the town's importance.
Never before has the timber outlook been brighter. By the transactions of the last
six months all the pine lands of this portion of Central Or-
egon have been blocked up by their various owners, so that the big companies are ready to undertake milling whenev-
er conditions warrant. Freight rates have been arranged sat-
isfactorily to all concerned. An improvement of eastern and middle western markets alone is required to i nsure
mills here, and the constant betterment in national con-
ditions assures such an improvement before long. The wool outlook for Cen-
tral Oregon was never better. A creamery, of very direct benefit to farmers, is assured.
Those who have put many thousands of dollars in Bend before are investing more thousands. Creditable new buildings are rising.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 12, 1939
The Gift to Germany
and Japan(Editorial) A Washington columnist
a n d Da v i d
eggs.
2,000MILESINATUKTUK:YOUR NEXT INDIANADVENTURE: Featuring a slide show andvideo presentation presented by Room to Read and Rickshaw Run;$10 suggested donation; 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. A NOVELIDEA:"LOW 8(CLEAR":A screening of the documentaryabout a fly-fishing trip to Canadaand how
a friendship has grown apart; free; 6 p.m.; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www.deschuteslibrary.org.
TUESDAY BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss ANovel Idea's"The Dog Stars" by Peter Heller; free; noon; East BendPublic Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541330-3760 or www.deschuteslibrary.
org/calendar.
It's been a darn good lesson."
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending April 12, 1964
BEND 541-383-1733
REDMOND 541-504-2134
THURSDAY
WEDNESDAY ATTRACTINGNATIVE POLLINATORS:Learn howbees and other pollinators are important in a healthy environment and a secure food supply; free, reservation requested; 7 p.m.; TowerTheatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.deschuteslandtrust.org/events/ apr16nn. W HEELER BROTHERS: TheAustin,
Texas,Americanaquintet performs, with Graham Wilkinson; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-3825174 or www.mcmenamins.com. THE T SISTERS:The Oakland,
to hold a horse's leg when shoeing the animal to prevent getting kicked. And his grandfather, who taught him the business, passed down a
BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss ANovel Idea's "The DogStars" by Peter Heller; free; noon; La PinePublic Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/ calendar. HOW DIDWE GET HERE? HUMAN ORIGINS: EVOLUTION AND MIGRATION": Scott Fisher presents "Clues From theSolar System"; $10, $8for Sunriver Nature Center members, free for students with ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394 or www.
sunrivernaturecenter.org.
part time. D avis also was a
w r e s-
tling coach for a spell when he taught sixth grade at Pilot
few tricks of the trade.
Butte Junior High School. He retired in 1985 after teaching
When Davis was just 13 years old, his grandfather
for 28 years because a long time neck injury was getting
took him into the shop pri-
the best of him.
marily to keep him out of trouble, he said. And he liked
said. "Sitting at a desk hurts."
"Doing this is easy," he
But even when he was Now his two sons, Joe and teaching during the day, he Buck, are following in their shod horses at night. "People would ask how I father's hoof prints, er, footsteps. Joe shoes full time, and could do this after teaching it from the start.
Buck, the w r estling coach
at Bend High School, does it
all day, I said, 'How can I not do this'?'"
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Days of Caring is a county-wide effort matching local businesses with non-profit agencies for a day of community service. Registration forms can be found online at www.liveunitedco.org.
Contact United Way TODAY!
7wo years later he was forced to help support his family.
(541) 389-6507 docodeschutesunitedway.org
was unable to attend school until he wa s l l
bnNrs "Projecth
Days of Caring May 30 L 31
Poitier, who was born in Florida, but who was raised on a tomato farm in Nassau,
p M VtL P ai n t . Clean. i'ix . P ai n t . P ai n t . Clean. F i ss. f ix P a in t .
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want it."
Winners in the senior division, for children under eight years of age, were Elton Rowland, with 33 eggs, and Jackie eggs.
MONDAY
CONSUNER
Dean Campbell, twins who won the Oscar Monday night failed to secure a single egg forhisperformance ofa footlast year when, as three year loose handyman who helps a olds, they joined in a search group of nuns build a church through Drake Park, won in "Lilies of the Field." "I'm glad I won it for my first places in the junior division of the Lions Club Easter kids" Poitier said. "I will put egg hunt yesterday by turn- the Oscar wherever they ing in a total of 55 colored
Volcanic TheatrePub onWednesday.
boy in a bowling alley and He said his passion for longshoreman. horseshoeing allows him to H e f inally j o ined t h e overlook the dirt and grime Bennyplans American N e gr o T h e ater and heat of working with to continue work and worked as a janitor in horses in the summer and the Jack Benny, radio and exchange for acting lessons. dirt and grime and cold of doscreen comedian, said today He advanced to small roles ing the same thing in winter. his admitted guilt on federal and moved on to stage parts Maybe it's the freedom to smuggling charges should in "Lysistrata," "Freight" and come and go as he wants, to serve as a "darn good lesson" "Anna Lucasta." work just as hard and as long to others but that it had not In 1949 he made his film as he wants. Or perhaps it's affectedhis future as a high debut in "No Way Out," lat- the satisfaction of helping an paid entertainer. er starring in "Blackboard animal and its owner. Maybe Tired, worn and unshav- Jungle," "The Defiant Ones," it's knowing he's done a good en upon his return from "Porgy and Bess" and "A Rai- job and the joy of seeing the New York, where he pleaded sin in the Sun." He was nomi- benefits. guilty to smuggling and was nated for an Academy Award Chances are it's a little bit fined $10,000, Benny said in "The Defiant Ones" in of everything. "I shoe horses seven days that he walked into the office 1959, losing to Charlton (Benof his radio sponsor in New Hur) Heston. a week, and I don't get tired York and off ered to cancel a of it. I get to take something contract worth several thoumessy and out of shape and 25 YEARS AGO sand dollars a week. make it look good," Davis "The offer was not accept- For the week ending said while deftly filing a hoof ed," he said. April 12, 1989 smooth and even. C oncerning hi s f u t u r e Davis is constantly hurting plans he said he would con- Man gets kicks from painful run-ins with his shoeing horses tinue his film and radio work horse customers. He said he's while reporting to p robaSome people say that when had a lot of broken bones and tion officers here in compli- you're in love, it's easy to hoof tracks on his body over ance with stipulations of his overlook the others' faults. the years. That's the effect horseshoe"Most of the time when you year-and-a-day suspended sentence. ing has had on Larry Davis get kicked it's your own careThe specific charge was of Bend, who has loved do- lessness," he said. that he was instrumental in ing this work for the past 47 But the years of experismuggling a $2,131 diamond years. ence have taught Davis how and gold bracelet for his wife, the Mary Livingston of his radio program. "It was a foolish thing," he said, "but it was something anyone could get into. No I wouldn't advise anyone else InSuranCe ServiCeS AND RENTERS to buy any 'bargain' jewelry.
American growers at 70 cents stone rocket on a 15 minute or more. At the time the sales sub-orbital journey July 21, w ere made the domestic price 1961, and said frankly he was "scared a good portion of the was around 70 cents, The purchase price, of time," will become the first to course, was paid with money make two flights into space. raised by the American taxpayer. He paid in his 70 cents Sidney Poitier becomes and his government got back first(African-American) 40 cents. The 30 cents differ- to win top Oscar award ence was his contribution to Sidney Poitier, who strugGermany and Japan. gled from the poverty of a CaHow, Mr. Taxpayer, do you ribbean tomato farm, modlike that? estly accepted his achievement today as the first (AfriCampbell Twins can-American) to win filmbest egg hunters dom's top acting award. D oris J ea n
Courtesy Claude Shade
The T Sisters, an Oakland, Calif., sister group, will perform at the
cealed that it was not found until the hunt was about over.
reports that the federal gov- ride America'sfirst two-seaternment is selling to Germa- er Gemini spaceship on a ny and to Japan at less than three-orbit trip around earth, 40 cents a bushel of wheat about Christmas time. that it has purchased from
com.
Calif., sister group performs, with Portland's Ike Fonsecaand Olivia Holman; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 pm VolcanicTheatrePub 70SW Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. TRIBAL SEEDS:California rootsreggae, with New Kingston and Inna Vision; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 atthedoor;8 p.m.,doorsopen7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408-4329 or www.j.mp/TribalSds.
y e a r s old.
David K r ibs, 2 1 m o nths When he was 16 he moved old and dressed in his Sun- to New York City and did a
day best, turned in the prized series of odd jobs, including golden egg, so effectively con- ditch digger, store clerk, pin-
SELCO COMssutslTV CREDIT Ilstlest
United Way of Deschutes County PO Box 5969 Bend, OR 97708
Find us on Facebook, Twitter and YouTube Oliveunitedco
LIVE UNITED
'I
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
ae rans o aion un in onrac o a a ou The Associated Press
cy says.
PORTLAND — People are
driving less, and their vehicles have become more fuel efficient.
While those might be considered positive trends, a potential decline in g as-tax
revenue is one reason the Oregon Department of Transportation says it is on track to
spend about $500 million less on construction in 2020 than
during the peak of the stimulus in 2009.
Five years ago, the department's construction programs
tax remains a major sourceof aspects of Oregon transpor- transportation funding. tation, including roads, rail, Moreover, gas sales have bridges, bicycle lanes and pe- been flat or falling for about destrian-safety projects. a decade, in part because ve"As a result of a whole vari- hiclesare becoming more ety of trends coming together, fuel-efficient. The gas tax we're going to have a very lim- provides just under half of ited budget going forward to the money in Oregon's State really tackle the needs of the Highway Fund, and the matransportation system," Travis jority of the money in the Brouwer, the transportation federal Highway Trust Fund, department's chief of staff, of which Oregonreceives a told The Oregonian. portion. Retiring Baby Boomers are Other issues that hurt proone reason there will be less jected construction spending driving. Though the trend include lower federal funding,
totaled about $800 million. That's projected to plummet to certainly pleases environmen$300 million in 2020, the agen- talists, it concerns transporta-
Misconduct
chargefor former lieutenant
tion officials because the gas
The decline would hit all
higher construction costs and
millions of dollars tied up in
High-Tech Crimes Task Force has been charged with official m i sconduct
and computercrime. J osh Moulin w a s a r -
raigned Friday in Jackson County Circuit Court. A
felony charge outlined in the indictment alleges
Moulin altered, damaged or destroyed a computer or software, while the mis-
PILOT ROCK — Tara Fox
"it felt like I was walking on
ware or data on a system. The official misconduct
marbles." After testing, doctors di-
cording to the indictment. Moulin said he's innocent. He told the Mail Tribune newspaper that he
believes the charges stem from the way he returned a Central Point Police De-
partment-issued l a ptop computer after he was placed on paid administrative leave two years ago.
department, however, expects to have money to fix only 36 bridges, Brouwer said.
MiSSing teen —Oregon authorities are searching for a 17-yearold girl believed to be with a former sheriff's deputy. A state police spokesman says 42-year-old Kenneth Turkle recently resigned from the Lake County Sheriff's Office. He wasbeing investigated because of an alleged sexual relationship with the Lakeview teen. Thegirl was staying with a friend in Grants Pass on Friday when sheleft with a man believed to beTurkle. When detectives contacted Turkle, he told them he didn't know where the girl was. Since then, detectives can't find Turkle and his vehicles are gone.Warrants have been issued for Turkle's arrest. He faces charges of third-degree sex abuse and contributing to the sexual delinquency of a minor. Lake County is in south-central Oregon, near the Nevada and California state lines.
He added that transporta-
tion department also needs to pave about 400 miles annual-
ly to keep state highways in proper condition. But starting this year, Oregon only has enough money to pay for 250 miles.
— From wire reports
Find It All Online
Neither Fox nor Adelmann
presses the point. Fox, especially, feels uneasy about accepting such a huge gift of life from another. She continues to resist, though she knows an
organ transplant is really her only course of action. t o h i n d er someone'slife," she said."It's
something I've had to think through." Fox knows she is headed down a rough stretch of road as her kidney function declines, but she seems determined not to let her condition define her. She runs and cycles, rides horses and contin-
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life the best I can."
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Oddly, while men outnumagnosed her with an autoim- ber women, "we know males mune disease that was attack- are a lot less likely to become ing her kidneys. The following donors," said Adelmann. months brought rounds of One donor can save up to immuno-suppressant drugs eight lives. Harvesting ofbone, and steroids. She went into re- tendons, ligaments, veins, mission for a while, but then corneas, skin and other body her kidney function crashed parts can enhance the lives of again, now working at 25 per- up to 50 people. cent and declining. At 20 perThis was a somber, yet incent, she will likely go on the triguing topic for a roomful of organ transplant list. teenagers, who traditionally This week, Fox and Aimee don't dwell on their own morA delmann o f D o n ate L i f e tality. They had plenty to think Northwest broached the idea about. People can register to
of organ donation to Pilot
Active despite her age,Chica is ready for a home where she is the only dog. Chica is a very sweet Chihuahua mix, 11 yearsold and 11 pounds. She loves herdaily walksand a warm cuddle or lap. House-trained and happy,shewill give yousmilesand snuggle sto make you glad you found her. Photos, video at brightsideanimals. org/adoptable-dogs.Meet her TuesdaySaturday, 10- S.
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long term. The transportation
Rock High School students. without parental permission.
access a computer,softcharge alleges Moulin illegally used his position as a public servant while committing the crimes, ac-
and they would need repairs to keep them in service for the
Adelmann, 29, is a veteran of two kidney transplants. Her
swell. When she tried to walk,
led the Southern Oregon
structurally deficient by 2020,
By Kathy Aney
accessed or attempted to
fo r -
CnrValliS diSpenSary —The Oregon Health Authority says a second Corvallis medical marijuana dispensary has beenapproved. The agency says the Agrestic GreenCollective will be able to dispense cannabis to Oregon Medical Marijuana Program cardholders once it receives its state registration certificate in the mail. The Corvallis Gazette-Times reports the Agrestic was one of11 dispensaries approved by the state this week, bringing the total number of licensed medicinal cannabis outlets in Oregon to 43.
Brouwer said more than 50
bridges in the state highway system are expectedto be
(Pendleton) East Oregonian
demeanor charge alleges that he knowingly used,
M EDFORD — A
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paying off bonds for earlier projects.
Athena womanwaits for a kidney didn't give the idea of organ body rejected the first, donatdonation much thought uned by her father. The Donate til about six years ago. These Life Northwest representative days, however, the 21-year-old came armed with factoids. "Every 10 minutes, someone Athena woman speaks frankly to teens about the idea of or- is added to the wait list," said gan donation and doesn't hide the Portlander. "Eighteen peoher emotions as she tells her ple die every day waiting." personal story. In the case of organs, deAt age 15, Fox rode horses mand far exceeds supply. Fox on her family's wheat farm, pressed a couple of keys on played school sports and com- her laptop and a bar graph peted in snowboarding at the glowed from the screen: a tall national level. She rarely saw bar represented 130,000 peoa doctor and avoided even as- ple needing transplants and pirin. Then one day, she fell ill. a stubby bar showed about "I felt like I had the flu," she 14,000 donors (6,000 living and recalls. 8,000 who were deceased). Fox She powered through soft- flipped to another slide. This ball practice that day, then fell one illustrated how many Orinto bed. The next morning, egonians are waiting for orshe stayed there. Along with gans. Currently, 226 women flulike symptoms, her fore- and 483 men need kidneys. arms, hands and feet began to Ninety-nine men and 34 wom-
The Associated Press
Dng laWSuit —An Oregon postal worker seeks more than $180,000 in a lawsuit filed against the owner of a dog that allegedly attacked her. TheRegister-Guard newspaper reports that Kristin Joachim's suit was filed in LaneCounty Circuit Court. The court document states that Joachim was delivering mail in a Eugene neighborhood two years ago whenshewas attacked by a Siberian Huskynamed Yukon thatwasonaleash,butescapedfrom itsowner's control. The suit says Joachim suffered serious facial injuries, andtheownerknew Yukonwas"abnormallydangerous."
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
NORTHWEST NEWS
BITUARIES
Wanapum Damneeds
DEATH NoTIGEs Steven R. Wienke Juue15,1953- March28,2014
Katherine 'Katie' Marie Barber, of Bend Dec. 18, 1952 - April 8, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A service will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
VeLoria Fine, of Milwaukie, OR July 11, 1919 - April 6, 2014 Arrangements: Peake Funeral Home, Milwaukie, Oregon 503-654-7755 For a full obituary see www.peakefh.com. Services: A Memorial Service will be held on Thursday April 17, 2014 at 1:00 p.m., with the St. Matthews Angelican Church which meets at the Mt. Tabor 7th Day Adventist Church, located at 1001 SE 60th Ave., Portland, OR 97215.
James Markwood Wintermyre, of Bend Sept. 8, 1940 - April 9, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org or Melanoma International Foundation, 250 Mapleflower Rd., Glenmoore, PA 19343, www.melanomainternatio
nal.org.
Liiiie Pauline Stites, of Crooked River Ranch Nov. 29, 1938 - April 9, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.
Zayne John Lees,of Poweii Butte Nov. 25, 1949 - April 9, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will be held Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 1:00 PM in the old sanctuary at the Powell Butte Christian Church, located at 13720 Hwy 126 in Powell Butte,
Oregon.
Contributionsmay be made to: Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Steven Ray Wienke, of Redmond June 15, 1953 - Mar. 28, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place on Saturday, April 26, 2014 at 1:00 PM at the Carey Foster Hall, located within the Crook County Fairgrounds in Prineville, Oregon. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice House, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Stewart R. Marshall, of Redmond (Formeriy of
Sisters, Oregon) Dec. 23, 1930 - April 2, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Memorial Service will take place Saturday, April 26, 2014, at 11:00 AM, with a luncheon to immediately follow, at St. Edward the Martyr Catholic Church, located at 123 Trinity Way in
Sisters, Oregon.
Contributionsmay be made to: St. Charles Hospice 1201 NE Elm Street Prineville, OR 97754
S teven Ra y W i e n k e o f Redmond, Oregon, passed away March 28, 2014 after battling cancer. He was 60. A Celebration of Life will be held 1:00 p.m. Saturday, April 26, 2014 at the Carey F oster Hall o f t h e C r o o k County Fa i r g r ound s in P rineville, Oregon w i t h a r eception to f o l low a t t h e Prineville Golf Club. Steve was born June 15, 1953 in Prineville, Oregon to Charles and Faye (Conklin) Wienke. Steve graduated from Crook County H igh School i n 1 9 71. H e married J a neen ( O sborn) W ienke, o f Ma d r as , O r egon in 1979. S teve had a 3 8 y ear c a reer with Les Schwab Tire Center u n t i l r e t i r in g in 2 010. M ana g ement l e d Steve and his family to Milton-Freewater, OR and Omak, WA, before returning to Redmond in 2005. S teve ha d m a n y a c c o mplishments, including Business Person of the Year in 1994. Steve gave a great deal of t ime and support to Jr . & h igh s c h ool r o d eo , 4 - H , s chool sports, an d m a n y y outh activities. H e l o v ed to spend time golfing and hunting. Steve had a great a mount of p assion & s u p ort f o r h is fam i l y 8 riends. S teve is survived by h i s w ife, J a neen W i e nk e o f Redmond, OR; son, Travis Wienke of Tumalo, OR and
FEATURED OBITUARY
JesseWinchesterwrote
songscoveredbythe likes
Helen Rae Proctor
Costello, Anne Murray,
cancer. He was 69. H is death was a n -
Wynona Judd, Emmylou Harris, the Everly
Utility District. "A lot of effort has been putinto recovering
The Associated Press
break from recording. That
TORONTO — Jesse Winchester, a U.S.-born singer who established himself in
album, however, contained
Montreal after dodging the
Although larg e -scale mainstream success eluded Winchester, his songs were covered by an array of musicians i n cluding
Vietnam War and went on to
write songs covered by the likes of Elvis Costello, Jimmy Buffett and
Winchester's biggest U.S. hit, "Say What."
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Ron Pundak, 59: An Israeli
academic and peace activist who was instrumental in ini-
tiating peace talks with the Palestinians in the 1990s. Died
Friday. Sue Townsend, 68: BritH elen lived a l if e f ul l o f ish comic author who created l ove and g l o ry. A m e m o - angst-ridden teenage diarist r ial ser - Adrian Mole and sent Queen v ice w i l l
which won a Pulitzer Prize.
Died Thursday in Aiken, S.C. Leee Black Childers, 68:Photographer whose photographs of Warholians, punk musicians, club kids, drag queens and other denizens of late-night downtown life told an inside
story of avibrant musical era in New York City and elsewhere. Died April 6 in Los Angeles. Rivka Haut, 71:A prominent
champion of Orthodox Jewish be h el d Thursday in Leicester, England. women fighting for divorce in Monday, Gregory White Smith, 62: rabbinical courts and seeking A pril 14, at 11 : 0 0 An author best known for his to pray together as a group, a.m. at mammoth biographies of art- Died March 30 in the Bronx, Elizabeth II into exile. Died
Frank E. Morton Sept. 18, 1940 - April 1, 2014 Frank E. M o rt o n of Richland, WA died April 1, 2014 at the age of 73. Frank was born September 18, 1940 in Salem, Ore gon t o L e l a n d E d w a r d Morton and Eunice (Smith) Morton. H e enjoyed hunting a n d tournament B a s s F i s hing and was a member of the Central Oregon Bass Club for many years. He had lived in the Central Oregon area for m o st o f his l if e an d w o r ked i n construction and as a general contractor. H e served on the Madras City Counc il and a s M a yo r o f M a dras. He was a member of the Foursquare Church. Survivors i n c l u d e hi s wife of 40 years, Gloria Kerr M o r to n o f R i c h l and WA; sons, Todd Morton of C ulver, M a r c M o r t o n o f Redmond and Scott Mort on of H a w a ii ; ste p c h i l d ren, Mark W i l e y o f D e poe Bay and Kris Lentz of Nebraska; brother, Robert Morton of M a d r as, sister, V irginia W e s t o f S i s t e r s and brother, Kody M orton of Sisters; s i x g r a n dchildren; and six great-grandchildren. A celebration of l if e w i l l b e hel d t h i s s u m me r i n Central Oregon. Contributions c an be m ade to C.A.S.T. for K i d s F oundation, 297 S W 4 1 st St., Renton WA 98057.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
pum Dam's concrete spillway
Was h . in February, and workers — A crackinthe Wanapum have lowered the water levDam on the Columbia River el 26 feet to reduce pressure W ENATCHEE,
Joan Baez has died of
of Costello, Buffett, Baez
January 25, 1929- April 8, 2014
Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 Helen Rae BrosterProctor hous Road, Bend, 541-388-0765. H er full o b i tuary w i l l a p p ear Tuesday, April 1 5 i n The Bulletin and on line at www.bendbulletin.com
The Associated Press
and the ensuing reduction of on the dam. That left the upwater levels have prompted stream exits of the fish ladcrews to carry out about $7 ders there high and dry — unmillion worth of work on fish usable for the migrating fish. ladders for chinook salmon. At the Rock Island Dam 36 Existing fish ladders at the miles upriver, the ladders are Rock Islandand Wanapum usable for now, but crews are dams are being extended to worried they won't be as levallow the chinook to reach elsdrop furtherthissummer. their spawning grounds, The The Chelan Public Utility Wenatchee World reported. District will pay about $4.3 "This fish coming up are million to extend the ladders a way of life for the Pacific on the Rock Island Dam's Northwest," said Keith Trus- Chelan and Douglas County cott, director of natural re- shorelines. The Grant Public sources for the Chelan Public Utility District's cost to mod-
nounced on his official Brothers, Buffett and Facebook page Friday. Wi nch ester Ba ez. "Friends, our sweet Some of his best Jesse died peacefully in his known songs include "Yansleep this morning," the up- kee Lady," "Biloxi," "The date reads. "Bless his loving Brand New Tennessee Waltz" and "Mississippi, You're On heart." Winchester was born in My Mind." Louisiana and raised around After living in Canada for the U.S. South, but he didn't decades, Winchester moved begin his music career in ear- back to the U.S. early last denest until moving to Quebec cade. He died at his home in in 1967. There, he began per- Charlottesville, Virginia. forming solo in coffeehouses Winchester was nominated around Montreal and the Ca- for three Juno Awards, innadian East Coast. cluding country male vocalist W inchester wa s a pr o - of the year in 1990 and, most tege of the Band's Robbie recently, best roots and tradiRobertson, who p roduced tional album for "Gentleman and played guitar on Win- of Leisure" in 2000. chester's self-titled debut alIn September 2012, artists bum and broughtBand-mate including James Taylor, Ludaughter, Marcie (husband, Levon Helm along to play cinda Williams, Vince Gill Craig) Neher of Burns, OR. drums and mandolin. and Buffett performed covOther survivors include his Winchester's second al- ers of Winchester's tunes for b rother, K e n W i e n k e o f a tribute album called "Quiet Central Point, OR and sis- b um, 1972's "Third D o w n, 110 to Go," featured tracks About It." ter, Julie King of Phoenix, Winchester reportedly reOR; as well as many nieces, produced by Todd Rundgren. a nephew, other r e l atives He continued to release ma- corded a final album called "A a nd friends. He w a s p r e - terial at a steady clip until R easonable A m o u n t ceded in death by his par1981's "Talk Memphis," after o f Trouble," du e o u t t h i s ents and grandparents. which he took a seven-year summer. Memorial con t r i b utions can b e m a d e i n S t e v e 's memory to Partners in Care Hospice House at 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701. A utumn Fu n e r a l s of R edmond h a s b e e n e n trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements (541) 50 4 - 9485; www.autumnfunerals.net
$7M in fish-ladderwork
ists Vincent van Gogh and
NY.
Jackson Pollock, the latter of
— From wire reports
ify its ladders on the Wana-
pum Dam is estimated at $3 and increasing the fish runs million. The work is expected to the Upper Columbia. We to be completed by'Iliesday. shouldn't allow an unplanned Thousands of spring chiincident like this to deter us nook are already headed from our goal to be good up the Columbia, and about stewards of the environment." 1,200 to 1,500 spring chinook Divers discovered a65-foot will soon be passing the Wacrack across part of Wana- napum Damper day.
JAMES EI,IjAH (jIM) DAvIS James Elijah (Jim) Davis passedaway on April 6, 2014 at the age of 87. He was the son of Lige Davis and Martha Jarvis Boughton and the stepson of Josephine Jackson Davis and Gordon Boughton. Jim, a fourth generation Oregonian, was raised on a cattle ranch in Ritter, OR.
Jim briefly attended Reed College in Portland before enlisting in the U.S. Navy in 1944. He served two years and was honorably discharged in1946 as a Pharmacists Mate Tbird Class. After his service in the Navy, Jim attended Oregon State University from which he graduated in 1949. He was granted early admission to the University of Oregon Medical School in Portland and received his medical degree in 1953. Jim practieed family medicine in Milvraukie, OR for 33 years before retiring to Bend, OR. Jim was an enthusiastic alpine skier, snowshoer, hiker and cyclist and was involved with many outdoors groups in Bend. Jim skied with the legendary "Over the Hill Gang" at Mt Bachelor. For manyyears, he maintained a section of the Pacific Crest Trail from McKenzie pass to Mount Wasbiagton. Jim was the driving force behind the creation of thefirst marked snowshoe exclusive trails on Forest Serviee land. In 2011, Jim reeeived the prestigious John Day award for his exeeptional service to Oregon's Nordic clubs. Jim vras an active alumni of the Oregon State University and served onthe University Honors College Board of Regents kom 2011 to 2015. Jim established the Jim and Dee Davis University Honors College Scholarship Fund for Oregon residents to enable deserving students to attend Oregon State University.
Jim is survived by his wife of 46 years, Deama Davis; his sons Steve Davis of Lake Oswego, OR and Bruce Davis of Seattle, WA; his stepdaughters Susan Coulson of portland, OR and Judy Lanning ofApache Junction, AZ; four grandchildren, and four great-grandchilden. A memorialservice isplanned forJune 8th,2014 at Aspen Hall in Shevlin Park, Bend OIL
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Zayne JOhn L e eS
P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Zayn e John Lees of Powell Butte,Oregon, passedfrom this life and on to hiseternal life in Heaven on April 9, 2014. Hewas64.
A Memorial Service will beheld Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 2:00PM in the old sanctuary at the Powell Butte Christian Church, locatedat13720 Hwy126 in Powell Butte, Oregon.
Zayne ownedandoperated Falcon Drywall, Inc. for several yearsandacommercial beekeepingoperation. John'spassion in life wastraining andhunting with birds ofprey. Hewasan accomplishedfalconer for morethan 38years. Healsoenjoyed hunting, fishing, hiking andprospecting. Zayne issurvived bythosewholoved him dearly, hiswife ofmore than 43years, Susan; their sonDylan; daughter-in-law, Amanda;andthree grandchildren, Madelyn,ShaylaandConner. The family would like to thankthePartners in Careteamfor their care, compassion and support. Autumn Funeralshasbeen entrusted with the arrangements. (541i 504-9485.www.autumnfunerals.net
i 9runces E& o y a n ,~ 4-
January 15, 1928 - March 31, 2014
,«r
Frances B. Hogan passed away peacefully on Monday afternoon, March 31, 2014, surrounded by her loving family and caregivers at her long-time home ia Palo Alto, California. Fran has been a summertime resident of Camp Sherman for many years.
<
Born January 15, 1928, in Portland, Oregon to John and Martha Beckwith, Fran spent her childhood years in the Portland area. In the late 1930's, the Beckwith family built a vacation cabin on the Metoiius River which soon became, and always remained, Fran's favorite place on earth. Over the years, she and her family would spend countless hours exploring the wonders of Central Oregon from their Metolius River cabin. Fran's father was a naval oIIicer and during World War II, the family relocated to the San Francisco Bay area, where she completed high school at The Hamlin School in San Francisco. She attended Stanford University where she met the love ofher life, Dick Hogan. They both graduated in 1949 and married in 1950. Fran and Dick made their home in Palo Alto where they raised their five children. Fran was a very caring person who was active ia multiple community and charitable organizations including the Metolius River Forest Homeowners Association.
Fran and Dick enjoyed a life of extensive world travel. Their excursions often included their children and grandchildren. These travels are the subject of many fond family memories among three generations of Hogan's. When at home in California and Oregon, Fran loved spending time with her family and often hosted events such as an annual 4th of July celebration at her Metolius River cabin. Fran is survived by her sister, Mary B. Smith of Sisters; her five children - John Hogan, Martha (Martil Dale, Rich Hogan, Jr., Mary HoganBotkin, and Ted Hogan; 12 grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren, and two faithful Golden Retrievers. She was preceded ia death by her husband, Dick; her parents; her brother, Jack Beckwith; her sister, Isabel Goode; and two grandsons and one granddaughter.
A special gathering in the Camp Sherman area will be announced at a later date. The family requests, ia lieu of flowers, contributions in Fran's memory to one of her favorite charities.
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B5
NORTHWEST NEWS
oo stores in eattesoar, an em racea oe — mazon ByKirkJohnson New York Times News Service
SEATTLE — Alove ofbooks
number of bookstores, library resources, newspaper circulation and education.
best-sellers at discount prices, thaw in those tensions, at least e-readersand other commodities of the digital marketplace.
here in the city that most embodied them. As Amazon has
"They seem to be after ev- exploded with growth, hiring eryone and everything," one thousands of tech workers at Seattle-area bookstore owner, its downtown headquarters Roger Page, fulminated on his and helping bolster the Seattle store' sblog lastyear.Headded, economy, local bookstore ownsurveyranks Seattle the coun- or closed their doors, owners "I believe there is a real chance ers have seen a surprising new try's second-most literate big oftenplaced blame for their that they will ruin the publish- side of the company they loved city, behind Washington, D.C., plight on the giant online re- ing world." to hate: Many Amazon emas measured by things like the tailer's success in delivering But now there are signs of a ployees, it turns out, are readand bookstores runs deep in the sinews of this city, where gray skies and drizzle can drive aperson to drink, or read, or both. A long-running annual
Amazon.com Inc. also calls Seattle home. And in recent years, as many small independent bookstores here and around the nation struggled
ers who are not shopping at the enough to even pay employee company store. bonuses. "A lot of our customers work Whether it is A m azon or at Amazon," said Tracy Taylor, general manager at the Elliott
something else, the broader pattern is unmistakable, said
Bay Book Co., one of the city's Oren Teicher, chief executive largest independent booksell- of the American Booksellers ers. The store, about a mile Association, a national bookfrom Amazon headquarters, storetrade group."Seattle has last year earned what Taylor called the " f irst substantial
become one of the most suc-
WEST NEWS
Chief
Attorney Carl Dutli did not
Poac erstar etCaiornia'sre woo s
Continued from B1 City officials have said lit-
By Patdcia Leigh Brown
S.'..
of land between the Califor-
New York Times News Service
nia-Oregon border and Big
R EDW OO D N A T IO NA L AND STATE PARKS, Calif.
Sur. P ark officials l i ken
— It was an unlikely crime scene: a steep trail used by
crimes to killing elephants
bears leading to a still, ancient
isode, discovered in February, involved 21 burls cut from four
for ivory. The most recent ep-
redwood grove. There, a rare old-growth coast redwood had been brutally hacked about 15 times by poachers, a chain saw massacre that had
trees in the park's northern-
most reaches. The park is managed cooperatively by the National
exposed the tree's deep red
Park Service and the California Department of Parks and Recreation; investigations of
heartwood. The thieves who butchered this and other 1,000-year-old
Jim Wilson/The New YorkTimes
arboreal giants were after Jeff Denny, the redwood coast sector supervisor et Redwood the burls, gnarly protrusions National end State Perks, next to e cut on e redwood tree where on the trees that are prized thieves removed a large burl, a gnarly, growth-like protrusion, for their intricately patterned neer Arcete, Calif., last month. wood. Although timber theft has
long plagued public lands, a are motivated by a sluggish recent spate of burl poaching, localeconomy and expensive with 18 known cases in the methamphetamine h a bits, last year, has forced park of- park officials say, and they ficials to close an 8-mile drive have been targeting ever-bigthrough old-growth forests, ger burls and using increasthe Newton B. Drury Scenic ingly brazen tactics. Parkway, at night t o d eter
criminals. More closings are expected. While some burls are small
and barnaclelike — perfect for souvenirsalt-and-pepper shakers — others weigh hundreds of pounds and can fetch hundreds or thousands of dollars per slab. The poachers, known locally as the "midnight burlers,"
the
illegal activities are handled by about 12 law enforcement rangers, approximately one per 11,000 acres. Because poaching tends to occur at night off estab-
lished trails, catching a thief marks. The trail led rangers in action is rare, said Paul Gal2/z miles to the Redwood High-
legos, the Humboldt County
way — U.S. 101. They found the burl stashed beneath an
district attorney. Quantifying the value of thieves' spoils is
overpass for safekeeping.
also difficult — and import-
"How many do we have that
ant, Gallegos said, as the value we haven't found?" Silver said "can distinguish a felony from Last year, a redwood esti- of the poached trees. "It's not a misdemeanor." mated to be 400 years old was just a property crime. It's a legLocal culture plays a role in felled by thieves who wanted acy, like hackingup a church." the thefts as well. "People still feel they have access to a 500-pound burl 60 This 132,000-acre park, feet up. It was the first time an a UNESCO World Heritage a right to extract from the forentire tree was cut down for a site, is the repository of a sig- est to make a living," Gallegos burl, said Brett Silver, the state nificant portion of the planet's said. "But parks are a state park's supervising ranger. remaining virgin coast red- and national resource. These The burl was so massive woods, which were largely trees belong to the people of that the thieves wound up logged by timber companies. the United States of Ameridragging it behind their ve- The trees thrive only along a ca, so they are in fact stealing hicle, leaving a trail of skid narrow, fog-shrouded ribbon from them."
cessful independent bookstore profit" in almost 20 years, cities in the country," he said.
reply to an email sent Friday seeking reaction to the news the investigation has been
cision to place him on leave
completed. Moffat s ai d
and ask the institute to inves-
should receive a bill for the
tle about what led to the de-
P r i neville
tigate, beyond describing it as investigation in May. She a "personnel matter" unrelat- said the organization charges ed to Bush's conduct as a law $140 an hour for investigatoenforcement offi cer. ry services, but she was not Capt. Michael Boyd has sure what the city's final bill served as interim chief since will be. Bush was put on leave.
In addition to his duties with
Prineville cit y o f f i cials the Prineville police, Bush is a did not respond to a public brigadier general with the Orrecords request filed Thurs- egon Army National Guard. day seeking information on He served 14 months in Iraq how much the city has paid in 2009 and 2010, earning the Bush while on leave, and any Bronze Star and the combat overtime costs that may have infantry badge. been incurred because of — Reporter: 541-383-0387, his absence. Prineville City shammers®bendbulletin.com
Llamas
people who were in it for the big money dropped out, and now there's just a few ranch-
Continued from B1 "There's really only one vet es left in Central Oregon," she that does llamas, and we re- said. ally want all the vets to have One of the llama associasome basic understanding, tion's most popular annual because there's a lot of lla-
events, the llama hike and
mas in Central Oregon," she barbecue, was canceled this sard. year becauseofthe sale ofthe Veterinarians with e xten- ranch where it's been held for sive knowledge of llamas used more than 20 years. However, to be more common in the llama fans will have two opregion, according to associa- portunities to see the animals tion board member Adrienne up close, at the annual Black Dawell-Parker, but t hey've and Blue Festival May 17-18 disappeared since the lla- in Prineville, and at a second ma market crashed five to 10 Llama O'Rama set for June years back and big breeders 21 in Crooked River Ranch. quit the business.
"When thathappened, the
— Reporter:541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
L
lt's everything that brings us together. It's a million conversations happening at once and sometimes, it's one momentous event that we ail witness together. It's our shared sense of wonder. It's our collective hope. It's not just the place we live but the place we're all creating. 1Nhgt
lNp Shgt"p
bendbroadband" 54L382.5551
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C3-6 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Communitygarden beginningsoon
a
NorthWest Crossing's community garden opens at 9:30 a.m. April 26. The opening dayis a time to meet newand returning gardeners, clean up the plots to ready for the growing season, participate in learning sessions and registerfor plots. Garden plots not rented by returning gardeners will be available to Bendcommunity members on a first-come, first-served basis for $30, or $25 for seniors. Interested parties are required to participate in opening day, can pay in cashor check and must fill out a basic registration form. All gardeners should bring gloves andtools to the meeting for weeding, plot preparation and cleanup. The garden is managed by the Oregon State University Extension Service's Master Gardener program, with volunteer garden assistants from the extension service providing information and mentoring to gardeners throughout the 2014 season. It features 59 raised beds with microspray irrigation enclosed by an8-foot-tall wire fence. Rowcover, garden gloves andsoil thermometers will be available for purchase on opening day. For more information, visit www.northwest crossing.com/amenities /Community Garden/, or contact Louise Gas-
y
'w™
ou may have seen Travel Oregon's
advertisements or on its website. It's called "The
.~P 4
,: r
a',,- .-.::~=.',.' -
The Painteli Hills . . The Wauowas
Seven Wonders of Oregon." The Portland agency Wieden+Kennedy designed the campaign, but I think their efforts fell short of their mark: Certainly, there are more than seven wonders in our state. Here's how Travel Oregon announces the campaign: h
i
Bulletin illustration. Map by Greg Cross rThe Bulletin
There are 7 Wonders of the World, and not a single one of themis herein Oregon. All we can figureis whoever came up with the list must have never set foot here. They must have never seen Mt. Hood or the grandeur of the Columbia River Gorge. They certainly didn't explore the Oregon Coast. The exposed earth of the Painted Hills, Smith Rock's towers of volcanic ash and the alpine peaks of the Wallowas were overlooked as well. Even Crater Lake, the deepest lakein America, was left off their list. So we see your Wonders, world. And raise you 7 of our own. And weinvite you to notjust see them, but experience them. Because our Wonders aren'tjust for taking pictures of — to truly say you've seen our Wonders, you have to get out of the car, hike down from the scenic vista and feel them beneath your feet.
/
I agree with the sentiment. So to the original list, I have added
'; '>.((~,.h 4Xh~ lg=
two that I consider essential — Oregon Caves and Hells Canyon. Neither one of them can be seen from the safety of your car.
ij@F/
See andreadaboutOregon'sSeven(Nine)Wonderson C3-5 NORTHWEST TRAVEL
541-383-0351.
run in the Outdoors section. Submit online at bendbulletin.com/ spring2014.
The ColumbiaGorge
commercials, print
Set in the fictional
of Well shot! that will
„/
campaign in television
Lay It Out Events and Portland's Northwest Classical Theatre Company will host three performances of the Shakespeare comedy "Twelfth Night" in Central Oregon, Aug. 22-24.
• Well shot!:Send us your photos showing "spring in full swing" for another special version
Hells Canyon
m
new promotional
Get your tickets for Shakespeare
Have a story idea or submission? • Community events: Email information to events©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event"at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before thedesired date of publication. Contact:
*Bonus:Twoplacesdidn't makethe cut. Theydeservedto, so they're included here.
By John Gottberg Anderson For the Bulletin
541-678-5949.
Contact us
.
Sure, wedon't havepyramidsor Zeusstatues, but wedo havesevennatural notables, andOregon' stou~ism agencywantsyoutocheckthem out.
or John Coltman at
— From staff reports
if'
' llI /t' iftt
"
ton at 541-318-5759
town of lllyria, "Twelfth Night" is the story of ayoung girl who, following a deadly shipwreck, disguises herself as a boyand becomesentangled in a love triangle. Director Grant Turner will return for his fourth season with Shakespeare in the Park to direct the performances. Performance locations include: • Aug. 22 ancl 23: Drake Park, Bend. • Aug. 24:SHARCAmphitheater, Sunriver. Doors to each show open at 5 p.m. and performances begin at 7 p.m. Tickets cost between $22and $75 and are now onsale for all performances. Accessible seating is available. Contact Lay It Out Events at 541-323-0964 for more information.
i
I p'D tothe
SLAUGHTKR
Ne xt week: Mount Rushmore and the Black Hills
Bend shopowner pensfirst book in 31 years By David Jasper "I just had a book published, right here," Duncan McGeary
In a store chockablock with comic books, novels, games, puzzles, posters and other pop-culture artifacts, McGeary
said as he rang up a customer at
pointed to one of the items near-
to a reporter, "It doesn't have
his downtown Bend bookshop, Pegasus Books, on a Thursday
est the register and, presumably, nearest his heart: a paperback
afternoon in late March.
book with the title "Led to the
any impact, but I show it to everybody. Actually, I end up selling one a day, so that's pret-
The Bulletin
Slaughter: The Donner Party Werewolves," his first new book
to be published in 31 years. McGeary turned and said
ty good." McGeary, 61, has been selling books since he bought the shop from Dark Horse Comics founder Mike Richardson in 1984, but
now he's hawking one of his own. See Book/C7
C2 T H E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
M II ESTON + ' L7
BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Ryan McMahon and Alyssa Abbey,a girl, Ruby Lucia McMahon, 7 pounds, 6 ounces, April 3. JoshuaNiblelt andJerilyn Roberts,a girl, Kate Jocelyn Niblett, 8 pounds, 7ounces, April 4. Kyle andBri Summer,a boy, RyderLincolnSummer,8 pounds, 12 ounces, March 31. Scott andRobieKnox, a girl, Louisa Sloan Knox, 7 pounds, 9 ounces, April 2. William MooreandKristine Traustason,a boy, Oli Theodore Moore, 8 pounds, 14ounces, April 4.
Formsforengagementw,eddinganniversary orbirtltday announcements areavailableat TheBulletinl,777SW ChandlerAve v Bendo,r by emailingmilestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within on month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
i e un,an ain, ois iin we in s Use these creative ideas from the editors at Martha Stewart Living for your special day. This story suggests Martha Stewart-brand items and tells you where to buy them, as well as items from other places and do-it-yourself ideas.
•
Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Christian and Rachel Burkert, a girl, Rhiannon JoeleneBurkert,7 pounds, 11 ounces, April 4. Kandle Kenville,agirl, Brina Jean Welty, 5 pounds, 8 ounces,April 4.
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Wedding tip: how to pick a good band
Photos by Bryan Gardner/Martha Stewart Living
Montana Gold paint adheres evenly to just about any surface. We found that two coats is the ideal amount for boxes and the inexpensive wooden, plastic and ceramic vessels we've compiled here.
4+
By Becky Mickel
y
Martha Stewart Living
Music can make or break a reception. Here, Mike Herman and Erik Marshall, bandleaders and co-man-
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-gcbo aawre •
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agers from New York's Hank Lane Music and Productions, spill their secrets
on booking musicians. Go for quality over quantity: "If your entertainment
budget is on the lower end, your best bet is to secure a four-piece group that sings and plays multiple instruments," Herman says.
7
Fuel the late-night revelry on the dance floor with sweet, colorful doughnuts.
In l ieu of a guest book, add a dash of spring flowers with a poster for attendees to sign.
Keep your swatches, photos and other sources of insp i ration organized in a single binder.
Sweet treats: color wheels
bers.) Shine a bright light on with a daughter someday. yourselves — a desk lamp or Where to buy: car headlights work well, says • M artha S tewart H o m e Bryan Gardner, a photographer. Office with A very " DiscHave a friend stand behind or bound" notebook in blue: $18, to the side of the light and snap staples.com. a picture of the shadows you've • Patina Vintage Rentals
gift boxes into favor packaging
created. Experiment to find the
cover the boxes. Fill the finished containers with match-
"That versatility will make
them sound like an eightpiece outfit." Don't limit yourself to one typeof music: "Years ago,people were more into themed events with music that matched, but now the
theme should just be 'fun!'" Marshall says. "... If you've hired a band whose members are musically flexible, they could maybe play jazz during dinner and then switch to classic rock for dancing." To save money, opt for any day but Saturday:
Talk about eye candy! Delicious multicolored doughnuts add up to a visual feast when displayed on a dessert buffet or passed around late at night to refuel partygoers on the I
dance floor.
Peter Callahan, owner of Peter Callahan Catering in New York City and a contributing editor at Martha Stewart Wed-
Marble-Top Table: www.rent
best position for a sharp image. patina.com. Thenhandit off toyour stationer
SAVETHEBATE
or design andprint it at home.
It
that fits every color palette.
Before you get to work, give the can a good shake (at least two minutes' worth after you
first hear the rattle) and wear a respiratormask as you evenly ing tissue and treats, and your guests will be tickled pink (and blue and yellow and celadon). Where to buy:
For the guys
Marshall says. "Booking a
color the frosting: The yellow hue comes from turmeric, the This shadow save-the-date green from turmeric plus leafy card is a throwback to old-fashveggies, and the vivid pink ioned silhouettes. from beets. Callahan finishes
Whereto buy: Monograms make every• "Classic C rest T e x t " thing (napkins, plates, statio8.5-by-ll-inch paper in So- nery) even more special. And • Montana G o ld ac r y l i c lar White: $10 for 25 sheets, they're working their way onto spray paint: from $5 per can, paperpresentation.com. dapper, personalized suspend- dickblick.com. • A7 envelope in Wealth: $7 ers, which make sure-to-be• Jewelry boxes: 25 cents for25;paperpresentation.com. used-again groomsmen gifts. and up each, usbox.com. • Stamps: Champion Stamp Start with plain suspenders • Bunny a n d as s orted
band for a Saturday wed-
each confection with sugared
Co., championstamp.com.
ding will likely increase the rate by 15 to 20 percent, be-
flowers (violets); fruit (coconut, pineapple, pomegranate); herbs(mint);sesame seeds;or lavender salt to add flavor. Where to buy:India Tree dye
"Great music is great music, no matter what night it is,"
cause it's the most popular
night for live music. These days, we're getting lots of requests for Fridays and Sundays, which are more affordable." Be wary of groups without representation: "Hiring freelance bands won't
dings, uses India Tree's vege table-based food-dye kit to
(such as H8gM's, $13 each at
shadow play
always lead to trouble, but
poster that is blooming with
you have more guarantees when you use a booking agency, which will have every backup plan imaginable," Marshall says. "Simply signing a contract with the band directly isn't foolproof. They can put anything down on paper, but if the drummer doesn't show on the day of, you're out of luck, whereas an agency can just send over another musician." Read the contract carefully: "It's not uncommon for bands to charge for learning new songs or for not taking breaks," Marshall says. "And a destination wedding will always be more expensive; besides the extra costs for flights,
beauty — and a great place For a fun, romantic save- ors in a variety of lights and by graffiti artists everywhere for loved ones to jot down well the-date card, try this updated situations. Keep all of your (hey, they would know!). But wishes. take on traditional silhouettes. precious pieces together in a it can also transform humble To plant it at your party, Pose with your fiance a few pretty binder with labeled tabs download the clip art (avail- feet in front of a large wa!I, hold- and pockets that hold business able in three sizes online at ing a banner with your wed- cards, Pantone chips, fabric marthastewartweddings.com/ ding date. (Make the banner swatches and images you've flower-poster) and print it on using the dip art template avail- printed. Decades later, you'll
ca n d lesticks:
It also lets you test col-
shades offered — is beloved
I
I '
I
686 NW YorkDrive, Sie.150 Bend,OR!541-306-3263
The Bulletin
matte paper at home or at a
able online at marthastewart
love to look through it — and
print shop. Place the print- weddings.com/banner-numout in a frame with the glass removed and provide a pen is g for partygoers to write in the white spaces — ask a pal to
maybe you'll even share it
ZfPZ <A<
sign first so the other attend-
ees get the idea. Where to buy: "Gallery" frame in Gold Leaf, 16-by-20inch: $54, westelm.com.
Party gifts: charitable giving We get it: A gift card isn't the
might tack on a charge for traveling the night before,
splashiest of presents. But we promise that your bridal party will be touched when you hand out one by GlobalGiving,
since that could mean the
which lets giftees donate to a
loss of a gig for them."
philanthropic project of their
hotel, and rentals, bands
vessels a n d
choice from among thousands www.hm.com) and send them jamaligarden.com. around the world. (It's also a Planningsmarts:bookingit to Any Body's Custom Design • Hurricanes: $19 and up, great favor alternative.) When it comes to showing Embroidery for monogram- westelm.com. Brighten the recipients' day your color palette and inspi- ming (from $5, www.abcde • Apples and pears: www. even further by presenting it ration to vendors, shoe-shop- -embroidery.com). They're fit- barnardltd.com. kit: $22, surlatable.com. in the editable clip art card ping bridesmaids and comput- ting for both formal and laid— Julie Vadnai, holder available online at er-challenged relatives, hav- back celebrations. Martha Stewart Living Guest book: signature style marthastewartweddings.com/ ing physical examples of the We a r r anged f l owers card-holder. real elements in your wedding Stylists'tool: Montana Gold and stems just so and phois the clearest way to commuThis brand's exhaustive line tographed them to create a Stylish stationery: nicate your message. of spraypaint — more than 200
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MILESTONE G UI
INES
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin(1777 SW Chandler Ave.,Bend)or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Gan QUb Bend Metro Park & Recreation District The Bend Trolley
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Wonders
C3
4 When Capt. George Vancouver's expedition first sighted Mount Hood in 1792, they called it a "very high, snowy mountain." It remains so today, rising 11,245 feet. Its
Continued from C1
Mount Hood W
upper mile of elevation is best
There is no landmark that says "Oregon" to the outside world
seen from historic Timberline Lodge, from which this photo
so much as 11,245-foot Mount Hood. The first sighting of the state's highest peak by Europeans was by Capt. George Vancouver's 1792 expedition, and this "very high, snowy mountain," as it was described, has captured the imagination of travelers ever
was taken. John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
since.
Timberline Lodge, now a renowned national historic landmark, was built high on Mount Hood during the Great Depression. In just 22 months, laborers for the Works Progress Admin-
istration and Civilian Conservation Corps built the remarkable lodge by hand, using stone and timber from the mountain itself, plus other recycled and repurposed materials. Skiing, hiking, mountaineering and other outdoor sports now keep visitors coming year-round. Timberline is one of
YAs seen from Chanticleer Point, the Columbia River
several ski areas, including Mount Hood Meadows — on the
Gorge stretches many miles to
peak's eastern flank — and Skibowl, just outside the hub community of Government Camp. In summer, Skibowl becomes an adventure park with zip-lining, alpine slides and other family
the east. Designated as America's first National Scenic Area in1986, the Gorge is
activities. The old Barlow Road, representing the last leg of the continen-
home to many spectacular
tal crossing for mid-19th-century Oregon Trail pioneers, circles the south side of Mount Hood. Numerous interpretive plaques
nomah Falls, second-highest in
waterfalls, including Multthe United States.
and other historic markers recall the path.
Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
Columbia River Gorge W The first designated National Scenic Area (established in 1986), the Gorge surrounds the Historic Columbia River Highway, built between 1913 and 1922 and stretching 75 miles from
Troutdale to The Dalles east of Portland. The highway is credited with introducing modern tourism to the Pacific Northwest, with campgrounds, roadhouses and lodges catering to tourists. At its wetter western end, the highway weaves past the stunning Chanticleer Point scenic viewpoint and the classic Vista House at Crown Point State Park, 733 feet above the Columbia
River. It also passes numerous spectacular waterfalls, including Multnomah Falls, second-highest falls in the United States, plunging 611 feet in two cataracts.
The eastern end of the Gorge beyond Hood River is much drier, but it is no less scenic. Just west of The Dalles, the highway winds through wildflower-rich Tom McCall Preserve and over
4js»
Rowena Crest, with a descent along a series of graceful switchbacks. And near its east end, on the Washington shore, such enigmatic creations of Quaker leader Sam Hill as a war-memorial replica of Stonehenge and the Maryhill Museum of Art rise on bluffs above the river. Today, tourism takes a different form than it did before World
War II. The Gorge is home to highly regarded wineries and breweries, and prevailing winds on the Columbia River have made the Gorge world-renowned for wind surfing and kite boarding. Continued next page
"The first designated National Scenic Area, the Gorge surrounds the Historic Columbia r
River Highway, built between 1913 and 1922
'r 'a+
and stretching 75 miles from Troutdale to The Dalles. The highway is credited with introducing modern tourism to the Pacific Northwest."
"I am very happy
Travel Q&A: Scotland, London, Greece • I'm headed to London • and will be driving to Inverness via Edinburgh. Any suggestions of unique stopping points along the way? I'm especially interested in beautiful churches and ancient
Q
than ever. That same sagging
and a visit to the Paw Paw Tun-
economy means that Greece
nel. Any other suggestions'?
remains a relative steal. You can find inexpensive lodging, delicious cheap food and wonderful local crafts to buy for a song.
spent a week driving A •• Iaround the state for its
cemeteries.
• Newcastle is one possible A • stopping point. Traveling Q along the Ml, you could visit
• I've booked tickets to • London on British Airways. When I went to reserve
Unfortunately, BA and numer-
city park, the Isaiah Morgan Distillery in Summersville, the Museum o f
still come down to the docks to nab renters fortheirrooms, but
SOLUTION To TODAV'SLAT CROSSWORD
P A W A T C L A S P S P I T
A P D U I N O C S H A L M I I N G E O S A O R T A P A R E
B L U E C O L L A R
E E K Y A OW E L D S L S I P E I N L S T S K A R T A Y M R E R
A R S E N A L I N R
E S A G S
E B B
C H E O U N D W E A R S M A R L O G I G E R P E A A R D A S E S L 0 W T A P A S 0 N 0 F T R E A P O R T A R T U C E R S E T O U R E A H A N G S A D E R L I N I 0 N E T
whether it's a crowded flight
and the general attitude of the flight attendants. I know that
wedding gowns are often given extra-special attention, but I'm not positive that same attention
I have a couple of friends that went theinexpensive routefrom other companies and they have had nothing but trouble with them. Anotherfriend told me about Beltone Hearing Centerin Bend, I stopped byfor a free hearing test and consultation. I ended up with hearing aids that I am very happy with. They weren't very expensive, you canhardly see them, and Ican hear sounds that Ihaven't heardin years. I highly recommend checking out Beltoneif you have hearing problems. You will be amazed at the digerence hearing aids will make." — George S., La Pine, OR
to West Virginia. So far on our
I'd imagine that given the state list is hike/tube/kayak in Harpof the Greek economy, they ers Ferry, dinner in Shepherdhave more incentive to do that stown, spa at Berkeley Springs
G A P S
I was reluctant to try hearing aids because
A m e r ican
would be given to gowns for • My husband and I are wedding attendees. • planning a weeklong trip — The Washington Post
• from island to island. I don't know whether the locals
music and shooting guns without ear
from that trip: Pickin' in the Park jam session in the Elkins
Q
island and found a room with ous other airlines are making the local renters standing at the m oney from thesefees, and pier. Is that still feasible, and enough people are willing to what are costs like today7 pay toavoid a dreaded middle • You can still take ferries seat or one next to kids.
it",","'I)''j~„' !'! IIttr,',,f <
Some of my favorite activities
Q•
pier to book a boat to the next
rtl e t r
150th birthday and had a blast.
York and its splendid Minster, seats, BAgave me the option of Glass in Weston and the Hatas well as other great church- paying $45 for an early reser- field-McCoy Trails for hiking es. South of Leeds, you could vation. There'd be no charge if or ATV-riding. followthe Al and stop in Peter- I reserved 24 hours before de• I'll be flying to California borough to visit Peterborough parture. I find this outrageous. • You're right — the seat Cathedral, a magnificent Nor• in June for my son's wedman church and the final rest• assignment fee is out- ding, carrying a long gown. In ing place of Henry VIII's first rageous. BA is charging it thepast, onewouldcarry onthe wife, Katherine of Aragon. because it can and people are gown and ask the attendant to willing to pay it. The only way hangitup. Is this stillpossible? Is this summer a good it will go away is if the govern• I don't believe there are • time to go Greek Island ment (British or American) • set airline policies on this, hopping? Many years ago we says the airline can't charge it, and even if there are, it's going always just went down to the or if passengers stop paying it. to depend on the plane type,
A
with my Beltone Hearing Aids. I have
C O P Y C A T S
I S A K
G A G A
U S T A
L T Y R
S T H E
P O S A D I T S A S P O T I N O N P A P S T 0 A S
A R S K A T E T U R Y T A C I T M 0 L I A K E L E M A C A D R O O Y E A R I S I A N T R F I B A L A R B V E I P A N E R T I L I D T A S
cRosswoRD Is ONc6
M O N E Y T R A I L
O N E B
G Y R O
0 P I N E
R I L E D
T R A V E L O G U E
M A D E A S C E N E
E N S 0 R T R E K
4/1 3/14
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU
3 8 9 7 1 5 2 4 6
76 24 15 83 69 42 91 37 58
4 3 6 5 7 9 8 1 2
2 5 7 1 4 8 3 6 9
1 9 8 2 3 6 4 5 7
5 1 4 9 8 7 6 2 3
9867 23 46 1 52 3 13 75 j 89 14 !
e
and
Hearing Screenin
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SUDOKU IS ON C6
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
ZQ5LXKX Answer:
F USION G ENDER
G A S KET INDUC T
DI G E S T INCOME
=:==
t one
Helping the World Hear Better. 541-389-9690 • 141 SE 3rd St. • Bend
(Corner of 3rd &, Davis)
Michael & Demse Underwood
He won the Masters golf
tournament thanks to a-
STROKE OF GENIUS jUMBLE IS ON C6
•
•
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C4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
From previous page
Oregon Coast W The 363-mile-long coastline — from Astoria, at the mouth of
the Columbia River, south to Brookings, hard by the redwood forests of the California border country — is followed along its
entire course by U.S. Highway 101. En route, this national scenic byway follows long, rocky beaches and clings to seaside cliffs, overlooks picturesque lighthouses and derelict shipwrecks, passes miles of wind-sculpted sand dunesand more than 50 state parks and recreation areas, and visits dozens of charming communities — some of them
tourist towns, others with bustling fishing harbors. From the Columbia's mouth, where explorers Lewis and Clark spent the winter of 1805-06 at Fort Clatsop, the highway visits the
old-time resort town of Seaside, the arts community of Cannon Beach and the surfing center of Pacific City. Beyond Lincoln City, amid rugged headlands, is the whale-watching capital of Depoe Bay. Newport is famed for its bustling harbor and the Oregon Coast Aquarium. Near Yachats, Sea Lion Caves protect a remarkable grotto whose scores of denizens maintain a constant roar.
R=
The Oregon Dunes National Recreation Area, 50 miles long, extends from Florence to Coos Bay, the largest coastal harbor between Puget Sound and San Francisco Bay. Coastal scenery
.8' "g-
remains dramatic around the Bandon Dunes golf resort, the Cape Blanco lighthouse and Gold Beach, which sends jet boats up the wild and scenic Rogue River.
45
r
John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
A The sea stacks lining the Pacific Coast at Cannon Beach add to the stunning view of the Oregon Coast from Ecola State Park. The 363-mile coastline, from the mouth of the Columbia River to the California border, is followed along in full course by U.S. Highway101. 4 The vividly striped bands of color in the Painted Hills, one
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
parcel of John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, are the legacy of 33 million-year-old lakebed sediments and fossilized soils. The
• • Classzfieds
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appearanceofthe colorschanges ascloudscome and go.
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Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
A Painted Hills
Y Smith Rock
Within the John Day Fossil Beds National Monument, layers
Central Oregon's "wonder" is Smith Rock, north of Redmond.
of lakebed sediments and fossilized soils have left an artist's palette 33 million years old. In the Painted Hills, vividly striped
Embraced by Smith Rock State Park, it boasts sheer cliffs of tuff and basalt that rise hundreds of feet directly above the Crooked
hummocks, bands ofburnt-orange and ocher-yellow, olive-green and rust-red, lay a unique veneer upon the arid landscape. There are four short trails here. The Painted Hills Overlook Trail gives the best overall view of this vibrant landscape, its appearance changing as clouds come and go. The striations of paleosols, or fossil soils, layered between sediments left by ancient lakebeds, have created a colorful and mineral-rich canvas.
River, earning it acclaim as the "birthplace" of modern American sport climbing. Rock climbers of all ability levels, including many experts from foreign countries, gather at Smith Rock to test its cutting-edge routes. First-time visitors might be forgiven for thinking they've been transported to the canyonlands of southern Utah: The view from the parking area is reminiscent of the red-rock gorges of Zion
Twenty-nine different minerals have contributed to the hues of
National Park, with precipices towering above the quietly mean-
these barren clay hills. Not far away, the Painted Cove Trail winds through red and gold clay-stone hills on an elevated walkway; from this angle, they appeared as giant mounds of colored popcorn. The Painted Hills are just one of three parcels within the John
dering river. And nonclimbers may behold a similar panorama as they ascend the Misery Ridge Trail and wind around Monkey
I I
Face, an unmistakable sentinel above the High Desert.
Smith Rock has served as a film location for several notable features, including "Rooster Cogburn" (1975), with John Wayne Day Fossil Beds National Monument. The Sheep Rock Unit con- and Katharine Hepburn; "Even Cowgirls Get the Blues" (1994), tains several outstanding fossil quarries at the Thomas Condon with Uma Thurman; "The Postman" (1997), with Kevin Costner; Paleontology Center. The Clarno Unit preserves subtropical and "Swordfish" (2001), with John Travolta. plant fossils from more than 40 million years ago, including a diContinued next page versity of fossil wood unmatched on Earth. 4 The Crooked River winds beneath the towering basalt cliffs of Smith Rock State Park
I Ir
near Terrebonne. Internationally famed as a mecca for rock
Qagll Il II
climbers, Smith Rock is widely
$3 FREESLOT
recognized as the "birthplace" of modern American sport climbing.
PLAY COUPON Cou on Ex ires Ma 31, 2014
LEAIIETHf Dafvfks Tetfs!
Barb Gonzalez/ For The Bulletin
Call for reservations, location 0 times 541.703.7529 ext. 200 Valid forBend,LaPine&Redmond guestsonly: LocalOneCouponper personper visit.
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Crooked River, earning it acclaim as the 'birthplace' of modern American sport climbing. Rock climbers of all ability levels, including many experts from foreign countries, gather
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C5
From previous page
Y The Wallowas In so many ways, Wallowa County is the proverbial end of the road. All alone in Oregon's isolated northeastern corner, its lofty peaks surround a spectacular glacial lake, a nationally acclaimed community of bronze sculptors in Joseph and beautiful ranchland that spreads to the rugged chasm of Hells Canyon. The summer tourist season is short, and even at the peak of
that season, velvet-antlered mule deer sidestep small tents to graze in the state park's campground. Meanwhile, the region's No. 1 man-made tourist attraction, the Wallowa Lake Tramway
to the top of Mount Howard, is lucky to fill every third cab. Above deep-blue Wallowa Lake, nestled in the cradle of moraines, foot and horseback trails climb into the Eagle Cap Wil-
derness, long ago nicknamed"America's Alps." Wallowa regional history has deep roots in the Nez Perce tribal culture. These people knew their homeland as "the land of
wanderingwaters."When American settlersbegan occupying their lands, father-and-son Chiefs Joseph led a resistance that remains one of the moist poignant episodes of Western history.
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Barb Gonzalez / For The Bulletin
Crater Lake A
A Crater Lake was formed about 7,700 years ago by the collapse of the Mount Mazama volcano. Travelers on the 33-mile drive that
The deepest lake in North America at 1,943 feet, and the sev- circles the lake get many views of Wizard Island, to the left in this enth-deepest on the planet, Crater Lake was formed about 7,700 picture. yearsago when Mount Mazama, then a peak of about 12,000 feet, violently erupted and collapsed into itself.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
Ash — more than 150 times as much as spewed from Mount
St. Helens in 1980 — scattered over eight Western states and three Canadian provinces. Later volcanism formed Wizard Is-
John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
A Rider Nora Hawkins pauses for a viewdown the Lostine Valley in the Eagle CapWilderness at the summit of Northeast Oregon's
land, the lake's most unmistakable feature, and other features.
Find YOur Dream HOme
The huge, bowl-shaped caldera cooled as activity subsided, and starting around 5,000 years ago, it began to fill with water from springs, rain and snowmelt. Today, evaporation and seepage balance the incoming flow. Visitors to the national park, established in 1902, travel by
in Real EState
www.AgateBeadtwotel.oom h ivate, vintage geeanlr , oatgeIaway
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vehicle around the 33-mile Rim Drive to view this spectacular,
Wallowa Range. Nicknamed "America's Alps," the Wallowas cradle a deep-blue glacial lake and hundreds of miles of trails.
cobalt-blue lake. The more adventuresome may descend a steep trail to a boat dock, from which tour boats ply routes on the lake's
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ter Lake Lodge, a historic showpiece of the park, looks like atiny lookout from this perspective.
surface. On all sides, cliffs rise 1,000 feet or higher. The 1915 Cra-
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A Rafters prepare to float the Snake River through Hells Canyon.
At 7,913 feet, the canyoncanclaim to be the deepest river gorge in
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Hell s Canyon A
The Oregon Caves, south of Grants Pass, are Hells Canyon, through which the Snake Rivformed of calcite that was deposited by sea wa- er flows along the border of Oregon and Idaho, ter 250 million years ago. Buried far beneath makes claim to being the deepest river-carved overlying rock, the calcite metamorphosed into gorge in North America. At 7,913 feet (from marble, a feature of only about 5 percent of the the summit of Idaho's Seven Devils Mountain, world's caves. Water filtering from the surface 9,393 feet, to the canyon floor at Granite Creek, over the past 2.5 million years created a car- 1,480 feet), it's half again deeper than Arizona's bonic acid that continues to seep through the Grand Canyon. rock, dissolving it and creating formations on Though not as colorful or as spectacular as the ceiling of the cave — stalactites, draperies the Grand from a geological standpoint, it is and flowstone. a national recreation area of huge appeal to It is not only rock that lives within the cave system. Federally preserved as a site of "un-
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whitewater rafters and jet-boat enthusiasts, while backpackers, hunters and fishermen love
usual scientific interest," the Oregon Caves are the chasm as well. home to 120 distinct, endemic species, more On both sides of the northbound Snake, bathan any other cave west of the Mississippi Riv-
salt cliffs rise in steps above the river. Here
er. Most of them are spiders, insects and eight and there are gravel bars and alluvial streams, different types of bats. where Nez Perce once wintered and pioneer
APRIE 10 - 18
Ranger-led cave tours descend to 220 feetbe- homesteadersbuiltremote cabins and orchards.
low the Earth's surface. They travel two-thirds As recently as 1975, when the Hells Canyon Naof a mile, featuring 526 steep steps and some
tional Recreation Area was established, sheep
passageways with ceilings only 3'/z feet high. grazed the sparsely vegetated terrain. The preservewas established as Oregon's Isolated overlooks of the canyon may be first national monument in 1909. Its 1934 chateau, a quaint 23-room hotel, is a national his-
found off backcountry roads in national forests on both sides of the river. Sportsmen, howev-
toric landmark.
er,may be isolated fordaysata tim e,asaccess
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roads into the canyon are few and far between. — Reporter: janderson@bendbulletinfcom
OntheWeh
More information with Travel Oregon in Portland; call 800-547-7842 or visitwww.traveleregon.cem 0
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* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
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DAILY BRIDGECLUB
Sunday, April 13, 2014
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency cO
"I've decided my bridge would benefit if I took up yoga," Unlucky Louie told us in the club lounge. "It would help my concentration." " The next time you're at t h e dentist," Cy the Cynic advised, "tell him you don't want any painkiller. You c an tran scend de n t al medication." "Go ahead and make your jokes," Louie growled, "but meditating is better than just sitling around doing nothing." Louie was today's East. When West led the jack of clubs against four spades, Louie took his ace and concentrated fiercely, but he finally decided that his best defense was to do nothing: He would sit back and wait for two heart tricks. So Louie led a diamond. South won and started the trumps, and Louie took his ace and exited with a trump. Declarer drew trumps, cashed the queen of clubs, led a diamond todummy and discarded a heart on the king of clubs. He lost one heart but made his game. In many deals, a "passive" defense is best: When you must lead, you try for safety, You don't lead something that will give declarer a trick that isn't his anyway. This was not such a deal. Louie can count f iv e t r um p t r i cks, t h ree diamonds and two clubs for South. The defenders must win four tricks
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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
her final tweet to the airline that day, either the vodka had
that shortens URLs. "United failed online checkin exCDG tomorrow, knows
commandeered the keyboard or the fruitful exchange had cheered her mood. "Shout out to cust service
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©2014 TribuneContentAgency,LLC.
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I) Get me to San Antonio
twitter united!" she typed. "Still on my crazy journey but you pulled thru for me!" Cadotte had relied on Twitter to communicate with the situation. Through f requent
messages, United's social media team could track her case and, when her disabled plane returnedto the gate,arrange a new reservation. Even better:She could take the express
rebooked with the gate attendant," she said, when I contacted her post-trip. "The United
instead of direct to gate ¹fail, n
support. "Best of luck to you, Kevin. I
Answers, easy andhard
Paul Cadario, a top-tier fre-
Scan United's 7witter feed
quent flier, wrote from Paris
and you'll notice that many
about the carrier's website de- queries are easy to answer. nying him a boarding pass. They roll off the representa"We regret the i n conve- tives' fingers. " Complimentary admi t nience,n KP replied. "Please see this page for full details for tance to our club is not offered online check-in." fordisservice,"MN responded Cadario tossed out three to a passenger who requested more tweets that m orning, a lounge pass as solace for his clearly u nhappy: "united luggage troubles. should not have robots like KP Petrella enjoys the challengresponding to tweeted com- ing dilemmas, the "irregular plaints." He returned the fol- operations" that require a nimlowing day with an epilogue: ble hand to rearrange the puz"United checkin at CDG didn't zle of travel. When all segments even lookat document your areworking in tandem, though, website demanded and then she'll devote her energies to less wouldn't let me checkin online intricate questions about miss¹sloppy¹majorfail.n ing mileage credits, securing No one on United's side wheelchairs, ordering special responded. meals and bringing a minia"If I'm annoyed, I'll say what ture horse aboard (allowed if I'm displeased with," Cadario it's a service animal). In several told me a few days after his cases, she'llprovidethe answer, R
app crashed, and people were on their phones talking to return to Washington. But United. Twitter was definitely sometimes there's a misunthe way to go." derstanding about what you're Airlines "are using social complaining about." media like they are using the The airline originally used phone, for one-to-one issue
travelera note of been-there
perfectly well who I am. I re- was in that same boat earlier." sent cursory docks glance
the form of media as a market-
resolution," said Ragy Thom- ing arm with a giant squid's as, chief executive of Sprin- reach. About two years ago, it klr, a social media technology expanded into customer serprovider. "It's unrivaled in its vice, with live reps addressing efficiency." operational issues from 6 a.m. Over the past few years, to midnight (an off-site support most major and minor carriers staff monitors the messages have established a presence on in the wee hours). On averTwitter and Facebook, in addi- age, the team receives 25,000 tion to YouTube and Instagram. comments or queries a week.
plus a link to the information. The tweeting travelers "are
happy when they can get instant results," she said. "Eighty percent of the time we can re-
solve it here." A moderator assigns each
employee cases, and a single rep typically stays with the customer until the issue is re-
solvedor the rep's shiftends. When I joined Petrella, she was in the middle of helping @AIIWrlteNannyLA, who was stranded in Denver en route to
January's snowstorms, the number doubles.
Los Angeles. "united is officially thee worst, most disappointing airline. I've had better flying ex-
a year or two later. Delta unveiled DeltaAssist in 2006.
Cadotte's case is a shining
periences with ¹Spirit, n read
Blue spoke to affected and frus-
lost WiFi, she sent an alert to
United and KLM started dabbling in the alternative medium
in 2009 before fully committing
When a wintry mix hits, like
example of social media work- the passenger's initial tweet. Two events cemented the ing for you. After a delay at KP responded, "We don't union between airlines and the Pittsburgh gate, her plane like hearing this. If there is social media. During the me- finally took off. Minutes later, something we can assist you ga-snowstorm of F ebruary Cadotte sensed that the plane with, please DM the details." 2007, the chief executive of Jet- was still limping. Before she Petrella found two flights to the final destination. Butbefore
trated passengers via YouTube. United about her predicament: Three years later, the Icelandic She was never going to make volcano erupted, creating hav- her connection to San Diego. oc over Europe's skies. OverShe was right. For 90 minwhelmed with calls and que- utes, the aircraft flew in cirries, KLM turned to Facebook cles, dumping fuel for an and Twitter to reach more eyes. emergency landing. Back at
she could take the next step, @
Today, the Dutch carrier em-
and selectedseats for a passen-
the airport,she discovered a
Biggest impact: immediacy F or t h e ai r l i nes, s u ch shrinking-world i n novations as Twitter and Facebook move
A11WriteNannyLA
s l ammed
the door and locked her out: She had aunfollowedn United.
While @AllwriteNannyLA bubbledonthebackburner, Petrella booked an awards ticket ger in Bangkok and thanked a flier for sharing his enjoyment of Channel 9 (the cockpit chatter station) during his flight. To one user, who wondered why a flight search yielded a higher price on United than on Kayak,shegave abriefeconomics lesson. And when a passenger swooned over hearing the song "Reunited" on her way to the United gate, we all climbed aboard that sweet Peaches and
like jackrabbits. The response time is short, and the exchangeasier way. And, more impor- es are pithy and direct; the tantly, social media has provid- 140-character limit requires a ed customers with a magnified poet's finesse. KLM, for one, voice that can have a huge im- displays the reply time on its Herb cloud. elers in transit to get in touch with their airline in a much
7witter page and updates it
" It's nice when t hey a c-
every five minutes (on a Fri-
knowledge you and share their
day afternoon, the wait was
positive experience," Petrella R said. I'm just happy with a thank you.n Petrella never heard back from NiAIIWriteNannyLA, but
36 minutes). United aims for through he r sm a rtphone a holler-back time of 15 to 30 screen, she would have fallen minutes, although it often outinto the lap of Karen Petrella. performs its own goals. "The immediacy is the most KP, her sobriquet, was Cadotte's fairy GM. Her initials, along significant change," said Rick If Cadotte could have dimbed
f fo
MCT file photo
monitor, she toggled between (stuck in Denver due to delay). "Fingers crossed I make my the reservations system, the 2) Provide a reasonable place connection in Denver!" carrier's main website, United to sleep. 3) Make sure my lugAfter a short intermission, Hub (tagline: "your source for gage arrives," @kevinsjuts Cadotte was back, indulging United Airlines artides, videos wrote to United. in a burger and a Bloody Mary and news"), the airline's FaceNA11WriteNannyLA joined in the Pittsburgh airport. In book page and an online site the conversation, sending the
From phoneto keyboard
103
109
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conversations. On the left-hand
pact on an airline's reputation."
99
106 107 108
f22
95
ff
a.m. and ended at 2:30 p.m.
minent when Cadotte reported the arrival of a mechanic.
front-runner in the adoption of social media," said Raymond Kollau, founder of A irlinetrends.com, "as it allows trav-
64 65
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can disseminate their message She casually dropped that more widely while also creatThe drama starring Mary- she had already handled 200 ing a community where they beth Cadotte and United un- to 300 Facebook and Twitter can forge a more personal confolded like a serial e-novel. messages; I was embarrassed nection with the traveler. Many The Pittsburgh traveler, to share with her my accom- thousands of eyeballs (1.64 miltrapped on a plane beset with plishments (put on shoes, rode lion followers for Southwest, mechanicalproblems, opened the elevator). 874,000 for KLM, 788,000 on R the scene with the first lines of I can handle three issues at American) can, for example, sitweetologue. once," said the former United m ultaneously seefare sale pro"Stuck on the plane in Pitts- phone reservations agent. "Be- motions, newsy bits on upgradburgh. Let's get it together fore, I could be stuck on one ed ~ ser vi c es, weather united," she wrote to the car- call for four hours and maybe alerts and flight changes. Those rier's Twitter account March help 80 people a day.n same peepers can also read 21. "Let's fix the planes before At her workstation, Petrella all about the plight of individu load them with people! We faced two computer screens ual travelers who've lost bags, needflapstofly n arranged like an open book. m issedconnections or fretted United, humble and contrite, On the machine to the right, over an ailing parent (e.g., a replied with an apology for the she could see the 7witter page, mom who suffered a panic atdelay, adding optimistically: with one column headed As- tack on a KLM flight). And if "We hope to have you on signed to M e a n d a n other you feel isolated by your travel your way soon." called 7witter Mentions, which woes, embrace the crowd and A happyending seemed im- showed the threads of ongoing soak up its virtual empathy.
"The airline industry is a
59
s
In
The Washington Post
ploys 135 social media agents surprise from United: A new who are available 24 hours a itinerary was sitting in her day and fluent in 10 languages. 7witter account.
46 49
By Andrea Sachs
route to the bar, bypassing the long line of passengers waiting to rebook and avoiding the overburdened call service and the squirrelly airline app. "There were 200 people from my plane trying to be
Opening lead — 4 J
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service just seems to be better this way.
carrier — a savvy decision, especially considering her
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ly landed in Los Angeles, actality expert at J.D. Power, a cording to her tweet. Her suitWhen I met Petrella on a global marketing information case, however, had not. R mid-March morning, she was services company. WNip it in You may trace your bag more than halfway through the bud, that's the idea." here," tweeted EY, who includher day, which started at 6 With these tools, the airlines ed the link to lost luggage. with 11 other sets, are sprinkled
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Garlick, a travel and hospi-
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Book Continued from C1 The book, which sells for $14, is also available in paperback
Devolution of Wikipedia: A 1,000-volumeseries?
IIIp .I
at Amazon.com, Barnes 8t: No-
ble, his wife Linda McGeary's Greenwood Avenue used-book
C7
New I ttrwtta
r
By Hector Tobar
I
Los Angeles Times
"We all know that
Wikipedia is huge. The English version alone consists of
autograph." Published by Books of
For some people, Wikipedia is the answer to everything. The always-growing, crowd-sourced encyclopedia is a source of knowledge and trivia used by undergraduates,assorted professional writers and people trying
the Dead Press, "Led to the
to settle dinner-table argu-
shop, The Bookmark, or as an
e-book. The Kindle edition is priced at $3.99. When a nother
Q'y
' t'
c u stomer
comes in expressing interest in the book, he tells her, "Buy it today and it's $12, with an
Slaughter" is a historical horror novel that retells the Don-
ments about television shows and vaguely remembered
of
De
ner Party tragedy, with werewolves committing carnivo-
news events.
Now a German-basedpub-
rous misdeeds. McGeary's turnaround in
lisher, PediaPress, wants to take that virtual encyclope-
writing productivity almost
dia and put all of its articles into print — in one massive,
sounds like the stuff of fiction. I n th e e a rl y 1 9 80s, h e
1,000-volume set of hardcov-
penned three fantasy novels,
Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin file photo
"Star Axe," "Ice Tower" and
AuthorDuncan McGeary, pictured in his downtown Bend bookshop, Pegasus Books, lastyear,has
"Snowcastles."
a few books comingout this year. "It's great," McGeary said of publishing again. "The first time
But then he went on a de-
cadeslong publishing hiatus, concentrating his energy on growing his business. He and wife Linda raised their family, and he ran the store himself. For one seven-year stretch, he worked seven days a week, taking off only Thanksgiving and Christmas. McGeary didn't stop writ-
ing altogether. He remained
workload.
"I've got a good crew working for me. I feel like I can leave," he said. Without them,
"I couldn't write. There's no
you imagine how large Wikipedia really is? We think that the best way to
experience (that) is by transforming it into the physical medium of books." — PediaPress, which wants to print the
online encyclopedia — all of it
than 4 million articles," the way I could write."
McGeary has greatly reduced his days in the shop. "If I can string three, four or
five days together, and I know I have (those days), it's just a lot more conducive" to writing,
he said. What made him start writ-
ing novels again? "I just decided to do it," he standing critique group that replied. "Plus, I'm in some sort meets in Bend. of weird groove, which isn't "It was nice to keep my hand normal. I certainly didn't have in by being part of the writers' that back in the ('80s). I really group all those years. It kept struggled back then." me into the idea of writing," he Now, the words seem to said. "I'd get three chapters in gush out. "I think I just had a (a story), like everybody else." whole lot of pent-up creative He's also been writing dai- energy," he said. ly on his blog, Best Minimum A sequel to " Led t o t h e Wage Job a Middle Aged Guy Slaughter" is in the works, Ever Had, which he began in and McGearyhas anumber of 2006. otherprojects at or near comIn 2011, McGeary found his pletion. He's cagey about the fine running shape and a staff helping shoulder some of the
"We all know that Wikipe-
dia is huge. The English version alone consists of more
through, it was a life-changer. I'm not sure this is a life-changer, but obviously it's great."
active in the Farewell Bend Writers Roundtable, a long-
debts paid down, the store in
er books of 1,200 pages each.
more than 4 million articles. But can
total. "I don't even want to say," he satd. More than 10?
"Maybe," he said.
he also sold the company his Vampire Evolution Trilogy. All three publish May 1. Through April30, eache-bookinthetrilogy is available for 99 cents at
McGeary said. "It's great," McGeary said of publishing again. "The first time through, it was a
smashwords.com, barnesand
is a life-changer, but obviously it's great. The first time, was
noble.com and iibnes. "This is actually a
life-changer. I'm not sure this
j ust out o f
the
blue for me."
distraction, f r ank-
This time, "I had ... an endor-
ly,"McGeary said. He was referring to publishing, not to the shop — he plans to rent the
I,k . .
phi n f l ow for a few weeks," he added, laughing. " But it's the r e-
space t ha t the Minnesota Avenue
ality of then you
store occupies for
have to do the next
at least another
book, and the next
five years — but
book. What I find really fun i s t h at
rather to the publ ication of " L e d
to the Slaughter" and doing publicity. "(Getting) the whole thing published is a distraction from the writing," said McGeary. "You got t hat
e ndorphin
rush going on?" a customer asked.
"Well, yeah. It's really hard At the time Books of the to get your head back in the Dead Press accepted "Led to (next) book. So I'm trying rethe Slaughter" for publication, ally hard to go, 'That's done,'"
I have all these books lined up, and you can get asense ofw hether they're all going to get done or not, and I have a sense that they're
all going to get done. "So it's really fun. I don't know how it happened, but I'm pursuing it," he said. "I have a new rule. If I start a book, I finish it." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, dj asper®bendbulletin.com
ty of what Wikipedia is gets lost when you try and print it.... Trying to put something like Wikipedia that is constantly evolving into a print ly is? We think that the best form doesn't work for me." way to experience the size of To complete the project, Wikipedia is by transform- PediaPress is trying to raise ing it into the physical medi- $50,000 on Indiegogo. In um of books." seven weeks, it has raised a The single, complete col- quarter of that, about $12,500. lection would then be exhibWikipedia is at once all-enited, first at the Wikimania compassing and notoriously conference in London in unreliable. This writer once August. spotted an entry that had him PediaPress has created born in the wrong country, thousands of books from and professors and college W ikipedia content and i s counselors routinely tell their the official print-on-demand students not to rely on Wikipartner of the Wikimedia pedia entries in their course Foundation. Its printed copy work. Clearly, a $50,000 budof all of Wikipedia would fill get can't cover fact-checking a bookcase that's 32 feet long 4 million articles. and 8 feet high. But backers of the project But not everyone thinks argue such concerns miss it's a good idea. the point. Founded in 2001, Lee Matthew, a blogger for Wikipedia is the work of 20 geek.com, told NPR the proj- million v olunteer contriborganizersofthe projectsay in a pitch for support on the Indiegogo crowd-funding site. "But can you imagine how large Wikipedia real-
ect is both unnecessary and a waste of paper. "I under-
utors. And th e o rganizers
think of their project as a"pestand from an artistic stand- riod piece," an artifact that's point what they are trying meant to commemorate an to show," Matthew said. "I especially fertile moment in think, though, that the beau- the history of ideas.
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
o e s a owsan ono escreen • Once taboo, or at leastdifficult to portray, rapeis apopular plotline in today's TV.Why? TV SPOTLIGHT
dricks), the savvy, competent head of the secretarial pool, is raped by her fiance, Greg (Sam Page), in the second season of the show. "Pretend I'm
olence or are unacceptably oblivious to the female char-
By Alyssa Rosenberg The Washington Post
It happened on her wedding night. On an ordinary afternoon at home. On her way
back from an errand. On the floor of her boss' office, in the gym where she was training for an assignment, in the parking garage where she left her car after work. The man who
raped her was her husband. Her father-in-law. Her college sweetheart. Her name is Cer-
sei Lannister. Claire Underwood. Skyler White. Gemma Teller Morrow. Jennifer Melfi.
Joan Holloway. Elizabeth Jennings. Mellie Grant. Almost every buzzworthy
drama now on television features a female main character who has been raped. The
frequency of the plotline has been criticized as lazy, "ma-
nipulative and damaging." And it is in cases like "Downton Abbey," which introduced
a rape storyline as just another cheap waytoraise the stakes after a wrongful imprisonment, a jilted bride, and deaths inflicted by Spanish flu, childbirth and a car crash. But shows such as "Game of Thrones," "Mad Men" and "The Americans" have made
rape survivors' experiences and perspectives central to their storytelling and worldviews. The same shows that have been alternately praised
acters' experiences. And no your boss," he tells her. That one gets rescued; no one gets command allows him to avoid a day in court. The drama is thinking of himself as a rapist. less about the process of kill- But his words also highlight ing, jailing or confronting a that her co-workers' behavior rapist, and more about how is on a continuum with rape. these women's lives have been The advertising executives inflected by their rapes, often pull up secretaries' skirts to years into the future. look at their panties, even On "Game of Thrones," force themselves on female HBO's epic fantasy series,one clients. of the most prominent characJoan is a kind of forerunner ters is Cersei Lannister, queen to women who do not report Nefflix/The Associated Press of Westeros. She begins the theirrapes today.She marries Robin Wright stars in "House of Cards" as Claire Underwood, left, series as a villainess. But we Greg, rather than prosecuting who thinks she's a canny and detached political operative like her learn that the king she want- him. Fast-forward to the 1980s on-screenhusband, right,played by KevinSpacey.Butanepisode ed so badly to love raped her and the FX Cold War spy this season revolves around rape; Claire's sobbing on the steps of repeatedly during their mar- show "The Americans." The her townhouse is one of the rawest emotional arcs in "Cards." riage, complicating our un- first season could have been derstanding of her behavior. structured as an extended We can viewthe bloody war hunt for KGB spy Elizabeth's and condemned formaking cations scholars Lisa Cuk- of succession that follows her rapist. But the show did someviewers sympathize with diffi- lanz and Sujata Moorti write. husband's death as a kind of thing more unusual, killing cult men have produced some "Women became bit players punishment for the men who him off in the first episode and of the strongest, richest recent in stories that were ostensibly arranged her marriage and focusing instead on the consedepictions of women's diffi- about their violation." Even as left her a prisoner in it. Her quencesof her disclosure for cult choices following sexual subsequent shows incorporat- actions are a revenge fantasy her marriage. assault. ed ideas about sexual assault on a grand scale. "Game of All of t h ese shows have Rape storylines of the past drawn from feminist think- Thrones" strikes a deft bal- viewers who are just in it for focused on defining perpe- ing, Cuklanz and Moorti note, ance: Learning about Cersei's the t r ansgression. W ithout tratorsas monsters and cops it was often men who got to experiences does not exoner- women in the f rame, those as heroes. "In the 1970s and teach those insights to women. ate her of her worst actions, fans might get what they 1980s,detective programs deThe new breed of pres- but it does clarify her moti- want: a version of "Game of Thrones" that is all about the picted rape within a formula- tige drama has upended that vations and her view of the ic frame.Narratives featured convention. These shows are world. battles, a "Mad Men" that is a If "Game of Thrones" is a celebrationof the days before brutal stranger attacks that interested in survivors, who were accompanied by extreme are often among the central dark fantasy set in a w orld sexual harassment laws. violence; victims were ren- characters rather than extras. where women can be raped Those shows might be indered mute and helpless by the The attackers are not abstract with impunity, AMC's "Mad termittently entertaining, but attack; and detectives avenged monsters but respected mem- Men" is often concerned with they would not be nearly as rape by capturing and killing bers of society. The male leads how rape is defined. Joan good and as thoughtful as the the perpetrators," communi- are often complicit in the viHolloway (Christina Hen- series we have instead.
TV TODAY 6 p.m. on NGC, "Inside the Hunt for the BostonBombers"Premiering two days before the first anniversary of the bombings at the Boston Marathon, this two-hour special revisits the events of that week through the experiences of those who lived through it, including members of the Boston Police Department, the FBI, survivors of the attack and those who were caught up in the manhunt. 9 p.m.on56,"Believe"— Tate (Jake McLaughlin) returns to his hometown to track down the old friends who framed him for murder, with Bo, Winter andChanning (Johnny Sequoyah, Delroy Lindo, Jamie Chung) in pursuit. Skouras (Kyle MacLachlan) sees potential
in ayoungtelepath (guest star
Owen Campbell) in the newepisode "Sinking." Kerry Condon and John Finn also guest star.
9p.m.onFOOD,"America'sBest Cook" — TedAllen ("Chopped") is the host of this new cooking competition, in which chefs Cat Cora, Tyler Florence, AlexGuarnaschelli and Michael Symon mentor teams of amateur cooks. The winner gets a $50,000 cash prize, and his or her team leader gets bragging rights. 9 p.m. on MTVandVH1, "2014 MTV MovieAwards" —Conan O'Brien makes his debutas host of this one-of-a-kind awards ceremony, known for honoring perfor-
mances incategories not covered at the Oscars, such asbestfight and best kiss. Mark Wahlberg is being honored with the Generation Award. Adrian Grenier, Cameron Diaz, ShaileneWoodley and Kevin Dillon are scheduled to
appear aspresenters.
10 p.m. onAMC, "MadMen" — The hit drama's seventh and final season — which airs in two
piecesandconcludesnextyear
Bo riend leaving;movewith or move on? Dear Abby:I'm in a tricky situ- to see which is more important to ation. My boyfriend of four years, you: the man or the location. "Ian," and I took a break from our Dear Abby: This "issue" with relationship for two months be- my wife may seem trivial, but it's cause he was scared he'd miss out making me crazy. I like to cook; on the single life. We started hang- she doesn't. When I cook, it's an ing out again soon after, and every- expressionof love, and our famthing fell into place. ily sits together to We were talking enjoy the meal. We don't watch TV and r ecently, an d h e DPPR mentloned that he's we don't answer the planning to m ove ABBY phone. Sounds ideal, across the country to wouldn't you say'? San Francisco to be The problem is, near his family. He made it plain after I put the food on the table, my he wants to live on the West Coast wife gets up and starts pullingother "forever." I am close to my family food from the fridge to microwave. — closer than Ian is to his. Or she'll start making a salad. We're both 24, and while we're These last-minute additions not going to get engaged anytime make me furious. She knows it but soon, I'm not sure what to do. We
won't stop. Either she "doesn't want
paring for dinner and ask if there is anything else she wants included? That may prompt her to think
ahead so she wouldn't have to get up and leave the table. But if the answer to my questions
is yes, then there may be something going on in your relationship for which she's trying to punish you. Dear Abby:My daughter goes to a preschool in a church where we are not members. Pastor "Joe" is
very involved with the classes, often chatting with the parents and calling them by their first names. I have seen him around town various times, but I'm never sure how to address him. I feel strange calling him "Pastor" since he isn't my min-
ister. On the other hand, calling him "Joe" doesn't quite seem right either.
love each other, but geography is causing so many issues.
the leftover to go bad" or she thinks How should a man of the cloth something is "missing" from the ta- be greeted on the street? — New York Girl ble. I say she should prepare these —Feeling Awkward in Dear N.Y. Girl:It's good that you additions while I'm making dinner Jamestown, N.Y. and Ian aren't planning on be- so everything will be on the table Dear Feeling Awkward:I think coming engaged anytime soon, at the same time, or else forget it. you're asking the wrong person. because you have some serious What do you think? Why not ask HIM how he'd like to thinking to do. If you plan on hav- — Steaming fn the Kitchen in Texas be addressed? I remember a delighting a family and want your parents Dear Steaming:Is the layout of ful priest in Chicago, who when to be close to their grandchildren, your kitchen conducive to tandem meeting people would immediately it would be better for you to find cooking? If it's not, that may be say, "Call me John." I used to refer to another boyfriend. I'm advising why your wife goes in there after him as Father Call-Me-John. you and Ian to take another break you're no longer using it. Do you — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com — this time for YOUR benefittell your wife what you will be pre- or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014:This yearyou have wonderful ideas — only, before you can share them, others seem to move on. You might want to allow others to give
Find a reason to celebrate.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
ability to pull the wool over a parent's or personal matter could change as a result. older relative's eyes. Be careful. Tonight: If you are single, this summer could prove Actas if there were no tomorrow. to be very exciting, as you are in a period CANCER (June21-July 22) when you are likely ** * Invite several friends over for an Starsshowthe kind to meet someone early dinner. You could be taken aback by of dayyou'llhave important to your someone's response.Let it go, asnearly ** * * * D ynamic life history. Fall and everyone has been under unusual pres** * * Positive wi n ter will carry sure lately. Be careful when dealing with ** * Average the same theme. If a loved one at a distance. Tonight: Play it ** So-so you are attached, low-key, but enjoy those around you. * Difficult the two of you act like newfound lov- LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * Don't worry about making the ers this summer. LIBRA looks at life very differently from how you do. first move — just do it. Someone you care about can be quite slack when it comes ARIES (March21-April19) to money. Be careful to keep your funds **** Let a loved onetakethelead.You separate if you decide to let this relationmight have asense that a choice seems to be off, but let it be. Theother party needs to ship evolve into something more. Tonight: Invite friends to join you. see what will happen. Youare likely to be in the mood to snoozeandoverindulge a little. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) Tonight: Aclose friend has a great idea. ** * Be more aware of someone else's spending needs as well his or her tendenTAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You could be so easygoing that cy to take risks. In any case, make today you might miss a scheduled get-together. your treat, and invite several friends to A friend could be quite disconcerted when brunch or a movie. You will note a difference in how you feel when you are with you don' tshow up.Makea phonecall your pals. Tonight: Pay bills. quickly, and adjustyour plans. Consider making a caring gesture toward this perLIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) son. Tonight: Go for lazy. ** * * You could be a lot more content than you have been in a while. Try to GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * Your playful spirit might emerge, better understand a friend and figure out which will allow for great fun and interper- what is getting to him or her. Your sensisonal relating. You actually could become tivity will help this person understand his childlike and expressive. You have the or her limits within a relationship. Tonight:
you feedbacksooner. Howyou handle a
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * Slow down. You often jump to conclusi onsbasedonwhatyou would do in the same situation. Remain sensitive to a loved one who adores you. Explain that you need some time to yourself. Tonight: Get a good night's sleep.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may I/e an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject tochangeafter press time. I
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BAD WORDS (R) 7:30, 9:55 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 3:30, 6:25, 9:30, 9:50 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLIDER 3-D (PG-13) I2:15, 6:45 • CAPTAINAMERICA: WINTER SOLDIER IMAX3-D (PG13) 12:30,3:45,7, IO:05 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 12:05, 3:20, 6:30, 9:40 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 1245, 3:50, 715, 955 • GOD'S NOTDEAD(PG) 1:25, 4:25, 7:10, 10 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 12:55, 4:15, 7:05, 9:35 • MR.PEABODY 5 SHERMAN (PG)12:35,3;05,6 • MUPPETSMOSTWANTED(PG) 12: IO,2:55, 6: IO, 9:10 • NOAH(PG-13)12:20, 3:25, 6:50, l0: l0 • OCULUS(R) I:30, 4:30, 7:40, I0: I5 • THE RAID 2(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:40,10 • RI02 (G) 1,3:40, 6:20, 9 • RIO23-D (G)1:15,3:55, 6:35, 9:15 • SABOTAGE (R) 9:05 • SOMETHINGWICKED(R) 1:10, 4:05, 7:20, 9:45 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 11:45a.m., 3 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
a client, Roger(John Slattery) getting a strange phonecall, and Peggy (Elisabeth Moss) being impressed with some new work. Vincent Kartheiser and January Jones also star in "Time Zones." 10 p.m. on SHO, "Years of Living Dangerously" — This new fourpart series uses star power to call attention to climate change, sending actors and journalists around the globe to report on its effects. Participants include Michael C. Hall ("Dexter"), Lesley Stahl ("60 Minutes"), Harrison Ford, Matt Damon,JessicaAlbaandArnold
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SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * Play it low-key with a personal matter. Go off and enjoy your friends, wherever they might be. You could end up at several different events as a result. You could make a big difference and help someone feel comfortable with him- or herself. Tonight: Do whatyou want.
— opens with Don (Jon Hamm) making a newfriend, Joan (Christina Hendricks) having drinks with
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
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CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * A must-show event or family happening could define your day. Remain sensitive to a sibling or close person in your life. Make time for this person, and you might gain a greater sense of levity around him or her. Tonight: Out till the wee hours.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 29-Feb.16) ** * * Make a call to a friend at a distance thatyou have been putting off. Understand what is going on with this person before you decide to visit. You could be surprised by whatyou hear. Decide whether it is wise to get together right now. Tonight: Go hear some live music.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) * *** Maketodayaboutyou anda loved one. This type of togetherness will fuel your bond. Make plans at some point to join a dear friend for munchies. Know that you do not need to make this a big deal. Tonight: You are especially alluring. © King Features Syndicate
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 2:10,4:05,7 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 6:50 • MUPPETSMOST WANTED (PG)1:50,4:20 • NOAH (PG-13)12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • OCULUS(R)12:25, 2:45, 5:05, 7:20 • RI02(G)Noon,5,7:10 • RI023-D (G)1:45 •
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
GOLF' THE MASTERS
CYCLING Horner to remain hospitalized MILAN — Chris
Horner will remain in the hospital until next week at least following a Friday training accident in northern Italy. Horner has been moved to the chest surgery department where he is undergoing drainage on apunctured lung. The 42-year-old Bend residentalso has four broken ribs and cuts on his head. The Lampre team says his morale is improving and hewill remain in the Manzoni hospital in Lecco "until midway through next week at least." Horner is the defending champion of the Spanish Vuelta.
Golf's next bigthing has somekid in him
For champions, the jacket speaksfor itself By Karen Crouse New York Times News Service
club's gates to anyone in search of a connection.
AUGUSTA, Ga. — The
The winner is allowed to
M asters green coatthatcame into vogue in the late 1930s
remove the jacket, one of the most classic prizes in sports,
has become what amounts to
from the Augusta National
the world's most recognizable grounds only during the reversible jacket. Augusta year of his reign. National Golf Club members
wear theirs on the grounds to make themselves visible to tournament patrons seeking
guidance onthe course. And the reigning Masters champion wears it to make himself visible outside the
Gary Player said that after he won the 1961 Masters, he
took the jacket home to South Africa, "hung it up with my honorsblazerfrom other sports at school in a plastic bag," and forgot about it. SeeJacket/D4
— The Associated Press
• Spieth, 20, is tied for the lead at -5 AUGUSTA, Ga. he kid talks to himself
Chris Carlson/The Associated Press
Jordan Spieth is tied with Bubba Watson heading into today's final round of the Masters.
Leaderdeard Jordan Spieth Bubba Watson Jonas Blixt Matt Kuchar
JIM LITKE
-
on the course. And not TJordan Spieth has already
co-leader with Bubba Watson in the final group today, he'll
been tabbed as golf's next big thing, and he did nothing to diminish that prospect Saturday with a second straight 70
do so since Brian Henninger nearly 20 years ago. Yet every so often, Spieth does something that reminds
at the Masters.
you that he's still only 20. SeeSpieth /D4
just a little.
When he goes off as
PREP SOFTBALL
be the first Masters rookie to
DUCKS FOOTBALL
COLLEGE ATHLETICS
States degin union pushdack COLUMBUS,Ohio — State pushback against a movement to unionize college athletes has begun in Ohio, the football-loving heart of a heated anti-labor campaign in 2011and home to one ofAmerica's highest-grossing collegiate athletic programs, the OhioState Buckeyes. A measure approved by the state Houseon Wednesday, two weeks after a federal agency said football players at Northwestern could unionize, clarifies that college athletes are not public employees.The proposal appears to be the first of its kind to clear a state legislative chamber; it heads next to the state Senate. The opposite is happening in Connecticut, where lawmakers are looking at clearing the path for college athletes to unionize. Someobservers, though, think other states are more likely to follow Ohio's lead. Federal labor law is in play at Northwestern because it's private, but states control policy at public universitiesincluding giants such as Ohio State, Florida State, Michigan and Alabama, whoseathletic programs generate millions in annual revenue.
ava ears an e Oun wice 0. a es receivers a in
cac u • Lowe, with 40 career receptions, isnowthe Ducks' most experiencedwideout By Ryan Thorburn The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE — Bralon Addison has not
caught his final pass for Oregon. Is there any chance the junior wide receiver, who tore an ACL during Wednesday's spring practice, could catch passes from Marcus Mariota in 2014?
Offensive coordinator Scott Frost did not rule Addison out for the upcoming season. "I think that will be up to Bralon," Frost
said after Friday's practice. "We'll see what he's thinking, how far he comes along. We're just on his side and whatever happens we'll be right there with him." Even though head coach Mark Helfrich would not "confirm nor deny" that Addison iseven injured,the Ducks began preparing for life without the program's top returning receiver and special-teams threat. "First and foremost as his friend, it's tough to see that. That's an athlete's worst nightPhotos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Bend's Kendall Kramer reaches to tag Hood River Valley's Jessie Karr as she attempts to steal second base during the
first game of a doubleheader Saturday at Bend HighSchool. Karr wascalled out on the play.
— The Associated Press
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS
Rousey, Davis to fight in July LAS VEGAS — UFC
bantamweight champion Ronda Rouseywill return to the octagon against Alexis Davis at UFC175 on July 5. UFC president Dana White announced the matchup in a post on his Twitter account late Friday. Rousey (9-0) is arguably the UFC'sbiggest star, and she is theonly 135-pound women's champion in the mixed martial arts promotion's history. She defendedher title last Decemberand again at UFC170 in late February before taking a break to resumeher acting career. White had discussed matching Rousey against former MMA star Gina Caranonext if she made acomeback with the UFC.
Davis (16-5) is unbeaten in three fights since joining the UFC last year. — The Associated Prass
• Hood River Valley's I(ayla Byersstrikes out 21 overtwo gamesin sweep Bulletin staff report Wade Kinkade called it
"a long day at the ballpark." Kinkade's Bend High softball team can thank Kayla Byers for that. Byers tossed shutouts in
"Kayla is very tough," said Kinkade, whose team had two hits in the first game
The Bears stayed close in the first game behind the pitching of junior Megan
and three in the second
Berrigan, who went the
against the Eagles' senior right-hander. "She's argu-
distance and allowed three
ably the best pitcher in the state."
striking out five and walking none. "All in all, it was a good pitching performance by Megan."said Kinkade. "We just couldn't do anything against their pitcher." See Lava Bears/D4
both games of a doubleheader Saturday, striking out 21 Not so arguable is Hood over two games in leading River Valley's No. 1 ranking Hood River Valley to 4-0 in Class 5A, and they proved and 7-0 Class 5A nonconfer- it by twice taking down a ence victories over the host
Lava Bears.
Bend High team that had won six in a row.
runs on seven hits while
Inside • Summit girls tennis finishes strong at Bend Invitational. Prep roundup,04 • Prep baseball and softball scoreboard,
mare," senior receiver Keanon Lowe said of Addison's knee injury. "That's something we all know, through his injury and through injuries in the past, on any given play on any given day, you could go down. SeeDucks /D4
No experienceneeded Of the 13 wide receivers on theDucks' spring roster, only four other than the injured Bralon Addison caught a pass last season. Y r Rsc Yds T D Keanon Lowe Jr. 1 8 233 3 Chance Allen Fr. 5 98 1 Blake Stanton Jr. 2 11 0 B.J. Kelley So. 1 13 0 Total 26 3 5 5 4
D2
PREP BOYS TENNIS
Storm claimtitle at their own tournament Bulletin staff report This was about as dominant as it gets for Summit. With a 7-1 win over Crescent Val-
tory at No. 2 against Churchill. During the two-day tourney, the Storm defeated their opponents 31-1
en route to a perfect 4-0 mark. ley of Corvallis and an 8-0 victory Also on Saturday, Bend High tied against Churchill of Eugene on Sat- Ridgeview 4-4 but earned the win urday, the Storm boys tennis team with a 10-6 advantage in sets won. claimed top honors at the Summit Sean Hebert had a 6-4, 6-1 victory at Tournament at the Athletic Club of No. 3 singles for the Bears, who finBend. ished 2-1 at the tourney. Carter Quigley highlighted SumMountain View, which posted a mit's domination by dropping just 1-2 tournament record after falling one game in two matches, posting a 7-1 to Marist of Eugene and 5-3 to 6-0, 6-0 win at No. 1 singles against Ashland on Saturday, was led by Crescent Valley and a 6-1, 6-0 vic- Jakob Lenschen. Lenschen won
6-1, 6-2 at No. 2 singles against Marist and later teamed up with Brooks Larraneta for a 6-2, 2-6,
11-9 win at No. 1 doubles against Ashland.
Ridgeview wrapped up the tourney 0-3 with back-to-back losses on Saturday. The Ravens dropped a 7-1 decision to Ashland, during which only the No. 4 doubles team of Braden and Matt Allen posted a win. T.J. Smith and Brett Blun-
dell recorded close three-set wins against Bend in the Nos. 1 and 2
singles matches, respectively.
Associated Press file photo
Keanon Lowe, left, is the most experienced wide receiver that quarterback Marcus Mariota will have this season after the injury to Bralon Addison.
D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY AUTO RACING
Time TV/Radio
IndyCar, Indy Lights, Streets of Long Beach IndyCar, GrandPrix of Long Beach
11:30a.m. NBCSN
1 p.m. NBCSN
BASEBALL
MLB, TampaBayat Cincinnati College, OregonState at Washington State College, Texas atOklahoma MLB, Oakland at Seattle
College Baseball, UCLAat Arizona MLB, Boston at N.Y.Yankees
1 0 a.m. ML B noon 9 4 0-AM 12:30p.m. ESPNU 1 p.m. R O OT 4 p.m. P a c-12 5 p.m. E S PN
BASKETBALL
NBA, OklahomaCity at Indiana NBA, GoldenState at Portland
1 0 a.m. AB C 6 p.m. CSNNW, 1110 AM, 100.1 FM
GOLF
The Masters HOCKEY NHL, Detroitat St. Louis
NHL, Dallas at Phoenix SOCCER EPL, Liverpool vs. Manchester City FA Cup, Hull City vs. Sheffield United EPL, SwanseaCity vs. Chelsea
1 1 a.m.
CB S
9:30 a.m. NBC 6 p.m. NBCSN 5:30 a.m. NBCSN 8a.m. FS1 8 a.m. NBCSN
SOFTBALL
College, Arizona atCalifornia College, Oregon atOregonState
noon 2 p.m.
Pa c -12 P a c-12
3 p.m.
Pac-12
4 p.m. 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
E S PN Roo t E S PN
6 p.m.
FS1
MONDAY SOFTBALL
College, Oregon atOregonState BASEBALL
MLB, Atlanta at Philadelphia MLB, Seattle at Texas MLB, Oakland at Los L.A. Angels BOXING Ronny Rios vs. AndrewCancio
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL OregOn dOWnS UCRiVerSide — Oregonnevertrailed in making it two in a row over UCRiverside on Saturday with a 7-4 win. Ducks starting pitcher Jeff Gold gave upfour runs on nine hits over 61/3 innings but got enough support to earn the victory and run his record to 8-0. Tyler Baumgartner tripled home Oregon's first run in the first inning and scored onMitchell Tolman's single for a 2-0 lead. The Highlanders (14-16j scored a run in thetop of the second, but the Ducks (26-10) answered with a three-run rally fueled by two UCR throwing errors and highlighted by AaronPayne's two-run double.
BeaverS even SerieS with WSU — GabeClark hadfour hits and drove in four runs Saturday to leadOregon State to a12-5 Pac-12 win over Washington State in Pullman,Wash.The Beavers, silenced on four hits in a 4-1 loss to theCougars in the series opener Friday night, pounded out16 hits against five Cougars pitchers. Other offensive standouts for OregonState (10-4 Pac-12, 26-7 overall) included Michael Conforto (three hits, four runs), Dylan Davis (two hits, two runs, three RBIS)and Kavin Keyes(two hits, three RBIS). Andrew Moore was the winning pitcher despite giving up five runs on11 hits over 5 2/3 innings. ZackResershut down the Cougars (7-4, 16-15) over the final 31/3 innings to earn thesave.
SOFTBALL TOP-ranked DuCkS tOPBeaVerS —Janelle Lindvall belted a grand slam in afive-run fifth inning and No.1-ranked Oregonscored nine unearned runsSaturday to beat OregonState10-5 in the opener of a three-gamePac-12series at in Corvallis. A stadium-record1,032 fans watched theBeavers commit five errors, offsetting two-run homers by C.J.Chirichigno and Kori Nishitomi.
HOCKEY UniOn COllege deatS MinneSOta fOrNCAAtitle — Union College won its first NCAAhockey title Saturday night, scoring three times in less than two minutes in the first period in a7-4 victory over Minnesota. MikeVecchione tied it at 2 with 4:01 left in the first, Eli Lichtenwald gavethe Dutchmanthe lead 57 seconds later, and Daniel Ciampini cappedthe spree with 2:57 to go. Max Novak, Kevin Sullivan and MatBodiealso scored and Colin Stevens made 36saves for Union (32-6-4), the 2,200-student liberal arts college in Schenectady, N.Y.,that competes in Division III in all other sports. Adam Wilcox stopped 41shots for the five-time champion Gophers. Under third-year coach Rick Bennett, Union won its final12 gamesandwent 16-0-1 in its last17. Ciampini scored three goals in the Dutchmen's 5-4 victory over Boston College in thesemifinals Thursday night. The Dutchmen havecompeted in Division I since1991-92. Minnesota lost for the seventh time in the title game.TheGophers weremaking their first appearance in thechampionship gamesince winning its second straight title in 2003.
BASKETBALL USA juniOrSdefeat WOrld team — Duke-boundJustlse Winslow scored 16points and the U.S. junior national team pulled away in the fourth quarter to defeat the world select team 84-73 Saturday in the annual NikeHoopSummit at Portland's Moda Center. Kelly Oubre scored 14points, Jahlil Okafor had 14 points and 10 rebounds, andTyusJoneshad13pointsasUSA hadfourplayersscore in double figures. It was abig day for future Duke players: Okafor, Jones and Winslowsigned with the BlueDevils in November. Oubre isheadedforKansas.Thegame'sleadingscorerwasEmmanuelMudiay with 20 points for World Selects. Mudiay, a 6-foot-5 guard from Democratic Republic of Congo, is headed toSouthern Methodist. World's only other player in double figures wasCanadianguard Jamal Murray with10 points. The win ended a two-game losing streak for the United States, which leads theoverall Hoop Summit series 12-5. Of the 22 players in the game,14 havesigned with an NCAADivision I school, most for prominent programs.
ON DECK
PREPS
Monday Baseball:SummitatBend,4:30p.m.; MountainView atRidgeview,4:30p.m.;RedmondatCrookCounty, 4:30p.m.;Sistersat JunctionCity, 4:30p.m.; La Pineat Elmira,4:30p.mcCountry Christianat Culver,4:30p.m. SoflbaH: Junction City atSisters, 430p.m4Elmiraat La Pine,4:30p.m. Boys tennis:StaytonatSisters,4 p.m. Girls tennis: Sisters atStayton,4 p.m. Boysgolf: Bend,MountainView,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeview,CrookCounty atBendGolf andCountry Club,11a.m.
Baseball Nonconference First game
Bend 100 001 2 HoodRiverValley 000 010 0
12 10 1 1 8 6
Secondgame
Bend 001 460 0 — 10 12 2 HoodRiverVauey 100001 0 — 2 4 3
Three-way tie OccurS in LOuiSiana — Therewasatriple dead-heat for first place in ahorse race at Evangeline Downs in Opelousas, La., a finish so rare there havebeenjust six since1990. Three horses hit the wire together in the fifth race Friday night at the Louisiana track. Theofficial photograph showed all three horses' noses touching the wire, so atriple dead-heat was declared by the stewards. Chessie Slew, a25-1 long shot, 5-1 shot All in the Art and 8-1 shot Memories of Trina shared thevictory in the $15,000, six-furlong claiming race. It was the first-ever triple dead-heat at Evangeline Downs. The most recent triple dead-heat was atnow-closed Betfair Hollywood Park, whenthree horses tied for second in December. That Southern California track wasalso the site of a triple dead-heat for first in1997. — Staffand wire reports
GOLF
College
Professional
Pac-12Standings AH TimesPDT
The Masters Saturday At AugustaNational GolfClub Augusta,Ga. Yardage:7,435; Par:72 Third Round
Washington Oregon State ArizonaState UCLA Washington State Oregon USC Arizona California Stanford Utah
Conference Overall 1 2-2 1 0-4 9-5 7 -4 7-4 7 -5 6 -0 5-0 3-8 3-8 1-13
24 - 6 26- 7 19 - 13 19 - 14 16 - 15 25 - 10 17 - 16 16 - 20 14 - 17 11 - 17 1 0 - 21
a-amateur JordanSpieth 71-70-70—211 BubbaWatson 69-68-74—211 70-71-71—212 JonasBlixt Softball 73-71-68—212 Matt Kuchar Nonconference MiguelAngelJimene z 71-76-66—213 First game RickieFowler 71-75-67—213 Tuesday HoodRiverValley 102 100 0 4 7 0 Thomas Bjorn 73-68-73—214 Baseball:GladstoneatMadras,4:30p.m. Bend 000 000 0 0 2 5 74-68-72—214 Soflbau: EstacadaatMadras,4:30p.m. Jim Furyk 73-71-70—214 Boystennis:Summit at Bend, 4 p.mcRidgeviewat LeeWestwood Saturday'sGames Secondgame MountainView,4p.m.; CrookCountyat Redmond, Fred Coupl e s 71-71-73—215 USC3, Utah 2 Hood RiverValley 330 0100 7 130 4p.mcMolallaat Madras,4p.m. JustinRose 76-70-69—215 Oregon St a te12, W as hi n gton S t a te 5 Bend 000 000 0 0 3 2 Girls tennis: BendatSummit,4p.m.; MountainView JohnSenden 72-68-75—215 Oregon 7, UC R iv er si d e 4 atRidgeview,4p.mcRedmondatCrookCounty,4 70-73-72—215 KevinStadler Washi n gton 7, St a n f o rd 2 76-70-70—216 p.m.;Madrasat Molaga,4p.m. lan Poulter SOCCER Arizona State4, California 1 Boyslacrosse:BendatRedmond,5p.m. Gary Wo o dl a nd 70-77-69—216 Arizona3,UCLA2 Adam Scot 69-72-76—217 Today'sGam es MLS Wednesday KevinStreelman 72-71-74—217 U C Ri v ersi d e at O r egon, noo n Baseball:SummitatBend,4:30p.m.; MountainView MAJORLEAGUESOCCER 75-73-70—218 JasonDay OregonStateat WashingtonState, noon atRidgeview,4: 30p.m.;RedmondatCrookCounty, AH TimesPDT 75-69-74—218 GonzaloFernandez-Castano Californiaat ArizonaState,12:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.;LaPineat Sisters, 4:30p.m4East Linn Russel Henl l e y 73-70-75—218 UtahatUSC,1p.m. ChristianatCulver, 4:30p.m. Eastern Conference Chris Kirk 75-72-71—218 S tanford at W as hi n gton, 4 p. m . Soflbau: BendatSummit (DH), 3 p.m.;Ridgeviewat W L T P tsGF GA UCLAatArizona,4 p.m. SteveStricker 72-73-73—218 MountainView(DH), 3p.m.;CrookCountyat Red- Columbus 3 1 0 9 7 4 70-72-76—218 Jimmy Walker Monday'sGames mond(DH),3p,mcLa Pineat Sisters, 4:30p.m. TorontoFC 3 2 0 9 5 5 73-70-76—219 JamieDonaldson SanDiegoatOregon,1 p.m. Girls golf:Bend,MountainView,Summit, Redmond, SportingKansasCity 2 1 2 8 5 4 NorthernColoradoatWashington, 5p.m. BernhardLanger 72-74-73—219 Ridgeview, CrookCounty, Trinity LutheranatJuni- D.C. 2 2 1 7 5 6 RoryMcllroy 71-77-71—219 per, noon NewEngland 2 3 1 7 4 8 LouisOosthuizen 69-75-75—219 Trackandfield: Bendat Ridgeview,3:30 p.m.;Sum- Philadelphia 1 1 4 7 8 8 73-72-74—219 HenrikStenson mit atRedmond,3p.m. Houston 2 3 0 6 7 8 MOTOR SPORTS 74-72-74—220 Steven Bowditch Boyslacrosse:Mountain ViewatSummit, 8p.m. Chicago 0 1 5 5 9 10 MartinKaym er 75-72-73—220 NewYork 0 2 4 4 6 10 NASCAR Sprint Cup HunterMahan 74-72-74—220 Thursday Montreal 0 3 3 3 6 10 Bill Haas 68-78-74—220 Southern 500 Baseball:MadrasatGladstone,5p.m. WesternConference 75-71-74—220 Vijay Singh Saturday W L T PtsGF GA Soflbau: MolalaatMadras,430pm. 73-72-76—221 StewartCink At DarlingtonRaceway 4 1 1 13 15 9 Boystennis:BendatRedmond,4 p.m.;Mountain Fc Dallas Lucas Gl o ver 75-69-77—221 Darlington, S.C. Colorado 3 1 1 1 0 8 5 View at Summ it, 4 p.mc CrookCountyat RidJoseMariaOlazabal 74-74-73—221 Lap length:1.366 miles Seattle 3 2 1 1 0 12 10 geview, 4p.m.; MadrasatCentral, 4p.m. DarrenClarke 74-74-73—221 (Startpositioninparentheses) 2 0 4 10 10 6 Girls tennis: Redmondat Bend, 4p.mcRidgeviewat RealSaltLake 74-72-76—222 2 2 2 8 8 6 1. (1) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 374laps, 148.9rating, BrendondeJonge CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Central at Madras, 4 p.m.; Vancouver 75-72-75—222 Billy Horschel 48points,$328,700. Los Angeles 2 1 1 7 5 2 Summiat t Mountain View,4p.m. Thongchai Jai d ee 73-74-75—222 1 2 3 6 7 11 2. (15) DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet, 374,120,43, Track andfield: Sisters,Sweet Homeat La Pine,4 ChivasUSA ThorbjornOlesen 74-72-76—222 3205,690. Portland 0 2 4 4 8 11 p.m.; Culver atEast Linn,4 p.m. 70-75-78—223 3. (26) JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet, 374,101.2,42, K.J. Choi 0 2 1 1 4 6 Boysgolf: Ridgeview,Mountain View,CrookCounty, SanJose a-OliverGoss 76-71-76—223 $215,101. Sisters at BlackButte Invite, noon 71-76-76—223 4. (25)MattKenseth, Toyota,374,114.2,41,$183,401. Francesco Molinari Saturday'sGames Boyslacrosse:HarneyatSisters,5p.m. N ick Wat n e y 72-75-76—223 5. (19)GregBiffle, Ford,374,90,40,$165,040. Philadelphia2, RealSalt Lake2, tie SandyLyle 76-72-76—224 6. (8)KyleBusch, Toyota374,1049, 38,$157156. Montreal1,Chicago1,tie Friday 70-74-80—224 7. (9) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet, 374, 120.2, 38, BrandtSnedeker TorontoFc0 Baseball:Bendat Summit, 4:30p.mcRidgeviewat Colorado1, 73-72-79—224 $155,576. MikeWeir MountainView,4:30 p.m.; CrookCounty at Red- NewEngland2, Houston 0 71-72-81—224 8. (17) Kyle Larson, Chevrolet, 374, 81.7, 36, StephenGagacher mond,4;30p.m.; Sistersat CottageGrove,4:30 D.C.United1,NewYork 0 $133,510. Joost Lui t en 75-73-77—225 p.m.; La Pineat Junction City,4:30p.m.; Culverat SeattleFc3, FCDallas2 9. (23) Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, 374, 74.8, 35, LarryMize 74-72-79—225 Los Angeles1,Vancouver 0 Delphian,4:30p.m. $136,873. Soflbau:Summitat Bend,4:30p.m.; Mountain Portland1,ChivasUSA1, tie 10. (7) RyanNew man, Chevrolet, 374, 95.7, 34, Today'sGames View atRidgeview,4:30p.mcRedmond at Crook DEALS $109,665. at SanJose, noon County,4:30p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 4:30 Columbus 11. (20) Austin Dillon, Chevrolet, 374, 77.6, 33, Wednesday'sGames p.m.; JunctionCityatLaPine, 4:30p.m.; Culverat $144,441. Transactions PhiladelphiaatNewYork, 7:30p.m. Delphian,4:30p.m. 12. (16)Clint Bowyer Toyota,374,852,32, $134271. Saturday,April10 Boys tennis:Sisters atWigamette,4p.m. BASEBAL L 13. (21) Carl Ed w ar ds, Fo rd, 374, 69.2, 31, $113, 9 05. Track andfield: Ridgeviewat AppleBlossomInvite Houstonat Philadelphia,1 p.m. AmericanLeague 14. (4)MarcosAmbrose,Ford, 374,71,30, $124,125. NewEnglandat Chicago,1 p.m. in HoodRiver,TBD CLEVEL AN D IN D IAN S — Se ntDHJasonGiambito 15. (18) A J Allmendinger,Chevrolet, 374, 72,29, Girls golkRidgeviewatRunningYRanchinKlamath SanJoseatcolorado3p.m. Akron(EL)forarehabassignment. $116,438. Los Angel e at s V a nc ou ver, 4 p. m . Falls, 10a.m. HOUSTONASTROS— PlacedRHPScottFeldman 16. (6) JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet, 374,82.4, 28, Boys lacrosse:Wilsonvile at Bend, 5:30 p.m.; D.C.UnitedatColumbus, 4:30p.m. on thebereavement list. RecalledRHPPaul Clemens $134,694. Clevelandat Redmond, 5 p.m.; Summit at Herm- MontrealatSporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. from Oklahoma City (PCL).Optioned RHPJoshZeid 17. (5) Brad Keselowski, Ford, 374, 100.6, 28, TorontoFCatFCDallas,5:30 p.m. iston, 5p.m. to Oklahoma City. $137,288. Portland at R ea l S al t La ke,6:30 p.m. Equeslrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams SeattleFcatChivasUSA,7:30 p.m. KANSASCITY ROYALS— Recalled LHP Dan18. (31) CaseyMears, Chevrolet, 374, 63.1, 26, Central Districtmeetat Deschutes County Fair & ny Duff yfrom Omaha (PCL).Optioned 28Johnny $118,888. ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m. aha. 19. (10)DennyHamlin, Toyota,374,92.4,26, $101,905. Giavotella toOm MINNES OTATWINS— PlacedOFJosh WilingHOCKEY 20. (28) RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,374,56.4, 24, Saturday ham onthe15-day DL,retroactive toApril 7. Recalled $130,280. Boystennis:Sistersvs. NorthBendat Wigamette, 21. (29)JoshWise, Chevrolet, 374,56.3,23,$89,005. RHPMichaelTonkin fromRochester (IL). NHL 10a.m. 22. (33) DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 374, 54.5, 22, OAKLANDATHLETICS — Designated OF Sam Girls tennis:Sisters, Red mond, Madras at Madras NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE $100,055. Fuld forassignment. ReinstatedOFCraig Gentry from Invite,TBD AH TimesPDT 23. (24) Justin Allgaier, Chevrolet, 372, 61, 21, the15-dayDL. Trackandfield: BendMountain Viewat CraterClas$113,563. SEATTLE MARINERS— TradedRHPHectorNoesi sic, 10a.m.;Summit at Oregon Relays in Eugene, Eastern Conference 24. (3)AricAlmirola,Ford,372,679,20, $127641. to Texasfor aplayerto benamed or cashconsiderTBD; Sistersat ElmiraRelays,11a.m.; Summit, Atlantic Division 25. (35) LandonCassill, Chevrolet, 372, 46.2, 0, ations. Redmond, LaPine, Culver, Gilchrist at LaPine, 10 GP W L OT Pts GF GA $07,305. TAMPA BAYRAYS—RecalledOFKevin Kiermaier z-Boston 8 1 5 4 1 8 9 117259 174 26. (14) Brian Vickers, Toyota, 371, 80.6, 19, from a.m.; Crook County atMarshfield, TBD Durham(IL). x-Montreal 82 4 6 28 8 100 Boyslacrosse:WilsonvigeatSisters,11 a.mcSum215 204 $121,480. TEXAS RANGERS — Transferred INFJurickson x -Tampa Bay 81 45 27 9 99 mit atHoodRiverValley, 2p.m. 239 215 27. (12)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,371, 70.9,17, Profar tothe60-dayDL. Girls lacrosse: Shedl onat Central Oregon,10a.m.; x-Detroit 8 1 3 8 2 8 15 91219 230 $116,613. NationalLeague Sherwood at Central Oregon,1;30 p.m. Ottawa 81 36 3 1 14 86233 263 28. (27) David Gilliland, Ford, 370, 43.9, 16, ATLANTABRAVES— SentLHP Mike Minorto Equestrtan:Oregon High School Equestrian Teams T oronto 82 3 8 3 6 8 8 4 231 256 $107,663. (SAL)forarehabassignment. 82 2 9 4 5 8 6 6 196 268 29. (34)AlexBowman,Toyota,369,39.6,15, $97,252. Rome CentralDistrictmeetat Deschutes County Fair8 F lorida CHICAGO CUBS—Optioned RH PBrian Schlitter B uffalo 81 21 5 1 9 5 1 154 244 30. (38) ParkerKligerman,Toyota, 369, 40.7, 14, ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m. to lowa (PCL). Recalled LHPChris Rusin fromlowa. MetropolitanDivision $09,005. PHILADEL PHIA PHILLIES — SentRHPMike AdGP W L OT Pts GF GA 31. (13)KurtBusch,Chevrolet, accident,368, 75,13, ams Sunday toLehighValley(IL) for arehabassignment. Equestrian:Oregon High School Equestrian Teams y-Pittsburgh 81 51 24 6 108 247 204 $84,305. S T. L OUI S CARDINALS— SignedgeneralmanCentralDistrictmeetat Deschutes County Fair& x-N.Y.Rangers 82 45 31 6 96 218 193 32. (32)David Ragan, Ford, 367,44.5,13, $94,605. ager JohnMozeliak to a two-year contract extension x -Phitadetphia 81 42 30 9 9 3 231 229 33. (41)TravisKvapil, Ford,367,32.9,11, $83,905. ExpoCenter, Redmond,8:30a.m. the2018season. x -Columbus 82 43 32 7 93 231 216 34. (43)JoeNemechek, Toyota, 366,29.8, 0,$91,705. through ANDI EGOPADRES— SentOFCameronMaybin Washington 81 38 30 13 89 235 239 35. (2) Joey Logano, Ford,front hub,359,84.5, 10, to SEl Paso(PCL)forarehabassignment. NewJersey 81 34 29 18 86 194 206 $123,471. WASHINGTON NATIONALS — SelectedtheconTENNIS Carolina 8 1 3 5 3 5 11 81201 225 36. (37)David Stremme, Chevrolet, brakes,326,34.1, tract of RHP BlakeTreinenfrom Syracuse(IL). OpN.Y.lslanders 81 33 37 11 77 221 264 8, $83,305. RHPAaron Barrett to Syracuse. PlacedOFDeWesternConference 37. (22)KaseyKahne, Chevrolet, accident,323,87, tioned Professional nard Spanonthe7-dayDL RecalledOFStevenSouza Central Division 8, $102,480. ATPWorldTour Jr. fromSyracuse.Recaled INF/OFJeffKobernusfrom GP W L OT Pts GF GA 38. (42)ColeWhitt, Toyota,301, 31.5,6, $78v285. U.S. Men'sClayCourl Championships useandplacedhim onthe60-dayDL. x-Colorado 81 52 22 7 111 248 217 39. (40)ReedSorenson, Chevrolet, overheating,289, Syrac At RiverOaksCountry Club HOCKEY x-St. Louis 81 52 22 7 111 248 188 42.3, 5,$74,285. Houston x-Chicago 82 4 6 21 15 107 267 220 40. (39)RyanTruex,Toyota,274,25, 4,$70,285. NationalHockeyLeague Purse:0630,730 (WT250) x-Minnesota 81 43 26 12 98 204 199 41. (11) Paul Menard,Chevrolet, 270, 60.8, 3, CAROLINAHURRICANES — Reassigned F Zach Surlace:Clay-Outdoor x-Dagas 8 1 4 0 30 11 91234 226 Boychuk to Charlotte (AHL). $93,499. Singles DALLAS STARS—RecalledFChris Muegerfrom Nashville 8 1 3 7 32 12 86209 239 42. (30) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,accident, 101, Semifinals Winnipeg 8 2 3 7 35 10 84227 237 44.6, 2,$62,285. Texas(AHL). Fernando Verdasco (4), Spain,def. Santiago GiralPacific Division DETROIR TEDWINGS—RecalledDXavierOueget 43. (36)DaveBlaney,Ford, brakes,65,28,1,$58785. do, Colombia6-4, , 7-5. GP W L OT Pts GF GA and DRyanSproul fromGrandRapids(AHL). Nicolas Almagro(3), Spain,def. SamQuerrey, y-Anaheim 81 53 20 8 114 263 207 RaceStatislics FLORIDA PANTHERS— Rassigned0ScottClemUnitedStates,walkover. x-San Jose 82 51 22 9 111 249 200 Average Speedof RaceWinner:131.211 mensentoSanAntonio (AHL). x-Los Angeles 82 46 28 8 100 206 174 mph. MONTREAL CANADIENS— Signed0DustinToGrandPrixHassanH Phoenix 8 1 3 6 3 0 15 87214 230 TimeofRace:3hours,53minutes,37seconds. karski toatwo-yearcontract extension. Saturday Vancouver 81 35 35 11 81 191 222 Margin ofVictory:0.558seconds. NEW JERSEYDEVILS—AssignedDEric Gelinas At ComptexeSporlif al Amal C algary 81 3 5 3 9 7 7 7 208 236 Caution Flags:11for 50laps. to Albany (AHL). Casablanca,Morocco E dmonton 8 2 2 9 44 9 6 7 203 270 LeadChanges:22among 12drivers. PHOENIXCOYOTES— Recalled FTyler Gaudet Purse:$066,600 (WT260) x-clinchedplayoff spot Lap Leaders: J.Logano1-37;J.Gordon38-42; D.Ra- from SaulSte. t Marie(OHL). SignedFDan O'DonoSurlace:Clay-Outdoor y-clinched division gan43;J.Gordon44-45;K.Harvick46-60;D.Hamlin ghue toatwo-year, entry-level contract. Singles z-clinched conference 61-63; M.Kenseth64-75; K.Harvick 76-179;B.KesWASHIN GTON CAPITALS — Recaled C Peter Semifinals Saturday'sGames elowski 180-183;K.Kahne184-201; K.Harvick202; Le8lancfrom Hershey(AHL). SignedCChandler SteMarcelGranogers(4), Spain, def. Federico Delbo- Boston4,Buffalo1 K.Kahne 203-207; K.Harvick 208-223; B.Vickers phenson to athree-year,entry-level contract. nis (6),Argentina,6-1, 6-4. Philadelphia4, Pittsburgh3,OT 224-247; J.Gordon 248; B.Vickers249-254; K.HarGuillermoGarcia-Lopez(8), Spain, def. Roberto Montreal1,N.Y.Rangers0, OT vick 255-273;G.Biffle 274-278;K.Harvick279-359; CarballesBaena, Spain, 6-2, 6-7(6), 6-4. Ottawa1,Toronto0 FISH COUNT J.Johnson 360-367; D.Earnhardt Jr. 368-372;K.HarColumbus 3, Florida 2 vick 373-374. Upstream daily movem ent of adult chinook,jack WTATour Nashville 7,Chicago5 LeadersSummary (Driver, TimesLed, Laps steelhead andwild steelheadat selected BNPParibasKatowice Open SanJose3,Phoenix 2 Led):K.Harvick, 7 timesfor 238 laps;J.Logano, chinook, Singles Edmonton 5, Vancouver 2 1 time for 37laps; B.Vickers, 2 timesfor 30 laps; ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Saturday. Cbnk Jcbnk Stlhd Wsuhd Semifinals Anahei m 4,LosAngeles3,SO KKahne,2timesfor23 laps;MKenseth,1 timefor12 3 44 20 Alize Cornet(4), France,def. AgnieszkaRadwanska Today'sGames laps; J.Johnson,1timefor8 laps; J.Gordon,3 times Bonneville 79 0 T he Dal l es 190 2 18 12 (1), Poland, 0-6,6-2,6-4. Detroit atSt.Louis,9:30a.m. for 8 laps;D.Earnhardt Jr., 1 timefor 5 laps; G.Biffle, 0 14 8 CamilaGiorgi, Italy,def. CarlaSuarezNavarro (3), BostonatNewJersey, noon 1 time for 5 laps;B.Keselowski, 1 timefor 4 laps; John Day 7 4 -1 39 19 15 Spain,7-6(2),6-4. Carolinaat Philadelphia, noon D.Hamlin,1 time for3 laps; D.Ragan,1 timefor1 lap. McNary Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, TampaBayatWashington,noon Wins:K.Harvick,2; Ku.Busch,1; Ky.Busch,1; ClaroOpenColsanitas N.Y.IslandersatBuffalo, 2p.m. D.EarnhardtJr., 1; C.Edwards, 1; Bra.Keselowski, 1; jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected Singles ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Ottawa at Pittsburgh,4:30p.m. J.Logano,1. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsuhd Semifinals Nashville atMinnesota, 5p.m. Top 12 in Points:1. J.Gordon,297; 2. 21 3, 123 9 9 5 Caroline Garcia(5), France,def.VaniaKing(6), United ColoradoatAnahe>m,5 p.m. M.Kenseth,296; 3. C.Edwards, 278; 4. D.Earnhardt B onneville 3,729 States,6-2,6-4. Calgaryat Vancouver, 6p.m. Jr., 271;5. J.Johnson,270; 6. Ky.0usch,269;7. Bra. The Dalles 1,072 6 142 54 JelenaJankovic (1), Serbia,def. Chanelle Scheepers, Dallasat Phoenix, 6p.m. Keselowski,246;8.JLogano,245; 9.RNewman,236; J ohn Day 59 1 18 2, 5 4 8 97 2 SouthAfrica,6-1, 7-5. End ofregularseason 10.A.Digon,235;11.G.Biffle,227;12.TStewart,224. McNary 18 5 1 257 156
BOXING
Pacquiaowins rematch byunanimousdecision By Greg Beacham
Timothy Bradley, left, lands a punch to the head of Man-
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — Nearly two
HORSE RACING
BASEBALL
years lat er, Manny Pacquiao finally got the decision most people thought he deserved the first time against Timothy Bradley. Pacquiao won a unanimous decision in his rematch with Bradley on Saturday night, avenging his 2012 loss and claiming the WBO welter-
ny Pacquiao, but Pacquiao
ally recalling the Pacman irt
the result — although that's what he thought last time, too.
Bradiey's split-decision victory astonished most ringside ob-
unanimous decision Saturday.
"I knew I had to do more in this fight than I did in the last
Pacquiao (56-5-2) pursued and peppered the previously unbeaten Bradley around the
Pacquiao left little doubt about
handed Bradley his first loss by
Eric Jamison/The Associated Press
weight title.
In the same arena where the fighters met for their first bout,
siveness, but Pacquiao kept up
servers, who felt Pacquiao had earned a clear decision. fight," Pacquiao said. Judges Craig Metcalfe and Michael Pernick scored the rematch 116-112 for Pacquiao, while Glenn Trowbridge favored the Filipino congressman
MGM Grand Garden ring with his prime. Bradley fought back his attack while Bradley (31-1) 118-110. The Associated Press an aggressiveeffort occasion- with counterpunching and elLt- struggled down the stretch. scored it 116-112 for Pacquiao.
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
OR LEAGUE BASEBALL catandings
American League
AH TimesPDT
indians12, WhiteSox6
AMERICANLEAGUE
Tampa Bay NewYork Toronto Baltimore Boston
East Division W L 7 5 6 6 6 6 5 5
6 6 5 4
Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Texas Houston
6 7
PctGB .5 8 3 .5 0 0 1 .5 0 0 1 .4 5 5 1r/r .4 1 7 2
6 6 6 6
PctGB .6 6 7 .5 0 0 1'/z .5 0 0 1r/r .4 5 5 2 .4 0 0 2'/z
4 6 6 7
PctGB .6 3 6 .6 0 0 '/z .4 5 5 2 .4 5 5 2 .4 1 7 2'/z
CentralDivision W L 6 3
West Division W L 7 4 6 5 5 5
Astros 6, Rangers5, 10 innings
Saturday'sGames
N.Y.Yankees7, Boston4 Tampa Bay1, Cincinnati0 Cleveland12,ChicagoWhite Sox6 Minnesota 7, KansasCity1 Baltimore 2,Toronto1,12 innings Houston 6, Texas5,10 innings Detroit6, San Diego2 N.Y.Mets7, L.A.Angels6, 13innings Oakland 3, Seatle1
Today'sGam es TampaBay(C.Ramos 0-0) at Cincinnati (Cingrani 0-1),10:10a.m. Toronto(Buehrle2-0) at Baltimore(Jimenez0-2), 10:35a.m. Cleveland (Kluber 1-1) at ChicagoWhite Sox(Quintana1-0),11:10a.m. Kansas City (Vargas1-0)at Minnesota (Correia 0-1), 11:10a.m. Houston(Oberholtzer 0-2) at Texas(M.Perez 1-0), 12:05p.m. N.Y.Mets(Colon1-1) atLA. Angels (C.Wilson 1-1), 12:35p.m. Detroit (Scherzer0-0) at SanDiego(T.Ross 0-2), 1:10 p.m. Oakland (Kazmir2-0) at Seattle (C.Young0-0), 1;10 p.m. Boston(Doubront1-1)at N.Y.Yankees (Nova 1-1), 5:05 p.m. Monday'sGames Tampa Bayat Baltimore, 4:05p.m. SeattleatTexas, 5:05p.m. Oaklan datLA.Angels,7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE East Division W L PctGB Atlanta 7 4 .6 3 6 Washington 7 4 .6 3 6 NewYork 5 6 .4 5 5 2 Philadelphia 5 6 .4 5 5 2 Miami 5 7 .4 1 7 2'/2 CentralDivision W L PctGB Milwaukee 9 2 .8 1 8 Pittsburgh 6 5 .5 4 5 3 St. Louis 6 5 .5 4 5 3 Chicago 4 7 .3 6 4 5 Cincinnati 3 8 .2 7 3 6 West Division W L PctGB LosAngeles 8 4 .6 6 7 SanFrancisco 7 5 .5 8 3 1 Colorado 6 6 .5 0 0 2 SanDiego 4 7 .3 6 4 3 '/2 Arizona 4 1 0 . 286 5
Saturday'sGames Tampa Bay1, Cincinnati0 St. Louis10,ChicagoCubs4 Colorado1,SanFrancisco 0 Philadelphi5, a Miami4,10 innings Milwaukee 3,Pittsburgh2 Atlanta6, Washington 3 LA. Dodgers 8,Arizona5 Detroit 6,SanDiego2 N.Y.Mets7, LA. Angels6,13 innings Today'sGames TampaBay(C.Ramos 0-0) at Cincinnati (Cingrani 0-1),10:10a.m. Miami (H.Alvarez0-2) at Philadelphia (K.Kendrick 0-1),10:35a.m. Washington (G.Gonzalez2-0) at Atlanta(Harang1-1), 10:35a.m. Pittsburgh(Morton0-0) at Milwaukee(Lohse 1-1), 11:10a.m. ChicagoCubs(E.Jackson 0-0) at St.Louis (Wa cha 1-0),11:15a.m. N.Y.Mets(Colon1-1) atL.A. Angels(C.Wilson1-1), 12:35p.m. Colorado(Chatwood 0-0) at SanFrancisco (Hudson 2-0), 1:05p.m. Detroit (Scherzer0-0) at SanDiego(T.Ross 0-2), 1;10 p.m. L.A. Dodgers(Haren1-0) at Arizona(Cahil 0-3), 1:10 p.m. Monday'sGames Atlantaat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. PittsburghatCincinnati,4:10 p.m. Washington at Miami,4:10p.m. St. LouisatMilwaukee,5:10p.m. N.Y.MetsatArizona, 6:40p.m. Coloradoat San Diego,7:10p.m.
Leaders Through Saturday's Games AMERICANLEAGUE BATTING —AIRamirez, Chicago,.413; Kubel, Minnesota,.405;SPerez, KansasCity,.375; Effsbury, New York,.372;Joyce,TampaBay,.367; Solarte,NewYork, .359;Eaton,Chicago, .354.
ARLINGTON,Texas —Jason Castro tripled with one out in the10th CHICAGO — Ryan Raburn hit a and Jose Altuve had atiebreaking tiebreaking, two-run single with sacrifice fly, helping Houston end two outs in the seventh inning to a12-game skid against their inlift Cleveland. Nick Swisher, Jason state rival. Marwin Gonzalez, runKipnis and David Murphy homered ning for Castro, scored Altuve's fly for the Indians, who snappeda off Rangers closer Joakim Soria. three-game losing streak. Murphy Michael Choice hit his first career added a three-run triple in a fourhomer in the ninth to tie it. run ninth against DonnieVeal. Cleveland Chicago ab r hbi ab r hbi M organcf 5 1 1 0 Eatoncf 3 2 2 1 Swisher1b 6 2 2 1 LGarci2b 5 1 0 0 Kipnis2b 4 2 2 1 Gillaspi3b 3 1 1 1 CSantnc 3 2 0 0 Abreu1b 4 1 0 0 Brantlylf 3 1 1 2 A.Dunndh 4 0 1 2 Acarerss 4 1 1 1 AIRmrzss 4 1 1 0 Raburndh 4 1 1 2 DeAzalf 5 0 2 1 D vMrprf 5 2 2 4 Nietoc 4 0 0 0 A viles3b 5 0 2 1 JrDnksrf 4 0 1 1 Totals 3 9 121212 Totals 3 6 6 8 6 Cleveland 310 0 2 0 204 — 12 Chicago 4 10 010 000 — 6 E—Aviles (1), Kipnis (1), L.Garcia (2). DPCleveland1,Chicago1.LOB —Cleveland8, Chicago 10. 28—A.cabrera(5), Eaton(3). 3B—Dav.Murphy (1). HR —Swisher (2), Kipnis(2), Dav.M urphy (2), Eaton(1).SB—Morgan(3).
Houston
Texas
ab r h bi ab r hbi F owlercf 5 0 0 0 Choolf 5 0 0 0 Presleyrf 5 0 0 0 Andrusss 3 2 2 0 J castrodh 3 1 1 0 Riosrf 5011 MGnzlzpr-dh 0 1 0 0 Fielder1b 4 0 1 0 Altuve2b 4 1 2 1 JoWilsnpr 0 0 0 0 Carter1b 3 1 1 0 Kzmnff3b 4 0 1 1 Corprnc 3 0 0 1 Morlnddh 3 0 0 0 MDmn3b 4 1 1 1 Choiceph-dh 2 1 1 1 Grssmnlf 4 1 2 3 DMrph2b 2 2 1 0 Villar ss 4 0 0 0 LMartn cf 3 0 2 0 Arenciic 4 0 0 1 Totals 35 6 7 6 Totals 3 5 5 9 4 Houston 000 500 000 1 — 6 Texas 110 100 011 0 — 5 DP — Houston 2. LOB—Houston6, Texas7. 28-
National League
Interieague
Phillies 5, Marlins 4, 10innings
Rockies1, Giants0
PHILADELPHIA —Jimmy Rollins homered with two outs in the10th SAN FRANCISCO— Tommy inning and Philadelphia overcame Kahnle and four Colorado relievers two home runs byGiancarlo Stancombined for two-hit ball over six ton. Rollins finished with three hits innings after Brett Anderson left in andChaseUtleyhadtwo doubles the third inning with a brised finand an RBIfor the Phillies. ger. Troy Tulowitzki had asacrifice fly in the third inning for Colorado. Miami Philadelphia ab r hbi ab r bbi Matt Belisle, AdamOttavino, Rex Yelich If 6 0 2 0 GwynJ cf 5 2 2 0 Brothers and LaTroyHawkins Ozunacf 5 1 1 0 Rollinsss 5 2 3 2 S tantonrf 5 2 3 3 Utley2b 4 1 2 2 pitched an inning apiece to comGJones1b 5 0 0 0 Howard1b 4 0 1 1 piete the three-hitter. M cGeh3b 5 0 2 0 Byrdrf 4000
Rays1, Reds0 CINCINNATI —Alex Cobbwent seveninningstoextendTampa Bay's run of solid starting pitching, and JamesLoney homered. TampaBay Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi DeJesslf 4 0 0 0 BHmltncf 4 0 0 0 Z obrist2b 3 0 1 0 Votto1b 3 0 1 0 Joycerf 4 0 0 0 Phillips2b 4 0 1 0 M cGeep 0 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 Balfourp 0 0 0 0 Frazier3b 3 0 1 0 Longori 3b 4 0 1 0 Ludwck If 3 0 0 0 Loney1b 4 1 1 1 B.Penac 3 0 0 0 Kiermrcf-rf 4 0 0 0 Cozartss 2 0 1 0
Sltlmchc 3 1 2 0 DBrwnlf 4 0 0 0 J eBakr2b 4 0 0 0 Ruizc 3 0 1 0 YEscorss 3 0 1 0 Simonp 1 0 0 0 San Francisco ab r hbi ab r hbi ARamsp 0 0 0 0Gal vis3b 3 0 0 0 Hanignc 3 0 0 0 Heiseyph 1 0 0 0 Blckmncf 3 1 2 0 Pagancf 4 0 0 0 MDunnp 0 0 0 0 Pettionp 1 0 0 0 C obbp 2 0 0 0 MParrp 0 0 0 0 B arnesrf 3 0 1 0 Pencerf 3 0 1 0 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Ascheph 1 0 0 0 Forsythph 1 0 1 0 Marmlp 0 0 0 0 DeFrtsp 0 0 0 0 CGnzlzlf 4 0 0 0 Sandovl3b 4 0 1 0 DJnngscf 0 0 0 0 DJnngsp 0 0 0 0 Hollndsp 0 0 0 0 Tlwlzkss 3 0 0 1 Posey1b 3 0 0 0 Totals 3 2 1 5 1 Totals 2 70 4 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 2 0 Mayrryph 1 0 0 0 Rosarioc 4 0 0 0 Morself 4 0 0 0 T ampa Bay 0 1 0 0 0 0 000 — 1 Eovaldip 2 0 1 0 Bastrdp 0 0 0 0 Mornea1b 4 0 0 0 HSnchzc 4 0 0 0 C incinnati 000 0 0 0 000 — 0 Solano2b 2 0 0 0 Papelnp 0 0 0 0 Arenad3b 4 0 1 0 Arias2b 3 0 0 0 DP —TampaBay1.LOB— TampaBay5,Cincinnati Rosnrgp 0 0 0 0 LeMahi2b 1 0 0 0 Bcrwfrss 3 0 1 0 3. 28 — YE s coba r (2), Forsythe(2), Votto(3), Cozart Revereph 1 0 0 0 Andrsnp 2 0 0 0 M.cainp 1 0 0 0 (1). HR —Loney(1). CS—Phillips (2). S—Simon. K ahnlep 0 0 0 0 Machip 0 0 0 0 Totals 42 4 133 Totals 3 6 5 9 5 IP H R E R BBSO Miami 010 010 200 0 — 4 Beli slep 0 0 0 0 B.Hicksph 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia 2 0 2 000 000 1 — 5 TampaBay ulersnph 1 0 0 0 Petitp 0000 Grossman (1), Rios (3), Do.Murphy(3). 38—J.castro C Cobb W, 1 -1 7 4 0 0 0 5 Ottavin p 0 0 0 0 Twooutswhenwinning runscored. (1). HR —Grossman(2), Choice(1). SB—Altuve (4), Brothrs p 0 0 0 0 H,1 1 0 0 0 0 1 E—Howard (2). DP—Miami 1, Philadelphia1. McGee Andrus(4). CS—Rios (1). S—L.Martin. SF—Altuve, Hwknsp 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 LOB —Miami 12, Philadelphia 4. 28—GwynnJr.(1), BalfourS,4-4 IP H R E R BBSO Corporan. —Stanton2(4}, Rollins(2).SB—Ru>z Cincinnati Totals 2 9 1 4 1 Totals 2 90 3 0 Utley 2(5). HR Cleveland IP H R E R BBSO C olorado S imon L,1-1 8 5 1 1 1 4 001 0 0 0 000 — 1 (1). CS —Ruiz(1). 6—Eovald>. Masterson 42-3 7 6 5 5 7 Houston IP H R E R BBSO M.Parra 1 0 0 0 0 2 San Francisco 000 000 000 — 0 OutmanW2-0 1 1 - 3 0 0 0 1 2 Cosart 7 6 3 3 2 8 HBP—byCobb(Cozart). WP—Cobb. E—M.cain (1). DP —Colorado1. LOB —Colora- Miami ShawH,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 AlbersH,2 1 1 1 1 1 0 do 6, SanFrancisco6. 28—Blackmon (4), Arenado Eovaldi 61-3 7 4 4 0 5 T—2:31. A—35,356(42,319). Allen H,2 1 1 0 0 0 3 K.chapma n 2-3 0 0 0 1 0 2), Sando val (2), B.crawford(5). SB—Bfackmon(3), A.Ramos Axford 1 0 0 0 0 1 W,1-083,1-1 1 1 1 1 1 1 M.Dunn 1 1 0 0 0 0 arnes(1). S—Barnes. SF—Tulowitzki. Chicago BassS,2-2 1 1 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 3 IP H R E R BBSO Marmol Paulino 5 6 6 6 3 3 Texas 2 Da.JenningsL,0-1 2-3 1 1 1 0 1 Tigers 6, Padres Colorado BelisarioL,1-1 1 1 - 3 2 2 2 1 1 Scheppers 7 4 5 5 1 6 Anderson Philadelphia 3 1 0 0 1 2 Downs 0 0 0 0 1 0 Figueroa 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 KahnleW,2-0 2 5 8 2 1 1 5 SAN DIEGO 1 0 0 1 2 Pettibone — Justin Verlander D.Webb 1 1 0 0 0 0 Toffeson 11-3 2 0 0 1 2 BelisleH,2 3 2 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 De FratusBS,1-1 1 Veal 12-3 3 4 4 3 3 had the first two hits of his career Soria L,1-1 1 1 1 1 1 0 OttavinoH,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Hollands Downspitchedto1batter inthe7th. HBP— byCosart(Kouzmanoff ),byScheppers(J.cas- BrothersH,3 Bastardo 1 0 0 0 1 0 and pitched sevenstrong innings 1 1 0 0 2 1 HBP—by Masterson (A.Dunn). WP—Masterson, tro, Corporan). WP —Cosart, Bass. 1 1 0 0 1 1 HawkinsS,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 1 Papelbon Belisario. T—3:15.A—42,577(48,114). RosenbergW,1-0 1 0 0 0 0 1 to lead Detroit. Verlander allowed San Francisco T—3:28. A—27,332(40,615). pitchedto 2batters inthe7th. two runs and eight hits, struck out M.cainL,0-2 7 4 1 1 3 8 De Fratus Machi 1 0 0 0 0 1 T—3:29.A—27,760 (43,651). eight and walked one.Austin JackOrioles 2, BlueJays1, 12 inn. Petit 1 0 0 0 0 1 son hit a two-run double andRajai T—2:48. A—41,917(41,915). Twins 7, Royals1 Braves 6, Nationals3
MINNEAPOLIS — Joe Mauer hit
his first home run of the season and free-agent acquisition Ricky Nolasco earned his first win for Minnesota. Brian Dozier hada leadoff homer for Minnesota. Nolasco (1-1) showedwhy theTwins signed him to a$49 million, fouryear contract to steady their rotation. The right-hander gave upfive runs in each of his first two outings for his newteam, but wason top of his gameSaturday. Nolasco went eight innings andallowed five hits with four strikeouts.
BALTIMORE — Steve Lombardozzi tripled and scored ona single by David Lough in the12th inning for Baltimore. Toronto trailed1-0 with two outs in the ninth when Colby Rasmushit a solo homer off TommyHunter.
Colorado
Cardinals10, Cubs4 ST. LOUIS —Matt Carpenter drove in two runs andAdam Wainwright saved atired bullpen by lasting seven innings for St. Louis. It was hardly a vintage performance byWainwright, who gave up ahomer to Junior Lakeon his first pitch and allowed six more hits and three runs after that while striking out eight.
Davis scored three runs. ATLANTA — Atlanta's Freddie Detroit San Diego Freeman hadthree hits, including ab r hbi ab r hbi RDavislf 4 3 2 0 ECarerss 5 0 2 0 a home run. B.J. Upton hadtwo 4 2 2 1 Denorfirf 5 1 1 0 hits, including his first homer, and Kinsler2b TrHntrrf 5 0 1 2 S.Smithlf 3 0 1 0 Dan Uggla drove in two runs with Micarr1b-3b 4 0 1 1 Gyorko2b 3 0 1 1 AJcksncf 4 0 1 2 Headly3b 4 1 2 0 two hits for the Braves. Cstllns3b 5 0 1 0 Alonso1b 4 0 1 0
Nathanp 0 0 0 0 Grandlc 4 0 2 1 Baltimore Washington Atlanta Avilac 4 0 1 0 Venalecf 4 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r hbi ab r bbi AIGnzlzss 4 0 0 0 Kenndyp 2 0 0 0 Mecarrlf 6 0 2 0 Markksrf 5 0 2 0 Rendon2b-3b4 1 2 1 Heywrdrf 4 0 0 0 Izturis2b 5 0 0 0 N.cruzdh 4 0 1 0 Verlndrp 3 1 2 0 Hundlyph 1 0 0 0 McLothrf 4 0 1 0 BUptoncf 5 1 2 1 Bautistrf 2 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 0 0 Krolp 0 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Zmrmn3b 2 0 1 0 Fremn1b 5 2 3 1 Encrnc1b 5 0 1 0 A.Jonescf 5 0 1 0 V Mrtnzph-1b1 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 Espinos2b 2 0 1 0 CJhnsn3b 5 0 0 0 Linddh 4 0 1 0 Clevngrc 4 0 0 0 Stauffr p 0 0 0 0 LaRoch1b 5 0 0 0 J.Uptonlf 4 2 3 1 Sierraph-dh 1 0 0 0 Hardyss 5 0 0 0 Amarstph 1 0 0 0 Dsmndss 4 2 1 0 Uggla2b 4 1 2 2 Navarrc 4 0 1 0 Lmrdzz2b 5 1 2 0 3 8 6 116 Totals 3 6 2 102 H arpercf 3 0 1 0 Gattisc 4 0 3 1 Totals R asmscf 5 1 1 1 Loughlf 5 1 2 1 Chicago ab r hbi St. Louis ab r hbi Detroit 1 01 200 002 — 6 Frndsnlf 3 0 20 Smmnsss 3 0 0 0 S an Diego Lawrie3b 4 0 0 0 Schoop3b 4 0 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 000 — 2 Leonc 4 0 1 1 A.Woodp 2 0 0 0 Lakelf 4 1 1 1 Mcrpnt3b 5 1 2 2 Goinsss 2 0 1 0 E—A.Jackson(2), Headley (2). LOB —Detroit 9, Jordanp 2 0 0 0 Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Valuen3b 3 1 1 0 Wong2b 4 1 1 1 Kratzph 1 0 0 0 San Diego 9. 2B—Kinsler 2 (3), Mi.cabrera(3), A. Oltph-3b 0 0 0 0Kozmaph-ss 1 0 0 0 TMooreph 1 0 0 0 Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Diaz ss 1 0 0 0 Jackson (4), Castelanos (2), E.cabrera(5), Headley KansasCity Minnesota R izzo1b 4 1 1 0 Hollidylf 5 2 1 1 Treinenp 0 0 0 0 JWaldnp 0 0 0 0 ab r hbi ab r bbi Totals 40 1 7 1 Totals 4 0 2 9 2 Schrhltrf 4 1 2 1 MAdms1b 5 1 1 1 Werthph 1 0 1 0 JSchafrph 1 0 0 0 (2), Alonso (4). SB—Denorfia 2(3). SF—Gyorko. 000 000 001 000 — 1 Sweenycf 4 0 1 1 YMolinc 3 1 2 1 IP H R E R BBSO Aokirf 4 0 0 0 Dozier2b 4 2 1 2 Toronto Stmmnp 0 0 0 0Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Baltimore 000 000 100 001 — 2 S Castross 4 0 2 1 TCruzc 0 0 0 0 Detroit Infante2b 4 0 0 0 Mauer1b 4 1 2 3 Kimrelp 0 0 0 0 Oneoutwhenwinningrunscored. 8 2 2 1 8 Hosmer1b 4 0 0 0 Plouffe3b 3 0 0 0 B arney2b 4 0 0 0 Craigrf 4 1 1 0 Totals 3 5 3 112 Totals 3 8 6 136 VerlanderW,1-1 7 DP — Toronto 3, Baltimore 2. LOB —Toronto 9, J oBakrc 4 0 0 0 Jaycf 1 1 0 0 0 2 BButlerdh 4 0 0 0 Colaellrf 3 0 0 0 4012 Washington 10 0 001 010 — 3 Krol H,2 Baltimore 8. 28—Me.cabrera(3), Schoop(3). 38AGordnlf 4 1 2 0 Mstrnnrf 1 0 0 0 Villanvp 1 0 0 0 Descalsss-2b 4 2 2 1 Atlanta 400 010 01x — 6 Nathan 1 1 0 0 0 1 Lombardozzi (1). HR —Rasmus(2). SB—Me.cabrera Rusinp 2 0 0 0 Wnwrgp 2 1 1 1 E—McLouth (2), Desmond 2 (4), Freeman (1). San Diego S .Perezc 4 0 1 0 Kubellf 3 1 1 0 (2), C.Davi(1). s DP — Atlanta 1. LOB—Washington 11, Atlanta10. KennedyL,1-2 6 Mostks3b 3 0 0 0 Pintodh 4 1 1 0 Kalishph 1 0 0 0 Roinsnph 1 0 1 0 8 4 4 1 7 IP H R E R BBSO 28 — McLouth (1), Zimm erman (3), Desm ond (2), Vincent L.caincf 3 0 1 1 KSuzukc 4 1 0 0 Choatep 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 Toronto J.Upton 2(2), Gattis (2). HR —Rendon (2), B.Upton A.Torres AEscorss 3 0 2 0 A.Hickscf 3 1 1 1 Manessp 0 0 0 0 1 2 0 0 0 0 Hutchison 6 4 0 0 2 5 Totals 35 4 8 4 Totals 3 8 101310 (1), Freema Flormnss 3 0 0 0 n(3). CS—Harper(2). S—McLouth. Stauffer 1 1 2 2 3 0 2-3 2 1 1 0 1 Chicago Wagner 1 00 102 000 — 4 IP H R E R BBSO T—3:05. A—42,182(42,302). Totals 33 1 6 1 Totals 3 2 7 6 6 1 -3 0 0 0 0 0 Loup St. Louis 040 5 0 1 0 0x — 10 Washington K ansas City 0 0 0 0 1 0 000 — 1 Delabar 1 0 0 0 1 1 E—Sweeney (1). LOB —Chicago 5, St. Louis6. JordanL,0-1 5 10 5 5 2 5 Minnesota 1 6 0 0 0 0 Bgx— 7 E—Shields (1), Moustakas(2). LOB—KansasCity RedmondL,0-1 3 1-3 3 1 1 1 1 28 — Valbuena (1), Schierholtz 2(3), Swe eney (1), Treinen 2 2 0 0 0 1 Mets 7, Angels6, 13 innings S.castro(2),Hoffiday(4), YMolina(3), Descalso(1). Stammen 1 1 1 1 0 1 6, Minnesota4. 28—A.Gordon 2 (4), S.Perez (5), Baltimore Atlanta B.Norris 7 5 0 0 3 4 H R — La ke (2), M a .A da m s (1). SB — W ong ( 3), H og i L.cain(1),A.Escobar (2). HR —Dozier(4), Mauer (1). A.WoodW2-1 5 6 1 1 3 8 ANAHEIM, Calif.— New York's 1 0 0 0 1 0 day (1).S—W IP H R E R BBSO MeekH,2 ainwright. 1 0 1 1 2 2 Tom.HunterBS,1-4 1 1 1 1 0 1 IP H R E R BBSO Varvaro KansasCity O' D ay J .Wal d en H,1 1 1 0 0 0 2 Anthony Recker led off the13th 1 1 0 0 1 1 Chicago ShieldsL,0-2 52 - 3 6 7 1 3 5 3 1 1 0 1 inning with a home 2 0 0 0 1 1 Villanueva L,1-3 3 10 9 9 0 2 D.carpenterH,4 1 Duffy 21-3 0 0 0 0 3 BrittonW,2-0 run against KimbrelS,5-5 1 1 0 0 0 1 WP — Delabar. Rusin 5 3 1 1 1 1 Minnesota rookie Matt Shoemakerandalso WP —A.Wood, Varvaro. St. Louis NolascoW,1-1 8 5 1 1 1 4 T—3:39.A—30,446(45,971). WainwrightW2-1 7 7 4 4 0 8 T—3:33.A—36,621 (49,586). had a two-run single. Mets closer Tonkin 1 1 0 0 0 1 Choate 1 0 0 0 1 2 T—2:35. A—23,963(39,021). Jose Valverde came on inthe ninth Athletics 3, Mariners1 Maness 1 1 0 0 0 1 Dodgers 8,Diamondbacks5 Villanueva pitched to5 batters inthe4th. to protect a 6-3 lead for Jonathon PB — Jo.Baker. SEATTLE — Sonny Gray overcame Niese, but allowed a three-run Yankees 7,RedSox4 T — 2: 4 0. A — 45,302 (45, 3 99). PHOENIX — Adrian Gonzalez hit a a shaky start to allow onerun in
NEW YORK —Bria nMcCann put an emphatic end to his season-opening slump, hitting his first two home runs for NewYork. Carlos Beltran, Alfonso Soriano andKell yJohnsonalsoconnected as the Yankeesscored all their runs on homers.A.J. Pierzynski hit his first home run for Boston.
Toronto
seven innings, Josh Donaldson hit atwo-runhomer and Oaklandwon for the fifth time in six games.Gray gave up his only run in the first when Seattle failed to capitalize when they hadrunners at first and third and noouts. Graystymied the Mariners from there, allowing only singles to LoganMorrison in the fourth and RobinsonCanoin the sixth, and adouble by Dustin Ackley in the seventh.
Brewers 3, Pirates2
two-run homer andZack Greinke improved to 3-0.
MILWAUKEE — Carlos Gomezhit a leadoff homer andJonathan Lucroy drove in the tiebreaking run in the eighth inning as Milwaukee won its eighth straight game.
LosAngeles Arizona ab r hbi ab r bbi Puigrf 5 1 2 1 Campncf 3 0 1 0 Kempcf 4 0 0 0 OPerezp 0 0 0 0 HRmrzss 4 0 0 1 Zieglerp 0 0 0 0 AdGnzl1b 4 2 22 Owingsph 0 0 0 0
Pitlsburgh Milwaukee ab r bbi ab r hbi Martelf 4 0 1 1 CGomzcf 4 1 1 1 Sniderrf 4 0 2 1 Segurass 4 0 0 0 Melncnp 0 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 1 2 0 AMcctcf 4 0 2 0 ArRmr3b 4 0 1 0 PAlvrz3b 2 0 0 0 Lucroyc 4 0 2 1 JHrrsnpr 0 0 0 0 KDavislf 4 1 0 0 RMartnc 4 0 1 0 MrRynl1b 3 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 4 0 0 0 Gennett2b 2 0 1 0 Ishikaw1b 2 1 1 0 Gallardp 1 0 0 0 G Snchzph-1b1 0 0 0 Dukep 0 0 0 0 Mercerss 3 1 1 0 Thrnrgp 0 0 0 0 Volquezp 1 0 0 0 Overayph 0 0 0 0 Watsonp 0 0 0 0 Weeksph 1 0 0 0 Tabataph-rf 1 0 0 0 Hndrsnp 0 0 0 0 FrRdrgp 0 0 0 0 Totals 3 0 2 8 2 Totals 3 13 7 2 P itlsburgh 0 0 2 0 0 0 066 — 2 Milwaukee 1 1 0 0 0 0 01x — 3 E—A.Mccutchen (1), PAlvarez (2). DP—Pittsburgh1,Milwaukee4. LOB—Pittsburgh4, Milwaukee 7. 28 — A.Mccutchen (2), Ishikawa(1). HR —C.Go-
V nSlyklf 4 1 1 0 Putzp 0000 U ribe3b 5 1 3 2 Thtchrp 0 0 0 0 JuTrnr2b 5 1 1 0 A.Reedp 0 0 0 0
homer to Raul Ibanezafter David Freese singled with two outs and Erick Aybar walked. Shoemaker escaped his ownbases-loaded jam in the12th by striking out Juan Lagares. NewYork
LosAngeles
ab r hbi ab r hbi E Yonglf 4 0 0 0 Cowgilllf 3 2 2 1 DnMrp 2b 7 0 0 0 Shuck ph-If 3 0 1 0 D Wrght3b 6 0 1 0 Troutcf 6 0 2 0 Grndrsrf 4 1 1 0 Pujols1b 5 0 1 1 I.Davis1b 4 1 0 0 HKndrc2b 5 0 0 0 Dudadh 5 2 2 1 Freese3b 5 1 1 0 Lagarscf 6 2 2 1 Aybarss 3 1 0 0 Reckerc 5 1 2 3 Ibanezdh 5 1 1 3 Q untnllss 6 0 3 2 lannettc 5 1 1 1 Calhonrf 5 0 0 0 Totals 47 7 117 Totals 4 5 6 9 6 New York 610 600 302 000 1 — 7 Los Angeles 100 011 003 000 0 — 6 DP — New York 3, LosAngeles1. LOB —New York11, LosAngeles2. 28—Trout (2). HR—Duda
Buterac 4 2 2 0 Echavzph 1 1 1 0 G reinkp 2 0 0 0 Hill2b 4110 PRdrgzp 0 0 0 0 Gldsch1b 5 0 1 0 ab r hbi ab r bbi Withrwp 0 0 0 0 Prado3b 4 1 1 0 P edroia2b 5 0 1 0 Gardnrlf 5 0 1 0 Figgins ph 1 0 1 0 Monter c 4 0 1 1 RBI —Abreu, Chicago, 14; Colabello, Minneso- Navarf 4 1 1 0 BRorts2b 4 0 0 0 M ahlmp 0 0 0 0 Trumolf 4 1 1 2 ta, 14; Moss,Oakland,11; Ibanez,LosAngeles, 10; D.Ortizdh 4 0 1 0 Ellsurycf 3 1 2 0 Oakland Seatlle Ethierph 1 0 0 1 GParrarf 5 0 1 0 DavMurphy,Cleveland,10;AIRamirez, Chicago, 10; Napoli1b 3 0 0 0 Beltrandh 4 2 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Leaguep 0 0 0 0 Pnngtnss 4 0 2 1 6tiedat9. Carplf 4 0 1 2 Mccnnc 4 2 2 3 Crispcf 3 2 1 0 Almontcf 4 1 1 0 J ansenp 0 0 0 0 Mileyp 1 0 1 0 HOME RUNS — Abreu,Chicago,4;Bautista,To- Bogartsss 4 1 1 0 ASorinrf 4 1 2 1 Gentry ph-cf 1 0 0 0 BMiller ss 4 0 1 0 Pogockph-cf 3 1 1 1 ronto, 4;Mecabrera,Toronto, 4; Dozier,Minnesota, Przyns c 4 1 2 2 ISuzukirf 0 0 0 0 Lowriess 2 0 0 0 Cano2b 4 0 1 1 Totals 39 8 127 Totals 3 8 5 125 4; 7 tiedat3. JHerrr3b 3 0 0 0 KJhnsn1b 4 1 2 1 Dnldsn3b 4 1 1 2 Smoak1b 4 0 0 0 Los Angeles 02 2 101 011 — 8 PITCHIN G— Sale,Chicago,3-0;FHernandez,Se- BrdlyJrcf 3 1 0 0 Solarte3b 4 0 2 0 Moss1b 4 0 1 1 Seager3b 3 0 0 0 Arizona 0 00 010 013 — 5 attle, 3-0. Annass 4 0 1 0 Barton1b 0 0 0 0 Morrsndh 3 0 1 0 E—Prado2(3). DP—Arizona1. LOB—LosAn e3), Recker(1), Cowgil (1), Ibanez(2), lannetta (1).) ERA— Darvish,Texas,0.00;Feldman,Houston, Totals 34 4 7 4 Totals 3 6 7 14 7 Cespdslf 4 0 1 0 Blmqstph 1 0 1 0 les 11,Arizona11. 2B—Van Slyke (2), Uribe2 7), 8—E.Young (6), Recker(1). CS—D.Wright (1). 0.44; BuehrleToronto, , 0.64; Richards,LosAngeles, Boston 0 20 000 200 — 4 C allaspdh 3 0 1 0 Ackleylf 4 0 2 0 Ju.Turner (1), Hil (6), Goldschm idt (7),Trumbo3). S—E.Young . 0.75; Tillman,Baltimore, 0.84; Gray,Oakland, 0.95; New York 200 2 0 2 0 1x — 7 Jasoc 3 0 2 0 MSndrsrf 4 0 0 0 HR —Ad.Gonzalez (4), Pollock (1). SB—Owings 4). IP H R E R BBSO Scherzer, Detroit,1.20; Vargas,KansasCity,1.20. E—A.Soriano(1). DP—Boston 1. LOB—Boston D Norrsph-c 1 0 0 0 Buckc 3 0 0 0 S—Greinke. SF—Montero. STRIKE OUTS—FHernandez, Seattle, 30; Price, 7, NewYork7. 28—Pedroia (3), Beltran(4), Anna Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO NewYork Niese 71-3 6 3 3 1 5 TampaBay,22;Sabathia,NewYork,21;Lester,Bos- (1). HR —Pierzynski (1), Beltran(2), Mccann2 (2), Sogard 2b 3 0 0 0 LosAngeles 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 ton,20; Gray,0akland,19;Sale, Chicago,19; Tanaka, A.Soriano(3), K.Johnson(3). SB—Nava (1), Bradley Totals 32 3 7 3 Totals 3 4 1 7 1 GreinkeW,3-0 5 1 - 3 8 1 1 0 8 C.TorresH,1 V alverde BS , 1 -3 1 2 3 3 1 1 New York,18. Jr. (2),Ellsbury(6). CS—Carp(1). S—B.Roberts. Oakland 2 01 000 600 — 3 P.Rodriguez 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 NATIONALLEAGUE IP H R E R BBSO Seatlle 1 00 000 000 — 1 mez(4).SB—A.Mccutchen(3). S—Volquez, Gennett. Withrow 1 0 0 0 1 3 Rice 11-3 0 0 0 0 1 BATTING —Blackmon, Colorado,.500; Utley,Phil- Boston E—Gray(1). DP—Seattle1. LOB—Oakland7, SeIP H R E R BBSO Maholm 1 1 1 1 0 0 Germen 0 0 0 0 0 adelphia,.472;Bonifacio, Chicago,.435;Freeman,At- LackeyL,2-1 52- 3 10 6 6 0 6 attle 8.28—Cagaspo(3), Ackley (3). HR —Donaldson Pittsburgh League 2-3 2 3 3 1 0 LannanW,1-0 2 2-3 1 0 0 0 1 6 1-3 4 2 1 2 4 Los Angeles lanta, .425; DGordon, LosAngeles, .405; Pagan, San Breslow (2). SB —Sogard(2). Volquez Jansen S,3-4 1 3- 0 0 0 0 1 62-3 3 4 4 4 5 2-3 0 0 0 1 1 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 Arizona Weaver Francisco,.404;Cuddyer,Colorado,.386. A.Miller IP H R E R BBSO Watson RBI —Stanton, Miami, 16;Trumbo, Arizona, 15; Badenhop 1 3- 1 0 0 0 1 1 3 1 1 0 1 Oakland MelanconL,0-1 1 3 1 1 0 1 MileyL,2-2 5 8 5 5 3 4 SalasBS,1-1 1 1 0 0 0 1 CGonzalez,Colorado,13; AdG onzalez, LosAngeles, NewYork GrayW,2-0 7 5 1 1 2 9 Milwaukee O.Perez 11-3 0 1 0 1 0 Kohn D .De La R osa 1 3 1 2 2 1 0 11; 7 tiedat10. KurodaW,2-1 6 1 - 3 6 4 4 3 5 Doolittle H,4 11 - 3 0 0 0 0 Gaffardo 6 6 2 2 1 6 Ziegler 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Putz 2-3 1 0 0 1 1 HOME RUNS—PAlvarez, Pittsburgh, 5; Belt, San ThorntonH,3 1 - 3 1 0 0 0 1 GregersonS,1-2 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Duke 2-3 2 1 1 2 1 Jepsen 2-3 0 0 0 0 1 Thatcher Francisco,5;Trumbo,Arizona,5. BetancesH,2 1 - 3 0 0 0 0 0 Seatlle Thornburg 1-3 0 0 0 0 1 Frieri 1 0 0 0 0 1 PITCHING —Greinke,LosAngeles,3-0. WarrenH,4 1 0 0 0 0 2 E.RamirezL,1-2 5 6 3 3 3 3 Henderson W,1-0 1 2 0 0 0 1 A.Reed 1 2 1 0 0 1 J.Smith 1 1 0 0 0 3 ERA —Wacha, St. Louis, 0.71; Harang, Atlanta, KelleyS,2-2 1 0 0 0 0 0 Leone 2 1 0 0 1 1 Fr.Rodriguez S,4-4 1 0 0 0 1 0 HBP —byLeague(Hiff), byMaholm(Trumbo). WPShoemaker L,0-1 2 3 1 1 2 2 HBP—byJepsen(E.Young). WP—Shoemaker. 0.71; Haren,LosAngeles,0.75;GGonzalez,Washing- HBP—byThornton(Napoli). WP —Breslow. Beimel 2 0 0 0 1 0 WP—Volquez. Greinke,Maholm,Miley, Putz.PB—Butera. ton, 0.75;JKegy, St.Louis, 0.79. T—3:07. A—48,572(49,642). T—3:08.A—22,061(47,476). T—2:53. A—42,828(41,900). T—3:47.A—38,374 (48,633). T—4:29. A—40,027(45,483). Boston
NewYork
NHL ROUNDUP
Bruins clinchPresident's Trophywith win The Associated Press BOSTON — The Boston Bruins
Flyers 4, Penguins 3: PITTS- beat Florida for the eighth straight BURGH —
Mar k St r e it b e a t time.
— Patric
clinched the NHL's best record and home-iceadvantage throughout the playoffs with a 4-1 win over the league-worst Buffalo
Marc-Andre Fleury 2 minutes, 10 seconds into overtime to lift
OTTAWA — Jason Spezza scored
goal with 58.2 seconds left and
Philadelphia. Canadiens 1, Rangers 0: MON-
the game's only goal and Craig Anderson stopped 27 shots for his
Shea Weberadded an empty-net-
Sabres on Saturday. It is the first time the Bruins have claimed the
TREAL — Brian Gionta scored on
fourth shutout of the season.
goals in the third period. Ducks 4, Kings 3: LOS AN-
a penalty shot at 2:04 of overtime. Boston's Zdeno Chara and BIJffalo's Matt Presidents' Trophy since the 1989Blue Jackets 3, Panthers 2: O'Agostini battle along the boards during the first 90 season. David Krejci scored SUNRISE, Fla. — Ryan Johanperiod Saturday. The Bruins clinched the best two goals for the Bruins sen scored the tiebreaking goal record in the NHL. In other games Saturday: in the third period as Columbus Michael Dwyer/The Associated Press
Senators 1, Maple Leafs 0:
Predators 7, Blackhawks 5: NASHVILLE, Tenn.
Sharks 3, Coyotes 2: GLENDALE, Ariz. — San Jose's Joe Pavelski had two goats to become
the fourth player in team history with 40 goals in a season.
Hornqvist scored the go-ahead ter as Nashville rallied with five GELES — A n aheim's Devante
Smith-Pelly scored his first goal in regulation since Halloween, then got the only goal in the shootout.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
PREP ROUNDUP
Jacket
"It's been mostly
Continued from 01 The next year, Player lost to Arnold Palmer in a three-way
orm iniS S IOn
playoff and returned home. Shortly thereafter, he received
AVI 8 IOM Bulletin staff report S ummit did not wi n t h e
was 2 for 4 for Bend. A scary moment came in the bottom
gold bracket championship, of the third inning of the secbut when the Storm's lone loss ond game, when Bend pitchcame at the hands of arguably er Kota Carter was struck in the top Class 6A team in the the face by a line drive. Bend state, they will take it. High coach Bret Bailey said Still, with a 5-3 win over the sophomore was helped off West Salem and a 6-2 victory
the field and taken to a near-
McAllister, Falk lead Outlaws: SALEM — Sisters had
four athletes place fourth or better in their respective events at the Meet of Cham-
pions at Willamette University. Jake McAllister led the
Outlaw boys by taking second in the high jump and third in
against Tualatin, Summit sal- by hospital, from which he the 300 hurdles and the long vaged a first-place finish in was releasedafter receiving jump. Zoe Falk was second the silver bracket of the Bend sutures. The Lava Bears (8-3) in the 800 and fourth in the Invitational girls tennis tournament on Saturday.
went on to score four runs in
the top of the fourth inning
Lindsey Brodeck led the and five more in the fifth en way with matching 6-1, 6-0 route to an eight-run victory. wins in her two No. 1 singles Willy was 3 for 5 with two
against Tualatin at Summit
nior Matthew Maton finished
mit but fell to Oregon Episco-
pal 5-3 at Mountain View in
the Burns Lions/Oster Memorial Invitational. The White
the bronze bracket. The Cou-
Buffaloes edged second-place
gars rebounded for a 6-2 win Lakeview by three points. Anover Sisters, which lost 8-0 to derson also placed second in OES of Portland. the long jump, and Ruiz took In other Saturday action: BASEBALL
third in the same event. Arturo Vazquez was fourth in the Bend 12-10, Hood River Val- 200 and fifth in the 100 to lead ley 1-2:HOOD RIVER — The Culver to a seventh-place finLava Bears picked up their ish with 36 points. In the girls sixth and seventh straight meet, Elle Renault was second
wins with a sweep in a non- in the javelin, while Kimberly conference doubleheader. Be- Alonso took third in the 3,000 hind a 3-for-4performance to lead Madras to a sixth-place and three runs scored by finish with 42 points. Culver Dalton Hurd — as well as an rounded out the standings eight-run third inning — Bend with 8.5 points, with Unity cruised past the Eagles in the Ballard placing third and sevfirst game. Sami Godlove enth in the pole vault and dispitched four innings for the cus, respectively. Lakeview Bears, allowing four hits and won the girls meet with 125 striking out six. Elliot Willy points.
1,500 to lead the Sisters girls. Aria Blumm won the 3,000,
It was on his arm in his native Australia, in his homes
and Tessa Hern was second in
in Switzerland and the Bahamas, and at every organized dinner or informal party to celebrate his becoming the first golfer from his country to enjoy the pleasure of the jacket's company.
the pole vault for the Outlaws.
ryn Kaonis won the shot put,
Danielle Michael took the pole vault, and Hannah Troutman won the javelin for Crook
County at the Lower Columbia I nvitational. Troutman also placed second in the shot
put and fourth in the triple jump. For the boys, Luis Rivera was second in the 800, Zach
Smith was second in the shot put, and Cody Thurman was third in the pole vault. BOYSLACROSSE
Bend 23, Roseburg 3:The host Lava Bears rolled to their
fourth consecutive win, drubbing Roseburg (3-2) in a nonleague match at 15th Street
Field. James Rockett and en goals apiece to lead Bend (6-1), which led 6-2 after the first quarter and 12-2 at half-
ner from Canada, donned his jacket to drop the puck at a
Toronto Maple Leafs playoff game against Philadelphia and — Adam Scott got chills when the players respondedby tapping their sticks on the ice. Trevor Immelman, who won
they wonder why I'm wearing 10 yearsafter O'Meara, was a very bright green jacket, I in an airport in Japan when a think." group of businessmen saw the In airports, at cocktail par- green jacket draped over his ties and waist-deep in the Pacif- arm and started crying. "I think the awe is the same ic surf, strangers have shared with Scott where they were last as when I've touched an OlymApril when he defeated the Ar- pic gold medal or Stanley gentine Angel Cabrera on the Cup," Immelman said. "It's the second playoff hole. pinnacle of sport, really." "People were just as excitImmelman's countryman, ed to tell me where they were Player, who won three Maswhen I won and their story as
terstitles from 1961 to 1978,
I was talking about the Mas- said he had never worn his To the club members, the ters," Scott said. He laughed. jacket in public. "Not even at bright green garment — made "So I got cut off a lot of times." my dinner table with my 13 of tropical-weight wool and The jacket's hue, called grandchildren," he said. polyester, with a rayon lin- Masters green, proved ideal Jack Nicklaus, a six-time ing, an Augusta National logo for color television, which cap- winner, said, "I've never taken patch on the left breast pocket tured it, and the tournament, it off the club grounds." and brass buttons — is a status in all its radiance. If the jackets F uzzy Zoeller, who w o n symbol. could talk, oh, the tales they in 1979, said he had worn his On Scott and the other play- could tell. The 2011 champion jacket during a parade in his ers who have donned it over Charl Schwartzel left his in honor in his hometown, New the decades, the jacket rep- the back seat of a car driven Albany, Ind. "And that was resents something more pow- by a tournament volunteer. about it," he said. "The cardrove off,butthe erful. It is a conversation piece, Zoeller is reunited with his a cover-up that causes folks to guy was honest enough to jacket every year when he display their joy and awe. bring it back," Schwartzel returns to A u gusta Nation"It's been mostly what any- said, adding: "It could have al for the Champions Dinner one talks to me about in the been worse. If you left it in a and the par-3 contest. "There last 12 months since the Mas- taxi, then they would have is something magical," he ters," Scott said, adding: "It al- gone with the jacket." said, about wearing it on the ways gets an incredible reacPhil Mickelson, the winner grounds during the tournation if there are golfers in the of threeMasters jackets,has ment. "People want to walk up room. If they are not golfers, worn one on the floor of the and feel it, touch it."
Masters
drew up a spreadsheet, plot- thing about the golf course from, you know, have really helped."
watched
fore Mickelson even left the
them.
on the team.
and it's almost like y ou're
drew Joyce and Austen Ruby with one apiece. Beutler had a
team-high three assists, Rockett, Johnston and Pite had two
apiece, and Hinderlider and Joyce eachhad one. Sisters 11, West Salem 6: SALEM — Scott Nelson
scored four goals and Mark Fish added three for the Outlaws, who never trailed en
route to the nonleague victory. Nelson also was credited with three assists for Sisters (4-3), which led 6-2 at halftime and outscored the Titans 5-0 in the third quarter to break it open.
+ W4 <
his
sh o r t
i ro n
shot buffeted by the swirling winds at Amen Corner,
dropped to the ground and began praying a gust would hold it up just enough to find the green. "When it landed, I started
putting on rolling gravel. "It was crazy, crazy fast out there," Spieth said, nod-
ding his head for emphasis. "I've never putted on greens like this before."
If Spieth is as quick a study as his brief career suggests, he'll find a way to navigate them one more time and offset Watson's edge in experience. A win would make him
the first rookie champion since Fuzzy Zoeller in 1979.
Spieth already treads the line between confident and cocky with a poise that belies
his years. After hearing him "I told Michael I was going repeatedly refer to "Mr. Crento buy a T-shirt for him that shaw" and " M r . N i cklaus," says, 'Carl says' because he someone asked, "What's your keeps saying that to me out age cutoff for calling anypatient." there," Spieth said. body mister'?" "Mr. Crenshaw was very "Anybody older than me," Spieth's rise has been anything but patient. He skipped helpful," he added. "I had a he replied. "So you'll c al l B u bba steps including his final three little talk with Mr. Nicklaus, years of college golf at Tex- and he helped me out,toomister'?" " Yeah, Mr . W a tson, f o r as and golf's minor circuits. this was Wednesday evening Within ayear, he had won at a dinner here. So those sure," Spieth said with a misa tournament and made the guys, which I think are pret- chievous smile. "Just because U.S. Presidents Cup team. ty good guys to learn some- it'll mess with him." His team says the success is a
byproduct of plenty of careful preparation. After leading the Longhorns to an NCAA championship, Spieth and his father
Continued from C1
yards on 20 punt returns with two touchdowns.
Addison had 61 receptions for players in the Pac-12, went down
T iger Woods fo r t h e f i r s t
b o t her y ou'?" winner Ben Crenshaw.
890 yards and seven touchdowns during a routine noncontact drill. "It was tough for a second, but you last season. He also averaged 14.1
scrimmage of the spring Friday. Heling to make a hell of a lot more plays frich said the offense played slower around here before he's out of here, than normal with young players getbut we have a lot of other guys on ting "tons of reps." "There are a lot of guys that need scholarship. We've got a great quarterback to throwto them, and in some to either grow up or they're going to ways we're kind of glad if it was go- have very limited playing time," Heling to happen (that) it happened now, frich warned. because a lot of these guys are going Understandably, there was some to get reps and they're just going to shock among the players after Adhave to growup fast." dison, one of the most dynamic skill
In January, playing with
laughing and looked back at time, Spieth beat Woods 71Michael (Greller, his caddie) 72 in the first round and then and said, 'Don't give me any drummed him 63-71 the next crap for that, because I want- day. ed that one really bad,'" SpiSpieth downloads knowleth said. edge from everyone and Not a problem. Greller has anyone and then generously been with Spieth long enough hands back the credit. Not t o know when to h old h i s long after his first tour win tongue. punched his ticket to t he "Lot of monologue. Lot of Masters, he began lining up dialogue," is how the caddie mentors. described their tour across He gave pride of place to Augusta National. "He can be Carl Jackson, the legendary pretty hard on himself." Augusta caddie for two-time
Ducks
without Addison during the f irst
"There are front pins that course, the five-time major winner texted Presidents Cup you really couldn't stay becaptain Fred Couples and low, so you're going to be told him to put the youngster putting downhill, downgrain,
someone asked. "No," Greller laughed. "I was a sixth-grade teacher for 10 years. I know how to be
berg, noting that the Eagles vester,Kendall Kramer and scored just one run over the Hill-Gruenberg. "When you don't face that for a 6-0 lead. final five innings. "She started slow, but she Byers had 10 strikeouts caliber of pitching on a regufinally got it going," Wade in the second game. She al- lar basis," Kinkade said, "it's Kinkade said of Hill-Gruen- lowed three singles, to Syl- difficult."
Oregon was counting on Addison Now Lowe will lead a long list of withthe loss of Josh Huff, who ledthe young, talented receivers over the fiteam in receptions, receiving touch- nal spring practices and throughout downs,receiving yards and all-pur- preseason camp. "It's tough, especially (Addison) bepose yards last season. Lowe, an excellent blocker who was the Ducks' ing a good friend of mine," Lowe said. fifth-leading receiving target in 2013, "But there's a lot of opportunities for is now the lone returning starter at other guys to step up, and that's the wide receiver. wayyou have to approach it." Typically, recovering from a torn The Ducks got off to a shaky start
The one thing none of them
could prepare Spieth for was his left shoulder before losing Spieth shot 62 p l aying speed of the greens, espeinterest and letting it drop alongside Phil M i ckelson cially after three days of sunlikea bored drum major. at the Deutsche Bank tour- shine and soft breezes sucked A h o l e e a r l ier, S p i eth nament last September. Be- most of the moisture out of
"Doesn't it
each of the first two innings
Oregon State When:1p.m.. May 3 TV:Pac-12
Mike Weir, who in 2003 became the first Masters win-
After a bad tee shot at No. 13, he twirled his driver over
til Hood River Valley (8-2) pushed across three runs in
ACL takes six to nine months. "I love Bralon," Frost said. "He's go-
champion to do."
Continued from 01
was effective — but not un-
Oregon When:11a.m. May 3 TV:Pac-12
thing that the club allows the
with four goals, Chance Beutler with two, and Eli Pite, An-
er hit allowed by Byers was a double by Awbrie Elle Kinkade. Byers struck out 11 in the opener and issued one walk. The Lava Bears (6-3 overall) also got complete-game pitching in the second game Joe Kline/The Bulletin from Alexis Hill-Gruenberg. Bend High's Kstie Brown catches a line drive in the first game of And the senior right-hander a doubleheader against Hood River Valley onSaturday.
"That's just football."
ing, "That's a really special
ting the quickest route to the PGA Tour. A win at the John Deere last July rendered that plan obsolete.
But she was left stranded at third, and the only oth-
Spring foothall games
"I think it's such a cool thing to be able to travel around with it," Mickelson said, add-
time. Also scoring forthe Lava Bears were Cohl Johnston
Continued from 01 inning, when Lisa Sylvester hit a double.
Masters. It always gets an incredible reaction if there are golfers in the room. If they are not golfers, they wonder why I'm wearing a very bright green jacket, I think."
Cade Hinderlider scored sev-
Lava Bears Bend threatened in the first
appearances anywhere," said the 2013 champion Adam Scott, who treated his green
doubles, Tony Watters went 2 for 2 with a double, while
High. the boys 1,500 in 3:54.2, breakTwo-time defending 6A ing the Jim Robinson Twilight state champion Jesuit defeated Invitational record that had Beaverton 5-3 in the champi- stood since 1976. Miranda onship of the gold bracket at Brown won the long jump Juniper Park after beating St. and the triple jump to lead the Mary's 8-0 in the semifinals. Storm girls. Bend High's CamRidgeview, which lost to'Ib- den Stoddard was second in alatin 6-2 before beating West the pole vault, and teammate Salem 7-1 in the consolation Logan Blake was second in final of the silver bracket at the 400 to lead the Lava Bear Summit, was paced by its top boys. Sophia Cunningham singles players, Caitlin Carr was third in the 400 to lead the and Riley Hanks. Both play- Lava Bear girls. ers picked up convincing wins Buffs take invite: BURNS against 'Ibalatin and repeated — Behind victories by Isaac against West Salem. Fisher (pole vault), Drake AnHighlighted b y S i e rra derson (high jump) and Fredy Winch, who went 2-0 in No. 1 Povis Ruiz (triple jump), Masingles play, Bend High defeat- dras racked up 136 points to ed Mountain View 5-3 at Sum- win the 11-team boys meet at
"It's very rare that it makes
jacket as his plus-one.
Culver's Corey Sledge was second in the boys pole vault, while the Bulldogs' Hannah lone setback in the two-day tournament was dealt by Jesu- Hurd and J.J. Spitler each had Lewis (400) and Andrea Retait on Friday. Autumn Layden twohits. no (800) each had sixth-place TRACK AND FIELD finishes for the Culver girls. also went 2-0 in singles play Cowgirls boast three winfor Summit, including a 6-0, Stormrunner breaks record: 6-0 sweep at No. 4 singles ROSEBURG — Summit ju- ners: ST. HELENS — Kathmatches for the Storm, whose
a call from Clifford Roberts, one of Augusta National's founders, reminding him that he needed to return his jacket to the club. "I said, 'Well, you can come and fetch it,'" Player said. "He laughed about it, and he just said, 'No, in all seriousness, please don't ever wear it in public.'" Only one jacket is allowed to circulate in public in any given year, heightening its mystique.
what anyone talks to me about in the last 12 months since the
New York Stock Exchange and in the drive-through of a Krispy Kreme doughnut shop, where he was photographed by the store manager.
have to move on andyou have to com-
pete," Lowe said. "You have to think about him when he's in the training room and can't run and you're out there. You have to think about him
and go just as hard." Lowe chose to keep private the
conversations Addison has had with his teammates in the locker room
since the injury, but he added: "He's definitely in good spirits for sure." Most likely, Addison will take advantage of a redshirt year and return
to the field in 2015 as a fourth-year junior. If he is a fast healer, the possibility of making a key catch to move the chains against Stanford on Nov. 1 or
grabbing a late touchdown pass from Mariota at Oregon State on Nov. 29
might be tempting. "Bralon is a stud," Frost said. "He's
going to be here. No matter what is going on with him, he's going to be involved in what's going on."
Awbrey Glen Golf Club Your Journey Begins Here. Enroll as a Journey Golf Member by May 1 for early season discounts! Experience our Learning Center and new perspectives.
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MLS
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Summaries
AH TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames
EasternConference W L 54 26 54 26 47 32 46 33 43 36 42 38 41 39 37 43 34 45 32 49 29 51 25 55 23 56 17 63 15 65
y-Indiana y-Miami x-Chicago y-Toronto x-Brooklyn x-Washington x-Charlotte x-Atlanta NewYork Cleveland Detroit Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee WesternConference W L z-SanAntonio 62 18 y-Dklahoma City 58 21 y-L.A.Clippers 56 24 x-Houston 53 27 x-Portland 52 28 x-GoldenState 49 30 x-Dallas 49 32 Memphis 47 32 Phoenix 47 33 Minnesota 40 39 Denver 36 44 NewOrleans 32 48 Sacramen to 27 53 L.A. Lakers 25 54 Utah 24 56 x-clinchedplayoffspot y-clincheddivision z-clinched conference
Pct GB 675 675
595 6'/2
582 7'/z 544 10'/v 525 12 513 13 463 17 430 19'/z 395 22'/a 363 25 313 29 291 30'/a 213 37 188 39
Pct GB
775 734 3N 700 6 663 9 650 10 620 12'/z 605 13r/v 595 14'/z 588 15 506 21N 450 26 400 30 338 35 316 36'/z 300 38
Wizards104, Bucks91
Celtics111, Cavaliers 99 BOSTON (111) Green6-184-619, Bass7-115-519, Dlynyk11231-1 25,Pressey4-8 0-0 9, Bradley9-152-2 25, Johnson2-73-47, Anthony2-50-04, Babb1-3 0-0 3. Totals 42-9015-18 111. CLEVEUIND (99) Gee5-91-411, Thompson 6-122-314, Haw es 1-4 0-0 3, Irving3-15 8-815, Waiters6-153-615, Jack6-142-215,Dellavedova4-90-010,Vare)ao2-4 0-04, Zeller4-84-712.Totals 37-9020-30 99. Boston 28 32 29 22 — 111 Cleveland 18 24 16 41 — 99
Hawks 98, Heat85 MIAMI (85) James10-22 4-8 27, Haslem3-5 0-0 6, Bosh 5-8 0-0 11,Chalmers4-10 1-2 9, Wade10-14 4-9 24,Cole03000,Allen1-2003,Lewis1-4003, Andersen 1-20-0 2, Douglas0-30-0 0. Totals 35739-19 86. ATLANTA (98) Carroll 6-122-217, Millsap4-10 2-211, Brand 3-70-1 6,Teague9-17 6-825, Korver1-31-1 4, Scot 6-14 0-012,Wiliams7-9 5-523,Mack0-6 0-0 0, Muscala0-00-00, Martin 0-00-0 0. Totals 36-78 16-19 98. Miami 23 26 13 23 — 85 Atlanta 28 21 20 29 — 98
MILWAUKEE (91) Middleton6-154-420, Adrien4-63-811, Pachulia 4 91-29, Sessions 6-168-1020, Antetokounmpo 3-51-48, Henson 6-101-213, Wright1-3 2-2 4, Radul)ica 2-42-26. Totals 32-6822-3491. WASHINGTO N(104) Ariza 5-71-213,Booker5-71-1 11,Gortat5-12 3-413, Wal5-12 l 5-515, Beal12-220-026,Webster 2-62-38, Gooden1-42-24,Harrington4-112-212, Porter Jr 1-20-0 2, Seraphin0-1 0-0 0, Miler 0-0 0-0 0, Singleton 0-00-00, Temple0-0 0-00. Totals 40-8416-19104. Milwaukee 26 26 22 17 — 91 Washington 27 28 32 17 —104
Clippers117, Kings101 SACRAME NTO(101) Gay6-183-416,Evans4-66-814, Cousins12-27 8-932, McCallum4-130-08,McLemore3-76-614, Outlaw3-7 0-06,Wiliams1-1 0-0 2,Thompson1-1 1-23, Cunningham 1-23 46,Acy000 00.Totals 35-82 27-33101. L.A. CLIPPERS (117) Barnes4-6 2-2 12,Griffin 9-158-9 27,Jordan 9-13 3-1121, Paul6-144-417, Redick4-9 3-413, Cogison1-50-02, Crawford 3-82-210, Davis3-7 2-2 8, Turkoglu1-20-0 2, Dudley1-20-03, Hoffins 0-02-22,Bullock0-00-00.Totals41-8126-36 117. Sacramento 26 2 1 32 22 — 101 L.A. Clippers 27 2 9 29 32 — 117
Mavericks101, Suns98
Bobcats111, 76ers105
PHOENIX (98) Tucker2-7 2-3 6, Frye 7-132-2 21, Plumlee Young8-220-1 16,Thompson1-4 0-0 3, Sims 2-2 0-0 4, Bl e dsoe11-15 5-7 29, Dragic 6-181-3 5-8 5-7 15,Carter-Wiliams7-11 9-1023, Anderson 3-111-28, Mullens 6-120-013, Wiliams4-91-210, 13, Mark.Morris2-84-4 8,Green2-94-4 9, Marc. Wroten 4-82-410,Davies0-40-00,Ware3-40-07. Morris 3-4 0-0 6,Smith1-2 0-0 2. Totals 36-78 18-23 98. Totals 41-9318-26108. DALLAS(101) CHARLOTTE (111) Kidd-Gilchrist 4-6 2-410, McRoberts1-41-2 4, Marion3-60-07, Nowitzki8-154-423, Dalembert 0-3 0-0 0, Ellis 15-234-7 37, Jefferson13-193-529, Ridnour4-82-412, Hender- 2-5 2-2 6, Calderon son 5-84-714,Zeller2-48-1012, Neal4-102-310, Wright5-82-212, Harris1-40-03, Carter4-13 0-0 Pargo2-50-06,Douglas-Roberts4-82-212,Biyom- 10, Crowderg-00-00,Larkin1-20-03. Totals397912-15 191. bo 0-02-4 2.Totals 39-7226-41 111. 26 31 21 20 — 98 Philadelphia 24 3 6 19 27 — 105 Phoenix 27 19 29 26 — 101 Charlotte 26 30 31 24 — 111 Dallas PHILADELPHIA (105)
Saturday'sGames L.A. Clippers117,Sacramento101 Washington104,Milwaukee91 Charlotte111,Philadelphia105 Boston111,Cleveland99 Atlanta98, Miami85 Houston111,NewOrleans104 Dallas101,Phoenix98 Denver101,Utah94 Today'sGames OklahomaCity at Indiana, 10a.m. TorontoatDetroit,12:30 p.m. OrlandoatBrooklyn,3 p.m. Chicago at NewYork,4:30 p.m. GoldenStateat Portland, 6p.m. Minnesota at Sacramento, 6 p.m. MemphisatLA. Lakers, 6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Miami atWashington, 4 p.m. BostonatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Milwaukee atToronto,4 p.m. CharlotteatAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. OrlandoatChicago,5p.m. SanAntonioat Houston, 5p.m. Oklahoma City at NewOrleans,5p.m. L.A. Lakers atUtah,6p.m. Memphis atPhoenix,7p.m. Minnesota at Golden State, 7:30p.m.
D5
Rockets111, Pelicans104
Nuggets101, Jazz94 UTAH (94)
Hayward 7-189-1023, Favors6-101-513, Kanter 8-146-7 22,Burke5-131-1 12, Burks1-3 2-25,Jefferson3-81-27,Evans3-74-510, Clark0-10-0 0, Garrett 1-40-0 2,Gobert0-1 0-0 0. Totals 34-79 24-32 94. DENVER (101) Miller 0-2 0-0 0, Faried11-192-3 24,Mozgov 4-11 3-611,Brooks3-132-2 8, Foye7-139-9 26, Fournier7-166-723,Chandler 3-72-29, Arthur0-1 0 00, Vesely02000. Totals 36 8424 29191. Utah' 23 21 21 29 — 94 Denver 18 16 30 37 — 101
NEWORLEANS(104) Miller 3-80-0 6,Babbitt 8-184-424,AIinca 7-12 3-3 17, Rivers8-24 2-6 20, Morrow9-14 0-0 20, Aminu1-66-6 8, Southerland 1-30-0 3, Withey2-3 2-2 6. Totals 39-8817-21194. HOUSTON (111) Casspi0-42-2 2, Jones4-82-210, How ard 5-8 3-8 13, Harden 10-2210-10 33, Beverley6-124-4 20, Asik2-2 5-8 9,Lin 6-85-518, Motie)unas0-2 0-00, Hamilton1-30-03, Daniels1-50-03. Totals 35-7431-39111.
Neworleans Houston
20 3 9 23 22 — 104 22 24 26 39 — 111
Anot ertie or Tim ers The Associated Press
scoring for Portland in the seventh minute with his first
PORTLAND, Ore. — Erick Torres scored in the 79th
goal of the season.
minute to help Chivas USA
M aximiliano
tie Portland 1-1 on Saturday
night, leaving the Timbers
they took advantage and they scored a goal."
Ur r u t i
Portland had a late chance
forced a turnover and got the ball to Darlington Nag-
when Johnson had a free
kick just outside the penalty be, who slid a pass between area, but his shot hit the post t wo d e fenders a n d i n t o and went out of bounds. enough open space for JohnChivas U SA's T h o m as son to run into it and knock McNamara was taken off on a right-footed shot past Dan a stretcher in the 64th minKennedy. ute with what appeared to Chivas USA coach Wilm- be a serious knee injury. The
winless at 0-2-4. "We're behind the 8-ball,"
Portland coach Caleb Porter. said "There are plenty of examples of teams that have started out slow. But in
the end, we're not where we
er Cabrera said Portland's goal was helped by an er-
midfielder crumpled to the ground while running with ror in his team's footwear the ball and trying to avoid selection. Portland defenders. "We picked the wrong "Sadly, it l ooks pretty shoes," Cabrera said. "Sadly, bad," said Cabrera. "Right Carlos (Bocanegra) slipped, now, we have to confirm, and he realized he needed to but it's not promising for us.
want to be, at this point, and
we need to step it up." Torres scored off a cross from Leandro Barrera for
his fifth goal of the season for Chivas USA (1-2-3). It was situation Porter had
hoped to avoid. "Torres was the key guy, we talked about it all
ing with 10, in that moment,
change his cleats. And then w e ek," Porter said. he was on the sideline in the
That's the sad part of th is
game." moment that we conceded P ortland h a d i t s 5 5 t h that goal. They were play- straight sellout with a crowd ing with 11, we were play- of 20,814.
"He's good at getting into spots to score." Will Johnson opened the
NASCAR: SOUTHERN 500
Harvick gets1stcareer Darlington win By Pete lacobeiii The Associated Press
DARLINGTON, S.C.
Kevin Harvick capped his biggest weekend at Darlington Raceway with his first Southern 500 v ictory Sat-
s
urday night, passing Dale Earnhardt Jr. two laps from the end of the longest race in
the track's 65-year NASCAR history.
NBA ROUNDUP
Harvick earned his f irst
Clippers tie franchiserecordwith 56th win
polehere Fridaynight andhad
Chuck Burton /The Aesocaited Press
the most dominant car. But he had to make it through a restart with 10 laps left and two
Kevin Harvick, left, passes Dale Earnhardt Jr. in Turn 4 on the next-to-last iap of the Southern 500 on Saturday.
tries at a green-white-checkThe Associated Press
•
Harvick said. in 17career Darlington races Earnhardt finished second, before this. He hadn't finished
ered finish — NASCAR's ver-
- '
Griffin scored 27 points, De-
sion of extra innings. "We were able to hang on
Andre Jordan added 21, and
there at the end and I knew
the Los Angeles Clippers beat the Sacramento Kings
I had that high line I hadn't
LOS ANGELES — Blake
Jimmie Johnson was third, last year's Southern 500 winner Matt Kenseth fourth and
better than fifth in his last 10 tries, but clearly had the stron-
gest machine this time out. Greg Biffle fifth. H arvick led 239 o f t h e Harvick had just three top- 374 laps, seven more than to save it until the very end," fives and six top-10 finishes planned. showed it to them all night on the restarts and I wanted
117-101 on Saturday to earn
their franchise record-tying 56th victory of the regular season. Chris Paul added 17 points
and 10 assists, J.J. Redick had 13 points, and Matt Barnes
X5kh Annual
scored 12 for the Clippers. DeMarcus Cousins had his seventh straight double-dou-
R ON A L D M C D O N A L D H O U S E C H A R I T IE S
ble with 32 points and 12 rebounds to lead the Kings, who
C ENTRAL O R E Go N
lost their fifth in a row in their
last road game of the season. In other games Saturday:
F IRDDAv»
H awks 98, Heat 85: A T -
Danny Motoshok/TheAssociatedPress
Black Butte Ranch, Sisters
had 18 of his 23 points in the
e liminated New York f r o m
playoff contention. Williams scored the Hawks' last 12 p oints. LeBron James f i n i shed with 2 7 p o i nt s a n d
franchise's first winning record since 2008 — which was also the last time they made the playoffs. Bobcats 111, 76ers 105:
Rockets 111, Pelicans 104: HOUSTON — James Harden
CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Al Jefferson continued his dom-
the Western Conference
Mavericks 101, Suns 98:
inating play with 29 points
D ALLAS
Dwyane Wade scored 24 for
and 12 rebounds. It marked
matched his season high with
Miami, which moved into a tie with Indiana for the Eastern
the sixth straight game Jefferson had at least 20 points and 10 rebounds in a gameextending his own franchise record. Celtics 111, Cavaliers 99:
37 points and Dirk Nowitzki
Conference's best record. Wizards 104, Bucks 91: -
WASHINGTON
Brad-
8:oo a.m. Registration 8r. Breakfast 9:oo a.m. Shotgun Start
had 33 points and 13 assists
and Houston remained ahead of Portland in fourth place in —
Mon t a E l l i s
scored 21 of his 23 during a second-half rally that carried
Dallas back to the playoffs. Nuggets 101, Jazz 9 4:
ley Bealscored 26 points for DENVER — Kenneth Faried Washington, John Wall add- CLEVELAND Boston scored 24 points and pulled ed 15 points and eight assists rookie Kelly Olynyk matched down 21 rebounds in Denver's come-from-behind win. and the Wizards clinched the a career high with 25 points.
MAT 16® R01@
Scramble-Format Golf Tournament
LANTA — Jeff Teague scored Sacramento's Rudy Gay, left, and Los Angeles' Darren Coliison 25 points, Lou W i l liams fight for a loose ball Saturday. fourth quarter and Atlanta earned the Eastern Conference's final playoff spot. Atlanta's third straight victory
OPEN
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
'New territory'
PACIFICORP'S ENERGY FUTURE
Some see
signs of real wage growth
PacifiCorp/Pacific Power
Pacific Powercorporate structure
By Tim Mullaney
Berkshire Hathaway
New Yorh Times News Service
Jeff Dworkin, a Dallas builder, was surprised to
WA S H I N G T 0 N
find someone he didn't
MidAmerican Energy Holdings Co.
• +g „,kk
recognize inside a half-finished house this winter where crews were about to texture the home's drywall. That's how Dworkin, president of JLD Custom
Des Moines, lowa, ownsPacifiCorp and other energycompanies serving 7.1 million customers in11 states.
M 0 N T A N A
PacificCorp
O RE G O N
Homes, discovered that the chief of a rival subcontrac-
operates Pacific Power,which provides electricity in Oregon,Washington and California, andRockyMountain Power which provides electricity in Utah, Wyoming and Idaho.
W Y O M I N G
IDAH0
tor was there trying to steal
his workers. "He was driving around and saw a rig, and he went inside to offer our guys more money," Dworkin said. "These guys know, eventhough they may not
+
C ALIFORNI A N EVA D A
serves 731,323customers in Oregon (558,721), Washington (127,612),and California (44,990).
ly C OL O R A D O
ment rate moves slowly
downward, wage growth remains sluggish nearly five years after the recovery
officiallybegan, and has become one of the economy's most conspicuous
• •
Pacific Power service area Ro cky Mountain Power service area • Thermal plants I Gas-fired thermal plants 4 Geothermal and other • Hydro systems 4 Wind facilities
startingto tighten enough that workers may finally
Pacificcorp energysources Percentages ofPacifiCorp's total energy supplied byenergy source for the yearsendedDecember31. A RI Z ON A
Coal
2 011
2 0 1 2 20 1 3
5 9%
60%
62%
9'/ 7'/
10'/ 6'/
12%
Natural gas
0 Coalmines
Hydroelectric
"I do think there are
signs wage growth is picking up," said Mark Zandi, Analytics. Zandi was pessimistic this year about any acceleration in wage gains before 2016, but now he predicts that last year's
Purchased energy
Source:Pacificorp,
after-inflation growth of 0.8
percent will rise to 1 percent this year and 1.1 percent in 2015. "I think we can say
definitely the slowing in wage growth is over." Those gains are still modest, especially considering that median familyincomes, adjusted for inflation, fell about 10 percent during and after the recession. The typical worker is recovering only slowly from that loss. Over the past 12 months, nomi-
nal hourly wages are up a modest 2.1 percent, which
4%
The state Public Utility Commission, groups, in March criticized PacifiCorp for its continued reliance on coal-fired plants in its long-range plans to supply Oregonians with electric power at the lowest cost. The scrutiny comes in the wake of re-
newed federal government efforts to reduce greenhouse gases, a push severely diminished when cap-and-trade legislation died in the U.S. Senate at the end of 2010. PacifiCorp executives say the compa-
ny works collaboratively with interest groups to draft its plans. They point out the U.S. Environmental Protection Agen-
cy has yet to identify targets for reducing carbon emissions from coal plants, a fact the PUC recognizes. Coal is still the cheapest source of fuel
cattle herds to levels last were about half as many mouths to feed in America. "We've seen strong
prices before but nothing this extreme," said Dennis ker for Archer Financial Services in Chicago. "This is really new territory." The swelling prices are roiling the beef supply chain from rancher to
restaurant. Norm Langer managed to go two years without raising prices at his famed
5%
5% 17%
menus showing a 50-cent
tantly began printing new increase for sandwiches at his 67-year-old restaurant.
• The utility is underpressureto changeih long-rangeplans, which continue torelyheavily on amaligned energysource
flanked by consumer and environmental
Extreme weather has thinned the nation's beef
19%
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
The Bulletin
sticker shock. Beef prices have reached all-time highs in the U.S. and aren't expected to come downany time soon.
5%
MidAmerican Energy Holdings 2013 Form 10-K
By Joseph Ditzler
come with a hearty side of
20%
Wind and other
chief economist at Moody's
Come grilling season, expect your sirloin steak to
Los Angeles delicatessen. But last week, he reluc-
getsome realraisesthat
significantly outpace inflation.
Los Angeles Times
Smith, a commodities bro-
V T A H
a
weak spots. But there are now signs that the labor market is
By David Pierson and Tlffany Hsu
seen in 1951, when there
Pacific Power
be well educated or even
speak the language, that they can work for the next guy and make $150 a day instead of $100." Even as the unemploy-
for beef prices
in 2015 and 2016 and instead we agree to shut down theplant in 2025 or 2024, and
so we save the very expensive costs up front and close them down early?" Commissioner John Savage likewise for generating electricity at power plants, upbraided the PacifiCorp executives presand PacifiCorp generates more than 60 ent at a March 17 hearing on the IRP. percent of its power by burning coal. In Spending millions to extend the useful Oregon, PacifiCorp residential rates grew lives of its coal-fired plants without adby 60 percent, or $3.81 per kilowatt hour, vance notice and expecting its ratepayers from 2005 to2012, according to a survey to foot a portion of the bill may no longer by Synapse Energy Economics Inc., a be considered acceptable,Savage said. "I want an early warning system if you consultant firm. Only PacifiCorp rates in Idaho surpassed that rate, at 147 percent, begin construction on anything," Savage or $5.99 per kilowatt hour, according to said. "And also, I would ask that timelines Synapse. and key decision points be part of your Juliet Johnson, the PUC staff mem- updates." ber who reviewed the latest PacifiCorp None of PacifiCorp's coal plants oper20-year plan, known as the Integrated ate in Oregon, but the company, which opResource Plan, said the utility should be erates Pacific Power and Rocky Mountain more transparent with its data, and its Power, seeks to recover a portion of its managers need to think outside the box in costs across the six states it serves. terms of reducing its reliance on coal. PacifiCorp operates 11 coal-fired plants "I think we're looking for more alter- and six natural-gas-fired plants, along natives," she said in an interview. "Could with 13 wind-power and five hydropower they negotiate with EPA or state air qual- facilities, according to the company webity regulators'? How about we don't install site. It also operates several coal mines. SCRs (smokestack emission scrubbers) SeePacifiCorp/E5
Langer accepts it's one
of the perils ofbusiness when your bread and butter happens to be corned
beef and pastrami. But he fears he may have to raise prices again, driving away customers. SeeBeef/E2
Steak sticker shock The retail value of "all-fresh" USDA
choicegrade beef jumped to a record $5.28a pound in February, up from$4.91the same time ayear ago. The same grade ofbeef cost $3.97as recently as 2008.
works out to an after-inflation rate of about 1 percent.
Marketconditions In the second half of the
1990s, when unemployment fell as low as 4percent, competition for workers
helped drive up real wages and salaries for the worker
"We seethese stories, 'Why aren't there more women in computer science and engineering?' and there'sall these complicated answers like, 'School advisers don't have them take math and physics,' and it's probably true. But I think there's probably a simpler reason, which ts these guys arejustjerks, and women know it." — Lauren Weinstein, a man who has spent four decades working in tech
at the middle of the income
ladder roughly 1.5 percent ayear, the fastest sustained pace in decades. With the
labor market so tight, wages for workers at the bottom
T etec in ust sman ro em
By Tim Logan
of theincome scalerose
even faster, about 2 percent a year above the rate of
Elissa Shevinsky can pinpoint the moment when
inflation.
she felt that she no longer
But with the jobless rate now at 6.7 percent, the labor
belonged. She was at a friend's house
market is still not nearly as
Sept. 8, watching the live
favorable to ordinary work-
stream of the TechCrunch Disrupt hackathon on her lap-
ers as it was at the end of the last century.
The idea that wages are
top and iPhone. Entrepreneurs
about to accelerate is far
were showing off their products, and two young Austra-
from unanimous among economists. Among those
lian men, David Boulton and Jethro Batts, stood behind the
who believe the evidence
podium to give their presenta-
is still lacking is Janet Yellen, the newly installed
tion. "Titstare is an app where
chairwoman of the Federal
Reserve, who said at her firstnews conference after taking the helm that most
measures of income growth
you take photos of yourself staring at tits," Boulton began, as photographs of women's chests on a cellphone flashed on the screen behind him. After some banter, Batts
F -":
lgllll'llli llillIil„,
and want to fit in. But then
Los Angeles Times
The real estate market
has long worked on a simple system: If you want to buy a new house, sell the old one and use the equity
for a down payment. But the past few years of low ownership costs
and rising rents have some move-up buyers trying a new approach: Buy the new house. Keep the old
Elissa Shevinsky ended her working partnership with Pax Dickinson after he tweeted in defense of an app called Titstare. The pair
reconciled after Dickinson wrote a public apology.
barriers have fallen — wheth-
planned to do with their old house when they bought a
Elizabeth D. Herman / New YorkTimes News Service
concluded, "This is the breast
inal wage growth would be normal if inflation, now runningbarely over 1 percent on the Fed's crucial measure, rose to the central
The crowd — overwhelmingly young, white, hoodie-wearing men — guffawed. Something in Shevinsky's mind clicked. If ever there was
bank's target of 2 percent.
proofthatthetechindustry
"I thought that we didn't need
needed more women, she
more women in tech. I was
hack ever."
to defend the Titstare pair against accusations of misogyny. "It is not misogyny to tell a sexist joke, or to fail to take a woman seriously, or to enjoy boobies," he wrote. Shevinsky felt pushed to the edge. Women who enter fields dominated by men often feel this way. They love the work something happens — a slight or amajor offense— and they suddenly feel like outsiders. The question for newcomers to a field has always been when to play along and when to push back. Today, even as so many
had shown little movement. She said3 to 4 percentnom-
SeeWages/E5
Sell or rent? Many opt to become landlords
thought, this was it. Shevinsky, 35, wasn't the
wrong." Then things got worse. The
only one who was disgusted
next day, Pax Dickinson, who was her business partner in a
by the presentation. Twitter lit
up with outrage. She joined in, startup called Glimpse Labs, writing a blog-post manifesto: as well as the chief technology officer of the news site Business Insider, took to Twitter
one. And rent it out. Real estate firm Red-
fin recently asked 1,900 prospective home buyers nationwide what they
er at elite universities, where
new one. As you'd expect,
women outnumber men, or
the majority said they
in running for the presidency, where polls show that fewer people think gender makes a difference — computer engineering, the most inno-
would sell. But 39 percent said they'd rent it out. In Western markets that
vative sector of the economy,
remains behind. SeeSexism/E3
have seen big price growth lately, like Los Angeles, the percentage was even higher. SeeLandlords/E3
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
B USINESS TODAY 25TH ANNUALCENTRAL OREGON RV DEALERSPRING SHOW AND SALE:Free, open to the public;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Deschutes County Fair and Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 541-548-2711.
TUESDAY MEMBERSHIP 101 — DRIVING YOUR MEMBERSHIP:Connecting new members with current members, registration required; free; 10 a.m.; Bend Chamber of Commerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221, shelley© bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org/. SCORE — SMALLBUSINESS COUNSELING:Thosewho operate or wish to start a small business candiscussbusinessplanning, organization and start-up, finance,
END A R
marketing and other issues, no appointment necessary; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7050 or www. scorecentraloregon.org.
WEDMESDAY BEGINNINGPHOTOSHOP PLUS COURSE:Course provides additional time to gain a solid understanding of the basic tools and concepts of Photoshop, registration required; $95; 9 a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. COMMUNITY HEALTH WORKER COURSE:Learn how to be a Community Health Worker
(CHW), an outreach person who coordinates access and care to help bridge the gaps and eliminate barriers between health care, social services, and the
needs of at-risk members of our
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
community, registration required; $595; 9 a.m.-noon; Central
Oregon Community College,
2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. SPANISH FORHEALTHCARE: For healthcare professionals to learn some basic medical Spanish, online course starts April16, classroomsessions begin May 20, registration required; $189; 3:30-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270. A TO ZGRANTWRITING COURSE: Learn how to raise funds by discovering how and where to look for potential nonprofit funders
who are agood match for your organization, how to network and develop partnerships with funders, how to organize a successful grant-writing campaign and how to put together a complete proposal
package, online course starts April16, classroom sessions start May 5, registration required; $189; 6-8:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler
Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. PROJECT MANAGEMENT COURSE:Learnto m eetand win the challenges of truncated timelines, short-staffed project teams,skimpy budgets and crippling risks, online course starts April16, classroom sessions meet April 29, registration required; $189; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
BLOGGING FOR"BUSINESS AND BEYOND" COURSE:Learn how to set up a Wordpress.com blog, integrate your blog with other social media, engage with your audience and other bloggers, and create original content on the fly, registration required; $65; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
THURSDAY
SEARCH ENGINESTRATEGIES 1 COURSE:Learn Search Engine Optimization from a professional Search Engine Marketer including keyword marketing, site content best practices, internal links, link popularity, paid inclusion, payfor-placement and submitting your website to search engines, registration required; $99; 9-11 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270.
CITY CLUBAPRIL FORUM: What's Next for developing Central Oregon's recreation and tourism assets, registration required; $20 for first time guests and members, $35 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, Center for Health & Learning, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-385-6390 or www.cityclubco.
org/home/.
SATURDAY MARKETING101COURSE:Learn howto create aFacebook pageand use socialmedia to marketyour product, registration required; $50 per farm/ranch one time fee; 9a.m.-noon; COCC Crook CountyOpenCampus, 510 S.E. LynnBlvd., Prineville; 541480-1340 or tcf©cbbmail.com.
MOMDAY
FRIDAY
April 21 ICLOUD FORBUSINESS COURSE: Learn what the Cloud is all about, registration required; $69; 9 a.m.noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. CENTRAL OREGONRETIRED EDUCATORS ASSOCIATION MEETING:$8.50 for lunch; 11:30 a.m.; Zion Lutheran Church,1113 S.W. Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-382-7044.
DEEDS Deschutes County •Andreas G.and Cheri D.Nager, trusteesfor the CheriDianeNagerTrust, to Andreas G.Nager, BrokenTop, Phase 3D, Lot 359,$575,000 •Timothy L. andJanice D.Voth to Peter L. andJane O.Goedecke, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase30, Lot17, $1,325,000 •Thomas A.and LyndaA. Arnold to Michael A.Sposito, trustee for the Michael A.Sposito1998 Revocable Trust, ParkAddition to Bend, Lot 5, Block19, $292,000 • Margaret S. Betterton to KennedyCare Holdings LLC,Stonebrook,Phase2,Lot 35, Block1, $295,000 • Mara E. Hansen to Jessica D.Knowles, Glacier Ridge,Phase3, Lot 23, $197,500 • Lands BendCorp., successor by reason of conversion from Lands Bend LLC,to BendLa PineSchool District Administrative SchoolDistrict, No.1, Partition Plat 2014-4, Parcel1, $2,600,000 • Bruce N. Davisand Wiliam Service andDunlapFine Homes Inc.toRyan Greiner andKaelyn R.Jensen, Cimarron City, Lot 29, Block 4,$262,500 •Jonathan P.Love to Jonathan P.and Margaret M. Love,Elkhorn Ridge, Phases1 and 2,Lot17,$399,000 •HaydenHomesLLCtoBradleyJ.Nef, Emily Estates, Lot 33,$203,724 •Janel Maurer to Bill andAnn Sorenson, North Pilot Butte Addition to Bend,Lot 4, Block3, $170,000 •Jerry Slaughter to Kerry andJodi Kuenzi, Ridge atEagleCrest 39, Lot 66, $560,000 • Multidimentional Inc. to Barbara E. Warren andJulie A. Hurt, Shevlin Ridge, Phase 5,Lot126, $645,000 •Amy K. Moll to Almine Barton, Badger Forest, Phase 2,Lot 26, $189,000 • Shannon T.and Kirk D.Louxto James A. and Mara E. Brown, Westbrook Vill age,Phase2,Lot6,$265,000 • Michael andShellie Saracione to Cameron andKristen Langham, Stage Stop Meadows, Third Addition, Lot 41, $186,500 • Ralph R. Sherman,trustee of the Ralph R. ShermanRevocableTrust, to Dennis K. Sherman,Partition Plat1991-49, Parcel 2, $215,000 •Jeff R. andJennifer L. Snow,formerly known asJennifer L Wilson, to Orville L and Deborah A.Wray, Hilman, Lots 16 and17, Block115,$185,000 •Michael D.andJohnJ.W agner, trustees for theMichael D.Wagner Trust, to DonaldPotesta, Township15, Range10, Section11, $185,500 • Stephen T.and Barbara S.Weber to Daniel Bretoi, WestsideMeadows,Lot 54, $275,000 •Jeff and NormanF.Ruttenberg to Richard J.Kuss,Oakview,Phase2,Lot 11, $235,000 • Nancy K. Cary,trustee, to Washington Federal, Summerhill, Phase 2, Lot16, $418,543.56 •J. Michael andLauraE.Carnahan to
Shawna K.and Margo M.Carnahan, Township15, Range13,Section18, $230,000 • Carolyn R. Schmidt and Sheila A. Sohn to Not SoSerious LLC,Center Addition to Bend,Lot 6, Block45, $260,000 • Orestes andDanaYambouranis to Laura R.andWiliam I. Sanderson, Stage StopMeadows, Lot 2, Block1, $183,688 • Mark W. Mungerto Sheila A. Marrion, Ridge atEagleCrest57, Lot196, $189,900 • Richard C. Hunt, trustee for the Richard C.Hunt RevocableTrust, to Erikand SaraEmerson, North Rim on AwbreyButte, Phase2, Lot 28, $225,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Randall A. Broussard, AwbreyWoods, Phase2, Lot18, $259,500 • Fannie Maeto Christopher R. andCarly E. Sullivan, EastbrookEstates, Phase2, Lot 34, $174,600 • Barbara Butzento Marcus Holmes and Robert Tscharner,Tall Pines,Fifth Addition, Lot40, Block32, $190,000 • Timothy R. Kelly II to JackD.and Karen S.Bledsoe, Fairhaven, Phase1, Lot 9, $159,000 •Tammy J.IamstoJohnH.andJodi I. Weisner, SunMeadow, Lot11, $200,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Timothy E. Pfiffnerand Tracy Y. Fox-Pfiffner, Shevlin Ridge,Phase6, Lot133, $591,049 • Terry H. Troutto Danny S.Loveless, Arrowhead,Phases1-4, Lot19, $189,500 • Sherrie W. Anderson, trustees for the Sherrie W.Anderson RevocableTrust, to Judith A. Johansen,trustee for the Judith A. JohansenFamily Trust, East MeadowHomesite,Lot34,$650,000 •HaydenHomesLLC to DanielPalesch, Aspen Rim,Lot110, $273,807 • Kimberly S. Wolford to FabianA. Clark, CascadeGardens, Phases1and2,Lot 4, $229,900 • Erik Zamboni to Natalya Dolgopolova, South Village, Lot 22,$195,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Carol J. BoschSosa andAnthony F.Sosa, Vilage at Cold Springs, Phase2, Lots 73and 74, $198,369 • Dunlap FineHomes Inc. to Joel and Kelly Moore,Volcano, Lot11, $178,900 Crook County • Katherine andCraig Hornto Cheri C. Wulf, trustee ofthe Cheri C.Wulf Revocable Living Trust, BrasadaRanch 1, Lot109, $150,000 • Steven H.andCaroline E. Pape to Jeffery R.andJennifer L. Snow, Partition Plat 2002-40, Parcel2, $343,900 • Investments Unlimited LLC to Melissa Herz, Partition Plat 2004-24, Parcel 1, $160,000 • Columbia State Bank,assuccessor by merger toWest Coast Bank, toClem Wood, Partition Plat 2004-23, Parcel1, $800,000
•
enough to cover the increased
Contlnued from E1 "No beef, no delicatessen. That's the bottomline," Langer said after a typically frenetic lunch service."Jewish delis aren't vegetarian; they're based
Speaking last week at his company's plant scented with paprika and smoked beef, Haines said small businesses like his are strugglingtosecure enough red meat. Slaughterhouses,also known as packers, are more likely to reservetheir reduced supplies for big customerslike McDonald's. There's more pressure to
on corned beef and pastrami.
Things arebeyond my control. With theprice increase,I hope my customers are tolerant."
costs.
Langer said beef prices are the main reason his whole- throw the special cuts needsalefood costs have risen 45
ed to
percent in the past two years — much of it passedfrom his longtime supplier, R.C. ProvisionInc. The half-century-old Burbank, Calif., company prepares corned beef, pastrami,
the grinder for hamburgers. What's left for Haines costs
more. Brisket has more than tripled in price since 2008.¹ vel has more than doubled.
roast beef and chili for LA delis and restaurants.
have to mark it up more and
es recordedon stacks of sm all sheets of paper. "You take all
more," said the company's gen- the McDonald's and Burger eral manager, Jerry Haines, Kings across the United States; who has watched profit mar-
the amount of meat needed
ginsdwindleto about I percent from 5 percent in the last few
to make those hamburgers is
years rather than raise prices
of meat to goup."
forcing the value of other cuts
•
To OLIr COmmunity:
We have been asked a number of important questions regarding the expansion of OSU-Cascades into a four-year university for Central Oregon. For example, will there be sufhcient parking and transportation services? The initial10-acre campus will eventually serve1,960 students, faculty, staff and visitors. However, because of how classes are scheduled — and factoring in online courses — no more than an estimated 957 people will be on campus at any one time. Trafhc and parking demand will fluctuate as people come and go throughout the day, and most every parking spot will be used multiple times each day. We will also offer incentives to reduce the number of singleoccupancy cars coming to campus. Many students will live within a reaSOnable Walking Or biking diStanCe. SOme Will LISe CaSCadeS EaSt TranSit bLISSerViCe and a Shuttle linking Central OregOn
COmmunity COllege. In additiOn, LIP to 300 reSidenCe hall StudentS will not be allowed to park on campus. OLIr PlanS are baSed on COmmunity and tranSPOrtatiOn eXPertS'
input, a trafhc engineering study and benchmarking similar-sized universities and cities. With multiple transportation options, flex vehicle and carpool programs, and an expanded transit service, the research shows 321 parking spots at the10-acre campus will be more than enough. We're working to make sure that it is — for OSU-Cascades and for the community. Sincerely,
Becky Johnson Vice President
Traffic and parking by the numbers:
students will live in residence halls and not be allowed to park on campus
No more than an estimated
9S7 people will be on campus atany one time
11a.m.— 3p.m. 20O/O of students will live within an easy walk
is when most students and faculty will be on campus
ma ke deli me at in to
"This whole thing now is being drivenby hamburger," said the gravelly voiced Haines, who keepsyears of beef pric-
"For any profitability, you
•
Campus Parking and Traffic
300 Beef
-
Learnmore at OS UCaSCadeS.edu/4FA
Q
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN E 3
Sexism
Landlords
a letter he had written on his iPad about the Titstare episode and his comments on Twitter about women.
Continued from E1 Many women who want to
be engineers encounter a field where they not only are sig-
"It was a lapse in judgment and I'm entirely responsible for
nificantly
that," he wrote. "I sincerely and
u n d errepresented
but also feel pushed away. Tech executives often fault
e xpect t h at,"
For both of them, the letter
general for failing to encourage girl s to pursue computer
was the turning point. "The biggest thing was Pax realizing he was a public figure and the responsibilities that came with that," Shevinsky said. "He
science. But something else is
at play in the industry: Among the women who join the field, 52 percent leave by midcareer, a startling attrition rate that is
wrote the apology letter, and it
double that for men, according
Stuart Isett/ New York Times News Service
Juiie Ann Horvath, a software designer and developer, quit her job Business School. at GitHub last month, saying there was a culture of intimidation A culprit, manypeople in the and disrespect of women. field say, is a sexist, alpha-male culture that can make women
to researchfrom the Harvard
Computer science wasn't
said in an interview while she still worked at GitHub. "It's just
Dickinson sent his letter to
VentureBeat, a tech blog, for publication.
Married and then 40, he was more experienced and serious
women were pushed out. Over
who mistreated her included a
s ai d E l l e n said.
the last two months with situations like this than we've
in North Carolina, and he
Rents are up in parts of
interest rates. Now rents are
could work from there as had in two years," said Trev- easily as in California. So or Henson, managing part- off they went. They're lookner at First Light Property ing for houses now and findManagement in Manhattan ing that their money will Beach, Calif. "It is definitely go a lot farther in their new on the upswing." home. If this trend holds, it could The timing, Darcy said, mean even fewer homes for couldn't have been better. sale in an already tight mar- He estimates that his house ket. But for a certain type i n M a n hattan B e ach i s of homeowner,becoming a worth one-third more than landlord could make a lot of he paid for it four years ago, sense. and he refinanced into lower
r e t u rned to
Glimpse in December. But first Dickinson had to make some
promises. Shevinsky would unprofessional. Tech needs to be the chief executive and the A few days after Dickinson's 'computers' meant 'women,'" grow up in a lot of ways." public face of the company. "It is not misogyny" tweet, says Ruth Oldenziel, a profesAt GitHub, Horvath, who She would have to sign off on Shevinsky qui t G l i mpse.sor at Eindhoven University of was the only female develop- what he said on social media She had been aware of ear- Technology in the Netherlands er at the company when she and in press interviews — as lier cringe-making tweets in who studies history, gender started, said she once declined she did when he was interwhich her business partner and technology.Six women a romantic relationship with viewed for this article. And the had joked about rape or ques- programmed one of the most one of her co-workers. Then, company would add a second tioned even the most basic famous computers in history she said, she discovered that mission statement supportfeminist precepts. ("Women's — the 30-ton ENIAC — for the code she had written had dis- ing women in tech, including suffrage and individual free- U.S. Army during World War appeared. The man, she said, through hiring. "I have come to realize there dom are incompatible. How's II. had ripped it out. that for an unpopular truth?") But as with many profesHorvath eventually decid- are problems with sexism in Still, she admired Dickinson's sions, Oldenziel said, once ed that it was worth the risk technology through all this," technical skills and work ethic. programming gained prestige, and quit. She said the people Dickinson wrote in an intermeaned or even endangered.
always dominated by men. "In the beginning, the word
was very genuine and moving and impactful for me."
Shevinsky
gage, Darcy sard. "The confluence of events d i dn't kind of blew my mind," he
Haberle, Redfin's real estate D arcy an d h i s wi f e economist and the survey's bought the house in 2010 author. and always planned to move I t's the f i rst t i m e t h at to something bigger. With Redfin has conducted this two growing children and kind of study. But real estate regular visits from relatives, agents and property man- it was getting to be that time. agers say they're seeing the But the houses they were same thing: a noticeable up- eyeing in Manhattan Beach tick in the number of home were going up in price just buyers who want to rent out as fast as theirs was. their old place. They had enough sav"We've had more calls in ings for a down payment
unreservedly apologize to anyone I offended."
schools, parents or society in
and other people who don't fit the mold feel unwelcome, de-
Continued from E1 "We certainly
enough to cover the mort-
the country. Buyers who rising. "We bought at a good bought at the bottom of the market in 2009 got a bar- time," Darcy said. "That's gain. Then came years of what makes the mechanics opportunity t o r e finance work." into r e c ord-low i n t e rest Many of the new landrates. That means many lords are affluent and finanowners can rent out their cially savvy, Haberle said. home for more than it costs They're not necessarily in
view over email.
thedecades,theshareofwom- founder of the company. Nonetheless, he wasn't reabout workthan many other en in computing has continued Chris Wanstrath, GitHub's treating fromhis public tweets. tech types she knew, and she to decline. In 2012, just 18 per- chief executive and another Rather, he said, the media them each month, even with said he always treated her with cent ofcomputer-science col- co-founder, apologized to Hor- had portrayed him in a way taxes and other ownership respect. lege graduates were women, vath in a blog post and said the t hat didn't capture his f u ll costs figured in. But after the Twitter con- down from 37 percent in 1985, co-founder she complained personality. With the tenant covering "I am not just my tweets, troversy, she decided that she according to the National Cen- about was put on leave and the the note, they can build equity — especially if home just couldn't work with hi m ter for Women 5 Information company was investigating and I never was," he wrote in anymore. Technology. what happened. the email interview. "The carprices continue to rise. "It's a market-based deShevinsky's epiphany, howThis lack of women has beicature that's been painted of ever, wasn't just about Dickin- come of greater concern in the Owning the code me isn't accurate. I realized cision," Henson said. "They son or a couple of engineers. industry for a number of reaAt bigger companies, wom- after all this that many of my know they can get really It was about computer-engi- sons. For one, the products that en say harassment may be tweets came off mean-spirithigh rents right now. If I'm neering culture and her rela- the tech industry creates are easier to stop but that other, ed in a way I never intended, locked in on a 30-year fixed tionship with it. She had en- shaping the future for every- subtler forms of sexism persist. hence my apology." (mortgage) at 4 percent, and joyed being "one of the bros" one. "Women are increasingly Women often take on the At Glimpse, Shevinsky's if home values are going up, — throwing back whiskey and consumers; they're not go- role of p r oduct manager, title is "ladyboss" — which it can make a lot of sense." rubbing shoulders with MIT ing to like products that don't which entails the so-called she likes because, she said, it Timing it right graduates. And if that some- work for them," said Londa soft skills of managing people embraces the idea of women times meant fake-laughing as Schiebinger, a Stanford pro- and bridging the business and being in charge. Three of the It did for Brian Darcy. The her colleagues cracked jokes fessor who runs the Gendered engineering divide. Yet even six people who work at the 36-year-old and his wife reabout porn, so be it. Innovations project, which en- though this is an essential job, company are women, as are cently moved to North Car"For years, all I wanted to do courages engineers and scien- it's the purely technical people two of the three board memolina to be closer to her famwas work and code and make tists to consider gender when — not the businesspeoplebers. The pair raised a small ily. Instead of listing their software," she said in an inter- developing new products. who get the respect in the tech amount of money, mostly from t hree-bedroom in M a n view. "That's why I didn't care Perhaps more fundamental- lndustry. New York angel investors, and hattan Beach for sale, they "In engineering, whoever introduced the Glimpse app at about feminism. I just wanted ly, there are simply more jobs signed with First Light and to build stuff." than can be filled by available owns the code, they have the the South by Southwest conput it up for rent. Within a "But Titstare showed me talent. Some 1.2 million com- power," said Ana Redmond, a ference in Austin, Texas, in week they had a tenant and that was no longer a viable puting jobs will be available software engineer. When she March. a lease that paid more than option," she said. "We had to in 2022, yet U.S. universities worked as a senior engineer address our culture, because are producing only 39 percent at a bigcompany, Expedia, something was really not of the graduates needed to fill she was constantly underestiworking." them, the National Center for mated by male colleagues and Two days after the Tech- Women & Information Tech- suffered because she was not Crunch show, Business Insid- nology estimates. willing to leave her children to Tech's biggest companies work the hours needed to "own er forced Dickinson to resign. The Australian entrepreneurs say that recruiting women is a the code," she said. and TechCrunch each apolo- priority. "If we do that, there's In a statement, Expedia said gized. But incidents like these no question we'll more than Redmond had not raised these aren't exceptional. double the rate of technology concerns during her tenure. "We see these stories, 'Why output in the world," Larry The company added that it aren't there more women in Page, the chief executive of now has programs to develop computer science and engi- Google, said last spring. Yet at and retain female talent; it also neering?' and there's all these Google, less than a fifth of the has a goal to double the numcomplicated answers like, engineers are women. ber of women in roles at the 'School advisers don't have That's a t y pical f igure. vice-president level and higher them take math and physics,' Twentypercent of software de- by2020. and it's probably true," said velopers are women, accordIn 2011, Redmond quit to Wieden & Kennedy Lauren Weinstein, a man who ing to the Labor Department, start her own company, Inhas spent his four-decade ca- and fewer than 6 percent of finut, which makes educareer in tech working mostly engineers are black or His- tional apps for children, and with other men and is current- panic. Comparatively, 56 per- to teach computer science at ly a consultant for Google. cent of people in business and the University of Washington "But I think there's proba- financial-operations jobs are — largely, she said, to mentor bly a simpler reason," he said, women, as are 36 percent of female students. "For me, what "which is these guys are just physicians and surgeons and worked best was changing the one-third of lawyers. jerks, and women know it." context," she said, "not conforming to it."
it for the long haul, but they see a chance to profit right
now. "These amateur landlords
aren't people who are doing this for a living," she said. "They just kind of happened into this opportunity."
Vanessa Ginn,
Management Group in Los Angeles, said she's seeing a lot more people consider-
ing the idea and looking for help. But being a landlord has its challenges, including fair housing laws, tenant screening and the potential for costly repairs. It can be
p articularly difficult f o r first-timers or homeowners who move out of town.
"You don't always know what's going on with the property," Ginn said. "Your tenant can tell you something that's going on that you can't see."
Eric Gadrielson 8 Jesse Johnson
Making a Credible Gonnection — ALook Behind P&G's Olympics Campaign
A bright beginning
Startup culture
When Shevinsky was introAt tech startups, often conduced to engineering culture sidered the m ost d esirable at Williams College, she got places to work,the number no hint of sexism. A political of women appears to be even theory major, she learned to lower. The companies genercode from a boyfriend, and ally don't release these numshe described their engineer bers publicly, but an engineer friends as "forward-thinking at Pinterest has collected data feminists." from people at 133 startups She worked in product de- and found that an average of velopment for a
n u mber of
12 percent of the engineers are
startups and was a co-found- women. er of a dating site. She settled Sexism exists in many placin New York, where she got to
es,but startup companies have
know Dickinson at tech meet- particular qualities that can alups. When she had a new busi- low problemsto gounchecked. ness idea — a kind of Snapchat
The lines between work and
for adults that prevents people social life are often blurry, befrom taking screen shots of cause people tend to be young private pictures — she sought and to work long hours, and out his advice. the founders and first emLast spring, they decided to ployees are often friends. And build the app together. At first, startups pride themselves on a they conceived it as a sexting lack ofbureaucracy, forgoing product, but later they shifted big-company layers like huto a service that could be used man resourcesdepartments. by anyone concerned about They say they can move faster keeping their messages safe that way, without becoming from prying eyes. They called bogged down in protocol. it Glimpse. But a result can be an anyBy August, Shevinsky had thing-goes atmosphere, said closed her dating site to work Julie Ann Horvath, a software on Glimpse. Dickinson, who designer and developer who had his full-time job at Busi- publicly quit her job last month ness Insider, helped when he at coding website GitHub, saycould. ing that there was a culture of "I remember thinking just intimidation and disrespect of that I was so lucky that Pax women. GitHub, founded in was going to work with me," 2008, hired a senior HR execShevinsky said. "At the time I utive only in January. "If there is n o s t ructure, was still relatively unknown, and he was one of the best that's actually more harmful to technologists I'd met." marginalized people," Horvath
The OlympicsgaveProcter & Gambleanopportunity
Still on the defensive
to haVe aPOint of VieWthat WOuld reSOnateWith milliOnS ofPeOPle.But to do thiS, P&Ghadto
After she quit Glimpse, She-
vinsky began looking for a job outside the startup world. Dickinson, no longer at Business Insider, made it his mission to persuade her to return.
find its authentic andmeaningful connection to the OlymPiCS GameS.
Glimpse had no office and lit-
tle money, so they met at TGI
JOin Wieden 8 Kennedy'SEriCGabrielSon and JeSSeJOhnSOnaSthey highlightPBG'SS0Chi
Friday's and at a dive bar that
served $5 beer. The conversations started at
a deadlock.
Olympicseffort, and intheprocess discuss lessons and overarchingstrategy increating acompelling creative campaign.
"There was the one where
Pax said, 'I got to keep tweeting, I got to keep tweeting,'" Shevinsky recalled. "I wasn't going to come back to Glimpse if we both weren't going to be taking it seriously. I remember telling Pax that his tweets were going to be very expensive for us."
Social media, where people carefully build their public personas, often become bullhorns for offensive comments.
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"Many women have come
to me and said they basically have had to hide on the Net now," said W einstein, who
I
I '
• I ' I
I I I I
•
works on issues of identity and anonymity online. "They use male names, they don't put
theirreal photos up, because they are immediately targeted and harassed."
Late last fall, Shevinsky and Dickinson flew together from a tech conference in Califor-
nia back to New York. When Shevinsky awoke from a nap, Dickinson asked her to look at
s
s
I
p resen tedby:St. Charl e s HEALTH SYSTEM
•
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p r esi-
dent of Platinum Property
ss
E4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
CobaltlEn
17.51
-.64
CognizTc s 47.31 Coldwgrk d.13 ColgPalm s1.44f 65.31 Comcast .90f 47.96 For theweek en dirlg Comc spcl .90f 47.36 Fdiday,April 11,2014 Comerica .761 48.25 1.00 30.50 WK YTD ConAgra ConocoPhil 2.76 70.87 N AME D I V LAST CHG %CHG ConEd 2.521 55.60 ConstegA 78.03 Corning .40 20.38 ADT Corp .80 29.74 1.24 112.08 Costco AES Corp .20 14.15 CSVlnvNG 3.04 AK Steel 6.96 CSVellVST 29.51 AT&T Inc 1.84 35.20 CSVxShtrs 7.37 AbbottLab .88f 37.02 Abbgie 1.68f 46.46 CrwnCstle 1.40 72.10 A berFitc . 8 0 35.74 Abraxas u4.69 Accenture 1.86e 77.09 Actavis 188.83 ActivsBliz .20f 19.05 AdobeSy 60.50 AMD 3.65 Aerepestl 64.62 Aetna .90 70.82 AkamaiT 52.61 AlcatelLuc .18e 3.77 Alcoa .12 12.54 Alkermes 41.89 A gergan . 2 0 120.89 AgdNevG 4.01 Allstate 1 . 12f 55.29 AgyFin n ud24.20 AlphaNRs 4.31 AlpAlerMLP1.09e 17.93 AlteraCp If .60 33.81 Altria 1.92 37.65 Amazon 311.73 Ambev n .22e 7.80 Ameren 1.60 40.50 AMovilL . 3 4e 19.97 AmAirl n 33.68 AmApparel .49 ACapAgy 3.15e 22.39 AmCapLtd 14.54 AEagleDut .50 (I11.60 AEP 2.00 u50.90 AmExp 1 .04f 84.54 AmlntlGrp .50f 49.40 ARltCapPr 1.00 13.23 AmTower 1.28f 80.55 AmeriBrgn .94 64.1 7 A mgen 2 . 4 4 111.94 Anadarko .72 96.48 AnglogldA .10e 17.97 Annaly 1 .35e 11.46 AntaresP (I3.63 Anworth .49e 5.30 Apache 1.00f 82.09 ApoaeEdu 27.12 Apogolnv .80 8.06 AppleInc 12.20 519.61 A pldMatl . 4 0 19.1 2 ArcelorMit .20 16.45 ArchCoal .04m 4.88 ArchDan .96f u44.41 ArenaPhm 6.07 AriadP 7.14 ArmourRsd .60 4.1 6 AshfordHT .48 10.19 AssuredG .44f 24.00 Atmel 7.87 AutoNavi 20.65 Autodesk 45.19 AvagoTch 1.08f 58.53 AvisBudg 48.04 Avon .24 14.41 8 88T Cp . 9 2 38.65 BP PLC 2. 28 47.45 BRF SA .3 9e 21.95 Ctrip.com 53.83 Baidu 149.74 CumMed 6.61 B akrHu .6 0 63.37 C ypSemi . 4 4 9.61 BagardPw 3.93 40 +159.4 I BcoBrad pf .23e 14.90 +.76 e1 8.9 7.59 BcoSantSA .82e u9.58 -.21 +5.6 D CT Indl . 2 8 BcoSBrasil .95e 5.70 +.05 +5.6 DDR Corp .62f 16.27 9.43 BkofAm . 2 0f 15.77 -.95 e1.3 DFC Glbl BkNYMel .68f 33.12 -1.48 -5.2 DR Horton .15 21.61 B arclay . 4 1e 15.72 -.60 -13.3 DanaHldg .20 22.20 8 iPVix rs 44.75 a2.91 e5.2 Danaher .40f 72.80 2. 0 4 u92.01 B arrickG . 2 0 18.62 +.14 +5.6 D eere .26 B axter 1 . 9 6 71.98 -.95 c3,5 DelaurEg Beam lnc .90 83.27 -.01 +22.3 DelphiAuto 1.00 64.90 .2 4 32.52 BedBath 63.72 -5.50 -20.6 DeltaAir BerkH 8 121.70 -2.20 +2.6 DenburyR .25 16.37 B estBuy . 6 8 25.51 -2.19 -36.0 DevonE . 9 6f 67.55 . 5 0 a 45.88 Biogenldc 274.00 -14.27 -2.0 D ia0ffs BlackBerry 7.28 -.72 -2.2 DigitalRlt 3.32f 51.68 74.00 Blackstone 1.34e 30.14 -2.66 -4.3 DirecTV 33.44 B lockHR . 8 0 27.64 -1.87 -4.8 DirSPBr rs -5.31 -1 0.6 DxGldBII rs 37.15 Boeing 2 .92f 122.07 22.21 BostonSci 12.69 -.81 +5.6 DrxFnBear -1.06 -8.1 DrxSCBear 17.99 BrMySq 1.44 48.83 27.64 Broadcom .12f 29.32 -1.36 -1.1 DrxEMBug -.95 DrxFnBuH 82.06 BrcdeCm 9.55 +7.7 23.58 C A Inc 1 . 0 0 29.41 -1.67 -1 2.6 DirDGdBr s DrxSCBuH 1.19e 66.24 CBS 8 .48 58.68 -2.88 -7.9 CH Robins 1.40 54.87 +2.46 -6.0 D iscover . 8 0 55.15 DishNetw h 57.49 CME Grp 1.88f 66.95 -3.65 -14.7 CMS Eng 1.08f 29.45 +.07 +10.0 D isney . 8 6 f 77.01 CSX .60 28.01 -.75 -2.6 DogarGen 54.74 CVS Care 1.10 72.58 -2.11 +1.4 DogarTree 50.74 CYS Invest 1.28 8.77 +.41 +1 8.4 DomRescs 2.40f 69.42 CblvsnNY .60 16.29 -1.04 -9.1 DowChm 1.48f 46.95 CabotOG s .08 32.41 -2.16 -1 6.4 DrPepSnap 1.64f 51.19 3.10 Cadence 14.53 -.31 +3.6 DryShips Caesars 18.73 e.98 -13.0 DuPont 1 . 80 66.09 Calpine 20.72 -.23 +6.2 DukeEngy 3.12 71.84 16.70 Cameron 60.66 -3.31 c1,9 D ukeRlty . 6 8 12.60 CdnNRs gs .90f u39.40 -.33 +1 6.4 E-CDang CdnSelar 24.99 -5.99 -16.2 E-House .20e 10.73 CapOne 1.20 74.04 -2.66 -3.4 E-Trade 19.79 CpstnTurb 2.03 -.06 +57.4 eBay 53.46 -2.87 -1.0 E MC Cp . 4 0 26.65 CardnlHlth 1.21 66.14 98.63 Carnival 1.00 37.03 -.87 -7.8 EOGRes s .50f -3.75 -1 8.1 Eaton 1 . 9 6f 70.92 Catamaran d38.89 Caterpillar 2.40 u101.45 -.72 +11.7 Edisonlnt 1.42 u56.32 EldorGld g .06e 5.90 Celgene 136.90 -.48 -1 9.0 CegThera 3.17 -.14 +66.0 ElectArts 26.67 CegdexTh 14.62 -1.95 -42.1 EmersonEI 1.72 65.40 C emex . 4 5 t 12.83 -.75 +8.5 EnableMn ud22.20 Cemig pfs 2.02e 7.26 +.32 +21.9 EnCana g .28 u22.42 CenterPnt .95f 24.00 +.20 e3.5 Endo Intl 57.33 CntryLink 2.16 33.35 -.34 +4.7 ENSCO 3. 00 48.59 52.11 -1.56 -6.5 Ericsson .46e 13.13 Cerner s 68.18 CheniereEn u55.95 a1.15 e29.8 E steeLdr . 8 0 ChesEng .35 26.16 -.34 -3.6 E xcoRes . 2 0 5.84 Chevron 4.00 117.03 -1.77 -6.3 Exelixis d3.37 Chicos .30 15.59 -.57 -1 7.3 E xelon 1 . 2 4 35.16 Chimera .36a 3.14 +.09 +1.3 E xpedia . 6 0 68.79 ChiMYWnd 2.45 -.35 ExpScripts 72.15 Cienagarp 19.41 -2.22 -16.9 ExxonMbl 2.52 96.72 Cisco .76f 22.46 -.25 +.9 Facebook 58.53 C itigroup . 0 4 45.68 -1.43 -12.3 FamilyDlr 1.24f d56.10 CitrixSys 54.56 -1.97 -13.7 Fastenal 1.00 49.86 CgffsNRs .60 19.58 -.95 -25.3 F idlNFin .7 2 31.46 C oach 1 . 3 5 48.81 -.75 -13.0 F ifthThird . 4 8 21.56
-2.88 -.11 +1.09 -2.22 -1.91 -2.84 -.48 +.65 c1.24 -6.30 -.97 +1.43 -.45 -2.25 +.66 -2.65
Consolidated Stocks NYSE andNasdaq
-
For the we ek ending Friday, April 11, 2014
WK %RETURN NAV CHG 1YR 3YR
AmericanBeacon L gCpylls 28 . 7 9 -.80 +19.3 AmericanCentury Eqlnclnv 8.69 -.15 +10.0 I nvGrlnv 31 . 8 5-.99 +15.3 U ltralnv 32. 5 8-1.00 +20.2 AmericanFunds
AMCAPA m 27.11 -.84 +21.3 B alA m 24. 1 7 -.41 +11.8 BondA m 1 2 . 66+.07 +0.3 CaplncBuA m 58.28 -.49 +8.2 CapWldBdA m 20.81 +.20 +1.9 CpWldGrlA m 44.94 -.92 +14.5 EurPacGrA m 48.39 -1.01 +13.4 FnlnvA m 4 9 .92 -1.40 +15.9 GrthAmA m 41.74 -1.29 +18.0 HilncA m 1 1 . 47-.04 +5.7 IncAmerA m 20.74 -.25 +10.5 IntBdAmA m 13.54 +.05 -0.1 InvCoAmA m 36.39 -.95 e18.3 MutualA m 34.39 -.85 +13.1 NewEconA m 37.32 -1.13 +25.0 NewPerspA m 36.51 -.96 e14.1 NwWrldA m 58.44 -.49 +6.9 SmCpWldA m 47.92-1.33 +15.0 TaxEBdAmA m 12.79 +.08 +0.4 WAMutlnvA m 38.90 -.93 +17.0
Artisan Intl d 29.32 -.58 +11.4 I ntlVal d 36. 3 0 -.58 e17,9 M dCpVal 2 6 . 6 8-.76 +15.2 M idCap 45. 6 8-1.78 e20.3 BBH TaxEffEq d 21.36 -.36 +13.0 BlackReck EqDivA m 2 3 . 95-.56 +11.7 E qDivl 24.0 2 -.56 +12.0 GlobAlcA m 21.10 -.34 +6.6 GlobAlcC m 19.51 -.32 +5.8 G lobAlcl 21. 2 1 -.35 e6.9 H iYldBdls 8.3 2 -.03 +8.3 S trlnclns 10 . 26 -.02 +3.2 Cohen &Steers Realty 68.20 -.78 +0.4 Columbia AcornlntZ 4 6 . 70-.61 +13.5 A cornZ 35. 7 4-1.11 +14.1 LgCpGrowZ 32.72 -1.19 e14.1 Credit Suisse C omStrlnstl 7 . 79 +.10 -0.1 DFA
1 YrFixlnl 10 . 3 3+.01 +0.4 2 YrGlbFII 1 0 . 0 1+.01 +0.5 5 YrGlbFII 1 0 . 9 8+.06 +0.6 EmMkCrEql 19.89 +.23 +0.7 EmMktVag 27.96 +.43 -1.0 I ntCorEql 1 2 . 8 3-.24 +17.0 IntSmCapl 21.16 -.54 +26.8 I ntlSCol 19. 6 7 -.42 +22.1 I ntlValul 19. 5 2 -.37 +18.0 RelEstScl 2 8 . 45-.22 -0.8 USCorEq11 16.24 -.51 +19.2 USCorEq21 16.05 -.53 +19.9 U SLgCo 14 . 3 3 -.38 e16.3
-6.3 FstSolar -62.6 FirstEngy 1.44 +.2 -7.7 Flextrn .50 -5.1 FordM e1.5 ForestLab -9.5 ForestOil +.3 Fortinet c.6 Fortress .32f +1 0.9 FrankRes s .48 +1 4.4 FMCG 1 . 25a -5.8 -65.6 Freescale -14.2 FrontierCm .40 -1.7 FuelCegE -1.8 Fusion-io
+14.0 +10.5 +1 0.5 +1 2.7 +14.4
+11.2 c4,1 +8.6 e3.3 +9.1 +5.1 e11.2 +12.3 +6.9 +1 0.2 +2.1
+12.7
+12.4 +1 5.9
e9.4 +3.1 +8.1 e6.8 +13.9
+9.7 e1 2.3 +12.5 e13.1
e14.7 +10.6 +11.0 +4.8 +4.0 e5.1 +9.1 +4.3
e9.7 +7.6 +1 0.1 e11.3
-8.0 +0.6 +0.8 +3.5 -2.7 -5.8 +5.8 e9.3 +7.7 +3.9 e1 0.9 +13.5 +13.4 e13.4
iSh20 yrT 3.37e 110.73 +2.27 +8.7 iS Eafe 1.70e 6 6.26 -1.10 -1.2 iShiBxHYB 6.01e 93.78 -.50 +1.0 iShNsdqBio .07e 215.45 -9.85 -5.1 iSR2KGr .99e 127.58 -5.30 -5.9 iShR2K 1.45e 110.41 -4.08 -4.3 iShREst 2.56e 6 7.52 -.62 +7.0 iShHmCnst .04e 23.53 -1.06 -5.2 IngerRd 1.00 5 4.39 -2.10 -11.7 -.3 I novioPhm .. . 2.8 9 -.25 IntgDv ... 1 1.11 -.74 e9.1 Intel .90 26.18 + .02 + . 9 IBM 3.80 1 9 5.19+3.42 +4.1 IntlGame .4 4 1 3 . 58 -.08 -25.2 IntPap 1. 4 0 4 4 . 98 -.83 -8.3 Interpublic .38f 1 6.28 -.64 -8.0 InvenSense ... 2 0.59 -.63 -.9 Invesco . 9 0 34 . 09 -1.56 -6.3 IsoRay ... 2.80 -.23 +460.0
Masco .30 MasterCd s .44
21.35 -1.28 -6.2 ProUltSP .25e 99.06 -5.56 -3.4 68.68 -3.39 -1 7.8 PrUPQQQ s 53.89 -4.80 -13.2 M attel 1. 5 2 f 37.82 -1.59 -20.5 PUltSP500 s .06e 90.94 -7.88 -5.6 Maximlntg 1.04 31.49 -1.19 +12.9 PUVixSTrs 67.06 +8.66 -.2 McDrmlnt 6.84 -.23 -25.3 ProctGam 2.57f 80.76 +.99 -.8 -.61 -13.2 McDnlds 3.24 99.29 +1.42 +2.3 ProgsvCp 1.00e 23.66 McEwenM 2.47 +.03 +26.0 ProUShSP 30.01 +1.50 +1.2 Medtrnic 1.12 59.20 -2.37 c3,2 PUShQQQrs 63.16 +3.00 e5.3 MelcoCrwn .34e 35.66 -1.49 -9.1 ProUShL20 65.22 -2.79 -1 7.7 M erck 1. 7 6 u55.92 -.20 e11.7 PUSR2Krs 50.64 +3.40 e5.2 M etLife 1 . 10 49.19 -3.65 -8.8 PShtQQQrs 61.45 +4.11 e7.1 MKors 86.87 -2.67 +7.0 PUShSPXrs 61.04 +4.47 e1.3 MicronT 21.13 -1.45 -2.9 ProspctCap 1.32 10.79 -.04 -3.8 Microsoft 1.12 39.21 -.66 +4.8 Prudentl 2.12 77.61 -6.72 -15.8 MobileTele .94e 16.50 -.65 -23.7 PSEG 1 . 4 8f 38.81 +.34 +21.1 Molycorp 4.76 -.02 -15.3 P ulteGrp . 2 0 18.71 -.78 -8.1 Mondelez .56 34.31 -.23 -2.8 Qihoo360 87.00 -2.34 +6.0 Monsanto 1.72 110.90 -3.38 -4.8 Qualcom 1.68f 78.01 -.52 +5.1 MorgStan .40f 28.47 -1.90 -9.2 Guestcer 1.26 u80.12 +12.25 +47.1
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Suncorgs .92f 35.92 -.05 +2.5 SunEdisen 16.85 -2.68 +29.1 SunPewer 26.61 -5.37 -16.7 SunstnHtl .20 13.22 -.71 -1.3 S unTrst . 8 0 f 37.75 -1.93 +2.6 Supvalu 6.71 -.38 -8.0 SwiftTrans 22.97 -2.10 +3.4 Symantec .60 20.01 -.24 -15.1 S ynovus . 0 4 3.19 -.20 -11.4 S ysco 1. 1 6 35.34 -.31 -2.1 T-MoblUS n 30.01 -2.45 -10.8 TD Ameritr .48a 29.90 -.77 -2.4 TJX .701 57.83 -3.35 -9.3 TaiwSemi .50e 19.89 +.12 +14.0 TakeTwo 19.78 -1.42 e13.9 TalismE g .27 10.44 +.15 -1 0.4 T arget 1.7 2 58.90 -2.24 -6.9 TeckRes g .90 22.45 +.21 -13.7 Teradata 44.71 -3.08 -1.7 TeslaMot 203.78 -8.45 +35.5 T esoro 1 . 0 0 47.47 -3.11 -1 8.9 TevaPhrm 1.31e 50.33 -2.67 e25.6 T exlnst 1 . 2 0 44.98 -1.36 +2.4 Themgrkg 2.85 +.49 +36.7 3D Sys 48.67 -7.27 -48.3 3M Co 3 . 42f132.39 -3.47 -5.6 TW Cable 3.00f 133.08 -6.09 -1.8 TimeWarn 1.27f 62.76 -3.75 -10.0 TiVo lnc 11.64 -1.19 -11.3 TogBros 34.73 -2.05 -6.1 Transocn 2.24 39.45 -2.16 -20.2 TrinaSelar 11.56 -2.66 -15.4 TripAdvis 78.99 -6.70 -4.6 TriQuint 13.22 c.47 e58.5 Trulia 31.86 -1.95 -9.7 TurqHigRs 3.50 +.11 + 6 .1 21stCFoxA .25 31.91 -.96 -9.3 21stCFoxB .25 31.01 -1.18 -1 0.4 Twitter n 40.05 -3.09 -37.1 TwoHrblnv 1.11e 10.33 +.05 +11.3 T ycolntl . 7 2 f 40.62 -1.66 -1.0 Tyson .30 41.67 +.45 +24.5 UltraPt g u27.31 -1.69 e26.1 UtdContl 41.49 -3.39 +9.7 UPS 6 2 . 6 8f 96.27 -1.83 -8.4 87.41 -4.46 +12.1 UtdRentals US Bancrp .92 40.51 - 2.04 + . 3 US NGas 25.74 +1.05 +24.4 US OilFd 37.18 +.75 + 5 .3 U SSteel . 2 0 26.87 -.89 -8.9 UtdTech 2.36 113.93 - 4.25 + . 1 UtdhlthGp 1.12 78.95 -2.58 +4.8 UraniumEn 61.68 -.17 -46.6 UrbanOut 36.01 -1.99 -2.9
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+3.81 +8.5 -.26 -14.5 GT AdvTc 16.20 -.59 -8.5 GalenaBio 2.06 Gagaghr 1.44f 44.38 GameStop 1.32f 40.52 -.16 +6.5 .88f 38.40 -.47 e5.9 Gap 1.92 -.05 -17.6 GencoShip 25.43 -.70 -3.2 G enElec . 8 8 -.51 +13.1 GenGrPrp .60f 22.07 2.60 -5.7 GenMigs 1.64f 51.15 +.18 +.7 GenMotors 1.20 31.93 16.60 +.63 +119.7 Genwerlh 6.05 -2.91 +7.9 Gerdau . 1 3e 1.84 -2.09 +18.4 GeronCp -.38 -.4 Gigamonn (I16.27 -.46 +9.2 GileadSci 66.03 -2.50 -1 9.4 GlaxoSKln 2.47e 51.76 4.02 -1.50 +5.2 GluMobile 18.19 -3.36 e7.2 Gaga n GoldFLtd .02e 4.05 +2.44 +.7 -.37 c35.5 Goldcrp g .60 24.09 152.72 +2.29 +3.3 GoldmanS 2.20 +1.76 +6.0 Goodyear .20 25.21 537.76 +1.00 -3.7 Google A d530.60 16.31 -9.2 Google C n 9.81 -.18 -46.5 GraphPkg 6.95 -8.61 -14.5 Groupen -3.24 -1.4 GpTelevisa .14e 32.52 48.21 -4.75 -.7 HCA Hldg -3.42 c.8 HCP Inc 2.18f 40.22 -1.94 -9.3 HalconRes 4.55 -1.37 -10.1 H agibrtn . 6 0 57.61 -.20 +7.3 Halezyme 7.42 -1.74 +5.7 H arffdFn . 6 0 33.30 HeclaM . 0 1e 3.11 -2.52 e5.1 -.16 -34.0 Herbalife 1.20 51.48 -1.25 e1.7 HercOffsh d4.30 +1.35 +4.1 Hertz 26.17 -.22 c11.0 H ess 1.0 0 83.58 -.25 +31.9 HewlettP .64f u32.45 -.74 -28.8 HimaxTch .25e 10.47 -.64 +.8 HogyFront 1.20a 46.18 -.54 -2.6 HomeDp 1.88f 75.70 32.92 -.75 +6.0 HomeAway -1.14 +17.5 Honwglntl 1.80 90.40 -4.65 -6.8 HarizPhm 12.62 a.39 +21.6 HostHotls .56f 20.05 -.06 +3.7 HovnanE 4.62 -1.93 c1 6.3 H udsCity . 1 6 9.55 -1.87 -6.8 HuntBncsh .20 9.41 Huntsmn . 50 24.20 I AC Inter . 9 6 +.38 +24.2 68.82 -6.87 -15.0 IAMGld g 3.50 -2.51 -15.0 IMS Hlth n u23.46 -.06 +7.3 iSAstla 1.14e 26.29 +1.20 -9.5 iShBrazil 1.44e 47.39 -.04 +10.0 iShEMU .92e u41.73 -.25 -45.0 i Sh HK . 6 1eu21.03 . 3 4 e 17.39 +.69 +28.4 i Shltaly -1.26 -1.2 iShJapan .13e 10.80 -1.13 +2.7 iSh SKor .90e 63.48 -.64 -4.4 iShMexico 1.33e 63.75 e1.78 e7.1 iSTaiwn . 2 6e u14.69 -1.94 -13.7 iShSilver 19.19 -1.14 e4.9 iShChinaLC1.02e 36.14 -.26 -3.1 iSCorSP5003.44e 182.60 -1.36 e2.5 iShEMkts .86e 41.83
c1 7.4 +1 2.6 +2.7 +4.9 +20.7 +7.8 +23.2 +15.3
10.96 +.05 e1.3 e6.2 51.61 -.78 +1 0.1 +1 0.2 9.14 -.02 +3.0 +4.4
20.83 -.37 e1 5.0 +1 3.0 33.11 -.40 +12.7 +9.8 10.27 +.01 +0.7 +1.6
nds
38.78 -1.52 +20.5 +8.2
17.57 -.21 22.57 -.46 22.56 -.47 61.25 -2.29 34.27 -1.54 9.97 -.07 91.32 -2.85 91.28 -2.85 34.68 -1.02 35.76 -.91 35.71 -.91 58.22 -1.32 12.73 -.16 13.27 -.30 9.37 -.21 9.96 -.01 14.23 -.17 14.83 -.21 15.40 -.26 15.66 -.33 16.13 -.36 16.22 -.37 15.33 -.15 15.56 -.21 13.23 -.22 16.08 -.34 11.45 +.06 115.89 -3.57 27.24 -.71 115.77 -3.56 9.46 -.02 38.84 -1.18 7.85 +.05 49.21 -1.32 49.24 -1.31 90.17 -3.18 39.40 -1.34 13.14 +.10 74.87 -3.29 21.00 -.46 20.99 -.46 13.60 -.44 11.35 +.07 53.23 -1.68 13.61 -.43 11.34 +.07
-3.03 +8.5 -.87 -1.5 -.42 -1 5.6 -2.13 +23.7 - .88 + . 5 -.18 e1 6.9 -.50 +1.3 -3.80 +44.5 -.07 -49.3 -1.54 +7.0 -.50 -1 8.6 -1.61 -10.3 -.45 -13.7 +.39 +50.0 -.12 +16.8 -.07 +66.0 -.71 c3,5
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40.83 -1.07 +17.8 +10.5 41.34 -1.08 +18.0 +1 0.8 97.47 -1.82 13.78 +.07 43.80 -.58 166.01 -5.09
47.33 11.48 8.96 67.59 33.15 9.08 15.63 86.76 1.83 20.47 6.97 51.80 32.56 24.07 5.43 2.34 9.22
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30.99 -1.11 +20.4 +1 4.4 34.47 -1.09 +22.3 +1 3.2 29.82 -1.07 +22.4 +1 3.4
MutualFunds FUND
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CocaCola 1.221 38.63 +.41 -6.5 FstHorizon .20 CocaCE t .00f 45.24 -1.64 +2.5 FstNiagara .32
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Wages
a 750-store sandwich chain based in Jacksonville, Fla.,
Continued from E1
says his franchisees in the Moreover, even as the eco- Texas oil belt have had to pay nomic cycle continues to ad- $10 to $15 an hour to get workvance, powerful underlying ers. But at company-owned forces — including a relative- stores in North Florida, where ly strong dollar that contrib- unemployment is about 6 perutes to an outsourcing of jobs cent, there is not much wage abroad — are helping to hold pressure yet, and he is able down pay increases. to get away with paying little "The upward pressure on more than the state minimum wages will be there, but I'm wage of $7.93 an hour, which not sure it will be fulfilled went up 14 cents at the beginin a competitive worldwide ning of the year. market," said Bob Funk, chief But even there, he is feeling executive of Express Employ- agreaterneedtom ake hisjobs ment Professionals in Okla- more appealing. This year, homa City, one of the nation's
largest staffing firms. At Express, which places mostly
he offered health insurance to lower-ranking store work-
ers, and twice as many people signed up as he expected. "That was a $4,000-a-year average hourly wage of its job finders rose only 7 cents in raise right there," Fox said. 2013, or less than 1 percent, to Signs of wage pressure con$11.41, he said. cern some experts, who worry The March unemployment that it may lead to inflation. rate showed average hour- But many analysts, includly wages dropping a penny, ing the m i ddle-of-the-road light-industrial workers, the
to $24.30, after a 9 cent gain in February, but with hours
Zandi and Jared Bernstein, a left-leaning economist who
worked increasing, total pay continued to gain ground.
served as an adviser to Vice President Joe Biden, dismiss A cross the c o untry, t h e the inflation threat, arguing number of metropolitan re- that growing business investgions at or near the 5.5 percent ment to enhance productivity unemployment rate — a signal and expand sales will offset that an area is moving closer higher labor costs. to the full employment zone One example is Gap Inc., — is growing rapidly, said Joel which is raising the pay of its Naroff, president of Naroff 65,000 lower-wage workers Economic Advisors outside (out of its total of 90,000 in the Philadelphia. United States) to $9 an hour "Labor supply is like hous- this year and will increase it to ing or anything else: It's local," $10 an hour in June 2015. Naroff said. The Gap acted partly beMadison, Wis., has 4.5 per- cause a shift to more busicent unemployment and the ness online made it essential nation's second-fastest wage to have higher-skilled and growth, Labor Department better-trained workers in its statistics show. Collier County,
stores. The retailer's expanFla., anchored by Naples, has sion into selling clothes online
the nation's third-highest wage growth, as rebounding housing and stock markets have pushed local unemployment
above the national trend in the
Continued from E1 PacifiCorp owns more re-
2013 version.
sults for our shareholders."
revenue, a model it's reluctant
the Clean Air Act, a federal
2020. "We're still at a point where
later" by utilities is coming to an end, they said.
the company's approach to coal is this piecemeal ap-
"Do you invest hundreds of millions of dollars in retrofit-
ting old, outdated, often heavily polluting coal plants to meet said Bob Jenks, executive di- current and coming regulatory rector of the Oregon Citizen's standards for pollution control Utility Board, at the March and public health'?" asked Bill 17 hearing. Guideline 8 asks Arthur, deputy regional manutilities to anticipate the cost ager for the Sierra Club Beyond to comply with coming regu- Coal campaign. "Or is it time to lations on carbon dioxide and actually retire those plants and other emissions. retire them earlier, and pursue Jenks said h e b elieved an investment strategy that P acifiCorp u n d erstood i n can havealternativeenergy reD ecember 2012, when t h e placing the old coal plants?" PUC disallowed $17 million Vogel, of PacifiCorp, said the company invested in coal the Sierra Club takes a stand to plants, that Oregon expect- fit its agenda. "The reality is these invested the utility to rethink its approach to burning coal in ments don't extend the life power plants. Instead, Mid- of these coal plants.... What American Energy Holdings all this analysis does, if it can Co. re-assigned key personnel be done, is look at the alterinvolved in coal analysis to natives, and when it doesn't other tasks and moved on. Representatives of the Sier-
pencil out, we look at retiring
plan, said the utility counts
"That's the point of the IRP."
(those plants). When it does ra Club, which also weighed pencil out, we look at makin on PacifiCorp's long-range ing the investments," he said. its investments in coal-fired plants as a kind of guaranteed
The Doctor will see you now. Dr. Randy Visser will see you in the comfort and convenience of your own home. Dr. Visser has
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COMPANY
T ICKER
C .H. Robinson Wwde CHRW UnileverNV UN Annaly Capital Mgmt NLY Crescent PointEngy CPG 3 Arch Dan Mid A DM FacebookInc FB Kellogg Co K M agellan Mid Ptrs MMP Con Edison ED Hlth Care REIT H CN Enterp Prod Part E PD Cheniere Energy L NG southern co SO Exelon Corp E XC Duke Energy DUK
FRIDAY C LOS E
Seruiny all of Central Oregoninctuding BenB, 1reipmon3, Sutera, cVaJrcu ~ P r i nevitk
54. 8 7 42.25 11.46 8.2 4 44. 41 58.53 65.68 73.51 55.60 61. 77 72.17 55.95 44.57 35.16 71. 84
2.46 1.68 0.4 2 1.2 4 1.36 1.7 8 1.91 1.97 1.24 1.33 1.46 1.15 0.8 7 0.69 1.35
4.7 4.1 3 .8 3A 3 .2 3.1 3 .0 2 .8 2.3 2 .2 2 .1 2 .1 2 .0 2 .0 1.9
7.3 9.6 1.1 4.8 4.5 -13.6 7.8 6.1 1.7 4.8 6.4 8.5 2.5 14.8 1.6
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
ISRG
sanDiskcorporation CatamaranCorp AmeripriseFncl Gilead Sciences
-65.89
-13.0
3.9
8.25
-1.01
-10.9
-6.0
A BBV
46. 4 6
-5.32
-10.3
-9.3
M YL
45.7 2
-4.91
-9.7
-13.1
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57. 2 5
-6.09
-9.6
-26.0
L NC
45.6 7
-4.55
-9.1
-9.4
S NDK
73. 6 5
-7.30
-9.0
0.5
C TRX
FRIDAY C L OS E
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
17. 9 7
5.79
475
24.0
32.4
19. 9 0
4.20
26.8
26.8
-19.2
19. 4 3
3.99
25.8
19.2
-6.7
12. 3 8
2.41
24.2
-21.8
0.0
4.46
0.78
21.2
2.8
32.9
2.85
0.49
20.8
20.8
4.69
0.80
20.4
36.2
6.68
1.08
19.3
21. 0
42. 5 0
6.51
18.1
11.8
13 . 8 4
2.12
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22.0
2.81
0.42
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0.60
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47.5
3.84
0.54
16.4
13. 9
25. 8 4 7.71
3.65 1.02
16.4
-3.6
15.2
3.6
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
43 9 . 63
S
TICKER
-9.0 Vocus Inc VOCS 4.8 Titan Machinery Inc TITN -20.0 Zygo Corp ZIGO 9.9 Celladon Corp CLDN 35.6 Harvest Nat Res HNR 114.6 Thompson CreekMtls TC 4.3 AbraxasPetrol AXAS 42.1 Ruby Tuesday RT -6.3 USEcology ECOL -9.2 Oramed Pharma ORMP 22.7 Bio-Path Holdings BPTH 107.6 RadNet Inc RDNT -2.4 ProfireEnergy Inc PFIE 0.5 Constant Contact CTCT 2.6 ConsuPortfolio Svcs CPSS
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS Intuitive Surgical SprintCorp Abbvie Inc Mylan Inc BioMarin Pharma LincolnNatl Corp
GlobalMarkets
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
38. 8 9
-3.75
-8.8
-15.2
A MP
101 . 74
-9.68
-8.7
-6.0
G ILD
66.0 3
-6.17
-8.5
-12.0
-9.1 Imperva Inc 0.0 Datawatch Corp 12.2 Regado Biosciences 64.9 GlgamonInc -4.6 Ohr Pharmaceutical 44.0 WorldWrestling Ent 30.9 Kindred Biosciences -28.1 Nanostring Tech 43.8 MacroGenics Inc 31.7 Castlight Health Inc
IMPV
28.11
-22.10
-44.0
-53.7
DWCH
14.60
-10.03
-40.7
-49.7
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
-9.7 Buenos Aires Merval 100.4 Mexico City Bolsa Saopaolo Bovespa -18.1 Toronto s&p/Tsx 58.4 /AFRICA 59.4 EUROPE 456.6 Amsterdam 44.8 Brussels Madrid 157.0 Zurich 107.6 Milan -20.0 Johannesburg Stockholm -27.7
maah
Title: CEO & Chief EquitiesStrategist, BelusCapital Advisors
What he suggests: Pick luxury stocks carefully
Brian Sozzi
LAST 1815.69 9315.29 6561.70 23003.64 4365.86 13960.05
FRI. CHG -1 7.39 -139.25 -80.27 -183.32 -47.63 -340.07
FRI. CHG WK MO QTR -0.95% -1 47'/ L -1.21% -0 79% -1.08% T 4 j
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1 53% +4 64'/ +3.25% +1.17% i16.56%
-1.03% -0.80%
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ASIA
OHRP
9.96
-3.98
-28.6
-49.3
SeoulComposite 1997.44 SingaporeStraits Times 3198.22 0.0 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 4 23.50 0.0 Taipei Taiex 8908.05 118.1 Shanghai Composite 2 1 30.54
WWE
20.29
-7.73
-2z6
-34.4
141.1
KIN
14.66
-4.28
-22.6
-39.5
0.0
Quotable
NSTG
15.50
-4.34
-21.9
-24.7
0.0
"I look at lt as doing fine, it's just not that predictable a business."
MGNX
20.38
-5.68
-21.8
-42.0
0.0
CSLT
17.08
-4.49
-20.8
-57.1
0.0
RGDO
5.85
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-38.7
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GIMO
16.27
-10.15
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4 4
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+0.97% +1.32% 3 44%
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+0. 6 9%
— JamieDimon, CEO of JPMorgan Chase, commenting onthe bank'sfixed income trading business which posted a 21 percent decline in revenue rnthe first quarter
Note:Stocks classified by marketcapitalization, the product of thecurrent stock priceandtotal shares outstanding. Rangesare $100 milion to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8bilion Ilarge).
Lmmry oes
% uee
541-719-8598
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
N e llness
Comprehensive healthcareprovided in the convenience ofyour home or oaice.
See ourwebsite www.namicentralore on.or for more information on our free meetings, classes and support groups
ers," Naroff said. "You just
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jditzler@bendbulletin.com
since 1999. His practice is now a
April 15, 2014 Education Meeting
Nallonal Allisnee on Menlal lllness
growing scarcity of qualified workers — not the generosity of employers — will lift pay more broadly. "You can always get work-
tolerance for "spend now, ask
plies with IRP guideline 8,"
at a later date.
~nami
In the end, however, only a
to change. The Oregon PUC
proach that I don't think com-
Once, those filings and the Critics say P acifiCorp subsequent round of public doesn't do enough to address hearings and commission carbon emissions and its meetings passed with little aging coal fleet, and doesn't notice outside a handful of get the message the comstate bureaucrats, corpo- mission is sending. Oregon's rate executives and interest other investor-owned utili-
stores, said Bill Chandler, se-
we're confident we can meet it while continuing to deliver re-
groups. Then came glob- ty, Portland General Electric, al warming, carbon foot- has agreed to shut down its prints and Section 111(d) of coal-burning power plant by
newable power plants than mandate to reduce carbon any other utility in the West, emissions. its executives say. They reIn June, President Barack sponded to Johnson's cri- Obama directed the EPA to tique by pointing to the long write within three years new process of public meetings regulations on carbon dioxand workshops that go into ide emissions from fossil-fuel producing the IRP. plants. "We've opened the door to PacifiCorp argued to the a lot broader audience," said PUC that Obama's memo Rick Link, PacifiCorp direc- came too late to factor into tor of origination. Paul Vogel, the company calculations. PacifiCorp vice president of PacifiCorp told the commiscommunications and public sion it would factor in the cost affairs, added: "It's a pretty of reducing carbon emissions complex, long-term, two-year in its 2015 long-range plan. process in the IRP. There was PacifiCorp, a subsidiary a time not too long ago that of MidAmerican Energy nobody bothered to notice Holdings Co., itself a subsidthat we even filed an IRP. iary of Berkshire Hathaway, That's obviously changed." plans to retire one coal plant P acifiCorp every t w o in 2015 and convert another years updates its 20-year to natural gas in the next four plans for generating power years, Vogel said. at the least cost to its OrePacifiCorp a s k e d the gon ratepayers. The plan, re- commission to acknowledge quired by the PUC, typically work already underway or describes new transmission planned at a handful of coallines and improvements to fired plants, none in Oregon the company's fleet of pow- but which generate electricier plants: whether to retire, ty for Oregon consumers. By retrofit or convert to gas, for asking the PUC to acknowlexample. The PUC must ap- edge those investments, the prove the plan with an order, utilitybuilds its case for passwhich is under review for the ing the cost on to ratepayers
for customers to try on in the
niorvice president of corporate affairs, means the comdown to 5.6percent from 9.8 pany will rely on employees percent in the summer of 2012. to encourage customers to buy And several cities in Texas accessories and other clothes and North Dakota, buoyed by when theypickup their orders. "We're not quantifying the shale oil and gas drilling boom, reported raises well the cost," Chandler said, "but third quarter of 2013, the most recent period for which detailed statistics are available. For all th e encouraging signs in especially tight local markets, however, wages in the vast array of low-paying services generally remain modest. Don Fox, chief executive of Fire House of America,
PacifiCorp
E5
Is thls agood time to buy Iuxury stocks? You haveto pick very, very carefully. Even though Ido like what Coach Do youthlnk thls will help Iuxury ls doing ln men's, you still have companies' bottomline? to analyze them fromthe female Why has the men's sector largely Absolutely.Now you are starting to perspective. It's great Coach has a men's opportunity and Michael Kors been untappeduntil now? see profit margins onthe handbags The luxury goods sector for women ls are not what they Used to be. If you go too, but they're alwaysgoing to be mature. Sure, you are alwaysgoing to back andlook at Coach, they've had female-centric and fashion driven. You have interesting new styles ln Michael What does thls say about the health to introduce lower-pricedhandbags to havetosee whatcompanies are on Kors, Coach andeven Guess ln the of the luxury sector and Is It driven get that femaleconsumer spending on trend and driving the strongest profit malls anddepartment stores. But the by international expansion? things that theyprobably already have margins. Start from there and lf you men'sarea has long been one that The future ls bright. You have a premium ln their closet.Whereas on the other look at, let's say Michael Kors, their they haven't necessarily touched.Why productthat is Usually going to be in hand, male products are a new market female business lsworking now, their men's business lsstarting to catch haven't theytouched it? Men have demand.If you're a Coachor a Michael entirely. If you're able to create some not been trained toengage ln luxury Kors you'rethinking about well, what great marketingand attract some great fire, that's a winning combination. productsso they almost have to be are the markets I haven'ttapped into, buzz aroundnew products you can trained into why they need these prod- andseveral feel like it ls men's. It's charge apremium price and you don'I Interviewed by Mae Anderson. Ucts. Ithink you're starting to see this moreof a growth market overseas. The have to worry about marking lt down. Answers edited for clarity and length. Luxuryretailers like Burberry,Prada, Coach andMichael Kors are putting the focus on menswear. Retail analyst Brian Sozzidiscusses why this ls happening and why it's good for the bottom line.
with more marketing from Coach and Michael Kors. Even specifically with MichaelKors, now you're seeing them putting out more ties, leather bags. You'reseeing a maleconsumer who wants to spend. Male consumption of clothinghas been on an upswing pretty much for the last couple of years.
internationalmale consumer has always been much more into fashion than the U.S. maleconsumer.
AP
Indexclosingand weekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, April 11, 2014
+
16,026.75
Nasoaa ~ <>8 OO 3,999.73
s&P500
+
1,815.69
49 40
RUssELL2000 1,111A4
+
41 94
WILSHIRE5000
+
19,321.15
5M 45
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
UNDAY D
R
ea c ime: eases u u
e ran eurisnoi usion By Peter Couture and Lyra Solochek Tampa Bay (Fla.) Times
We interrupt this column to
Q
that use ultra-low-sulfur diesel fuel and employ ad-
months agothe driver's side seat ditional technologies to enbeit light/warning chime in my hanceengine efficiency and
present a car that's decidedly not a daily driver — unless you'rea member of the 1percent class. For the rest of us cu-
2006 Pontiac G6 started going
reduce exhaust emissions.
rious about what a half-million
• I wear my seat belt all • the time, but a number of
off while the seatbelt isbudded. Ultra-low-sulfur diesel, or The shop said itwouldbe $400to ULSD, has sulfur concentrarepair because they would have tions of 15 particles per milto take the seat out to get to the lion or less, which is about 97 area to repair. The chime comes percent cleaner than the pre-
dollars on wheels is like, we present the 2014 Rolls-Royce
on immediately after starting
c ars ar e
vious 1993 standard. Besides
the car, then again about five greatly reducing emissions minutes later and always chimes of sulfur dioxide, ULSD alfive times. The light illuminates
several times while I am driving and the chime does, too. • From the symptoms you • describe, the problem could be as simple as the seat
A
lows the use of a diesel particulate filter and selective
catalyticreduction. I should mention mod-
ern diesel engines typically employ common rail direct belt switch located in the seat fuel injection, which also belt buckle at your right hip or improves performance, alits harness connector under lows quicker starts and rethe seat. Or it could be a more
duces emissions and noise,
serious issue with the sensing compared to earlier methand diagnostic module or in- ods. "Common rail" means strument panel cluster. all of the engine's fuel inI would suggest having the jectors have fuel pressure shop unplug and test the seat available at all times and belt switch to determine if it's are electronically operated, the culprit. I think this can be allowing precise and highdone without removing the ly atomized fuel delivery. seat. If the switch is bad, have it The engine management replaced. If the switch is good system employs a variety of and a scan tool confirms the sensors to allow very smart sensing and diagnostic mod- fuel delivery functions. Let's return to th e exule is telling the instrument panel cluster the seat belt is
haust: An oxidation catalyst
fastened — yet the light/chime deans up carbon monoxide are still indicating the seat belt and hydrocarbons. Next is is unfastened — the problem is in the instrument panel clus-
the diesel particulate filter,
ter. You'll have to decide if it's
which collects and stores soot. The engine manage-
worth this level of repair. Because of the somewhat
ment system can tell when it's time to clean the filter
intermittent nature of the light/ and adds fuel to add heat/ chime coming on, my best burn off the build-up. guess is the seat belt switch. Next, a urea-based solution called AdBlue or DEF
I am curious what your (domestic diesel exhaust • opinion is about using fluid) is sprayed into the only DexCool antifreeze in exhaust just ahead of the our two Buick vehicles as rec- selective catalytic reduc-
Q•
ommended by GM. An auto
tion unit. Exhaust heat con-
Phantom Drophead Coupe-
an apotheosis of luxury. Why so much? First, the h a n d-crafted i n
Goodwood, England. Buying a Rolls-Royce is like going to a Savile Row tailor
REVIEW — it's a custom,
or "bespoke," experience limited only by what Lyra Solochek/Tampa Bay (Fla.)Times you want to spend. For exam- The 2014 Rolls-Royce Phantom Drophead Coupe — what drlvlng a half-million dollars feels like. ple, our $568,900 tester — the most expensive car we've ever
q~~
W isconsi n man:
$95,000 electric Tesla is alemon
A • freeze utilizes an organic acid anti-corrosion technology
o o l ant/anti- catalytic reduction have a 5to 7-gallon DEF tank, which
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel Robert Montgomery paid
needs to be refilled approxand daims a much longer ser- imately at each oil change. vice life than conventional an- High-mileage cars may go
more than $95,000 to have
tifreeze that utilizes phosphate/
further; the DEF is metered at about 2-6 percent of fuel used. DEF varies wildly in
March 2013. Now, he's filed what is likely the first lemon
price, from about $3 per gallon in bulk to about $5 at Wal-Mart up to about $30 per gallon at a luxury car
tric-car maker and Wall Street
borate/silicate anti-corrosion technology. Both coolants are ethylene glycol-based for their antifreeze capabilities. Is one type better than the other? That question has been
and continues to be heavily dealer. The cost of the DEF debated. The biggest issue is is largely offset by greater oxidation of the coolant over engineeff iciency,compared time and mileage. As long as to a system that doesn't use the coolant level is properly this system. maintained and the coolant is The bottom line: Modflushed/replaced when recom- ern diesels run cleanly mended, both work well. and smoothly, and are surprisingly quiet. I've had a • I have a 2000 Buick Park • Avenue. The d r i v e r's door refuses to open as eas-
lubricant. If this does not help,
perhaps the door has "sagged" on its hinges over the years and miles. A body shop may be able to realign the door for easier opening. In the "old days" I used to do this by placing a piece of 2x4 below the hinges between the door and
law case against luxury elecdarling Tesla Motors, which is already facing other legal hurdles in a growing number of states where the company's directto-consumer sales are under attack.
Since arriving from Palo Alto, Calif., the car has had major troubles, according to his lawsuit. In all, it was out of service 66 days in the first year. The suit lists more than
a dozen of what it calls de-
European passenger car models. With the exception of exhilarating low-end torque, a lower-than-usual
fects and problems with the
questionsto under-the-hood@ earthlink.net.
car — not starting, not going into drive, recessed door handles that do not emerge when
touched, faulty battery coolant pumps, faulty steering wheel controls and several electrical
problems. Tesla, which would not comment for this story, has been
around for 10 years but recently became a raging success.
Weekly Arls & Entertainment Inelde MAgAZINE
••
www.be n d d a s h.com
REAL ESTATE Designated Principal Broker position is being offered to someone outstanding in their field who wants to play a role in a progressive, successfu1 Real Estate Company with a culture of synergy, training/education and broker services. Duties are unique in that you will work as a team member with current management, review and compliance of documents via a "paperless" system, assist with recruiting of Brokers, network with fellow brokers and be involved in a COAR, Chamber and other events in the promotion of the Brokerage and current training and education. Broker should have"on the ground"experience in their own right doing sales and be familiar with compliance issues and governmental ndes and regulations. Applicant could possibly continue to produce on their own.'Ihis is a perfect opportunity to take your Principal Broker license to the next level in a fun, exciting and progressive Brokerage. Confidentiality will be kept at all times. Do you meet the requirements? Want t o
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•
•
•
8
.0> •
t
IIII>
!
• •
•
•
•
•
•
•
— Paul Brand is an automotive troubleshooter. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com.
No lines. No mess. No problem.
• I just read a recent col-
• umn of yours on automotive emissions. You didn't mention d i esel
TheBulletin
«J u n e 15th,2014
o e re urns ma e eas
door frame and "push" the
door toward close to slightly "readjust" the hinges. If the hinge pins/bushings are worn, they canbe replaced.
his white Tesla S delivered to his Franklin, Wis., home in
chance to drive some of the
ily as the others. It feels like thereisavacuum between the weatherstripping and the door tachometer red line, and frame. Please advise. great mileage, you might • First, clean and lubricate not realize it wasn't a gaso• the door s eaVweather- line engine. stripping and seal area on the — Brad Bergholdt teaches body with an aerosol silicone automotive technology. Email
Das i"ia; fof
I
mechanic and auto body re- verts the urea to ammonia, pairman with 30 years' expe- which reacts with oxides rience advised me not to use of nitrogen inside the unit, this product as he found it transforming it into nitroclogged up the heaters/heating gen gas and water vapor. systems in vehicles. Vehicles using selective • DexCool c
2014 RollsRoyce Phantom DropheadCoupe
driven— had almost $20,000 not sure we've ever experi- you register them ("Oh, was in teak-wood decking and enced an engine so quiet at that a speed bump?") brushed-steel on the hood and idle, even with the bonnet Other unique features: door pillars. Then there were (hood) raised. And the en• Two umbrellas are tucked the 21-inch, fully polished sevgine in question is a massive into the front fenders, accessiBase price: $474,600 453-horsepower 6 . 7 5-1iterble when you open the door. en-spoke wheels for almost As tested:$568,900 V-12. Lyra had a colleague ea$11,000. The Silver Haze finish • Each coach door can be 'Illpe:Luxury coupe, is $9,500. And those are just ger for a ride tell her: "Okay, closed electronically with butconvertible let's crank it up!" But the en- tons on the dash. the standard dealer options. Engine:6.75-llter V-12, • The five-layer electronAdd some Bespoke features gine had been idling all along. 8-speedautomatic,RW D like piping ($3,200), personalAs for the ride, it's as if you've ically r etractable soft-top ized clock face ($9,500), white been born aloft by cherubs. roof has a c a shmere-blend Mileage:11mpg clty, instrument dials ($7,700), and We kid. The off-white leather headlining. 19 mpg highway the price jumps drastically. seats with red piping are livThe bottom line: Is it worth ing-room-couch comfortable, it? To most of us, no. But to the How luxurious? The appointments fittingly r ecall coach doors (please don't call and the almost 6,000-pound few who can afford to own a that of a luxury yacht, with them "suicide") and stain- land-yacht floats softly down Rolls-Royce, then the Phaneven Rolls-Royce making the less-steel pinstripes. As Lyra, the road — even on rough tom is one of t h e u l timate comparison. Inside, the cabin says: "You also pay for what brick s t reets courtesy four-wheel status s y mbols. is tasteful, even minimalist, you don't get." In this case, of the suspension features Peter took our CEO for a spin especially for anyone who has noise. The droptop's cabin that include self-leveling air with the top down. When they driven some of the tech-laden is as quiet as a Zen garden. springs and continuous elec- stopped at a light, the driver German luxury cars. There's One surprise, the key fob felt tronic damping control. Un- in the car next to them said little to detract from the but- plasticky and unsubstantial. like other cars, you hardly admiringly: "You guys have tery leather interior made of "You'd expect it to be Tiffany feel the bumps as much as made it." preshrunk hides, lamb's wool with a price like that," one colfloor mats (you'll want to run league said. your bare feet through them), H ow does i t d r i ve? I ' m UrolO
p a r t iculate
emissions, and I wish you had. It seems hard to find info on the current performance of
diesels. I hear talk of "clean diesel" but don't know if that just means low-sulfur. I don't
much like the idea of tiny particles burying themselves in my lungs and would like to educate myself as to whether this is an irrational fear or not. question. "Clean A •• Great diesel" generally refers to
diesel engines built since 2007
•
•
•
•
•
755 NE 2nd in Bend BottleDropCenters.com
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
SUN A READER
DAVID BROOKS
The moral power of curiosity
M
ost of us have at one time or another felt ourselves in
the grip of the explanatory
drive. You're confronted by some
puzzle, confusion or mystery. Your inability to come up with an answer gnaws at you. You're up at night, turning the problem over in your mind. Then, suddenly: clarity. The pieces click into place. There's a jolt of pure satisfaction. We're all familiar with this drive, but I wasn't really conscious of the
moral force of this longing until I read Michael Lewis' book, "Flash Boys." This book is about how a small
number of Wall Street-types figured out the stock markets were rigged by high-frequency traders who used complex technologies to give themselves a head start on everybody else. It's nominally a book about
finance, but it's really a morality tale. The corequestion Lewis forcesus to
ask is: Why did some people do the right thing while most of their peers did not? The answer, I think, is that most
people on Wall Street are primarily motivated to make money, but a few
people are primarily motivated by an intense desire to figure stuff out. The heroes of Lewis' book have this intrinsic desire. The central fig-
ure, Brad Katsuyama, observes that the markets are not working the way
they are supposed to. Like thousands of others, he observes that funny things are happening on his screen w hen he places atrading order.But, unlike those others, this puzzling discrepancy between how things are and how things are supposed to be gnaws at him. He just has to understand what's going on. He conducts a long, arduous research project to go beneath the technology and figure things out. At one point he and his superiors at the Royal Bank of Canada conduct a se-
Thinkstock
ries of trades not to make money but
just to test theories. Another character, Ronan Ryan,
taught himself how electronic signals move through the telecommunications system. A third, John Schwall,
is an obsessive who buried himself in the library so he could understand the history of a particular form of
stock-rigging called front-running. These people eventually figure out what was happening in the market. They acquire knowledge both of how the markets are actually working and of how they are supposed to work. They become indignant about the discrepancy. They could have used their
knowledge to participate in the very market-rigging they were observing. But the pleasure they derived from
satisfying their curiosity surpassed the pleasure they derived from making money. So someofthem ended up creating a separate stock exchange that could not be rigged in this way. One lesson of this tale is that capitalism doesn't really work when it relies on the profit motive alone. If
• Desperate for answers, parents searchfor a doctor who can explain why their adult son iscompletely out of control and not getting anybetter By Lisa Sanders ~New York Times News Service
on't come near me!" the
young man lying on a gurney
him worse. Her son's current psychiatrist was tapering
everybody is just chasing material self-interest, the invisible hand won't
shouted. Dr. Jory Goodman
him off the five medications he was taking.
lead to well-functioning markets.
calmly observed the agitated
And the plan was to start a new regimen once
It will just lead to arrangements in which market insiders take advan-
tage of everybody else. Capitalism requires the full range of motivation, including the intrinsic drive for knowledge and fairness. Second, you can'ttame thedesire for money with sermons. You
can only counteract greed with some superior love, like the love of knowledge. Third, if market-rigging is defeated, it won't be by government regulators. It will be through a market in-
novationin which a good exchange replaces bad exchanges, designed by those who fundamentally understood the old system. And here's a phenomenon often true in innovation stories: The people
who go to work pursuing knowledge, or because they intrinsically love writing code, sometimes end up making more money than the people who go to work pursuing money as their main purpose. — David Brooksis a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return.
23-year-old as he entered the tiny room in the emergency department at a hospital in Culver
the drugs cleared his system. But a week ago, he went completely wild.
City, Calif. The patient was, Goodman noted,
He stopped eating and sleeping. He spent
sunburned and unshaven.
one night destroying his bedroom, throwing
He clearly had not showered in days, and
everything — books, computer, CDs,
his rumpled T-shirt was stained with sweat.
furniture, pictures — into the center of the
A middle-agedman and woman introduced
floor.
themselves as the patient's parents.
The next day he started running a crazy
Their son had a history of manic depression, circuit in the house and outside. In the front the mother explained. Since his diagnosis four door, through the house, then out the back. He yearsearlier,he had seen many doctors and
ran for hours, bumping and sliding against
tried a dozen psychiatric medications. None
doorways, walls and furniture.
of themworked. Some even seemed to make
SeeMadness/F6
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
U'KRAI N lA: cP y,,)I "04sll
or Central Oregon Community College, it doesn't matter why presidential finalist Patrick Lanning is on paid leave. It matters that he didn't disclose it. That disquali-
SS
fies him no matter how the leave is ultimately resolved. COCC has wisely decided to close that chapter in its search to replace retiring President Jim Middleton. The loss of a year is unfortunate,but nowhere near as unfortunate as hiring the wrong person. Lanning was one of three candidates invited to town in February. After he was chosen as the finalist, COCC said it was no longer considering the other two candidates and did not have abackup plan if something derailed hiring Lanning. Lanning had been placed on leave from his job at Chemeketa Community College on Feb. 11, before his visit to COCC and before the college sent five representatives to research his background at his current job. Nevertheless, COCC was unaware of the leave until the week of March 17 as it neared finalizing the hiring. The college hasn't said how it finally received the information. We don't know the cause of Lanning's leave or why he and his colleagues weren't forthcoming in their talks with COCC. We expect better from both. It's a reminder
The loss of a year is unfortunate, but nowhere
near as unfortunate as hiring the wrong person. of how difficult it has become to research a job candidate's background when principal figures are willing to dissemble, or at least not volunteer clearly relevant information. Although Lanning was not necessarily asked if he was on leave, according to COCC, he was asked if there was anything in his past that could cause the college embarrassment.Being on leave does seem to fit that bill, but he didn't mention it. COCC has decided to seek an interim president for the next school year and then start over, seeking a new permanent leader for the fall of 2015. The delay is unfortunate, but the college has dodged a bad hire, and we should be grateful for that.
Limiting number ofdogs is bad idea inWallowa W allowa C o unty c o m missioner h a s de c ided that dogs have it too good where he lives. Paul Casteilleja wants, among other things, to limit households to two dogs each and to ban them from all city and county parks. Neither idea would fly in these parts. Many-dog families seem to be the norm here, and the fight is not to ban the critters from parks, but to expand the number of places they're welcome. More than a few dog owners
A
are genuinely offended when told their pets are not welcome at outdoor public gatherings, even grocery stores. What will Casteilleja think of next? Two-cat limits? Two goldfish or gold finches? We're not sure what put this particular bee in the commissioner's bonnet, but the limits, at least, seem both extreme and unenforceable. And if the limits are approved, will the county really need the full-time animal control officer Casteilleja wants to hire?
Panel seeksGMOanswers ov. John Kitzhaber's new task force on genetically modified organisms held its first meeting in Portland on Thursday. It will give 2015 lawmakers advice on the issues surrounding GMO agriculture and potential conflicts with conventional and organic agriculture, among other things. The group appears to be broadly inclusive, with scientists from Oregon State University, organic farmers and proponents and opponents of GMO agriculture among its members. Given that
G
diversity, the meetings may be heated. Heat may well be one way to judge if the group is truly balanced. We hope so. Its findings are unlikely to persuade anybody to consider softening a position if the task force is seen as unduly influencedby one side oranother. Given agriculture's place in Oregon'seconomy — it was valued at more than $5 billion in 2012, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture — finding answers that all can live with is critical.
b
M 1Vickel's Worth Hummel good fit for DA
And it is quite a bargain at $3 per That's a good fit for DA. class. Kathryn Olney Perhaps if more people are in-
system.
A recent letter to the editor follow-
ing The Bulletin report of the dis-
Bend
trict attorney candidate's forum in
Rusty Hingesclassvaluable
Redmond says John Hummel is not a good candidate for DA. The story
r e ported questions
I read with a great deal of inter-
posed at the forum having nothing to do with being a DA. This job is
formed, participation will increase
and the program will be retained. Sharon Freeman Redmond
SupportSpearfor judge
est the article in Ageless magazine about the value of aquatic therapy. nonpartisan and has little impact There is such a program available to Although I live in Pendleton, I statewide on issues like college tu- the residents of Redmond. wish to recommend Thomas Spear ition rates for undocumented resiLast November, I began a class at for Circuit Court judge for Dedents. The questions suggested that
Cascade Swim Center called Rusty
the host group has a litmus test for Hinges. Go ahead — smile, chuckle any public office, which is sad be- or laugh. Everyone does. The name cause they may choose candidates is clever and funny but very apbased on reasons unrelated to the ropos. Those of us involved in the position. program have physical difficulties. The letter to the editor stated that
schutes County.
As a trial and business law attorney for over 25 years and having served as a judge pro tempore for a number of those years, I know what qualities a good judge must possess.
We need to strengthen our cores, Spear has the qualities to make an
Hummel was a "politician" (as a improve our balance, recover from pejorative term) because of his an- surgery or accidents. We are "loosswers to certain questions. I would ening the hinges." suggest the opposite. In that enviWhile our instructors are not ronment, a "politician" would tell physical therapists, each has a wide you what you wanted to hear rath- range of experience in the field of er than what his position truly was. exercise and movement. ParticiAs I read The Bulletin report,
Hummel answered honestly and directly.
excellent judge. Spear has a broad base of experience to rely on. He has prosecuted
cases against criminals and defended persons wrongly accused. His experience is not limited, however, to criminal matters. He has exten-
pants receive individual attention as needed.
sive business knowledge and has
My back specialist wrote a "pre-
complex patent proceedings. To be an effec tive judge, one
A DA is far more than the chief
scription" for me to attend this class.
prosecutor for the county. To be effective the person has to work with multiple stakeholders, provide direction and support for their staff and work to prevent as well as pros-
Surgery isn't going to "fix" anything. Narcotic pain meds make me sick. When I began experiencing episodes of weakness in both legs, my doctor suggested Rusty Hinges. My
ecute crime.
strength has increased; my balance
One of Oregon's greatest DAs, Mi- is better. Most remarkable is the dechael Shrunk of Multnomah Coun- crease in pain, and the increase in ty, didn't even try cases. my quality of life. I have returned to Hummel has a compelling per- activities I had given up. sonal story that includes helping Why write this letter'? Due to a stabilize the legal system in a war- lack of participation, Rusty Hinges torn nation. He has a track record is going to be canceled. This proof bringing people together rather gram is one of the best-kept secrets than creating conflict, and experi- in the offerings of the Redmond ence working in the criminal justice Area Park and Recreation District.
even represented companies in should have tried cases in the court
one seeks to judge in. Spear has tried numerous Deschutes County
Circuit Court cases, including Measure 11 crimes. I would ask that his opponent point to jury trials that he has tried in Deschutes County Cir-
cuit Court. Spear was selected by the Oregon Supreme Court toserve Deschutes
County as a judge pro tempore. I now urge you to vote Spear in as your full-time Circuit Court judge. Timothy O'Hanlon Pendleton
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Preventing child abuse strengthens our community t By Kathy Murch counts for children, especially during t's shocking and tragic, yet it's crit- the first three years of life. A child's ical that we as a community grasp earliest experiences are essential that one out of every three victims for healthy development, and simple of child abuse arebabies and toddlers. things make a tremendous difference At the most critical period in their de- — eye contact, touch, food and attenvelopment, from newborn to 3-year- tion. Having a caring, devoted parent olds, these children are at the high- who makes their child's needs a priest risk for abuse and neglect. These ority is a huge advantage in life. are certainly among the r easons
MountainStar Family Relief Nursery and other Oregon Relief Nurseries are the No. 1 priority in Gov. John
Kitzhaber's early childhood agenda. Scientific evidence has shown that a child's earliest influences are criti-
cal to brain development and can affect a child's long-term health. Early positive messages set a foundation
of adaptability and resilience and give a child the chance for achievement, success and happiness. As a
parent, grandparent or guardian, you are already aware that every day
IN MY VIEW
heart of Relief Nursery programs in Oregon. These mothers and fathers seek out relief nurseries, because
Thriving communities, such as the one we are fortunate to live in, depend on the successful development of all our young citizens.
they know that the services provided
will make their child's life a whole lot better, giving their child a chance in life that they likely never had. Unfortunately, not all babies and At MountainStar, services range toddlers have attentive parents or from providing some basic but imcaregivers and live in stable homes. portant necessities, including diaEven in our beautiful community, we pers and food boxes, to providing the have families living in crisis, expe- means to create a solid foundation riencing too many risk factors asso- for a healthy, thriving child through ciated with child abuse and neglect, therapeutic classes, parenting classincluding poverty, intergenerational es and P arent C h ild I n teraction child abuse, substance abuse issues, Therapy (PCIT). domestic violence, to name a few. Oregon Relief Nursery programs Keeping children, who are at the have been proven highly successful. highest risk for abuse and neglect, Research by Portland State Universafe and helping mothers and fa- sity has shown that these programs thers, who are living on the edge, have reduced the risk of abuse by 70 become successfulparents is at the percent after just six months of ser-
vices andalso decrease the number
counties, M o untainStar
of new placements into foster care. Relief Nurseries enhance early litera-
these critical child abuse and neglect
p r o vides
prevention services for as little as
$30 a day for a child in the therapeureduce the burden on special educa- tic early childhood program and $60 tion, the justice system and other ex- a month for a child in the safety net pensive interventions. A 2011 study program. found a nearly 4:1 return on investThe state and federal government ment for Oregon Relief Nurseries. For coversabout 40 percent of costs,but each tax dollar allocated, the state the rest comes from the private secsaved nearly $4 in costs associated tor. Thriving communities, such as with child abuse, unemployment, the one we are fortunate to live in, decriminal behavior and other social pend on the successful development issues. Even more striking is that this of all our young citizens. high rate of return was realized in — Kathy Murch, of Bend,is a community cy and increase school readiness and
just three years.
Serving Deschutes and Jefferson
volunteer and past board president at Mountainstar Family Relief Nursery.
SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
e are in a new n uisi ion w
hat if yo u
b elieved that
VICTOR DAVIS
warmed up the last two
HANSON
decades, even though carbon emissions reached all-time highs'? Or, if the earth did heat up, you
thought that it was not caused by hu- today — opposedmaking gay marman activity'? riage legal'? Or, if global warming were the If you were the CEO of Mozilla, fault of mankind, you trusted that Brendan Eich, you would be forced the slight increases would not make to resign your position. all that much difference? If you owned a fast-food franchise The Los Angeles Times would not like Chick-fil-A, boycotts of your print your letter to the editor to that business would ensue. effect. If you were a star of "Duck DynasThe CEO of Apple Inc. might ad- ty," your show would be threatened vise that you should "get out of this with suspension or cancellation. stock." What if you thought that foreign Or maybe if you were a skeptical nationals who broke the law to enter climatologist, you would cease all and reside in the U.S. were aliens reresearch and concede that man- siding here illegally'? caused global warming needed no Three or four years ago, you further scientific cross-examination would have been advised to use only — as columnist Bill McKibben re- the politically correct term "illegal cently advocated. immigrant" — even though not all If you were a drought-stricken arrivals crossed the border to live California farmer and worried about permanently in the U.S. The more diversions of irrigation water to sup- legally precise noun "alien" was no port fish populations, you would be longer allowable. told by the president of the United Then, about a year ago, you would States that the real problem is not have been further advised that the a failure to build reservoirs and ca- adjective "illegal" was suddenly also nals, but is due entirely to global no longer acceptable. warming, which is a "fact" and "setYet all the while, entering and retled science." siding inside the U.S. without legal What if you supported equality permission stayed a federal crimefor all Americans regardless of their just as it is in every other nation in sexual preference, but — like presi-
Muslims and heretics. on college campuses? Unfortunately, the Obama adIf you were the Israeli ambassa- ministration has been part of the dor, you would be shouted down at problem, not part of the solution. Its University of California, Irvine. appointees used the once-impartial If you were a Jewish student orga- IRS against conservatives. They nization asking to ensure free speech m onitored Associated Press reportat the University of Michigan, you ers. They denied that the NSA was would probably be cursed at with eavesdropping on average citizens. racial epithets, as happened recently. They arbitrarily chose not to enforce If you were a faculty member or- laws they didn't like. ganizing a scholarly trip to Israel, The president bragged of using "a you would be harassed at Vassar pen and phone" to circumvent the College. legislative branch, and urged his What if you were a professor at supporters to "punish our enemies." Oberlin College or the University The attorney general calls Ameriof California, Santa Barbara, who cans who have different views from ians would wish to air their positions
the planet might not have
the world.
dential candidate Barack Obama What if you thought that supportin 2008 and about half the country ers of both the Israelis and Palestin-
Are we a
FRIEDMAN
Playing hockey with Putin hortly before the Sochi Olym-
S
pics, Russian President Vlad-
imir Putin played in an exhi-
bition hockey game there. In retro-
bate, or that supporting Israel is a le-
spect, he was clearly warming up for his takeover of Crimea. Putin doesn't strike me as a chess player, in geopolitical terms. He prefers hockey, without a referee, so elbowing, tripping and cross-checking are all permitted. Never go to a hockey game with Putin and expect to play by the rules of touch football. The struggle over Ukraine is a hockey game, with no referee. If we're going to play, we,
gitimate cause, or that breaking fed-
the Europeans and the pro-Western
a n e w I n q uisition. eral immigration law is still a crime
Ukrainians need to be serious. If we're not, we need to tell the Ukraini-
wished to teach literature that some-
his own on matters of affirmative
times dealt with class, race, gender and sex? If the ensuing class discussions did not meet left-wing dogma, you might soon be asked by student groups to offer "trigger warnings" on your syllabus — as if your class were a toxic cigarette or pesticide in need of warning labels.
action "cowards."
We are i n
THOMAS
Self-appointed censors try to stamp out any idea or word that they don't
All of that them/us rhetoric has
given a top-down green light to radical thought police to harass anyone who is open-minded about man-
caused global warming, or believes that gay marriage needs more de-
and therefore "illegal." Our civil liberties will not be lost
wish to be aired — in the pursuit of a to crude fascists in jackboots. More new race, class, gender and environ- likely, the death of free speech will ment orthodoxy. be the work of the new medieval Hounding out people with dif- Torquemadas who claimthey deferent views is seen by the Left as a stroyed freedom of expressionfor necessary means to achieve its sup- the sake of "equality" and "fairness" posedly noble goals — just like the and "saving the planet." Spanish Inquisitioners who claimed — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist God was on their side as they went
after religiously "incorrect" Jews,
and historian at the Hoover Institution and Stanford University.
eing pic y, pic P, PIC P?
ans now: Cut the best deal with Putin
that you can. Are we serious'? It depends on the meaning of the word "serious." It
starts with recognizing what a huge lift it will be to help those Ukrainians who want to break free of Russia's
orbit. Are we and our allies readythrough the International Monetary
Fund — to finance Ukraine's massive rebuilding and fuel needs, roughly $14 billion for starters, knowing that this money is going to a Ukrainian government that, before the overthrow of t h e p r evious president, ranked 144 out of 177 on the Trans-
parency International list of most corrupt countries in the world, equal
with Nigeria'? Moreover, we can't help Ukraine
By Jay Ambrose
get at least a half million people laid
unless we and the European Union
McClatchy-7/ibune rnformation Services
off. He doesn't mention the picky,
have a serious renewable energy and economic sanctions strategy — which
p
comedian, who appeared on
picky, picky half million. He talks as if such a law would do more good
"The Smothers Brothers" TV
than harm, when it won't, and now
at Paulsen was a hoot. The
show starting back in the late 1960s, was also a perennial presidential candidate, getting loud laughs by being just a tad more evasive, ludicrous and shallow than the real thing. Pat also had a pat answer to any imag-
is talking as if women are being
order of his having burned down Washington. "Picky, picky, picky," he would say. D id h e
ma y b e s t ar t s o m e -
thing'? I look around today, see bone-crunching putdowns of pro-
( --— oBAyA CApp
able Care Act seems to have signed up 7.1 million people despite earlier problems with malfunctioning computer systems and a seeming lack of consumer interest. Some well-
known commentators say all is now proven OK. Obamacare works. Excuse me, but this is just one of
the early steps along with a stumble in a march of a thousand tortuous miles. We don't even know those
signing up are the young, healthy, previously uninsured people who were targeted, but there is much
we do know. We do know, for in-
thrive. And arewe readyto play dirty, too? Putin is busy using pro-Rus-
It is t rue that men are better
sian Ukrainian proxies to take over
searched, and the main reasons are
for a Russian invasion there or de fac-
to control there by Russia's allies. Finally, being serious about Russia means being serious about learning from our big mistake after the Ber-
ple of new executive orders from the
a couple of million people may leave delayed the employer mandate that the workforce because of the law, might strip jobs from the workplace thereby reducing wealth production so that it will come after instead of in the nation. We know people had before the 2014 midterm elections. to give up plans they liked for those That may mean near-term political they did not like. We know many disaster is somewhat less likely, but are being hit with higher premiums certainly not that human disaster is and that literally tens of millions ruled out. will remain uninsured under the We know that Obamacare, while program. doing some truly good things that I see the progressive yawns out could have been done more simply, there, and I guess I will induce more could portend a doctor shortage. We as I move on to the president's latknow that new regulations are caus- est populist palaver meant to affect ing mass confusion in hospitals. those aforementioned 2014 elecWe know that a new tax in the act tions. The president is still talking has already cost 33,000 jobs in the about the desperate need for a new medical device industry. We know minimum wage that would likely
government buildings in eastern Ukraine — to lay the predicate either
thatmany employed women choose to work fewer hours than men or convenient or rewarding to them than those that pay more. We've got laws requiring equal pay for equal w ork and women can now sueifthe factssupport theircase,and a cou-
progressive responses on the order of a shoulder shrug, a grin, the shaking of a head, the equivalent of "picky, picky, picky." That's the stance, that President Obama has case,for instance, as some look at how the initial rollout of the Afford-
nation as long as Putin and Putinism
eragemake more money than they do.
take jobs that pay less but are more
gressive nonsense and then note
mine Putin and Putinism, because Ukraine will never have self-determi-
unfairly treated because men on av-
compensated on average, but it is also true that this has been well-re-
ined criticism, even if it was on the
requires us to sacrifice — to under-
lin Wall fell. And that was thinking that we could expand NATO — when
Russia was at its weakest and most democratic — and Russians wouldn't care. It was thinking we could treat
president about fairness from federal contractors are meaningless.
a democratic Russia like an enemy,
They are just new ways to further
expect Russia to cooperate with us as
divide us, stir up anger and distrust of the marketplace and paint perfectly fine people as malicious and unfair and thereby win elections.
if the Cold War were over — and not produce an anti-Western backlash like Putinism.
After all, that's what the utterly pho-
ny "Republicanwar on women" did, making it sound as if birth control was out of reach of large numbers
as if the Cold War were still on, and
As historian Walter Russell Mead put it in a blog post: "The Big Blini that the West has never faced up to (is): What is our Russia policy? Where does the West see Russia fit-
through mandates and premium-in-
ting into the international system? Ever since the decisions to expand
creasing insurance rules. None of it was even close to true.
NATO and the EU were taken in the Clinton administration, Western pol-
of women if Obamacare did not act
Haven't we had enough ofthat? Or am I being picky, picky, picky? — Jay Ambrose is a columnist for McClatchy-Tribune.
When moderates are viewed as extremists
icy towards Russia ... had two grand projects for the post-Soviet space: NATO and the EU would expand into the Warsaw Pact areas and into the former Soviet Union, but Russia itself
was barred from both.... As many people pointed out in the 1990s, this strategy was asking for trouble." One of those pointing that out was George Kennan, the architect of containment and opponent of NATO
expansion. I interviewed him about By Farah Stockman The Boston Globe
here wasa reason they killed her first. P rime
M i n i ster A g a t h e
Uwilingiyimana, a Hutu, believed in living in peace with Tutsis. She was about to go on the radio to appeal for calm. Had she lived, and had her message been heeded, the extermi-
nation campaign against Tutsis in Rwanda might never have gotten off the ground. That's the irony of "identity" conflicts. The voices that can pull a country back from the brink are the
easiest ones to silence. Moderates are sitting ducks. They face enemies on two fronts: extremists in their
own camp, and those on the other srde.
In Sri Lanka, Tamil Tiger rebels systematically assassinated Tamil politicians who showed a willingness to compromise. In Northern Ireland, Prime M i n ister Terence O'Neill, who reached out to Catho-
lics and even visited a convent, was forced to resign by his own party. Even here in the United States, par-
tisan wrangling has turned "moderate" into a dirty name for an endangered species.In red states, mod-
erate Republicans get picked off by that Ukraine is a nation of two lanthe Tea Party. In blue states, they get guages — Ukrainian and Russiantrounced by the likes of Elizabeth and two regions — East and West. InWarren. stead, it signaled that Russian might "You canseethispattern whereby no longer be considered an official leaders who moderate their policies language. That made it much easier find themselves displaced by a ri- for Vladimir Putin to stir up anger val," said Brendan O'Leary, a former and dissent among ethnic Russians. senior adviser on power-sharing to In Syria, too, O'Leary sees a tragithe United Nations, who now teach- cally missed opportunity. es political science at the University At the beginning of the protests, of Pennsylvania. opposition forces spoke of unity for So are moderates doomed'? all Syrians. But, as the war dragged Not exactly, O'Leary said. But on, the mostly Sunni rebel fighters timing m atters: "Moderates are did little to reassure minority groups most important at the outset of new about the future. They refused to regimes." promise the Kurds more autonomy. When a change ingovernment They didn't tell the Alawites that happens, moderates have a tiny win- a new regime would forgive them dow of opportunity to set an inclu- for supporting Bashar Assad. They sive tone. offered no credible protections to W hen John Garang, a rebellead- Christians who feared Sharia law. er in South Sudan, got killed in a Recently in Aleppo, a prominent plane crash, his widow could have opposition activist was reportedly urged the mass murder of his long- forced to wear a hijab, even though time foes. Instead, she assured her she's Christian. "It is impossible countrymen that the crash was an for us Christians to live with these accident. armed groups," she wrote on her But leaders often miss those pre- Facebook page. Christians, she cious moments when moderation is wrote, should "leave this country. It's possible. The new Ukrainian govern- not ours any more." ment that came to power in February
could have sent a message of unity:
With stories like this, it's no wonder that m i norities have turned
away from the rebels. And its no
wonder that the Assad regime has regained the upper hand.
it in this column on May 2, 1998, right after the Senate ratified NATO
expansion. Kennan was 94. He had
The moment that moderation ex-
been a U.S. ambassador in Moscow.
pires is the moment conflicts spin out of control. People take sides. Po-
He knew we were not being serious. "I think it is the beginning of a
sitions harden. Bodies start piling
new Cold War," Kennan said to me of NATO expansion. "I think the Rus-
up. The thirst for revenge sets in. By then, moderates have gotten killed,
sians will gradually react quite ad-
or dismissed as traitors, or they have transformed into extremists. When
versely and it will affect their policies. I think it is a tragic mistake. There
a situation reaches full-blown war,
Mahmoud Abbas has threatened to walk away from peace talks in re-
was no reason for this whatsoever. No one was threatening anybody else. This expansion would make the founding fathers of this country turn overintheir graves.We have signed up to protect a whole series of countries, even though we have neither
cent weeks. As talks drag on with
the resources nor the intention to do
few concessions from Israel, he's worried about being sidelined by
so in any serious way. (NATO expansion) was simply a lighthearted
other Palestinian leaders, who are
action by a Senate that has no real
increasingly calling him a"sell-out." If conflicts go on long enough, moderation disappears. In Rwanda, it's a bad sign that many people once
interestin foreign affairs." We need a strategy to help Ukraine
hardliners are viewed as the true
representatives of their people. That dynamic could explain why Palestinian
A u t hority P r e sident
considered "Hutu moderates" are now viewed as extremists. Agathe
Uwilingiyimana died a hero of the genocide. But if she were alive today, I wonder what she would be called. — Farah Stockman is a columnist for The Boston Globe.
and to undermine Putinism today-
and to reintegrate Russia tomorrow. It's a big, big lift. So let's be honest with ourselves and with the Ukrai-
nians. If Putin's playing hockey and we're not, Ukrainians need to know that now. — Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
JOHN UPDIKE
Boo etai s a writer
ie, eneat t esu ace "Updike" by Adam Begley (Harper,558 pgs., $29.99)
Ehrenreichmemoir isodd but not all that surprising "Living With a Wild God" by Barbara Ehrenreich
(Grand Central, $26) By Jeff rey Weiss The Dallas Morning News
the answers to life's persistent
questions. There's nothing silly about her struggles. But it's like someone deciding to become a chess master without ever reading — or knowing about
By Dwight Garner
Imagine visiting a carnival when a barker says — the existing literature. A there's a dinosaur in the lot of dead ends have already
New Yorh Times News Service
tent. You go inside to find
His high school friends called him Uppie, as if he were a drug. He'd claim the back booth in Stephen's Luncheonette, in Shillington, Pa., his
— a chicken. And a paleontologist who explains that chickens are really incredibly dinosaurlike. W ould you t h ink t h at was interesting7 Or would
hometown, and amuse every-
one by blowing smoke rings and French inhaling. He was gawky and shy but almost sexy. John Updike (1932-2009) grew up to like high spirits, gags, party games. At The Harvard Lampoon, where he became editor, he organized elaborate pranks that required great mounds of elephant
you be angry that Foghorn Leghorn is no Ty-
of what she c alls
dissociation where
dung and the destruction of
Barbara E hrenreich as "outspo-
cars. At The New Yorker, he'd
ken atheist, ac-
pretend to faint in elevators. He played Twister and Botti-
tivist and New York Times
best-selling author." So when she titles her most recent work "Living With a W i l d G od," that
to entertain in an early poem called "Thoughts While DrivThe Associated Press file photo ing Home": John Updike, the great American writer who died in 2009, is the Was I clever enough'? Was I subject of a newbiography from AdamBegley. charming? Did I make at least one
good pun? Was
I
di s c oncerting?
AD A i sl
Yet Begley's book lacks a certain richness and allusive-
BEG LE~
Disarming?
ness. It occupies an awkward
Was I wise? Was I wan? Was I fun?
biographical no man's land. It isn't so rigorous and bristling
These details arrive in Adam Begley's "Updike," a sympathetic new biography that's the f irst but
~ I„'
with facts that it feels definitive, yet it isn't so lively and
argumentative that it succeeds as a buoyant piece of writing.
u n l ike-
ly to be the last of this great American writer — THE great
American writer, in many regards. It's an honorable book
0
Updike is not situated, in
r
"Updike," except in passing, in the whirring galaxy of his competitive cohort, all those
but also a slight, frictionless
gravity-bending white males:
and oddly subdued one, unlikely to jump-start new pop-
Bellow, Styron, Vidal, Roth.
ular or critical interest in Up-
dike's vast oeuvre. Updike's impulse to charm on the page has been held against him. His exquisite
We get no sense of how Updike felt about Roth's brilliant late career run, nor any
complicated understanding of why Updike's own reputa-
"whale-size checks" like krill tion took a comparative nose words flowed, some felt, too along the way. drve. freely and too amiably. No othBegley gets Updike's bedBegley describes how Uper American writer who made rock story told. His father was dike was stung by the pounda splash before 30, Begley ob- a high school mathematics ing he took in later years from serves, "piled up accomplish- teacher. His more nurturing younger novelists and critics, ments in as orderly a fashion mother supported his writing including David Foster Walas Updike, or with as little and was a writer herself, later laceand James Wood. Wood fuss." publishing short stories in The went so far as to declare that "Updike is not, I think, a great Begley goes on: "He wasn't New Yorker. despairing or thwarted or reAt Harvard, Updike's fresh- writer." (In a letter, Updike called Wood "a great annoysentful; he wasn't alienated or man roommate was Chrisconflicted or drunk; he quar- topher Lasch, who would ance, in part because he is so reled with no one." It was one become the author of "The intelligent, in a needling, fussy of the few un-American things Culture of Narcissism" (1979). kind of way.") There is a gently simmerabout him, this refusal to let us It was a competitive, uneasy see him suffer. friendship. At Harvard, Up- ing Oedipal quality to this It's one of the achievements dike met his first wife, Mary biography. Begley's father, of Begley's book, however, Pennington, to whom he would novelist Louis Begley, was that it so acutely demonstrates remainmarriedform orethan a H arvard c l assmate and how it all, in fact, didn't come 20 years. It was their social set friend of Updike's. ("Accordso easily. We witness Updike's in Ipswich, Mass.— the cock- ing to family legend," Begley will in the face of repeated tails, the games, the gambol- writes, "Updike was the first early rejections, rebuffs that ing adultery — that he would person to make me laugh.") would have squelched the describe so lovingly and so Yet Begley, who was for many drive of a l e s s determined wickedly, deploying the full years books editor at The New artist. sensorium of his prose, in York Observer, also assigned Princeton, to begin, turned "Couples" (1968) and in so Wallace to review the novel "Toward the End of Time" him down. At Harvard, where many short stories. he considered becoming a carUpdike asked The New (1997), and the result was toonist, Archibald MacLeish Yorker to put away for later slashing. It lumped Updike twice denied him entry into use many of his early stories with other increasingly senile his elite creative writing class. about adultery, to spare Mary's "phallocrats." Begley is a gifted literary After college, when Updike feelings. It is among Begley's was newly married and had themes in "Updike" that much critic but does not deploy his a family to feed, his autobi- of Updike's fiction sprang al- knife skills t o g r eat effect here. There are few penetratographical first attempt at a most directly from his life. novel, "Home," was rejected by Updike married his sec- ing shafts of insight. He never Harper. He shelved it. ond wife, his former mistress musters a dense argument for He soon wrote 250 pages Martha Bernhard, in 1977, and Updike's importance, which of another, titled "Go Away," they remained together until would require him to triangubefore abandoning it. "The his death. With her arrival, late not just among Bellow and Poorhouse Fair" (1959) would this biography goes somewhat Roth and Mailer but among become his official first novel. dark, like one of those satellite Proust and Hawthorne and It, too, was rejected, by Harp- photographs of North Korea at Nabokov and Henry James. "Updike" races to its close, er, before landing at Alfred night. She exiled him from his A. Knopf, the publisher with old crowd, kept the press and skimming lightly over Upwhom Updike would profit- even his children with Mary at dike's final decades and novably remain. Like a salmon bay, and attended fully to his els. He never owned a cellswimmingupstream, he avoid- career as helpmate and reader. phone or used emaiL His wife ed predators and leapt large We learn some new things guessed, probably wisely, that impediments. (or are reminded of things email would keep him from H e arrived at T h e N e w we've forgotten) in "Updike." getting done what he wanted Yorker almost right out of col- In 1961 William Shawn tried to get done. What he did get done is lege and was instantly seen as to persuade him to become a prodigy. But he couldn't, he The New Yorker's television mighty, in scope and in tanknew, remain long on its staff. critic. He was an adept car- gled intensity. Begley's fluid He soon fled with his young penter. Claire Bloom, after her book has its share of nice mofamily to Massachusetts. "I divorce from Philip Roth, said ments and flickering insights was full," he remarked, "of a Updike's negative review of and intimate revelations. But Pennsylvania thing I wanted Roth's "Operation Shylock" you get the sense that we are to say." He would, of course, (1993) so distressed Roth that just beginning to untangle Upwrite for The New Yorkerhe checked himself into a psy- dike's knots. "Was I wise? Was I wan? poems, stories, criticism — for chiatric hospital. (Roth has more thanfive more decades, denied that his depression was Was I fun?" he asked. Yes. And no. And yes. collecting what h e c alled Updikian in nature.)
Here's what we get: From
her childhood, Ehrenreich experiences moments
This book promises a lot, for anybody who knows even a bit about own pu b l icity blurbs describe
couch. He satirized his need
It's possible, however, that a chess savant working on her own might come up with something utterly original. I kept waiting for that.
rannosaurus rex?
the author. H er
celli at his dinner parties. If things got dull, he'd fall off a
been dealt with.
sure sounds like there's a
she has a sense of the interconnected-
ness of all things in t he universe — i n cluding her. Human
categories of meaning simply don't apply. It's the kind of experi-
ence described by religious seekers of many kinds, familiar enough these days to have neuroscientists scan the brains of people who get to that state. Back in th e 1950s, when
young Barbara starts getSpoiler alert: There's not ting these fugues, she had no much to spoil. such context in which to place This is mostly an odd them. She was scared, not sort of memoir, an annotat- enlightened. ed culling of a journal she Spoiler alert, again. The T-rex in that tent.
kept in her teens and 20s. A lot of it is a window into
most important moment in
tional range of the book:
Calif. She has an extended
her life, from the perspective a psychologically peculiar of this book, happened when and profoundly unhappy she was 17 and on a trip with childhood. Here's a pas- friends that took them to the sage that sets up the emo- tiny desert town of Lone Pine, "Only one thing saved my father from dying as a slobbering drunk, and that was Alzheimer's disease, alcohol being unavailable in the nursing home he finally expired at. As for my mother, she died too, be-
dissociation where "I found whatever I had been looking for since the articulation of
my question, or perhaps, given my mental passivity at the moment, whatever had been
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between us, on her third
looking for me. Here we leave the jurisdiction of language." Which is a problem for an author writing a book.
suicide attempt. The earlier ones had led to successful
T hat's a b o u t h al f w a y through the memoir. Most of
TheBulletin
stomach pumpings, but in
the rest is more conventional:
the last one she managed
Attends college. Finds love,
to down enough pills before anyone noticed the
marriage and motherhood.
fore we could settle things
cessation of vital signs."
Enters into activism with the same naivete that marked her
Ouch. Not that young Barbara
early attempts at philosophy. All of it interesting to the
herself is revealed to have anything like warm fuzz-
extent that you are interested
ies. Her journal, the inspi-
in her — and certainly, the author of works such as "Nickel
ration for this book, is less
and Dimed" has fans who will
a girl/woman's diary than be. "Living With a Wild God" a young person's attempt to includes some rather splendid dophilosophy. writing. Her parents were, you see, confirmed atheists. So when she bumped up Pui4 5dod.i l 5a against the problem of the meaning of life — she calls it "The Situation" — teen-
age Barbara sets out to find
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SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
'THE WRONG ENEMY'
re o erana es eroe o a isanin e an war "The Wrong Enemy:America
been successful approximate-
in Afghanistan, 2001-2014" by Carlotta Gall (Houghton
ly 43 percent of the time when
Mifflin Harcourt, 329 pgs., $28) BySeth G.Jones New Yorh Times News Service
On July 7, 2008, insurgents
detonateda huge suicide car bomb outside the Indian Em-
bassy in Kabul, Afghanistan, killing 54 people, including an Indian defense attache. The
attack destroyed the embassy's protective blast walls and front gates, and tore into civil-
ians waiting outside for visas. On one level, the attack was merelyone among many that occur across this war-torn country, terribly unfortunate but numbingly frequent. But there was something particularly insidious about this one. According to U.S. intelligence assessments, agents from Pakistan's chief spy organization, the Directorate for In-
ter-Services Intelligence, or ISI, were involved in planning the attack. After being briefed
by U.S. intelligence officials, President George W. B u sh
dispatched Stephen Kappes, the CIA's deputy director, to Pakistan. The involvement of the ISI
in such a high-profile attack illustrates one of the most ignominious undercurrents of the war in Afghanistan and the subject of Carlotta Gall's
new book, "The Wrong Enemy": the role of Pakistan. Gall, a reporter for The New York
Times in Afghanistan and Pakistan for more than a decade, beginning shortly after Sept. 11, is in an extraordinary position to write this important
and long overdue book. At its core, "The Wrong Enemy" is a searing expose of Pakistan's involvement in
the Afghan war, which Gall drives home in the book's opening salvo. "Pakistan, not Afghanistan, has been the true enemy," she pointedly writes.
Starting in 2001 The book opens with the Taliban's November 2001 defeat in Afghanistan, a strik-
ing blow to a group that had initially seized Kabul in 1996 with aid from the ISI and oth-
er Pakistan government agencies. By December 2001, how-
gRONG ENEMY
they enjoyed a sanctuary. Afghan insurgents enjoy both outside support and sanctu-
ary, a doubly difficult hurdle for the United States and its allies to overcome.
villagers, Taliban fighters and officials of many governments provide poignant realism to the book, they also highlight one of its few drawbacks. Unlike some of the pre-eminent books on the region, like Steve
Coll's well-sourced Pulitzer Islamabad's rationale for Prize-winning "Ghost Wars" ANIERICA IN AFGHANISTAN, supporting Afghan insur- (2004), "The Wrong Enemy" 2001-2014 gents i s s t r aightforward occasionally veers into reportand, in many ways, under- ing unsubstantiated secondGARLOTTA GALL standable. Hemmed in by its or thirdhand accounts from archenemy, India, to the east, unnamed sources without proPakistan wants an ally to the viding adequate context — or west. It doesn't have one at skepticism — when approprithe moment. Instead, New ate.On several occasions,for Delhi has a close relation- example, she cites unnamed ship with the Afghan gov- Afghan security officials, who ernment. Feeling strategically have a proclivity to blame PaIn the Pakistan frontier town encircled by India, Islamabad kistan for everything, in highof Peshawar, more than 60 has resorted to proxy warfare lighting ISI mischievousness prominent insurgents and sev- to replace the current Afghan in Afghanistan. eral well-known Pakistan mil- government with a friendlier Still, "The Wrong Enemy" itary and intelligence figures regime. arrives at an auspicious time, met and plotted their revenge. just as the United States is "The Taliban leaders divid- Pakistan's role ending its combat mission in ed Afghanistan into separate With its focus on Pakistan, Afghanistan. In a passionate areas of operations," Gall "The Wrong Enemy" is a valu- plea, Gall argues in the final notes. "The Taliban comeback able contribution to a hefty chapter that the United States was underway." body of work on the American is turning its back on AfghanThe Taliban then turned to war in Afghanistan that has istan because U.S. leaders are the weighty task of building become stale and somewhat tired of war an d m istakena base of operations. Many of hackneyed. It provides a raw, ly view Afghanistan as lost. their leaders settled in the bus- unvarnished and important "That is the wrong way to look tling Pakistan city of Quetta, look at one of the darkest and at the problem," she writes once an outpost of the Britleast understood parts of the with palpable emotion. "Pakiish Empire that guarded the Afghan war. stan is still exporting militant "The Wrong Enemy" is not Islamism and terrorism, and s outhern gateway t o I n d i a from Afghanistan through the first book to grapple with will not stop once foreign forcthe Bolan Pass. Eager to find Pakistan's role in Afghani- es leave" Afghanistan. Quetta's newest squatters, Gall stan. Others have done so, These words have a nostaltrekked there and found Tali- including Ahmed Rashid's gic ring. In 1979, the Pakistani "Descent Into Chaos" (2008) leader Gen. Muhammad Zia ban fighters willing to talk. ul-Haq tellingly remarked to Over the next several years, and Barnett R. Rubin's "Afa sordid mix of Pakistan gov- ghanistan From the Cold War the director-general of the ISI ernment officials, political Through the War on Terror" that "the water in Afghanistan parties and militant groups (2013). must boil at the right temperaprovided refuge and aid to the But Gall's treatment of Paki- ture." As the United States Taliban and other Afghan in- stan's role is the most compre- ends its combat mission, the surgents. According to Gall, hensive. She does not, how- cold reality is that Afghanthe ISI even ran a special desk ever, let the Afghan or U.S. istan's future hinges just as assigned to handle Osama governmentsoffthehook.She much on Pakistan as it does bin Laden, a damnable accu- excoriates President Hamid on what happens inside Afsation if true. (Gall credits an Karzai of Afghanistan for fail- ghanistan's borders. "inside source" and says she ing to offer the Taliban a seriran it by t w o U .S. officials ous peace plan after 2001. She who told her it was consistent also criticizes him for a litany with their conclusions.) This of faults, from wantonly toleramalgam of support proved ating government corruption to be a lethal combination for to unnecessarily micromanthe growing insurgency in aging government decisions. Afghanistan that confounded And she disparages the U.S. U.S. policymakers. military for conducting airAccording to a RAND study strikes that u nnecessarily I wrote several years ago, killed civilians and for detaininsurgencies that r eceived ing too many Afghans who support from external states were wrongly arrested, falsely achieved their aims more than accused by rivals, or simply in 50 percent of the time, while the wrong place at the wrong
'Dark SacredNight' is rich in characters "And the Dark Sacred Night" by Julia Glass (Pantheon,$26.95) By Marion Winik Newsday
Julia Glass can really do geezers. Her sure hand with the voices and idiosyncrasies of older men is the strongest thing about "And the D ar k S acred
Night," the third in a trio of novels featuring gay Scottish bookseller Fenno McLeod. He debuted in Glass' National Book
Award-winning "Three Junes" (2002), then rewn settrngs so vrvrd Over" (2006), where he got a the relationships so carefully boyfriend, a bantering, nur- shaded that it remains an enturing Greenwich Village grossing read. restaurant owner named For example, Walter, the Walter. endearing restaurateur, is Now Fenno and Walter unrelentingly peevish about are secondary players in a Fenno's long-ago friendship cast that includes a crusty with Malachy. Vermont outd o o rsman, One of the points of "And Jasper Noonan, and a post- the Dark Sacred Night" is stroke state senator, Zeke that people are defined as Burns. Zeke is the father of much by their flaws as their art critic Malachy Burns, assets — in fact, in relation to who died of AIDS in "Three another character, a Catholic Junes." Malachy plays a key activist, it is observed that posthumous role in the cur- "saints ... fall hard. Saints rent novel as welL are merely tyrants in the Unfortunately, the charkingdom of virtue." turned in "The Whole World
acter at the center of the new plot is the weakest of the
troupe. Kit Noonan, adoptive son of Jasper Noonan,
As for the title, it is ex-
plained by Walter and Fenno's therapist. It's a lyric from the Louis Armstrong
song "What a Wonderful World" — "the bright blessed day and the dark sacred of a drip, and it's hard to un- night." "The past is like the derstand why his once-teen- night: dark yet sacred," says age and single mom has per- the therapist, underlining manently refused to reveal the importance of unravelwho his biological father is, ing one's history. Good old and why his wife thinks it'll Fenno nearly bolts from the solve his unemployment and office at that point. It's kind of odd that the depression problems if he finds out. strongest characters in the If the paternity-mystery book have an ironic relationplot line of this book doesn't ship to the somewhat gooey have enough mojo, the char- wisdom it imparts. But the acter development is so rich, odd moments in this novel the Vermont and Province- are its best. is a 42-year-old art historian
who lives in New Jersey with his wife and twins. He's a bit
ever, some Pakistani officials those with no support won time. began conspiring against the only 17 percent of the time. But While Gall's rich anecdotes nascent Afghan government. that's not all. Insurgents have from interviews with Afghan
Novelist bringstogether MeyerLans, I(ing David's taleand aslain Israeli poet By Carolyn Kellogg Los Angeles Times
neth Anger and Charles Manson associate Bobby Beausoleil.
live up to those ideas. It's very likely that those ideals couldn't
Meyer Lansky is one of the In another writer's hands, this be lived up to. But (Benjamight've been lurid; in Lazar's, min) Netanyahu is not David it was a brilliant, controlled Ben-Gurion." the Poor Immigrant" (Little, look at creativity and chaos. Lazar, who is Jewish, knew Brown and Co., $25). In his mid-40s, Lazar seems only the vague outlines of IsraNot so much the dapper, younger, wearing a casual el's history when he was start"Boardwalk Empire"-era gang- plaid shirt when we talk. His of- ing to write the novel. He took ster as Lansky in 1972 in Israel, fice in the home he shares with two research trips to the counseeking to retire there under his wife, an OB-GYN, Sarah, is try to get a feel for the place. the country's Law of modest and organized. Its most Using narrative to contain Return. It's hardly the striking feature is a a bigger problem and give it a most celebrated era bold painting from kind of meaning is something in Lansky's life, but an inmate at the Lou- Lazar has done before. His Lazar was going for isiana State Peniten- 2009 memoir, "Evening's Emsomething other than tiary in Angola that pire," was about his father's life he's planning to in- and 1975 murder. Ed Lazar, a the obvious. "The initial i d ea clude in his next novel. Phoenix accountant, was killed of this book was to B ehind L aza r ' s by two gangland assassins beput Meyer Lansky easygoing demeanor fore he could give a second day in the same room lies ahungryintellect, a of testimony in a land fraud as King David from rarecraftand a drive to caseagainsta former partner. gravitational centers of Zachary Lazar's new novel, "I Pity
the Bible," Lazar said via
write books that don't
Skype from his home office in on the surface resemble one New Orleans."That was such a another. "I used to worry that crazy idea it was nearly a ludi- this was not a good thing," he crous one." says, because the marketplace Andyet the King David story rewards series, not diversity. "I Pity the Poor Immigrant" does appear, woven seamlessly into a multi-threaded narrative is anchored in the texture of that indudes Lansky and his daily life — a potato chip bag 1970s mistress, flashbacks to littering the Valley of Elah, the his younger days, plus a con- mistress' itchy nylons, the "nartemporary American journal- cotic gray light of the terminal ist who has a love affair when
at JFK" — but it also examines
she investigates the slaying of the relationships between faa (fictional) Israeli poet whose thers and sons, violence's legapolitically tinged work gives cy and Israel. "(lt's) to do with the idealisthe novel its title. Lazar, who recently got ten- tic promise of Israel as a new ure teaching creative writing nation versus what's going on at 'Mane, proved that he could there now with the occupamake disconnected story lines tion," Lazar says. "The early, work with "Sway," his 2008 so-called fathers of that nation novel that moved among the being replaced by a generation Rolling Stones' Brian Jones, of people who are less —what's avant-garde filmmaker Ken- the word? — who just don't
"I have always had two ideas," Lazar wrote in thatbook."That
one day I would have to write about my father's story, and that if I ever did so I would nev-
erbe able to write anotherthing again." But Lazar, who got an MFA in creative writing from the Writers' Workshop at the Uni-
versity of Iowa, was bound to begin again. Violence, he ad-
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books, although it's not the flashy,Hollywood-ready kind. "What I think you can do in literature is get into the interi-
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F5
F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014
'Night Diver' is ablend 'Reme of romanceand mystery "Night Diver" by Elizabeth Lowell (William
Morrow,$26.99)
"The Remedy: Robert Koch, Arthur Conan Doyle, and the Quest to Cure Tuberculosis"
Once she's there, she realizAnd the man sent to essentially
put her family out of business isn't all bad either.
Elizabeth Lowell's charac-
ters are often snide, cynical and sarcastic, and she did not deviate from this form in "Night D iver." But i n t h i s case, it adds a bit to
Holden has been sent by a
British government agency to discover if Kate's family is inept, or if they are steal-
ing recovered treasure. Surprisingly, it doesn't take Kate long to ally herself with Holden. Not as surprisingly, it
the charm and chemistry between Holden and Kate.
Another quirk of Lowell's is totally submersing readers into whichever subject she has chosen to research for her
doesn't take Holden
long to realize Kate is innocent of anything nefarious going on. It takes even less
l a test b ook.
Thankfully, she has stepped away from that with
time for the both of them to recognize the fierce attraction
her last couple of books, which
that pulsates between them.
makes them so much more
Not much longer to act on that attraction.
pleasurable to read.
In"Night Diver," Lowell does an admirable job of blending a mystery with a modern-day romance. Kate fled her Caribbean home and her family's nautical
salvaging (treasure hunting) business many years ago. A frantic call from her brother
begging her to return to help them save the struggling busi-
While Lowell does refrain from smothering readers with too much detail, there is a lot
of information about diving in the story. Most of it is rather
necessary. Doesn't make it less tedious, but at least it's not too much and it doesn't overshad-
ow the romance and suspense that hooks a reader almost immediately.
Madness
had any medical problems. None really. He smoked a lot, Continued from F1 cigarettes and marijuana. He His mother tried to stop him had some abdominal prob— she grabbed at him, trying lems, and last year he was givto slow him down — but each en a diagnosis of irritable bowtime he shook her off roughly el syndrome. He also had back and kept going. Sick with wor- pain sometimes. Otherwise he ry, she did something she'd was pretty healthy. never done before: She called
and stool must never be ex- been in the sun. He'd stopped posed to light. Then the sam- eating and sleeping, physioples were to be sent to a spe- logical stressors that can cause cial lab. Goodman also tested porphyria to flare. the patient for other possible causes of psychiatric symp- A miraculous drip treatment toms. Street drugs can cause Attacks of porphyria can be psychosis. Heavy-metal poi- treated either with an artificial soning, from lead or arsenic version of heme, which is exor mercury, can as well. Defi- pensive and difficult to obtain, ciencies of B12 or folate, disor- or with high doses of intraveders of thyroid hormone and nous glucose, which tempocertaintypes of seizures can rarily stops the production of produce a variety of psychiat- porphyrins. Once the young man's treatment with glucose ric manifestations. The first set of tests was began, the effect was remarkunrevealing. Finally, a couple able. As the sugar flowed of days later, one of the tests into his system, the shouting, for porphyria suggested an the cursing, the struggling abnormality. The rest of them stopped. His face relaxed. His had to be repeated because mother watched in amazethey weren't done properly. ment as he transformed back Although that single test result into the son she remembered. wasn't enough to make a definitive diagnosis, Goodman
Goodman looked atthe ag-
the sherlff.
itated man on the gurney, and
Committed
then turned back to the parents. "I don't think your son
The sheriff assessed the devastated household and
has bipolar disorder at all," he said abruptly.
took the son to a psychiatric
holding area for observation. Anunusual doctor There, he was so out of control Over the course of Goodthat at times it took six or sev- man's 30-plus-year career en people to restrain him. The in psychiatry, he had made next morning, he was taken to something of a name for hima psychiatric hospitaL The ag- self as a doctor who could gressive behavior continued, figure out puzzling patients. and none of the medicines For this young man who had they used to try to calm him psychotic symptoms but didn't seemed to work. respond to antipsychotic med- decided to s t ar t t r e atment After three days, he was re- ications, Goodman considered when the patient turned violeased into his parents' care. the possibility that he did not lent again. He wasn't a danger to himself have a psychiatric disease."I or others, and the hospital strongly suspect," he told the A blood problem wasn't required to hold him. parents, "that your son has Porphyria is a rare genetDesperate, they contacted some type of porphyria." ic disease that develops in his doctor, who made a few The porphyrias are a group patients born without the calls and then instructed them
And before Koch discovered
theory." Making germs part of medical conventional wisdom required a "radical" shift
by Thomas Goetz
es all her memories aren't bad. McClatchy-7/.ibune News Service
of becoming a famous writer.
the causeof tuberculosis,he was a provincial German in scientific thinking, Goetz (Gotham,$27) physician with the dream of writes. The German doctor becoming a famous scientist. wanted "(n)ot just to prove the By Hector Tobar Both practiced a profession in existence of one disease, but Los Angeles Times which "bad air" was to change the conception of all Germs and detectives might believed to cause disdisease." not seem like they're connect- eases and in which Goetz, former execed. But their link, as a certain blood-letting deviculive editor of "Wired" fictitious sleuth might say, is es were commonly and author of "The elementary. used. Decision Tree: Taking In Thomas Goetz's fasciR elegated to a Control of Your Health nating and entertaining new small practice in in the New Era of Perpage-turner of a book, "The a rural corner of sonalized M e dicine," Remedy: Robert Koch, Arthur Prussia, Koch beemploys great flair and Conan Doyle, and the Quest gan a small scale an unfailing sense of to Cure Tuberculosis," we are but sy s tematic drama as he describes transported to the final de- study of a scourge of his com- Koch's lonely mission and the cades of the 19th century. The munity: anthrax, aserialkiller highly competitive intellectuage of electricity was dawn- of sheep and cattle, and some- al milieu of late 19th-century ing. And in laboratories and times humans. science. After he outlines his The "germ theory" of dis- findings in a series of letters to on imaginary London streets, men armed with microscopes ease was not then widely ac- a respected university, Koch and the power of observation cepted. With a microscope not only wins a prestigious first used science to tadde the provided by his wife and with academic appointment, he betwin scourges of crime and farm animals as his first test comes a celebrity. disease. subjects, followed by legions But his newfound fame is "The Remedy" is a true tale of white mice (Koch pioneered quickly upstaged by a Frenchabout how deductive reason- their use in laboratories), Koch man. Louis Pasteur is n ot ing and the scientific method not only found the anthrax only a more practical scienfirst captured the public imag- bacterium in his microscope, tist (he always has an eye to ination — thanks in no small he discovered its entire life cy- the commercial potential of measure to the work of two de. Then, with a series of sim- his work), he is also a better country doctors. ple but bold experiments, he showman. Pasteur creates and Before Conan Doyle got sought to prove conclusively tests the world's first anthrax rich with Sherlock Holmes' that it caused the disease. vaccine in a dramatic public story, he was a small-town EnOnly a small number of demonstration. glish physician with dreams scientists embraced "germ Koch allows the discov-
ness has Kate very reluctantly going home.
By Lezlie Patterson
is a thrilling physician's tale ery-obsessedmedia to leak out word that he's discovered a "remedy."He calls hism ysterious new substance tuberculin. Legions of tuberculosis patients launch a
"zombie
pilgrimage" to Berlin, Goetz writes. They are followed by a doctor who's recently
launched a writing career. Conan Doyle travels to Berlin in 1890 as a correspondent
for a London newspaper. He never gets to meet Koch, but
in visiting his patients, Conan Doyle quiddy concludes that the "remedy" is no such thing. Koch has addressed the symptoms of the disease, Conan Doyle asserts, without attack-
ingthe disease itself. Conan Doyle returns to England a changed man, newly confident in his abilities as
both a writer and an observer. From that confidence, Sherlock Holmes is born.
If Koch was one of the first science celebrities, C onan
Doyle became one of the first multiplatform media superstars, with his fictional Holmes
coming to life first in magazine stories, then in books and finally in theater, silent movies and "talking pictures" — all
during Conan Doyle's lifetime. In the end, "The Remedy" is a thoroughly enjoyable and illuminating journey.
After half an hour, the young more than I thought anything man turned to her and said, "I ever would," the patient told don't remember the last time me recently. He's planning to I felt this good." The pain in start working — something he his back and abdomen was hadn't been able to do — and gone. The snarling anger that he's hoping to go back to colhad been his daily compan- lege in the fall. ion for months, maybe years, Goodman said this was vanished.
the 19th patient in whom he'd
Porphyria cannot be cured. diagnosed porphyria. He's To manage the disease, pa- proud of his diagnostic abilitients must focus on avoiding
ties. He told me that some of
those things that trigger the production of porphyrins. Af-
his patients liken him to the curmudgeonly diagnostician ter the glucose treatment, the on TV, Dr. Gregory House. patient was eager to learn how "I'm irritable," he said. "I'm to avoid future attacks. He be- opinionated. I can be blunt. gan to eat and sleep regularly. And I've got the limp. The only He quit smoking and drink- real difference'? I'm not addicting. He eliminated all the med- ed to drugs." ications he could. Eventually
— Lisa Sanders, M.D., writes the Diagnosis column for The New York Times Magazine.
he felt nearly back to normal. "This has changed my life
PREMIUM HEARING AIDS +P~
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acterizedby episodes of de- essential body chemicals, inbilitating back or abdominal cluding heme, an important Hospitals (now called South- pain, often accompanied by component of h emoglobin. ern California Hospital at Cul- psychiatric symptoms that do When the body is exposed to ver City) to see Dr. Jory Good- not respond to most psychi- certain drugs and environman, an excellent psychiatrist atric medications. The drugs mental stimulants — alcohol, and an old friend. He would sometimes make the symp- tobacco, marijuana, certain figure out what was going on toms worse. prescription drugs, or stress hours away to Alta Hollywood
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Sedatives ThatDon'tSedate
duce the essential chemicals but can't. It ends up producing dangerous levels of the chemi"He hasn't really been test- cal precursors to heme, known ed for it until I test him for it," as porphyrins. The excess porGoodman shot back. It's an phyrins injure tissues througheasy test to mess up, he said. out the body, but especially the ately: "He's already been tested for that. He doesn't have it."
G oodman watched t h e young man as his parents talked. He'd already been given powerful sedatives to quiet Happens all the time. him, and at times it seemed as Goodman started the proif he were about to fall asleep. cess oflooking for a medical But just as his eyes would be- cause for the patient's madgin to close, he'd erupt with ness. He ordered tests for porexpletives and strike out be- phyria, giving explicit instrucfore sinking again into an un- tions on how the samples had easy quiet. to be handled for the tests to Goodman asked if their son be accurate. The blood, urine
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Boxer/French Mastiff Labradors, purebred "Hooch"mix,2 m ales, chocolates, vet-checked, • Chandelier, > Serving TheBulletin > Say ngoodbuy" Central Oregon since i903 22" diameter x 17n 9 wks, shots, wormer, $250. 541-416-1175 to that unused dewclaws & docked tails, high, 12 lights, $500. 541-419-0149 Maine Coon (part) Tuxbronze & crystal, 212 item by placing it in edo BIJayed female cat, has 6 arms (2 lights Antiques & 4 white paws, The Bulletin Classifieds Chihuahua puppies, very "Chirp,' on each arm), bib, semi-long hair, Collectibles 202 $300 obo. tiny, 1 male, 1 female, white shots, microchipped. $250. 541-420-1068 all 541-923-7491 Want to Buy or Rent Hand-raised (mom died), 541-385-5809 Antiques wanted: tools, gentle, petite, free to good furniture, marbles,early CASH for dressers, Corgi pups, 6 wks, $300. home only. 541-526-0687 Couch: beige, B/W photography, 245 dead washers/dryers 541-420-8621, or leave reclining, $150. toys, decoys, jewelry. 541-420-5640 msg at 541-447-3985. 541-517-4345. Golf Equipment 541-389-1578 Wanted: $Cash paid for Donate deposit bottles/ People Look for Information vintage costume jew- cans to local all vol., P eople g iving p e t s Dining table Bid Novtl! About Products and elry. Top dollar paid for non-profit rescue, for away are advised to www.BudetinBidnBuy.com Beautiful round Gold/Silver.l buy by the Services Every Day through be selective about the oak pedestal table cat spay/neuter. new owners. For the v Estate, Honest Artist feral The Bulletin Classineds with 4 matching Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Cans for Cats trailer protection of the anichairs, table is 42" at Bend Pet Express Collectors! Free French a personal visit to Wanted white peace E; or donate M-F at mal, in diameter and in postage stamps home is recomdoves for outdoor avi- Smith Sign, 1515 NE the brand new condi541-548-6642 mended. ary. 541-382-2194 2nd; or a t C R AFT, tion, as are the Dark oa k 2- d rawer Buy Hegg...Buy Local Tumalo. Lv. msg. for chairs. Priced at The Bulletin 205 You Can Bid On: p ick up o f la r g e dresser, curved front, $300. 541-447-3342 Items for Free $250. White wicker Widgi Golf Pass amounts, 389-8420. POODLE pups, toys or www.craftcats.org baby crib, u n ique Retail Value $79 sml mini. also 'rescued Dining table, glass & Goose, large Chinese Im$250. Large dark oak Widgi Creek Golf erial male, free to good Foster homes needed pup'. 541-475-3889 brass, glass pedestal, roll top desk $800 Club nx40". $450 obo. Call ome. 541-382-8399 60 Surveryor's tr a nsit (Bidding closes for orphan k ittens, 541-330-8177 after 11am Just too many 1930-1940, orig. box Tues. April 15 kittens with moms and 208 at 8:00 p.m.) CAS H special needs cats. collectibles? G ENERATE SOM E $ 350. Pets & Supplies Orphan kittens would EXCITEMENT in your 541-923-5960 be weaned but not yet Sell them in neighborhood! Plan a big enough for spay/ The Bulletin Classifieds garage sale and don't The Bulletin recomneuter & a d o ption. forget to advertise in mends extra caution classified! when purc has- Foster needs to commit to 2-6 weeks. We 541-385-5809. ing products or ser541-385-5809 provide food, cage, vices from out of the litter, vet care, etc.; area. Sending cash, Queensland Heelers foster provides a safe, Standard checks, or credit in8 Mini, $150 lovinghome. Home f ormation may be & up. 541-280-1537 visit required. e-mail www.rightwayranch.wor subjected to fraud. info©craftcats.org or For more i nformadpress.com call 541-815-7278. tion about an adverHassock (or ottoman) tiser, you may call about 17 t/~n tall and the O regon State 34t/en in diameter, in Need to get an Attorney General's good cond. $35 obo. ad in ASAP? Office C o n sumer 541-419-6408 Protection hotline at You can place it 1-877-877-9392. Kenmore 1-yr-old uponline at: S ponsor needed f o r right freezer 16 cu. ft. The Bulletin www.bendbuffetin.com Peanut, a sweet, tiny $325. (830) 822-3945 Serving Central Oregon sincetgtu calico who came to sr CRAFT in respiratory 541 -385-5809 Adopt a rescued cat or distress. The vet was gg kitten! Fixed, shots, ID unable to determine if r chip, tested, more! Help needed for Mont- it was f rom b eing 65480 78th, Tumalo, gomery, who just had a maced or from being T hurs/Sat/Sun 1 - 5 , leg amputated. He was struck; n o br o ken 541-389-8420 seen injured with a bones but she had inLEATHER CHAIR www.craftcats.org bone protruding from ternal bleeding. After Espresso brown his leg for over 2 mo. a week she is stable & in very good condiAussie Mini puppies, 5 by Sisters residents can stand, & loves attion, lessthan 2 purebred, born 3/13/14, before they contacted tention. The vet costs years old. $250. ready 5/8. 541-693-4888 CRAFT to help him. were a big hit for our In SE Bend www.mlnlausslesbend.com He needs time & a small rescue, so any 541-508-8784 quiet place to heal. help is appreciated. Young & strong but She will need a safe, to be alive. A big loving home once we NEED TO CANCEL Aussie, Mini/Toy pup, lucky YOUR AD? tri-color, first shot, $320 vet bill for a small res- k now she i s c o mThe Bulletin cue group, so spon- pletely okay, but a cash. 541-678-7599 sors are needed; safe foster home may also Classifieds has an nAiler Hours" Line Bow front fish tank, 45 home for Montgomery', be a good option. Box al. w/ stand, pump & PO Box 6441, Bend 6441, Bend 9 7 708 Call 541-383-2371 e ater, $250 o b o. 97708 541-598-5488. www.craftcats.org, 541 24 hrs. to cancel 541-408-0846 www.craftcats.org 598 5488. your ad! w/lightsi glass shelves, faux finish (looks like
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• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
Moving Sale, Fri-Sun, 9am, 780 S Redwood, Sisters. Freezer, furniture, bed set, swing, & more! 503-701-3840 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since i903
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to Bell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
The Earned Income Tax Credit. YoII may have
earned it. Why not claim it? If you're working hard just to make ends meetand have one or more children living with you, you may qualify for the EITC. Think of it as a reward for doing one of life's most beautiful, most important and most loving jobs. Visit our Web site or ask your tax preparer if you qualify. Because when itcomes to getting more for your family, consider it done. A message from the Internal Revenue Service. www.irs.gov/eitc The Internal Revenue Servlce
G2 SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D 1
AT TIMES BY PATRICK BERRY / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ
ACROSS
44Overzealous sorts I Irnprovisational 47Old-fashioned music barber, at times? 4 Brick color 48Missile launched at 10 Bibliographical Goliath abbr. 51National Book Mo. 14 Indigenous people 53 Circus performer known for their Kelly tattoos 54 Inexperienced 19 NPR journalist shucker, at times'? Shapiro 58 Low pair 20 1986 girl's-name 60Out of fashion song by Boston 21"Catch-22" profiteer 61 Subject of a van Gogh series Minderbinder 22 DuPont trademark 62 Software user's shortcut of 1941 65 No-limit Texas 23 Clurnsy pharmacist, hold'em player, at at tirnes'? times? 26 Easily misled 6$ People may be 27 String section down on them members 70 TWA competitor 28 Dressage rider, at times? 71 Dual-sport athlete Sanders 30 Smidgen 72Answers that may 31 Suffix with social anger 34 suit 74 Farrner, at times? 35Maintain 78 Unfettered 36Grant for a filmrnaker? 82 Knowledge 38 Indonesian tourist 83 "Shall we proceed?" haven 84 Sleeping sunbather, 39 London at times? (British Ferris 87 Buyer's final figure wheel) $0 Spirits in 40 Reminiscent of Scandinavia 41Tucked away 91New Haven alum 42 Some supplies for 82 Breaks down Hershey's $3 Stanford rival, informally Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle aud more 85 Job everyone wants than 4,000 past puzzles, 96 Sound at a horror nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). film
$7 Florentine dynasty name 100"Cut that out!" 101 West African vegetable 102 Double-handed cooking vessel 103 Dieter, at times? 106 Fall stopper 109 French: merci:: German: 110 Person getting out of a tub, at times? 114Transpire 115Memo opener 116 Detestable 117 Something that may be arnalgamated 118Manual parts? 119Giants or Titans 120 Porcelain purchase, perhaps 121As matters stand
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1 Entrance side 2 Department 3 Current location? 4 Brought to tears, possibly 5 "Time's Arrow" novelist Martin 6 Took off 7 Wedded 8 Unconventional 9 Person moving against traffic'? 10 Bring on 11Go quietly 12 Fully attentive 13 Sorne hand-medowns?
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66 " c'est moi" 67Told stories 68 Way too thin 73Not a single thing'? 75 Blue 76 Diminish 77 Opposite of smooth 79Take by surprise 80 Mud (bottom-dwelling fish)
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81 Total bore 85 Slurpee flavor 86 Supermodel Heidi 88 Dress in fancy duds 89 Long-eared dogs, informally 90 Reshape 93 Fuerza Democrhtica Nicaragiiense member
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84 It's played in ballparks 96 Viscous substance $7 PC platform of old 98 Ratify 99 The Harlem Shake or the Dougie 100One of the Allman Brothers 102Flick site?
104Expiration notice 105Fundarnental part 106Modelist's need 107Julio-Claudian dynasty ruler 108Attracted 111Horatian 112Harnm of soccer 113Signal that replaced "CQDn
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo in your private party sd for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 248
255
Health & Beauty Items
Computers
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T HE BULLETIN r e quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systemsl software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
259
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Mem b erships
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Buy New...Buy Local
You Can Bid On: One Year Couples Non-Tennis Membership Retail Value $1,836. Athletic Club of Bend (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)
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Misc. Items
Misc. Items
Building Materials
Lost & Found
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www.euuetineidneuy.com
Buy New...Buy Loctal
You Can Bid On: $1 000 Flooring Voucher Retail Value $1000. Interior Ideas NMfRedmond (Bidding closes Tues., April 15,
Is Your Identity ProBend Habitat tected? I t is our RESTORE promise to provide the Building Supply Resale most comprehensive Quality at LOW identity theft prevenPRICES tion and r e sponse 740 NE 1st 541 -3f 2-6709 products a v ailable! Call Today for 30-Day Open to the public. FREE TRIAL 267 1 -800-395-701 2.
Fuel 8 Wood (PNDC) Just snow plow hitch, All Year Dependable fits 2500 Dodge Ram, Firewood: Seasoned; $1 00. 54f -408-0758 257 Lodgepole 1 for $195 Lortone rotary rock tum- or 2 for $365. Cedar, Musical Instruments bler, 12-Ib cap, extras, split, del. Bend: 1 for $1 50 firm. 541 -389-7952 $175 or 2 for $325. ar 8:00 p.m.) Painters, coarse grade 541 -420-3484. stripping 3m pad, box Pine & Juniper Split of 10, $5. Buying Diamonds Want to impress the 541 -548-6642 /Gold for Cash 260 relatives? Remodel Saxon's Fine Jewelers *REDUCE YOUR PROMPT DELIVERY Misc.ltems your home with the 541-389-9663 541-389-6655 CABLE BILL! Ger an Beautiful Lowrey help of a professional All-Digital Sa t e llite Adventurer II Organ BUYING system installed for Call The Bulletin At from The Bulletin's Absolutely perfect 2012 Simp l icity Lionel/American Flyer FREE and program541-380-5809 condition, not a "Call A Service Gusto Heps canistrains, accessories. m ing s t arting a t Place Your Ad Or E-Mail scratch on it, about ter va c u um with Professional" Directory 541-408-2f 91 . $ 24.99/mo. FRE E 4-feer wide, does attachments, extra HD/DVR upgrade for AI: www.bendbulletin.com everything! Includes filter and bags, exc. BUYING a SE L LING 253 Seasoned Pine, (2yrs): a nice bench, too. cond. Retail $1500, All gold jewelry, silver new callers, SO CALL LaPine rounds $130/cord; NOW (877)366-4508. 5 I600 obo. TV, Stereo & Video Asking $700 . and gold coins, bars, (PNDC) split, $145. Sunriver 541-385-5605 97f -221 -8278 (cell) rounds, wedding sets, rounds, $145. Bend split, DirectTV 2 Year Savclass rings, sterling sil- Reduce Your Past Tax $165. Redmond rounds, ings Event! Over 140 ver, coin collect, vin- Bill by as much as 75 $165. Sisters sphf, $180. channels only $29.99 DRUM SETS: Are you in BIG trouble tage watches, dental Percent. Stop Levies, 2 cord min. 541-508-3159 a month. O nly DiLudwig drum ser, gold. Bill Fl e ming, Liens and Wage Garwith the IRS? Stop recTV gives you 2 289 d rums o nly, n o nishments. Call The wage & bank levies, 641 -382-941 9. YEARS of s a vings hardware, 26" base Tax DR Now to see if Gardening Supplies liens & audits, unfiled and a FREE Genie drum, 13", 16", and Check our the you Qualify tax returns, payroll is& Equipment upgrade! Call 18 e toms, 14" snare, 1 -800-791-2099. sues, 8 resolve tax classifieds online 1 -800-259-51 40. $500. REMO Masdebt FAST. Seen on www.tsendbulletirLcom (PNDC) (PNDC) ter Touch drum set, CNN. A B BB . C a ll BarkTurfSoil.com The Bulletin Offers Updated daily no 1 -800-989-1 278. DISH T V Ret a i ler. drums o nl y Free Private Party Ads (PNDC) Starting at hardware, 22" base Computer wood desk, • 3 lines - 3 days PROMPT DELIVERY drum, 8", 10", 12", $19.99/month (for 12 54i-389-9663 frosted glass, 3 tiers, • Private Party Only 1 3", 16" and 1 8" mos.) & High Speed • Total of items adverkeyboard drawer, $20. toms, 1 4" s n are I nternet starting a t Get your tised must equal $200 541-548-6642 For newspaper $f 4.95/month (where drum, $800. Both in or Less business available.) SAVE! Ask excellent condition. FOR DETAILS or ro delivery, call the FAST TREES 541-410-4983 Circulation Dept. at About SAME DAY InPLACE AN AD, Grow 6-f 0 feet yearly! 54f -385-5800 stallation! CALL Now! Call 541-385-5809 e ROW I N G $1 6-$2f delivered. To place an ad, call 1 -800-308-1 563 Fax 541-385-5002 www.fasttrees.com 258 541-385-5809 (PNDC) or 509-447-41 81 with an ad in Wanted- paying cash or email Travel/Tickets for Hi-fi audio & sru- olaeeified@bendbulletin.oom The Bulletin's How to avoid scam dio equip. Mclntosh, Advertise VACATION "Call A Service and fraud attempts JBL, Marantz, D yThe Bulletin SPECIALS to 3 milServine teneel Oreeonsince salB MusicNoice Studio Professional" YBe aware of inrernanaco, Heathkit, Sanlion Pacific N o rthIncludes: tional fraud. Deal losui, Carver, NAD, etc. Mantis Garden Tiller Directory westerners! 29 daily • Pro Tools 8 software Call 541-261 -1 808 cally whenever possix • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 newspapers, $50. states. 25-word clas- Auto Accident Attorney: sible. • Behringer Bf mic 261 Call 54f -389-95f 8 sr'Watch for buyers • Sony headphones sified $540 for a 3-day INJURED I N AN Medical Equipment who offer more than 270 • Samson USB studio a d. Ca l l (916) AUTO A CCIDENT? 2 88-601 9 o r v is i t your asking price and mic w/stand; Lost & Found Call InjuryFone for a • Training books www.pnna.com for the free case evaluation. who ask to have money wired or • Corrugated foam Pacific Nor t hwest Found about 2 months a cost to you. handed back to them. padding Daily Con n ection. Never ago, in Tillicum VilDon't wait, call now, Fake cashier checks Package price new, (PNDC) lage area, male cat, 1 -800-539-991 3. $0T200+and money orders orange tabby, white (PNDC) are common. Offered at$550. paws 8 chest, rings of Flatscreen Iillagni(All reasonable offers Bid Now! VNever give out perwhite on rail. Probfier Optlec Clearwww.euuetinsidneuy.com considered) sonal financial inforlems w/ left eye. Call Bid Now! view+ viewer, magCall 541-639-3222 marion. to identify, www.eulletineidneuy.com nifier for reading, sfTrust your instincts 541 -389-9968. writing and viewing REDUCE YOUR and be wary of for those who have CABLE BILL!* Get a Lost cat, black/gray tiger someone using an ese whole-home Satellite vision loss. $900 striped, yellow eyes, seu escrow service or obo. (othsr items female, 8 lbs., in DRW system installed at agent to pick up your NO COST and pro- Buy New...auy Local listed previously Navaio Rd. area. merchandise. have been sold) REWARD. 541 -554-6031 ramming starting at You Can Bid On: 1 9.99/mo. FR E E Two Night Stay Buy Netar...Buy Local In Bend, call The Bulletin LOST LOVEBIRD:peachServ>ng Central Oregon since SSOS 541-480-6162 HD/DVR Upgrade to in a Restless You Can Bid On: faced, green body, 4/8/f 4 new callers, SO CALL Waters Room $100 Gift Certificate at Larch Grove in ShevIMPORTANT MEETING NOW Retail Value $550 Toward any Repair 263 lin Park. Has blue band for residents of 1 -866-984-85f 5. Retail Value $100 Overleaf Lodgeon leu with a¹3.e $100 Deschutes River Woods Tools (PNDC) Yschsts, Oregon The iPhoneGuy REWARD. 54f -77f -13f 1 Thurs., April 17, 7 p.m. (Bidding closes (Bidding closes Vizio HDTV 27s/a" flat ar the Morning Star Snow blower 19 e MTD Lost Maltese, white, Tues., April 15, Tues., April 15, screen, $1 00. Christian School gym. 2-stroke, runs well. female, Gist Rd. area at 8:00 p.m.) at 8:00 p.m.) 830-822-3945 (Bend) www.drwna.org on 4/1. 541 -350-51 06 $75. 360-420-4762 Buy Neiar...auy Local
You Can Bid On: $250 Gift Card Retail Value $250 Exhale Spa and Laser Center (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)
REMEMBER: If you
have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541 -382-3537 Redmond 54f -923-0882 Pi e i l le 541-447-7178;
or Craft Cats 541-389-8420.
325
Hay, Grain & Feed Mixed Grass Hay, 1st quality, big bales, 3'x3'xs', barn stored, $230/ton. Patterson Ranch Sisters, 541-549-3831
Good classified adstell the essential facfs in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway. This advertising tip brought to you by
The Bulletin Svrnng CentralOregon see fate
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 341
Horses & Equipment Horse stall s/aex4'6e rub
ber mats, 7 @ $30 ea. (830) 822-3945 Bend
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
476 o a
/ 0 0
Employment Opportunities BANKING
Onpoint COMMUNITY CREDIT UNION
476
Employment Opportunities
is seeking a dynamic and service-driven individual to fill a
Full-time Teller
role in our Bend South Branch. CAUTION: Ads published in To view the fulljob "Employment Opdescription and to portunlties" include apply, please visit employee and indeour website at: pendent positions. WWWron Ointoareere.epm Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or Caregiver upfront investment Prineville Senior care must be stated. With h ome looking f o r any independentjob Caregiver for multiple opportunity, please shifts, part-time ro i nvestigate tho r full-time. Pass oughly. Use extra criminal background caution when apcheck. 541 -447-5773. plying for jobs online and never proConcrete Finishers vide personal inforWanted! mation to any source Roger L a ngeliers you may not have Const. Co is looking researched and for experienced cedeemed to be repument finishers. Full table. Use extreme benefit pa c kage, c aution when r e EOE. We E-Verify, s ponding to A N Y d rug screen reonline employment quired. A pplicants ad from out-of-state. m ay come by the ofWe suggest you call fice at 62880 Merthe State of Oregon cury Place to fill out Consumer H otline an application, or at f -503-378-4320 call Steve For Equal Opporru5 41 -31 8-6200, o r nity Laws contact 54f -948-0829 Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, What are you 97f -673- 0764. looking for? The Bulletin You'll find it in 54f -385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bulietin's web sire, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Look at: Bendhomee.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
~© SU EIARU. Auto Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r de a ler Subaru of B e nd. Offering 40fk, profit sharing, me d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara nree. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.
541-385-5809
St~tnd
d
Delivery Driver I Warehouse Worker
Standard TI/ 8 Appliance is looking for a deliyery driver. This position is full-time and requires heavy lifting, l e adership, professional appearance and ability to work Saturdays and Sundays. D r i vers need recent experience driving a box truck and must be insurable with no more than 3 moving violations. Must also pass a background check, lift test/physical and drug screen. Apply in erson at: 6 3 736 aramount Dr., Bend, OR 97701 or online at www.standardiv nda lence. a~ a licant ro.com/'obs
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
f JtrMJ
476
476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Can be found on these pages: EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions
and benefits. Year-round, long-term
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
Caii 541-997-8212
Fax it to 541-322-7253
S UBA R U . Sales Sales professional to Join Central Oregon's l a r gest new ca r d e a ler Subaru of B e n d. Offering 401k, profit sharing, m e d ical plan, split shifts and paid vacation. Experience or will train. 90 day $1500 guara ntee. Dress f o r success to work in our drug free work place. Please apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. See Bob or Devon.
card. Great pay
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476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
employment.
FIRE/PARAMEDIC
DRIVER
(Long & Short) for logging company in Florence, OR. Experience required, CDL, current medical
RN Clinical Coordinator needed for Heart 'n Home Hospice & Palliative Care in Bend. Top 100 Best Places to Work in Healthcare in the N ation with great pay and benefits. www.goHospice.com
Log Truck Drivers
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
INSURANCE Establishment of BILLING CLERK National wholesale dis- Employment List for tributor of w aterworks Firefighter/Paramedic products in Redmond is Crook County Fire and Wallowa Memorial Hospital seeking motivated and Rescue is establishing an hard working part time/ employment list for Fireseasonal individual with a fighter/Paramedic. IndiLocated in ood attitude. C andi- viduals who meet the Enterprise, OR minimum qualifications ate must have good communication skills, be are invited to apply and Full-Time - Days professional, punctual, a take the examination for Mon. - Fri. self starter, and work as Firefighter/Paramedic. A Medicare & a team player. Primary complete job description Commercial Ins. job duties are driving and for Firefighter/Paramedic Billing Exp. all warehouse functions. is posted on the district's Benefit s a lary Excellent Secondary duties i n- website. Th e Package volve counter sales, an- range is from $4,248- Visit our website at swering phones, and $5,002 per month. Appliwww.wchcd.org various other d uties. cations will be accepted or Contact Class A CDL is required. until Monday, April 14, Linda Childers at Ability to operate a fork- 2014. Contact: 541P26-5313 lift, climb a ladder, maCrook County EOE n ipulate t o ol s an d Fire & Rescue e quipment, lift u p t o 500 NE Belknap Street Prineville, OR 100lbs, and type a mini97754-1932 mum of 20 words per minute is a must. We are (541) 447-5011 looking to fill this position very quickly so please fireandrescue.com A HumRaaw» 4aajeeesGeywy email your resume to hors e aaron.bondi@fer uson.com Housekeeper wanted B eautiful ranch in Sisters is if you are interested. The part time, apply at Company is an equal op- The Pines at Sunriver. looking for an exp. 541-593-2160. landscaper. Position portunity employer as is f ull-time, s eawell as a government contractor that s h a ll sonal with potential abide by the require- Garage Sales of becoming full-time ments o f 41 CFR y ear round, 1 y r . Garage Sales 60-300.5(a), which proexp. with a pro landhibits dis c rimination scape company req. against qualified pro- Garage Sales Please submit retected Veterans and the sume to centraloreFind them requirements of 41 CFR gonjobs©bbsihq.co 60-741.5(A), which proin m or visit website, hibits dis c rimination www.barrettbusiThe Bulletin against qualified indiness.com/branches/I viduals on the basis of Classifieds ocation/OR/bend for disability. m ore info. Dr u g 541-385-5809 screen and background check req.
CDL Driver
The Bulletin Classifieds RESORT
SALES
Daytime Inside Sales Sales
J A M A R I M E D I B A S S TA C A R Y A T E F O A M E M M E T MA C R U S A I C H I C K E N N E T R M E D I S N A C D A N K O C C U S T E P
M A C E D
A R O O N M A N D A I N E D R S C I S M B A L I A L M O N D R U B B E R T T O Y WO S O A L L B R D E I O K E N T E N R E A D Y C O S T O T S C A C I D O N K C O U N T E B A T H R I N R E S T E A M
E M P L O Y
T I P T O E
S S T P A E T N D E B A B L T E R R O O T
T E S T
M O R S E
R A S P Y
C O L A
O O Z E S
A L E R T
L O R E V A L I A N N E C R E R S A L K B L U U M M G S L O U S E
M O N O S K I
A R A L S E A
O L I V E
R O V E R
I N E R T
C O A C K S E I K N E S S O O S U R N T E G A W O K R O U I P P S O T N
S C E N E
T R E S
E E L S
D R I P
Will hire two sales N D people to work from the B e n d Bu l letin O M E R newspaper office for D I R E Current Job t he N ewspaper i n Toyota-Scion Auto Education sales cam- Sales. Great earnOpportunities! E A OW paign. This is soft, ing potential, borelaxed business-toFood & Beverage n uses, 401k a n d PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 • Line Cooks business sales. We benefits. Qualifying • Servers offer a s h ort p aid e xp. e l igible f o r 476 573 573 • Beverage Cart training program. The guarantee 90 day Employment Business Opportunities Business Opportunities • Bussers average salesperson salary. Full service • Dishwashers earns $400 to $700 facility Opportunities pro v iding WARNING The Bulletin CLASSIFIED ADVER• Barista Server per week, for a 2 7 training and support. that you TISING! Reach Over • Catering Servers hour work week.The Must pass criminal The path to your dream recommends eve r y 3 Mi l lion Pa c ific job begins with a col- i nvestigate • Snack shop staff dress code is very background check, • Grill Cooks lege degree. Educa- phase of investment Northwesterners. relaxed and casual. clean DMV and drug espe- $540/25-word classiWe prefer a b ack- screen. A p ply at tion Quarters offers a opportunities, ially t h ose f r o m fied ad in 2 9 d aily free college matching c Golf ground in "business-to Toyota-Scion of out-of-state or offered newspapers for service. CALL • Assistant Mechanic -business" s e l ling. Bend, 61430 S. Hwy by a person doing 3-days. Call the Pa1-800-901-2241. • Outside services This is not ad or sub- 97, Bend, Oregon. business out of a lo- cific Northwest Daily (PNDC) • Greens Keepers scription sales, howcal motel or hotel. In- Connection (916) ever if you have prevestment o ff e rings 288-6019 or e m a il Maintenance vious experience in TELEFUNDRAISING Utilities Labormust be r egistered elizabeth ©cnpa.com • Grounds Maint. advertising sales, I will with the Oregon De- for more info. (PNDC) • Admin. Assistant Tele-funding for give you priority conpartment of Finance. EXTREME VALUE ADsideration. I'm looking •Meals On Wheels, We suggest you con- VERTISING! 29 Daily Recreatlon for motivated, ener- •Defeat Diabetes sult your attorney or newspapers • Life Guards articulate getic, 4HlmalRMolleNsll!ele!N~~ call CON S U MER $540/25-word classi• Activity Leaders people, with excellent Foundation, Local municipality is HOTLINE, fied 3-days. Reach 3 communication skills. •Veterans (OPVA). looking to fill sea1-503-378-4320, Rental Operatlons million Pacific NorthM e l anie at sonal labor posi8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. • HousekeepingStaff Call Seniors and a/I westerners. For more 541-383-0399. tions. Positions in• Night Audit information call (916) volve ins t alling, others welcome. • Vacation Sales 288-6019 or e m ail: *This is not an emservicing, operating, The Bulletin's • Guest Services elizabeth Ocnpa.com ployee position with Mon-Thur. repairing and main"Call A Service for the Pacific NorthThe Bulletin but an 4:30-8:30 p.m. taining areas surSpa/Sgorts Shoq Professional" Directory west Daily ConnecI ndependent C o n '$9.10mour.' rounding public right is all about meeting tion. (PNDC) tractor position with of ways, water, wa• Sales Associate Mid South Circulation Call 541-382-8672 your needs. ter reclamation and lllness forces sale of Sales. storm drain systems J oin our team of Precious Cargo Call on one of the and to perform other General Seafood Co. email professionals todayLimited Energy professionals today! related work. JeffersonCoun Job 0 or f unltles The Bulletin seafood@preciousTechnician'A' 8 'B' We offer a "fun" SALES Healthcare is P lease visit o u r cargoseafood.com License Apprenticeship work e nvironment, Owens looking for a dynamic website, www.barBilingual Domestic Violence and Sexual breathtaking views Open to accept Sales Representative in rettbusiness.com/bra Assault Advocate — District Attorney Office chasing products or I %ES C and excellent seaapprenticeship applica$2,168.36.10 to $2,615.55 a month - DOQ sonal b enefits in- the Bend, Oregon area. services from out of I nches/location/OR/b tions for employment Motivated individuals with z DESCHtjTES COUNTY end, for a full deCloses April 18th, 2014 f the area. Sending opportunities in cluding FREE at least 1-3 years of exs cription o r cal l Deschutes, Crook and GOLF! c ash, checks, o r CAREER OPPORTUNITIES perience selling to physi- f credit i n f ormation 541-382-6946. Drug For complete job description and applicaGrant Counties. cians and who have es- ~ may be subjected to ~ screen, DMV, backtion form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click Visit our webs/te & tablished relationships FRAUD. ground check req. Applications available apply online at on Human Resources,then Job Opportunithru Apr.25, 2014 www.BlackButteRanch.com with physicians in this For more informaBEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECILIST I, Adult ties; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Apr.14 territory are encouraged tion about an adver- ~ at WorkSource Oregon and click on the Jefferson County Application forms to: to apply. Please apply Treatment-Bridge Program (2014-00045). "Career" Link to Employment Dept., f tiser, you may call Looking for your next online at: Bend. Directions, call: submit an Full-time position. Deadline: THURSDAY, the Oregon State employee? www.myowens. Jefferson County HumanResources, 541-388-6070 application today or f Attorney General's Place a Bulletin help 05/01/14. com/careers 66 SE D Street, Suite E, For info, call: contact Human Office C o n sumer s wanted ad today and Madras, OR97741. 541-279-1543 Resources at Protection hotline at I reach over 60,000 BEHAVIORALHEALTH SPECIALIST II, La Pine Minorities and females Sales - Retail (541) 595-1523for readers each week. Immediate Opening for I 1-877-877-9392. Jefferson CountyIs an Equal Employment are urged to apply. School Based Health Centers (2014-00039). more information. Your classified ad motivated self starter, gThe Bulletin g Full-time, limited duration, grant-funded will also appear on Need help fixing stuff? experience helpful but Black Butte Ranch bendbulletin.com positi on.Deadline:SUNDAY,04/20/14. Call A Service Professional is a Drug-free work not required. Apply in General which currently The Bulletin person only at Furnifind the help you need. p/ace. EOE receives over 1.5 CROOK COUNTY ture Outlet, 1735 NE To Subscribe call BEHAVIORALHEALTH SPECIALIST II, La Pine www.bendbulletin.com EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES million page views Hwy 20, Bend. 541-385-5600 or go to Access Team(2014-00041). Full-time, limited every month at www.bendbulletin.com General no extra cost. duration, grant-funded position. Deadline: Crook County/Wellness & Education Jefferson Count Job 0 or tunltles Bulletin Classifieds Board of Central Oregon THURSDAY, 04/17/14. General Get Results! (WEBCO) Corrections OfficerCall 385-5809 Clinical Quality Coordinator BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Adult $2,887.00to $3,548.00 a month DOQ or place $70,553- $74,883 DOE — La Pine (2014-00042). Full-time, limited Closes April 21st, 2014 — 5:00 p.m. your ad on-line at Full time w/benefits bendbulletin.com duration, grant-funded position. Deadline: Closes: April 30, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. Central Oregon Community College has For complete job description and applicaTHURSDAY, 04/17/14. openings l i s te d bel ow . Go to tion form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click WEBCO is a newer entity and serves as the https:/fjobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply on Human Resources, t hen Job Opportuniregional Mental and Public Health Authority for BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III, online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, Raezce ties; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Crook, Deschutes and Jeff erson Counti es. 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Intensive Community Support (2014-00036). Jefferson County Application forms to: This position will oversee the behavioral health 5 l3z@zcm (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, contract deliverables and coordinate the qualOregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. JeffersonCounty Human Resources, ity and continuum of care operations for 04/13/14. COCC is an AA/EO employer. WEBCO. Requires Master's degree and prior 66 SE D Street, Sulte E, work experience as a Licensed Clinical Social Madras, OR 97741. BUILDING SAFETY INSPECTOR III (2014AdministrativeAssistant, Nursing Worker. Work is performed in our Redmond Provide administrative support and assistance 00043). On-call p osition. Deadline: office and frequent tri-county travel is required. Jefferson Countyls an Equal Employment for the Nursing Department and Programs. THURSDAY, 04/Il/14. Associates + 2-yrs exp. req. $2,440-$2,905 526 Applications and full job description can be for 10.5-mo. contract. Closes April 20. found at www.co.crook.or.us. Customer Service Representative HEALTHEDUCATOR II, Healthy Communities Loans & Mortgages Midstate Electric Cooperative, located in La Pine, TestCoordinator, (2014-00038). See website for FTE details. Oregon, is seeking a qualified applicant for the Please apply at the WARNING Deer Ridge Correctional Facility Deadline:SUNDAY,04/20/14. osition of customer service representative. Crook CountyTreasurer'slrax Office The Bulletin recomposition is located at the Deer Ridge Corust be a high school graduate or equivalent. This 200 NE2 St. mends you use caurectional Facility, Madras OR. Responsible for One year of office expenence is required. Must PROGRAM DEVELOPMENT SPECIALIST, Prlnevllle, OR 97754 tion when you probe reliable, motivated, creative, self-starter, administering computer-based exams and 541-447-6554 vide personal School Based Health Center (2014-00025). classroom progress exams. Associates + 1-yr. team player, goal oriented, personable, well-orEOE information to compa- Full-time, limited duration, grant-funded ganized with ability to work under high stress exp. $13.47-$16.04/hr. 20hr/wk. Closes April nies offering loans or situations. Must exhibit proven problem-solving 30. positi on.Deadline:TUESDAY,04/15/14. credit, especially and decision-making skills. Previous public those asking for adGeneral contact experience is preferred. Must have abilPROGRAM MANAGER, BehavioralHealth vance loan fees or ity to establish sound customer relations while Assistant Professor 1of Non-Destructlve The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturcompanies from out of (2013-00098). Full-time position. Extended working effectively with customers and the pubTestingand Inspection day night shift and other shifts as needed. We state. If you have lic, and promoting a pleasant working atmo- Provide instruction in the Non-Destructive currently have openings all nights of the week, Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. concerns or quessphere among associates. Ability to indepen- Testing and Inspection (NDTI) program at the everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts tions, we suggest you dently establish files and maintain records Manufacturing and Applied Technology Censtart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and consult your attorney PROGRAM MANAGER,Public Health (2014accurately and efficiently. Possess working ter (MATC) in Redmond. Provide small group end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoor call CONSUMER 00008). Full-time position. Extended knowledge of personal computer (current verdiscussion, lectures, hands-on demonstration, sitions we are hiring for work Saturday nights. sion of MS Office), word processing and student advising and assistance. 10-yrs NDTI HOTLINE, Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a 1-877-877-9392. spreadsheet capabilities. Proflcient with 10-key exp. + 5-yrs using NDTI techniques req. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts and data entry. Must possess valid Oregon are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Open Un- BANK TURNED YOU PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER —Adult driver's license. til Filled. loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackTreatment Program (2014-00001). Will This position is an Hourly/Non-Exempt DOWN? Private party ing product onto palletsi bundling, cleanup Bargaining Unit Position — IBEW Local 125. will loan on real es- consider any full or part-time equivalent. Assistant Professor 1of and other tasks. For qualifying employees we tate equity. Credit, no Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Medical Assisting Submit resume with a cover letter to: problem good equity Responsible for course planning and developshort-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Human Resources 4/1 4/2014 is all you need. Call PSYCHIATRICNURSEI OR II (PHNII) (2014ment, program organization, and review and vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc. Oregon Land Mortevaluation of effectiveness in Medical Assistprior to employment. P 0 Box127, La Pine OR97739 00040). Will consider full or part-time gage 541-388-4200. ing Program. Associate + 3-yrs healthcare faFax No. 541-536-1423 equivalent, two positions available. Deadline: cility exp. + 1-yr. teaching + CMA certification Please submit a completed application attenE-Mail:smiesen©midstateelectric.coo req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9 mo. c ontract. LOCAL NIONEyrWe buy OPEN UNTIL FILLED. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available secured trustdeeds & Closes April 18. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanNO TELEPHONE CALLS WILL BEACCEPTED. note,some hard money dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be HEALTHNURSEII (2014-00037). Partloans. Call Pat Kellev PUBLIC Part Time Instructor obtained upon request by contacting Kevin All resumes must be received by 12:00 noon 541-382-3099 ext.13. time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,04/20/14. New! Chemistry, HHPInstructor Eldred via email (keldred ©bendbulletin.com ). on Monday, April 14, 2014. EEOE for Madras &Pnnevllle, snd French No phone calls please. Only completed appliestate investor loan Looking for talented individuals to t each Real cations will be considered for this position. No needed. Investor will RESERVEDEPUTYSHERIFF (2013-00013). part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our resumes will be accepted. Drug test is repay 7% on a $40,000 On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS AN ONemployment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. quired prior to employment. EOE. Seming Central Oregon since 1903 to $60,000 loan se- GOING RECRUITMENT. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU = 1 cured by First Trust class credit), with additional perks. Home Delivery Advisor deed. 541-771-4414 The Bulletin
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SUMMERINTERN(2014-00048). Temporary, hourly position, not to exceed 3.5 months. Deadline:THURSDA Y, 5/01/14.
Servmg Central oreyon since $03
Graphic Designer Position The Bulletin's Creative Services team is seeking a graphic designer. The ideal candidate possesses practiced design skills and excellent communication skills in order to work with account executives and local businesses to design and produce advertisements that get results for that advertiser. Proficiency using Adobe InDesign, lllustrator, and Photoshop softwares to create basic and advanced ad layouts and designs is a must. For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace, EOE. Send a resume with qualifications, skills, experience and a past employment history by Friday, April 25th to: The Bulletin Attention: James Baisinger. 1777 S. W. Chandler Ave P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020
The Bulletin Serving Centra( Oiegon since 1903
The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time position and consists of managing an adult carrier force to ensure our customers receive superior service. Must be able to create and perform strategic plans to meet department objectives such as increasing market share and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a self-starter who can work both in the office and in their assigned territory with minimal supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t rong customer service skills and management skills are necessary. C o mputer experience is required. You must pass a drug screening and be able to be insured by company to drive vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but we believe in promoting from within, so advancement within company is available to the right person. If you enjoy dealing with people from diverse backgrounds and you are energetic, have great organizational skills and interpersonal communication skills, please send your resume to:
The Bulletin
c/o Kurt Muller PO Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708-6020 or e-mail resume to: kmufler@bendbulletin.com No phone calls, please. The Bulletin/s a drug-free workplace. EOE
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We currently have the following opportunity at our Gilchrist, Oregon Operation:
Licensed Journeyman Electrician A great career opportunity for an electrician, the successful candidate will be responsible for all electrical and process control equipment on site. Must hold an Oregon inside journeyman or plant journeyman license.Starting wage at $31.42/hour. Interfor is a growth-oriented lumber company with operations in the United States and Canada. We offer our employees: • Highly competitive salary, 401k match, and benefits package • Internal advancement opportunities • Professional development • Job stability and a positive work environment Please apply online at interfor.com/careers
INTERFOR' Building Value
DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT wwur.deechutee.org/jobe. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via email only. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. To request information in an alternate format, please call (541) 6174747, fax to (541) 385-3202 or send email to accessibility@deschutes.org. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
Women, minorities, and the disabled are encouraged to apply.
G4 SUNDAY, APRIL 13, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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Motorcycles & Accessories
Watercraft
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Motorhomes
Ads published in nWa
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
659
Houses for Rent Sunriver
.00 627
Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Vilfage-Properfies.com 1-866-931-1061 675
632
CHECKYOUR AD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheckn and
human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that
corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified FIND IT! B41Y Iy I
SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds 634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1,2&3 bdrms w/d hookups,
BSell 5@R!jaa [PP oP ©gQg
744
541-383-9313 Professionallymanaged by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
Open 12-3 1184 SW Silver Lake Blvd.
Advertise your car! Add APicture!
Great Family Home Near Old Mill Dan Griffin, Broker 541-280-3807
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Ctasstfteds 648
Houses for Rent General
I thegarnergroup
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE 541 383 4360 eeawtheaasnertgoup.oom All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H ousing A c t which makes it illegal Open 12-3 to a d vertise "any 1899 NW preference, limitation Monterey Mews or disc r imination Cottage Condos based on race, color, For Easy Living religion, sex, handiJanis Grout, cap, familial status, Broker marital status or na541-948-0140 tional origin, or an intention to make any such pre f erence, limitation or discrimiI nation." Familial status includes children thegarnergroup under the age of 18 living with parents or 541 3Li 4360 legal cus t odians, eswwthegamergroup.oom pregnant women, and people securing custody of children under 16. This newspaper Open 12-3 will not knowingly ac62712 Larkview cept any advertising Rd. for real estate which is Many Upgrades in violation of the law. O ur r e aders a r e to Oakview Home Sean Haidet, hereby informed that Broker all dwellings adver541-848-7448 tised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of d iscrimination cal l I HUD t o l l-free at 1-800-677-0246. The thegarnergroup toll free t e lephone number for the hear541 363 4360 ing i m p aired is eseteathegatnetgroug.oom 1-800-927-9275.
The Bulletin
Motorcycle / Scooter Carrier for RVs, trucks, SUVs, only $135. 541-389-0049
Motorhomes
NOTICE
National RV
Tropical, 1997,
Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to hst. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales &Service, Bend 541-914-8438
gereing Central Oregon since tgtu
880
Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, 4000W generator, w heelchair lift avail. Good cond. $7 ,000 obo 541-447-5504
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included.$19,900. 541-815-4811
DLR ¹3447
home o r v a c ation building sites $34,500 o wner t erms. O n paved road, pwr 8 wtr. 6 mi. to Prineville 541-350-4077 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes
Triumph Daytona 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
¹201536.
$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801 Division, Bend
DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665
541-548-5511
Over 40 New & Pre-Owned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly
V ictory TC 9 2 ci 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665
payments.
Over 350 RVs in
Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
850
2005 HD Super Glide 746 fuel injected Northwest Bend Homes custom, 7k mi, new tires, like new cond. $9500 Westside! 3/2 on a quiet 541-639-9857 hillside lot. G ranite, slate, stainless steel. View the city lights. Private, quiet, convenient. $396,000. Call Glenn Oseland, Principal Broker, (541) 350-7829 Holiday Realty FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, TiCk, TOCk Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I TiCk, TOCk... with Vance & Hines fuel management ...don't let time get system, custom parts, away. Hire a extra seat. $1 0,500 OBO. Call professional out Today of The Bulletin's 541-516-8684 "Call A Service Professional" Harley Davidson 2009 Directory today! Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to • Redmond Homes list, $8900. 541-388-8939 $282,900. 2189 sq.ft., single level, 3/2, family room w/ gas fireplace, formal dining room, den, sunroom, upgrades galore. ForSaleByOwner.com ID ¹ 23975895. Call 541-526-1206 for info. Harley Davidson 2011 Classic LimLooking for your next ited, Loaded! 9500 emp/oyee? miles, custom paint Place a Bulletin help "Broken Glass" by wanted ad today and Nicholas Del Drago, reach over 60,000 new condition, readers each week. heated handgrips, Your classified ad auto cruise control. will also appear on $32k in bike, bendbulletin.com only $20,000or best which currently reoffer. 541-318-6049 ceives over 1.5 million page views every month HDFatBo 1996 at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Completely Rebuilt/Customized 762 2012/2013 Award Homes with Acreage Winner Showroom Condition 5760 NW 66th Lane Many Extras Redmond. 4 bdrm on 5 Low Miles. acres, 40x50 shop, $77,000 fenced, borders BLM. 541-548-4607 $285,000. 541-815-1216
Arctic Cat Prowler 650, 2007, UTV w/camo canvas. Askinq: $7450. Call: 541-815-3960 870
Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$69,500.
$25,000.
541-548-0318
(phctc above is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Best Motor Home Selection In C.O.!
ATVs
Snowmobiles
KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.
Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $4500. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652
$24,995. 541-383-3503
865
• H omes for Sale
ppo o Open Houses
Honda 110 Trail, 1986, street legal, licensed 8 reg'd, like new. Has auxiliaiy tank & t oo l k it. $1995. 541-480-4937
I RX J & !
One acre year-round
All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any pref687 erence, limitation or Commercial for discrimination based 1989 Yamaha on race, color, reliRent/Lease Exciter, gion, sex, handicap, 2,000 miles, Fenced storage yard, familial status or naoriginal owner, building and o f fice tional origin, or intenalways garaged, trailer for rent. In con- tion to make any such $600. venient Redmond lo- preferences, l i mitacation, 205 SE Rail- tions or discrimination. 541-480-7517 We will not knowingly road Blvd. Reduced to $700/mo. Avail. now. accept any advertising for real estate Arctic Cat 560 1994, 541-923-7343. EXT, in good which is in violation of condition, $1000. this law. All persons 693 are hereby informed Located in La Pine. Office/Retail Space Call 541-406-6149. that all dwellings adfor Rent vertised are available 860 on an equal opportu670 sqftO ff ice Space on nity basis. The Bulle- Motorcycles & Accessories Highland Ave. in Redtin Classified mond. High visibility. $600/mo + deposit. Find It in 541-419-1917 The Bulletin Ctassigedsf 541-385-5809
patios or decks. Nfounfain Glen
Reachthousands oi readers!
You Can Bid On: Lot 22 at Yarrow in Madras Retail Value $23,000 Sun Forest Construction (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the Ask about our • O p en Houses classifieds! Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809 Open Sat. & Sun. 11-2 3393 NE Wild Rivers Loop, Bend Beautiful 3 bdrm, 2trg bath, bonus room, on the canal. $389,900 Vonnie Green, Broker Alleda Real Estate. 541-815-0097
Oceanfront house, RV Parking each walk from town, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, RV space for rent, NE Fireplace, BBQ. $95 Redmond, $350/mo., per night, 3 night MIN. i ncludes water & 206-369-3144 sewer. 541-419-1917 Apt./llilultiplex General
Bay New...say Local
G K E AT
tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5609
www.eulletineidneur.com
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Meet singles right now! No paid o perators, just real people like you. Browse greetings, exchange messages and connect live. Try it free. Call now: 8 77-955-5505.
Fleefvvood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all eagl options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 miles. Monaco Lapalma, Wintered in h e ated 2002, 34'10u -Work(PNDC) shop. $84,900 O.B.O. horse 8.1i Less than 541-447-8664 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan Thank you St. Jude & Sacred H e art of gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. Jesus. j.d. Generator Kubota 3500 refrig w/icemaker, as, 60 h rs, $ 1000 micro/convection Western Washington ASH. 541-923-5960 oven, water purifier, Guy seeks gal 50-66, hydraulic jacks, power slim/average build, to People Look for Information pilot seat+ more opshare quiet times; tions. Exceptionally About Products and trips, walks, nature, clean.$59,900/make Services Every Daythrough moon-light, cuddling! offer. 541-504-1008 Greg, PO Box 3013 The Bulletin Classifistfs Arlington, WA 98223.
Boats & Accessories
a •
12'1969 Sears aluminum fishingboat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape! $1600. 541-382-2599
Call 54I-3855809 to promote your service• Advertise for 28 days starting at 'l40 inis speaoiItockggeisnotoeoiiobie onour weitseel
Building/Contracting
Handyman
NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone who con t racts for construction work to 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, be licensed with the inboard motor, g reat Construction Contraccond, well maintained, tors Board (CCB). An $8995 obo. 541-350-7755 active license means the contractor is bonded & insured. Verify the contractor's CCB l i c ense at www.hirealicensedcontractor.com or call 503-376-4621. The Bulletin recom2007 Winnebago mends checking with «C" Outlook Class the CCB prior to con31', solar panel, Cat. tracting with anyone. heater, excellent Some other t rades condition, more exalso req u ire additional licenses and tras. Asking $58K. certifications. Ph. 541<447-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prinevilie.
LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
ERIC REEVE
COLLINS
SERVICES
SERVING CENTRAL OREGON
since 2003 Residential & Commercial
An Home & Commotcial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small orlargejobs, no pmblcm. Senior Discount An work Suarantcotl
Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow TestLIIg MAINTENANCE • Thskch 8t Aerate
• Spring Clean up • Weekly Mowing
541-389-3361 541-771M63
8t Edging • Bi-Monthly & Monthly Malntenance • Bark, Rock, Etc.
Bonded - Insured CCBtt149468
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
LANIlSCAPP1G • Landscape Constructlon • Water Feature Instatlatton/Matnt. • Pavers • Renovatlons • Irrigations Installation Senior Discounts Bonded and Insured
Aevatiett/llethstching Ask aboutFREE added services with seasonal contract! • Spring Clean-up • Mowing eudgtattg • Pruning eWeedeating • Frtulzlng «Hauling • Grounds Keeping Ottgttittgor igggittysggttutggg optton FREE ESTIMATES Call now io scttedulg!
j41-4$0BONDED & INP714 Uiuio 0 u
AllEN REINSCH — Providing-
(2) 10' Kayaks; Old T. SCHELLWORTH Town Otter, Ocean General Contractor/ Yard Maintenance Frenzy Si t -on-top, & Clean-up, Builder g both with p a ddles, Mowing, Thatching, $225/ea. CustomBuilding, Plugging 541-593-6053 Remodelsand & much more! tile work The Bulletin Senrng Canlral Oregonsrncetgtu Ads published in the Contact Allen, 541-8154458 "Boats" classification 541-53$-1294 541-588-0958 Lce¹ s759 include: Speed, fishthomasschellworthogmail.com 541-815-5313 ing, drift, canoe, website comingsoon! house and sail boats. Landscaping/Yard Care NOTICE: Oregon Land- Just bought a new boat? For all other types of ccs¹ 1 ee631 scape Contractors Law Sell your old one in the watercraft, please go (ORS 671) requires all classifieds! Ask about our to Class 875. businesses that ad541-365-5809 Seller rates! vertise t o p e r form Super Zdde &Qaa/rI 541-385-5809 Debris Removal Landscape ConstrucZa~<da r, , tion which includes: Serein Central Ore on since 1903 More Than Service p lanting, deck s , Painting/Wall Covering Peace of Nfind fences, arbors, Bid Novv! water-features, and inwww.BulletinBidneuy.com stallation, repair of irSpring CleanUp rigation systems to be •Leaves l icensed w it h th e •Cones Will Haul Away Landscape Contrac•Needles tors Board. This 4-digit •Debris Hauling F FREEetN; number is to be inFor Salvage igb cluded in all adverWeed Free Bark Western Boy New...suy Local tisements which indiAny Loowkfon & Flower Beds cate the business has Palntlng Co. You Can Bid On: e ..;,t Removal a bond,insurance and —Richard Hayman1994 Alumacraft 16 Lawn Renovation Also Cleanups workers c ompensaAluminum Boat a semi-retired painting Aeration - Dethatching &4 Cleanoute i tion for their employ- contractor of 45 years. Retail Value $4,995 Overseed ees. For your protecAll SeasonsRV & Compost tion call 503-378-5909 Small jobs welcome. Marine Top Dressing or use our website: Interior & Exterior (Bidding closes www.lcb.state.or.us to Tues., April 15, 541-388-6910 Landscape check license status at 8:00 p.m.) Fax: 8414884737 before contracting with Maintenance ccs¹5184 Handyman the business. Persons Full or Partial Service doing lan d scape •Mowing eEdging Enclosed raft t railer, 12'x7', pulley system maintenance do not •Pruning eWeeding require an L CB Sprinkler Adjustments to help load, wired for I DO THAT! cense. 12 volt a i r p u mp. Fertilizer included $750. 541-593-6053 with monthly program Call a Pvo Have an item to Weekly, monthly European Whether you need a sell quick? or one time service. fence fixed, hedges Professional Handyman/Remodeli n g If it's under EXPERIENCED trimmed or a house Painter '500you can place it in Residesuat/Commerciat Commercial built, you'll find Salu Jobs io The Bulletin & Residential Repaint Entire Room Remodels professional help in Garage Organisation Classifieds for: Specialist! The Bulletin's "Call a Home InsPectioa RePairs Senior Discounts Service Professional" Oregon License '10- 3 lines, 7 days fiaatity, HonestWork 541-390-1466 ¹166147 LLC Directory '16 - 3 lines, 14 days oensis 541.317 9768 Same Day Response 541-385-5809 ccegtgtgg3Bonifetfrriugred 541-815-2888 (Private Party ads only)
The Bulletin
I®L
•
•
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MARTIN JAMES
•
I
I I
I I
I THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM B eautifu l P a h l i s c h H omes c o m m u n i t y eee • f eaturin g a m a z i n g n ei g h b o r h o o d a menities: pool, h o t tub, clubhouse, sports 20862Golden GatePlace,Bend center, gym, game room Directiosgifrorn the parkway, east and more! Come tour a variety of single level on Reed Narltet, south on 15th, then and 2-story floor plans. follow st¹ns.
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
TEAM DELAY
Homes Stardng Mid-$300s
•1
Homes starting in the Iow
$200,000s. Brand new homes rn Bend with the qua!ity Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma q uartz counters (even in baths) with
20781 NE Comet Lane
under-mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention DirectioasiNorth on Boyd Acres,
given io allow for tons oi Right on Sierra, Le f( onBlack Potgder, natural light & much more. Right onCometlane.Lookfor signs. Come Igy the model home for starting in the low more information and plans.
Hosted & Listed byi
Principal Broker
I
$200,000s
RHIANNA KUNKLER
EDIE DELAY
Broker
541-420-2950 R E A L
T 0
R 8
541-306-0939
R E A 1. T
o R s
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, APRIL 13 2014 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
880
880
881
881
882
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908
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
Fifth Wheels
Canopies & Campers
Aircraft, Parts & Service
w •,
30' 2004
Providence 2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-460-2019 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809
TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles / Offered at $199K. Too many options to list here! For more information go to
e ~ ~alla obus.co or email
trainwater157O g Bil.GD
or call 858-527-8627
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
For Sale
VW Eurovan 2000 camper Excellent cond. in every way. 92,000 miles, AC, refrigerator, sink, stove, furnace. Pop-top, 2 beds, above and fold-down. Seats 6+
assengers.
25,900 OBO 541-389-3314.
only 6 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
881
Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail At: www.bendbulletin.com
Travel Trailers
c :RowlN G
AIRSTREAM 2010 25' FB, Int'ISerenity, like new, only used 4x. Originally
$75,000; asking
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
$56,950. Call for details, 541-593-0204
I~,il t = tL
Forest River 27' by Wildwood 2004, winter pkg, slide, AC, oven, tub-shower, outside shower, micro, awning, Winnebago Adven- always stored. $12,500. turer 2005 35t/e', gas, Prineville, 541-447-9199 less than 20,000 miles,
excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps 5, with a l l o p tions, $62,000 l negotiable. Call 5 4 1-306-6711or email a i kistu@bend- KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' cable.com slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Winnebago Aspect sho w er. 2009- 32', 3 slide- Outside Slide through storouts, Leather intea ge, E a s y Lif t . rior, Power s eat, $29,000 new; locks, windows, Askinq$18,600 Aluminum wheels. 541-447-4805 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n e w , Lance Travel Trailer $74,900 (Model 1985) 2012, 541-480-6900 dinette/slide makes to a queen-size bed, queen walk-around bed, inside/outside sound system, microwave, c o oktop WINNEBAGO with oven, power awning, flat screen BRAVE 2003 TV, only used 10 • 34D, 2 slides times. Easy tow with • Tires 80% F-150. Call for price. • Just completely 541-647-0658. „
•
serviced • 39,000 mlles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150
Orbit 21' 2007, used
with living r oom slide, 46,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at 541-406-2367
Get your business
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbuffetin.com Updated daily
Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2009 9t/e' Arctic Fox, 2 slides, AC, recliners, loaded, excellent! Must walk-around queen bed, sell, price slashed, sellsliding glass door closet, ing below book, $16,500. 541-410-1312 new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand new 20' screen room Bid Now! on the first day it runs available. Super clean, 1 172 Cessna Share to make sure it is cor- owner, n o n-smokers. www.BulletinBidnsuy.com .=.p e" + IFR equipped, new rect. "Spellcheck" and $11,999. 541-447-7968 avionics, Garmin 750 human errors do ocI cur. If this happens to touchscreen, center your ad, please constack, 160hp. tact us ASAP so that Exceptionally clean corrections and any & economical! Buy New...Buy Local adjustments can be $13,500. You Can Bid On: made to your ad. Hangared in KBDN 2001 Gench MONTANA 3565 2006, 541-385-5809 Call 541-728-0773 Citation Truck exc. cond., 3 slides, The Bulletin Classified Camper king bed, Irg LR, Retail Value Arctic insulation, all Garage Sales $10,995. options $35,000 obo. All SeasonsRV & 541-420-3250 Garage Sales Marine (Bidding closes Garage Sales Tues., April 15, at 6:00 p.m.) Find them Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 in Summerwind 811, 2000 2 slides, ducted The Bulletin Camper w/slide, Loaded heat & air, great OPEN ROAD 36' Asking $10,900 Classifieds condition, snowbird 2005 - $25,500 Call 541-81 5-3960 ready, Many upKing bed, hide-a-bed 541-385-5809 grade options, fisofa, 3 slides, glass nancing available! shower, 10 gal. wao $14,500 obo. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, Call Dick, s atellite dish, 2 7 " 541-480-1687. TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' 1974 Bellanca awning. Like new! CHECKYOUR AD
Winnebago Sightseer
Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mdl P 27RL 31', 15'
Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill,
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-615-4121 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882
Fifth Wheels
541-419-0566
541-480-7930
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
541-548-5254
Salem Cruise Lite 18', 2014 Only $10,999! Zero Down! $112 Per Month!
Holiday Rambler 37' Presidential model Alpenlife 29' 1993, 2003, all factory opwith goo s eneck. tions, 3 slides, 2 A/C $3500 OBO. Needs 4 door fridge, new re f r igerator units, fireplace, generator, 541-306-1961. electric jacks front Leave message. and rear, flat screen TV, e n tertainment center, bay window, Best 5th Wheel exc. cond., MUST Selection in C.O.! SEE! Sacr i fice $24,500 OBO. Over 45 541-223-2218 New & Preowned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs In Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value
Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254
$10,999, 0 Down, $112 per month, 132 months, 5.75% apr, Tier One credit score,
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter,
This advertising tip brought toyouby
The Bulletin
1/3interestin
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$150,000
(located I Bend) 541-266-3333
( in La Pine )
WILL DELIVER
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
Keystone Montana 2003 34' Arctic insulation, 3 tip-outs, solar panel, catalytic heater, $19,900. 54'I -420-66'I 7
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV
Bend: 541-330-2495
Redmond:
541-546-5254
Sunlight 1986 23', awning, furnace, 2-way fridge, super fan. Everything works! No leaks, clean, nonsmoking, lots of storage with complete Reese 14k hitch. $2,375. 541-389-6265
$28,000
541-419-3301
servlng ont al ongondnce l9et
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65 000 541-41 9-9510 www. N4972M.com
1/5th interest in 1973
Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance& affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007
• 'Little Red Cot'vette"
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•
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Coupe, 350,auto with ~32 miles, gets 26-24 +Pg.Add lots moredescrlPtion and interesting facts for $99I Lookhow
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convection micro, er ceramic tile washer/dryer, floor, TV, DVD, sate ie dsh IS, air ieueling, passand a through storagetray, king SiZe bed- A|Ltor Only
$149,000 541-000-000
muChfufI a girj COuld
Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months
Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/ prop, custom panel, S-Tec 30+ altitude hold, Garmin 430, GPSS, oversized tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint & interior. Must see to appreciate. Asking $66,000. Bill, 541-480-7930
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
n •
2160 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner
In Madras, call 541-475-6302
307-221-2422,
Laredo 30' 2009 Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner. Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.
1730A
for 35 years. $60K.
on approved credit.
Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-546-5254
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
havein a sweet car likethis! $12,500 547 -000-000
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publiCatiOn in The Bulletin, an audienCe Of OVer 70,000. • Weekly publiCatiOn in Central OregOn MarketplaCe —DELIVERED ta OVer 30,000 hOuSehOldS. • Weekly publiCatiOn in The Central OregOn NiCkel AdS With an audienCe Of OVer 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • COntinuOuS liSting With phOtO On Bendbulletin.COm
541-385-5809 * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 196 8 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164.
T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-362-8996.
G6 SUNDAY APRIL 13 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 • •
935
975
975
975
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975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Kia Souf+2012
Pontiac Grand AN SE1 2003
Audi A4 2011, 34K mi. •
•
$22,000. 541-389-8181
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
916
933
933
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Pickups
Pickups
International Harvester TD6 Bulldozer, older model, has logging winch in back for skidding or dragging. $3500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-8176
¹132212
$20,977 ROBBERSONX o. ~
Kenworth 1991 T800 Water Truck 914 350hp diesel eng, 9-spd trans, Hendrickson cab suspension, double framed, self-contained John Deere pony motor, 4000 gallon water tank, new battery, 902,832 miles. $22,500 obo. 541-589-2209
na m a
541-312-3986 DLR¹0205
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregonsince LRtB
possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190 GMC Sierra SLT 2005 4wd Crew, 5.3L V8 86k mi., mint cond. $18,000. 541-416-3699
PMf Nl I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 spd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 Peterbilt 359 p otable with camper s hell, 935 water truck, 1 990, good cond $1 5 00 Sport Utility Vehicles 3200 gal. tank, 5hp OBO. 541-447-5504. O p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, camiocks, $ 25,000. Volvo S60T5 2013 541-820-3724 931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories Dodge Ra m 1 50 0 Nfega Cab 2006, VB HEMI, 4WD, pw, pdl, Bid Now! tilt wheel, tow packwww.Bulletinsidnsuy.com age, lift. Vin ¹146717 Stock ¹82918 2 0 aeusos $22,479
IeIII Buy New...suy Local
You Can Bid On: $200 Automotive Shop Labor Retail Value $200 Advanced Auto Repair (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)
Ford Escape SEL 2013, silver, 1 7K mi. ¹C36368 . $24,995
541-598-3750
4 wheel drive, less than 50k miles.
©
s u a a au
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
BMW Z4 3.0 2004 convertible, only 28k
mi., 6 spd, loaded, flawless. Local car, clean CarFax. Reduced to $16,950 obo. 928-210-8323
2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, automatic, 43k miles, 28 MPG Hwy, vin¹438072 $13,977 ROBBERSON y LIOCOLC ~
IM RDR
Jeep Compass Latitude 2012, roof rack, spoiler, keyless entry, Vin ¹508927, Stock ¹44165A
$18,779
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SuaARU
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
L exus RX350 AWD 2011 comfort & con-
FWD, V6 auto., 90k
mi., 29 mpg Hwy, Vin¹572987
Bar ain Corral 6,977 ROBBERSON i LI O C0 LO ~
541-312-3966 DLR ¹0205
r-,;„;,;,.a
CHECK YOURAD Please check your ad on the first day it runs Vehicle? to make sure it is corCall The Bulletin rect. Sometimes inand place an ad s tructions over t h e today! phone are misunder- l A s k about our stood and an error "Whee/ Deal"! can occur in your ad. l f o r private party l If this happens to your advertisers ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as s oon as w e c a n . Deadlines are: WeekThe Bulletin days 12:00 noon for To Subscribe call next day, Sat. 11:00 541-385-5800 or go to a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If www.bendbulletin.com we can assist you, please call us: Nissan Alfima 2010 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
J
I M ROR
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
Subaru impreza 2.5i Volvo S40 T5 2005 AWD, sunroof, 2011, 4 C y l., a uto, luxury and winter AWD, running lights, n ice w h eels. V i n packages, new ¹ 507659, Stock tires, and more! ¹82824 $6775 obo. $13,979 Call 541-330-5818
©
S UBA R U
NIRLRUORRRRD.ODII
V40 1. 8 t u rbo 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Volvo charge 2001, auto., 877-266-3821 1 30,500 mi., g o o d Dlr ¹0354 tires, power windows 8 locks, moon/sunroof, heated seats, leather, very clean, garaged, $3, 9 95. 541-617-3951
Subaru Legacy 2.5 GT WHEN YOU SEE THIS Limited 2005, loaded, leather, roof, a l loy wheels. VIN ¹210360, Stock ¹42935A On a classified ad $12,979 go to www.bendbulletin.com S UBA R U NIRLRUORRRRD.ODII to view additional 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. photos of the item.
MorePixatBendbuletin.com
©
877-266-3821
Dlr ¹0354
Looking for your next employee?
Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad Subaru Legacy 3.0 R will also appear on Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., bendbulletin.com auto, AWD, leather, which currently rePorsche 911 Turbo m oon r o of , re a r ceives over 1.5 milspoiler, alloy wheels. lion page views Vin ¹207281, Stock 2.5S 4cyl., FWD, every month at ¹82547 CVT, 76k mi., 32 no extra cost. Bullempg„Tuscan Sun $23,979 tin Classifieds C hevrolet HH R L S Metallic, vin¹443778 Get Results! Call S UBA R U 2009, tow pkg, FWD, $11,997 NIRLRUORRRRD.ODII 385-5809 or place remotge keyless en2003 6 speed, X50 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. your ad on-line at try. V i n ¹ 61 8 685, ROBBERSON i added power pkg., 877-266-3821 bendbulletin.com Stock ¹43663C 530 HP! Under 10k Dlr ¹0354 $9,979 miles, Arctic silver, 541-312-3986 gray leather interior, ® s u a aau DLR ¹0205 new quality t ires, I The Bulletin recoml and battery, Bose mends extra caution 8 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. when p u rchasing • p remium sou n d 877-266-3821 Nissan Versa S 2012 stereo, moon/suni products or services Dlr ¹0354 white 10,250 mi. from out of the area. roof, car and seat ¹802581 $14,995 covers. Many extras. Subaru Outback 3.0R i S ending c ash , 2006, AWD, leather, Garaged, p e r fect checks, or credit inr oof rack, CD. V i n formation may be I condition, $59,700. ¹ 300629, Stock i subject toFRAUD 541-322-9647 541-598-3750 ¹82891 For more informawww.aaaoregonauto$14,979 i tion about an adverFIND IT! (photo forillustration only) source.com tiser, you may call S UBA RU Chevrolet TrailBiazer BfIY ITr NIRCRUORRNID.OOII I the Oregon Statel 2003, auto, 4.2 liter, SELL IT! 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. s Attorney General's s a lloy w h eels. V i n I Office C o n sumerI 877-266-3821 The Bulletin Classifieds ¹ 103029, Stock Dlr ¹0354 i Protection hotline at ¹44183A 1-877-877-9392. $5,979 Porsche Carrera 911 Just too many 2003 convertible with SuaARU ServingCentral Oregon since 1RS collectibles'? Olds 98 Regency 1990 hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche exc. shape, runs as 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. motor 6 mos ago with new, one owner, 20 Sell them in 877-266-3821 Advertise your car! 18 mo factory warmpg in town. New Dlr ¹0354 Add A Picture! The Bulletin Classifieds ranty remaining. battery, stud snow Reach thousands of readers! $37,500. tires.$2000. Call 541-385-5809 541-322-6928 541-385-5809 541-389-9377 The Bulletin ClassiBeds
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541-598-3750 /aaaore-
gonautosource.com Mercedes Benz C300S orf 2012
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AWD, less than 11k
mi., auto, 6 spd. vin ¹202364 $31,977
Less than 14k mil, AWD, 7 spd, leather vin ¹700716 $31,977
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Ford Escape Ltd 2012 Exc. cond! Silver gray m etallic, loaded f le x f u e l, Bluetooth, l e a ther int., ski rack, keyless entry, back-up sensors. new all season tires, Ext. warranty. Great all weather vehicle! $22,000 Call or text Sandy at 541-480-4778
Chevy Colorado LX Crew Cab2009
FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles,
Call
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541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
CCRR I R
541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205
DodgeRam 1500 SLT uad cab 1999
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Subaru Impreza WRX Limited! AWD, BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K 2012, miles, premium pack- 5-Speed Manual. Vin¹ Corvette 1979 213631, Stock age, heated lumbar L82- 4speed. .2L V8 aut o . , supported seats, pan- ¹44202A Free (4) Tires, used, 5 85,000 miles Come in and oramic mo o nroof, 1 6", p r etty g o o d 1 43,659 mi. R W D Garaged since new. TEST DRIVE! Vin ¹ 628726 B arBluetooth, ski bag, Xeshape. 541-388-5690 I've owned it 25 non headlights, tan & gain Corral. $5,977 B UBA R U . years. Never damblack leather interior, Where can you find a aged or abused. n ew front & re a r 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend ROBBERSON helping hand? brakes O 76K miles, $12,900. c o. ~ mRRRR R 877-266-3821 one owner, all records, Dave, 541-350-4077 From contractors to Dlr ¹0354 very clean, $16,900. 541-312-3986 yard care, it's all here 541-388-4360 DLR¹0205 in The Bulletin's ToyotaLandcruiser VX 1999 "Call A Service Professional" Directory C
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Antique & Classic Autos
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
engine, power every-
thing, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, exc. cond.in/out. $7500 obo. 541-480-3179
Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000 miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285
BMW X3 2011black on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k U miles, 19 wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015. $38,000 One owner, 503-789-9401 (Portland)
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 Ford F-350 4x4,
Buick Skylark 1972 17K orig. miles. Please see Bend Craiglist for details. $18,900. 541-323-1898 933
Pickups
I 2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826
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541.312.3986 DLR¹0205 940
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 Power Stroke diesel, find the help you need. turbocharged, 5-spd, www.bendbulletin.com good runner 8 work truck. $4500 obo. Call Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, 541-389-5353 or AWD, V6, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, 541-647-8176 $5995. 541-610-6150 Ford F-350 2010 Cabela's Crew Cab TiCk, TOCk Plymouth B a r racuda I:ggferL'i ', 1966, original car! 300 Tick, Tock... hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out VB diesel, 4 wheel drive. ¹A74567 of The Bulletin's "Call A Service $39,777 Professional" Rolls Royce 1992 SilR OBBER N ver Spur II,excellent! Directory today! LICCOLO~ I RRRO R Midnight Blue exterior, Parchment leather inte541-312-3986 rior, 15-inch chrome RR DLR¹0205 wheels, Alpine Sirius DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS navigation system, 77,200 miles, dealer- USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ship maintained, alDoor-to-door selling with ways garaged. New, Ford Bronco H about $250,000; sell fast results! It's the easiest 4x4, 1989$19,500.541-480-3348 way in the world to sell. Automatic, power WHEN ONLY THE BEST WILL DO!
4.7L VB, 4WD, auto., 16mpg Hwy, Vin¹ 66902 Bargain Corral $9,977
steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662 Ford Ed e 2011
2006 XLT 4-door Crew Cab 6.0L Turbo diesel, full Leather trimmed power, a u t omatic, heated seats, AWD, 6-disc CD, cruise, fog auto. 6 speed. lights, running boards, vin ¹A50096 tow pkg, bedliner, grill $26,997 guard, folding rear seat. Tan cloth inteROBBERSON rior, metallic tan exteLIOCOLC ~ II RRI N I rior. 91,400 miles. 541-312-3986 Priced to sell $21,500 DLR ¹0205 541-350-6925
Need to get an Ford Ranger 1990 K ing Cab, g o o d ad in ASAP? cond, new motor, You can place it tinted windows, bed online at: liner, 2 sets tires, dual pipe. Must see www.bendbuUetin.com to appreciate. $4000 obo. 541-948-9061 541 -385-5809
Vans
Chrysler Town & Country LXI 1997, beautiful inside & out, one owner, nonsmoker,. loaded with options! 197,892 mi. Service rec o rds available. $4 , 950. Call Mike, (541) 8158176 after 3:30 p.m. 975
Automobiles
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1996 137k, auto. Bose Gold sound. synthetic oil/ non-ethanol fuel $10,500 541-923-1781 Where can you find a helping hand'? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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Corvette Coupe 1996, 350 auto,
non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold sound system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! 137k, $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781
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Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE La Pine Rural Fire Protection Dis t rict Budget Committee will hold a public meeting on Tuesday, April 22, CORVETTE COUPE 2014 at 6:30 p.m. The Glasstop 2010 meeting purpose is to Grand Sport-4 LT receive the proposed loaded, clear bra 2014/2015 b u d get, hood & fenders. hear budget message New Michelin Super and take public comSports, G.S. floor ment. Meeting locamats, 17,000 miles, tion 51550 HuntingCrystal red. ton Road, La Pine, $42,000. Oregon. The location 503-358-1164. is accessible to persons with disabilities. Please visit our webHave an item to site for further information or to request sell quick? s pecial needs a c If it's under commodation. '500you can place it in www.lapinefire.org or call 541-536-2935. The Bulletin LEGAL NOTICE Classifieds for: NOTICE TO INTERESTED P ERSONS. '10- 3 lines, 7 days JANET J. SCHWARZ '16 - 3 lines, 14 days has been appointed Personal Representa(Private Party ads only) tive of the ESTATE O F DOUGLAS B . SCHWARZ, Deceased, by the Circuit Court, State of O regon, Des c hutes County, under Case Number 14PB0030. Ford Mustang 2004, All persons having a VB, manual, RWD, claim against the espower seats, rear tate must the spoiler, leather. VIN c laim wpresent f our ¹ 232501, Stock months of i thin t h e f i rst ¹82459A publication date of this $9,979 notice t o He n drix, Brinich & B e rtalan, S UBA R U LLP, at 716 NW Har2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. riman Street, Bend, 877-266-3821 Oregon 97701, ATTN: Dlr ¹0354 Ken Brinich, or they may be barred. Additional information may be obtained from the c ourt records, t h e Personal Representative or the followingnamed attorney for Ford Thunderbird Personal Repre2002 c o nvertible the sentative. Date of first with brand new tonpublication: April 13, neau cover, white 2 014. HEND R IX with grey i nterior, BRINICH 8 BERTAloaded, 88,600 low LAN, LLP, 716 NW miles, choice condiHARRIMAN, BEND, tion, everything OR 97701, works. Great fun car 541-382-4980. to d r ive. I l l ness forces sale. price reLEGAL NOTICE duced to $13,250. TRUSTEE'S NOTICE Call Bill O F SALE File N o . 541-604-9307 7 827.20491 Re f e r ence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d m ade by A lban L . Meister and Berylle D. Meister, as tenants by the en t irety, as grantor, to A l liance Title Company, as Ford Thunderbird trustee, in favor of Fi 2004 nancial Freedom Se Convertible nior Funding Corpora with hard & soft top, tion, a subsidiary of silver with black IndyMac Bank, F.S.B., interior, as beneficiary, dated all original, 08/21/06, r e c orded very low mileage, 08/25/06, in the mort in premium condition. gage records of Des $19,900. chutes County, Or 702-249-2567 egon, as 2006-58483 (car is in Bend) and subsequently as
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Corvette Coupe
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Legal Notices
signed to O neWest B ank, FSB b y A s signment recorded as 2013-051738, cover ing the following de scribed real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot 1 in Block 5 of EAST SIDE - THIRD ADDI TION, City of Bend, Deschutes C ounty, Oregon. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 1555 Northeast Me i s ter Place B e nd, OR 97701-5082 Both the beneficiary and the trustee have elected to sell the real prop erty to satisfy the obli gations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursu ant to O regon Re vised Statutes 86.735(3); the event of default under the n ote and d eed o f trust, pursuant to Sec
t ion 9(a)(i) of
the
Deed of Trust, which provides that, "Lender may require immedi ate payment in full of all sums secured by this Security Instru ment if... .Borrower dies and the Property is not the p rincipal residence of at least o ne surviving B o r rower". Default date of 02/13/2012 and pay the following sums: principal balance of $185,121.38 with ac crued interest from 01/13/2012; together with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; any further sums ad vanced by the benefi ciary for the protec tion of t h e a b o ve described real prop erty and its interest therein; and prepay ment penalties/premi ums, if applicable. By reason of said default, the beneficiary has declared all sums ow ing on the obligation secured by said trust deed immediately due and payable, s aid sums being the follow ing, to wit: principal balance of $ I 85,121.38 with in terest thereon at the note rate o f 1 . 6 60 percent per annum beginning 02/13/2012; together with title ex pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by reason of said de fault; any further sums advanced by the ben eficiary for the protec tion of the above de scribed real property and i ts inte r est therein; and prepay ment penalties/premi
ums, if a p plicable. tion of the principal as W HEREFORE, n o would not then be due tice hereby is given had no d efault oc that the undersigned curred) and by curing trustee will on June any o ther d e fault of herein 23, 2014 at the hour complained of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. that is capable of be ing cured by tender in accord with the ing the performance standard of time es t ablished b y OR S required under the ob 187.110, at the follow ligation or trust deed, ing place: inside the and in addition to pay main lobby of the De ing said sums or ten pe r f or s chutes Coun t y dering th e Courthouse, 1164 NW mance necessary to cure the default, by Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Des paying all costs and expenses actually in chutes, State of Or egon, sell at public curred in enforcing the and t rust auction to the highest obligation bidder for cash the in deed, together with and terest i n th e de trustee's scribed real property attorney's fees n ot exceeding the which the grantor had or had power to con amounts provided by vey at the time of the said OR S 8 6 . 753. execution by grantor Requests from per of the trust deed, to sons named in ORS gether with any inter 86.753 for reinstate est which the grantor ment quotes received or grantor's succes less than six days to the date set sors in interest ac prior quired after the execu for the trustee's sale tion of the trust deed, will be honored only at to satisfy the forego the discretion of the ing oblig a tions b eneficiary or i f r e thereby secured and quired by the terms of t he costs an d e x the loan documents. penses of sale, includ In construing this no ing a re a sonable tice the singular in plural, the charge by the trustee. cludes the Notice is further given word " grantor" i n that for reinstatement cludes any successor n i nterest t o th e or payoff quotes re igrantor as well as any quested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .757 a n d other person owing an obligation the perfor 86.759 must be timely mance of which is se communicated in a written request that cured by said trust and the words c omplies with t h a t deed, "trustee" and cbenefi statute addressed to ciary" include their re the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either spective successors by personal delivery in interest, if any. The to the trustee's physi trustee's rules of auc may be accessed cal offices (call for ad tion ww w . northwest d ress) or b y fi r s t at class, certified mail, trustee.com and are r eturn r e ceipt r e incorporated by this reference. You may quested, addressed to also access sale sta the trustee's post of fice box address set tus at www.northwest trustee.com and forth in this notice. Due to potential con www.USA-Forecloflicts with federal law, sure.com. For further information, p l ease persons having no Bre a non record legal or equi contact: Miller Nort h west table interest in the Trustee Services, Inc. subject property will only receive informa P.O. Box 997 Belle vue, WA tion concerning the 586-190098009-0997 Meister, Al lender's estimated or ban L. (TS¹ actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o 7827.20491) 1002.264787-File No. available a t the trustee's web s ite, PUBLIC NOTICE www.northwestThe Four Rivers Vectrustee.com. Notice is tor Control District will further given that any be flying a helicopter person named in ORS on Monday, April 14th 86.753 has the right, between 7:00 a.m. 8 at any time prior to 7:00 p.m., applying a five days before the biological m o squito date last set for the control product call s ale, to h a v e t h is B.T.I., in Sunriver and foreclosure proceed the Marshes along the ing dismissed and the Little Deschutes River trust deed reinstated from Burgess Road to b y payment to t h e Spring River Rd. The beneficiary of the en p roduct poses n o tire amount then due danger to h umans, (other than such por pets, fish, or birds.