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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
IN SALEM
Legisature reconsiders
Legal pOt —Oregonalready has one market — for medical use.Now theOLCCwantsto create a separate one.E1
Toilet paper index?Theamountofmoney people are spending on luxury toilet paper can beread asa good economic indicator.A3
is e i n
Hem e i e a
SPeCIEI
taxdeas By Taylor W. Anderson The Bulletin
Clinten 2016 —Decades
SALEM — Bend-La Pine
of political history meansa campaign that has to balance the new andtheold. A6
Purple Hearts —Anerror on the battlefield, honors withheld and wrongs righted.AS
And a Wed exclusiveThe guilty gambit: How the defense in the Boston bombing case harks back to amurder almost a century ago. beatiballetia.cem/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Schools will indirectly pay about $1 million to one of
By Andrew Clevenger• The Bulletin
the wealthiest counties in the state in the next two
years under a tax-sharing program that a Portland lawmaker says has bal-
WASHINGTON — Just like the rest of the country, Oregon has seen its rate of deaths due to heroin overdoses increase dramatically over the last 15 years, but a new protocol being used in
loonedincost.
The state has sent $74 million to counties that
Portland is helping to reverse the trend.
offer companies tax breaks
Between 2000 and 2012, Oregon saw its rate
U.S. heroin-relateddeaths
of 3.2 in 2011, according to a 2014 report by
Deaths related to heroin overdoses have increased dramatically nationwide, particularly since 2010, according to figures compiled by the Centers for Disease Control. While rates have skyrocketed in the Northeast and Midwest, rates in the West havegrown atamoremodestpace.
the Oregon Health Authority.
Deaths per 100,000 population
of fatal heroin overdoses more than triple, from 0.8 per 100,000 people to 2.9, with a high
U.S. deaths involving heroin hyage group
i ustrate
NCAA's
In 2000, the West and Northeast had the highest
and lengths of time for people to take opioid painkill-
rate of heroin overdose deaths of any region in America, with 0.9 per 100,000, compared with
ers, but other factors have
0.4 for the Midwest and 0.5
for the South, according to figures released earlier this
drop in fatalities, she said.
strugg e
bled to 1.8, the South rose to 1.7, while the Northeast
The Washington Post
For the next three weeks,
according to gaming industry estimates, nearly 40millionAmericans will gamble more than $2
elevenfold increase. "It's a fairly complicated landscape, and we're just now really studying what the drivers" are behind heroin-related fatalities, said
Lisa Millet, OHA's Injury
billion on the outcome of a
and Violence Prevention
tournament featuring the
section manager. Conventional wisdom has largely settled on one
nation's best unpaid bas-
ketball players. The tradition starts this evening, with the unveil-
ing of the 68-team NCAA tournament field, and will continue this week in of-
ficesacrossthe country. Come Thursday morning, when games tip off in earnest, sports bars will fill and Internet streaming capabilities will strain as
bettors keep track of their wagers on an event run by a nonprofit organization vehemently opposed to gambling. The NCAA men's bas-
narrative to explain the rise
in heroin-related deaths: As painkillers containing synthetic opioids rose in prevalence,widespread abuse of prescription drugs followed. When federal law enforcement began cracking down on prescription pill abuse, users craving an opioid high often turned to heroin when painkillers
were unavailable. This often resulted in fatal overdoses, particularly when black tar heroin, a particularly strong narcotic
ketball tournament bracket pool is an inimitably Amer-
imported from Mexico, was
ican tradition that encapsu-
That's part of the story, said Millet, but there's not
lates all that is complicated, contradictory and, some
say, hypocritical about the cultural and financial heft of sports in our society.
Many have attempted to explain the cognitive
involved.
a push to find more money for K-12 and universities,
some lawmakers say it's time to reworkthe program and spread the money across the state.
heroin detox for Medicaid
Disease Control. By 2013, rates in the West had dou-
west skyrocketed to 4.3, an
of the payments are due to jobs that aren't new. Amid
Age 18-24
First, Oregon removed methadone as apreferred drug administered during
gambing By Will Hobson
schools and roads. But most
Age 25-44
heroin fatalities, she said.
patients, and saw a quick
jumped to 3.9 and the Mid-
put on infrastructure like
helped reduce Oregon's
month by the Centers for
ton County in the Portland metro area.
The program seeks to help counties cope with the pressure new employees
6
Brackets
to land big business expansions and new projects via a program that will continue to grow in cost over the next four years, mostly going to wealthy Washing-
SeeTax/A5
Particularly when used as a prescription painkiller,
Age 45-64
methadone can build up in
2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013
the body and lead to slowed breathing and disrupted heart rhythms, according
U.S. deaths involving heroin dyage and ethnicity
to the CDC.
8
Deaths per 100,000 population
Second, Multnomah
• 2000 • 2013
Appying to co ege
County, where heroin
abuse rates are very high, has started a program where naloxone, an opioid antagonist used to counter the eff ectsofheroin during
VIB Vldeo
an overdose, is made avail-
By Nick Anderson
able. The heroin-related overdose rate in Oregon
The Washington Post
dropped to 2.6 per 100,000
ell Moran-Kaplan did the
in 2013, and the total num-
usual drill for most of his
ber ofheroin-related deaths
college applications. But for Goucher College, the 18-year-old grabbed a digital camera last fall and went for a drive, gathering
BALTIMORE — Mitch-
in Oregon for 2014 was 72, down from 101 in 2013 and
0
124 in 2012, according to the OHA.
Age18-44 Age45-64 Age18-44 Age45-64 Age18-44 Age45-64 White W hite Bl ac k Bl ac k H ispanic Hispanic
U.S. deaths involving heroin dy region
"With the heroin-using population in Portland, a lot of those people can be rescued" with naloxone, said Millet. "We're working right now on a study to examine why the prescription
Deaths per 100,000 population
footage for a two-minute
• 2000 92007 • 2013
5
video that aimed to explain what he's all about. The private liberal arts
drug overdose rates and heroin overdose rates in
college in Baltimore County did not ask for his SAT scores, a personal essay or a transcript. It just wanted the video, a graded writing
Oregon have dropped."
assignment and one other
Still, heroin has made
sample of work from his high school years. Through his "video app," the student from Bowie, Maryland, joined
inroads in Central Oregon that may be difficult to re-
as much crossover between verse, said Rick Treleaven, prescription painkillers executive director of Bestand heroin as people think. Care Treatment Services, Yes, the medical communi- a drug rehab center in ty in Oregon has reconsidRedmond. ered the appropriate doses See Heroin /A5
an experiment that offers a Northeast U.S. M l dwest
South
radical, lower-stress option
West
to the college-admissions Source: Centers for Disease Control
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
craze. SeeCollege/A4
dissonance necessary to understand the bracket
pool's place in a country
where betting on sports is
mostly illegal, but perhaps none have done better than 11-year-old Max Kohll of Omaha, Nebraska. SeeNCAA/A6
. :ACC E S S M AKE S - PER F E C T
TODAY'S WEATHER Morning showers High 62, Low 37 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Books Business Calendar
F4 Classified G 1 - 6 L ocal/State B 1-6 Puzzles E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Obituaries B4-5 Sports F1-3 TV/Movies B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Opinion
C6 D1-6 C8
AnIndependent Newspaper
vot 113, No. 74,
4e pages, 7 sections
Q Weuserecyc/ednewsprint
:: IIIII I o
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
The urorld co ul d a l w a y s ua e mo r e D u e l r a. E n t e r P a t h w a y o r e g o n . W e cr e a t e d a p r og r a m t o g i v e f u ll t u i t i on t o P e ll - e l i g i b l e s t u d e n t s g r a d u a t i n g w i t h a 3 . 40 G P A . G e t o n t h e p a t h t o o n e o f t h e t o p p ubli c u n i v er s it i e s i n t h e n at io n .
p at h w a y or e g o n . u o r e g o n . e d u Eo/AA/ADA institution committed to cultural diversity.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
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LA. SCllOOI SOxOSSSIIItS — Tenmale students at a LosAngeles high school havebeenarrested and four more were being sought Saturday in connection with sexual assaults against two underage girls, the police said. Investigators said the assaults took placeat Venice High School andoff campus starting in December 2013 and continued with increasing frequency until this month. Some of the crimes were forced sexualacts, and while others were not forced, the girls were too young to give consent, a police commandersaid Friday. Local media reported that at least some of thesuspects were members of the school's football and basketball teams. FerguSOn mayOr — In the dayssince the release of aJustice Department report that found widespread racial bias in theFerguson Police Department, the mayor of the St. Louis suburb hasbecome a part-time public servant in a full-time spotlight. The attention has only intensified as six city employees —most notably the police chief and city manager — havebeenfired or stepped down. But Mayor James Knowles remains, making just $4,200 ayear in ajob he called basically ceremonial before awhite police officer shot an unarmed black18-year-old in August, prompting weeks of sometimes-violent protests and the Justice Department inquiry. He's now soinvolved that he's opened aCity Hall office and insists he will stay to seethe city through the changes it must make.
By Vivian Salama
city, Mosul, and the Syrian bor- lab in an unnamed coalition The Associated Press der, aspeshmerga forcesfought partner nation, which found BAGHDAD — Kurdish au- to seize a vital supply line used chlorine traces. "The fact ISIS relies on such thorities in Iraq said Saturday by the Sunni militants. It said they have evidence that the its fighters later found "around tactics demonstrates it has lost Islamic State group used chlo- 20 gas canisters" that had been the initiative and is resorting rinegas as achemicalweapon loaded onto the truck involved to desperate measures," the againstpeshmerga fighters, the in the attack. Kurdish government said in the latest alleged atrocity carried Video provided by the coun- statement, using an alternate out by the extremist organiza- cil showed a truck racing down acronym for the Sunni militant tion now under attack in Tikrit. a road, white smoke pouring group. The allegation by the Kurd- out of it as it came under heavy There was no independent istan Region Security Coun- fire from peshmerga fighters. It confirmation of t h e K u r ds' cil, stemming from a Jan. 23 later showed a white, billowing claim. Peter Sawczak, a suicide truck bomb attack in cloud after the truck exploded spokesman for the Organinorthern Iraq, did not imme- and the remnants of it scattered zation for the Prohibition of diately draw a reaction from across aroad. Chemical Weapons, which has the Islamic State group, which An official with the Kurdish monitored Syria dismantling holds a third of Iraq and neigh- council told The Associated its chemical weapons stockboring Syria in its self-declared Pressthat dozens of peshmer- pile, said his group had not caliphate. However, Iraqi ofga fighterswere treated for been asked to investigate the ficials and Kurds fighting in "dizziness, nausea, vomiting attack. Syria have made similar allega- and general weakness" after Alistair Baskey, a spokestions about the militants using the attack. He spoke on con- man for the White House's Nathe low-grade chemical weap- dition of anonymity as he was tional Security Council, said ons against them. not authorized to discuss the American officials were aware In a statement, the council incident. of the Kurds' claim, though said the alleged chemical atThe Kurds say samples of they had no information "retack took place on a road be- dothing and soil from the site garding its veracity at this tween Iraq's second-largest were analyzed by an unnamed time."
SOCIBI SOCIII'Ig FOCOfdS —Americans are getting older, but not this old: Social Security records show that 6.5 million people in the U.S. have reachedthe ripe old ageof112. In reality, only few could possibly be alive. As of last fall, there wereonly 42 people known to be that old in the entire world. But Social Security does not have death records for millions of these people, with the oldest born in 1869, according to a report by the agency's inspector general. Only 13 of the people arestill getting Social Security benefits, the report said. But for others, their Social Security numbers are still active, so a number could beused to report wages, open bankaccounts, obtain credit cards or claim fraudulent tax refunds. Gaymarriage — While more than 70 percent of U.S. states now allow same-sex marriage, thewaves of change haveyet to reach America's far-flung and socially conservative territories in the Caribbean and Pacific. Of the five territories, only Puerto Rico hasfaced a lawsuit seeking the right for gay andlesbian couples to wed, and a federal judge there — bucking the trend in federal courts on the mainland — rejected the suit. That case is underappeal before the1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston. In the other four territories — the U.S. Virgin Islands, Guam,American Samoaandthe Northern Marianas — nogay or lesbian couples havestepped forward to make a legal case for marriage rights, according to advocacy groups monitoring the situation.
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EbolamanitOring — Public health officials said Saturday that a number of Americans will return from west Africa to bemonitored after possibly being exposed toEbola. TheCenters for DiseaseControl andPreventionsaidseveralAmericanswho mayhavebeenexposed to Ebola in Sierra Leonewould be monitored. The CDCdid not specify how many Americans arecoming back, but University of Nebraska Medical Center officials says they'll be monitoring four Americans.
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HeliCOPter CraSh —The largest sections of a Black Hawkhelicopter that crashed during a nighttime training mission were pulled Saturday from the waters off Florida's Panhandleamid efforts to recover the remains of all sevenMarines and four soldiers who were killed. The salvageoperations that had been interrupted Friday night by bad weather wereexpected to finish by today, said Eglin Air Force Base spokesmanAndy Bourland. The debris pulled from about 25 feet of water in the SantaRosaSound off Navarre will be moved to the Air Force's Hurlburt Field to beexamined by investigators.
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POland alId RuSSia —For evidence of how much President Vladimir Putin of Russia has jangled nerves and provokedanxiety across Eastern Europe, look no further than the drill held the other day by the Shooters Association, at which 30 students took anoath to defend Poland. Theparamilitary group, like more than100 others in Poland, has experienced aspike in membership since Putin's forces began meddling in neighboring Ukraine last year. OnTuesday, Prime Minister EwaKopacz changed the law on who can becalled up for service. Now, if necessary, the armed forces cancall on almost any man in the country.
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Georgina Harwood gestures excitedly as shelands with Jason Bakerafter a tandem parachute jumpas part of her100th birthday celebrations, in Cape Town,
South Africa, on Saturday. This was the third tandem jumpfor Harwood, in front of family and friends, daysafter she turned100.
— From wire reports
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OTHER SERVICES
8 mn irme ea in Vanuatucycone By Nick Perry
He came upon one of the
The Associated Press
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
storm's victims S aturday, CHRISTCHURCH, Ne w while surveying the damage Zealand — At least eight peo- along the coastline with other ple were confirmed dead in relief workers. The group spotVanuatu after a massive cy- ted a man lying on the ground, clone tore through the tiny not breathing, and rushed him South Pacific archipelago, and to the hospital. By the time the death toll is likely to rise they arrived, however, he was much higheronce communi- dead, Nihmei said. cations are restored with outStructural damage across lying islands, aid workers said Port Vila was extensive, Nihtoday. mei said, with the majority of Packing winds of 168 miles homes severely damaged or per hour, Cyclone Pam tore destroyed. through Vanuatu early SaturSome residents began deanday, leaving a trail of destruc- ing up what was left of their tion and unconfirmed reports wrecked houses and checkof dozens of deaths. ing on family members. Relief Chloe Morrison, a World Vi- workers, meanwhile, were trysion emergency communica- ing to get temporary shelters tions officer in Port Vila, said to victims as fast as possible, officials from Vanuatu's ¹ Nihmei said. "We're still not having comtional Disaster Management Office confirmed to her agen- m unications wit h t h e o t h cy that at least eight people er provinces," Nihmei said. died in and around the capital, "We're just running around Port Vila. trying to g e t i n formation Officials have yet to assess around Port Vila; with the oththe damage in many of the er islands it's really hard to get hard-hit outer islands because anything." communications and power A westward change of remain cut, she said. Morrison course put populated areas disaid she had heard reports of rectly in the path of Pam. The entire villages being destroyed U.N. Office for the Coordinain more remote areas. tion of Humanitarian Affairs "People are really upset and saidthere were unconfirmed it's really hard, just because reports of an additional 44 forthe lastcouple ofyears,we deaths in Vanuatu's northeasthaven't received a really big ern islands after Pam moved cyclone like this one," said Isso off its expected track.
14Qao 47 Q1Q4QSQ Q
Nihmei, Vanuatu coordinator for the environmental and cri-
The estimated jackpot is now $1 million.
sis response group 350. "Most people right now, they are really homeless."
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
Q sr QsQ4QeQss
©
The estimated jackpot is now $40 million.
MEGABUCKS
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Residents awoke to much
calmer weather today after many hunkered down in emergency shelters for a second straight night, Morrison said.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
College Continued from A1 Goucher President Jose Antonio Bowen said there is "a
, ro
hunger" across the country for new ways to apply to college. "We will be seeing more alternative applications," he said. "The system is broken."
Video, he said, is how teens raised on social media com-
h
municate. And they don't need to hire tutors and consultants
to make one. "It's appealing," Mitchell Moran-Kaplan and Oceane Caiveau via The Washington Post Bowen said. "More people can Mitchell Moran-Kaplan appears in the video he submitted with his do this. Not only the rich, not
only the privileged." The hope is that it provides a 'J"
more authentic glimpse of the typical college-bound student than heavily edited and polished personal essays.
'
.~'."'.:i=;' -'@ i c "::,III' Jill Toyoshiba i Kansas City Star
"I wanted to show you this to show you that I'm driven,"
application to Goucher College in Baltimore County, Maryland. He is one of 49 students, out of 64 who sent in videos as an alternative
to the traditional college application process, whowere admitted. OceaneCeiveeu,below, was also accepted. percent. Two dozen of Goucher's vid-
eo applicants sent transcripts to be considered for merit scholarships. But Christopher
Meredith Hengel and her 5-year-old son, Josh, get ready for "pajama day" at their home in Grain Valley, Missouri. Josh participated in a Children's Mercy Hospital trauma-focused program called
Moran-Kaplan says into the
parent-child interaction therapy. The therapy is designed to help Josh, whowas adopted out of
er stands outside a small house Wild, an admissions counselfrom his childhood in the Vir- or, said none of the transcripts ginia mountains. "I want to were reviewed before admis- would consider me," she says in succeed at whatever I do — at sions decisions were made. the video. "I think I'd be a great my career, atsports,atschool Three professors joined addition. I love the campus. I — because I don't want to wind Wild in December to screen love the atmosphere. It's just up back here, at a place like the video apps. They scored incredible. It's my top school, this." the high school works first be- honestly." H ere's M oran-Kaplan a t cause they didn't want to be Goucher admitted her. But his synagogue in Annapolis, influenced by images from the de La Viez said she also is Maryland: "Hopefully I would videos. Then they rated the vid- weighing offers from homelike to be the one who brokers eos on content/thoughtfulness, town Hood College, Shippenspeace betweenPalestine and s tructure/organization a n d burg University in PennsylIsrael. So you know, my major, ciarity/effectiveness. A ppli- vania and Towson University,
foster care, to address issues that may have arisen due to abuse or neglect that placed him in foster care in the first place.
ic in u e i eces a era rauma ic even By Eric Adler
The past matters.
The Kansas City Star
When children experience singular or repeated traumas, ditional method of care,
KANSAS CITY, Mo.— Never mind the little girl's name. What's important is that she
they can exert a powerful in-
flee or freeze. This differs from the tra-
which experts say tends to
was about 10 years old and all
fluence on their behavior and focus broadly on the sympmental health, now and as they toms of depression, bipolar
the doctors she had seen month
become adults. Data from as
after month had failed to ease farbackasthe1990s,forexamherpain. ple, show that the vast majority The girl's stomachwrenched. of incarceratedfemales were Her chest tightened. Her skull abused as children — sexually, seared with l i g htning-bolt physically or emotionally. headaches. Mental illness, physical illThen at Children's Mercy ness, substance abuse, behavHospital, pediatrician Lisa ior problems, eating disorders, Spector decided to probe with promiscuity, criminality: All a different set of questions. have strong links to previous Instead of asking what was abuse or neglect, to violence, to wrong physically, Spector abandonment, to the traumas asked the girl what had hap- exerted by the deprivations of pened to her in her young life. poverty. Other traumas might Quickly, the crux of her pain include anxiety surrounding became clear: Trauma. family illness, or personal ill"It was impacting her physi- ness,or the feared or real loss cal and mental health," Spector of loved ones. said. Even witnessing such events At school, she was bullied. At
home, shewitnessed repeated domestic violence. She talked of her dad belittling and abusing her emotionally. She recently had been a victim of an attempted carjacking; the thief
fled after seeing her in the back seat. Day to day, she was living
disorder, anxiety, or other
mental or emotional problems. Medications are prescribed for t h e
d i sorder.
Then behavior modification therapy teaches children to try to control their actions,
showing that positive behaviors bring positive results and negative actions
bring negatives, like scoldings, timeouts and school expulsions. Medication and behavioral therapy have been shown to be effective mainstays of treatment, but the fact that many children continue to
emerge deeply troubled has been a hint that something can create misery. significant was missing. "We know that witnessing "The focus became the someone else being hurt is of- depression or the anxiety," ten as traumatizing as being McCauley said, "but the hurt yourself," Gillece said. trauma aspect was being "What about kids who hear overlooked." Mom being beaten night after In trauma-informed care, night, or kids who go to bed time is spent teaching carehearing gunshots?" givers and others how to
a tense and unsure existence that was translating itself into
Such connections seem in-
tuitive, but they're also being
hobbling pain.
borne out scientiTically with
view the world through the
eyes of a trauma victim and to look for "triggers" that
mounting neurological re- cause behavior or moods to mately eased not with medica- search off ering evidence on shift negatively. tionbut with counseling can be how trauma can change the Meredith Hengel, 32, of credited to a serious effort by biology of the brain, flooding Grain Valley, said she and Children's Mercy to focus on it with hormones in ways that her husband didn't know "trauma-informed" care. keep its victims in easily trig- the magnitude of the probFor a growing number of gered states of fight, flight or lems that their son Josh, children across the country, the freeze. The hope of trauma-in- now age 5 and recently adapproach has become the key formed care,experts said, is opted, had endured when That the child's troubles ulti-
to their emotional and mental
health, "the most important thing we can do for people," said Marsha Morgan, chief operating officer for behavior-
that by teaching parents, teach-
he came to them as a foster
ers, social workers, doctors, child shortly before Christpolice and even children to ad- mas 2012. dress underlying trauma, chilBut they knew he didn't dren's emotions, behaviors and trust adults. H e s l ept al health at Truman Medical futures can be changed. The erratically. "He might fall asleep at Center. triggers that prompt children, Trauma-informed care fo- or even adults, to erupt (fight) 8, but he'd be up at 2 in the cuses on the notion that a trau- or mentally escape (flight or morning. He'd be wandermatic event in childhood, either freeze) through drugs, alcohol ing the house," Hengel said. experienced or witnessed, can or other means canbe averted. Food was a major issue. alter the biology of the brain. The boy would scrounge A trauma-informed strategy Helping kids throughthe refrigerator. "If he thought he wasn't works on multiple fronts — usIn eastern Kansas, child ing counseling and changes to welfare services such as fos- getting any food, he would one's personal interactions and ter care, adoption and mental be absolutely frantic," Henenvironment — to lessen or health services are provided gel said. bypass those negative associ- under a state contract to a priAt Children's Mercy, Henations while forming new and vate company, KVC Health gel and her son worked for more positive associative path- Systems Inc. The organiza- some 20 weeks at the hospiways in the brain. tion manages about 3,000 of tal's Safe and Healthy Fami"I've worked in this field for the 6,100 children in Kansas' lies Trauma Prevention and over 42 years, and this is the welfare system. KVC is now in Treatment Center, using most important thing I've ever the fourth year of a five-year Parent-Child In t e raction done," Morgan said. study, funded by the Annie E. Therapy, which for Josh was Together with Wyandot Inc. Casey Foundation,to measure designed to create a trusting of Kansas City, Kansas, Tru- the effectiveness of the system parent-child connection. "Kids who have been in man and othersare helping ituses, Trauma Systems Theralead a communitywide task py, to train children's casework- trauma need some sense of force, Trauma Matters KC, to ers and foster parents. control," Hengel said, "even transform Kansas City into a Although many trauma-in- if it is just playing with a Hot trauma-informed community. formed care systems exist (the Wheels car. It was that play, Meanwhile, across the region, California E v i dence-Basedcoupled with positive praise, scores of entities are offering Clearinghouse for Child Wel- that helped. He loved it. I do programs of their own pre- fare rates at least 25), they gen- feel it helped us bond and schools; Kansas' child welfare erally work in similar ways, build a relationship." system; mental health provid- starting with inclusion. ers;shelters for battered wom-
I want to do international studies, with a minor in Arabic and
a minor in Hebrew." Here he is with his high school rugby squad: 'Tm the captain this year. So we're just ending practice now. I know Goucher doesn't have a rugby team, but I figured I could start a rugbyteam there."The closing shot: a tight huddle with his teammates and a roar of
how trauma creates metaphori-
cal circuits, strong neurological The underlying tenet of trau- pathways, in a child's brain that ma-informed care is simple: surge with impulses to fight,
near Goucher. She said she
cants who received at least 23
points out of a possible 35 were does well in school, but she was admitted. grateful to apply to a college a s - that cared about who she is outside of A's and B's. "I'm not just a grade," she said."I'm a
N ina Kasniunas, an
sistant professor of political science who participated, acknowledged that it was risky. She said she had concerns about how much information could be learned through a video. "I was pretty scared
person." Ja'Marc A l l en-Henderson,
lion applications a year to more than 500 selective colleges.
18, of San Francisco, said he is "not a big social media person" and had never before produced not to have the safety net of a a video of himself. He sent one transcript," she said. Would the to Goucher anyway. "It took a couple months to students she admitted be ready for college work? Was Goucher mentally prepare for it," he said. "I was kind of camera doing somethingunethical'? But Kasniunas said she was shy." His video explains his reassured by the quality of the work as an intern at the Calassignments students submit- iforniaAcademy of Sciences ted and by the personality that in Golden Gate Park, working in exhibits with penguins and came through in the videos. Moran-Kaplan said he also sea stars. He got into Goucher applied to the University of but is considering several other Maryland, Emory Universi- colleges. A nother s t udent f i l m ed ty, Columbia University and the University of Rochester. her video with a friend's help One day last fall, while he was in a costume closet at her working on the Common Ap- high school's theater. Oceane plication, he decided to "try Caiveau, 17, of Westfield, New
There is virtually no chance
s omething different." So he
"Raiders!"
It worked. Goucher accepted him without knowing his grade-point average or the rigor of his course schedule. He was one of 49 students admitted this way, out of 64 who sent
m vrdeos. Skeptics dismiss the videos
as a gimmick, demonstrating little else than the elasticity of one quirky college's admission standards.
The Common Application, a W eb portal, processes 3.45 mil-
Jersey, told Goucher that she isthe co-head of costumes for
that the Goucher video app, or put together the Goucher video anything like it, will displace using an old camera and the the Common Application or iMovie program. "It was more fun than sitother pillars of the admissions industry anytime soon. Gouch- ting down and writing a story er, with about 2,100 students,
school plays and said it is "so cool" that there is an agricul-
turecooperative on Goucher's campus. "I am an avid reader, a lov-
about who you are or what you
also relies on the Common Ap- would do in this situation," he plication and has no plans to said. "It let me take a chance to stop using it. show who I am and change it B ut th e e x periment h a s up abit." He's waiting to find out if helped Bowen, a jazz musi-
er of all things plantlike and a huge theater fan," she said to
cian who joined Goucher last
stuffed alligator at
the camera.
As a co m edic t ouch, Caiveau's friend placed a
there are other acceptances be-
r a ndom
year, draw attention to his col- fore deciding where he wants spots in the backdrop of the video. The gator appears over lege in a crowded market. U.S. to attend college. News and World Report ranks
Goucher 105th among national liberal arts schools, tied with
Caiveau's shoulder at the end
Marissa de La Viez, 17, of
Frederick, Maryland, said she of the video as she proudly sent Goucher an app because demonstrates her goofy "go-
Hampden-Sydney Collegein she loves to edit video. "That's Virginia, Washington College my thing," she said. "It's my in Maryland and four others. calling. When I thought about Some colleges solicit and it, I was like, 'That's perfect accept videos as part of an ap- for me.' Who wants to look plication package, and videos 'normal' when you apply? You have long been essential for want to stand out." schools that recruit performing She put a camera in a winartists. dowsill in her poster-bedecked In 2010, George Mason Uni-
pher face." That's a nod to
the Goucher mascot — the Gopher. She got in, and she accepted.
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
bedroom, sat on a chair and
versity in Virginia launched an narrated her story: honor sooption for general undergradu- cietymemberships, academic ate applicants to submit supple- excellence awards, fundraismental videos. In 2013, Babson ing to fight non-Hodgkin's College in Massachusetts start- lymphoma and multiple scleed allowing applicants to sub- rosis, dancing on her high mit a one-minute video instead school poms squad, student of a one-page essay. journalism. "I really hope you guys Tufts University allowed video submissions for a few years,
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but a spokeswoman said the
Massachusetts school ended that experiment because the videos "weren't adding substantially to what candidates were telling us about themselves through other means."
Bowen's version of the idea — pushing aside test scores and transcripts— goes much
further. A growing number
•
of schools don't require test
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"It really works well when
en; and courts, jails and police all the players in a child's life departments. can come together," said Kelly "This has become a nation- McCauley at KVC, director for al conversation," said Joan evidence-based initiatives. Gillece, director of the NaThat means bringing togethtional Center for Trauma-In- er parentsor foster parents, formed Care, which in 2005 grandparents, physicians, case was launched by the federal workers, la w e n f orcement, Substance Abuse and Mental teachers and even the rest of Health Services Administra- a school's staff, if possible. tion to combat trauma's perni- Then, in ciasses over a series cious effects. "It's really taken of weeks, they learn the funoff." damentals of brain science and
Trauma-informed care
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SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
UPDATE PURPLE HEARTS
A5
e~
Vindication after Marines'honors denied- TAKE YOUR By C.J.Chivers
intended to cause an enemy harm.
New York Times News Service
C HANDLER,
FRMII Y CRMIIING!
But for troops wounded by
A riz.
Long after Dan Jones' last flight over Vietnam ended in wreckage and blood, his combat tour was never quite complete.
their colleagues in Vietnam, recognition has been difficult to obtain, veterans said. The c omplicated work o f m a r -
D
shaling evidence has largely been left to veterans and their
In 1968, Jones, a Marine
first lieutenant, was co-piloting a helicopter carrying
families o r
P
D
accidentally shot the aircraft down.
Three Marines were killed. Jones, the only survivor, was notified while convalescing that the deceased crew members, victims of an embarrassing mishap, would not be awarded Purple Heart medals, which recognize troops
Dan Jones, the only survivor of a1968 helicopter crash in Vietnam caused by friendly fire that killed three Marines, attends a Purple
wounded or killed in action.
for all the Marines who had been aboard the aircraft.
o
DD
f r i e nds. Jones
learned of his crew's eligibility only after he and other veterans began pooling records and recollections in 2013. Jones, now 70 and living
supplies to troops in battle when an American howitzer
g
D D
in Arizona, had not been opTodd Heisler / New York Times News Service
Heart ceremony for one of the victims, 1st Lt. Glenn John Zamorski, in Holmdel, New Jersey, last month. Last year, the Marine
Corps reversed previous decisions and approved Purple Hearts
F orty-seven years o n , Jones'determined journeyfrom silenced victim of a frat- ly recognized — a door gunricidal mistake to a veteran ner who was ejected from the vindicated by his insistence crippled helicopter and fell that his dead crew be honto his death — would receive ored — is reaching its end. the medal as soon as his surL ast y e ar , t h e M a r i n e viving family members set a Corps reversed previous de- date. "The Purple Heart is abcisions and approved Purple Hearts for al l t h e M a r ines solutely an appropriate recwho had been aboard the ognition of their courageous aircraft. A spokesman said serviceand sacrifice to our the family of the one Marine
nation," the spokesman, Maj.
who had not yet been formal-
Rob Dolan, said of the crew
timistic as the records were assembled. "I'm afraid they'll never get the award," he wrote in an email from the time.
185 Salem
~8 10,K'0
The turn of fortune came
lastyear after George Ross, another fellow pilot from the
5th¹8625 Vin¹109387
squadron, submitted a bundle
members. "This is closing a tragic story from the Vietnam era."
of documents to the Marine Corps. Several months later,
112 per month
Ross called Jones to say the
Purple Hearts were approved
The c orps' a b out-face for the entire crew. points to t h e c o ntinuing A s Jones described t h e evolution in how the Penta- conversation, his eyes welled gon determines who quali- with tears. "They were my buddies," fies for one of the military's most emotionally r esonant he said. "I felt their deaths awards. A change to the law needed to be honored, and as in 1993 granted eligibility to the surviving crew member those who had been wound- it was my responsibility to ed by American ordnance make sure that occurred."
Cheaperthan aI.atte a day! 5999 down,120months,6.5%APRonapproved credit, 720creditscoreorhigher.
179 Springdale
O0 m81C,K'1 t 5tk¹8834 Vin¹ 104053
@189 per mon th
Heroin
consequences of abuse and addiction, he said.
"You have a lot of kids Continued from A1 Until recently, there was no who were recreationally ustradition or history of a seri- ing prescription drugs, and ous heroin problem in Cen- they were kids who were tral Oregon, Treleaven said. from decent families, should "About five years ago, we be going to college or comreally began to see heroin munity college," Treleaven have a solid foothold here. said. "They were playing
ly clueless (and) picked up a population. very big-time addiction." Now that there's a demand The emergence of younger for heroin in Central Oreaddicts mirrors the nation- gon, the supply has become al trend. In 2000, the group steady, and users can count most likely to die from a hero- on heroin that is cheap and in overdose was non-Hispan-
Continued from A1 "That money comes straight out of schools, and it comes straight out of other programs that are very important to people all over the state," said Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland.
Burdick said "gain share," by which the state gives half and retained jobs to counties with the special property tax agreements, was set up to cov-
Estimated payments that flow from Oregon's general fund to counties that give property tax breaks to big companies to act as incentive to expand. Since 2011, the fund has sent more than $74 million to one of the wealthiest counties in the state and will continue to grow in cost until it sunsets Jan. 1, 2019.
la County, which gets a small piece of the $38.1 million this year. The group is tasked with working on Devlin's Senate
ESTIMATEDANNUAL PAYMENTS
One member of the work group, Rep. John Davis, R-Wilsonville, said he agrees the state is probably sending too
$60M
$52.8M
Only about 20 percent of the estimated $95 million impact
$40M
$20M
partisan Legislative Revenue
Office. The state estimated in 2007 that initial payments would be
2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17 2017-18 Source: Legislative Revenue Office
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
$600,000 in 2009-11 and $4.5 million in 2011-13. The impact on the current budget will be about 13 times that, at nearly
$62.3 million. The program is set to rise in cost annually before sunsetting in 2019. Burdick is proposing to limit the payments to new jobs only. She says that would return gain share to the scope the
Legislature intended when it passed the 2007 measure and would free up more money for schools and other programs. "It's been a fund so far that
(Washington County h as) managed to provide themselves with luxuries that are only in the wildest dreams of
some of our poorest counties," Burdick said. If 40 percent of the money
went to the State School Fund under Burdick's Senate Bill 848, Bend-La Pine would like-
ly receive more than $1 million more in the next budget, ac-
5tk¹8827 Vin¹104198
S'I69per month 51486down,120months,6.5%APRonapproved credit, 720creditscoreorhigher.
19FlB Hideout
~0 t j4,198 5tk¹ 8488 Vin¹ 201073
149 per month
U7'
51479 50 down, 120months,6.5%APRon approved credit, 720creditscoreorhigher.
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nal form yet. "We wanttomake good on the obligation that there is a
need and an impact on those counties that needs to be ac-
3
~814+C©
Senate Bill 129 isn't near its fi-
$11.8M
•
189 Springdale
changed this session. Davis said W ashington County has a legitimate need for the state's help. He said
on the state budget in the next
two years is attributed to new jobs, according to the non-
Bill 129.
much to Washington County and that the formula will be
$42.1M
er only new jobs, not ones that were assumed to be retained because of the tax breaks.
II
The other, Sen. Bill Hansell, R-Athena, represents Umatil-
The costofGainShare
the income taxes from new
'o
51399.70down, 120months,6.5%APRon approvedcredit, 720credit scoreorhigher.
effective, Treleaven said.
"The concern is that Cenic blacks between the ages of 45 and 64, at 2.0 deaths per tral Oregon has never had 100,000 population, accord- this underlying culture of Before that, you never had with a set of drugs that they ing to the CDC's national heroin addicts, and now it a steady supply of heroin in were largely unaware of the figures. does," he said. "I'm not sure Central Oregon," he said. consequences. By 2013, the top group was it will ever be able to put the "It's been so long since non-Hispanic whites between genie back in the bottle." Heroin addicts in Central Oregon tend to be young and heroin was a big deal in this the ages 18 and 44, at a rate — Reporter: 202-662-7456, unaware of the long-term country, they were basical- of 7.0 deaths per 1 00,000 ccclevenger®bendbulletin.com
Tax
o
5tk¹8804 Vin¹206566
s179 per month
counted for at the same time
that we consider the impact on the entire state budget," Davis
51784.30 down,120months,6.5%APRon approved credit, 720creditscoreorhigher.
said. "In particular, schools."
Bill in Salem —Senate Bill 848 would rework"gain share," a tax sharing agreement whereby the state gives to counties half the income taxes from jobs created whencounties give tax breaks to land certain large-scale business investments. Sponsors:Sen.Ginny Burdick, D-Portland; Reps. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland; Ann Lininger, D-LakeOswego History:Burdick said the ballooning costs of the program are the result of unintended effects in the original 2007 bill. Shesaid schools are inadvertently sending millions to the primary beneficiary of the program: Washington County. What's next:Hearing to be set next week. Online:Readthe bill at http://bit.ly/1b8p4TC Bill in Salem —Senate Bill129 would also rework gain share by sending 10 percent of the personal incometaxes attributed to all projects that exceed $5million to the Local Economic Opportunity Fund. Sponsor:Sen. Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin History:A group of lawmakers is working on Senate Bill129, which would also changethe program that has ballooned in costs. The bill is likely to change. What's next:Hearing to be set next week. Online:Readthe bill at http://bit.ly/1BCZrP3
Because the state spends a set amount of money on all students through its general out of that pool is money that
~011+4$
could potentially go to schools. Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, is leading the Republican fight to get the state to spend $8billion on K-12 education in the next budget. Democrats say there's
no way to get to that number without raising taxes or cutting other programs, and they say the state will more likely spend around $7.235 billion. Knopp signed onto Devlin's bill that would give slightly less money to Washington
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lates to more for Bend-La Pine. "I think most districts will
5tk¹8375 Vin¹113519
per month 515,558.40 down,240months, 6.5%APRon approvedcredit, 720credit scoreorhigher.
YomrHometownDealer Since lSV6
state-supported human services," Kotek said. "It would be
FREE 1YKA'RPASS!
CENTA RLOREGON'S
"That is money that hasn't
been going into our schools, into our colleges, into our
Qi¹
5178430down,120months,6.5%APRon approved credit, 720creditscore orhigher.
County, which he says trans-
farebetter under a rework of the gain share," Knopp said. Knopp said he is co-sponsoring Senate Bill 129 bethan $18.5 billion in the 2015- cause he thinks a substantive 17budget. change to the program has a Buckley signed onto Bur- better chance to pass with supdick's bill, which would cre- port from both parties, which ate a new State Economic Burdick's bill lacks. Development Fund available House Speaker Tina Kotek, for all counties and revise the D-Portland, said Monday she statute to send more money to foresees changes to the proschools. gram come July.
cording to an analysis of the The state will spend about school funding formula. $158.5 million before the measure expires on Jan. 1, 2019, WashingtonCounty while Washington County has Washington County offi- waived more than $500 milcials say the amount of mon- lion in property taxes. ey they forgo through the tax The issue, which will get a deals far exceeds the mon- full airing in the Legislature ey returned to the county in thecoming weeks, hascrethrough the program. ated an awkward divide beD evlin, whose district i s The gain share program tween the two lawmakers in partially in Washington Counhas helped land major ex- charge of writing the state's ty, and a group of legislators pansions by Intel and Genen- budget. from two of the seven counties tech in Washington County. Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ash- that benefit from gain share While gain share also applies land, and Sen. Richard Devlin, hope to extend the program in to large rural projects such D-Tualatin,are chief sponsors a slightly different form. as wind farms, Washington of competing bills to change Four of five members on a County will get 99 percent of gain share. They're also gain share work group repthe money this year. tasked with divvying up more resent Washington County.
260TBSpringdale
fund, any money that comes
L AR G E S T
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RV INVENTO RY! R EDM O N D
hard for me to see gain share not being changed by the end of session."
SALES Af SERVICE 63500 NE Highway 97
SALES ff SERVICE 2795 Hwy. 97
(Acrose from Lovves)
(Next to the Dollar Tree and Big 5)
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
541-330-2495
Qe541-548-5254
A6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
LOOKING AHEAD:CLINTON 2016
NCAA
NCAA
tournament TV revenue
Continued fromA1
>«4I«(/8/
In 2012, Kohll ended up
in the principal's office after he was caught with
— 1980$9 million — 1990$64 million 2000 $228 million 2010 $634 million
brackets and cash at his
elementary school. In an interview with th e l ocal
newspaper, the befuddled fifth-grader, whose mother had approved of her son's first foray into gambling and even paid his $5 entry fee, tried to explain what he'd learned.
Bill and Hillary Clinton campaign in1992 in Chicago ahead of the Illinois primary. As Hillary Clinton faces her own run for the White House, she has decades of political baggage to contend with,
"It's not OK to gamble," Kohll said. "It's, like, illegal, sort of." Kohll's confusion is understandable. Even the people who put on the NCAA men's basketball
some dating to before her husband's presidency.
t ournament
Stephan Savoia /The Associated Press file photo
oun mana er U es ataan o a ae
The Washington Post
"That's where it goes sideways to me." The NCAA providing paper brackets online that are inevitably used for gambling is "a very hypocritical stance, in terms of fighting against legalization but still profiting from the popularity of the brackets." — Tim Otteman, a Central Michigan University assistant professor who has studied the tournament and problem gambling
office pools anyone wrote about involved NFL games
and required participants to understand the vagaries
television revenue (1980: $9
of the point spread. Then, in 1979, the NCAA basket-
2000: $228 million, 2010: $634 million).
had been passing out brackets in homeroom. These stories of youngsters betting on the tourna-
And while the tournament
ment concern Otteman, the
ball tournament leapt in na-
million, 1990: $64 m i l lion,
tional pr ominence, thanks
office pool is outlawed in
to the championship game between Magic Johnson's
much of the country, it is a
crime roughly equivalent to
S t at e S p a r t ans driving 60 mph in a 55-mph and Larry Bird's Indiana zone. Michigan
"Technically, it is a vioh a v e l o n g State Sycamores, still the highest-rated tele v i s ion lation of state and federal broadcast in t h e e v ent's law, but it's so socially ac-
struggled with the widespread, condoned gambling that fuels much of
70-year-ol d James Carville denounced the coverage of his old friend Hillary Rodham Clinton'suseofapersonalemailac-
has known the Clintons since George McGovern's presidential campaign in 1972; former
cepted that I've never heard the interest in their annuN ationally telev i s e d of a situation where there's al spectacle. b roadcasts always h a ve been punitive action taken "The NCAA opposes fueled betting interest on by a law enforcement agenall forms of g ambling those sporting events, said cy over an office pool," said — legal and illegal — on gambling historian David Steven Silverman, f o r mer college sports," the offi- Schwartz, and in 1985, the public defender and mancial policy states, and it NCAA added an accelerant: aging partner of Silverman even goes so far as to de- The tournament expanded Thompson Slutkin White, a fine gambling as "putting that year to 64 teams, a num- Baltimore-based law firm. something at risk — such ber that allowed for a geoSilverman mentioned a as an entry fee or wager metrically enticing, aesthet- name that comes up often — in return for the opporically pleasing bracket. in discussions about the "The pureness of the 64tunity to win something." contradictions surrounding Over the years, not ev- team, si n g le-elimination office pools and the NCAA: eryone involved in stag- bracket a l l owed e v eryone Rick Neuheisel. ing the tournament has to participate, because it The former football coach taken such a dogmatic was really, really simple," was fired by the University stance. Former U n i ver- said Tim Otteman, a Cenof Washington in 2003, in sity of K ansas athletic tral M i chigan U niversity part because his basketball director Bob Frederick, assistant professor who has tournament betting prompt-
Clinton administration offi-
w ho o nc e
c h a ired t h e
studied the tournament and
count at the State Department,
tournament's s e lection
ticking off two decades' worth of scandals surrounding the
cials Cheryl Mills and James Kennedy; Huma Abedin, a longtime aide to Hillary Clin-
problem gambling. If newspaper coverage is
Clintons that he attributed to an
ton; and Mandy Grunwald,
irresponsible news media. Carville complained to the
who has advised the Clintons since 1992.
By Amy Chozick
controversy. They included
New Yorh Times News Service
On M SNBC
John Podesta, her presumpl a s t w e e k , tive campaign chairman, who
host, Andrea Mitchell, that he
had"lived throughthis."
Ultimately, t h e
st r a tegy
they settled on — having ClinnDo you remember White- ton publicly address the conwater?" he asked. "Do you re- troversy 'Iiresday — harked member Filegate? You remem- back to the approach used in berTravelgate? You remember 1994, when she held a lengthy
committee, in 1995 tried
to explain why he thought tournament pools aren't really sports gambling. "Most people who fill out office pools do that once a year and that's it. It's different than p l ac-
history.
the Whitewater inquiry and a
M eanwhile, far f r o m t h e
1970s commodities trade in Ar-
n ote, is e ssentially t h e
television lights, Robby Mook, the 35-year-old who is likely to manage Clinton's 2016 presidentialcampaign, kepthis head down and worked the phones from his standing desk to build a field operation in Iowa, set up technology to collect data to
kansas. Comparisons quickly erupted: "Mrs. Clinton is stuck
d efinition gambling.
in the '90s,n declared the conservative talk show host Rush The next day, the operation took its first coordinated step
popularity and financial imway. Before the 1980s, the pact of the office pool are a word "bracket" appeared staple of annual March Madin newspapers mostly ness news coverage, along in reference to tax clas- with stories marveling at
toward wrangling the Clintons'
sifications, and the only
target voters and hire a cam-
paign staff in a handful of key
old friendsand former aides, like Carville. Clinton's 31-year-
states. Mook was 12 and au-
oldpress secretary,Nick Mer-
ditioning for school plays in
rill, hosted a conference call
news conference to address
Benghazi'?"
Limbaugh.
with about 25 far-flung surrofirst electedpresident. He was a gates to make sure they delivpopular high school freshman ered the same message about when Kenneth Starr investigat- the emails. ed Whitewater. Part ofwhy Mook landed The uproar over Hillary the job was that in 2013, as the Clinton's use of personal email campaign managerfor Terry as secretary of state, which McAuliffe — a close friend to shielded her correspondence Bill Clinton who is now govfrom public records requests, ernor of Virginia — he deftly has presented the first media nurtured the Clintons' vast net-
of
spo r t s
lead to addiction. Otteman c redits t h e NC A A ' s a n -
ti-gambling publicity a nd education campaigns, but he is still bothered every year when the organization, on its website, provides printable brackets that are inevi-
tably used for gambling. "That's where it goes side-
ways to me," Otteman said. "It's a very h y pocritical stance, in terms of fighting against legalization but still profiting from the popularity of the brackets."
The stance likely won't change. On Tuesday, in a federal courtroom in Philadelphia, a ttorneys fo r t h e NC A A w ill c ontinue th e f i gh t t o
keep sports betting illegal. A hearing is scheduled that day in a case between the
NCAA, professional sports ing in the standard $10 en- leagues and the state of New any indication o f c u l t ural try office pool, though: He'd Jersey, which has been trypermeation, the March Mad- won more than $10,000 in a ing to legalize sports betting ness office pool exploded high-stakes auction form of for years. from niche practice to nabetting on the tournament M eanwhile, o n M o n d ay tional tradition i n a b out a called a "Calcutta." morning, many federal emdecade. Although t h e re g ular ployees will be r eminded A search of a database of p ick-all-the-games o f f i c e that their standards of conU.S. newspaper archives pools are mostly tacitly con- duct prohibit them from parfound zerostoriesreferring doned by law enforcement, ticipating in any gambling to tournament office pools there have been situations activity while on duty or on before 1980, 23 stories in in which police have broken government property. And the 1980s, 760 stories in the out the metal bracelets for if they have ESPN, they can 1990s, and more than 3,000 organizers of the gambling watch live later t hi s w eek in the 2000s. contests. as President Barack Obama
ing a bet on a game," said Frederick, who died in 2009. "They're taking a chance on a team." Which, some m i ght
Pardongate'? You remember
ed an NCAA i nvestigation. Neuheisel wasn't participat-
Central Michigan professor. He contends that brackets are the "gateway drug" of sports gambling, giving children the first rush that can
T oday, stories about t h e
I t wasn't a l ways t h i s
the tournament's spiraling
I n 1992, police i n
E a s t fills out his bracket.
Greenwich, Rhode Island, arrested Robert Pl ain, 18,
on a misdemeanor charge of possession of gambling paraphernalia. The crime? Plain, a high school senior,
Find It All Online
bendbulletin.cam
Vermont when Bill Clinton was
firestorm in her pursuit of the White House. But it has also
work of friends with frequent
divide that confronts her bud-
that often attaches itself to the
2 15
A ~fMT~Y l OIQI'
phone calls but did not get disrevealed the stark generational tracted by the noise and drama ding2016 campaign. couple. Over more than two decades Mook was inducted into the in national politics, the Clin- extended Clinton family during tons have amassed an army the 2008 presidential primary, of well-meaning defenders when he was Hillary Clinton's who will bring to 2016 old bat- state campaign director in Intle wounds and axes to grind diana, Nevada and Ohio: three that date back to the White
states that were rare bright
House and Arkansas — per- spots in her bruising battle haps not the ideal message against Barack Obama. in a presumptive campaign But despite Mook's efforts, that seeks to reintroduce the thecampaign didnotkeep pace 67-year-old Clinton as a fresh, with the Obama team's use of forward-looking candidate. social media, digital targeting It falls largely on Mook, and data analytics. "The Clinton field program and the band of young operatives he has assembled (called was not at the same level of sothe Mook Mafia), to move the phistication,n said Geoff Garin, grievance-laden Clinton ma- who succeeded Mark Penn as chine into the modern political
Hillary Clinton's chief strate-
age. The success of Clinton's campaign will rest in part on whether this younger generation of earnest, data- and social-media-savvy operatives can prevail. "They are going to be the first ones to hit the beach on D-Day," said Chris Lehane, a Democratic operative and former aide to Bill Clinton. "To getthe campaign offthebeach while under fire, the frontline troops will need to be in charge and empowered to run a modern-day, forward-looking, smart campaign."
gistin 2008 and was McAuliffe's pollster. "By the time of the 2013 campaign, Robby was advancing the state of the art rather than trying to catch up
The Clintons anointed Mook
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withit."
Mook's experience working for the Clintons leaves him well-positioned to bridge the campaign's generational gap. "He's old from the perspective that he worked for the Clin-
tons in 2008 and new enough
L
that he wasn't really part of the
nt
inner cirde of runningthe campaign," said Thomas Nides, a friend and adviser who worked for Hillary Clinton at the State
as much for his ease with data Department. and technology as for his calm No one could have predicttemperament. They value his ed that the first big test of his rare ability to charm and in- abilities would come so early, clude the abundant advice-givers without allowing them to
with the email controversy, but
people close to Mooksayhehas become too intrusive. Still, as- blocked out the crisis and is fosertinghimself among so many cused onthe expected start of influential veterans will not be the campaign in April. "He will be, I think, in a Hileasy. Even as Mook was starting lary campaign what he was in to build the infrastructure of the McAuliffe campaign," said the campaign, a crowded circle Ellen Qualls, a Democratic of advisers joined him in delib- strategist based in Alexandria, erating over how Hillary Clin- Virginia. "King of avoiding diston should respond to the email tractions and shiny objects."
•
s
7
• •
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
UPDATE 4 YEARS OF CIVIL WAR
CIA cashsometimes refills al-Qaida coffers By Matthew Rosenberg
p ay from the cache of computers and documents seized by WASHINGTON — In the ed from other countries was napped by al-Qaida, the Tal- Navy SEALs during the 2011 spring of 2010, Afghan of- handed over to al-Qaida,re- iban or, more recently, the Is- raid in which bin Laden was ficials struck a deal to free plenishing its coffers. lamic State, the United States killed in Abbottabad, Paki"God blessed us with a has spent hundreds of bil- stan, and had been classified an Afghan diplomat, Abdul Khaliq Farahi, who was kid- good amount of money this lions of dollars over the last until introduced as evidence napped in September 2008 month," Atiyah Abd al-Rah- decade at war in I raq and at the trial. and held hostage by al-Qa- man, the group's general Afghanistan, some of which Details of the CIA's preida. The price was steep — $5 manager, wrote in a letter has been siphoned off to en- viously unreported contrimillion — and senior security to Osama bin Laden in June emy fighters. bution to the ransom deofficials were scrambling to 2010, noting that the cash The letters about the 2010 manded by al-Qaida were come upwith themoney. would be used for weapons r ansom were i n cluded i n drawn from the letters and They first turned to a se- and other operational needs. correspondence b e tween f rom i nterviews w it h A f cret fund that the CIA bankThe C I A' s c o n tribution bin Ladenand Rahman that ghan and Western officials rolled with monthly cash to al-Qaida's bottom line was submitted as evidence speaking on condition of andeliveries to the presidential was just another in a long by federal prosecutors atthe onymity. The CIA declined to palace in Kabul, according list of examples of how the Brooklyn trial of Abid Na- comment. to several Afghan officials United States, largely be- seer, a Pakistani Qaida operThe cash flow has slowed involved in the episode. The cause of poor oversight and ative who was convicted this since a new Afghan president, Afghan government, they loose financial controls, has month of supporting terror- Ashraf Ghani, assumed office said, had already squirreled sometimes inadvertently fi- ism and conspiring to bomb a in September, Afghan offiaway about $1 million from nanced the very militants it British shopping center. cials said, but they added that that fund. is fighting. The letters were unearthed cash was still coming in. New York Times News Service
Sergey Ponomarev/New YorkTimes News Servicefile photo
Birds fly over destroyed buildings in Homs,Syria, last year. Syria's conflict continues to be agrowing humanitarian crisis that is echoing far from its borders.
n everria, roma vana e oins By Ben Hubbard
tancy had dropped by 20 years
New York Times News Service
since 2010.
BEIRUT — Government he-
licopters rained barrel bombs on villages across Syria last week, killing civilians and demolishing homes. Hundreds of combatants died in battles that failed to move the front lines.
And activists spread videos of hungry, war-weary Syrians through social media.
Within weeks, that money and $4 million more provid-
W hile refusing to
ransoms for Americans kid-
. US.Cellular.
"The numbers are staggering," said Valerie Amos, the departing emergency relief coordinator for the United ¹ tions. "They are so staggering that they have become almost
meaningless to people."
Nowhere else togo For Syrian civilians in the
"We can't move. We can't
country, the war has meant walk," a languid old man says a downward spiral of death, in one video shot near the capital, Damascus. "This situation won't work." But one of the starkest in-
uncertainty,
p o v ert y and
ment have extinguished more
time to clear government forces
displacement. NayefAbdul-Qader,a teacher, fled his home in the village dications of what four years of Qursaya in northern Syria of conflict have done to Syria with his wife and six children came from space, with new early in the war because fightsatellite images showing that inghad erupted nearby and the mass destruction and displace- local rebels said they needed
than four-fifths of the country's from the area. lights, according to an analysis The family returned later to by Xi Li of Wuhan University find their home damaged, fields in China and the University of burned and government forces Maryland at College Park. shelling continuously. But with The Syria confl ict began nowhere else to go, the family four years ago this week with stayed. protests calling for political Abdul-Qader's school had reforms inspired by the Arab dosed, and he then lost his salSpring uprisings elsewhere in ary because someone had told the Middle East.
the government that he had
Since then it has repeatedly joined the rebels. His family metastasized: President Bashar started planting vegetables, he Assad unleashed soldiers and
sald.
thugs to quell the unrest; the opposition spawned armed rebel groups; foreign powers poured in military aid; and the resulting violence spread chaos in increasingly large expanses of territory, allowing extremist groups to establish footholds
The area came under siege, so his family moved again, living in a cave for a few months
and increase their power.
moved to a camp on the Syrian side of the 'Ilirkish border,
No endin sight
and then in th e abandoned
home of another family who had fled the country.
When the fighting reached there, too, the family members
conflict with few signs that the war will end soon. Internation-
where they survived on money sent by Abdul-Qader's brother, who works in Lebanon. "The aid coming to the camp
al efforts to bring the warring
is rare, but we are still alive," he
parties together for peace talks
have fallen dormant, and the
said by phone. Life has become hard even
U.N. envoy, Staffan de Mistu-
in areas that are not directly
Syria enters its fifth year of
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ra, has made little progress on threatenedbyviolence. even his modest goal of a shortResidents of D a mascus, term cease-fire in only one of which is firmly controlled by Syria's many battleground government forces and associcities. ated militias, have grown used I nstead, international a t to long lines, rising prices and tention has shifted to military limited supplies of gasoline, action ~ the ext r emists heating oil and even bread. of the Islamic State, who con-
trol parts of Syria and Iraq and have shocked the world by beheading their foes and demolishing historical sites. Aid organizations say the rise of the Islamic State, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has not
Hopes that t h e
s i tuation
would improve rose briefly a year ago when the U.N. Security Council passed its first resolution on Syria, calling for free access to humanitarian aid. Another resolution authorized
aid shipments across borders only inflicted deprivation and not controlled by the Syrian violence on the communities government. it conquers, but has also siBut last week, a coalition phoned international attention of 21 aid groups released a from a growing humanitarian harsh report saying the resolucrisis that is echoing increas- tions had failed to make much ingly far from Syria's borders. difference. "There is more death, more Lastyear,forexample,brought a record high for illegal migra- displacement, an increase in tion across the Mediterranean restrictions by n eighboring to Europe. Many of those tak- countries and a more despering the often-lethal trips were ate situation for the refugees Syrian. and for those displaced inside Humanitarian organizations Syria," said Daniel Gorevan, issueda barrage ofreportsfor who handles Syria policy for the anniversary of the war's be- Oxfam, one of the groups that ginning that quantify how hard participated in the report. lifehasbecome forSyrians. While most refugees said About half the country's pre- they still hoped to go home, war population has fled from some did not expect they home, according to the United would. "I have cut off hope that I'll Nations, and nearly 4 million people have become refugees goback," said Farid Qassim,29. abroad, putting large burdens He fled the religiously dion neighboring countries like verse areaof Houla in central 'Iilrkey, Jordan and Lebanon. Syriawherethefightingamong A report by the Syrian Cen- communities has so damaged ter for PolicyResearch said that education was in a "state
sectarian relations that he did
not think he could live again of collapse"; that 6 percent of near his former neighbors. "The fighting there will nevSyrians had been killed or wounded; and that life expec- er end," he said.
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AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
awmor sino oo orcor oraions,a vocaes By Kevin G. Hall and Kevin Johnson
textual form. Or it may reach the public through a particular
McClatchy Washington Bureau/ USA Today
political prism. Or it may not
WASHINGTON — Newspa-
reachthe public at all. Another upshot: Govern-
pers were once the dominant ment offices say they are overforce in dislodging documents whelmed with requests. "We're pushing three-quarand otherrecords from reluctant federal government agen- ters of a million" annually, said cies, but a new crop of media FredSadler,whoretired recentplayers, advocacy groups and ly after four decades in FOIA corporate interests now drive operations at the U.S. Food and the release of information. Drug Administration. "You just The Freedom of Information don't have enough resources." Act of 1966 was first envisioned as a tool for traditional media to
A recent review of thousands
PndliC reCOrdS inOregen —Journalists in Oregonsayhigh fees charged bygovernment agencies are one of the biggest obstacles to obtaining public records. Last fall, the Register-Guard in Eugeneaskedthe University of Oregon for records related to anonprofit group trying to bring a major track meet to campus. Theuniversity demanded $2,163 to produce them. After the newspaper complained the feeshindered news coverage in the public interest, interim University President Scott Coltrane waived thefee, but much of the information was blacked out. Thenewspaper hasappealedthe redactions. The Oregonian askedthe Oregon Department of Energy for emails and documents about business energy tax credits awarded to solar energy projects between2003and 2013. Theagency demanded $9,830 for 170 hours of attorney andstaff time to produce the documents. Thereporter reduced his request to a database at acost of less than $500. The Associated Pressasked state police for records pertaining to their 2012 investigation of the director of a commission regulating boxing andmartial arts after $22,000 in cashand checks was found lying around his office. Last December, the state police demanded $4,000 for 25 hours of staff time to prepare, review and redact materials. The APdropped the request. State police said they found noevidence of wrongdoing.
of federalcourt records conseek documents, data and in- ducted by Syracuse Univerformation they deemed import- sity's Transactional Records ant to public interest. It also was Access Clearinghouse found meant to allow ordinary Amer- that media organizations were icans to seek information from filing fewer lawsuits challengthe federal government about ingfederal government secrecy themselves. than in past years. The study, Nearly a half-century later, which compared the last four news organizations continue years of the George W. Bush to paper federal agencies with administration with the first written and electronic requests t erm of the Obama ad~ a forrecords and other informa- tion, found that news organi- port found that The New York tion under FOIA, a review of
zation lawsuits dropped from
agencylogsshows,thoughthey 22 to 18. This stood out against are cash-strapped and less like- the total number of FOIA suits ly to press their claims in court. brought by all plaintiffs, which Meanwhile, over the past de- was higher during the first cade there's been a surge of re- Obama term than the last years quests from bloggers, advoca- of Bush's tenure. cy groups, corporate lawyers, In a separate examination researchers and even foreign published late last year, Syrnationals tapping the promise acuse researchers found that of open records. more FOIA lawsuits — 422This changing landscape were filed against the federal means that the information ob- government in fiscal year 2014 tained under FOIA may reach than in any year since 2001. the public in a raw, less con- Despite that volume, the re-
Question: Do I need a revocable trust or can I just get by with a Will?
"r
Answer: If you have only a Will, it may be necessary for your heirs to go through the probate process after your death. Probate is a legal process for your heirs to inherit Attorney at Law your assets as you direct in your Will. A probate of your estate can take 6 months or longer to complete, and requires hiring an attorney, filing court documents and publishing notice to creditors in a newspaper. Probate can be avoided by use of a revocable trust. W h en a t r ust is created, your assets are transferred to th e t r ust and after
your death the successor trustee you appoint has the authority to pay your debts and divide your estate as you have instructed. There is no need for a probate. So, a Will and a revocable trust accomplish the same thing, the primary difference is that a revocable trust may avoid the need to probate your
matters quickly might discour- and finds that private interests age traditional news organha- are at work. "Often it's all law firms, or if tions from legal challenges. "At the Justice Department, you Google names on a FOIA there has never been incentive log they are industry investigaother than to slow-walk these cases," he said. "They know
the media doesn't have staying power."
tors or their competitors," said
Smith. "It seems to be less sort of public-serving organizations and more individual interests
that are using FOIA for someern-day digital newsroom, thing from which they can which thrives on immediacy. profit." "So much of news happens Then there are advocacy so quickly now, and unfortu- groups like Judicial Watch. It Others pointed to the mod-
nately the process doesn't," said Adina Rosenbaum, an attorney with Public Citizen, a consum-
filed about 45 federal FOIA-related lawsuits in 2014 after
Matt Smith, a veteran jour-
arms to fall into the hands of Mexican drug cartel enforcers.
industry players: ProPublica,
agencies balked at providing records it had requested, said Scott Hodes, a veteran FOIA M ichael Bekesha, an attorney attorney and publisher of the for the group. popular FOIA Blog, shares Judicial Watch last year disthat view, and notes that many lodged from the Internal Revmedia organizations are strug- enue Servicenumerous email gling financially. communications concerning "If it is a long-term project, what the agency has called in— The Associated Press the mainstream media doesn't appropriate scrutiny of conserhave the interest or necessar- vativegroups seeking tax-ex"I do think there has been ily the resources to play what empt status. It also sued to win a move away from serious in- I'd call the long game," said release of 42,000 pages of docvestigative reporting" by tradi- Hodes, who added that "main- uments from the Department tional media, said Thomas Sus- stream media had a lot of mon- of Justice, which had daimed man, director of the American ey in the past and they used big executive privilege, concerning Bar Association's Government law firms. And big law firms the Fast and Furious scandal, Affairs Office and a f ormer chargebig fees." which involved abotched federJustice Department official So who has the money, and al gun-trafficking investigation who assisted in implementing the inclination to spend it? that allowed hundreds of fire-
MuckRock and V ice News.
FOIA in the late 1960s.
Advocacy groups such as the left-leaning Public C itizen and the right-leaning Judicial Watch are also more likely to sue under FOIA than manymedia organizations.
Susman, who also served nalist with the Center for Inas chief counsel to the Senate vestigative Reporting in EmJudiciary C o m mittee, s a id eryville, California, says he ofthe protracted FOIA process ten reviews agency FOIA logs and apparent indifference dis- to check who else is mucking played by judges to resolving around in his areas of interest,
Times was the only so-called
"legacy" news organization to havebrought severallegal challenges in federal court. Among the other news groups identified in the 2014 research were more r ecent
Question: My mother recently q ualified f o r M ed i c ai d t o pay for her care. As part of the qualification process, all of m y p a r ent's assets were transferred t o my fat h e r 's name only. Ca n m y f a t h er Attonssy at Law now spend, divest himself or otherwise dispose of this property? Answer: The short answer to the question is
yes. However, depending on what type of assistance your mother is receiving, sale of the house in which your father resides, an exempt resourceunder Medicaid law, and failure to purchase a new home with the proceeds thereof may affect your mother's continued eligibility for assistance.
er-rights watchdog group.
"A lot of our victories are holding the agencies accountable. A lot of FOIA lawsuits
stemfrom failuretorespond for several months," he said.
Question: I would like to acquire the parcel of l and adjacent to mine, but the owner is unsure i f he wants to sell it. Can I d o anything to have the first chance to buy it?
Answer: Yes. An Option will lock in your right to purchase the property on terms and conditions stated in the Option. A Right of First Opportunity Agreement will enable you to purchase the property for a price and terms to be set by the owner before he offers it to anyone else. A Right of First Refusal Agreement will enable you to buy the property for the price and terms that he offers to someone else. There are subtle but important distinctions between the three forms,
so be sure to talk with an attorney about which to propose for your situation.
estate after your death.
BRYANT, LOVLIEN 8 J A R V IS, P.C.
HENDRIX, BRINCH & BERTALAN, L.L.P.
Attorneys at Law 591 S.W. Mill View Way, Bend 541-382-4331
Attorneys at Law 716 NW Harriman St. Bend 541-382-4980
•
8
R
i
Question: I got hurt on the job. My employer told me not to file a Workers' Compensation claim and he paid my doctor bills. Now, my doctor says I need surgery and my employer won't help. Is it too late to file a claim with Workers' Compensation? PhitipH. Garrow Answer: No. It may not be too late. The law requires all Oregon employers to carry insurance to cover the job injuries. Some employers discourage their employees from filing claims for financial reasons, but if you were hurt on the job you can make a claim for compensation including medical benefits. Generally, a notice of injury should be made as soon as possible, even if you don't go to the doctor right away, but at least within 90 days of the accident. If your employer had notice of the injury, you may have up to a year to file a claim. You should contact someone experienced in handling on-the-job injury claims as soon as possible because there are some time limits that cannot be missed. The State of Oregon Workers' Compensation Division also has people who can advise you how to file a claim.
PHILIP H.GARROW
Attorney at Law Practice Limited to Workers Compensation Cases and Social Securityoisability/SSI Claims
127 SW Allen Rd., Bend 541-382-3736
i
t
•
Question:Will the statelien my home if I go on Medicaid? Answer: If you are married and one of you is able to continue living in your home Medicaid will not lien your home for thecost of care it pays on behalf of the spouseneeding long-term care. As long as onespousecontinues to live in your home it will be an "excluded resource" Will Dennis and not counted as anassetwhen applying for Medicaid long-term care benefits. There is a limitation on the amount of equity that is protected. That amount is $543,000 for 2015. That means that as long as the equity in your homedoesnot exceedthat amount it will be excluded as an asset when qualifying for Medicaid. However, in the event you both have to leave your hometo enter foster care,assisted living or a nursing home, then Medicaid will count your entire home equity as an available resource. The same is true if only one of you is living and has to leave the home for care needs. But, there are planningoptions available to protect the value of your home from Medicaid liens or other long-term carecosts. In order to take advantage ofthoseoptions you will need to evaluate and discover what works for youto protect your resources against long- termcarecosts. I offer a no charge initial consultation to see how I might help you do just that. Address Medicaid and your long-term care questions today by giving me acall. You will find peace of mind. I
WILL DENNIS
Medicaid Planning Attorney Irving Professional Building 160 NW Irving Ave., Ste. 204, Bend 541-388-3877 wdOwilldennislaw.com
EDW A R D S LAW O FFICES PC
Attorney at Law 225 N.W. Franklin Ave., Suite 2, Bend 541 -318-0061
Ask one of our Legal Professionals a question... My question is:
Send your questions to: Ask A Legal Professional • Pat Lynch By email: plynch@bendbulletin.com Or mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 We are looking for attorneys in legal fields that are not currently represented. Please contact Pat Lynch for more information.
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
WASHINGTON WEEK U.S. HOUSEVOTE • The Senate held two confirmation votes last week, approving both nomineesunanimously. On Monday, lawmakers voted to confirm Daniel Henry Marti, of Virginia, to be Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator in the Executive Office of the President. Marti was confirmed by a 92-0 margin, with support from 48 Republicans and 44Democrats. On Thursday, senators confirmed Christopher A. Hart, of Colorado, to be chairman of the National Transportation Safety Board. Thevote to confirm Hart was 970, with 53 Republicans and 44 Democrats voting yes.
in isers
OO COLl
WASHINGTON-
• A group of citizensistrying to find a way to keep it fromgetting established inthe city
egorize the carts as eating and drinking establishments
Proposed tood cart lot
sparked indignation from some, who said equating food carts with restaurants could
By Jasmine Rockow The Bulletin
Downtown Sisters bike
Boyd said some site work needs to be done before the
set an unwanted precedent,
carts can move in, and he
Categorizing the carts as eating and drinking estab-
and ski shop Eurosports plans to have an outdoor
plans to start electrical work, grading and paving of confood court well in time for crete pathways in April. Food summer. Owner and former carts should be up and runSisters Mayor Brad Boyd ning by May, he said. "I don't know who's going gained approval from the city in November to host food to be in the spot yet," Boyd carts on his quarter-acre said Wednesday. "We've lot year-round. The city's
been looking at some carts,
approval process has been a contentious issue in the
but no decisions have been made yet." The city's decision to cat-
community.
@aQn've. a sae e . Hoo A e.
as reported in The Bulletin.
p Cfl
I
CO
lishments means they are a
rc
permitted use downtown. A group of citizens, led
LL
by activists Ed Protas and
Greg Cross /The Bulletin
Mike Morgan, hired an attorney, who suggested the city amend its decision and give the planning commission an opportunity to review Boyd's application. "The council received lots
SISTE S of emails, lots of visitor communication and people ex-
pressing concern with regard to process. All of it has been ignored," Morgan said. SeeFood trucks/B5
BRIEFING Man hit by rock at Smith Rock A Missouri man who was injured by afalling rock at Smith RockState Park was rescuedSaturday afternoon. John Dentley, 20, of Springfield, Missouri, was climbing in the Picnic Lunch Wall area of the park, according to a news release from Deputy Jeff Winters, assistant Search and Rescue coordinator with the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Dentley, who was with a group of climbers from Yale University, said he washurt when a large rock hewas holding onto to gaveway and struck him as it fell. His climbing partner called 911 about12:45
a Uzz: arm aunc es
On both votes: Jeff/I/leddey (D)...... Ron Wyden(Df.......
new' ee c oo'
The House of Representatives was ona district work period, and did not hold anyvotes. — Andrew Clevanger, The Bulletin
Well shot! Reader photos
Send us your best outdoor photos at Qo bendbnlletin.cnm/ renderphntns.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.
; , II HII -
'
~e
p.m. Fourteen Deschutes County Search and Rescuevolunteers responded, joining up with two other Search and Rescuemembers who had beenclimbing in the areaand hadalready madecontact with Dentley and his partner. Dentley was lowered to rescuers and helped down several hundred feet of an extremely steep hillside, covered with scree, to the walking trail. Dentley wasassessed by Redmond FireDepartment personnel and sought medical treatment for his injuries on his own, according to the release. He has one to two years of climbing experience, the sheriff's office said. — Bulletin staff report
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as
possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
PUBLICOFFICIALS STATE OF OREGON
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
The Bulletin Call n reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7620 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-569-4347 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business ............... 541-617-7615 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7612 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Lettersand opinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView RO. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
Photos by Tess Freeman/The Bulletin
Naomi Price, of Prineville Honey BeeMentoring Partnership, leads the first class of Bee School at Smudgie Goose Farm onSaturday morning. The first of the three-session education series focused on honeybee swarms.
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
TERREBONNE — Going
purely by the head count, Smudgie Goose Farm near Terrebonne may well be biggest ranch in Central Oregon. "You guys have any livestock?" said Rob Deez, owner
of the farm, acting out both sides of an imaginary conversation. "Yeah, about 50,000.
Whaaa'? Yeah, 50,000 bees." Saturday, the farm hosted the first class in its new "Bee
School," a series of lectures and hands-on instruction for beekeepers and aspiring beekeepers. About a dozen people attended. Led by Naomi Price of Prineville Honey Bee Mentoring Partnership, Saturday's session focused on swarms,
the process by which a queen and a slice of a hive's worker
bee population leave the hive and go out in search of a new home.
Price said recent warm weather could push up the window of time when
-.Illn' Y
OI;US
swarms are likely to occur to around April l. Understanding how and why swarms happen can help a beekeeper avoid losing a colony, or cap-
e~
ture a swarm to establish a
new colony. While there are signs of a pending swarm, including "dancing," where bees move in a figure-8 pattern, Price said when a swarm gets up and moving, it's unmistakable, with thousands of bees flying together. SeeBees /B2
•GOV.KATEBROWN, D 160 STATE CAPITOL, 900 COURTST. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor. orsgon.gov • SECRETARYOF STATE 136 STATECAPITOL SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1616 FAX:503-986-1616 EMAIL:oregon.sos@ state.or.us • TREASURER TED WHEELER,D 159 OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURTST. NE SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon. treasurer©state.or.us WEB:www.ost.state. • ATTORNEY GENERAL ELLENROSENB LUM, D 1162 COURT ST. NE SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-4017 WEB:www.doj.state. OI'.US
p Two honeybees rub pollen on their bodies to bring back to their
hive from the ground ofSmudgie Goose Farm onSaturday. Due to warm temperatures in Central Oregon, the beekeepers at Smud-
gie Goose Farmfeed the bees pollen because of a lack of natural pollen.
•LABOR COMMISSIONER BRADAVAKIAN 800 NEOREGONST., SUITE1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE:971-673-0761 FAX:971-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail©state. or.us WEB:www.oregon.gov/ boli
• Schoolnews andnotes: Email newsitemsand notices otgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsofteens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunioninfo to bulletin@bendbulletimcom. Contact: 541-383-0358
YESTERYEAR
Crook County judgedeemedlegally qualified to keeprole in 1915
• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7625, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events: Email eventsto communitylifeO bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
• Engagements,marriages, domestic partnerships, anniversaries, birthdays: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117
Compiled by Don Hoiness
from archivedcopiesof The Bulletin at Des Chutes County Historical Society.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending March 14, 1915
Railroad men here Monday
On his first trip over the
Oregon Trunk since assuming the general managership
about two months ago, C.O. Oregon from Superior, WisJenks and a party of associate consin, where he was general railroad officials arrived in
superintendent of the Great
town late Monday afternoon. The party spent the evening
Northern. In his short stay in
in looking over the town, leav-
the business section and spent some time in inspecting the railroad property. He commented on the high character of the local stores and banks, speaking with especial in-
ing for Goldendale, Washington, early yesterday morning. Mr. Jenks succeeded the
late W.D. Scott as general manager of the S.P. & S. and other Hill lines in Oregon on Feb. 1. He has been in the employ of the Hill system for many years past, coming to
town Mr. Jenks looked over
terest of the number of brick
buildings. According to Mr. Jenks, until business conditions improve materially there
is little chance of further construction by his company. With Mr. Jenks on the trip
of inspection were H.K. Reif, general claim agent, F.A. Brainerd, superintendent, A.M. Lupfer, chief engineer, John Dickson, general master
mechanic, John Dwyer, road master and James Lindsay,
ruled today that so far as the information placed before him shows, G. Springer, county judge of Crook County, cannot be ousted from the office on the grounds
of disqualification through non-residence. "I conclude that beyond a reasonable
master carpenter. They trav-
doubt your county judge is a legally qualified officer of
eled by special train.
Crook County," are the words
Springer cannot beousted
with which he concludes his opinion. SeeYesteryear/B5
Attorney General Brown
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
E VENT TODAY SYMPHONY SPOTLIGHTRECITAL: Percussionists perform works by Bach and others; 2 p.m.; free; Wille Hall, Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; www.cosymphony.com. SHOTGUN WEDDING:The country band performs, presented bythe Redmond Community Concert Associa tion;2 and 6:30 p.m.;$60 $25 for students 21 andyounger (2 p.m. SOLDOUT); Ridgeview High School, 4555 SWElkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.redmondcca.org or 541-350-7222. "THE LANGUAGEARCHIVE":A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 2 p.m.; $20, $16for seniors, $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW GreenwoodAve.,Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "THE MAGICFLUTE":A full-length opera about ayoung manand his sidekick; 3 p.m.; $20-$45; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 NWCollege
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
CONCERT:Featuring live music by Wilderness, DonQuixote and Problem Stick; 6 p.m.; $10suggested donation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. ADELPHIANCONCERT CHOIR: The University of Puget Sound's Adelphian Concert Choir will perform, with Summit High School Choir; 6 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; 253-879-3555.
High School Auditorium, Bend.
WEDNESDAY HONORINGOUR LOCAL HEROES: Honor local people whohaveserved our community; $50, registration suggested; 4:30 p.m.; BendElks Lodge P1371,63120 BoydAcres Road; www.redcross.org/bend, lisa.stroup©redcross.org or 541-749-4196. AUTHOR TALK— OREGON'S RIVERS:Author and photographer Tim Palmer shares highlights from his new book, "Field Guide toOregon's
JAKE SHIMABUKURO: Theukulele wizard performs, with FranchotTone; 8 p.m., doors open 7p.m.; $48.50$59.50 plus fees;Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend;www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
Rivers"; 6:30p.m.; $3for members,
tV' Submitted photo
MONDAY
"20FEET FROM STARDOM": A documentary about the lives of singers Darlene Love,Judith Hill, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer,Tata Vega and Jo Lawry; 7 p.m.; $14plus fees; The TowerTheatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. Way, Bend;www.operabend.orgor THAT1 GUY:Theexperimental one888-718-4253. man band performs, 7 p.m.; $13, plus feesinadvance;DominoRoom,51 "WHAT EVER HAPPENEDTOBABY NW GreenwoodAve., Bend;www. JANE?":A play about two sisters and asuspiciousaccident; 3 p.m.;$19,$16 bendticket.com or 541-408-4329. for students and seniors; 2nd Street "THE DROPBOX: DON'TTHROW Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; THEM AWAY.BRING THEM HERE": www.2ndstreettheater.com. The story of LeeJong-rak, a pastor dedicated to protecting newborn AUTHOR PRESENTATION: G. Elizabeth Kretchmer will speakabout babiesabandoned onthe streets of Seoul, South Korea; 7 p.m.; $12.50; hernovel"TheDamnableLegacy of Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, a Minister's Wife"; 4 p.m.; Dudley's BookshopCafe,135NW Minnesota 700 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; Ave., Bend; www.gekretchmer.com or 541-312-2901. 425-495-3724. SIX MILESTATION:The Reno, AFRICAYOGA PROJECT BENEFIT Nevada, folk-rock band performs,
Portland folk-pop artist Esme Patterson will perform at 8 p.m. Wednesday at the Volcanic Theatre Pub. with Third Seven; 9p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY ST. PATRICK'SDAYCELEBRATION: Live music, bagpipers, Irish food and drink and more; 3 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. ST PATRICK'SDAYCELEBRATION: Celebrate St Patrick's Daywith Irish food specials, the release of our Irish Dry Stout, a free Kid's GoldCoin Treasure Hunt; 4:30 p.m.; Worthy BrewingCompany,495 NEBellevue Drive, Bend; 541-639-4776. HIGHDESERT MUSEUM BOOK CLUB:A discussion of Marilynne
Robinson's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, "Housekeeping." Thenovel explores the connections between
people, placeandpurpose; free; 6 p.m.; Downtown BendLibrary, 601 NWWallSt.,Bend;www. highdesertmuseum.orgrsvp or 541-382-4754. SCIENCECLUB:RyanDerby-Talbot, Chief Academic Officer at Quest University in Canada,will speak on "What Is the Role of Intuition in Mathematics?"; 6 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. BEND HIGHSCHOOL BAND CONCERT: A concert featuring music performed by musicians from all ofBend High's Bands:BSHS Wind Ensemble, BSHSSymphonic Band, BSHS JazzMessengers, andBSHS PercussioEn n semble;7 p.m.;Bend
$5 for non-members, registration required; TheHigh Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S.Highway97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.orgrsvp or 541-382-4754. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LA DONNA DELLAGO": Anoperasetin the medieval Scottishhighlands; 6:30 p.m.; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; RegalOldMill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. URALTHOMAS & THEPAIN: The R8 B andsoul band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. ESME PATTERSON: ThePortland folk-pop artist performs; 8 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tim Palmer, author of "Field Guide to
Oregon Rivers," will speak; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-549-0866. AN EVENINGOF GRACE: Classical musicians perform to benefit Patricia
Moore, asinglemotherwhosuffers from a threatening medical condition; 6 p.m.; $10 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door, donations accepted; Grace Bible Church of Bend, 63945 Old Bend Redmond Highway, Bend; 541-419-0549. THE JUNEBUGS: The pop folktrio performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. "THE ROYALBALLET— SWAN LAKE":Tchaikovsky's classic work is performed; 7 p.m.; $18, $15for seniors and children; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A play abouta linguist ata loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. GEORGE CLINTON& PARLIAMENTFUNKADELIC: The legendary funk pioneers perform; 8 p.m.; $30 plus fees in advance, $35 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.randompresents.com or 541-408-4329. "A SURVEY OFOPENSPACE": A film about two people ona4,000-mile bicycle ride; 9 p.m.; $5; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
NORTHWEST NEWS
Rainy Washin en struggleswith drought from lackof snow "What
By Maria L. La Ganga
w e 'r e e x p erienc-
Los Angeles Times
ing is essentially a snowpack SEATTLE — It is possible drought," Maia Bellon, direc-
to have rain — lots of it — and
tor of the state Department
still be plagued by drought. of Ecology, said Friday. "As Just look at t i ny F orks, of this very moment, the proWashington, which bills itself jected snowpack is 4 percent as the wettest town in the con- of normal in the Olympic tiguous United States. As of Mountains." Thursday, 26.6 inches of rain In the Central Cascades, had fallen on the Olympic Pen- snowpack is 8 percent to 45 insulahamlet since Jan. 1. p ercent of n o rmal, an d i n And yet on Friday, Demo- the Walla Walla area, it's 67 cratic Gov. Jay Inslee declared percent of normal. The longdroughts on the Olympic Pen- rangeforecastcalls for drier, insula, which has three sep- warmer weather, Bellon said, ons are expected araterainforests; as well as and "conditi on the east side of the Central to get worse." Cascade Mountains, WashingA statewide drought has not ton's answer to Central Valley been declared in Washingagriculture; and in the Walla ton since 2005, but the perilWalla region, the state's main ous snow levels mean other wine country. parts of the state are being Because there's d rought, and then there's drought.
monitored in case the emer-
gency declaration must be
To get ready for a long, hot summer, officials have requested$9 million in drought relief funds from the state Legislature and are prepared to make temporary changes to water rights so that crops and fish have an adequate water supply. broadened. To get ready for a long, hot summer, officials have requested $9million in drought relief funds from the state Leg-
islatureand are prepared to make temporary changes to
ing seasons. Firefighters are gearing up for another blazing summer, after enduring a record fire season in 2014. "We have man-made reservoirs," Bellon said. "But we consider the snowpack in the
fish have an adequate water supply. Washington's r e nowned outdoor activities will proba-
Olympicsand Cascades to be a frozenreservoirthatprovides a water supply.... Currently the snowpack statewide on averageis27 percent ofnorm al.
bly take a hit this year, with re-
The forecast, which is discon-
water rights so that crops and
strictions expected on camp- certing, calls for no snowfall fires and the hunting and fish- in spring and for warming."
Contlnued from B1 "It sounds almost like a high-performance race car when it gets up to speed," she said.
bendbulletin.com TheBulletin
in-
volved in establishing a new colony isimmense, Price said, which is why only about 1 in 6 newly established colonies survives. Worker bees must
"If people come and it's not
ASSURANCE
I' • •
@ Sponsored by @
Cl
In-Home Care Services 541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com
started beekeeping about a
things are addictive." Batty said her bees appear
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cerned about the possibility
A N I MA L
C K N TI R
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE., REDMOND, OR
(541) 923-0882
u
Teee Freeman /The Bulletin
Rlchard Nichols, known as the Hlve Man, shows off the feeder tray of a bee hive durlng the first bee-
keeping class at Smudgie GooseFarm onSaturday afternoon.
•
to have survived the winter
healthy, but she was con-
BRIGHTSIDE
EVERGREEN
176-pounds worth. Pam Batty of Redmond got
" I have one h ive t hat I s tarted last spring and I 'm hooked," she said. "Those
This clever boy is very affectionate and will be a loyal companion. Bruce is a small dog with a big personality ready to start his new life with you. He's a Miniature Pinscher/ Chihuahua with a short coat, about 9 months old. He will shine his best in a quiet home with a lot of love to share. Seemore photos at brightsideanimals.org/adoptable-dogs. Meet him in person Tues.-Sat., 10-5.
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somewhere between 132- and
year ago and has harvested 2 pounds of honey while discovering a newobsession.
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iswhatyougetwhen EVERGREEN manages your loved one's medications
make 1 million trips to and
from the hive to gather pollen, she said, carrying home 33 to 66 pounds of it grain-bygrain. Another 4 million trips are made to collect nectar,
water.
raining, they might get upset," Andros said as she opened the book and began to read from
Find It All Online
Bees
T he volume of w or k
Lissy Andros, executive its first chapter: "In the Olympic Peninsula of ber of Commerce, says her northwest Washington state, a hometown hasn't noticed any small town named Forks exists weather-related problems yet, under a near-constant cover but summer "will be worri- of clouds,"she read. "It rains some," in part because of tour- on this inconsequential town ists' expectations. more than any other place in Beyond dampness, Forks' the United States of America. major claim to fame is as the It was from this town and its setting for th e bestselling gloomy, omnipresent shade "Twilight" vampire franchise. that my mother escaped with "7wilight" tourists want it to me when I was only a few rain, she said,so they can get months old." "the full Forks experience." Rain or no, Andros said, the This year is particularly im- "Twilight" celebration will go portantbecauseit's the 10-year on. "It's going to be ablast," she anniversary of the first book's publication,and Forks is plan- said. "We're having it come hell ning a bibliophile's birthday or high water." bash. Better make that hell or low director of the Forks Cham-
dents. She said her day at Bee raised. "At first, I thought, 'Bees: School was successful, and
of losing them to a swarm. she expects the students will OK, they have a hive,'But Holly Carrigan of Bend be very interested in learning these things are amazing." came to Bee School to learn about the different roles indiFor more information on moreaboutbecoming a bee- vidual bees play and the way keeper but also to learn more they all work together in serabout bees to prepare for an vice of thecolony. upcoming event she'scoordiDeez said he finds bee sonating between Base Camp ciety endlessly fascinating. c S tudio a n d t he Wa l d o r f Despite living for only about Schoolof Bend. a month, a bee will cycle Carrigan said they're plan- through several jobs, he said, ning to make several kids bee serving as a guard to keep costumes for Bend's Earth bees from other hives out and Day Procession of the Spe- warn of predators, seeking cies Parade and are hoping out new supplies of nectar to connect with beekeep- and pollen, feeding fellow ers to make the experience bees and building the wax d more educational for the stu- combs where young bees are
g1j
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upcoming Bee School sessions, see s m udgiegoosefarm.com — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletirt.com
Op'hn Enrollment: ~Now-March 15th h t-IAtHWAYee PubliCChavt-ev
schoo1 sewiwgI:th-l2t-4 gvake Stukeah t-hvOIAghOIAtCevtt ml Ovegoa lAPPly mt- v'pWCmgemy.gvg'.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
0 Ll Lll'e
ICBAS OO I'lllSIA By Jonathan J. Cooper
of social media to communicate with voters, or stronger
The Associated Press
AROUND THE STATE GreSham Shuuting — Bail has beenset at more than$757,000 for a man arrested in ashooting at a Greshambarthat left three people with injuries that are not life-threatening. Police said the suspect, identified as local resident Kenneth Allen Sheets, wasarrested without incident. The34-year-old was being held on charges that include attempted murder, unlawful use of a weapon and assault. Officers were called to Puff's Pub at11:30 p.m. Friday to find three wounded victims: 39-year-old JasonThompson, of Fairview; 33-year-old Jose De Jesus Ramirez-Ramirez, of Gresham;and 23-year-old Adrian Mora-Garcia, of Portland. Investigators said they werequestioning dozens of witnesses. Theysaid the motive is unknown, but the shooting does not appear to havebeengang-related.
e e IOI1
Gordon Smith in 2002, who lost
Kitzhaber's victory despite a
cloud of ethics questions shows candidates who k now t h eir Merkley. The GOP has watched it's tough to get voters to depart conlnlunIIles. Democrats take over more of from theirfavored party,said "We havehad a problem in the state Legislature, and only John Winquist of Tigard. "Peothe past with extremism," said one of the seven lawmakers in ple who will pull a 'D' lever will Bill Cornett of Portland. "We've Oregon's congressional delega- continue to do that," Winquist had a few people say: 'It's my tion is a Republican. sald. way or the highway.' That's not Even in 2 010 an d 2 014, The Dorchester Confergood politics." strong Republican years when ence began in 1965 when Bob The party needs to do a bet- the GOP picked up seats else- Packwood, then a state repreter job reaching out to unions, where, the party hasstruggled sentative, organimd a meeting minorities and gays and invit- in Oregon. for Oregon Republicans to dising their input, said Cornett, A ctivists i n terviewed b y cuss the future of the party at who is a union member. The Associated ~ss weren't Dorchester House in Lincoln Highlighting the p a rty's convinced that the scandal City. It has grown into a tradiideological divide, social con- surrounding Kitzhaber would tion for Republican activists servatives who complain that make voters giveRepublicans a and a chance for them to meet the Dorchester crowd is too secondlook.Justthree months elected officials and party willing to compromise Republi- after defeating Republican officials. can values held a rival rally in Dennis Richardson to win an Packwood went on to defeat Portland for the second consec- unprecedented fourth term as Democratic U.S. Sen. Wayne utive year. Neither gathering is governor, Kitzhaber resigned Morse in 1968 and stayed in the formally affiliated with the Or- in February following months Senate for nearly30years. "Nobody likes losing. And I egon Republican Party. of ethics questions surroundA Republican hasn't won an ing consulting work that his understandwe're demoralized election for governor since Vic- fiancee, Cylvia Hayes, did for after the last few losses," Scott tor Atiyeh's victory in 1982. The advocacy groups. He won de- Jorgensen, a state Senate stafflast Republican to win a state- spite Richardson poundinghim er, told the crowd. "Now it's wide election was U.S. Sen. incessantly over Hayes'work. time to getback at it."
SEASIDE — Oregon's Republicans got something of a morale boost with the resignation of Democratic Gov. John Kitzhaber. But they're still try-
ingto figure outhowtobe more of a force in a state controlled entirely by Democrats.
After a punishing election that gave Democrats — once again — all statewide offices
and expanded majorities in the Legislature, Republican activists and elected officials
gathered Saturday for the annual Dorchester Conference. They continued a long-running debate in Oregon Republican circles: How does the party end a losing streak for statewide of-
fices that has lasted more than adecade? Some activists said the Re-
publican Party needs a rebranding effort to show young voters how their values align with the party's. Others said the party needs a better grasp
six years later to Democrat Jeff
Malnourished children investigation continues —Three Oregon state child welfare workers havebeen placed onleavewhile the state Department of HumanServices investigates aYamhill County neglect case that left two young children in hospital care for malnourishment. The theagency began aninternal investigation Thursday after Danielle YatesandJohn Yateswere arrested. A grand jury indicted the couple onassault and mistreatment charges. The two served asguardians for a 4-year-old boy and a5-year-old girl so malnourished that they reportedly lost weight in the four years theywereunderthecouple'scare.Agencyspokeswoman Andrea Cantu-Schomus said the Department of HumanServices would have signed off on the guardian placement. Thereview is expected to take four to six weeks. The three employeeswere not identified. The children have beenplaced in the custody of a relative.
Drought emergencies likely — oregon'sDroughtcouncil is recommending that Gov.KateBrown declare a drought emergency in two southeastern counties due to dry conditions and low snowpack. Brown spokeswomanMelissa Navassaid Friday the governor will likely sign those declarations for Lakeand Malheur counties promptly once she receives the paperwork. State Office of Emergency Management spokesmanCory Grogansaid drought declarations for Harney and Klamath counties likely aren't far behind. Oregonhas received a normal amount of precipitation this winter but warm temperatures havecaused most of it to fall as rain, not snow. Theemergency declaration gives theOregonWater Resources Department authority to do such things as issue temporary emergency permits to water users, allow the owners of surface water rights to tap ground water and prioritize certain water usesover others.
ROSEBURG CELEBRATESDRONE DAY Mia Schreiner, 13, of Roseburg, pilots a radio-controlled drone using first-person view flight goggles during an International Drone Day event at Huecrest Elementary School in Roseburg onSaturday. Thegoggles receive a signal from a video cameraattached to the drone
TraffiC StOp —Police in Eugenesaid a driver pulled over for an expired vehicle registration cameout of his car swinging at the officer who stopped him. Police spokeswomanMelinda McLaughlin said after an initial lunge andswing at the officer Friday afternoon, the driver aimed asecond blow but the officer deflected it. She said the officer used astun gunafter the man ignored his commands to stop. McLaughlin said the mancontinued to fight as the officer tried to handcuff him and theofficer finally hit him to bring him under control. Medics were called to evaluate the driver. Hewas also checkedout atahospital.Thespokeswoman said62-year-oldBarneyBusewas cleared to be bookedinto jail for investigation of attempted assault on a police officer and resisting arrest.
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Michael Sullivan/The
Tup prOSeCutOr OnleaVe — U.S. Attorney AmandaMarshall has steppedawayfrom her job as Oregon's top federal prosecutor, citing health issues. The45-year-old Marshall has left her duties for an indefinite period. First Assistant U.S. Attorney Billy Williams began to sign legal documents Wednesdaythat named himacting U.S. attorney. Hesaid he had nocomment about Marshall "being on leave." Marshall said Thursday that she's beenhaving health issues for months, adding, "I can't serve right now." Shedeclined to discuss the health problems other than to said shewasseeing an out-of-state specialist. An Obamaappointee, Marshall was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in September 2011and began herwork as U.S. attorney that October. Her office has placedspecial emphasis on protection of children, including record prosecutions for child sextrafficking. Shehas supervised more than100 lawyers in Portland, Eugene and Medford.
III,
(Roseburg) News-Review via TheAssociated Press
— From wire reports
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DISCOVERTHE VERY BEST CENTRAL OREGON HAS TO OFFER.
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
BITUARIES Matilda 'Tillie' Marten
DEATH 1VOTICES Coralee Jeter, of La Pine Mar. 9, 1960 - Mar. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: Private services will be held at a later date.
Jessie Adele Johnson, of Prineville/Redmond Mar. 3, 1924 - Mar. 2, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219. Services: No service was held at Jessie's request. Private burial took place at Redmond Memorial Cemetery March 6, 2015. Contributions may bemade to:
St. Charles Hospice, 1201 NE Elm Street, Prineville, OR 97754. 541-447-2510.
Katejean uKay u Borneman, of Bend Dec. 21, 1919 - Mar. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A graveside service with military honors will be held at 1:30 PM on Tuesday, March 17, 2015 at Deschutes Memorial Gardens in Bend. Contributionsmay be made to:
Oregon Dachshund Rescue, INC., PO BOX 820082, Portland, OR 97282-1082, 503-313-3220, www.odr-inc.org or to your local humane
society.
Richard Burton Holcomb, of Redmond July 20, 1929 - Mar. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Visitation: 1:00pm - 5pm Mon. March 16, 2015 at Autumn Funerals 485 NW Larch Ave., Redmond. A Funeral Service will be held on Tuesday, March 17, 2015 at 1:00 PM at Community Presbyterian Church, located at 529 NW 19th St. in Redmond, Oregon. A reception will immediately follow. graveside services will be held on Wednesday, March 18, 2015 at 1:00 PM at Belcrest Memorial Park in Salem, Oregon.
ila Louise Carlson, of Redmond Oct. 21, 1932 - Mar. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place on Saturday, March 28, 2015 at 11:00 AM at Community Presbyterian Church, located at 529 NW 19th Street in Redmond, OR.
Collette L. Neupert, of Terrebonne Aug. 18, 1946 - Mar. 10, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: No services are currently scheduled. Contributions may bemade to:
Healing Reins, 60575 Billadeau Rd., Bend, OR 97702, (541) 382-9410, www.healingreins.org.
Rachel C.B. Abney,of Crooked River Ranch Aug. 20, 1929 - Mar. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private gathering of family and friends will take place at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
American Alzheimer's Association, 225 N. Michigan Ave., Fl. 17, Chicago, IL 60601 www.alz.org
Jacqueline Dorothy Gerritsen May 9, 1933- March 9, 2015 Jackie Gerritsen, of Bend, OR, passed away M onday after fighting cancer. Serv ices w i l l be held at a l at er date. S he w a s b orn in Ritzville, W A, th e daughter of Cla r ence and jacqueline D or ot hy Gerritsen T hi el . She grew up a nd gr ad u a te d i n W ashtucna, WA , an d s tarted he r f a m i l y t h e r e . L ater m o v in g t o A s t o r i a , the Oregon City area, and settled in Bend. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r son, Terry Gerritsen of Oregon City, OR; and daughters, S h e rr y Gl e a v e of V ancouver, W A , Deb r a Kirchhofer of A l i s o V i ejo, CA, Sue L ehnertz D u eml ing o f A u r o r a , O R , a n d Amy Pfeifer of B end, OR; n ine g r a nd-children; a n d ten great-grandchildren. She is preceded in death b y her s on , J erry G e r r i t sen of Kahlotus, WA; and granddaughter , Tr acy Wright of Ellensburg, WA. Jackie had a love of family and all animals and will b e r e m embered f o r h e r sense of humor and love of life.
Robert (Bobbie) Gordon I. Jack Bailey
Bentson
August7,1931 - March 5,2015
Aug. 30, 1917 - Feh. 23, 2015
Bob Bailey passed away In Loving Memory: o n March 5 th , 2 015. H e Husband, Father, Friend w as 83 at th e t im e o f h i s G ordon I . B e n t son, 9 7 , death. Bob is survived by passed away February 23, h is w i f e , 2015, in Medford, OR. He w as b o r n ! S h i r ley A nn w h o August t he met in 30, 1 9 1 7, in Sidney, Dayt,on O hio a n d MT, to married Anna and SeptemPeter Bentson. b er 1, 1955. Bob He served is al so in World Boh Ballsy survived by W ar I I a s Gordon his daughter, Sharon Lynn a St aff Sgt. in the ( Brian) H o f f man, s o n , Bentson Michael St e w a r t an d U.S. Army (Michelle) Bailey and their Air Corps and received full c hildren, J e s sica, S a r a h honors. a nd Sean. A l s o s o n , J o Gordon married his wife, seph Lloyd (Cindy) Bailey Bea on August 29, 1969. He and their c h i l dren, B r a d- owned the Coast to Coast ford, T y l e r , N o a h an d Store in Redmond, OR, for Mickey. Bradford is the fa- 23 years. He then w o rk ed ther of Bob's great grandfor the State of Oregon Budaughter, K r i s t i n e an d reau of Labor as an inspecgreat-grandson , L i am , tor until he retired. w hich Bo b d i d n o t h a v e He was a member of the the chance to meet. L utheran Church an d t h e Bob is preceded in death M edford E l k s ¹ 1 1 68. H e by his mo m an d d ad , Jo- enjoyed fishing, R.V.'ing, s eph and H a z el, an d h i s and ballroom dancing. brother, Dean. Gordon is survived by his Bob will be cremated and wife, Bea Bentson; daughh is immediate family w i l l ter, Pat M athews (Davtd); et together t o c e l ebrate S tep-son, M i k e Bu r e a u is life at a later date. (Shtrley); St e p - daughter, Contributions m a y be P at A l va r e z (Dan); made in lieu of f l ow ers to n ine gr a n d c hildren , 14 BrightSide An imal C enter g reat-grandchildren, an d 1 355 N E H e m l oc k A v e . two gr eat - g r eat-grandRedmond, OR 97756. d aughters. H e w a s p r e R edmond M emor i a l ceded in death by his first C hapel i s p r i v i l e ged t o wife, Fern B entson; Stephandle t h e ar r a n g ement d aughter, P a u l a Bu r e a u f or t he Ba i l e y X a m i l y . Glider; dau g h t e r-in-law, Please sign our guest book C arla Bureau; tw o b r o t h at www.redmondmemorial.com ers, Cliff and Roy Bentson.
Carolyn Ann Thrasher, of Redmond April 18, 1936 - Mar. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services:
Per Carolyn's request, no services will be held. Contributions may bemade to:
Three Rivers Humane Society 1694 SE McTaggart Road Madras, OR 97741 www.threerivershs.org
ELSEWHERE
March14,1939- March10,2015 Deaths of note from around
Frank (Stan) Stanley Wood, of Bend Aug. 26, 1926 - Mar. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please
sign our guest book at
www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: At Stan's request there will be no service. Contributions may be made to:
Adult 8 Teen Challenge PO Box 5223 Bend, OR 97708 Phone: 541-678-5272
Susan Marie Ronis,of Bend April 21, 1951 - Mar. 12, 201 5 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A memorial mass will be held at Deschutes Memorial Chapel at 1:00 pm on Wednesday, March 18, 2015. Contributions may be made to:
Salvation Army, 515 Northeast Dekalb Avenue, Bend, OR 97701,
Robert DeFrance www.salvationarmybendoregon.org. Zahniser Jens Andrew July 27, 1934- March 7, 2015 Andersen III Robert w as bo r n in Rochester, Ne w Y o r k t o R everend Arthur an d A u drey Zahniser. A fter hi s s e r vice i n t h e Navy, he met and married his wife of 59 p lu s y ears, N . Carol Lockhart in Evans ton, I l h n ois on Decemb er 3 0 t h 1955. Bob Zahniser A fter a ttending N ort hw e s t ern University, Bob worked 14 y ears for th e F or d M o t o r Co. out of St . L o uis, Mi ss ouri. A t th i s p o i n t B o b and family moved to Madis on, South D ak ota w h e r e t hey had b o u ght a F o r d , Lincoln 8 M e r cury dealership. Bob, Carol and sons w orked h a r d u nt i l he reached the age of 58 , at w hich t i m e B o b r e t i r e d . For 1 0 y e a r s B o b an d Carol traveled the U n i t ed States and Mexico with the SOWERS Christian group working and serving those in need. At age 48, Bob accepted J esus as h i s S a v io r a n d L ord. This allowed him t o e njoy hi s l i f e f u l l o f s e r vice and love. He enjoyed sharing THE GO OD W ORD w i t h h i s fa m i l y , friends a n d an y o n e he came to know. He i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s loving wife, Carol of Bend and his sons, Kirk 8c Kathy Zahniser of S a rasota, FL; Kip 8c Karen Z a hniser of D iamondhead, M S ; K y l e Zahniser of M a d ison, SD; K ale & J o d y Z a h n iser o f Bend, OR; and his brother, Dick an d C a ro l Z a h n iser of Upland, CA. Bob is also s urvived b y e i g h t g r a n d c hildren a n d f i v e g r e a t grandchildren
DEATHS
Sept. 19, 1953- March 8, 2015
Matilda sTillies Marten of S anta Rosa and m ost r e cently of Bend O regon
theworld:
Gretchen Kafoury, 72: Longtime Oregon political leader passed away peacefully on and a key women's rights leadM arch 10, 2015. Sh e w a s er, helpingto launchthe Oregon s urrounded b y h e r h u s - chapter of the National Organib and o f 4 9 y e a r s , D o n zation for Women in 1970 and Marten and her co-founding the Oregon Women's Political Caucus. Died Frisons, day in Portland. M ark a n d Eric Marten. .t S he w a s b orn in Atlasburg, PA, March 14, 'Tll' I Ie' M art en Ig3g Tillie and Don w ere longt ime r e s idents o f Sa n t a Rosa, C A wh e re th e y raised their sons. They moved to Bend, Oregon in 2005. She enjoyed l ife to th e f u l lest and h e r m ost recent p a ssion w a s m aking f r e quent t r i p s t o visit h e r gr a n d c h ildren, Shae, Madeline and Max. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r h usband, D on , h e r s o n s , M ark an d E r i c , a n d h e r grandchildren, Shae, Madd ie and M a x a l o n g w i t h h er sisters, V i r g i ni a P e t ricca, B l a nc h S c h n eider, Pauline Mott and nieces. A m e m o r ia l g a t h e r i ng w ill b e h e l d o n S u n d a y , March 29, 2015 at 3:00 p.m .at Partners i n Ca r e i n
Al Rosen, 91: Muscular third
baseman who won the 1953 AL MVP and played on the last Cleveland Indians team to win the World Series. Died Friday night. No location was reported. Dell Williams, 92: After being humiliated by a department-store derk when she tried
to buy a vibrator, Wiliams was moved to start Eve's Garden,
the New York boutique widely described as the nation's first sex shop catering specifically to women. Died Wednesday in Manhattan, New York.
F. Ray Keyser Jr., 87:Former Republican governor of Vermont whose 1962 defeat by a Democrat is seen as a turning point in the state's transition
from one of the most conservative in the country to one of the most liberal. Died on March 7 in Vermont.
Brian Sutton®mith, 90: Developmental psy c hologist Bend. Oregon. whose work — prolific, scholarContributions m a y be ly and precedent-setting — was m ade i n Ti l l i e M a r t e n ' s quite literally child's play. Died
m emory t o : P a r t n er s i n Jens A n d rew A n d e r sen Care, 2 0 7 5 N E W y att March 7 in White River Junction, Vermont. I II, a g e 61 of Eu g e n e , Court, Bend, OR 97701 — From wire reports p assed away on M a rch 8 , 2015 as a result of complications f r o m a n ag g r e ss ive f or m o f ly m p h o m a . J ens w a s b orn on Death Notices are freeand Deadlines:Death Notices are Septemb er 19 , will be run for oneday, but accepted until noon Monday 1953 in specific guidelines must be through Friday for next-day Pocatello, followed. Local obituaries are publication and by4:30 p.m. ID. Jens paid advertisements submitted Friday for Sundaypublication.
Obituary policy
g rew
up
tn Fo rt H all, ID and
jens Andersen ated from the University of
I daho, majoring i n
ac-
counting. A ft e r c o l l e ge, J ens m o ve d to Eu g e n e w here h e w o r k e d a s a Elregistered FINRA securities representative as well a s a Certified Public A c countant and Shareholder with a regional accounting f irm, h a p pil y r e t i r in g i n 2012. Jens served as a Dir ector on t h e O r eg o n Board of Accountancy and as a Director for the Board o f the O r egon Society o f CPA's. A n a d v ocate for a s trong c o m m u nity , J e n s v olunteered fo r a n d h e l d l eadership p o sitions a t a variety of n ot - f o r -profit o rganizations i ncl u d i n g Big Brother/Sister, Eugene Symphony, Junior A chievement, M cK e n z i e Willamette Hospital Foundation, Eugene Town Club, C entral O r e gon C o m m u nity C o l l ege F o u ndation, a nd Track Town U SA . I n 2 014, Jens served a s t h e Managing Member of the S outhern W i l l amette A n gel Network. Jens is preceded in death b y hi s p a r ents, Jens an d Harriet Andersen. J ens is s urvived by his w ife of 3 1 ears, JoAnn and four sibIIg, ings, Jon,, Joyy A n n , J erri and Joel and their families.
by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail:Obituaries
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
P.O. Box 6020
Bend, OR97708
Maybelle Olive (Elder) Collegeman
Melvin L. Kays of La Pine, Oregon, passed away Sunday, March 1, 2015, in Lake Havasu City, AZ. Funeral services will be held Monday, March 16, 2015, 10:00 AM at the Immaculate Conception Catholic Church, 1310 Adams Street, Davenport, WA. Burial will be in Mountain View Cemetery. Strate Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Mel was one of triplet boys born April 5, 1931 in Perkins County,NE, to Chancy and Ruth Kays. Mel and family moved to Washington in 1945. They lived in the Wilbur and Davenport areas. Mel graduated from Wilbur High School in 1948. Mel and his two brothers joined the Air Force at the same time in 1950. After serving in the Air Force he attended Gonzaga University, receiving a Bachelor of Arts in Education. While attending Gonzaga he and Mick Byrne and Richard Spils spent several summers in Copper Valley, Alaska, helping construct a school for Father Jake Spils, SJ., an Alaskan missionary. Mel retired from Consolidated Freightways, Portland, OR, as Senior Accountant in the General Accounting Department, also
December 12, 1918 - March 4, 2015
working in licensing and as a purchasing agent. He purchased
Maybelle Collegeman, 96 years old, peacefully joined her four sisters in heaven onWednesday morning, March 4 at Mt. Bachelor Memory Care,with her family by her side. Maybelle was born to Peter and Florence Erickson December 12, 1918 in Vienna, South Dakota. She lived and worked in Eugene, Portland and Seattle. Maybelle had a fullworking career as an Escrow Officerand was President of the Oregon Chapter. Maybelle retired and moved to Seattle in 1987. She volunteered for many years at Ballard Hospital, was active in Queen Anne Baptist Church, and enjoyed traveling with her husband, Lee. W hen Lee passed away in2005,Maybelle moved toBend to live with her daughters. Maybellewas an avid reader, and was a member of "Page 'IItmers Association" Book Club. She was also a member of Discovery Christian Church, and was a volunteer in the church thrift shop. She issurvived by her two daughters, Carole Wolfe and FrancineJarnagin of Bend; her son, Steve (Loril Elder of Portland; eight grandchildren; and seven great-grandchildren. She will be dearly missed by her family and friends. The family would like to extend a special thank you to the staff at Mt. Bachelor Memory Care, Partners in Care and Evergreen In-Home Care for their loving support. A Celebration of Life is planned for Maybelle, 2:00 p.m. Saturday, March 21, 2015 at Discovery Christian Church, 334 NW Newport Ave., Bend. In lieu of flowers, please make a donation to Partners In Care Hospice.
so many tires from Goodyear, he was rewarded with a ride in the Goodyear blimp. After retirement, he made his home in La Pine, OR, spending his summers there and his winters in Black Rock, AZ. He avidly pursued his family's genealogy traveling widely to complete the history of his family. He enjoyed family and made special trips to celebrate their special occasions. He also enjoyed fishing, watching Little League baseball and high
school sports. Mel will be remembered for his sly wit and abilityto make friends everywhere he went. He was always glad to lend a helping hand. His special friends included Sylvia (Byrne) Henderson, Allen, WA; Joe, Lynette, Kellin, Danielle, and Tarah Byrne, Colbert, W A; Pat and Shawna Byrne,FederalWay, WA; Dee Byrne, Lake Tahoe, NV;Darcy and Mark Davis,Anchorage, AK; Annette Davis, Spokane, WA; Gary Marchant of Portland, OR; J.R. and Lori Tabuyo and family of La Pine, OR; Dan and Gretchen Clark, La Pine, OR; Jack and Marilou Sims of Pleasantville, OR; Duane Smith and Dottie Peterson, Black Rock Park, AZ; and all his wonderful friends at the Black Rock RV Park in Arizona. Those preceding Mel in death were his parents, Chancy and Ruth, brothers Fred 2002, Marvin 2004, and Mervin 2015. Survivors are his brother Darrel and wife Jayne, Puyallup, WA; brother Vern and wife Maxine, Spokane, WA; and sister-in-law Ellen Kays, Davenport, WA. He is also survived by numerous nieces,nephews, cousins and friends. ln lieu of flowers, memorials may be sent to Gonzaga University, Michael J. Byrne and Richard Spils Memorial Scholarship, 502 East Boone Avenue, Spokane, WA 99258.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Food trucks
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 The City C ouncil recently decided that in the future,
Morgan and Protas asked
readers of their newsletter, Sisters Voice, to consider litigation against the city or a recall
of Council President McKibplanning commission mem- ben Womack and Mayor Chris bers will be notified by email Frye. "I don't know what people any time a land use decision is made by the city's Community are going to want to do," MorDevelopment Department. The gan said. "It will take a major commission can elect to review effort, and I don't know if the any decision made by staff. community is willing to step The planning commission up and do it," Morgan said. Boyd's food cart lot is at the plans to hold a workshop in the next couple of months, to corner of Hood Avenue and
FEATURED OBITUARY
"ask if we want food carts in
B5
L
Fir Street, right outside his
Sisters," said Pauline Hardie, store. He envisions something Sisters community develop- similar to The Lot in Bend on ment director. "If we do, how
Eurosports in downtown Sisters hopes to have an adjacent food
other business, or get different
court up and running byMay, but the city's process in approving
regulations'?"
Yesteryear
I i~ '" / e
M. Spencer Green/The Associated Press file photo
Rev. Willie Barrow, left, greets Chicago Urban League president Cheryie Jackson in Chicago in 2009. Barrow, a longtime civil right activist, died Thursday at a hospital where she was being treated for a blood clot in her lung. She was 90.
office in Crook. He and the
judge agreed to the facts of the case, and further agreed to abide by the attorney general's decision. If Wirtz' con-
tentions were upheld Springer
Fiery, charismatic
would resign, otherwise there
civil rights fighter
cited that Springer formerly
told it like it was The Associated Press
CHICAGO — T h e R ev. W illie B a r row, a fr o n t -
line civil rights fighter for decades and a mentor to younger generations of activists, died Thursday in Chicago. She was 90. Barrow was a field organizer for th e Rev. Martin
Luther King Jr., marched on Washington and Selma in the '60s and more recently focused concern on Chicago's gun violence and changes to the Voting Rights Act. Barrow had been hospitalized for treatment of a
blood clot in her lung and died early Thursday, said
"She was agreat motivational speaker with the unusual gift of being able to take a scared group of people and inspire
— Rev. Jesse Jackson
worked hard to live up to her
rior," her short height belied example. I still do." a fiery, charismatic, tell-itShe studied theology at like-it-is attitude unchecked a seminary in Oregon and by either concern for polit- moved to Chicago in 1945. ical correctness or the statBecoming involved in the ure of whomever she was civil rights movement, Baraddressing. row said she always sought "She was a great moti- to be close to those with v ational speaker with t h e power. "I opened my house up to unusual gift of being able to take a scared group of peo- all of the powerful women in the movement — Coretta
Scott King, Dorothy Height, correct a wrong," Jackson Addie Wyatt," she once told said. "She was an authen- the Chicago Sun-Times.
She took up causes ranging from women's rights to AIDS awareness. Her son, Keith, died of the disease in 1983. And she traveled
For the week ending March 14, 1940
successful dash across the submarine-infested Atlantic.
loved by, to be challenged a young child, Barrow deby," Pfleger said. manded to be let on her allBarrow h elped o r ga- white school bus. "The fight for equality she nize sit-ins and boycotts in the South with civil rights joined that day would beicons including King, Rosa come the cause of her life," Parks and the Rev. Ralph President Barack O b ama Abernathy. said in a written statement Alongside the Rev. Jesse that lauded Barrow for her Jackson, Barrow co-founded "pursuit of justice for all the Chicago chapter of Op- God's children." "To Michelle and me, she eration Breadbasket, which would become Operation was a constant inspiration, PUSH. a lifelong mentor, and a very Around Chicago, she was dear friend," Obama said. known to many as "god- "I was proud to count mymother" or "mother" for the self among the more than care she took to advise and 100 men and women she inform younger activists. called her 'Godchildren,' and
Rosa Parks and Fannie Lou Hamer."
75 YEARS AGO
was an authentic
freedom fighter in the linage of Sojourner Truth,Rosa Parks and Fannie Lou Hamer."
Barrow w a s b o r n in Burton, Texas. In 1936, as
linage of Sojourner Truth,
last election. But it is admitted
that he and his family took up residence in Prineville before the governor's proclamation legally established Jefferson County.
er Queen Elizabeth made a
able to hold onto for a long
t ic freedom fighter in t h e
wife registered there at the
haven after Atlantic dash
when Nelson Mandela was releasedfrom prison.
ple and inspire them to take militant nonviolent action to
lived in what now is Jefferson County, and that he and his
Britain's luxury liner finds
"She's one of those icons in themovement we've been
Known as the "little war-
In the stipulation it is re-
nonviolent action to correct a wrong.She
Pfleger.
time, to learn from, to be
"That's how I learned." And she wanted to pass
that wisdom on to others. "We have to teach this generation, t r a i n more
Corettas, more
A d dies,
more Dorothys," she told the
newspaper. "If these youth don't know whose shoulders
widely on missions of peace they stand on, they'll take and outreach, including to us back to slavery. And I be-
Great Britain's luxury lin-
The biggest ship afloat was hurried across to an Ameri-
can haven for the duration of the war. The Queen Elizabeth joined the Queen Mary and the Normandieafter a secret dash across the Atlantic. They are tied side by side in New York for the duration of the war.
Russia boasts of war victory Soviet Russia today celebrated the Red Army's defeat
this city's first school princi-
brave and great in defeat.
50 YEARS AGO
Feed Store in the fall of 1904.
She was succeeded later in the fall by Grace Jones.
place. Webber himself
r a rely
came into town but his son-
in-law did and "he would go to a store and peel off hundred dollar bills to pay for what he w a nted," recalled M ary C a nnon, w ho , w i t h her husband Dan, owns the
Les Schwab Tire Center in Mitchell.
"Anyone who knows farmers knows they don't pay for stuff like that," said Cannon. "We thought something must
A talented teacher, Ruth
be going on, but we didn't
Reid saw the need of a high school here and directed her
know what." By late 1987, the law was
looking hard at M itchell's forts resulted in the founding most notorious citizen. of a high school with four The breakthrough came National ski event members in the first gradu- when the FBI received perto open on Sunday ating class. It was founded in mission to t a p W ebber's "All systems are go" for the 1908. phone. On the morning of National Junior Ski ChampiIn October, 1910, Ruth Reid Oct. 11, 1988, they overheard onships to be held at Bend and was married to James Over- him make plans to deliver a Bachelor Butte this coming turf who also had come to the shipment of cocaine to OreSunday through March 20. village of Bend, in 1904. Mr. gon City. The event will bring an offi- and Mrs. Overturf made their Drug agents caught up cialparty ofaround 300 here home in Bend from the time w ith W e bber a b out h a l f for the week-long event. of their marriage until they way between Prineville and Registration will begin at moved to Hood River 12 years Madras. A search of his car the Pilot Butte In n F r iday ago. uncovered 12.1 pounds of coevening. caine and $22,000 cash in a Skyliners reported new suitcase in the trunk. 25 YEARS AGO estimates show 90 percent of At the ranch they found the snow needed for the Pilot For the week ending much more cocaine,gemButte ski jump site at the east- March 14, 1990 stones and precious metals ern city limits of Bend will along with other drugs and have tobe hauled in by dump Drugs shatter over 30 weapons. Mitchell's peacefulness truck. The bags of coke were laThe group said high dayThe townspeople of Mitch- beled"Centavo 2,"the name time temperatures have pro- ell once thought it was safely of a well-known Colombian hibited building a good base removed from many of soci- drug cartel. Police valued the of artificial snow on the jump. ety's ills. Their children stud- drugs at $2.1 million — the The committee had previous- ied the basics and a typical largest drug seizure in Orely planned to count almost en- array of elective subjects: one gon history. tirely on artificially produced popular class is called "ModAnd when the police and snow. ern Problems." For years of FBI went door to door quizHauling of the natural snow course it was an examination zing the people of Mitchell from the old Skyliner site on of the outside world. about what they knew of the Tumalo Creek Road was postAnd then one day, Oct. 11, Webbers, there no longer poned. It was decided to wait 1988, a modern problem was w as any question that t h e until this coming weekend to unearthed from under a cab- town faced a very modern start the operation. in on a ranch just out of town. problem. Skyliners hope to have the It was $2 million worth of Whatever happens, the citjump ready for practice jump- cocaine. izens of Mitchell agree that ing by Monday or Tuesday. The cabin — and the cotheir town will never be quite C ompetition jumping w i l l caine — belonged to John the same as it was before the be held Saturday afternoon, Carl Webber who paid cash events of Oct. 11, 1988. For the week ending
attention to that end. Her ef-
for a r anch just outside of
collaboration" with the Finn-
town and brought in a bunch
ish people, and guarding Rus- Mrs. Ruth Reid Overturf, sia against involvement in the
pioneer Bend teacher, dies
western European war. A pioneer teacher, Ruth The announcement of an R eid Overturf, f o r w h o m end to the fighting and of a B end's Rei d S c h ool w a s non-aggression treaty which named and who served as was designed to create — as
of his relatives. They were
not very friendly and had many hassles with neighbors. Webber had a violent
"In this town, you always
thought that you were pretty untouched by the things going on in the world," said Mary Cannon. "Wefound out that we were wrong. We have the same problemsthatevery-
temper and the townspeople were suspicious about the one else has."
the communist n ewspaper
said - "stable, friendly and mutual r e lations" w h i ch
would guarantee the security
of both countries. But, the newspaper emphasized, the soviet union wants
to keep out of the war.
Great in defeat(editorial) Four months ago Finland was known in America as an honest nation; in recent weeks
she has shown herself a brave nation. Today, beaten into submission by cruel, overwhelming, brute force she still stands in her pride, respected, honored and pitied by all the decent people of the world. Should Finland not h ave
fought the Russian bully'? How can one answer'? Instead of surrendering she chose to fight and she has suffered greatly. Three months ago she might have had peace and there would have been no ignominy about it. She chose resistance. Instead of merely
negative action she chose to affirm herself and her honor.
lieve that's why the Lord is
Some will say that honor counts for little in the fact of
Cuba and to South Africa
still keeping me here."
the losses she has sustained
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate ••
there is no mind for these matters. We think only of Finland,
of Finland as ending all threat of an "imperialist" invasion in the north, assuring "friendly March 20.
Vietnam, Russia, Nicaragua,
•
but that is not so. Honor is all. And if the time comes when
the food carts continues to draw criticism.
would be no ouster proceed- March 14, 1965 ings it is understood.
them to take militant
fellow activist Rev. Michael
— Reporter: 541-383-0354, jrockow@bendbtdletin.com
Ryan Brennecke I Bulletin file photo
pal, is dead. Continued from B1 man thinks only of living She died Saturday at a The opinion is rendered safelywhatever elsemay hap- nursing home in Hood River in answer to a request from pen it will be a sorry world he at the age of 84. District Attorney Wirtz and lives in. A native of Ne w B r unsJudge Springer. They sent a All the strategists are busy wick, Canada, who received joint statement of facts to the now trying to decide what her education there, Ruth attorney general, Wirtz hold- effect the Finnish peace will Reid came to Bend in 1904 to ing that Springer, because of have on the fortunes of Ger- teach school. Her first assignresidence in Jefferson County, many, England and France. ment was teacher in a onewas disqualified from holding Time will t ell. For us n ow room school above the Mutzig
.'
By Jayson Keyser
NW Columbia Street, which
do we want to regulate them'? has foodcarts,tablesand beer Should we treat them like any taps.
TheBulletin
Beatrice Pilz Hess July 17, 1928 - January 4,2015 Bea, daughter of Leo and Cora Pilz, and loving wife of Richard Hess passedaway on January 4, 2015, from lung cancer. Bea was not in pain. With hospice support, she rallied for the usual, fun and busy family Christmas. Dick and Bea spent her last 8 days side by side at Ridgewater, a hospice home, in Bend, Oregon. She cheered on the Ducks while watching the Rose Bowl with Dick, Dave, Janette and Rob. In a few days, she had passed. Family and friends are all grateful for that time with her. Bea is survived by her husband, Richard Theodore Hess,her three sons and their wives, Ron and Mary, Robert and Jeanne, Dave and Janette,and her ftve grandchildren, Daniel, Jacob,William, Grace and Truman. She is survived by her five siblings, Jeanette Roberts, Ray Pilz, Leona Knowlton, Marlene Evans, and George Pilz. Bea wasborn in Sacramento, CA on July 17, 1928, and grew up attending public schools in Clarksburg, California. She was an avid tap dancer who easily did splits! She spent her summers in Lake Tahoe where it was cooler, sleeping in a tent with her brothers and sisters outside the small familycabin. She grew up hiking and enjoying the outdoors. Bea attended San Jose State University when it was a teachers college. She pursued math and science, completing all but a master's degree in the male dominated, at the time, field of geology. Bea and Dick met on Waikiki Beach in Hawaii in 1953, and married in 1954. They raised their three boys in Los Gatos, CA. Bea taught elementary school in Los Gatos, California, until her retirement. She was an innovator, along with Gracia Trevey, being the first two teachers tojob share in the district. Bea brought her love of math, science and learning along with her endless patience and quiet sense of humor to work with the children everyday. Bea was an environmental volunteer and an active member of Los Gatos United Methodist Church in California. Her hobbies included reading, photography, hiking, skiing, and extensiveworld travel. Bea and Dick moved to Sisters, Oregon, in 1992. Bea set and met her goal of 2000 hours as a volunteer docent at the High Desert Museum in Bend, Oregon. Shewas much loved by friends in several community groups: the Casual Quilters, the Out to Lunch Bunch, a garden group, a book group and Support Our Sisters, a support group for breast cancer survivors. She was a member of Bend First United Methodist Church. Bea and Dick hosted family holidays at home, at the beach, in the mountains and in Hawaii for their 50th wedding anniversary. An active grandmother, she took each grandchild on several trips to see the United States when they turned age ten. Dick and Bea enjoyed a full life together for over sixty years. Bea was "a great lady! We all loved her.", as Dick would say. Attd to quote her son, Rott, "she taught us, inspired us, blessed usand loved tts. Shelives on in us." She wasmuch loved and is greatly missed by her family and friends. For those wanting to make a donation in Bea's memory, please contribute to the High Desert M useum, 59800 S.Highway 97,Bend,O regon97702. A celebration of her life will be held at the the Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration, 68825 Brooks Camp Rd., Sisters, Oregon, onApril 18, 2015, at 2 pm. A receptionwill follow in thesocial hall.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
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TODAY
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TONIGHT
HIGH 62' I f '
ALMANAC Yesterday Normal Record Low
51 27'
74' in 1934 -9'in 1906
Tigamo
PRECIPITATION
CENTRAL:Periodsof 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace rain across northern Record 0.90" in 1967 locations, mainly in Month to date (normal) 0.0 4" (0.35") the morning; mostly Year to date(normal) 1.15 " (2.97") cloudy but dry in the Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 0" south. WEST: Rain
SUN ANDMOON Today Mon. Sunrise 7:16 a.m. 7: 1 7 a.m. Sunset 7:11 p.m. 7: 1 2 p.m. Moonrise 3 :53 a.m. 4:40 a.m. Moonset 1:5 6 p.m. 3:0 7 p.m. New Fi r s t Full Last
d w Mar 20 Mar 26
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Tonight's slty:Asteroid 2005 ES70NearEarth Flyby IO.O56 AU). Source: JimTodd,OMSI
UV INDEX TODAY 1 1~2
37'
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Overcast with spotty showers
~
~ ~
Mostly cloudy
WED NESDAY
~
60' 34'
57/47
Lincoln 57/48
Newpo 58/43
/4
lington 67/43
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Camp Sh man Red n
R
61 /39
• John eu throughout muchof 57/46 60/45 • Prineville Day 2/38 tario the day, becoming 63/38 • P a lina 6 4/ 4 3 7 49 more intermittent in Floren e • Eugelle e Re d Brothers 60 39 Valee the afternoon across 59/49 Su iVere 62/37 72/48 southern areas. Nyssa • 6 0 / 7 • l.a pine Ham on e 74/49 Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns 68/44 OREGON EXTREMES co 61/45 44 59 6 • Fort Rock Riley 68/38 YESTERDAY Cresce t 67/36 59/35 High: 73 Bandon Roseburg • Chr i stmas alley at Hermiston Jordan V Hey 60/47 Beaver Silvei' Frenchglen 64/46 Low: 42' 68/46 Marsh Lake BN44 59/36 at Burns 64/37 Gra • Burns Jun tion • Paisley 9/ • 73/47 Chiloquin 65/39 Goid ach • 7 MedfO d '63/40 Rome 0' e~® 75/46 Klamath • Ashl nd 'Falls • Lakeview McDermi Rro ings 66/ 57/ 64/39 66/38 71/44 56/38
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Yesterday Today Monday
1
Yesterday Today Monday
Yesterday Today Monday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i t y Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 55/50/1.23 54/41/r 60/44/pc L s Grande 63/ 54/0.03 66/45/r 65/41/pc 59/49/Tr 65/41/sh66/38/c La Pine 59/47/0.01 60/37/sh 58/35/pc Brookings 62/52/0.09 57/48/r 57/46/pc M e dford 63/5 4/0.04 64/46/sh 68/46/pc Bums 63/42/0.06 68/38/c 62/37/c Ne wport 55/5 2 /1.03 58/43/r 5 7/44/pc Eugene 60/54/0.55 59/43/sh64/43/pc NorthBend 59/54/1.44 59/46/r 60/46/pc Klamath Fags 62/48/0.03 64/39/c 60/37/pc Ontari o 60/45/0.11 74/49/sh 69/44/c Lakeview 59/45/0.00 66/38/c 61/36/c Pendleton 68/50/0.01 62/45/r 65/44/pc
City Astoria Baker City
The highertheAccuWeaffrer.rxrm tiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor sysandskin protscgon.0-2 Low, 3-5 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.
ROAD CONDITONS ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto www.bendbulletin.com/webcams
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 60/5 2/0.6659/47/r 65/47/pc Prinevige 66/ 50/0.0163/38/sh58/39/ pc Redmond 63 / 48/0.0065/36/sh 60/37/pc Roseburg 63/ 5 5/0.0264/46/sh 67/46/pc Salem 58/53/0.73 59/44/r 65/42/pc Sisters 59/48/0.00 64/37/r 61/36/pc The Dages 6 3 /52/0.06 62/44/r 65/42/pc
Weather(W):s-sunny, pc-partly cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-thunderstorms, r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow l-ice, Tr-trace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m. yesterday
I-G4at Cabbage Hill: Cloudy,rain this morning, then ashower ortwo. US20at Santiam Pass: Cloudy, rain this moming, then ashower ortwo. US 26 at Gov't Camp:Periods of rain today. US 26 at OchocoDivide: Showers in the morning; otherwise,cloudytoday. ORE 5G at Wiuamette Pass: Mostly cloudy, rain this morning, then ashower ortwo. Spotty showers tonight. ORE136atDiamond Lake:Cloudytoday and tonight with a couple ofshowers.
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~
gs
~ gs
~ 108
~ 208
~ 406
~ 508
v Calga 37/2
NATIONAL EXTREMES YESTERDAY(for the 46 contiguousstates) National high: ga at Anaheim, CA National low: -9' at Presque Isle, ME Precipitation: 1.56" at Seaside, OR
~ 308
~ 608
~ ags ~ g g s
~ 1 0 0 8 ~ 1 108 Que c 31/4
467
v ~+
Bismsrck
d d d d
s s
~ 708
• i n ipeg TffanderBay
do 7
aPW s
s
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.openingTBA HoodooSkiArea: est. openingTBA Mt. Ashland: est. opening TBA 0 45-9 0 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 26-66 Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est. opening TBA Timberline Lodge 0 26-4 5 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 45-76 Vail, CO 0 54-5 4 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 30-60 Squaw Valley,CA 1 16-4 7 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 56-56 Sun Valley, ID 0 30-6 0 Source: OnTheSnow.com
d d d d S
,x x x
'A~x ~
Wir i ngs
78/34
's
M ne 7 /48
• 78/45
~
Mild with sun andsome clouds
ronto
'd 4
Today Monday
Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. Abilene 70/51/Tr Akron 52/43/0.74 Albany 41/35/0.06 Albuquerque 64/44/0.00 Anchorage 13/-4/0.00 Atlanta 70/47/0.06 Atlantic City 52/38/1.17 Austin 77/48/0.00 Baltimore 54/40/0.78 Billings 71/46/0.00 Birmingham 67/51/0.03 Bismarck 72/25/0.00 Boise 66/52/0.10 Boston 39/31/0.79 Bridgeport, CT 44/32/0.86 Buffalo 44/39/0.02 Burlington, VT 42/30/0.02 Caribou, ME 29/-6/0.00 Charleston, SC 76/63/0.27 Charlotte 64/41/0.47 Chattanooga 63/51/0.18 Cheyenne 62/27/0.00 Chicago 60/44/0.00 Cincinnati 62/50/0.89 Cleveland 50/44/0.38 ColoradoSprings 62/28/0.00 Columbia, Mo 63/47/0.00 Columbia, SC 69/49/0.66 Columbus,GA 79/49/0.02 Columbus,OH 59/46/0.84 Concord, NH 37/29/0.30 Corpus Christi 79/57/0.00 Dallas 64/56/Tr Dayton 60/50/0.75 Denver 69/30/0.00 Des Moines 67/35/0.00 Detroit 53/42/Tr Duluth 56/35/0.00 El Paso 70/49/0.00 -3/-23/0.01 Fairbanks Fargo 68/24/0.00 Flagstaff 60/30/0.00 Grand Rapids 47/39/0.00 Green Bay 52/37/0.00 Greensboro 57/40/0.32 Harrisburg 42/36/0.77 Harfford, CT 38/32/0.71 Helena 72/34/0.00 Honolulu 78/64/0.00 Houston 77/51/0.00 Huntsville 66/52/0.16 Indianapolis 59/50/0.52 Jackson, MS 69/60/0.24 Jacksonville 87/66/Tr
HiRo/W 68/48/pc 48/37/pc 43/28/sn 69/39/s 25/21/sf 73/45/pc 46/34/c 70/54/pc 53/34/pc 78/45/c 74/45/pc 75/36/pc 75/53/sh 40/26/c 45/29/sh 39/31/sf 33/20/sn 26/7/sn 77/48/pc 73/43/s 73/42/pc 73/45/pc 63/50/s 63/46/s 46/39/pc 74/42/s 71/47/s 78/46/pc 78/45/pc 55/42/pc 39/18/sn 65/58/pc 69/50/pc 57/43/s 78/46/s 74/51/s 56/43/pc 60/38/pc 69/46/s 8/-2/pc 73/41/pc 62/29/pc 53/42/s 63/45/s 68/43/s 49/34/c 46/28/sh 66/44/sh 78/65/pc 71/57/pc 71/43/pc 63/44/s 77/53/pc 82/53/pc
Hi/Lo/W 74/55/pc 64/36/pc 49/34/pc 71/43/s 42/33/sn 79/54/s 51/43/pc 68/57/c 62/49/pc 49/29/sh 77/54/s 47/20/sh 68/48/c 45/35/pc 46/37/pc 47/32/pc 43/29/pc 35/19/s 79/53/s 78/48/s 79/49/s 73/33/pc 70/38/pc 72/50/pc 61/35/pc 79/40/s 77/49/s 82/53/s 81/51/s 68/43/pc 45/28/pc 70/62/sh 72/58/pc 69/44/pc 80/36/s 80/41/pc 66/36/pc 48/25/c 72/52/pc 30/12/sf 47/27/c 64/31/s 62/32/c 65/32/c 74/51/s 60/44/pc 51/36/pc 60/35/sh 80/66/pc 75/59/pc 75/52/s 72/46/pc 80/60/pc 82/53/s
Amsterdam Athens
46/36/sh 59/47/pc 73/63/r 81/52/s
53/36/s 57/46/pc 72/62/r 81/53/s 97/79S/s 66/43/pc 65/53/s 55/44/pc 67/50/r 57/35/pc 84/71/s 77/57/1 71/51/pc 36/18/c 86/68/pc 44/36/c 47/37/c 57/38/c 83/56/s 77/69/c 49/42/c 58/42/pc 81/57/1 83/71/pc 59/49/pc 50/36/c 57/35/pc 88/72/pc
* Jrosion
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d dd ' d d
96/79n
62/37/s 65/54/pc 47/40/sh 69/49/1 55/37/pc 81/68/s 77/58/pc 71/51/s 37/26/c 87/71/pc 44/37/c 46/37/sh 54/36/pc 82/53/s 76/69/pc 50/43/r 59/42/s 81/57/1 84/72/pc 63/44/s 47/38/sh 54/33/pc 89/72/s
•
Yesterday Today Monday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 36/24/0.03 39/25/sn 43/29/sn 66/41/0.00 74/50/s 80/46/pc 48/40/0.00 55/45/s 64/33/c 82/57/0.00 83/58/pc 85/58/pc 59/51/0.80 62/44/s 70/51/s 69/34/0.00 78/43/s 83/37/pc
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Lss Vegss Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
Providence Raleigh
Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY
Sacramento St. Louis Salt Lake City San Antonio San Diego San Francisco San Jose Santa re Savannah Seattle Sioux Fags Spokane Springfield, Mo Tampa Tucson Tulsa Washington,Dc Wichita
Yakima Yuma i
43/36/0.13 so P 59/46/0.01 * uke dd x .', +Botsa 82/ mf Auckland 76/63/0.00 4 75/63 York Baghdad 79/52/0.00 s ol dd d • /36 Che n Bangkok 95/82/0.04 74/51 73/4 • C' go iladelphis Beijing 57/32/0.00 d d d Col mb d d d asft taks /50 2/34 Beirut 66/55/0.00 an snciico 5 d d d Omah • Den 74/51 Berlin 43/37/0.11 71/58 ington d d d d 78/ us lle Las V ss 87 Bogota 70/52/0.16 d dd dd dd dd 47/ae 83/5 K n~s aty Si. u Budapest 45/39/0.18 dddddddddd 74/50 72/ BuenosAires 79/68/0.02 Chsrl 'id dd dd dd dd dd Los An fes Cabo San Lucas 81/64/0.00 70/4 3 'd d d d d d • 2/43 phoe n • L' Cairo 73/56/0.00 d d d d d« Anchorage • At d ,s . n i ' x x Calgary 61/45/0.00 • as/44 Albuque ue 7 klshoma Ci 7 81 „26/21, 69/39 73/45 Cancun 84P2/0.04 6 noi Bir ingha 8 42 • Dsffa Juneau al Ps Dublin 41/32/0.00 74/ * 49/5 9/ Edinburgh 42/37/0.00 )9/24 1 h Geneva 52/34/0.00 4O • rfsndo Harsre 81/56/0.05 Q 1/57 8 44 Hong Kong 75/68/0.03 Honolulu Chihushus O ~ . f Istanbul 52/46/0.18 78/da Miami Jerusalem 61/42/0.00 aepe,- 'z . Johannesburg 80/59/0.14 xit vsixee/54 e Lima 77/69/0.00 Lisbon 66/48/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperaturebands are highs for the day. London 46/37/0.12 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 55/37/0.00 Manila 88/73/0.00 d d
64' 33'
i
Yesterday
Meac am Losti ne • W co6/46 60/43 Enterprfse dl t, 59/ he Dall • 5 9/41 • 62/ andy• Mc innvill • 62/44 JosePh Govee • HeP Pner Grande • nt • u pi Condon 9/42 •5 66 45 union 50/ Sale Granitee • pray 59/ 43 a 'Baker C 58/39 9/44 • Mitch ll 65/41 /
""
60' 32'
TRAVEL WEATHER
/44
Portland
THU RSDAY
Mild with decreasing clouds
Timesofcloudsandsun
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatilla Hood 62/44 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
Yach
2 p .m. 4 p .m.
~ S
58' 38'
•
A p r 4 Ap r 11
10 a.m. Noon
"'"
TUESDAY
OREGON WEATHER EAST:Periods of rain across northern areas, tapering to showers; mostly cloudy across Cannon southern areas.
TEMPERATURE 66 52'
MONDAY
LOW
Showers around in the morning; cloudy
I
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
High
i
8
64/59/0.22 93/63/0.00 64/55/0.91 60/39/0.00 65/60/0.03 87/69/0.00 57/42/0.00 61/33/0.00 61/54/0.28 73/60/0.00 51/39/0.73 51/38/0.79 66/43/0.62 69/51/0.01 68/32/0.00 88/68/0.01 93/67/0.00 64/46/0.00 51/38/1.03 88/63/0.00 55/42/0.66 37/30/0.34 44/29/0.89 62/45/0.30 76/28/0.00 74/50/0.00 56/45/1.06 46/37/0.12 84/56/0.00 63/51/0.55 69/42/0.00 78/52/0.00 90/64/0.00 76/57/0.00 89/54/0.00 63/32/Tr 83/63/0.19 57/52/0.75 67/33/0.00 58/48/0.17 61/52/0.91 83/71/Tr 81/55/0.00 64/55/0.44 59/45/0.61 69/46/0.00
71/51/pc 76/59/pc
99/75/0.00 63/51/0.10 32/27/0.10 46/25/0.00 81/58/0.00 64/71/0'.00 81/61/0.03 54/39/0.05 46/19/0.00 31/21/0.14 50/37/0.00
98/73/pc 63/46/sh 36/18/sn 43/24/pc 85/56/pc 83/70/s
92/63/pc 87/64/pc 67/48/s 74/52/s 65/48/s 71/36/c 71/47/pc 75/57/s
8600/pc 83/66/pc 62/46/s 66/36/c 70/45/pc 59/30/c 70/41/s 76/54/s
76/60/pc 79/61/pc 50/36/sh 55/42/pc 50/35/sh 57/41/pc 59/40/pc 64/49/s 71/49/s 79/55/pc 77/46/s 81/39/pc 85/64/c 84/60/s 92/65/pc 91/64/pc 69/48/s 76/44/pc 52/36/c 60/43/pc 88/64/s 88/63/s 46/35/pc 63/39/pc 36/21/sn 44/32/pc 45/27/sh 47/35/pc 68/42/s 75/51/s 82/48/pc 62/25/c 74/45/c 72/46/pc
63/38/pc 70/51/pc 40/31/sf 51/33/pc 78/51/c 73/56/pc 72/50/s 78/54/s
76/51/pc 72/57/pc 86/62/pc 71/55/c 77/53/c 68/32/s
73/49/pc 69/61/c 83/63/pc
69/55/pc 73/57/pc 69/36/s
79/48/pc 81/52/s 53/46/r 58/46/sh
76/47/pc 65/29/c 54/42/r 57/38/pc 70/45/s 74/50/s 83/66/pc 84/65/s
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
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NORTHWESTTRAVEL Next week: Santa Barbara,
California
0 R E G0N
• Hillsboro-area highlight is a greatmineral museum
WaShihat0ll COUlltV W SH.
By John Gottberg Anderson«For the Bulletin
HILLSBORO-
Van ouver
ultraviolet or "black" light.
There are few more stunning sights in Oregon
Colors emerge as short-wave and long-wave
than the Rainbow Gallery of fluorescent
fluorescence flows upon the rocks, adivating
minerals at the Rice Northwest Museum of
impurities within them. Specimens of more than
Rocks and Minerals.
500 typesofminerals,about one in every seven,
llsboro Forest Grov
B aver lgafd
Toala n
Step behind a blackout curtain to see otherwise areknown tofl uoresce.They come from every colorless rocks explode into brilliant colors-
continent and in virtually every color of the
emerald green, cobalt blue, fiery red, yellow,
rainbow.
orange, pink, purple — when they are bathed in
S
o
REG N SeeHillsboro /C4
Greg Cross/The Bulletin Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin
The Rainbow Gallery at Hillsboro's Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and
Minerals displays a remarkable collection of fluorescent rocks. As they are bathed in short-wave and long-wave ultraviolet (or "black") light, the rocks' impurities are activated, and these brilliant colors emerge.
•e
i
'Twenty Feet fromStardom' screens inBend By Ben Salmon The Bulletin
Morgan Neville's 2013 documentary film "Twenty Feet
from Stardom" focuses on the livesand careers of a handful
of background singers, induding Judith Hill, Merry Clayton, Lisa Fischer, Tata Vega and Jo
movie so good was they had and her transcendent singing so much film on me out there voice. Love's role in "Twenty Feet" ... and they didn't have a lot of film on all the other singers," makes sense on the surface; she said in a telephone inter- she spent years working as a view from New York City. "So hired vocalist for some of the that really did help boost me greatest names in music histoout there into the spotlight, big- ry, such as Elvis ~sley, Marger than life." vin Gaye, the Beach Boys and She's being modest. Film- Tom Jones. But the rise she has
Lawry. But as it unfolds, one woman emerges from the shad- makers no doubt had access ows and becomes the star of to plenty of footage of Love, this movie about the voices be- thanks to her five-decade cahind the stars. reer in music. But on the list of Darlene Love thinks she reasons Love shines in"Twenty knows why "Twenty Feet" fo- Feet," plentiful footage would cused in on her. unquestionably fall somewhere "What made my part in the
behind her vibrant personality
experienced the past decade or
so makes for an odd juxtaposition with the film, which won the Oscar for Best Documen-
tary Feature in 2014 and will screen at Bend's Tower Theatre
on Monday (see "If you go"). See 'Twenty Feet'/C7
Submitted photo
Tata Vega, from left, Judith Hill, Merry Clayton, Julia Waters, and Oren Waters singing in "Twenty Feet
from Stardom."
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
e treasure t at is t e ationa or
ar
us e um
By Jill Schensul
place. And one hopes they will lead to understanding. ReIn the darkness of the the- membering. Incorporating the ater, the numbers appear. lessons of war into the minds They come at you, really, dar- of generations that followed. ing you to absorb them: The Record
Soviet Union, 24,000,000 China, 20,000,000 Poland, 5,600,000 Japan, 3,100,000 U.S.A., 518,000
Amission
That is exactly the mission of the museum, what Stephen
Ambrose, the historian and writer, had in mind when he
Germany, 8,800,000 These are the number of dead, by country, in World
began gathering support for it. Ambrose, a longtime profes-
War II. A total of 65 million, more than all other wars to that point combined.
ty of New Orleans, wrote not only biographies of Dwight D.
sor of history at the UniversiEisenhower and Richard Nix-
Visitors get a sobering taste on, but also historicalbest-sellof submarine warfare from ers, including "Band of Broththe feature "Final M i ssion:
ers." When he founded the
The USS Tang Experience." E isenhower Center a t t h e "Beyond All Boundaries," university in 1989, its mission the much-praised film that is
was to study the consequences
a centerpiece of the National
of war. So his first project was collecting oral histories from
World War II Museum in New
Orleans, slaps you into aware- World War II veterans about ness. Awareness of a reality their experiences. He collected that, as the "Greatest Gener-
their words and thousands of
ation" veterans slip away, we artifactsfrom veterans as he are in danger of forgetting. interviewed them. The movie, narrated by Tom
Hanks, its executive producer, is in "4-D." The 3-D is accomplished without needing those special glasses, and the fourth D reaches into the audience
?
All this formed the foundation of the museum, which he
saw as a place that would reflect "his deep regard for our nation's citizen soldiers, the
workers on the homefront and the sacrifices and hardships seats shake, smoke billows. they endured to achieve victoThe movie, like the museum, ry," according to its president. wants to engage all genera- Ambrose got a lot of heavy tions; that's why you need that hitters to help support the muextra "D" these days. seum — Hanks, Steven SpielStill, as the film proceeds (it bergand stateand federalgovtakes us through the Pacific ernments. It opened in 2000, Theater and Africa in addition and in 2003, Congress desig-
Photos by Jill Schensul/The (Hackensack, ht J ) Record
The National WWII Museum is made up of three buildings, including the Atrium in the Louisiana Memorial Pavilion, which features rotating macro-artifacts from the museum's collection, including a Douglas C-47.
— wind blows, the theater's
to Hitler's march through Eu-
rope), the events upstage any theatrical booms and quakes. The bigness is difficult to wrap your mind around. But in one section on the brutal
nated the museum as "America's National World War II
Museum." Ambrose, however, died in 2002, so he never knew of the extra import that
es of war — a woman jumping off a cliff to commit suicide, a GI giving his canteen to a child
was given to the museum he founded. From its one original building, the museum has expand- Visitors can get a small taste of how the war was fought below ses ed to three and is planning level in "Final Mission: The USS Tang Experience." Spoiler alert: more. Currently, exhibitions It's a pretty grim, sobering experience. are organized in three main
and a GI holding a tattered Im-
pavilions
perial Japan flag amid ruins — there is an image of a shiveringJapanese girl,m aybe 5, and all alone. It is just a quick image, a
themes of the war.
Battle of Saipan, when just the
center screen is illuminated, with shots of the consequenc-
blink in the spectrum of this devastation. But you see her shiver. You can feel it.
a r o un d ce n t r al tor Restaurant and Soda Shop
person, Augustus Hamilton
— atmospheric and friendly, Pavilion showcases the large with old-fashioned tunes and artifacts of the war and exhibi- USO photos.
of the 358th Fighter Group;
The Louisiana M emorial
tions about D-Day, the homefront and the Pacific. Here
you'll find the Solomon Victory Theater, which shows "Be-
yond All Boundaries" and the Basically, this is what will Stage Door Canteen, where move you. Individuals. The the music and entertainment stories of individuals, of each of the generation come to life. person, each one of the ones The John E. Kushner Restothat make up the 65 million
ration Pavilion is where staff
the time. Blakey was haunted
Generation, might live on.
by what he saw behind enemy lines and was only finally able to drive away the ghosts
he enlisted the day after Pearl when he became a volunteer. Harbor was attacked. I felt bad Sharing his stories and talking The U.S. Freedom Pavil- that I couldn't stay with him, about the war, in all its aspects, ion, the most recent addition, but I had doomed myself from helped him come to terms with features exhibitions and inthe outset to run out of time thepast. teractive experiences that illu- because, well, there are stories After his death, there was a minate the story of a country everywhere. memorial service for Blakey. mobilizing for war. At its heart The moment I entered the Gordon "Nick" Muller, presiis the Campaigns of Courage Louisiana Memorial Pavilion, dent and CEO of the National section, with it s new Road I was waylaid. After gasping WWII Museum, gave the closto Berlin: European Theater at the enormous planes sus- ing remarks. "He gave his spirit and Galleries. pended from the ceiling, I noticed a familiar-looking craft to
dead — along with those who and volunteers restore artisurvived, of course. The sto- facts in public view. Make sure Talking it all in ries bridge the gap of time and you stop by the American SecThere's a lot to see in this museum — truly, you need at least half a day, or consider breaking a Memorial Courtyard, the up your visit into two days (an JapaneseGarden of Peace, extra $6 for second-day admisthe Nimitz Museum, where sion), so you have time to digest Adm. Chester Nimitz spent Wherever World War II was itall. hisboyhood,andthe But there are two other spefelt, you can find away to recall much of 33,000-square foot George it. There arevast battlefields cial features of the museum H.W. BushGallery with 900 (well, at least two) not to miss. (throughout Normandy, for artifacts, machinery, vehicles "Final Mission: The U SS instance) and small private and more. Twoblocks east of Tang Submarine Experience" homes (AnneFrankHouse in requires buying a supplemenAmsterdam) and placeswhere the main campus, the Pacific tary ticket, but it's worth the soldiers trained (CampToccoa, Combat Zone, aunique 3-acre indoor/outdoor exhibition fea$5. You will get an interactive Georgia, linked to the "Band tures restored military vehicles experience of being aboard of Brothers") and died (Iwo and weaponry displayed in repthe most successful submarine Jima). Here are few a of the licated docks, entrenchments in World War II, boarding as other official museums that and beachheads. Combat it sets off on its fifth (and fiyou can visit. re-enactments are scheduled nal) war patrol Oct. 25, 1944. UMITED STATES throughout the year. Info: You're assigned a workstation Battleship Cove,Fall River, pacificwarmuseum.org. down in the control room — I Massachusetts:Near the The USSArizona Memorial, never did figure out how to Natick museum is theworld's Hawaii:The new$62 million work my various wheels and largest exhibition of historic Pearl Harbor Visitor Center at dials, but it soon didn't matter. naval ships, with a battleship, the World War II Valor in the Above us through a glass windestroyer, submarine, PT Pacific National Monument dow, we could see the prow of boats and more. Sleepovers features two world-class a Japanese warship and hear for kids. Opendaily. battleship- museums, aswell as outdoor the buzzing of alarms and cove.org. the shouting of instructions. I panels and panoramic shorestood looking up, mouth open, Battleship NewJersey, Cam- line views. Also visit the Pacific Aviation Museum, which occuhelpless, along with my fellow den, NewJersey: America's sub mates — a dad and his son, largest and most-decorated pies surviving World War II-era hangars that bear the scars of grandparents and their little battleship is berthed on the the Pearl Harbor attack. See Camden waterfront on the girl, a young Asian couple with aircraft, including a Japanese a little boy — as we began to Delaware River. Overnights Zero, an F4FWildcat, B-25 understand we were under atoffered. Opendaily April1 to tack. We were gaining an unOct. 31; closed Jan. 1 toFeb.6, Mitchell Bomber, F-14Tomcat derstanding what the "final" open weekendsonly the rest of and F-15Eagle, are on display. in the title of the experience the year — plus special holiday Veteran docents help bring the actually meant. I had no idea openings. Info: battleshipnew- history to life. Info: pacificaviationmuseum.org. — as themen on Oct.25,1944, jersey/org. had no idea. But for them it was The Museumsf World War ABROAD real. II, Natick, Massachusetts: Imperial Iar Museum,LsnThe other feature to watch A privately funded museum don:The museumcovers conout for at the museum is "Dog 20 minutes from Boston flicts from World War I to the Tag Experience," which allows with one of the world's most present and hasfive locations: you to follow one person's stocomprehensive collections of IWM London; IWMNorth in ry through the war. When you World War II memorabilia. The Trafford, Greater Manchester; pay for your ticket, you receive museum is, however, small, IWM Duxford nearCambridge; a dog tag that you can then and visiting is limited to control the Churchill War Roomsin register at a kiosk in the Camcrowds (and accidents). ReWhitehall, London; andthe paigns of Courage section of serve aheadfor a visit, Tuesday historic ship HMSBelfast, the museum. You "follow" a through Saturday, byemailing moored in the Pool of London real person in the museum damuseumofworldwariiyahoo. on the Thames. Info: iwm. tabase: Whenever you notice com. Info: museumofworld org.uk. a dog tag station at various warii.com. HiroshimaPeaceMemorial points throughout the exhibiNational Museum sf the Park andMuseum:The mution, you can access additional Pacific War, Fredericksburg, seum is within this moving, information about the person Texas:Dedicated exclusively memorial-filled park. Note that you're following and his or her to telling the story of the part of the museum is closed experiences at that point in Pacific and Asiatic theaters. for renovation until 2016. Info: time. The 6-acre campus includes pcf.city.hiroshima.jp. I didn't have enough time to learn all about my dog-tag
OtherWWII museums
who had just died. I asked them memories to millions of visiabout Thomas Blakey. tors," Muller said. "To all of us Blakey was an Army para- in this room, Tom Blakey was trooper who landed behind the very heart and soul of this enemy lines early on D-Day to museum." capture and hold a bridge to I thought about 15,000 keep Germans from sending hours of t e l ling s t ories. I reinforcements to Utah Beach. thought about 94 years of livHe was 94 when he died, Vil- ing. I thought about 65 million larrubia said. He had logged people dying. I hadn't even 15,000 hours as a volunteer at begun to explore the place, the museum. but already I was grateful for They didn't tell me that the opportunity it provided to Blakey had been one of the learn the stories of individuals, legions of veterans who had as many as I — and the million suffered from post-traumatic other visitors — could. stress disorder. It was someSo their memories, and thing you didn't talk about at what made them the Greatest
TOUCHMARK slNCE 1980
•3
•
my left. It was, I learned from
the signage, a Higgins Boat, a replica of one used for the D-Day landing in Normandy. It also explained one reason
the museum is in New Orleans: When the military in the late
1930s began developing small boats that could carry troops from ships to open beaches, they eventually discovered Andrew Jackson Higgins of New Orleans, who had been manu-
facturing shallow-water work boats to support oil and gas exploration in the Louisiana
bayous. Higgins adapted his designs for the military's specifications; he and his 30,000
workers went onto make every landing craft used in the war. Right next to the Higgins display was a long metal table, and near the far end sat two
men, one sporting military medals, the other with a gray, unruly beard. Behind the man with the medals was a sign: "I was there! Meet Forrest Villarrubia, USMC, WWII veteran. Pacific Theater." Both men were veterans,
willing to answer questions, or welcome other veterans to
the museum. On the table beside them was a photo of a man
ie
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SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
am erin meetswi ernessincoasta Bi ur By Richard Scheinin San Jose Mercury News
"Oh my God, look at that!" My wife, Sara, and I have j ust driven around one o f
those hip-hugging turns on Highway 1 i n C a lifornia's Big Sur. They used to make me nervous — you know, the fact that there's nothing but a guardrail between you and the death-fall. Now they make me greedy for what I know i s coming next. A n d
sure
enough, this one has opened up onto a straight-shot view down miles of coastline: the
jutting cliffs, the shining sea below. We've been coming here for more than 25 years,in the early days with our three young sons, stopping at Nepenthe for an Ambrosia Burger and a vista, then continuing on to Jade
Cove Beach and a night of camping on the foggy bluffs. Photos by LiPo Ching / Bay Area News Group One time, 20 years ago, Sara McWay Falls, on the McWay Waterfall Trail, plummets onto the beach at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park and I left the boys at home
in Big Sur, California.
and got away for a memorable night at Ventana Inn and Spa, the ocean-view resort that was
Park — we follow a babbling founded in 1975 by Hollywood creek, hopping across rocks investor Larry Spector, who and roots, and then begin helped produce "Easy Rid- our climb. The t r ail s lants er." Now the kids have grown steadily upward, switchbackand flown, and we're simply ing through redwood groves, getting away, heading back to cleaving to the sides of McWay Ventana for a re-pampering. Canyon, passing over small We intend to earn it, how- wooden bridges and breaking ever, by hiking a steep trail up into dramatic cloud-shrouded into the Santa Lucia coastal views of the Pacific. The sirange. The trek requires for- lence is profound. Dotting our tification, and so we precede way are redwood sorrel and our Big Sur adventure with a wild sweet pea with pale lavstop at that foodies' paradise ender blossoms — and sporadknown as the Big Sur Bakery ic poison oak, blooming early and Restaurant. this winter. Climate change?
f'
forest.
Japanese bathhouse, where
7:30 p.m.: Dinner
we slide into the warm waters and stare up at the sky, nam- TOP IMAGE: A small stream runs along the start of the Ewoldsen
The Restaurant at Ventana
ing the constellations, count-
is a sleek and intimate place, ing our good luck. softly lit. My four-course meal ($75) includes a grilled New 10a.m.: One more hike York strip steak with hen of There's a storm coming in the woods mushrooms, a min- the next morning, but trail gling of flavors that demands guide Greg Ambrosio is ready slow eating. Sara is silenced to lead his daily tour of the by her roasted duck breast; Ventana property: 243 acres, that's how good it is.
a corner of the surrounding
hiking trail at Julia Pfeiffer Burns State Park. ABOVE: Diners on the patio of the Restaurant at the Ventana Inn and Spa have aview of the ocean.
key, deer. Ambrosio takes us snaps it in half and offers us to a secluded redwood grove: a whiff of the menthol aroma: "When Iwas a boy,my great Native Americans treated it as a sacred spot; some woo- aunt told me, 'Smell that evw oo-ers have called i t a n ery day, and you'll never energy vortex. Looping the catch cold.' " property, he seems familiar He offers to take us several with each blossom and tree. miles down the road to a spot He snaps off fragrant sprigs with 15 waterfalls. But the of white sage, yerba buena wind is picking up, the rains and penny royal. He picks a getting ready to wallop. Fifleaf of California bay laurel, teen waterfalls? We'll be back.
We linger for three hours Ventana Wilderness, which is over the meal, drinking good 165,000 acres large. "Let's take red wine, overindulging in a hike," he says. He's a raconteur, a local, dessert. And then we stroll At the 90-minute mark back to our room, don our and it isn't long before he's 11 a.m.: Thesandwhich about halfway through the robes and — laughing in the p ointing out t r acks i n t h e The bakery is in a convert- 4.6-mile loop — we come to dark — find our way to the earth: bobcat, rabbit, wild tured ranch house built in 1936 a fork, with a sign pointing by a descendant of William up toward the Waters Trail. Brainard Post, the 19th-cen- We climb another 100 yards tury pioneer who worked at a or so, hang a left and plunk Vinyl Wall Art Point Lobos whaling station ourselves down on a bench before moving to Big Sur as marked with a rickety "End • Decorative Spheres Categories Listed a ranch foreman. He married of Trail" sign. More than 1,000 DOES NOT INCUJDESFASONALDEPNtTIrtENT Anselma Onesimo, who was feet above the ocean, we are • Ceramic Decor Sale FEATURING TABLETOP DECOR. of Costonoan Indian heritage, practically at cliff's edge. It PLATES, SERVING DISHES. PITCHERS, CUPS, SALT a PEPPER and their family became fa- feels like the top of the world, AND OTHER CE!tANIC DECOR mous on this twisty stretch of as the delicious cold mists fly DOESNor INCurDE DECORATIVE DRAWERPULLS coast. All that history adds to up into our faces. On our way the bakery'srustic ambience, down, following a ridge overameless LED Candles, e NlrlOrs WALL a TABLE • Candles,Fl though I'm not prepared for looking Highway 1, the clouds Fragrance Warmers & Diffusers ITEMS PRICED$4.99 a UP the cost of our little meal: $41 suddenly vanish, and there's • lamps 8 lampshades DOES Nor rNCWDEGINDLEFX~. for two coffees, a ham and nothing but open skies and TFAuGHT5,yortvEs. YALvEpAcKsOR FRAGRANCE WAX a OILS • Pillows, Rugs & Throws cheese croissant and a couple endless waters, along with the of sandwiches to go? Come on! mingling fragrances of forest But the coffee is rich, the croissant is, like, ridiculous.
our room, where we munch
grapes in front of the fire, then Leaving the trailheadgrab a blanket and flop, slightalongside the parking lot in ly tipsy, into the hammock Julia Pfeiffer B u rn s S t ate out on the deck, enveloped by
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And when we get into the car 4 p.m.: Happyhour and begin the drive toward The decadence begins at our trailhead, Sara and I are Ventana, our Shangri-La. We groaning, literally, as we pass sip two glasses of excellent S andwich No. 1 b ack a n d pinot — a 2010 Cedar Lane f orth. It's o verstuffed w i th from Carmel Valley's Chesecurling ribbons of fresh Ital- bro Wines — and dig into the ian meats — ham, salami and spread of oozy cheeses, curatmortadella — spilling out of ed by chef Paul Corsentino. the perfect, crusty sourdough, Guests wander about in white accented with pepper jack robes, fresh from massages mayonnaise and mustard. and hot tubs. We speak sotto Profuse with flavor, it's a full voce, as do all the other coumeal. (No need for $10.75 ples here in the Bistro. Sandwich No. 2). We take refills on the piAnd now we are ready for not,and amble along the windthe Ewoldsen TraiL ing, wooded pathways back to
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
Hillsboro Continued from C1 There are calcites — orange, red, pink, even bright blue. Willemite and autunite may be
yellow-green; scapolite shows up as orange-yellow; dolomite is often a vivid orange, and hardystonite may appear as deep blue, almost violet. Fluorescent colors are ascribed
to aragonite, clinohedrite, eucryptite, rhyolite, scheelite, termolite and other minerals that
the average person might only read about in a dictionary. They may all be seen in the Rice Northwest Museum of Rocks and Minerals, considered one of the finest geology museums in the United States. Recently approved as one of three Smithsonian Institution
affiliates in Oregon (the others are in McMinnville and Ash-
land), it has unparalleled collections of Northwest minerals and petrified wood, along with several iconic, one-of-akind specimens. Although it is located just
off U.S. Highway 26 west of Portland, the museum is virtually unknown o utside of
rock-hounding circles. "This is a different part of nature, not what people typically think of when they hear that word," explained executive director
«
JulianGray. "We preserve the
rare and beautiful 'things' of '?
nature."
Apassionfor rocks Oregon's Was h ington County, which embraces the
'r
'Ibalatin River Valley, is far
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin
from unknown to business A new tasting room rises above a vineyardthat awaits spring growth at Ponzi Vineyards near Sherwood. Established in 1970 by pinot noir pioneers Dick and Nancy Ponzi, travelers. Home to technology the company built a new gravity-flow winery in 2013 in the peaked building at left, followed by a visitor facility. company Intel and numerous
"Alma Rose," an 18-inch-Iong rhodochrosite from Colorado's
other high-tech firms, along with footwear and dothing gi-
away, the collection took over
ant Nike, it is a destination for
Rices moved out, their home Sweet Home Mine that may be became a private museum. It the finest specimen of its type was accorded nonprofit status in the world. There are other in 1996, a year before its found- exhibits of agates and meteorers' deaths. ites, lapidary carvings and gem Now the museum is in its faceting. And in the adjacent final transition phase from a Northwest M n e ral G a llery family museum to a public in- building, museum curator Lesstitution. That will create many lie Moclock will describe a zemore fundraising opportunities olite, fossils and an opal-filled — "Intel is a $57 billion com- thunder egg considered to be pany across the interstate, and the world's largest. we can't approach them until Ethnic Asiancuisine we get this," Gray quippedwith upgrades and possible As a dedicated "foodie," I expansion to follow. 'Vilith the also find Washington County addition of new technology, we remarkable for its wide variety want to become much more in- of ethnic Asian restaurantsteractive, especially for school seemingly a greater concentragroups," the director said. tion than in Portland itself. In a Surrounded by 23 partly short visit, I enjoyed outstandwooded acres, the Rice house ing Indian, Korean and Japawas the first ranch-style home nese cuisine, and within a few to be placed on the National more days, I might also have Register of Historic Places. Its considered Chinese, Thai, Vietgalleries are both on the main namese, Persian and Lebanese. floor and in the basement. One A likely reason for this proliflower-level exhibit is the Den- eration is the number of infornis and Mary Murphy petri- mation technology specialists fied-wood collection, display- who have come from Asian ing460 specimens from all over countriesto work in area corthe world, including more than porations. In past visits, I have a dozen from Central Oregon. encountered many of them dinThere's even a hokey "talking ing at Chennai Masala, and this log" that speaks to young time was no different.
visitors from around the world. That includes Central Oregonians, of course. But all work
and no play makes Jack a dull boy. Curious about afterwork activities and dining options in Hillsboro, Beaverton and nearby communities, I wandered among these towns and others
— within a half-hour's drive southwest of downtown Portland when rush-hour traffic
doesn't interfere — on a recent three-day visit.
My most memorable discovery was the Rice Northwest Museum, open weekends and
Wednesday through Friday afternoons. Richard and Helen Rice were
passionate rock collectors beginning in the 1930s, when they became enamored of agates
they gathered on the Oregon coast. "Richard had money at a time when there were incred-
ible minerals to be bought," Gray explained. "He got involved in lapidary and learned to cut andpolishhis finds. Butit began as a hobby." The couple built a r anch-
the house, and when the senior
style, flagstone home in 1953 and raised three daughters there. They displayed their visitors. specimens in lighted cases. As A stunning collection of the family grew and moved crystals is climaxed by the
• 2'lrrt «T~»„'
The Nak Won Korean Restaurant is one of at least 10 "Seoul food" eateries in a 1«/s-square-mile
district of Beaverton known as"Little Korea." Banchan, or small-plate side dishes, are served here in advance of larger plates such asbulgogi beef. a traditional meal of makhani new furniture and decor. But dhal gentils), saag paneer (spin- the kitchen still dishes up the ach) and roti bread. Not only same marvelous spice blends has expansion into an adjacent of cardamom, cumin, corian-
The once-tiny cafe, however, had changed a lot in the two
space more than doubled the size; but the restaurant has also
years since I last dropped in for
brightened its appearance with
•
0
o
der and garam masala that
make the food of India unique. Continued next page
www.AgateBeachwotel.com Private,vintage,oeeanfront getaway. pt' e w port,tRO 1-. ~ ~-7S--S6754
',ate Betichmotel
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
From previous page In downtown Beaverton is a I t/z-square-mile quadrant known to locals as "Little Korea." It is home to at least 10 Korean restaurants that offer
variations of grilled beef, pork belly, chicken and fish with
the four-level winery where younger daughter Luisa Ponzi holds forth as head winemaker,
adjacent tasting room, which
$7y' ~ -
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attention to building a self-sus-
Owned by husband-and-wife taining ecosystem on our 125 chefs with broad experience planted acres. We don't add at such noted Portland restau- sugar or manipulate the grapes rants as Fratelli, Saucebox and in any way. We regard correcBluehour, Decarli brings the tions as failures." big city to the suburbs. Cavatelandtaprooms li pasta with pork Bolognese, Breweries and beef short ribs braised The brewing industry is in espresso and dried prunes growing, too, as it has done and served with spaetzli, were statewide. At least 13 indepenoutstanding. dent craft breweries have estr.~ r tablished niches in Washington Pinot noir culture County, with more than half John Gottherg Anderson / For The Bulletin Washington County's wine that many private taprooms A zip-liner prepares to jettison herself from the final plafform of the country is focused in the North pouring their output to thirsty Pumpkin Ridge course near North Plains. Three of the plafforms Willamette Valley. Dozens of visitors. are linked by suspension bridges that turn into ladder climbs, 90 vineyards and wineries cover In the latter category is the to120 feet up in Douglas fir and Western red cedar trees above the hills that surround Hills-
ABV Public H ouse, which
Lunch and dinner every day. Budget to moderate. Gas:Bend to Hilisboro (roundDecarli 4545 SW trip), 373 miles at $2.80/gallon Watson restaurant: Ave., Beaverton; 503$41.77 641-3223, www.decarlirestauDinner:ABVPublic House rant.com. Dinner Tuesdayto $23 Sunday. Moderatetoexpensive Lodging(twonights with Chennai Masala:2088NW breakfast):Hampton Inn 8 Stucki Ave., Tanasbourne, HillSuites $237.62 sboro; 503-531-9500, www. Lunch:NakWon$20 chennaimasal a.net.Lunchand Admission:Rice Museum$7 dinner every day. Budget to moderate Dinner:Chennai Masala $31.25 Coyote's Bar tf Grill:5301 W. Baseline Road,Hillsboro; 18holes:Reserve Golf Club 503-640-7225, www.coyotes$49 restaurant.com. Lunch and Lunch:Syun Izakaya$27.20 dinner every day. Moderate Pumpkin RidgeZipTour: $75 Bnk WonKorean Restaurant: Dinner:Decarli $45.50 4600 SWWatson Ave., BeaTOTAL:$557.34 verton; 503-646-9382, www. facebook.com. Lunch and dinner Monday to Saturday. If you go Budget to moderate Rock CreekTavern:10000 (ali addresses in Oregon) NW Old Cornelius PassRoad, INFORMATION Hillsboro; 503-645-3822, Washington County Visitors www.mcmenamins.com. Association. 12725 SW MiiLunch and dinner every day. likan Way,Suite 210, BeaverBudget to moderate ton; 503-644-5555, 800-537Syun lzakaya:209 NELincoln 3149, www.tualatinvalley.org St., Hiilsboro; 503-640-3131, www.syun-izakaya.com. LODGING Lunch Monday to Saturday, Century Hotel:8185 SWTudinner every day. Budget to alatin-Sherwood Road,Tualamoderate tin; 503-692-3600, 800-2409494, www.thecenturyhotei. ATTRACTIONS com. Rates from $129 Ambncht BrennngCompany: The GrandHotel at Bridge1060 NE 25th Ave., Suite B, port:7265 SW HazelFern Hillsboro; 503-828-1400, Road, Tigard; 503-968-5757, www.ambacht.us 877-540-7800, www.grandCooper Mountain Vineyartts: hotelbridgeport.com. Rates 9480 SW Grabhorn Road,Beafrom $159 verton; 503-649-0027, www. Hampton lnn tfSuites Portcoppermountainwine.com land/Hillsboro-Evergreen Ponzi Vineyards:19500 SW Park:19999 NWTanasbourne Mountain Home Road,SherDrive, Hillsboro; 503-718wood; 503-628-1227, www. 0006, http://hamptoninn3. ponziwines.com hilton.com. Rates from $109 Pumpkin RidgeZip Tour: Mclennmins GrandLottge: 22616NW PumpkinRidge 3505 Pacific Ave., Forest
Expenses
Fogelstrom, husband of older daughter (and company president) Maria Ponzi, designed the
nestles discreetlyinto the hills. fiery-hot kimchee. I followed The winery is famous for a recommendation to t h e its pinot noir production, but it Nak Won restaurant and was also makes an Italian red varistunned to be served an ar- etal called dolcetto and several ray of more than a half-dozen whites — a citrusy pinot gris, complimentary banchan (side a soft chardonnay, pinot blanc, dishes) before mymeal arrived. Riesling and l esser-known They induded a delicious vari- arneis. ety ofsteamed and marinated Other well-established area vegetables and tofu. I would re- wineries include J. Albin and turn just for this. Oak Knoll (Hillsboro), David A longtime 'Ittalatin Valley Hill and Montinore Estate (Forfavorite has been Syun Iza- est Grove), Elk Cove and Patton kaya, housed in a historic for- Valley (Gaston). Especially inmer library just off Main Street triguing is the all-organic Cooin quaint downtown Hillsboro. per Mountain Vineyards, in the In true Japanese pub style, Beaverton hills, which producSyun offers a wide choice of es biodynamic pinots (noir, gris sakes and beers, along with and blanc) from four private esvery fresh Oregon coast sea- tatevineyards. food at its sushi bar. Even more The winery was founded impressive is its selection of in the late 1970s by a PortJapanese plates not often seen land homeopath and psychion this side of the Pacificatrist, Robert Gross, and his dishes such as okonomiyaki wife, Corinne; they produced (savory pancakes), agedashi their first wines in 1987. Their tofu (bean curd in broth) and daughter, Barbara Gross, now chawan mushi (steamed egg marketing director, describes custard). For Japanophiles, it's winemaker Gilles de Domingo's winemaking style as "hoa real find. For non-Asian food, I had meopathy for the grapes." "We don't source from anyan excellent dinner at the Italian-influenced Decarli Restau- one," she said, "so we pay more rant in the heart of Beaverton.
iW
and son-in-law architect Brett
fermented vegetables such as
C5
Brunswick Creek.
boro and Beaverton, as well as opened a year ago in an indusSherwood, Gaston and Forest trial park facing U.S. Highway Grove. They are a great place 26 near Helvetia Road. I initial- Three Mugs Brewing. Culifor business travelers to sip and ly had trouble finding the pub, nary-trained son Christopher relax after a busy work week. but locals clearly don't have the (aka "Amish" for his red beard) Probably no winery here same problem: The place was is the brewmaster. A taproom deserves more acdaim than packed. for two years, a brewery since Ponzi Vineyards. It was foundMore than 700 beers and ci- January 2014, the business proed in 1970 by Dick and Nancy ders are sold from coolers that ducesa variety ofseasonaland Ponzi, who were among the surround two walls, and 40 standard ales induding red and first pioneers of Oregon's pinot taps offer a rotating selection brown ales, IPAs and dunkelnoir industry. They had earned of local drafts. The food wasn't weizen. Brew dogs Finnegan (a national recognition for their bad, either. black Lab) and Bruno (a boxer) wines before the end of that Industrial parks accommo- are always around; in fact, Findecade, helping to establish the date a number of the small area negan was voted "best bartendregion's reputation. breweries, induding the Am- er" by readers of Northwest After more than 40 years bacht and Three Mugs brewing Brewing News in a recentpoll. outside of B eaverton, the companies. Ambacht — the Art Larrance is a l egend Ponzis built a new facility and word is Dutch for "craft," said in Oregon brewing cirdes. In opened it in June 2013. The his- Tom Kramer, who co-owns the particular, he introduced sour toric estate still welcomes vis- company with cousin-in-law beers to the Northwest, which itors, but the spectacular new Brandy Grobart — specializes he continuesto make and serve tasting room and gravity-flow in Belgian-style beers, indud- at his Raccoon Lodge on the winery, looking north across ing a ginger ale and a "Matzo- Beaverton-Hillsdale Highway brau" that is made with Jewish (state Route 10). The Two Kilts t he 1ttalatin Valley from a perch on Sherwood's Mountain matzo added to the mash. "But Brewing Co., which will move
vantage of location near Ron
Tonkin Field to support the local professional baseball team — not coincidentallynamed the
Hillsboro Hops.
Outdoor adventure Pro baseball doesn't fire up here until June, when the Class
Grove; 503-992-9533, 877-
Road, North Plains; 971-371-
3895, www.pumpkinridgeziptour.com Reserve VineyardsandGolf Club:4805 SW229th Ave., boro; 503-208-5708, 888-503- Aloha; 503-649-8191, www. reservegolf.com 7094, www.theorenco.com. Rates from $89 Rice ftorthwest Museumof Rocks tf Minerals:26385 PepperTree lnn:10720 SW NW Groveiand Drive, HillsAlien Blvd., Beaverton; 503641-7477, www.peppertreeinn. boro; 503-647-2418, www. ricenorthwestmuseum.org com. Rates from $54 Three MugsBrewingCompany:2020 NWAioclek Drive, DINING Hillsboro; 971-322-0232, ABV Public House:23588 NW www.threemugsbrewingco. Clara Lane, Hillsboro; 503com 372-9117, www.abvpub.com. 992-9533, www.mcmenamins.com. Rates from $50 The Orenco Hotel:1457 NE Orenco Station Parkway, Hills-
A Northwest League season kicks into action. But other sports are popular year-round. I enjoyed a round of golf at played the South Course, dethe Reserve Vineyards and signed by John Fought. Golf Club, a semi-private club in Pumpkin Ridge Zip Tours Aloha, between Beaverton and was one of the more challengHillsboro, that is nearly as well- ing zip courses I've undertakknown for its Vintage Room en. Located on a hilltop 7 miles restaurant (its wines come north of the village of North from regional wineries) as Plains, it was opened in Aufor its 36 championship holes. gust by Portland-based SynCraig Griswold, the course's ergo, a challenge-course and director of instruction, sent me team-building company. out on the Bob Cupp-designed Operations manager MitchHome Road, invites more visi- you can't drink it at Passover," this year from Sherwood to North Course, and I was lucky ell McWilliams and markettors these days. Kramer warned. downtown Hillsboro, is famous to lose onlythreeballs inits wa- ing manager Cory Rossnagel And it's all in the family: Air Force veteran Jay Jen- for Scottish and Irish ales, and ter hazards. No doubt I would harnessed me and led me over Dick Ponzi himself designed nings and his family own Vertigo Brewing takes ad- still be in the sand traps had I seven steel cables. Three of the
zip platforms were linked by suspension bridges that turned into ladder dimbs,90to 120 feet
up in fir and cedar trees. While the views over
B r unswick
Creek Canyon were unquestionably "bird's eye," vertigo was a close companion.
Swaying in the trees was fun for a short time. But I think I prefer both feet on the
ground, among the rocks at the Northwest's finest mineral museum. — Reporter:janderson@ bendbulletin.com
W W W . B E N D B U L L E T I N .C O M
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
SU D O K U
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that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
by David L Hoyt and Jaft Knurak
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to form six ordinary words.
TRIMEH
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DAILY BRIDGECLUB
merous motion pictures.
Find James Bond, 'Bali Hai' scenery in Kauai's Hanalei
JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Photos by Brian J. Cantwell/Seattle Times
A roadside viewpoint offers this look at Hanalei Bay. The area has served as a tropical locale in nu-
sMRdBy, M~eh is,zois
Losing one's balance
By Brian J. Cantwell
By FRANK STEWART
The Seattle Ttmes
Tribune Content Agency
Recently in the ACBL's magazine, A diamond leadwould have sunk the noted theorist Larry Cohen and I the contract, but South led the jack of d ebated th e w i s dom o f "pr e - clubs. East took the ace, cashed the balancing." ace of trumps and A-K of spades, Most players are familiar with ruffed a spade and threw diamonds "balancing": backing into the auction on the K-Q ofclubs.He made four, when the opponents stop low. "Pre- plus 620, so instead of losing 14 balancing," which requires fortitude IMPs, GUPTA lost only five and held and judgment, is entering when you on to win the match. think the opponents are about to stop West dealer but you fearyour partner may not Both sides vulnerable have a suitable hand to balance. C ohen supported t h e id e a . I NORTH 4b10543 expressed doubts. In a Senior Teams match at the 96 ACBL Fall Championships, GUPTA 0AKQ74 vs. KASLE, both teams were chock 4876 full of professionals. Tied at the end of regulation, the match required an WEST EAST eight-deal playoff, and today's deal 4 8 2 4 I AK9 7 arose with GUPTA ahead by 10 9 J 987 9 A1054 3 IMPs. 0 J105 0986 At one table, North-South for 4A 4KQ43 GUPTA were E ri c R o dwell-Jeff Meckstroth, one of the world's most SOUTH aggressive and successful pairs. 4IQ J6 When East-West bid and r aised QKQ2 hearts, Rodwell came in with a pre032 balancing double. It was a bad time 4 J10952 for that action. East redoubled, and when South took out to three clubs, West Nor th E ast South West doubled. The defense won P ass Pass 19 Pass 29 Dbl Redbl 3A seven tricks, plus 800. All P a s s That result gave KASLE a chance D bl for a big swing and the lead. But in the replay, where North passed over Opening lead — 4b 8 two hearts, East jumped to f our hearts. (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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"Defend Hanalei n says the
bumper sticker on a rusty, surfboard-loaded pickup puttering slowly down the winding, two-lane road in front of my rental car as I approach a bridge into Kauai's green, green Hanalei Valley. The bridge itself is a political statement aimed at keeping "progress" out of this iso-
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lated community on the north
Cry
shore of the Hawaiian island of Kauai. Locals successfully
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battled against a new concrete
span to replace the Hanalei River's one-lane, steel-truss bridge. At islanders' behest, the state in 2003 replaced the decaying old bridge — built in 1912, the year the Titanic sank
— with a close replica. CLt
It slows traffic. It keeps out
ctg
tour buses and big trucks. It helps keep Hanalei funky.
CCr
waiians farmed taro and other food crops in this fertile valley. Native crops gave way to a boom of rice farming in the 19th century. Today, water-
C3
Over centuries, Native Ha-
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TOP IMAGE: The launching stream at Kayak Hanalei feeds into the lazy Hanalei River. ABOVE: During a tour of a historic rice mill in the Hanalei Valley, visitors also learn about taro farming and get
to sample fresh pa'i'ai, or pounded poi, rolled in shredded coconut.
are the backup singers as Pasdown emerald-green hillsides tor Alpha Goto plays his ukubeyond ponds that once again lele and croons uKei Ka Hoa 0 falls thread thousands of feet
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grow taro, now used in tradi-
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tional dishes plus everything from hummus to smoothies. With every breeze, the large, heart-shaped taro l e aves wavelike butterfly wings.
Have in Jesus"). After the service, look behind the church for Christian missionaries Abner and Lucy
Wilcox's 1837-vintage home,
Travel across the
v a lley listed on the National Register of Historic Places, with its n a-LAY") t own , t h e n i n t o lava-rock chimney, classic koa the "Bali Hai" area of Kauai, furniture and a master bed-
through Hanalei (say uhaw-
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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
hikers by the score set out
ly from the 19th century until
from the Kuhio Highway's end to tackle the challenging Kalalau Trail along the Na Pali cliffs. The old bridge doesn't keep
Hawaii's rice industry collapsed in the 1960s. The Ho'opulapula Haragu-
visitors out, so Hanalei town
life Refuge, off-limits to most
chi Rice Mill is now in the mid-
dle of Hanalei National Wild-
has its share of touristy bou- visitors, so if you're a birder, tiques and galleries. But even the touralso off ers chances their setting, such as the rustic
to bolster your life list with
Old Hanalei School retail complex (check out the vintage restrooms), beats your average strip mall. And while cafes might have plenty of visitors from Oregon or Arizona, not every or as memorable as Hanalei's 52-year-old island-style bar,
possible glimpses of endangered species such as the ae'o (Hawaiian stilt), 'alae ke'oke'o (Hawaiian coot), 'alae 'ula (Hawaiian moorhen), nene (Hawaiian goose) and the koloa maoli (Hawaiian duck). The tour is highly personal. Leading it is 35-year-old Lyndsey H a raguchi-Nakayama,
Tahiti Nui — or uda Nui" to
whose family is in its sixth
locals. Co-founded by a descendant of Tahitian royalty, this is where George Clooney and Beau Bridges hung out in
generation of farming the valley, which included oper-
Hawaiian town has local col-
ating the mill until its closure.
Hanalei is on Kauai's north shore, on the Kuhio Highway, abouta50-minute drive from the Lihue Airport.
RICE MILLTOUR Tours of the Ho'opulapula Haraguchi Rice Mill and the adjacent working taro farm are offered Wednesdays at10 a.m. and last 3t/t to
4 hours, including snacks and a Hawaiian-style lunch. $87/adults, $52/children 5-12, younger children free. 808-651-3399 or haraguchiricemill.org. BEACH TIME Hanalei Bay, fronting Hanalei town, has one of the best beaches onKauai. As you drive west through Hanalei, turn right on Aku Road, then right on Weke Road. Look for the beach park on your left. MORE INFORMATION Kauai Visitors Bureau, kauaidiscovery.com
in freshly shredded coconut. Then comes a catered lunch of sticky rice, lau lau pork (marinated pork wrapped in a steamed taro leaf) and a sweet mochi cake.
It leaves me bulging with Hanalei culture — and its food. To workoffthelunch,akayak paddle up the lazy Hanalei
Now, through a nonprofit, the family helps preserve the River is just the way to cap the historic mill, which has been day. Kayak Hanalei, a f amidance to a rocking island band rebuilt and restored through and slurp cocktails bursting many flash floods — you can l y-run outfitter just off t h e with pineapple and passion get rain here that would im- main drag as you enter town, fruit. press Noah — and two major launches boats into a little After a hard night at uda hurricanes. stream that connects with the Nui," make your way to church. uAt the ripe old age of 6, I river. They make it easy and Hanalei is home to one of the started driving t r actors, to fun, no guide required. Rent a planet's prettiest little church- help with evacuations," Hara- double-seater, sit-on-top kayes, circa 1912. Sunday services guchi-Nakayama recalls as ak for a half-day. A 9 0-minute r ound t r i p (10 a.m.) at the green-shingled, she stands by a taro pond and American Gothic-style Wai'oli tells her family's story. takes you under the old bridge Hui'ia Church, in the heart of Under the old mill's corru- and back up into the wildlife town, include hymns sung in gated metal roof, she shows refuge, past towering monkey the Hawaiian language. how scoops of rice moved on a pod trees and thickets of hau, Visitors are welcome. You conveyor belt powered at first also known as sea hibiscus. Then it's back into town for might get a lei during the by a water wheel, later by a morning g reeting. A l oha hefty diesel engine. Machinery dinner. Choices, choices: the shirts, muumuus and flip- dating to 1830s China includes open-air deck at Kalypso for flops, with a n o c casional boulders that turned together the Paniolo Spicy BBQ burger plumeria blossom in the hair, to crush and hull the rice. ($10.95)? Or Chicken in a Baris the dress code. Pick up a I learn almost enough about rel BBQ, from which you can handheld lauhala fan, woven rice milling and taro farming look across the road to a douthe 2011 movie "The Descendants.n Under bamboo rafters,
33 37
where rainbows arch across room, where Lucy gave birth cockscomb-jagged hills above to eight sons. some of the island's best snorFor schooling in a page of keling beaches. unique island history, I join "South Pacific" was filmed a tour of Hawaii's only rehere. A former James Bondmaining rice mill, situated actor Pierce Brosnan — has a among the taro ponds. Rice home here. Every morning, was grown here commercial-
If you go
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from theleaves of a hala tree, to wade into a pond and go to from a basket by the door work.
ble ribbon waterfall tumbling down a distant mountainside? Or back to Tahiti Nui, for Kau-
if there's not enough breeze The tour concludes with a through the open windows, demonstration of taro pound- ai prawns with macadamia whose stained glass has a col- ing using a lava-rock stone. honey sauce over steamed bok orful theme of tropical flowers There are samples of coco- choy ($25)? If you stay out too late and and banana leaves. nut water and fresh pa'i'ai, On the Sunday I visited, or pounded poi — like pur- drinktoo much? Backto church twittering birds from outside plish lumps of dough rolled with you in the morning.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
Submitted photo
Darlene Love
'Twenty Feet' Continued from C1 "'Wait a
m i n ute,'" Love
says, mimicking a common reaction t o
t h e c o n trast.
"'She's not20 feetfrom stardom! She's there!'" Indeed, Love has enjoyed a majorlate-careerresurgence, but it came decades after a decidedly rocky start. In the
1960s, she sang on a number of hits, many under the guidance of producer PhilSpector, Sam McManis/The Sacramento Bee
The pyramid constructed at the Institute of Perception in Jacumba Hot Springs, California, is one of the centerpieces of the site, which also hosts music festivals.
x ecta warm, i weir, wecome at acum a's nstitute o erce tion By SamMcManis
argue, aren't we all'?) and land owner. He and his partner,
The Sacramento Bee
JACUMBA HOT SPRINGS,
Calif.— Sunlight glints off an object deep in the desert, brilliant in the stone-washed den-
Noor, settled in Jacumba Hot
Springs, the high desert oasis along the Mexican border in far eastern San Diego County,
im hue of the afternoon sky. in the early 1990s, where the You are compelled to follow, two along with like-minded lured by curiosity and some artistic colleagues set about inchoate force moving you creating a "sacred" space ever forward.
for artists and seekers to ply
When you reach the termi- their craft, commune with the nus of Railroad Street, literal- ancient gods and goddesses ly the end of the road and the whose spirits live in the very resumption of the vast and un- soil that Roberts says harbors forgiving high desert terrain, a "power vortex" and mystical the object comes into clearer energy "ley lines" dating from view. It is a pyramid, may- neolithic times. Kirk Roberts looks inside an art installation at the Institute of be 20 feet tall and looks to be Think of the Institute of Per- Perception. constructed of metal, maybe
ception as a permanent Burning Man installation, with a
aluminum.
dash of Coachella grooving up, Kirk pats his pocket. No added. Kirk and Noor (they in- key. He can't let you in to see sist on first-name status) stage the interior. music and performance art "People ask, did you do the festivals several times a year, pyramid at the exact angles the biggest being TeleMagica and stuff? No, no, no, no. We (30 bands, scores of artists) actually put it in a place that up with nowhere left to go. To each spring. was not a sacred node.... We your left is a caboose with a You ask, again, about the put it in as a (psychic) way stahand-painted sign hammered pyramid and Kirk assures that tion, where there wasn't anyYou can't get c loser be-
cause a locked gate, adorned with wrought-iron sculptures, blocks the way. To your right is the abandoned husk of Jacumba's former train station, railroad cars in disrepair lined
onto to the wooden door. It reads: "Private Property. Institute of Perception."
In events such as Burning
Man," he continues,"nothing endures. Here, they stay, and they make an impact."
Kirk and Noor's impact in their community of like-minded artists and mystical think-
ers is huge. In addition to TeleMagica, which has drawn thousands, the couple is fea-
tured in Anthony Vega's book "Sex Dreaming: Esoteric Sexsculpture, first and foremost." Near the pyramid stands uality Revealed," based on the a 6-foot block of concrete teachings of philosopher Carwith a snake carved along its los Castenada. shaft. The Toltecs, Kirk says, Monetary gains and widebelieved snakes were sacred spread renown are of little as the "guardians of the des- concern to K ir k a n d N o or. ert," and he says more than a They live simply on the land, few visiting artists here inte- consider the desert as "the grate shedded snakeskins into place where all great spiritual works. seekers of the world" gravitate. "One day there was (a rat"This really is the last wild tler) in the pyramid, and I was space in California," Kirk says. wondering why it was coiled "When I came here, I thought, right in the center in our con- 'This is like a David Lynch crete meditation area," he t own, the last place in t h e says. "I walked around it. It world to have a Starbucks.'" didn't care if I was there. The Disregard, too, those "No next day, all that was left was T respassing" s i gns. T h e a perfect skin, which I then locked gates, Kirk says, are used for a piece of art." only to deal with the "trafArt pops up all over the fic, smugglers, dumpers and orgasm. His last stop was in desert hillside, ranging from shooters preventing a peaceful Jacumba. He came here be- works as simple as a stone area for the animals." He incause he believed the energy circle of paint brushes aligned vites anyone to visit. "It's a mystical experience," here was attracting flying like cacti with the corroded saucers. We started the Per- remains of a water tank that he says, leading you back ceptioncenterand people can Kirk says has "amazing re- to your car, back to prosaic walk around the grounds, a verb and acoustics." civilization. power vortex spot, and run into things like the pyramid will come, in time. He wants
thing natural. It's a perceptual
to show you the grounds. You walk three steps behind him This only heightens your up the prickly hillside. "This goes all the way back curiosity. Poke your head around the caboose, and you to the Toltec days," he says, resee a sprawling, nicely ap- ferring to the archaeological pointed ranch house ringed by Mesoamerican culture, said a few corrugated tin buildings to be a precursor to the Azand more railroad cars, paint- tecs in Mexico. "We know of ed with care by graffiti art- artifacts in the Carrizo Gorge ists, petrogylphs for the 21st (area around Jacumba) that century. are stone carvings, and the Just then a tall, cranelike tribes that came here later figure intrudes upon your bla- did zero stonework. So they tant snooping. His long silver are Toltec. We protect these mane is harnessed in a brown artifacts. I don't give out GPS bandana, which whips in the coordinates. "So, it's a sacred place. You 15 mph wind. He is dressed in colors that hew to the land- know a guy named Wilhelm scape, pale green coat, black Reich? He was the originashirt, faded jeans. He is not tor of orgon energy and did smiling, but his facial hairstudies of the mysteries of the two ends of a mustache hang-
ing like parentheses around his mouth, a soul patch segueing into a goatee with long gray tail — makes it seem as ifhe is. "May I help you?s
A deep, rich voice. Welcoming, not intimidating. You explain your attraction and these hot springs tubs." to the glint that is the pyramid Jacumba is known for its and openly express interest geothermal activity, which behind the anointed "Insti- leads to burbling mineral watute of Perception," and here it ter hot springs, and Kirk and comes now, a smile and a prof- Noor designed a geometric fered hand. alignment of hot tubs facing "I'm Kirk," he said. "It's OK. each direction. "We call them dreaming We like visitors." He is Kirk Roberts (a.k.a. tubs," Kirk says. When he leads you to the Q), a musician, artist, philosopher (but then, some might pyramid, even shinier close
THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC
MARIGOLD HOTEL
•r'aellraa S
NQ+
IMAGENATloN
-
"And it worked out. I started
but what should have been talking to (Friesen) on the her biggest — 1962's "He's phone and two hours later, a Rebel" — was credited to we were still talking about it." The Crystals, and not Love's Love liked Friesen's idea own group, The Blossoms. but felt he had a lot of work to In 1963, her iconic version do. Once crews started comof "Christmas (Baby Please ing to New York to film her, Come Home)" appeared on she realized the movie was Spector's famous 1963 holi- not only going to materialize, day compilation album. it was going to be good. After years of singing, reAnd it is. In his review for cording and not always get- Variety, Peter Debruge called ting the credit or revenue she "Twenty Feet" a "personalideserved, Love left the indus- ty-packed docu (that's) nothtry in the 1970s to raise her ing short of absorbing as it family. recaps the essential role AfIn the 1980s, she moved rican-American background from her native Los Ange- singers played in shaping the les to New York City, where sound of 20th-century pop she diversified, performing music." David Edelstein of in Broadway productions, New York Magazine praised playing Danny Glover's wife the film's "ecstatic converin the "Lethal Weapon" mov- gence of lung power and ies and singing "Christmas spirit." (Baby Please Come Home)" For 90 minutes, e7wenty on David Letterman's late- Feet" digs into the careers night TV program every year of Love and her peers, in(except one, during a writer's corporating p e r formance strike), from 1986 to 2014. footage from the distant and In 2011, Love finally re- recent past, as well as interceived the recognition she de- views with superstars Bruce served for her contributions Springsteen, Mick Jagger to popular music when she and Sting. was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. Last
Ultimately, it's a story not
about anonymity or almosts,
year, she was the highlight of but about dedication to craft, the Academy Awards broad- being a team playerand, cast when she belted out the above all, perseverance. That's another reason Love gospel hymn "His Eye is on the Sparrow" during the stands out in the film. "It's amazing, most of those "Twenty Feet" a cceptance speech. girls that were background Love, 73, said she didn't singers ended up saying, 'Forjump at the chance to partici- get it. It's too hard. I'm going pate inthe makingof the doc- do something else.' And I umentary, but that she took just kept chuggin' along," she producer Gil Friesen's call af- said. "It has been a struggle ter two friends — music exec- ... but I've gotten through it, utive Lou Adler and "Lethal and the movie makes that Weapon" director Richard great. You can be there in all Donner — encouraged her to the struggles that (I) went do so. through. But (I) escaped it. (I) "I don't even know today if I would've done that had it not been for them," she said.
moved on." — Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbtdletin.com
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
sicomare e iono wrier'sso "I am famous for emotional clues that slide
TV SPOTLIGHT
right past me. I did not take it as a friend
"One Big Happy" 9:30 p.m. Tuesday,NBC
writing a letter to a friend.I tookitasjusta pilot, and I thought it was really funny."
By David Bauder
— Jason Allen, friend of Liz Feldman's who inspired the male lead in her new sitcom; he also writes for the show
The Associated Press
PASADENA, Calif. — Ev-
eryone has those days where his life feels like a sitcom.
Starting Tuesday, writer Liz Feldman's life really will
thought-provoking." Feldman pays tribute to her
son, taught to me by Ellen,
that when you are authentic, it's really powerful," she said.
painful personal episode into the series "One Big Happy,"
"People relate to it, but every-
mentor on the pilot through one of Cuthbert's lines, "I
one might not like it. That's
should have known I was gay
which airs at 9:30 on NBC. Actress Elisha C u thbert
sort of what happened to her when she came out — she
when I named my cat 'Ellen.'"
be asitcom, after she turned a
me," he said. "I did not take it as a friend writing a letter to
In sitcom life, Cuthbert's found out there were a lot of character gets pregnant from people who were really proud her friend's sperm donation, and were really rooting for which Feldman never did. It's her, and there were people part of an eventful pilot where who weren't." her friend, played by Nick DeGeneres' 1997 declara- Zano, meets, marries, breaks tion that she was gay, simul- up with and gets back togeth-
a friend. I took it as just a pi-
taneous with th e
lot, and I thought it was really
in her sitcom coming out, "changed my life," Feldman
portrays a lesbian having a Eric McCandless / NBC /The Associated Press baby with her straight male Elisha Cuthbert, left, Nick Zano and Kelly Brook appear in a scene best friend, a plan suddenly from the comedy "One Big Happy," which premieres Tuesday. complicated when he marries another woman.
Feldman wrote an outline Allen had proposed, she rein 2008 for the pilot, made by sponded, "Well, you told her Ellen DeGeneres'production about our plan, didn't you'?" company. Her friend Jason Awkward. "He was like, 'yeah,' and Allen had just told Feldman that he had met the love of his she said, 'yeah, we'll talk life. about it once we get married,'"
funny." Their first real conversa-
c h aracter er with his love interest. The fictional Li z d oesn't l ike t h e n e w wo m an , a said. A year later, the 21-year- free-spirited Brit played by
old Feldman met DeGeneres Kelly Brook. In real life, FeldShe and Allen met at Bos- Feldman said. "And I could at a book signing and sum- man and Allen's wife are good ton University, bonding over feel that our plan was slipping "One Big Happy," in front of moned the guts to say, "You're friends. She is godmother to their mutual desire to pur- away. To be totally frank, I other staff members studying Carol Burnett and I'm Vicki Allen's son George, together sue careers in comedy. After was jealous. I was jealous that them to apply facets of their Lawrence, but you don't know with her own wife. "We want to have kids," she graduation, they moved to I didn't have my best friend in relationship to the sitcom's that yet." Los Angeles and were insep- the same capacity anymore. I characters. Their friendship and shared said. "It won't be with him." arable through their 20s. "We was so weirded out that I was While also doing standup sense of humor led to the partF eldman an d A l l e n a r e did everything but each other jealous that the only thing I comedy, Feldman has written nership on "One Big Happy." still working together; he's a together," she said. could do was write about it. I for DeGeneres' daytime show, DeGeneres said she wasn't on writer on "One Big Happy." Feldman knew she wanted couldn't even have a conver- Jeff Foxworthy's "Blue Collar the lookout for scripts featur- Having him around keeps her TV" and the CBS sitcom "Two ing gays or lesbians. children someday. So they had sation with him." grounded, Feldman said. "I've always wanted to write "Yes, there's a lesbian charan understanding, although Allen's reaction when she Broke Girls." Offered an opwithout a firm deadline. If she showed him th e script f ulportunity to write a comedy acter, but it's a really funny for a sitcom," Allen said. "It remained single, Allen would filled a male stereotype. pilot, she immediately went show," she said. "All I want- tookLizmaking me acharac"I am famous for emotion- back to her own story. father her children. ed to do was to put out really ter on her own show to make "I learned an amazing les- f unny material, smart a n d Panicked when she learned al clues that slide right past it happen." tion about it came years later. It was in a writers' room for
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5 p.m.on TCM, Movie:"Darby O'Gill and the Little People"-
Before hebecamea superstar as JamesBondin "Dr. No," Sean Connery appeared in this pleasant1959 Disney-studio movie about elderly rascal O'Gill (Albert Sharpe), who claims to have
captured theking(Jimmy O'Dea)
of the leprechauns. Janet Munro co-stars. Note to parents: The story also includes a banshee and a "death coach" that are likely to frighten younger children. 7:30 p.m. on10, "Bob's Burgers" —Bob (voice of H. Jon Benjamin) doesn't have the
same concept of romancethat
Linda (voice of John Roberts) does, leading to a disappointing time on the town for her, in the new episode "Adventures in Chinchilla-sitting." Backat home, mayhem erupts when Louise (voice of Kristen Schaal) fails to keep a close-enough eye on the chinchilla that's a school
mascot.
0 p.m. on 6,"MadamSecre-
tary" —No stranger to political dramas, having also been in both "The West Wing" and "The American President," Anna Deavere Smth returns to that arena as a guest star in the new episode"Tamerlane."Sheplays America's attorney general, who becomes party to Elizabeth's
(Tea Leoni) plan tocounter an Iranian coup that could have repercussions for the current U.S. administration. 0:30 p.m. on10, "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" —Jake (Andy Samberg) wonders if his recent misfortunes are simply cases of bad luck, or if someone is
purposely causing hismishaps,
Teena er is reuctant to stan ta
MOVIE TIMESTDDAY
Dear Abby: My 1 3 -year-old granddaughter is 5 feet 9 inches tall. She walks hunched over, and when she stands with a group, she keeps her legs 2 feet apart. She's on a softball team and is always sitting on the ground in the dugout.
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:50, 6:15, 9:15 • CHAPPIE(R) 12:05, 3:05, 6:50, 9:45 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:30 a.m., 12:25, 2:30, 3:30, 6:45, 6:55, 9:30, 9:40 • CINDERELLAIMAX (PG)noon, 3, 7:15, 10 • THE DUFF(PG-l3) 12:40, 3:40, 6:50, 9:20 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) 11:55 a.m., 2:55, 7, 9:55 • FOGUS(R) 12:30, 3:10, 6:30, 9:05 • JUPITERASCENDING(PG-l3) 3:20, 9:25 • JUPITERASCENDING3-D (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 6:35 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:25, IO:30 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 12:50, 3:15, 7:45, 10:10 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:10, 3:25, 6:25, 9:45 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) I2:15, 3:15, 7:30, 10:15 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:45 a.m., 3:45, 6:40, 9:35 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:50 a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:45,6,9 • UNFINISHEDBUSINESS(R) 12:55, 4, 7:35, 10:25 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
DEP,R
ABBY
"giant." I've been with
her when someone approaches her who hasn't seen her in a while and says, "Wow! You've
grown really tall." She hates school and has no friends. She also happens to be very pretty. She's taller than anyone in the family. What can we do for her? — Grandpa in Indiana
teased about their height when they used as a cash cow in previous rewere her age. lationships, and I'm not putting up Tall women of note: Taylor Swift, with it anymore. This makes dating Gisele Bundchen, Nicole Kid- difficult at times, but I'm sticking man, Venus and Serena Williams, to my guns. She said it makes me Brooke Shields, Geena Davis and
a snob because not everyone earns
Ob a m a what I do. come immediately to Abby, I'm not a snob by any mind. First daughter means. I'm generous toward my Malia Obama was 5 loved ones. But I feel that in this day feet 9 at 13, like your and age, people can always better granddaughter. None themselves as I have, and I don't of them is ashamed of want another man thinking I will herheight;they "own" who they are support him. It's not fair to me. Any and carry themselves with pride. advice? — Looking For My Equal Research modeling schools in your area because enrolling your grandDear Looking:Your friend was daughter in some of the classes correct when she said not everymight help her to feel less awkward one has the earning capacity that about her height. you do. But you are right in your Dear Abby:I'm a 33-year-old sin- conviction that people can better gle woman, a nurse who paid for themselves if they are determined my own education and am still try- to do it. ing to further it. I work a lot, have a Considering your personal hisnicecar,and Iam remodeling my tory, I don't think you're a snob for house. I make good money, but I feeling the way you do. That said,
Dear Grandpa: Being perceived as different at your granddaughter's age can be very painful. The best thing you can do for her right now is to be supportive. Keep telling her that being tall is have to take certain training, keep not only nothing to be ashamed of, my licenses current, etc. I'm serious but it can be an asset.Encourage about mycareer,and I'm proud of her to find activities she is interested myself. in. In addition to softball, she might I was talking to a friend the othexcel at basketball or volleyball. Re- er day about dating, and I said I mind her that fashion models are
wouldn'tdate someone who made
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY,
YOURHOROSCOPE
MARCH 15, 2015:This yearyou'll want to do one thing, yet you might feel as if you should do another. Your conflicting feelings are likely to bring confusing results. Consider why this is happening, and figure out how to avoid it. If you are single, a friendship plays a significant role in you finding your next sweetie. This period will begin in October. If Btars showthe kjntt you are attached, of dayyon'll have yo u will enjoy ** * * * D ynamic greater closeness ** * * p osltlve with your sweetie. ** * Average Fri e ndship also
** So-so
plays a stronger
* Difficult
role in your relationship. CAPRICORN remains a
By Jacqueline Bigar
relating will be easier than usual. Be present. Tonight: Order in.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * *
You'll put a smile on friends and
loved ones' faces.Perhapsyou've decided to invite people over for a late brunch. You love to cook, and others view your cooking as an act of love. Don't expect the party to end early. Be ready for a day of friends. Tonight: Relaxat home.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
** * * You'll charge into the moment, even if someone is trying to encourage you to settle down. You might consider loyal friend. this as a dayto play, and playyou will. ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * Feelings will run rampant in the A roommate or loved one could try to manipulate the situation. Do whateveryou morning. The unexpected pops up when want. Tonight: Get physical. you least expect it. Schedule a morning VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) walk, as your temper could be closer to ** * * Your vibes will communicate the surface than you realize. A get-together with a friend will help you regain your desire for fun. A friend will have no balance. Tonight: Up late. problem joining in; however, apartner might have other plans. Try to avoid an TAURUS (April 20-May20) argument, and make the most of the ** * * * M ake calls and touch base moment. Quietcaring goes along way. with friends you rarely get to chat with. Tonight: Act now. Understand that it might take a while to
catch up oneveryone's news.Relaxto
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
a good movie or dinner, and share news with your favorite person. Tonight: Follow your vision.
** * Tensions might be mounting on the homefront, and a disagreement could arise as a result. Howyou deal withthis pressure will color the rest of the day. Why notworkthrough it? If the other party wants to set off fireworks, let it happen. Tonight: Make peace, not war.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20)
half or less than what I do. I was
M ichelle
She is the tallest
one in the seventh grade in her school. S orne of h« d a ss mates call her the
tall women, many of whom were
** * * * G etting going could be close to impossible, asyou luxuriate in a slow day and relax with a loved one. You might evendeclaretodayas alazy day to be spent in pajamas. In this environment,
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * *
One invitation after the other
however, I would hate to think you
might excludea great guy who earns less, because he could be helpful in other ways and have qualities the others don't. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
seems to headyourway.Choosethecompany you want, and you will be happier. A friend might have a short fuse. Deal with this person diplomatically. Conversations will flourish in the afternoon or over a meal. Tonight: At a favorite haunt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * You might be in a situation where you feel as if you must act. An unexpected
development from aloved onecould trigger you. Stay cool. Many of you might decide to flee the situation and go shopping or out for brunch. Tonight: Make it your treat.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * * You will be up for some fun and action, butsomeone aroundyoucould be holding you back. A domestic matter needs to be addressed; you cannot walk away from it. You might want to take a few hours in the afternoon to relax. Tonight: Choose a favorite stress-buster.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.10) ** * You could decide to maintain a low profile right now. Be responsive to a friend who seems to need to discuss an
issue. Onsomelevel, youmight personalize a comment. Avoid that scenario at all costs. Stay neutral. Tonight: Followyour intuition.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Stop and do some solid thinking. Be careful, asyou could end up on a shopping spree or involved with some other indulgence. Calmly express your feelings to the person who needs to hear them. You will feel better, even if he or she doesn't respond. Tonight: Out late. © King Features Syndicate
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in the new episode "Sabotage." Captain Holt (Andre Braugher) dispatches Amy and Rosa (Melissa Fumero, Stephanie Beatriz) to investigate. Charles (Joe Lo Truglio) is partnered with Scully and Hitchcock (Joel McKinnon Miller, Dirk Blocker). gp.m. on2,9, "Secretsand Lies" —Ben's (Ryan Phillippe) probe of Natalie's (Indiana Evans) actions before Tom's death leads to a tense meeting with neighbors (guest stars Kate Ashfield and Steven Brand) in the new episode "The Sister." Eventually, Ben suspects them of playing a direct role in the tragedy. Detective Cornell (Juliette Lewis) has a shocking surprise for Ben. Michael Beach, Greg Alan Williams ("Baywatch") and Denise Dowse ("Beverly Hills, 90210") also guest star. © Zap2it
h V
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INHERENTVICE(R) 9:15 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 6 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 2:30 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:30 a.m. • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied t/yalegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FOXCATCHER (R) 5 • SONG OFTHE SEA (PG)2:45 I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA(PG)11a.m., 12:15, 1:30, 2:45, 4,5:15, 6:30, 7:45, 9 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:30, 3:15, 6:05, 8:45 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG)1:45, 4:15, 6:30 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)6:30 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG) I:15, 3:45, 6:15 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 1:30, 4, 6:30 • STILL ALICE(PG-13) 2:15, 4:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7 • FOCUS(R) 12:20, 4:50 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 2:45, 7:10 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG) I:10, 4, 6:50 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:05, 4:45, 7:15 • UNFINISHEDBUSINESS(R) 12:50, 3, 5:10, 7:20 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (PG)1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • FOCUS(Upstairs — R) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
MOXIK
Moxie is a very pretty 9.5 year old kilty who was sadly surrendered to us after her owner decided that they could simply not care for her anymore. She is here now, waiting for her forever loving home. Moxie came from a homewhere she lived indoors only with one other female cat. If you have room in your heart and your home, come down and meet Moxie today! HUMRNESOC IGV OF CCNTRRLOREGON/SPCR 61 170S.C.fl7th St., 8END (541) 38R-3537
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us alsofor: • RetractableAwnings • Exterior SolarScreens • Patio ShadeStructures
s®aCMSSIC COVERINGS 1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com ••
g )
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Scoreboard, D2 G o lf, D3 Sports in brief, D2 NHL, D5 NBA, D3
MLB, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
PREP BOYS
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
COMMUNITY SPORTS
BASKETBALL
cougs' Haugen named all-tourney
Mj / a
Mountain View guard Ments Haugenwas named to the Class5A boys basketball all-tournament team after leading the top-seeded Cougars to a third-place finish this week. Haugen, who tied for fifth in scoring at the 5A tourney with 14 points per gameand ranked sixth in shooting accuracy by hitting 52 percentfrom the floor, joined Marist's Austin Tyner as the only two unanimous boys selections. Mountain View, which fell in the semifinals to eventual state champion Silverton before defeating Marist in Friday's third-place game, also received the sportsmanship trophy.
'4ntntct,;,
tht '
John Locher /The Associated Press
Oregon's JosephYoungdrives against Arizona's Stanley Johnson during the first half of the Pac-
12 championship gameSaturday night in Las Vegas. The Ducks lost 80-52.
c»
,.w j
'I(-,
'r
TRACK 8. FIELD
llp,"+ +p~
Ducks menwin
IIICAA indoor title
t
FAYETTEVILLE, Ar-
7:58.81.
Jenkins also won the 5,000-meter run Friday, and the Ducks won the distance-medley relay as well as Edward Cheserek's win in the mile on Saturday with a
+@ /
>95 ~
ular-season titles, the deep NCAA tournament runs,
Racers decked in their finest green and orange run in the timed 5-kilometer race of the St. Patrick's Day Dash complete the final stretch of the race Saturday morning in Bend.
• Hundreds of runners, walkers, costumeupfor the St. Patrick's DayDash
one question: When are
you going to win the Pac-12 tournament again? They had an emphatic answer Saturday night. Finally playing its best brightest lights, No. 5 Arizona ended 13 years of frustration with a dominat-
ing 80-52 win over Oregon in the Pac-12 tournament
championship game.
NCAA tourney selection show When:3 p.m. todayTV:CBS
Inside • Fourteen other teams clinch NCAA tournament berths. Roundup,D3
SeeDucks /D3
3
PREP BOYS BASKETBALL
~~s I
p
. ~)-'.
() itittnttnnttsss
Runners and walkers, both of the
biped and quadruped varieties, go up a hill in Drake Park.
Dorinda Vetterick, left, and her daughter, Hannah Vetterick, of Bend, make sure their rainbows are in order prior to the run. r J
J
. / '/
Bush visited with
— The Associated Press
they were hounded with
underthe conference's
SAN FRANCISCO
theteam Wednesday and was seentouring outside Levi's Stadium with new SanFrancisco coachJim Tomsula. Bush joins a Niners team that lost Frank Gore in free agency to the Colts, left guard Mike lupati to the Arizona Cardinals and apair of cornerbacks who are now gone, too — Chris Culliver and Perrish Cox. Bush played in only 11 games with nine starts last season with the Lions becauseof injuries, including an ankle issue. Hecarried 76 times for 297 yards and two touchdowns. He posted Saturday on Twitter, "The best is yet to come ¹49ers." Also Saturday, the 49ers announced they have signed cornerbacks Chris Cookand Shareece Wright to oneyear contracts.
Nextup
Wildcats have had, the reg-
s
Bush agrees to deal with 49ers — Free-agent running back Reggie Bushhas reached a dealwith the San Francisco 49ers, a person withknowledge of the agreement said Saturday.
By John Marshall LAS VEGAS — Through
meet in the 3,000,
NFL
• Arizona wins its 1stPac-12 tourney championshipsince'02
all the success the Arizona
Oregon needed11 points to clinch the
titles. — The Associated Press
Ducks blown out in Pac-12 title game The Associated Press
time of 3.57.94.
and they finished with 24 thanks to Jenkins, Cheserek andWill Geoghegan's top-three finish. "It's great to end with a race like that," Jenkins said. "You can't ask for much more." The Oregon women finished second behind Arkansas, which won its first title. The Ducks had won the past five
a ~» , .
Photos byTess Freeman • The Bulletin
— Bulletin staff report
kasnas — TheOregon men won four distance races to win their second straight NCAA indoor track and field championship. The Ducks clinched their third overall title with all three top spots in the 3,000-meter run — led by senior Erick Jenkins with a time of
+
A total of 386 runners and walkers participated in the timed 5-kilometer run of the St. Patrick's Day Dash onSaturday morning in downtown Bend. Ryan McLaughlin, of Bend, was thetop men's finisher, in16 minutes,13.3 seconds; and Stacie Koehler, also of Bend, was the top female finisher, in19:42.6. The event was afundraiser for KIDS Center, aBendbased child abuse intervention center.
White Buffs fall in final game tofinish 6th in Class4A Bulletin staff report HILLSBORO — Sometimes, Allen Hair reflected, a tip of the hat is all you can offer when
a season comes to a heart-breaking close. After all, the Madras coach continued, even after Cas-
cade's John Schirmer drained a go-ahead jumper with 12
' Spring spo~ts sea s o n
seconds left in the fourth-place
be g ins this
week. See the first week Saturday, the White Buffaloes o f games in were still in a position to win. Sc o reboard, Had Jered Pichette's 3-point D2 game of the Class 4Aboys
basketball state tournament
attempt at the buzzer been
on target instead of just missing the mark, it would have been Madras celebrating lategame heroics. Instead, it was the ninth-seeded
Cougars (19-9) of Turner, led by Schirmer's
One-year-old Karter Shiner, of Bend, sits in anticipation of the day's events.
11 fourth-quarter points, who claimed fourth-
Qo See additional photos of the St. Patrick's Day Dash on The Bulletin's website: hendhnlletin.cnm/stpatsdash
place with a 51-49 win at Liberty High School. SeeBuffaloes/D6
RODEO
Lookingoverthe herd and to the future By John Branch New York Times News Service
The 1,000-foot cliffs of Zion National Park that border the
open range of Smith Mesa glowed orange and red, like Josh Haner/The New YorkTimes hot coals. The sun slinked low Ryder Wright in a rodeo at the Uinta County on the opposite side of a wide Fairgrounds in Evanston, Wyoming, last July. At sky. a time of urbanization, rodeo and ranching may Bill Wright, 60, stopped his seem anachronistic, but to the Wright family, they pickup on the dirt road last represent the present and the future. spring, dusty from drought.
He walked west, weaving through green junipers, scraggly shrub live oak, flowering barrel cactus and dried cow pies. His pointed boots left a string of meandering arrows in the red sand. The boys were off riding
Lubbock, Bill could never keep up. Bill's wife, Evelyn,
saddle broncs on the profes-
sional rodeo circuit's Texas
acres of rugged rangeland hiding a few hundred of his
swing — somewhere between
cattle.
Austin, Nacogdoches and
was at home, two hours north
in Milford, Utah, teaching at the elementary school. Bill
was alone, living in a camper, eating from a skillet, surrounded by silence and 20,000
SeeRodeo /D4
ditional photos of the Wright family on The Bulletin's website:
hendhulletin. cnm/spnrts
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER England, Chelseavs.Southampton England, Manchester U.vs. Tottenham Hotspur MLS, NewEngland at NewYork City FC MLS, Los Angeles at Portland HOCKEY
Time TV/Radio 6:30 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. N BCSN 2 p.m. E S PN2 4 p.m. FS1
NHL, Detroit at Pittsburgh
9a.m. NBC 4:30 p.m. NBCSN
NHL, Boston atWashington BASKETBALL
NBA, Chicago atOklahomaCity Men's college, Atlantic10, final, VCU vs. Dayton Women's college, CAA,final, James Madison vs. Hofstra Men's college, SEC, final, Arkansas vs. Kentucky Men's college, SunBelt, final, Georgia St. vs. Georgia Southern Women's college, NEC, final, St. Francis (N.Y.j at Robert Morris Women's college, Horizon, final, Wright St. vs. GreenBay Men's college, AAC,final, UConn vs. SMU NBA, Houston at L.A. Clippers Men's college, BigTen,final, Wisconsin vs. Michigan St. Men's college, NCAAselection show
10a.m. 10a.m.
ABC
10 a.m. 10 a.m.
CSNNW ESPN
CBS
10 a.m. ESPN2 10 a.m. ESPNU noon ES P NU 12:15 p.m. ESPN 12:30 p.m. ABC
12:30 p.m. CBS 3 p.m. CBS NBA, Portland at Toronto 4 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Baltimore at Pittsburgh College, West Virginia at Texas MLB pre season,L.A.AngelsatChicagoW hiteSox College, OregonSt. at Arizona St.
10 a.m. MLB 10:30 a.m. FS1 1 p.m. MLB 1 p.m. P a c-12, KICE 940-AM
MLB preseason, L.A. Dodgers at Seattle College, Mississippi at LSU College, Washington St. at Southern Cal GOLF PGA Tour,Valspar Championship PGA Tour,Valspar Championship
1 p.m. Roo t 1 p.m. SEC 3 p.m. Pac-12 (Ore.) 1 0 a.m. noon
Gol f NBC
TENNIS
BNP Paribas Open
11 a.m. T ennis
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Phoenix
noon
Fox
FOOTBALL
College, Colorado spring game
1 p.m.
P a c-12
SOFTBALL
College, OregonSt. at Oregon College, Arizona St. atWashington College, Alabama atGeorgia College, Utah atUCLA College, Texas atArkansas
11 a.m.Pac-12(Ore.) 11 a.m. Pac-12 11 a.m. SEC 3 p.m. P a c-12 4 p.m. SEC
MONDAY BASEBALL
MLBpreseason,DetroitatSt.Louis 10a.m. MLB preseason, ChicagoCubsatSan Diego 1 p.m.
MLB MLB
TENNIS
Paribas Open,men's andwomen's third round 11 a.m. SOCCER England, FACup,Reading vs. Bradford City England, SwanseaCity vs. Liverpool
T e nnis
BASKETBALL NBA, Portland at Washington 4 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM,100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
NBA, Cleveland at Miami NBA, L.A. Lakers atGoldenState
5 p.m. ESP N 7:30 p.m. ESPN
HOCKEY
NHL, Washington at Buffalo
4 p.m.
N BCSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL BeaVerS lOSeOnWalk-Off Single — ArizonaState's Brian Serven hit a bases-loaded single in the bottom of the ninth inning off Sam Tweedt to handOregonState a4-3 loss Saturday night in Phoenix. The loss snappedan11-game winning streak for the Beavers (15-4 overall, 1-1 Pac-12j. Zack Reser(0-1) pitched the first two outs of the ninth for the Beavers, who led 3-0 after the top of the second. Oregon State's JoeGillette had three hits. OregOn fallS to Cal —Afour-run sixth inning allowed California to pull away for a6-2 Pac-12victory over Oregon on Saturday night in Berkeley, California. TheGolden Bears (15-3 overall, 2-0 Pac-12), were aided by threeDuckerrors. Brandon Cuddy hadtwo of the five hits for Oregon (13-6, 0-2j. Ducks starter David Peterson (2-1 j struck out five.
SOFTBALL Civil War game postponed —Saturday's secondgameof a three-game series betweenOregon State and Oregon in Eugenewas rained out. A doubleheader will be played today beginning at11 a.m.
SKIING Plnturault wins GS, Hirscher takes title —Alexis Pinturault of France dominated amen'sWorld Cup giant slalom Saturday in Slovenia, while Marcel Hirscher came insecond to takethe season's discipline title with a race to spare. TheAustrian locked up his second GS title after also winning in 2012, holding an insurmountable 185-point lead over Pinturault with only one raceremaining. Shiffrin WinS SlalOm —American Mikaela Shiffrin won her fourth World Cupslalom race of the seasonSaturday, beating Slovakia's Veronika VelezZuzulova by1.41 seconds. Theresult means Shiffrin extended her leadover Sweden's Frida Hansdotter in the overall slalom standings to 90 points with one raceremaining. Shiffrin, who turned 20 onFriday, haswon four of the past five World Cup slalom races.
DOG SLEDDING BiirmeiSter reClaimS lead Of Iditarod —AaronBurmeister reclaimed the lead of the Iditarod on Saturday after leaving the checkpoint at Nulato, Alaska, ahead ofJeff King. Burmeister hasn't taken his mandatory eight hour layover yet in the race. King has.Aliy Zirkle has also checked in at Nulato. Zirkle is trying for her first win after finishing second in the past threeyears. If the 45-year-old pulls in to the finish line at Nome first, she would be thefirst female Iditarod winner since1990 when the lateSusanButcher finished first. — From staffand wire reports
ON DECK Monday Boystennis:MadrasatBend,4p.m. Girls tennis: Bend atMadras,4 p.m. Boys lacrosse:SummitatMountainView,6p.m. Girls lacrosse:SistersatSouthSalem,6p.m.
BASKETBALL
MLB preseason
Men's college
MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AU TimesPDT
Saturday'sGame Pac-12Conference Championship Arizona 80,Oregon52
Saturday'sGames Philadelphi5, aDetroit(ss) 4 Miami4,Washington(ss)0 Minnesota 6,St.Louis 3 Tuesday Pittsburgh 5, Boston2 Saturday'sSummary Baseball: RidgeviewatHermiston,4:30p.m.; LaPine Tampa Bay3, Baltimore2 at Culver(DH),2p.m. N.Y. Yankees(ss)4,Detroit(ss)1 SoflbaU: Hermiston atRidgeview,4:30 p.m.; Sisters Toronto 1,N.Y.Yankees(ss)0 at CrookCounty(DH),3 p.mc LaPineat Culver No. 5 Arizona 80, Oregon52 N.Y.Mets13,Washington(ss)4 (DH),2p.m. OREGON (26-9) Chicago Cubs(ss) 3,Oakland(ss) 1 Boys tennis:Redmond, Sisters atMadras,4:30p.m.; Bell 2-4 0-0 4,Young7-19 2-219, Abdul-Bassit Colorado1, Cincinnati 0 TheDallesat Ridgeview,4 p.m. 0-0 3,Cook4-6 0-18, Brooks3-5 5-5 13,Ben- SanDiego2,Texas0 Girls tennis: Sisters,Madrasat Redmond, 4 p.m.; 1-4 Oakl a nd (ss) 5,SanFrancisco2 jamin0-42-22,Benson1-20-03,Rorie0-00-00, Ridge viewatTheDages,4p.m. Cubs(ss)10,Milwaukee5 0-00-00, Sorkin0-1 0-00. Totals 18-46 Chicago Boyslacrosse:RedmondatBend,5:30p.m.;Forest Chandler 9-10 62. LA. Dodgers 7,Cleveland2 GroveatRidgeview,5:30 p.m. LA.Angels(ss)7,KansasCity 6,10 innings ARIZONA (31-3) Seattl e 11, Ari zona4 Mcconnel5-80-012, l Johnson6-131-214, AshWednesday ley6-88-1020,Hollis-Jefferson3-70-07, Tarczewski Chicago White Sox7,LA.Angels(ss)6 Baseball: HenleyatBend,4 pmcSummitatMadras, 4-61-49, Jackson-Cartwright0-21-21, York3-60-0 Atlanta 6,Houston5 4p.m. SanFrancisco2 8, Ristic2-22-26, Pitts1-30-03, Korcheckg-00-0 Arizona5, SoflbaU: Madrasat Summit, 4p.m. Today'sGames ,Mason0-00-00,Hazzard0-00-00,Mellon0-0 Boys golf: Bend,MountainView,Ridgeview, Crook 0 0-00.Totals30-6613-2080. Boston vs. Philadelphia (ss) at Clearwater,Fla. County,Summit, Redmondat Brasada, noon; Sis10:05a.m. Halftime —Arizona 36-21. 3-Point Goals—Dreters at Tokatee, noon 7-16(Young3-8, Brooks2-2, Benson1-1,Ab- Detroitys.MiamiatJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Girls golf: Bend,Mountain View,Ridgeview,Sisters gon dul-Bassit 1-3,Sorkin0-1, Benjamin0-1), Arizona St. Louivs. s Minnesotaat Fort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m at Crooked River Ranch, noon 7-19 (Mcconnel2-2, l York2-5, Hollis-Jefferson1-3, Philadelphia(ss) vs. N.Y.Yankees at Tampa, Fla. Track and field: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Pitts 1-3, Johnson1-5, Jackson-Cartwright 0-1). 10:05a.m. Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at MountainView FouledDut—None. Rebounds—Oregon20 (Brooks, NYMetsvs.TampaBayat PortCharlotte,Fla.,1005a m Icebreaker, 3 p.m. T oronto vs.AtlantaatKissimmee,Fla.,10:05 a.m. Cook4), Arizona37(Hoffis-Jeflerson 9). AssistsGirls lacrosse: Summiatt Thurston, 4p.m4Marist vs. PittsburghatBradenton, Fla.,10:05a.m Oregon8 (Young4), Arizona17(Mcconneff6).Total Baltimore at Bend,4:30p.m. vs. Houstonat Kissimmee, Fla.,10:05a.m Fouls —Oregon 16, Arizona 17.Technicals—Cook, Washington LA. Angelsvs.ChicagoWhite Soxat Glendale, Ariz. TarczewskiA . —12,916. Thursday 1:05 p.m. Baseball:MountainViewatSisters,4p.m.; Hilsboro Oakland vs.Milwaukee(ss)at Phoenix,1;05 p.m. Saturday'sGames at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.;Redmondat Wilamette, 5 L.A. Dodgers vs.Seattle atPeoria, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. AmericanAthletic Conference p.m.; La Pineat Summit JV,4 p,msGrant Unionat Milwaukee (ss)vs. Texasat Surprise,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Semifinals Culver,2p.m. San Di e go vs. ClevelandatGoodyear,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. SMU69,Temple56 SoflbaU: MountainViewat Sisters, 4 p.m.; Crook uconn47,Tulsa42 Cincinnativs.ChicagoCubsatMesa, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. County atCascade, 4:30 p.msGrant Union/DayKansasCityvs. Coloradoat Scottsdale, Ariz.,1:10p.m. America EastConference ville/PrairieCityat Culver(DH),2p.m. Arizona vs.SanFranciscoatScottsdale,Ariz.,3:05 p.m Championship Boys tennis:TheDalles atMadras,4p.m.;Sistersat Albany(N.Y)51, StonyBrook50 CrookCounty. 3:30p.m. Atlantic CoastConference Girls tennis: Sisters atCrookCounty, 3:30 p.m.; Championship GOLF Madrasat TheDalles, 4p.m. NotreDam e90, North Carolina82 Track and field: Summit,CrookCounty, Madras, Atlantic10 Conference La Pine,Culverat BreakingtheIce-Ice Breakerin PGA Semifinals Prinevige,3:30p.m. Dayton56,RhodeIsland52 Valspar Champions hip Boyslacrosse:RidgeviewatWestAlbany,8p.m. VCU93,Davidson73 Saturday atInnisb rook Resorl, Copperhead Girls lacrosse:SistersatCrescent Valey, 6 p.m. Big EastConference Course, P alm Harbor,Fla. Championship Yardage: 7,340; Par71 Friday Villanova69,Xavier 52 Third R ound Lead ers Baseball: Madrasat Mountain View,4 p.mcCrook Big SkyConference RyanMoore 69-68-67 —204 County atTreasureValley Invitational in Ontario, Championship Jordan Spieth 70-67-68 —205 TBD;HiddenValley atSisters,4 p.m. EasternWashington 69, Montana65 DerekErnst 67-70-69 —206 SoflbalhMountainViewat Madras, 4 p.m.; RidBig TenConference SeanO'Hair 66-72-69 —207 gevie watReynolds,4;30p.m. Semifinals PatrickReed 72-68-68 —208 Boys lacrosse:Glencoeat Summit, 8 p,msMoun- MichiganSt. 62,Maryland58 Matt Kuchar 70-70-68 —208 tain View atGrant, 8p.mcLiberty atSisters, 7p.m. Wisconsin71,Purdue51 HenrikStenson 67-70-71—208 Big 12Conference DanielSummerhays 70-72-67—209 Saturday Championship Vijay Singh 69-70-70—209 Baseball: Bendat TheDalles (DH), noon;Crook lowaSt.70,Kansas66 RusselKnox l 69-71-70—210 County atTreasure Valey Invitational in Ontario, Big WestConference Billy Hurleygl 69-71-70—210 TBD;EaglePoint atSummit (DH),1 p.m. Championship NickTaylor 70-70-70—210 Soflbalh TheDallesat Bend(DH), noon;Sisters at UC Irvine67, Hawaii 58 LucasGlover 69-69-72—210 Cascade, noon; West Salemat Redmond (DH), 11 ConferenceUSA SamSaunders 70-72-69—211 a.m.;Summitat EaglePoint (DH),noon Championship ChadCampbell 70-72-69—211 Boys lacrosse:Bendat BishopOD ' owd (Calil.), 5 UAB73,MiddleTennessee60 LukeGuthrie 68-73-70—211 Mid-AmericanConference p.m.; Liberly atSummit, 2 p.mcMountain View JasonKokrak 68-73-70—211 at ForestGrove,1 pm.;Glencoeat Sisters,1 pm. Championship BrianDavis 65-76-70—211 Buffalo89,Central Michigan84 Shawn Stelani 68-72-71—211 Mid-EasternAthletic Conference JasonBohn 70-69-72—211 Championship Kevin Streel m an 68-69-74—211 PREPS Hampton 82, DelawareSt. 61 BrendondeJonge 67-69-75—211 Mountain WestConference ChessonHadley 73-69-70—212 Boys basketball Championship Francesco Molinari 70-72-70—212 Wyoming 4 5 , S a n D i e g o S t . 4 3 Danny Le e 72-69-71—212 Class 6A Southeastern Conference 70-71-71—212 Jason Duf n er State tournament Semifinals 71-70-71—212 LeeWestwood At Chiles Center, PorDand Arkansas 60, G eor gi a 49 TroyMerritt 72-69-71—212 Saturday'sGames Kentucky 91, Au burn 67 Kenny Perry 69-72-71—212 Fourlh-placegame Southland Conference N ick Wa t n e y 72-69-71—212 No. 5SouthSalem73, No.7North Medlord 65 Championship CharlesHowell Ig 70-70-72—212 Third-placegame Stephen F. Au s ti n 83, Sa m H ou ston S tate 7 0 67-72-73—212 JustinThomas No. 13SouthEugene 65, No.2 Central Catholic 61 Southweslern Athl e tic Conference 66-72-74—212 RickyBarnes (DT) Champi o nshi p Ralael Cabrera B el l o 74-69-70—213 Final TexasSouthern 62,Southern 58 Jim Furyk 69-73-71—213 No.1 West Linn68, No.3Jesuit 57 Sun BeltConference Will Wilcox 68-73-72—213 Semifinals 71-70-72—213 JohnHuh Class 4A G eorgi a Sou t h ern 44, Loui s i a na-Monroe 43 70-70-73—213 B rendon T odd State tournament GeorgiaSt.83, Louisiana-Lafayette79 67-73-73—213 AlexCejka Af Liberly HS,Hillsboro Western Athletic Conference 71-69-73—213 Cameron Tringale Saturday'sGames Champi o nshi p 72-68-73—213 LukeDonald Fourlh-placegame New Mexi c o St a te 80, S e at t l e 61 Michael Putnam 70-69-74—213 No. 9Cascade51,No.10 Madras49 68-70-75—213 lan Poulter Third-placegame 74-69-71—214 AndresRomero No.1 NorthBend47, No.2Philomath 40 Women's college 70-73-71—214 DavidHearn Final Saturday' s Games 70-73-71—214 B randt Sne d ek er No. 5Scappoose51, No.11North Marion48 Big SkyConference 71-71-72—214 S.J. Park Championship 68-73-73—214 JohnPeterson Saturday'sSummary Montana60,N. Colorado49 71-70-73—214 KevinNa Big WeslConference 69-72-73—214 Will MacKen zie Cascade 51, Madras49 Championship 67-74-73—214 NicholasThompson CS Northridge 67, Hawai 60 69-72-73—214 GregChalmers MADRAS (21-8) Colonial Athletic Association 72-71-72—215 Jon Curran DevonWolfe7-121-1 15,Pichette4-136-9 14, Semifinals 70-73-72—215 MarkWilson Yeahquo 2-40-05,Sullivan2-50-04,Bryant2-50-0 Holstra45,Delaware42 71-71-73—215 Spencer Levin 4, Rehwinkel1-21-2 3, Lindgren1-40-0 2, LeRiche JamesMadison63,Elon60 69-72-74—215 Martin Laird 1-4 0-0 2,Rauschenburg0-2 0-0 0. Totals 20-51 ConferenceUSA 69-72-74—215 HarrisEnglish 8-12 49. Championship 73-67-75—215 KenDuke CASCADE (1B-B) W. Kentucky 60, SouthernMiss. 57 71-72-73—216 KevinKisner John Schirmer9-170-1 22,Zavydovskyy 4-7 0-3 Mid-AmericanConference 73-69-74—216 D.A. Points 8,Roos2-71-27,Walker2-60-05,Molan1-53-5 Championship 72-71-74 —217 FreddieJacobson 5,Coff ey2-80-04,Raney0-10-00.Totals20-61 Ohio60,E.Michigan44 69-73-75—217 StewartCink 4-11 Bf. Mid-EasternAthletic Conference 69-74-75—218 Jeff Dverton Madras 12 6 1616 — 49 Championship 68-75-75—218 AdamHadwin Cascade 11 11 1217 — 61 Savannah St.65, Md.-Eastern Shore47 3-point goals —Madras 1-11 (Yeahquo 1-2, Missouri ValleyConference Pichette0-3, Lindgren0-3, Rauschenburg0-2, Wolfe Semifinals TENNIS 0-1), Cascade 7-21(Schirmer4-9, Roos2-6, Walker MissouriSt.75,Evansvile 66 1-3, Garrett Cofley 0-3). Fouledout—None. Re- WichitaSt.56, N.Iowa42 bounds —Madras35 (Sugivan9), Cascade33(ZavyPatriot League Professional dovskyy12). Assists—Madras7(Pichette 4),Cascade Championship BNPParibasOpen 10 (Schirmer 4).Total fouls—Madras12, Cascade11. American U. 66,Lehigh50 Saturday atIndian Wells, Calif. Technicalfouls—None. SouthlandConference Men Semifinals SecondRound Houston Ba p t i s t 88, St e p hen F . A us ti n 81 Philipp Kohlschreiber(26), Germany, del. Tim Girls basketball Northwestern St. 70, Lamar 64, OT Smyczek, UnitedStates, 6-3,6-1. Class 6A SouthweslernAthletic Conference Kevin Anderson(16), SouthAfrica, del. Federico State tournament Championship Delbonis, Argentina,7-5,6-4. At Chiles Center, PorDand Alabama St. 73,Southern U.55 Juan Monaco, Argentina, del. MarinCilic (10), Saturday'sGames Sun BeltConference Croatia,6-4, 6-4. Fourlh-placegame Championship F ernando V er dasco (28), Spain,del. JamesDuckNo. 3Beaverton 46, No.5 Jesuit 37 UALR78,ArkansasSt. 72 worth,Australia,6-2,7-6(3). Third-placegame Western Athletic Conference Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,del. RyanHarrison, United No. 6Sheldon48,No.8Roseburg41 Championship States 6-4 6-4 Final NewMexicoSt.70,Texas-PanAmerican52 ThanasiKokkinakis,Australia,del. GuilermoGarNo.4Sout hSalem56,No.7St.Mary' s50 cia-Lopez(23), Spain,7-5,5-7, 6-3. NCAAAutomatic Bids Ernests Gulbis (14), Latvia, del. Daniel GimeClass 4A Albany,AmericaEast Conference no-Traver, Spain, 6-4, 6-1. State tournament Arizona,Pacific-12 Conference AndyMurray(4), Britain, def.VasekPospisil, CanAf LiberlyHS,Hillsboro Belmont,OhioValey Conference ada, 6-1, 6-3. Saturday'sGames Buffalo,Mid-AmericanConference AdrianMannarino, France,def. FabioFognini(19), Fourlh-placegame CoastalCarolina,BigSouthConference Italy, 7-6(8), 6-3. No. 5Gladstone54, No.10 Banks31 EasternWashington, BigSkyConference Albert Ramos -Vinolas, Spain,del. Julien BenThird-placegame Gonzaga ,WestCoastConference neteau (25), France,6-2, 6-3. No.4Cascade47,No.3ValleyCatholic34 Hampton,Mid-EasternAthletic Conference FelicianoLopez(12), Spain,del. EdouardRogFinal Harvard,IvyLeague er-Vasselin,France,6-7(3), 6-4,6-4. NNo. 1Sutherlin 51,No.2 Henley46 lowaState,Big12 Conference PabloCuevas(20), Uruguay,def.Jarkko Nieminen, Lafayette,Patriot League Finland,4-6,7-5,6-0. Manhattan,MetroAtlantic Athletic Conference BernardTomic(32), Australia, del.BornaCoric, NewMexicoState, WesternAthletic Conference Croatia,6-3,6-4. SOCCER NorthDakotaState, Summit League John Isner(18), UnitedStates,del. JurgenMelzer, NorthFlorida,Atlantic SunConference Austria, 6-3r 6-4. Northeastern,Colonial Athletic Association MLS NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,del. MarcosBaghdatis, N orthern l o wa, Mi s souri Val l e y C on f e rence MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER Cyprus,6-1,6-3. NotreDame , Atlantic Coast Conference All TimesPDT RobertMorris, NortheastConference EasternConference Women tephenF.Austin, SouthlandConference W L T P l s GF GA S SecondRound T exas So u t h ern, So ut h w e st e rn At h l e ti c Con f e rence OrlandoCit y 1 0 1 4 2 1 AnaIvanovic(5),Serbia,def.Yulia Putintseva, KaAB,ConferenceUSA Columbus 1 1 0 3 2 1 U zakhstan, 6-3,6-1. UC Irvine,BigWest D.C. United 1 0 0 3 1 0 Valparaiso,HorizonLeague Sara Errani(11), Italy,def.ZhuLin, China,6-0, 4-6, 6-2. TorontoFC 1 1 0 3 3 3 Viffanova, BigEastConference Philadelphia 0 0 2 2 3 3 Wofford,Sout Flavia Penne tta (15), Italy, del. MadisonBrengle, hernConference NewYorkCityFC 0 0 1 1 1 1 Wyoming,MountainWest Conference UnitedStates,6-4, 6-2. NewYork 0 0 1 1 1 1 SabineLisicki (24),Germany, del. RobertaVinci, Montreal 0 1 0 0 0 1 Italy, 6-1,5-7,6-4. Chicago 0 2 0 0 0 3 BelindaBencic (31),Switzerland, del. BojanaJovaBASEBALL NewEngland 0 1 0 0 0 3 novski Serbia 62 76(2) WeslernConference CarolineWozniacki (4), Denmark, def.OnsJabeur, College W L T P l s GF GA Tunisia,7-6(3), 6-4. Pac-12 FCDallas 2 0 0 6 4 1 LesiaTsurenko,ukraine, def. AndreaPetkovic (9), Seattle 1 1 0 3 5 3 AU TimesPDT Germany, 6-3,4-6,6-4. Los Angele s 1 0 0 3 2 0 CarolineGarcia (25), France, def. PolonaHercog, SanJose 1 1 0 3 3 3 Saturday'sGames Slovenia, 6-4, 6-7(5), 6-4. Houston 1 1 0 3 1 Washington8,UCLA1 MadisonKeys(16), UnitedStates, del. KlaraKouVancouver 1 1 0 3 2 3 utah 7,Arizona3 kaloya,CzechRepublic, 6-3, 6-2. RealSalt Lake 0 0 2 2 3 3 California6, Oregon2 VictoriaAzarenka(32), Belarus,del. KirstenFlipColorado 0 0 1 1 0 0 Arizona St.4, ArizonaSt.3 kens,Belgium,6-2,6-4. Portland 0 0 1 1 0 0 Washington St.4, Southern Cal2 JelenaJankovic (18), Serbia,del. LaurenDavis, Today'sGames SportingKansasCity 0 1 1 1 2 4 UnitedStates,6-7 (5), 6-0,6-4. Saturday'sGames utah atArizona,noon MariaSharapova(2), Russia,del. YaninaWickmayVancouver1,Chicago0 WashingtonatUCLA,1 p.m. er, Belgium, 6-1, 7-5. Columbus2,Toronto FC0 OregonatCalifornia,1 p.m. SamanthaStosur (21), Australia, del. Taylor FC Dalla3, s Sporting KansasCity1 OregonSt.4,ArizonaSt. 3 Townsend ,UnitedStates,6-4,6-2. RealSalt Lake3, Philadelphia 3, tie WashingtonSt.atSouthern Cal, 3p.m. Alize Cornet(20), France,del. ChristinaMcHale, SanJose3, Seattle 2 Tuesday'sGames UnitedStates,4-6,6-2, 6-1. Today'sGames CaliforniaatSanFrancisco, 2p.m. CocoVandeweghe (30), UnitedStates, def. Sesil NewEnglandatNewYorkCity FC,2 p.m. WashingtonatPortland,TBD Karatantcheva, Bulgaria, 6-2,6-3. Los Angeleat s Portland, 4 p.m. utah Valleat y Utah,5 p.m. EugenieBouchard(6), Canada, del. LucieHradecWashingtonStateatSanDiego, 6p.m. ka, Czech Republic,6-2,6-2.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE
All TimesPDT
EaslernConference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT Pls GF GA 69 43 19 7 93 182 153 70 42 21 7 91 226 182 67 37 19 11 85 195 182 68 36 22 10 82 184 173 68 31 23 14 76 169 190 67 32 24 11 75 192 179 70 27 37 6 60 187 222 68 19 43 6 44 129 230 MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y.Rangers 67 43 17 7 93 205 157 N.Y.lslanders 71 43 24 4 90 221 199 Pittsburgh 6 8 3 9 19 10 88 195 168 Washington 69 36 23 10 82 203 172 Philadelphia 70 29 27 14 72 185 200 NewJersey 69 29 29 11 69 158 179 Columbus 68 30 34 4 64 178 215 Carolina 67 25 3 4 8 58 158 185
Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
WesternConference Central Division
Nashville St. Louis
Chicago Minnesota Winnipeg Colorado Dallas
GP W L OT 70 43 20 7 68 43 20 5 68 41 21 6 69 38 24 7 69 34 23 12 69 32 26 11 69 32 27 10
Pls GF GA 93 201 169 91 211 170 88 198 157 83 196 173 80 191 186 75 184 193 74 218 226
Pacific Division
GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 7 0 4 3 20 7 93 204 193 Vancouver 68 39 25 4 82 193 184 C algary 69 3 8 2 6 5 81 205 181 Los Angeles 68 33 22 13 79 185 172 San Jose 6 9 3 4 27 8 76 193 193 A rizona 69 2 1 4 0 8 50 145 230 Edmonton 69 18 39 12 48 160 238
Saturday'sGames
Philadelphia7 Detroit 2 Boston 2,Pittsburgh0 Chicago6 SanJose2 N.Y.Rangers2, Buffalo0 Winni peg2,TampaBay1 Montreal3, N.Y.Islanders1 Florida 2,Carolina0 Vancouver4,Toronto1 Minnesota3,St. Louis1 NewJersey4, Arizona1 Colorado3,Calgary 2 Nashville 2,LosAngeles1
Today'sGames
Detroit atPittsburgh,9:30a.m. FloridaatN.Y.Rangers, 2p.m. Carolinaat Columbus, 2p.m. St. Louisat Dallas,3p.m. PhiladelphiaatOttawa,4 p.m. BostonatWashington, 4:30p.m. NashvilleatAnaheim 5pm
Monday'sGames Washingtonat Buffalo, 4p.m. MontrealatTampaBay,4:30p.m. Torontoat Edmonton, 6:30p.m. Ariz onaatLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Tuesday'G sames Ottawaat Carolina, 4p.m. Pittsburghat NewJersey,4p.m. Buff aloatBoston,4;30p.m. Montrealat Florida,4:30p.m. MinnesotaatNashvile, 5 p.m. SanJoseatWinnipeg,5p.m. N.Y IslandersatChicago,5:30 p.m. St. Louisat Calgary, 6p.m. PhiladelphiaatVancouver,7 p.m.
MO TOR SPORTS NAiaCAR Sprint Cup Phoenix Lineup After Fridayqualifying; race todayat Phoenix International Raceway,Avondale, Ariz. Lap length: 1miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,140.751mph. 2. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,140.543. 3. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,140.422. 4. (20)Matt Kenseth, Toyota, 140.072. 5. (31)RyanNewman,Chevrolet,139.833. 6. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,139.817. 7.(19)CarlEdwards,Toyota,139.779. 8. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,139.665. 9. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,139.643. 10. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet,139.535. 11. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,138.969. 12. (42)KyleLarson, Chevrolet,138.755. 13. (18)DavidRagan,Toyota,139.157. 14.(17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,139.141. 15.(78)MartmTruexJr., Chevrolet, 138.884. 16.(88)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevrolet,138.814. 17.(14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet, 138.718. 18.(55)BrianVickers, Toyota, 138.654. 19. (16)GregBifle, Ford,138.515. 20. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,138.483. 21. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,138.478. 22. (47)AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet, 138.43. 23. (10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet,138.297. 24. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,137.862. 25. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,137.562. 26. (7)AlexBowman, Chevrolet,137.363. 27. (9)SamHornishJr., Ford,137.211. 28. (51)JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet,136.674. 29. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,136.586. 30. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,136.55. 31. (46)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,136.467. 32. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,136.405. 33. (40)LandonCassil, Che vrolet,136.266. 34. (98)JoshWise,Ford,136.245. 35. (83)MattDiBenedeto, Toyota,135.834. 36 (6) TrevorBayneFord 135675 37. (32)MikeBliss, Ford,owner points. 38. (34)BrettMoffitt, Ford,ownerpoints. 39. (35)ColeWhitt, Ford,owner points. 40. (23)J.J.Yeley,Toyota, ownerpoints. 41. (26)JebBurton, Toyota, ownerpoints. 42. (62)BrendanGaughan, Chevrolet, ownerpoints. 43. (33)AlexKennedy,Chevrolet, ownerpoints. Failed to Oualify 44. (66)TannerBerryhill, Chevrolet,132.533. 45. (44)TravisKvapil, Chevrolet,132.086.
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
NationalLeague
COLOR ADOROCKIES— OptionedINF-OFRosell HerreraandRHPJorgeRondonto their minorleague camp. ReassignedRHPsJustinMiller,JoseOrt egaand Gus Schlosser;LHPsBuddyBoshers, YohanFlande and Jason GurkaandCTommyMurphytotheir minor
league camp.
WASHING TON NATIDNALS— Dptioned INF/OF
Jeff Kobernusto Syracuse(IL).
BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA — SuspendedPortland C Joel Freeland and Detroit FShawneWilliams onegame apiecefor head-buttingeachotherduring a March13game. FOOTBALL
National Football League BALTIMOR ERAVENS—Agreed to termswith S KendrickLewisonathree-yearcontract. BUFFALO BILLS—Agreed totermswith DEJarius Wynn. MINNESOTA VIKINGS— ReleasedWRGregJennings. SANFRANCISCO49ERS—SignedCBShareece Wright toaone-yearcontract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague COLUMBU SBLUEJACKETS—Assigned FLuke Adam to Springfield(AHL). DALLAS STARS— Assigned DLudwig Bystrom from Farjestads (Swedish Hockey League) to Texas (AHL). COLLEG E BIG TENCON FERENCE — Suspended Penn Statehockeystudent-athleteScott Conwayone game for receiving a major penalty for contactto thehead and agam emisconduct in aMarch13 gameagainst Minnesota. AUBURN — Suspended men's basketball F CinmeonBowers onegamefor a potential rulesviolation. DEPAUL — Announcedthe resignation ol men's basketbalcoach l Oliver Purneff. VIRGINIA —Announcedbaseball coach Brian O'Connorwil serveanautomatic four- gamesuspension formakingcontactwithanumpire duringaMarch 13 game at Virginia Tech.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
GOLF ROUNDUP
Moore inisesstron,ta es1-stro eVas ar ea The Associated Press
was another stroke back after
PALM HARBOR, Fla. Ryan Moore had no trouble -
a 69.
The field was like a crowdexplaining how, after 12 con- ed freeway early b efore secutive pars to start the third- Moore finally opened up some round of the Valspar Champi- space. When the final paironship, he birdied four of the ing of Brendon de Jonge and final six holes Saturday. Spieth reached its fifth hole, "I just hit it closer," he said. they were part of an eightThe result was a 4-under way tie for the lead at 5 under. 67 that pushed Moore to a 54- Another seven players were a hole total of 9-under 204 and shot back. Twenty-seven were a one-shot lead over Jordan within three. Spieth on Innisbrook Resort's While de Jonge,who led Copperhead course. by one after 36 holes, shot 75 Spieth shot 68. Derek Ernst and fell off the pace, Moore,
seeking his fifth career win, moved steadily along in the swirling wind until sprinting to the finish.
the 200-yard par-13th with a 6-iron to 8/2 feet, was the
springboard. "It was not an easy par 3
"Any day around this golf especially with t hat w i n d," course with no bogies is pret- Moore said. "It was hard to ty good especially the spots figure out whether it was realwhere I hit it," Moore said. "I ly helping or more across. Obwas able to save par really low viously, you don't want to get in the middle of my round, that wrong with water short made some good putts but had and with trouble long, you some good chip shots. Was don't want to go long of that able to get it rolling there and green. "Stepped up and hit a great make some birdies coming in." iron shot there, left myself The first birdie, coming on nice 8-, 9-footer right below
the hole and knocking that in kind of got me going there on the backside." Nine players are within five shots, all aiming at Moore.
"Ryan has been obviously on his game for weeks now and I've just been starting to
trend up where I want to be," Spieth said, "We're both really
4-under 66 for a share of the lead with five other players in the Tshwane Open. Englishman David Horsey (69), South Africans George Coetzee (69), Trevor Fisher Jr. (69) and Wallie Coetsee (68) and Spain's Adrian Otaegui (72) matched Lee at 9-under 201.
right where we want to be this
Park leads by one: HAIKOU, China — Defending champion
week."
Inbee Park birdied two of the
Also on Saturday:
lastfourholesfora 2-under 71 Six-way tie at Tshwane: and a one-stroke lead in the PRETORIA, South Africa Ladies European Tour's World Scotland's Craig Lee shot a Ladies Championship.
NBA ROUNDUP
..4~
Warriors score47 in 2nd quarter, blow out I(nicks
i
Western Conference leaders
(52-13) as they topped their
OAKLAND, Calif. — Ste- win total of last season.
phen Curry dazzled for 25 points and 11 assists playing
Als o o nSaturday: Pac e rs 93, Celtics 89: IN-
on his 27th birthday,
DIANAPOLIS — Ttir-
and the Golden State NSXt IIP
ler Zel l er scored 18
W arriors b ea t th e
points, t h re e
New York
Celtics added 16 and Boston snapped Indiana's seven-game winning streak. Wizards 113 Kings
K n icks
125-94 on S aturday
1
night for their eighth straight home victory. Curry ended the po«ian< at first half with a con- Toronto 7 tested 3-pointer from +h — John Wall had 31 poin t s and 12 assists, the top of the arc as he < "' 4P leaned in and let it go, y Paul Pierce s c ored legs off balance. He T":~SNNW 1 7 p oints, and Washfinished6of10on3s. Ra dio:KBND in g ton rallied from a
s
K% ' 8
o t h er
-
Klay
r
Th o m p son 1 110-AM,
21-po i nt, third-quarter
added 27 points with 100.1-FM; def i c it. six 3s, and the Splash KRCO 690-AM, Gr i zzlies 96, Bucks Brothers combined for 96.9-FM
83: MEM P H IS, Tenn.
29 points by halftime C ourtney L e e to highlight a 47-point second scored 17 points, Jeff Green John Locher/The Associated Press
quarter that blew open th e points for t h e
Ducks
with so many Arizona fans in the stands.
Continued from D1 The Wildcats let up a lit"When anyone asks when tle defensively in the second Arizona last won the Pac-12
half, but were even better
time; everyone seems to be seven points — two after a
clicking." Oregon (25-9) was out of it almost from the start after Arizona went on two big
championship, you tell them on offense to polish off their first-half runs. The Ducks 2015," Arizona coach Sean first Pac-12 championship played better offensively in Miller said after accepting since Lute Olson was coach the second half, but had no the championship trophy and Luke Walton was tour- chances of catching the racfrom conference Commis- nament MVP in 2002. ing Wildcats. sioner Larry Scott. T ournament m o s t o u t J oseph Young had 1 9 Top-seeded Arizona (31-3) standing player Brandon points Dillon Brooks added won the regular-season title Ashley scored 20 points and 13 for Oregon, which still and reached the tournament Stanley Johnson added 14 for should be in good position to finale for the second straight Arizona. get an NCAA tournament in"For every great team, vite on Selection Sunday. year with two convincing "The way it ended, everywins. therecomes a point where The Wildcats rolled over you really have to come to- body hates to lose, but at the Oregon in a dominating first gether as a team and we've same time, this is a young half of th e championship done a great job of doing team and we've just got to game, building a 15-point that," Ashley said after cel- use it as a learning experilead with a flurry of 3-point- ebrating under a mammoth ence," Young said. ers and transition baskets in shower of confetti at cenThe Wildcats also houndwhat felt like a home game ter court. "It's just the right ed Young, holding him to
quick flurry to start the game — on 2-of-10 shooting. "Throughout the first half, our shot selection was not good," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "The ball didn't
MISSOULA, Mont. — With his team down 11 and time
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Jeri-
45, San Diego State 43: LAS
an Grant scored 24 points and VEGAS — Josh Adams hit a Notre Dame took over with a 3-pointer with a minute left, 26-3 second-half run to rally and Wyoming earned its first past North Carolina. trip to the NCAA tournament America East: Albany (N.Y.) in 13 years. Washington beat M o ntana 51, Stony Brook 50: ALBASouthland: Stephen F. Aus69-65 in the Big Sky champi- NY, NY. — Peter Hooley hit tin 83, Sam Houston State onship game Saturday night a 3-pointer from the top of the 70: KATY, Texas — Thomas to earn a spot in the NCAA key on the final shot of the Walkup had 24 points and tournament. game to give Albany its third eight rebounds to lead SteMontana led 59-48 with straight conference tourna- phen F. Austin to its second 6:15 to go, prompting Eastern ment title. straight NCAA t ournament Washington coach Jim HayBig West: UC lrvine 67, Ha- berth. ford to call a timeout. waii 58: ANAHEIM, Calif. SWAC: Texas Southern 62, -
"We've been there before,"
'Let's do this. Let's go out and
fensive rhythm for sure." Oregon played better offensively in the second half and Young heated up. The Ducks made 11 of 20 shots and Y oung c o n fidently stroked in jumpers, scoring 13 in the half. Oregon never put a dent
in Arizona's lead, though, because it couldn't stop the Wildcats.
lead with 2:10 to go.
Also on Saturday:
Conference finals
Big 12: No. 13 lowa State 70, No. 9 Kansas 66: KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Georges Niang scored 19 points, Abdel Nader made the go-ahead foul shots with 48 seconds to go,
added 15 and Kentucky broke the school-record winning streak of 32 games set from Dec. 5, 1953, to Jan. 8, 1955.
Michael Qualls scored 15 points to lead Arkansas. Big Ten semifinals: No. 6 Wisconsin 71, Purdue 51; Michigan State 62, No. 8 Maryland 58: Bronson Koenig scored a career-high 19 points to lead Wisconsin, which trailed by five points at
trip to the NCAA tournament
made four 3-pointers to lead UAB to its first NCAA tournament since 2011.
halftime then held Purdue to tory. In the other semifinal,
Travis Trice scored 20 points,
ference title. Branden Dawson added 17 WAC: New Mexico State 80, points and eight rebounds Seattle 61: LAS VEGASand Michigan State recovRemi Barry scored 21 points ered from a 16-point, firstand Tshilidzi Nephawe added half deficit. 18 and 10 rebounds as New No. 20 SMU 69, Temple Mexico State won its confer-
MAC: Buffalo 89, Central ence tournament championBig East: No. 4 Villanova Michigan 84: CLEVELAND ship for the fourth consecu69, Xavier 52: NEW YORK — Xavier Ford and Shannon tive season. — Josh Hart had 15 points Evans scored 18 points apiece Ivy League: Harvard 53, off the bench, and top-seed- as Buffalo, coached by March Yale 51: PHILADELPHIAed Villanova won its second Madness icon Bobby Hur- Steve Moundou-Missi hit a tournament title.
lie Cauley-Stein scored 18 points, A n d rew H a r r i son
Deverell Biggs made two free 24 percent shooting after the throws with 27 seconds left break in its fifth straight victo lift Texas Southern to the Southwestern Athletic Con-
56: HARTFORD, Conn. Markus Kennedy scored 12 -
of his 17 points in the second half to help SMU reach the American Athletic Confer-
ence championship, where it will play Connecticut. VCU 93, No. 24 Davidson
ley, earned its first trip to the NCAA tournament.
15-foot jumper with 7.2 sec-
ware State 61: NORFOLK, Va.
fourth straight NCAA Tournament berth.
points inside, Treveon Gra-
Top 25
and VCU won an Atlantic 10
onds left, and Harvard won MEAC: Hampton 82, Dela- a one-game playoff for its
— Reginald Johnson scored 20 points to lead Hampton to the Mid-Eastern Athletic Con-
s t r eak.
Jazz 88, Pistons 85: SALT
and Co. kick-started a wel-
L A K E C I T Y — D e rrick Fa-
come six-game homestand vorsscored 26 pointsinUtah's with plenty of pizazz for the f i f thstraightvictory.
NBA SCOREBOARD
and they got us out of our of-
Southern 58: HOUSTON-
play to win and put the pres- in the 38-year history of the sure on them and get them to school's basketballprogram. start playing not to lose.'" Conference USA: UAB 73, Felix Van H ofe made a MiddleTennessee 60: BIR3-pointer to cap a 14-2 run MINGHAM, Ala. — Robert and give the Eagles (26-8) the Brown scored 22 points and
a night earlier at Denver with
the regulars resting, Curry
a very good defensive team
Luke Nelson scored 17 points
Hayford said. "And we said and UC Irvine earned its first
Nets 9 4 , 76ers 87: PHILA-
contested shots. Arizona is
ACC: No. 11 Notre Dame ment appearance since 2011. Arkansas 60, Georgia 49: 90, No. 19 North Carolina 82: Mountain West: Wyoming NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Wil-
running out, Tyler Harvey did what he does best — score. The nation's leading scorer had 12 of his 18 points in the second half and Eastern
K n i cks an d
Alexey Shved added 14. DELPHIA — Thaddeus Young After having their f ive- s cored 21 points as Brooklyn gamewinningstreaksnapped snapped a five-game losing
get moved, we took some off-balance ones, some very
Eastern Washington tops Montana to godancing The Associated Press
a n dZ ach Randolph added 15
game. apiece, and Memphis snapped Andrea Bargnani had 18 atwo-gameskid.
Arizona's Kaleb Tarczewski, right, and Oregon's Joseph Young battle for the ball during the second half of the Pac-12 tournament championship in Las Vegas on Saturday night. The Ducks lost 80-52.
73: NEW YORK — Mo Alie-
Cox muscled his way to 18 ham provided the pop from the outside with 18 more,
and Iowa State rallied from a ference championship. It is the SEC semifinals: No. 1 Ken- semifinal. The Rams will play 17-point second-half hole. Pirates' first NCAA tourna- tucky 91, Auburn 67; No. 21 Dayton in the final.
Standings
Wizards113, Kings 97
All Times PDT
EasternConference x-Atlanta d-Cleveland d-Toronto Chicago Washington Milwaukee Indiana Charlotte Miami Boston Brooklyn Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W L 51 t4 42 25 39 26 40 27 38 28 34 32 30 35 29 35 29 36 29 36 26 38 23 43 21 46 15 51 13 52
597 12 576 13'/z 515 17'/r 462 2t 453 21'/z 446 22 446 22 406 24'/z 348 28'/r 313 3t 227 36'/z 200 38
WesternConference W L Pct GB 52 13 800
d-Golden State d-Memphis d-Portland Houston LA. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio NewOrleans Oklahoma City Phoenix
utah Denver
Pst GB 785 627 10 600 12
Sacramen to LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
46 20 43 20 43 22 42 24 42 25 40 24 36 29 36 29 34 33 29 36 25 4t 22 43 17 47 t4 50
697 6t/r
683 8 662 9 636 t0'/r 627 11 625 11'/t
554 16 554 16 507 19 446 23 379 27'/r 338 30 266 34'/z 219 37'/r
Saturday'sGames
Washington 113,Sacramento 97 Boston93,Indiana89 Brooklyn94,Philadelphia 87 Memphis96,Milwaukee83 Utah88,Detroit 85 GoldenState125,NewYork94
Today'sGames Chicagoat OklahomaCity,10 a.m. Houston at LA.Clippers,12:30p.m. Denverat Ne wOrleans,3p.m. ClevelandatOrlando 3 p.m. Minnesota atSanAntonio 4p.m. Portlandat Toronto, 4 p.m. NewYorkatPhoenix, 6p.m. Atlantaat LA. Lakers, 6:30p.m. Monday'sGames Portlandat Washington, 4p.m. TorontoatIndiana,4p.m. Philadelphiat a Boston,4:30 p.m. Denver atMemphis,5p.m. BrooklynatMinnesota, 5p.m. ClevelandatMiami,5p.m. Oklahoma City at Dalas, 5:30p.m. CharlotteatUtah,6p.m. AtlantaatSacramento, 7p.m. LA. Lakers at GoldenState, 7:30p.m.
Summaries
Celtics 93, Pacers 89 BOSTON (93) Turner1-72-44, Bass5 96-616, Zeller8-102-4 18, Smart310 02 8, Bradley719 00 t6, Crowder 5-11 4-416,olynyk 1-6 0-02, Pressey3-7 1-1 7, Jerebko 1-20-03, Datome1-2 0-03. Totals 35-83 15-21 93. INDIANA (89) S.Hill 0-5 0-00,West4-93-311, Hibbert2-61-2 5, G.Hill 11-186-6 30, Miles5-130-013, Mahinmi 1-4 0-0 2, Stuckey 5-u 0-2 12, Scola2-7 0-0 4, Watson4-82-2 12, Rttdez0-4 0-0 0. Totals 34-85 12-15 89. Boston 20 25 22 26 — 93 Indiana 18 19 23 29 — 89
SACRAM ENTO(97) Casspi1-20-02, Landry4-6 0-08, Cousins9-17 12-1630,McCallum5-83-4 15,McLemore2-102-2 7, Thompson 2-5 0-0 4, Miler 1-6 2-3 4,Wiliams 6-0 0-015, Evans2-3 2-3 6, Stauskas3-9 0-06. Totals 35-77 21-2897. WASHING TON(113) Pierce7-11 0-017, Gooden1-5 0-02, Gortat6-9 1-2 13,Wall9-159-1031, Beal4-1345 14,Seraphin 5-5 0-0 10, Butler 6-100-014, Porter 1-3 0-0 3, Sessions1-4 0-03, Blair 3-6 0-0 6.Totals 43-81 14-17113. Sacramento 25 39 21 12 — 97 Washington 21 25 38 29 — 113
Grizzlies 96, Bucks83 MILWAUKE E(83) Antetokounmpo7-105-6 19, llyasova4-10 2-4 12, Pachulia5-84-414, Ennis3-140-07, Middleton 6-15 4-517,O'Bryant1-2 0-02, Henson0-1 3-83, Johnson 2-50-05,Pluml ee2-40-04,Mayo0-30-0 0. Totals 30-7218-2783. MEMPHIS (96) Je.Green5-13 3-4 15, Randolph4-10 7-8 15, Gasol 6-120-0t2, Udrih6-100-0 t4, Lee6-103-3 17, Allen4-121-1 9, Kotifos1-3 0-0 2, Calathes2-3
0-0 4, Carter3-5 0-08, Ja.Green0-00-0 0. Totals 37-7814-16 96.
Milwaukee Memphis
20 22 19 22 — 83 22 27 29 18 — 96
Nets 94, 76ers 87 BROOKLY N(94) Johnson6-103-4 15, Young9-152-4 21, Lopez 2-7 6-8 10,Wiliams3-7 4-6 10,Brown0-3 2-22, Jack 6-1 6 0-012, Plumlee3-80-0 6,Anderson4-1t 1-210, Bogdanovic1-4 0-0 2, Jefferson3-3 0-06. Totals 37-8418-2694.
PHIULDELPHIA (87)
Sampson1-50-0 2, Grant3-11 0-48, Noel7-10 3-317, Canaan 6-13 0-013, Richardson3-110-06, Sims05343, Robinson 35 t-t 7, Covington410 0-010, Thompson 5-120-012, Smith3-10 2-29, RobinsonIII 0-20-00. Totals 35-949-1487. Brooklyn 27 24 23 20 — 94 Philadelphia 29 2 7 10 21 —87
Jazz 88, Pistons 85 DETROIT (85) Butler1-4002, Monroe7152316, Drumm ond 2-4 0-2 4,Jackson4-11 0-0 10, Caldwell-Pope0-5 1-21, Prince3-6 0-08, Meeks2-9 6-811, Tolliver 5-12 2-3 14,Dinwiddie3-9 2-3 9, Anthony5-9 0-1 10. Totals 32-8413-2285. UTAH(88) Hayward4-84-6 12,Favors 8-1410-13 26,Gobeit 5-8 0-210, Exum 3-5 0-08, Hood5-10 0-012, Mill sap2-60-05,Burke3-62-39,Booker3-60-06, Ingle s0-60-00.Totals33-6916-2488. Detroit 18 25 12 30 — 85 utah 18 31 13 26 — 88
Warriors125, Knicks 94 NEWYORK(94) Thomas 2-60-04, Amundson3-81-2 7, Bargnani 8-1t1-2 18,Galoway4-70-010, Shved4-I04-714, Aldrich0-42-22, HardawayJr5-100-013, Smith0-2 0 00, Early5-130-110,Acy2-6005, Larkin2-50-0 4 Wear3u 1-27. Totals 3896 916 94. GOLDEN STATE(125) Barnes3-51-28,Green5-70-0t2, Bogut2-50-0 4, Curry8-153-325,Thompson9-173-327, Iguodala 3-50-07,SpeighIs 2-85-59, Holiday4-92-213, Lee 5-60-010, Livingston4-6 0-0 8, Ezeli 0-3 0-0 0, Barbosa 0-3 2-22, Rush0-1 0-00. Totals 45-90 16-17 125. New York 27 25 21 21 — 94 Golden State 26 4 7 38 14 — 125
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
Rodeo Continued from D1 The sand gave way to stairstepped rocks, like r isers on which enormous choirs
Cody was in grade school when he found Bill's old chaps and spurs in the rafters. Bill was soon putting 20,000 miles on his truck every year driving Cody and his younger brothers
might perform, until the last
to 40 rodeos a year. They rode
one dropped off several hundred feet. The canyon below was a deep and jagged cut in the forever landscape of southern Utah, as if carved by impatient gods with a dull knife. The Wrights have been running cattle in the area for
bareback and bulls. Slowly, surely, the Wright boys each settled into bronc riding, leaving the other events behind.
"I mighta had something to
do with that," Bill said. "Once
more than 150 years, since
great-great-grandparents arrived beginning in 1849 during the Mormon migration.
"My boys will be the sixth generation," Bill said. His mouth never opened very far
when he spoke. "And Cody's boys will be the seventh."
Cody Wright is the oldest of seven boys among Bill and Evelyn's 13 children. The boys, ages 18 to 37 and similarly built — like a litter of puppies, Bill said — are a posse of the
w orld's best saddle-bronc riders. Taut-muscled and not too tall, they are able to muster the
guts, strength and balance to ride a bucking horse like few PhotosbyJosh Haner/The New YorkTimes others, as if genetically gifted The Wright family sits around a fire at their ranch on Smith Mesa, bordering Zion National Park in Utah, during a Memorial Day weekend to do so. A Wright boy has won roundup. A Wright boyhaswonthe saddle-bronc world title every even-numbered year since 2008, using their winnings to support the the saddle-bronc world title ev- family's modest ranching business back in Utah. ery even-numbered year since 2008. Cody won twice, in 2008 and 2010. Jesse, now 25, won
you got it learned, it's not near as hard on your body. Besides, my dad said cowboys ride horses — saddle horses. It used to bug him, bareback riding. He'd say, 'Cowboys don't ride bareback.'" Cody was in high school when Bill and Evelyn moved the family from Hurricane about two hours north to Milford (population 1,400), in search of a smaller town and better schools. The backyard has a wide-angle view of the Mineral Mountains and a rodeo arena, where the boysmostly the grandchildren now — practice on a ragged collection of bucking horses that Bill keeps. Metal signs at the edge of town along Highways 21 and 257 declare Milford the home
of Cody Wright, world champion. Jesse's name was added after 2012.
to his 18-year-old son in the camper. "You guys check in for your flight in the morning?" The day started at dawn, back home in Milford, Utah,
in 2012. Jesse's twin, Jake, was
Cody was outside his house, south of town amid the hayfields,not far from where Jes-
se and Jake have homes, too. There were goats in a nearby where most of th e W r ights pen and a half-dozen horses live. Cody, his brother Spen- in the field. His Dodge pickup cer, his son Rusty and another was gone, replaced by a newsaddle-bronc rider from Utah er version. Cody sold it with named Brady Nicholes drove 560,000 miles on it.
second in 2013. In 2014, those
three and a fourth Wright boy, Spencer, 24, qualified for the sport's most prestigious event, December's National Finals
Rodeo in Las Vegas — a record for one family. But rodeo careers can end
three hours to Las Vegas, then another six hours through the
without warning, as quick as the next try at an eight-sec-
"But the engine was pretty new," he said. "It only had 300-
Mojave Desert, over the Te-
some on it." Cody's 5-year-old daughter, Lily, was on a horse, spurring it Valley to Clovis, California, to a full sprint. One of his sons,
ond ride. So the boys, most
hachapi Mountains and into the vast San Joaquin Central
with families to support, increasingly plug their rodeo
11-year-old Statler, was atop a
earnings into B i ll's modest
near Fresno.
ranching business. While they
Now and again, they spotted mechanical bucking machine. a familiar pickup with an overCody turned on the power, size camper riding piggyback. low.The thing hummed and Inside were the twins Jake and heaved, and Statler bobbed up Jesse, brothers of Cody and and down comfortably in the Spencer. saddle. One hand clenched a Cody was the oldest, by a thick rein, the other waved long way, in both age and ex- over his head. "The only thing that needs perience. He had a scar under his right eye and a gap to move is from your knees between his front teeth. Like down, plus your hand as the all the Wrights, despite being horse bobs its head," Cody born and raised in Utah, he said. "But you have to keep the had a hint of a drawl — not rein tight." Southern so much as rural. His The key calculation for evrodeo results are louder than ery ride is how much rein to have — too tight, and a drop of his personality. "He's the kinda guy, when he the horse's head might pull the goes to 31 flavors," his moth- rider over; too loose, and the er said, "he comes out with rider exits off the back. vanilla." The career of a bucking The two loads of Wrights horse can last a decade or arrived 45 minutes before the more, and it builds a reputation rodeo began, as the leaden sky for how it bucks, skips, spins, poured a cold rain. In front of hesitates and tosses its head. a scattered crowd, Spencer The Wrights record all their scored an 84, good enough for rides in a worn ledger to tell second and a $4,281 check. future riders how much rein Jesse's 78 earned him $744. to give a particular bronc. One Cody's 77 earned $93. Rusty's fist past the front edge of the 74 was out of the money, and saddle is a little. Three fists are Jake bucked off. alot. The boys were gone by the When the gate swings open, time the rodeo ended. The the horse bounds out sidepickups escaped the muddy ways. For a mark out, the first parking lot and split in differ- requirement in a ride, a rider's ent directions, toward different feet must be above the horse's rodeos. Cody's truck arrived in shoulders when t h e h o r se
crisscross tens of thousands of miles to more than 100 events a
year across the West, Bill shepherds the growing herd back home in Utah. From a distance, at a time of urbanization and connectiv-
Spencer Wright is named world champion at the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas in December.
ity, rodeo and ranching may seem anachronistic notionshundred cattle. The number of an America that no longer cattle operations in the United exists. To the Wrights, rodeo States shrinks as the average and ranching represent not size grows. The Wrights' opthe past, but the present and eration is bigger than about the future. The hope is that the 90 percent of those around combination can sustain the the country, government staexpanding Wrights for several tistics show, but a herd of 200 calf-bearing cows is barely more generations. "Rodeo's not something that enough to earn a living for Bill everybody's going to be able to and Evelyn. The business will do," Bill said. "Where ranching have to expand exponentially possibly is." to provide for their children He stared into the canyon. and grandchildren. His eyes, squinty pinches beLand is the biggest impedneath the low brim of a tan iment. Like most ranchers in cowboy hat smudged with grit, the West, the Wrights lease were trained over a lifetime of most of their grazing pastures spotting specks of black and through a patchwork of perbrown moving amid red soil mits from the Bureau of Land and green brush. Management or the U.S. Forest That such a gorge was cre- Service. Each permit dictates ated by moving water felt like how many cattle can graze a myth. Beyond an occasion- on a particular parcel, and for al trickle through a cluster of how many months of the year. Bill's father had one of the green ferns deep in the shadows, there was little moisture first permits sold in the afternow. Not in this drought. math of the Taylor Grazing quaint and sepia-toned from
That was a m ai n r eason that Bill wanted to gather his cattle earlier than usual, even
before most of his children and 30-some grandchildren arrived for the family's annual roundup on Memorial Day weekend. He needed to move the herd 100 miles north, to the
high-elevation summer range
in the Tushar Mountains near Beaver, Utah, w here t h ere were plants to eat and water to
drink. In May, Bill sold 102 yearlings, born the previous spring and still growing. "I normally would have kept them until September," Bill said. "But prices were so damn high, and things looked so bleak, we decided to do it now. I got more out of them cattle selling them
this year at 600 pounds than I did last year at 850 pounds."
Today's high prices did not quash the anxiety of pinning the livelihoods of the family's future generations on a few
mountain goats, diagonally toward the canyon rim. One evening, a riderless horse lost its balance and tipped backward. It tumbled downhill in sliding and bouncing somersaults, 50 feet deeper into the canyon. It
his fingers inside the steer. He pulled out bands of tissue and sliced again. Young boys sprayed the area with an anti-
septic. Some years, they collect the testicles to fry and eat later. This year, though, the pen of
crashedinto a stand of trees, shaking them furiously. Everything went still, except for a dust cloud that rose gently, like campfire smoke. Back at camp, Dutch ovens pulled from the fire were
the corral was left littered with
ents built in the 1940s stood
than aminute,never more than
dirt-covered testicles. They looked like pearl onions. Someone else with a knife carved a gash into the tip of each calf's ear, an identifying marker, usually causing filled w it h c h i cken, others a spritz of red blood. A whitewith peach cobbler. There hot branding iron was pressed were bowls of salad and corn. hard against the animal's hip. Surrounded by children and Flesh and hair sizzled, smoked grandchildren, eyes dosed, and sometimes flamed. A puBill offered a prayer. He asked trid scent filled the dusty, cathe Heavenly Father to bless cophonousair. "It smells like money," somethe family, the animals, the land and "this great nation." A one said. one-room cabin that his parEach calf took little more nearby. He was told about the horse,
two. Released, they clamored to their feet and scampered in
which, miraculously, seemed search of their mothers. A few hours later, the corral Act of 1934, meant to prevent uninjured. "It ain't the first time that's empty and silent, the nearby overgrazing on tens of millions of acres of public range in the happened," Bill said between pasture serenely dotted with West. These days, permits can bites. Justa yearbefore,Spen- cattle grazing on thinning cost tens or hundreds of thou- cer was atop a horse that tum- grass, Bill knelt in the dirt and sands of dollars. Bill has eight bled; he was thrown against scribbled numbers on a box permits, some bought with a tree and was knocked out. with a pencil. His hands were "When I was a boy, we lost a stained in blood. heftybank loans. Bill stared at h a sh-mark More and more, though, he cow over the edge. And I did it pays cash, with help from the again a few years ago, lower in tallies of cows, heifers, steers and bulls, plus the 108 calves boys. the wash." Memorial Day was Brand- branded, tagged and inoculatIt was late May when the boys took a break from the ing Day, a family holiday. ed. "How can I be 60 short?" he rodeo circuit. Each morning, Men, horses and dogs nudged asked himself. He remembered that he they climbed onto horses and the herd in clumps toward the descended into the canyon, corral, the g uttural b ovine had already moved 36 cows looking for flashes of move- dissents carrying half a mile. north to the mountains, to get ment and listening for grunts Cody recruited young boys to a jump-start on summer amid and murmurs of cattle hidden gather wood to feed two fires, the drought here in the desert. in the prickly thicket among then buried irons deep in their But he was still short 24. They the cliffs and boulders. For coals. He drove three stakes were sprinkled somewhere hours, they nudged small deep into hard dirt nearby. among the tens of thousands of herds north into a box canyon Each held one end of a long, acres of canyons and pastures black inner tube. At the oth- around him. with no obvious exit. The rest of the family would The boys, alone or in pairs, er end was a metal harness emerged from the abyssat that looked like a medieval pack up and leave later in the day. The boys would head into dusk, trailing cows and calves contraption. Boys loitered nearby on theheartofthe summer rodeo that trekked single file up a steep trail, as sure-footed as horseback, coiled ropes intheir circuit. Bill would be left alone, hands. Bill gave a nod. Calves again. were lassoed by their back feet
"Next few days," he said,
and dragged toward one of the "I'm going to be back and forth, three stations. The heads were looking for these cows." wrestled into the harnesses
F. THE
RO 1'~ Rusty Wright after a ride at the Cheyenne Frontier Days in Chey-
enne, Wyoming.
Las Vegas about 3 in the morn-
lands on its front feet the first
ing. The four men slept for a time. The other main rule: no few hours in the airport park- touching the horse with the ing lot, flew to Houston, drove off hand. As in bull riding and three hours to a rodeo in Cor- bareback riding, the cowboy pus Christi, Texas, (only Spen- must hold on for 8 seconds to cer, $2,940 for second, earned receive a score. No points, no money), drove back to Hous- money. ton, slept in the rental car, flew Rider an d a n i mal e a ch to Las Vegas at dawn to reget half the score, on a scale trieve Cody's truck, drove five that adds to 100. The bronc is hours to Lakeside, California, judged for how high and hard for another rodeo (Rusty got it bucks. The cowboy is judged $1,518 for second, Spencer $231 by how well he stays in confor seventh) and then drove trol above the chaos. The rein eight hours back to Milford. should be tight, the seat in the It was 35 hours of driving, saddle, the legs churning totwo flights, three time zones gether in time with the ups and and three rodeos in three days. downs of the horse below. "When the front feet hit the Cody, a two-time world champion, winner of more than $2 ground, and the back feet are million in career prize money, kicked up, your feet should earned $93. be forward, so it's like you're "I've made a pretty good liv- standing," Cody said. Clinging for dear life excites ing rodeoing," he said. "But I've done it hard." the crowd but dulls the judges. Bill Wright, Cody's father, Keeping the toes pointed out, was 12 when he rode a bull the spurs against the animal, and won $40 at a county fair in is point-adding showmanship. Hurricane. He did all the rodeo A score above 90 is rare. Anything above 80 is usually in the events as a teenager. Riding a bull is like being money. In 2014, Cody, by the count in an eight-second car accident. Bareback riding of the Pro Rodeo Cowboys broncs without a saddle — is Association, earned $111,093 filled wit h n e ck-snapping, in 98 rodeos, good for second back-bending whips and jerks. among saddle-bronc riders. But saddle-bronc riding was The goal every year is finishBill's favorite. More poetry ing in the top 15 to qualify for than chaos, it is the ciassic ro- December's National Finals deo event, depicted in the cow- Rodeo, a 10-night, big-stakes boy silhouette on the Wyoming event where a rider can double license plate. It is balance and or triple his season's winnings. technique, rhythm and guts. The cutoff for the top 15 in "I just think it's a little more 2014 was about $60,000 in seafulfilling," Bill said. "Don't son earnings. More than 200 know if it's harder to learn, but golfers made more than that on
and the calves, moaning and Hours on the road, wild-eyed, were stretched long seconds in the saddle onto their sides. The black road unspooled Like a pit crew to a race beneath the headlights like a car, a team converged on the treadmill. Painted dashes on animal. Someone with an ear the pavement rolled past in a punch tagged an ear with an silentparade of blurs. There identifying colored marker. was no horizon; through the Two with needled syringes cracked windshield of t he injected vaccines. Someone Dodge truck, sky and desert called out "steer!" if the calf were painted the same charwas male. coal hue. Las Vegas was six Castration was quick. Bill hours of darkness away. tugged on the scrotum, sliced "Rusty?" C od y ca l l ed I think it's more of a skill. You away the testicles and dug through the back window have to work harder at it."
the PGA Tour.
Continued next page
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
NHL ROUNDUP
From previous page Expenses eat the winnings quickly. Cody spent $11,040
Price again outstanding,
on rodeo entry fees and about
$20,000 on gas. He put 90,000 miles on the truck and replaced
Habs topslumpingIsles
tires twice. When he took his
family along in the summer, he took his worn motor homemore repairs, more mouths to
The Associated Press
feed,fewer people to share the costs of gas or do the driving. "Ifyou don'tm ake $65,000or $70,000, I don't think you can break even," Cody said. "Depends on how many guys you
Duncan Keith also b roke
a long scoring drought for Chicago. about to let a rough week deFlyers 7, Red Wings 2: rail what has already been a PHILADELPHIA — Brayden specialseason. Schenn scored tw o g o als After a 23-8 start at home to lead Philadelphia, which in their final season at Nas- snapped a four-game losing UNIONDALE, NY. — The New York Islanders aren't
travel with."
Cody remained a perennial threat to win a world title
sau Coliseum, the Islanders
streak.
despite being the oldest of the top riders by several years. For
have dropped four straight there — including three this
FALO, N.Y. — Keith Yandle
hS
now, the financial certainty is better in rodeo than in the
„, y4
not take away from Dad. He
enjoys it, and I like seeing him enjoy it." der. He would finish in ninth, with season winnings of Disappointment and $130,393.86. delight: Showtime in Vegas Jesse, the 2012 champion, Like wind through a desert had arrived in Las Vegas with canyon, the cheers and groans $77,495, but he was cursed with of 17,000 fans rushed through ordinary horses and scores. the hard bends of the arena He would finish the season in hallway and into the locker eighth place, with $134,502.22. room. They swirled and faded, In 2013, Jake held the lead leavingbehind onlythe faintest through eight rounds, but a ofechoes. missed mark in Round 9 cost Cody Wright sat alone. him the world title and left Minutes before, the other him second. He barely got to 14 saddle-bronc riders vying Las Vegas in 2014, needing the for the world championship season's final rodeo to qualify grabbed their saddles and reins for one of 15 slots in 14th place, and shuffled out, wordlessly. with $59,795 in season earnThey wore cowboy hats on ings. Then he won Round 6 and their heads, dirtyboots on their finished in the money — top six feet, worn leather chaps on — every remainingnight to end their hips and silver belt buck- up fifth in the world, with yearles the size of salad plates on long winnings of $155,420.44. their flat bellies. Their footsteps Spencer arrived in Las Vewere deadened by carpet, but gas in December as the aftheir spurs jangled. terthought. He was the 2012 One w o u l d win th e rookie of the year, 29th in the $19,002.40 first prize rewarded standings, but his 2013 season for each of 10 go-rounds over 10 was washed out by injuries. He nights of the NFR. A night later, spent 2014 traveling in the faone would be declared world ther-and-son shadow of Cody champion. and Rusty. His $60,265 in winIt might have been Cody. But nings was enough to qualify two nights before, trying to dis- him for the National Finals Rodeo in 13th place.
But once he reached Las pickup men arrived on horse- Vegas, as if immune to presback to assist, Cody slid off the sure, he strung together solid, backofalurchingbronc named moneymaking rides. He won Camp Fire. The knob at the top the fourth go-round with 84
I pulled it tight. Kept hitting my back cinch." X-rays the next morning found a compression fracture in Jake's vertebrae, between the shoulder blades. Doctors
in the mountains. He needed
to get them down to the relative warmth of Smith Mesa before
the snow got too deep, and spent most of a month doing it. "I'm still short a couple of
told him he would miss the next
head," he said in late January. two months, at least, of the ro- "They could be dead, or they deo circuit. could be pocketed up some"I don't get paid for watchin'," where. You just don't know." Jake said.
He was down at Smith Mesa, alone, fixing a tractor tire. He
He would ride the final night, a bolt of pain darting through wanted to plant a few hundred his back with each buck, and acres of grain, most of it rye, on earn a $3,064.90paycheck for a the family land, to supplement 78score. the herd's diet across the sandy, Around C h ristmas, Jake rugged terrain. overturned an all-terrain veSome late-summer storms hicle while pulling youngsters had filled the ponds, but Bill through the snow. He already wasn't so sure that the drought hadplans for surgery on abone was over. spur in one hand, but broke the "They said we're not that far other, and had the operations at the same time. "If he'd a got throwed out of that and got that thing on top
from normal — 86 percent of normal, I think they figured,"
he said. "But it seems like we're dry. We don't have any snow-
of him, he's looking at para- pack. There isn't a stitch of lyzation," Bill said in January, snow." somewhat annoyed. "But he's He said he hadn't talked to like a cat in a cage — put him Jake in awhile, and was meanin a room, he paces around. He ingtocallCody,andhad hoped just can't set." to get a little help from Spencer Cody rode the final night, with the tractor tire. But Spentoo. He wore a straitjacket of cer was with Jesse, Bill thought, a brace that tied his left arm to
and probably with CoBurn, too,
his body. It was a strong ride, travelingto some rodeos. but he was so worried about They had been to Odessa, his shoulder that he missed his
but Bill wasn't exactly sure
of the humerus bone of his left
points on Mata Fact. Through
arm snapped out of the socket ofhis shoulder. He winced. Only his wife, mother and oldest son, sitting in Section 112 of the Thomas &
six rounds, Spencer, Cody and
markout and got no score. where they were now. Maybe "Nothing hurt but my pride," Denver. he said outside his camper in the arena parking lot. He
Cort Scheer were the only rid-
smiled. Within a week, he had
Mack Center, understood that
a wince on Cody's face meant something serious. Cody held his left arm snug to his body and walked directlytothe medical room. He sat on a table, his shirt off, his dislocated left
shoulder hanging with a dull ache. An IV pumped painkiller
ers to score every night — no buckoffs or blown markouts
shoulder surgery and was told he would miss the first three
— putting them in position to
months of 2015.
daim the rank-altering bonuses that go to those with the highest average score over 10 rides. "No one's even paying atten-
In Chute 1, Spencer leaned back in the saddle, clenched the
tion to Spencer," Bill said before Round 7. "He's sneaking up
there and no one's noticing." And then on the night that
Cody got hurt, Spencer won Cody reflexively tensed. An- again, an 85-point ride on Pretother dose, another yank. An ty Boy, after being introduced ambulancewas called. by the public-address announc"He's all right," Jesse said. er asthe "redheaded Wright into his veins. Doctors yanked.
"But I'll bet he's a sore sucker tomorrow."
brother."
"Look at the leaderboard!" Cody, his left arm taped to the announcer shouted minhis body in a sling, his jeans utes later, when Jake scooted and belt budde undone at the between Spencer's 85 and Jeswaist, was helped to a gurney. se's 78 in the night's standings. Propped up, with a drunken "Spencer Wright! Jake Wright! look on his face, he was taken Jesse Wright! Utah, you're secup an elevator and out an arena ond to none!"
was kept, and Spencer's sad-
go-rounds. The emcees called dle slid back and forth on Pony Spencer out of the darkness, Man's back - "Look at that and he shuffled into the spot-
saddle!" Cody said to no one-
Panthers 2, Humcanes 0: RALEIGH, N.C. — Dan El-
when asked if his team was
Brandon Pirri scored in the
"I would hope so a little lis made 27 saves for his first bit," coach Jack Capuano said shutout of the season, and frustrated. "You want a little second period to lead Florida. fire in your belly. I sound like Jets 2, Lightning 1: TAMa broken record. We played PA, Fla. — Drew Stafford pretty well, tobe honest." and Blake Wheeler scored Tomas Plekanec and Max third-period goals as WinniPacioretty scored 2:15 apart peg rallied to win. in the second period, and Canucks 4, Maple Leafs 1: Carey Price stopped 35 shots VANCOUVER, British Coto win.
lumbia — Derek Dorsett had
Price bounced back from
a goal and two assists for the first three-point game of his
a loss against Ottawa two nights earlier in which he al-
lowed five goals. "This was a
career to lead Vancouver. Wild 3, Blues 1: ST. LOUc o nfidence IS — Nino Niederreiter and
builder for sure. A tough Kyle Brodziak scored just building to win in," Price said. 17 seconds apart late in the He heard chants of "Car- third period to lift Minnesoey, Car-ey" from a large ta, which got 40 saves from throng of Canadiens fans af- Devan Dubnyk. ter a save during a late power Devils 4, Coyotes 1:GLENplay, but lost his shutout bid DALE, Ariz. — Mike Cammoments later when Josh malleri scored his 25th goal Bailey scored with 2:18 left. of the season in a three"Carey EYice was Carey goal third period, and Cory Price," Canadiens coach Mi- Schneider stopped 30 shots chel Therrien said. "He's a for New Jersey. dominant player and a speAvalanche 3, Flames 2: cial player." DENVER — Alex Tanguay Also on Saturday: and Ryan O'Reilly scored Bruins 2, Penguins 0: 1:47 apart i n t h e s econd PITTSBURGH — T u u k ka period, and Semyon VarRask made 30 saves as Bos- lamov stopped 29 shots for ton won its fifth straight. Sid-
Colorado.
ney Crosby was a late scratch Predators 2, Kings 1:LOS for Pittsburgh, which was ANGELES — Na s hville's also without Evgeni Malkin.
Viktor Stalberg got credit for
Blackhawks 6, Sharks 2: the tiebreaking goal when SAN JOSE, Calif. — Patrick Los Angeles' Jake Muzzin Sharp scored his first two
deflected the puck into his ownnet.
goals since January, and
•
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s
t /
surged across the dirt in heav-
ing bursts. Spencer pumped his legs intime, twice clenchingthe horse's wide middle to hang on. The buzzer sounded. The score came: 79. Only Cort Scheer, a 28-yearold from Nebraska, could beat
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him for the world title. But Scheer never found rhythm
back in the 'Ibshar Mountains near Beaver, Utah, where he
OQBRL' F LoDGEt 5PA Y ACHATS, OREGO N
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mer and fall. About a month
home to Milford. It was placed near the fireplace, and children
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kept the herd through the sum-
free hand aimed atthe rafters, loaded it in his truck and took it
the youngest Wright daughter, like a waiter holding an invisible tray. He scored an 81.5 and trailed in support. Days before, Cody was the tookthe night's lead. Moments later, he entered Wright expected to contend for the world title. He was po- the room dragging his saddle sitioned third with three go- and rems. "He was soaking wet," Spenrounds left, but his chances w ere as tattered as his shoul- cer said. "I thought I had it on.
saves for his first career NHL shutout.
starved Islanders.
held his right over his head. He gritted his teeth and nodded. The gate swung open. Lunatic From Hell skipped out, and Spencer held the heels of his boots hard against the horse's neck. The animal
light. Bill, Evelyn, Jake and but Spencer managed to keep earlier, he had found a calf CoBurn Bradshaw, apromising his feet moving in time and his alone, shivering in the cold. He saddle-broncrider married to
only one goal in each. The latest setback came Saturday night when the Montreal Canadiens earned a 3-1 win over the goal-
fat rein with his left hand and
aboard Big Fork, scored a 71 and finished second in the world standings. Jake ambushed Spencer in door. Fans stopped and stared Cody returned to the empty and pointed as he was loaded arena at 10 the next morning. the hallway. The other riders, into an ambulance. His shoulder might require including Scheer, congratulatAbout the time that Cody surgery and, either way, would ed him in the locker room by was drugged fully unconscious surely knock him off the ro- sprayinghim with cheap beer. The world champions of the at the hospital, his humerus deo circuit for a month or two. yanked back into the socket Cody wanted to know whether seven rodeo events were introwith an audible pop, Spencer it could withstand three rides in duced during a ceremony of stirring music and pyrotechWright, more than 13 years three days first. younger, stood backstage at the Cody went to the locker nics. No family had ever had South Pointe Casino, tugging room and sat in his saddle on three world champions in roon a longneck Coors Light. the fl oor.He clenched the reins deo. Bill's hat was tugged low, The South Pointe is a 25-sto- with his left hand and jerked shading the tears in his eyes. ry hiccup amid the low sprawl upward as hard as he could, Two rows of Wrights in Section on the southern end of Las trying to simulate a ride. Some- 112 stood and cheered. "I'm speechless," Spencer Vegas, several miles from the thingpopped deep inside. stammered softly into t he neon clash of the Strip. The The next night, he was winner of each night's sev- alone in the locker room again, microphone, and the crowd en events — bareback riding, watching the ninth go-round laughed. "I'm glad to have my calf roping, steer wrestling, unfold on television without brothers. I love them. And I love myparents." saddle-bronc riding, tie-down him. "That horse come in flat, He was off to another rodeo roping, barrel racing (the only women's event) and bull riding Bradley?" he said to start one the next week, not sure what — is called onstage at the South conversation. to do with his 10-day winnings Pointe and, in front ofhundreds On television, Spencer dung of $145,123. He considered a of fans, awarded an enormous to Pony Man, 1,200 pounds of house in Milford, but instead belt buckle and a b ottle of jerks and kicks that bucked off bought 10 older cows from Bill's whiskey. Jake in Round 4. It was raining herd, and then another 48head. By then, Bill was on horseSpencer had won for the outside, where the livestock second time in the first seven
scored the game-winning goal in the third period, and MackenzieSkapski made 20
week in which they netted
ranching business that Bill is building. "I can't figure out for sure if I Josh Haner/The New YorkTimes could stop rodeoing and just do Jesse Wright competes in the National Finals Rodeo in Las Vegas in December. Jesse won the saddle ranching," Cody said. "I don't bronc riding world title in 2012, and competed here alongside three brothers, all of whomcrisscross know if I could quit doing it and the west from rodeo to rodeo, using their winnings to support the family's ranching business.
mount after the eight-second buzzer and before either of the
Rangers 2, Sabres 0:BUF-
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© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
Wearable tech finds place with pooches
L.A. Prep aids chefs through kitchen rentals
By Patdck May San Jose (Calif) Mercury News
With the cognoscenti breathlessly occupied with the launch of the Apple Watch, we thought we'd
By David Pieraon Los Angeles Times
'i. ®
check in with another dis-
tinguished group of users just drooling for the latest wearable technology: Dogs. It's practically raining
Photos by Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
Taryn Heyler, manager of Oregrown, stands in front of the different medical cannabis strains at the Bend dispensary.
accessories that can be
attached to our four-legged friends, usually for the owner's peace of mind.
Wearable tech for animals has been around for years: Decades ago, scientists began tracking endangered species with radio-tracking collars, and police and soldiers can
ixin
renovate a leased space to meet health codes. A new project called L.A. Prep is aimed at helping Walton and a growing number of local artisanal
food manufacturers that are primed to one day hit
to receive commands electronically. More recently,
the shelves of Costco or
Trader Joe's.
the marketplace is awash with all kinds of cool track-
Located in a
56,000-square-foot industrial building, L.A. Prep
ing and monitoring devices for the canine set, typically
will rent 54 commercial kitchens outfitted with
in the form of a tech-laden
way: one device still under
development, No More Woof, is a headset that
stoves, stainless-steel
mariuana
• Officials say Oregon should not blend the two regulatorysystems
claims to be able to read
your dog's inner emotions by monitoring its brain signals. "Wearable tech for dogs was really big at
mercial kitchen to expand production. His company was too big for his home, and too small to afford the tens of thousands of dollars needed to
attach devices to their dogs
collar that can be accessed through Web browsers and mobile smartphone apps. And there's more on the
was a hit. Gourmet shops were clamoring for more, hooked on a recipe handed down by his grandmother. But Walton hit a wall. He couldn't find a com-
cats and you-know-what
in the burgeoning subcategory of tech gadgets and
LOS ANGELES — Matt Walton's caramel corn
countertops and walk-in refrigerators to tenants,
who can come and go as they please. "There really isn't a place for the people in between like me," said
By JosephDitzler • The Bulletin
n one of its first messages to the Oregon
Walton, who founded his Zlicious Confections in 2012 and signed a one-year lease for a 333-square-foot
the Consumer Electron-
Legislature, the Oregon Liquor Control
kitchen at L.A. Prep at $3,600 a month. "There's a
ics Show this year," said wearable-tech evangelist
Commission warned against allowing retail
huge need for this." Shared kitchens and
Tom Emrich, founder of a
collaborative hub called We Are Wearables, "and the latest trend is devices
that quantify your pet's health, just like Fitbit does for humans. We're now
pushing that technology on our dogs so, for example, you can see if your pet's been running or playing or getting any exercise while you're at work." I recently got my hands
medical marijuana is dispensed. grown in Bend. Medical marijuana in Oregon is unregulated until it reaches the dispensary.
meet federal guidelines." Government authorities assume that some portion
Growers do not need licenses of the marijuana grown for the way dispensaries do, and medicinal purposes leaks
on a few of the latest products and used our lovable
the way Measure 91 will requiremarijuana grown
that reason, an unregulat-
— though hyperactive and food-obsessed — 10-yearold Beagle named Lucy as my guinea pup. First up is Voyce, a $299 lightweight, waterproof and Jetsons-worthy collar
for recreational use to be
alongside a regulated system for recreational marijuana,
that uses Wi-Fi to monitor
to patients," OLCC Chairman Rob Patridge wrote March
SeeDog tech/E5
and olive oils that show Multiple medical cannabis strains sit on display inside Ore-
onto the black market; for
statistics.
celerators have grown in response to the rise of specialty foods — think small-batch snacks, cheese
to sell from the same locations from which
theirproductisnottracked
the heck out of your pet's health, serving up all kinds of diagnostics to help you and your vet take care of Fido. Voyce even sends you articles by renowned animal experts, each custom-tailored to your dog's breed and ongoing health
food incubators and ac-
marijuana shops, expected to open in late 2016,
trackedfrom seed to sale. "Medical production by growers for cardholders, and 'cardstacking'practices,produces an excess of product, not all of which is delivered 3 to leaders in the Oregon
House and Senate."There is debate about how much of the remainder of medical
product is being shared with individuals and dispensaries, exported, lost, destroyed or simply sold illegally. The fact that there is a debate is evidence that the system cannot
ed system could not exist said Tom Towslee, interim
communications director for the OLCC recreational marijuana program. The Oregon Health Authority has jurisdiction over medical marijuana. Discussion at the
state level already includes the possibility of bringing medical and recreational
Foods. to be the same unregulated
systemthat feeds the black market," he said. The OLCC is compiling community input as part of drawingup regulations
Related • For complete coverage of marijuana legalization, go to bendbulietin.com/marijuana
for recreational marijuana,
whichisscheduledtobecome available for retail sales in 2016. Possession of up to 8
ounces and fourplants at home becomes permissible July 1 under Measure 91. The
OLCC must start accepting license applications for retail sales by Jan.4. Marijuana remains illegal under the federal Controlled
marijuana together under the Substances Act. To stay dear OLCC, Towslee said. of federal scrutiny, states "What we asked the Legis-
lature was, if you're goingto give the medical marijuana program to the OLCC, we'd rather not have it if it's going
up in pricey delis and your neighborhood Whole
from 2012 to 2014 to $109.6
billion, according to the New York-based Specialty Food Association.
James Cole, Patridge said during a Feb. 19 community listening session in Bend. The memo sets out eight
federal priorities for prosecuting marijuana cases under the act. Keeping marijuana away from children tops the list, followed by keeping marijuana revenue away from cartels and gangs and ensuring it stays within states that have legalized it and out of states that have
not. Taking measures, like seed-to-sale tracking, will abide by guidelines set out help keep marijuana from in the so-called Cole Memo, leaking outside the regulated issued in August 2013 by U.S. system, Patridge said. Deputy Attorney General SeeMarijuana/E2 that legalize marijuana must
The specialty foods industry grew 21percent
Other avenues for upand-commg food buslnesses include universities.
Rutgers in New Jersey and Oregon State University are among a few institutions that operate food in-
novation centers, which focus on development rather
than full-scale production. Some leasedcommercial kitchens are mission-driv-
en, such as La Cocina in San Francisco, which serves low-income food en-
trepreneurs in the Mission District.
None, however, approach the scale of L.A. ~p. See Kitchens/E5
Fremreck bandT-shirts, couple fashion agrowing business By Tom Daykin
support other local businesses," Julie Teska said. "So we
to move this spring. The company has 10 fulltime employees and plans to add an estimated 10 full-time and two part-time employees
we can't continue to grow in this building," he said. The couple launched their business in 2008 in the base-
get a lot of customers that
within two years, according to
renting. Whitney Teska learned to
Orchard Street's Milwau-
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
kee roots are a selling point.
MILWAUKEE — Whitney and Julie Teska started Orchard Street Press LLC
in their basement to supply limited runs of logo-printed T-shirts for Milwaukee-area bands.
"Local businesses love to
way." It also helps that Orchard Street Press does good work. William Seidel, a bar and
Seven years later, Orchard Street Press still rocks. The
restaurant operator, grew up
business is moving from its shop to a much larger space, with plans to add more employees.
with Whitney Teska. Seidel has hired Orchard Street to print T-shirts, sweatshirts, tank tops, knit caps and
But the band business now
makes up a small part of the company's sales. Orchard Street supplies screen-printed
shirts and other apparel to dozens of area restaurants, bars and other businesses, as
well as nonprofit groups staging festivals and fundraising events.
stickers. "Besides being friends, they are also very talented de-
signers and screen printers," Seidel said. Other customers include
restaurants, a coffee shop, a natural grocer and community groups. Orchard Street Press plans
Milwaukee Economic Development Corp.
ment of a house they were print T-shirts as a teenage
band member. "I kind of just fell in love ness lender, recently approved a $171,000 loan to help finance with the process," he said. improvementsOrchard Street Orchard Street Press was is making at its new plant. financed with $7,500 they won That work, totaling $190,000, through a University of Wisincludes $19,000 in equity consin-Milwaukee business capital. plan competition for students The new building will and recent alumni. providemuch more efficient Julie Teska, 34, graduated space. in 2003 from UWM with a At the cramped current bachelor's degree in jourhome, "we'vepretty much nalism. She was working at got everything jammed in OnMilwaukee.com, writing every space," Whitney Teska under the byline of Julie Lawsard. rence, her birth name. "We're at the point where SeeShirts /E3 MEDC, a nonprofit busi-
( • .
Michael Searsl Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Julie Teska, right, and her husband, Whitney Teska, who together run Orchard Street Press in Milwaukee, which prints logos on
company T-shirts and other apparel. Their business is expanding so they are moving out to St. Francis later this spring.
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
BUSI1VESS
E 1VD A R
www.scorecentraloregon.org.
the March AdBite Happy Hour, Serial entrepreneur and business visionary Dale Partridge reveals the seven core beliefs that create success by putting people first; $15 members, $25 non-members; 5 p.m.-7 p.m.; The 1001 Tech Center; 1001 SW Emkay Drive, Bend; http://adfedco.org/meetinginfo. php? Id=t9&ts =1425578875 Building a Better Bend: Moving Beyond the Automobile: MultiModal Transportation Planning. Presenter Chris Comeau, CTP, AICP, Transportation Planner for City of Bellingham, Washington; 6:30-8 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-815-3951, info© buildingabetterbend.org or www. buildingabetterbend.org.
TUESDAY
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
Internet Searching: Learn tips
March AdBite Happy Hour: In
City Club of Central Oregon:
TODAY Free TaxPreparation Sessions: Offered by the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County, walk-ins
available; free; noon-5 p.m.;
Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482 or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep.html.
MONDAY Central Oregon Retired Educators Association Meeting: Featuring a speaker and a business meeting; free, $9 for lunch; 11:30 a.m.; Zion Lutheran Church, 1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond; 541-382-7044.
and tricks needed to make your Internet searches more effective. Prerequisites: "Internet for Beginners" or familiarity with the Windows operating system and Internet Explorer (or other browser); free, registration required; 2-3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7085 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.;
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.
March forum: What does the Georgetown University Energy Prize have to do with us; $20
Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3837290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc.
members, $35 non-members,
SATURDAY
registration required by March 16; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, Center for Health 8 Learning, 2500 NE Neff Road; 541-633-7163, info©cityclubco.
Labor & Human Resources: Agricultural business workshop: learn where to make changes to increase efficiencies and prioritize needs; $10, registration requested; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County, walk-ins available; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482
com or www.cityclubco.org.
Computer Lab: Free time to practice your computer skills or work on any problems you're having with one of our staff on hand to help; free; 2:304:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org.
March 22 Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County, walk-ins available; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482
or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep. html.
March 24 SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business
counselors conduct free
30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; free; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep. Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall html. St.; www.scorecentraloregon.org.
Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class
and decide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; La Pine Public
DEEDS Deschutes County • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Russell R. and Sally L. Porter, RiversEdgeVilage Phase15, Lot 41,$476,900 • PacWest II LLC to Travis J. Tuma, Eagles LandingPhase2, Lot 5, $296,322 • Gary L. andDeborahA. Sterling to George R.Sieveking, CanyonRim Village Phase6, Lot122, $262,000 • Krystal Brown to Greta Schuier, Deschutes RiverCrossing Phase2, Lot 27, $204,000 • Lowell N. and SaraJ. Pearceto Wiliam J. Rolser andKimberly A. Johnson, Ridge atEagleCrest 4,Lot 51,$411,000 • AA Bend LLCto Robert D.Boyer, Boyd Crossing, Lot18, $236,400 • Clarence andAnnette Rosebrook to JohnJ.andVivianJ.Pavlicek,Township 15, Range13,Section 30, $675,000 • Jennifer R. Proffer, who acquired title as Jennifer R.Grimwood, to Rick A.and Shelley R.DeLance,HaydenView Phase 3, Lot 98, $192,500 • Thomas J. Fastto Eric and Eryn Nash, Justin GlenPhase3, Lot 55, $214,000 • Greg WelchConstruction Inc. to Thomas P. and Mimi T.Sheehan, Awbrey ParkPhase2, Lot 67,$774,500 • Martha F.Bergelin to Richard E.and Buffy L Bromley,Homestead,Lot5, Block1, $248,880 • Imogene Easley,trustee of the Easley Family Trust, to JeremyA.and Crystal D. Herauf,Township17, Range13, Section 28, $427,000 • Mark A. andKarenM.Simmonsto Thomas J.andEmily D.Fast, Crooked River RanchNo.4, Lot62,$240,000 • Pamela L Keller, trustee of the Delores J. Prichard Living Trust, to Victoria S. Graves, PineMeadowVilage Phase1, Lot122, $340,000 • Deborah D. and Richard C.Hibbard to Oliver J. Murray,Meerkat Meadows, Lot 6, Block 3,$255,000 • Flowering Crabapple LLC to Silas W. Davis III andDonnaBergh, North Mountain ViewEstates, Lot 34, $349,000 • William and LisaNielsento BenL and Leah B.Parsons,Ridgewater Phases1 and 2 PUD, Lot 51,$319,000
• Pahlisch HomesInc.to Equity Trust Company,for the benefit of Bobby L. Burton IRA, 8thStreet Cottages, Lot 20, $259,950 • Stephanie Blackto Katherine M. Farrell, WestHills, Lot16, Block8, $285,000 • Wood Hill HomesInc. to 20375 Sonata LLC, Ironstone, Lot18, $281,325 • Monica D. Wellsto KevinBarnum, Northpointe Phase 3, Lot 99, $200,000 • Richard A. Craigto RalphC.Tolli Jr. and CarolTolli, RanchVillage First Addition, Lot14, Block5, $357000 • David A. and Jeweliann M. Norrie to Nathan D.andTheaA. Nash, PineTree Meadows Phase2, Lot 74,$185,000 • Brock and Stacey J. McFarlane to Anne Reitz,TaraView Estates, Lot9, Block1, $240,000 • Steven P. andJami J. Grant to Scott M. Wiley, LavaRidges Phase1, Lot19, $357000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Jean Brunson, Cold Springs South, Lot11, $253,964 • Jason S. and Elisa L Grant to Donald and SusanOverton, trustees of the Overton Trust, Willow SpringsPhase3, Lot 65, $175,000 • Darrell W. andJanet J. Halligan, trustees of theHalligan1987 Family Trust, to Jay H. Curtis and Carolyn L. Howard Jones-Curtis, AlpineVillage 2at Mountain High, Lot18, $408,500 • George T. and Janet D.Tuttand Steven G. and Janet L Mollenhauer,Mountain Gate, Lot 7,$680,000 • Joseph SantosandMaria A. Gummerson toJeffrey D.andTrina Reese, Skypark, Lot3, $985,000 • Stone Bridge HomesNWLLCto Chaylan L.andCherilyn Maxwell, Hidden Hills Phase1, Lot26,$429,000 •TerranceJ.andJessicaM.Kinnaman to Daniel C.Hauswald, OakviewPhase 2, Lot 22, $258,000 • Borgies Inc. to Meredith J. Nicholls, Traditions East, Lot 23,$278,600 • Albert J. andCarol S. Smith to M. Kathlee n Lake,AspenW indsPhase1, Lot14, $252,000 •WestBend PropertyCompanyLLC to Taylor DevelopmentLLC,NorthWest Crossing District 2, Lot1, $487,461
Marijuana
a foremosttopic in Eugene. "Myself and the other orgaContinued from E1 nizers of the event are strong In Bend, dispensary owners advocates of keeping medical Jeremy Kwit and Aviv Hadar, marijuana completely in place said they have no problem and intact and not making with a tracking system on any drastic changes to it," he medical marijuana. Kwit, own- said. "Medical (marijuana) is a er of Bloom Well, on Division system the citizens are happy Street, said tracking medical with." marijuana is as simple as inThe medical marijuana prostalling acomputer program. gram, first approved by voters "In the spirit of making in 1998,serves a specific need cannabis safe for everyone," for a particular clientele.Ushe said Thursday, "if we have ers of medical marijuana have to have tracking from a state concerns, such as privacy, that agency, that's a lotbetter than aren't necessarily important having federal intervention." to recreati onal users,Rogers Hadar, president of Ore- said.He said some further reggrown Industries Inc., which ulation of medical marijuana operates a dispensary on NW is acceptable,but it should not Wall Street, said his company be associated too closely with alreadyemploys tracking soft- recreational marijuana. "The mantra with (Measure) ware on marijuana the company grows and sells. An un- 91 was 'let people outta jail and regulated system for medical don't mess with medical marimarijuana will make a mock- juana,'" Rogers said. "That was ery of therecreational system, the will of the voters, the will he said. of the people. It's only the pol"What Rob (Patridge's) let- iticians and big business that ter is, is essentially a statement want this to change." that articulates that the state Oregon looks to Colorado and industry need to build a over Washington as the model box that doesn't leak," Hadar said. "We all need to build a box that doesn't leak to kids or
of a state with regulatory pro-
theblack market." They and other dispensary
leesaid. Both medical and recreational marijuana there are
owners interviewed in Bend
subject to seed-to-sale track-
grams for both medical and recreational marijuana, Tows-
said they would consider sell- ing systems. The Colorado ing recreational marijuana Department of Public Health when it becomes legalto do so. and Environment oversees the However, Alex R o gers, medical program; the state Deowner of clinics in Ashland partmentof Revenue regulates and Eugene, and an advocate the recreational side. for medical marijuana, said Like Measure 91 inOregon, the existing framework for Amendment 64 in Colorado, medical marijuana in Oregon approvedby voters in 2012,did works fine. Rogers is an orga- not address that state's me¹i nizer behind the Medical Mar- cal marijuana system. Backers ijuana BusinessConference in of Amendment 64 saw potenEugene on Saturday and to- tial harm to me dical mariday, one of three he organized juana patients, whose needs in Oregon inthe past l~/~ years. differ from recreational users, He expectedthe future of dis- by lumping the two together, pensariesin Oregon would be said Teri Robnett, of Denver,
• Randy J. and SusanA. Bacchus to Kerrida M.Rossi, Mountain Peaks Phase1, Lot10, $269,900 • Jeffery W. and Carol L Rankto Christopher P.andGail G.Daane, trustee of theGail G.DaaneRevocable Trust, Township15, Range12,Section 36, $159,000 • Helm Investments LLC to Jeff A. and Tamara S.Stringham, Homestead4th Phase, Lot18, Block10, $215,000 •DavidP.andDeborahG.Floydto Melissa S.GardnerandWiliam L Larson, RiversEdgeVilage Phase8, Lot 67, $429,000 • Vergent LLC toWendy S. Brewer, Thomson Estates, Lot 3,Block1, $186,000 • Deborah L Wallace to DarcyStokes and BrandonWilliams, Windsor Park, Lot1, $269,900 • Robert D. Jenkinson to Terrance R. and Cindy Z.Hawley,William and Whitney HawleyandWalter Zahnd, trustee of theWalter F.ZahndRevocable Trust, Mountain VillageEast 3,Lot 7, Block1, $277,000 • Charles A. Larrance to Stephen Land Diana J.Cook,trustees of the Stephen & DianaCookJointTrust, Village Wiestoria Phase1, Lot1, $309,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to IRAServices Trust Company,for the benefit of Peter J. BezekIRA,McCall Landing Phase1, Lot16, $212,900 • Drew K. Davisto Dennis Patrick and Elaine FreesPatrick, SecondAddition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot22, Block 22, $385,000 • Heidi Hausner, trustee of the Jil Hausner Trust, to Robert P. and Kiersten L. Saraceno,Township16, Range12, Section 2, $212,000 • Greg WelchConstruction Inc. to Brent C. Wesenbergand Mary A. Winters, NorthWest Crossing Phases20-22, Lot 799, $594,000 • Glennys J. Boese,trustee of the Ralph 8 Glennys Boese Trust, to Daniel R. and Alida J. Turner,Township18, Range12, Section 2, $470,000 • Sean andJennifer Rule to Tyson N. Ceniga, EmpireCrossing Phases1 and 2, Lot 38, $200,000
• Phillip H. Kohfeld to Larry T.and Janette M. Forsyth andHarold Folmsbee,Valleyview, Lot104, $279,000 • Norma L. Wellsto Keith L. Woods, Second Addition toWhispering Pines Estates, Lot 25and 26, Block19, $349,900 • Ron M. andRonald M.Warner to David M. Driscoll, ObsidianEstates No. 2, Lot 79, $162,500 • Rutledge N.Waterhouse, Michael and Tracy Kennato Kirsten E.Thompson, Center Addition, Lot1 and 2,Block 37, $280,000 • Cindi R. andGary D.Tandyto Justin M. and Jodi J.Nelson,Sunset West, Lot 1, Block 3,$255,000 • Robin L. andMartine L. Ziniker, trustees of the Robin &Martine Ziniker Trust, to Patricia A.Captain, Buena Ventura, Lot13, Block1, $622,000 • Michael L Tompkins to Andrewand Jennifer Peterson, PlateauEstates, Lot 3, Block 3,$200,000 • WolfBuild LLCto Phillip Kohfeld, Sierra Vista Phase2, Lot 41,$272,800 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Brian J. Ladd, 8th Street Cottages, Lot19, $240,975 • Lynn L and Rose R.Alsbury to Mark G. Blanchard, Safari Acres, Lot3, Block 4, $210,000 • Bruce Hinchliffe and SandraL. Swanlund toPeter J.and SusanC. Bezek, Partition Plat1991-40, Parcel1, $850,000 • Karen L Brown, trustee of the KarenL Brown Trust, to Christine M.and Mark W. Higley, Partition Plat 2002-65, Parcel 1, $192,500 • Anna M. andRichard C.Breitling to Nancy E.Nielsen,Tetherow Crossing4, Lot19, Block1, $176,000 • Maxine A. Johnson, trustee of the RevocableTrust, to Jamie Stanley Custom HomesLLC,First Addition to Tillicum Village, Lot 3and 9, $165,000 • Market of Choice Inc. to LavaLLC, Township17, Range12,Section 32, $1,775,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Bipin and Wendy Agarwal, Bridges atShadow Glen Phase2A, Lot 54, $364,585 • Thomas W. and Mary E.Brouilletteto
Gary D.andLisa H. Fulkerson, Cimarron City First Add.Replat of aportion of, Lot A, Block 3,$316,500 • Jon L and Jerrine J. Jackmanto Brenda D.and PaulW. Stephens, SummitPhase2,Lot29,$244,000 • Douglas andRosannaSiler to Margaret andRandall D. Haines, Deschutes RiverRecreation Homesites, Lot 7, Block 7,$266,500 • Bridges at Shadow GlenLLCto Pahlisch HomesInc., Bridgesat Shadow GlenPhase2A, Lot111,139, 140, $215,000 • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC to Jonathan M. Char,ReedPointe Phase1, Lot 7, $269,950 • Mark A. Atchley and Bonnie J. Phippen to Kyle J. PiroandWhitney Cheng, NorthWest Crossing Phase 9and10, Lot 493 and494, $480,000 • Andrea A. Zechmann,who acquired title as AndreaA. Henry, Barbara E. Smith andTyler M. Hardin, Larkspur Village Phases3and 4, Lot 98, $208,500 • Metin and Demet Cinar to Aaron J. Griffin, Summerfield Phase 2, Lot13, Block 4, $150,000 • Brian C. and TaraA. Bomberger to Todd K.andCatherine R. Hamilton, Rock RidgeCabin Sites First Addition, Lot 24, $329,500 • Bruce H. and ShanRaeHawkinsto Brett B. andAndreaA. Zechmann, Foxborough Phase6, Lot 309, $257,500 • U.S. Bank Trust National Association to Judith Emory,Tall PinesFifth Addition, Lot 21,Block26, $209,900 • Federal Home LoanMortgage Corporation to James D. andPatty J. Yow, ClineFallsOasis No.2, Lot 4, Block 1, $228,000 • David C. and PeggyL Barnett to James T.RashJr. and LindaC. Rash, Township18, Range12,Section 3, $220,000 • Deborah A. Hebertto Scott E. andKim K. Hughes, KingsForest Third Addition, Lot 26, Block 4,$345,000 • Peter J. andDianaT.Hall, trustees of the Peter 8 DianaHall Living Trust, to Stephen R.and Kirstin L Altman, trustees of theAltman LivingTrust, and
a medicalmarij uana userand a board member of the Colo-
lations on medical marijua-
surprise that that was going to
na. A bill moving through the Washington Legislature, SB
happen."
rado chapter of the National
CROSSING Aax/ard-aeinning
neighborhood on Bend's s4/estside. 716 SW 11th St. Redmond 541.923.4732
www.northwe's'tcrossing.com
4
•
dispensaries is unknown, he
' NQRTHWEsT
— Reporter: 541-617-7815, jdftzfer@bendbulletin.com
Organization for the Reform of 5052, would regulate the medMarijuana Laws. ical marijuana supply and "Our recreational system is dent that gray market, Oliver incapable of supplying what sard. "The Legislature has been a real patient needs," Robnett said Thursday. "Even the talking about this for acouple medical system can't supply of years," he said. "5052 flew the most desperate patients' through the Senate; it's flyneeds." ing through the House. It's no At the opposite end of the regulatory spectrum, Washington's medical marijuana law allows qualified patients to possess marijuana and grow it collectively.But dispensaries operate outside the law. Dispensaries areneither legal nor regulated,said Don Moyer, spokesman for the Washington State Department of Health. The exact number of
Meika O.Koletar, trustee of the Meika 0. Koletar Living Trust, CalderaSprings Phase One, Lot146, $155,000 • Triple KnotAssociates LLCto LisaK. Lindgren, Golf Homes at Tetherow, Lot 44, $562,228 • Hayden HomesLLCto Rick A.and Sandee S.Cnossen, MeganPark Phase 1, Lot 27,$229,145 • Pahlisch HomesInc.to Douglas H. andJaneE.Rude,McCallLanding Phase1, Lot17, $217500 • Mark A. andWilma L.Stone to Julie E. and Brian D.Reynolds, Foxborough Phase 6,Lot 289, $249,900 • Nicholas A. and Juanita L Clarno to Harold andCarrie Morgan, Obsidian Estates, Lot 2,$156,000 • Beverly J. Ashleyto Jason and DawnCofer,Forum Meadow,Lot45, $185,000 • Ronald A. andLauren Beyerinck, trustees of theRonald A.and Lauren Beyerinck RevocableTrust, to Ross K. and ShandaK.Ackermann, Bonne Home Addition, Lot10and11, Block19, $420,000 • Robert J. and Johanna M.Dilard to William D.and Kathryn R.Goodrich, Crescent Creek,Lot26, $160,000 • Glowstone LLC to Michael D.and Michelle A.Gronlund, CalderaSprings Phase One, Lot 208, $800,000 • David S. and Clara C.Pratt, trustees of the David S. 8ClaraC. Pratt Living Trust, to ChristopherScharpf, Pines at Pilot Butte Phases1 and 2,Lot 31, $295,000 •AA Bend LLCtoJacobW.and KatieM. Anderson, Sunscape,Lot 3, $217,500 • David D. Jordanand MaryJ. Chandler to Robert A. and M.Patricia Fulton, Otter Run, Lot13, $780,000 • Kyle and Nicole Balto l Jeffrey S. Knipe, Ridge atEagle Crest 58, Lot 22, $474,900 • Michael J. R.Harrison to Rafael M. KayGonzalesandJanai M. Deckwar, NealAddition, Lot4and5, Block2, $260,000 • Federal National Mortgage Association to Christian Rea,Monticello Estates Phase1, Lot31,$215,000
•
•
•
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•
However, as many as 1,000 dispensaries could be in business, said Kevin Oliver, exec-
utive director of Washington NORML. "Next to a regulated system,
it's prettyWild West," he said. Illegal dispensaries sprang up asregistered medical marijuana usersformed collective gardens to grow the maximum number of plants allowed un-
der state law, Oliver said. State law allows a maximum 10 peo-
ple in a collective growing as many as 45 plants. Thecollec-
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tives opened storefronts, ille-
gal buttolerated by authorities becausestate law recognizes that medical marijuana users
have an affirmativedefenseif they'reprosecuted, Oliver said. Based on that premise, authorities have no incentive to crack
down on illegalmarijuana dispensaries, he said. Like Oregon and Colorado, legalization of r e creational marijuana in Washington did not affect the separate regu-
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SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN E 3
Micro- ouse oomo ersa or a e ivin o tions By Susan Kelleher The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — The smell of
garlic rises from the frying pan as two women in flannel
pajama pants and beige slippers saute shrimp and noodles on a range top in a shared kitchen just inside the main
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entrance to t h e a p artment
iaf
building. As they cook, a steady stream of sneaker-clad tenants, some walking dogs,
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stride down the hall toward
the elevator. They barely
•
•
•
glance into the kitchen de-
spite the pungent aromas and the conversation taking place
•
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around the square, steel table
that dominates the room.
Ia ~
The women make fast work
h
of the cooking, then quickly clean up and head back to
I i'!•
their apartment to study over
steaming bowls of noodles. "They're the only ones I've seen use the kitchen, but then,
I really don't use the physical space that much," says Jesse Yem, 21, a psychology major at Seattle University who has lived here for five months. "I come here to sleep, and that's about it."
Photos by Benjamin Benschneider/The Seattle Times
Footprint1806, a micro-apartment building on 23rd Avenue, has 61 sleeping rooms and common kitchens.
says of his first project with Potter. We're seatedata conference table in the modest storefront
Yem, whose thick black office of Janette Architecture hair hangs over sleepy eyes, Planning Design, a residential occupies one of the 92 mi- architectural firm. It's an open cro-units at A l der F lats, a space that feels larger than its clean, modern, seven-story
footprint thanks to south-fac-
complex that occupies a city ing floor-to-ceiling windows, block a few blocks from Se- and a floor plan that places attle U, where old multifamily employees in close quarters, housing once sat. their desks pushed together in It's Yem's first venture in groups. solo living, and he's still adJanette lives in a two-bedjusting to the silence and the room bungalow with his wife cost of living: $1,000 for 200 and their three children, so square feet, utilities and Wi-Fi personally and professionally, he's steeped in the challenges included. Tiny apartments are hardly of living small. a new thing, but they've atMicro-living requires a tracted attention and contro- ruthless eye for economy. "What th e m i c ros h a ve versy here because developers have been building them at a taught me is that there are a quick clip — sometimes over lot of people out there who the objections of neighbors don't have as much stuff as I — and filling them quickly do and don't need that stuff," with people seeking rents that Janette says. "I mean, think match their
c i r cumstances about how much of your liv-
"I got a job here and needHe also has a nearby condo ed aplace ratherquickly,"she says. "This was available and filled with the detritus that comes with being a bicycling affordable." hobbyist and tinkerer. With 10-foot ceilings, a "That's a huge struggle in nook for he r q ueen-sized my life, because I really love bed and a north-facing winstuff," says Sauer, whose job dow that provides a view, the moved to California in De- space feels larger than its 200 cember. "I feel that burden all square feet. It's homey, filled the time, and that's why I'm with framed vintage photos. relishing this move." The black-and-white decoErin Shingler i s r o sy- rating scheme complements cheeked as she enters the Al- the white laminate cabinets, der Flats building, a blue yoga the shiny subway tile in the mat cradled in the crook of c ompact kitchen and t h e her arm. distressed gray l a m inate Having just come off three flooring. 12-hour overnight shifts at For now, that's all she the hospitalwhere she works, needs. she's catching up on her work"I certainly don't want to outs before kicking back for live this way forever," she much-needed rest. Later, the says, "but at this point in my 29-year-old registered nurse life, it makes it easier. I need to might order a meal through stayclose to work,Ineed free BiteSquad.com, the restau- (street) parking, I need somerant deliveryservice, or head thing affordable and just the to the Thai restaurant down convenience of being in the the street. city. A space like this allows with junk and tools I need."
and mobile lifestyles.
ing space just goes to storage. For now, she'll take the polFootprint (a micro-housing ished steel elevator up to the A loophole developer) has this great tag- apartmentshe's been renting The first of the breed, an line: 'It's just what you need.'" since she moved in June. She aPodment dev elopment, makes a mug of tea and suropened i n 2 0 0 9 w i t h 4 6 International fame veys her domain. dormlike sleeping rooms with Seattle's most f a m ous common kitchens. It was the brainchild of the
late developer Jim Potter, who found a loophole in Seattle's
building regulations.
me to be in the city without
breaking the bank." Besides, she says, "I know I'm going to be moving soon, so it's going to be that much easier to move again."
ABOVE IMAGES: Steve Sauer built Seattle's most famous small apartment, converting a182-square-foot basement room being used for storage on Lower Queen Anne into a functional living
space.Sauershows what can bedonewith clever,thoughfful design in a very small space.
small-scale apartment owner
has moved again. Steve Sauer, a Boeing en-
0ti
s .» "
gineer, a t t r acted i n t ernational attention when Pacific
At the time, the city allowed NW magazine featured his up to eight unrelated people 182-square-foot ap a r t ment to live in one "dwelling" with that includes two sleeping a shared kitchen. The code lofts, a full kitchen and a bath, didn't say the rooms had to
a video-viewing station and a
be tied together as a single platform where he could sit by unit, so Potter built a cross be- the window and read a book. tween an apartment building
t
'e
20
The room, in the basement
and a boardinghouse, where of a co-op, had been used for someone could rent a sleeping storage. room as small as 100 square
OUT
The article was t r anslat-
feet with a private bath and
ed into dozens of languages.
share a kitchen with up to seven others renters.
He had a movie-star moment at a cafe in Istanbul, where a
A micro-housing building
Russian man overhead him
spree ensued that gave Seattle
talking about his apartment
more such units than any city in the country. At last count,
and said, "I know your place. I love your place!"
Sauer says the apartment, cleared for occupancy in Seat- which he started building 12 tle, with another 1,598 units in years ago, is less a lifestyle the pipeline. No other Ameri- statement than a n e x p erican city comes close. ment that allows him to create Architect Jay Janette was at something cool and indulge ground zero for Potter's first his contrarian ways. " Conventional hous i n g micro-housing project, and
a
ing projects in t h e S eattle
Shirts Continued from E1 Whitney Teska, 33, graduated in 2004 as a history major and was working various jobs while also drumming in bands.
year later, bought a different house and moved Orchard Street Press to its basement.
They continued to work their other jobs so they could invest
their company's profits back into the business. Within a fewyears, they had "We were not business stu- quit their days jobs to operate dents," said Julie Teska, who the growing company, where grew up inthe Milwaukee area. Whitney Teska oversees operBut they took a dvantage ations and Julie Teska handles of the m entoring provid- sales and office work. ed through the contest and The business grew mainly learned to write a business through word-of-mouth, leadplan. The couple had a lot of ing to a 2011 move to its curfriends who were in bands, rent location — and now the and theybuilt a case for a com- expansion. pany that would print small, They plan to grow Orchard affordable runs of T-shirts for Street Press in a sustainable those customers. manner that doesn't rely on They also pitched Orchard huge orders from a few cusStreet Press as using environ-
tomers.The business also has
efaciencj' s
l'
lie Teska said.
about it," Julie Teska said.
The Teskas, who married a
"We're trying to be smart
y ggy,
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ENERGY EFFICIENCY NEVER CLQCKS QUT. The great thing about energy efficiency is that it works 24/7. Energy Trust of Oregon helps owners, managers and operators at commercial and industrial buildings discover ways to manage energy costs just like any other business expense — around the clock. We offer cash incentives that can help you offset the cost of making energy improvements and technical expertise to help you find ways to minimize energy waste and maximize savings.
Get more from your energy. Call us at 1.866.368.7878
Serving customers of Portland General Electric,
states.
KI O I 4I R Q
21
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able cleaners and water-based ink. had a market, and we knew the market inside and out," Ju-
NW
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or visit www.energytrust.org.
com, andatover 30 stores in The contest judges "saw we Wisconsin and seven other
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mentally friendly supplies, expanded into selling its own such as soy-based biodegrad- printed clothing and accessories, @orchardstreetapparel.
aaa
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Still, the apartment "is kind
area. of a giant lie. I do have this "I didn't realize it was going space, and I have the (storage) to take off like a rocket," he space next door, which is piled
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782 micro-housing units were
has designed 21 micro-hous- creeps me out," he says.
Se
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Pacific Power, NW Natural and Cascade Natural Gas.
EnergyTrust of Oregon
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
---- voyce
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Kitchens
themeat.
Continued from D1
it would have inhibited our
"Most of them are much smaller," said Ron Tanner,
growth projection and entire business model," said Dane Se-
vice president of philanthropy and government and industry relations for the Specialty Food Association,
tin, who met her husband vis-
who counted 110 food incu-
use the hub-and-spoke model."
g(j' ' l(I
people in business for two to
threeyears." Set to open later this month, if all goes well, L.A. Prep will house bakers, paleo diet chefs, pasta makers and a butcher, among others.
Three pet tech devices, from left: the Narrative Clip, a wearable
camera; Voyce, a device that tracks a pet's activity level; andTagg, s pet-tracking device.
Photos by Jim Stevens / Bay Area News Group
Lucy, a beagle owned byPat May ofPleasanton, California, wears two tech devices —Tagg, a pet tracker, and Voyce, for monitoring pet activity levels.
Dog tech
utes to get the device up and
Continued from E1 "It's got sensors on board
I wish I could say the same thing about Lucy, a pint-size
runnlllg.
that a llow u s t o mo n i t or hound who's far more prone to things that are typical with mope around or sit out in the
human-based trackers, like sun for hours. I left the house rest, calories burned, distance for an hour and when I came traveled," said Voyce's direc- back to check the website, I tor of program management, found basically a flat line on Ben Maphis. "But our secret the graph indicating, well, sauce is reading heart and re- rest. In other words, Voyce had spiratory rates in a noninva- confirmed what I'd instinctivesive way, using low-frequency, ly known all along: My dog's a radio-based technology. And spoiled and lazy little beast. it works on every type of dog, Next was Tagg, an adorwith any size of neck or fur able little band the size of a length." wristwatch that attaches to The band comes in a smart- your dog's collar and basically assembled package, like an ly keeps track of his whereApple product. After giving it abouts through GPS and sata quick charge through a base ellite technology. Thanks to connected by a USB cord, I at- its geofencing feature, Tagg tach the band to Lucy's neck acts like a digital pet-sitter and set up an online account. you can monitor through your As I fill in Lucy's profile, I'm smartphone app and Webasked about her physical con- based browser. It was recently dition, from a skinny state purchased by San Franciswith bony ribs "evident from
co-based Whistle, a canine fit-
a distance" to "massive fat deposits." I give Lucy a mid-
nesstracker thatraised funding from partners including
dle-of-the-road score of 5, or
Nokia and the venture fund of
"ribs palpable without excess New York Knicks basketball fat covering." Directions are star Carmelo Anthony. simple and the tutorial video
helped me in just a few min-
I take it out o f
t h e b ox,
which contains a few too
many parts for my liking, con- deviceseemed like a perfect nect the docking station to a fit for Lucy. It's simple: clip it wall plug, and while the band onto your dog's collar and it'll is charging, I overcome a few take a photo every 30 seconds glitches to create an online for up to 30 hours. Upload the account and download the photos to the Narrative webmobile app. The band costs site and — voila! — you've $99.95,there's a one-time ac- got a shareable timeline, with tivation fee of $14.95 and sub- only the better-quality photos scription plans that start at included. "Narrative helps you cap$6.95 a month. On the home page,a ma p of ture photos without losing my neighborhood comes up presence in the moment, withand I'm instructed to create a out having to stop and actually Tagg Zone within which Lucy take a photo," said co-founder is supposed to remain, as in Oskar Kalmaru. "And while "Stay, Lucy!" In the middle of we initially intended this for this square covering my house humans, we see people putand neighbors on each side is ting it on their dog during a a golden paw, signifying Lu- walk or hanging it on their cy's location. After clipping cat to see what it's been up to the device onto Lucy's collar, I
More than half the kitch-
ens have already been leased at a cost of between $2,000 and $9,000 a month, depending on the size of the space.
"Hi. It's me, Lucy. I'm near Finally, it's time for some
fun. While the $149 Narrative Clip, which calls itself "The Wearable Camera for Moments That Matter," is pri-
when they were at work."
T ICKER
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Mobileye NV M BLY 41. 6 3 3.79 10.0 Macerich Co M AC 94. 3 9 7.67 8 .8 BioMarin Pharma B M R N 12 3.52 9. 75 8. 6 Ulta Salon Cosmetics ULTA 150 .1 0 11. 5 1 sjs Mylan NV M YL 59.76 4.32 78 Salix Pharma Ltd SLXP 169 . 4 0 11. 3 9 72 F reescale Semi Ltd FSL 42.57 2.55 S.4 NXP Semiconductors NXPI 104 . 6 7 6.19 Sa j Perrigo Coplc PRGO 1 6 6.4 2 9.59 S.1 Alnylam Pharmaceutic ALNY 11 3 .5 7 5.90 sjs Gen Growth Prop GGP 29. 65 1.45 5.1 Constellation Brds A STZ 116 . 4 4 5.53 sje Alaska Air Group ALK 66.66 2.93 4.6 Fidelity Natl Fincl FNF 37.05 1.61 4.5 UDR Inc UDR 33. 00 1.40 4.4
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vada and hope to soon get their
hands on beef from a French breed of cattle called Salers, known for its marbling. Setin
will carve out French cuts of steak hard to find in the U.S. "We want to meet the high-
end niche market, supplying the best meat money can buy in Los Angeles," said Dane Setin,
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUCTION
casses and then open three or four retail shops to sell DESIGN 0 BUILD 0 REMODEL
Qecf~
PAINT
WINDOW TREATS
803 sw lndustrial way, Bend, 0R
7%1 SW10th • RedmOnd • (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
Looking for loads
~srystde Cotr>.
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for our 26' Freightliner box truck (26,000 GVW) with 4K lift gate. We will distribute locally in
C.O. or do line hauls
Licensed 4 Bonded
perfectly framed shot of my face as I was bending down
between C.O. and PDX area.
to disconnect the hipster Bea-
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LAST FRI. CHG 2053.40 -1 2.55 11901.61 +102.22 6740.58 -20.49 23823.21 +25.25 5010.46 +23.13 19254.25 +263.14
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The pair are working with ranchers in California and ¹
kitchen to break down car-
and then, last but not least, a
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TICKER
charcuterie.
The couple plan to use L.A. Prep as their industrial
some bushes that looked like a Jackson Pollock painting,
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$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
Le French Butcher, as the
business is called, will sell grass-fed beef along with lamb, pork and poultry. It will also offer prepared foods such as rotisserie chicken and
trained French butcher.
a couple of lovely tree shots,
marily intended for human gle from her use, this postage-stamp-sized bling-bling.
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France. "L.A. Prep allows us to
whose 600-square-foot kitchen loading docks, around-the- is equipped with a walk-in redock security, a demon- frigerator, carvingtables, a saustration kitchen and office sage maker and meat grinders. space. By having so many artisans In addition to the county dose to one another, Dane Sekeeping tabs on L.A. Prep, tin expects many to exchange an inspector from the U.S. business ideas and even buy Department of Agriculture and sell one another'sproducts. "We're already talking to a will monitor the processing of meat. tenant that needs animal fats That made all the differ- for the paleo community," she ence for Susan Dane Setin said. and her husband, JeanClaude Setin, a classically
take her for an on-leash walk, I clipped the Narrative to intentionally leaving the Tagg Lucy's collar and, leash atZone. A minute or so later, the tached, headed out into the alarms start ringing — cell- neighborhood. She was like phone alerts, smartphone no- a fury four-legged paparaztifications and, in my mobile zo, snapping up everything in app, bright red notices saying sight as she sniffed her way "Lucy: I'm outside of the home from car tire to lamp post to Tagg Zone." They repeat ev- well-frequented shrub. ery three minutes, each idenBack home, Iuploaded the tifying the specific address to pictures and sat back for the which Lucy is closest. show. "Done," the message said. Had she been on her own, I could have hopped on my "Your moments are ready to bike or jumped in my car and be viewed." tracked the little brat down. Lucy and her camera did A fter we g o b ack i nto t h e good. There was a nice shadhouse, Tagg sends me yet an- ow of me against the paveother notice, this one more ment, my blurred finger while reassuring: I was adjusting Lucy's collar, the home docking station."
iting his butcher shop in Nice while she was living abroad in
They'll all have access to
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers COMPANY
"If we didn't find this place,
bators across the country. "This is a very ambitious project. They aren't looking so much for businesses in the startup phasebutmaybe
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L L
-0.84% +0.21%
+16.02% 13 49% +7.48% +1.92% i19.47%
+4.07% +1 3.70%
ASIA
Seoul Composite 1985.79 +15.20 +0.77% +3.66% singapore straits Times 336z77 -1 0.83 -0.32% -0.07% -63.0 -0 48'/ Sydney All Ordinaries 5 7 88.00 -28.00 7 41% -47.7 Taipei Taiex -Q 17'/ 9579.35 -1 6.65 +z92% -60.1 Shanghai Composite 3372.91 +23.59 +0 70% 4 27% -65.3 Quotable 0.0 0.0 "This week has really been about investors' outlooks adjusting in the face of higher interest rates later this year." -76.2 0.0
— Gabriela santos,a global market strategist at JpMorgan Funds
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product Ofthe current stock price andtotal shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
Eyes on3une I s'der Title: Chief Global Strategist, JPMorgan Funds
Outlook:Investors shouldn't fear the Fed raising interest rates
David Kelly
U.S. stock indexes have reached record highs recently, with the Nasdaq briefly topping 5,000 for the first time since 2000. Yet for many investors, there is a shadow hanging over the market: Federal Reserve officials have suggestedthey could soon begin raising its benchmark short-term interest rate from its record low level of nearly zero percent. That ultra-low rate may have contributed to healthy market gains in recent years, many believe; what will happen when rates actually rise? David Kelly, chief global strategist for JPMorgan Funds, counsels patience. While some short-term volatility may occur when the Fed moves, stocks will still mostly reflect corporate earnings in the long run.
Many investors worry that the bull marketdepends on the Fed keeplng Its benchmark rate low. If It rlses, what will that mean for stocks? All bull markets come to an end at some stage, and this one will too. But there's no particular reason to believe that raising interest rates from a very low level should hurt the stock market. Historically, when the Fed has begun to raise rates, you often get a market correction. But that's usually what it is: a market correction, and the market bounces back. I wouldn't be surprised to see that happen again. How hlgh do Interest rates need to rlse before investors start shlftlng to bonds, threatening stocks? People always think that higher interest
rates are bad for the stock market, and that's true if interest rates are at a high level. But as interest rates start to go up from low levels, bond prices go down, and that tends to push investors the other way.
It has been a very good environment for earnings. And also a reduction in risk. We always talk about risks as they rise, and thenwe neglectthem when they go away. A few weeks ago, we were very worried about Greece collapsing, and thatseems to have gone away. The economydoes notrely on low interest rates. As short-term interest rates go up, it's actually going to increase the income of many savers in this country, and I think will actually pump moneyInto the U.S.economy.
How much of a factor has the Fed's low Interest rate policy been In pushlng up the stock market? Very low interest rates of course have diverted some money toward the stock market. Usually, the stock market will continue to go up so long as earnings are rising and confidence is high. So long as When do you predlct the Fed will the global economy Is improving, I don't begln lifting rates? think the stock market really needs zero June or July, and most probably June. percent interest rates to move higher. Interviewed by Christopher S. Rugaber. What other trends have lifted stocks? Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, March 13, 2015
+
17,749.3I
ltasoaa ~ 4,871.76
>56 1
S&P500+ 2,053.40
-17.86
RUSSELL2000 I,232.14
+
+14.62
N
R + -139.67
21,746.76
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
UNDAY D
R
PSI recommendation settings are distinct
By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News
By Paul Brand
kind that define young rowdies in fine old photos — soft-
Star Tribune(Minneapolis)
My wife owns a 2004 Q •• Toyota Sienna w ith
en over time.
Q
• 2011 Honda C R-V w ith 1 3,000 m i les a n d
months ago, she put on the
Sharp, sensuous lines — the
• My mother has a
The long, lean muscles that keep hard-chargers two steps ahead of the yapping pack slacken, usually about the time the razor-cut, pinstriped wolves in back pick up the pace. And suddenly, the smooth-
original tires. She just got back home after two
A
f aced kid w i t h
But don't take the word of
an aging boomer whose retirement plans will probably involve an old Airstream trailer somewhere in Arkansas — a sort of hillbilly version of The
Back in 2 0 09, Hyundai's midsize Sonata sedan absolutely crackled with tight, taut
new styling, giving a once-invisible car instant status in an
extremely tough segment. In one model year, the Sonata shot to the front of the pack
design-wise, lording its hot lines over boring Camrys and Accords and Altimas.
Hyundai must have tired of the race, though — or maybe
CourtesyHyundai via Tribune NewsService
er, and is it correct to use
While possessing all of the qualities you'd llke In a sports car, the 2015 Sonata 2.0T meets these stan-
the door jamb psi level?
dards meagerly, leaving you a little less than impressed.
Again, the tires sure look low. Also, I set all tires at
2015Sonata2.0T
I aim for these days, the So-
considering. ly high-performance and 1.9 No major compromises, seconds slower than the previ- though, were inflicted on the ous-gen Sonata Sport. car's black interior. But I w o uldn't necessariSure, like all midsize sely recommend that you skip dans, the Sport had plenty of the Sport and save the $8,000 hard plastic, from its softly difference between the encurved dashboard to all the try-level Sonata and the Sport door panels. (mine had a window sticker of But this generation of So$29,510). nata feels more German inFor one thing, the front- side than the last car, which wheel-drive Sport gets a tight- flashed a giant center stack er suspension that keeps it flat in the middle of the dash that in most corners and makes dropped all the way down to it feel considerably more the console. responsive. It always looked to me as if Ride quality doesn't suffer some large metallic object had
nata lacks its former edgy
much, either. The Sport is ap-
Base price:$29,385 Astested: $29,510 Type:front-wheel-drive, four-door sports sedan Engine:2.0L/245-hp/260Ib-ft turbo DOHC 16-valve 1-4
Mileage:23 mpg city, 32 mpg highway
its top designer moved to Col-
orado to open a pot shop — because the restyled 2014 Sonata arrived looking suddenly soft and safe. I initially thought: Get back to the gym. Quickly. Not that there was anything unattractive about the quietly
parking brake and when she released it, the parking brake light would not go off. And it's been on ever since then. The local Toyota dealer, a Honda
months away and her tire warning light came on. The tire says 44 pounds and a local independent auto per square inch and the repair shop have not been door jamb sticker says 30 able to fix it. psi. I called the dealer and • Hopefully one or more they said go by the sticker • of theservice agencies psi. The tires look low at have eliminated the three 30 psi. The Bridgestone likely causes for the parkt ire m anual t h a t c a m e ing brake light staying on as with the vehicle says to she drives the vehicle — the use the door jamb sticker pedal-applied parking brake psi as well. Why is there mechanism has not fully resuch a discrepancy be- leased, stuck/binding parktween the recommended ing brake cable or shoe or low psi level on the tire ver- fluid level in the brake master sus the door jamb stick- cylinder reservoir.
REVIEW the green iPhone, t he one w h o wears extremely skinny jeans and pointed shoes, gets all the choice assignments, not to mention your parking spot.
Rockford Files, the Rockabilly Files, I suppose. Just ask Hyundai.
102,000 miles on it. Eight
from that point on.
While clean and well-proportioned, which is about all
60, which is not even remote-
blasted into the interior.
propriately firm but has deThe new Sonata features a cent wheel travel and doesn't 6-inchtouchscreenwithamore handsome car. It just resem- line above the door handle beat occupants up much. subtle horizontal panelbeneath bled all the other ToyHonNiss- traveled straight and true back Although the steering lacks it for the climate controls. es in the midsize world. to wrap-around taillamps, the refined feel of the unit in The door panels, while plasGive me any one ofthem while a second, slightly more the larger,more expensive tic, off ered padded centers in white with a $219-a-month dramatic line down low eased Hyundai Genesis, it is still with orange "stitching" on the payment and I'll try not to lose some of the slabbish feel in the quick and well-weighted. panels. caI's sldes. Likewise, the nice-looking it in the mall parking lot. And believe me, that is an So I had high hopes for Still, the Sonata had that enormous accomplishment black leather seats had perthe 2015 Sonata Sport 2.0T, a turbo motor beneath the hood for Hyundai, which once had forated centers and orange saltier version of the Sonata and pretty decent 18-inch some of the vaguest, strangest stitching on their bolsters. with stiffer suspension, better wheels wearing reasonably steering in the business. In back, the seats provided steering and a more powerful assertive 23 5/45 tires. In addition, the turbo 2-li- good headroom and legroom turbocharged four-cylinder It seemed to have promise. ter churnsout 260 pound-feet in spite of the Sport's curving engine. As I discovered, though, the of torque at a really low 1,350 top. distinction. A c onservative character
In the last version of the Sport, the turbo 2-liter twisted
2015 turbo motor got de-tuned,
possibly in keeping with the
rpm. As a result, I didn't realize at first that the Sport was
out 274 eager horsepower.
$8,000 premium for the Sport
new car's more subdued na-
so average in acceleration.
version, the Sonata is still a
Moreover, the Sonata Sport ture or maybe just to scratch With all that torque down I had recently came coated in out a few more miles per low, the big sedan charges rich dark-orange paint, look- gallon. away from stoplights with ing as if it were ready to run. This year's Sport cranks more than ample energy, runLike the 2014 model, this out 245 horsepower, a near- ning briskly through its sixyear's Sonata starts strongly ly 30 horsepower drop in a speed automatic transmission. enough with giant, elongated 3,600-pound sedan. It even gets decent fuel headlamps offset by a large And it's noticeable, particu- economy, squeezing out 23 horizontal three-bar grille. larly if you have passengers or miles per gallon in town and A fairly long hood that are pushing it. 32 on the highway, and sounds gave the car a hint of power Both Car and Driver and better, adding to the car's overstretched back to a sleek, rak- Motor Trend found that the all athletic feel. ish windshield. new Sonata Sport needed 8 If you want a livelier SoBut it all kind of sagged long seconds to accelerate to nata, the Sport is still worth
Even with the substantial
pretty good deal — at least $3,000 below average new-car transaction prices in the U.S.
with all its options. But I wish the Sonata would shuck its Jos. A. Bank suit and
slip back into its tattered black leather jacket.
The Sport has most of the basic right stuff to be a mild-mannered rebel again. And the staid midsize sedan
segment needs all of those it can find.
Two
with the ABS. If the ECU de-
30 psi and the dash light is tects a problem with the ABS, still on. The dealer said it it will illuminate the parking might take a little driving brake warning light. A scan around for the light to go tool might identify this type out unless it needs to be of problem. reset, which they would
have to do at a cost. Could • I have just purchased my car code analyzer (old • a 2004 Acura TL with cheap one) reset this light? 93,000 miles on it. Beautiful • There is no discrep- car,but oneproblem is avery • ancy between the loud power steering pump
A
two different tire pressure
specifications. Each is for a different purpose. The 44 psi shown on the tire
when cold. Is this common and would a little Sea Foam
help?
A • A few ounces of Sea
sidewall is the pressure at • Foam Trans Tune will which the tire will safely help clean and condition the support its maximum load power steering fluid — alrating. This is not the car- ways good maintenance.My maker's recommended op- ALLDATA database pulled erational tire pressure for
up Acura TSB 07-060 from
that specific vehicle. The 2009 that identifies this cold carmaker's recommended start characteristic as being tire pressure for optimum generated by aerated fluid fuel mileage and tire wear caused by air getting past the is shown on the vehicle's inlet 0-ring. A new 0-ring door jamb, in this case 30 psl. Is there a question of safety with the two differ-
ent pressures? No, the tire is absolutely safe at its 44
might eliminate the noise. — Brand is an automotive troubleshooterand former race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Includea daytime phone number.
psi max inflation pressure, but the car will ride a bit firmly and the center of the tread will wear consid-
erably faster. T he correct c old
tire
pressures for every vehicle are posted by the carmaker on a placard somewhere on thevehicle— common-
Find Your Dream Home In
Real
ly the driver's door jamb, inside the fuel filler cap or on the inside of the glove box door.
Estate
You didn't say wheth-
•
er both the tire pressure monitoring system light as
Tribune News Service
Q•
I have a 2 007 Acura • MDX. It was purchased
new, is serviced regularly and is never abused. It now has 53,000 miles on it. Everything I'm reading states the
timing belt should be replaced at 105,000 miles (60,000 for severe usage). Age is not mentioned. The dealer is telling me it should be replaced because the car is 8 years old. It's
a lot of money if it's not necessary. Your opinion please.
sensors can also become biased or sleepy, again from Methodically inspecting the contamination, and occasionbelt's inner cogs for cracks ally suffer from internal heator deteri oration makes sense, er failure. Phosphorus and but isn't easy to do on many zinc deposits due to oil usage engines without some disas- and silicone contamination as sembly. If it were my vehicle, a result of coolant leakageI'd renew the timing belt at from head gasket leakage, a 60,000 miles, along with the cracked cylinder heard or the water pump and belt tension- wrong engine sealants, can er. These additional parts are slowly poison both the cat and recommended as they could oxygen sensors. Newer motor derail or destroy the belt if oils and some coolants have one of them fails. greatly reduced levels of these and oil contamination could be taking their toll as well.
substances. A mode six scan
burned air and fuel passing through, resulting in melting and breakage of the honey-
a modern scan tool may
CRATCH
seen better life. If one plans to keep a car for the long term,
or far these partsare from
A
It's logical that most timing belt wear occurs due to use,
but environmental conditions such as airborne ozone
Arts Sr Entertainment Every Friday
several minutes at speeds above 28 mph to allow the pressure sensor to trans-
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mit its signal to the control
•
module.
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•
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•
Mur laeal apg>llenae exgrerts
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trouble code usually makes the right call that the cat has
eNitRNp .
I'd opt for the greater durabil-
ity, better performance and longer warranty of an OEM cat instead of a less expensive aftermarket replacement. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlinit.net.
the crankshaft and camshaft lose synchronization due to
belt breakage. In order to deliver high performance, many modern engines are designed this way.
S ECT I O Pl Blemtshed pmdacts that work tlme.
are functioning correctly, the
makers do specify a time in- I have a four-cylinder Honda reaching the failure threshold. terval along with the mileage, Accord with 161,000 miles. Major failure of a catalytic and you'd be coming up close What's best: a new or replace- converter can occur due to with most of them. My con- ment converter'? engine misfiring, an excescern is you have a magnificent • In a perfect world these sively rich air-fuel mixture, engine that could incur signif• parts would last the life impact damage and possibly icantand expensive damage if of the vehicle. Catalytic con- a cold quench from a really the timing belt were to break. verters can gradually lose ef- deep puddle. The normally This is known as an interfer- ficiency due to contamination high temperature within the ence engine, where the valves and excessive heat. Oxygen catalyst can soar with unwill collide with the pistons if
verterand two sensors last?
and drive the vehicle for
ing emissions treatment, this, along with impact or quench damage can cause a clogging effect, dramatically reducing engineperformance. Greater heat caused by a rich air-fuel mixture fuses pores in the converter' s active surface,reducing oxygen storage capacity. Assuming upstream and downstream oxygen sensors dreaded P0420 diagnostic
• This question comes up
E1%1'
sure" symbol is on, confirm proper tire pressures
comb substrate. Besides spoil-
H ow m a n y mil e s tool reading (challenging to inA • a lot and everyone has a Q • • should a catalytic con- terpret) can indicate how close differing opinion. Some car-
•
sure" warning symbol are on. If it is TPMS light only, pinpoint a problem with
By Brad Bergholdt
•
TheBulletin
well as the "Low tire pres-
the TPMS control module. If the "Low tire pres-
Mileageaside,timing belt warrantsreplacement
o t h e r po s sibilities
— the brake warning light switch itself or a problem
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MAGAZIME TheBulletin
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Information is From sources deemed reliable but is not guaranteed. Subject to prior
sale or lease, price change, correction or withdrawal.
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
CHARLES KRAUTHAMMER'~,i + ' COMMENTARY
Clinton
fatigue setting in WASHINGTON-
he burned the tapes.
S
Had Richard Nixon burned his tapes, he would have sur-
vived Watergate. Sure, there would have been a major firestorm, but no smoking gun. Hillary Rodham was a young staffer on the House Judiciary Committee investigating Nixon. She
• Political scientist Robert Putnam explores economic inequality and the opportunity gap By Emily Badger • The Washington Post
saw. She learned.
Today you don't burn tapes. You delete emails. Hillary Clinton deleted 30,000, dismissing their destruction with the brilliantly casual: "I didn't
see any reason to keep them." After all, they were private and personal, she assured everyone. How do we know that? She says so. Were, say, Clinton Foundation
contributions considered personal? No one asked. It's unlikely we'll ever know. We have to trust her.
That's not easy. Not just because of her history — William Safire
wrote in 1996 that "Americans of all
political persuasions are coming to the sad realization that our first lady
... is a congenital liar" — but because of what she said in her emergency news conference Tuesday. Among the things she listed as private were
"personal communications from my husband and me." Except that, as The Wall Street Journal reported the
very same day, Bill Clinton's spokesman said the former president has
sent exactly two emails in his life, one to John Glenn, the other to U.S. troops in the Adriatic.
Mrs. Clinton's other major declaration was that the server containing the emails — owned, controlled and
housed by her — "will remain private." Meaning: No one will get near
SWARTHMORE, Pa.— Robert Putnam wants a show of hands of everyone in the room with a parent who graduated from college. In a packed Swarthmore College auditorium where the students have spilled onto the floor next to their backpacks, about 200 arms rise. "Whenever I say 'rich kids,' think you," Putnam says. "And me. And my offspring." The Harvard political scientist, famous for his book "Bowling Alone," which warned of the decline of American community, has returned to his alma mater to talk, this time about inequality. Not between the 99 percent and the I percent, but between groups that have also fallen further apart: children born to educated parents — who are more likely to read to them as babies, to drive them to dance class, to nudge them into cottege themselves — and children whose parents live at the edge of economic survival. The distance between the two
is deeply personal for Putnam, 74 andlaunching a book thathe hopes could change what Americans are willing to do about children in poverty. He grew up in a working-class Ohio town on Lake Erie where, in the 1950s,
poor kids could aspire to Rotary scholarships or factory jobs. He left Port Clinton for Swarthmore, where he met a woman in his introductory political sci-
ence class who would raise two
them.
children with him. They would
This she learned not from Watergate but from Whitewater. Her hus-
go on to Harvard. His grandchildren are college-bound, too, or already there, one of them living
band acquiesced to the appointment
of a Whitewater special prosecutor. She objected strenuously. Her fear
on the same floor of the dormito-
was that once someone is empow-
Some of his classmates from Port Clinton in the 1950s, mean-
ered to search, the searcher can roam freely. In the Clintons' case, it led to impeachment, because when
the Lewinsky scandal broke, the special prosecutor added that to his
portfolio. Hillary was determined never to permit another open-ended inves-
tigation. Which is why she decided even before being confirmed as secretary of state that only she would control her email.
Her pretense for keeping just one private email account was "conve-
nience." She doesn't like to carry around two devices. But two weeks ago she said she
now carries two phones and a total offourdevices.M oreover,ittakes about a minute to create two ac-
counts on one device. Former Transportation Secretary Ray LaHood did exactly that.
Her answers are farcical. Everyone knows she kept the email private forpurposes of concealment and,
above all, control. For other State Department employees, their emails belong to the government. The records officers decide to return to you what's personal. For Hillary Clinton, she decides.
The point of regulations is to ensure government transparency.
s
rg-
ry where Putnam bunked. while, stayed for manufacturing jobs that later disappeared. Their children faced rising unemployment and stagnating wages. A third generation was born poor, often without two parents.
Pacing the floor like a preacher, Putnam conjures their fate through the story of a real-life Port Clinton child, whom he calls "Mary Sue." At 5, her parents split. Her mother became a
stripper. For days at a time, she was alone and hungry. "She is a granddaughter of Port Clinton, just as my granddaughter is a granddaughter of Port Clinton," Putnam says. And no matter how often he repeats this line — which he does
frequently in front of any group of politicians, students or voters who will listen — it always
comes out anguished. Half an hour into his Swarthmore lecture, Putnam winds into the voice of what an associate calls an "Old Testament prophet with charts."
He starts throwing graphs on the screen behind him that reflect national trends mirrored
Damian Strohmeyer/For The Washington Post
Political scientist Robert Putnam, shown here at Harvard, recently wrote "Our Kids," about the divide among privileged and underprivileged children.
they'll eat family dinners, in the time parents spend reading to
them, in the money families invest in their clubs and lessons.
"Every summer camp you went to, or every piano lesson you got, or every time you went to soccer club, you were getting some advantage," Putnam says, "that somebody else out there-
Mary Sue — was not." It's not an accusation, but a rallying cry, a call to come to
the altar and help save someone else's children. "If we can begin to think of
these poor kids as our kids," he how to help them." For three years, Putnam has been nursing an outlandish
ensure opacity. Because she holds
regation, the breakdown of the
of opportunity for kids to be
the emails, all document requests by
working-class family. They all look ominously simi-
the central issue in the 2016
ambition. He wants inequality
lar. Each graph shows two lines
presidential election. Not how big government should be or
diverging over the last several
what the "fair share" is for the
who will stonewall until the end of
decades inthe experiences of American kids at the top and
wealthy, but what's happening to
evercomes first. It's a smart political calculation.
bottom: in the share born to single mothers, in the chances that
70percent
children boxed out of the American dream. See Inequality/F5
Taking a few weeks of heat now-
50 40 30 20 •
IO 1 960 1970
around April 1, the Clinton apolo-
gists will begin dismissing the whole story as "old news." But even if nothing further is found,
the damage is done. What you're feeling now is Early
•
•
• 0•
•
8% bachelor's 1 9 8 0 1 99 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 10 degree ormOre
Sources: Robert Putnam and U.S. Census Bureau
The Washington Post
Families who eat dinner together
A survey taken from 1978 to 2005 shows that the percentage of families whoeat dinnertogether declined across parental education groups, but the fall wasmorerapid for less-educated parents. Bachelor's 100percent degree or more 80 60
it's only March 2015 — is far less
risky than being blown up by some future email discovery. Moreover,
65% High school degree orless
60
Starting a discussion
The point of owning the server is to
time — or Election Day 2016, which-
In 2012, 65 percent of children whose mothers never made it past high school spent at least part of their early childhood in a single-parent household, up from 20 percent in 1953.
says, "we would not sleep for a second before we figured out
in Port Clinton: rising income inequality, growing class seg-
Congress, by subpoena, by Freedom of Information Act inquiries, have ultimately to go through her lawyers,
Children living in a single-parent home
"If we can begin to think of these poor kids as our
kids, we would not sleep for a second before we figured out how to help them." — Robert Putnam, Harvard political scientist
40
75% 64%
High school degree orless
20 0 Sources: Robert Putnam and DDB Lifestyle surveys, 1978-2005 The Washington Post
Onset Clinton Fatigue. The CDC is
recommendingelaborateprecauti ons. Forget it. The onlyknown cure is Elizabeth Warren. — Charles Krauthammeris a columnist for The Washington Post writers group. John Costa's column will return.
Thinkstock
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
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TNI4 PI~ K
Q.
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%XCKC'ii' RKRPICK CAHDIPATE
EVALLh47LQN
he Department of the Interior appears to have its
CEN~
priorities crooked. The new priority o f S ecretary of the Interior Sally Jewell's rangeland fire strategy is to better protect sage grouse habitat. That's an important priority. Settlers once said they saw millions of the birds. Now the numbers might be as low as 200,000. It might be listed as an endangered species. What's unclear is what the new priority means when fire managers have to make choices. The priority ranking has been protecting human life, protecting private property and protecting public resources. Now there's the new one to protect sage grouse habitat. One Bureau of Land Management official had suggested that it could mean that private property could be moved below protecting sage grouse habitat/public resources. We asked the press office at the Interior Department in Washington, D.C., if that's how it will work. No, they told us. The statement they sent said it "does not re-prioritize the protection of the ecosystem over the safely of the public and our firefighters." It's just another critical fire management priority for managers to consider. Maybe that makes sense in Washington. But in Oregon, at least, it doesn't work to just keep adding priorities. You have to know how you value them. If you are a federal fire or land manager,you have to make choices about how you use resources. It's probably not going to be as razor-edged a drama as: "We can save the sage grouse nest or we
can save that home. Which is it going to be, sir?" But it's easy to imagine that there will be decisions similar to that. There's a lot more to Jewell's new rangeland plan than the odd sense of priority. There are action items to improve fire prevention and containment and also restorethe area after a fire occurs. There will be more focus on data collection to ensure what is done is measured and evaluated.Better supplies of native seeds will be gathered for restoration work. There is a call for deploying more veteran fire teams earlier in the fire season. That all sounds good, but back to priorities. Do you remember the Buzzard Complex Fire last year in Eastern Oregon? It began July 13. Lightning ignited multiple spots east of the Stinkingwater Mountains in Harney County. The fire spread quickly because of fuels on the ground. The Bureau ofLand Management noted that it moved along well even without wind, feeding on non-native grasses. The fire was eventually contained about a month later afterburning some 400,000 acres. That's625 square miles. There were at least 11 nest-
ing areas for sage grouse in the burned areas. Those were mapped. Under this new policy, the nestswould have been whatever priority fire managers wanted them to be. That could be a treacherous protocol for private property.
Require Rep. Whisnant's civics proficiency test tudents should know things about the country's history and how government is supposed to work. That gives state Rep. Gene Whisnant's bill, House Bill 2977, its strength and its seriousness. It will require students to take a statewide civics proficiency test. Whisnant, R-Sunriver, wants to require school districts and public charter schools to include a test that, at least, demonstrates the level of proficiency required by the naturalization test for United States citizenship. State Rep. Knute Buehler, R-Bend, is also a strong supporter of thebill. No requirement for a civics test is going to transform Oregon students into informed, active citizens. For
S
some, it might be just more answers that they memorize and quickly forget. But the same canbe said for any test. It's not a reason to reject it. We have all heard the criticisms of the testing obligations put on teachers and school districts. It also could be argued that a simple test like this doesn't show the ability of students to think critically. That's a poor excuse to try to wriggle away from this bill. Facts are where critical thinking should begin. What Oregonians want children to learn in school is what we value. It's an integral expression of who we are — or hope we are. To argue that schools don't need a forthright emphasis on the basic civics facts of the country would be a slipshod lesson.
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iS
< m WE '
Making the case for old ideas self-segregatingand marryingamong themselves, and virtual realities are replacing older forms of intimacy. ROSS What I f ind most provoking, DOUTHAT though, is Harari's insistence that in dealing with these problems, "nothingthat exists atpresent offers a solune of the anxieties haunting tion," and "old answers" are as "irrelthe 21st century is a fear that evant" now as they were (allegedly) technological change will duringthe Industrial Revolution. soon make many human lives seem He means this as a critique of reessentially superfluous. ligious revivalists in particular: Not It's a fear as old as the Luddites, but only the Islamic State's seventh-centhe promise of computing, robotics tury longings, but any movement and biotechnology has given it new that seeks answers to new challenglife. It suddenly seems plausible that a es "in the Quran, in the Bible." Such rich, technologicallyproficient society seeking, he argues, led to dead ends will no longer offer meaningful occu- in the 19th century, when religious pation to many people of ordinary irruptions from the Middle East to talents, even as it offers ever-greater China failed to "solve the problems of wealth, ever-widening powers and, industrialization." It was only when perhaps, ever-longer life to the elite. people "came up with new ideas, not
O
eugenics, religious humanists helped keep the idea of equality alive. Overall, we overestimate how pious the Westof 1750 or 1800 was — and
we underestimatehowmuchthe more egalitarian West of 1950 was shaped
byreligious mobilization and revival. Nor is this just a Western phenomenon. As the developing world has converged in prosperity with Europe and America, old religious ideas that have been given new life — Christianity in China, Hinduism in India, Pentecostalism in Latin America and Africa-
are playing as important a social role as anysecularor scientific perspective. gn the Middle East, too, it's a good bet that any successful answer to the
Islamic State will alsobe Islamic.) The point is not that traditional ideas alone can save societies in transition. That way lies the Islamic State
and the foredoomed ruin of countless old regimes. eavesdrop on, between Nobel lau- from studying science and technolBut the assumption, deeply inreate Daniel Kahneman and Israeli ogy, that answers to the industrial grained in our intelligentsia, that historian Yuval Noah Harari on the age's dislocations emerged. everything depends on finding the website Edge.org. This argument deserveshigh- most modern and"scientific" alternaHarari, the author of a recent his- lighting because I think many smart tive to older verities has been tested tory of the human species, "Sapiens," people believe it. And if we're goingto repeatedly — with mostly dire reargues that our own era's break- confront even modest versions of the sults. The 19th-century theories that throughs will create new classes and problems Harari sees looming, we cast themselves as entirely new and dass struggles, just as the Industrial needtorecognizewhat hisargument modern were the ones that devastatRevolution did. gets wrong. ed the 20th century, loosing fascism Soon, if not tomorrow, the rich New ideas, rooted in scientific un- and Marxism on the world. might be able to re-engineer bodies derstanding, did help bring societies Which makes Harari's concluding and minds, making human equality through the turbulence of industrial- provocation feel like an unintended seem like a quaint conceit. Mean- ization. But the reformers who made warning: "In terms of ideas, in terms while, the masseswill losetheirjobs to the biggest differences — the ones of religions," he argues, "the most inmachinesand findthemselveschoos- who worked in the slums and with teresting place today in the world is ing between bread and cirams (or the displaced, attacked cruelties and Silicon Valley, not the Middle East." It's drugs and video games) and the pull pushed for social reforms, rebuilt in Silicon Valley that people are"creatof revolutionary violence — with the community after it melted into air ing new religions" — techno-utopian, That anxiety dominates the most provocative conversation you can
from the Shariah, and not from the Bible, and not from some vision," but
Islamic State's appeal to bored youths possibly a foretaste of the future.
— often blended innovations with
very old moral and religious commitments. When technological progress helped entrench slavery, the religious radicalism of abolitionists helped destroy it. When industrial develop-
Harari's scenario, as he concedes, is only a projection, and one may doubt that technology can go as far as he imagines. But some of the dislocations he envisions are already here: Work is ment rent the fabric of everyday life, disappearing for the erstwhile work- religious awakenings helped reknit ing class, the rich are increasingly it. When history's arc bent toward
trans-humanist — and it's those religions "that will take over the world." He could be right. But if those new
ideas are anything like the ones that troubled the 20th century, we may
find ourselves looking to older ones for rescue soon enough. — Ross Douthat is a columnist for The New York Times.
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Homelessness: Whose responsibility is it to help? By David A. Gross are putting out fires but not containhe Stevens Road Tract closure ing, preventing and/or reducing the highlights a growing issue. blaze. This isn't due to reluctance or W hose responsibility is it t o lack of vision. It's a lack of resourcaddress and solve the problems of es and ultimately, your involvement.
T
IN MY VIEW
talking about the felons, the disabled, the addicts, the mentally ill,
anyone can become homeless. It's the veterans, the disabled, the vicsomething that everyone can ex- tims of abuse, the LGBTQI ki ds perience at some point in his life, and adults, runaways, those on a homelessness and those at risk of It is the communities' responsibiliregardless of the precautions taken fixed income, kids from the foster homelessness in Bend and Central ty to face these issues. By working or personal qualities. The homeless system, minimum-wage workers, Oregon? together, combining public and pri- can be you, without a house or place temporary employees, part-time The federal, state and local gov- vate resources, time and energy, the to go. workers, those without health insurernments are forced to deal with issues that led to the displacement of Each person staying in shelters, ance, those who can't take another this issue as campers use public more than two dozen people from motels, cars, Rvs, sleeping bags, rent increase, those who lost their lands. Various land m anagement the Stevens Road Tract won't haptents, backyards, the houses of retirement, those who can't physagencies pass the buck, avoiding li- pen again. friends and family, on porches and ically work, those who can't afford ability and responsibility. Why care about the homeless in more, has a unique story with ups housing in the area, those who have Hospital and emergency services the area? It seems to be a common and downs, showing qualities and a bad credit record or bankruptcy, are unable to discriminate; these sentiment that they must have done flaws, just as you have. They are hu- those laid off, those fired because servicesare often the only route to something wrong, or they are ad- man, just like you, and as humans of a mistake, those whose job skills aren't required anymore, those who help for some. dicted to drugs, or they just don't deserve grace, justice and dignity. Let's lead the way toward finding want to get out of h omelessness, Organizations, coordinated by want to find housing or jobs ... and the Homeless Leadership Coalition on. solutions to the problems faced by the active drug user, those with of Central Oregon, are acting withBut if you really want to know the the homeless, houseless and those pets, those without ID and many in the community, but from my view face of homelessness in the com- at risk. more. I think you can find someone are working in triage mode. They munity, look in the mirror, because I hate labels, but here I go: I'm you know, maybe even yourself,
within those labels. Someone you
don't want to see tossed aside and neglected. You can make a difference. If you hear the stories and connect to the community of professionals, volunteers, homeless, houseless and those at risk, you will find something you can do to help. The story of th e Stevens Road
Tract is not over. If the public comes together, we can solve the safety and trash issue and enter discus-
sions with the Oregon Department of State Lands. The state board meets in m i d-
April with the intent to permanently close the area to camping. Let's start a conversation with the department
and the homeless community to solve the problem, rather than kick
the can down the road. — David A. Gross lives in Bend.
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
mai scan a s an accounta i it ormer CI A
F
D i r e ctor D a vid
Petraeus plea-bargained to a misdemeanor count ofunau-
exactly that. Clinton even went so far as to cre-
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN
Public service is also voluntary. It
is usually of a limited nature. And it ate her own private domain server, requires accountability to the public. which in effect allowed her to adjudiThe real problem is that our public cate which of her government com- servants are using their electronic munications would eventually be correspondence to affect their public deleted and which would be retained. records— indeed,to massage history Consider the controversies that itself far more easily than had been arose and contentious decisions that done in the pre-computer age. were made during Clinton's tenure A CIA director who is entrusted as secretary of state: failed reset with with the nation's secrets cannot use Vladimir Putin's Russia, the pullout email to facilitate secret lives in a way of all U.S. peacekeepers from Iraq that would be difficult with just postand that country's subsequent image stamps and phone calls. plosion, the estrangement from IsJackson created a false identity rael, the killing of U.S. personnel in that enhanced her own reputation Benghazi and the scapegoating of in a way that would have been nearan obscurevideo-maker. In theory, ly impossible with a typewriter or Clinton alone could have chosen to pencil. release official or unofficial comWith the aid of high-tech corremunications that she found useful spondence, Clinton attempted to deand to simply delete those she found cide for herself which of her emails problematic — messages that, most should be subject to oversight — in a likely, only her staff knew existed. manner difficult for prior secretaries Why, otherwise, would Clinton of the pre-electronic age, who were avoid all standard, required govern- forcedtoleave a dumsy carbon pament email accounts to create her per trail. own for official business — even with Email speeds things up. It expands the risk that her shenanigans would the power of communications and be exposed as unsecure, unethical allowsone to m essage farmore peoand potentially unlawful? ple, far more often — and sometimes In all of these email scandals, the more stealthily. root of the problem is not, as is someOur public servants who get caught times alleged, undue government up in these electmnic scandals are not intrusiveness into the private lives of victims of a new face of intrusive Big federal officials. After all, the public Brother. Instead, they are using techdeserves transparency — even with nologyto become a sort of Big Brother regardtobureaucrats'private corre- themselves. spondence, at least while they are in — Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist office and communicating as public and historian at the HooverInstitution, figures. Stanford University.
BenjaminNetanyahu'sspeech recently in Congress knows, one of the people prominently seated in the gallery was casino magnate Sheldon Adelson, a primary financial backer of the Republican Party and Netanyahu. As The Washington Post's Colby Itkow-
Yes, there is a bright side to Big Brother
that one man, with a willingness and ability to give away giant sums, can now
thorized removal and retention of
classified material after having given classified government information to
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
his former mistress, Paula Broadwell.
How was Petraeus' transgression Jackson, using th e W i ndsor uncovered? By exposure of a non- p ersona, communicated in a w a y government email account that he that allowed her to skirt federal rehad set up with to communicate with cord-keeping laws. But Jackson not Broadwell free of CIA scrutiny. only wished to exchange email beAfter aseries ofDemocratic scan- neath the radar of the federal govdals in the New York state legisla- ernment that employed her, she also ture, Gov. Andrew Cuomo is insti- wanted to create an alias that might tuting a policy to have the emails weigh in favorably on her own agenof state employees automatically cy's policies. deleted after 90 days. Apparently, In s u rreal f a shion, J ackson's createdWindsor alsoreceived an Cuomo did not want e-trails of politi- selfcians' communications. Meanwhile, award from the EPA for meritorious the former speaker of the New York state assembly, Sheldon Silver, faces
service— perhaps the firstcase of a
chargesofcorruption andwas forced
tronic alter ego.
bureaucrat rewarding her own elec-
Former Secretary of State Hillary correspondence. Clinton is nowtryingto explain away Under the Cuomo plan, a politician her own email scandal. During her such as Silver could delay and obfus- tenure,she might have broken federcate for three months, and then safely al laws by creating several personal assume that almost all of his commu- email accounts on her own private nications had safely vanished — in server. a fashion that pre-email politicians Like Petraeus, Clinton ostensibly couldneverhaveim agined. sought to avoid leaving an electronby subpoena to turn over computer
In December 2012, shortly after
ic trail that might have allowed the
the re-election of Barack Obama, government to have full access to her Environmental Protection Agency correspondence, in her case while administrator Lisa Jackson quietly sheservedassecretary ofstate.Earlistepped down without much public er, Clinton had issued a cable to State notice. Jackson had been under fed- Department employees warning eral investigation for, in apparent vio- them not to use their personal email lation of the law, fabricating a phony accounts for national security reasons — even though she herself did email persona, "Richard Windsor."
By Lane Filler
face with his fist, and then we could react knowledgeably to the response of his team and the NFL. I'm glad we saw what cops did to Eric Garner on
Newsday
T
he first thing that struck me when I saw video of University
Adelson carries the cash he symbolism was too powerful to ignore. As anyone who watched Israeli Prime Minister
itz reported, at one point Adelson's
wife, Miriam, accidentally knocked her purse off the gallery railing, and it hit Rep. Brad Ashford, D-Neb., seated below. The Post noted that Adel-
son had given $5 million to the GOP's Congressional Leadership Fund super PAC, which had spent $35,000 in a failed effort to defeat Ashford in his 2014 race against Lee Terry. Ashford
later joked to The Omaha World-Herald: "I wish I'd opened the purse. Do you think she carries cash?" Wecertainlyknowthat Sheldon Adel-
son does. And when it came to showering that cash on Republican presidential hopefuls and right-wing PACs trying to defeat President Barack Obama (reportedly $150 million in 2012), and on keeping Netanyahu and his Likud party in office, no billionaire-donor is more influential than Sheldon. It is troubling tilt Israeli and U.S. politics his way at the
same time. Israel has much stricter laws on individuals donating to polilical campaigns, so Adelson got around that in 2007 by founding a free, giveaway newspaper in Israel — Israel Hayom — whose sole purpose is to back Netanyahu, attack his enemies in
of Oklahoma fraternity boys and their gal pals singing a violently racist song was how comfortable they looked and sounded talking about hanging black people from trees and using the N word. It's as if they felt it
pened, and didn't have to rely purely on a grand jury that backed the cops. So why do I feel so differently now than I did in my youth, beyond the fact that I've become so boring no
was totally normal and inoffensive.
one careswhat Ido? Mostly because
the West Bank (which, in time, could
As if no one could call them on it. The second thing that struck me,
I now understand what privacy is, and where and when people have the
undermine Israel as a Jewish democracy). Graphically attractive, Israel Hayom is now the biggest-circulation daily in Israel. Precisely because it is free, it is putting a heavy strain
Staten Island to understand whathap-
politics and the media and enforce a
far-right political agenda to prevent any Israeli territorial compromise on
and I've been thinking it a lot lately,
right to expect it.
was that I never would have believed, 25 years ago, I would someday enjoy the Orwellian presence of Big Brother in our society so much. Again and again, we're presented with video shot in public (or sort of public) settings of people behaving
There's neverbeen any rightto privacy in public. If other people, whether they be cops or private citizens, could seeyou from aplace where they were legally allowed to be, then they
badly. Each time I think, "Man, I'm
The case of these young people, of course, was a bit different. They had privacy from me and you inside
tionalist right in Israel, Makor Rishon,
a bus, but not fromone another. I'm
sure most of them had cameras, but
Economy Minister Naftali Bennett. Last March, in an interview with Is-
at least two used them. Rather than
rael Army Radio after the Makor Ris-
giving in to some misplaced sense of loyalty to people behaving so nastily, they publicized what they recorded. As I said, the most disconcerting
hon sale, Bennett said: "It saddens me.
could look. And listen. And record. And that's fair.
really glad there was a someone with a camera present to record that horrifying event." Admittedly, much of my acceptance of the fact that I can assume I'm on camera anytime I'm in public stems from the fact that I'm a sober,
married, middle-aged father. My days of regularly committing high crimes and misdemeanors are behind me. Any camera trained on me now is likely to record behavior that's em-
barrassinglygeekybut not criminal. When I was young and wild and
on competitors, such as Yediot and
Haaretz, which both charge and are not pro-Netanyahu. Adelson then bought the most im-
portant newspaper of the religious-nalong considered the main backer of Netanyahu's biggest right-wing rival,
Israel Hayom is not a newspaper. It is Pravda. It's the mouthpiece of one per-
thing about what these folks sang on
son, the prime minister." Last March in Las Vegas, Adelson
the bus was how comfortable and confident they seemed that they would go
primary. Politico wrote at the time:
organized his own private Republican "Adelson summoned (Jeb) Bush and Govs. Chris Christie of New Jersey, John Kasich of Ohio and Scott Walker
would probably do a flawless job of
it and withdraw his commitment to at-
keeping himself down without "the
far more adamantly libertarian than
man" didn't occur to me until years
tend and play for the school. wonderful thing was that they were And I'm glad that duringthe search wrong. Their fraternityhousehasbeen
today, the idea that there would someday be cameras all over the place freaked me out. I would say things like, "That's how the man's going to keep us down, dude. Constant
later. But it's awesome that the actions
for the Boston Marathon bombers, multiple street cameras showed their
dosed, two participants have been ex-
of Wisconsin to Las Vegas.... The new
pelled, andtheinvestigationcontinues. taken by some of the Sigma Alpha Ep- furtive travels and hideous actions, Fraternity, of course, means brothsilons of Oklahoma are on display. I'm and the actions of the heroes who re- erhood. It was bigbrotherhood, in this glad university officials could take it sponded, too. I'mgladwe sawelevator case, and I'm awfully glad. in and act. I'm glad top football recruit camera footage of football player Ray — Lane Filler is a member
big-money political landscape — in which ahandful of donors candramatically alter a campaign with just a check or two." When Christie, in his speech beforeAdelson, described the West
Jean Delance, who is black, could see
Rice smashing his then-fiancee in the
of the Newsday editorial board.
Bank as "occupied territories," some
surveillance." That anyone who spoke that way
unreported and unpunished. The most
Lower-income workers deserve healthful food
Republican Jews in the audience were appalled. So, Politico reported, Christie hastily arranged a meeting with Adelson to explain that he had misspoken and that he was a true friend of Israel. When money in politics gets this big, when it can make elected officials
By Courtland Milloy
in two countries bow and scrape at the same time, it is troubling. I'm sure
The Washington Post
WASHINGTONwas under the impression that
t
to put food onthe table?
In a report on hunger in America released in December, the U.S. Con-
ferenceofMayors noted a steep rise in request for emergency food assistance in the Washington area. High rentsand escalating food costswere majorcauses — and theproblem was
most bosses hadn't been handing out raises — except to themselves. Not so. While shopping at my neighborhood supermarket in Fort Washington recently, I noticed that some of expected to worsen in 2015. my favorite foods got raises. M oreover, the mayors' reportsaid Chicken got a raise — a 2 per- that "the Washington metro area is cent price hike in the last year, ac- seeing growing numbers of low incording to the U.S. Department of come individuals suffering from diAgriculture. et-related illnesses such as diabetes Pork chops got a raise — up 7.4per- and hypertension." cent last year. The USDA puts out annual cost Beef got a raise — a 19 percent in- estimates for preparing nutritious crease last year. (At Whole Foods in meals. Under the " Thrifty" plan, the District of Columbia, a porter- which is the least expensive, a family house steak rakes in $15 apound.) of four (two adults between the ages All of which amounts to a pay cut of 19 and 50 and two children befor me, and to quite a few others, no tween the ages of 6 and 11) could eat doubt. According to a report last healthfully for $151.60 a week. month by the Economic Policy InJudging from the prices I saw at the stitute, "real hourly wages have de- supermarket, they'll be eating ramen clined for 90percent of the workforce noodles every other night. "The most notable annual inflation w ithfour-year college degrees since 2007." It's called wage stagnation. increases were seen in the perimeter How much harder must it be for of the grocery store — retail beef and low-incomeand unemployed people veal, pork, eggs, fish and seafood,
dairy, and fresh fruit experienced above-average price increases," according to a USDA Research Service update March 3. I did find a few bargains in the center aisles at the Safeway and Giant where I usually shop: sugar, cookies, chips,processed snacks,softdrinks. Diabetes at discount prices. Some economists predict that rising employment could lead to a 3 percent increase in hourly wages this year. From the perspective of a grocery shopper, that would mean the average worker's pay hike would be about one-tenth of the 30 percent rise in the
challenge. " Suggested fi xes include raising the minimum wage, strengthening workers' right to collective bargaining and ensuring that employees can earnpaid sick leave and paid family leave. Others have suggestions that the
boss likely would find more appealing — such asgiving employees a compliment instead of cash. Accord-
ing to results of an employee satisfaction survey, released lto coincide with Employee Appreciation Day, hearing the boss say "good job" produces the same feel ingasam odestraise. " Many o r ganizations t ur n
he lacks any sense of limits in how he
exercises his extraordinary financial power — power he is using to simultaneously push Israel and the United States toward eliminating any two-
state solution between Israelis and Palestinians, toward defunding the Palestinian Authority and toward a confrontation with Iran, not a diplomatic solution. People need to know this. The most important bonds between
Israel and the U.S. always emerged from the bottom up — a mutual re-
to
spect between two democracy-loving
unique perks, payraises, andbenefits to keep employees happy, but cre-
peoples. Money can't buy those bonds, but it can threaten them by going to excess — by taking Israel's true good will in America and usingit to help one party"stick it" to the president, one big
cost of peanutbutter since 2010. This month, I asked some of my fel- ating a culture of gratitude could be low grocery shoppers if they got rais- just as impactful," according to Kroes. Most of them did not know that nos, a global workforce management March 6 was the 20th anniversary
Adelson cares deeply about Israel, but
software company headquartered in
of "National Employee Appreciation Massachusetts that commissioned Day." Apparently neither did their the survey."The power of 'thankyou' employers. cannot be underestimated." "I work for Metro," one shopper Of course, before leavingthe supertold me, "and they don't appreciate market, I was reminded that a thank anybody. you does not pay the grocery bill. The EPI calls wage stagnation — Courtland Milloy is a columnist "the country's central economic for The Washington Post.
donor drive his extreme agenda, one
party appear more pro-Israel than the otherfor electoralreasons or one Israeli politician win re-election. People
who go "all the way" like this will one day go over a diff. They will regret it. So will the rest of us. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended March 8. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead) 2. "Prodigal Son" by Danielle Steel (Delacorte) 3. "The Assassin" by Clive Cussler (G.P.Putnam's Sons) 4. "All the Light WeCannot See" by Anthony Doerr (Scribner) 5."The Buried Giant" by Kazuo Ishiguro (Knopf) 6. "The Nightingale" by Kristin Hannah (St. Martin's) 7. "A Spool of BlueThread" by Anne Tyler (Knopf) 8. "Dead Heat" by Patricia Briggs (Ace Books) 9. "Private Vegas" by Patterson/Paetro (Little, Brown) 10. "Mightier than the
Sword" by Jeffrey Archer (St. Martin's) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 2. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 3. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil McGraw (Bird Street) 4. "Killing Patton" by O'Reilly/Dugard (Henry Hold) 5. "Bold" by Diamandis/Kotler (Simon 8 Schuster) 6. "Goddesses NeverAge" by Christiane Northrup (Hay House) 7. "Effortless Healing" by Joseph Mercola (Harmony) 8. "Yes Please" byAmy Poehler (Morrow/Dey Street) 9."Girlin a Band" by Kim Gordon (Morrow/Dey Street) 10. "Money Master the Game" by AnthonyRobbins (Simon & Schuster) — Tnbune NewsService
A look insidefashion's
messychoreography "Gods and Kings: The Rise and Fall of Alexander McQueenandJohn Galliano" by Dana Thomas (Penguin Press, 422 pgs.,$29.95)
National Book Festivalbackindoors For National Book Festi-
val purists, last year's move from the National Mall to
the Washington Convention Center felt like an act of desecration. After all, the festival had started outdoors in 2 001 and expanded on the Mall
Robin Givhan has centered
By Alexandra Jacobs
Jeff Swensen/The New York Times file photo
Writer Michael Meyer's new book"In Manchuria" documents a changing rural China.
'n
anc uria' eais avanis in wa 0 i e "In Manchuria: A Village Called Wasteland and the Transformation of Rural China" by Michael Meyer (Bloomsbury, 365 pgs., $28)
IN MA,'N;O 'C 'U"@'> s Vl I I AOK
o A I. I.C 0 '
< rsaws'<
~ g1 C'1pN' ~ yATI O H
By Larry Rohter New York Times News Service
In Chinese, the region that
"In Manchuria" is the second book by Meyer, whose work has also appeared in magazines and newspapers, including The New York Times. His first was "The Last
was once the cradle of the
mighty Qing dynasty is today rather prosaically known as
Days of Old Beijing," a well-received portrait of daily life in an ancient
Dongbei, the Northeast. Home
to 110 million people, it has smoggy cities and bitingly cold
section of the city that Meyer has a more refined is about to be razed in sense of history and poetry, ceived portrait of daily life in the run-up to the 2008 "In and with his new book, an ancient section of the city Manchuria: A Village Called that is about to be razed in the Wasteland and the Transfor-
run-up to the 2008 Olympics.
mation of Rural China," he seizes the opportunity to dig beneath the region's gritty surfaces.
As a political and cultural center of 21 million people, Beijing offers an almost endless supply of fascinating characters and historical details.
Meyer's motivation for writ-
ing his book is simple and straightforward. "Since 2000, a quarter of China's villages had died out, victims of migration or the redrawing of mu-
Wasteland, elevated to village
nicipal borders," as the country urbanizes, he notes early
Olympics.
ing a company town, yoked to a privately held enterprise called Eastern Fortune Rice. Founded in the late 1990s by a
former chauffeur of the village status in 1956 and populat- chief, Eastern Fortune grows ed by a handful of families, is so rapidly that when Meyer a more difficult subject, and
arrived in Wasteland, it is urg-
Meyer responds to that chal-
ing — perhaps pushing is the
lenge with mixed results.
better word — peasants to give
ond year in a row, it will be held on Labor Dayweekend — Saturday, Sept. 5. Gayle Osterberg, director of com-
Applying a method that up their land and homes and on, adding: "Before it vanished worked well in "Last Days," he move into the modern apartI wanted to experience a life has found colorful locals to an- ment buildings going up near that tourists, foreign students, chor his narrative and capably its processing plant. By the end and journalists (I had been, in captures the flavor of colloqui- of the book, Eastern Fortune's order, all three) only viewed in al Chinese. Two residents seem managers are even talking passing." especially noteworthy: the vol- about renaming the village af"In Manchuria" shifts back uble Auntie Yi, a retired Com- ter the company. and forth among various munist Party cadre and a bit of This clearly has the support genres. It is part travelogue, a well-meaning snoop, and her of China's Communist Party part sociological study, part taciturn brother San Jiu, who is leaders. "You have to underreportage and part memoir, rendered as the quintessential stand, this will be a nationwide but it is also a love offering to Chinese peasant, canny and trend," the company's general Meyer's wife, Frances, who deeply attuned to the interre- manager tells Meyer in begrew up in the unfortunately lated cycles of nature, weather tween visits from top officials. "It can't be stopped. (Chinese named Wasteland, the village and the cultivation of rice. thatMeyer chooses ashisbase But Meyer often strays from president) Xi Jinping has made near the start of this decade, whatis ostensiblyhis main sub- developing the countryside his and to the unborn son she is ject, and sometimes it seems as administration's priority." carrying by the time "In Man- if he is padding to compensate As is so often the case in this
munications for the Library
churia" ends.
of Congress, acknowledged that the holiday was one of
To tell his story, Meyer al- be inherent in focusing on ternates between chapters a tiny village. The review of
every year through 2013. But when tens of thousands of eager readers arrived at the convention center last
August, air conditioning, clean restrooms and easy
access to all the speakers made a very persuasive argument. Last week, the Library of Congress confirmed that the 2015 National Book Fes-
tival will again take place in the Washington Convention Center. And for the sec-
many factors considered
when scheduling the event. More than 100 novelists,
nonfiction writers, graphic novelists, children's writers and poets will speak at the festival this September.
Among the first speakers to be confirmed are Daniel Alarcon, Kwame Alexander, Annette Gordon-Reed, Walter Isaacson, Ha Jin,
David McCullough, Naomi Shihab Nye, Marilynne Robinson and Jane Smiley.
NeW UmbeItOECO
novel coming NEW YORK — Umberto Eco's "Numero Zero," a
best-seller in the novelist's native Italy, will come out in the U.S. this fall.
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt announced a Nov. 3
releasedate forEco'sstory of a ghostwriter in Milan caught up in an underworld of crime and conspiracy. Eco is known for his complex plots, and his publisher said the latest will feature "corrupt newspapers," "imaginary histories" and the "cadaver of Mussolini's double."
ter," Thomas has produced a slightly seedy-feeling but, yes, addictive biography of two outsize personalities who seem less the gods or kings of
"The Battle of Versailles: The her title than Captain Hook Night American Fashion Stum- and Peter Pan. Both men have bled Into the Spotlight and (or had) inconsistent personMade History" al hygiene, volatile temperaby Robin Givhan (Flatiron ments and apowerful tendenBooks, 310 pgs., $2799) cy toward substance abuse.
weather.It can seem drab or worse to a visitor. But Michael
BooKs BRIEFs
How Luxury Lost Its Lus-
for the deficiencies that might
book, San Jiu offers the most
succinct assessment of the new situation. "Someone up that examine a broad histori- Manchuria's history and the here," he says, raising his arm, cal canvas and those focused excursions to the region's main "is always telling us down here on his daily life in Wasteland. cities are clearly necessary, but what to do." Meyer provides There he sleeps on a kang, a a divagation about a lumber- the unsaid subtext: "In feudal combination bed and stove jack who claims to have been times, it was landlords. Then heated by burning rice husks; abducted by aliens and some of came cadres. Now there were uses a rudimentary outhouse the detailed descriptions of the managers." and a public bathhouse; and neglected museums he visited, Meyer also has a knack for tries to adjust to a place de- seem only marginally relevant. noticing amusingly incongrufined "by what was absent," ous details, and he employs with "no local newspaper, no Ayear in Wasteland that talent to full effect to congraveyards, no plaques, no liAsserting that "perhaps no vey the contradictions of conbrary, no former mansions or otherregion has exerted more temporary China. He sips "a battlefields." influence on China across the cup of Marxism brand instant Along the way, he takes last 400 years" than Manchu- coffee ('God's Favored Cofnote of the few points of refer- ria also seems a bit of a stretch, fee!' the package promised in ence that might be familiar to meant to convince readers of English)"; notes that Harbin is Westerners, such as the movie the significance of his subject a city with "a Wal-Mart bor"The Manchurian Candidate" but likely to raise the eyebrows dering Stalin Park", and, at or Puyi,emperor of the pre- of Sinologists. And although it winter's peak, observes peasWorld War II Japanese puppet is true that Japan and Russia ant girls who "belted out Lady state of Manchukuo and the are central actors in the his- Gaga songs" as they watched subject of another well-known tory of Manchuria, to say that a basketball game in a frozen film, "The Last Emperor." But "uniquely for a Chinese region, schoolyard, "tethered together his real goal is to burrow into foreigners played a prominent with shared MP3 earbuds." a peasant society that would role on its stage" plays down After a year in Wasteland, have been closed to him if not the experience of Xinjiang and Meyer was ready to move for his wife and her family. Tibet. on, and he now divides his But when Meyer turns to the time between Singapore and Fascinating characters transformation of the Chinese Pittsburgh, where he teaches "In Manchuria" is the sec- countryside in recent decades, nonfiction writing. But his inond book by Meyer, whose he is able to use his experience terlude in Manchuria clearly work has also appeared in in Wasteland to illuminate taught him many lessons, permagazines and newspapers, much larger trends. A com- haps the most fundamental beincluding The New Y ork mune in its early years, the ing this: "The countryside was Times. His first was "The Last village is, bythe time he moves romantic only to people who Days of Old Beijing," a well-re- there, on its way to becom- didn't have to live there."
her first book on the prepaNew Yorrt Times News Service ration for and realization of a Fifteen years into the new single "magical moment," still millennium, fashion shows further back, when a group tend to be crisply executed of five American and five mass-marketed affairs, with French designers faced off in invitations beamed a lavish and unliketo electronic calenly fundraising pagdars and the events eant at Versailles on themselves often Nov. 28, 1973, abetoccuIYIng ln black ted by, among othor white boxes and ers, Liza Minnelli. s tieamed live o n ,. c'gU"Ee'EwN , This was a decidiThings from Peoria edly better-scented to St. Petersburg. dass of event than Where is the rothe Galliano or Mcmance? Where is Queen bacchanals, the drama? Where with an ice-cream is the stink? s culpture in t h e Let's go b a ck shape of a porcuto the mid-1980s, pine, Kay Thompwhen, as the forson instructing the mer
New s week
models to "walk like
correspondent
praying mantises" and "jewels on top
Dana Thomas re-
minds us, a modof jewels, tiaras on el punctuated her top of tiaras," recalls prance down John Donna Karan (then Galliano's runway working for Anne by flinging dead mackerels Klein, shoved in the basement into the audience (one landed by the French because they in the lap of Joan Burstein,
scorned her sportswear with
founder of the London bou- vanity sizing). tique Browns). And a less fraught one as Or just to the 1990s, when
well: for fashion was then a
Alexander McQueen staged "happyland, a snow globe of his first womenswear show joy," Givhan writes, "an anfor Givenchy in, Thomas tidote to a toxic world" conwrites, "an old horse slaugh- fronting political unrest and terhouse on the edge of Par- urban sprawl. is,where cobblestone fl oors Compared with the tragic slanted toward drains for the opera of Galliano and Mcflow of animal blood." Queen, her subject is more a One would not have been divertissement. But the ausurprised to find McQueen thor argues forcefully that it poised at those drains with a was a revolutionary one, for collection bucket: He bragged the platform it gave to black of sewing his own pubic hair models, hitherto and since into the queen's soldiers' hats, frequently marginalized or embalmed a bunch of worms exduded, and to underrecoginto a transparent corset and nized designer Stephen Burordered up a hat made of a rows,thegifted creatorofthe freshly harvested rack of "lettuce edge" technique who sheep horns. Talk about Rag she declares was "in modii'r. Bone!
ern terms, Alexander Wang,
Building on the extensive Hedi Slimane and Nicolas reportage of her wellre- Ghesquiere all rolled into ceived 2007 book, "Deluxe:
one."
'Lacy Eye'isan intricately plotted psychologicalthriller "Lacy Eye" byJessica Treadway (Grand Central,341 pgs., $26) By Elizabeth Taylor Chicago Tribune
While her older sister ex-
the attack and how it reflects rage that was years in the
making. Although the grand jury failed to indict Dawn, the community very much saw her as guilty in the attack on her parents. For years, Han-
celled on the athletic fields, na had worked to protect her in classrooms and at parties, awkward and friendless child Dawn was that girl who just frombullies; she defended her never quite fit in. Maybe it from all the cruel names, such was her amblyopia, the con- as Ding Dong Dawn. Yet, dition otherwise known as somehow, she so much wantlazyeye,butmaybe therewas ed to believe in her daughter's something more going on? goodness that signals eluded That question animates her. "Lacy Eye," an intricately Treadway raises interestplotted psychological thriller ing questions for those who by Jessica Treadway, the sto- instinctively protect society's ry of a mother trying to fig- weakest members at the exure out what happened to her pense of understanding that family, and why. the meek can be as dangerDuring a home invasion, ous as the strong amongus. Dawn's father is killed, and
After the attack, Hanna
her mother, Hanna, is brutally injured, disfigured and
clings to her daughter's innocence and the boyfriend's guilt, but she gradually learns
left with no memory of what
happened the night of the at- more about her daughter. Initially, shehad thought that the boyfriend had cast a sort of years later he wins an appeal, spell on Dawn and made her and Dawn, who has been compliant to his wishes, but to college and dropped out, she comes to see it differently. "Maybe she was a bird returns to the family home. Gradually, Hanna begins to w ithout a fl oc k u n ti l s h e put the pieces together. found him, or he found her," Could Hanna herself have Hanna thinks. "I imagine played a part in her husband's him spotting a tiny seed of death and the splintering of corruption inside her, spitting her family? She feelsguilt and on it, then helping it grow undeep sadness that she can't til, like a weed gone wild, it quite bear to acknowledge. choked and strangled whatTreadway deftly depicts how ever hadonce been beautiful Hanna gradually remembers underneath." tack. Dawn's boyfriend is convicted of the crime, but three
SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN F 5
Inequality
the president's memo: "Deeply troubling racial gaps remain, of course, but this opportunity gap is about class, not race, and it is growing." Putnam is always quick
Continued from F1 His manifesto, "Our Kids: The American Dream in Cri-
sis" was published last week. It places brain science, sociology and census data alongside stories of children growing up on
we've solved racial inequali-
strands under a single thesis:
The gaps he identifies have been widening on both ends: Better-off families are spend-
ing ever-more money on their children. They're volunteering even more at their schools.
Their children are pulling away as Mary Sue falls further behind, and her original mis-
take was simply, as Putnam puts it, that she chose her par-
Carolyn Kaster I The Associated Press file photo
ents badly. "Our Kids" picks up many
President Barack Obama awards Robert Putnam the 2012 National Humanities Medal during a ceremony in the East Room of the White House in Washington, D.C., in 2013. Putnam received the
medal for deepening our understanding of community in America and examining how patterns of engagement divide and unite.
Bewildering childhood
dance was in decline. So was
Southeast of Los Ange-
union membership, voter turnout, trust in government
les, in a heavily Latino part
of Orange County invisibly a nd participation i n c i v i c partitioned by gang lines, two groups from the Boy Scouts to sisters in Putnam's book have bowling leagues. As a result, grown up with no parents to Putnam argued, Americans speak of. Their mother, a herwere losing the kind of "social oin addict and prostitute, died capital" that helps us solve when they were young. Their big, collective problems (how fathers were unknown or abdo we pay for our schools?), sent. Their grandmother kept as well as small, daily ones them on track, but then she (who will watch my child died, too. tomorrow?). Lola and Sofia, as Putnam "At the beginning you don't names them (all of the ethknow you're doing a study of nographies in the book are the collapse of American so- anonymous), have navigated cial life — you're doing a study life without coaches, pastors, of PTA membership," says Put- tutors, friends' parents, counnam, who has a grandfather- selors, neighbors, community ly presence with a white Abe groups, parents' co-workers Lincoln-like beard. "Our Kids" and family friends. They feel was like that, too. "The more abandoned even by the one we investigated, the bigger we group of adults we like to think realized the problem was." poor kids can always count on T he poor c h ildren i n —theirteachers. "Our Kids" are missing so "In junior high," Lola, the
don't understand how students
of their life by age 7 in a sin- were chosen for those classes. gle-parent household. In the Only the smart kids, they say, 1970s, there was virtually no were told about the SATs. They difference in how much time tried to join afterschool activeducated and l ess-educated ities — the very venue where parents spent o n a c t ivities they might find structure such as reading to infants and and mentors — but Lola was toddlers, which we now know told her reading wasn't good matter tremendously for their enough for a reading club, and brain development. Today, Sofiathat her grades weren't well-off children get 45 min- high enough to play volleyball. utes more than poor kids evThrough their eyes, coaches ery day of what Putnam calls and teachers were gatekeep"'Goodnight Moon' time." ers who extended opportunity
"Bob Putnam's work helped
me understand a key insight," Ryan says by email. "Poverty isn't just a form of deprivation; it's a form of isolation, too." On that same visit, Putnam spoke as well to the president,
grown up on the town's lakefront, as neighborhoods just inland have collapsed into poverty. She is wary of the idea of education funding for poor
sistent to set aside."
as they do in Port Clinton now — the rich in their enclave, the
with residents to explain that the trends his research de-
An Associated Press photographercaptured the president's reaction, his eyes tightly drawn in laughter. After the
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her children are successful
precisel y because of their advantages: a stable home, regular homework help and college expectations. The fact t h at
Americans increasingly live poor in another — means that a dults who might f und t h e
answers may never come in contact with poor children to recognizethe problem. They m ay never overcome theirsuspicion that poor people are to blame for their own poverty.
"Look at the economic profile of Congress: where members went t o
s chool, what
kinds of families they came from, their net worth," says
out. "But maybe that's not true." — Emily Badger is a reporter for Wonkblog covering urban policy.
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"Send me something," the
offers more for members...
committed to expressing his
know who went off to college, views on economic inequality," the neighbor who happens to says Gene Sperling, director of Obama's National Economic
childhood is bewildering. A task as simple as picking the
Council at the time. "You might
Now Bush is one of sever- right math class becomes anal likely 2016 candidates to other trapdoor to failure. whom Putnam has sent his The privileged kids don't book. He has discussed its just have a wider set of options. findings with Hillary Rodham They have adults who tailor for Clinton's staff, with President them a set of options that exBarack Obama in the White cludes all of the bad ones. House, with Ryan in his office Meanwhile, for a child like on Capitol Hill and with the Sofia, "She's just completeHouse Democraticcaucus at ly directionless, because life its annual retreat. He doesn't happens to her," Putnam says. come bearing new solutions "What she's learned her whole but with a crusade to put the life is that life is not something problem out in the open. you do, it's something you
Obama's Piketty," Sperling added, referring to Thomas
say that Putnam was President Piketty, the French economist
who grabbed the world's attention last year with his writings on inequality. Putnam that summer sent
the White House a six-page memo summarizing "Our Kids," scissorsgraphs and all, with a cover letter urging the president to give a speech on inequality. That m em o c i r culated among the president's domestic and economic policy advisers, whoput together ameeting for the president devoted to in-
equality. During that session, Putnam sat opposite Obama
to Ryan, calls "an ominous
tional Humanities Medal at the
s ilence about poverty" i n Washington.
White House for deepening the country's "understanding of community." During the vis-
at a long table in the Roosevelt
it, Carr took him to meet Ryan.
ing basketball star-turned-ur-
rector of the Initiative on Cath-
where taxpayers don't want to
presidentoffered.
need a summer intern — and
silence," says Carr, now the di-
study confirms that children from single-parent homes finish fewer years of school. It's at the local schoolboard meeting,
"Putnam was the academreality among the privileged that Putnam acknowledges he ic who caught the president's did not previously see even in attention right at t hat postthe lives of his children: Take election moment when he away the parents who drive was feeling both liberated and
endure."
"If my kids are going to be successful," she says, "I don't think they should have to pay other people who are sitting around doing nothing for their success." She doesn't recognize that
It's in the news, when another
Putnam what he was working
one. And it exposes an inverse
"I think the two people who have the potential to breakthat
up everywhere. It's on the bus,
when a frazzled young mother doesn't have the patience to play "I spy" with her child.
ceremony, the president asked
around them is a deeply lonely
after years of what John Carr, who has long lobbied 'Aform of isolation' on behalf of Catholic interests In July 2013, Putnam went and who introducedPutnam to Washington to receive a ¹
kids in town.
Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a Democrat, who represents Port Clinton. "You say to yourself, racial lines. she says of Putnam. could this group of people reIn the Roosevelt Room deThat is, in fact, what Putnam ally walk in the shoes of these bate, the president argued, as does. families?" he has publicly, for a kind of And one o f t h e b enefits This question has long middle ground: that poverty — or burdens — of having pained poverty crusaders with and family breakdown aren't something identified for you less optimism than Putnam. "I'm basically calculating uniquely black problems, but is that you cannot then shake ones that hit the black commu- the sight of it. Spend any time that it's harder to be dismissive nity before the white working listening to Putnam talk and of poor kids than poor adults," class and that acknowledging suddenly evidence of the phe- he says, considering what so unites more people behind nomenon he's describing pops m ight happen once hisbook is
here."
is not entirely far-fetched. Over
you to soccer, the peers you
e d ucation wealthy community that has
couldn't have imagined I was going to be seeing you in this place at this time. But I bet you knew you were going to be
the pastyear, several prominent Republicans including Rep. Paul Ryan of Wisconsin have begun to talk more about poverty and inequality. Former Florida governor Jeb Bush gave a speech in Detroit in February on declining eco-
That moment would come
e a rly
low-income men can find work
completed mor e
before he was president can. "When we first met in Cambridge," Putnam told him, "I
would rise to national debate
time."
childhood education and criminal justice reform so more
The poverty black children conservative interpretation of experience is compounded by scribed were not Port Clinton's the causes of poverty. Putnam their surroundings, as well fault or unique to it. "He painted an awful picdoesn't dispute that we need to as by history. Black children fix families to fix poverty. are far more likely to live in ture of the town I live in, but But he teams that with the high-poverty neighborhoods, he just paints reality," Galvin economic argument more of- for instance, and their fam- says. In a letter to the local paten advanced on the left: that ilies are far more likely to per, she implored the town to declining real wages and the have lived in poverty for gen- do something. Could you take disappearance of blue-collar erations. The more complex a child, she wanted to know, to jobs have undermined fami- reality is that Putnam's op- a story time? Could you menlies. That no amount of mar- portunity gap is layered atop tor a single mom? Could your riage promotion can repair this picture — that this new group sponsor a community broken homes when fathers inequality widening along potluck? If the answer was yes, can't find work, mothers can't class lines exacerbates for she publishedher cellphone afford day care, and the utility black children the severe dis- number. "He named the problem," bills are past due. advantages they face along
on. "Actually, I think you might only to chosen students. T heir view o f t h e w o r ld be interested," Putnam said.
come, calling the opportunity gap "the defining issue of our
m ore i nvestment i n
us.
criticism: His opportunity gap than their parents had, sugthesis is grounded in the idea gesting what Putnam calls that we've lost a sense of com- "astonishing upward mobilmunal responsibility for chil- ity." The working-class kids dren that we had in the 1950s. in town today, he worries, are But he deals only briefly with "locked into t r oubled, even the severe racism at that time, hopeless lives." The headwhich no doubtkept many line, "Crumbling American white adults from viewing Dreams," ran over the photo of black children as "their own." a crumbling school. "You can say politically Many in the town balked or strategically that we can at the piece and the photo (it set aside race and just look at turns out that school was declass differences," says Rob- molished to build a new one). ert Sampson, a sociology Christine Galvin, the area dicolleague of Putnam's at Har- rector for United Way in Ottavard. "But analytically, based wa County, organized a pubon the data, the black-white lic meeting at a local library gap is just too big and too per- where Putnam video-chatted
whom he has known for years. As an Illinois state senator, Obama served on a group Putnam created to ponder solutions in response to "Bowling the problem. much more t h a n m a t erial older sister, explains to Put- Alone." The group, for all its That December, at an arts wealth.They have few men- nam's team, "the teachers ac- ideological diversity, never and education center in Washtors. They're half as likely tually cared." hit on any grand answers. ington, Obama delivered a "In high school, teachers But some old-fashioned social speech on inequality, in which as wealthy kids to trust their neighbors. The schools they don't care," Sofia says. capital emerged among its he warned that the opportuni"The teachers would even members. To this day, Putnam ty gap in America was now"as attend offer fewer sports, and they're less likely to partici- say out loud that they get paid keeps in his office what looks much about class as it is about pate in afterschool activities. to be there," Lola says. likea grade-school class pho- race." But Putnam's primary "Just to be there," Sofia says. to of the "Seguaro Seminar," a influence appears in another Even their parents have smaller social networks. Their lives "Just to babysit." young Obama grinning in the passage. "Yeah," Lola adds, "that backrow. "The idea that so many chilreflect the misfortune of the working-class adults around they're there just to babysit, When Putnam walked upto dren are born into poverty in them, who have lost job pros- that they don't care if we learn receive his humanities medal the wealthiest nation on Earth pects and financial stability. or not." from the president in a White is heartbreaking enough," the More than 60 percent of They believe the honors House ceremony, he playfully president said. "But the idea childrenwhose mothers nev- classes at their high school got chided Obama in a way that that a child may never be able er made it past high school all the good teachers, but they only peoplewho knew him to escapethatpovertybecause
nomic mobility for the low-in-
own, that should offend all of
Putnam's solutions are not
Putnam's reception back in
nam is most v ulnerable to
or never touch — opportunity.
His hope that "our k i ds"
particularly novel. He wants
and raise their own babies. He Port Clinton has been more wants religious groups to take complicated. In 2013, he pub- up the problem of mentoring. day worried that his message lished an opinion piece in The He wants public schools to would sound that way, that it New York Times summariz- end "pay to play" fees for afterwould appear as if a country ing the book's first chapter, its school sports. that had overlooked poor black most autobiographical. Many of these things will kids should rally to the cause His research team stud- require money, though, and of poverty now that many of ied his Port Clinton High that is where the fight brews. the poor kids were white, too. School class of 1959. Nearly In Port Clinton, his team interRace is, in fact, where Put- three-quarters of the class viewed one mother from the
that instead of talking about inequality of wealth or income among adults, we ought to focus on inequalities in all of the ways children accumulate-
will now spend at least some
that views her future as their
ty. But many of the advocates in the Roosevelt Room that
of the findings draw on the work of other researchers who have long studied families, education or neuroscience. But Putnam has gathered up these
book cautioned that Americans were increasingly withdrawing from one another and civic life. Church atten-
pay for full-day kindergarten.
Backhome
to say that he doesn't believe
both sides of the divide. Many
of the themes from "Bowling Alone," 15 years later. That
she lacks a decent education or health care, or a community
Room surrounded by national experts and advocates, includ-
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Putnam brought his "scis- ban entrepreneur Magic Johnsors graphs," as he calls them, son. The meeting opened with
olic Social Thought and Public o n printed h andouts. T h e Putnam's research, and he beLife at Georgetown University, graph showingthe steep rise of gan, as he often does, by sum"are the pope and Putnam." single motherhood speaks to a marizing a line he had typed in
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American Tribute electric Reduce Your Past Tax Bend Habitat WHEN BUYING guitar, amp, stand, case, Bill by as much as 75 RESTORE CASHII Percent. Stop Levies, Building Supply Resale For newspaper FIREWOOD... For Guns, Ammo & etc. $225. 541-306-0166 P eople g iving i caution when pur541-312-6709 Liens and Wage Gardelivery, call the Reloading Supplies. Drum Kits:Specializing away are advised to chasing products or > To avoid fraud, nishments. Call The 224 NE Thurston Ave. Circulation Dept. at 541-408-8900. be selective about the services from out of I in High Quaifty New & The Bulletin 541-385-5800 Tax DR Now to see if Open to the public. new owners. For the ~ the area. Sending ~ Used Drum Sets! recommends payQualify To place an ad, call you protection of the ani- ' cash, checks, o r ' Kevin, 541-420-2323 IONRI%%5 ment for Firewood 1-800-791-2099. 541-385-5809 202 mal, a personal visit to i credit i n f ormation The Drum Shop Garage Sales only upon delivery (PNDC) or email the home is recom- may be subjected to Want to Buy or Rent and inspection. classifiedabendbulletin.com mended. DO YOU HAVE For Sale: • A cord is 128 cu. ft. i FRAUD. For more SOCIAL S E C URITY Garage Sales 4' x 4' x 8' Wanted: $Cash paid for The Bulletin SOMETHING TO Piano Technician The Bulletin information about an ~ D ISABILITY BEN - Garage Sales Serving Centrei Ongon sincetgle vintage costume jewServing Centrei Oregon sincetgat SELL tools & supplies, • Receipts should advertiser, you may I E FITS. Unable t o elry. Top dollar paid for FOR $500 OR with rolls of piano include name, call t h e Or e gon / work? Denied benFind them Husqvarna hedge trimGold/Silver.l buy by the Pomeranian male, large /' State LESS? string, $725. phone, price and Atto r ney ' efits? We Can Help! Estate, Honest Artist size, lonq-hair, trained. i General's O mer comm. grade. Non-commercial Call 971-219-9122 in kind of wood f fi ce WIN or Pay Nothing! $200. 541-213-1172 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 used 1 t i me. New advertisers may in Redmond purchased. Consumer Protec- • Contact Bill Gordon & The Bulletin $459, asking, $200. POODLE or POMAPOO place an ad • Firewood ads tion h o t line a t i Associates at 203 541-410-1483 puppies, toy. Stud also i 1-877-877-9392. with our Classifieds MUST include 260 1-800-879-3312 to Holiday Bazaar 541-475-3889 "QUICK CASH species & cost per Prompt Delivery start your application Misc. Items 541-385-5809 SPECIAL" cord to better serve 8 Craft Shows Rock, Sand & Gravel TheBulletin > 1 week3!ines today! (PNDC) Purebred Lab p u ps,> Sening Central Oregon since fgle 12 our customers. Multiple Colors, Sizes champ bloodlines. Are you in BIG trouble of' Artistic Talent Search! 7F, 1M, blacks & yelThe Bulletin Offers 266 Instant Landscaping Co. with the IRS? Stop Free ee eks so! ~ Private Party Ads 541-389-9663 Grizzly Ridge Upcycle lows. Avail. in May. The Bulletin 212 Heating & Stoves wage & bank levies, • 3 lines - 3 days Serving Central Oregon sincetggg Ad must is currently accepting Come meet your new liens 8 audits, unfiled Antiques & 270 include price of Private Party Only applications for cre- companion! S i sters NOTICE TO tax returns, payroll is- •• Total Collectibles o~nle tem oi Seoo of items adverLost & Found ative, artistic people (503) 459-1580 All Year Dependable ADVERTISER sues, & resolve tax tised must equal $200 or less, or multiple who want to sell their Firewood: Seasoned; Since September 29, debt FAST. Seen on Queensland Heelers Old Gas Pumps /Soda items whose total creations in our new Less 1991, advertising for Lodgepole, split, del, CNN. A B BB . C a ll or 8 Mini, $150 Vending Machines does not exceed FOR DETAILS or to c onsignment s t o r e Standard 1-800-989-1278. used woodstoves has B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 8 up. 541-280-1537 WANTEDI Will pav cash. $500. opening soon in SisPLACE AN AD, REMEMBER: If you been limited to mod- or 2 cords for $365. (PNDC) www.rightwayranch.wor Kyle, 541-504-f 050 Call 541-385-5809 ters, Oregon. The have lost an animal, els which have been Multi-cord discounts! dpress.com Call Classifieds at Buying Diamonds ideal candidate will be Fax 541-385-5802 541-420-3484. don't forget to check certified by the O rThe Bulletin reserves 541-385-5809 an out - of-the-box /Gold for Cash The Humane Society Department of the right to publish all www.bendbulletin.com Utility pump Briggs & egon thinker, able to create Saxon's Fine Jewelers Bend Environmental Qual- Pine & Juniper Split ads from The Bulletin Stratton 2.5hp $150 541-389-8655 upcycled m erchan541-382-3537 ity (DEQ) and the fednewspaper onto The 541-221-8226 dise that is beautiful, Gun & Knife Show Redmond eral E n v ironmental Bulletin Internet webBUYING DELIVERY clever, unique or even March 28-29 541-923-0882 Protection A g e n cy PROMPT site. Lionel/American Flyer Wantedpaying cash 542-389-9663 comical. Space is is Deschutes County Madras trains, accessories. for Hi-fi audio & stu- (EpA) as having met TEDDYBEAR p u ps limited, so only the Fair/Expo Center 541-475-6889 The Bulletin 541-408-2191. smoke emission standio equip. Mclntosh Serving CentreiCkegcmsince sgte best merchandise will $1200 - 2 b oys, $5.00 Admission Prineville dards. A cer t ified 269 BUYING & SE LLING JBL, Marantz, Dyb e a ccepted. F o r non-shed, vet check, 541-447-7178 (under 14FREE!) oodstove may b e 216 All gold jewelry, silver naco, Heathkit, San- w Gardening Supplies more info. go to: healthy, s m a ll/meSat. 9-5; Sun. 9-3 or Craft Cats identified by its certifiand gold coins, bars, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. cation dium, great f a mily• C oins & Stamps grizzlyridgeupcycle. Info: 541-810-3717 & Equipment 541-389-8420. label, which is Call 541-261-1808 rounds, wedding sets, com or email: pets. 5 4 1-233-3534 permanently attached 280 www.maiasminisugrizzlyridgeupcycle Private collector buying Savage 17HMR BBSS class rings, sterling silto the stove. The Bul263 stock with BSA ver, coin collect, vinBarkTurfSoii.com Ogmail.com premes.com Estate Sales postagestamp albums & thumb letin will not knowt actical 6-24, n e w tage watches, dental Tools Just bought a new boat? collections, world-wide $450. 541-447-1340 ingly accept advertisgold. Bill Fl e ming, 208 Everything household, Sell your old one in the and U.S. 573-286-4343 ing for the sale of PROMPT DELIVERY 541-382-9419. (local, cell phone). (2)Tool boxes w/profeslawn, & garden must go! Pets & Supplies classifieds! Ask about our Wanted: Collector seeks 542-389-9663 uncertified s ional tools, $ 7 00 woodstoves. Low prices. Fri-Sat-Sun, Super Seller rates! high quality fishing items 240 obo. 541-280-7808 9-5, 425 NE Greeley 541-385-5809 & upscale fly rods. Call Look at: The Bulletin recomAve. (behind Safeway) • Crafts & Hobbies 541-678-5753, or What are you Ladder 20' fiberglass mends extra caution Bendhomes.com 503-351-2746 286 comm. grade 375 cap. when purc h aslooking for? for Complete Listings of Sales Northeast Bend ing products or ser247 $200. 541-221-8226 Area Real Estate for Sale You'll find it in vices from out of the Sporting Goods Polishers • Saws Advertise your car! Estate/Garage Sale! area. Sending cash, The Bulletin Classifieds COW MANURE - aged, - Misc. Add A Pfcturel Everything goeschecks, or credit in- Whoodle Pups, 8 weeks, 150 cu.ft. truckload Reach thousands of readers! Repair & Supplies Chainsaw-carved offers. f ormation may be d elivered, $15 0 . 64832make 1st shots & dewormed. Backpackers tent. High Call 541-385-5809 Illlomma and Baby Casa Court, Bend s g subjected to fraud. Hypoallergenic/no shed, The Bulletin Classileds 541-420-6235 541-385-5809 Sierra sleeps 2+ packs, Fri-Sat., 10-4; Sun., 10-2 Bear. Momma is For more informa$1200; 6 males $30. 541-593-7398. over 5-ft tall; baby is tion about an adver- 1 female, O $1000 ea. Health 241 23" tall. May contiser, you may call guarantee. 541-410-1581 253 sider selling sepathe O regon State Bicycles & TV, Stereo & Vide rately; both $850. Attorney General's Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, Accessories Can be seen in Office C o n sumer 1F, adorab!e, UDT DISH T V Ret a i ler. shots, health guar., pix, Protection hotline at New Diamondback hyai Call Prineville. 1-877-877-9392. $500/up. 541-777-7743 brid bike, Shimano gears, Starting 541-447-7820 $19.99/month (for 12 ' lots of upgrades, selling mos.) & High Speed I I I I I ti 210 The Bulletin Furniture & Appliances at $225. 541-306-0166 I nternet starting a t Cooker King turkey Serving Centrei Ongon sincetgag /fish fryer, like new. $14.95/month (where $200. 541-279-8908 242 available.) SAVE! Ask I t t Adopt a rescued cat or A1 Washers&Dryers Exercise Equipment About SAME DAY In- DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Full warranty, FREE kitten! Altered, vaccistallation! CALL Now! 10 Americans or 158 delivery! Also, used nated, ID chip, tested, weight ma1-800-308-1583 million U.S. A dults more! CRAFT, 65480 washers/dryers wanted. BioForce chine,used 5 tim es,new (PNDC) read content f r om 541-280-7355 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, condition. Cost $1250 m e dia 1-5. 541 - 389-8420Dresser w/mirror, 9 new. Full body workout, Panasonic 55" plasma n ewspaper each week? Discover www.craftcats.org drawer 62nwx34 eh easy to transport/reset. TV, 2 yrs old, like new, the Power of the Pamanual, DVD & was $1000 new), selling cific Northwest NewsBichon Frise AKC reg'd $100, 541-389-7734 Tools, complete i n structions. or $350. 541-550-7189 puppies, 3 females. paper Advertising. For Electric bed twin size, $500. 541-416-0106 541-953-0755 or Switch & Save Event a free brochure call good cond., $300. 541-912-1905. or 541-385-6168 Champ weight bench, from DirecTV! Pack- 916-288-8011 & 255 Ibs asstd a ges s t arting a t email G ENERATE S O M Ebarbell $19.99/mo. Free cecelia©cnpa.com EXCITEMENT in your wts, $140. 949-584-2696 3-Months of HBO, (PNDC) neighborhood! Plan a Starz, SHOWTIME & How to avoid scam garage sale and don't Power Plate CINEMAX. FRE E machine and fraud attempts forget to advertise in GENIE HD/DVR Upclassified! Vibrational exerYBe aware of internag rade! 2 01 5 N F L Boston Terrier Puppies. 541-385-5809. cises for muscleSunday Ticket. I ntional fraud. Deal loShots, ve t ch e ck, strengthening, cluded with S elect cally whenever pospuppy package. $750. NEED TO CANCEL stretching, massage Packages. New Cus- sible. chrisandcyndi©yaYOUR AD? 8 relaxation, $500. tomers Only IV Sup- Y Watch for buyers The Bulletin ' hoo.com. 541-504-3889 <r )port Holdings LLC- An who offer more than 541-279-3588. Classifieds has an l authorized D i recTV your asking price and "After Hours"Line Donate deposit bottles/ Dealer. Some excluwho ask to have 245 Call 541-383-2371 ~ dp~ . c,g ' dtgitjr;'fjtfr'Clf4gJQ' sions apply - Call for ts s cans to local all vol., money wired or 24 hrs. to cancel • G olf Equipment non-profit cat rescue details handed back to them. cf t.',r I your ad! 1-800-410-2572 trailer: Jake's Diner, Fake cashier checks CHECKYOUR AD Hwy 20 E & Petco in Refrigerator (PNDC) and money orders atsetse Stke Item Priced al: Your TohrlAd Coston . e ' - ' 'vs i Redmond; donate at are common. Frigidaire brand 255 fet anesg'bctn' • Under $500 Smith Sign, 1515 NE VNever give out per$29 a ne ftils new side-by-side a Computers 2nd, Bend; or CRAFT sonal financial inforLON f'dcefet 'Mcnlc tg • $500 to $999...................................................................$39 with icemaker. in Tumalo. Can pick bike. Noel mation. Paid $1200 fuss tgtttt.. Attue batftain • $1000 to $2499.............................................................. $49 T HE B U LLETIN r e - PTrust your instincts up Ig. amts, 389-8420. atonlY selling for $850. www.craftcats.org on the first day it runs quires computer adand be wary of • $2500 and over............................................................... $59 $6JJ.00! 541-410-5956 to make sure it is cor- vertisers with multiple someone using an @t JJJJJ J J J 00 LOOKING FOR A NEW eSpellcheck n and Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, rect. ad schedules or those escrow service or COMPANION? human errors do ocselling multiple sysagent to pick up your bold headline and price. Some restrictions apply te. Cute, healthy small dogs cur. If this happens to tems/ software, to dis- merchandise. s for adoption. your ad, please conclose the name of the Your ad will alsoappear iru Visit resqac.com Bulletin tact us ASAP so that business or the term The Serving Centrei cregon srnce i903 • The Bul l e tin • The CentralOregonNickel Ads corrections and any "dealer" in their ads. Serving Central Oregon since fgttg Check out the adjustments can be Private party advertisOriental rug from Mo• Central Oregon Marketpl a ce + bendbtljlefin.tom classifieds online 541-385-5809 W asher & Dry e r , made to your ad. ers are defined as rocco 6'6ex9'Be mauve www.hendbulletin.com Kenmore, good cond. 541-385-5809 those who sell one like new cond., $750 *Privatepartymerchandiseonly- excludespets& livestock, autos, RVs,motorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgaragesale categories. Updated daily The Bulletin Classified computer. 541-410-1483 $275. 541-279-1930
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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 ad 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. 288
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Sales Northeast Bend
Hay, Grain & Feed
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Everything must go! Sat. & Sun., 9 a.m. 1657 NE 13th. Furn., salt & peppers, h o u sehold items & decor Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To
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 541-385-5009 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!" PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at
1777 SW Chandler
341
Horses & Equipment J
"8
• 0.
Ave., Bend, OR 97702
The Bulletin
servrne cenvat oregon sincessos
292
Sales Other Areas
Huge Moving S ale,
101S Chapman St., Jackpine Village, La Pine. Fri. - Sun., S-5. Household, tools, wood splitter, rotofiller.
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Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water 95,000/acre Call 541-41 9-4440
3-horse Silverado 2001 29'xa' 5th wheel The Bulletin Servina Central Oregon sinceSsaa trailer. Deluxe showman/semi living 541-3S5-5809 quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO Accounts Re ceiv541-420-3277 able/Collections Clerk with accountPeople Lookfor Information ing experience and About Products and excellent customer Services Every Daythrough service skills. Strong The Sulletin Clsssiffeds computer skills required. Must be a great team player. 375 Full time p osition Meat & Animal Processing Monday to F r iday Sam to 5pm. Drug Buermann's Ranch and backM eats. Annual Hog Sale screening ground check re/2 hog fully processed q uired. Plea s e delivered to your area cover letter $240. Call 54f-573-2677 email with wage requirements, resume and references to yvonne ©athleticclubofbend.com
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Hay, Grain & Feed Fat hogs, ready to butcher 275 -300¹. $275 541-420-2116 First Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $225/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 or 541-948-7010. Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opporrunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p ositions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate th o r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor fk I ndustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
421
Schools & Training HTR Truck School
Add your web address to your ad and readers onThe Buiietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
Have an item to sell quick? 1-898-439-2235 If it's under WWW.IITILEDU '500 you can place it in 454 The Bulletin Looking for Employment Classifieds for: Woman willing to do er'1 0 - 3 lines, 7 days rands for the elderly for s light f e e in '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Bend/Redmond. (Private Party ads only) 541-2SO-OS92 REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs!
Carpenters neededfor Lodge project. Immediate openings - Start tomorrow! Finish carpentry & light framing, experienced only! Licensed or unlicensed welcome. $20-$35/hr. Time and a half for overtime.
Drivers GTI - NOW HIRING! Top Pay for CDL A EMPLOYMENT > first communit Drivers! HIGH SCHOOL Dry Van or Reefer you JUN[ORS ONLY We are excited to choose! you're a junior in high announce an Frequent time at home. If school, you can join available position for Well-appointed trucks. the National Guard a full-time teller in EOE. S66-435-S590 t hrough t h e Sp l i t Bend, Oregon. GordonCareers.com Training Option and 541-325-3755. (PNDC) be back from Basic Salary Range: Combat Training in $11.00 - $18.00 FIND YOURFUTURE time for your senior Call The Bulletin At HOME INTHE BULLETIN ear. Next year, you'll First Community 541-385-5809 e back in time for Your future isjust a page Credit Union is an college. Joining the Place Your Ad Or E-Mail away. Whether you' r e l o oki n g equal opportunity Guard will open many At: www.bendbulletin.com for a hai or aplace Io hangif, employer of doors for you with The Bulletin Classified is protected Veterans benefits like college and individuals with your bestsource. tuition assistance and KNOW disabilities. For more D ID Y O U excellent tra i ning. Every day Ihousands of Newspaper-generdetails please Plus, it's one of the buyers andsellers of goods a ted content is s o best part-time jobs apply online: valuable it's taken and and services dobusiness in www.myfirstccu.org. ou can have while in repeated, condensed, these pages.Theyknow igh school. broadcast, tweeted, you can't beatTheBulletin The 2015 Split Training Classified Section for discussed, p o sted, Option season ends Caregivers copied, edited, and selection andconvenience April 30. Applicants w anted t o j o i n emailed co u ntless -every item isjust a phone must be 17 years old call away. times throughout the and have p a rental our caring day by others? Disprior to obm emory c a r e cover the Power of The Classified Section is consent taining a contractual easy Io use.Everyitem c ommunity. A l l obligation. E l igibility Newspaper Advertis- is categorizedandevery shifts a v ailable. ing in FIVE STATES cartegory is indexedonthe r estrictions ap p l y. Contact your l o cal Must be reliable. with just one phone seciion's front page. National Guard Repcall. For free Pacific Also needed part resentative and seNorthwest Newspa- Whether youare lookingfor t ime c hef. F o r cure your future now. Association Net- a home orneedaservice, more in f o rma- per SSG Jason Bain work brochures call your future is inthepagesof tion, or any The Bulletin Classified. (541) 325-1027 916-288-6011 or Ore on uard.com questions, email Banking
please call 541-385-4717
cecelia©cnpa.com (PNDC)
Check The Bulletin Classifieds
The Bulletin ServingCentral Orvaresiae ttte
ACCOUNTING
Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is s eeking a g oal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will:
Staff Accountant The Staff Accountant is responsible for maintaining multiple aspects of the general ledger to ensure accurate and timely reporting. This position will be responsible for the preparation of monthly financials, journal entries, balance sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and month end accruals. We seek a motivated individual that will bring a fresh perspective to our systems and procedures. An ideal candidate will learn current procedures, while taking a proactive approach to find efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with financial analysis. The position requires a detail-oriented individual with strong general accounting, organizational, communication, and time management skills. We seek a positive individual that enjoys working in a fast-paced team environment in beautiful Bend, OR.
• Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. job functions & responsibilities • Assist in the development of online and •Essential General ledger maintenance: detailed undercross/sell advertising packages and attendant standing of each account and proper posting sales collateral. • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and balance sheet reconciliations Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at • Fixed Asset additions, disposals 8 depreciation least 3 years' experience and a proven track • Cost reporting and forecasting record of success in selling multi-platform or digital advertising to major accounts and Experience & skills agencies. Management experi ence a plus, ledger accounting required with the ideal candidate being able to demon- •• General degree in Accounting strate a history of success in implementing in- • 4-year Excel and data entry skills novative ideas and developing the skills level • Advanced with SBS Financial Systems a plus of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug • Experience Newspaper experience preferred free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required. To apply, please submit both a cover letter and resume to hwright@wescompapers.com or by Please email your resume to: mail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi jbrandt@bendbulletin.com Wright, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 9770S. No phone calls please.
The Bulletin Serving Centra( Oregon since1903
The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer
Western Communications, lnc. is a drug free workplace and EOE. Pre-employment drug testing is required.
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www.bendbulletin.com
541-3II5-5IIll9
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
A C T P L Y Medical Billing Supervisor R 0 7K E We are a busy MediS C U cal Clinic with multiple providers lookD E A R ing to welcome a O S L O Billing Supervisor to our team. S t rong N E L S billing background S T Y with exceptional or-
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Health Department The Alfalfa Fire Manager District will be taking Grant County Public applications for a and LVL Supervisor Health in John Day, Bend Park 61 part-time Fire Chief. Recreation Oregon is seeking a G Riddle Engineered Wood The announcement full-time Health Decloses March 31, A Is Accepting partment Manager. Roseburg a leader in the wood products 2015. Go to Applications For: Requires O r egon industry is seeking to fill a Quality Assurance www.alfalfafiredistrict.or S registered nurse Technician position as well as a LVL Supervito view a full copy of •Swim Instructor K F C H A P censure, degree in sor position. The Quality Assurance Tech will the employment •Lifeguard nursing from an acg anizational an d audit processes, test materials and products R I O A W •Seasonal Park agreement, job's credited university, customer s e r vice to e n sure q u a lity; i d e ntify p r ocess description and how Maintenance C H A T E L M P A L P S and p r ogressively s kills required. I n disconnects and take corrective actions; and to apply. responsible experiaddition to oversight fill in supervisory positions as needed. For complete job H O W I M L I P I I L Y ence in a p u b lic of our billing team announcements health agency. Salyou will be responE G O M L I N E T C A N The LVL Supervisor will drive safety improveor to applygo to The Bulletin r a n g e is sible for monthly rement; provide leadership in safety, quality, and bendparksandrec.org ary To Subscribe call C A K E I N G O N K Y O $60-$90,000/yr. porting / analyzing production; maintain high morale with teams; 541-385-5800 or go to DOE. Exc e l lent process; p o l icies K N E S set clear expectations for crewmembers; Equal Opportunity N G S T P E E D benefits. For more and pr o cedures; www.bendbulletin.com identify opportunities for improvement; and Employer I S E D R S details, go to e valuate and i m - S S N customer needs; maintain quality and efficienhttp://www.workprove met h ods. cies; enforce policies and procedures; coordiI C A L C U L sourceoregon.org, Positive communinate p roduction b etween d e partments; CUSTOMER SERVICE J ob L i sting I D : cation and leaderA S C A D A S T U P c omplete reporting; manage t ime a n d REPRESENTATIVE 1335732. If i n t er- s hip skills are a attendance with Kronos; assist in moving Lean M U T I M O S I S T O R e sted, plea s e must. We offer a full process forward and monitor costs. Immediate opening in our download an applibenefit package. If E R U C P S H O O T O S E cation at www.comyou are interested in Classified Advertising department We offer a competitive salary and comprehenT A 7K L E E T U I 7K E D for an entry level munitycounselingbeing a part of our sive benefits package including family insursolutions.org, positive team o r iCustomer Service Representative who will ance,company matching 401K and company E L D E D D A T E A Y S assist the public with placement of classified forward it with cover ented w o r kplace, paid retirement plan. For more job informaletter and resume to please send your reads, either over the phone or in person at tion go to Roseburg.applicantpool.com. Apply PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 The Bulletin office in SW Bend. ladawn.fronapel ©go sume to and attach resume. bhi.net. EOE. medpracbend Must be able to function comfortably in a 476 @gmail.com An Equal Opportunity Employer Good classified ads tell fast-paced, performance-based customer serEmployment Call a Pro including Disability sndVeterans the essential facts in an vice environment. Accurate typing, phone skills Opportunities Whether you need a Marketing Sales interesting Manner.Write and computer entry experience. Strong communication skills and the ability to multi-task is from the readers view - not Manager fence fixed, hedges FIND YOUR FUTURE Instructor, Chemistry Lab, a must. Positive attitude, strong service/ team the seller's. Convert the Experience in the Medical Certified trimmed or a house oriented, and problem solving skills are a plus. HOME IN THE BULLETIN facts into benefits. Show Part-Time, Term-to-Term health care field Coder built, you'll find This is a Full-time, Mon-Fri., 8-5 position. the reader how the item will We are a busy Medipreferred, but not Yourfutureis justa pageaway. Oregon State University - Cascades in Bend is Pre-employment drug testing is required. professional help in cal Clinic with mulhelp them insomeway. required. Must be W hether yo u' r e l o o k i n g for a ha t o r recruiting for a part-time Instructor to teach tiple providers lookThis The Bulletin's "Call a Please send resume to: outgoing and perChemistry lab on a term by term basis for the aplaceto hangil, TheBulletin ing to welcome a advertising tip jbrandt@bendbulletin.com s onable. Mus t Service Professional" remainder of the 2014-2015 academic year. Classifiedisyourbestsource. Certified Coder to brought to you by These are fixed-term appointments. There have reli a ble Directory Everydaythousandsofbuyersand our team. S t rong may also be potential for lab courses/duties in transportation. The Bulletin billing background, 54f -385-5809 Serving CentralOregon sincelrta summer session2015. Some of these apServing Central Oregon since1903 s ellers of go od s a n d ser v ices do For more i nforexceptional organipointments may be reviewed for renewal or EOE/Drug free workplace businessinthesepages. They r natin, o r an y zational and comtransition to an instructional position on an anmunication skills acknowyou can't beatTheBulletin questions, please nual basis at the discretion of the Dean of c ompanied wit h call 541 -385-4717 Classified Sectionforselection OSU-Cascades. Coursesto be taught may detail and accuracy andconvenience- everyitemis include Chemistry lab courses and duties may orientation. You will include coordination/prep for lab course injust ph aonecal away. be responsible for BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS struction. Salary is commensurate with educoding Ho s p ital, TheClassifiedSectionis easy cation and experience. Required qualificaSearch the area's most ASC and c l inical The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources comprehensive listing of lo use.Everyitemis categorized tions include an advanced degree (M.S.) in charges; w o rking Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of Chemistry (or closely related field) and an eviclassified advertising... andeverycategoryisindexedon with providers repre-employment drug testing, preparing pareal estate to automotive, dent commitment to cultural diversity 8 eduthe secti o n' front s p age . g arding cod i n g perwork for newly hired employees, orientacational equity. Preferred qualifications inmerchandise to sporting tion; benefit enrollment and helping employ- goods. Bulletin Classifieds Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome challenges and imclude a Ph.D. in Chemistry (or closely related provements; monthly ees keep t heir personnel and b enefit appear every day in the or need field), teaching experience at the college or aservice, yourfutureisin analyzing and r einformation current. Maintains personnel files print or on line. university level and a demonstrable committhe pages ol TheBulletin Classfied. porting of c o ding and records for the purpose of providing ment to promoting and enhancing diversity. Call 541-385-5809 trends. We offer a up-to-date reference and audit trail compli- www.bendbulletin.com For full consideration for the Chemistry lab The Bulletin full benefit package. ance. Assist with payroll processing as the senlhr crlltra onrrn alvr tsta position, applications should be received by If you are interested back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides ad03/31/2015. The Bulletin in being a part of our Serving Central Oregonsince lras vice to employees on matters in designated positive team orihuman resources areas. Establish and mainT o review posting and a pply, g o t o ented w o rkplace, tain favorable working relationships within all http://oregonstate.edu/jobs. Apply to posting Accounting please send your reWesCom departments to assist in effectively ¹0012324. You will be required to electronisume to achieving department objectives, while recally submit a letter of application describing medpracbend sponding to requests for reports, records and your experience, qualification and interest in @gmail.com Chemistry la b i n s truction a n d d u t ies, information in a professional and timely manner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to resume/vita, and names/phone ¹'s of three FIND IT! support employee actions such as promotions, professional references. transfers, hires and terminations while mainBUY IT! Inventory Accounting Analyst taining the highest level of data integrity. SELL ITr OSU is an AA/EOE/Vets/Disabled. Other duties include, processing paperwork for unemploymentand worker's compensation as Les Schwab is looking for an I nventory The Bulletin Classifieds well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves Accounting Analyst to work closely with store Project Managerfor of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the management t o id e ntify a n d an a lyze production home buildReception desk when necessary. variances within their inventory and gross ing company. Requires The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and margin results. Th e Inventory Accounting subdivision management self-motivated full-time employee to assist a Minimum two years human resources experiAnalyst performs month-end financial close of several homes under large staff and write daily clerical reports. This construction, from excaence (payroll and benefits knowledge preduties including account reconciliations and person should like working in a fast-paced enferred) in a support capacity. General knowljournal entries a n d p r e pares m onthly vation to completion. vironment and be able to meet tight deadlines edge of applicable state and federal laws. inventory reports. This position also provides Must have several years on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial expeCalifornia experience a plus. Working knowlassistance to store personnel on their daily exper. Send resume to: rience preferred. edge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong comresponsibilities such a s p o s ting/receiving constructionmana er enda mail.com a~ puter skills with the ability to proficiently use purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, Organization, flexibility, and a high level of Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. and analyzing and correcting certain system computer proficiency are essential. A solid Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able to transactions. Tick, Tock knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typmaintain highest degree of confidentiality, dising speed of at least 50 WPM is required. cretion and tact. Qualifications: TiCk, TOCk... • Ability to both work independently and Ability to work for long periods doing detail-ori...don't let time get For qualifying employees we offer benefits incontribute to overall team performance ented work is necessary. This person must cluding life insurance, short-term & long-term • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft away. Hire a understand the importance of accuracy and disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Excel thoroughness in all duties. professional out Drug test is required prior to employment. • Prior accounting coursework or experience Preferred: of The Bulletin's Excellent customer service and interpersonal EOE/Drug Free workplace • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, "Call A Service skills are required. Must enjoy working with the business administration or equivalent public. College degree or previous office exProfessional" If interested please submit resume • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP perience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free and salary expectations to systems Directory today! workplace and equal opportunity employer. hrresumesOwescom a rs.com • Experience working in teams that Pre-employment drug screening is required No phoneca//s please. implemented new accounting systems RESTAURANT prior to hiring. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent To apply, please send a resume and any writcustomer service, with over 450 stores and ing samples to: nolson © bendbulletin.com. serving central oregon since 1903 7,000 employees in the western United States. No phone inquiries please. We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash bonus. Please go to General www.lesschwab.com to apply. No phone calls Pastini Pastaria please. serving centraloregon since 1903 in theOld Mill District is hiring talented Les Schwab is proud to be an equal opportunity employer. Line Cooks Central Oregon Community College has EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NiGHT and Server/Hosts openings lis t e d bel o w . Go to to join the team. https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply Circulation Night Dock Assistant Apply online at s online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, The Bulletin is looking for a motivated, rewww. astini.com/ca2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; sponsible individual to join our Circulation Dereers or stop by be(541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, partment team and fill a vital position working tween Thursday,March 19th -5:00 PM — 7:00 PM 2pm-4pm daily. Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. 22550 Nelson Road by the Bend Airport within our circulation Dock crew. COCC is an AA/EO employer. SALES EPIC AIRCRAFT Is SEEKING Person is responsible for all dock issues: sortFreight Broker/ CANDIDATES WHO ARE... Executive Director ing, distribution, and loading all WesCom Logistics Manager for COCC Foundation products to haulers and carriers. Knowledge of A well-established 3PL • Highly Motivated •Dependable & Reliable Responsible for providing leadership for Founpackaging, transportation and d istribution company is seeking •QualityFocused • Strong Problem Solvers dation activities, fundraising opportunities, and methods, as well as inventory skills and cusqualified candidates aTeam Oriented • Organized & Professional development of grant applications. Provide tomer service skills a plus. May drive com• Mechanically Proficient .Aviation Experienced for this f a st-paced management for Foundation staff. Represent pany vehicles to transport various WesCom transportation sales the Foundation to the public, donors, College products from time to time (such as post office, position. ResponsibiliFOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: (PLEASE BRING YOUR RESUME) staff, media, and v olunteers. Bachelor's etc.). Interacts with Home Delivery Advisors, ties include developdegree + 5 -yrs management with direct Carriers, Customer Service Representatives, ing new and existing BONDING TECHNICIAN f und-raising experience r e q. $61,000and all management at The Bulletin. business to arranging Performs structural assembly of b onded $73,000/yr. Closes Mar 18. for the transportation carbon and composite parts, including surface Ability to lift 50 pounds, work night shift. Apof customers' freight prep, fit, trim & drill; bonding of major and Assistant Professorl of Chinese proximately 24 hours per week shift to start. shipments. This posiminor assemblies, mechanical fit, and assemProvide foreign language instruction in Wage DOE. All hiring is contingent on passing tion offers unlimited bly of flight controls, wing tips, and windChinese to first and second year language drug and DMV screening. commission-based inshields. sequences.Advising and student assistance. come for a committed Job Requirements: Masters in Chinese required + 2-yrs teaching Please apply by delivering a Letter of Interest individual with a pas• 1-2 years of experience working with comcollege level Chinese o r o t her f oreign and resume, 8-5, Mon. through Fri. to The sion to succeed. posite materials language req. $42,722-$49,202 for 9 mo bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave. or apply via To apply please call • Experience operating mechanical hand tools contract. Closes Mar 16. email to mewing © bendbulletin.com with a Bend WorkSource at Letter of Interest, resume, and with the job title 541-388-8070 an d FINAL ASSEMBLY TECHNICIAN Part-Time Instructor Positions in the subject line. reference J L ID Assembles and installs aircraft systems and Looking for talented individuals to teach components, including engine, propeller, 1330418. part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Materials Service Specialistlanding gear, flight controls, hydraulic systems, Serving Cenrrai nregon since1903 employment Web site at https:/ffobs.cocc.edu. control systems, and electrical harnesses. Sunriver Resort East Bend Library = 1 Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU EOE Drug Free Workplace Repositions aircraft, understands build manuJoi7Fair class credit), with additional perks. Do you like to work in a positive als 8 instructions. +++ Job Requirements: environment while processing high Thurs., March 19th • Experience operating mechanical hand tools General volumes of materials and occasionat The Homestead • Experience working with build manuals and The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our SaturThe Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with expe4:00pm -7:00pm instructions ally interacting with customers in day night shift and other shifts as needed. We rience in the Printing industry. Two years of currently have openings all nights of the week. prior web press experience is beneficial, but Skip waiting in line sua ASSEMBLY TECHNICIAN person, via phone, and electronically? Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts training can be provided. At The Bulletin you and apply online Assembles aircraft components to drawing It's a great chance to grow in a fun start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and can put your skills to work and make our ahead of time, and specifications using hand tools, bench tools, end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoproducts and services jump off the page! In be the first to and adhesives, in accordance with build environment and to make a difFersitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. addition to printing our 7-day a week newspainterview! manuals & instructions. ence in the lives of children, teens, Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a per, we also print a variety of other products Job Requirements: minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 • Ability to read and understand basic To fill out an online and adults. Two part-time positions 1/a tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of application, please engineering drawings and procedures are available. Deadline: zioo on loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackmust become knowledgeable and familiar • Experience with hand/air tools and working visit: www.destination ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup working with. hotels.com/careers March z6. with adhesives, including epoxy resins and and other tasks. For qualifying employees we We put a premium on dependability, timelisilicones offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, ness, having a positive attitude and being a CAD (Computer Aided Design) TECHNICIAN short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid team player. We offer a competitive compenTELEFUNDRAISING http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ Prepares layouts and component drawings and vacation and sick time. Drug test is required sation plan and career growth opportunities. employment for more details, designs according to engineering specificaprior to employment. This position primarily works nights, with a Tele-funding for tions. Analyzes, designs and confers with 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. application, and supplemental • Meals On Wheels engineering to address unresolved details. Please submit a completed application attenIf you are interested in fostering your talent as questionnaire. Or call (54t) 3tz-toz5 Performs routine calculations and inspects • Defeat Diabetes tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourincoming parts to verify conformance with Foundation for assistance. EOE at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, component drawings. Veterans (OPVA) dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Pressroom Manager, at Job Requirements: obtained upon request by contacting Kevin anelson@wescom a ers.com • Strong computer skills 8 basic CAD experiEldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). with your resume, references and salary hisSeniors and a/I ence and/or coursework No phone calls please. Only completed applitory/requirements. No phone calls please. others we/come. • Highly prefer proficiency with AutoCAD & D ESCH U T E S P U B L I C cations will be considered for this position. No Drug testing is required prior to employment. Microsoft Office Suite software resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reThe Bulletin is a drug free work place and Mon-Thur. • Able to lift materials weighing up to 25 Ibs quired prior to employment. EOE. EOE. 4:30-8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour. For more information, visit The Bulletin The Bulletin Servmg Central Oregon snre 1903 www.epicaircralt.com or serving central oregon since19as email kellys@epicaircraft.com. Call 541-382-8672
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[Pp op ~Q DID YOU KNOW that Bayliner 185 2006 Open 12-3 Looking foryour next PINNACLE 1990 Tioga 24' Class C not only does newsopen bow. 2nd owner • e~ emp/oyee? 30', clean. Bought new in 2000, 20979 Avery Ln. paper media reach a — low engine hrs. Place a Bulletin help Rear walk-around currently under 21K New Home, Huge HUGE Audience, they — fuel injected V6 wanted ad today and bed. No smokers, miles, exc. shape, Lot In Orion Greens caution when puralso reach an EN— Radio & Tower. new tires, profesreach over 60,000 no mildew, no Mollie Jurgenson, chasing products or I GAGED AUDIENCE. Great family boat sionally winterized readers each week. leaks. $8500. Broker services from out of Discover the Power of Priced to sell. RV PACKAGE-2006 541-306-7268 every year, cut-off Your classified ad 732 541-815-5248 Newspaper AdvertisMonaco Monarch, 31 ', I the area. 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Get Results! 61057 Ruby Peak miles, hard & soft top, 5 I Attorney General's On-site credit This commercial Find It in Stored in T errebLn. Call 385-5809 or speed manual, $1 1,000 g Office C o n s umer g approval team, building offers exonne. 541-548-5174 place your ad on-line 541-815-6319 Charm and Value I Protection hotline atI The Bulletin Clessiffeds! cellent exposure web site presence. 541-385-5808 In Hidden Hills at I 1-877-877-9392. along desirable NW 16' Cata Raft We Take Trade-Ins! ShelleyGriffin, bendbulletin.com Sell an Item 6th Street. 2 Ouffitter oars, 2 Broker Tech specialists get Get your Currently housing Cataract oars, 3 NRS BIG COUNTRY RV paid to o ffer y o ur 541-280-3804 775 The Redmond 8" Ouffitter blades and Bend: 541-330-2495 business customer experience TheGarnerGroup.oom Spokesman newsRedmond: l ots of gear, all i n Truck Driver Manufacturedl r eview a t App l e 541-548-5254 paper offices, the "very good to exc." FedEx Ground Mobile Homes stores! Visit 2,748 sq. ft. space is condition plus custom www.Shop.BestMark. Line Haul Driver GROWINQ perfect for If it's under$500 camp/river tables and List Your Home Requirements: Cur- com to register or call owner/user. Two bags, more!. $2,700 JandMHomes.com The Bulletin's you can place it in r ent Class A C D L (800) 969-8477. private offices and 541 318 1322. 745 We Have Buyers with an ad in "Call A Service with 1 yr experience; The Bulletin generous open Additional information Get Top Dollar Homes for Sale medical The Bulletin's card, spaces. Three Professional" Directory and photos on Financing Available. Classifieds for: doubles experience parking places in request, too! is all about meeting 541-548-5511 "Call A Service FSBO — Seriously back + street parkpreferred. Must pass your needs. Illlotivated & Ready! Ads published in "Wa $10 • 3 lines, 7 days drug t est, b a c king. $259,000. Professional" 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sqft tercraft" include: Kay Call on one of the ground check, have Quality home, $16 • 3 lines, 14 days Directory aks, rafts and motor Call Graham Dent clean driving record. professionals today! Quality price. $205K. Ized 541-383-2444 personal Night run, full time. 541-279-8783 (Private Party ads only) watercrafts. Fo COMPASS If interested please "boats" please se Commercial contact Perry at NOTICE Class 870. 541-420-9863. 632 All real estate adver541-385-5809 AptiMultiplex General tised here in is subTRUCK DRIVER ject to th e F ederal WANTED re gC CHECK YOURAD Fair Housing A c t, Must have doubles 850 which makes it illegal endorsement. 880 Snowmobiles Call 54!3855809topromote yourserme• Advertisefor 28daysstartingatrlf0 Irraerga!acaargagago'er e ar we ggal to advertise any prefLocal run. erence, limitation or Motorhomes Truck is parked in Woodsman Country discrimination based Madras. 541-475-4221 L odge. AA A A pon race, color, reliproved. Unique 15 Building/Contracting Handyman WILDLAND gion, sex, handicap, Landscaping/Yard Care unit motel in Creson the first day it runs FIREFIGHTERS familial status or naee cent, OR on busy to make sure it is corGFP Enterprises Inc./ rect. "Spellcheck" and Hwy 97, 45 miles NOTICE: Oregon state tional origin, or intenNOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone I DO THAT! ASP Fire - currently tion to make any such 4-place enclosed Interscape Contractors Law n orth o f Cra t e r human errors do ocseeking qualified appli- cur. If this happens to Lake. T o tally rewho con t racts for preferences, l i mita(ORS 671) requires all snowmobile trailer construction work to c ants f o r CR W B , your ad, please contions or discrimination. state 2007 Winnebago businesses that admodeled wl log furw/ Rocky Mountain pkg, be licensed with the ENGB, FFT 1 /ICT5 tact us ASAP so that We will not knowingly $8500. 541-379-3530 Outlook Class "C" vertise t o pe r form niture and log cabin Construction ContracAND FFT2. No exp. accept any advertis31', clean, nonLandscape Construcdecor. F u lly f u rcorrections and any tors Board (CCB). An necessary: Entry level ing for real estate smoking exc. cond. tion which includes: YAMAHA 700 2000 nished 3 Bdrm, 2 adjustments can be active license and advanced training p lanting, deck s , More info.$49,900 1/2 bath o w ners which is in violation of 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 made to your ad. means the contractor Handyman/Remodeli fences, arbors, provided. $14-$32/hr . this law. All persons Polaris Fusion 900, 541-447-9268 ng quarters. Downsiz541-385-5809 is bonded & insured. DOE. For more infor- The Bulletin Classified ing. water-features, and inEver y thing are hereby informed only 788 mi., new mirf Verify the contractor's Residential/Commercial stallation, repair of irmation please reply to that all dwellings ad- rors, covers, custom stays. Call for apCCB l i c ense at Small Jobs to g rigation systems to be hr@gfpenterprises.com vertised are available skis, n e w rid e -on pointment , • Etdea USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! www.hirealicensedLreure Room Remodeta r ide-off t r ailer w i t h l icensed w it h th e or call 541-967-8425. on an equal opportu1-541-433-2710. contractor.com Garage Orgneizauon Landscape ContracVisit us and apply on Door-to-door selling with $1,250,000 OBO. nity basis. The Bulle- spare, + much more. or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit $6,995. Call for deHome Inspecrioe Repairs the web www.gfpemertin Classified The Bulletin recomtails. 541-420-6215 number is to be ingency.com Drug Free fast results! It's the easiest gualiry, Hoaesr Work Need to get an mends checking with cluded in all adver24' Mercedes Benz workplace - EOE - Vet- way in the world to sell. Open Sunday1-4pm the CCB prior to conad in ASAP? 860 Dennis 541.317 9768 tisements which indiPrism, 2015 Model G, erans encouraged to 20120 Winston Lp., ccs¹151573Bggdedllnrared tracting with anyone. cate the business has The Bulletin Classified You can place it Motorcycles & Accessories Mercedes Diesel engine, Some other t rades apply Bend a bond, insurance and 18+ mpg, auto trans, 541-385-5809 online at: also req u ire addifully loaded with LandscapingNard Care workers compensational licenses and Looking for your next www.bendbulletin.com tion for their employdouble-expando, 634 employee? certifications. and only 5200 miles. ees. For your protecPlace a Bulletin help AptJMultiplex NE Bend Perfect condition tion call 503-378-5909 541-385-5809 wanted ad today and Computer/Cabling Install or use our website: onlv $92K. ' eht' reach over 60,000 Call 541-526-1201 www.lcb.state.or.us to Znue4 Qua/rjI Call for Speciafs! 738 FSBO Big Cascade readers each week. or see at: check license status Limited numbers avail. Multiplexes for Sale Harley Dyna Wide Glide L'a~< C'~ r,. Mountain views from Computer tratmeg, 3404 Dogwood Ave., Your classified ad before contracting with 1, 2 & 3 bdrms 2003 custom paint, this 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath, in Redmond. Full Service will also appear on the business. Persons Set Up & Repair w/d hookups, extras, 13,000 orig 3727 sq.ft. Tumalo bendbulletin.com Landscape doing land scape patios or decks. miles, like new, health from the comfort ef Home on private 5.25 forces sale. Sacrifice which currently maintenance do not Mountain Glen Management your own home! acre estate with RV r equire an LC B l i receives over 1.5 541-383-9313 $10,000 obo. shop and two s tall million page views cense. Professionally managed by 541-633-7856. Spring Clean Up barn. $829,000. Call every month at Norris & Stevens, Inc. •Leaves 541-419-8286 no extra cost. 30+ yearsexperence •Cones DUPLEX by owner SE HD Fat Bo 1996 648 Bulletin Classifieds tarrth computers. COLLINS •Needles Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath Allegro 32' 2007, like Excell Get Results! 748 ent t eac her, pati ent e Houses for • Debris Hauling new, only 12,600 miles. ImowIadgable in Windows ea., 14yrs old. Great Call 385-5809 Rent General Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 cond. $219,900 .karen- Northeast Bend Homes or MacComputers. or place transmission, dual exWeed FreeBark michellen Ohotmail.com. applications, Aeratien/llethetchiag your ad on-line at Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, PUBLISHER'S 541-815- 7707 haust. Loaded! Auto-levconfigurationor repairs. & FlowerBeds bendbulletin.com • Spring Clean-up 1692 sq.ft., RV parkeling system, 5kw gen, NOTICE Call Dirk forquote or i ng, m t n vie w s , power mirrors w/defrost, • Mowing 'Edging All real estate adverappointment Lawn Renovation Completely slide-outs with aw$259,900. P r incipal tising in this newspa- • O p en Houses Aeration - Dethatching • Proning 'Weedeating 541-647-1341 or Rebuilt/Customized 2 B roker @ J o h n L nings, rear c a mera, 519-997-8291 per is subject to the Overseed • FertiTizing ~Haoling 2012/2013 Award WIMI)RK) Scott, 541-480-3393. trailer hitch, driyer door F air H ousing A c t Compost Winner • Grounds Keeping Open 12-3 w/power window, cruise, ! @EKC ® DL which makes it illegal Top Dressing Showroom Cond. exhaust brake, central Debris Removal ong-nrne or 1946 NE Otelah to a d vertise "any 750 Many Extras vac, satellite sys. Asking ueakly sargiggaoption Ct. preference, limitation Landscape Redmond Homes Low Miles. $67,500. 503-781-8812 FREE ESTIMATES or disc r imination 3-Story Townhome $15,000 Maintenance Carl now to scaedulg! Fully Remodeled based on race, color, 541-548-4807 Private Setting on 1.48 Full or Partial Service Rob Davis, j41-480religion, sex, handi$714 acre! Custom 3 bdrm, 2.5 •Mowing gEdging BONDED a IN URED Broker cap, familial status, bath, 2450 SF home has • Pruning gWeeding 865 541-280-9589 marital status or nabonus rm, shop, canal 8 528 Water Management TheGarnerGroup.com tional origin, or an inCPR nice Mtn view! 1075 NW ATVs Will Haul Away Loans & Mortgages tention to make any Newell Ave., Terrebonne. Fertilizer included Landscaping such pre f erence, By owner, $359,000. Call 2010 Polaris Sportsman Fleetwood D i scovery FREE m with monthly program WARNING limitation or discrimi541-923-4995 to see 850XP EPS, fully loaded, 40' 2003, diesel, w/all Webring your For Salvage h "-'. The Bulletin recomnation." Familial sta$6950. 541-318-0210 landscape back to life options - 3 slide outs, Weekly, monthly mends you use cau- tus includes children ; Any LocaMon. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, or one time service. 870 tion when you proSealed Bid Real Estate Auction under the age of 18 .4 Removal etc., 34,000 m i les. vide personal living with parents or CHS Inc., A Corporation of Minnesota ("CHS" Boats & Accessories Wintered in h e ated 1Mso Cleanups Managing information to compa- legal cus t odians, or the "Auctioneer") announces the sale via shop. $78,995 obo. <BI Cleanouts i nies offering loans or pregnant women, and seal bid auction of certain real properties loCentral Oregon 541-447-8664 credit, especially Landscapes t ~ i people securing cus- cated in Jefferson County, Oregon. those asking for adSince 2006 tody of children under Properties for Sale: Th e properties to be vance loan fees or 18. This newspaper auctioned are located at 7141 NW Boise Dr. companies from out of will not knowingly ac- ("Boise") and 2876 NW Hickory Ln., ("Hickory") Senior Discounts state. If you have 541-390-1466 cept any advertising Madras, OR 97741. Boise is approximately 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 concerns or quesCourier Service for real estate which is 157 acres and Hickory is comprised of apSame Day Response Wakeboard Boat tions, we suggest you in violation of the law. proximately 157.2 acres. Each property conconsult your attorney O ur r e aders a r e tains a residence. Each property, and any inI/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, We will distribute Four Winds 32' tons of extras, low hrs. or call CONSUMER hereby informed that cluded personal property, will be sold as locally in C.O. Full wakeboard tower, 2010 HOTLINE, all dwellings adver- separate single lots. More detailed informaPainting/Wall Covering or do line hauls Triton V-10 with 1-877-877-9392. light bars, Polk audio tised in this newspa- tion on the properties is contained within an SERVING CENTRAL OREGON between C.O. and speakers throughout, 13,000 miles. Large information packet outlining the full details of per are available on since 2003 PDX area. BANK TURNED YOU completely wired for slide, Sleeps 7. Lots equal opportunity the auction (the "Information Packet"). DOWN? Private party an amps/subwoofers, unLooking for loads for Residential a Commercial of storage. 5000lb basis. To complain of Registration: All potential bidders shall regisderwater lights, fish our 26' Freightliner will loan on real eshitch. Like new. Sprinkler d iscrimination cal l ter by providing contact info to CHS as proBox truck (26,000 finder, 2 batteries custate equity. Credit, no HUD t o l l-free a t vided below. Registered bidders will receive a $51,900 Activation/Repair tom black paint job. GVW) with 4K lift problem, good equity 1-800-877-0246. The copy of the Information Pack. 541-325-6813 Back Flow Testlnfa ate. Lic. 8 Bonded. $12,500 541-815-2523 is all you need. Call toll free t e lephone Bid Submittal: Bids from registered bidders ontact Bill at Oregon Land Mort- number for the hear- will be accepted via email, fax, mail or hand European MAINTENANCE wsdahl@bendgage 541-388-4200. ing i m paired is delivered until 5:00 p.m. on March 27, 2015, at • Thatch dt Aerate broadband.com. Professional which time and place bidding will be closed. LOCAL MONEY:Webuy 1-800-927-9275. ~g lde cpe • Spring Clean up Geee All bids shall be made on the form included in i~~~ Painter secured trust deeds & • Weekly Mowing the Information Packet. note,some hard money Need to get an ad 8c Edglng Repaint Award: The property will be offered to the loans. Call Pat Kellev • Bi-Monthly & 541-382-3099 ext.1 8. highest qualifying bidder subject to the terms Specialist! in ASAP? Freightliner 1994 and conditions described in the Information Monthly Malntenance 2007 Bennington Custom 573 Oregon Llcense Packet. Both lots are subject to an unpub• Bark, Rock, Etc. Pontoon Boat Motorhome lished reserve. CHS will consider seller-fi¹186147 LLC Business Opportunities Fax It te 541-322-7253 Good classified adstell 2275 GL, 150hp Will haul small SUV nancing. the essential facts in an Honda VTEC, less LAMlSCAPP1G or toys, and pull a 541-815-2888 The Bulletin Classifieds Inquiries: All inquiries regarding this auction WARNING The Bulletin interesting Manner.Write than 110 hours, trailer! Powered by • Landscape shall be made in writing no less than 48 hours recommends that you original owner, lots from the readers view- not 8.3 Cummins with 6 Constructlon prior to the bidding deadline. CHS will ati nvestigate ever y of extras; Tennesthe seller's. Convert the 687 speed Allison auto tempt to promptly respond to all inquiries, but • Water Feature phase of investment see tandem axle facts into benefits. Show trans, 2nd owner. Commercial for reserves the right to limit or withhold its reopportunities, espeInstallat!on/Ma!nt. trailer. Excellent the reader how the item wi l l Very nice! $53,000. sponses. All responses will be forwarded to c ially t h ose f r o m RentiLease condition,$23,500 • Pavers 541-350-4077 help them in someway. registered bidders. out-of-state or offered 503-646-1804 This • Renovatlons Auctioneer Contact Info: Bidder registration, • Interior and Exterior by a person doing 4700 sq. ft. shop and advertising tip inquiries, and bids shall be directed to CHS • Irrlgatlons business out of a lo- 2500 sq. ft. office on • Family-Owned • g brought to you by Inc., A Corporation of Minnesota c/o Sharon Ads published in the I cal motel or hotel. In- 1.53 acres for lease I Installat!on • Residential R "Boats" classification Smith, Bryant, Lovlien & Jarvis, P.C. as folvestment o f f e rings in NW Bend, quiet The Bulletin Commercial Senior Discounts lows: Email: smith@bljlawyers.com include: Speed, fishmust be r e gistered area, excellent conMeet singles right now! Bonded and Insured • 40 years experience Fax: 541-389-3386; Mail/Delivery: 591 SW Mill ing, drift, canoe, with the Oregon De- struction, perfect for No paid o perators, View Way, Bend, OR 97702 house and sail boats. • Senior Discounts partment of Finance. electronic assembly 541-8154458 just real people like Domestic Services For all other types of We suggest you con- plant. Lots of parkLcs¹s759 • 5.year Warranties you. Browse greetDisclaimer: This invitation to bid only contains watercraft, please go sult your attorney or ing. Was auto shop. ings, exchange mes- HOUSE CLEANING Aakabout our a synopsis of the auction. A full description of to Class 875. call CON S UMER Call 702-526-0353. Cleaning homes in TURN THE PAGE sages and connect the terms, conditions, and procedures of this 541-385-5809 SPRING SPECIAL! HOTLINE, Shop can be leased Bend for 18 years. live. Try it free. Call For More Ads auction is contained in the Information Packet, 1-503-378-4320, separate from office rate, call Rosie Call 541 337 6149 now: 8 77-955-5505. Hourly which shall control the conduct of this auction. 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. 541-385-0367. The Bulletin space. CCB¹204918 Servin cencralore on since 1903 (PNDC)
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The Bulletin
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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
Popular Pah!isch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 2 miles of walking trails. Tour a variety of single level aod 2 story plans.
Recently finished Pah!isch Homes Model in NE Bend. Homes feature quartz counters, laminate flooring, gas cooking, stainless steel 20802 NE Sierra Drive appliances and all the DirectionarNorth on Boyd Acres, quality Pahlisch Homes is righr on Sierra OR north on 18th known for, Now selling Pom Empire,legon 8!erra. Lookfor Phase Two — stop by for SlgrK more information. Homes from the
20878SEGoldenGatePlace,Bend
Directions:East on Reed flfarfet ttd,, firn exff aI roundaboutonIo 15th, at Road Detour Slgn turn le ft on Ferguson. Right at SageCreek Drive, left at Manhae Lane, righi at HOSted 6 LiSted byr Gokfgn Gate.
TEAM DELAY Principal Broker
EDIE DELAY
541-420-2$50
H omes St~ g Mid-II2008
Hosted 6 Listed by:
RHIANNA KUNKLER ABR
541-506-0959
$220,000s
THE BULLETINโ ข SUNDAY, MARCH 15 2015 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIEDโ ข 541-385-5809 880
881
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179
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 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
881
Travel Trailers
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993
882
Fifth Wheels CHECK YOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it iso correct. "Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Heartland P r owler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-liv-
ing area & l a r ge closet. Large enough Keystone Everest 5th to live in, but easy to Wheel, 2004 tow! 15' power aw- Model 323P - 3 slides, ning, power hitch 8 rear island-kitchen,
stabilizers, full s i ze fireplace, 2 TV's, queen bed, l a rge CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner shower, porcelain sink w/surround sound, A/C, & toilet. custom bed, ceiling fan, $26,500. 541-999-2571 W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. Pe()asus 27' 2005 FQS, $19,750.More pics 14 slide, lots of extras and plenty of storage available.541-923-6408 inside & out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in Laredo 31'2006, heated garage when not 5th wheel, fully S/C in use. $15,750. one slide-out. 541-526-1361 Awning. Like new, RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Say "goodbuyo to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
Need help fixing stuff'? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,
You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Redmond:
541-548-5254
885
Cano pies & Campers Adventurer 2013 86 FB truck camper, $18,800. 2205 dry weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i ce floorplan. Also available 2010 Chevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!
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Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
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Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
Mercury Mariner l
Ford F550 1999 7.3 Diesel Truck 2-Door 1.5 ton crane 8 welder, 227,000 miles New tires, radiator, water pump, glow
plug relay. Asking$17,900
Buick Electra 225 1964Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V8. Runs good, needs interior work, 166K miles. $9,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-480-6130
ChevroletSilverado 1500 2004, Extended Cab 6.0L V-8 cyl. VIN ยน199459. $20,998
(exp. 3/15/1 5) DLR ยน366
541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com
925
Utility Trailers Sell them in TURN THE PAGE The Bulletin Classifieds F latbed t r ailer w i t h For More Ads 1965 Mustang ramps, 7000 lb. ca-o The Bulletin Hard top, pacity, 26' long, 8'6 541 o385-5809 auto trans, wide, ideal for hauling 6-cylinder, brakes, power Chev Silverado hay, materials, cars, power steering, garaged, exc.cond. $2800. well maintained, o 541-420-3786 engine runs strong. 0 0 74K mi., great condi929 tion. $12,500. Automotive Wanted Must see! 541-598-7940 2005 crew cab great DONATE YOUR CAR, looking! Vinยน972932 TRUCK OR BOAT TO $19,977 HERITAGE FOR THE BLIND. Free 3 Day 908 ROBBERSON V acation, Tax D e Aircraft, Parts ductible, Free Towing, uooooo~ ~nm am All Paperwork Taken & Service 541-312-3986 Care O f. CALL Mercedes 380SL 1982 www.robberson.com 1-800-401-4106 Roadster, black on black, Dlr ยน0205. Price (PNDC) soft & hard top, excellent good thru 03/31/15 condition, always ga931 raged. 1 55 K m i l es, Automotive Parts, $11,500. 541-549-6407 CAL LW Service & Accessories TODAY% 1/3interestin Chevy Pickup 1978, Cargo box, Sears, great Columbia 400, long bed, 4x4, frame condition, $95. Financing available. up restoration. 500 541-221-8226 Cadillac eng i n e, $125,000 fresh R4 transmisFour Nokian 35x12.50 (located O Bend) 17LT tires, 50% tread sion w/overdnve, low 541-288-3333 mi., no rust, custom $150. 541-639-7501 1950 Mercury intedior and carpet, 4-dr Sedan Nerf bars for Dodge n ew wheels a n d Ground-up Dakota like new $150. restoration, tires, You must see beautiful! 541-221-8226 it! $25,000 invested. Call for details. $12,000 OBO. $35,500 Where can you find a 541-536-3869 or or best offer. helping hand? 541-420-6215. 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo- From contractors to 541-892-3789 nanza A36, new 10-550/ yard care, it's all here prop, located KBDN. in The Bulletin's $65,000. 541-419-9510 What are you www.N4972M.com "Call A Service looking for? HANGAR FOR SALE. Professional" Directory You'll find it in 30x40 end unit T Ford F-350 Truck Crew SubaruwheelsH14o hanger in Prineville. The Bulletin Classifieds Cab 1999, set of 4, $100. Dry walled, insulated, (Photo for /0ustretiononly) 541-385-6168. and painted. $23,500. 4x4, 6.8L V-10 cyl. Tom, 541.768.5546 541-385-5809 932 VIN ยนA37789. $9,888 Antique & (exp. 3/15/15) DLR ยน366 Classic Autos
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BMW X3 35i 2010
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.) $22,500. 541-915-9170
2010.Only 56k m i.. Vin ยนJ20929 16,977 ROBBERSON oI o c 0 oo ~
541-447-5184.
T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-362-6998.
V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978
A Private Collection
1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-362-6038
Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023
~
smolichmotors.com
VolvoXC60 T6 2011, AWD, 3.0L 1-6 cyl VIN ยน176453. $28,977.
Mountaineer 1999
Bargain Corral price $4,998 ROBBERSON
(exp. 3/1 5/1 5) DLR ยน366
nsaoa ~
~
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ยน0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5 541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com
975
BMyy328i XDrive 2011, 3.0L 1-6 cyl. VIN ยนN81801. $24,995. (exp. 3/15/15) DLR ยน366
SMOLICH
V O LV O 541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com
Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily
Subaru Forester 1998 Buick LeSabre 2005 170k miles., red, two custom, exc. cond., sets tires, daughter GMC Yukon XL tires 40%, 3800 Series moved to Sweden 1500 SLT2013, II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., needs $. Clean, no 4WD, 5.3L V-8 cyl. pets. Dependable car. 2nd owner. $7700 obo VIN ยน213994. $35,998. 541-430-7400 or $4200. (exp. 3/15/15) DLR ยน366 541-815-8467 541-647-0657
Toyota Highlander 541-548-'I 448
smolichmotors.com Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
2008 Sport, 3rd row, lots more! ยน024803 $19,977 ROBBERSON olocooo ~
BuickLeSabre Limited Sedan 2000, 3.8L V-6 cyl VIN ยน166929. $2,688. (exp. 3/15/15) DLR ยน366
II IR K R
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ยน0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
541-548-1448 smolichmotors.com
Tribeca 2009 AYVD
(exp. 3/1 5/1 5)
Vin ยน064947 Stock ยน44696A
$13,999 or $175/rn.,
This is a nice one! Vinยน401035
$ 2900 down 72 m o 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
S UBA RU oooooooooooo.ooll
F ord Ranger X L T 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, 877-266-3821 tow pkg, runs great, Dlr ยน0354
$12,977 ROBBERSON oI II o 0 o II ~
Ih SK R I
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ยน0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
$5200. 541-385-4790.
A dd color photos for pets, real estate, auto 8 m o r e !
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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
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merchandise and automotive categories.
The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com To place your photo ad, visit us online at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or c a ll with questions,
5 41 -3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
541-548-1448
4x4 and ready for fun! Vin ยนJ28963
ยฎ
are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul jt all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwilln6ed. Roomtogrowinyour a t ough V8 engine will g6t the job call right away. $500 own little paradise! Call now. done on the ranch.
$3,995.
(exp. 3/15/15) DLR ยน366
smolichmotors.com
In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds. I
2.3L 1-4 cyl VIN ยน005636.
Automobiles
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541-548-1448
HondaOdyssey LX Van 1998,
IM ROR
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ยน0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
Honda CRV2007, ~
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
Vans
o-o~I
541-480-1868
Just too many collectibles?
935
CHECKYOUR AD on the first day of publication. If a n e r ror may occur in your ad, p lease contact u s and we will be happy to fix it as soon as we can. Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, S at. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
G6 SUNDAY, MARCH 15, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
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Legal Notices
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LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE File No. 7236.25892 R e f erence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Eric Bozovich and Kelley Kersch, a s grantor, to R e gional Trustee Services Corporation, as trustee, in favor of Mortgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for WMC Mort g age Corp., its successors and assigns, as beneficiary, dated 09/01/06, r e corded 09/06/06, in the mortgage records of DESCHUTES C o unty,
Oregon,
as
2006-60939 and subsequently assigned to U.S. Bank N.A., as trustee, on behalf of t he holders, of t h e J.P. Morgan Mortgage Acquisition Trust 2006-WMC4 A s s et Backed Pass-Through Certificates, S e ries 2006-WMC4 by Assignment recorded as 2014-031896, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: Lot Thirty-six, Block Eight, PONDEROSA PINES IN FOURTH ADDITION, Des c hutes C ounty, Oreg o n PROPERTY ADDRESS: 15202 PONDEROSA LOOP LA PINE, OR 97739 Both the beneficiary and t he t r ustee h a v e elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due t h e fo l lowing sums: monthly payments of $764.92 beinning 07/01/09 and 1,026.58 beginning 1 0/1/1 0; plus l a t e charges of $ 3 8.24 each month beginning 07/1 6/09; plus prior accrued l a te charges of $ 2 5.13; p lus advances o f $14,596.76 that represent property inspections, p roperty preselvations, prope rty valuation a n d paid foreclosure fees and costs; together with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default inspections, property preservations, property valuation and paid foreclosure fees and; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of the above described real property and i ts inte r est therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared all s u ms owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed i mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $154,639.02 with interest thereon at the rate of 5 percent per
annum
be g inning named in ORS 86.778 l a t e has the right, at any charges of $ 3 8.24 time prior to five days each month begin- before the date last ning 07/16/09 until set for the sale, to paid; plus prior ac- have this foreclosure crued late charges of proceeding dismissed $25.13; p l u s ad- and the trust deed vances of $14,596.76 reinstated by payment that represent prop- to the beneficiary of erty ins p ections, the e ntire a mount property p r e serva- then due (other than tions, property valua- such portion of the tion and paid foreclo- principal as would not sure then be due had no e es a n d cos t s ; default occurred) and t ogether w it h t i t l e by curing any other expense, costs, default complained of t rustee's fees a n d herein that is capable attorneys fees of being cured by i ncurred herein b y tendering the reason of said default; performance required any f urther s u ms under the obligation or advanced b y the t rust deed, and i n b eneficiary for t h e addition to paying said protection o f the sums or tendering the above described real performance property a n d its necessary to cure the interest therein; and default, by paying all costs and expenses prepayment penalties/premiums, if actually incurred in enforcing applicable. the WHEREFORE, notice obligation and trust hereby is given that deed, together with the undersigned trustee's and trustee will on June 8, a ttorney's fees n o t 2015 at the hour of exceeding the 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in amounts provided by accord w i t h the said OR S 8 6 .778. from standard o f tim e Requests established by ORS p ersons named i n 0 6/01/09; plus
187.110,
at
the
following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, C o unty of DESCHUTES, State o f Oregon, sell a t public auction to the h ighest bidder f o r cash the interest in the described real property which t he grantor had or h ad power to convey at the
t i m e of
the
execution by grantor of the t r ust d eed, t ogether wit h a n y i nterest which t h e grantor or grantor's successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the cos t s and expenses of s a le, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely
ORS
8 6 . 77 8 for
reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan In documents. construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include their respective successors i n interest, if a n y . Without limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representation or warranties, O r egon l aw r e quires t h e trustee to state in this n otice t ha t s o me residential p r operty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to be toxic. Prospective purchasers o f res i dential property should be aware of this potential d anger b e fore deciding to place a bid for this property at the trustee's sale. The trustee's r u le s of auction m a y be accessed at www.nolthwesttrustee .com a nd are incorporated by this reference. You may also access s a le status at www.northwesttrustee.com and www.USA-Foreclosur e.com. For f u rther information, p l ease contact: Kathy
c ommunicated in a written request that complies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to t he tru s t ee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post officebox address set forth in t his n otice. Due t o pot e ntial conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will o n l y re c eive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o Find exactlywhat available a t the trustee's web s ite, you arelookingforinthe www.nolthwesttrustee .com. Notice is further CLASSN'IEDS given that any person
Taggalt No r thwest Trustee Services, Inc. P.O. Box 997 Bellevue, WA 98009-0997 586-1900 BOZOVICH, E R IC and KERSCH, KELLEY (TS¹ 7236.25892) 1002.277572-File No. LEGAL NOTICE TRUSTEE'S NOTICE O F SALE File N o . 7236.25635 R e f erence is made to that c ertain t rust d e e d made by Danna K Frint, Del R Frint, as g rantor, t o Firs t American Title Insurance Company of Oregon, as trustee, in favor o f M o r tgage Electronic Registration Systems, Inc. as nominee for American Brokers Conduit, its successors and assigns, as b eneficialy, dated 05/18/07, recorded 05/23/07, in the mortgage records of Deschutes County,
Oregon,
as
2007-29230 and sub-
sequently assigned to U.S. Bank National Association, as trustee for J.P. Morgan Mortgage Trust 2007-S3 by Assignment recorded as 2013-019856, covering the following described real property situated in said county and state, to wit: A tract of land located in the South half of the Northwest quarter (S 1/2 NW 1/4) of Section 13, Township 14 South, Range 13 East of the Willamette Meridian, Des c hutes County, Oregon, more particularly described as follows: Beginning at a point from which the West quarter corner of said Section 13 bears South 89 degrees 30' 18" West, 1330.63 feet, thence North, 630.68 f eet; thence South 66 degrees 34' 52" East, 153.77 feet; thence South 52 degrees 00' 37" East, 463.30 feet; thence South 0 degrees 29' 42" East, 280.00 feet; thence South 89 degrees 30' 18" West, 508.69 feet to the point of beginning. Exce p ting therefrom the Northeasterly 25 feet and the Easterly 25 feet which is reserved for roadway p u rposes and that portion lying within the right of way of the Lambert Road. PROPERTY ADDRESS: 3800 Northeast Xenolith Street Terrebonne, OR 97760 Both the beneficiary a n d the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to O regon Revlsed Statutes 86.752(3); the default for which foreclosure is made is grantors' failure to pay when due t h e fo l lowing sums: monthly payments of $ 2 ,715.42 beginning 08/01/09; plus late charges of $135.77 each month beginning 08/1 6/09 p lus advances o f $6,672.00 that repre-
sent property preservations, property inspections and paid foreclosure fees and costs; together with title expense, costs, t rustee's fees a n d a ttorney's fees i n curred herein by reason of said default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection of t h e a b ove described real property and its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has d eclared al l s u m s owing on the obligation secured by the trust deed mmediately due and payable, said sums being the following, to wit: $532,000.00 with interest thereon at the
rate of 6.125 percent per annum beginning 07/01/09; plus l a te charges of $135.77 each monthbeginning 08/1 6/09 until paid; p lus advances o f $6,672.00 that represent p r operty preselvations, property inspections and paid foreclosure fees and costs; together with title e x pense, costs, trustee's fees and attorneys fees incurred herein by reason of said default; any f urther s u ms advanced b y the b eneficiary for t h e protection o f the above described real property a n d its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby is given that the undersigned trustee will on May 26, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A.M. in accord w i t h the standard o f tim e established by ORS 187.110, at the following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o u nty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of B end, C ounty o f Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which t he grantor had or had power to convey at the t i m e of the execution by grantor of the t r ust d eed, t ogether with a n y i nterest w hich t h e grantor or g rantor's successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the cos t s and expenses of s a l e, including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .786 a n d 86.789 must be timely communicated in a written request that c omplies with t h at statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery
to t he tru s t ee's physical offices (call for address) or by first class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post officebox address set forth in this notice. Due t o pot e ntial conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will o n l y re c e ive information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee .com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the e ntire a m ount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or t rust deed, and i n addition to paying said sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n ot exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .778. Requests from p ersons named i n ORS 8 6 . 77 8 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include their respective successors i n interest, if a n y. Without limiting the trustee's disclaimer of representation or warranties, O r egon l aw r e quires t h e trustee to state in this n otice t ha t so m e residential p r operty sold at a trustee's sale may have been used in manufacturing methamphetamines, the chemical components of which are known to be toxic. Prospective purchasers of residential p r operty should be aware of
this potential danger the following, to wit: notice that some resib efore deciding t o $146,563.24 with indential property sold place a bid for this terest thereon at the at a t rustee's sale property at the rate of 5.50000 per- may have been used t rustee's sale. T he cent per annum be- in manufacturing t rustee's r ules o f g inning August 1 , methamphetamines, auction m a y be 2013; plus prior ac- the chemical compoaccessed at crued late charges of nents of which are www.northwesttrustee $ 127.32; plus a d - known to be t oxic. .com a nd are vances of $1,183.00; Prospective purchasincorporated by this p lus e s crow a d - ers o f re s i dential reference. You may vances of $2,412.76; property should be a lso a ccess s a l e plus fees of $53.00; aware of this potenstatus at together with title ex- tial danger before dewww.northwesttrustee pense, costs, trustee's ciding to place a bid .com and fees and a ttorney's for this property at the www.USA-Foreclosur fees incurred herein trustee's sale In cone.com. For f u rther by reason of said de- struing this notice, the information, p l ease fault; any further sums singular includes the contact: Kathy advanced by the ben- p lural, t h e wor d Taggart N o r thwest eficiary for the protec- "grantor" includes any Trustee Services, Inc. tion of the above de- successor in interest P.O. Box 997 scribed property and to the grantor as well Bellevue, WA its interest t herein; as any other person 98009-0997 586-1900 and prepayment pen- owing an obligation, FRINT, DANNA F and a lties/premiums, i f the performance of DEL R (TS¹ applicable. WHERE- which is secured by 7236.25635) FORE, n o tice is the trust deed, and 1002.277207-File No. hereby given that the the words "trustee" undersigned trustee and beneficiary" inLEGAL NOTICE on May 1, 2015, at clude their respective TRUSTEE'S NOTICE will hour of 11:00 AM, successors in interest, OF SALE. Reference the if any. Robinson Tait, is made to that cer- i n accord with t he of time es- P .S., Authorized t o tain trust deed made standard t ablished b y OR S sign on behalf of the by Chris Kimmel, a 87.110, a t Des - trustee, 710 Second married person and 1 Patrick McMichael, a chutes County Court- Ave., Suite 710, SeFront Entrance, attle, WA 98104. s ingle person a s house NW Bond grantor, t o F i d elity 1164 S treet, B end, O R PUBLIC NOTICE National Title Ins Co 97701, in the City of as trustee, in favor of Bend, County of DesThe Bend Park 8 Wells Fargo Bank, chutes, State of OrRecreation D i s trict N.A. as beneficiary, sell at public Board of Directors will dated December 14, egon, 2009, recorded Janu- auction to the highest meet in a work sesbidder for cash the s ion at 5 : 3 0 p m ary 4, 2010, in the mortgage records of interest in the r eal Tuesday, March 17, Deschutes C o unty, property d e s cribed 2015 at the district ofOregon, as D o cu- a bove, which t h e fice, 799 SW Columor had bia, Bend, Oregon. ment No. 2010-00051, grantortohad convey at A genda topics i n covering the following power time of the execu- clude Special Disdescribed real prop- the tion by grantor of the tricts Association of erty situated in said trust deed t ogether Oregon, V o lunteer county and state, to any in t erest P rogram, Nee d s wit: LOT 3, BLOCK 2, with which the grantor or A s s istance ROMAINE VILLAGE, grantor's successors Based Report and FY 15-16 UNIT 2, DESinterest acquired Plan and a L a tino CHUTES COUNTY, in the execution of Outreach Update. A O REGON. P R O P- aftertrust deed, to sat- regular bus i ness ERTY AD D RESS: the 60921 McMullin Drive, isfy the foregoing ob- meeting will convene Bend, O R 9 7 7 02. ligations thereby se- at 7:00 pm for t he There is a default by cured and the costs board to consider the expenses of the Consent Agenda. the grantor or other and person owing an obli- sale, including reacharges by The board will congation or by their suc- sonable trustee. Notice is duct a n ex e cutrve cessor in interest, the the given that any session following the performance of which further me e t ing is secured by said person named in ORS business has the right, pursuant t o OR S trust deed, or by their 86.778 at any time that is not 1192.660(2)(h) for the successor in interest, later than five days with respect to provi- before the date last purpose of consultation with legal counsions therein which for the sale, to sel concerning legal authorize sale in the set have this foreclosure rights and duties reevent of d efault of proceeding dismissed garding current litigasuch provision. The default for which fore- and the trust deed tion or litigation likely r einstated by p a y - to be filed and ORS closure is made is grantors' failure to pay ment to the benefi- 192.660(2)(e) for the of t h e e n tire purpose of discussing when due the follow- ciary ing sums: monthly a mount the n d u e real property transacthan such por- tions. payments of (other of the principle as $1,061.10 beginning tion not then be due T he a g enda a n d September 1, 2013; would monthly payments of had no default oc- s upplementary r e and by curing ports are posted on $1,052.49 beginning curred) March 1, 2014; plus any o t her d e fault the district's website, complained of herein www.bendparksanprior accrued l a te charges of $127.32; that is capable of be- drec.org. For more ing cured by tender- information call p lus advances o f the performance 541-389-7275. $1,183.00; t o gether ing under t h e with title e x pense, roequired bligation o r tr u st I n addition to t h i s costs, trustee's fees and in addition week's Board meetand attorney's fees deed, to paying those sums ing, the Bend Park i ncurred herein b y tendering the per- and Recreation Disreason of said default; or formance necessary trict Board of Direcany further sums adcure the default, by tors is scheduled to vanced by the benefi- to ciary for the protec- paying all costs and tour the Simpson Paactually in- vilion and Colorado tion of t h e a b o ve expenses described real prop- curred in enforcing the Dam Safe Passage and t rust project sites on March erty and its interest obligation together with 18, 2015 at 4:00 pm. therein; and prepay- deed, trustee and attorney ment penalties/premi- fees not exceeding ums, if applicable. By Where can you find a amounts provided reason of said default, the helping hand? by ORS 86.778. Withthe beneficiary has out li m i ting the From contractors to d eclared al l s u m s trustee's disclaimer of owing on the obligayard care, it's all here epresentations o r tion secured by said rwarranties, in The Bulletin's O regon trust deed i mmedi- l aw r e q uires the "Call A Service ately due and pay- trustee to state in this able, said sums being Professional" Directory