Bulletin Daily Paper 04-15-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

TUES AY Aprij15,2014

v

SPORTS • C1

v

Foodfor acause AT HOME• D1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

EDUCATION

COCC

Boat trouble —Family members swim to shore at the Prineville Reservoir as their craft goes up in flames.B1

Importing sunlight — A town in Norway doesn't get any rays for half the year.The answer? Giant mirrors.A6

Pulitzers —TheWashington Post and TheGuardian are honored for the NSArevelations.AS

• Salena Sahme of WarmSprings plans to compete in Portland's racethis October

picks interim leader By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

The Central Oregon Community College board plans to appoint Extended

Learning Dean Shirley Metcalf as the college's interim president beginning next fall. Current President Jim Middleton will also

postpone his planned

Presto, graphene — A material with the potential to forever alter the world of electronics moves closer to commercial production.A3

~

retirement by two months to help with the transition.

gV E R< SgNGLE,g

Metc a lf

Metcalf's appointment, which board members agreed to unanimously Monday, is contingent on

In national news — The suspect in the fatal shooting in Kansas had arecord of white-supremacist beliefs but not of violence.A2

contract negotiations. She will assume the position

September 15. The action follows the

board's decision Wednesday to abandon the col-

Have a nice picture of the eclipse> —Sendit to

lege's selected candidate for the permanent president

readerphotos©bendbulletin. com.

EDITOR'SCHOICE Roh Kerr/The Bulletin

Miitants

in Ukraine's east defy utimatum By Anthony Faioia and Will Engiund

Salena Sahme, 23, injured in an automobile accident in 2010, has been exercising at the Warm Springs Elementary school track, seen here during a workout Monday, toward a goal of completing the Portland Marathon in October. She is trying to raise money to

get a handcycle.

SeeCOCC/A7

By Monicia Warner •The Bulletin

alena Sahme has a 15-week plan. The 23-year-old has been training in her wheelchair at the Warm Springs Elementary School track at least four days a week for the past three weeks. She was up to 4t/z miles last week and will try for 5 miles this week to increase her distance and stamina level.

DONETSK, Ukraine — Defiant pro-Russian militants here in eastern

"Every time I go, I keep going and going and try not

Ukraine pushed this coun-

to stop," Sahme, of Warm

try to the brink of war or

Springs, said Friday. "On the

dissolution Monday, expanding their hold while the acting president failed to make headway in trying to end the crisis.

last week, I want to gain 20

the acting president, Oleksandr Tttrchynov, first vowed to rout them

by force, then held out the offer of a referendum to

decide Ukraine's fate, then proposed a peacekeeping intervention by the United Nations.

Nothing Turchynov said moved the pro-Russian

a fact he did not disclose

during the vettingprocess.

The Washington Post

After an ultimatum to the militants was ignored,

position. After announcing plans to appoint Patrick Lanning as the college's next president, COCC discovered Lanning was on paid administrative leave from his current employer,

Risingcosts put squeeze on renters By Shaiia Dewan

sharp turn and he lost control.

The car took a tumble and rolled

New York Times News Service

How todonate

MIAMI — For rent and

utilities to be considered affordable, they are supposed

• On Salena's Facebook pageat www.facebook. com/HelpSalenaBeAFinisher • Her GoFundMepageatwww.gofundme.com/7rrh60

to take up no more than 30

miles in one day." Nearly four years after she was injured in a car accident, Sahme is taking major steps toward competing in

Sahme

stopping. Sahme was the only one

get out ofbed because of the fractured disk in my spine. I

"She said, 'Hey mom, what do you think? I'm gonna do

percent of a household's income. But that goal is increasingly unattainable for middle-income families as a tightening market pushes

the Portland Marathon in October. Right now, that

of the three passengers with

had to sit up at a certain de-

the marathon in Portland

up rents ever faster, outrun-

serious injuries and was

gree for almost a month." Sahme's mom, Becky

five times,

over a boulder and hitting a tree, before

goal depends heavily on airlifted to then-Mountain whether she can raise $6,600 View Hospital in Madras for to cover travel and room treatment of injuries, includcosts and the purchase of an ing a fractured spinal disk, a all-terrain handcycle. shattered right ankle and a Sahme has been a paradislocated right leg. "It was really rough. I had plegic since July 2010. She was riding in the passenger quite a few injuries, and I was seat of a car driven by her out for two weeks," she said. "It took me a while to actually cousin when they took a

Picard, said that Sahme has

rarely left home since the accident, and they've been slowly pushing her to become more active. Picard, 43, said she came home from work one af-

ternoon to find out about Sahme's plan.

— 26 miles,'" Picard said. "It brought my heart a lot of joy in just knowing that she was going to heal and that she was serious."

Sahme said she was inspired by a YouTube video of a man competing in the

ning modest rises in pay. The strain is not limited to the usual high-cost cities like

New York and San Francisco. An analysis for The New York Times by Zillow, the

realestate website, found90

Portland Marathon using a

cities where the median rent — not mdudmg utthttes-

handcycle. See Marathon /A7

was morethan30percent of the median gross income.

forces, who seized another police station in another

SeeRent /A7

small town, Horlivka. In a nation of 44 million,

it became clear that a few hundred men, operating on the eastern fringes of the country with guns and unmarked uniforms, have

brought Ukraine to a deeply dangerous juncture. The mood was tense in

this industrial city of nearly 1 million, where many residents were staying inside after dark. Pro-Russian activists took over the

regional administrative offices last week, and bands of masked men, including several carrying steel pipes, were patrolling the barricadedentrances to the monolithic structure in the

center of town. See Ukraine/A7

Internet bugfixesthreaten tocause major disruptions The Brian Fung The Washington Post

Efforts to fix the notorious

Heartbleedbugthreatento cause major disruptions to the Internet over the next several

weeks as companies scramble to repair encryption systems onhundreds of thousands of

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 54, Low32 Page B6

websites at the same time, security experts say. Estimates of the severityof thebug's damage have mount-

words for protection now appears much more serious. New

revelations suggest that hackers can usethe bug to createfake websites thatmimiclegitimate

bug — which makes it possible to stealthe"security certificates" that verifythat a website is authentic — could over-

whelmthe systems designed to ers announcedthe discovery onestotrickconsumers into keep the Internet trustworthy. "Imagine if we found out of Heartbleed last week. What handing over information. initially seemed like an inconveThe sheer scale of the work all at once that all the doors nient matter of changingpass- required to fixthis aspect of the everybody uses are all vulnered almost daily since research-

INDEX D6 Ob ituaries B5 At Home D1 - 6 C lassified E1-6 Dear Abby B usiness C7-8 Comics/Puz zles E3-4 Horoscope D 6 Sports C1- 6 Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B 1-6 TV/Movies D6

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 105,

34 pages, 5 sections

able — they can all get broken into," said Jason Healey, a cybersecurity scholar at the Washington-based Atlantic

Council."The kinds ofbad things it enables is largely limited only by the imagination of the bad guys." SeeHeartbleed/A6

Q ilf/e use recycled newsprint

': IIIII I o

8 8 267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

The Bulletin HOW to reaCh US STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?

541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30a.m.-5 p.m. Mon.-F ri.,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun

GENERAL INFORMATION

541-382-1811 ONLINE

www.bendbulletin.com EMAIL

bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS

541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X

541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.com Cily Desk..........news@bendbulletin.com CommunityLite communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sports..............sports©bendbulletin.com

OUR ADDRESS Street ........... 1777S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing.........P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706

Si sil.rva

Dtsouies rr

ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337

NATION Ee ORLD KANSAS CITYSHOOTING

us e a r ecor o racism, no vio ence By Maria Sudekum and Jim Suhr som said the victims "hap- assigned two federal public The Associated Press pened to bein thewrong place defenders. OVERLAND PARK, Kan. at the wrong time" and had "a Knocks by an Associated — Never one to keep his ha- firsthand encounter with evil." Press reporter went u n antred to himself, Frazier Glenn The FBI and police have not swered Monday at Cross' Cross for decades sought out offered any public explanation small, single-story h o me any soapbox to espouse his for what triggered Sunday's bordered on threesides with white-supremacist b e l iefs, deadly outburst in Overland barbed-wire fences near the twice running for federal of- Park on the eve of the Jewish southwest Missouri town of fice with campaigns steeped festival of Passover. While the Aurora, some 180 miles south in anti-Semitism. FBI and other law-enforce- of Overland Park. Parked Yet there's scant evidence ment agencies were familiar outside was a red Chevrolet the Army veteranand retired with Cross, Sunday's gunfire bearing two Confederate flag t rucker with Ku K lu x K l an was "very random," the FBI's stickers. links ever resorted to violence Michael Kaste said. In n earby M a r ionville, "We don't really see how Mayor Dan Clevenger said before Sunday, when authorities say he opened fire with this could have been prevent- Cross often distributed racist a shotgun and pistol outside ed. There's at least no obvious pamphlets. a Jewish community center answer," said M ar k P o tok, The Southern Poverty Law and retirement complex near a senior fellow at th e A l a- Center said Cross, who also Kansas City. None of the three bama-based Southern Poverty went by the name Frazier people killed turned out to be Law Center, which tracks hate Glenn Miller, has been imJewish. groups and had a considerable mersed in white supremacy The 73-year-old Cross, who dossier on Cross. "He is one most of his life. During the shouted a Nazi slogan at tele- of the more frightening char- early 1980s, Cross was "one vision cameras when arrested acters out there, no question of the more notorious white minutes later, has been jailed about that." supremacists in the U.S.," acawaiting charges that investiA Johnson County jail offi- cording to the Anti-Defamagators said could come as ear- cial reached Monday by The tion League. ly as today. At some point, a AssociatedPress refused to He founded the Carolina federal grand jury is expected make Cross available and Knights of the Ku Klux Klan to review the slayings, which referred inquiries to his at- and served as its "grand dragauthorities now deem a hate torneys and Overland Park on" before launching the sucrime. police. The Kansas City Star premacist White Patriot Party, U.S. Attorney Barry Gris- reported that Cross had been the law center said.

DEPARTMENT HEADS

TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran.........541-383-0360 CilySheila G.Miler ..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....541-383-0353 GO! Magazine Ben Salmon....................... Home,All Ages AlandraJohnson...............541-617-7860 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 Photos DeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............541-383-0359 State Projects Lily Raff McCaulou...........541-410-9207

ng pRtSBCMSfAIL

SU sBSIIITA

.s

CORRECTIONS

By mail in DeschutasCounty: One month: $14.50 Bymail outside Daschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Edition only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-365-5809 Advertising fax..................541-385-5802 Other information ............. 541-382-1811

Chilean fire —Two daysafter wind-borne flames ravagedthe steep hills surrounding Valparaiso, Chile, manyslopes of colorful housesthat gave the slenderport city a picture-postcard landscapehavebeenreduced to rings of ruins. Firefighters, somebrought in from other parts of the country, werestill combating outbreaks of fire Monday, supported by 21 aircraft. Thirteen peopledied asa result of the fire over the weekend, according to Chileanauthorities. Onesuffered a heart attack Sunday eveningafter seeing theruins of his relatives' home.

— From wire reports

The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.

One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)

Syrian conflict —Navi Pillay, the U.N.human rights chief, condemned the rampant and routine use of torture by theSyrian authorities in a paper released byher office Monday. Thereport drew on 38 interviews conducted by U.N.investigators over the past eight months with individuals released from detention centers across Syria. The papersaid torture by armed opposition groups was rare in the early stages of Syria's conflict, which began in March 2011,but that as of 2013, it appeared to be onthe rise.

E-Cigarette Study —An investigationby Democratic members of Congress into the marketing practices of electronic cigarette companies has found that major producers aretargeting young people by giving awaysamples at music andsporting events and running radio and television advertisements during youth-oriented programs. The inquiry, led bySen. Richard Durbin, D-lll., and Rep.Henry Waxman, D-calif., was conducted as the Food and Drug Administration prepared amajor package oftobacco control rules that would place e-cigarettes under federal regulation.

REDMOND BUREAU

Home deliveryandE-Edition:

West Bank killing —An Israeli police officer was fatallyshotand hiswifeandyoungsonwerewoundedMondayeveningastheydrove to a PassoverSedernearthe West Bankcity of Hebron, according to a spokeswomanfor theIsraeli military. The killing cameas Israeli and Palestinian negotiators havebeentrying to salvage peacetalks that have been teetering onthe brink of collapsefor two weeks.Military and police officials said thedeadmanwas40and lived in Modi'in. His wife and son were being treated atJerusalemhospitals, local media reported.

Health laW —The insuranceexpansionunderthe Affordable CareAct will cost $1.383 trillion over thenext decade, morethan $100billion less than previous forecasts, theCongressional BudgetOffice said Monday. The nonpartisan budget office's report, anupdate to projections from February, showsthe law costing less than in previous estimates inpart because ofthebroad andpersistent slowdown in the growth of health care costs. Thereducedestimate is attributable mostly to the budget office's cutting its projections of federal spendingfor subsidies.

Street address.......226N.W.Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203

TO SUBSCRIBE

SePt. 11 hearing —A military judge abruptly recessed the first 9/11 trial hearing of the year Mondayafter defense lawyers accused the FBI in opencourt of trying to turn a defenseteam security officer into a secret informant. If true, the lawyers argued, attorney-client confidentiality may havebeenbreached in the casethat seeks to put on trial and execute five men accused of orchestrating the Sept.11 attacks that killed 3,000 people in New York, Pennsylvania and at the Pentagon. Defense lawyers alleged Mondaythat in at least one instance, two FBIagents enlisted a civilian on the defenseteam of accused plot deputy Ramzi bin al-Shibh as aconfidential informant. The FBI had noimmediate comment.

PiStnriuS trial —On the fourth day of relentless cross-examination at his murder trial, Oscar Pistorius was takenback to the early hours of Feb. 14,2013, when heshot his girlfriend, ReevaSteenkamp, 29, in what the prosecution says was anact of premeditated murder and the track star says was amistake. In close detail, the prosecutor, Gerrie Nel, hadPistorius, 27, relive the final moments of Steenkamp's life, as theathlete walked into a bathroom andfired four rounds at the lockeddoor of a toilet cubicle, believing, by his account, that at least one intruder was behind the door.

DEVASTATING BLAST IN NIGERIAN CAPITAL

Advertising Jay Brandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation AdamSears...541-385-5805 FinanceHolly West..........541-383-0321 HumanResources Traci Donaca.....................541-383-0327 Operations James Baisinger...............541-617-7624

Dead infnntS —Over a decadebeginning in1996, Megan Huntsman gavebirth to at least seven babies in herhomeat Pleasant Grove, Utah. Onedied at birth and theother six were strangled or suffocated, their bodies concealed in boxesthat were stored in thegarage, she told police, according to documents released bystate authorities Monday. Huntsman, 39,was being held on $6million bail — $1 million for each of the babiesshe isaccused of killing — after a preliminary court appearance Monday, a spokesman for the Utah County jail told the Los Angeles Times. Formal chargesare expected by next week.

Sunday Alamba/The AssociatedPress

DamagedbusesareseenMondayatthesceneof an explosion at a buspark in Abuja, Nigeria. Suspected Islamic militants struck in the heart of Nigeria on Mondaywith a massive rush-hour bomb blast at a busstation that killed at least 72 people and wounded164 in the deadliest attack ever on the nation's capital. Survivors screamed in anguish and the stench of burning fuel and flesh hung over the area, where billows of black smoke rose as firefighters worked to put out the fires. Rescue workers and police gathered body parts as ambulances rushed the

wounded to hospitals. Visiting the blast scene, President Goodluck Jonathan blamedBokoHaram, the homegrown terrorist network that has targeted schools, churches, mosques, villages andgovernment facilities, killing thousands in its five-year campaign to makeNigeria an Islamic state. A counter-terrorism expert said the bombappeared to have beenburied underground, while the emergencymanagementagencysaidtheexplosiveswere apparently hidden in avehicle. — The Associated Press

Find Your Dream Home

in Real EState • • •

The B ulletin

EVERGREEN

In-Home care servlces Care for loved ones. Comfort for all. 541-ass-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066

Adjustablg Beds

IIATTRESS

G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4

OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-383-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7825 Back issues ......................541-385-5600

All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern Communicationsinc.,1777 S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR9770z periodicalspostage paid atBend,OFLPostmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,pO.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

Malaysia jet searcharea

too deepfor submarine By Margie Mason The Associated Press

P ERTH, Australia — T h e search area for the missing Ma-

analyzed, it added. The Bluefin 21 will resume the search today when weath-

The numbers drawnMonday nightare:

er conditions permit, it said. laysian jet has proved too deep Search authorities knew for a robotic submarine which that the primary wreckage was hauled back to the surface from Flight MH370 was likely of the Indian Ocean less than lying at the limit of the Bluehalf way through its first sea- fin's dive capabilities. Deepbed hunt for wreckage and the er diving submersibles have all-important black boxes, au- been evaluated, but none is yet thorities said early today. available in the search area. Search crews sent the BlueThe sub would have been fin 21 deep into the Indian programed to return to the Ocean on Monday tobegin surface once itexceeded the scouring the seabed for the 4,500-meter limit, but a safemissing Malaysia Airlines Boe- ty margin would also have ing 777 after failing for six days been included to protect the to detect any signals believed device from damage if it went to be from its blackboxes. a bit deeper, said Stefan Wil-

Q4QeQaoQ asQ aoQ ss

But after only six hours of its planned 16-hour mission on

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

MEGABUCKS

The estimated jackpot is now $1.2 million.

PetPremium' PET HEALTH INSURANCE

liams, a professor of marine

robotics at the University of the sea bed, the autonomous Sydney. "Maybe some areas where underwater vehicle exceeded its maximum depth limit of they are doing the survey are 15,000 feet and its built-in safe- a little bit deeper than they ty feature returned it to the are expecting," he said. "They surface, the search coordina- may not have very reliable tion center said in a statement

priordata forthe area, so they

early today. What if anything it might have discovered during the six-hour search was still being

have a general idea. But there may be some variability on the sea floor that they also can't

seefrom thesurface."

Is your pet happy, healthy and

P<r~otectedzg v Choose Up to 90% Reimbursement W Find Low Annual Deductibles W Get Special Multiple Pets Discount Call Now f or a FREE Pet Insurance Q uot e :

0 (80iOi) 391-8212 Monday toFriday 8am -5pm ET vnderwriNen by the Unrred states Fire Insurance company

HQL-021914-12


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day

It's Tuesday, April15, the105th day of 2014. Thereare260 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Shootillg —Charges could be announced assoon as today against Frazier Glenn Cross, a suspect in the slaying of three people in Kansas.A2 TaX day —It's the deadline to file federal and state income tax returns.

HISTORY Highlight:In 2013, two bombs packed with nails and other lethal metal shards exploded at the Boston Marathon finish line, killing two womenand an 8-year-old boy andinjuring more than 260 people. (Bombing suspect DzhokharTsarnaev has pleaded not guilty to 30 federal charges, including theuseofaweaponofmass destruction; his brother and alleged accomplice, Tamerlan Tsarnaev, died in ashootout with police.) In1850, the city of SanFrancisco was incorporated. In1865, President Abraham Lincoln died, nine hours after being shot the night before by John Wilkes Booth at Ford's Theater in Washington; Andrew Johnson becamethe nation's17th president. In1874, an exhibition of paintings by 30 artists, including Claude Monet, EdgarDegas, Pierre-Auguste Renoir and Paul Cezanne,opened in Paris. (A critic derisively referred to the painters as "Impressionists," a namewhich stuck.) In1912, the British luxury liner RMS Titanic foundered in the North Atlantic off Newfoundland more than2~/~hours after hitting an iceberg; 1,514people died, while less than half as many survived. In1945, during World War II, British and Canadian troops liberated the Naziconcentration camp Bergen-Belsen. In1947, Jackie Robinson, baseball's first black major league player, madehis official debut with the Brooklyn Dodgers on opening day. (The Dodgers defeated the Boston Braves, 5-3.) In1964,the ChesapeakeBay Bridge-Tunnel connecting Virginia's Eastern Shore with Virginia Beachwas opened to traffic.

In1974, members of the Symbionese Liberation Army held up a branch of the Hibernia Bank in SanFrancisco; a member of the group wasSLA kidnap victim Patricia Hearst, who by this time wasgoing by the name"Tania" (Hearst later said she'd beenforced to participate). In1986, the United States launched anair raid against Libya in response to the bombing of a discotheque in Berlin on April 5; Libya said 37 people, mostly civilians, were killed. In1989,96 people died in a crush of soccer fans at Hillsborough Stadium in Sheffield, England. Ten years ago:In an audiotape, a man identifying himself as Osamabin Laden offered a "truce" to European countries that did not attack Muslims, saying it would begin when their soldiers left Islamic nations; key European nations, including Iraq war opponents Germany and France, vigorously rejected the overture. Five years ago: Whipped up by conservative commentators and bloggers, tens of thousands of protesters staged "tea parties" around the country to tap into the collective angst stirred up by abad economy,governmentspending and bailouts. One year ago:Venezuela's electoral council quickly certified the razor-thin presidential victory of HugoChavez's handpicked successor, Nicolas Maduro.

BIRTHDAYS Columnist Heloise is 63.Olympic gold, silver andbronzemedal swimmer DaraTorres is 47. Actor-writer Seth Rogen is32. Actress Emma Watson is 24. — From wire reports

CUTTING EDGE

SCIENCE Q&A

Long in

en i,c ar ei, Lin ra ene, maeria o

the tooth By C. Claiborne Ray New York Times News Service

after 5,000 or so Q ••Why, years under ice, would the teeth of the so-called

It has the potential to change the electronics industry. It's the strongest, thinnest material known

Iceman of the Alps still look pretty good? How long do

to exist and also one of the most pliable. It could usher in an era of flexible devices and quantum

teethlasP.

• Frozen or unfrozen,

computers. Also, it's inexpensive and researchers are beginning to explore commercial production.

• teeth are usually the

longest-lasting remains of a body and can survive for study for many millennia, long after the disappearance of most bones.

By Nick Bilton New York Times News Service

I just want to say one word to you. Just one word.

For oneextreme example,

No, fans of "The Graduate," the word isn't "plastics." It's "graphene." Graphene is the strongest,

thefossilizedteethof theprehuman species Ardipithecus ramidus, first reported in

Ethiopia in 1994 asAustralopithecus ramidus, provided

t hinnest material known t o exist. A form of carbon, it can

some of the most important information about the diet

conduct electricity and heat better than anything else. And get ready for this: It is not only

and presumed behavior of the species. These teeth are

believed to date from about 4.4 million years ago.

t he hardest material in t h e

world, but also one of the most pliable. Only a single atom thick, it has been called the wonder

The heavy mineralization

and dense crystalline structure of tooth enamel make teeth more durable than

material.

Graphene could change the electronics industry, ushering in flexible devices, supercharged quantum computers,

bones.

electronic clothing and computers that can interface with

nightmare. As reported last

The teeth of the Iceman,

however, have r ecently been found to be a dentist's year in The European Journal of Oral Sciences, they were heavily abraded and had several cavities, one of whichpenetratedthepulp of

the cells in your body. While the material was dis-

NicholasPetrone via New York Times News Service

covereda decade ago, itstart- High frequency graphene transistors on a flexible plastic substrate at Columbia University. Graphene ed to gain attention in 2010 is 200 times stronger than steel, and it's so thin that a single ounce of it could cover 28 football fields. when two physicists at the

atooth. Researchers l i n k the wear and decay to a staidiy,

University of Manchester were awarded the Nobel Prize for their experiments with it. More

recently, researchers have zeroed in on how to commerciallyproducegraphene. T he

A m e r ican C h e m i-

were leading to touch-screen

remaining able to conduct

electronics that "could make cellphones as thin as a piece of paper and foldable enough to slip into a pocket." Vijayaraghavan is building an array of sensors out of graphene — including gas sensors, biosensors and light

electricity.

cal Society said in 2012 that graphene was discovered to be 200 times stronger than steel and so thin that a single ounce sensors — that are far smaller of it could cover 28 football than what has come before. fields. Chinese scientists have And last week, researchers created a graphene aerogel, at the Samsung Advanced Inan ultralight material derived stitute of Technology, working from a gel, that is one-seventh with Sungkyunkwan Unithe weight of air. A cubic inch versity in South Korea, said of the material could balance that Samsung had discovered on one blade of grass. how to create high-quality "Graphene is one of the few graphene on silicon wafers, materials in the world that is which could be used for the transparent, conductive and production of graphene tranflexible — all at the sametime," sistors. Samsung said in a said Dr. Aravind Vijayaragha- statement that these advancevan, a lecturer in nanomateri- ments meant it c ould start als at the University of Manmaking "flexible displays, chester. "All of these properties wearables and other next-gentogether are extremely rare to eration electronic devices." find in one material." Sebastian Anthony, a reSo what do you do with porter at Extreme Tech, said graphene'? Physicists and re- that Samsung's breakthrough searchers say that we will soon could end up being the "holy be able to make electronics grail of commercial graphene that are thinner, faster and

cheaper than anything based on silicon, with the option of

making them clear and flexible. Long-lasting batteries that

can be submerged in water are another possibility. I n 2 011, r esearchers at Northwestern University built

a battery that incorporated graphene and silicon, which the university said could lead to a cellphone that "stayed charged for more than a week and recharged in just 15 minutes." In 2012, the American Chemical Society said t h at

advancements in graphene

"You know what else you can stretch by 20 percent? Rubber," he said."In comparison, silicon, which is in today's electronics, can only stretch by

If that is the case, graphene might end up being used in other industries before it be-

comes part of

e lectronics.

Last year, the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation paid for the

grain-based diet, which was becoming more common during the Neolithic transition from hunting to

agriculture.

development ofa grapheneI percent before it cracks." based condom that is thin, He continued, "That's just light and impenetrable. Carone of the crazy things about makers are exploring building this material — there's really electronic cars with bodies nothing else quite like it." made of graphene that are The real kicker? Graphene not only protective, but act as is inexpensive. solar panels that charge the If you think of something in car's battery. Aircraft makers today's electronics industry, it also hope to build planes out of can most likely be made bet- graphene. ter, smaller and cheaper with If all that isn't enough, an graphene. international team of researchScientists at the University

ers based at MI T

h a s per-

of California, Berkeley made formed tests that could lead to graphene speakers last year the creation of quantum comthat delivered sound at quality puters, which would be a big equal to or better than a pair of market of computing in the commercial Sennheiser ear- future. phones. And they were much So forget plastics. There's smaller. a great future in graphene. Another fascinating aspect

of graphene is its ability to be submerged in liquids without oxidizing, unlike other conductive materials.

As a result, VijayaraghaSamsung is not the only van said, graphene research is company working to develop leading to experiments where graphene. Researchers at IBM, electronics can integrate with Nokia and SanDisk have been biological systems. In othexperimenting with the mate- er words, you could have a rial to create sensors, transis- graphene gadget implanted in tors and memory storage. you that could read your nerWhen these electronics fi- vous system or talk to your nally hit store shelves, they cells. could look and feel like nothBut while researchers being we've ever seen. lieve graphene will be used in James Hone, a professor next-generation devices, there of mechanical engineering are entire industries that build at Columbia University, said electronics using traditional research in his lab led to the silicon chips and transistors, discovery that graphene could a nd they could be slow t o stretch by 20 percent while adopt graphene counterparts. production."

Think about it.

mplements 'Hsae '3n,ie~i,s~J HWY 20E & Dean SwlftRd. (1 block West of Costco)

70 SW Century Dr., Ste. 145 Bend, OR 97702• 541-322-7337 complementshomeinteriors.com

541-828-8011 • slmrks.cem

RESEARCH

Marital anger?Quick, eat something

"Wq'M ,

By Monte Morin

and aggression in married Los Angeles Times couples. LOS ANGELES — Y o ur The paper, which was pubnormally cheerful spouse has lished Monday in P NAS, suddenly, and inexplicably, found that when blood glucose turned cranky and an other- levels dropped, spouses were wise pleasant day is fast be- far more likely to stick pins coming a scene from "Who's into voodoo dolls representing Afraid of V irginia Woolf." their mates. They were also Sound familiar'? more likely to blast loud noisWhen you see those storm es intoearphones strapped to clouds gathering in your sig- their mate's head. nificant other's eyes, you The authors argue that loss might do well to give them of self-control is a contributsome carbohydrates — and ing factor to aggression befast. tween intimate partners, and At least that's the advice of a team of researchers who

that self-control is linked to nutrition.

in part by glucose," wrote lead study author Brad Bushman,

a professor of communication and psychology at Ohio State University.

"Glucose is made from nutritious intake that becomes converted into neurotransmit-

tersthat provide energy for brain processes. Low glucose levels can undermine self-con-

trol because people have insuffic ient energy to overcome challenges and unwanted impulses," wrote Bushman and his colleagues. The authors described the

phenomenon of lashing out "Self-control requires ener- aggressively due to hunger examined the connection between low blood sugar levels gy, and that energy is provided with the slang term "hanger."

es&

W & &

&

% % &

& &

& & & &

&

H W & W

&

&

Q

; SSeFF $ 2 S , 8 I * valid through 4/20/14 on g

g g g 6 g g

64

in-storepurchases at the Bend WBU. ne O discountper purchase. Offer not valid on previouspurchases, sale items, giftcards,or Daily Savings Club memberships. a mm a m m

8 8

Q Jg~

8

~ ®~ 8

m a m m a m m m m m m a m m m a

Forum Center, Bend (541)617-8840 www.wbu.com/bend BIRDFOOD •FEEDERS •GARDEN ACCENTS • UNIQUE GIFTS


A4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

/, I

1

1

c,,

SI

>I'

I

rs xrsE ...

, '/

ll'

,I'

' •

a

I-

• •

.

II • •

' I, •

0

'

I

I I '

I

I •

I

JOIN US AT

Calvary Chapel Bend

SERVICE TIMES: Sunday 8:30 8 10:30 AM Wednesday Night 7:00 PM Child Care at 10:30 AM Service

C ENTRAL O R E O O N

Studying God's Word chapter by chapter, verse by verse for the equipping of the saints for the work of the ministry. IIOIII15 Cooley Rd. (off Hwy 90)

EASTER SUNDAY .

• •

Downtown at the Boys 6 GirlsClub, 500 NW Wall St. r

Bend

www.centraloregonbaptistchurch.org

541-617-2$14

Bend Church of the Naalrene 1270 NE 27th Street www.bendnaz.org

wo r s irlq

(<~lA rise+shine P for i ~thy'light is~ come.

w i , t lrl Ms

MI,s Caster

Good Friday Service April 18, at 7:00pm

Se is )4sem!

EASTER SUNDAY , 9:00am and 10:45am

r

9:30 AM — Bible Study 990 AM — Children's Class 10:30 AM — Worship Service 10:30 AM — Primary Class

, 2O I R

For more information call 'gor~o~ 5 d l 1 . 383.5097 KhTper www.ccbend.com

ry c e r ' ,L o

Good Friday Service April 18th at 6:30pm

e c

a g.Jo

Easter Sunday Services 7:30am, 9:00am & 10:45am

I

Pygg

Pf

fsairrrt 60:1 Wp rience the Ifeili

'

I I

I

power of Clirist'at theY Christian Skittnqe Church.g Sunday Schopl is af~ happening ~t, t1'e Samp time.

I Siuutay, Ser'vice,"10:00,.am Cftfiff cure k. p arking pr~e r L

$

: iFIKST"CHURCH: OF 'CHRIST, SCIENTI'ST

City Center Church 549 SW 8th St, Redmond

I'

(541) 548-7128 www.citycenterchurch.org

I

I

1$51' NW 1st St., Be ndLIIR jgoutrr of portland Ave,) cbristianscienceinbenthcom

Community Presbyterian Church, Redmond

toUIIQR'P

B A P T IST C H V R C H

for

Celebrate with Us

529 NW 19th Street (541) 548-3367

ServicesatS,930,and 11am

Rev. Rob Anderson, Pastor

Prayer Service April 16th, 5I30 pm

Experience for Families, 10am

Maundy Thursday Service April 17th, 6roo pm

FRIORV

Sew iceat 12pm

Easter Sunday April 20th

62425 Eagle Road

Xw@taCN@B eastmontchurch.com

9roo am — Contemporary Worship 11too am — Tradttlenal Worship Fellowship following both services www. redmondcpc.org

Sunday,8,9:30,11 A.M. ~ Saturday 7 P.M. HIGHLAND BAPTIST CHURCH 3100 SW Highland Ave. www.hbcredmond.org 541.548.4161

C

The Episcopal Church of the Transfiguration Maundy Thursday, April 17: Noon - Holy Eucharist and Stripping of the Altar

Good Friday, April 18: Noon Good Friday Service 7:00 pm Good Friday Service and Stations of the Cross

+ a Q©lfi|(Q[j'(®g(® 1l '

Easter Sunday, April 20: 8:30 a.m. Ecumenical Worship 10:15 a.m. Holy Eucharist www.e isco alchurchsisters.or

Qa lgQa

e

•e

68825 Brooks Camp Road Sisters • 541-549-7087 Fax: 541-549-7087

Apn IS -April 8 at New Hope Church

Open 5:30-8:30 pm PSaP@PSP J~()Pg4T JSQlSN@fiSFCSPSF 5, StationsOfThecrossBend.com Weekend Services at New Hope Church Sat. April 19 at 6:00PM Sunday, April 20 9:00 L 10:45AM 20080 Pinebrook in Bend • 541. 389.3436

NewHopeBend.com


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

O ME L E T '

US

IM.

Grace First Lutheran Church

• a"

POH/ell Butte

Christian Church

ELCA

te

SUNRISE WORS S ERVICE:6:00am ' ia s-Rd„Powell Butte Tom's gond

~ Easter Sunday

8:00, 9:30 & 11:00 a.m.

rtrh

I

Child Care Provided Maundy Thursday7:00pm - Gqod Friday7:00pm . +I Vi g il of Easter aturday 7:00 pm

/

Welcome toour new church home at: 2265NW Shevlin Park Rd. • Bend

541-382-6862 www.gracefir stlutheran.org

Breakfast, m ~ w s hip Hall Pregared by the Youth

Join usfor Easter Sunday Services

Aprit 20t1t at 10:45 am

Newport Avenue

Church of Christ 554 Newport Avenue, Bentl, Oregon

(541j 382-5242 churchofchristhencloregon,com

W RSH I

ER V I CK'S

0er on: Ifyh t ifference doe) East r makel atth e w28:t- (5 8:30 10:15 am — Worship Cettter 11 00 am — Historic Chapelj Pasto s: Chris Blair,Trey Hin II:le, & Ozzy Osborne

13720 SW Highway 126, Powell Butte

541-548-3066 www.powellbuttechurch.com

F IRST UNITED ME T H O D IST CHU R C H 680 NW BOND • 382-1672

GRACE

Come worship with us: Everyone always welcome, child care provided. Friday, April 18th at 7:00 pm Good Friday Service

LUTHERAN CHURCH AT EAGLE CREST

"Christ is Arisen from the Graves Dark Prison."

Easter Sunday, April 20th 9:00 am Contemporary Service with Praise Band 11:00 am Traditional Service with the Chancel Choir Coffee Fellowship between Services

Easter services at 10t30 am followed by a luncheon and Easter egg hunt with prizes for the children. For more information call: 541-728-4193 7525 Falcon Crest Dr. A c ross from Niblick 8c Greene's Restaurant www.gracelcateaglecrest.org

EasterEgg Hunt forChildren between Services

Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open Doors.

~

atamauht r$

Trinity Episcopal Church

f

md

Oe

8oeees tv'etedsaseaem

REALUFE $ REAL HOPE

'

i a

e ' 18

,6:8o

Holy Week & Easter Services

edmondG IIijstiag

469 NW WallStreet, Bend 541.3B2.5542 trinitybend.org

]oin usas we Celebrate The gesurrection tt f

The Rev. Roy D. Green, Inter'm Rector Nativity Luthera Chur 60 B r osterh s R

April 1'7 at 7:00 M aundy Thursday Holy Eucharist

Sswode» II'dmss il'tSIIdl INtdrSO

JOIN US EASTER WEEKEND FOR

QNE„ 'g.ca, '

u e ak

er r' '0'

"

'

')',esus Christ

Childrhn'f classes anddaycareg available during both services.

6

llg5Eatgatisa„hjlmmit$0III

Redmond CommunityChurch

www.elmea dag,com f41.54B.4%5

237 NW 9th Street • Redmond, OR www.redmondcc.org 541-923-3023

c5l'. C Zm~cf/Se M~l y r Caldoli'c Cku

vtoce to Begtn

Holy Zhursday Mass of the Lord's Supper •7000PM Good Friday Stations of the Cross • 3:00 PM Celebration of the Lord's Passion •7:00 PM Holy Saturday Easter Vigil 8:30 PM Easter Sunday Mass • 10:00 AM 123 Trinity Way Sisters

etong... Reco

I

L.J Wamhtp: Sunday 0:00am1110:dsam

>586 Sytf, Evergreen*,Redmondg > 541-548-2974 wtmjw.reflmondchristian.org

at Trinity's St. Helens Hall 231 NW Idaho Avenue.

April 18 at noon / Stations of the Cross

ST. THOMAS CATHOLIC CHURCH

/ r,

April 18 at 7:00 pm

Redmond 1720 NW I 9th Street 54 I m923-3390

The Good Friday Service

Holy Thursday April 17

b' w • 4 •

I OQR '

-QR--

7 pm EveningMass ofthe Lord's Supper

April 19 at 7:00 pm The Great Vigil, Baptism Holy Eucharist

Good Friday April 18 12:30 pm Living Stations of the Cross 7 pm Celebration of the Lord's Passion

Holy Saturday April 19 Easter Vigil 8 pm

April 20 at 8 and 10:15 am Easter Day Holy Eucharist

Easter Sunday April 20

Breakfast Fundraiser B:30 —10 am

541-549-9391 www.stedwardsisters.org

Masses: 8 and 10 in English Noon Misa en Espanol

FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH OF BEND

JOIN US EASTER WEEK

PSt. Fr a n cis of Assisi CNthotic Church Bend New Church: 2450 NE 27ed Street Historic Church: Corner of Lava & Franklin Ave.

at

Zion Lutheran

HOLY %'.HURSDAY • April 1 7 0 2014 No 7:00 AM or 12:15 PM Mass 7:00 PM New Church (English) 7:00 PM H i storic Church (Spanish) Both Masses will include the foot-washing ceremony with the participation of children.

H OLY W E E K

Leave Your Answers At The Door GOO D

t

FR IDAY

Stationsof the Cross Service at 7:oopm

E ASTER SU N D A Y Morning Services at 9:oo and a.o:fw5am

An Easter Contemplative Service at 5:oa.pm PastorsSteven Koskiand Jenny Warner NURsERY CARE PRovIDED AT ALL sERYICEs

FIRsT PREsBYTERIAN CHURCH OF BEND

Celebrating A Spacious Christianity~ a3o NENinth Street Bend St01.38a.tst001

www.bendfp.org •facebook.com/bendf'p

S ER V I C E S + Maundy 1hursday Service - 7:00 pm (Holy Communion Served) Good Friday ServicesNoon tic 7:00 pm

GOOD FRIDAY

E ASTER S U N D A Y W ORSHIP T I M E S Festival Worship with Communion 8;30 am Bc 11;00 am Easter Brunch 10;00-10;45 am Children's Egg Hunt 10;00 am Nursery Provided

A p r i l 18 , 2 0 1 4

No 7:00 AM or 12:15 PM Mass 12:00 PM Seven Last Words of Christ Reflections & Meditations 7:00 PM Good Friday Service New Church (English) 7:00 PM Good Friday Service Historic Church (Spanish)

VIGIL OF EASTXR • Aprils 19 2014

I

Church(ELCA)

No 8:00 AM or 5:00 PM Mass No 8:30 AM or 3:00 PM Confessions 8:30 I PM Vigil Mass New Church (English) With Baptisms, Confirmations, ilc more.

Pastor Eric Burtness

EASemR - April 20, 2014

Zion Lutheran

1113 SW Black Butte Blvd., Redmond

541-9>3-7466 www,rionrdm,com

t

No 4:30 PM Ma s s on Easter 7:30 AM Mass New Church 9:00 AM M a s s H i storic Church 10:00 AM M a s s N ew Church 12:30 PM M ass New Church (Spanish)

I

A5


A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

TODAY'S READ: INNORWAY, CORRALLING THE SUN

Heartbleed Continued from A1 The Heartbleed bug put many consumers' user names and passwords at risk. Undetected for two years, the bug

quietly undermined the basic security of the Internet by leavinga gap in OpenSSL, an encryption technology used widely by businesses to protect sensitive data. By some

Photos by Kyrre Lien/New YorkTimes News Service

Children play in a spot of sunlight reflected by mirror onto Rjukan's town square in Norway. The sun in Rjukan disappears behind a mountain for six months of the year, but the town finally installed large

mirrors to cast some light onto the shaded streets.

eamin oo c eer oa own's ar a s By Suzanne Daley New York Times News Service

RJUKAN, Norway — Yearning for sunlight has been a part of life in this quaint old factory town in central Norway for as long as anyone can remember. Here, the sun disappears behind a mountain for six months of the year.

Post. "After starting a script on a cloud server, I watched

of thousands of sites to add their certificates to the list, a movie and totally forgot practically overnight. The about it. Checking the logs in certificate revocation lists approximately 1 hour, to my will become bloated with surprise,revealed a private new entries. And browsers key to me." will continue to download Indutny's coup was quick- the now-massive files, acly followed by three more cording to Paul Mutton, a sesuccessfulattempts athack- curity consultant at the Web ing the security key. One of services company Netcraft. the hackers, Ben Murphy, Checking a site's identity will t old The Post it t ook h i m take vastly longer.

estimates, the bug affected two hours to retrieve the seas much as two-thirds of the cret key from CloudFlare's Internet; the flaw prompted server. thousands of Web users to Stealing the certificate is change their passwords on labor intensive. Indutny's Google, Yahoo, Facebook and attempt involved making othermajor services. 2.5 million requests of the No examples have sur- CloudFlare server before he faced of anyone actually finally obtained the key. But exploiting the vulnerability. what was thought to be imBut on Friday, Web services possible now turns out to be company CloudFlare issued doable. Websites can indeed an open challenge to hackers be tricked into giving up their to see if Heartbleed could be identity papers, and those paused to do something really pers can be reused by malidangerous — steal the secu- cious actors. rity certificates that prove Changing your passwords Google, for instance, is really will not protect you if you give Google. them unwittingly to a hacker CloudFlare's initial t ests pretending to be your Web suggested it was probably mail provider. impossible for an attacker In the days after Heartto steal a site's security cer- bleed was revealed, many tificate and lure visitors to

websites raced to update their

systems. Those fixes plugged the immediate hole so hackversion. (Most browsers, if ers could no longer take adthey detect an invalid secu- vantage of the vulnerability. rity certificate, will b l o ck But in light of this latest disaccess to the site and warn covery, many sites still appear the user that it may be illegiti- to be vulnerable; an attacker mate. But with a stolen certif- could have used Heartbleed icate, a fake site would be al- to steal a site's valid security lowed to load as if it were the keys anytime before the site real thing.) patched its systems. For the challenge, CloudThe next step, experts say, Flare urged Internet users to is for all 500,000 affected sites run their own tests on a dum- — from mom-and-pop retailmy server with the Hearters to big conglomerates — to bleed bug. Hackers had to revoke their security certifi-

ers have to download that ... we're talking hundreds of megabytes." It's roughly the equivalent of having to download 30 minutes' worth of stan-

dard-definition video just to view a single Web page. While there has been a modest uptick in the number of sites revoking and reissuing their security certificates since the new vulnerability was demonstrated late Friday, Mutton said, the rise has not

been significant — meaning many sitesare unaware they

need to reissue their certificates or are delaying doing so.

The good news is that many of the Web's most critical sites — those belonging to banks and governments-

cates and issue new ones.

from the server, then send But as necessary as that a message to CloudFlare process is,it could have dra-

sen, a conceptual artist who arrived here 12 years ago and would find himself walking and walking, searching for

that was "signed" with the

matic consequences for Web

certificate in order to prove users' everyday experiences. they had obtained it. Within When you visit a secure nine hours of the challenge's site, your b r owser checks launch — and three hours af- the site' s security certificate ter he began working on the agarnst a hst of rnvalrdated problem — a hacker named certificates. Depending on Fedor Indutny became the how it is designed, the browsfirst to crack the code. er probably downloads that "It was just a fun way of list to your computer. Because spending Friday evening sites rarely change their certime, and a good chance to tificates, the lists are relativetry my skills in a legal hack- lyshort. ing action," Indutny wrote in But the H e artbleed exan e-mail to The Washington ploit now requires hundreds

that move in concert with the

1 0,000 certificates on i t , " Mutton said. "And if brows-

behaved exactly like the real

stealthe security certificate

stand in. It was on one of these walks that he had the idea of slapping some huge mirrors up against the mountain to the north of town and bouncing some rays down on Rjukan. The town eventually agreed to try, and last fall, three solarand wind-powered mirrors

icates, that entry will have

a duplicate that looked and

It is worse for newcomers, of course, like Martin Ander-

any last puddle of sunshine to

"If a certificate authority has to revoke 10,000 certif-

were not vulnerable to Heartbleed in the first place, so

they will not have to reissue their certificates. Other Web services, such as Facebook,

Dropbox, OkCupid and Netflix, were affected by Heart-

bleed and are in the process of reissuing their certificates or have completed the process. But hundreds of thou-

sands of other sites may still be exposed. Healey, of

t h e A t l antic

Council, said Web security firms are left with two distasteful options. The first op-

tion is to flood the Internet's security infrastructure with

tens of thousands of revoked keys per day and risk slowing down the Web in exchange forgreatersecurity.The second option is not much better. "What's the other solution?

Ask people to be vulnerable for longer? That doesn't strike me as particularly reason-

able," he said.

sun started training a beam of A mirror reflects Martin Andersen, the conceptual artist behind the sunlight into the town square. sun mirror project. Thousands of people turned out for t h e

o pening event,

wearing sunglasses and drag- with the most sunlight. WorkWhen they want sunshine, ging out their beach chairs. ers got apartments deeper in they drive to the next town. And afterward, many r esi- the valley. But all the housing Or up the mountain to the ski dents say, life changed. was cutting edge for its day. resorts. "It's a very costly little spot There was indoor plumbing Happiness andclouds for everyone. of sun," said Annar TorresThe town became more soEyde understood the yearn- vold, who moved to Rjukan ciaL Leaving church on Sun- ing for sun, too. Back in 1913, after he retired from working days, people would linger in one of his bookkeepers wrote in a paper producing plant. the square, talking, laughing to the local paper suggest- "It was very clear what comand drinking in the sun, try- ing that a giant mirror might mon people thought, and ing not to look up directly into work. But instead, Eyde, who they thought it was a waste of the mountain mirrors. On a settledhere because a water- money." recent morning, Anette Oien fall nearby provided an easy And T orresvold t h inks had taken a seat on newly in- means of generating electrici- the town will end up spendstalled benches in the square, ty, built a cable car so his em- ing more to keep the mirrors her eyes closed, her face ployees could go up the moun- working. " I can't see t h i s turned up. She was waiting for tain to get some sunshine in having a long-term effect on her partner to run an errand, the winter. The cable car still things here," he said. "It's just and sitting in the light seemed exists. a flash in the pan." much nicer than sitting in a But the mirror enthusiasts It took n early a d e cade car. "It's been a great contribu- wanted more. "We were a for the mirrors to go up. Anhigh-tech town 100 years ago," dersen began the project, tion to life here," she said. But the sun, pale and weak, Bergsland said, "and now we researching t h e te c h nical did not last long. In fact, during are using high tech to get some aspects and drawing up projthe almost three months from sun into our valley. ects that included rounded "Of course there were peo- mirrors. But once he assured Dec. 25 to March 15, the skies were so cloudy that the mirple here who said this is cra- town officials that it could be rors produced just 17 hours zy," he continued, "but a lot of done, they turned it over to of sunlight on the square, bol- people really liked the idea." engineers. stering the arguments of those And tourists have begun to Eventually, the m i rrors, who call the project a waste of trickle in, including from Oslo, each measuring about 183 money. about a three-hour drive away. s quare feet were f l own i n M ost days, i n f a ct , t h e Many of the businesses here by helicopter and installed square just looks like the report an uptick in income. If about 492 yards above the parking lot it once was. A Rjukan becomes one of UN- town square, w h ere t h eir bone-chilling wind sweeps ESCO's World Heritage sites movementsare controlled by through it, and there is often next year, as it hopes, that computers. the sting of swirling sand that should help, too. These days Rjukan is fowas once put down on snowy Still, not everyone has em- cused on fixing up the town roads, but which now drifts b raced the mirrors. In t h i s square. Perhaps a fountain is over the dreary blacktop. town of about 6,000 people, needed. "You can't just have There has been so little some 1,300 signed a petition to a sun mirror shinning on a sunlight, in fact, that the solar block the project. Some oppo- parking lot," Bergsland, the mechanisms that power the nents,like Robert Jenbergsen, mayor, said. mirror stopped working and who is studying to become a Andersen, who has generthe beam disappearedcom- teacher, have changed their ally made a living off odd jobs pletely for a while. A generator minds. "I thought it would be (he is currently a lifeguard and fuel had to be hauled up a waste because we have a lot at the municipal pool) grumthe mountain by snowmobile of bad weather here," he said. bles a bit that the mirrors are "But when we got the sun, square and that little was done to get things going again. But most residents do not you could see the happiness to make the site aestheticalseem to dwell on such set- itbrought.We had never seen ly pleasing if someone were backs. Certainly, the mayor, anything like that before. So, to walk into the area on the Steinar Bergsland, is not much now I think it is great." mountain, as he would have concerned. Refusing to accept done. life in the shadows, he said,

has brought all kinds of atten-

Not everyone's happy

For his n ext

OWN YOUR OWN TANK! New Customer Package Deal 8 99*

ny

This limited time special offer includes: • 250/288 Gallon Refurbished Above Ground Tank • Propane Filled to 80% • Regulator, New Pigtail Bc Installation • Fire Marshall Permit • Free Site Evaluation 6 System Check Expires 5/31/14

O ne year contract required at "Locked-In Price Per Gallon" — Too Low To Print!!

h o w ever, h a v e would like to paint a Jules Verne quote — "Look with all Torresvold, 77, and his wife, your eyes, look!" — in giant O thers,

not been impressed. Annar

the world's first large-scale

Anne-Lise Odegaard, 70, still

letters across the road leading

fertilizer plant here between 1905 and 1916.

think that the 5 million kroner

into town. Verne once visit-

In the decades that fol-

the mirrors might have been

ed Rjukan in 1861, Andersen said. But he is not optimistic. "It is a s i mple project, lowed, the industrialist, Samu- better spent elsewhere. They el Eyde, known here as Uncle worry about a possible closing cheap," he said, sounding a bit Sam, built just about every- of the hospital, the quality of annoyed. "But the town has althing that stands in Rjukan to- the schools and health care for ready turned me down. They day. Managers got the houses seniors. would not consider it."

Ogl

NEWCUSTOI ~ *Any part of system after first stage regulator that needs repair, update or added will be at customer's expense. For your safety, all systems will be up to State Fire Marshall Installation Code.

A Subsidiar

of

II Ii

p r oject, he

tion to Rjukan, a town built by an industrialist who opened

(roughly $840,000) spent on

II I<

Amaica's Pmpane Company

I TO REDEEM - PRESENT THIS AD INPERSON AT: I

I

I

I

I


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

COCC

at Hawaii Community Col-

lege, where she became a

Continued fromA1 tenured professor in business Lanning, 48, is chief aca- and a dean. Before moving demic officer of i n struction to COCC, she served as an and studentservices for the executive vice president for Chemeketa Community Col- instruction and vice presilege District and president of dent foradvancement at Lake its Yamhill Valley Campus in Washington Institute of TechMcMinnville. nology in Kirkland, Wash. In "We're really disappointed 2010, she was a finalist to be with last week's failed search, the president of South Seattle quote, unquote," Metcalf said. Community College. "If the board feels I have the COCC Board C h a irman background, skills and expe- Bruce Abernethy said Metcalf rience to get us to the perma- has the skills and experience nent role, I'm truly honored. I "to help the college make a love this college and commu- smooth transition." He noted nity, and will give it my heart that during her period as inand soul." terim vice president, she was Metcalf, who said she will "very well received by staff not seek the permanent po- and students." sition following her one-year Abernethy said the board

as president for a decade, will postpone his planned June 30

Ukraine

retirement until September. In

Continued from A1

the meantime, the board said Metcalf will l ikely assume more responsibility to prepare for the transition. Abernethy also said Middleton may con-

tinue in a smaller role after September, working as "a mentor, lobbyist or to provide

other support," if Metcalf so desires. Middleton praised Metcalf,

saying, "Some people say they are dedicated, but with her, it's truly the case that she is ded-

icated to the college. She will provide the calming and stabilizing influence the college needs in this transition."

l

o t h er

Ukrainian officials are sure that Russia is guiding steadily taken over one government building after another. They have vocal

support on that score from Washington and London. Russia adamantly denies

it, and the Russian foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, said Monday it is the West's

responsibility to rein in the government in Kiev so that

Maxim Dondyuk I Russian Reporter magazine

Ukrainian soldiers sit on top of military vehicles with a Ukrainian national flag Monday in a field about 44 miles from the eastern Ukrainian town of Slovyensk, where the Ukrainian regional edministration building wes seized by pro-Russian activists.

there are no violent attacks on the militants.

The crisis, which began to the south, in Crimea, is

the next academic year are

now focused on militants who say they represent the "People's Republic of Donetsk." It has brought

considered only internal can-

h

the militants as they have

Metcalf said her goals for

to "calm everyone down folcollege since 2011. In her cur- didates for the position, noting lowing what happened" and rent role, Metcalf oversees Vice President for Administra- to "build trust in the board as COCC campuses in Redmond, tion Matt McCoy was also a they prepare to choose the college's next president." Prineville and Madras, as well candidate. "Matt asked to not be conas the college's noncredit inCOCC will begin a new struction. For a f i v e-month sidered," Abernethy said. "We presidentialsearch process period beginning in February have a great staff and felt com- next fall, hoping to have some2013, Metcalf served as the fortable with our decision. If one securedforthe beginning college's interim vice president Shirley had said no, we might of the 2015-16 school year. for instruction. not have felt so comfortable." — Reporter: 541-633-2160, Metcalf began her career Middleton, who has served tleeds@bendbulletin.com appointment, has been at the

T urchynov an d

U.S. weighsnewsanctions against Russia WASHINGTON — President BarackObamawarned PresIdent Vladimir Putin of Russia onMonday against further disruption of eastern Ukraineevenasthe U.S.and Europeprepared to expand sanctions against leading Russian fIgures in thenext few days. After a weekend of meetings, the White Housewas working on a list of new targets who would bebarred from traveling to the United States or whoseassets here would be frozen, officials said. Among them is Igor Sechin, a longtime Putin ally and the president of Rosneft, the largest state-owned Russian oil company, which has amajor joint venture with ExxonMobil. European ministers agreed Monday on alist of their own. The U.S. sanctions would also be imposed on atleast oneRussian institution that is deemedpart of the crony network supporting Putin, officials said. But they addedthat Obama does not plan to place more crippling measures onwhole sectors of the Russian economy unless the Kremlin escalates Its actions. The debate over theWestern responsecameastensions continued to mount. ThePentagon said Monday that a Russian attack aircraft made 12close passes near aU.S. destroyer in the Black Sea onSaturday. And the White Houseconfirmed that CIA Director John 0. Brennanvisited Kiev over the weekend, a move that provided propagandaammunition to the Kremlin, which has presented the crisis as aU.S.-orchestrated intervention. Judging by public accounts, the latest telephonecall between Obama andPutin did little to bridge the divide. In the call, requested by Moscow, Obama accused Putin of trying to subvert Ukraine by fomentIng takeovers of security buildings. "The president expressed graveconcern about Russian government support for the actions of armed, pro-Russian separatists who threaten to undermine anddestabilize the government of UkraIne," the White House said in astatement.

relations between Russia and the West to their low-

est point at least since the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979.

"There can't really be

any real doubt that this is

something that has been planned an d br o ught about by Russia," the Brit-

ish foreign secretary, William Hague, said as he arrived in Luxembourg to meet with his European counterparts.

Rent Continued fromA1

In Moscow, a spokesman for Vladimir Putin said the

In Chicago, rent as a percent-

age of income has risen to 31 percent, from a historical aver-

Russian president has been watching the crisis with

"great concern" and had received "many appeals, addressed personally to Putin, asking to help in this or that way and asking to in-

age of 21 percent. In New Orle-

ans, it has more than doubled, to 35percent from 14percent. Zillow calculated the historical

average usingdata from 1985to 2000. Nationally, half of all renters

tervene in this or that way."

Officials at the Pentagon on Monday protested what they described as a provocative flyover by a Russian

are now spending more than 30 percent of their income on housing, according to a comprehensive Harvard study, up from 38 percent of renters in

A7

attack aircraft that flew at close range for 90 minutes

2000. In December, Housing

over a U.S. Navy ship that

Secretary Shaun Donovan dedared "the worst rental afford-

had been sent into the Black

Sea. The anonymous appeal

— New YorkTimesNews Service

looking increasingly unlikely. On Monday, Turchynov unexpectedly held out the offer of a

vinced that the Kiev government would not carry out its

threat to deploy the Ukrainian army in the region. Unlike

referendum to determine the

rise, on average, as much as 4 percent this year, compared

Hungary in 1956 and of

with 2.8 percent last year. But rents are rising faster than that

two operations in which one of Putin's heroes, Yuri

themselves in towns on stra-

amount of power-sharing between Kiev and the regions, to be held the same day. The separatists have been saying that a referendum is their principal goal, but many were quick to dismiss Turchynov's proposal as insincere — as was the Russian foreign ministry. Turchynov also talked with

in many cities even as over-

Andropov, a KGB official

tegic crossroads, but wouldn't

U.N. General Secretary Ban

all inflation is running at little more than 1percent annually.

who later became Soviet leader, played a key role.

be able to withstand an armored assault— unless such

ability crisis that this country

has ever known."

for help has been a favorite tactic of Russian interven-

Apartment vacancy r ates have dropped so low that fore-

tionists for the better part

casters at Capital Economics, a

of a century. It was rolled out before the invasion of

researchfirm, said rents could

Czechoslovakia i n

One of the most expensive cities for r enters is

where rents, on average, consume 43 percent of the typical household income, up from a historical average of just more a quarter. S tella Santamaria, a

Angel Valentin/ New York Times News Service

Arturo Breton, left, end Aureiio Medine consult their smertphones es they look for en apartment to rent earlier this month in Miami Beach, Fia. "I've come down to the conclusion that in this country, it's easier for two people to pey the rent then for one person," d i - Breton said.

vorced40-year-old math teacher, has been looking for an ers, said Stan Humphries, the chief economist of Zillow. "We're kind of sick of talking For many middle- and lowabout it," she said of herself and er-income people, high rents fellow teachers in the same choke spending on other goods boat. "It's like, 'Are you still liv- and services, impeding the ecoing with your mom?"Yeah, are nomic recovery.Low-income you?"Yeah.'" families that spend more than After 11 years as a teacher, half their income on housing Santamaria makes $41,000, spend about a third less on considerably less than the food, 50percent less on clothcity's median income, which is ing,and80percentless onmed$48,000, according to Zillow. ical care compared with low-inEven dual-income profes- come families with affordable sional couples are being priced rents, accordingto anewreport

apartment in Miami for more than six months.

out of the walkable urban-core

by the National Low Income

sult, there are in effect two separate rental markets that are so

far apart in price that they have little effect on each other.

Cities have been left to address theproblem ontheir own, with some granting exceptions to their own zoning laws to al-

low for things like micro-apartments. Miami h a s a l lowed some variances to its urban

plan for projects like Brickell View Terrace, which will have 176 units in a prime location near a Metrorail station. Ninety of the units will be affordable

neighborhoods where many of Housing Coalition. And renters them want to live. Stuart Ken-

nedy, 29, a senior program officer at a nonprofit group, said he and his girlfriend, a lawyer, will be losing their $2,300 a month rental house in Buena Vista in June. Since they found

the place a year ago, rents in the area have increased sharply. "If you go by a third of your income, that formula, even with how comfortable our incomes

are, it looks like it's going to be impossible," Kennedy said. Part of the reason for the

squeeze on renters is simple demand — between 2007 and 2013 the U.S. added, on net, about 6.2 million tenants, com-

for people making 60percent of amass less wealth, even non- the median income, 10 for peohousing wealth, than home- ple making less, and the rest owners do. willbe market rate. The problem threatens to But a seemingly insatiable get worse before it gets better. demand for luxury condos Apartment builders have raced in Miami, created in part by to build more units, creating a wealthy L a ti n A m e r icans, wave of supply that is begin- has caused land prices to soar, ning to crest. Miami added making affordable housing 2,500 rental apartments last projects harder to build anyyear, and 7,500 more are ex- where dose t o d o w ntown. pected in the next two years, Moving farther out is cheaper, according to the CoStar Group, but the cost savings on housareal estate research firm. ing can be quickly wiped out But demand has shown no by transportation costs. A 2012 signs of slackening. And as studybythe Center for Housing long as there are plenty of up- Policy found that Miami was per-income renters looking for the most expensive metropol-

pared with 208,000 homeown-

apartments, there is little incentive to build anything other than expensive units. As a re-

Marathon

because for th e w heelchair uphill and on gravel," she said.

Continued fromA1 "It really touched me. It made me want to push myself more to do it," said Sahme,

itan area in the country when

housing and transportation costs were combined.

Russia's involvement in Crimea in late February

militants have established

Ki-moon and later suggested thataU.N.peacekeeping force

an attack draws assistance could enter eastern Ukraine. from Russian military forces

But the almost-certain oppo-

right across the border, which sition of Moscow, standing up and March b efore t h at is exactly what Kiev and its for the men with guns, makes region's annexation by friends abroad fear. that problematic. Moscow. This being Ukraine, though, In e a stern Uk r a i ne, some people — including Visit Central Oregon's Ukrainian news agencies Oleksandr Yaroshenko, a vetreported Monday evening eran political strategist in Dothat opponents of the sep- netsk — worry that Turchynov aratists had set up check- and his ally, the former prime points on highways leading minister Y u li a 7 i r moshenfrom the Donetsk region to ko, are gaming the crisis for the Kharkiv region, andpersonal benefit and may not See 100 life-sized with the help of traffic po- intend to resist Russia to the samples of the latest lice — were inspecting cars fullest. innovative and stylish with the aim of preventing O ne factor at play is t h e separatists from traveling upcoming presidential elecHunter Douglas to Kharkiv. tion, scheduled for May 25 but window fashions! But as the evening wore

HunlerDouglas

See us also for Retractable Awnings, Exterior Solar Screens, Patio Shade Structures

on there was still no sign of

Turchynov's promised attack on separatist positions by forces loyal to Kiev. Turchynov and other officials had said that if no res-

Pur4 5dDd lD 50.

aj B~ dU 1~ Bend Redmond

olution was reached by 8 a.m. Monday, an "anti-ter-

sea C~srg

John Day

rorist" operation would begin.

Burns Lakeview

In the heart of Donetsk,

a group of pro-Russians occupying the city's Lenin Square said they were con-

COVERINGS

La Pine

541-388%418

541.382.6447

1465 SWKnollAve. Bend www.clessic-coverings.com

bendurology.com

SUY NEW ... SUV l Q CAl I

I

/ •

I

I

O N- IN E BID ING STARTS

P RIL 6 T 9 A .

ww w . Bullet inBidnBuy.com

"It's a really big challenge, people using it and handling it d ivision, we can't do

t h e "I'm hoping I'll get the hang of

half-marathon; we have to do the full 26 miles," she said. "I

get scared a lot, even in my who is taking GED classes chair, going down steep hills and hopes to enroll in Portland and everything." Community College once she Once she reaches 10 weeks earns her GED. of training, Sahme will move Marathon participants can to a blacktop area in Warm use a wheelchair, but Sahme Springs to get used to going feels a handcycle would be up and down hills. She wants more suited to he r e x peri- to purchase the custom-made ence level and the challenging handcycle by the first week of course. The handcycle has August so she can have a few

it."

Sahme's determination runs deep. Whether or not she can raise the money to purchase

the handcycle, she said she may still try to compete in her wheelchair. She registered for the marathon last week, and her family has already booked rooms in Portland for the event.

weeks to train herself to use it

"I'm overwhelmed with joy," Picardsaid."We're allhere for her and supporting her in every way we can."

bottom for steering and hand before the marathon. "They have a few videos of pedals to power the vehicle.

— Reporter: 541-633-2117, mwarner®bendbulletin.com

three wheels with pedals at the

itary to roll into the region. They were holding out for a referendum on the region' s future.

Elsewhere in the region, the 1 9 68, several hundred pro-Russian

It was also a feature of

M i ami,

some activists, they said they did not want the Russian mil-

VOU CAIII BID Olll:

• Gift Certificates • BedroomFurniture • Living RoomFurniture

Retail Value frrm$2SOto$2,500

I

'

'

I


AS TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

UPDATE:BOSTON BOMBING SUSPECT

IN FOCUS: PULITZER PRIZES

gcjjggey yygj g jg jgo g jgg Post, Guardihonored an By Michael Wines and Serge F.Kovaleski

He cannot mingle, speak or pray with other prisoners. His onlyvisitors are his legalteam,

demands for sweeping access to prosecutors' files and, according to prosecutors' bitter complaint, ignored court rules requiring them to hand over considerably less information

a mental health consultant

than the prosecution is being

and his immediate family, who apparentlyhave seenhim only rarely.

asked to give. Tsarnaev spends his days in

He may write only one let-

vens, Mass., a men-only prison hospital that houses 1,042

New York Times News Service

er Edward Snowden.

StevenSenne/The Associated Press

hint that he has overcome at least the worst of injuries suffered during the manhunt that

D zh o k h a r T sarnaev in a

anything he has told or written them. C ourt documents and a

suburban Boston backyard, before the measures were imhiding in a boat posed, offer glimpses into his there, wounded life. Last May, he told his parTssrnaev b y g unfire. To- ents in Dagestan that "everyday he passes thing is good," that he was eattime in a secure federal med- ing meals of chicken and rice ical facility, awaiting a No- and that supporters had devember trial on charges that posited some $1,000 in a bank he helped plan and execute account set up onhis behalf. the Boston Marathon bombAnd he gets cards and leting a year ago on Tuesday, ters: at least a thousand so far, which killed three people and many, his lawyers have writwounded at least 260, and a ten, from people urging him killing and kidnapping spree to convert to Christianity. But that forced an entire city into thereare others aswell,from lockdown. admirers and backers who beNow, at age 20, it is his turn lieve he is innocent. to be effectively walled off Crystel Clary, a single mothfrom the outside world, im- er in Wisconsin who turns 35 prisoned under so-called spe- on Tuesday, is one of them. She cial administrative measures says she has written Tsarnaev approved by the U.S. attorney 10 times beginning a month general. The restrictions are after the April 15 bombing, reservedfor inmates consid- offering moral support and ered to pose the greatest threat news tidbits about such things to others — even though, pri- as Eminem's latest album and vately, federal officials say new movies. Prison authorthere is little of substance to suggest that Tsarnaev and

ities returned birthday and

Valentine's Day cards, she his brother Tamerlan were said, stating that she is not apanything but isolated, home- proved to write to Tsarnaev. g rown terrorists. A c o u r t Clary said that the letters have orderbars his legaladvisers not been returned, and she has and family from disdosing not received any replies from

led to his capture last April. The location and terms of

his confinement are set by U.S. marshals, and there is some leeway in the degree Tsarnaev. Her Twitter account of isolation they impose: The neverthelessfeatures photo- administrative measures, for graphs of Dzhokhar Tsarnaev example, technically allow

snippet of a phone conversa- and Tamerlan, who was killed tion with his family, released by the police during a manhunt for the two men.

Tsarnaev to write one letter a

month, but in practice he can send one a week.

"You can tell he didn't do it," Beyond being segregated she said. "There is too much from other prisoners — for suspicious stuff going on in their security and his, the govthis case." ernment has stated — TsarIn court documents, prose- naev may well spend little time cutors appeartohave amassed outside his cell, period. an arsenal of evidence from Richard Reid, the "shoe thousands of pages of docu- bomber" who sought to blow ments and terabytes of digital up a n A m e rican A i r lines information, including what flight from Paris to Miami in they say is Tsarnaev's hospi- December 2001, was confined tal-bed confession and a call for 23 hours a day and given for others to wage holy war accessto sunlightforan hour, against Americans. according to Gerry Leone, a They are fodder for 30 crim- former U.S. assistant district inal charges against him. Sev- attorneyand terrorism coorenteen of them carry the death

penalty. The federal court

dinator in Massachusetts who oversaw his case. As w ith

M a ssachusetts, seldom Tsarnaev, he said, any comaccused of hurrying a case munications to or by Reid were along, has given the two sides seized and scrutinized for hid19 months to prepare for a trial den messages. that the prosecution says could At their root, Leone said, the last three months. measures aim to prevent susTsarnaev's public-defender pected terrorists from hatchlegal team — five attorneys, at ing more plots from their cells. "Part of the reasoning is least two investigators, a brace of paralegals and aides — has the tradecraft of terrorists, in in

in turn called 19 months a

that they recruit others," he

time for the scorched-earth

said. "They use many different forms of communications with

"rocket schedule," far too little

NEW YORK — The Washington Post and The Guardian won the Pulitzer Prize in

adjacent minimum-security

A passer-by walks psst yellow and blue crocheted hearts hangthe government deems poten- ing from a lamp post Monday in front of the Forum restaurant tial vehicles for coded messag- near the finish line of the Boston Marathon. The restaurant was es. He watches no television, damaged after one of the bombs exploded in front of the building listens to no radio. He ventures during the race April 15, 2013.

outside infrequently, and only to a single small open space. It has been nearly a year since police officers found

The Associated Press

inmates and 131 others at an camp. His health is unknown, although court d o cuments

and letters to the editor, which

By Meghan Barr

public service Monday for revealing the U.S. government's sweeping surveillance programs in a blockbuster series of sto riesbased on secretdocuments supplied by NSA leak-

Federal Medical Center in De-

ter — three pages, double-sided — and place one telephone call each week, and only to his family. If he reads newspapers and magazines, they have been stripped of classified ads

for NSArevelations

defense it appears tobe assem- others to try to compromise bling. Theyhave filed repeated security."

The Pulitzer for breaking news was awarded to The Boston Globe for its "exhaustive

and empathetic" coverage of the Boston Marathon bombing and th e m anhunt that

followed. Two of the nation's biggest and most distinguished news-

papers, The Post and The New York Times, won two Pulitzers each, while the other awards

were scattered among a variety of publications large and small. The stories about the National Security Agency's spy programs revealed that the government has systematically collected information about

millions of Americans' phone calls and emails in its effort to head off terrorist attacks. The

resulting furor led President Barack Obama to impose limits on the surveillance.

The r eporting "helped stimulate the very important discussion about the balance

between privacy and security, and that discussion is still going on," said Sig Gissler, administrator of the Pulitzer Prizes. The Washington Post won a second Pulitzer in the exfor Eli Saslow's look at food

I

Post

local reporting:Will Hobson and Michael LaForgia oftheTampa BayTimes, Florida National reporting:David Philipps of TheGazette, Colorado Springs, Colo. International reporting: Jason SzepandAndrew R.C. Marshall of Reuters Feature writing:Noaward. Commentary:Stephen Henderson of the Detroit Free Press Criticism:Inga Saffron of The Philadelphia Inquirer Editorial writing:The Editorial Staff of TheOregonian, Portland Eriiterial cartooning:Kevin Siers of TheCharlotte Observer, North Carolina Breaking newsphotsgraphy:Tyler Hicks of The New York Times Feature photography: Josh Haner of TheNew York Times

an investigation that found

stamps in America. that the Army has discharged The Center for Public Integ- escalating numbers of traurity's Chris Hamby won for matized combat veterans who investigative reporting for de- commit crimes at home. tailing how lawyers and docThe Oregonian won for tors rigged a system to deny editorial writing for its focus benefits to coal miners suffer- on reforms in Oregon's pubing from black lung disease. lic employee pension fund. The prize f o r n a t ion- The prize was the third in the al reporting went to David newspaper's history foreditoPhilipps of The Gazette of rial writing.

)

M See Store for DetailsM

0

Public service:TheGuardianUS andTheW ashington Post Breaking newsreporting: The Boston GlobeStaff Investigative reporting: Chris Hamby of TheCenter for Public Integrity, Washington, D.C. Explanatory reporting:Eli Saslow of TheWashington

planatory reporting category, Colorado Springs, Colo., for

PACIFIC FURMjTURE DEALERS

See Store for Details

Journalism PulitzerPrizes


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

BRIEFING

2vie in circuit

4.

!

*

Teen injured in vehicle incident A Redmond teen received cuts and a broken arm Monday afternoon after he fell off the running board of a moving pickup truckat Redmond High School. Police found an injured 17-year-old lying in the high school parking lot when they arrived about 2:44 p.m., according to a newsrelease from Redmond police. After being treated by Redmond Fire Department personnel, the youth was taken to St. Charles Redmond. The teen steppedonto the running board of a Ford pickup being driven by a second17-yearold, according to the news release.Whenthe pickup begandriving through the school parking lot, the teenon the running board could not hang on, thenews release stated. Redmond police did not release the namesof the teens but said they attend RedmondHigh School and areacquaintances. The driver was cited for reckless driving, according to police. — Bulletin staff report

STATE NEWS The Dalles Corvallis

Pet 'f

gii I-

COLIIt

~0 0'

"~+

jj

debate By Shelby R. King The Bulletin

I

REDMOND — The

4p

two attorneys running for Deschutes County Circuit Court judge invited attend-

tt:0 ;tl

+(

r

ees at a Monday evening forum to examine their differing backgrounds and experience when choosing the best candidate.

r

Thomas

.g;< j,,'"

Miller

"T.J." Spear and Randy Miller par-

f

ticipated in a

Redmond Patriots-sponsored forum

' tk

Photo courtesy Crook County Sheriff's Office

Fire consumes a boat on Prineville Reservoir Sunday. The family aboard swam toshore before flames spread throughout the vessel, which eventually sank.

oa oesLi in ames, swim ac os ore • Family members escapeinto chily waters of Prinevile Reservoir

at Highland Bapt i st Church in Redmond. The candidates are vying for the position on the court being vacated by Judge Barbara HaslingS pear

er in the May 20 election. Spear, 52, cited his 19

years experience as a trial attorney, representing both

prosecution and defense. He said he's participated in more than 200 jury trials,

whereas Miller has only tried one case in front of a jury. "Do you want someone who's only had one jury trial or is in court every

• Cervallis:Oregon State University launches a craft beer archive,B3 • The Dalles:Mystery in a sewage pipe,B3

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

The Bulletin

By Dylan J. Darling

Anthony Howden, 40, of

The Bulletin

Bend was trying to start the

Three people escaped a fire aboard a motorboat Sunday on Prineville Reservoir by

jumping into the water and swimming to shore. "It looks like it was probably engine trouble that caused it," said Sgt. James Savage of the Crook County Sheriff's Office. The three swam about

inboard motor of a 1972 Caravelle boat around I:30 p.m.

when a fire ignited in the engine compartment, according

jackets on the boat, but they

weren't accessible during the fire. Savage said he didn't have an exacttemperature reading forthe reservoir'swater Sun-

Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 State projects...... 541-410-9207 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-383-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health ...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissions • Letters andopinions:

Miller, 43, said his

to squelch the blaze with a fire

day, but it was chilly. "One of (the boaters) was

extinguisher, but the extin-

treated for hypothermia, so it

best choice because the

guisher didn't work. Howden then told his family to go overboard, according to

was pretty cold," he said. No other injuries were reported.

30 yards to reach land near

the sheriff's office. The three

the Powder House Cove boat ramp, off of state Highway 27.

swam to shore without the aid of life jackets. They had life

two people in the boat was not available. SeeFire/B2

two most recently elected judges came from criminal attorney backgrounds. "He misunderstands

to the sheriff's office. He tried

Information about the other

years of civil-litigation experience make him the

the nature of my practice. He will never have the

complex civil-litigation experience that I have,"

Call a reporter

Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-2186 Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 Sunrlver ................541-383-0367

day?" he asked the audience. "If you're going into surgery, do you want a guy who's done one surgery or hundreds?"

REDMOND

Council to discuss new city hall

Miller said. "Ask yourself, what does the judge do? A judgemakes decisions.... Every judge has to learn new things." Audience members asked the candidates their

opinions on gun control By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

For four years, Redmond

city leaders have envisioned a new city hall in the closed Evergreen Elementary School. The worst recession in generations kept those plans in the drawing room, long after

the city bought the building from the Redmond School

building proposal at a meeting tonight.

District in 2010. But an im-

Those talks could focus on

proving economy, and a new source of funding, means the

the repairsneeded to restore the 93-year-old building and

Evergreen conversations could

make it suitable for use as a

shiftback into high gear. City councilors are sched-

city hall, Redmond Mayor George Endicott said Monday. SeeEvergreen/BG

uled to discuss the Evergreen

via a change to the Second Amendment, and how each would rate U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder's

performanceon a scaleof one to 10, with 10 being a high rating and one a low rating. SeeDebate/B5

Mail:My Nickel's Worth

or In MyView P.o. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358, bulletln@bendbulletln.com

• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletln.com,with "Civic Calendar" ln thesubject, andincludeacontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletln.com. Email announcementsof teens'

academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletln.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletln@bendbulletln.com. Contact: 541-883-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, oblts@bendbulletln.com

• Community events: Email events tocommunitylifeO bendbulletln.comorclickon "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe

calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries: The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-883-0358

HAPPENED TO ... •

Following up onCentral Dregon's most interesting stories, even if they've been out of the headlines for a while. Email ideas to news©bendbulletin.com. Q»To follow the series, visit benslbulletin.csm/updates

FOREST SERVICECHARGING STATIONS

More stations to juice upelectric fleet By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

U.S. Forest Service workershave three times

as many places to juice up electric cars around Central Oregon than they did in spring 2013. The Forest Service now has nine charging stations at locations in Bend, Redmond, Prineville and Sisters, said Jean Nel-

Since then, two charging stations have been installed at the Redmond Air Center, and one each at the Sisters

Ranger District Office, the Ochoco National Forest headquarters in Prineville,

charging stations, it certainlycausestheincrease in use of the electric vehi-

ters on Deschutes Market

to the public. See Electric/B2

Road in northeast Bend.

said, and are not available

OESCHUTESCOUNTY

• District Attorney Patrick Flaherty is seeking re-election, and Bend attorney John Hummel has also filed to run for the position as well. • Commission seats held by TonyDeBoneand Tammy Baneyare upfor election. DeBone,aRepublican, hasfiled to run again andfaces a primary challenge fromRichard Esterman.Democratand current BendCity Councilor Jodie Barramhas announcedshewill run for the position aswell. • Circuit Judge Barbara Haslinger hasannounced she'll retire. Her seat on the benchwill be up for election. Randy Miller and Thomas Spear are vying for the position. • Circuit Judge Stephen Forte is upfor re-election. • The county assessor position is on the ballot. • A five-year local option fire levy would tax property owners 20 cents per $1,000 in assessed property value. The fire department currently receives acut of $1.18 per $1,000 in assessed property value from the city's permanent tax rate of $2.80 per $1,000.

CROOKCOUNTY • The commission seat held by SethCrawford is up for election. Crawford has filed to runagain and faces a primary challenge from Prineville City Councilor JackSeley. • The county assessor position is on the ballot. • A measure to make nonpartisan the positions of Crook County Judge and county commissioners will also be on the ballot.

JEFFERSON COUNTY

• Commission seats held by MikeAhern and John Hatfield are upfor election. Ahern is seeking re-election and will face a challenge from Floyd Paye;TomBrown, Mae Huston andMike Throop have filed for the other seat.

CROOK/JEFFERSON • Circuit Judge Daniel Ahern and Circuit Judge Gary LeeWilliams are running unopposed for re-election.

REGISTERTO VOTE • The deadline to register to vote is 21 days before Election Day. • Register online atthe Oregon secretary of state's website, bymail using a formfoundthere, or in personatyour county electlons offtce. • Absentee ballots are available 45days before the election. Voters already registered in Deschutes County can request anearly ballot in person, by mail or byfax. Use this link to thecounty website to download the form as aPDF: bitly.com/1fWStbY. Voters must include aname, a residenceaddressand a mailing address.

READOURSTORIES

in Bend and Prineville. "With the increase in

cles," Nelson-Dean said. The charging stations serve Forest Service vehicles only, Nelson-Dean

The May 20election will serve as aprimary for a variety of statewide offices. Local races and measures will also be on the ballot.

• Coverage leading up to the election is online at bendbulletin.cem/ elections

and at agencywarehouses

son-Dean, a Forest Service spokeswoman. A year ago, there were three, all at the Deschutes National Forest headquar-

MAY ELECTION

1

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

The two electric vehicles charging Friday at the Deschutes National Forest headquarters in northeast Bend are part of the expanding fleet of U.S. Forest Service electric vehicles snd charging stations in Central Oregon.

ELECTIONCALENDAR Are you holding anevent to educate voters in the lead-up to the Mayelection? Submit the information toelections© bendbulletin.com.We will not publish information about political fundraisers.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

E VENT TODAY BOOKDISCUSSION:Discuss A Novel Idea's"The Dog Stars" by Peter Heller; free; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. A NOVELIDEA:"LOW & CLEAR": A screening of the documentary about a fly-fishing trip to Canada and how a friendship has grown apart; free; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www.deschuteslibrary.org. DIRECTDIVIDE:The LosAngeles, Calif., alt-rock band performs, with Junk Yard Lords; $5; 9 p.m., doors open 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

ENDA R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

$10, $8 for Sunriver Nature Center members, free for students with ID; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-593-4394 or www. sunrivernaturecenter.org. "I AM":A screening of the 2010 documentary (NR) about spiritual

C

tft;,

/' i

leaders discussingwhat is wrong

with the world and how to improve it; free, donations accepted; 7:30 p.m., doorsopen 7 p.m .;The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-508-1059 or www. spiritualawarenesscommunity.com. ARMCHAIR STORYTELLING: Local storytellers perform, with a theme of "Plan B"; $10; 7 p.m.; TinPanTheater,869 N.W .Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-241-2271 or www. facebook.com/ArmchairBend. LEE KOCH TRIO: The California Americana band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.

tu,,

AQX

Submitted photo

The Wheeler Brothers will perform at McMenamins Old St. Francis

School on Wednesday.

Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541WEDNESDAY 322-9392, bend.events©yahoo.com or www.bendcitycare.com. ATTRACTINGNATIVE POLLINATORS:Learn how bees GEORGE MANN: The NewYorkmcmenamins.com. and other pollinators are important based activist singer-songwriter in a healthy environment and a WILLYTEA &THE GOOD LUCK performs a benefit concert for secure food supply; free, reservation FELLAS:Folk and Americana universal and publicly funded requested; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, performances, with The Sumner healthcare for Oregon; $10 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317Brothers, Mosley Wotta and suggested donation;7 p.m.; 0700 or www.deschuteslandtrust. Marshall Law; proceeds benefit the Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. org/events/apr16nn. Leonard Peltier Defense Committee; Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 $10 suggested donation; 9 p.m., WHEELERBROTHERS:The or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. doors open 8 p.m.; Volcanic Austin, Texas, Americana quintet TRIVIA BEE:The Education Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century performs, with Graham Wilkinson; Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. Foundation for the Bend-La Pine free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Schools holds a trivia competition; volcanictheatrepub.com. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond ages 21 and older; proceeds benefit St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. "WON'TBACK DOWN — THE the foundation; $21 plus fees; mcmenamins.com. STORY OFSTEVEPEAT": A 7 p.m.,doors open6 p.m.with screening of the brand new THET SISTERS: The Oakland, live music and appetizers; Tower film documenting the career of Calif., sister group performs, with Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; legendary downhill mountain biker Portland's Ike Fonsecaand Olivia 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. Steve Peat; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins ol'g. Holman; $5; 9p.m., doorsopen8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. "BLUE JASMINE":A screening Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or of the 2013 film (PG-13) starring www.mcmenamins.com. or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. Cate Blanchett; free, refreshments TRIBAL SEEDS:California rootsavailable; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez reggae, with New Kingston and Inna FRIDAY Annex, Jefferson County Library, Vision; $15 plus fees in advance, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-475$20 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open YOUTH ARTWALK:Showcase 3351 or www.jcld.org. of local youth art from Redmond 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. COMEDY IMPROV: An interactive schools and home-schooled Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-408performance with Triage and the students; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown 4329 or www.j.mp/TribalSds. Reality Benders; $5; 7:30 p.m., Redmond; 541-923-5191 or www. doors open 7p.m.; Greenwood visitredmondoregon.com. THURSDAY Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood "THE LITTLE MERMAID": Bend Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. BOOKDISCUSSION:Discuss A Experimental Art Theatre presents cascadestheatrical.org. the classic tale by Hans Christian Novel Idea's "The Dog Stars" by THE LOWESTPAIR:The banjoPeter Heller; free; noon; La Pine Anderson; $15, $10 for students; 7 focused folk band performs, with Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541- p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. 312-1090 or www.deschuteslibrary. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. Dead Pigeons; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815org/calendar. beatonline.org. 9122 or www.belfryevents.com. "HOW DIDWE GET HERE? HUMAN CITY CAREFUNDRAISER:Live ORIGINS: EVOLUTION AND music by Kim Kelley and raffle; ILKO:The Portland DJ performs, MIGRATION": Scott Fisher presents proceeds benefit City Care of Bend; with BasssChost, Rad and local fire "Clues From the Solar System"; free, donationsaccepted; 7p.m.; spinners; $3; 10 p.m.; Dojo, 852

N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-7069091 or www.dojobend.com.

SATURDAY WALK MS:A 5Kwalk to benefit multiple sclerosis treatment and local programs; registration required; proceeds benefit the National MS Society; donations requested; 9:30 a.m. opening

ceremony, siteopens9a.m.; Riverbend Park, 799 S.W.Columbia St., Bend; 503-445-8360 or www. walkorc.nationalmssociety.org. BEND FLYFISHING FESTIVAL: Featuring fly fishing films, demonstrations, artists, raffle and small auction; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way; bendcastingclub©gmail.com or www.bendcastingclub.org. EASTER EGGHUNT:Featuring an Easter Bunny visit, bouncy house and motorcycle blessing; free; 10 a.m. blessing,11 a.m.-3 p.m. bouncy house, noon-2 p.m. Easter egg hunt; Wildhorse HarleyDavidson, 63028 Sherman Road, Bend; 541-330-6228 or www. wildhorsehd.com. COMMUNITY EASTEREGG HUNT: Featuring 10,000 eggs stuffed with candyand tickets; three separate hunts for children ages 0-2, 3-4 and 5-6; Easter outfits are encouraged; free; 10:30 a.m.; Sam Johnson Park, S.W. 15th St. and S.W.Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-923-7710 or www.ci.redmond.or.us. EARTH DAYPARADEAND FESTIVAL:A parade and festival to celebrate the Earth, with live music, local food, activities and more; free;

11 a.m.; downtown Bend; 541-385at the door; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 6908 or www.envirocenter.org. E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www.belfryevents.com. EASTER EGGHUNT: Featuring more than 4,000 plastic eggs filled CHARLIE WORSHAM:The with candy and prizes for four Nashville, Tenn., country artist age groups; free; 11 a.m.-noon; performs; $12 plus fees; 9-11:30 Redmond Health Care Center, 3025 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar S.W. Reservoir Drive; 541-548-5066 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., or activities©redmondhealthcare. Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. com. maverickscountrybar.com. EASTER EGGHUNT:A com munity VINNIETHE SQUID:The Canadian Easter egg hunt for children in electronic artist performs, with Mr. fifth grade and younger, with Wu and Earsex Crew; 10 p.m.; Dojo, apuppet show,snacks and 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541prizes; free; 1 p.m.; Smith Rock 706-9091 or www.dojobend.com. Community Church, 834411th St., Terrebonne; 541-548-1315 or www. smithrockchurch org SUNDAY "THE LITTLEMERMAID": Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents DESCHUTESBREWERYEASTER the classic tale by Hans Christian KEG HUNT:Decipher Twitter and Anderson; $15, $10 for students; 2 Facebook clues to find a keg; free;; p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Mt. Bachelor ski area, 13000 S.W. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. Century Drive, Bend; 541-382-2442 beatonline.org. or www.mtbachelor.com. AUTHORPRESENTATION:Rene EASTER EGGSCATTER: The Denfield reads from her book"The Easter Bunny scatters eggs for Enchanted," with refreshments and children to find; free; 10:15 a.m. for prize drawings; free, reservation ages 5 andyounger, 10:45 a.m.for requested; 5-6:30 p.m.; Sunriver ages 6 and older; Mt. Bachelor ski Books 8 Music, Sunriver Village area, 13000 S.W. Century Drive, Building 25C; 541-593-2525 or Bend; 541-382-2442 or www. www.sunriverbooks.com. mtbachelor.com. TEN FRIENDSSPRING EASTER EGGHUNT FOR DOGS: CELEBRATION:Featuring Nepali Leashed and well-behaved dogs food, live music, silent auction and search for eggs filled with dog more; proceeds benefit Ten Friends treats, with gifts and prizes; free, Himalayan Education Center in donation to Hope food bank for pets Nepal; $12 suggested donation; requested; 3:30 p.m.;Eastside Bend 5:30-9p.m.;Aspen Hall,18920 N.W. Pet Express,420 N.E. Windy Knolls Shevlin Park Road, Bend; 541-280Drive; 541-385-5298 or www. 7778 or www.tenfriends.org. bendpetexpress. com/events. "THE LITTLEMERMAID": Bend "THE LITTLE MERMAID": Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents Experimental Art Theatre presents the classic tale by Hans Christian the classic tale by Hans Christian Anderson; $15, $10 for students; 7 Anderson; $15, $10 for students; 4 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. Sixth St.; 541-419-5558 or www. beatonline.org. beatonline.org. FASHIONSHOW & SILENT "HALF THEROAD":A screening AUCTION:The10th annual show of the 2014 documentary about benefits the Bend High School DECA women's professional cycling; chapter; located in the Center of $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Technology& Design behind the Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond school; $10, students $5, V.I.P. $15; St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. 7 p.m. silent auction, 8 p.m. fashion mcmenamins.com. show; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-383-6290. MOMDAY CASCADE RYE: The Oregon-based roots-music band performs, with BINGO ANDCOMMUNITY DINNER: Waylon Rich and Aaron Rhen; $5; 8 Featuring a dinner, bingo, silent p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. auction and dessert; $2 for dinner, Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 $15 for11 games of bingo; 5:30 p.m. or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. dinner, 6:30 p.m. bingo; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte DAVID JACOBS-STRAIN:The Road; 541-549-4050 or tim.roth© Oregon bluesman performs, with sisters.k12.or.us. Bob Beach and TheCrunk Mountain Boys; $15 plus fees in advance, $18

NEWS OF RECORD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMEMT Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at7:27a.m. April12, in thearea of SoutheastThird Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at11:29 a.m. April12, in thearea of Southeast Fairview Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at11:46a.m. April12, in the areaof Southeast Garner Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal

mischief was reported at11:58 a.m. April12, in the SoutheastGarnerStreet. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief wasreported at12:04 p.m. April12, in theSoutheast Lynn Boulevard. DUII —DerekChandler, 24, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:15 p.m. April13, in thearea of Northeast Elm Street.

JEFFERSOM COUNTY SHERIFF'S OFFICE Griminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 5p.m.April 10, in the areaof LakeSimtusus and Pelton DamRoadin Madras. Unauthorizeduse —Avehicle was reported stolen at8:06 a.m. April11, in the 500 block of Ninth Street in Metolius. Griminal mischief —Anact of

criminal mischief and aburglary were reported at 2:03 p.m.April 7, in the 200 block of Northwest Juniper Lane in Madras. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported enteredwith items missing at 7:47 a.m.April 9, in the 400 block of Eighth Street in Metolius. Theft —A theft was reported at12:45 p.m. April12, in the 700blockof Hood Avenue inMetolius. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief and aburglary were reported at 2:57 p.m.April13, in the100 block of Southeast DeeLaneinMadras.

OREGON STATE POLICE DUII —Brandon Mitchell Bailie, 25, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at1:09a.m. April12, in theareaof Northwest Portland Avenueand Northwest Wall Street in Bend. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was

reported at 9:52a.m. April12, in the area of U.S.Highway 20near milepost 94. Vehicle crash — Anaccident was reported at1:34 a.m.April 8, in the U.S. Highway 97near milepost186.

BEND FIRE RUMS

7:43 p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, in thearea of Cline Falls Road. 20 —Medical aid calls. Sunday 4:46 p.m.— Natural vegetation fire, 495 N.E.Bellevue Drive. 19 —Medical aid calls.

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO

•J

Thursday 7:23a.m. — Building fire, 150 N.W. Pacific Park. 10:50 a.m.— Unauthorized burning, 64655OldBend Redmond Highway. 5:05p.m.— Authorized controlled burning, 59795NavajoRoad. 21 —Medical aid calls. Friday 5:56 p.m. —Natural vegetation fire, 642 N.E.Third Street. 29 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 4:55p.m.— Unauthorized burning, in the area ofChuckanut Drive.

CONSUNER InSuranCe ServiCeS AND RENTERS

BEND 541-383-1733

REDMOND 541-504-2134

SR-22'S • SUSPENSIONS DUII'S • TICKETS

Weekly Arls St Enterlainment MAGAIIL'

Fire

I n his 13 years with t h e

Continued from B1 T he m i n t g r e e n bo a t b urned fo r a n h o u r a n d

driftedclose to shore before sinking i nto t h e

r e servoir,

according to the sheriff's office.

office marine patrol offers

Crook County Sheriff's Of- free boat inspections, during fice, Savage said, he hadn't which deputies provide adheard of a b o a t c a t ching vice on making boats safer. fire like the one on Sunday. The event is planned for 8 Still, he said, boaters should a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday at the include a fire extinguisher Ochoco Plaza in Prineville. among their safety gear. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, Each year the sheriff's ddarling@bendbulletin.com

I' I •

• •

Electric

formore electric-carcharging

to come down from Bend or

stations in C entral Oregon,

Prineville and be comfortable

Continued from B1 at the new welcome station (about) getting back," she said. So far, the Deschutes Na- planned for the Cascade Lakes Crescent is about 50 miles tional Forest fleet has three Highway near Bend and the south of Bend. Workers who fully e lectric cars, and t h e new Crescent Ranger District have used the electric cars Ochoco National Forest fleet Officeplanned for Crescent, available so far have deterhas one hybrid car, capable of Nelson-Dean said. Construc- mined that's about the range of being plugged in to recharge, tion on the welcome station the cars, Nelson-Dean said. but Nelson-Dean said there shouldstart later this year and T he electric c a r s h a v e will eventually be more. be done by the end of the year. proved ideal for driving from The continuing addition of Holly Jewkes, district rang- city to city, she said, but workelectric charging stations, and er in Crescent, said she hopes ers rely on hybrid, gas or diesel electric cars, on the Deschutes construction of the new office vehicles for going deep into the and Ochoco national forests will start this summer and forest — where there are no comesinresponse to a callby be donelate next year.Once charging stations. "Obviously, going into the President Barack Obama in the office has a charging sta2011 for changes to federal ve- tion, she said, employees will field sometimes might not be hicle fleets. By the end of next likely be more inclined to use appropriate (for the electric year, all new light-duty federal the electric cars, particularly cars)," Nelson-Dean said. "We vehicles must use alternative when driving to Bend or mak- go somelong distances." fuels. ing similar trips. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, The Forest Service has plans

"It will give them the chance

ddarling@bendbulletin.com

'

••

g

' 'l l

'

~ W gy~,

I

'

''

' ' I'

I

ON-LINE BIDING STARTS APRIL 6 AT 9 A.M.

www. BulletinBidnBuy.com

II -~ Ik

4g s t

.

VOU CAN BID Olll:

20tt Gench Citation

18eaS0rP4

M

VOU CAN BID OII:

1994Alumacraft16' Aluminum Boat Retail value$4,985

• I

'

'

I

0 '

s


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

RKGON

Mystery m OerSre o I sewage OOS Ill 0 Y cICcIIlCIBS pipe fouls have been working on a

quarterly job vacancy survey of employers. "What it's basically showSALEM — Oregon employers are reporting 10,000 more ing is there's a tighter labor job vacancies than they had market," said Jessica Nelson, a year ago and more trouble a state employment econfinding the right candidates, omist. "After several years leading to higher wages, ac- of very slow growth, things cordingto a report released have been ramping up more Monday by theOregon Em- quickly in the last six to nine

mystery: What's the source

ployment Department.

months."

of the sewage that's flowing through a pipe that drains

The numberofunemployed Oregonians also is falling.

Employers reported nearly 33,000 job vacancies this

stream The Associated Press T HE DALLES — F o r nearly two years, health and city officials in The Dalles

into a stream through the

Columbia Gorge town'? More than tw o d ozen tests of the water flowing

into Mill Creek have contained levels of E. coli bacteria higher than the equipment measures, The Dalles Chronicle reported.

By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press

unusually pronounced, Nelson said, though difficult to explain from the data. Many of the smaller em-

ployers with job vacancies were in the construction, retail an d

n a t ural r e sources

industries, suggesting people are opening more small stores

wastewater fro m a n other source, such as a septic tank, is contaminating un-

derground water that flows

Paoky turnS 52 —More than ahalf century has passedsince Packy the elephant's newsmaking birth at theOregonZoo. He's nowa six-ton senior citizen andconsidered geriatric at age52. Heapproached his birthday cakeat aleisurely pace Monday, but zooofficials say he wasted no timedemolishing the 40-pound wholewheat offering that included carrots, bananas,apples andsweet potatoes. Zooexecutive chef Paul Boschsays thecakewas "pretty healthful" except for the five pounds of butter in the buttercream frosting. (Thechef saysthat's not really THATmuch butter for a12,000-pound elephant.) Zoo spokesman HovaNajarian sayszoo vets areworking with U.S.Agriculture Department experts to plan anew course of treatment for Packy's tuberculosis, discovered last July. He'sshown no signs of illness yet but is sensitive to one ofthetypically used drugs. In1962, the zoo says Packy becamethe first elephant to be born in theWestern Hemisphere in 44 years.

contractors are hiring more help, she said. Employers reported having With m or e v a cancies and winter. Nearly all of the 10,000 difficulty filling 54 percent fewer joblessworkers, there additional vacancies were at- of jobs, up from 39 percent are now four people unem- tributed to companies with last winter. As a result, the ployed for every job vacancy, fewer than 100 employees. average wage offered was up down from eight a year ago, The concentration of vacan- 74 cents from a year ago, to according to data from the cies at smaller employers was $16.05.

BOdieS in COIOmdia RiVer —A Multnomah County sheriff's spokesmansays river patrol deputies responding to a report of a body in the ColumbiaRiver in thePortland area spotted another body floating mid-channel in thenearbyWillamette River. Thebodies — both adult men — havebeenrecovered. Lt. Steve Alexander saysthesheriff's river patrol recoveredonebody from theWillamette on Mondayafternoon.HesaysaClarkCounty,Wash.,Fireand Rescueboatrecovered the other body from theColumbia River nearReeder Beach.Thebodies have beenturned over tothe MultnomahCounty medical examiner's office. Theywere not immediately identified. Sheriff's detectives are investigating the deaths.

OSU launchesan archive project to chronicle craft beer inOregon

SeX aduSe aCCuSatiOnS —A42-year-old former Lake County sheriff's deputy hasbeenaccused of sexually abusing a17-year-old Lakeview girl reported missing late last week.TheOregon State Police say the girl got in touchwith authorities Sunday afternoon andwas returned to herfamily. Earlier this month, as aninvestigation began, Kenneth Turkle resigned from thesheriff's department. OnFriday, the girl was reported missing. Shewaslast seenstaying with a friend in Grants Passandleaving with a manbelieved to beTurkle. HesurrenderedSundaymorninginLakeCountyonchargesofsexualabuseand contributing to thesexual delinquency of aminor.

and independent construction

Authorities suspect the

mystery pipe, 4 inches in diameter, is decades old and has been damaged, so

AROUND THE STATE

into the line.

Workers have pushed m etal detectors up t h e pipe. They've blown smoke through it. They've used dye teststo trace the lines from some homes. They've used ground-penetrating radar to trace part of the line's route. They used a dowser to trace

The Associated Press CORVALLIS — A new proj-

ect at Oregon State University is aiming to create a definitive

historical archive of craft beer's history and impact in Oregon. The university has launched

the Oregon Hops 8 Brewing Archives. The organizers be-

"We live in an important moment historically that ts reclaiming craft beer heritage and culture. People are going to stay interested (in beer) for a long time. That's what we're trying to document, this historical shift during the late

20th and early 21st centuries."

the pipe to one home, but no leaks were found. They dug a 14-foot hole in a city lot to find the pipe — nothing. They dug up the front yard of a home — and there was the pipe. But when

hind it have the ambition of

a camera was sent in, a

The W i l lamette V a lley's ticing "community archiving," i m portant relationship with beer has a which is taking her across moment historically that is re- long history: from the first the state to breweries and hop

sharp bend or some other impediment blocked its progress under the street. "And we don't want to

cut up a perfectly good street in this effort," said

Public Works

D i rector

Dave Anderson. Because of the risk of lia-

bility, the city is not considering the drastic option of just plugging the pipe and seeing whether anybody's house gets the backflow.

Among the city's expenditures: A $2,400 power snake. As for the total costs of the investigation, Anderson said, "I don't even want to know."

— Peter Kopp, an agricultural historian at New Mexico State

building the archives as a destiUniversity and an unofficial adviser to the OSU project nation repository for researchers in hops and brewing. In fact, the Oregon Hops 5 Brew- drank pale, mass-produced disease-management and ing Archives is the first of its beer for so long in the 20th cen- crop-sciencedepartments and kind in the United States, The

tury — and then switched rap-

Eugene Register-Guard reported Sunday.

idlyto craft brews.

dtvtsrons. Now, the archivist is prac-

"We live in a n

claiming craft beer heritage

hop-breeding experiments at OSU in the 1890s to today's an agricultural historian at plant genetics studies at the New Mexico State University university. "Now, they're mapping the and an unofficial adviser to the OSU project. "People are going hop genome, in particular, for to stay interested (in beer) for diseaseresistance and flavor," a long time. That's what we're said Tiah Edmunson-Morton, trying to document, this histor- an OSU librarian who is over-

farms to gather documents, data and oral histories that she believes will help future researchers. "The exciting thing about craft brewing is all the people, pretty much, who were involved are still alive," Edmunson-Morton said. "It's really ical shift during the late 20th seeing the collection. possible to not be retroactively and early 21st centuries." She has mined historic trying to piece the story togethOrganizers say peoplein 100 photographs and reports at er but (instead) working with years may find in the archives OSU from beer-related stud- thepeoplewho aremakingthat the answer to why Americans ies in the chemistry, irrigation, history." and culture," said Peter Kopp,

Car, traih COIIISIOll —Marion Countysheriff's deputies say adriver crashed into atrain before daybreak, ranfrom his burning carand asked neighbors for aplace to sleep. Thesheriff's department reported Monday that 24-year-old KyleRandall wasarrested on adrunken driving charge after theneighbors called officers about 5a.m. Saturday. Deputies came toinvestigateand noticed aplumeof smokein the distance that turned out to be the burning car.Theysaid the carwas dragged 300 feet before Randallescaped.Theydescribed itas "burned out."

TranSgemier hOuSingdiSpute —About 50people rallied over the weekend atGeorgeFoxUniversity and delivered petitions in support of a transgenderstudent in ahousing dispute. Thestudent lived in a female dorm for thepastyear but wants to live with malefriends next year on campus,after completing a transition to become aman. The university told KPTVit's a Christ-centered community that keepsresidences single-sex becauseof theological commitments. Theuniversity has offered to let the student live alone in asingle room or off-campus. The student hasturned downthat option and has alawyer to helpfight for campus housing with males. Highway vandaliSm —OregonState Police havereceived information there werefour people on anInterstate 5 overpass aboutthe time a cementblockwasdropped onto acar window. Policeare looking for the four — two onbicycles andtwo on skateboards — to determine if they are responsible for the incident about 4:30a.m.Sundayabout five miles south of Eugene. The block crashed through thewindshield and injured a30-year-old woman passenger in the car.Shewastreated at a hospital and released.Thedriver was not injured. — From wire reports

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Damascus residents readyto exit city +~ ~

Translation blamed in death lawsuit The Associated Press

PORTLAND A wrongful d e at h l a w suit

filed in Portland alleges that a 911 Spanish language interpreter botched the translation of an ad-

dress, sending medics to the wrong place after a caller reported that a young woman couldnotbreathe. The Oregonian reports the Circuit Court lawsuit

seeks $3 million. The city

o f P o r t land

is listed as a defendant through its Bureau of Emergency Communications. The city declined comment. The lawsuit says 26 minutes elapsed on April 12,

2011, as medics searched for the woman, received

the correct address and then found Elidiana Valdez-Lemus

u n c onscious

from cardiacarrest.Court papers say she died three days later after her family took her off life support. Bureau of Emergency Communications spokes-

woman Laura Wolfe said she can't comment on the lawsuit. But she says 911

call takers only have to press one button to get a

The Associated Press DAMASCUS — F r ustrat-

ed residents are wasting no time in their effort to de-annex

from the Portland suburb of Damascus.

,

"Weare the poster child for dysfunction." — Hank Brown, the first person to file an application to leave

www.be n d d a s h.com

Damascus

The Oregonian reports that

House Bill 4029, which passed in March, allows any property anything to prepare because on the boundary and within Damascus has no rules gova half-mile from another city erning what you can and can't to leave Damascus. At least do with your land. Meanwhile, 17 people have taken the first he and a few neighbors had to step, the newspaper reported. take it upon themselves to fix It's quite the turnaround potholes in the road. "We are the poster child for from 2004, when Damascus — 20 miles southeast of Port- dysfunction," Brown said of land — became one ofOre- Damascus. gon's newest cities. Residents After a citizen-led disincorhoped to control their own poration effort failed last fall, destiny amid urban expan- Brown met with Jim Syring, sion. Instead, the city has been a neighbor and de-annexation divided over planning issues advocate. while political infighting has They threw their support led to a revolving door of city behind the House bill sponmanagers. sored by Rep. Shemia Fagan, D-Clackamas, and Rep. Bill Hank Brown was the first person to file an application to Kennemer, R-Oregon City, leave Damascus. The property both of whom represent porowned by him and his wife, tions of Damascus. Valerie, is fenced in all sides, Brown, who testified before creating the literal dividing the Legislature, said he was line between Damascus and surprised the bill became law Happy Valley. so quickly. Hank Brown was excited when Damascus incorporated

"What is needed doesn't al-

ways get done," Brown said. a decade ago. He didn't want But the exodus might not to be part of Happy Valley and be as quick. Once the bill was was suspicious of the city's signed into law, city councilors plans for development. hinted they might challenge it He attended a lot of the ini- in court, which would likely tial meetings and asked to slow the application process. join a transportation planning Brown and others who live effort. He backed away, how- near Happy Valley hope the ever, when the discord began city councilors will just let and things have only gotten them go. "My hope is they take the worse. Happy Valley i s g r ow- money they'd spend fighting ing quickly and headed for us and do something with it," Brown's doorstep. He can't do Brown said.

Spanish interpreter on the

line. Wolfe says the interpreters aretrainedand held to "a very high standard."

686 NW YorkDrive, Ste.150 Bend,ORj 541-306-3263

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •

••

TheB u lletin

AMERICAN ADVERTISING

AWARDS AOlllllTISIN • 0 I 0 I 1AT I 0 N •RsTIILOhEION

Advertising Awards Show May 1, 2014 Silver Moon Brewing Co. Calling all creatives!Some of you told us you really like award shows. Some said you like entering the American Advertising Awards and being recognized for your craft. Some said you appreciate calling attention to the best talent in our area. But all of you let us know you like a good party! Hanging with your friends. Checking out amazing creative work. Networking all in one room during one evening. You told us — and we heard you.Make plans now for this great occasion to celebrate ourselves! Dinner included.

Doors open at 6pm, show starls at 7pm Purchase tickets et ORAdverbsinyAwerds.com


B4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

inancia ai wi

su ens isa iiies

11 f' ( '(1:

regonians with disabilities got good news last week when the state announced they'd be eligible for fed•

eral education financial aid to take college and trade

g

school classes. It's a change in policy prompted in large part by the effort of state Rep. SaraGelser, D-Corvallis. Now students who graduate from high school with a modified or extended diploma will be able to apply for the same kind of aid sought by any student with a standard diploma.The change comes after Gelser met with federal Department of Education officials about the matter. Modified diplomas are awarded to special education and other students who, even with assistance,have been unable to complete work at grade level. An extended diploma is available only to students in special education

programs. Yet many students with disabilities can successfully complete classes at their local community colleges and elsewhere, if they can pay for those classes. And while some students have been eligible for aid in the past — they had to pass a skills test or successfully pay for and earn six hours of credit to qualify — not all had. Meanwhile, the program through which they applied ended in July 2012. Now help is available again.

The Oregon Department of Education's Crystal Greene said Gelser and a staffer for U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., were able to persuade federal education officials that requirements for the modified diploma are both rigorous and consistentacross the state. The new eligibility means that the roughly 800 students in Oregon who graduated with modified

Howsu erin c an esus uring the past few weeks, I've found myself in a bunch of conversations in which the

unspoken assumption was that the main goal of life is to maximize happiness. That's normal. When people plan for the future, they often talk about all the good times and good experiences they hope to have. We live in a culture awash in talk about

diplomas last spring can apply for financial aid if they need it to pay forcollege ortrade school courses. In addition, graduates who had been ineligible under the old rules will be eligible under the new ones. People with intellectual disabilities face plenty of employment issues as it is. A survey conducted for Special Olympics in 2011-12 found that only a third of intellectually disabled adults held jobs and that the unemployment rate for the group was 21 percent, as opposed to9 percent of the nondisabled workforce. Education can help change that, and now money will help some get it.

happiness. In one three-month peri-

od last year, more than 1,000 books were released on Amazon on that subject.

But notice this phenomenon. When people remember the past, they don't only talk about happiness. It is often the ordeals that seem most significant. People shoot for happiness but feel formed through suffering. Now, of course, it should be said that there is nothing intrinsically

ennobling about suffering. Just as failure is sometimes just failure (and not your path to becoming the next Steve Jobs) suffering is sometimes

State website'sgood rating on transparency is only part of the story regon recently came in second in a ranking of states according to their website transparency. That's not the whole picture, however. The Oregon State Public Interest Research Group studied g overnment websites from a l l 50 states, judging them on such things as user-friendliness and the amount of information available to them. Oregon's 93.5 score ranked just behind Indiana's 94 score,both A minuses by OSPIRG's standards.

O

Cover Oregon offers the most widely recognized example of the lack of openness that can create problems for the state's citizens. In late March, the Salem Statesman Journal reported that the Cover Oregon board's meetings with legislativeoverseers were secret and that lawmakers were being kept in the dark about its problems. Closer to home, there are plenty of examples of government agenciesworking tokeep unpleasantness out of the public's eye: Both Bend a n d R e d mond school districts have been less You can t h ank s t ate Rep. than forthcoming about the firing Gene Whisnant, R-Sunriver, for of principals in their systems. Ofthe state's high ranking. Whis- ficials tried to keep secret the gonant was a cosponsor of the 2009 ings on of the Mirror Pond Steermeasure that required the state ing Committee. And there are to create a budget transparency more. website. He continues to push for All that secrecy erodes the pubfurther openness about the state's lic's trust in government, and with spending practices. good reason. Budgets are only Unfortunately, t r a nsparency one way government impactsthe websites do not cover everything, lives of its citizens. Without equal and it's in nonbudget matters that openness in personnel and other transparency sometimes takes it matters, Oregon's efforts at transon the chin in Oregon. parency fall short of the mark.

They can't determine the course of

DAVID

BROOKS

their pain, but they can participate

in responding to it. They often feel an overwhelming moral responsibility to respond well to it. People

Recovering from suffering ts not like recovering from a disease. Many people don't come out healed; they come out different. smashes through what they thought was the bottom floor of their personality, revealing an area below, and then it smashes through that floor

revealing another area. Then, suffering gives people a more accurate sense of their own limitations, what they can control and cannot control. When people are thrust down into these deeper

who seek thisproper rejoindertoordeal sense that they are at a deeper level than the level of happiness and

individual utility. They don't say, "Well, I'm feeling a lot of pain over the loss of my child. I should try to

balancemy hedonicaccount by going to a lot of parties and whooping itup." The right response to this sort of pain is not pleasure. It's holiness. I don't even mean that in a purely

religious sense. It means seeing life as a moral drama, placing the hard experiences in a

m o r a l c ontext

and trying to redeem something bad by turning it into something sacred. Parents who've lost a child

start foundations. Lincoln sacri-

zones, they are forced to confront

ficed himself for the Union. Prisoners in the concentration camp

the fact they can't determine what

with psychologist Viktor Frankl

goes on there. Try as they might, quickly as possible. they just can't tell themselves to stop But some people are clearly enno- feeling pain, or to stop missing the bled by it. Think of the way Frank- one who has died or gone. And even lin Roosevelt came back deeper and when tranquility begins to come more empathetic after being struck back, or in those moments when with polio. Often, physical or social grief eases, it is not clear where the suffering can give people an outsid- relief comes from. The healing proer's perspective, an attuned aware- cess, too, feels as though it's part of ness of what other outsiders are some natural or divine process beenduring. yond individual control. But the big thing that suffering People in this circumstance often does is it takes you outside of pre- have the sense that they are swept cisely that logic that the happiness up in some larger providence. Abramentality encourages. Happiness ham Lincoln suffered through the wants you to think about maximiz- pain of conducting a civil war, and ing your benefits. Difficulty and he came out of that with the Second suffering sends you on a different Inaugural. He emerged with this course. sense that there were deep currents First, suffering drags you deeper of agony and redemption sweeping into yourself. The theologian Paul not just through him but through Tillich wrote that people who en- the nation as a whole, and that he dure suffering are taken beneath was just an instrument for transcenthe routines of life and find they are dent tasks. It's at this point that people in the not who they believed themselves to be. The agony involved in, say, midst of difficulty begin to feel a composing a great piece of music or call. They are not masters of the sitthe grief of having lost a loved one uation, but neither are they helpless.

just destructive, to be exited as

rededicated themselves to l iving

up to the hopes and expectations of their loved ones, even though those loved ones might themselves

already be dead. Recovering from suffering is not like recovering from a disease. M any people don'tcome outhealed; they come out different. They crash through the logic of individual utility and behave paradoxically. Instead of recoiling from the sorts of loving commitments that almost al-

ways involve suffering, they throw themselves more deeply into them. Even while experiencing the worst

and mostlacerating consequences, some peopledouble down on vulnerability. They hurl themselves deeper and gratefully into their art, loved ones and commitments. The suffering involved in their tasks becomes a fearful gift and very different from that equal and other gift, happiness, conventionally defined. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times.

Letters policy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedlt letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections OfThe Bulletin. Wrlters are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely In the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.

Please address your submission to either My Nlckel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth/ In My View

P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Drivers need to follow the rules of the roundabouts By Harry Godsll t seems that we have a lot of driv-

t

IN MY VIEW

saying, "Ignorance of the law is no excuse." To not know the rules is dumb

ers in Central Oregon who are unaware of the rules for driving in

and can be costly. I have a friend who got a ticket for not obeying the rules, roundabouts. They are relatively new and the fine was $80. You can go to traffic features, and new rules have the Oregon DMVoffice and get a copy been adopted for driving in round- of the manual or simply go to the Or-

already in the roundabout. That does

abouts. Some drivers are not aware

2. Drive slowly. Most roundabouts are posted at 15 mph. Powers Road

egon DMV website, dick on the man-

of these rule changes, and as a result ual and go to pages 41-42. Or if you we have a lot of dumb and lazy driv- are too lazy to look it up, just follow

not mean it's time to play "chicken" or

barge in. Most drivers obey this rule, but there are some dumb ones out

There are three basic rules to follow when you're driving in a roundabout. They are yield, drive slowly and signal when youleave the roundabout. These rules are easy to remember and justas easy to obey.

there. is not posted with a speed limit, but

Notice, this rule says always. Not sometimes or when you feel like it

ers out there. Some of these drivers

the rules below. I do not work for the

when you check your manual it states or why bother. It says always. That

will use their turn signals at an ordinary intersection but do not signal

DMV, so I offer just useful information

that you should not pass a bicyclist in

based on the manual.

a roundabout, and you are probably always. traveling at the same speed: i.e. 15 This rule is most often broken,

There are three basic rules to folizing that they are both intersections. low when you're driving in a roundThat's dumb, lazy and dangerous. I'll about. They are yield, drive slowly cover more on the signaling subject a and signal when you leave the roundlittle later on. about. These rules are easy to rememSome drivers may have gotten their ber and just as easy to obey. So let's licensesbefore roundabouts became review. popular and may not be aware of 1. Roundabouts have a sign to indi-

when leaving a roundabout, not real-

these newer rules, but remember the

cate that you should yield to a driver

MPH. Lots of dumb drivers break this rule. Remember a roundabout is a

means every time, no exceptions, leading me to believe there are a lot

of dumb/lazy drivers in Central Oredifferent kind of intersection and you gon. How much effort does it take to are driving in a tight circle. use your turn signal? Or have they 3. Signal when you leave a round- forgotten it is still an intersection, about. Notice the manual states on which is dumb. These rules are depage 42: "Always indicate your intent signed to avoid accidents. Signaling to exit using your right turn signal." on exit is more than a safety measure

and a courtesy to other drivers. It's

the law! There are some other helpful tips and rules in the manual, especially regarding multiple-lane roundabouts, but these three will keep you from

being a dumb/lazy driver and without a ticket. The rules are easy to remember andjustas easy to obey. Getting into the habit of following all of the rules in the drivers manual will make you asafer,more courteous and

law-abiding driver. — Harry Godsil livesin Bend.


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

4,500 calls failed during Washington 911outage

BITUARIES

Sept. 18, 1940 - April 9, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org or Melanoma International Foundation, 250 Mapleflower Rd., Glenmoore, PA 19343, www.melanomainternatio

nal.org.

Orie Eidson, of Bend Mar. 1916 - April 2014 Services: Memorial service April 19, 2014 at Grace Baptist Church at 11am 566 NE Clay Ave., Bend, OR 97701.

Ronald "Ron" Edward Thomas, of Crooked River Ranch April 12, 1948 - April 9, 2014 Services: April 19, 2014 at 1 pm at Metolius Friends Community Church, 575 Hood Ave., Metolius, OR 97741.

Cheryl Frederick, of Redmond

Zayne John Lees,of Poweii Butte Nov. 25, 1949 - April 9, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net

Services: A Memorial Service will be held Wednesday, April 16, 2014 at 2:00 PM in the old sanctuary at the Powell Butte Christian Church, located at 13720 Hwy 126 in Powell Butte,

Oregon.

Contributionsmay be made to: Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Jan. 7, 1955 - Mar. 31, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: No public services have been planned. Contributions may be made

Feb. 18, 1951 - Mar. 15, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com

Nev. 18, 1918- April 3, 2014

Dec. 1, 1922 - Dec. 24, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services were held in California. Contributions may be made

Chenoweth on Novemb er 18, 1 918. A f ter t he d eath o f his mother, he w as Bill Chenoweth r aised b y his f ather and ste p m o t h er , Jen L emon C h e n o w eth . He lived i n t h e L o s A n g e les a rea until c o m pleting h i s education in A r c h itecture. He joined an Architectural f irm i n B e v erly H i l l s a n d

helped design many local

b uildings, i n c l udin g s e v e ral l a r g e r e s i dences i n H ollywood a n d Bev e r l y Hills. L o c k h eed A i r c r a ft drafted Bill where he spent 10 years on a design team working on aircraft for the Navy. Following W W I I, B i ll joined a f a m i l y b u s i ness involved w it h c o m m ercial millwork . T he bu s i n e ss was eventually sold and he moved to Portland, where h e w o r ke d d e v eloping a line o f m o d u la r c a b i nets f or N oblecraft. Th e p l a n t g rew an d e m p l o ye d 1 7 5 workers an d B i l l b e c ame the Sr. V.P. The company i s stil l i n o p e r a t ion a n d n ow k n ow n a s D i a m o n d Cabinets. Sub s e quently, Bill worked at Simpson as t he head of M a r k eting i n t heir d oo r d i v i s io n f r o m 1967 to N o v e mber 1 9 8 1, when he retired. Bill's real passions were airplanes, fishing and golf. He was a f o u nding m emb er o f t h e W i d g i C r e e k Hackers and recorded two holes-in-one an d a t one time had a handicap of 12. H e a l s o l o v e d hu n t i n g , t raveling an d w o o d w o r k -

Mann, of Palm Desert, California

to:

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.

Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on thesecond day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825

Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254

Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708

( Berna) Olson Arnold i n

his home in Aiken, S.C. He brain tumor, said his husband

and co-author, Steven Naifeh.

the men wrote in a response

printed in The Times. "In so doing, we have hit Mr. O'Connor and his ilk where it hurts

might want to, and that

most. Their very identities are

takes integrity." One of the final ques-

Miller read from a li st

and, with M i chael Morgenstern, "How to Make Love to a Woman."

T HE BALLA D O F G R A N D M A H E L E N

Naifeh and Smith sued Potter

in response, though they later dropped the suit.

Smith and Naifeh had said For a time the books were that their early commercial going to be the basis of two work gave them the financial

separate movies, but only one

resourcesto pursue their true passion, the Pollockbiography. At 934 pages, "Jackson Pollock: An American Saga" was deeply researched and dense

was made: "Pollock," released in 2000, starring and directed by Ed Harris. Gregory White Smith was

Helen Rae Proctor January25, 1929 - April 8, 2014 She was the kindestperson you'd ever meet, With sparkling eyes,you'd get a warm greet. EKngham, Illinois, from where she hailed, Was never the same after Helen prevmled. That's where her reputation as "most popular girl" started, And that was hermoniker as she departed.

born on Oct. 4, 1951, in Ithaca,

NY. He graduated from Colpainter's life, family, friend- by College, in Maine, before ships and relationship with his earning his law degree and with new details about the

wife, the abstract expression-

On to art school at Southern Illinois University, She loved creating needle art that showed diversity. Knitting, crocheting, embroidery, and sewing, Prom dresses,wedding dresses,prayer shawls kept flowing. Her presentation of counted cross stitch and lace-making still abound, But her sock darning and mending are no longer around.

a master's in education from

ist painter Lee Krasner, who Harvard. died in 1984. He and Naifeh then lived in New York, where Smith

Animals of au sorts got her attention, Especially her childhood pony sherode with such intention. That led her to being akeeper of cats in her care, With those named Addie, Little Bee, Honey and Sugar Bear. Her love of animals extended to dogs, too, She hadmany, who loved her more than you. Therewas Snookie, Coquie, Raggedy Ann, and Jesse, Later on, Maggie and Tang, whowere not allowed to be messy. Maggie had a hair appointment every other week, Appalling?Yes. But never of it did we speak. Grandma'shorse Flash was the true animal love of her life, In fact, that is how she met Cliff and became his wife.

ing in their appraisals, say- worked briefly for a law firm ing the book buried Pollock's before he took a job editing leachievementsunder page after gal books. In the early 1980s, page about his personal life. he and Naifeh published "The They also criticized it for sug- Best Lawyers in America," the gesting, without firm evidence, first in a series of guidebooks that Pollock had had homosex- and rankings known as Best ual relationships and for sug- Lawyers Inc. gesting that one inspiration for In addition to Naifeh, whom his splattering style of painting he married in 2011 in New was watching his father uri-

nate when he was a boy. "Mr. Naifeh and Mr. Smith

know everything about Pol-

Grandpa Cliff was her soul mate and cowboy love, And everyonecould seethey et like a hand in a glove. Togetherthey roamed and ranched li ke westerners true, Fencing, irrigating, riding under skies that wereblue.

York, Smith's survivors include a sister, Linda Hirata. In the 1970s, Smith learned he had a brain tumor called

Back in '49, she started her family of pearls, And seven yearslater, she had four girls. Sharon, Linda, Elaine and Mary, Perfect angels except when contrary. Mary, Mary, how doesher garden grow? With Jack, sunshine and beautiful grandkids andflowers all in a row. Elaine, Elaine, what doesshe have to show? Backed by her kids Britta and Brik, Grandma'scare takers, you know. Linda, Linda how doesher life go? With Sheldon and kids and grandkids, we know. Sharon and Larry, what in their life makes them glow? Six grandkids, oh my! — Ask for their pix to show!

hemangiopericytoma. Since nothing," biographer and Pol- then he had sought innovative lock and understand almost

lock authority Elizabeth Frank wrote in The New York Times Book Review in 1990. "Their

treatments that enabled him to

defy astringof direpredictions about his prognosis. In 1997,

book is bad biography because he and Naifeh wrote about the instead of offering a concep- experience in the book "Maktion of Pollock rich enough to ing Miracles Happen." turn their facts into compelling truths, they cut him down to

size, diminishing both the man and his art in an unending chronicle of self-destructive defeat and humiliation." After the book won the 1991

Helen worked for the feds for almost 50years, And shereceived many commendations from her peers. Forest Serviceand Social Secwity were her businessesof choice, She often gavethose not able a voice.

In addition to their books-

Naifeh did most of the reporting, while Smith did most of the writing — the couple also

In her later years, life was full of activity. Many of her endeavors live on at Lutheran Church of Nativity. For example, the Nativity Prayer Garden that she started, Is where she and Cliff were buried, after they departed. And when the church could not afford a stained glass window, She designed a 40 foot satin one, usingcolors of the rainbow. She started the prayer shawl ministry for thosewho were ailing, Knitting over 600! Her devotion was unfailing. After moving from the ranch shelived at Harmony House a bit, And most recently moved into Bend Villa, a real fit.

collaborated on the restoration of their 60-room mansion in A iken, once owned by t h e

Pulitzer for biography, Francis Whitney family of New York. O'Connor, a Pollock scholar, Their estate is the setting for criticized the award in a Times article, noting that the men

Juilliard in Aiken, an annual

tialed art historians and that

with the Juilliard School.

series of concerts and eduwere not traditionally creden- cational programs produced

Shelived a life full of love and glory, And this concludes Helen Proctor's life's story.

the movie rights to the book had been sold before it was

published. "One can only conclude that this award was made in something of an i ntellectual

vacuum — or at least by people willing to accept primitive psychologizing and art chat

ical activist who composed Richard Hoggart, 95:A Britpolitically charged operas, ish scholar who helped launch suites, oratorios and ballets the academic fields of media that mixed jazz with popu- and cultural studies, and who

I

II

NE

S UY l I'

I

I •

ON-LINE BIDING STARTS APRIL 6 AT 9 A.M.

www.BulletinBidnBu .com

the novel "Lady Chatterley's

VOU CAhl BID Ohl: • Memberships • Pro ShopCertificates • Spa Service • Dining Certificates

Lover" wa s

Refeil fhlue Ftnm$5'Ofe$2,828

fg F

was a key witness in a British trial in 1960 over whether o bscene. Died

Thursday. Award-winning deaf actress Allen E. Puckett, 94:One of

~unv&p

the engineers who after World

version of "Children of a Lesser God." Died Thursday at her home in Temple City, Calif. Gerald Sharkey, 71:A com-

War II built Los Angeles-based Hughes Aircraft Co. into the nation's leading defense electronics company — dominant D a y ton, in the markets for air defense,

munity activist i n Ohio, who led a s uccessful radar systems, tactical missiles

grass-roots effort to establish a national park in the blighted

CAl

I

Phyllis Frelich, 70: A Tony

who starred in the Broadway

— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sktngNbendbulletin.com.

that included several circuit

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

of what he called Afro-Asian culture. Died Saturday at his home in Brooklyn, NY.

schutes County deputy district

attorneys. "I am honored to have their tions was a r e q uest of support as people I go up both candidates to l i st against every day (in court)," endorsements. he said.

based on the conviction that

lar and traditional elements

Endicott, La Pine Mayor Ken Mulenex, members of Bend

flawed because it did not in-

M odesto, CA. He wa s t h e h appy G r andpa o f s e v en grandchildren, eight greatgrandchildren, a n d one ter. He was preceded in death by his son, Russell; and his wife, Bernadine. A Memorial gathering i s p lanned for S u nday, M a y 4 , 2014, at W i d g i C r e e k Golf Club, from I : 0 0 p .m . to 3:00 p.m. In lieu o f f l o w er s d onations to Partners In C a r e, 2075 NE W y at t Ct . B e nd, OR 97701. P lease sig n o u r on l i n e g uest b oo k a t ww w . n i s wonger-reynolds.com

and half-baked theories that

They also wrote how-to clude an art historian)." guides, including "Moving Up The book also drew allegain Style: The Successful Man's tions of plagiarism from JefGuide to Impeccable Taste," frey Potter, the author of "To a "What Every Client Needs to Violent Grave: An Oral BiograKnow About Using a Lawyer" phy of Jackson Pollock" (1987).

Deaths of note from around urban neighborhood where theworld: the Wright brothers invented Fred Ho, 56: A composer, the airplane a century earlier. saxophonist, writer and radDied April 7.

great-great-granddaugh-

court judges from other counties, Redmond Mayor George

and Sisters' city councils and district attorneys from other stwo jurisdictions. Miller refused to answer Spear did not read from a both questions on ethical prepared list, but cited former grounds. Deschutes County D i s trict "I'm prohibited from A ttorney Mike D u gan a n d answering," he said. "The two Yamhill County Circuit canons of judicial ethics Court judges, and he said he say I can't reveal what my believed he has the endorsebeliefsare, as much as I ment of "13 of 17" current De-

they and only they are able to understand the mysteries Mormon Murders," a 1 9 88 of high art (to wit, Mr. O'Conaccount of a double murder nor's sad, parochial notion that in Salt Lake City. Both were the Pulitzer jury was fatally

best-sellers.

To read TheBulletin's coverage of the May 20election, visitbeetlbelletin.cem/electiens

O

tt

was 62. fill a distressing number of The cause was a rare type of books on contemporary art,"

1967, and gained two addit ional children, Jane W i l liamson o f Ben d , an d

Chuck Arnold (Karen) of

book had also been a finalist for the National Book Award. "We wrote for a n on-artworld audience as well as for

causedcontroversy for its assertions about his celebrated drip-painting technique, his sexual orientation and other an art-world audience, conmatters, died on Thursday at sciously rejecting the jargon

But some critics were scath-

ing.

Bill married Ruth Callan in 1941, and they had tw o c hildren, E m i l y n H o w e l l (Lin) of Portland and R u ss ell C . Che n o w eth . H e later m a r r i e d B e r n a dine

won a Pulitzer Prize but also

1970s, collaborated on more than a dozen books, including a well-received 2011 biography of Vincent van Gogh and "The

Lakey, of Klamath Fails

Continued from B1 Spear answered first, explaining to attendees that a "canon of rules" for judicial candidates prohibits them from speaking on those types of issues. When pressed, Spear said he gives Holder a

as appropriate to scholarly discourse," O'Connor wrote.

Gregory White Smith, a N aifeh an d S m it h f i r e d co-author of a 1990 biogra- back, picking at O'Connor's phy of Jackson Pollock that own work and noting that their

Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org

Lovie E. (Hirscher)

(Specht)

New York Times News Service

to:

Raymond "Ray" G.

calls failed to get through during a six-hour Washing- prevented the system from tonstate 911outage last week, properlyprocessingcalls. CenturyLink said Monday. The problem did not inElaborating on an expla- volve the computer bug nation it offered Friday, the known as "Heartbleed," the telecommunications company company said.

fOr POIIOCk biOgraphy Debate By William Yardley

said the outage was caused by atechnicalerrorinathird-party vendor's call router, which

SEATTLE — About 4,500

Gregory WhiteSmith won a Pulitzer Prize

Smith and Naifeh, who met at Harvard Law School in the

William 'Bill' Chenoweth William 'Bill' Chenoweth p assed away o n A p r i l 3 , 2014, at the age of 95. He was born i n L o s A n g eles, t o Russell L . a n d M a r i e

The Associated Press

FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH 1VOTIt ES James Markwood Wintermyre, of Bend

B5

and satellites. Died March 31. — From wire reports

I

'

'

I

0 '

Ie

s


B6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014

I

5

i

'

I

• I'

iI

•I3 3

Today: I

Tonight:

Partly cloudy

Pa~iy cloudy

HIGH

54

32

• Astoria Seaside •CannonBeach

Hood River

Ortland Hilisboro S gny Q1/4 •

45/38

Lincoln Citv50/43

Yachats 54/47

Bp/

Florence 58/45 4

Eupsene • @43 II/43

'

45/27 • 58/34 g Me cham • Enterprise 49/27

eWas « p

Willow ale

Warm 8/34 Sg/41 Camp Sherman 54222

• Madras

52/31

6/ 3 4

• 56/27 a edmOnd d 56/31

• SunriVer • Ben

Port Orfor

• SHI45

Gold 0 h • 54/

Broo ngs

Ashland

• 65/ 5

• rigl 7

5 5

Vancouver' 557/r44 ''

«5DD «5 DgoH«Ho

Wm m ~gaskatoon, :~

Tuebec Q

4

~

~

B i smarek

n

'-

J

: .~ 3ip g f 4 St Paul Green Bay ' @-.....BypidCit ------- . 40/351 • ' 36/23' Detroit

i Trordn~to' 8'ostoriT 60/30

'Q""" """"-

Ies[Mornes,

,2

6/

u "

Boise~54'

Halifax j

$5 -

7p Yellowstone, WY

• 4.22n Vicksburg, Ms

Medford 4 18' Baker

• s g/32'( 'Lgigings

~

p p"'"ew York

r33/tigp tubphrladelphra

-248/13 ~8

'""""': S: lt Lake City 56/88 ' I - - - - - " " '42/229' 2 T~ '' c'-"/ 68/44 IDenver K a nsas City • ..S>tLouis.:8 ILaetyegas,p " .. / 5 63/35 I '56/41 ~ ': 68'/44' 0• . 4gj+/00 4/30 e /67/31

(-

,

' ' ' -.

'

.

75~/56 •

Honolulu 75/68

,:

AlbuquerquhI :

Tijuaria

Lp~ hoenix

84/51

90/6i1

69/43, 2

'

'

...-....-" ..i

' I Birmingham : 5f/34 ''

8+7/625

FRONTS

'

0 e

~ Houston

Monterrey 98/51

' '

""'

Orlando 86/56

New™O 'rleans 90/70

65/45

CONDITIONS * *** * 4+ 4 A

Cold

P 7'

'

Maza'tlani

ALASKA

"

La/Paz 89/62 Juneau '49737

"

+

L'ittleIRock ,..- 49/'2'9' '. QAtlanta

Dagas"'""" :5 '78/39

A'n«horagei 49'/32'

iNashyige ... L I

'

,:

Chihuahua

HAWAII

FuR

OREGON CITIES

Tomorrow Ris e Set Yesterday through 4 p.m. at Bend Municipal Airport A Mercury..... 8:56P.m..... 9:44a.m. High/Low ...... . 7PP/27P 24hoursenigng4p.m.* . . P.PP Venus---- 7:35pm-- 6:45a.m. Recordhigh....... 82'in1962 Monthtodaie.......... 0.145 "----- : » m - - 90 3pm Remrdlow.........15'in1977 Averagemonthtodate... 031" Jupiter........1:33a.m..... 4:53p.m. Averagehigh.............. 59' Yeartodate............ 0.77" Saturn.......12:37p.m....10:35p.m. Averagelow............... 29' Averageyeartodate..... 3,685 Uranus....... 845pm..... 932am. Barometricpressure4pm.30065 Record24hours .. 033in2004 *Melted liquidequivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX S KI REPORT Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday; Snow a«cumulati ons ininches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes.......„„„Closed Hoodoo................................ 0"................. Closed Mt.Ashland........... Closed

Tuesday Wednesday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lp/W the need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Isthrough4pm

Astpria Baker City Brppkings Bums Eulpne Xiamath Falls La Pine Lakeview

59/37 60/I8 61/45

Medford Newport Nonh Bend Ontario Pendleton Portland Prineville Redmond

78/42 55/42 61/43 64/28 72/31

53/41 r 55/31 pc 65/45 5&/27 pc 6$43 5&I31 pc 52/25 pc 59/31 pc 66/39 53/45 pc 58/40 f 63/40 pc 59/36 pc 5$47 r 56/27 pc 55/29 pc 61/3& pc 59/45 pc 52/31 pc 6$42 Pc

544i r 56/2& sh 6445 pc 56/26 cd 63/42 r 59/34 pc 5&/22 pc 5$31 pc 69/40 pc 54/43 r 59/43 pc 62/35 pc 6$36 pc 60/4i r 58/29 pc 59/30 pc 67/40 pc

LQVV M E DIUVI HIGH

ROAD CONDITIONS

Mt. HoodMeadows.............0"...........113-145 Mt.Hood SkiBowl...............0"...............27-37" T i m berline............................0".............73-123" W igamette Pass...........Closed

Snow level and roadconditions representing conditionsat5pm. yesterday. Key: TT. =Traction Tires. Pass Cpndjtjpns 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit....................... No restrictions 1-84 at Cabbage Hill................. Carry chains, T. Tires Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass..........Carry chains, T. Tires

11' Aspen,CQ 66 91 Mammpth Mtn ('A p 35 65 Hwy. 26atGovernmentCamp...........no restrictions pa r k City, UT......................2"...............79-79 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..................No restrictions S q uaw Valley, CA.................O A............... 20 -68" 73/33 0.01 Hwy. 58 atWigamette Pass......Carrychains, T. Tires S u n Valley, ID.......................O"...............26-57 71/21 Rpseburg 75/39 Hwy.138atDiamond Lake......Carrychains,T.Tires Taos, NM.....................Closed Salem 71/39 62/43 r Vail, C0................................95 ...„„ „ „ „ „ 74- 74" Hwy.242 atM cKenzi e Pass..........Cl osedforseason 70/20 Sisters 56/31 pc For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Oalles 63/40 pc www.trip«heck.«om orcall 511 www.onthesnow.«om Legend Wweather Pcpprecipitation s sun,pcpartial cloudsc clouds,hhaze, shshpwers,r rain t thunderstorms,sf snowflurriiessnsnpw, i ice,rsrain snowmixw wind f fog, drdrizzletr trace 5

5

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

L~

o 'an Portiand>

• 78'

Cpalgary'

Seattle

Death Valley, CA

Yesterday's stateextremes

McDermitt • 58/36

Fields 54/31

Fir s t

Sunsettomorrow 7 50 p m

City Precipitation

Partly cloudy and seasonable conditions.

Rome 56/29

• Lakeview 59/31

PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION

MoonsettodaY....6:32 a.m. Apr 22 Apr 29 May 6 May 14

5

c

• 93p

Nyssa 61Mp

Jordan Valley 56/29 •

Frenchglen • 59/34

-«H»H~o ELH I I W D2oVID« ~o (in the 48 contiguous states):

63 38

Last H e w

seasonable conditions.

Juntura 58/32

56/29 • • Ri l ey 54/2 7

58/31

AT

Yesterday's extremes

HIGH LOW

63 36

sunrisetoday...... 6:21 a.m. Moofl pllases

Ontarlo EAST 63/40

61/40 •

Burns

Klamath Fal s

61/36

0

HIGH LOW

65 38

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

CENTRAL partly cloudy and

49/29

52/32 Vale

Pau na

HamPton • 5 /25 5 9/45 rescen esc e nt • Fors'Rock echristmas Valley Roseburg 5 /20 • 56/20 Chemult 61/38 ilver Lake 54/20 56/20 • Paisley ass Chiloquin 58/29 65 34 • M e dford • 56/27 • 65/36

52/43

HIGH LOW

Partly to mostly seasonable conditions today.

Partly cio.dy

1

56 32

WEST

54/31

Mitc ell

rothers ' /25

5 4/3 2

~

' Baker City

PTj5552 5

~r

• Bandon

Granite • .' 49/31 .

J'

ta Grande •

Spray

'

rs •

Cottage Grove Oakrldge 52/36 61/ scent Lake• 56/4

PendletO

Partly d-dy

1

HIGH LOW

cloudy and

r h7/29

52/27

2

Biggs

58/41 The 58/43Dages .• 5~6/ w36 Arlington 4 63/40

Sale 58/45

Newport

U matilla 63/38 Hermiston • 63/38

Government amp47/3

58/43 '

Chance of rain

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:STATE

Tigamppk •

Partly cio.dy

5 ++

+2

1 d d 4 '** * * * * 4

W a r m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

City

YesterdayTuesdayWedn esday HiRo/Pcp Hi/Lo/WHi/Lo/W City

YesterdayTuesdayWednesda Y Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/yyHIRo/yy City

YesterdayTuesdayWednesday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/yy Hi/Lo/yy Crty

Abilene, TX 5&lsa es/40 s 7$53 pc Grand Rapids,Ml 65/37 0.&3 37/22 ii 49/35 pc Rapid City, Sp 45/1 6 Akron, PH 7 Z I 53 0.12 36/zi il 47/3Ppc Green &ay,Wl 3&/30 1.3p 36/23 pc 42/34 sn & 55252 , NV 75/ 3 & Albany, NY 7 $ 6 3 64/26 is 43/23pc Greensboro,u« 74/ei ea/30 u 53/33 s Rich5222 2n 4 VA &1/ez eine u Albuqrrerque, NM5&I39 69/43 pc 73/43pc Harrisburg,PA 75/57 4$30pc Rochester, NY &2/54 anchorage,AX 49IZ& 49I34 pc 49/32 HaTriordcr 75/57 ee/30 is 45/27 s Sacramento, CA &$45 Atlanta 6A 7 1 /63 0.23 57/53 is 61/33 s Helena, Mr 61/19 54/34 r 4/n& sn Saltlake«iiy, Ur 5$29 Atlantic City, Ml 73/55 6&/35 is 4$32 5 Honolulu, ul ai//2 75/6& sh 75/6& pc Sspxnsrni o,rz 75/4 7 O.O& Auslin, 1X 73 / 43 1.34 66/43 s 71/57 pc uouslrrll, rx 7//4&1.51 65/45 s yiiep pc Sap Diego, CA 75/59 Baltimore, Mp 7&/62 69I29 is 5$32 s uurrisvilh, AL 71 /59 0.53 50/2& 2 eol3&s Ssp rr nascp, CA 6$S2 Billings, SST 5ZIZ5 5$34 sh 4$26 ii rndianapolisiu 77/39 0.19 41/26 pc 5ZI34 pc Ssn Jose, CA 76I51 aiumnghamAL 69I6P0 79 51/34 sh 63/45 s Jackson, SSS 71/591.71 56/32 s 6442 s Santa re, HM 45/25 Bismarck,up 341& 0.05 43/24 pc 33/I9 sn Jacksonville, FL &5/63 79/4& is 64I52 pc Savannah, ex &4/ee Boise, IP 64 33 6$3& pc Sa/39pc Juneau, AX 4$31 49/37 2 49/36 r & 225/pn, MA 7 5 / 57 67/36 r 44/32 s Kansas City, Mp 443p 0.06 55/41 pc es/49 pc augalo, NY 7$54 P.oe 33/19 sn 39/27pc lansing, iw 6442 0.37 3&IZ1 pc 46/33 pc A msurdam 50 42 auriingrrrn,Vr &I/4& 9.03 e&I23 r 37/22 s las Vegas,NV 765& aeiep pc&6/eo pc Arirpru 6$4& Caribou, ME 5&I35 0.49 S&ne r 37/1& lexington, xy 73/63 O.os 39/24 sn 52I34 pc Auridand 71l ep 45/30 0.02 59/3& pc 6$33 pc aaghdad Caspe«Wy 43/1 0 0.02 5&I30 r 39/25sn Linmip,NE Chaiiestsn, SC &2/ee 7&lsp is 61/40 s Little Rock,AR 5$47 2.76 57/33 s 63/41 s B angkok ssna charlotte, Nc 76/ep 67/31 is 5//35 s L525 Angeles, CA 6$56 75/56 pc 6$54 I aeijing 7&I50 Chxicsnooga, TN 72/62 0.21 52/30 sh 6439 s Louisville, Xy 75/61 0.2& er/30 pc 55/3&pc aeirut 6&I59 Cheyenne, WV 30/12 0.03 59/29 pc 4$19 sn Madison, Wl 4ZI31 147 4$26 pc 53/39 al Berlin 51/39 Chrcapr, it 63 / 36 OA4 42/29 pc 53/41pc Memphis, TN 67/5p 1.02 5436 pc 63/44 s 7H44 Cin«2pnae, PH 72/ei 0.16 39/25 il 53/36 pc Miami, FL &6I74 90/ro is aelyz sh B udapest 62/ 3 9 Cleveland, PH 73/62 0.14 34/23 il 45/32pc Milwaukee, Wl 39/31 0.9&37/27 pc 4%39 cd Buenos Aires 6$51 Colo. Spgs,CP 39/1& P.oi 62/31 pc 49IZ5 2 Minneapolis, MN 3$27 4$31 pc 43/27 sn «5622 SenLucss &$6& Columbia, MP 5$34 Ppn 51/34 pc ez/41pc Nashville,tu 7461 9.12 49/29pc ei/3& s Cairo &el59 Columbia, SC &462 72/3& is 62/37 s Neworieans,iA 79/ea 9.6761/42 pc 65/55 s Calgary Columbus, GA 77/62 0.24 60/3& is eu43 5 Nepr Yolk uv 75/61 6$32 ts Sp/34 s csrmlh aena Columbus,Ou 7463 0.22 3&/25 Il 50/35pc NepparicNi ao/62 69/31 ts 50/32 s Dublin 57/39 «TTTITTd,uc 7 $3 & 66/29 r 4422 pc NTTrirrik, VA &1/63 79/41 50/42 pc E dinburgh 57 / 3 7 Corpus Christi, TX 82I57 0.03 6&/45 s 7464 pc Okla.City, pX 53/35 63/39 5 6&/4& pc Geneva 69/41 D allas, TX 61 / 4 5 63/40 s 67/51pc Omaha, NE 41/2& 0.06 56I3& pc 62/32 pc uarxre 7//55 payl222c pu 7 3 /5& 049 sin6 ii 52I37 pc Orlando, FL &9/67 &7I56 is 7//62 pc HongKong ao//3 Denver,Cp 4 1 / 1& 0.06 63/35 pc 4$26 sp palm Springs,CA &7/ep 92/es s 93/64 pc Istanbul ep/44 Pes Moines, IA 41/32 0.1 7 4&I3& pc 62/35pc Peoria, IL 59/35 O.i 7 4i/31 pc 5&f41 pc /525255lem &0 / 53 Detroit, Ml 705& 3&IZ2 pc 4433 pc Philadelphia, PA 79/ez 65/31 is 50/35 s rotunnesburg + puiulh, MN 2 9 / ZZ 3$ZP pc 32/19 sn Phoenix, AZ &5/ee 90/ei pc 91/63 pc Uma 73I&2 E i Paso, TX 7 $ 4 7 72/52 pc &3/57 s Piusburgh PA 75/62 0.10 ul/21 il 49I31 pc usbon 69/57 Fairbanks, AX 52/19 47/23 pc 4&nssh ForuandME es/37 57/29 r 43/25 pc london 6$42 Fargo, NP 3 2 / 19 3426 pc 35/21sn Providence,Rl 7257 62/35 is 47/3P s Madrid 77/4& Hagsrxx AZ Sena 642& pc 63/2&pc Raleigh, Nc 76/63 75/31 is 5433 s Manila 91/&P

YesterdayTuesdayWednesday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/yy Hi/Lp/yy

ei/27 2 39/ZZsn Seairie,WA 72/37 pc 67/37 pc 5/52uxralls,SP 7ZI32is 53/34 s Spokane,W A

6&/42 41/23

57 / 41 sh 59/455 5P I 32 pc 52/255

63/34

5 6 /36 sh 5&I35 pc

37/22 sn 3&/23 pc Springfield,MP &1/51 pc &051 pc St.lovis,Mp 6&/44 pc 57/41 pc Tampa,FL 6$44 s 73I5& pc rucson,AZ 6&I5&pc 63/5& pc rui tmPK

ui/340.35 53/32 s eo/39 pc ep/3& 0.37 49/35 pc 59/42 pc

&4//1 & 6 /Ss u 76/63 pc &3/53 a&I54 pc 9//57pc 5$37 65 / 41 s 69/45 pc 6$49 pc 61/50 pc Washington, OC ap/65 7 0 /33 is 57/37 s 75/51 pc 75/50 pc Wichita,XS 50/32 P.P3 62/41 s 72/45 pc 67/32 pc 71/33 pc YakimuWA 69/27 6 3 / 35 pc 63/35 pc 76I42 is 6444 s YumuAZ -I92/62 s 93/63 s

INTERNATIONAL 53/41 2 51/37 pcMecca

er/53 r 6$55 s Mexica City yii&2 r 69/64 r Monueal &9/62 ts &6//1 s MOTCTT W 9$&0 cri 93/&0 cdNairobi &ZI57 5 73/46 cdNassau 71/59 pc 75/64 pc New Delhi 51/35 is 5035 r Osaka 66I5p is eelspis Oslo 6ZI35 pc 53/33 s piu5555 62/55 s ea/57 s Paris &7/ezs &7/ee s RXTdeJaneiro &$69 pc &2/62 pcRome 59/32 pc 4426 r santiago &$6& s &7//1 pc Sao Paulo 53/41 s 57/42 s Sspp222 0 55/37 5 55/41 s Seoul 66I39 s 59/33 s Shanghai 75I55 s 77/55 s Singapore 7&//1 is 77/69 pc Stockholm 62/51 s 6453 s Sydney 77/eo s &2/57 cri Taipei ee/51 pc69I53 s Tei Aviv 71/62 pc 71/62 pc Tokyo 75/59 01 69/53 s vanmwer 60/41 s 57/41 s Vienna aa/55 pc 7$53 s warssw 91//7 pc &yny pc

102/&0 192/&2 s 102/&2 s 9//62 0.05 ae/59 s 75/SS pc 7SI35 7 7 / Sils 55/19 r 4 6/35 7&/ep & 4//5 9 1//3

6 9/46 4 1/37 7 7/37 5%42 7 7/69

46 / 3 9 r Ssi«e pc 7 & / 59 is 77/59 is &2 / / 3pc &4/73 pc 96/ 6 9pc 9&/73 pc e r / 4 4s 75/50 s 53 / 4 1pc 5H42 s 75 / 4 1is 42/15 sn 5 9 I 39s 55/37 s & $ 7 1u 77/69 r

7 1 / 4& s ea/39 r &2I 5 0pc &2/SO pc 66I&2 7 1/es r ea/64 r 69/46 & $4l

-I69/ui 7 1/ul 9 5//3 5 3/37 66/57 7 1/66 & 0/53

53I33 r 41/33 s 644 i pc 64/44 cd 71 / 4 & pc 71/55 s 93/ 7 1 is 93//3 is 53 / 3 5 r 46/30 s 6 $60 r 69/59 pc 71 / 62pc 77/6& pc 75 / 59pc apep cri

eo/53 ee/53 s 69/53 s 64/37 59/39 4 !/41

5 7 / 44 pc 55/44 pc 6 2 / 39 pc si/35 r ul l 3 3 r us/32 r

WEST NEWS

Drivers inbuscrashhadclean records '2

The Associated Press

state's far north coast. Many

ORLAND, Calif. — Both drivers in the fiery Northern

were hoping to be the first in their families to attend college.

California crash involving a

Five students and three adult

FedEx truck and bus full of

chaperones died, along with

students had clean driving records.

the drivers. Federal and state investigators expect to take months to

FedEX driver Tim E v ans

and the driver of the chartered bus, Talalelei Lealao-Taiao, were killed along with eight passengers Thursday when the truck veered

determine what caused Evans

of injured students escaped

The former Evergreen Elementary School was purchased by the city of Redmond In 2010. The Redmond Clty Council is

across the median of Interstate 5 and smashed into the

through windows before the

slated to discuss a proposal to convert the building into a new

vehicles exploded into tow-

city hall.

bus.

ering flames artd billowing smoke in Orland, 100 miles

to lose control of his truck,

which sideswiped a sedan and collided with the bus. Dozens

California's Department of

Motor Vehicles said neither driver had a moving viola-

Rg '55

tion, although Lealao-Taiao's

The Associated Press file photo

license was briefly suspended A charter bus is prepared for removal by workers along wlth in 2004, The Sacramento Bee reported. The reason for the

remains of a FedEx truck on Frlday, the day after the vehicles colllded on Interstate 5 in Orland, Calif. At least10 people were killed and dozens injured In the flery crash.

rpystdpp r

Rob Kerr /The Bulletin file photo

north of Sacramento. The sedan driver told in-

Evergreen

vestigators the truck was in

Continued from B1 Community Development

flames before the crash, but the National Transportation

Director Heather Richards

investigation. that account. The bus was carrying 44 A preliminary NTSB report students from Southern Cali- is expected within 30 days; the extended family, and Lea- grief, the company declined to fornia for a free tour of Hum- entire investigation could last lao-Taiao's employer, Silvera- comment, citing the ongoing boldt State University on the more than a year.

said the meeting will offer a chance for city leaders to "discuss the next steps" to get the building back in good shape. That may not be easy, and restoring Evergreen would be a roughly $8 million project. That's the estimate an engineering firm gave the city after surveying the building last year, Endicott

Group donatessceniccoastal expanseto public

the former school will likely need to be torn down and

suspension was not immediately clear. The Glenn County coroner

Safety Board has said investigators found no physical evidenceof a pre-impact fire or other witnesses to confirm

has not released official iden- do Stages Inc., confirmed her

tifications, but the Bee spoke name. with a m e mber o f E v ans' Other than an expression of

said. He said some walls irt

public for hiking, said Rick San Jose Mercury News chokes and Brussels sprouts Cooper, field manager with SAN JOSE, Calif. — Ce- along its edges on Highway the BLM office in Hollister. menting protection for one of 1, the property was owned One, known as Liddell Creek the largest privately owned for more than a century by Trail, is off B onny Doon pieces of land on California's two Swiss families who ac- Road. The other, the Molina 1,100-mile coastline, a San quired it i n t h e 1860s and Pasture Trail, is off Swanton Francisco envi r o nmental joined holdings in 1902. It had Road. "This property has redgroup on Monday donated to been covetedfordevelopment the public the Coast Dairies since the 1970s, when PG&E w ood forests and creeks. It's property — a pastoral ex- acquired an option on it with a spectaculararea for the panse of rolling meadows, plans to build a nuclear pow- public to get a true recreationredwood forests and pan- er plant near Davenport, and al experience, hiking up the oramic ocean views north of more recently, in the 1990s, terraces," Cooper said. "And Santa Cruz. when former Nevada develop- looking back over the ocean, nWe are e n ormously er Brian Sweeney attempted it's a great view." pleased that generations from to carve it into 139 lots for luxSome environmentalists now it is going to look the ury homes. would like the property to way it does today," said Will The property was pre- become a national monuRogers, president of the Trust served in its bucolic state in ment. For that, there is recent for Public Land, which trans- 1998, when the Save the Red- precedent. ferred the property to the U.S. woods League acquired it for Last m o n th , Pr e s ident Bureau of Land Management. $44.5 million, most of which BarackObama designated an The 5,843-acre ranch eight came from theDavid and Lu- area on the rugged Mendocimiles north of S anta Cruz cile Packard Foundation in no County coast, the 1,656was the subject of years of Los Altos. acre Point A r ena-Stornetta battles, even among environBy the end of this year, two parcel, as part of the Calimental groups. trails should be open to the fornia Coastal Monument, a Marked with rows of arti-

"Thecommunityhas said they want to

preserve (Evergreen E/ementary School). So that's our goal." — Redmond MayorGeorge Endicott

rebuilt. The w indows and

doors need new framing; By Paul Rogers

Ifyouio What:Redmond City Council meeting Where:Council chambers, 777 S.W.DeschutesAve. When:6:30 p.m. today

toward fixing the Evergreen building, Redmond City Manager Keith Witcosky

preserve established by President Bill Clinton and over-

an elevator needs to be installed, and the whole build-

seen by the BLM.

ing needs to be upgraded to said. But the funds will be meet earthquake and dis- split among a variety of projability standards. ects, so it's uncertain just uWe've asked our (com- how much might go toward munity development and the $8 million Evergreen finance department) staff to price tag. take a look at the numbers Moving forward with the and see if it works," Endicott city hall plan isn't a sure sard. thing, either. But Endicott Paying for the laundry list and other city officials have of upgrades would have been hoped for years to find a new unthinkable just a few years home, andthey've called a ago, Endicott said. But ris- renovation ofthe Evergreen ing property values and tax building one of Redmond's returns prompted the city to top priorities. approve a $13 million urban Located a t So u t hwest renewal plan in late Febru- Ninth Street and Evergreen ary. The plan would shift $13 Avenue, on the edge of downmillion in future tax revenue town, the 30,000-square-foot into a variety of public im- school building "is iconic," provement projects over the Endicott said, "and the comnext 18 years, and finance munity has said they want things like park and street to preserve it. So that's our goaL" repairs. It's possible some of the ur— Reporter 541-617-7820 ban renewal funds could go eglucklich@lyendbulletiyt.com

Similarly in 2012, Obama designated 14,000 acres of Fort Ord, the former military

base north of Monterey, as a n ational monument run b y the BLM. In both mortuments,

oil and gas drilling is banned. Language in the deed settled Monday bansany commercial logging on the property. The T rust fo r P u blic Land also retained the miner-

al rights, blocking mining or fracking. Cooper said that the BLM

will develop, with public involvement, a long-term plan over the next two years. Uses

probably will include hiking, horse riding and mountain biking, he said. Until the first two trails open, the lands remain closed to the public, he

said, and BLM rangers will patrol it.


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 P reps, C4 Sports in brief, C2 NBA, C6 MLB, C3 NHL, C6 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

SWIMMING

THIS WEEK IN PREPS

GOLF

Michael Phelps returning to pool Michael Phelps is coming out of retirement, lured back into the pool by the fun of it and the possibility of swimming at a fifth Olympics in Rio in 2016. The 22-time Olympic medalist will compete for the first time since the 2012 LondonGames at a meet in Mesa,Ariz., on April 24-26. Bob Bowman, the swimmer's longtime coach, told TheAssociated Press on Monday that Phelps is entered in three events — the 50- and100-meter freestyles and the100

• Even though they are not run in highschool meets, multi-eventsare

becomingmorepopular

Rob Kerr / Bulletin file photo

Scott Cravens is one of two Central Oregon residents competing for the 2013 Senior PGA Professional National Championship. The event was postponed from last fall due to weather.

ocas e c ance

butterfly.

"I think he's just going to test the waters a little bit and see how it

goes," Bowmansaid by phone from Baltimore. "I wouldn't say it's a fullfledged comeback." Phelps returned to training last fall and re-entered the U.S. drug-testing program. He has completed the six-month waiting period required by the U.S. Anti-Doping Agency to be eligible for compe-

c .~ p

os ine, ina

.,

rRActc e, Ft~

• Scott Cravens andJeff Fought will competein postponed 2013Senior PNC

tition.

Bowman said Phelps is "pretty far" from being back in top form. He has been training Monday through Friday with Bowman's team atthe North Baltimore Aquatic Club in his hometown.

~'L$uus rW

By Zack Hall The Bulletin

Scott Cravens is tired of waiting around.

— The Associated Press

Who could blame him?

The longtime Central Oregon club professional has been champing at the bit since

NHL

Study suggests 'Olympic effect'

October to tee it up in the most important golf

The Olympic effect seems to havestruck the NHL again. Teams that sent many players to the 2014 Olympics experienced a significant drop in performance after the Sochi Games, while teams that sent few players had a slight improvement, according to a study by a University of Massachusetts sports economist. Neil Longley, a professor at the university's Isenberg School of Management who compiled the figures, called the findings preliminary. But if they hold up, they will be consistent with a study he published in 2012 that examined NHL teams' performance in each Olympic year since the league started participating in1998. The studyfound that for every player an NHL club sent to the Olympics, the club's goal differential dropped by 0 088 of a goal per game compared with its performance before the Olympics. Clubs that sent many players to the Olympics in 1998,

River Ranch resident, will end today in the first

tournament of his playing career. The wait for Cravens, a 55-year-old Crooked round of the 2013 Senior PGA Professional National Championship at the Ryder and Wanamaker courses at PGA Golf Club in Port St.

Lucie, Fla. "I'm actually really anxious and I want to get this over with," Cravens said last week. "I've

been thinking about this for so long that ... let's

go. Torrential rain scratched the Senior PNC last

fall at its original site in Aldie, Va. The PGA of America then decided to postpone the event until spring at its own course in Florida.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Summit's Miranda Brownand Mountain View's Kristen Place are two of several area athletes currently training to compete in the heptathlon.

The Senior PNC offers one more incentive to

ndy Young used to call them "mastersofmedi-

GRANT

ocrity." He meant LUCAS no disrespect, to be sure. (In fact, he quickly catches himself and agreesthat"mastersofabove average" might be more fitting.) But, as Inside • Game, athlete the second-year Mountain View track and stat of the and field coach notes, "that's what week,C4 makes a good heptathlete and a good decathlete." • Intermountain "The thing about being a heptathlete Conference or a decathlete is that you can be a pretty baseball play begins, good (multi-event athlete) if you're OK at everything," says Young, who himself c4

was a college decathlete at Oregon from 2002 to 2006. "You

play well: 35 golfers will earn a berth in the 2014 Senior PGA Championship, set for May at Har-

don't have to be stellar at any

bor Shores Golf Club in Benton Harbor, Mich.

one event.... That's one of the beauties of it. You just have to be OK at everything." Michaela Miller can buy that take. "The mindset for a heptathlon is you

don't always have to be first (in each event)," the Sisters sophomore says. "Just finish well, and take each event at

a time and focus on that one." If nothing else, heptathletes and decathletes just may be the greatest

chameleons around. SeeHeptathlon/C4

2002, 2006 and 2010

hadbigger performance drop-offs, on the whole, than clubs that sent few players. This season's preliminary findings, based on figures compiled through Friday's games, showed that goal differential dropped by0.077 per Olympian. Injuries to Olympians such asJonathan Toews, Patrick Kane, Evgeni Malkin andDavid Backes contributed to many of these teams' woes. Longley pointed out that it is impossible to determine whether the injuries could be attributed to Olympic-related physical or emotional fatigue. For more on theNHL playoffs,C6

Cravens — along with Black Butte Ranch director of golf Jeff Fought — will be in the 264-player field loaded with many of the country's top club professionals. The two Central Oregon pros will be vying fora shareofthe$285,000 purse andthe right to be called the top club professional in the nation age 50 or older.

HePtathlan 100 p Hlrh

$)

)

3)

shor

4)

200

5)

Lwr

6)

Javetrn

800

7)

SeeSenior PNC/C3

2013 SeniorPGAProfessional NationalChampionship What:Top tournament for club professionals, age 50 andolder, in the United States Locals:Scott Cravens, Crooked River Ranch; Jeff Fought, Black Butte Ranch Where: W anamakerand RydercoursesatPGA Golf Club in Port St. Lucie, Fla. When:Todaythrough Sunday Format:72-hole stroke play. Starting field of 264 players is cut to 70 lowest scores andties after two rounds of stroke play. On the web:www.pga.com

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL

s ur reain t e mo oI an S • A career leadoff hitter, the Central Oregon native takeshisplace batting third in New York

season's first five games. Jacoby Ellsbury, the Madras native whom the Yankees signed away from the

By Benjamin Hoffman

has served as the No. 3 hitter in seven of the last eight games. Although he has done well, batting .357 when third in the order, he is

New York Times News Service

Paul O'Neill. Don Mattingly. Mickey Mantle. Batting third in the New York Yankees' lineup has meant

— New Yo/tr Times News Service

('(( (,,

something special since Babe Ruth took the job from Wally Pipp in 1921.

The players who have occupied the role for long periods of time are not onlyYankees greats,butbase-

ball greats. For now, though, the premier hitting position appears to be available, with no obvious internal candidates. Carlos Beltran, a free-agent acquisition, hit.158 in the spot in the

Boston Red Sox in the offseason,

an unusual choice for the role, typ-

ically held by a hitter known more for driving in runs rather than scoringthem. SeeEllsbury/C3

Inside • Seehow Ellsbury's stats compare to a usual Yankees No. 3 hitter, C3 • MLB

roundup, C3


C2

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY BASEBALL

MLB, Atlanta at Philadelphia MLB, Seattle at Texas

Time T V/Radio 4 p.m. MLB 5 p.m. Root

BASKETBALL

NBA, NewYorkat Brooklyn NBA, Denver at L.A. Clippers

5 p.m. TNT 7:30 p.m. T N T, 940-AM

SOCCER EPL, Arsenal vs. WestHamUnited CONCACAF Champions League Soccer, Final, 1st Leg: CruzAzul vs. Toluca

11:45 a.m. NBCSN 5 p.m

FS2

WEDNESDAY BASEBALL

MLB, Pittsburgh at Cincinnati MLB, ChicagoCubsat N.Y.Yankees MLB, Seattle at Texas

9 :30 a.m. M L B 4 p.m. MLB 5 p.m. Root

BASKETBALL

NBA, Dallas at Memphis NBA, L.A. Clippers at Portland

5 p.m. ESP N 7:30 p.m. BlazerNet, ESPN, 1110 AM, 100.1 FM

GOLF

LPGA,LOTTE Championship 3 :30 p.m. G olf HOCKEY NHL Playoffs, Montreal at TampaBay 4 p.m. CNB C NHL Playoffs, Columbus at Pittsburgh 4:30 p.m. NBCSN NHL Playoffs, Dallas at Anaheim 7 p.m. N B CSN SOCCER EPL,ManchesterCityvs.Sunderland 11:45a.m. NBCSN Copa del Rey, Final, Barcelona vs. Real Madrid 12:25 p.m. ESPN

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL DIICkS IlOtCll SIXtll Stfllgllt — Oregon captured its sixth consecutive win Monday, asstarting pitcher Brando Tessarworked seven scoreless innings in the Ducks'4-3 victory over SanDiego in Eugene. TheToreros (25-11j had12 hits to just six for Oregon. Tyler Baumgartner had two hits for the Ducks (28-10), including an RBI double in a three-run fourth inning that put Oregonahead 4-0. San Diego rallied for three runs against three relief pitchers in the eighth inning before Garrett Cleavinger worked ascoreless ninth for the save. TheDucks return to Pac-12 playThursday night to open athreegame homeseries against Washington State.

SOFTBALL OregOn CaPS Civil War SweeP —Top-ranked Oregonscored 11 runs in the first inning and rolled to an18-0 victory in five innings Monday to complete asweep of OregonState. Kailee Cuico hit two home runs andNikki Udria also homeredfor the Ducks (11-1 Pac-12, 37-5 overall), who had19 hits. Cheridan Hawkins andJasmine Smithson-Willett combined to shut out the Beavers (3-10, 13-23j, whose one hit was adouble by Dani Gilmore.

ON DECK Today Baseball: Gladstone atMadras,4:30p.m. Boflball: Estacada at Madras, 4:30p.m. Boystennis:Summ it atBend,4 p.m.; Ridgeview at MountainView,4 p.mcCrookCounty at Redmond, 4p.m4Molalaat Madras,4p.m. Girls tennis: Bendat Summit, 4 p.m.; Mountain View atRidgeview,4p.m.;Redmondat CrookCounty, 4p.mcMadrasat Molala, 4p.m. Boyslacrosse:BendatRedmond,5p.m.

Stanfard Star iS tOP WNBAPiCk —Chiney Ogwumike wasselected No. 1 bythe Connecticut Sun in theWNBAdraft Monday night. Ogwumike joined her sister Nneka, drafted by LosAngeles in 2012, as the only siblings to bechosen first in the WNBA. Chiney Ogwumike finished her stellar career at Stanford as the top scorer and rebounder in Pac-12 history. Former Oregon prepstandout Shoni Schimmel of Louisville was the No. 8pick, by the Atlanta Dream. Schimmel starred at both Hermiston andFranklin of Portland.

CamPell jOinSDuCkSStaff frOm Oregan State — Oregon State associate headcoach Mark Campbell has left the women's basketball program to take ajob at Oregon, aschool spokesperson confirmed Mondaymorning. Campbell, who spent the last four season working under Scott Rueck, will join new Oregoncoach Kelly Graves' staff in Eugene.Graves,who took Gonzaga tosix straight NCAA tournaments, replaced PaulWestheadearlier this month. Before coming to Corvallis, Campbell was as an assistant coach in the men's program at St. Mary's College in Moraga,Calif., under coach Randy Bennett during the 2009-10season, helping the Gaels reach the Sweet16 for the first time in program history,

MOTOR SPORTS Indy 500 giveS teamS 2ndChanCe tOmake field — The new qualifying format for the Indianapolis 500 nowallows anyentry that has not made the field at the end of the first day of qualifying a chance to make the last row of the grid on the secondday. The IndyCarSeriesannouncedthechangesonMonday.Thechanges allow positions 31-33 to beprovisional. Thosecars, plus any entry not already in the field that has declared intentions to qualify for the race, will participate in aseparate qualification session May18 to determine the11th row on thegrid. IndyCar also added anextra day of practice to the schedule. Thesession will be held May19 after the 33-car field has beenset. The qualifying changes come asIndyCar struggles to fill the 33-car field, making the oncetension-filled Bump Day drama-free the last two years.

HaaS PlanS tO field F1 team — NASCARteamowner Gene Haas is out to prove that anAmerican-based teamcan succeed in the Formula Oneracing series. "I think we canbeat the Europeans at their own game," Haassaid Mondayatanewsconference.Haassaid he plans to field a team"HaasFormula" either in 2015 or 2016, depending on how long it takes to find anengine supplier and get things up and running. HaasFormula would becomethe first American-based Formula Oneteam since Parnelli Jones Racing in1974-76, which employed Mario Andretti as its driver. Haassaid his goal is hire ayoung American driver with a great potential — although hehasn't begun to narrow down that search.

HOCKEY Barry TrOtz Out aSCaaCh Ofthe PredatOrS — Barry Trotz, the NHL's longest tenured headcoach with one teamand the only coach the Predators haveever known, will not be backfor a16th seasonwithNashville.The Predatorsannounced Monday theyhave told Trotz his contract will not be renewed andthat they are starting a search for a new coach immediately. TMissing the playoffs two straight seasons — the first time since 2001-02 and2002-03 — was too much for a franchise that needs to reachthe postseason to sell tickets and generate crucial revenue.Trotz's contract expires June30.

FOOTBALL 49er Culliver PleadS nat guilty tO hit-run ChargeS —San Francisco 49ers cornerback Chris Culliver has pleadednot guilty to misdemeanor hit-and-run charges andfelony possession of brass knuckles. Culliver was arrested on March 28after SanJose police say he struck a bicyclist, then rammed awitness' vehicle that was blocking him from leaving until officers arrived. — Staffand wire reports

HOCKEY In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dlst. by Unlversol Ucnck www.gocomlcs.comiinthebleachers

All TimesPDT FIRSTROUND

(Best-of-7) (x-lt necessary)

s%iKE ONE, YEROUtII

Wednesday

EASTERN CONFERENCE Detroit vs. Boston FridayDetroitatBoston430p m Sunday,April 20:Detroit at Boston,noon Tuesday, April 22:Bostonat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Thursday,April 24:BostonatDetroit, 5 p.m. x-Saturday, April 26:Detroit atBoston, 3 p.m. x-Monday, April 28:Bostonat Detroit, TBD x-Wednesday, April 30:Detroit atBoston,TBD

Thursday Baseball: Madras atGladstone,5p.m. Boflball: Molallaat Madras,4:30 p.m. Boystennis:BendatRedmond,4p.m.;Mountain View atSummit, 4p.mcCrookCountyat Ridgeview,4 p.m.; Madras atCentral, 4p.m. Girls tennis:Redmo nd at Bend, 4 p.mcRidgeview at CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Central at Madras,4 p.m.; Summiatt MountainView,4 p.m. Track andfield: Sisters, Sweet Homeat LaPine, 4p,mxCulverat East Linn,4 p.m. Boys golf: Ridgeview,MountainView, Crook County,Sistersat BlackButte Invite, noon Boys lacrosse:Harneyat Sisters, 5p.m. Friday Baseball: Bend at Summit, 4:30p.mcRidgeview at MountainView,4:30p.mcCrook Countyat Redmond,4:30p.m.;Sisters atCotageGrove,4:30 p.m.; La Pine atJunction City,4:30p.m.; CulveratDelphian, 4:30p.m. BoflbaU:Summ it at Bend,4:30 p.mcMountain View at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m.; Redm ond at Crook County,4;30p.m.; CottageGroveatSisters,4:30p im,; JunctionCityatLaPine,430p mcCulverat Delphian, 4:30p.m. Boys tennis:SistersatWilamette,4 p.m. Track and field: Ridgeviewat Apple Blossom Invite inHoodRiver,TBD Girls golf:Ridgeviewat RunningY Ranchin Klamath Fals,10a.m. Boys lacrosse: Wilsonvile at Bend,5:30p.m.; Cleveland atRedmond,5 p.mc Summit at Hermiston, 5 p.m. Equestrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams Central District meetat DeschutesCounty Fair 8 Expo Center, Redmond, 8:30a.m. Saturday Boys tennis:Sistersvs.NorthBendat Wigamette, 10a.m. Girls tennis: Sisters,Redmond, Madras at Madras Invite,TBD Track and field: BendMountain Viewat Crater Classic,10a.mxSummit at OregonRelaysin Eugene, TBD;Sistersat ElmiraRelays, 11a.m.; Summit, Redmond, La Pine,Culver,Gilchrist at LaPine,10a.m.; CrookCountyat Marshfield, TBD Boys lacrosse:Wilsonville at Sisters, 11a.m.; Summiat t HoodRiverValley, 2p.m. Girls lacrosse: Sheldonat Central Oregon,10 amc Sherwood at Central Oregon,1:30 p.m. Equeslrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian TeamsCentral District meetat DeschutesCounty Fair 8 Expo Center, Redmond, 8:30a.m.

Sunday Equestrian: OregonHigh School Equestrian Teams Central District meetat DeschutesCounty Fair 8 Expo Center, Redmond, 8:30a.m.

SOCCER MAJORLEAGUE SOCCER All TimesPDT

How to speed up the game of baseball.

Washington OregonState Washington State ArizonaState Oregon UCLA

usc

Arizona California Stanford utah

Conterence 12-0 10-4 7-4 9-6 7-5 7-5 6-9 6-9 4-8 4-8 2-13

Overall 27-7 26-7

15-16 19-14 28-10 19-15 17-17 17-20 15-17 12-16 11-21

Monday'sGames Oregon4,SanDiego3 Washington14, NorthernColorado3 Today'sGames St. Mary's(Calif.) at Stanford,5:30p.m. Washington StateatGonzaga,6 p.m. UNLV atArizonaState,6:30 p.m. Thursday'sGames UCLAat Utah, 4p.m. WashingtonStateatOregon,6p.m. Arizona Stateat Stanford, 6p.m. WashingtonatCalifornia, 7p.m. Arizonaat USC,7 p.m. Friday's Games UCLAat Utah,4p.m.

WashingtonStateatOregon,6p.m. Arizona Stateat Stanford, 6p.m. WashingtonatCalifornia, 7p.m. Arizonaat USC,7 p.m. Saturday'sGames UCLA at Utah,11 a.m. ArizonaStateat Stanford,1 p.m. Washington atCalifornia,1 p.m. Washington StateatOregon 2pm ArizonaatUSC 7pm

26. New York, MeighanSimmons, G,Tennessee 27. Tulsa,TheresaPlaisance, F,LSU 28. San Antonio, Bri Kulas,F,Missouri 29.Indiana,C,HaidenPalmer,G,Gonzaga World Golf Ranking 30. Washington,CarleyMijovic, C,Australia Through April 13 31. Seattle,MikaelaRuef, Stanford, F,Stanford 1. TigerWoods, UnitedStates, 8.87;2. AdamScott, 32. Washington,KodyBurke,F,N.C. State Australia,8.28; 3. HenrikStenson,Sweden, 8.12; 4. 33. PhoenixSt , ephanieTalbot, G,Australia BubbaWatson,UnitedStates,7.30;5.Jason Day, 34. Chicago, Jamierra Faulkner, G,SouthernMiss Australia,6.86;6. Matt Kuchar, UnitedStates, 6.42; 7. 35. LosAngeles,Antonita Slaughter,F,Louisvile SergioGarcia,Spain, 6.08;8. Phil Mickelson,United 36. Minnesota, AsiaTaylor, F,Lousivile States, 6 07;9. JordanSpieth, UnitedStates, 602;10. RoryMcllroy,NorthernIreland,6.00.

States,2.50. 51. Francen cescoMolinari,Italy, 2.45;52. Thongchai Jaidee, Thailand,2.43; 53.Chris Kirk, UnitedStates, 2.43; 54.John Senden,Australia,2.43;55.Kevin Stadler,UnitedStates, 2.42; 56. RichardSterne, South

Africa,2.35;57.Mateo Manassero, Italy,2.32; 58.Ryan PalmerUnitedStates,231;59. ChessonHadley United States, 2.23; 60.GeorgeCoetzee, SouthAfrica,2.22. 61. MartinKaym er, Germany, 2.17; 62. Branden Grace,SouthAfrica, 2.15;63. ScottStallings,United States,2.13; 64.Mikkolonen, Finland,2.11; 65.Pablo LarrazabaiSp r ain,2.10; 66.David Lynn,England,1.99; 67. ThorbjornDlesen,Denmark,1.98; 68.BooWeekley, UnitedStates,1.92;69. MarcLeishman,Australia,1.90; 70. Kevin Na,United States,1.90; 71. Bernd Wiesberger, Austria, 1.85;72.RossFisher, England,1.85;73. PeterHanson, Sweden, 1.81; 74. BrendondeJonge, Zimbabwe,1.79; 75. ChrisStroud, UnitedStates,1.79.

WTA

DEALS

ATP World Tour

GOLF

Fernand z-cast e ano,Spain, 2.62;46.Matt Every, united States,2.57; 47.KevinStreelman,UnitedStates, 2.54;48.GaryWoodland, UnitedStates, 2.51;49. Nick Watney,UnitedStates, 2.51;50. Bily Horschel,United

Lukas Rosol,Czech Republic,def.EvgenyDonskoy,Russia,7-5,6-1. Albert Ram os, Spain, def. Jarkko Nieminen,Finland,6-2,7-5. PabloAndujar,Spain,def. EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France,2-6, 7-5i 7-6 (5). RobertoBautista Agut,Spain, del. VasekPospisil, Canada,6-2,6-2. TommyRobredo (11), Spain, def. DavidGoffin, Belgium,6-4,6-1.

TENNIS

College Pac-12 Standings AU TimesPDT

RODEO Pro Rodeo Leaders ThroughSunday All-around 1. TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas$55,963 2. ClaytonHass,Terreg,Texas$26,698 3. RusselCardoza, l Terrebonne,Dre.$16,927 BarebackRiding 1. Steven Peebles,Redmond, Dre. $50,722 2. Kaycee Feild, Payson,Utah$49,712 3. AustinFoss,Terrebonne, Dre. $38,61I 18. Bobby Mote, Culver,Ore. $13,480 Steer Wrestling 1. CaseyMartin, Sulphur,La.$29,815 2. LukeBranquinho,LosAlamos, Calif. $28,398 3. JuleHazen,Ashland, Kan.$26,059 TeamRoping(header) 1. DustinBird,CutBank, Mont.$40,614 2. ClayTryan,Bilings, Mont. $37,097 3.ColbyLoveg,Madisonville,Texas$28, 525 TeamRoping(heeler) 1. PaulEaves, Lonedell, Mo,640,614 2. JadeCorkill, Fallon,Nev.$37,097 3. MartinLucero,Stephenvige, Texas$26,725 18. RusselCardo l za,Terrebonne,Ore.$13,216 Saddle BroncRiding 1. CodyWright,Milford, Utah$45,517 2. CortSche er, Elsmere,Neb. $35,661 3. Taos Muncy, Corona,N.M. $33,038 11. RyanMacKenzie, JordanValley, Dre.$17,545 Tie-downRoping 1. TutCooper, Decatur, Texas$35,975 2. 0lint Robinson,Spanish Fork, Utah$31,394 3. Shane Hanchey,Sulphur, La.$28,422 Steer Roping 1. TrevorBrazile, Decatur, Texas$23,696 2.CodyLee,Gatesville,Texas$23,537 3. ChetHerren,Pawhuska, Okla. $18,000 Bull Riding 1. Sage Kimzey,Strong City, Okla.$69,587 2.J.W. Harris,Mugin,Texas$62,680 3.TreyBentonRl,RockIsland,Texas$36,306 Barrel Racing 1. LisaLockhart, Delrichs,S.D.$58,802 2. NancyHunter, Neola, Utah$55,198 3. ShellyAnzick,Livingston, Mont.$38,995

Montrea lvsTampaBay Wednes day:MontrealatTampaBay,4p.m. Friday:MontrealatTampaBay, 4p.m. Sunday,April 20:TampaBayat Montreal, 4p.m. Tuesday, April 22:TampaBayat Montreal,4 p.m. x-Thursday, April 24:Montreal atTampaBay,4 p.m. x-Sunday, April 27:TampaBayat Montreal, TBD x-Tuesday, April 29:Montreal atTampaBay,TBD Columbusvs. Pittsburgh Wednesday;Columbusat Pittsburgh, 4:30p.m. Saturday:Columbusat Pitsburgh, 4p.m. Monday,April 21:PittsburghatColumbus, 4p.m. Wednesday,April 23:PittsburghatColumbus, 4p.m. x-Saturday, April 26:ColumbusatPittsburgh, TBD x-Monday, April 28:Pittsburghat Columbus, TBD x-Wednesd ay,April 30;ColumbusatPittsburgh, TBD Philadelphia atN.Y.Rangers Thursday:PhiladelphiaatN.Y. Rangers, 4p.m. Sunday,April 20:PhiladelphiaatN.Yi Rangers, 9a.m. Tuesday, April 22:N.Y. Rangersat Philadelphia, 5p.m. Friday,April 25:N.Y.RangersatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. x-Sunday, April 27:Philadelphiaat N.Y.Rangers,9a.m. x-Tuesday, April 29:N.Y.RangersatPhiladelphia, TBD x-Wedne sday,April 30:Philadelphiaat N.Y.Rangers,TBD WESTERNCONFERENCE Minnesotavs. Colorado Thursday:MinnesotaatColorado,6:30p.m. Saturday:MinnesotaatColorado, 6:30p.m. Monday,April 21:Coloradoat Minnesota,4 p.m. Thursday,April 24:ColoradoatMinnesota,6:30 p.m. x-Saturday, April 26:MinnesotaatColorado,TBD x-Monday, April 28:ColoradoatMinnesota, TBD x-Wednesd ay,April 30;MinnesotaatColorado,TBD Chicagovs. St. Louis Thursday:ChicagoatSt. Louis, 5 p.m. Saturday:ChicagoatSt. Louis,noon Monday,April 21:St.LouisatChicago,5:30p.m. Wednesday, April 23:St. LouisatChicago,6:30p.m. x-Friday,April 25:ChicagoatSt. Louis,5 p.m. x-Sunday, April 27:St.LouisatChicago,3p.m. x-Tuesday,April 29:ChicagoatSt. Louis,TBD Dallas vs. Anaheim Wednes day:DallasatAnaheim,7p.m. Friday:DallasatAnaheim,7p.m. Monday,April 21;Anaheimat Dallas, 6:30p.m. Wednesday,April 23:Anaheimat Dallas, 5 p.m. x-Friday,April 25:DallasatAnaheim,7:30 p.m. x-Sunday, April 27:Anaheimat Dallas, TBD x-Tuesday, April 29:DallasatAnaheim,TBD Los Angelesvs. SanJose Thursday:LosAngelesat SanJose, 7:30p.m. Sunday,April 20:LosAngeles atSanJose, 7p.m. Tuesd ay,April22:SanJoseatLosAngeles,7p.m. Thursday,April 24:SanJoseat LosAngeles,7:30p.m. x-Saturday, April 26:LosAngelesatSanJose, TBD x-Monday ,April28:SanJoseatLosAngeles,TBD x-Wedne sday,April30:LosAngelesatSanJose,TBD

BASEBALL

EasternConference W L T Pls GF GA BASKETBALL Columbus 3 1 1 10 8 5 TorontoFC 3 2 0 9 5 5 2014 WNBA Draft SportingKansasCity 2 1 2 8 5 4 Monday D.c. United 2 2 1 7 5 6 NewEngland 2 3 1 7 4 8 First Round Philadelphia 1 1 4 7 8 8 Houston 2 3 0 6 7 8 1. Connecticut,ChineyOgwumike, F,Stanford 2 . T u l s a , Od y s s e y S i ms,G,Baylor Chicago 0 1 5 5 9 10 NewYork 0 2 4 4 6 10 3. San Antonio, Kayla McBride,F,Notre Dame Montreal 0 3 3 3 6 10 4. Connecticut(fromNewYork), AlyssaThomas, F WeslernConference Maryland W L T Pls GF GA 5. Indiana,NatashaHoward, F,Florida State FC Dallas 4 1 1 1 3 1 5 9 6. Washington,StefanieDolson, C,uconn Colorado 3 1 1 1 0 8 5 7. Seattle,BriaHartley, G,Uconn Seattle 3 2 1 1 0 1 2 1 0 8. Atlanta,ShoniSchimmel, G,Louisvile RealSalt Lake 2 0 4 1 0 1 0 6 9. PhoenixNa , talie Achonwa,F,Notre Dame Vancouver 2 2 2 8 8 6 10. Chicago,MarkeishaGatling, C,NCState LosAngeles 2 1 1 7 5 2 11. LosAngeles,ChelseaGray, G,Duke ChivasUSA 1 2 3 6 7 11 12. Minnesota, Tricia Liston,F,Duke Portland 0 2 4 4 8 11 SecondRound SanJose 0 2 2 2 5 7 13. Tulsa,JordanHooper, F,Nebraska 14. New York, TyaunnaMarshal, G,GeorgiaTech Wednesday'sGame 15. Minnesota, AsyaBussie, C,West Virginia Philadelphiaat NewYork, 4:30p.m. 16. San Antonio, AstouDnour, C, Spain Saturday'sGames 17. PhoenixTi , ffanyBias, G,OklahomaState HoustonatPhiladelphia,1 p.m. 18. Atlanta,lngaDrekhova,G,USF NewEnglandatChicago,1 p.m. 19. Seattle,MichegePloulfe, F,Utah SanJoseatColorado, 3 p.m. 20. Atlanta,Cassie Harberts, F,SouthernCal Los Angeleat s Vancouver,4 p.m. 21.Phoenix,MaggieLucas,G,PennState D.C.UnitedatColumbus,4:30 p.m. 22. Chicago,Gennifer Brandon, F,California MontrealatSportingKansas City, 5:30p.m. 23.LosAngel es,JenniferHamson,C,BYU TorontoFCat FCDallas, 5:30p.m. 24. Minnesota,ChristineFoggie, G,Vanderbilt PortlandatReal Salt Lake,6:30 p.m. Thlrd Round Seattle FC at Chivas USA,7:30p.m. 25. Connecticut,DeNeshaStagworth, F,Kentucky

11. JustinRose,England, 5.93; 12.ZachJohnson, UnitedStates, 5.67;13. DustinJohnson,United States,5.40;14.GraemeMcDowel, NorthernIreland, 4.56; 15.SteveStricker, UnitedStates, 4.52;16.Jason Dufner,UnitedStates,4.37;17. CharlSchwartzel, SouthAfrica, 4.34;18. KeeganBradley, UnitedStates, 4.18; 19. JimmyWalker, united States, 4.17; 20. BrandtSnedeker, UnitedStates,4.15. 21. JimFuryk,unitedStates,4.14; 22. IanPoulter, England,4.08;23.VictorDubuisson,France,4.01; 24. PatrickReed,United States, 3.90;25.Thomas Bjorn, Denmark ,3.86;26.HidekiMatsuyama,Japan,3.84; 27. WebbSimpson, United States, 3.82; 28.Jamie Donal dson,Wales,3.80;29.LukeDonald,England, 3.80; 30.GrahamDeLaet, Canada,3.45. 31. Bill Haas, unitedStates,3.40; 32.Miguel Angel Jimenez ,Spain,3.27;33.JonasBlixt,Sweden,3.23; 34. HunterMahan,United States,3.23; 35. Rickie Fowler,unitedStates,3.20; 36.LeeWestwood, England,3.15;37.RyanMoore, UnitedStates,2.97; 38. LouisDosthuizen,SouthAfrica,2.96; 39.StephenGallacher,Scotland,2.91; 40. Harris Englandlish, United States,2.85. 41. ErnieEls, SouthAfrica, 2.67;42. MattJones, Australia, 2.66; 43. Russell Henley,united States, 2.64; 44.JoostLuiten, Netherlands, 2.62; 45. Gonzalo

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE

Baseball: Summiat t Bend,4:30 p.mxMountain View at Ridgeview,4:30 p.m.; Redm ond at Crook County,4:30p.m.; LaPineat Sisters, 4:30p.m.; East Linn Christianat Culver,4:30p.m. Soflball: Bend atSummit (DH), 3p.m4Ridgeview at MountainView(DH), 3 p.mcCrookCountyat Redmond(DH),3p.m.;LaPineatSisters, 4:30p.m. Girls golf:Bend, MountainView,Summit, Redmond,Ridgeview,CrookCounty, Trinity Lutheranat Juniper,noon Track and field: Bendat Ridgeview, 3:30p.m.; Summiat t Redmond,3 p.m. Boys lacrosse:MountainViewatSummit,8 p.m.

MLS

BASKETBALL

IN THE BLEACHERS

Monte-CarloRolexMaslers Monday At TheMonte-CarloCountry Club MonteCarlo, Monaco Purse: $4.8million (Maslers1000) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles First Round Radek Stepanek,CzechRepublic, def. IvoKarlovic, Croatia 6-1 6-2. PhilippKohlschreiber,Germany,def. SimoneBolelli, Italy,6-3,6-4. FabioFognini(10), Italy,def.JoaoSousa,Portugal, 5-7, 7-5, 6-4.

Albert Montanes,Spain, det. Benoit Paire,France, 7-5, 4-6,6-2.

BMWMalaysian Open Monday At Royal SelangorGolf Club Kuala Lumpur,Malaysia Purse: $2BB,OBB(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles First Round Danka Kovinic, Montenegro, def. An-Sophie Mesta ch,Belgium,6-4,6-2. LyudmylaKichenok,Ukraine,leadsAyumi Morita (8), Japan, 5-2,susp., rain.

FOOTBALL Arena League AU TimesPDT NATIONALCONFE RENCE

Arizona Los Angeles SanAntonio

West Division W L T Pct PF PA 40 22 05

0 1 .000250 193 0 . 500 178 181 0 . 000 184 285

W L 32 32 22 13

T 0 0 0 0

PacificDivision W L T Pct PF PA Spokane 3 1 0 .7 50 241 192 SanJose 2 3 0 .4 00 294 245 Portland 0 4 0 .0 00 131 203 AMERICAN CONFERENCE South Division

P ct PF PA . 600 285 293 . 600 266 267 . 500 208 175 . 250159 210 East Oivision W L T Pct PF PA Cleveland 4 0 0 1 . 000194 156 Pittsburgh 3 1 0 .7 50 227 141 lowa 22 0 . 500 185 216 Philadelphia 1 3 0 . 2 50 206 251

Orlando Tampa Bay Jacksonvile NewOrleans

Tbursday'sGames

Philadelphia 69, Orlando56

Friday's Games

Pittsburgh56,NewDrleans14 Jacks onville60,TampaBay41

Saturday'sGames

lowa63,SanAntonio62 Cleveland 40,LosAngeles 30 Spokane 55, Portland 27 Arizona57,SanJose51 Friday, April 18 SanAntonioatNewOrleans,5:30p.m. SanJoseatPortland, 7p.m. Saturday,April16 Jacksonville at Philadelphia,3 p.m. TampaBayatOrlando,4:30p.m. LosAngelesatlowa,5:05p.m. PittsburghatArizona,6 p.m. Cleve landatSpokane,7p.m.

Transactions BASEBALL

AmericanLeague NEW YORKYANKEES— Dptioned RHP Shane Greene to Scranton/Wilkes-Barre(IL). SEATTLE MARINERS— SentRHPsTaijuanWalker and Stephen Pryorto Tacoma(PCL) for rehabassignments. TAMPABAYRAYS— OptionedLHPJeffBeliveau to Durham(IL). RecalledRHPBrad Boxbergerfrom Durham (IL). TEXAS RANGERS— Selected thecontract of RHP ColbyLewisfromRound Rock(PCL). DesignatedRHP DamelMccutchenforasslgnment. National League NEWYORKMETS— TradedCBlakeForsytheto Oakland for futureconsiderations. SANDIEGOPADRES— SignedINFJeddGyorko to a six-year contract throughthe2019 season. BASKETB ALL

National Basketball Association NBA— SuspendedSacramentoFMarcusCousins one game for receiving his16th technicalfoul of the 2013-14seasoninanApril 13 gameagainst Minnesota. CHICAGO BULLS—Waived FTornike Shengelia. SignedFGregSmith for theremainderof theseason. DETROIP TISTONS—Announced theresignation of president of basketball operationsJoeDumars,who will remainasanadvisor. FOOTBA LL National Football League CLEVEL ANDBRDWNS—Signed FBChris Pressley. DETROILIO T NS—ClaimedDEKourtneiBrownoff waiversfromBufalo. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —FinedPhiladelphia FScott Hartnell $5,000 for spearing Carolina DBrett Bellemoreduring Sunday'sgame. COLUMBU S BLUEJACKETS — Reassigned D Thomas Larkinto Springfield (AHL).

DETROIT REDWINGS—AssignedGPetr Mrazek to Grand Rapids(AHL). ReassignedDRichardNedomlel and GJared CoreaufromToledo (ECHL)to Grand Rapids. FLORIDA PANTHERS— ReassignedDColbyRobak toSanAntonio(AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS — ReassignedF Stetan FournierfromWheeling (ECHL) to Hamilton(AHL). NASHVILL EPREDATORS— Announcedtheywill not renew thecontract ofcoachBarry Trotz. NEWJERSEYDEVILS— AssignedFsMikeSislo and TimSestito andDJonMerril andAdamLarsson to Albany (AHL). NEW YORKISLANDERS — Reassigned D Ryan Pulock toBridgeport(AHL). Returned FsJohn Persson, JohanSundstrom,MikeHalmo,JustinJohnson and BrettGallant andDScot Mayfield andMatt Donovan toBridgeport. WASHING TONCAPITALS— ReassignedDJ

MOTOR SPORTS IndyCar Points Leaders 1. Will Power, 93;2. MikeConway, 66;3. Simon Pagena ud,60;4.HelioCastroneves,55;5.RyanHunter-Reay, 54; 6. Scott Dixon,51; 7. CarlosMunoz, 48; 8. Juan PabloMontoya,47; 9.Mikhail Aleshin,46;10. SebastianSaavedra, 42. 11. TonyKanaan, 40; 12.Justin Wilson,38;13. TakumaSato, 36; 14. JosefNewgarden, 34; 15. Ryan Briscoe,33;16.Sebastien Bourdais, 33;16.Graham Rahal,33;18.MarcoAndretti,32;19. CarlosHuertas, 32; 20.DriolServia,26.

NASCAR Sprint Cup Winners 1.KevinHarvick,2;Oneeach:KyleBusch,JoeyLogano,BradKeselowski, Carl Edwards, DaleEarnhardt Jr., KurtBusch. Sprint CupPoints Leaders 1.Jeff Gordon,297;2. MattKenseth, 296; 3. Carl Edwards,278;4. DaleEarnhardt Jr., 271;5. Jimmie Johnson,270;6.KyleBusch,269;7.BradKeselowski, 246; B.JoeyLogano,245; 9. RyanNewman,236; 10. AustinDilon,235. 11. GregBiffle, 227; 12.TonyStewart, 224;13. Brian Vickers,224;14. KyleLarson,223; 15. Denny Hamlin,223;16.Clint Bowyer, 219; 17. MarcosAmbrose,216;18.PaulMenard,206;19. AJAlmendinger,202;20.JamieMcMurray,195. 21. Casey Mears,188; 22. Kevin Harvick,186; 23. KaseyKahne,186;24. Aric Almirola, 184;25.Ricky Stenhouse Jr., 178;26.Kurt Busch,164; 27.Justin Allgaier,150;28. MartinTruexJr., 148;29.Danica Patrick,143;30.David Gililand,123. 31. ReedSorenson, 118; 32. DavidRagan, 107; 33. Cole Whitt, 105;34. MichaelAnnett, 105;35. Alex Bowman, 100; 36. JoshWise, 90; 37.TravisKvapil,

63; 38.ParkerKligerman,54; 39.RyanTruex, 51;40. MichaelMcDoweg,40. 41.BobbyLabonte,29;42.JeffBurton,27;43. TerryLabonte,24;44. David Reutimann,22;45. David Stremme, 13;46. TimmyHil, 7; 47. DaveBlaney, 4; 48. Michael Waltrip, 4.

FISH COUNT Upstream daily movement of adult chinook,jack chinook,steelheadandwild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiver damslast updatedon Sunday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 90 1 6 57 20 The Dalles 149 0 11 6 John Day 11 5 8 26 21 McNary 49 0 33 22 Upstream year-to-date movement ofadult chinook, jack chinook,steelheadand wild steelheadat selected ColumbiaRiverdamslast updatedonSaturday. Chnk Jchnk Stlhd Wsllhd Bonneville 4,630 2 7 3 , 180 1,015 The Dalles 1,234 6 153 60 J ohn Day 70 6 26 2, 5 7 4 99 3 McNary 2 34 1 290 178

Food, Home 8 Garden e • TheBulletin


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

C3

OR LEAGUE BASEBALL Standings

Mariners 7, Rangers1

All TimesPDT

NewYork Toronto Tampa Bay Baltimore Boston

AMERICANLEAGUE East Oivision W L Pct GB 7 6 .5 3 8 7 6 .5 3 8 7

.50 0 t/r

.4 6 2 1 .3 8 5 2

Pct GB .6 0 0

6

4

7

7

5

.5 8 3 1 t/r

6 6 5

7 7 8

.4 6 2 3 .46 2 3 .3 8 5 4

6 7

West Division W L 9 4

Monday'sGames

538

t/r

7

6 6

Oakland Seattle Los Angeles Texas Houston

7

6 7 5 8 Central Division W L 6 4

.5 0 0 1 .4 6 2 1'/r .3 6 4 2t/r

Pct GB .6 9 2

Baltimore7,TampaBay1 Seattle 7, Texas1 Oakland 3, L.A.Angels 2

Today'sGames ChicagoCubs(Hammel 2-0) at N.Y.Yankees (Tanaka 1-0),4:05p.m. TampaBay(Odorizzi1-1) at Baltimore(Mi.Gonzalez 0-1), 4:05 p.m. Cleveland (McAffister1-0) at Detroit (A.Sanchez0-0), 4:08 p.m. Seattle(Beavan0-0) atTexas(R.Ross0-0),5;05p.m. Boston(Peavy 0-0) at ChicagoWhite Sox(ErJohnson 0-1),5:10p.m. KansasCity (Ventura0-0) at Houston(Harreff0-2), 5:10 p.m. Toronto(Morrow1-1) at Minnesota(Hughes0-0), 5:10 p.m. Oakland(Straily 1-1) at L.A.Angels(Richards2-0), 7;05 p.m. Wednesday'sGames Tampa Bayat Baltimore, 9:35p.m. ChicagoCubsat N.Y. Yankees,4:05p.m. ClevelandatDetroit, 4:08p.m. Seattle atTexas, 5:05p.m. Bostonat ChicagoWhite Sox, 5:10p.m. KansasCityatHouston, 5:10p.m. TorontoatMinnesota, 5:10p.m. Oaklan datL.A.Angels,7:05p.m. NATIONALLEAGUE

Atlanta Washington NewYork Philadelphia Miami Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh

East Division W L 9 4 8 5 6 7 6 7 5

9

Central Division W L 10 3 8 5

Reds 7, Pirates 7, tie, 6 innings Mets 7, Diamondbacks3

ARLINGTON,Texas— Mike CINCINNATI —Neil Walker and Zunino homered aninning before GabySanchezhitback-to-back adding an RBIsingle in Seattle's homers twice, and Pittsburgh strange six-run outburst that inand Cincinnati combined for10 cluded threeTexas Rangers errors homers in only six innings before and a replay reversal. Roenis Elias rain forced a suspension. The worked into the seventh inning game will be resumed in thetop with five strikeouts for his first of the seventh inning at 5:30 p.m. major league victory in the lefttoday. Pittsburgh hit six solo shots hander's third career start. and Cincinnati had four homers, most of them into a heavy rain. Seattle Texas Already, it's the most homers in ab r hbi ab r hbi A lmontcf 5 0 1 0 Choolf 2000 amajorleaguegame since2006 BMiffer ss 5 0 1 0 Andrus ss 4 0 1 0 andthemostcombinedhomers C ano2b 4 1 1 1 Riosrf 4010 Hartdh 4 0 0 0 Fielder1b 4 1 2 0 for a game inGreat American Ball Romerpr -dh 0 0 0 0 Kzmnff 3b 4 0 1 1 Park's12-year history. Morrsnrf 0 0 0 0 Choicedh 2 0 1 0 MSndrsrf 5 1 2 1 Adduciph 1 0 0 0 Seager3b 4 1 2 1 Arenciic 2 0 0 0 Smoak1b 4 1 2 0 Morlndph 1 0 0 0 A ckleylf 4 1 1 1 Chirinsc 1 0 0 0 Zuninoc 4 2 2 2 LMartncf 2 0 0 0 JoWilsn 2b 3 0 1 0 Totals 3 9 7 126 Totals 3 0 1 7 1 Seattle 000 016 000 — 7 Texas 0 00 000 100 — 1 E—Rios (1), Kouzmanoff (1), Arencibia(2). DPSeattle 4.LOB —Seattle 8, Texas6. 28—Smoak(4),

PiNsburgh Cincinnati ab r hbi ab r hbi Martelf 4 2 2 1 BHmltncf 3 0 0 0 S niderrf 3 1 1 1 Votto1b 2 2 1 2 AMcctcf 3 0 1 1 Phillips2b 3 0 1 0 PAlvrz 3b 3 0 0 0 Frazier 3b 3 2 2 2 R Martnc 3 0 0 0 Brucerf 3 0 0 0 NWalkr2b 3 2 3 2 Ludwcklf 3 1 1 2 GSnchz1b 3 2 2 2 Mesorcc 3 1 1 1 Barmesss 3 0 1 0 Cozartss 3 0 0 0 W Rdrgp 2 0 0 0 Baileyp 1 0 0 0 Fielder(3). 38—M.Saunders (1). HR —Zunino (3). Tabataph 1 0 0 0 N.Sotoph 1 1 1 0 CS — M.Saunders(1). SF—Cano. IP H R E R BBSO Morrisp 0 0 0 0 Hooverp 0 0 0 0 Totals 2 8 7 107 Totals 2 5 7 7 7 Seattle Pittsburgh 120 0 2 2 — 7 EliasW,1-1 62-3 5 1 1 2 5 200 2 2 1— 7 11-3 0 0 0 2 0 Cincinnati Medina LOB —Pittsburgh 3, Cincinnati 1. 28—Marte (3), Farquhar 1 2 0 0 0 1

Texas

LewisL,0-1

51-3 8 4 3 1-3 3 3 1 21-3 1 0 0 1 0 0 0

Figueroa Noesi Toffeson HBP —byLewis(Seager). T—3:01. A—23,081(48,114).

0 0 0 1

4 0 2 1

Athletics 3, Angels 2 ANAHEIM, Calif.— Pinch-hitter

Pct GB .6 9 2 .6 1 5 1 .4 6 2 3 .4 6 2 3

JohnJasocame throughwitha two-run homer off closer Ernesto Frieri in the ninth inning to lift Oak-

land.YoenisCespedesalsowent 357 4 1/2 deep for the A's, offsetting Albert P c t G B Pujols' 496th home run. . 7 69 .6 1 5 2

Frazier(1), N.Soto(1). HR—Marte(1), Snider(3), N.Walker 2(4), G.Sanchez2(2), Votto (3), Frazier (3), Ludwick (2), Mesoraco(3).

IP H Pitlsburgh WRodriguez 5 6 Morris BS,1-1 1 1 Cincinnati Bailey 5 8 HooverBS,2-2 1 2 WP — Bailey. T—0:00.A—0(42,319).

PHOENIX —Lucas Dudahad four hits and two RBls andZack Wheeler pitched effectively into the seventh inning for NewYork. David Wright added two RBlsand the Mets had13 hits. New York

Arizona ab r hbi ab r hbi EYonglf-cf 3 2 2 0 GParrarf 4 1 0 0 D nMrp2b 4 2 2 1 Hiff2b 4010 DWrght3b 4 1 1 2 Gldsch1b 3 2 2 0 Grndrsrf 3 0 1 1 Monterc 3 0 3 3 ABrwnrf 2 0 0 0 Prado3b 4 0 0 0 D uda1b-If 5 1 4 2 Trumolf 4 0 0 0 Lagarscf 4 0 1 0 Owingsss 4 0 2 0 I.Davispr-1b 1 0 0 0 Poffockcf 3 0 1 0 dArnadc 4 0 1 0 Cffmntrp 1 0 0 0 CTorrsp 1 0 0 0 Bolsngrp 1 0 0 0 Teiadass 5 0 1 1 Campnph 1 0 0 0 Wheelrp 2 0 0 0 RwlndSp 0 0 0 0 Reckerc 1 1 0 0 Pnngtnph 1 0 0 0 Totals 3 9 7 137 Totals 3 3 3 9 3 N ew York 012 0 2 0 0 20 — 7 Arizona 1 01 000 010 — 3 E—Rowland-Smith (1), Owings(2). DP—New York1.LOB —NewYork11,Arizona7.28—Dan.Murphy (3),Lagares(3), Montero(2), Owings(2).SB—E. Young(7). S—E.Young.SF—Dan.Murphy,Montero. IP H

R E R BBSO

New York WheelerW,1-2 6 1 - 3 6 C.TorresS,1-1 2 2 - 3 3 Arizona CoffmenterL,0-1 4 5 Bolsinger 3 6 Rowland-Smit h 2 2 WP—C.Torres. T—3:08. A—18,099(48,633).

2 2 3 1 1 0

3 2

3 3 1

3

2 2 2 2 1 1

3 4

R E R BBSO Padres 5, Rockies 4

6 6 1 1 1 0

2 2

5 5 0 2 2 0

9 2

Braves 9, Phiiiies 6 PHILADELPHIA — Dan Uggla hit

two home runs, including a grand slam in the ninth inning to life Atlanta. EvanGattis also homered twice. The teamscombined for five homers and 12runs in the final two innings.

SAN DIEGO — San Diego scored twice in the eighth inning on Rex Brothers' wild pitch and catcher Edwin Rosario's errant throw back to the plate. TheRockies held a one-run lead whenBrothers walked the bases loadedwith two outs. Facing YasmaniGrandal, Brothers unleashed a wild throw. As Edwin Rosario retrieved the pitch, he turned andthrew wildly back to Brothers covering the plate. The ball got past Brothers as Xavier Nadyscored and, asthe ball sailed past the mound,Seth Smith scored from second baseas the Padres took a5-4 lead.

Los Angeles ab r hbi ab r hbi Chicago Cincinnati 4 8 .3 3 3 5 N Gentrycf 3 0 1 0 Calhonrf 4 1 2 0 M ossph-If 0 0 0 0 Troutcf 4 000 West Division Atlanta Philadelphia W L P c t G B Lowriess 4 0 0 0 Puiols1b 4 1 2 2 ab r hbi ab r hbi Dnldsn3b 4 1 2 0 Ibanezdh 4 0 0 0 LosAngeles 9 4 .6 9 2 Heywrdrf 3 0 1 0 GwynJcf 41 1 0 SanFrancisco 8 5 .6 1 5 1 Cespdslf-cf 3 1 1 1 HKndrc2b 4 0 0 0 Bupton cf 3 1 0 0 Roffins ss 3 1 1 0 SanDiego 6 7 .4 6 2 3 DNorrsc 3 0 0 0 Freese3b 4 0 0 0 Colorado San Diego Fremn1b 4 2 0 0 Ugey2b 5 1 2 0 J asoph-c 1 1 1 2 Shucklf 3 0 0 0 Colorado 6 8 .4 2 9 3t/r ab r hbi ab r hbi Caff aspdh 4 0 3 0 Cowgiff lf 0 0 0 0 J.Uptonlf 4 1 0 0 Howard1b 4 1 1 1 Arizona 4 1 2 . 250 6t/r Blckmncf 5 1 2 0 Ecarerss 411 1 G attisc 5 2 2 3 Byrdrf 4 1 2 2 Punto2b 4 0 1 0 Congerc 3 0 0 0 Monday'sGames Cuddyrrf 1 0 0 0 Amarstcf 2 0 1 1 U ggla2b 4 2 2 5 DBrwnlf 3 1 1 3 Reddckrf 4 0 0 0 Aybarss 3 0 1 0 Atlanta 9,Philadelphia6 S mmnsss 5 1 3 1 Ruizc 3 0 0 0 Barnesrf 1 0 0 0 Nadyph-rf 0 1 0 0 Barton 1b 4 0 0 0 Washington 9, Miami2 CGnzlzlf 4 0 0 0 S.Smithlf 3 1 1 0 R.Pena3b 3 0 1 0 Asche3b 4 0 0 0 Totals 34 3 9 3 Totals 3 3 2 5 2 Cincinnati 7,Pittsburgh7, tie, 6innings, susp., rain Tlwlzkss 5 1 2 0 Gyorko2b 3 0 0 0 ESantnp 3 0 0 0 Diekmnp 0 0 0 0 Oakland 0 00 100 002 — 8 St. Louis4,Milwaukee0 Rosarioc 4 1 1 2 Headly3b 3 0 0 0 Los Angeles 10 1 000 000 — 2 Thomsp 0 0 0 0 RHrndzp 2 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets7,Arizona3 Mornea1b 4 1 1 0 Alonso1b 3 1 1 0 E—Barton(2). DP—LosAngeles 2. LOB—Oak- Varvarp 0 0 0 0 Hoffndsp 0 0 0 0 SanDiego5, Colorado4 Arenad3b 4 0 2 0 Grandlc 4 0 0 0 land 6,LosAngeles 4. 2B—Calhoun (3). HR—Ces- Doumitph 1 0 0 0 Mayrryph 1 0 0 0 Today'sGames LeMahi2b 4 0 1 1 Venalerf-cf 3 0 2 0 Avilanp 0 0 0 0 Rosnrgp 0 0 0 0 ls(4).SB—Gentry(1). Atlanta(Hale0-0) atPhiladelphia(CI.Lee2-1), 4:05p.m. pedes(3),Jaso(1),Puio L ylesp 2 0 0 0 Stultsp 1 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO CJhnsnph 1 0 0 0 LuGarcp 0 0 0 0 ChicagoCubs(Hammel 2-0) at N.Y. Yankees Franaka Oakland Stubbsph 0 0 0 0 Medicaph 1 1 1 1 Dcrpntp 0 0 0 0 Galvis3b 1 0 0 0 1-0),4:05p.m. Kahnlep 0 0 0 0 ATorrsp 0 0 0 0 7 4 2 1 0 9 Totals 36 9 9 9 Totals 3 4 6 8 6 Pittsburgh(Cole 20)at Cincinnati(Leake1-1),4 10pm. J.chavez Belislep 0 0 0 0 Vincentp 0 0 0 0 Atlanta 0 00 002 034 — 9 W,1-2 1 1 0 0 0 0 Washington (Strasburg1-1) at Miami(Koehler 1-1), Ji.Johnson GregersonS,2-3 1 0 0 0 0 0 P hiladelphia 0 1 0 0 0 0 050 — 6 Dickrsnph 1 0 0 0 Denorfiph 1 0 0 0 4:10 p.m. E—uggla (3), Gatis (2),Ruiz2 (2). DP—Atlanta Brothrsp 0 0 0 0 Thayerp 0 0 0 0 Angeles St. Louis(S.Miffer0-2)at Milwaukee(Estrada 1-0), Los S treetp 0 0 0 0 H.Santiago 7 5 1 1 1 3 1, Philadelphia1. LOB —Atlanta 9, Philadelphia6. 5;10 p.m. 28 — R.Pena (1), Utley(7), Byrd(2). 3B—Simmons Totals 3 5 4 9 3 Totals 2 85 7 3 H,2 1 0 0 0 0 0 N.Y.Mets(Meiia1-0) atArizona(Arroyo1-0), 6:40p.m. J.Smith C olorado 001 1 2 0 0 00 — 4 F rieri L,0-1 BS,1-2 1-3 4 2 2 0 0 (2). HR — G a tt i s 2 (3), Uggl a 2 (2), Si m m on s (2), Colorado(Nicasio1-0) atSanDiego(Erlin 1-0),710p.m. J.Alvarez (3), D.Brown(1). SB—Heyward (4), B.Upton San Diego 0 0 0 0 3 0 02x— 5 0 0 0 0 1 Howard LA. Dodgers(Undecided) atSan Francisco(Lincecum HBP— byJ.Smith (Mo2-3 E — R os ari o (2), Stul t s (1), E.cabrera(1). DPss).WP— J.chavez.PB— D. 2(3).S—Ro ffins. 0-1), 7;15 p.m. —Colorado 9, San Norris. IP H R E R BBSO Colorado 3,SanDiego1. LOB Wednesday'sGames Diego 5. 28 —Blackmon (5), E.cabrera(6), Medica T—2:56. A—37,120(45,483). Atlanta PittsburghatCincinnati, 9:35a.m. —Amarista(1), Venable(1). HR —Rosario(2). E.Santana 6 4 1 1 2 11 (1). 38 St. LouisatMilwaukee,1010a m. 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 IP H R E R BBSO ThomasH,1 N.Y.MetsatArizona,12:40 p.m. National League 1 -3 0 0 0 0 1 Colorado VarvaroH,1 Atlantaat Philadelphia,4:05p.m. Lyles 5 6 3 3 2 3 AvilanW,3-1 1 4 5 5 ChicagoCubsat N.Y. Yankees,4:05p.m. 1 0 0 0 1 0 D.carpenterS,1-1 1 0 0 0 1 1 KahnleH,2 Washington at Miami,4:10p.m. Nationais 9, Marlins 2 BelisleH,3 1 1 0 0 0 0 Philadelphia Coloradoat San Diego,7:10p.m. 2 1 3 0 R.Hernandez 6 4 2 2 6 3 BrothersL,1-2 BS,1-1 1 0 L.A. Dodgers atSanFrancisco, 7:15p.m. MIAMI — Washington's Jordan Hoffands 1 0 0 0 1 1 San Diego 5 9 4 3 2 3 Rosenberg 0 3 3 3 0 0 Stults Zimmermannbouncedbackfrom 1-3 0 0 0 3 0 Lu.Garcia 1 0 0 0 0 1 A.Torres American League 6 4

6 8

.5 0 0 3t/r .3 3 3 5t/r

Orioies 7, Rays1 BALTIMORE — Wei-Yin Chentook a four-hitter into the seventh inning and Baltimore got its offense back on track. Matt Wieters and J.J. Hardy eachhadthree hits, scored twice and drove in arun. It was by far the worst of Chris Archer's 30 big leaguestarts. The seven runs and12 hits he allowed were both career highs.

Oakland

the shortest start of his career to pitch seven innings andhand Miami its eighth straight loss. Bryce Harper hadtwo doubles and an RBItriple for Washington. Zimmermann becamethe first Nationals starter to go seveninnings this season.

Washington Miami ab r hbi ab r hbi Rendon3b 5 0 2 3 Yelichcf 4 0 2 0 Frndsnlf 4 0 0 0 Dietrch2b 4 0 1 0 Werthrf 5 1 1 0 Stantonrf 4 0 2 0 Harpercf 4 1 3 1 GJones1b 3 1 1 1 Souzacf 1 0 0 0 McGeh3b 3 0 0 0 Dsmndss 5 1 1 0 Caminrp 0 0 0 0 TMoore1b 5 1 3 2 Dobbsph 1 0 0 0 Espinos2b 4 2 2 1 Cishekp 0 0 0 0 Leonc 5 2 2 2 Sltlmchc 3 1 1 0 Zmrmnp 3 1 2 0 RJhnsnlf 4 0 1 1 Treinenp 1 0 0 0 Hchvrrss 4 0 0 0 H and p 1 0 0 0 Slowey p 1 0 0 0 JeBakr3b 2 0 0 0 Totals 4 2 9 169 Totals 3 4 2 8 2 W ashington 1 8 1 0 0 0 400 — 9 Miami 0 10 001 000 — 2 E—G.Jones (2). DP—Washington 1. LOBWashington9, Miami7. 28—Rendon (5), Werth (3), Harper2 (3), T.Moore(1), Espinosa(4), Stanton(4), Saltalama cchia(4). 3B—Rendon(2), Harper(1), Espinosa(1). HR —T.Moore(1), Leon(1), G.Jones (2). S—Zimmermann.

DiekmanL,1-1 BS,2-2 1 2 4 4 2 Rosenberg pitchedto3 batters inthe 8th. WP — Avilan. T—3:41.A—26,516(43,651).

3

Cardinals 4, Brewers 0 MILWAUKEE — Lance Lynn struck out11 in seven innings, Jon Jay hit a three-run homerandSt. LouissnappedtheMilwaukee's nine-game winning streak.

0 1 1

Leaders ThroughMonday'sGames AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING —AIRamirez, Chicago,.420; Kubel, Minnesota,.385;Wieters, Baltimore,.366;Effsbury,New York, .362;Solarte, NewYork, .357; RD avis, Detroit, .345;Giffaspie,Chicago,.341. RBI—Abreu, Chicago, 14;Colabeffo,Minnesota, 14; Ibanez,LosAngeles, 12;AIRamirez, Chicago, 12; Moss,Oakland,11; DavMurphy,Cleveland,11; Brantley, Cleveland,10;Cespedes, Oakland,10. DOUBLES — DeJennings,TampaBay,6;Solarte,

Milwaukee ab r hbi ab r hbi Mcrpnt3b 2 0 0 0 CGomzcf 4 0 0 0 TampaBay Baltimore Descals3b 2 0 0 0 Segurass 4 0 2 0 NewYork,6; BeltranrNe wYork, 5; Acabrera,Cleyeab r hbi ab r hbi W ong2b 4 0 0 0 Braunrf 4 0 0 0 land, 5;Colabeffo,Minnesota, 5; SPerez, KansasCity, Zobrist2b 3 1 1 0 Markksrf 5 0 0 0 Hoffidylf 4 0 1 0 ArRmr3b 3 0 0 0 5;18 tied at 4. DJnngscf 3 0 1 0 N.cruzdh 5 2 2 1 MAdms1b 4 0 3 0 Lucroyc 4 0 0 0 HOMERUN S—Bautista, Toronto,5; Abreu,ChiForsythdh 3 0 0 0 C.Davis1b 3 0 1 1 Craigrf 4 1 1 0 Overay1b 3 0 0 0 cago, 4; Mecabrera,Toronto, 4; Dozier,Minnesota, DeJess ph-dh1 0 0 0 A.Jones cf 4 0 0 0 JhPerlt ss 4 2 2 1 Gennett 2b 2 0 0 0 4; Puiols,LosAngeles, 4; Trout, LosAngeles, 4; 17 Longori 3b 4 0 1 1 Wieters c 4 2 3 1 C Mrtnzp 0 0 0 0 LSchfrlf 3 0 1 0 tied at3. M yers rf 3 0 0 0 Lough lf 4 0 0 0 J aycf 4 1 1 3 Garzap 2 0 0 0 PITCHING —Buehrle, Toronto, 3-0; FHernandez, Loney1b 4 0 2 0 Hardyss 4 2 3 1 Tcruzc 4 0 2 0 MrRynlph 1 0 0 0 Seattle,3-0;Sale,Chicago,3-0;19 tiedat 2. Guyerlf 3 0 1 0 Lmrdzz2b 4 0 2 1 Lynnp 2 0 0 0 D ukep 0 0 0 0 ERA— Darvish,Texas,0.00;Feldman,Houston, JMolinc 0 0 0 0 Flahrty3b 4 1 2 2 Kozmass 1 0 1 0 Wootenp 0 0 0 0 0.44; Tilman,Baltimore,0.84;Buehrle, Toronto, 0.86; YEscorss 3 0 0 0 W angp 0 0 0 0 Gray, Oakland,0.95;Jchavez,Oakland,1.35. Hanignc 2 0 0 0 SKTR IKEOUTS—FHernandez, Seatle, 30;Scherzer, Totals 35 4 114 Totals 3 0 0 3 0 Joyceph-If 1 0 0 0 S t. Louis 010 0 0 3 0 00 — 4 Detroit, 25;CWilson, LosAngeles, 24;Price,Tampa Totals 30 1 6 1 Totals 3 7 7 137 M ilwaukee 0 0 0 0 0 0 000 — 0 Bay,22;Jchavez,Oakland,22. T ampa Bay 0 0 0 0 0 1 000 — 1 E—Jh.Peralta (3). DP—St. Louis 1, Milwaukee NATIONALLEAGUE Baltimore 182 0 1 0 g gx — 7 DP — Baltimore 3. LOB—Tampa Bay 5, Baltimore 1. LOB —St. Louis 6, Milwaukee6. 2B—Ma.Adams BATTING —Utley, Philadelphia, .489; Blackmon, 7. 28 — Loney (4), N.cruz (4), C.Davis (4), Wieters IP H R E R BBSO (6), Segura(2),LSchafer (3). HR —Jh Peralta(3), Jay Colorado,.478;Pagan,SanFrancisco,.412; Freeman, Washington (1). S —Lynn. Atlanta,.404;DGordon, LosAngeles, .400; Bonifacio, (2), Hardy 2(2). Z immermann W ,1-0 7 6 2 2 1 7 IP H R E R BBSO Chica go,.392;Adams,St.Louis,.360. IP H R E R BBSO RBI—Trumbo, Arizona, 18;Stanton, Miami, 16; Treinen 2 2 0 0 1 3 SL Loels TampaBay ArcherL,1-1 5 12 7 7 1 6 Miami LynnW,3-0 7 3 0 0 3 11 AdGonzalez,LosAngeles, 14;CGonzalez,Colorado, Boxberger 1 0 0 0 0 1 HandL,0-1 3 8 5 5 1 2 C.Martinez 2 0 0 0 0 1 13; Rendon,Washington, 12; McG ehee, Miami, 11; Lueke 2 1 0 0 0 1 Slowey 32-3 7 4 4 0 1 Milwaukee ArRamirez, Milwaukee,11. Baltimore Caminero 11-3 0 0 0 0 3 GarzaL,0-2 7 9 4 4 1 6 HOME RUNS — Trumbo, Arizona, 6; PAlvarez, 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Pittsburgh,5;Belt, SanFrancisco, 5;AdGonzalez, Los W.chenW,2-1 6 1 -3 5 1 1 2 4 Cishek 1 1 0 0 0 2 Duke 2-3 1 0 0 0 0 Angeles,5; Freeman,Atlanta, 4; CGomez, Milwaukee, Meek 12-3 1 0 0 0 1 HBP —by Slowey (Espinosa). WP—Zimmermann. Wooten O'Day 1 0 0 0 1 1 PB — Leon. Wang 1 1 0 0 0 0 4; CGonzalez, Colorado,4; Stanton,Miami,4; JUpton, T—2;46.A—15,799 (45,971). T—2:56. A—18,788(37,442). T—2:48.A—27,090 (41,900). Atlanta,4;Walker,Pittsburgh,4.

Senior PNC Continued from C1 "To me, this (the Senior PNC) is the top tournament (I have played in) simply because it is a national championship," says Cravens, who has never played for a national championship of any kind as a pro or an amateur. "You have the best

St. Louis

Vincent 12-3 0 0 0 0 ThayerW,2-0 1 0 0 0 0 StreetS,4-4 1 0 0 0 0 WP—Brothers. T—3:19. A—14,784(42,302).

difference brand of No. 3 hitter for the Yankees.

Ellsbury

with Seattle in the offseason, a year after getting the job. Continued from C1 Cano, a classic No. 3 hitter, Ellsbury, a l e ft-handed with a powerful bat and a swinger who began the sea- consistent approach, flourson leading off, has taken the ished in the role last year, hitmove down the batting order ting .319 with 16 home runs in stride, saying it would not in 110 games at No. 3. affect his approach. None of the high-priced "I'm not really going to players the Yankees acchange anything, just go quired was a natural fit to about my at-bats the same replace him, leaving them way," he told reporters last looking for their 37th fullweek. "You can't change the time No. 3 hitter since 1914. type of hitter that you are If Ellsbury remains third, (based on) where you hit in the Yankees may have to the lineup." adjust t h ei r e x p ectations It remains to be seen if because of his lack of powthe Yankees will be content

er. After all, that spot in the

to give the job permanently to the 30-year-old Ellsbury,

Yankees' order has twice produced 60 home runs

who has hit more than nine

home runs in a season just

in a season: Ruth hit 60 in 1927, and Roger Maris hit

once. It is also unclear if man-

57 in 1961 (the year he hit 61 overall), with Yogi Berra,

ager Joe Girardi is all that Johnny Blanchard and Bob eager to give the job back to Cerv contributing one homer first baseman Mark Teixeira

each from the third slot that

once he returns from a ham- season. string injury. It has been a The spot has typically number of years since Teix- produced between 25 and 30 eira, the team's primary No. home runs a season, and the 3 hitter from 2009 to 2011, Yankees have not had fewer has provided much intimi-

than 10 home runs from the

dation at the plate, and his

third spot since 1918, when

inconsistency has him in the

Frank "Home Run" Baker

position Mattingly experi- led the team with six. enced in July 1994, when he Ellsbury, while dynamic, ceded the spot to O'Neill. may struggle to continue Mattingly took the demo- that streak. In 2011, he inextion well, having served as plicably had 32 home runs the primary No. 3 hitter for among his 83 extra-base the majority of 11 seasons. hits; in his six other sea"Times have changed," sons with the Red Sox, he Mattingly told reporters at totaled 33 homers. This the time. "I'm not 23, 24 or 25

year, neither he nor Beltran

anymore. And the team has changed. We've got a guy who's leading the league in hitting. He should be getting

has homered from the No.

the at-bats. 1said that before,

home run.

3 hole, leaving that as the only spot in the Yankees' or-

der that has not produced a

and I believe it." Baseball's st a t i sticians O'Neill was the Yankees' will say this is much ado primary No. 3 hitter in five

about nothing. Many stud-

of the next seven seasons before retiring. In a way, the team has been looking for a No. 3 hitter ever since. Jason Giambi had the job for a while, as did Gary Sheffield. Bobby Abreu spent two years as the team's primary

ies have shown that changes in lineups are mostly mean-

No. 3 hitter before Teixeira

means something. Ellsbury is being paid like a No. 3 hit-

was brought in to fix everything. That plan worked for three years, before Teixeira's body started to betray him. The vacancy this season

ingless and that th e best hitter in a lineup should ac-

tually hit second rather than third. But for the Yankees, the team of Ruth, hitting third ter, and for the moment the

job is his to lose, even if his style is more reminiscent of Rickey Henderson than

is a result of the departure of Ruth, Mantle, Mattingly or Robinson Cano, who signed O'Neill.

Production fromthe No.3spot Jacoby Ellsbury, who was aleadoff hitter with the Boston Red Sox, has moved into the third spot in the NewYork Yankees' lineup. However, his production is much different than that the Yankeeshave had from that position over the last five years. Most common 013 Robinson Cano 2012 Alex Rodriguez 011 Marx Teixeir 2010 Mark Teixeira 009 Mark Teixeir Ellsbury162-game avg

Avg/OBP/Slg 296/.358/.461 .292/.372/.487 252/.358/.498 .256/.362/.473 .287/.381/.564

.298/.351/.439

HR 27 27 42 34 42 14

R BI S B 107 8 75 11 120 8 112 0

130 6 71

55

Source: hasebalr-reference.com

wTO me, thiS (the SeniOr pNC) iS the tOp tOurnament (I haVe played in) Simply beCauSe

it is a national championship. You have the best players from throughout the United States, the best six or seven players from each section. And if I win it t ama national champion. That puts it at a little bit different level. That makes it the most special." — Scott Cravens

over the winter, and that has given

him confidence on the greens. He acknowledges that his game might be a bit rusty and his swing a little mechanical after a long winter, but he hopes that the boost of energy from playing in a high-profile event will help him overcome the drawbacks of the offseason. B esides, he knows what i s

upper-echelon tournament. "I've been trying to qualify for States, the best six or seven players sons when he was hired as the from each section. And if I win it I director of golf at Crooked Riv- this thing for quite a while," says am a national champion. That puts er Ranch. He now teaches at his Cravens, who played small-college it at a little bit different level. That own Crave Golf Learning Center, football and did not pick up golf unmakes it the most special." which he stations at Mountain View til age 23. C ravens qualified fo r t h e S e - Golf Club in Boring, southeast of Having to wait six months to play nior PNC by finishing in a tie with Po71:land. in such an important event is cerFought for fifth place at the 2013 Cravens has long been a bet- tainly not ideal for any golfer. P acific N o r t hwest S e nior P G A t er-than-average player on t h e Like Fought, Cravens will be at PGA's Pacific Northwest Section, some disadvantage to professionals Championship. He moved to Central Oregon in but he never had qualified for an who reside in warmer climates. players from throughout the United

Peter Power/The Canadian Press

New York Yankees center fielder Jacoby Ellsbury, right, is a

1999 with his wife and their two

After all, in Central Oregon the golf season is just getting underway. Still, Cravens sees some advan-

at

stake. "You have your sights on winning t h e

t o u r nament," C r avens

tages to the wait. "The bad thing about it canceling last year is that I was playing really good golf at the time," Cravens says. "But the cool thing was it is always

says. "That's how you are going to play your best.... But if somebody could give me a place in 27th right now (to qualify for the Senior PGA),

more fun to practice hard when you

"But you want a chance to win a national championship."

have something big you are practicing for." He changed his putting routine

I would think about taking it.

— Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhaII®bendbulletin.com.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

PREP ROUNDUP

Hur ea s avaBears ast torminlM o ener Bulletin staff report In other prep events Monday: Dalton Hurd is doing everything in BASEBALL his power to get Bend High back to the Redmond 13, Crook County 3: Class 5A state baseball championship. PRINEVILLE — The Panthers re-

another RBI double in the seventh and

Morgan earned the win in relief for the Outlaws (4-0 Sky-Em, 10-2 overing overanxious all). "We were gett The Lava Bear senior standout led corded 12 hits in their Intermountain and jumping out and not hitting the Bend to an 8-1 home win over cross- Hybrid opener and evened their over- ball squarely early on. We made adtown rival Summit on Monday, going all record to 6-6 with the victory over justments, got fired up and started hit3 for 4 with a double, a solo home run and three RBIs at the plate in addition

to earning the complete game victory. Hurd allowed just four hits — all sin-

gles — while striking out three and walking one at Bend High. "He was a little nervous early but

settled down," Lava Bear coach Bret Bailey said about Hurd. Hurd broke open a scoreless tie in the bottom of the fourth with a

solo home run off Storm starter Nick Mason. The Bears (1-0, 9-3 overall) scored two more runs the fourth to grab a 3-0 lead. Sparked by Creighton Simmons'two-run double, Bend

scored five more runs in the bottom of the sixth and led 8-0. Summit (0-1,

5-4) broke up Hurd's shutout bid with a run in the seventh to make the final

VER — In a matchup between the

top two teams in Class 2A/1A's Special District, the Cougars of Molalla the Cowboys. Clayton Aas' two-run ting the ball well," said Sisters coach topped the Bulldogs and moved into double in the fourth inning sparked Steve Hodges. Cody Kreminski also sole possession of first place in the a seven-run frame for Redmond, who went 3 for 5 with three doubles and league standings. Culver fell to 5-1 in after three innings were tied 3-3 with two RBIs. league play and 7-4 overall with the Crook County (4-5 overall). Ethan Ridgeview 12, Mountain View 2: loss. Country Christian is now 5-0 in Moser paced the Panther offense, by REDMOND — The Cougars held a league and 9-2 overall. going3 for 3 and scoring three runs. 2-0 lead until the bottom of the fourth SOFTBALL Austin Cable scored twice and add- when the Ravens battled to score six Elmira 10, La Pine 3: LA PINEed two hits, and Darren Ross was 2 runs, leading to the Intermountain The Hawks managed seven hits and for 3 with a double, an RBI and one Hybrid victory. Ronnie Stacey led the were tied with the Falcons through run scored. Ross, Redmond's start- Cougars (2-7 overall), going 2 for 3, five innings before Elmira secured ing pitcher, earned the win, allowing while Devin Haney went 1 for 3. Rid- the Sky-Em League victory with three runs on two hits while strikgeview pitcher Dakota Schaumburg three runs in the sixth and four more ing out five over four innings. Colton had eight strikeouts for the Ravens in the seventh. "We showed some Slavey pitched a shutout fifth inning (9-1 overall), allowing just four hits spark today," La Pine coach Tom to end the game. in six innings. George Mendazona Welker said. Kinsey Pinckney led Sisters 11, Junction City 4: JUNC- pacedthe Ridgeview offense,going 3 the Hawk offense with two hits and TION CITY — The Outlaws overcame a 4-2 deficit with four runs in the sixth

score 8-1.

inning and five more in the seventh to beat the Tigers in a Sky-Em League

whose team continues its three-game series with the Storm on Wednesday,

Jonathan Luz in the sixth to tie Junction City, and Justin Harrer and Joey

"I was pleased with the way we road victory. Jardon Weems doubled came into the game," said Bailey, home pinch-hitter Austin Ogilvie and again at Bend High. "We were very businesslike."

hits, including two by James Lindsley ters will face La Pine on Wednesday. and a run-scoring double by Casey BOYS GOLF Schneider in the fifth inning. Summit edges Bend at Bend InviCountry Christian 4, Culver 1: CUL- tational: Jack Loberg fired a 2-over-

Morgan followed with RBI singles to give Sisters the lead. Weems added

Heptathlon

for 4 with two doubles, three RBIs and three runs scored. Sam Walker and Garrett Dewolf each went 2 for 4 and

Place, a Mountain View junior heptath-

lete-in-training. "Distance (running) is way different than throwing, so you have to be a whole different athlete."

In Central Oregon, multi-event athletes have begun to sprout up in recent years, especially after the 2012 Olympic gold-medal performance of decathlete

"What comes with that is being more of a student of the sport itself. You have to know all the events in depth in order to be

successful. That's what's exciting." In his 12 previous years at Summit, Turnbull was never in a situation like

this, having to create a multi-event training program. But now that he has a crop of arguably the most athletic girls ever to compete in track and field for the Storm, Turnbull has begun cultivating the program's first heptathletes.

Even during the track season — when

and Mountain View graduate Ashton Eaton. (For example, 2013 Mountain View

ATHLETE OFTHE WEEK It took Matthew Maton less than four mInutes to break a1,500-meter record that had stood for nearly 50 years. At

graduate Mitch Modin competes in the decathlon for the Ducks, as did Eaton.) While there may not be many male

the Jim Robinson Twilight Invitational

athletes in the Central Oregon high school ranks currently looking to mas-

trackand field meet in Roseburg onSaturday, the Summit junior completed the 1,500 in 3:54.2, winning by more than sevensecondsandbreakingthemeet's top mark that wasset in 1976.

ter the 10-event challenge that is the de-

cathlon, several girls have emerged as promising — and potentially masterful — heptathletes.

Where to start? There is Place, who began training last summer with Modin and hopes this summer to compete for the first time in a heptathlon — a seven-event

STAT OF THEWEEK Thirty-eight. Ridgeview baseball picked up a doubleheader sweep ofvisiting EstacadaonFriday,andthe Ravensputon an offensive clinic. Ridgeview banged

competition that includes sprints, hur-

dles, shot put, javelin, high jump and long jump. There is Miller, who after just two

out18 hits in a 20-1 victory in the first

months of training placed second at the Sweet Home Decathlon/Heptathlon in March. And then there are Summit's Mi-

game, then followed with another 20 hits in a14-6 win. TheRavensaccounted for 38 hits in total, led byGeorge Mendazona's 7-for-8 day at the plate and Tyler Ross' 6-for-7 performance over the two games.

randa Brown, a junior, and Megan Cornett, a freshman, the first- and third-place

heptathlon finishers among the 16 com-

to a combinedscore of 309 and a 10-stroke win over the second-place Lava Bears at the eight-team Bend Invitational at Bend Golf and Coun-

try Club. Just three days after Bend won the Summit Invitational, Summit shot the two lowest individual

scores as Loberg carded one birdie against three bogeys to beat team-

mate Cole Chrisman by a stroke. Bend's Ryan DeCastilhos, who was

paired with Loberg, finished in third place after carding a 76. In all, the Storm and Lava Bears claimed seven of the lowest 10 scores. Ridgeview's

Jimi Seeley shot a 79 to tie for sixth place. Mountain View (349) finished in fourth place, ahead of fifth-place Crook County (355), seventh-place Ridgeview (368) and eighth-place Redmond (383).

pair of singles, Keara Parrish recorded a double,and Bailey Wood conBOYS TENNIS scored one run. tributed an RBI single. La Pine (0-4 Sisters 5, Stayton 3: BLACK Elmira 12, La Pine 2: ELMIRA Sky-Em, 6-8 overall) hosts Sisters on BUTTE RANCH — Paul Fullhart The host Falcons broke open the Sky- Wednesday. and Trevor Standen, the Outlaws Em League contest with a six-run Junction City 12, Sisters 2: SIS- top singles players, each won their third inning and won in 4 1/2 innings TERS — The Outlaws dropped to 0-4 matches and Sisters won three of via the 10-run rule. The Hawks (0-4 in the Sky-Em League and 0-12 over- four doubles matches to down StaySky-Em, 1-13 overall) collected seven all after losing to Junction City. Sis- ton in a nonconference match.

GAME OF THEWEEK Kyra Hajovsky posted agoal late in regulation to force overtime against Marist ofEugeneonWednesday,and Annie Beaverdelivered a second wave of heroics for Central Oregon Lacrosse. With 24 seconds left in the secondovertime of the South Leaguegirls lacrosse matchup, Beaver logged herfourth goal to help Central Oregonsecure a13-12 home victory.

Continued from C1 "You definitely have to have a few different personalities," says Kristen

an RBI. Montana Hanna added a

par 74 to medal and lead the Storm

there are few heptathlons on the sched-

ule, and when athletes are focused on consistent improvement in their regular events en route to the state championships

— Central Oregon's heptathletes continue to stay on the seven-event grind. All, Turnbull says, to "make the best athlete,"

regardless of whether it could cost Summit points at the Class 5A state meet next month.

"The high school kids should have as much fun and experience as much as they can while they're in high school," Young adds. "If that means that I lose a couple of points at a meet, then I'm OK with that.

My biggest focus has always been on the kids having fun and experiencing different events." Young calls this local spike in interest to compete in multi-event athletics "the Ashton Eaton effect." "The Ashton Eaton connection is kind of sparking kids," Young says. "Like,

GOLF

Creativity trumps perfection

on final dayof the Masters By Karen Crouse

suggest it. He watched Wat-

New York Times News Service

son take his 6-iron and hit a

punch shot through a narrow Watson is old enough to be opening. The ball carried alJordan Spieth's uncle, but that most 200 yards and bounced is not why their final-round off the back of the green, setduel at the Masters remained ting up a par that was anycompelling long after the out- thing but routine. "That's Bubba golf," Scott come no longer was in doubt. Spieth, 20, has never seen said, adding, "I was l i ke, a shot he didn't expect to pull 'That's not a verybig gap.' But off. Watson,35, has never for him, he sees huge gaps." seen a shot he didn't want to Unlike Spieth, impatient try. Spieth is a perfectionist; at times Sunday when his Watson, an i m p ressionist. ball didn't end up exactly Together with the ageless set, where he had envisioned, or led by Miguel Angel Jimenez, the touring pros who pick at the 50-year-old human bun- their swings on the range ungee cord, the 78th Masters til there is nothing left of their dispelled a few misconcep- confidence, Watson does not tions about professional golf trytobeperfect. He settles for and the tortured souls who being perfectly creative. playit. If Watson commandeered AUGUSTA, Ga. — Bubba

Can we banish, once and for all, the notion that the

'Hey, well, why just do one event when

the main e vent, J imenez was a worthy warm-up act. players are corporate dones? Jimenez, the low senior at There is nothing in nature, 4-under, had the full attention short of a freak weather sys- of the fans, and that was be-

"More than anything, I wasn't really finding excellence in any other event," ferent techniques in each event. Brown says, explaining how she develThe quick adaptiveness demonstrated oped an interest in multi-events. "I felt like, by each of these local athletes, Turnbull Tm pretty good in all the other events, so I points out, is the key to why they are now might as well just do it all as a whole.' And promising multi-event athletes. "I really do think a heptathlete as to be it turned out tobe really successful." "I think the reason we do let them train very, very intelligent, because they have for the hep(tathlon) ... I think that's going to understand what they're doing, they to make those athletes better overall ath- have to understand the science behind the letes, which should help them in their in- events," Turnbull explains. "They can't dividual events," says Summit coach Dave just jump in and do it. Most people aren't Turnbull. "And you know what? This sea- just natural athletes in everything from

I can try a whole bunch of other ones?'

tem, capable of dismantling

Where we're having a lot of people find success is in events that they didn't think they'd be good at." Two years ago, Place, the Mountain

Augusta National quite the

As of Sunday, Brown ranked sixth in the state in the 300-meter hurdles, regardless

gave me the idea that I'm not exceptional

petitors at the Sweet Home meet.

View junior, had the opportunity to meet

Eaton and his fiancee (now his wife), Brianne Theisen, who is also a world-class multi-event athlete. That meeting, Place

says, got her thinking about multi-even sports. "He's kind of opened my eyes up to believing this was possible," Brown, the Summit junior, says of Eaton. "In high son will tell us." the shot put to the javelin to the high jump. school — I was looking at his marks — he So far, the season's story is reading like It's just not going to happen. They've got wasn't amazing at any given event. But a fairy tale. to figure it out." yeah, he was pretty good at most. That The No. 1 attraction to multi-events for

of classification, and owned the eighthbest triple jump measurement. She was

first in Class5A forthe300hurdles,second in both the 100 hurdles and the triple jump, fourth in the long jump and fifth in the 200. "We've got some females on the team that are very, very well-rounded," Turnbull says. "They're fast, they're strong, they're

a t h letic, t h e y 'r e i n t elligent.

And those are the things you need in a heptathlete." And it i s n o t j u st B r own. Cornett

through Sunday was 10th in 5A in the 300 hurdles. Place had the fifth-best 100

Miller (aside from the fact that her mother, at anything so I'll just try everything." Eden, was an accomplished heptathlete Place concedes that her choice to take at NCAA Division II Seattle Pacific Uni- on the heptathlon is straining, both physversity) is the combination of events that ically and mentally. But for the sport she make up the heptathlon. Brown agrees, loves — track and field — the rewards noting that the heptathlon offers a variety have been well worth the strain. "I think I appreciate the sport more," of athletics that "I probably would never have tried otherwise." Place says. "I've never gone over to the "That's kind of the philosophy of the throws until this season, and I get to meet heptathlon," says Turnbull, a veteran more people and learn how to do different track coach whose Summit teams have things. Every event in track is just a differwon a combined 10 boys and girls 5A ent side of the sport, and I love all of it. It's state championships since 2007. "If we giving me more experience in different can just play with some of these things types of athletics." "Now it's driving me," Brown says of and figure it out, we might discover some kids. I think that's what we did and what her recent success, "knowing that maybe we're going to continue to do." I am good at this, that I can go beyond my

time. And Miller already this spring has set career-best marks in six events. All of "I love it. I love the idea that they're that after focusing all their energy upon and committing themselves to heptathlon just so excited to do all sorts of different training, which consists of learning dif- events," says Mountain View's Young.

way Watson did in his final-round 69, which left him at 8-under for the tournament, 3 strokes better than Spieth and Jonas Blixt. Let the club members try

fore his opening shot. Those watching him on the practice range might have missed the ponytail sticking out of the back of his cap or the cigar in his mouth, entranced instead by the contortion act that he

calls stretching. to Bubba-proof the course. His routine makes people If they plant more loblol- point and sometimes snicker, ly pines, he'll simply fade but Jimenez doesn't care. He the ball around them or off is enjoying the last laugh. "It's my 26th year on tour, them, as he did with his 366yard drive on the 13th. Or and probably some people he'll shoot his ball through say, 'That's so many years, a cruiseship portalof space that's got tobe hard andthat's betweenbranches, likehedid got to be hard on the body,'" on his second shot Sunday at Jimenez said. "No, I love what I'm doing, and I hope I'm still the par-5 15th. The safe play for someone in the same condition for anprotecting a 3-stroke lead, as other 25." Watson was, was to lay up at He laughed, adding, "I'm No. 15. Watson's caddie, Ted not going to get bored of Scott, knew better than to myself."

dreams of what I ever thought before." — Reporter: 541-383-0307, glucas@bendbulletin.com.

PREP SCOREBOARD Baseball Summit Bend

Class 5A IntermountainConference 0000001 — 1 4 4

(5 iaaings) R edmond 111 73 CrookCounty 021 00

— 13 12 3 —34 3

Mountai nview 0020000 — 2 4 5 Ridgeview 00 1 623 x— 12 11 1 Class 4A Sky-EmLeague I4 vzinnings) 0 00 11 — 2 7 1 236 1x — 12 12 0

002 004 5 — 11 16 5 011 020 0 — 4 4 3

Softball

000 305 x — 8 7 0

Intermountain Hybrid

La Pine Elmira

Sisters Juntion City

Elmira

La Pine

Class 4A Sky-EmLeague 100 203 4 — 10 15 4 000 210 0 — 3 7 4

Golf 80$8

Bend Invitational At BendGolf andCountry Club Par 72 Team scores—Summit 309, Bend319,Hermiston345,MountainView349,CrookCounty355,The Dalle sWahtonka366,Ridgeview368,Redmond383. Medalist —JackLoberg, Summit, 74. Summit (309) —JackLoberg, t4. ColeChris-

man,75.DeclanWatts, 79. T.K.Wasserman, 81.Riley Meyer,89.AndrewDavis, 103.JordanChristiansen, Goldstein,85. 105. Sonny Smith,106. BendI319j— RyanDeCastilhos,76.MaxMcGee, 78.ChapinPedersen, 79. JackKlar, 86.Sam Tennis Nielsen,87. Hermisto n(345)— ZacAdams,77.J.D.ThackBoys er, 86.PadenLacoursiere, 86. NoahEngelbrecht, 96. Nonconference AndersLimd,99. Sisters 5,StarIon3 Mountain View (349) — Mason Krieger, At Black ButteRanch t Taylor Smith, 85. BryceAnderson, 90.Steven Singles — PaulFullhart, Sis, def.TristenSwift, Smallenberg, 90. SethChilcutt, 96. Stay,6-0, 6-0;Trevor Standen, Sis, def.JacobKeiner, crookcountyI355)— MaysonTibbs,83.Josh Stay,6-4, 2-6,11-9; EricRockwel, Stay,def. Brennan Christian,87.CabeGoehring,88. KodyKuk, 97. Har- Miller, Sis,6-1,6-0; SimonKeimer,Stay,def. Michael risonGist, 98. Commins,Sis,6-7(5), 6-4, 10-1. Doubles —Evan TheDalles Wahtonka (366)— ChaseSno- Rick ards/DevonCalvin,Sis,JorgeRamos/Robert Codgrass,83.NickGlesener,92. Bailey Ortega,93. Colby macho, Stay,6-4,6-0;EthanStengle/ShawnHorton, Conlee,98.MarkFelderman,100. Sis, def.LoganMcomber/Kyle Anundi, Stay,6-1,6-1; Ridgevi ew (368)— JamesSeeley,79.Jacob CameronButler/JordanMcOmber, Stay, def. Tyrell Kinzer,88.JohnnySpinelli, 97. Zach Nelson,104. Gilmore/Kobe Martinez, Sis, 6-4, 6-2, 10-5;Connor ChadRoe,DQ. Shaab/Billy Biggers,Sis,det 6ostonStewart/Jordan Redmond(383) — BrenonThornton, 86.Trent Pyle,Stay,6-2, 6-0.

Awbrey Glen Golf Club Your Journey Begins Here. Enroll as a Journey Golf Member by May j. for early season discounts! Experience our Learning Center and new perspectives.

541-385-6011 ( barbats4sawbmyglen.com

vvww.ambreyslen.com


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN C5

Blg new . . . Bl g

l o ca l ... BIIV BELOW RETAIL! •

ALL AljCTIOhl BIDDlhlCI CLOSES TOllllCIHT AT 8 P.NI •

I

0

deotp~ .,Ij r>, uegeeeQo ,

a ael ~ + lg llaeh

I

II

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

Pro Shop $100 Gift Certificate

FoursomeGolf Packages

Dinner and aShow for 15 People

$1000 Carpet

Laser Photo Rejuvenation

$65 Gift Certificate

RETAIL VALUE:$100

RETAIL VALUE:$480

RETAIL VALUE:$900

RETAIL VALUE:$1000

RETAIL VALUE: $575

RETAIL VALUE: $55

FROM:

FROM:

FROM:

Athletic Clubof Bend

AwbreyGlenGolf Cluh

BendComedy

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

FROM:

FROM: CarpetcoFlooring

Enhancement Center MedicalSpa

YOU CAN BID ON:

FROM:

Ice Fine Jewelry

X'

. • - c.'4

5"

YDU cAN BID oN: Motor ffjssanstr2oke3P 1994 Alumacraft 16' Aluminum Re7//g QQ0e. $4eee

't $

YOU CAN BID ON: Lot 22 at Yarrow in Madras

hp outboa rd.Includes:Fish finder,biminitop,trailer.

*

RETAIL VALUE:$23,000 ('60%Reserve]

FROM:

FROM:

All SeasonsRV& Marine

SunForestConstruction

A tremendousvalue, lot 22 at Yarrow in Madras has unobstructed views to theNorthwest, West toward the mountains andcity lights as well as to the South.Yarrow is abeautiful planned community created byBrooks ResourcesCorporation. Visit www.yarrowliving.com to learn more about thecommunity, the neighborhood association, CC&Rs,HOAsetc. This homesite would be agreat "hold as aninvestment", or build right away totake advantage of current building costs. Call Jeff Jernstedt at SunForest Construction at 541-385-8522 for details.

eoIOOW~'

ttj I~ni — -I u =

Cour guoip r Golfcu caao 541.54s.s|9II w, sl P---' 5u

~u~~-.

e

e

®

o

YOU CAN BID ON:

$400 Gift Package10 Roundsof Golf PunchCard RETAIL VALLIE:$400 FROM:

JuniperGolf

, iunjl2iN

I \

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

YOU CAN BID ON:

Ogio Shredder One Night Stay in $300 Off Interior

$500 Gift Certificate

Home Health Checkup

RETAIL VALUE: $500

RETAIL VALLIE: $250

RETAIL VALUE:$150

RETAIL VALUE:$425

FROM:

FROM:

FROM:

FROM:

M. JacobsFineFurniture

Mountain AirIndoors

Pro Golf ofBend

The OxfordHotel

Terrace Suite

Stand Bag

5

5

Pm-'" Pm Qm

YOU CAN BID ON:

y

e ' R

o

Painting of 3 or More Rooms RETAIL VALUE: $300 FROM:

Thoma sCraigPropertyServices,LLC


C6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

NBAROUNDUP

NHL PLAYOFF PREVIEW

rizzies

00

cinc

exi

BO

By Helene Elllott Los Angeles Times

The Colorado Avalanche rose from the dregs ofa 29th-place finish last season to win the Central Division title, and the St. Louis Blues

The Associated Press

collapsed late in the regular seasonand losttheirchance

PHOENIX — Z ac h R a ndolph scored32 points and the

to finish atop the Central Di-

Memphis Grizzlies clinched the final playoff berth in the

vision, the Western Conference and the National Hockey League overall.

Western Conference with a

97-91 victory over Phoenix on

T he Boston Br uins' r e -

Monday night that eliminated the Suns from postseason contention.

ward for having the league's best record is a first-round

matchup with the ever-dangerous Detroit Red Wings,

The Grizzlies scored the last six points of an intense fourth

who overcame a flood of

quarter. Mike Conley sank a 3-point-

injuries to earn the second wild-card spot in the East.

er to put Memphis ahead for

The series, which starts

good 93-91 with 1 minute, 8 seconds to play. Goran Drag-

Friday, will be the first playoff meeting between these

ic threw the ball away on the

Suns' next possession and Randolph scored inside to

Matt York/The AssociatedPress

Phoenlx' aGoren Draglc passes as Memphis'Courtney Leedefendsdurlng Monday's game.

make it 95-91 with 47.1 sec-

onds left. Mike Miller added 21 points,

In other games Monday:

Marc Gasol 17 and Conley 13

Wlzards 114, Heat 93: Mi-

for the Grizzlies, in the play- ami rested LeBron James and offs for th e f ourth straight

season. Markieff Morris had 21 points, and Channing Frye and Dragic 14 apiece for Phoenix. The Suns lost their third

Chris Bosh, and Trevor Ariza scored 25 points for Wash-

ington, which remained one game ahead of the Charlotte Bobcats in the race for the

East's No. 6 seed. Bobcats 95, Hawks 93: ATLANTA — Chris Doug-

straight to come up just short of the playoffs in a remarkable l as-Roberts d r i b bled i n t o turnaround season under first- the lane and sank a short year coach Jeff Hornacek, jumper as time expired comwinning 22 more games than plete Charlotte's 15-point a year ago, with one to play, af- comeback. ter going 25-57 in 2013. Raptors 110, Bucks 100: Phoenix is only the fifth TORONTO Greivis team in NBA history to win Vasquez scored 25 points, 47 games andnot make the Kyle Lowry had 24 and Toplayoffs. ronto seta franchise record The last o f

M i l l er's f ive with its 48th win. 7ers 113, Celtics 108: PHIL— put the Grizzlies 86-85 with ADELPHIA — Michael Car3:10 to go. Miles Plumlee made ter-Williams had 2 1 p oints

3-pointers — in six attempts

a 16-footer and Phoenix led and 14 rebounds and Tony 87-86, then Gasol scored on a Wroten scored 20 points for driving layup and Memphis Philadelphia. was on top 88-87 with 2:23 left. Bulls 108, Magic 95: CHI-

CAGO — Joakim Noah had 18 points, 10 rebounds and eight assists, and Mike Dunleavy scored 22 points in Chicago's win. Rockets 104, Spurs 98:

w ill e xi t

HOUSTON — Chandler Par-

after the first round because

sons scored 21 points and

they are playing teams that also had 100 points or more. The Los Angeles Kings and San Jose Sharks will

D wight H o ward a n d T e r rence Jones added 20 apiece to lift Houston.

Pellcans 101, Thunder 89: NEW ORLEANS — 7yreke

Evans scored a career-high 41 points to go with nine reb ounds, eight

a ssists a n d

three steals for New Orleans. L akers 1 19, J a z z 1 0 4 : SALT LAKE CITY — N i ck

Young scored a season-high 41 points as Los Angeles snapped a seven-game losing streak. Warrlore130, Tlmberwolves 120: OAKLAND,

C a lif.

Stephen Curry had 32 points and 15 assists, and Golden State Warriors rallied from a

19-point first-half deficit.

AllTimesPDT

Grizzlies 97, SIlns 91

e a rl y f r o m t h e

playoffs, which will begin Wednesday. At least two West teams t hat earned a t l e ast 1 0 0

points are sure to be gone

m eet for t h e t h i r d t i m e in four s e asons, starting

Thursday in San Jose. Sharks goaltender Antti Niemi has struggled lately, meaning Alex Stalock could be the starter.

The Kings, locked into third place in the Pacific Division for a while, rested several workhorse defense-

men down the stretch and still won the Jennings Trophy, awarded to the goaltender(s) on the team that gives up the fewest goals. Only Jonathan Quick's name willbe engravedhe is the only Kings goalie who played the minimum 25 games — but his teammates claimed a share of it. "It's one of those awards

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings

two Original Six t eams since 1957, when Gordie Howe was throwing elbows and ruling the corners. Some excellent teams

76ers113, Celtics108

MEMPHIS (97) BOSTON (108) EasternConference Prince1-42-2 4, Z.Randolph 15-252-232, GasGreen10-16 5-6 27,Bass3-0 3-4 9,Olynyk10w L Pd GB ol 7-134-518,conley6-0 1-414, Lee0-4 0-00, I9 6-728,Rondo4-8O-I8,Bradley9-223-423, z-Indiana 55 26 679 Koufos0-2 0-00, calathes0-1 0-00, Allen3-5 2-2 Pressey0-12-2 2, Anthony0-1 0-20, Johnson3-6 y-Miami 54 27 667 1 8, MillerB-u 0-021, Davis0-10-00. Totals 40-77 0-08, Babb1-20-03. Totals 40-8619-26108. y-Toronto 48 33 593 7 11-15 97. PHILADELPHIA (113) x-chicago 48 33 593 7 Thompson1-22-3 4, Young5-16 4-6 15,Sims PHOENIX (91) x-Brooklyn 44 36 550 10'/~ Tucker1-3 2-2 5,Frye5-122-214, Plumlee6-9 6-101-213, carterWilliams9-133-421,Anderson x-Washington 43 38 531 12 0-0 12, Bledsoe 6-16 0-1 13,Dragic 6-142-2 14, 1-8 3-4 6,williams4-52-410, wroten7-126-120, x-charlotte 42 39 519 13 Mark.Morris10-161-3 21,Green2-4 2-2 7, Marc. varnado1-12-64,ware4-60-09, Davies5-61-211. x-Atlanta 37 44 457 18 Morris1-41-23, S.Randolph 0-1 0-00, Smith1-I Totals43-7924-38113. NewYork 35 45 438 19'/z e-0 2.Totals 38-8010-1491. Boston 33 17 34 24 — 108 Cleveland 32 49 395 23 Memphis 24 22 21 30 — 97 Philadelphia 33 3 4 19 27 — 113 Detroit 29 52 358 26 Phoenix 14 28 25 24 — 91 Boston 25 56 309 30 Orlando 23 58 284 32 Philadelphia 18 63 222 37 Rockets104, Spurs 98 Wizards114, Heat 93 Milwaukee 15 66 185 40 WesternConference SANANTOIIO (98) MIAMI (93) W L Pct GB James2-52-26, Duncan4-104-412, Baynes3-6 Wade4-91-2 9, Batier 0-50-00, Haslem4-91-1 z-San Antonio 62 19 765 9, chalmers 3-91-21, Douglas5-83-314, Allen4-7 0-06, Parker4-92-210, Belinelli 6-133-417, Ginoy-oklahoma cit y 58 23 716 4 2-213, Andersen 0-1 0-00, Lewis1-30-0 2, Beas- bili 412 2 210,Ayres57 2312, Bonner1-3 0 03, y-LA. Clippers 56 24 7QO 5'/2 ley 7-124-418, Cole2-50-04, Hamilton2-52-2 6, Joseph5-101-1 11,Diaw5-11 0-011, Daye0-3 0-0 x-Houston 54 27 667 8 0. Totals 39-8916-1898. Jones4-70-011.Totals 36-8014-1693. x-Portland 53 28 654 9 HOUSTON (104) WASHINGTO N(114) x-Golden State 50 31 617 12 Parsons7-175-7 21,Jones7-126-7 20,Howard Ariza10-130-2 25,Booker4-40-2 8, Gortat5-9 x-Dallas 49 32 605 13 9-0 2-4 20, Beverl e y 5-0 1-1 12, Harden4-168-8 0-010, Wal2-7 l 0-04, Beal5-9 2-315, Webster 2-5 x-Memphis 49 32 605 13 2-27, Nene 8-122-418, Miler0-1 2-22, Harrington I6, Lin 2-70-0 5,Asik 3-42-2 8, Garcia1-30-0 2, Phoenix 47 34 580 15 Motieiunas 0-40-00. Totals 38-8524-29104. 6-80-016, porter Jr3-1 0-06, Gooden1-20-03, Minnesota 40 4I 494 22 21 22 25 30 — 98 seraphin 0-1e-0 0,Temple0-00-00. Totals 46-78 SanAntonio Denver 36 44 450 25'/2 8-15 114. Houston 30 20 26 28 — 104 NewOrleans 33 48 407 29 Miami 26 22 17 28 — 93 Sacramen to 28 53 346 34 Washington 27 43 28 16 — 114 LA. Lakers 26 55 321 36 Lakers 119, Jazz104 Utah 24 57 296 38 x-clinched playoffspot LA. LAKERS (119) y-clinched division Pelicaifs101, Thunder 89 Johnson3-64-4 12, Kelly2-9 e-0 4, Hill 10-13 z-clinched conference 1-1 21,Marshall1-40-02, Meeks8-135-623,Sacre Monday'sGames OKlAHOMA CITY(89) washington 04, Miami93 Durant9-234-6 25,Ibaka7-138-1022, Perkins 6-8 0-012,Young14-237-941, Farmar1-62-2 4, 0-00-00. Totals 45-8219-22119. Philadelphia I13, Boston108 2-5 0-0 4,Jackson1-t 2-2 4,Sefolosha0-5 0-00, Brooks UTAH (104) Torontouo, Milwaukee100 collison0-2e-0 0, Fisher2-8 e-e 6, Butler 6-9 4-4 Hayward7-13 6-821, Favors 6-100-1 12,Kanter Charlotte95,Atlanta93 19, Lamb1-20-03, Roberson3-30-06, Adams0-0 8-12 3-419, Burke8-220-017, Burks8-10 4-522, chicago108,orlando95 0-0 0.Totals 31-7718-2289. Evans1-31-2 3,Jefferson2-6 e-05, Garrett 1-3 0-0 Houston104,SanAntonio98 NEWORLEANS(101) 2, Gobert 0-10-00, Clark1-I 0-03,Thoma s0-0 0-0 NewOrleans101,OklahomaCity 89 Miller 4-12e-0 10,withey2-6 4-68, Aiinca4-5 LA. Lakers 09, Utah104 2-2 10, Rivers2-4 2-2 8, Evans14-26 I2-16 41, 0. Totals 42-8114-20104. 23 34 29 33 — 119 Memphis 97,Phoenix91 Morrow3-100-07, Ely 1-3 e-0 2, Babbitt 4-71-2 L.A. Lakers uiais 30 21 35 18 — 104 Golden State130,Minnesota120 12, Aminu1-40-0 2, Southerland 0-21-21. Totals Today'sGames 35-79 22-30101. NewYorkatBrooklyn, 5 p.m. Oidahomacity 2 12 5 23 20 — 89 Denverat LA.Clippers,7:30p.m. Newerleans 23 2 2 25 31 — 101 Warrior3130, Timberwolves120 Wednesday'sGames Indiana at Orlando,4 p.m. MINNESOT A (120) Chicago at Charlotte,4 p.m. Brewer10-132-322,Love0-2413-1640,Dieng Bulls108, Magic 95 Utah atMinnesota,5 p.m. 6-e 2-314, Rubio 4-7 7-915, Martin 5-102-214, Detroit atOklahomaCity,5 p.m. MbahaMoute2-6e-e4,cunningham 3-60-06, Atlantaat Milwaukee,5p.m. ORLANDO (95) Barea 1-5 0-0 2, Hum mel 1-2 0-03. Totals 43-81 O'Quin n9-0 2-220,Harkless1-30-03,Dedmon DallasatMemphis,5 p.m. 1-4 4-4 6, Oladipo3-8 3-4 10, Afflalo 5-7 2-2 13, 26-33120. LA, Lakers at SanAntonio, 5p.m. GOLDEN STATE(130) Houstonat NewOrleans,5 p.m. Lamb3-6 2-3 9, Nicholson8-9 0-019, Harris2-12 Barnes3-1 0-06, Lee12-141-2 25,0'Neal3-9 Washington atBoston,5 p.m. 0-1 4, Price2-62-2 6, Moore2-61-1 5. Totals 36- 4-410, curry10-21 5-532, Thompson7-204-420, BrooklynatCleveland,5 p.m. 7216-19 95. Green 7-92-2 20,Blake2-3e-05, Speights 4-131-2 Philadelphiaat Miami,5 p.m. CHICAGO (108) TorontoatNewYork,5 p.m. Dunleavy8-113-4 22, Boozer 6-0 1-2 I3, Noah 9, crawford1-50-03,Nedovic0-00-00, Kuzmic0-0 LA, Clippers atPortland,7;30 p.m. 7-164518, Hinrich1-51-23,Butler3-56-712,Fre- 0-00,Armstrong0-00-00.Totals49-101 17-19 Phoeni xatSacramento,7:30p.m. dette 7-142-217,Gibson1-56-88, Mohammed1-2 130. GoldenStateatDenver, 7:30p.m. e-0 2, snel5-e l 2-213, Brewer0-00-00, Amundson Minnesota GoldenState End oiRegularSeason 0-00-00. Totals 39-7725-32108. Orlando 21 23 26 25 — 95 Chicago 26 31 24 27 — 108 Leaders Summaries ThroughSunday's Games Monday'sGames Scoring Raptors110, Bucks100 G FG FT PTS AVG Bodcats 95, Hawks93 Durant,OKC 79 826 686 2526 32.0 MILWAUKEE (100) Anthony,NYK 77 743 459 202 27.4 CHARLOTTE (95) Middleton4-85-715, Adrien9-161-319, Pachu- James,MIA 77 767 439 2089 27.1 Kidd-Gilchrist 3 42-78, McRoberts1-5 0 0 3, Jeflia 3-5 0-06, Knight7-173-418, Sessionst-13 5-6 Love,MIN 75 635 497 1951 26.0 ferson11-175-727,Walker1-92-45, Hendersoni-9 21, Henson 5-8 2-2 12,Antetokounmpo1-3 2-25, Harden,Hou 72 545 568 1835 25.5 2-24, Zeller3-62-48,Neal5-115-517,Douglas-Rob- Wright2-30-2 4,RadulIica 0-00-0 0.Totals 38-73 Griffin, LAC 79 709 476 1906 24.1 erts 2-3 M 5,Ridnour5-80-010, Biyombo1-I 0-12, 18-26100. Curry,GO L 77 642 303 1841 23.9 TORONTO (110) Tolliver 2-70-06. Totals35-8019-31 95. AldriIjge,POR 69 652 296 1603 23.2 Ross 3-91-2 8, Johnson 4-7 0-1 10, val a nci u nas ATLANTA (93) DeRozan,TOR 78 602 514 1782 22.8 4-7 6-6 I4, Lowry10-24 1-124, Vasquez8-12 4-5 cousins,sAC Martin 3-0 3-310, Scott8-233-4 20,Antic1-2 71 591 432 1614 22.7 1-43, Teague 4-60-011, Wiliams5-133-313, Brand 25, Hansbrough4-64-5 12, Patterson1-70-0 3, De Jefferson,CHA 71 685 184 1557 21.9 4-5 4-612, Mack 5-101-1 13,Schroder1-4e-0 3, Colo2-62-2 7,Salmons2-32-47.Totals38-81 George, IND 80 577 401 173721.7 20-26 110. Muscal a3-52-28.Totals34-7917-2393. Nowitzki,DAL 79 621 335 1705 21.6 Charlotle 26 18 21 30 — 95 Milwaukee Irving,CLE 70 526 288 1463 20.9 Atlanta 24 26 30 13 — 93 Toronto Lillard, POR 81 550 371 1686 20.8

that I think represents who we are as a group," Kings forward Dustin Brown said.

"It's one of those awards that probably doesn't get a lot of media play, but it's a big partof the success we have here."

The Anaheim Ducks, No. 1 in the West, will face the Dallas Stars, who won the

second West wild-card spot to reach the postseason party for the first time since 2008.

The Ducks had their best record in club history (5420-8) and most points (116), but they are now focused on erasing the sting of their first-round loss to Detroit last

sprmg. "I don't think there's any

limits how good this team can be," winger Teemu Selanne said Sunday, after the

Ducks honored him in his final regular-season contest. "Everybody has to play at least their own level and some guys have to a l i ttle overachieve if you want to

win the whole thing. But I think we have all the tools."

He added: "The way we played last year in the playoffs, we want to make sure everybody is going to remember that because there is a next level to go, and this team can do it."

The defending Stanley Cup champion C hicago Blackhawks, who finished without injured forwards

eams wi a 0 ear 10storylines to watch NEW LOOK:Forgetwhatyou knew abouthow teamsmatched up in the playoffs. When the leaguewent from having six divisions to four this season aspart of its realignment, the plan for postseason wasalso altered. Twowild cards were added in each conference and atleast half the first-round series were guaranteed to haveteams face division opponents. IN THEEAST:The Atlantic Division-winning and defending

Eastern Conferencechampion Boston Bruins will face the wild-card Detroit RedWings in the opening round. Theteam that advances will face the division's second-placeTampaBay Lightning or third-place Montreal Canadiens. TheMetropolitan Division-champion Pittsburgh Penguins will play the wild-card Columbus BlueJackets andthe winner moves on to face the division's second- or third-place teams, the New York Rangers or Philadelphia Flyers. OUTWEST:The Pacific Division-champion Anaheim Ducks are set to match up with the wild-card Dallas Stars, the fifth team in

from the Central, in the only interdivision series. Thewinner will play the Pacific's second-place SanJose Sharks or Los Angeles Kings. TheCentral-champion Colorado Avalancheface thewildcard Minnesota Wild and theteam that advances will match up with the division's second- or third-place teams, the St. Louis Blues or defending Stanley Cup-champion Chicago Blackhawks. ON THEMEND: TheBlackhawksexpecttohaveJonathanToews and Patrick Kane inthe lineup whenthey play at St. Louis on Thursday after eachhadlong layoffs to heal injuries. Kane has been out since hurting his left knee onMarch19 — against the hard-hitting Blues. TampaBay might have to get to the second round to havegoaltender Ben Bishop on the ice. Bishop has been out since last weekwith an upper-body injury and is not going to be re-evaluated until early next week. "It's unfortunate, not just for our team, but for Ben," Lightning coach JonCooper said. "He's had agreat run with us this year." Tampa Bayhas to hopeAndersLindback,whohasplayedinoneplayoffgamepreviously, makes themost of his opportunity to play in net. BUCKLE UP:Oneof the many intriguing matchups in the opening round has the2012 Stanley Cup-champion Kings against the Sharks for the third time in four postseasons. TheKings eliminated the Sharks in Game 7 of the second round last year after being eliminated by them inGame6 of anopening-round series in 2011. LosAngeles and SanJose have played 22times in the last three years, including the playoffs, and eachhas won 11 of those games. "Wefigured we were going to seethem at some poi nt,"Sharksdefenseman DanBoylesaid.TheRangers and Flyers, whosearenas areabout100 miles apart, have met many times in the playoffs in the past, but not since1997, when Philadelphia got past NewYork in five gamesandwent on to lose in the Stanley Cupfinals. PRESIDENTIAL PRIVILEGE:Boston had the best record in the regular season, giving the franchise its first Presidents' Trophy since1990. The Bruins can bepardoned for not being too cocky about their chances becausethey lost three of four matchups this season against the RedWings, who are in a 23rd straight postseason. "All of the pressure is going to be onthem," Detroit goalie Jimmy Howard said. "They've got to win, we're not supposed to. We've got to make it ashard aspossible on them." CROSBY'S CHANCE: PenguinssuperstarSidneyCrosbywon the Art Ross Trophy for the first time since hereally was a kid, scoring a league-high120 points during the 2006-07 seasonas a19-year-old, second-year pro. Crosby crushed the competition in scoring, reaching the100-point mark for the fifth time in his career to finish17 points ahead of Duckscenter Ryan Getzlaf. "There's so muchmore to his gamethan just scoring, but it is pretty amazing to see," Pittsburgh coach DanBylsma said. WELCOME BACK:TheStars are in the playoffs for the first time since 2008. Columbus is still playing for just the second time in its13-season history and first since 2009. TheAvalanche are playing among the league's best after three years of missing the postseason. TheLightning are back in the16-team tournament for the first time since 2011.Dallas forward Tyler Seguin wasin the postseason the previous three years in Boston, and hehas advice to share with teammates: "A big thing with the playoffs is, you've got to hate the other team." SEI.ANNE'S SWAN SONG: DucksstarTeemuSelanneplansto retire after this season, ending a21-season run that includes a Stanley Cup in2006. The 43-year-old "Finnish Flash" averaged less than half a point per gamefor the first time in a decade. Selanne hasbecome asupporting player on a talented team that should advancefor the first time since 2009. WOECANADA:The hockey-crazed country north of the U.S. border is represented by only oneteam — Montreal — in the playoffs. It has been 41years since that was true and back then, the Scotty Bowman-led Canadienswon one of their NHL-record 23 championships. — The Associated Pess

"That's the beauty

of the playoffs. Especially the teams who have been playing do-ordie games the last couple weeks, they're going to be hot." — Teemu Selanne

to give the coaching staff a lot of credit for that," Ava-

lanche goaltender Jean-Sebastien Giguere said Sunday after what was likely the last

regular-season game of his career. "The one thing we don't

accept anymore is losing, and it's nice to be able to come out successful on most

nights." It is nicer to win when it counts most. The Pittsburgh

Penguins, No. 2 in the East, get re-energized, refocused were 5-0 against Columbus and come back and get during the season. ready to play," he said. The Penguins should cartop forwards to injuries and Fiery coach Patrick Roy ry that edge into the teams' lost their last six games. led Colorado's turnaround playoff series. "That's the beauty of the It was a huge stumble for from worst to first. the Blues, but coach Ken Colorado will face wild- playoffs. You never know," Hitchcock said he expects card entry Minnesota, start- Selanne said. "Especially the to have a different lineup for ing Thursday in Denver. teams who have been play"After the last few seasons ing do-or-die games the last the series opener Thursday at St. Louis. that we've had, it was nice to couple weeks, they're going "This break will do us re- have a change of mentality to be hot." ally a lot of good, and we can in the room. I think you have Patrick Kane and Jonathan Toews, will face the battered Blues, who lost most of their

Weekly Arts Ir Entertainment Fridays In TheBulletin


C7 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

+

NASDAQ

16,173.24

4,022.69

+

O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.

S&P 500

+

22 gg

TOdap

10 YR TNOTE 2.65%

+

14 g2

1,830.61

16,640"

S8$P 500

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Taxdeadline

t,seo "

Millions of Americans have until the end of today to file their federal tax returns or request an extension. The Internal Revenue Service anticipates about 12 million taxpayers will have requested more time to file their tax return by this year's filing deadline. However, such extensions don't give buyers more time to pay any taxes they

may owe.

"

"

"

"

......... Close: 1,830.61 Change: 14.92 (0.8%)

16,800"

1,850 "

16,400"

16,000"

"

15,200 " J

NYSE NASD

F

A

Edwards Lrfescrences N

D

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16184.76 16028.29 16173.24 +146.49 DOW Trans. 7450.29 7346.24 7403.24 +40.85 DOW Util. 539.19 534.31 537.70 +3.38 NYSE Comp. 10380.19 10287.30 10359.44 +78.50 NASDAQ 4050.79 3986.50 4022.69 +22.96 S&P 500 1834.19 1815.80 1830.61 +1 4.92 S&P 400 1331.86 1315.33 1324.61 +6.11 Wilshire 5000 19519.25 19300.54 19454.42 +133.27 Russell 2000 1126.31 1105.56 1115.35 +3.91

DOW

+

EURO 1.3823+ -.0064

+.31 '

StoryStocks

M

A

%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD $.0.91% T -2.43% $.0.55% +0.04% $.0.63% L L +9.61% $.0.76% -0.39% $.0.57% T -3.68% $.0.82% -0.96% -1.33% $.0.46% T $.0.69% L -1.28% $.0.35% -4.15% T

NorthwestStocks NAME

$1 04.05

The stock market rose Monday, recovering some of the ground lost in the previous week. The Standard & Poor's 500 index and the Dow Jones industrial average posted solid gains, as a government report showing an increase in U.S. retail sales and Citigroup's better earnings gave investors reasons to push shares higher. The government said retail sales rose 1.1 percent in March, the best showing since September 2012. The figures for February were also revised higher. All 10 sectors in the S&P 500 index climbed, led by oil and gas producers and information technology companies. Visa had the biggest gainamong the30 Dow companies.

r •

CRUDEOIL

Dow Jones industrials

.

14800" 0

+.07

Close: 16,173.24 Change: 146.49 (0.9%)

"

1,700 "

Vol. (in mil.) 3,066 1,846 Pvs. Volume 3,695 2,223 Advanced 2026 1385 Declined 1046 1239 New Highs 61 26 New Lows 45 82

"

.

15,600

StocksRecap

"

+

$20.00

"

1,750

1 650

"

SILVER

GOLD $1,327.20

16,000" ""' 10 DAYS "

1,900

1,800 "

.

16,320"

1,800' " ""'10 DAYS

ii2

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV

Ew

Close:$81.00L8.03 or 11.0% Acourt reaffirmed an earlier ruling that Medtronic's CoreValve system infringes on a patent held by the medical device maker. $90 80 70

J

F M 52-week range

$60.62 ~

A $8 6.11

Vol.:7.2m (4.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$8.52 b

Citigroup Close:$47.67L1.99 or 4.4% Profits topped Wall Street expectations as the bank distances itself from mortgages that soured during the housing downturn. $55 50

J

F M 52-week range

$44.52 ~

A $55.28

P E: 23.6 Vol.:52.0m (1.7x avg.) PE: 11.0 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$144.84 b Yi eld: 0.1%

Goodrich Petroleum

GDP

Close:$23.96%5.56 or 30.2% The independent driller completed its Blades 33H-1 well in Louisiana, which is producing more than 1,200 barrels of oil every day. $25

Aspen Insurance

AHL Close:$43.77%4.40 or 11.2% A rarity in the re-insurance world, Endurance Specialty Holdings is offering to take over the company in a cash-and-stock deal. $45

Alaska Air Group A LK 50.31 ~ 95.98 89. 3 5 - 1 .17 - 1.3 T T T +21. 8 +5 3 .5 6 5 4 1 2 1 . 00f Coke still it? Avista Corp A VA 25.55 ~ 31.29 30.5 9 +. 1 8 +0 .6 L L T +8.5 +16. 1 36 2 16 1. 2 7f Bank of America B AC 11. 23 ~ 18.03 16. 0 0 +. 2 3 +1.5 L T T +2.8 +28 . 8 96226 16 0 .20f The world's biggest beverage BarrettBusiness B BS I 48 . 08 ~ 102.2 0 56. 82 +1.09 +2.0 L T T -38.7 - 2.1 54 24 0. 7 2 maker has been struggling with 20 Boeing Co BA 8 5 .75 ~ 144. 5 7 12 3.25 +1.18+1.0 L T T -9.7 +40.4 3042 21 2.92f declining sales of soda in North 40 15 Cascade Bancorp C A C B 4 . 31 ~ 6.95 4.86 -.01 -0.2 T T T -7.1 -26.1 32 5 America. ColumbiaBnkg COL B 19.85 ~ 3 0.3 6 26.82 -.01 . . . T T -2.4 +2 8.2 1 7 6 2 2 0 . 48f To cope, Coca-Cola has J F M A J F M A Columbia Sportswear COLM 55.58 ~ 88.25 80 . 3 0 +1.62 +2.1 L T T +2.0 +35 . 0 96 30 1. 1 2f stepped up its marketing efforts. 52-week range 52-week range CostcoWholesale CO ST 103.20 ~ 1 26 .12112.56 +.48 $.0.4L T L -5.4 + 6 . 9 2 474 2 5 1 . 24 Has the strategy begun to pay off? $11.16 ~ $28 .55 $35.81 ~ $4 6.86 Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 7.13 ~ 18.70 1 4. 1 9 -.06 -0.4 T T T -13.6 +85.3 5 2 cc Wall Street finds out today, when FLIR Systems Vol.:12.4m (5.4x avg.) P E : . . Vol.:4.1m (8.5x avg.) P E:9. 2 F LIR 23.00 ~ 37.35 34.5 5 +. 3 0 $ .0.9 L L T + 14.8 $. 3 3.1 7 1 2 2 2 0 . 4 0f the company reports its latest Mkt. Cap:$1.06 b Yield: .. Mkt. Cap:$3.06 b Yie l d : 1.6% Hewlett Packard HPQ 19 . 07 — 0 33.90 32 .90 + . 4 5 +1.4 L L L + 17.6 +58 .2 13698 12 0 .64f quarterly financial results. HomeFederal Bncp ID HOME 11.54 ~ 1 6.03 14. 7 6 + . 1 8 +1.2 L T T - 0.9 +22.8 56 dd 0. 2 4 Lexicon Pharmaceutical LXRX F5 Networks FFIV Financial analysts predict the Intel Corp INTC 21.36 — 0 27.12 26 .56 + . 3 8 +1 .5 L L L +2.3 +24. 1 26486 14 0 . 9 0 Close: $1.55T-0.04 or -2.5% Close:$107.05L4.04 or 3.9% company's earnings and revenue Keycorp K EY 9 .29 ~ 14.70 13. 3 1 +. 1 3 +1.0 L T T -0.8 +33.6 8340 14 0 . 22 An oral treatment from the pharmaStifel Nicolaus noted the rising numfell in the first quarter versus a Kroger Co KR 3 2 . 71 — 0 45.47 44 .58 + . 5 8 + 1 .3 L L L +12.8 +34 .5 3 0 22 1 5 0. 6 6 ceutical company reduced the ber of million-dollar deals closed by year earlier. L T +41. 9 +4 7 .9 8 4 6 cc Lattice Semi LSCC 4.17 ~ 8.52 7.79 -.05 -0.6 T amount of insulin used during a meal the networking company and issued LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ 20.35 1 5.1 4 -.12 -0.8 T T T -18.2 -24.2 3363 13 by people with Type 1 diabetes. an upgrade. KO $38.73 MDU Resources MDU 23 .40 — o 35.60 34 .52 + . 64 +1.9 L L L +13. 0 +3 9 .1 83 8 2 4 0. 7 1 $2.0 $120 $50 MentorGraphics M EN T 1 7.06 $y 24.31 20 .11 -.04 -0.2 T T T -16.5 +15.5 3 3 8 1 6 0 .20f $41.18 1.8 110 Microsoft Corp MSFT 28.50 ~ 41.6 6 3 9. 1 8 -.03 -0.1 T L T +4.7 +39 . 0 31596 15 1 . 1 2 1.6 100 40 Nike Inc 8 N KE 59.11 ~ 80.26 72.3 8 + 1.13 +1.6 L T T -8.0 +1 7.9 3602 25 0 . 9 6 NordstromInc J WN 54.50 ~ 64.19 60.5 2 +. 0 6 +0 .1 L T T -2.1 + 8 . 2 1 161 1 6 1.32f J F M A J F M A Nwst Nat Gas N WN 39.96 ~ 45.89 44.2 5 +. 2 5 + 0.6 L L L +3.3 +0.8 9 5 20 1.84 52-week range 52-week range 30 PaccarInc PCAR 47.12 ~ 68.81 64. 2 9 +. 1 6 +0.2 L T T +8.7 +30 . 2 1 9 46 1 9 0 .80a $2.53~ $3.18 $6253 ~ $ 226 22 Operating Planar Systms PLNR 1.55 ~ 2.93 2.88 +.0 8 + 4 .0 L T L -18.1 + 5 .8 11 dd I Vol.:6.6m (5.1x avg.) PE: . Vol.:2.2m (1.2x avg.) P E: 30.5 EPS Plum Creek PCL 40.57 o — 54.6 2 41. 11 + . 4 2 +1.0 L T T -11.6 - 18.2 650 3 1 1 . 76 Mkt.Cap:$796.37 m Yie ld:. Mkt. Cap: $7.25 b Yield: ... 1Q '13 1 Q ' 14 Prec Castparts PCP 182.41 ~ 274. 9 6 24 5.51 +1.10 +0.5 L T T -8.8 +29.9 4 6 9 2 1 0. 1 2 Safeway Inc SWY 22.26 ~ 40.25 38. 0 1 +. 1 2 +0.3 L T L +16. 7 +4 5 .0 2 320 3 0. 8 0b Facebook FB PriceSmart PSMT Price-earnings ratio: 20 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 2 3 .07 $y 33.32 27 .85 + . 32 +1 .2 L L T - 14.8 +10.6 3 6 7 d d 0 . 75 based on trailing 12 month results Close:$58.89%0.36 or 0.6% Close:$94.35 A1.63 or 1.8% Sherwin Wms SHW 163.63 ~ 208. 6 3 19 0.11 +1.58 +0.8 L T T $-3.6 +1 1 .4 53 3 2 6 2 . 20f The Financial Times reported that Roth Capital Partners says a sell-off Dividend: $1.22 Div.yield: 3.2% StancorpFncl S FG 40.32 ~ 69.51 6 0. 8 3 - .02 . . . ~ T T -8.2 +47.7 1 1 7 1 2 1 . 10f the social network is close to getting of shares in the warehouse club was 8 StarbucksCp S BUX 57.50 ~ 82.50 69.3 1 +. 5 8 +0 .8 L T T -11.6 +18.9 6046 2 9 1 . 04 Irish approval to become an e-mon- overdone and that the World Cup source: Factset ey" institution. will drive business. L T +57.0 + 1 59.7 2142dd Triquint Semi TQNT 4.72 — 0 13.96 13 .09 -.13 -1.0 T $80 $120 Umpqua Holdings UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 9.65 18. 1 6 + . 3 8 +2.1 L T T -5.1 +48.7 1561 20 0.60a US Bancorp U SB 31.99 ~ 43.66 40.6 1 +. 1 0 +0 .2 L T T +0.5 +21. 1 7 0 1 6 13 0 . 9 2 70 110 Beyond PCs WashingtonFedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 4.5 3 22.34 +.19+ 0.9 L T T - 4.1 +31.9 3 2 2 1 5 0 . 40 60 100 The consumer shift away from Wells Fargo & Co W F C 3 6 .19 ~ 50.49 48. 1 1 +. 0 3 +0.1 L T +6.0 +31. 4 23883 12 1 . 20 personal computers and toward Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~ 33.24 27. 8 9 +. 1 7 +0.6 L T T -11.7 -9.9 2637 24 0 . 8 8 J F M A J F M A tablets and smartphones has hurt 52-week range 52-week range Intel's sales. $22.62~ $72 .58 $82.36~ $ 126 .64 The company,which supplies DividendFootnotes:6 - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. 6 -Liquidating dividend. 6 -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. f - Current Vol.:72.1m (1.1x avg.) PE: 9 9 .8 Vol.:349.2k (2.0x avg.) PE 33.2 : annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent chips for the majority of PC Mkt. Cap:$117.26 b Yield : ... Mkt.Cap:$2.85 b Yield: 0.7% dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend processors, has tried to offset the announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash SOURCE: Sungard AP decline with higher sales of chips value on ex-distribution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is 6 closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. for servers, phones and tablets. InterestRates NET 1YR The shift helped boost Intel's TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO earnings in the fourth quarter despite flat demand for its PC 3 -month T-bill . 0 3 .0 3 .06 chips. Intel reports first-quarter 6 -month T-bill . 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 T T T .09 Goodrich Petroleum stock hasn't been for the timid in surged past the rest of the market, jumping 83 percent. earnings today. recent years. It's ahead of the S&P 500 again in the early parts of 52-wk T-bill .09 .09 INTC $26.56 The oil and gas producer's stock fell for four straight 2014, and it got a big boost Monday when it reported 2-year T-note . 3 5 .34 + 0 .01 T T T .23 $30 The yield on the years from 2009 through 2012, dropping more than 18 results from a well in Louisiana. $21.83 5-year T-note 1.61 1.58 +0.03 T L L .69 10-year Treapercent each time. The losses came despite a boom for Analysts called the results encouraging: The well 10-year T-note 2.65 2.63 +0.02 T T T 1.72 sury rose to 2.65 25 the rest of the market: The Standard & Poor's 500 was successfully drilled and under budget, but several 30-year T-bond 3A9 3.48 +0.01 T T T 2.92 percent Monday. index rose at least 12 percent in three of those four say they still hope to see more consistent results in the '14 Yields affect years, thanks to rising corporate profits and stimulus area from the company. Most of the 23 analysts with a 20 NET 1YR from the Federal Reserve. rating on the stock call it a 6Buy,6 but four analysts have rates on mortgages and other BONDS YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO Operating a "Hold" rating, and one has a "Sell." Goodrich Petroleum bounced back last year and I 'I consumer loans. EPS Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.29 3.28 +0.01 T T T 2.64 1 Q '13 1 Q ' 1 4 * 1 0- YR* YTD 3 - YR GOOdriCh PetrOleum (GDP) Monday's ciose:$23.96 Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.64 4.63 +0.01 T T T 4.08 Price-earnings ratio: 14 GDP 45.6% 6 . 7 13.8 Barclays USAggregate 2.29 2.29 .. . T T T 1.81 Price-earnings ratio:Lost money based on trailing 12 month results PRIME FED Barcl -1.2 13 . 8 7.1 aysUS HighYield 5.09 5.03 +0.06 T T T 5.47 $11 29 (Based on trailing 12 month results) RATE FUNDS Dividend: $0.90 Div.yield: 3.4% M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.21 4.24 -0.03 T T T 3.7 8 *Annuagzed AP T o t al retums through April 14 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.81 1.79 +0.02 T L L .99 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 source: Factset B arclays US Corp 2.98 2.99 -0.01 T T T 2.6 8 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds

: ':"." Boom times

SU

HIS

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.2 8 + .11 -0.1 +12.4 +11.5+15.3 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.51 +.23 +1.5 +8.6 +8.8+13.3 C A 8 CpWldGrlA m 45.16 +.22 0.0 +15.4 +9.5+15.6 C 8 D EurPacGrA m 48.46 +.87 -1.2 +14.2 +5.2+13.7 A C C FnlnvA m 50. 2 4 +.32 -2.1 +17.0 +11.8+17.9 C D C BkofAm 962263 16.00 +.23 GrthAmA m 42.84 +.30 -2.2 +19.2 +12.9+17.4 8 8 D Facebook 707445 58.89 +.36 Hartford CapAprA m ITHAX IncAmerA m 20.80 +.86 +1.5 +10.9 +10.5+15.9 8 A A iShR2K 584691 110.72 +.31 InvCoAmA m 36.67 +.28 +0.3 +19.4 +13.3+17.1 8 8 D SPDR Fncl 552710 21.45 +.17 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.67 +.16 -2.4 +15.1 +9.8+16.9 C 8 C SiriusXM 495494 3.13 -.04 WAMutlnvA m39.15 +.25 -0.3 +18.0 +14.5+18.7 8 A 8 Citigroup 490033 47.67 +1.99 e Q PwShs QQQ 445544 84.77 +.66 Dodge &Cox Income 13.77 -.81 +2.9 +2 .4 +4.8 +7.5 A 8 B iShEMkts 437562 41.74 -.09 IntlStk 44.81 +.21 +2.3 +22.2 +8.3+17.6 A A A 8 iPVix rs 413341 44.38 -.37 Stock 167.30+1.29 -0.3 +24.7 +15.9+21.6 A A A Fidelity Contra 92.81 + .69 -3.3 +17.8 +13.1+18.7 C 8 B Gainers ContraK 91.9 7 + .69 -3.3 +17.9 +13.2+18.9 C 8 B NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.31 +.87 -0.3 +20.0 +14.0+21.6 B A B Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 64.94 +.63 -0.4 +17.6 +14.1+19.3 C A B SmrtPros 2.99 +.77 + 3 4.7 GoodrPet 23.96 +5.56 + 30.2 «C FrankTemp-Franklin Income C m 2. 51 .. . + 4 .0 + 11.5 +9.0+16.0 A A A AkebiaTh n 21.14 +4.28 + 2 5.4 53 IncomeA m 2. 4 9+.81 +4.6 +12.2 +9.7+16.6 A A A NV5 wt 3.37 +.52 + 1 8.3 Oakmark Intl I 26.33 +.11 0. 0 + 1 9.4 +11.4+20.3 A A A WebMD 43.87 +6.20 + 16.5 523 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 20 +.13 -2.5 +12.4 +10.9+15.5 E D E UniPixel 8.50 +1.19 + 16.3 RisDivB m 17 . 16 +.11 -2.8 +11.3 +9.9+14.5 E E E Moroingstar OwnershipZone™ Chindex 22.59 +3.08 + 1 5.8 RisDivC m 17 . 86 +.11 -2.7 +11.5 +10.1+14.7 E E E Zion0&G 2.29 +.31 + 1 5.7 Or Fund target represents weighted SmMidValA m44.22 +.30 -0.1 + 21.8 +9.6+18.3 8 E E BebeStrs 6.69 +.88 + 1 5.1 average of stock holdings SmMidValBm 37.23 +.24 -0.3 +20.7 +8.7+17.3 8 E E KindredB n 16.39 +1.73 + 1 1.8 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.55 +.17 -0.3 +15.4 +12.8+19.0 D C B Losers CATEGORY Large Blend GrowStk 49.77 +.41 -5.3 +20.9 +14.3+20.0 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR HealthSci 56.88 +.10 -1.6 +26.0 +24.1 +28.1 B A A RATING™ * * N N N -1.54 -26.8 Vanguard 500Adml 168.92+1.38 -0.4 +17.6 +14.1+19.3 C A A Highpwrlnt 4.21 NwstBio wt 3.20 -1.00 -23.8 ASSETS $5,989 million 500lnv 168.91 +1.37 -0.4 +17.5 +14.0+19.2 C 8 8 -.63 -22.3 22ndCentry 2.20 500Sgnl 139.53+1.13 -0.4 +17.6 +14.1+19.3 C A A EXP RATIO 1.14% BOS LM 4.79 -1.31 -21.5 CapOp 46.37 +.30 +0.4 +21.6 +15.0+19.4 A A B MANAGER Frank Catrickes -1.57 -20.4 NovaLfstyl 6.13 Eqlnc 29.79 +.20 +0.9 +15.8 +15.7+20.2 D A A SINCE 1998-12-30 IntlStkldxAdm 27.92 +.12 +0.4 +11.1 +3.8 NA C D -3.2 RETURNS 3-MO Foreign Markets StratgcEq 30.31 +.21 +1.0 +25.9 +16.3+24.3 A A A YTO -2.6 TgtRe2020 27.34 +.11 +0.8 +9.9 +8.4+13.7 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +22.1 Tgtet2025 15.85 +.87 +0.6 +11.1 +8.9+14.6 8 A C Paris 4,384.56 + 18.70 + A 3 3-YR ANNL +11.4 TotBdAdml 10.75 -.81 +2.6 -0.3 +3.9 +4.8 D C E London 6,583.76 +22.06 + . 34 5-YR-ANNL +17.4 Totlntl 16.70 +.88 +0.4 +11.1 +3.8+13.3 C D C Frankfurt 9,339.17 +23.88 + . 26 TotStlAdm 46.19 +.33 -0.6 +18.2 +14.0+20.0 8 8 A Hong Kong23,038.80 + 35.16 + . 15 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 46.18 +.34 -0.6 +18.1 +13.8+19.9 8 8 A Mexico 40,530.69 +1 49.90 +.37 Gilead Sciences Inc 3.48 Milan 21,314.56 + 115.77 + . 55 USGro 27.83 +.27 -3.0 +19.0 +13.7+18.4 8 A C American International Group Inc 2.48 -49.89 -.36 Tokyo 13,91 0.16 Welltn 38.26 +.16 +1.5 +11.9 +10.9+14.9 A A A 2.48 Stockholm 1,348.22 + 4.10 + . 30 CVS CaremarkCorp Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption -69.90 -1.29 Google Inc Class A 2.35 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,353.60 Zurich 8,312.90 +14.08 + . 17 Aetna Inc 2.34 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.

Hartford Capital Appreciation finished in the top 2 percent of MarhetSummary the large blend fund category Most Active last year with a return of almost NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG 42 percent, but is lagging this S&P500ETF 1196621 182.94 +1.43 year.

FAMILY

Commodities Crude rose for the fourth time in five days and settled above $104 per barrel for the first time since March 3. Natural gas fell for a second straight day, while gold and silver rose.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro and other major currencies following a better-than-expe cted report on U.S. retail sales, which showed the strongest growth since September 2012.

55Q QD

FUELS

CLOSE PVS. 104.05 103.74 Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) 2.33 2.36 Heating Oil (gal) 2.98 2.93 Natural Gas (mmbtu) 4.56 4.62 UnleadedGas(gal) 3.04 3.01 METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 1327.20 1318.70 20.00 19.93 1466.80 1461.60 3.07 3.07 811.75 807.05

%CH. %YTD + 0.30 + 5 . 7 -0.47 +22.0 +1.56 -3.2 - 1.30 + 7 .8 + 0.80 + 9 . 1 %CH. %YTD +0.64 +1 0.4 + 0.33 + 3 .4 + 0.36 + 7 .0 +0.03 -1 0.9 +0.58 +1 3.2

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.45 1.45 + 0.35 + 8 . 1 Coffee (Ib) 2.05 2.01 +1.81 +85.1 Corn (bu) 5.03 4.99 +0.90 +1 9.2 Cotton (Ib) 0.91 0.89 + 2.12 + 7 . 4 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 323.50 328.30 -1.46 -1 0.2 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.63 1.65 -1.12 +1 9.6 Soybeans (bu) 14.76 14.63 +0.91 +1 2.5 Wheat(bu) 6.79 6.60 +2.80 +1 2.1 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6727 -.0018 -.11% 1.5343 Canadian Dollar 1.0 9 64 -.0000 -.00% 1.0135 USD per Euro 1.3823 -.0064 -.46% 1.3081 JapaneseYen 101.71 + . 1 4 + .14% 9 8 . 89 Mexican Peso 13. 0394 -.0237 -.18% 12.1030 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4682 +.0041 +.12% 3.6262 Norwegian Krone 5 . 9672 +.0254 +.43% 5.7261 SouthAfrican Rand 10.5093 +.0300 +.29% 8.9561 Swedish Krona 6.5 6 0 6 + .0256 +.39% 6.3758 Swiss Franc .8797 +.0044 +.50% . 9 299 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar 1.0623 -.001 7 -.16% . 9522 Chinese Yuan 6.2190 +.0075 +.12% 6.1963 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7534 +.0008 +.01% 7.761 8 Indian Rupee 60.200 -.000 -. 00% 54. 548 Singapore Dollar 1.2529 +.0041 $..33% 1.2371 South KoreanWon 1 039.00 + . 20 +.02% 1128.50 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.21 + . 1 4 +.46% 2 9.97


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

BEST OFTHE

Progress, setbacks

EXECUTIVE FILE

BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Membership101Driving YourMembership: Connecting newchamber members with current ones; reservations required; free; 10 a.m.; Bend Chamber ofCommerce, 777 NW Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221 or shelley© bendchamber.org. WEDNESDAY • BeginningPhoteshep Plus:Course provides additional time togaina solid understanding of the basic tools andconcepts of Photoshop; registration required; $95; 9a.m.-noon; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. • CommunityHealth Worker course: Learn to be a Community Health Worker, anoutreach person who coordinates access and care to helpbridgethe gaps andeliminate barriers between health care,social services, andthe needs of at-risk community members; registration required; $595; 9a.m.noon; Central Oregon Community College,2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 54 I-383-7270. • Spanishfor Health Care:Professionals can learn basic Spanishfor medical use; online course starts April 16; classroom sessions begin May20; registration required; $189; 3:30-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 54 I-383-7270. • Grant WritingAto1: Discover howand where to look for potential nonprofit funders who are good matchesfor your organization, how to networkand develop partnerships with funders, howto organize a successful grant-writing campaign andhowto put together acomplete proposal package;online course starts April16; classroom sessions start May 5; registration required; $189; 6-8:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • Project Management course:Learnto meetthe challenges of truncated timelines, short-staffed project teams, skimpy budgets andcrippling risks; online course starts April 16; classroom sessions meet April 29, registration required; $189; 6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. THURSDAY • BloggingforBusiness and Beyond:Learn to create aWordpress blog, integrate it with other social media, engage your audienceand other bloggers, andcreate original content onthe fly; registration required; $65; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College,2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 54 I-383-7270. FRIDAY • Search EngineStrategies 1:Learn Search Engine Optimization including keyword marketing, sitecontent best practices, internal links, link popularity, paid inclusion, pay-for-placementand submitting your website to search engines; registration required; $99; 9-11a.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend;541-383-7270. SATURDAY • Marketing 101:Learnto create aFacebookpageand use social media tomarket your product; registration required; $50 perfarm/ ranch, one timefee; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College-Crook County OpenCampus, 510 S.E. LynnBlvd., Prineville; 541-480-1340 or tcf@ cbbmail.com. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.cem/bizcal

What:Smart Grow Technologies What it does:Sells best available LED technology in indoor grow lamps Pictured:CEODarrin Dow Where:69319 Panoramic Drive, Sisters Employees:Five Phone:800-571-3588 Email:darrin@parmaxpro.com Wodsito:www.parmaxpro.com

i C

+

.+ ~~+~ 1 in biofuel

y -~~IiIll

industry By CINord Krauss New Yorh Times News Service

HUGOTON, Kan. — There

is an old joke in the energy Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

are your Q •• Who largest customers? • Commercial • growers that work with dispensaries — cannabis. Most of our clients are down in Phoenix, (Ariz.). Where do you • see the business in five years? • Wesee • ourselves as being a leader in the LED lighting industry and Web-based control systems. The thing about LEDis you can write intelligence into them.

Q• By Joseph Djtzjer •The Bulletin

SISTERS — Smart Grow Technologies is living up to its name. Once a maker of grow lamps based on induction technology, a form of florescent lighting without

A

business that advanced bio-

fuels are the fuel of the future, and always will be. A Spanish company, Abengoa Bioenergy, has bet $500 million on robbing that joke of its punch line. In the

middle of a cornfield here it is building a plant that will soon begin producing cellulosic ethanol, which it calls a low-polluting alternative to petroleum products. This

is what the George W. Bush administration and Congress intended seven years ago with legislation promoting energy independence. But even as Abengoa and

othercompanies prepare to produce significant amounts of cellulosic ethanol, using corn stalks and wheat straw as opposed to corn itself, the

appetite forsuch fuelsseems to be diminishing. The market is saturated with ethanol from corn. The

filaments or electrodes, Smart Grow is switching to

automobile and oil indus-

lamps based on light-emitting diode, or LED, technology.

tries are resisting efforts to increase the amount of eth-

The company founders expect to reap the benefit of revolutions in lighting technology and in indoor horticulture.

anol blended into gasoline.

light to rows of LEDs. The induction lamp provided blue spectrum light while the LED provided the red spectrum, both at the correct

Smart Grow CEO Darrin Dow

intensity. Smart Grow made the

said LED technology recently advanced to the point it can produce ample quantities of the correct

grow lamp locally. But advancements in LED technology over-

And now the Environmental

Protection Agency is considering reducing the amount of advanced biofuels required for blending into vehicle fuels this year by more than 40 percent below the original target in the Energy Independence and Security Act of

took their business plan.

useful in commercial horticul-

"Six months ago, we thought this was the best grow light on

ture. Smart Grow will switch

the market, but LED is a superior

to marketing an all-LED lamp manufactured for Smart Grow by

product," Dow said. New generation LED lights can

Envirolux of Vancouver, Wash. Smart Grow supplies or works

deliver a red and blue light at the

Christopher Standlee, exec-

correct intensity, at lower heat and with longer life, he said. Manu-

utive vice president of Abengoa. "The whole purpose of

facturing and installation of LED

the RenewableFuel Standard

grow lamps are easier and simpler,

was to encourage investment

he said. His father, Merle Dow, the

to create brand-new tech-

company financial officer, said induction lamps require an accompanying cooling system, for example, due to the heat theyproduce.

nologies that would help the United States become more energy-independent and use cleaner and more efficient fuels. We feel like we are just on the verge of doing that

light spectrum at an intensity

with commercial growers, the agriculture departments in Canada and Mexico and home gardeners. Volcano Veggies, an indoor hydroponic grower in Bend, uses Smart Grow lamps, and Meg-nGro Indoor Garden Shoppe, also in Bend, carries the Smart Grow

line of grow lamps, Dow said. The new Smart Grow lamp

2007. A final decision is due in June.

"It's very frustrating," said

Robert Littleton, Envirolux

consists of rows of LED lights

only, engineered by Smart Grow, that provide light in two separate ranges of the spectrum: blue and red. Young plants and vegetables, particularly, require light in the blue range. Blooming plants, like flowers, need light in the red spectrum, Dow explained.

chief operating officer, said his firm will manufacture, package and ship the Smart Grow lamp;

and now the EPA is talking

about changing the rules." Other things have changed, too, since 2007. A boom in shale drilling has produced a sudden gush of domestic oil, and increasingly efficient cars and a sluggish economy have cut demand for fuel. And there is disagree-

Smart Grow will serve as the

sales arm. Darrin Dow said the company is also at work on Web-based and

mobile-phone applications that allow growers to remotely control their indoor grow lights.

Previously, Smart Grow made

— Reporter: 541-617-7815 jditzler@bendbulletin.com

a lamp that married an induction

ment about the potential for

Etsy to become awholesaler By Elizabeth A. Harris New York Times News Service

Amy Hamley of Redraven Studios makes jewelry and delicate home decor items out of porcelain, like hanging

She used a beta offshoot

tions, Etsy wants its sellers to

of Etsy, the popular e-commerce site for handmade,

take wholesale orders, so that through them, Etsy can be in thousands of stores without

vintage and other artisan

biofuels. The energy act's goal of reaching 21 billion gallons of advanced biofuels by 2022 is now considered virtually unreachable, even by biofuel enthusiasts. "It would take an enormous effort of deploying capital and labor and engineering," said Paul Winters, a spokesman for the Biotechnology Industry Organization. Many energy experts

in the shape of arrow heads. For three years, she worked

items, to help get her there. Etsy's site now has more than I million sellers of goods, generating$1.35billion in sales last year, the company

out of her basement and tried

says. Still, although Internet

to break into the wholesale

retailing is a growingmarket,

ever cutting a rent check. After spending a year in beta, Etsy plans to make its role as a wholesaler official. Today, Etsy will announce a 3.5percentcommission on each wholesale transaction,

market. But since September, she

more than 90percent of retail

the same cut it takes on its

large enough scale to make

commerce still takes place in physical stores, and like many

retail website, and substan-

a difference," said Michael

tially lower than a standard

retailers that started online,

wholesale markup. Etsy will start charging for wholesale in August.

E. Webber, deputy director of the Energy Institute at

planter sets and necklaces

quit her job and attracted enough wholesale accounts that they now make up most

of her business.

Etsywants apiece of that action. Instead of opening loca-

remain skeptical about the

new plants. "It's stuff being built, but that doesn't mean they are cost-effective or at

the University of Texas at Austin.

BRIEFING Coldwater Creek to close its stores Coldwater Creek, a women's apparel, jewelry and accessory retailer with more than 350 stores nationwide, has filed for bankruptcy and plans to liquidate all inventory and assets and close its stores. In the last year, the Sandpoint, Idaho-based retailer tried to refinance its debt and sell the business, according to its bankruptcy case, which was filed Friday. Annica Jordan, assistant manager for the Bend store, said she does not know whenthe Old Mill District location

will close. "All we've beentold is liquidation will begin in May," Jordan said. She said the store employs10 people.

One-day sale for GoogleGlass Hate 'em or love 'em, an unknown numberof Google Glasswearable devices will go on sale for one day only Tuesday for a cool $1,500 — plus tax — on the Internet. While Google Glass-wearing beta testers have sometimes been targeted in public for having something on their faces that can make surreptitious photographs and videos, demand continues to grow. So today's one-day sale hasthe potential to further

stoke demand asGoogle continues to ration out what's estimated to be a current supply of 10,000 units in circulation. The sale begins at 6 a.m.and buyers have to be U.S. residents with a U.S. shipping address and be atleast 18 years old, according to Google.

Data theft on the rise, report says The number of Americans who say they've had important personal information stolen online is on the rise, according to a Pew Research Center report released Monday. According to the survey conducted in January, 18 percent of online adults have hadpersonal information stolen such as their Social Security number, credit card or bankaccount information. That's up from11 percent in a July 2013 Pewsurvey. The number of adults who had anonline account compromised or taken over without their permission — suchas email or social media — remained flat at 21 percent. The survey wasdone after news broke of Target Corp.'s massive pre-Christmas data breach, but well before last week's discovery of the "Heartbleed" bug, which has causedwidespread worry across the Internet. — Staffand wirereports

DEEDS Deschutes County • Nordic Construction LLC to Jennifer D.Moon, NorthWest Crossing, Phase 17, Lot 779, $461,000 • John E. Gilmore andNeil R. Austin Jr., Stonehedge on Rim, Phase4m, Lot3, $189,000 • Brian and DianeDeyoung to Greg WelchConstruction Inc., Skyliner Summit at Broken Top,Phase11,Lot 292, $185,000 • Federal HomeLoan Mortgage Corporation to

Sherry and JohnOakley, High Desert Village, Lot4, $187,500 • James A. andSarah D. Weeks to Christopher J. Shaker, RiverRim P.U.D., Phase1, Lot159, $440,000 • Kurtis W. andCheri A. Fuller to N.P.Dodge Jr.,trustee forthe Trust between National Equity Inc. and N.P.DodgeJr., NiLah-Sha, Phases 2 and 3, Lot 75, $226,000 • N.P. DodgeJr., trusteefor the Trust betweenNational

Equity Inc. andN.P.Dodge Jr., to Gregory A.and Jennifer L Taylor, Ni-LahSha, Phases 2and3, Lot 75, $226,000 • Larch Leaf III LLC to Alan R. andTeresa D. McCowan, Credenda,Lot 3, $184,000 • John F. andLari D. Hodecker to JamesW. and Juli L. Goff, Greensat Redmond, Phase6, Lot 64, $330,000 • Mark Dhone and Susan Cunningham toChristofer

and Jessica Andersen, Majestic Ridge, Phases1 and 2, Lot 68, $305,000 • Ron R. Bennett to Reagan S., Curtis C.andJudith F. Gilbertson, McKenzieRim Estates, Lot1, $189,900 • Caldera Springs Real Estate LLC toHoward A. and Susan M.Pratt, Caldera Springs, Phase1, Lot179, $160,000 • Jesse D. andMaria D. Roberts to GeorgeO. Nance, Plat of Sagewood, Lot16, $380,000

• Bryant S. Green to Grace S. Haven, Kenwood, Lot15, Block 5, $285,000 • Donald B. Stuart, trustee for the Donald B.Stuart and Patricia L. Stuart Trust, to John andDeniseHines, Tanglewood, Phase6, Lot 25, $325,000 • PWD Associates LLC to Elaine E.Howard and Robert J. VandenBos, Points West, Lot 28, $439,750 • James C.and Elvira W. Blanchard to GalenG.and

Kristy A. Baker,Tuscany Pines, Phase1, Lot 5, $334,900 • Jill K. Putneyto The Doherty Group LLC, Kenwood, Lots11 and12, Block 4, $279,000 • Sadie A. Rosenberger to Lynda D.Williamson, Juniper Creek, Lots13and 14, Block1, $155,500 • PLJ Investments LLC to Andrew andRebecca D. West, Deschutes, Lot 9, Block19, $325,000 • Black Butte Ranch

Corporation, formerly known asBlackButte Ranch Property ManagementCorporation, to James E.andJudith K. Davis, GolfCourse Homesite Section, Fifteenth Addition, Lot 320,$234,000 • Nationstar Mortgage LLC to Cody J. andGiovanna E. Owen, to Arrowhead, Phases1-4, Lot 46, $202,650 • lan S. and Kristy N. Haworth to JohnA. and Heather L.Goffrier,

Foxborough, Phase1, Lot 40, $192,000 • Secretary of Housing and UrbanDevelopment of Washington D.C.to Richard D.andLori A. Johnson, PlateauEstates, Lot 7, Block 3, $212,607 • Loretta L.A. Forestelle, personal representative for the Estate of Thomas C. Forestelle, to JohnD. and Sarah M. Iarussi, First Addition River Forest Acres, Lots1-5, Block 3, $331,000


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5 Martha Stewart, D4 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/athome

HOME

FOOD

Easter emrations By Linda Turner Griepentrog

so it's no surprise that every-

For The Bulletin

one wants to get into the act

Eggs, carrots and bunnies, with holiday decorating. The oh my! three projects shown here These traditional Easter are easy enough for kids to icons are displayed in many create, with just a little adult forms this time of year, from supervrsron. calorie-laden

e d i bles to

— Reporter: gwizdesignsI aol.corn

home decor and wearables,

Yarn eggs What youneed: Assorted chunkyyarns, solid or variegated colors Plastic eggs Craft glue Make it: 1. Apply glue to theegg andspread it evenly to cover one half. 2. Beginning at oneend, stick the yarn to the center and begin wrapping, tucking eachsuccessive wrap close to the previous one. Wrap the egg with yarn to the midpoint. 3. Apply more glue to the opposite half of the eggand hold the previously wrapped portion. Continue wrapping yarn until you get to the other end. 4. Apply a little more glue to adherethe yarn end in place.

c@+'

* tss

Q$/ p

E

/'

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

These yarn-covered eggs are fun andeasy to make. SeemoredecorationideasonPage05

GARDEN

Time to thinkabout starting seedsindoors By LizDouville

was a time of gardeners experiencing the urge to play

For The Bulletin

"Ever wonder why children, when left to their visceral selves, are at home in the dirt? It's instinctual. There is no fear, only the urge to play, to explore." — nA Gnrden's Blessings,"

Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

Zydeco Kitchen & Cocktails will serve Duck Confit with Lentils paired with a sour beer from Boneyard to cut through the richness as part of the Foodie Crawl event on April 27.

By Alison Highberger For The Bulletin

ark your calendars, food lovers. The third

annualFoodie Crawl, benefiting Bend's Community Center's Feed the Hungry Program, happens April 27 from 3 to 6 p.m., followed by an after party with dessert, music and a silent auction until 8 p.m. at Liberty Theater.

For$65,you can enjoy asm all plate of deliciousness from 13

FoodieCrawldetails What:Participants visit local restaurants, where they sample small plates paired with a beverage;desserts, beverages, live music and asilent auction to follow at the afterparty When:April 27, 3 to 6 p.m. afterparty from 5 to 8 p.m. at the Liberty Theater Cost:$65 each, or $20 for afterparty only Contact:Tickets available through April 25 at Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E Fifth St, 541-312-2069, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. or atwww .bendscommunitycenter.org; tickets on saleApril 27 at Liberty Theater from noon on, 849 N.W.Wall St. • Suu mnponPage D2with restaurant locations nndinformation on dishes nndbeverages.

Central Oregon restaurants, along with specially selected beverages and the after party. This year, the crawl is set up like a progressive party, and

and to explore.

I especially enjoy looking back at the previous year's garden journal during the month of April to compare notes on the weather, the indoor seed starting I did

by Lois Trigg Chaplin and what was happening out in the garden. On April If you were at any garden 15 last year, it was cold and centerduring those warmstormy and we had snow. ish days in late March, On April 26, the temperayou saw that the center of ture was up to 77 degrees attraction was the seed but four days later the high rack. Arms going every was 53 degrees and the which way, above your low was 16 degrees. Good head below your knees, reasons why we shouldn't hands full of seed packets, get too serious about plantconversations questioning ing vegetables and annual other packet grabbersflowers outdoors until have you planted this? How much later. about this one? It definitely SeeStarting seeds/D4

TODAY'S RECIPES Recipes for ncause:Three of the dishes that will be available later this month during the FoodieCrawl: DuckConfit with Lentils, Crabcake JalapenoPoppersW rapped inBaconwithGoatCheese and Avocado, BurmesePorkBelly Curry, D2 TheGreennnd White:Homemade pizzatoppedwithanarugula salad,D3

participants must walk from

place to place to enjoy the food and drink. (If you just want dessert and live music, tickets

are $25.) The chefs/owners who partic-

ipate go all out to impress local foodies' palates. Spork will be serving Burmese Pork Belly Curry on rice, accompanied by Crux Fermentation Project's Pilsner.

Zydeco Kitchen 8 Cocktails

More homemade pizza recipes: Roberta's Pizza Dough, Pizza Margherita,D3

will have a Duck Confit with Lentils, paired with Boneyard

Beer's aged Funky Bunch Ale. SeeCrawl/D2

Rockin' Daves will be serving Crabcake Jalapeno Poppers andOregon Spirit Distillers Spiced Rum Punch at Zydeco. Popper recipe on Page D2.

Recipe Finder:Chocolate-Covered Matzo: great for Passover ... and any other time of year,D3


D2 THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

FOOD

Next week: The joys of caramelized onions

Duck Confit with Lentils

Ne por Ave

Makes 4 servings.

Crabcake Jalapeno Poppers Wrapped in Bacon with Goat Cheese and Avocado Makes12 servings.

4 duck thighs and legs

iv sideBlvd.

2 sprigs of fresh thyme, rough

(attached or separate)

chopped

2 TBS Kosher salt 1 tsp granulated garlic t/2 tsp freshly ground black

al eson ve.

~n

ve.

Andy Zeigert 1The Bulletin

On themenu 1. Spork, 937 N.W.Newport Ave. —Burmese Pork Belly Curry with CruxFermentation Project's Pilsner 2. Primal Cuts, 1244 N.W. Galveston Ave. — Pork Meatball Banh Mi with Hop Valley's Citrus Mistress from Growler Phil's 3. The Victorian Cafe, 1404 N.W.GalvestonAve. — Grilled Board Collar with HousemadeKimchi on aSweet Rice Cakewith Deschutes Brewery's FreshSqueezedIPA 4.Zydeco KitchenH Cocktails,919N.W.BondSt.— DuckConfit with Lentils with BoneyardBeer's Funky BunchAle 5. Rockin' Daves(hosted at ZydecoKitchen HCocktails)Crabcake JalapenoPoppersWrappedinBacon with GoatCheese and Avocado with OregonSpirit Distillers Spiced RumPunch 6. Pronghorn(hosted at CascadeSotheby's, 821 N.W.Wall St.) — "Sweet As" PorkVerdein Phyllo Cupswith Good Life's "Sweet As"Pacific Ale 7. Tim Garling's JackalopeGrill, 750 N.W. LavaRoadSmoked Trout with Trout Caviarand CommealBlini with Dopff & lrion CrustacesAlsace, 2010 8. Seasons at Seventh Mountain Resort (hosted at TheWine Shop, 55 N.W. Minnesota Ave.) —14Spiced Chicken with Spinach and Romaine Salad, Dijon Vinaigrette and Pickled Red Onion with Buitenverwachting Beyond Sauvignon Blanc, South Africa, and Boekenhoutskloof The Wolftrap red blend, South Africa 9. Drake, 801 N.W. Wall St. — Portobello Fries with BeerCheese and Pickled Spring Onion with Oregonwhite wine 10. Hola!, 920 N.W.BondSt. — Empanadas with CreamyChicken andPeruvian PepperandBaby BackRibsCrusted with Quinoaand served with JalapenoCilantro CreamSauce with Apple Tamarind Margarita andChocolate Margarita 11.10 Below at theOxfordHotel,10 N.W. Minnesota Ave. Oxford Pot Roast with Garlic MashedPotatoes, Cippolini Onions, Celery and CarrotsinaWineBordelaiseand EspressoCreme BruleewithBoneyard Beer'sDiabloRojoredale 12. Brick House, 5N.W. Minnesota Ave.— Prime New York Steakand Wild Mushroom Risotto with Oregonpinotnoirand Marionbeny PanSaucewith Oregonpinot noir 13. Bad BoyzBBQat BlueBird Coffee Company,550 N.W. Frankli nAve.— Bourbon TeriyakiTri-Tip,BlanchedAsparagus withRiceVinegarSesame GlutenFreeSoyandCucumber Chips withRanchand CandiedSalmon Caperswith choiceofbeeror wine 14. Liberty Theater, 849 N.W.Wall St. — afterparty -

t/4 C onion, minced t/4 C celery, minced t/4 C red bell pepper, minced

3 green onions, sliced into thin

I'ounds t/2 TBS fresh parsley, chopped t/2 tsp smoked paprika fine In a small bowl mix together the seasoning blend: salt, granulated gar- 1 tsp chili powder

pepper

"~an

qO

2 bay leaves, hand crushed 1 clove of garlic, sliced 1 TBS minced shallot 2 C duck fat or olive oil

lic, black pepperandsmoked paprika. In a baking dish, scatter the rough chopped thyme and crushed bay leaves. Rub the seasoning blend all over the duck, and then place the duck on thethyme andbayleaves,skinsideup. Wrap thedishwith plastic wrap,andplace it inthe refrigeratorfor 24hours. Preheat the oven to200. Lightly rinse the seasoning blend off the duck with cold water. Saute the sliced garlic and shallots with 2 tablespoons of duck fat (or olive oil) until lightly caramelized. Take the oil left in the pan and strain out the garlic and shallots. In an oven-proof dish, place the duck legs and thighs, sauteed garlic and shallots and cook in theovenfor 6 to 8 hours or until very tender. Remove the duck from the oven, allow it to cool, and then shred the duck meat. Take the shreddedduck and 1cup of the fat from the pan andtoss it all together. This is the duck confit. Place the duck confit in a container and store it in the refrigerator. Also store the remainder of the duckfat separately in the refrigerator to use in other dishes youare cooking, instead of butter or olive oil. Note: The duckconfitcooking can be done2to 3 daysin advanceof serving.

Lentils for Duck Confit t/4 C duck fat from the duck confit 1 C yellow onion, diced t/2 C carrots, diced t/2 C celery, diced 8 oz pork belly, sliced thin

7 C beef stock t/2 tsp salt '/4 tsp freshly ground black

2 TBS sherry vinegar, plus1

For garnish: extra virgin olive oil and fresh cracked pepper

1 egg, beaten t/2 Ib fresh Dungeness crabmeat

TBS 1 Ib brown lentils

6fresh jalapeno peppers, halved, with stems and seeds

removed (Note: wear gloves) 4 oz goat cheese, crumbled 1 avocado, skinned and pitted and cut int/2-inch slices 12 bacon slices (thinner is

better)

Preheat oven to 375. Mix all of the ingredients (onion through Ritz crackers) in a medium bowl. Stuff the jalapeno halves with the crabmeat mixture. Top with crumbled goat cheeseand anavocado slice, and then wrap each in bacon. Placethe peppers on asmall baking sheet or tray and bake in the ovenfor 20 to 25 minutes. — FromRockin'OavesBagelBistro & Cateri ng Company, will be paired withan OregonSpirits'Spiced Rum Punch

Burmese Pork Belly Curry Makes 8 servings. Note:Ingredients for this recipe can be found at local Mexican and specialty grocery stores, or www.importfood.com. Do yourself a favor and invest in a food scale to measureounces of ingredients. —JeffHunt,che f/ownerofSponk PASTE: 6 stalks lemongrass 2 tsp Kosher salt t/2 oz galangal (Thai ginger root) t/4 oz puya chilis (available in Mexican markets like Colima

in Bend) t/4 tsp shrimp paste

pepper 1 tsp herbes de Provence 1 tsp dried thyme

t/2 TBS fresh dill, chopped fine 6 Ritz crackers, crushed

4TBS fish sauce 3 TBS soy sauce 1 oz Thai pickled garlic 1 TBS liquid from Thai pickled garlic

2 oz palm sugar 8 TBS tamarind water (dissolve 1 oz tamarind paste in1 C

water and then strain) CURRY: 2 TBS rice bran oil 2 oz thinly sliced shallot

2 C water Sticky rice or steamed jasmine

2 tsp curry powder

/e C roasted unsalted peanuts

rice

for garnish 2 Ibs pork belly (skinless), diced Fried shagots for garnish 1 tsp turmeric powder

Heat duck fat in a stockpot, add the sliced pork belly, and cook until lightly caramelized. Add onions, carrots, celery and garlic and continue to cook until the vegetables are lightly caramelized. Add 2 TBS sherry vinegar to the pan and reduce the liquid to half the original amount. Add all the remaining ingredients except1 TBSsherry vinegar and cover for 30 to 40 minutes or until lentils are tender. Remove from heatandadd1 TBSsherry vinegar. Take 1 cup of the mixture and add it to a blender. Blend until smooth and then add it back into the remaining lentils in the stockpot. Simmer for an additional 5 minutes.

To make the paste:Pound the lemongrass with the salt in a mortar with a pestle until you have afibrous paste. Add the galangal and pound. Rehydrate the dry chilies andaddthem to the mortar and pound. Add the shallots and pound. Add the shrimp paste and pound. Fully incorporate each ingredient before adding the next. For the curry:Fry the paste in the rice oil in a large skillet over medium heat until fragrant. Addthe shallots and cookfor a few minutes. Addthe curry powder andturmeric and cookwhile stirring continuously until very fragrant, taking carenot to burn.Addthe pork belly, fish sauce,soysauceand the liquid from the pickled garlic. Increasethe heat andadd the palmsugar and cook until it's dissolved. Addthe tamarind water andthe 2 cups of water. Increase the heat to high andbring it to a boil, then reduce the heat to low. Cook ona To serve DuckConfit with Lentils, take '/4 cup of duck confit per person, low simmeruntil the pork istender. Addthe ginger andthe pickled garlic. and warm it in a saute pan. In individual bowls, place a spoonful of the Note:This is a very rich dish, best served as a part of a larger meal. If warm lentils, and top them with the duck confit in the center. Drizzle a there is a lot of rendered pork fat, feel free to skim it from the top after the small amount of extra virgin olive oil on top, add fresh cracked pepper, if curry is done. you like, and serve. To serve: Place rice in a bowl, and top with the curry. Garnish with — From ZydecoKitchen & Cocktails, fried shallot and peanuts. will bepaired with BoneyardBeer' s FunkyBunchAle

— FromSpork willbe paired with CruxFermentation Project's Pilsner

]p

Kastsi~deiGa rdens SP'RI~N iG SP'KC+IALSI Aeration & 7hatch

Crawl Continued from D1 Rockin' D a ves

p r o mises

Crabcake Jalapeno Poppers Wrapped in Bacon with Goat Cheese and Avocado paired with a cocktail the restaurant is

FREE FERTILIZER

creating called Oregon Spirits'

(April Only)

W hen you buy a ticket,you get a wristband, map and

Spiced Rum Punch. menu, which entitles youto visit

Spring Clean-up WEEKLY SERVICE

SPRING COLOR SALE61780 SE 27th Street • Bend ~visa 541 383 3722 ~C4I

T Rxe s Treat

any or all of the event's venues April27.Three spots are close together west of the Deschutes River, and 10 of them are walk-

able, right in the heart of downtown Bend (see map). While noshing, you'll feel good knowing that you're helping BCC feed the hungry, as they've done for the past nine years. "We

s erve a l most

500

meals every Sunday, and the number seems to be rising. It's not just homeless people. You don't have to be home-

a re d o n e ~

y our s el f ~

less to be hungry. Everyone Foodie Crawl is a crazy good is welcome. We feed a lot of deal. "You get 10 or 12 courses and seniors that have a home, but at the end of the month, when drinks for $65 versus the $250 food stamps and money are or $300 you'd normally spend. running out, our numbers It's a win-win. It's taking peoare way up. In a ddition to ple who can afford to eat really serving meals with our Feed weil, and helping people who the Hungry program, we put can't. I think it's great that we out extras, like cereals, chips come together as a community, and bread for them to take have fun, and we can all end as well," said Linda Heatley, up at the theater to have desBCC's executive director. sert and kick it up a little bit. As Last year, about 130 people chefs, we get to quit working, participated in Bend's Foodie have a drink with each other Crawl, raising about $10,000 for and the people we've been servBCC. This year, the nonprofit is ing," Flier said. hoping to sell 300 tickets. Steve and Cheri Helt, owners '%Te have so many great of Zydeco Kitchen & Cocktails restaurants here. Our idea is to and supporters of the small let the community enjoy it, so plate dining concept at their we can provide for others who previous Bend restaurant, 28, can't," said Heatley. told us they wouldn't miss the Dave Flier, owner of Rockin' chance to be a destination on Daves Bagel Bistro 8 Cater- the Foodie Crawl. "Our big thing is we feel ing Company, is participating in the Foodie Crawl for the the community gives a lot to third year. He'll be serving his us, and we want to give back. Crabcake Jalapeno Poppers at We're excited this year that Zydeco's Kitchen & Cocktails, Tony Lawrence of Boneyard 919 NW. Bond St. They're shar- Beer is pairing up with us. His ing the spaceso Foodie Crawl- Funky Bunch Ale will help cut ers don't have to drive ail over through the richness of our town. duck confit dish," Cheri Helt "The Foodie Crawl is near SBld. and dear to my heart. I love Jeff Hunt, chef/owner of the fact that the BCC is right Spork, is a newcomer to the around the corner from Rock- Foodie Crawl. He's planning in' Daves. I gave my first day on being at Spork on April 27 of sal es,alm ostfouryears ago, to visit with fellow foodies and to the BCC because I believe in serve his Burmese Pork Belly whattheydo.Theyfeedpeople, Curry. "We like doing these things. and that's what we do," said Flier. Ultimately, it's a good cause, and I'm happy we're in a posiFlier pointed out that the

tion where we can throw down a little here and there to help. I'I not rich, and I don't have the financial resources to do a whole lot, but it's great to have

something to offer and for me to be able to contribute person-

ally with my food," Hunt said. Two volunteers will be at each stop on the Foodie Crawl

to provide information about the programs at Bend's Community Center.

There will be a dozen or so silent auction baskets full of goodies to bid on at Liberty Theater.

Bill Keale and Downhill Ryder will play music while you eat dessert (if you saved room), and Worthy Brewing and Naked Winery will furnish some of thebeverages for the last stop of the evening. If you paceyourself just right, you can sip and nibble remarkable local food and drink and have memories of a fantastic

gastronomic experience while helping an important community resource. "We hope everyone will join us. By participating, you can help us feed the hungry all year.The Bend Community Center almost had to dose the

doors ayear and a half ago, but we have survived and we're to-

tallybacknow. The community made that possible, stepping up and donating and saying this is such a vital service," Heatley SRld.

— Reporter: ahighberger@ mac.com

Does bakingsodastop gasfrom beans? By Kathleen Purvis The Charlotte Observer

•A friend says I should •soak 2 pounds of white beans in water with /~ cup of baking soda to get rid of the trouble with gas. Is this worth dolllg. The results are mixed

A •• on whether adding baking soda, either to the soaking water or while cooking beans, will help. Some people notice a small improvement; other no-

COOK QLA

affect the texture, making the cooked beans mushy. tice no change. Soaking beans If you do add baking soda, in plain water and then chang- the amount your friend suging the water before cooking is gested is too large. Usually, just as likely to help. you only use /4 teaspoon bakThere is evidence that add- ing soda to a pound of beans. ing baking soda reduces some The best way to reduce the nutrients, particularly v i t a- problem is simply to eat more min B. Baking soda also can beans. People who eat beans make the beans taste saltier or regularly have the least troueven soapy, so they should be ble digesting them. rinsed very well if you use it. — Email questions to Adding baking soda also may kpurvis@ctmrlotteobserver com


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

F OO D

D3

Roberta's Pizza Dough Makes enough for two12-inch pizzas. Time: 20 minutes, plus at least 3 hours' rising. 153g "00" flour(1 C plus1TBS) Sgfineseasalt(1 tsp) (see note) 2 g active dry yeast (/4 tsp) 153 g all-purpose flour (1 Cplus 4 g extra-virgin olive oil (1 tsp) 1 TBS and 2tsp)

By Sam Sifton New Yorh Times News Service

NEW YORK — T h ere is

pizza dough in my refrigerator right now. I made it last night in about 20 minutes, 15 of which were spent reading a maga-

In a large mixing bowl, combine flours and salt. In a small mixing bowl, stir together 200 milliliters (about1 cup) lukewarm tap water, the yeast andthe olive oil, then pour it into flour mixture. Knead with your hands until well combined, approximately 3 minutes, then let the mixture rest for15 minutes. Knead rested dough for 3 minutes. Cut into 2 equal pieces and shape each into a ball. Place on aheavily floured surface, cover with a dampened cloth, and let rest and rise for 3 to 4 hours at room temperature or for 8 to 24 hours in the refrigerator. (If you refrigerate the dough, remove it 30 to 45 minutes before you begin to shape it for pizza.) To makepizza, placeeachdough ball on aheavily floured surface anduse your fingers to stretch it, thenyour hands toshapeit into rounds or squares. Top andbake. Note onflour:Finely miled Italian flour gradedas"00" canbe found online. Note onweightL.Measurementsfor dry ingredients aregivenby weight for greater accuracy.Theequivalent measurements byvolume are approximate.

zine while it rested. I'll bake it

tomorrow night under mozzarella, then put a small arugula

Pv

salad on top, an homage to the

Green and White pizza available at Roberta's in Brooklyn. A mericans c onsume

1

"

~

'

an

enormous amount of pizza. Running the numbers with market analysts and industry

spokesmen can set the mind to reeling. Those who track the businesssay pizza isa $40 billion industry in the United

— Adapted from Roberta's, Brooklyn

States, in no small part because 97 percent of us eat the stuff,

Melina Hammer/New YorkTimes NewsService

A homemade pizza is topped with an arugula salad.

Pizza Margherita

most of us regularly, to the tune of 2.1 slices a sitting. Most of that pizza comes

from chain restaurants. A lot

ery fee of $299. That's the high end of the

of it comes from independent

costspectrum. The recipes we

operators with afew ovens and are going to work with for this a high school kid delivering the exercise require only the oven pies in his mom's old Mazda. A most of us already have in our fair amount of it comes from homes. Additional cost: $0. the frozen foods aisle at the A pizza stone, which is the supermarket. surface upon which the pie is Very little pizza is made at cooked, costs around $40 at home, from scratch. most kitchenware stores and I am here to change that. I

online, and a

s teel version,

am here to say: You can make whichheats more quickly, costs pizzaathome. You can make perhaps twice that, but is still pizza at home that will be the

less expensive than a decent

equal of some of the bestpizzas available on the planet. With a minimal amount of planning and practice, you can get good at it, even if you are a relatively

frying pan or knife. You can easily cut costs, though, bybuying 6-inch-by-6-inch unglazed quarry tiles at your local building supply store for roughly $2

novice cook.

a tile. Six of these make a fine

Makes 2 servings. Time: 15 minutes, plus 1 hour to heat oven. 1 12-inch round of pizza dough, stretched 2/4 oz fresh mozzarella Extra-virgin olive oil

1 12-inch round of pizza dough, Extra-virgin olive oil stretched 2/4 oz fresh mozzarella 3 TBS tomato sauce (see note) 4 t o 5 basil leaves, roughly torn

Kosher salt /2 oz Parmesan, finely grated

2 handfuls baby arugula

Place a pizza stone or tiles on the middle rack of your oven and turn heat to its highest setting. Let it heat for at least an hour. Put the sauce in the center of the stretched dough andusethe back of a spoon to spread it evenly across the surface, stopping approximatelyi/s inch from the edges. Drizzle a little olive oil over the pie. Break the cheese into large pieces and place thesegently onto the sauce.Scatter basil leaves over the top. Using a pizza peel, pick up the pie andslide it onto the heated stone or tiles in the oven. Bake until the crust is golden brown and the cheese is bubbling, approximately 4 to 8 minutes. Note:In a foodprocessor, whiz together whole, drained cannedtomatoes, a splash of olive oil and sprinkle a of salt. Keepleftover sauce refrigerated.

Half s lemon, juiced

Place a pizza stone or tiles on the middle rack of your oven and turn heat to its highest setting. Let it heat for at least an hour. Break the mozzarella into small pieces and place themgently onto the stretched dough. Drizzle lightly with olive oil and a pinch of salt and scatter the Parmesanover the top. Using a pizza peel, pick up the pieand slide it onto the heated stone or tiles in the oven. Bake until the crust is golden brown and the cheese is bubbling, approximately 4 to 8 minutes. Meanwhile, put the arugula into a large bowl and dress it lightly with a splash of the olive oil, the lemonjuice and afurther pinch of salt, or to taste. When the pizza is done, put the dressed greens on top of the pie and serve immediately.

Yes, it may take a few tries cooking surface. You could get before your confidence soars. by with four. Whichever stone Your first attempts may be

Makes 2 servings. Time: 15 minutes, plus1 hour to heat oven.

The Qreen and White

— Adapted from Roberta's, Brooklyn

the pizzaonce more, making using gravity to help it stretch. sure it moves back and forth The top remained the top. The smoothly on the surface of the bottom remained the bottom. peel. Then open the oven door At approximately 12 inches and carefully slide the pie onto in diameter, Falco called it your stone, steel or tiles. ready to go. He slid the round Now close the door and back and forth on the floured watch what happens. The surface to make sure it didn't pizza is done when the edges stick. "That is certified for top- are a beautiful golden brown, ping," he said. and the sauce and cheese are Topping a pizza is tender bubbling nicely. Even at 500 work as well. You do not want degrees in a dodgy oven your to overload the pie. Doing so landlord should have fixed leaves it soggy, no matter the two years ago, it won't take heat of the oven. much more than four to five At home you should certify minutes.

— Adapted from Robe/ta's,Brooklyn

palms, rotating it each time,

or steel you use, preheat the

wan. There may be issues with the dough, or the toppings, or

oven at its highest temperature Roberta's has a wood-fired for at least an hour. oven. It also runs a number of the oven, or with the surface on Finally, you will need a piz- mobile wood-fired pizza ovens. which you cook the pie. But as za peel, the device that helps Anthony Falco, the bearded, laanyone who has ever eaten a transfer the pie to the hot oven. conic chef who was the restauchain pizza out of a box in a ter- A peel runs $20 or so if you rant's first pizza maker and rible hotel room far from home springfor a m etalone,lessfor now reigns as its official pizza can tell you, even when pizza is wood. You can easily just use a czar (code name Tony Calbad, it is actually pretty good. cutting board or the back of a zone), says that on a good day And pretty good is an excellent baking pan and spend nothing. Roberta's can serve something place to begin. on the order of 2,500 pies, all of

a mound ofdough tobecome a pizza is entrancing. He starts with his fingertips, spreading the dough out from its cen-

ter, gently, on a well-floured surface. "It's a living thing," he said of the dough. "It's your baby. Y ou don't want t o

b eat i t

up." He pushed down gently around the pie's perimeter, creThedough them cooked inwood heat, 60 ating the edge. He picked up Many home pizzamakers seconds a pie. But he has made the dough and lightly passed begin their journeys toward Roberta's pizzas all over the it back and forth between his the delicious with frozen dough country in residential ovens as from the supermarket, or with well, on stones and steels and fresh dough purchased from occasionally on or in cast-iron a local pizzeria. Good pizzas pans. "This dough works anyresult from both, but neither where," he said. is really a homemade pizza. It is superlative dough: thin

Getting started

The basics of pizza are simple. There is dough. There is topping. There is a hot oven. There is a surface in the oven on which you will cook the dough and the topping. There is a tool to transfer the uncooked pizza from your countertop to Homemade pizza starts with the oven, and to pull the finhomemade dough: flour,water, ished pie from the oven. yeast and salt. The total costs associated I have experimented with with all this can be minimal recipes for pizza dough for or gigantic, depending on years, varying the ratio of your frame of reference. Ma- flour to water, changing the

and pliant, tender and chewy, with excellent flavor. It calls for

a mixture of all-purpose flour and the finely milled Italian

flour graded as "00" — available at many more markets

rio Batali, the restaurateur and

flours, using different sorts of

ways online. Combined with

television personality, has a wood-fired pizza oven on his vacation property in Michigan. He imported it from Italy. You can buy a gas-fired pizza

yeast. For the last few months, I have been using the recipe developedby the team behind Roberta's, the Brooklyn restau-

salt and a mixture of water, olive oil and yeast, it rises into

soft pillows of dough that take well to gentle handling.

rant and lifestyle incubator that built its reputation on the merits

How to make a pizza

oven from Williams-Sonoma

for $6,795 and a flat-rate deliv- of its pizzas.

I p

I

I

'I

I

than you would think, and al-

Watching Falco encourage I

'

I

I

I

I

r

I '

'

I

I

r

I '

I

I

Addictive chocolate-coveredmatzo By Julie Rothman

RECIPE FINDER

The Baltimore Sun

Gilda Weinfeld from Pikes-

Looking for a hard-tofind recipe or cananswer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun,

ville, Md., said that last year

during Passover, an acquaintance sent her some home-

made chocolate-covered matzo. She said it was absolutely

501 N. Calvert St., Balti-

delicious, and when she called her friend to thank her for the

more, MD 21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.

gift she asked for the recipe — and her friend politely declined to give it to her. Not to worry, Gilda, there are plenty of good recipes for homemade chocolatematzo both online and in print. My go-to recipe for this holiday treat comes from "The Treasury of Jewish Holiday Bak-

I• •I•

This highly addictive dessert is great to make any time

of year.

• •

I

I

I

I

• Steven Catlett from Baltimore would like to have the

recipes for the crab cakes and creamed coleslaw that were

sold at the long-ago closed Haslingers take-out restaurant that was located in the

111 WAYS

shopping center at Hillen and Belvedere avenues.

To DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON

ing" by Marcy Goldman. It's cate arecipe she has lost for surprisingly simple to make, Twinkie cake. All she can reand her basic recipe lends it- member about it is that thebase self to plenty of variations. was made with split Twinkies.

NEEDANIDHLFOR HOW 10SPEND VOUR FREETIME? THISGUIDEHAS 111 IDEAS. L

Chocolate-Covered Matzo 1 C (2 sticks) unsalted butter or unsalted Passover margarine

Requests

• A lice M c K eehan f r o m Elkhart, Ind., is trying to lo-

4-6 unsalted matzo sheets

1 C firmly packed brown sugar / 4 C coarsely chopped

chocolate chips or semisweet chocolate

Preheat the oven to 375degrees. Line a largecookie sheet (or two smaller sheets) completely with foil. Cover the bottom of thesheet with baking parchment — ontop of the foil. This is very important because the mixture becomessticky during baking. Line the bottom of the cookie sheetevenly with the matzos, cutting extra pieces, asrequired, to fit any spaces. In a 3-quart, heavy-bottomed saucepan, combine the butter or margarine and the brown sugar. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until the mixture comes to a boil (about 2 to 4 minutes). Boil for 3 minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from heatand pour over the matzo, covering completely. Place thebakingsheet in the ovenand immediately reducethe heatto 350 degrees. Bakefor15 minutes, checking every few minutes to makesure the mixture is not burning (if it seems to bebrowning too quickly, removethe pan from the oven,lowerthe heat to 325degrees, andreplacethe pan). Remove from the ovenand sprinkle immediately with the choppedchocolate or chips. Let stand for 5 minutes, and then spreadthe melted chocolate overthe matzo. If using nuts, sprinkle ontop of melted chocolate. While still warm, break into squares or oddshapes. Chill, still in the pan, in the refrigerator until set.

WHEN TO LOOK POR IT: PUBUSHIIG TWQ HllTIONSAVEAR • Spring/Summer: April Fall/Winter: October (Dates to be announced)

Presenting the a rea's most comprehensive guide to places, events and activities to keep you entertained throughout the year. The Bulletin's 111 Ways to Discover Central Oregon is one of the most comprehensive visitor's guide in the Tricounty area. This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerceandother key points of interest including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to DeschutesCounty Expo Center visitors throughout the year.


D4 TH E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

H OME ck

A RDEN

Next week: Gardens to visit in Oregon

Starting seeds

ASK MARTHA

Continued from D1 We can satisfy that urge to play and to explore by starting seeds indoors. We have a good six to eight weeks before planting-out time. Depending on the

enceanin t iss rin,

s ow ouraira itte ove

weather and where you live in

the tri-county area, the planting-out time could be as late as the third week of June. No matter what the calen-

dar tells us, plants and seeds

"

can't read and will do their

thing when soil temperatures, air temperatures, sunlight and

-MARTHA STEWART

moisture are at their optimum

for seed germinahon or seedling growth.

inally, spring! You're p acking away t h e

F

Variety selection is the ma-

m nter

jor advantage of seed starting.

c o at s an d

success. Considering our short growing season, choose a va-

power-washing the deck. Maybe you're turning your spring-cleaning efforts inward, adding fresh juice to your diet or easing up on

riety with a maturity date of

the heavy stews. Now, what

between 65 and 75 days. To

about the air? As elemental as it is, many of us don't give what we breathe indoors much thought, assuming that if

Choosing the correct variety for ourdimate helps to ensure

compensate for the tempem-

ture swing of warm days and cool nights during the summer, add 14 days, which will bring the maturity date up to approximately 90 days. Choosing a

our homes are well cared

for, our air quality must be top-notch. But considering

tomato with a maturity time

of 100 days, then adding the 14 days would make that variety marginal unless you would cre-

that t h e

ate an environment that would

the top five environmental

maintain a higher more consis-

health risks, perhaps we

tent tempemture. Our cool soil

should pay more attention to our indoor atmosphere.

temperaturesarenotconducive to the germination of the direct seeding of warm weather vegetablessuch as tomatoes, peppers, cucumbers and summer squash, but they will do well going into the soil as seedlings with protection on some nights.

Here are some tips and easy modifications to help you breathe more easily.

What's in your air? The two main types of

ters and nurseries that is well worth the investment as it can

be used for years. Repurposed plastic "damshell" containers,

small yogurt containers or cottage cheese containers will also work.

Whatever you use must have drainage holes. I use a nail to

low at the American Acad-

emy of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology. "Keeping windows shut when your

ers should be sanitized by dipping them in a solution of I part bleach and 10 parts water and allowed to air dry. The seeding mix needs to be moist, and it is easier to do that

before you fill the containers. It will take awhile to moist-

en as the seeding mix is very light, but be patient — it is an important step. The containers

need to be filled almost to the top. This will help ward off a diseasecalled dampening off , which is evident when a growing seedling will all of a sud-

insulation, an d

vehicle exhaust that make Photos by Andy Tullis /The Bulletin

level. The cause is usually poor Some tips for seed-starting success: Moisten the seeding mix before you fill the containers, and fill the containers nearly to the top. Plant at /4 inch depth, which is the depth of a new eraser on a lead pencil. Be sure to label what you've planted.

a table fan set very low, or you

the air. There is no cure for the seedling, so pull it out and vow not to be so generous with the

watering. All you need to know is on

the seedpacket. Planting depth: '/4 inch is the depth of a new eraser on a lead

pencil. "Needs light to germinate" means do not cover the seeds.

Number of days to germinate: If the maximum time is 21 days, and theyhave been planted for

Resources • "The New Seed-Starters Handbook" by Nancy Bubel • Deschutes County Extension Service — garden publications: http:ll extension.oregonstate.edul deschutes/garden -publications • Seed starting schedule/ seed shelf life: http:Il extension.oregonstate.edul deschutes/sites/defaultlfilesl seed starting schedule .pdf

42 days and nothing has happened, you might as well start over.

orescentshop light suspended Days to maturity: the number from chains with S hooks so the of days to maturity from the lights can be moved up as the time the seedling is set out. plants grow would be the best Other hints as to spacing in solution. I made a light setup to the garden, soil temperature, fit a card table using PVC pipes optimum growing temperature and fluorescent lights. Artificial and moisture requirements lights are usuallyleft on 12 to 16 maybe offered. hours a day. The most favorable soil gerThe first set of leaves apmination temperatures are pearing is the rounded cotyin the range of 70-75 degrees. ledon leaves followed by the Containers could be set dose to true leaves that make the plant but not on a floor register or the recognizable as to the variety. hearth of a gas fireplace that is At the third or fourth set of true used daily, or you might want to leaves, the seedlings should consider investing in heat mats be prepared to meet the cold available at garden centers for cruel world of Central Oregon thatpurpose. Coverthe contain- through a process called harders with clear plastic to help re- ening off . The process starts tain heat and moisture. Remove several weeks before you plant the plastic when germination out to the garden. To start, set is present. Once the seeds have the seedlings outside in a prostarted to germinate, they need

and keep inyour home: Opt

Too wet?

f or low-VOC paint, air o u t

On the flip side, we need to monitor excess humidity in-

doors. "Overly moist air — 60 percent RH or higher — provides a breeding ground for dust mites, mildew and mold, all of which can trigger allergic reactions and asthma in susceptible individuals," Nish said. In extreme cases, elevated hu-

midity can even cause building materials to rot, compromising the structural integrity of your

house. Signs that your home is too humid indudecondensation on windows, mold spots on

walls and ceilings, and a musty odor. Air-conditioning and

test kits are available at most hardware stores.

proper ventilation can help low-

tected area that receives filtered

hours the plant spends outside.

Make sure to continue to monitor the watering as they will dry out more quickly outdoors.

Then finally after eight weeks of tending to your seedlings, planting day arrives. But even that process comes with some advance planning to make the process work properly. Irrigate the garden several days before planting so the soil is moist. Choose a doudy day or early in the day to transplant to the garden. The plant-

ing should be done before the heat of the sun and the wind can causeplant damage. Gently water after planting and be suretohave some frostprotec-

Desert orjungle?

o u t door moisture level.

pollutants like radon and

den topple over right at the soil

of cardboardfrom a cerealbox or anything else that will move

and floors from drying out.

Khatri says. First, be thoughtful about what you bring into

er the humidity. If levels remain high despite these steps, you pollen allergies flare up, usP roper humidity i s a n may also need a dehumidifier. ing a high-quality air puri- equally important (yet often fier with a HEPA filter and ignored) factor in maintaining Get potting washing your pets weekly healthy indoor air. For optiAfter a t w o -year s t udy, will help decrease the aller- mal health, you should aim N ASA compiled a l ist o f gens floating around your for a relative humidity, or RH, houseplants that help filter the home." between 40 and 50 percent, air and are effective at removThe list of indoor gas- according to Nish and the ing common household poleous pollutants is just as American Lung Association. lutants. Included are the easylong — things like building An i nexpensive instrument to-find and e asy-to-care-for materials, cleaning prod- that measures RH can help philodendron, peace lily and ucts, asbestos-containing you keep tabs on your home's spider plant.

punch out a series of holes in the recyded items. All contain-

can physically fan the area several times a day using a square

tion, but indoor air pollution poses health risks, too.

dry-cleanedclothes and lose the plastic bags, use nontoxic cleaning supplies, and throw out nearly empty cans of paint and solvents (which off-gas matter, such as pollen, dust, even when not in use). Allowdust mites, pet dander and ing fresh air in is also crucial mold spores, is the leading — crack a window whenevcause of indoor allergies. er you can. "In addition, ev"These common allergens eryone should test for radon, cause a range of problems, an invisible, odorless radiofrom the annoying runny active gas found in homes nose to the more serious al- throughout the U.S. that's lergic asthma," said Andy the second-leadingcause of Nish, M.D., an allergist in lung cancer in the country," Gainesville, Ga., and a fel- Khatri said. Affordable home-

Seeds should be started in-

improved with the addition of

Yasu+Junkovia New YorkTimes News Service

Many people take special precautions to avoid outdoor air poliu-

indoor air pollution are p articulate matter a n d gaseous pollutants — and chances are your home has both. In fact, particulate

doors in a good quality seed starting mix. Not potting soil or garden soil, both of which are too heavy to promote successful germination. There is a plethora of seed starting equipment available at garden cen-

air circulation and too much moisture. Air circulation can be

E n v i ronmental

Protection Agency lists indoor air pollution among

their way inside. "Exposure to these may lead to mild symptoms like dizziness and itchy eyes, and can cause long-term effects like asthma and cancer," said Sumita Khatri, M.D., a

Be your own purifier

Too dry?

"There's a saying in yoga:

"Although w e as s o ciate 'Breathe with your nose, eat humidifiers with winter, you with your mouth,'" said Carla

should switch yours on when-

Stangenberg,the director of Jaya Yoga Center, in Brookdips below 40 percent, regard- lyn, N.Y. "It's because when less of the season," Nish said. you breathe through your ever the RH level in your home When it's below that level, he

CASA

Label your containers the

first day you do the seeding, and carry that label or make a new one when you plant to the

garden. Keep a garden journal listing variety, where you purchased the seed and the plant-

ing schedule. I can't tell you how many times when gardeners have complained about fail•

that they have no idea. Could

it be possible they planted the wrong variety for our area? Just a thought! If you don't

w ant to keep a journal record, either written or electronic, at

a strong source of light, which is sun for a fewhours a day. Grad- next year. more critical than the soil tem- ually i ncrease the a mount — Reporter: douville@ perature. Grow lights or a flu- of sun the plant gets and the bendbroadband.com

— Questions of general interest can be emailed to ms!Ietters@ marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart.com.

a

• •

you hear the frost warning on the news.

least put the seed packets in a plastic zip-top bag for reference

a a

len and dust, and the air is warmed and moistened on its way to your lungs — it's like a free, portable air purifier and humidifier in one."

a

-

Court Appointed Speaol Advocotes

tive measure in mind before

ures and I have asked what variety they planted, they answer

nose, the cilia inside trap pol-

pulmonologist at the Cleve- adds, people may experience land Clinic who sits on the dry eyes, noses and throats, board of the American as well as more-frequent noseLung Association. bleeds, and the likelihood of I t's not al l d oom a n d sinus infections may increase. gloom, however; while A dequately moist a i r a l s o some of these pollutants keeps flu and cold viruses at may seem unavoidable, bay (they thrive in low humidithere are easy ways to ty), prevents dry skin and hair, minimize your exposure, and protects wooden furniture

Register online at

„,~; Li htofho erun.or

-


TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

MOre EaSter deCOratiOnS, continue dfromPageOt

Photos by Linda Turner Griepentrog / For The Bulletin

Carrotgarland What you'll need: Orange cardstock, 12-by-12 inches Green cardstock, 12-by-12 inches Note: Onesheet of cardstock will make eight carrots and f2leaf sets. Stapler and staples Large-eye sewing needle Heavy-duty sewing thread Scissors or paper cutting tool Pinking shears (optional)

Photos by Linda Turner Griepentrog / For The Bulletin

Bunnytreat dags

Make it: 1. Cut the orangecardstock into1 1/2-by-12-inch strips for carrots. If desired, use pinking shears to trim the edges into a zigzagshape. 2. Cut the greencardstock into1-by-12-inch strips. 3. Fold the greenstrips in half, then bring that half point to match each strip end, forming two leaves. 4. Fold the orangestrip in half, right sides together. Insert the folded leaves into the fold and staple in place. Tip: To make the staple less visible, use a permanent orange marker to color the staples before using them. 5. Open out the orangestrip and place theends wrong sides together forming the carrot shape with the leaves at the top. Staple the endstogether. 6. Using heavy thread, insert the hanger through the folded leaves. Spacethe carrots as desired to form the garland.

What youneed(for onebng): Paper or plastic treat bag, anysize Pink scrapbook paper for ear liners /s-inch-wide ribbon, 12-15 inches Craft glue t/s-inch paper punch Make it: 1. Fold the bag in half lengthwise (but do not crease) and trim out the upper center to make the ear shapes. 2. Punch two holes aboutt/s inch down from the cut-out section, near the base ofeachear. 3. Cut two pink paper shapes to fit inside the ears. Glueone earliner to each ear. (Note: If you want to add a bunny face to the bag, do it now using markers.) 4. Fill the bagwith treats, being careful not to over-stuff. 5. From the backside, thread the ribbon through the holes in both bag layers. 6. Tie the ribbon in abow, gently pulling in the bag upper edge. Becareful not to pull too tightly, or the bag may tear. Trim the ribbon ends.

L

"P.

i

'i

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

A handmade paper carrot garland can be a fun way to decorate for Easter.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Bunny treat bags are whimsical and fun to make.

Find It All

Potato-munc in est? Here'ssomeste s to ta e ByBarbara Damrosch

a toes, and the more you pick, manure-based f ertilization the more you'll reap. program have been shown to — Barbara Damrosch's latest have higher yields. Seaweed, book is "The Four Season Farm either fresh or in liquid fertil- Gardener's Cookbook"; her website izerform, isalso greatforpois www fourseasonfarm.com. tatoes. Well-grown, vigorous plants will net a decent crop i cally. Potatoes fed w it h

Special To The Washington Post

The common potato is not

so common inhome gardens, and here's why. First, people who have never dug fresh new potatoes don't know how good they taste. Second, their

first crop might have been wiped out by Colorado potato

even after defoliation by the

again. This much-studied pest

. I

I

I

PROMPT DELIVERY

541-389-9663

temperatures and retain mois-

ture. Accordingly, yields were greaterand they required less spraying. Exclude the pest with floating row covers that are se-

to depend upon this unilat-

after planting. Check plants

eralapproach for managing this pest and others." And to

often in case some overwinter-

cured at the soil surface right

little avail. From Paris Green to DDT, to the highly toxic

Thinkstock

Peoplewho have never dug fresh new potatoes don'tknow how good they taste. vive to breed. We'd do well to

Crop rotation, always worth

heed Casagrande's thought that "the solution may require

doing, is most effective on a

t h a t a reevaluation of many prac-

the beetle acquired this power through its coevolution in

tices throughout agriculture." Meanwhile, p r ofessional Mexico w it h p o t ato-related growers continue to play pohost plants, which were full of tato beetle hopscotch, substinatural toxins. In addition, our tuting new poisons for banned overeagerblanketing ofcrops ones, or alternating one spray with poisons has actually en- with another of a different couraged resistance, because class. Many use safer, more only resistant individuals sur-

I

Mulch the plants with straw.

w rote e ntomologist R . A . Casagrande in 1985, "resulted in the first large-scale use of insecticides on an agricultural crop ... influencing generations of agriculturists

S cientists t h e orize

BarhTurfSoilecotu

Such a mulch was shown, in a Virginia trial, to temper soil

was first seen not in Colorado but in Iowa. "This insect,"

neonicotinoids of the present day, the beetle has developed resistance to every chemical employed to destroy it — even the popular Spinosad formulations, created by fermenting a natural soil bacterium.

TheBulletin

FIIP PN fhl.'lVIQ Slik

beetle, if it occurs when they are mature enough.

beetles and they've never tried

Online

bendbulletin.com

sustainable tactics as w ell.

large scale, with miles, not

feet, between crops. Timing plantings helps, too, but because this prolific little crea-

ture can have three broods per year, with eggs, larvae and adults all occupying a plant at once, it's a finicky process. Here's what a home gardener can do:

Grow thevegetable organ-

ing beetles have emerged from the soil. Hand-pick. La r ge-scale growers use vacuum rigs and flamers to pick pests, but a small plot is easily managed by hand. Look for striped adult beetles that emerge in spring and knock them into a can of soapy water. Rub off any bright orange patches of eggs they've laid on the • • undersides of leaves. Squish or drown the plump, pinkish

901.0 Compulsory Oregon State

larvae that hatch from these

•'

Gymnastics Meet Hosted by Umpqua Valley Gymnastics Sponsored by Wildlife Safari

Friday, April 95 - Sunday, April 97

eggs and do the most damage. Keep checking throughout

Douglas County Fairgrounds, RosebursI, Oregon More information: (544} 67g-3534

summer. You won't get them

Roseburtl hotel and visitor information: www.roseburt3areachamber.ortl

all, but greatly reducing the numbers will save your pota-

=

-


D6

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

'ar o're oneasa s ow? ou etc a. TV SPOTLIGHT

Actor Billy Bob Thornton attends the FX network's

ARGO

ByNealJustin Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

When Ethan Coen finished

tststs

"Fargo," the TV v ersion, he

mumbled his initial reaction: Yeah, good.

in New York. Thornton

"When Ethan says, 'Yeah,

stars as

good,' he's over the moon," said Billy Bob Thornton, who

Lorne Malvo, a mysterious drifter determined to

has worked with the Minne-

sota-raised Coen brothers on three films and stars as a mys-

create chaos wherever he

dl

terious, manipulative drifter in the Bemidji, Minn.-set drame-

travels.

f It R e

dy debuting tonight at 10 on the FX network.

Greg Allen / Invision /The Associated Press

The Coens have every reason to be ecstatic. The 10-part series, shot in Calgary, is as hilarious and harrowing as the 1996 thriller that earned them their first Oscar nominations

and put them on the map as major Hollywood players. "'Fargo' is one of the American Film Institute's 100 greatest American movies and, re-

The pilot never made it to air. markably, this new 'Fargo' fills ed him with a snow globe feaBut Littlefield, now an indethose big snowshoes," said FX turing Marge bent over bloody pendent producer, never threw president John Landgraf, who snow next to a flipped-over car. out the snow globe. He found previously brought "Rescue But then Littlefield got cold himself staring at it three years occasion,the creators present-

Me," "Justified" and "Louie" to feet.

the network. "It's one of the best

things we've ever done." It took a heckof an effort.

"The script was good, but it was a network television ver-

sion of an iconic and brilliant film and my fear was we would film's release, Bruce Paltrow disappoint the audience," he ("St. Elsewhere") and Robert said. "I passed." Palm ("Law & Order: Special CBS decided to give it a go Victims Unit") pitched a series and shot a version directed by adaptation to then-NBC pres- Kathy Bates and starring a ident Warren Littlefield, who pre-"Sopranos" Edie Falco as In 1997, just a year after the

Levesque) asks Elijah (Daniel Gillies) for permission to celebrate a traditional feast day publicly with her coven. After disagreeing with Monique (Yasmine Al-Bustami) about what the ancestors want from them, Genevieve reveals her plan to increase the witches' power. Klaus (Joseph

— Warren Littlefield, producer

they love and that are in their ed in reprising her Oscar-win- wheelhouse," Thornton said. "That gets more rare every ning role. In fact, none of the charac- day." ters from the movie appear in To be dear, the Coens did not the series, although Martin write or direct any of episodes, Freeman's much put-upon in- but as executive producers they surance salesman and Allison made some pivotalsuggestions, Tolman's plucky deputy sheriff like hiring their longtime castwill certainly feel familiar. ing director, Rachel Tenner. "What they said to (writer) The biggest twist in the TV version comes courtesy of a Noah (Hawley) was,rWe're not stranger named Lorne Mal- big fans of imitation. This is vo, who's determined to create kind of strange for us because chaos wherever he travels. The we feel like you've channeled us,'" Littlefield said. "And I part seemed tailor-made for Thornton, who hasn't appeared think Noah may have said, 'So regularly on a TV series since am I the third Coen?' And they a supporting turn in the mid- said, 'No.'" Dormand, who wasn't interest-

'90s on the John Ritter sitcom "Hearts Afire."

quickly signed up. To mark the Police Chief Marge Gunderson.

8 p.m. on(CW), "TheOriginals" —Genevieve(Elyse

"The world of television has changed. Cable really embraces where this could live."

upfront premiere screening of "Fargo"

AWts

watching the first episode of

TV TODAY

Morgan) suspectsElijah hasan ulterior motive for restoring their home to its former glory. Phoebe Tonkin also stars in the new episode "The Big Uneasy."

9p.m.on29,"Marvel'sAgents of S.H.I.E.L.D." —With Col. Glenn Talbot (Adrian Pasdar) in pursuit, Coulson (Clark Gregg) and the team find an unlikely hiding place, where they uncover some secrets about S.H.I.E.L.D. that could destroy them all in the new episode "Providence." 9 p.m. on 7, "The Address"-

Seven scoreand10 yearsago, President Abraham Lincoln made a speech of about 270 words that continues to inspire. This new special explores the history and importance of the Gettysburg Address via its impact on a group of students preparing to recite it.

Littlefield and Hawley insist that if there's life beyond these

''When I was coming up, if you went to television from

10 episodes, they'll start fresh with new characters — the

same approach used in FX's wrong. You might as well be "American Horror Story." But doing 'Hollywood Squares,"' the setting will remain rural film, it meant something was he said. "But now it's actually

9:01 p.m.on58,"Abouta Boy" —Fiona (Minnie Driver) volunteers to run Marcus'(Benjamin Stockham) class project, a society modeled on Dickensian London, but he's unhappy with the lowly position she gives him. After getting a sizable royalty payment, Will (David Walton) takesMarcus shoppingand plans a party to impress Sam (guest star Adrianne Palicki) in the new episode "About a Slopmaster."

Minnesota.

"I think there is something ago and decided to try again. a feather in your cap to be on a "The world of television has great television show." really compelling about the changed," he said. "Cable realIt didn't hurt that Thornton region and the Coen brothers' ly embraces wherethis could would once again be associat- style of storytelling, which is live." ed with the Coens. He starred not plot-driven, but is both dark FX was interested — with in their films "The Man Who and comic," Hawley said. "I've Wasn't There" and "Intolerable already started planning a secone caveat: No Marge. Executives were concerned Cruelty" as well as "Bad Santa," ond season where I'll get to tell that audiences would be disap- which they produced. a whole other story. Until I run "I think they're successful out of those, I think it's a really pointed if the part was filled by anyone other than Frances Mc- because they stick to things fun challenge."

10 p.m. on 2 9, "Celebrity WifeSwap" — In the season

A users on't itasingestereo pe tionship with a woman who scored

15 out of 15 on your

friends who were involved with

aware of her black- abusers. Gay and lesbian centers ofouts and outrageous fer counseling for this. LGBTpeople

list. We knew it was a

toxic relationship, but he couldn't see that. The night he came

alcohol and marijuana. I became

DFP,R

ABBY

to us for help, battered

and bloody, I finally took a stand. It took six months to

get her out of his life. My son was ashamed to be a battered man, and she had told him that men who call 911 go to jail. Itkepthim from calling. Please, Abby, help to change that. If you use this, please keep me anonymous. He thinks I'm an "interfer-

ing mom," but at least he's not being abused anymore.I love him and miss him terribly. — Interfenng Mom

DearMom: I'm glad you wrote so I can emphasize that abusers can be

behavior just before our weddlIlg.

face the same problems as straights

I fmally left after

— Mike in Daytona

Dear Abby:I spent four years in a committing a crime relationship before I realized I was in response to her physical abuse, being abused. My lady friend pushed chronic infidelities, psychological for a lifelong commitment within a cruelty and pathological intoxica- month of our meeting, was jealous tion. Please urge men to report their and controlling, shut my friends out, abusers,file charges and fl ee bad cursed and hit me on more than one situations! I had no way of knowing occasionand,whenIprotested,she'd what lay ahead for me back then. say she was "just trying to get my Do you have adviceforotherm en attention," or "I only got what I decontemplating marriage to a pretty served."WhenI finallytoldherI was party girl? Today I'm happily mar- leaving, she threatened to kill me. ried to a deeply beautiful and noble Please inform your male readers woman, and grateful to have found they can gethelp from a skilledtherher. apist or counselor by calling the Dotwo years to avoid

— Set Free in North Carolina

members of both sexes, from every Dear Set Free:I think you've stateconomic level and sexual orienta- ed it well. All I can add is that men tion. I received a TON of mail about this:

who suffer physical abuse at the

hands of a partner should go to an emergency room for treatment so

Dear Abby:Thank you for induding both "he and she" in the warn- their injuries can be documented,

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014:This yearyou often get into situations where you encounter a conflict of ideas andactions. You will learn how to handle this type of collision,

and you'll comeupwith compromisesasa result. You often wonder which voice to listen to. Whether your impulsiveness or your logic dominates will be your call. If you are single, you could Stars showthe kind meet someone of ""'yy'"""'" ** * * * D ynamic interestafter June. Do not rush out tomeetsomeone; ** * Average rather, beyourself ** So-so and trust that the right person will come along. If you are attached, the two ofyou seem to get each other fired up. Youalso act as if you were newlyweds. You will smile when you look back at this year. SCORPIOis as intense as you are, but he or she is more secretive.

do.

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

many different results. You might want to manipulate a situation involving a financial matter. You could have difficulty coming to an agreement with others, as they seem to think they have abetter route. Tonight: Relax all you want.

CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You could be in for quite a surprise. Where you might haveanticipated a level-headed interaction with a boss or supervisor, you could run into a last-minute problem. Your imagination will help you find the right path through this present maze. Tonight:Add insom enaughtiness.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * You are full of energy and ready to meet a challenge headon; however, someone else likely won't be willing to do the same. Becareful, as words could ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * * The Full Moon triggers some high be exchanged and afull-blown argument drama. Normally, you would choose not to might ensue. Tonight: Do not allow a rift to continue. get involved, but right now you might feel cornered. A friend will come to the rescue. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) Letthis person know how much youap** * * You suddenly might be more preciate him or her. Tonight: Enjoy dinner willing to take a risk. You could feel prestogether. sured to go oneway or the other with a financial situation. Allow someone else TAURUS (April 20-May20) to share more of what he or shedesires. *** Focusongetting thejobdoneand Be flattered by this person's vulnerability. accomplishing whatever you want. PresTonight: Catchup ona pal'snews. sure could come from a touchy situation that is not being resolved easily. You would LIBRA (Sspt. 23-Oct.22) be wise to go with the flow and not get ** * * Use the morning for pursuing caught upinsomeoneelse'sissue.Toany matter that is close to your heart. You night: Join a friend for dinner. might not be getting the exact results you GEMINI (May21-June20) desire, but the Force is with you. A partner ** * Your playful personality draws in could trigger you in anargument. Let your

mestic Abuse Helpline for Men and Women at 888-7HELPLINE (888-

743-5754) in the U.S. and Canada. The website is DAHMWorg. — Professional Man in Atlanta — Write to Dear Abb)/at dearabb)tcom or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

imagination rock and roll. Tonight: Make it your treat.

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

** * You might have difficulty getting going, but once you do, you could be a force to behold. Delay an important decision until later in the afternoon, when your imagination and creativity merge. Listen to feedback. Tonight: Add more romance to your life.

Hofmann, partner of actor Daniel Baldwin, trades homes with Halima Jackson, wife of musician Jermaine. While both

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • I/(ovie times are subject to change after press time. t

Dear Abby:I read your Jan. 8 col- ing signs of abusers. My second then file a formal complaint and end umn about the warning signs of an marriage was a sad and unhealthy the relationship. abuser. Would you use your influ- rebound affair. My ex was attracDear Abby:Gay people need to ence to say that men are also victims tive, talented and host to multiple read those warning signs because of abuse? addictions — risky sexual encoun- abusers abound in the gay comMy son was in a three-year rela- ters with men and women, cocaine, munity, too. I have gay and lesbian

premiere, actress Isabella

MOVIE TIMESTODAY I

I

families are in showbusiness,

I

their lives couldn't be more different. Baldwin, Hoffman and their son live in a modest Hollywood Hills home, while the Jacksons' dwelling ishugeand lavishly furnished. It's their lifestyle differences, though, that make for good television.

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • BADWORDS(R)7:30,9:55 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) Noon, 3:15, 3:30, 6:25, 9:30, 9:50 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLIDER 3-D (PG-13) I2:15, 6:45 • CAPTAINAMERICA: WINTER SOLDIER IMAX3-D (PG13) 12:30,3:45,7, IO:05 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 12:05, 3:20, 6:30, 9:40 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 12:45, 3:50, 7:15, 9:55 • GOD'S NOTDEAD(PG) 1:25, 4:25, 7:10, 10 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 12:55, 4:15, 7:05, 9:35 • MR.PEABODY 8 SHERMAN (PG)12:35,3;05,6 • MUPPETSMOSTWANTED(PG)12:10, 2:55, 6:10, 9:10 • NOAH (PG-13)12:20, 3:25, 6:50, 10:10 • OCULUS(R)I:30,4:30,7:40, IO:I5 • THE RAID 2(R) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:40,10 • RI02(G) 1,3:40,6:20,9 • RIO23-D (G)1:15,3:55, 6:35, 9:15 • SABOTAGE (R) 9:05 • SOMETHINGWICKED(R) 1:10, 4:05, 7:20, 9:45 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 11:45a.m., 3 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •

I

10:01 p.m. on 6, "Person ofIn-

terest" — Reese(Jim Caviezel) poses as a Secret Service agent to protect a congressman in this new episode. He's not just any congressman;he ma y holdthe key to stopping Decima's plans

to bring asecondMachineonline in "Death Benefit."

Ct Zap2it

t

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • HER(R)9 • POMPEII(PG-l3) 6 • After7p.m., shows are2f and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guadian. • J

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • ERNEST 8CELESTINE(PG) 3:30 • PARTICLEFEVER(no MPAArating) 8:30 • "Low // Clear"screens af 6 tonight as part of the Oeschutes Public L/b/ar)/system's ANovel idea. I

I

Plae Well, Retire Well

775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevalioncapilal.biz

~

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 3:45, 6:45 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 4:15, 7:15 • NOAH(PG-13)4:30, 7:30 • RI02(G)4:15,6:30

-."'349 HgsoN

r//tcRs1308/tt/r Large oven, splltsaver top

TV.APPLIANCE

SAGITTARIUS (itiov.22-Oec.21)

** * * A meeting in the morning will provide you with more than one great idea to

get you to aspecific end. Honorachange, but know that you don't need to commit to that course. If you relax, you will be able to tell the trees from the forest. Tonight: Get some extra R andR.

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 6:15 • DRAFT DAY (PG-13) 6:30 • THE GRAND BUDAPESTHOTEL(R) 7 • NOAH(PG-13)6 • RIO 2 (G) 5

Are your hearing aids working properly?

GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * Others naturally gravitate toward you. You might be in asituation where you will want to assume abigger role. Evaluate the time and cost of taking on another commitment. Clearly, you know what you want. Tonight: Hang out with your friends.

AQUARIUS (Jan.20-Feb.18)

** * Make a point to take the high road.

Misunderstandingsseemto be happening out of the blue. You might be facing some extreme feelings when trying to decide which way to go. Excitement seems to arrive in the most unexpected manner. Tonight: Could be alate one.

PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * You have a unique ability to work through any problem. A discussion needs to happen on aone-on-one level. Try to make time in the morning, when you tend to be more relaxed. By late afternoon, detach and take anoverview of recent events. Tonight: Use your imagination. © King Features Syndicate

H N CK

30"Range

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (PG-13) 4:05, 7 • DIVERGENT (PG-13) 6:50 • MUPPETSMOST WANTED (PG)4:20 • NOAH (PG-13)3:30, 6:30 • OCULUS(R) 5:05, 7:20 • RI02(G) 5,7:10 •

Cau

Beltone 541-389-9690

We will clean and check your hearing aids for FREE,

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • CAPTAINAMERICA:THEWINTERSOLDIER (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • RI02 (G)6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

regardless of make or model.

FREE

, BATTERIES, Limit one percustomer. I


THE BULLETIN

TUESDAY, APR 15, 2014

tl

p

JI

®:::;/,

p JJ rv

I

I

.

e

I

I

.

e

(hemgr Drier. Ckatrrr. Herr/r/tirra /

TACOGRANDE

FAMILYSIZE .@ S OFF

Chem-Dry of Central Oregon ServingDeschutes,Crook &Jeff ersonCounties•IndependentlyOwned& Operated

Perfectfor Ceramic,Porcelain, Slate, GraniteandTravertine

ANY FAMILY SIZE PIZZA!

r

I

off regular price

LARGE

o IIFF

Your Choice

I t's Back !

• Ojginal Crust

OurOriginal ~ QSatsa and Refried Beans, Real Mozzarella & Che hee ses, Mixed Onions,

Tile, Stone I Qrout Cleanlnl I Sealinl

• Stuuu, Crust

M l uRSS-1574 • Resiglontial k Commercial

• deLITE Crust

Offer valid with coupon only. Not valid with other offers. Minimums apply. Payment due at time of service. Expiration date: April 30, 2014

Choose from Beef or Chicken! Oiler ExpiresS/ts/tt Coupou Required. Not validwith other oaers

Onernxpiress/ts/u • Coupon Required teotvalidwithother oilers

P

g te.nf>x jrg

I

I

Open to the public-every Thursday

I NEWQAME plipglIAM STARTINQ

IISgp

Starter packonlyS21(2BImls) CARNg I • Increaseil Payouts I AP I. 2g14 •TwoProgressivegameswithS250ILS500Payout gg5N® I I I

Minimum Buy-In S10

Free BonanzaGamo Shoot with this coupon

(Mustinc luderegulargamepackandeach

I

player must have a minimum t/uy in)

L

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

~

I I

~

~

~

~

l

~

~

~

~

~

a •

'S Ih

See back of this couponfor full details. Doesnotapplyfo the Paslini SundaySupper.

Coupon expires April 30, 2014

~

l.

I

Limit o ne coupon Per Player ~

4.

Old I' Mill

sa

u

I I I

I

I

• Includes upto 5 qts. Blendedsynthetic oil • Top off fluids • 21point inspection

I

I

DIESEL! NIURRRY&HOLT

$~

95

ytNJ

Incl u des up to

a

10 qts. oil

,- SOL AT U B E. with Solar Powered Ni ht Li ht

I Great seleetiea.

5 41-3 8 2 - 2 2 2 2

G r e at Seruiee. Gr e a t ieieiao

a

e

SERVICE HOURS: M-F7:45am to 5:30pm w

I

t

G

' 2'0'/'.or~r'=' ".-„"=„""

541-706-9390

IAERA TIOfQNILilDE-TH ATCHING >,' ''' 'll".;IPpus

Serving Central' Oregon; for Over 20 Years

1-800-STEEMER. I stanleysteemercom

Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Call for details.

• RY COHSI|EHMEHTSWAHTED We Do The Work... You Keep The Cash!

-i

a

:•

I

a . •

Os

SK' ®)

• s ,

FREE!

Second plantmust beequal or lesser value.

Curc//4/cf

/tr//c/t/P k r /i t 84 1 . 3 8 3 . 8888 I

20202 Powers Road, Bend

a•• I• .

I

,GET ONE

Free Advertising. I

tFiREE fertilizer

Expires 5/5/I 4

HOUSEPLANT

We Take Trade-INs!

/-

r

BUY ONE

I

On-site credit approval team, website presence. ~

I

. i;"b."Askaboug

Cleaning Completed by: 5/5/14

iSj

•- •

COtt

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING

B wl

Lamu R. Lamdseape Maimteaanee

CARPET i UPHOLSTERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

STML Y STE MER —-

Cj G L

3 ROOMS 5 ROOM S 'l23 'l95 Cleaning Completed by: 5/5/14

Valid thru June 30, 2014 (Not Valid during Parking Lot Sale) Limit 2 per Customer • '

'

's

3 Rooms Cleaned

899

II

WithCoupon. RoomisConsidered250Sq.Ft. Expires 4/30/2014

Behind Bank ofAmienc on 3rd Street in Bend 1230 NE 3RD ST

I

BW04 14

2 Rooms Cleaned

Roszak's

876 WithCoupon.RoomisConsidered 250Sq.Ft. Expires 4/30/2014

541-382-3173

BW0 414

Whole House Cleaning

nsss-"

with purchase oflwo beverages

'-

Cleaned

WithCoupon. Room isConsidered250Sq.Ft. Expires 4/30/201 4 BWO414

notvalidbackpagespedalsor other promotional offers. Expires5/5/14

Fish House LUNCH 11:30 — 2:30, MON —FRI DINNER 4-9, MON-SAT

SEE OTHERSIDE FOR DAILY BACK PAGE SPECIALS

:Qi i p with purchase oftwo beverages Notvalid backpagespedalsor other promotional offers. Expires 5/5/14


I

8 I

COUPONS uSPECIALOFFERS ALWAYS AVAILABLE ONLINE:

u

Love at gg

ChelIIPry.

Like us on Facebook!

Papa Murphy'8 Pizza

QJ

Drier. Cleaner. Healrhier.a

Join our e-club at

How clean is your tile? Dirt and grime begin to absorb into the pores of grout. Over time, the grout coloring becomes uneven which makes the entire floor look worn and dirty. Call Chem-Dry today and let our professional technicians extract the dirt and grime from your tile and stone surfaces. Our process also seals your tile and grout to resist mold, mildew and dirt. Don't forget, we also clean carpet, area rugs & upholstery tool

TAKE 'N' BAKE PIZZA

I

O

NE 3 r d S t Rev e re

SW tot h & Highland

(541)

(541)

{541)

G"

Old Mill District — Next to REI

Must be18 or older toplay (no oneunder I 8 permitted in bingo hall) Doors open at 4:30pm Games start at 6pm, finish about 9:30pm

I'll)tIIIIl.coM

'-'0-S O LA I 3

I

i541)

www.bendeinsiodB e.orB

375 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend, OR 97702 541.749.1060

(541)

93129 BoydAcres Bood,Bend 541-388-7438

aw,

Doesnotapplyto the Paslini SundaySupper.Validin Bendonly. Pleasehonor your serverwith a gratuity basedon the amountbeforediscount. Offerexpires4/30/14.

' •

PRINEVILLE M ADRAS NE Third St SW H wy gy Near Les Schwab & Bard Lane

BEND ELKSLODGE ¹1871 BINGO

Validanydayoftie week.Bringinthiscouponto redeem.Mustbuytwo regularly pricedentreesandtwo beverages to receive$7discount. Limitonecouponpertable. Cannotbecombinedwith anyotheroffels, discounts,orspecials.

' I

I•

t

S outh Hwy gy & Murphy Rd &

X A. S X' L X L P w s T w R I w

S sm

447-5999 475-1555 39 2-6767 399-7272 649-7272

CD

Serving Deschutes, Crook & Jefferson Counties • Independently Owned & Operated

I

BEND SOUTH BEND NORTH R EDMOND

~]5p

54 I -388-7374 • Residential & Commercial

aw %

'

I t

I

Chem Dry -o f' Central Oregon

www.papamurphya.oom

Foodandbeveragesavallableforsale No outside food orbeveragesallowed in the BingoHall

e e ' ' '

m

ae

U B E.

s

Wax Plus Detail

with Solar Powered Night Light

Bring Sunshine into Your Livin S ce •

.

I •

I

We are the BEST: Certified Installers 10 Year Warranty Licensed, Bonded, Insured Highest Performance Guaranty

I3

- , 'NURINflY&HOLT '' ~ g" ~ IBIII

~wi)1)

I

I •

-:4:-.soL

T U B E.

54 1

e J.L. eei t

I

I

I

* Mowing Services * Lawn Reseeding

-

* De-thatching * Aeration " ;, *Fertilization

' If, ~

' ll* Spring & Fall tIrpCIean upll III g>* Trimming ~t *Bark Installation * Top Dressing

Serving Central Oregon B fo r o v e r 20 Years

I

SERVIC E HOURS: M-F 7:45am to 5:30pm

I I I

I I

I

I

r

IO schedule AEI, Ifu r ulSEASON MOWINO SENUICEI; t'I" t'

I I

One couponperhousehold. Withthis coupon. Not valid withanyother discounts. Expires4/30/I4.

Cull lo Ilaii,'. „•

BEYOND CARPET CLEANING CARPET i UPHOLSTERY i TILE&GROUT i HARDWOOD

541-706-9390 1-800-STEEMER. I stanleyateemercom

aca

l" If"d/ft" / i",:l'Irtrt'l

I

I

Cmta

'

I I

Caixa

• •

CompleteLandscape Maintenance ' ,,

I

J

Lasau rS'LLuudseape Mahateuauee

Commercial tII Residentialg;,,~tI„,, tr

-3 8 2 -2 2 2 2

I I I I

L

ww.solatubelen acom I

I

I

Includes: Wash and Machine Wax eVacuum Interior • Clean Glass TreatDash • Consoles and Door Panels • Clean Door Jams and much much more.

I

I I

Qg ~gy Q

Combined Living areas, L-shaped rooms, and rooms over 300 sq ft are considered two areas. Baths, halls, large walk in closets, and area rugs are priced separately. Minimum charges apply. Cannot combine with other offers. Residential only. Must present coupon at time of service. Valid at participating locations only. Certain restrictions may apply. Can for details.

Sa

Cascade Garden Center Floral Designs caters to the discerning customer, offering high quality products as well as custom design specifically created to each unique order.

Your Service R Re air Head uarters I

I

Offering an array of products and servicesincluding loose cut blooms, Q„, fresh arrangements, custom orders, commercial accounts and weddings.' .Please browse our beautiful fbral arrangements and feel free to call oe mailif you have any questions or comments. We'd love to hear from you!'~ ' r

~* ." '

Expert RV Service - All Classes, MakesEyModels RVIA Certified Technicians No Charge lnsurance Estimates. Insurance Repairs Quality Service Without the Wait! Emergency Service Collision Repairs Small Paint Scratches to Major Collision Repairs Maintenance, Electrical, Plumbing, Water Leak Prevention and Repair, Winterization Special Open 6 Days • Tow Bars E Wiring

I

Serving Central Oregon for over 25 years, the fbral design studio has been a perpetual favorite for those seeking something out of the ordinary. r.

• • • • • • • •

• Onsite Service, Drop-off I • Free Roof Inspection I • Oil Changes • Accessories Installations • RV Parts Specialists I •• Hitch SalesEyService

I I

I I I I

• We Specialize in Complete Appliance Repairs

3 Locations to Serve You Better e www.bi crv.com

Curcrrrfr: f rcrr/dycr Fhriit 541.383.8888

Bend - 63500 NE Hwy 9T (across from Home Depot) 541-330-2495 Redmond South RV SALES & PARTS - 2?95 S. Hwy 9T 54l-548-5254 Redmond SERVICE CENTER - 3 I I I N. Canal Blvd (off Huiy Ã,.ExitI l9) 54I-504-2585

20202 Powers Road IBend ICascadegardencenter.com ',

Oa

I

54P1-382431575 3

I I

Behind Bank ofAmerica on 3rd Street in Bend 1230 NE 3RD ST

Roszak's with purchase olIwo beverages Notvalidbackpagespedalsor other promotional offers. Expires5/5/14

Fish House LUNCH 11:30 — 2:30, MON —RIF DINNER 4-9, MON-SAT

SEE OTHERSIDE FOR DAILY BACK PAGE SPEC1ALS

The power of oxygen is undeniable; Mother Nature has I used oxygen to naturally purify the Earth for thousands I

arAIFraar rrsararrrrraa

ljlim

of years. Now let the power of oxygen clean your carpets!

DfCeafrai Preypa 54$ 593 $ 799

convenient APPointments lf FREE Estimate Over the Phone sf IICRC Certified Technician

with qnrchaseollwo beverages Notvalid back page spedalsor other promotional offers. Expire s5/5/t4

Oxi Freshuses a combination of its one of a kind Oxi SpongeEncafrsuldtor, ond OxiPowder. This three part cleaning solution creates apowerful oxygenated cleaning system that breaks down the stains while encapsulating them, so thattheycan be efficiently removed from the carpet pile. It is safe for children and pets, leaves no sticky residue, reduces returning stains and has an one hour average dry time.


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • •

J

J

•I•

• J

J

h.

r

i'

h

th

e»1» • 'I

'cnt,t

ttlstgnec „,

contact us:

hours:

Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

Monday - Friday

businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.

Subscriber services: 541-385-5800

7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

Classified telephone hours:

Subscribe or manage your subscription

Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.

24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com

Tpe • Bj u l l e t l n :

1 7++

S . W .

C h a n d l e r

210

212

246

253

257

259

Antiques & Collectibles

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

TV, Stereo & Video

Musical Instruments

Memberships

Bid Novv!

Antiques wanted: tools, furniture, marbles,early B/W photography, toys, decoys, jewelry.

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Buy Hew...suy Local 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment You Can Bid On: $2,000 Gift 270- Lost and Found Certificate GARAGESALES Retail Value $2,000 275 - Auction Sales Nf. Jacobs Fine 280 - Estate Sales Furniture (Bidding closes Tues., 281 - Fundraiser Sales April 15, 282- Sales NorlhwestBend at 8:00 p.m.) 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend • Chandelier, 288- Sales Southeast Bend 22" diameter x 17n 290- Sales RedmondArea high, 12 lights, 292 - Sales Other Areas bronze & crystal, has 6 arms (2 lights FARM MARKET on each arm), 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery $300 obo. 316- Irrigation Equipment 541-923-7491 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsendSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment Dining table 345-Livestockand Equipment Beautiful round 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals oak pedestal table 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers with 4 matching chairs, table is 42" 358- Farmer's Column in diameter and in 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing brand new condi383- Produce andFood 208

Pets & Supplies

97 $ 0 2

n d • O r e g o n

Furniture & Appliances www.cusetinBidncuy.com

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles end Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingend Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo endVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

A v e . , • Be

541-389-1578

The Bulletin garolng Central Oragonsince fgtu

242

Exercise Equipment

Aero Pilates

machine w/ pull up bar, rebounder 8 3 DVDs $150. 541-504-5982 245

Golf Equipment

• P ets & Supplies

Dining table, glass & Bid Now! Bow front fish tank, 45 Maine Coon (part) Tux- brass, glass pedestal, www.culletincidncuy.com n al. w/ stand, pump 8 edo sIJayed female cat, 60 x40". $450 obo. Call he ater, $250 o b o . "Chirp,' 4 white paws, 541-330-8177 after 11am 541-408-0846 white bib, semi-long hair, all shots, microchipped. G ENERATE S O M E Boxer/French Mastiff Hand-raised (mom died), EXCITEMENT in your "Hooch"mix,2 m ales, gentle, petite, free to good neighborhood! Plan a 9 wks, shots, wormer, home only. 541-526-0687 garage sale and don'I 202 dewclaws & docked tails, forget to advertise in Buy Hew...suy Local Want to Buy or Rent You Can Bid On: POODLE pups,toys or $500. 541-419-0149 classified! Widgi Golf Pass sml mini. also 'rescued 541-385-5809. Chihuahua puppies, very pup'. 541-475-3889 Retail Value $79 CASH for dressers, tiny, 1 male, 1 female, dead washers/drvers Kenmore 1-yr-old up14fidgiCreek Golf $250. 541-420-1068 Queensland Heelers 541-420-5640 right freezer 16 cu. ft. Club Standard 8 Mini, $150 $325. (830) 822-3945 (Bidding closes Wanted: $Cash paid for Corgi pups, 6 wks, $300. & up. 541-280-1537 Tues., April 15, vintage costume jew- 541-420-8621, or leave www.rightwayranch.wor at 8:00 p.m.) elry. Top dollar paid for msg at 541-447-3985. dpress.com Gold/Sifver.l buy by the Donate deposit bottles/ Estate, Honest Artist Need Io get an Elizabeth,541-633-7006 cans to local all vol., ad in ASAP? non-profit rescue, for Wanted white peace feral cat spay/neuter. You can place it LEATHER CHAIR doves for outdoor avi- Cans for Cats trailer online at: Espresso brown ary. 541-382-2194 at Bend Pet Express in very good condiE; or donate M-F at S ponsor needed f o r www.bendbulletin.com 205 tion, lessthan 2 Smith Sign, 1515 NE Peanut, a sweet, tiny years old. $250. 2nd; or a t C RAFT, calico who came to Items for Free 541-385-5809 In SE Bend Tumalo. Lv. msg. for CRAFT in respiratory 541-508-8784 Free (4) Tires, used, p ick u p o f la r g e distress. The vet was CHECK YOURAD 1 6", p r etty g o o d amounts, 389-8420. unable to determine if www.craftcats.org shape. 541-388-5690 it was f rom b eing or from being Foster homes needed maced Goose, large Chinese Imstruck; n o br o ken I ctu for orphan kittens, perial male, free to good but she had inkittens with moms and bones home. 541-382-8399 bleeding. After special needs cats. ternal on the first day it runs week she is stable & 208 Orphan kittens would a sure it isn corcan stand, & loves at- Ottoman - about 17 trun to make be weaned but not yet tention. The vet costs tall and 34 trgnin diamrect. nSpellcheck and Pets & Supplies big enough for spay/ were a big hit for our eter, in good cond. human errors do ocneuter & a d option. small rescue, so any floral pattern $25 obo. cur. If this happens to The Bulletin recomFoster needs to com- help is appreciated. 541-419-6408 your ad, please conmends extra caution mit to 2-6 weeks. We She will need a safe, tact us ASAP so that when purc has- provide food, cage, loving home once we Upright freezer Kencorrections and any ing products or serlitter, vet care, etc.; k now she i s c o m- more 1-yr-old 7 cu. ft. adjustments can be vices from out of the foster provides a safe, pletely okay, but a made to your ad. $250. (830) 822-3945 area. Sending cash, lovinghome. Home 541-385-5809 foster home may also checks, or credit inJust bought a new boat? visit required. e-mail be a good option. Box The Bulletin Classified f ormation may be info©craftcats.org or 6441, Bend 9 7 708 Sell your old one in the Ask about our 246 subjected to fraud. call 541-815-7278. www.craftcats.org, 541 classifieds! Super Seller rates! For more i nforma598 5488. Guns, Hunting 541-385-5809 tion about an adver& Fishing tiser, you may call Help 210 Vacuum, Diamond Ultra needed the O regon State Furniture & Appliances Edition Kirby w/sham1000 rds of 22LR, $160. for Attorney General'9 pooer & all attachments, 160 rds of 22-250, $140. Office C o n sumer 3-pc display cabinet/curio $250 obo. 541-388-1025 200 rds of .25, $120. Protection hotline at glass shelves, 541-647-7950 Montgomery, who just w/lights, 1-877-877-9392. faux finish (looks like had a leg amputated. stone), end sections 70" The Bulletin .380 Ruger LCP pistol w/ was seen injured laser, NIB, The Bulletin He middle section 80" recommends extra ' LaserMax Serving Central Oregonsince tgtu with a bone protruding tall, l caution when pur- $349. Bob 541-788-6365 tall; 72" width. $450 obo. from his leq for over 2 541-330-8177 after 11 am chasing products or • .45 acp, $230. Adopt a rescued cat or mo. by Sisters resiservices from out of I 400 rds rds of .308, $270. kitten! Fixed, shots, ID dents before they con- A1 Washers&Dryere f the area. Sending f 300 541-647-7950 ' cash, checks, o r ' chip, tested, more! tacted CRAFT to help $150 ea. Full war65480 78th, Tumalo, him. He needs time & i n f ormation 600 rds of 7.62x39, $250. ranty. Free Del. Also l credit T hurs/Sat/Sun 1 - 5 , a quiet place Io heal. may be subjected Io 400 rds of .556 ammo, wanted, used W/D's Young & strong but 541-389-8420 l FRAUD. For more $250. 541-647-7950 541-280-7355 lucky to be alive. A big www.craftcats.org information about an c 900 rds of .223, vet bill for a small resadvertiser, you may l $500. Aussie Mini puppies, 5 cue group, so sponI call t h e Ore g on / 541-647-7950 purebred, born 3/13/14, sors are needed; Safe USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! ' State Atto r ney ' ready 5/8. 541-693-4888 Home for Montgomery, Door-to-door selling with l General's O f f i ce Bend local pays CASH!! www.miniausaieebend.com PO Box 6441, Bend for all firearms & Consumer Protec- • 97708 541-598-5488. fast results! It's the easiest tion ammo. 541-526-0617 h o t line at I www.craftcats.org way in the world to sell. i 1-877-877-9392. ql + CASH!! Aussie, Mini/Toy pup, Labradors, purebred For Guns, Ammo 8 The Bulletin Classified I TheBulletin I tri-color, first shot, $320 chocolates, vet-checked, Reloading Supplies. Serving Canrrai Oregon sincetgm 541485-5809 cash. 541-678-7599 541-408-6900. $250. 541-416-1175

r

DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial

Collectors! Free French postage stamps 541-548-6642 Dark oa k 2- d rawer dresser, curved front, advertisers may place an ad $250. White wicker with our baby crib, u n ique "QUICK CASH $250. Large dark oak roll top desk, $800. SPECIAL" Surveryor's tr a nsit 1 week3lines 12 ol' 1930-1940, orig. box $350. C ASH ~a a aka 2 N 541-923-5960 Ad must price of The Bulletin reserves nlinclude a ka oi konn the right to publish all ~ or less, or multiple ads from The Bulletin items whose total newspaper onto The does not exceed Bulletin Internet web$500. site.

tion, as are the chairs. Priced at $300. 541-447-3342

208

HOH'T IISSTHI S

l

I

l l

Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletln.com

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin'9

"Call A Service Professional" Directory

I

MusicNoice Studio Includes: • Pro Tools 8 software • Mbox 2 mini version 8.0 • Behringer B1 mic • Sony headphones • Samson USB studio mic w/stand; • Training books • Corrugated foam padding Packaqe price new, $nf200+Offered at $550. (All reasonable offers considered) Call 541-639-3222

1 4 snare drum, $800. Both in excellent condition. 541-410-4983 t oms,

BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate Io automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

255

Computers T HE B U LLETIN

re-

quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

The Bulletin snkcngcentral oregon sincetatu

257

I

iaw Buy Hew...suy Local

You Can Bid On: One Year Couples Non-Tennis Membership Retail Value $1,836. Athletic Clubof Bend (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.) 260

Misc. Items 2012 Sim p licity Gusto Hepa canister va c uumwith attachments, extra filter and bags, exc. cond. Retail $1500, Asking $ 700. 971-221-8278 (cell)

The BvlletinClassileds

Bid Now!

Iylusical Instruments

Bid Now!

www.BulletinBidncuy.com

People Look for Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough

258

Travel/Tickets www.BusetinBidncuy.com

Private party wants to buy WWII 1911 pistol, S&W Victory, M1 carbine. 541-389-9836

Bid Novv!

www.BulletinBidncuy.com

Sig M400 e n hanced $1200; Remington 12 $ga. mdl 11, $400; Beautiful Lowrey Glock mdl 22,$450. Adventurer II Organ 541-408-8850 Absolutely perfect condition, not a Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items scratch on it, about 8 upscale bamboo fly 4-feet wide, does rods. Call 541-678-5753, everything! Includes or 503-351-2746 a nice bench, too. $1 600obo. 247 541-385-5685 Sporting Goods - Misc.

Buy Hew...suy Local

You Can Bid On: Two Night Stay in a Restless Waters Room Retail Value $550 Overleaf Lodgeyachafs, Oregon (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)

Buy Hew...suy Local

You Can Bid On: $1000 Flooring Voucher Retail Value $1000. lnterior Ideas NINRedmond (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)

Bt'

Tent, 6 person, good cond. $ 3 5 . Cal l 541-279-1930.

h

248

Health & Beauty Items

Bid Novv!

www.BulletinBidnBuy.com

o kh

,"V

©

»

Buy Hew...suy Local

You Can Bid On: $250 Gift Card Retail Value $250 Exhale Spaand Laser Center (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, at 8:00 p.m.)

0 e

~gg, 1

u

Where buyers meet sellers You know what they say about noneman's trash". There's a whole pile of "treasure" here!

I

l

DRUM SETS: Ludwig drum set, d rums only, n o hardware, 26" base drum, 13", 16", and 18n toms, 14 n snare, $500. REMO Master Touch drum set, drums o nl y no hardware, 22" base drum, 8", 10", 12", 13", 16 n and 18" n

Thousands ofadsdaily ln print andonline. •

ala

o O0

UN Utqf tl. SOL.D"

COACHfAAN 008 F~tander- 15O 2 2 Classc M31

coach Prlstine -Efficient 'tn Banks has FordVtc wl4' sftde, power Pk g P,C, fiat ductedfurnacel 5 awning. screen Ttl " NokBtlin. II pets/neverLg,900! BNo AbargainBt8

541-000-0

ur auto, Rti rnotorcy boat, or o airplane tit' tt sells runsun' ad <2 or up to rnonets cornes first.) ~vvhicheve

The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903

Classifjeds

o

k

Includes: 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline ond price. Some resrrictions app/y

541-385-5809

your ad wdl also appear rru

• The Bulletin • Central Oregon Marketplace

• The(entrul OregonNickel Ads

• bendbullelin.com

'Privatepartymerchandiseonly


E2 TUESDAY, APRIL 15, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • •• 11:00 am Fri.

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Housekeeper wanted RN Clinical Coordinator part time, apply at needed for Heart 'n The Pines at Sunriver. Home Hospice & Pal541-593-2160. liative Care in Bend. Top 100 Best Places Call The Bulletin At to Work in Healthcare 541-385-5809 in the N ation with Place Your Ad Or E-Mail great pay and benAt: vvvvw.bendbulletin.com efits. www.goHospice.com

Log Truck Drivers (Long & Short) for logging company in Florence, OR.

SALES

Daytime Inside Sales

:> Qfy J~;QJIJI~K Can be found on these pages: FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMorlgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions 476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

RBEljnal

® Rhmlhrsm

Will hire two sales Sales - Retail people to work from Immediate Opening for Sales the B e n d Bu l letin motivated self starter, required, CDL, newspaper office for experience helpful but < current medical • • not required. Apply in t he Newspaper i n card. Great pay Education sales cam- person only at Furni528 and benefits. paign. This is soft, ture Outlet, 1735 NE Toyota-Scion Auto Hwy 20, Bend. relaxed business-toYear-round, Loans & Mortgages Sales. Great earnbusiness sales. We long-term ing potential, boPlace a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES offer a s h ort p a id WARNING n uses, 401k a n d employment. for only $15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines training program. The ® The Bulletin recoms u a aau benefits. Qualifying Call average salesperson mends you use caue xp. e l igible f o r *IJNDER '500in total merchandise OVER '500 in total merchandise 541-997-8212 earns $400 to $700 Sales tion when you proguarantee 90 d ay Sales professional to 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 per week, for a 2 7 vide personal salary. Full service Join Central hour work week. The Oregon's 14 days................................................ $16.00 facility pro v iding information to compa7 days.................................................. $24.00 FIND YOUR FUTURE l a r gest dress code is very nies offering loans or *llllust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 HOME INTHE BULLETIN ca r de a l er training and support. credit, especially relaxed and casual. new Subaru of B e nd. Must pass criminal 28 days .................................................$61.50 Garage Sale Special We prefer a b ackthose asking for adYourfutureisjust apageaway. background check, 401k, profit vance loan fees or 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (call for commercial line ad rates) ground in "business-to Offering Whetheryou'relookingfor ahal or m e dical clean DMV and drug -business" s e l ling. sharing, screen. A p ply at companies from out of aplacelohangit, The Bulletin plan, split shifts and state. If you have This is not ad or sub- paid vacation. ExpeToyota-Scion of Classifiedisyourbest source. scription sales, howconcerns or quesBend, 61430 S. Hwy A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: rience or will train. tions, we suggest you if you have pre97, Bend, Oregon. Everydaylhousandsofbuyersand ever Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. vious experience in 90 day $1500 guarconsult your attorney seller ofgoodsandservicesdo a ntee. Dress f o r * or call CONSUMER advertising sales, I will success to work in BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) business inthesepages.They HOTLINE, give you priority con- our drug free work REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well 1-877-877-9392. know youcan't beatTheBulletin sideration. I'm looking place. Please apply The Bulletin for motivated, eneras any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Classified Sectionforselection 2060 NE Hwy 20, TURNED YOU getic, articulate at caution when pur- BANK andconvenience- everyitemis bendbulletimcom Bend. See Bob or reserves the right to reject any ad at DOWN? Private party people, with excellent chasing products or I will just a ph on e ca l a w a y. Devon. loan on real esany time. is located at: communication skills. services from out of • tate equity. Credit, no Call M e l anie at T he Cl a ssi f i e d S ec t i o n i s e as y I the area. Sending 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. problem, good equity 541-383-0399. c ash, checks, o r i o use. Ev ery i t e mi s ca teg or i z ed all you need. Call Bend, Oregon 97702 I credit i n f ormation is andeverycategoryisindexedon Oregon Land Mort*This is not an emTick, Tock • may be subjected to the seciion'sfront page. gage 541-388-4200. ployee position with FRAUD. PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Tick, Tock... I For The Bulletin but an more informa- I LOCALMONEY:We buy W hether you ar e lo ok i n g f o ra h om e is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right I ndependent Co n - ...don't let time get tion about an adver- • aservice,yourfutureis in secured trust deeds & to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these or need tractor position with I tiser, you may call note,some hard money t h e pages o f Th e B ulle ti n C las s f i e d. away. Hire a newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Mid South Circulation the Oregon State loans. Call Pat Kellev Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Sales. professional out I Attorney General's 541-382-3099 ext.13. The Bulletin Office C o n sumer s of The Bulletin's 260 266 270 Protection hotline at I Real estate investor loan "Call A Service I 1-877-877-9392. needed. Investor will Misc. Items Heating & Stoves Lost & Found o pay 7% on a $40,000 Ãljtiijo Professional" Graphic Designer Position LTh Bullet to $60,000 loan seNOTICE TO Directory today! The Bulletin's Creative Services team is Bid Now! cured by First Trust ADVERTISER www.eulletineidoeuy.com seeking a graphic designer. The ideal candideed. 541-771-4414 Since September 29, REMEMBER:If you date possesses practiced design skills and ex1991, advertising for have lost an animal, cellent communication skills in order to work 573 rar t General used woodstoves has don't forget to check with account executives and local businesses The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- Business Opportunities os been limited to modThe Humane Society to design and produce advertisements that get day night shift and other shifts as needed. We els which have been Bend results for that advertiser. Proficiency using currently have openings all nights of the week, certified by the Or476 lllness forces sale of 541-382-3537 Adobe InDesign, lllustrator, and Photoshop everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts Precious Cargo egon Department of Redmond Employment softwares to create basic and advanced ad Btur New...suy Local start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Environmental QualSeafood Co. 541-923-0882 layouts and designs is a must. For qualifying Opportunities You Can Bid On: end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpo541-420-9369 ity (DEQ) and the fedPrine ille employees we offer benefits including life in$100 Gift Certificate sitions we are hiring for work Saturday nights. eral E n v ironmental 541-447-71 78; surance, short-term & long-term disability, Add your web address Toward any Repair Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Protection A g e ncy or crart cate What are you 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test to your ad and readRetail Value $100 minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts (EPA) as having met 541-389-8420. is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is The iphone Guy ers on The Bulletin's are short (f 1:30 f:30). The work consists of looking for? smoke emission stana drug-free workplace, EOE. web site, www.bend(Bidding closes loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackdards. A cer t ified 282 You'll find it in Tues., April 15, bulletin.com, will be ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup w oodstove may b e Sales Northwest Bend Send a resume with qualifications, skills, able to click through at 8:00 p.m.) and other tasks. For qualifying employees we The Bulletin Classifieds identified by its certifiexperience and a past employment history automatically to your offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, cation label, which is Garage Sale! Dog by Friday, April 25th to: website. short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid Buylng Diamonds permanently attached kennels, household vacation and sick time. Drug test is required to the stove. The Bul- items, some tools, chairs, /Gofd for Cash 541-385-5809 The Bulletin prior to employment. S UB A R U . Saxon's Fine Jewelers letin will not knowglassware, clothes. Attention: James Baisinger. ingly accept advertisFri-Sat only, 9-4, 67170 541-389-6655 1777 S. W. Chandler Ave Please submit a completed application attening for the sale of Gist Rd. (6 miles East of Auto Sales P.O. Box 6020 Sales professional to BUYING tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available uncertified Sisters, off Hwy 20.) Bend, OR 97708-6020 Lionel/American Flyer Join Central at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanwoodstoves. trains, accessories. 286 Oregon's l a r gest dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be Thank you St. Jude & 541-408-2191. new ca r de a ler Sacred H e ar t of 267 obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Sales Northeast Bend Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Subaru of B e nd. Jesus. j.d. Eldred via email (keldredobendbulletin.com). BUYING & SE L LING Fuel & Wood Offering 401k, profit No phone calls please. Only completed appli- Western Washington All gold jewelry, silver sharing, me d ical ** FREE ** cations will be considered for this position. No Guy seeks gal 50-66, and gold coins, bars, plan, split shifts and resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reWHEN BUYING rounds, wedding sets, slim/average build, to Garage Sale Kit paid vacation. Expequired prior to employment. EOE. share quiet times; class rings, sterling silFIREWOOD... Place an ad in The Serving Central Oregon since 1903 rience or will train. ver, coin collect, vintrips, walks, nature, Bulletin for your gaTo avoid fraud, 90 day $1500 guartage watches, dental moon-light, cuddling! The Bulletin rage sale and reHome Delivery Advisor The Bulletin a ntee. Dress f o r Serving CentralOregon since 19IB gold. Bill Fl e ming, Greg, PO Box 3013 ceive a Garage Sale recommends paysuccess to work in 541-382-9419. Arlington, WA 98223. Kit FREE! The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking ment for Firewood our drug free work a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time Computer wood desk, only upon delivery place. Please apply KIT INCLUDES: position and consists of managing an adult frosted glass, 3 tiers, and inspection. at 2060 NE Hwy 20, • 4 Garage Sale Signs carrier force to ensure our customers receive keyboard drawer, $20. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Bend. See Bob or • $2.00 Off Coupon To superior service. Must be able to create and 4' x 4' x 8' 541-548-6642 Devon. Use Toward Your perform strategic plans to meet department • Receipts should Next Ad FAST TREES objectives such as increasing market share include name, • 10 Tips For "Garage Grow 6-10 feet yearly! Caregiver and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a phone, price and Sale Success!" Call54I 3855809topromote yourservice• Advertise for 28dop stortingottf4f fnarfrrtrt~atr arrrtarruurs sr rrr~ > Prineville Senior care self-starter who can work both in the office $16-$21 delivered. kind of wood h ome l ooking f o r www.fasttrees.com and in their assigned territory with minimal purchased. Caregiver for multiple supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary or 509-447%181 • Firewood ads PICK UP YOUR s hifts, part-time t o with company vehicle provided. S t r ong Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care GARAGE SALE KIT at MUST include full-time. Pass customer service skills and management skills Find exactly what 1777 SW Chandler species & cost per criminal background are necessary. C o mputer experience is you are looking for in the cord to better serve Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landcheck. 541-447-5773. required. You must pass a drug screening NOTICE: our customers. CLASSIFIEDS law requires anyone scape Contractors Law The Bulletin and be able to be insured by company to drive who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all serving central oregon sincer9IB vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but Concrete Finishers Zdped gua/reI The Bulletin construction work to businesses that adIMPORTANT MEETING tervfntrcentral creyonsace faa Wanted! we believe in promoting from within, so be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Zawz< gifr e I,. for residents of Check out the Roger L a ngeliers advancement within company is available to Construction Contrac- More Than Service Landscape ConstrucDeschutes River Woods classifieds online Const. Co is looking the right person. If you enjoy dealing with tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Thurs., April 17, 7 p.m. All YearDependable Peace Of Mind experienced cepeople from diverse backgrounds and you are active license p lanting, deck s , Firewood: Seasoned; www.bendbufletin.com for at the Morning Star ment finishers. Full energetic, have great organizational skills and Updated daily means the contractor fences, arbors, Lodgepole 1 for $195 Christian School gym. interpersonal communication skills, please Spring Clean Up benefit p a c kage, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inwww.drwna.org or 2 for $365. Cedar, •Leaves EOE. We E-Verify, send your resume to: Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of irsplit, del. Bend: 1 for d rug screen r e •Cones The Bulletin CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be Painters, coarse grade $175 or 2 for $325. • Needles quired. A pplicants c/o Kurt Muller www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e stripping 3m pad, box 541-420-3484. may come by th e of • Debris Hauling PO Box 6020 contractor.com Landscape Contracof 10, $5. fice at 62880 MerBend, OR 97708-6020 or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 541-548-6642 Pine & Juniper Spllt cury Place to fill out WeedFree Bark or e-mail resume to: The Bulletin recomnumber is to be in& Flower Beds Wanted- paying cash an application, or mends checking with cluded in all adverkmullerobendbulletin.com call for Hi-fi audio & stu- PROMPT DELIVERY Steve No phone calls, please. the CCB prior to contisements which indidio equip. Mclntosh, 5 41-318-6200, o r tracting with anyone. Lawn Renovation cate the business has 541-389-9663 The Bulletin isa drug-free workplace. EOE 541-948-0829 Some other t rades Aeration - Dethatching a bond, insurance and J BL, Marantz, D yalso re q uire addiOverseed workers compensanaco, Heathkit, San325 269 tional licenses and tion for their employsui, Carver, NAD, etc. Compost • Hay, Grain & Feed certifications. ees. For your protecCall 541-261-1 808 Gardening Supplies Top Dressing tion call 503-378-5909 & Equipment Custom Remodel & Tile Mixed Grass Hay, 1st WHEN YOU SEE THIS or use our website: Landscape T. Schellworth, Gen. quality, big bales, 3'x3'xs', www.lcb.state.or.us to Contractor/Builder Maintenance barn stored, $230/ton. check license status BarkTurfSoil.com CCB ¹1 88631 Patterson Ranch Sisters, Full or Partial Service before contracting with 541-588-0958 MorePixB atendbjjlletij,com 541-549-3831 •Mowing ~Edging the business. Persons On a classified ad •Pruning .Weeding PROMPT D ELIVERY doing land scape Good classified ads tell Debris Removal go to 541-389-9663 Sprinkler Adjustments maintenance do not the essential facts in an www.bendbulletin.com r equire an LC B l i interesting Manner.Write to view additional JUNK BE GONE Fertilizer included cense. from the readers view not photos of the item. with monthly program Fornewspaper I Haul Away FREE Aeration/Dethatching the seller's. Convert the delivery, call the For Salvage. Also 1-time or Weekly Services Weekly,monthly Circulation Dept. at facts into benefits. Show Cleanups & Cleanouts Call a Pro Ask about FREEadded 541-385-5800 the reader how the item will or one time service. svcs Mel, 541-389-8107 w/seasonal contract! Whether you need a The Bulletin deliVerS yOur "HELP WANTED" ad to To place an ad, call help them insomeway. Bonded & Insured. fence fixed, hedges 541-385-5809 This EXPERIENCED Get your COLLINS Lawn Maint. 70,000 print readers and20,000 online visitors a day. or email advertising tip Commercial trimmed or a house Call 541-480-9714 claeeified@beodbulletimcom & Residential brought to you by The Bulletin, lOCal, haSSl e -free, WOrry-free adVertiSing. business built, you'll find Allen Reinsch Yard The Bulletin professional help in tervfntrcentral creyonsace faa The Bulletin Maintenance & Mowing servingcentral ortgon sincefjle Senior Discounts (& many other things!) The Bulletin's "Call a Call 541-536-1294 or 541-390-1466 Service Professional" 270 541-815-5313 Looking for your Same Day Response Directory Lost & Found next employee? F OR O N L Y S 2 1 . 4 3 A D A Y ! ~ Painting/Wall Covering 541-385-5809 Place a Bulletin With an ad in Found about 2 months help wanted ad And get $31 in ad upgrades for FREE! ago, in Tillicum VilWESTERN PAINTING today and The Bulletin's 263 BASED ONA 2" AD SPACE lage area, male cat, CO. Richard Hayman, reach over Serving Central Tools orange tabby, white a semi-retired paintOregon Since 2003 60,000 readers "Call A ServIce paws & chest, rings of ing contractor of 45 Residental/Commercial each week. Snow blower 19" MTD white on tail. Probyears. S m all Jobs Your classified ad Professional" 2-stroke, runs well. lems w/ left eye. Call Sprinkler Welcome. Interior & will also $75. 360-420-4762 to identify, Activation/Repair Exterior. c c b¹51 84. appear on 541-389-9968. Directory 541-388-6910 Back Flow Testing 265 bendbulletin.com In print and On-line at bendbulletjn.Com which currently Building Materials Maintenance Just too many Handyman receives over ~Thatch & Aerate collectibles? • Spring Clean up Bend Habitat 1.5 million page I DO THAT! RESTORE .Weekly Mowing views every Home/Rental repairs Sell them in & Edging Building Supply Resale month at no Small jobs to remodels •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Quality at LOW The Bulletin Classifieds extra cost. Honest, guaranteed Maintenance PRICES Bulletin The Bulletin offers both print adanddaily online accessfor work. CCB¹151573 •Bark, Rock, Etc. 740 NE 1st Classifieds Dennis 541-317-9768 541-385-5809 541-312-6709 our emPIOymentneedShere at COCC. ThiSreaCheSa large Get Results! Open to the public. ~Landsca in ERIC REEVE HANDY •Landscape Call 541-385-5809 audience at a great price. Data proves empl o yment seekers Lost cat, black/gray tiger SERVICES. Home & Construction or place your ad Craftsman French door, striped, yellow eyes, Find them in look to TheBulletin for available opportunities. In 2013 Commercial Repairs, ~Water Feature $100. Half-light door, female, 8 lbs., in DRW on-line at Carpentry-Painting, Installation/Maint. $40. 541-771-8809 bendbuHetin.com Navaio Rd. area. recruitment stats showed 51% of the online The Bulletin Pressure-washing, •Pavers Sisters Habitat ReStore REWARD. 541-554-6031 Honey Do's. On-time •Renovations applications had identified The Bulletin as Classifieds! 341 Building Supply Resale LOST LOVEBIRD: peachpromise. Senior •Irrigations Installation Quality items. their source of advertisement notification." Discount. Work guarfaced, green body, 4/8/14 • Horses & Equipment LOW PRICES! anteed. 541-389-3361 at Larch Grove in ShevSenior Discounts 150 N. Fir. or 541-771-4463 lin Park. Has blue band Horse stall trb"x4'6" rub Chrjsta Gunnejl, HumanResourcesCentral OregonCommunity College Bonded & Insured 541-549-1621 on leg with "¹3." $100 ber mats, 7 O $30 ea. Bonded & Insured 541-815-4458 Open to the public. REWARD. 541-771-1311 (830) 822-3945 Bend CCB¹f 81 595 LCB¹8759

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

• 3:00 pm Fri.

Experience

• 5:00 pm Fri •

The Bulletin

I

I I I

MX

I

I I

I

I

' j0 0

*g

®

The Bulletin

The Bulletin

youe next ernployee is reading Yhe Bulletin

Get 7 consecutive days

sRDWliji6

Classifjeds

5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9

Garage Sales

Garage Sales

GarageSales

541-385-5809


THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, APR 15, 2014

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

TUNDRA

E3

FOR BETTER OR FOR WORSE TT IAIRS aets4I!! Wa. HRD PaRS, RN' 'TFIToaS, RN' QHIQICBN FIN a EVEFL YlHIN&!

IIUHILR)OO ILIERa FIIAIRII, DROOy'

I THIIJK I'Ah 5TARTlhl& TO 5EE WHY WE &OT TH(5 hlE5T 50 CHEAP.

SHOILIEP US

HUILI ro

epox!

PERH! XsrpUTONa.

DRDDIII SHOUO ED

DFTHase IN, THe.oVEN - FIN TLI'W ITUPTO J+5'0 I E.

HOIL) TO

KOK FILL

a.THINGS. E 0

0 '0

L

0 Ih

g

4 15

b

0O

E cs

©Tundra 20TII

www.tun racomtcs.com

HEART OF THE CITY ANP Z CTOlTROL <HE ELECTiticiT+.

TV. OFF.

Hoh!IEwoRTc./dothj.

0

SALLY FORTH

~

:FE.P;- V(

I

OKAY, INSTEAD OF DECIDING ON A BAND NAME / I ET 5 FIGURE OUT OUR NEW SOUND.

I

th/ Itrrnar

olCK>AAAV...

hlahh... 7~ <FEREN5%!

YOU'RE RIGHT. WE NEED TO REPLACE HIL.

HOWR WE DON'T KNOW ANY DRUMMERS AND WE NEVER HANG OUT WITH ANYONE BUT US. 0 5

A SOUND WITHOUT A r, DRUMMER g

SO A DRUM MACHINE IT IS.

AND JUST LIKE THAT WE BECAME A WANG CHUNG COVER BAND.

5 n

I O IC

g

0

FRAZZ

ROSEIS ROSE IS LIKE AAUCKING THE. SARN TN SRcDKSEF ROTIIERS

YOO KNDW,OWNING A NlCE CARAROUND %RE

TIIERE'5NO CONSOLING ~ A GOY WHO 4IST MOKE ANoTHER STRVT IN ANOTIIERPUTIILE OV ANOTTIE9, TR'lp T0 THE. CAR WASH. //!

I'III!8080RR.! 8)% fH e %A&H'T$00 IIQl Ot' A

NOT SVIMPLYLNG I E NEEDSTODRIVE, THE AljTOMO TIVE EObOIVALENTOF ON OVERAI-LS.

//,

l-15

III| IYR(Ehi!?9HAI/' fO OlP~B

FWfouS NS suppR56%nyl

I' IHCON%NSNCS,

5

//I.

//

O

'E h 4-IG

O2014UFS,lno.

LUANN

TONE SOUP I P HOllY A&lc@7IAF I IF I WA& HAPPY... NOBABLY I &AIP BA&ICAH-'(. &AY THAT TOO.

8 UT.„IOTHAT HEY. WE:Ic'BNOT Ar GOOP M HUN&Pt'jWE'RS IT &ET+? NOT &ICK,OÃ COUNTIZY& NOT BE IN& INVAPBP.

WPH,+U%; HA PPY! HAPPY! WHBN YOU PUT HAPP'(!!

R )II-Wf/

f ©SON

IT~r WAY„,

I

WOUI DYOUI IKE5OME HEI.P, QUILLF e ~

oK

5

5

(~

('ht

•I

D

0

II 100

MOTHER GOOSE AND GRIMM

DILBERT

SQ~,S R!hhM) BUT WAlT,WAIT, 9MREvomee MGHOQ''5IAY

E

C..C„CA,CA„CAS„ CAS„CASr„e@rt„,

IH'T To CasOSA&Oou LPDUIO I'CLSBRlNT

8 EMAIL THE O NLY IS DOIJJN G U Y WHO AGAIN. CAN FIX IT 5 IS IN THE HOSPITAL. 8

BAcK

a

0

g

S O... IF HE DIES, WE CAN NEVER. AGAIN HAVE EMAIL?

0

CF O

E

MAYBE.

a 'O

)

O

or

O cu •

IS THERE ANY WAY I WAIT A CAN REACH WEEK AND HIM? TRY A OUI3'A BOARD.

5

U

enr

0

0

ul

d

OONESBURY 7HR75 EPER7BoYs!

I!EY PEoPLE, z'vE E07

RII IPER! LEIS F I I I/II OO7 A/HR7 YOO RLLAIRI!7 lO EE A/hEIII

IIIRR7 pO5YB4C IIoa/ ~~y5E/ oo Yoo / It/RA/77o EE i I BE?

YO// EROEIIIP!

FIR57/ 7/IE

R PILIII.

80Ys!

g

g6 ~ T!N'7 ~(@(

BoY5 IF Yol/LL-

I

-

I Otity/4RP! ~

.

TEPA%I&

-//lii

FL0615IMG~ HAVE 9M SEEM AD&QMQ VGGR.%.ETHP

WORSCnl

lVlolXIM& t MBSON>

CA/R7

WAA. i RO&SQEAA Otu. TAE TIOAE

AMT/I OtIAAf ASOLIT

OoPS! I

SRLISA ISIOQR

EIICUSE L/5, 7/!E BIRls R/4/O X //RIIE 70 h'RYE R LJI77IE

pgg0

R OOLTOIE.

ICKLES C?TP VoQ

ONCE. IM D,iijAILE,

0 ':

I 8

I+ W 4/15

C.I5

ADAM

0

0 C

I

IZARD OF ID

cvet I'Nl

OKAY.How OIOYOUOO THAT?

NYSUONNKIOU S I LL OE lbiOIMNO,ANPAL OF I Ii NUSTOE HINO,OO INTIIT TO.. ASUPOE NTHEILEAOESNACKS IN IIIYHA NP.

SEILIOU SLY, LAUHA. I OONT OIOIO How IT HheeON5.

CUILSEP!

,Q

0

YOUK.T+Xg5 ~

ACNKPIN& TO

I'LEA5VI

P UE

SU55KTIOA! 5 A,

TOON,5!RI I !VKP AAOR& TIy!AB!

/

yy y E

Tl& KIN& /MY AILON AOII!P-WBEK &RAG& PW.IOD

'll

lirNYTHIA! Ip IN TH&RE MOUT A- 515TBR-IN-

TWneS!

x z 0

Olt,

I

0 8

TItAII!K... Ia,

CI

-

WiznlIDOFID/DOM

B.C.

P

0

+IE

II

'0

SHOE

WHAT5 THAT

I'EALLY' BRI &HTENG Up THE. PLAc,a'I rHoLI&H t XESnl'r I r P

BEATS hhE.

SUPPOSEt> To

BE >

0

00

(+(, '<I-I q'I

IQQ

QI7

CJl7~ '

O201410 n L. HartFLP

Johnuartstudios.tom

ARFIELD I'M BACK, SARFIELP

I WAS M!5QUQT ED.

5ENATOR, WHAT DO YOU HAVE TO 5AY ABOUTTHE CONTROVERSIAL 5TATEMENTS YOUMAD E INYQURAUTQBIOGRAPHYP

YOU HAVEN'T MOVEP, HAVE YOU?

PEARLS BEFORE SWINE SIR. MECACLEPYOVINHERETOPAY BECA USE THEREARESOME lSSVES IPI ITHYOVRPASTFEHYEARSOFTAX RETVR NS. YOUMAYBEINQUITEA BITOF TRO VBCE. I VNPE RSTANPCPHPIETECY.

EILACTLY WHAT PO YOU PO WHEN i'MGONE? OH, GEE!YOU JUS'T MISSEP 'THE PONY RIPE! 0

Reuenue Seruice

a

THE I.R.S.CAA I BEVE'RY VNPER STANPlNG.

E

O 0

e8'

Internal

0

THOVGH MYBEARHATESTHE TAXCOPE.

::: 0

Seruice

5 I

0

O 5

O

ÃM OAV05 H-I5

PEANUTS

ARY WORTH

"'ALL RIGH T,GAID THECA T'ANDTHI5 TiME ITVANIGHED QUITE 5LOIILY...

BEG(NNIN6ILIITHTHEEND OF THETAIL,AND ENDING lLIITH THE GQIN, It)HICH REMAINEDGOME TIME AFTER THERESTOF IT HAD GONE.

THE NEX T PAY, IRI5 PREAPG

I YE BEEN ABLE TO DO THAT FOR YEAR5!

FINPING TOMMI'Y WA5'T ING

IRI5, ARE YOLI OKA'I t

MAY BE WILGLIR WA5 RIGHT. SU'T WHAT CAN T. Pot

NO... 1'M IVOT!

H I5 T I M E

AGAIN.

CI 0

0

(C • I

Illur

415

ET FUZZY

NON SEQUITUR Wait wait wait.. Me Too„.ijhh.. Poes you WeeI lucky, pvnk? 4jell, does you.

And bePore we kill,me jvst wantsay oneting ...Dis one small swinq for croc,one giant blow C'or croc-ki d, esaas

yeahyeah Yeah..Me too.. Vh.. Uh.. Say herro to Trty leetle

Okoy, Dat likeone speech too rnany.

a Ylo

HE ALWAYru LOOKEP FoR

'NE. BRICIt T SlOE oF EVERYTHING

TPIIIIIK

OHVK

BLI4$ OLIPIK

fc end!!!

Itst/SR

HAWETO I0AY

Y

5

>AxEs MAIN I

iTrs!' 08 5 8 5

I

NN .05NN!iiii'i"

O 5

r

, X t)i

I

~

c 'I'Wuntaa

«a a .

:..uo~

or

IL

Io / c i51585 IHK lnc.

H-l5

WILEH II4KeEAWIILIILK.ILS'I


E4

TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, APR 15, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Will Shortz

C L U B T uesday,Aprlt 15,2014

Deductive reasoning By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency "I say, Holmes, tax day is drawing near." "I never pay any i n come tax, Watson," Sherlock Holmes said. "I make too many brilliant deductions." Holmes was today's declarer at 6NT — reached on a simple auction — and West led a club. Holmes won with the jack. He next cashed the K-A of hearts and conceded a heart to West. Holmes won the club return and took the A-K of spades and then the ace of clubs, discarding a d iamond from dummy. He le d a diamond to the king and cashed the good hearts.

DAILY QUESTION Y ou hold: 4 J 4 2

39 Physics Nobelist 65 Like Easter eggs of 1903 and 66 "Citizen" of film Chemistry news Nobelist of 1911 67 They return north 6"Mustbe done in the spring 40Toastedwaffl e NOW!" 41 Having a rounded 10Reduce to a pulp end, as pliers DOWN 14 Lugs 43TOtetopper 1 Blind guess 15Latvia's capital 44 Big name in 2 Protein source 16It may be just a audio speakers for vegetarians hunch 4SFracases 3Tiny bit 17Underway 46 Minor 4 Some summer improvement in 18Blend babies the Dow 19Boxers 5 Topics for Muhammad and 50 Shout of probate courts inspiration Laila 6 Flaming felony 51Thomas who 20 Idles wrote "Death in 7ln 22 Fey of "30 Rock" Venice"

(4 K 5 3 4K 6. Yo ur partner opens one diamond, and the next player doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: Yo u h a v e e n o ugh values to redouble, and many players would choose that action. Since the auction may tm n c ompetitive, an option is to begin to describe your hand by bidding one heart, forcing. If you redouble, you might hear (for example) two clubs at your left, pass, three clubs at your right. Then you would be awkwardly placed. South dealer Both sides vulnerable

23 Souvenir of Maui, maybe 24 How money may be won or lost 26 Like windows 30 Window segment 32 Monday, in Madrid 33Alliedsupply route to China during W.W. II 38 Olympic skating champ Kulik

NORTH 45 J42 ' v)A8 7 5 4

UNGUARD Holmes was left with the A-J of d iamonds, and dummy ha d a diamond and the jack of spades. West h ad t o u n g uard h i s q u ee n o f diamonds to keep the queen of spades, and Holmes led to the ace. His jack won the 13th trick. "Amazing," Dr. Watson marveled. "Why didn't you finesse in either red suit?" " Deduction. W e s t cho s e a dangerous opening lead.After our auction to 6 NT , h e w o ul d h a ve preferred a safe lead if one were available. I expected him to hold all four queens."

ACROSS 1 Like yesterday's

0K53 e%K6

4Q76

EAST 451085 'v) 106

0Q84 AQ742

0 10972

WEST

'v) Q92

F E S S

I T N I GL E E A R O DO R H A N I O T T T H A H A S E LM B AL L E E KE D T I V O S T E N Y AL E

4 109 5 3

QKJ3 O AJ 6 4AJ8 W est Pas s

Nort h 6 NT

East All Pass

Opening lead — 4 2

9 A 87 5 4

(C) 2014Tribune ContentAgency, LLC

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO giz

II 59 No

II

(reassuring words) 60 Spanish eight 61Tolkien'8 ring bearer 62 Caesar's rebuke to Brutus 63 Lena of "Chocolat" 64Supply,as a new ingredient

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

SOUTH 45 AK93

S outh 2 NT

S2Sycamore tree

I X L E I N EA

OB I 5 F A S T E F I L E L T EN N E T O I N K S N D IA O O LB O N O B L S S OD T S T A IO U G F I N G E F L I P S S T S

A D A P P T R T O O X Y A C T O O RN N A S L

MA I M K I E C H I A M P M O E R R E

T E N K 5

H E R

A

G L E A I L V E L

E D S

(undisturbed) 8Opposedto, to Li'I Abner 9 "Scusi" 10Autodom's MX-5 11Wingit 12What the Left Bank is a bank of 13Attacks with vigor 21 "Far out, man!" 25Three R's org. 26 Smooth-talking 27 She's back in town, in a Fats Waller song 28 Blue dye source 29 Fervor 30 Baby food, typically 31Like much of the Southwest 33 Smooch 34 Recite quickly, with "off" 35 Brute 36 James who wrote "Let Us Now Praise Famous Men" 37 "i" and "j" tops

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

No. 031 1

8

9

10

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

28

24

29

30

32

13

35

36

7

57

58

25

31

33

38

12

22

21

23 26 2 7

11

34

39 42

41

45 46

47

48

49

50

51

52 5 3

59

60

54 61

55 5 6

66

67

62 65

PUZZLEev MEL ROSEN

39 Volume that requires lots of preparations to compile? 42 "Parks and Recreation" network

53 Pac-12 basketball powerhouse

46 Made calls, in baseball 47 New Year's Eve staple 48 Federal security, for short 49About to bloom ... or a hint to 20-, 33-, 41and 52-Across 50ObserveYom Kippur

43 Casual type of chair 45 Unit of electrical

conductance

54 Slender 55 Broad

56 Ye S h oppe 57 Kimono securers 58 Puzzle solver's happy shout

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

DENNIS THE MENACE

icE Cokt

SUDOKU

Fooo)oo k4om/IIISorrocomioL

I wi<h qou had come

Complete the grid so that every row, column and 3x3 box contains everydigitfrom1 to9 inclusively.

to Yne gcevter.

h iI I'

SOLUTION TO TIIIIgT II

QtEti P

YESTERDAY'S

8 m

SUDOKU

71 D 43

QUP

ro 5

9 I

47

3

8 Cl

' WIIFN 1 GROW UP, 1'AA GOHHA PLAY WITH IIIS VA7YSLIKS NOSE GUY8 I "

I LL

3

oo

CANDORVILLE I'M PICK OF PEOPLE PAYING I/OMEN EARN YY CENTP FOK EUEEY POLLAK AMANMAKEP

rl/Ar'PgEEN pESUNK ED ALEEAOY.Ir'P MOPE LIKE

TIIEY EARNONLYA NICKEL LEPPWNENIr'P TIIEEXACT PAME JOS.

'rp cENTP.

YOOKNON A LOT OF INOOPTRIEPPTILL NONT II/IK I/OMEN FOR TI/E "EXACr PAME JOS"F

Ol 0 o

I DONT PEE WAT TIIATI/APTO pO I/ITII ANYTIIING

'+ + ''m

4,

IJ

D IFFICULTY RATING: **4 4

4

LOS ANGELESTIMES CROSSWORD

I

Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS SAFE HAVENS

5 Australian

'v' $ 55f I t ~/2AIAh455,N')ff HSRR(7 t(ol/I4' l4&fftALI',Tf(AT I('L)(j V A r'T l 5 Ppf jIIL, IOIFID k%'LL &IZAIIT '(OV t j 475 gDUIZ' VA6T IAFLI)PIICE7,' 6(IIOIZA7,' TOL'D FHgg ..' 1('OU (8)EIZf. It,' I'&giltl55IOFI TO lj68 INR. 17IIA I A FL()BIIC< fa TO LEI4&TIIEI| '(WR CAf'5 LIFE; CHAH&6 M L4PI'( ',,' v P R04(l&55.', 7 0

Qgg'

6Nr4... PoFz.A PRIC5!

'

.

.

HOhAAAIT'( ÃGA'r5

gemstone

9 Dressed 13 They're found in

veins 14 Zany escapade

1ffE iA)OIFLD'5 L)C&AA5.'

16 Saintly ring 17 Yellow sticky

CTd™

I

brand

s

19 Eric of

g

"Spamalot"

:.::: I

httpi/wwmoafehavonocomic.com

© 2014 by King FeatureS SyndiCate, Ino. Wor rightS reServed

E-moil: bholbrook1@gmoil.oom

SIX CHIX 5Otc1O4~ PAnt8iNG FO47ORK5 OYNO>CATSi I4C

(QKAvl gOw fi11 XiN0

CSl4 94RCoos1' SHUucK

20 Color 21 Manicurist'8 concern

22 "Breaking Bad" award 24 Out of bed 26 Caffeination station 30 Vessel for the Mad Hatter 32 Fast-running bird

~ O F F@CS~DOL)y

33 Kibbutz country 36 18th-century

m71OLoc.14

composer

ITS

Thomas

TW~AF-e.m<S ylfkgN

PIPON

N

DOWN 1 Part of Uncle Sam'8 outfit 2Turn on 3 Pre-euro Spanish coin

1 Wire insulator

II1NP VAi&-

PIPWOUKNPhl NOTUNTIITHQZFAR'6 I GGl

SIFTSARE F~ P YC2(jALSONEFPTO PQTHAT WHGN ITS/k7TFÃPECfBP.

HIPPEN

HOLIPAY5P'

ISRz j Fp.

37 Kenya neighbor: Abbr.

40 Crisis phone service

43 "Breaking Bad" law org. 44 Journey

TINFSPp,il'I

46 Shed, with "off'

48 Solar or lunar phenomenon

4 Repair shop fig.

ERMAN

THAT SCRAooBLED WORD GAME CI

Unscramble these four Jumbles,

ono letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

ROLOF

Oy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

Are you oo ehsnod up and ready 1o take Ihe Plunoeo

/

Ouch! I just hlokoo myself.

/

1

2

3

4

CANGLE BPFORE THB WBDOING ~N Y, T H E

HERMAN

68 Sicilian volcano

Now arrange the circled letters

69 Golf targets

suggested by the above cartoon.

70 Quick gander 71 Light bulb unit

Print answer here: (Anoworo tomorrow)

"Stay calm ...I'm gonna get a second oplnlon on your blood pressure."

Yeoteda 4

i

65 Composer'8 output, and where to find the last words of 17-, 26-, 40- and 55Across

H1255ANP-TO-ee WA5-

to form the surprise anowo5 ao

O4!uOOnOStOCk Irltemananal Inc, Dist Oy Univeraal Uolick tor UOO,2014

6

7

8

13

15

19

21 24

22

25

26

ss 38

39

23

27

31

37

16

18

17

60 Tees off 62 Electronic

63 Jalopy

TALOG

4-15

42 Self-absorption groun d e rs 45 Rain-on-the-roof 5 7 Let loose rhythm 61 Online crafts 47 Kept secret marketplace 49 Hollywood hrs. 63 C h op with an ax 50 Money inthe 6 4 SFO posting mattress, e.g. 66 Ga r d ening tool 52 Karate instructor 6 7 Porffolio53 More like child's incre a sing market moves play

28

29

53

54

32 34

se

35

40

41

43

42

ol'g.

oool4 Tooune content Agency, LLc All RiOho Reeenred.

SOIPEM

41 Religious sister 5 6 Chase flies or

5

59 British "bye-bye" eavesdropping

M en'8 Wearhouse items

5 Penta- plus three 6 Lose one's cool 7 2014 Olympics skating analyst Ohno 8 Replayed tennis serve ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: 9 Fire-breathing Greek monster G A Z E S T A B P L A T E 10 19608 White O M E N W I S E H A R E S House nickname D I R T D E V I L A N G E L 11 Everyone O F F A N D O N 12 Anonymous Jane S N O R E 15 Snorkeling areas Y E T R U T 18 Arrival en masse A S T D A I L Y D O U B L E 23 Bumped into C H 0 P S U E Y I M P R 0 V 25 Here, to Henri T A X I D D S D A N E 27 Folded I S O T O N E R manuscript sheet E M I N E M D U C K D Y N A S T Y D R Y 28 Clearasil target 29 Actress Perlman A T E C P R 31 Expert NU T S H E L L E U RO S 34 On a cruise, say R A N I N D I S K D R I V E 35 Angled pipe fitting O P I N E L O A M A P E X 37 Meat-andW A T E R E N T S L E N T potatoes dish 04/15/14 38 Ocean predator xwordeditor@aol.com

51 Hiss andhum 55 Cafe serving gl'OUP 58 Flawless

39 Combatively 5 4 supportive

J umbles: TIGER C L UN G NUM B E R G EN I US Answer. The marathon winnero favorite part of owning hio own store wao — RUNNING IT

45

44

46 49

47

50

51 56

59 63

64

60 65

66

69 71

57

52 58

61

62 67 70

72

73

72 Circular current 73 Respecfful titles

By Annemarie Brethauer (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

04o/1 5/1 4


THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY APRIL15 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860

)

s

I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

a

fe

Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

875 850

Snowmobiles

EXT in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. 860

Motorcycles & Accessories

2005 HD Super Glide custom, fuel injected 7k mi, new tires, like

P

541-385-5809

new cond. $9500

Harley Davidson 2011 Classic Limited, Loaded! 9500 miles, custom paint "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, new condition, heated handgrips, auto cruise control. $32k in bike, only $20,000 or best offer. 541-318-6049

1994 37.5' motor-

home, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

$25,000.

541-548-0318 (photo above is of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

The Bulletin

Serving Centra/ Oregon since 1903

V ictory TC 9 2 ci 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665

Arctic Cat Prowler 650, 2007, UTV w/camo canvas. Askinm $7450. Call: 541-815-3960

Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master

15' fiberglas Sportsman, 75HP motor, trailer, good condition, $950. 541-389-1086

Illlonaco Lapalma, 2002, 34'10' - Workhorse 8.1i Less than 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. refrig w/icemaker, micro/convection oven, water purifier, hydraulic jacks, power pilot seat+ more options. Exceptionally clean. $59,900/make offer.541-504-1008

5000 tow bar, $24,995. 541-383-3503

870

12'1969 Sears aiuminum fishingboat, low hours on new 8 hp engine, with trailer and extras. Good shape! $1600. 541-382-2599

Bigfoot Diesel 32' 2006, Su per C Duramax di e s el, Allison trans., only 37K mi., do u b le slide, 5500 Onan diesel gen., to many options to list. Vin¹ 534032, $79,995. Beaver Coach Sales & Service, Bend 541-914-8438 DLR ¹3447

541-419-8034

Navion IQ Sprinter chassis RV 2008, 25' Mercedes Benz diesel, only 24k miles, excellent condition, automatic rear slide-out w/queen bed, full bath w/shower, deluxe captain swivel front seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ no smoking.$69,500. 541-382-2430

Need to get an ad in ASAP?

Fax it to 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds

18'Maxum skiboat,2000,

inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, Cat. heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking $58K. Ph. 541<47-9268 Can be viewed at Western Recreation (top of hill) in Prineville.

Bid Novv!

Dodge Brougham 1978, 15', 1-ton, clean, 69,000 miles. $45OO. In La Pine, call 541-602-8652 Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019 RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit

I

Apt./Multiplex NE Bend

TIFFIN ALLEGRO BUS 2010 - FULLY LOADED 40QXP

Powerglide Chassis / 425HP Cummings Engine / Allison 6 Spd Automatic Trans / Less than 40K miles /Offered at $199K. Too many options to

list here( For more information go to mce ~ aoe ~ ocoa.com or email

trainwater157O gmail.com or call858-527-8627

Boats & Accessories

Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900. 541-388-8939

KOUNTRY AIRE

880

541-639-9857

FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $1 0,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684

WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003

The Bulletin

634

541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.

Motorhomes

Fieetwood Discovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, approval team, to that unused www.sulletinsidnBuy.com web site presence. satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, item by placing it in (2) 10' Kayaks; Old etc., 32,000 m iles. We Take Trade-Ins! HDFatBo 1996 Town Otter, Ocean Wintered in h e ated Free Advertising. The Bulletin Classifieds Frenzy Si t -on-top, shop. $84,900 O.B.O. BIG COUNTRY RV both with p a ddles, 541-447-8664 Bend: 541-330-2495 5 41-385-580 9 Redmond: $225/ea. Generator Kubota 3500 541-548-5254 541-593-6053 Bey NetN...Bey Local as, 60 h rs, $ 1000 687 ASH. 541-923-5960 You Can Bid On: Ads published in the Commercial for Lot 22 at Yarrow in Completely "Boats" classification FIND YOURFUTURE Rebuilt/Customized Madras include: Speed, fishRent/Lease HOME INTHE BULLETIN Retail Value $23,000 2012/2013 Award ing, drift, canoe, Winner Your future isjust a page Sun Forest house and sail boats. Fenced storage yard, Construction Showroom Condition away. Whetheryou're looking For all other types of building and o f fice Many Extras for a hat or aplace to hangit, (Bidding closes watercraft, please go trailer for rent. In conTues., April 15, Low Miles. The Bulletin Classified is to Class 875. venient Redmond loGulfstream S u nat 8:00 p.m.) 541-385-5809 your bestsource. cation, 205 SE Rail$77,000 sport 30' Class A 541-548-4807 road Blvd. Reduced to 1988 new f r idge, Every daythousandsof $700/mo. Avail. now. TV, solar panel, new buyers andsellers ofgoods Servrn Central ore on since tgnt 541-923-7343. refrigerator, 4000W and services dobusinessin Manutactured/ generator, w h eelthese pages.They know Bid Novv! Mobile Homes chair lift avail. Good you can't beatThe Bulletin The Bulletin is your www.BulletinBidnsuy.com cond. $7 ,000 obo Classified Section for Employment FACTORY SPEC!AL 541-447-5504 selection andconvenience New Home, 3 bdrm, - every item isjust a phone Honda 110 Trail, 1986, Marketplace $46,500 finished call away. street legal, licensed & on your site. Garage Sales reg'd, like new. Has auxThe Classified Sectionis J and M Homes Call iliary tank & to ol k it. 541-548-5511 easy to use. Every item Garage Sales $1995. 541-480-4937 is categorizedandevery Buy NetN...Bey Local 5 41- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 You Can Bid On: e Garage Sales cartegory is indexedonthe The Bulletin's Want to impress the section's frontpage. 1994 Alumacraft 16 "Call A Service to advertise. Aluminum Boat Find them relatives? Remodel Whether youarelooking for Professional" Directory Retail Value $4,995 your home with the in a home orneedaservice, www.bendbulletin.com is all about meeting Aii SeasonsRV & your future is inthe pagesof help of a professional The Bulletin Marine your needs. The Bulletin Classified. from The Bulletin's iBidding closes Classifieds Call on one of the "Call A Service Tues. April 15 The Bulletin at 8:00 p.m.) Serving Central Oregon sincetgta professionals today! Professional" Directory ServingCentml Oregonsinceiata 541-385-5809 n

Say ngoodbuy

Call for Speciais! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAINGLEN,

880

Motorhomes

Motorhomes

865

%0o0o

Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

ATVs

PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t 627 which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any • H o mes for Sale Vacation Rentals preference, limitation & Exchanges or disc r imination NOTICE based on race, color, All real estate adverOcean fronthouse, religion, sex, handitised here in is subeach walk from town, cap, familial status, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, marital status or na- ject to th e Federal Fireplace, BBQ. $95 tional origin, or an in- F air Housing A c t , per night, 3 night MIN. tention to make any which makes it illegal 208-369-3144 such pre f erence, to advertise any preflimitation or discrimi- erence, limitation or based Have an item to nation." Familial sta- discrimination tus includes children on race, color, relisell quick? ion, sex, handicap, under the age of 18 amilial status or naIf it's under living with parents or origin, or intenlegal cus t odians, tional '500you can place it in pregnant women, and tion to make any such l i mitaThe Bulletin people securing cus- preferences, tody of children under tions or discrimination. Classifieds for: will not knowingly 18. This newspaper We will not knowingly ac- accept any advertis'10 - 3 lines, 7 days ing for real estate cept any advertising which is in violation of '16 -3 lines, 14 days for real estate which is this law. All persons (Private Party ads only) in violation of the law. are hereby informed O ur r e aders a r e all dwellings adhereby informed that that 630 all dwellings adver- vertised are available an equal opportuRooms for Rent tised in this newspa- on per are available on nity basis. The Bulletin Classified Beautiful golf c ourse an equal opportunity home, all furn., owner basis. To complain of absent 90% of time. d iscrimination ca l l TURN THE PAGE $600, share util. avail HUD t o l l-free at For More Ads 4/20.. 541-279-9538. 1-800-877-0246. The The Bulletin toll f ree t e lephone 632 number for the hearApt./Nlultiplex General ing im p aired is 771 1-800-927-9275. Lots CHECK YOURAD

on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. aSpellchecko 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

DreamCarsBend.com

Arctic Cat 580 1994,

~e ~ h

.00

Triumph Daytona Watercraft 2004, 15K m i l es, perfect bike, needs Ads published in aWa nothing. Vin tercraft" include: Kay ¹201535. aks, rafts and motor Ized personal $4995 watercrafts. Fo Dream Car "boats" please se Auto Sales Class 870. 1801Division, Bend

1989 Yamaha Exciter, 2,000 miles, original owner, always garaged, $600. 541-480-7517

648

o.

880

Motorhomes

Enclosed raft t r ailer, 12'x7', pulley system to help load, wired for 12 volt ai r p u mp. $750. 541-593-6053

Houses for Rent General

880

870

The Bulletin

• 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150 Advertise your car! Add A Picture!

Reach thousands of readers!

Call 541 e385-5809

The Bulletin Classigeds

Winnebago Sightseer 30' 2004

Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541 -548-51 74

a'

r

fa

VW Eurovan 2000 camper Excellent cond. in every way. 92,000 miles, AC, refrigerator, sink, stove, furnace. Pop-top, 2 beds, above and fold-down. Seats 5+ assengers. 25,900 OBO 541-389-3314.

For Sale with living r oom slide, 48,000 miles, in good condition. Has newer Michelin tires, awning, blinds, carpet, new coach battery and HD TV.$31,000 Call Dick at 541-408-2387 881

Travel Trailers AIRSTREAM 2010 25' FB, Int'ISerenity, like new, only used 4x. Originally $75,000; asking $56,950. Call for details, 541-593-0204 FIND IT! BUT IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Classifieds

Fleetwood Wilderness NW Edition 2002, 26' 1 slide, electric

tongue jack stabilizers, new brakes, waste tank heaters, ducted heat/AC, micro/stove/oven, tub/shower, couch, elec/gas hot water tank. Sleeps 6. Includes Eaz Lift hitch, storage cover and accessories. $10,500. 541-447-3425

Winnebago A dventurer 2005 35trs', gas, less than 20,000 miles, excellent condition, 2 slide-outs, work horse chassis, Banks power brake system, sleeps Forest River 27' by Wild5, with a l l o p tions, wood 2004, winter pkg, slide, AC, oven, $62,000 / negotiable. tub-shower, outside Call 5 4 1-306-8711or email a i kistu@bend- shower, micro, awning, always stored. $12,500. cable.com Prineville, 541-447-9199 The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

KeystoneLaredo 31' RV 20 06 with 1 2' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underWinnebago Aspect neath. Tub & shower. 2009 - 32', 3 slide2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove 8 outs, Leather interefrigerator/freezer. rior, Power s eat, locks, win d ows, Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Aluminum wheels. a Slide through stor17 Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, a ge, E a s y Lif t . $29,000 new; camera, Queen bed, Asking$18,600 Foam mattress, Aw541-447-4805 ning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, r Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900

' tjs(-»

Get your business

e ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Lance Travel Trailer (Model 1985) 2012, dinette/slide makes to a queen-size bed, queen walk-around bed, inside/outside sound system, microwave, c o oktop with oven, power awning, flat screen TV, only used 10 times. Easy tow with F-150. Call for price. 541-647-0658.

a

mu vow ururr!

'Ad runs until it sells or up to 8 weeks (whichever comesfirst!)

Item Priced at: Your Total Ad Cost onl: • Under $500 $29 • $500 to $999 $39 • $1000 to $2499 $49 • $2500 and over $59 Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price.

g~t,'HAIS@<

~...~pgp Qfgft Becti@> Ntaft yuted the gtatn e vot. Ofts, t'trttstt' 6 softdyj sttt'" „Bot ao ,ottttd „CCOII ~iaga'o destgtts

LeatherCou g~ argg,~ oocttget « leather cfta/r offom coucfI se an and condition; Excellent fears, sfalns > " able. yl/as ' $1600 new offe ering for onl

$70p

"f-ooo-000

• Daily PubliCatiOn in TheBulletin, an audienCe Of OVer 70,000 potential customers.

• Weekly publication inCentral Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to OVer30,000 hOuSehOldS.

• Weekly publication inThe Central Oregon Nickel Adswith an audience of over 15,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous Listing online, with photo, onbendbulletin.com

541-385-580tti Private partymerchandiseonly- excludespets &livestock, autos,Rvs,motorcycles, boats, airplanes,andgarage salecategories.


E6 TUESDAY APRIL 15 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

•fj

I

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

881

882

Fifth Wheels

o 0 0

Laredo 30' 2009

00

Orbit 21' 2007, used

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

908

Aircraft, Parts & Service

$28,000

541-419-3301

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED

We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121 Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809

or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com

1/3 interest in Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, Columbia 400, 2 slides, AC, recliners, Financing available. walk-around queen bed, $150,000 sliding glass door closet, (located I01 Bend) new tub 8 10-gal water 541-288-3333 heater, good tires. Brand new 20' screen room available. Super clean, 1 owner, n o n-smokers. $11,999. 541-447-7968 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. MONTANA 3565 2008, $65,000. 541-419-9510 exc. cond., 3 slides, www.N4972M.com king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566

150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend. Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

172 Cessna Share IFR equipped, new Just bought a new boat? avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our stack, 180hp. Super Seller rates! Exceptionally clean 541-385-5809 & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 36-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 obo. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

( in La Pine )

WILL DELIVER

Find It in The Bulletin ClassiTieds! 541-385-5809

1974 BeHanca 1730A 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 160 mph, excellent condition, always hangared, 1 owner

for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302

882

Fifth Wheels

935

975

975

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

44!444

ChevyColorado LX Crew Cab2009

Travel Trailers

Pacific Ridge by Komfort 2011 Mcll P 27RL 31', 15' Super slide, power jack, electric awning, solar panel, 6-volt batteries, LED lighting, always stored inside. Must see to appreciate.Asking $28,000. Call Bill, 541-480-7930

933

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

908

RV CONSIGNIIIIENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit

1976 Cessna 150M Just oyer 3000hrs, 600 hrs since out of frame major, Horton Stol Kit. Avionics: Apollo 65 GPS & additional radio (4 frequencies can be monitored at once). Transponder w/mode C, JPI Fuel Flow Monitor, digital density, temp & amp CHECKyOUR AD Sunlight 1988 23', aw- monitor. Nice paint & upw/memory foam ning, furnace, 2-way holstery seat bottoms. Oil filter & fridge, super fan. block htr. 1 owner past Everything works! yrs; always hangared, No leaks, clean, non- 14no damage history. smoking, lots of storN9475U.$26,000. age with complete on the first day it runs 541-480-4375 Reese 14k hitch. to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and $2,375. 541-389-6265 human errors do oc885 cur. If this happens to your ad, please con- Canopies & Campers tact us ASAP so that corrections and any 2009 9~/d Arctic Fox, adjustments can be loaded, excellentl Must made to your ad. sell, price slashed, sell- Cessna 182Q, 1977, mid-time engine/ ing below book, $18,500. 541-385-5809 541-410-1312 prop, custom panel, The Bulletin Classified S-Tec 30 + altitude hold, Garmin 430, Bid Now! GPSS, oversized www.BulletinBidnsuy.com tires, digital fuel flow, excellent paint & interior. Must see to I -~ appreciate. ~ r~ P Asking $68,000. Fleetwood Prowler Bill, 541-480-7930 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted Buy Ne|N...Brry Local heat 8 air, great You Can Bid On: FIND YOUR FUTURE condition, snowbird 2001 Gench HOME INTHE BULLETIN ready, Many upCitation Truck grade options, fiCamper Your future is just apage nancing available! Retail Value away. Whetheryou're looking $14,500 obo. $10,995. forahatoraplacetohangit, All SeasonsRV & The Bulletin Classified is Call Dick, Marine your best source. 541-480-1687. (Bidding closes Tues., April 15, Every daythousandsof at 8:00 p.m.) buyers andsellers of goods and services dobusiness in these pages.Theyknow Summerwind 811, 2000 Camper w/slide, Loaded you can't beatTheBulletin Classified Section for Asking $10,900 selection andconvenience Call 541-815-3960 -every item isjust a phone Holiday Rambler 37' call away. BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Presidential model Search the area's most 2003, all factory opThe Classified Section is comprehensive listing of tions, 3 slides, 2 A/C easy to use.Everyitem classified advertising... units, 4 door fridge, is categorizedandevery fireplace, generator, real estate to automotive, cartegoryisindexed onthe merchandise to sporting electric jacks front section's front page. and rear, flat screen goods. Bulletin Classifieds Whether youare lookingfor TV, e n tertainment appear every day in the a home orneedaservice, center, bay window, print or on line. your future is in thepagesof exc. cond., MUST Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified. SEE! Sacr i fice www.bendbulletin.com $24,500 OBO. The Bulletin 541-223-2218 The Bulletin Saving Cenfral Ongon since SR

approval team, web site presence. Alpenlite 29' 1993, We Take Trade-Ins! with go o s eneck. Free Advertising. $3500 OBO. Needs BIG COUNTRY RV new ref r igerator Bend: 541-330-2495 541-306-1961. Redmond: Leave message. 541-548-5254

g

SeruingCentral Oregansince r%8

Pontiac Grand AM SE1 2003

+534

N4//Z/z

BMW X3

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1 96 8

A ero

Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5184.

T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-382-8998.

4 wheel drive, less than 50k miles. ¹132212 $20,977 ROBBERSON I I N c 0 L II ~

IM ROR

541-312-3986 DLR¹0205

BMW X3 2011black

Corvette Coupe

on black, sport/prem packs, leather, 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19" wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015.$38,000 One owner,

(Portland)

non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold sound system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! 137k, $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781

Get your business

Audi A4 2011, 34K mi. $22,000. Call 541-389-8'I 81

503-789-9401

914 350hp diesel eng, 9-spd trans, Hendrickson cab suspension, double framed, self-contained John Deere pony motor, 4000 gallon water tank, new battery, 902,832 miles. $22,500obo. 541-589-2209

Ford 3/4 ton F250 1993 Power Stroke diesel, turbocharged, 5-spd, good runner & work truck. $4500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-8176

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BUDGET COMIIIIITTEE MEETING

Vin¹572987

Bar ain Corral 6,977 ROBBERSON LINcoLN~

I M ROR

A public meeting of the Budget Comm ittee of the A dministrative School District No. 1, Deschutes Cou n ty, State of Oregon, to discuss the budget for the fiscal year July 1, 2014 to June 3 0, 2015, will b e held at the Education Center, 520 NW Wall Street, Bend, Oregon. The meeting will t a ke place on the 22th day of April, 2014 at 5:00 p.m. The purpose of the meeting is to r e ceive the budget m e s sage and t o rec e ive comment from the public on the budget. This is a public meeting where deliberation o f th e Budget Committee will take place. Any person may appear at the meeting and d iscuss the p r o posed p r o grams with th e B u d get Committee. A copy of the budget docum ent may be i n spected or obtained on or after April 22, 2 014, at 520 N W Wall Street, Bend, Oregon between the hours of 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

1996, 350 auto,

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647

GROw) N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

Dodge Ram 2500 2008 Diesel, exc. towing vehicle, 2WD, 55,000

mi., 29 mpg Hwy,

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.oom Updated daily

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

miles. New batteries, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000. 541-604-1285

1000

Legal Notices

FWD, V6 auto., 90k

541-388-4360

916

Kenworth 1991 T800 Water Truck

000

-->

2 0 07, 99K

miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, pan- Corvette Coupe oramic moo n roof, 1996 Bluetooth, ski bag, Xe137k, auto. non headlights, tan & Bose Gold sound. black leather interior, synthetic oil/ n ew front & re a r non-ethanol fuel brakes © 76K miles, one owner, all records, $10,500 very clean, $16,900. 541-923-1781

Chevy Ext. Cab 1991

with camper shell, good cond., $1500 OBO. 541-447-5504. People Lookfor Information About Products and Hyster forklift, H30E propane, 2 stage, 672 Services EveryDaythrough hours, $1900 obo. The Bvlletin Classryfeds 541-389-7596 Dodge Ram 1500 International Harvester SLT uadcab 1999 TD6 Bulldozer, older model, has logging winch in back for skidding or dragging. $3500 obo. Call 541-389-5353 or 541-647-8176 5 .2L V8 auto . , 1 43,659 mi. R W D Call a Pro Vin ¹ 6 28726 B a rWhether you need a gain Corral. $5,977 fence fixed, hedges ROBBERSON 4 trimmed or a house • -oi. ~ ~nama built, you'll find 541-312-3986 professional help in DLR¹0205 The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809

MII HColLIINM

BMW Z4 3.0 2004 convertible, only 28k mi., 6 spd, loaded, flawless. Local car, clean CarFax. Reduced to $16,950 obo. 928-210-8323

Porsche 911 Turbo

2003 6 speed, X50

added power pkg.

Chev Trailblazer LS 2004, AWD, V6, remote entry, clean title, 12/15 tags, $5995. 541-610-6150

530 HP! Under 10k

miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality tires, and battery, Bose p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sunroof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $59,700.

Corvette 1979

Ford Bronco H 4x4, 1989Automatic, power steering, stereo upgrade, set-up to tow, runs good. $1700. 541-633-6662

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.

$12,900.

541-322-9647

Dave, 541-350-4077

LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF SEIZURE FOR CIVIL FORFEITURE TO ALL POTENTIAL CLAIMANTS AND TO ALL UNKNOWN PERSONS READ THIS CAREFULLY

If you have any interest in t h e s e ized property d e s cribed you must claim Garage Sales below, that interest or you will lose that Ford F-350 2010 Garage Sales automatically interest. If you do not Peterbilt 359 p otable Cabela'sCrew Cab file a claim for the water truck, 1 990, Find them CORVETTE COUPE 3200 gal. tank, 5hp property, the property Glasstop 2010 in pump, 4-3" h oses, may be forfeited even Ford Edge 2011 Grand Sport 4 LT if you are not concamlocks, $ 25,000. The Bulletin loaded, clear bra 541-820-3724 victed of any cnme. hood 8 fenders. Classifieds To claim an interest, 931 New Michelin Super V8 diesel, 4 wheel you must file a written Sports, G.S. floor 541-385-5809 Automotive Parts, claim with the forfeidrive. ¹A74567 mats, 17,000 miles, ture counsel named Service & Accessories Crystal red. Leather trimmed below, The w r itten $39,777 Porsche Carrera 911 $42,000. heated seats, AWD, claim must be signed 503-358-1164. 2003 convertible with ROBBERSON auto. 6 speed. Bid Now! by you, sworn to unhardtop. 50K miles, www.BulletinBidnsuy.com vin ¹A50096 maaaa der penalty of perjury o. ~ ~ new factory Porsche $26,997 before a notary public, alIOSOIBa motor 6 mos ago with 541-312-3986 Find exactly what and state: (a) Your 18 mo factory warROBBERSON y DLR¹0205 you are looking for in the ranty remaining. true name; (b) The LlllcoLN ~ IM RDR address at which you CLASSIFIEDS $37,500. will a c cept f u t ure 541-322-6928 541-312-3986 Ford F-350 4x4, m ailings from t h e DLR ¹0205 court and f orfeiture Buy NetN...Buy Local counsel; and (3) A You Can Bid On: s tatement that y o u $200 Automotive USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! have an interest in the Shop Labor seized property. Your Retail Value $200 Door-to-door selling with deadline for filing the Advanced Auto 2006 XLT 4-door Ford Thunderbird fast results! It's the easiest claim document with Repair Crew Cab Volvo S40 T5 2005 2002 c o nvertible way in the world to sell. forfeiture cou n sel (Bidding closes AWD, sunroof, with brand new tonn amed below is 21 Tues., April 15, 6.0L Turbo diesel, full neau cover, white luxury and winter The Bulletin Classified days from the last day at 8:00 p.m.) power, a u t omatic, with grey i nterior, packages, new of publication of this 6-disc CD, cruise, fog 541-385-5809 loaded, 86,600 low tires, and more! notice. Where to file lights, running boards, miles, choice condi932 $6775 obo. a claim and for more tow pkg, bediiner, grill tion, eve r ything Call 541-330-5818 Antique & i nformation: D a i na guard, folding rear works. Great fun car Vitolins, Crook County seat. Tan cloth inteClassic Autos to d r ive. I l l ness rior, metallic tan exteforces sale. price re- Volvo V40 1. 8 t u rbo District Attorney Ofrior. 91,400 miles. duced to $12,500. charge 2001, auto., fice, 300 N E T h ird Call Bill 1 30,500 mi., g o od Street, Prineville, OR Priced to sell $21,500 541-604-9307 tires, power windows 97754. Ford Escape Ltd 541-350-6925 & locks, moon/sun- Notice of r easons 2012 Exc. cond! Silver gray m etallic, roof, heated seats, for Forfeiture: The Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 leather, very clean, property d e s cribed loaded, flex f u e l, engine, power everyBluetooth, l e a ther garaged, $3 , 995. below was seized for thing, new paint, 54K forfeiture because it: int., ski rack, keyless 541-617-3951 orig. miles, runs great, (1) Constitutes the entry, back-up senexc. cond.in/out. $7500 WHEN YOU SEE THIS proceeds of the violasors. new all season obo. 541-480-3179 tion of, solicitation to tires, Ext. warranty. Ford Thunderbird Great all weather vev iolate, attempt t o FORD XLT 1992 2004 violate, or conspiracy hicle! $22,000 3/4 ton 4x4 Convertible Call or text Sandy at to violates, the crimimatching canopy, On a classified ad with hard & soft top, nal laws of the State 541-480-4778 30k original miles, go to silver with black Oregon regarding possible trade for www.bendbulletin.com of interior, the manufacture, disclassic car, pickup, to view additional all original, tribution, or possesPlymouth B a r racuda Mercedes Benz motorcycle, RV photos of the item. very low mileage, sion of controlled sub1966, original carl 300 C300 S ort2012 $13,500. in premium condition. stances (ORS hp, 360 V8, center/ In La Pine, call Good classified ads tell $19,900. Chapter475); and/or lines, 541-593-2597 928-581-9190 702-249-2567 the essential facts in an (2) Was used or in(car is in Bend) interesting Manner. Write t ended for us e i n from the readers view -not committing or facilithe seller's. Convert the tating the violation of, Kia Soul+ 2012 facts into benefits. Show solicitation to violate, Less than 14k mil, I nternational Fla t the reader how the item wi l l attempt to violate, or AWD, 7 spd, leather .l Bed Pickup 1963, 1 help them in some way. conspiracy to violate vin ¹700716 Rolls Royce 1992 Silton dually, 4 s pd. the criminal laws of This $31,977 ver Spur II,excellent! trans., great MPG, the State of Oregon advertising tip Midnight Blue exterior, could be exc. wood regarding the manuROBBERSON brought toyouby Parchment leather inte- hauler, runs great, facture, distribution or u vroa» ~ ~naa a a rior, 15-inch chrome RR new brakes, $1950. 2.0L 4 cyls, FWD, The Bulletin possession of conwheels, Alpine Sirius 58N/ g CNtltBI OKgtN SIIKQ ISB automatic, 43k 541-312-3986 trolled su b stances DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS 541-419-5480. DLR ¹0205 miles, 28 MPG Hwy, (ORS Chapter 475). navigation system, vin¹438072 935 77,200 miles, dealerLooking for your IN THE MATTER OF: ship maintained, al$13,977 next employee? Sport Utility Vehicles ways garaged. New, ToyotaLandcruiser Place a Bulletin help ROBBERSON ~ about $250,000; sell (1) One 1993 Toyota VX 1999 wanted ad today and $19,500.541-480-3348 VolvoS6075 2013 Tacoma, OLN tk a. reach over 60,000 U KH036, Case No readers each week. 541-312-3986 WHEN ONLY THE 13-1739 seized OctoYour classified ad BEST WILL DO! DLR ¹0205 b er 3 , 2 0 1 3 f r o m will also appear on Carolyn Orrell. bendbulletin.com which currently reNissan Altima2010 4.7L V8, 4WD, auto., (2) One 2008 Silver ceives over 1.5 milToyota Tundra, OLN AWD, less than 11k 16 mpg Hwy, Vin¹ lion page views 66902 Bargain Cor5 11GFG, Case N o mi., auto, 6 spd. every month at 13-278305 se i z ed vin ¹202364 ral $9,977 no extra cost. BulleBuick Skylark 1972 D ecember 6, 2 0 13 $31,977 17K orig. miles. Please tin Classifieds f rom Andrew Van ROBBERSON~ Get Results! Call see Bend Craiglist for Nest. 385-5809 or place details. $18,900. ROBBERSON 2.5S 4cyl., FWD, your ad on-line at 541-323-1896 LlllcoLN ~ IIM K R CVT, 76k mi., 32 541.312.3986 bendbulletin.com mpg„Tuscan Sun DLR¹0205 933 Sell an Item 541-312-3986 Metallic, vin¹443778 DLR ¹0205 Pickups $11,997 I The Bulletin recoml 940 ROBBERSON mends extra cautionl Vans co mazaa when p u r chasing • GarageSales

Garage Sales

MoreP ixatBendbulletin,com

g-i

®

GarageSales 2005 Diesel 4x4 Chev Crewcab dually, Allison tranny, tow pkg., brake controller, cloth split front bench seat, only 66k miles. Very good condition, Original owner, $34,000 or best offer. 541-408-7826

GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!

541-385-5809

~

541-312-3986 DLR ¹0205

I

f products or servicesf

FAST!

from out of the area.

f S ending c

ash ,f

checks, or credit in- s formation may be I [ sublect toFRAUD. For more informa-

I

If it's under$500 you CanplaCeit in

The Bulletin Chrysler Town & f tion about an adverCountry LXI 1997, Classifieds for: tiser, you may call beautiful inside 8 I the Oregon StateI out, one owner, nonGeneral's s smoker,. loaded with Olds 98 Regency 1990 Attorney Office C o nsumer I $10 3linee,ldaye exc. shape, runs as options! 197,892 mi. new, one owner, 20 f Protection hotline at Service rec o rds 1-877-877-9392. $16 3lines, t4daye mpg in town. New available. $4 , 950. battery, stud snow Call Mike, (541) 815tires. $2000. 8176 after 3:30 p.m. Serving Central Oregon sinceSIB (PrivatePartyadsonly)

f

I

/

~ TI.Su.t

541-389-9377

~


v I I

Oyer 2,000 NE natur

Your LocallyOwned

Check Out Our

I $4

R /

®

Depertment

PR IICTS!

IRp /

BEEF NEW YORK STEAKS

,$ $8 LB

BEEF COUNTRY STYLERIBS

PINK LADY APPLES

j

j '

j J

CHOICETEXAS GRAPEFRUIT

3$q

LB

GRANNYSMITH APPLES

.CHANPAGNE

.$ $8 LB

m-"™

PORK SIRLOIN ROAST Bone-In

LB

CALIFORNIA SWEETNAVEL ORANGES

r q~ LB

LB

CHOICE LENOHS

gs1 BEEF RUNP ROAST Boneless

CORNISH GANE HENS

LARGERIPE TOMATOES

8 68 LB

POLLOCK FILLETS Frozen

$288 BEEFllP STEAKS Boneless

LB

$328

CRISP GREEN CABBAGE

OAILY'S BIG BUY BACOH 16 Oz

LB

LB

S)88 Ad Items Subject to Availability FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, APR 15,2014 IPAGE 1


LLKI

I ~

COORS 4 COORS LIGHT BEER

w5p

18 Pack, 12 Oz Cans & Bottles

30 Pack 12 Oz Cans

EA + DEP

EA + DEP

<rj;ma CORONA,PACIFICO, REBRA MOOELO A

MOOELOESPECIAL BEER

~

12 Pack 12 Oz Bottles

MppLI IIIIELI

r ,

BBRD

hTeltlll tlt TILTI

750 ML Sweet Red & Sweet White

WOODSRIDGS ltlltte IJU!Ilfrl

& eetrlE/

FOR

MENAGE ATROIS WINE 750 ML Selected Varieties

6 Pack 24 Oz Bottles

Stroganoff, Cheeseburger Beef Pasta

EA + DEP

'p

IRQJ +RJ~LII

I

i>~ J- 'C

• OKKKK TTKFA T

e

r

KTJJIOthhheftD

MALT-0-MEAL BOXED CEREAL Oat Blenders, Cocoa Dyno Bites, Fruity Dyno Bites

EA

47 Oz Selected Varieties

WESTERN FAMILY SALTINES

OROWEA T ENGLISH MUFFINS

16 Oz Salted Tops

12to140z Selected Varieties

WESTERN FAMILYCANNED TOMATOE S

SENECA APPLESAU CE EA

PAGE 2 I TUESDAY, APR 15,2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

14.5 Oz Selected Varieties Peeled, Stewed, Diced

HAMSUR HELPER Lasagna,

NA T U R AL

EA + DEP

l,r

KWOODSRIDOI

PEPSI, DR PEPPER, MTN DEW, . SIERRA MIST

l SN Mi'st O

Apod I'

WOODBRIDGE WINE

BUSCH BEER

tehllh

MD BATH TISSUE EA

IIIeh

SUN UQUID DISH DETERGE NT

SARALEE BAGELS EA

15to 200z Selected Varieties

12 Double Rolls

EA

20 Oz Selected Varieties


I

) i

r •

O ~s

g s aagenn

0

g~25% ~ er 'I"''

DD 0

Eeeee

.I •

i,

4ip 25&

I•

Illg

i

A

e

I I I •

~e

g s aEsena

POTATO CHIPS

HOLE GRAIN'

ESEBURGER ACARONI

BRAND

• ,

0

NEW YORK

08giIrr

CHEDDAR

25gIII

great taate... naturILLuI"

net weight s on(14E g)

$

GER KElTLE CHIPS

ClLPRI SUN

Mac, EA

50z EA Selected Varieties

Se lected Varieties

ANER VALIIES

FROZ EN VALIIES

DAIRY 1 VALUES

EBEEHAED'E

• lrrrr

gralgggpg

W

STASHTEA 20 Count Selected Varieties

» O

EGGL BIlTER ROLLS

HEALTHY CHOICE DINNERS

PS EBERHARD HALF ScHALF Quart

12 Count

10 to 12 Oz Selected Varieties

DELI VALIIES

FROZ EN VALUE S I

WHIPPINGICRHLM EA

'

'

I

' =

I

-=.

Pn it

DAIRY VALIIES

-

@SSEaanS~~..

I 1

p

NAPOL EON EXTRA VIRGIN OLIVE OIL 33.8 Oz

E

p]

i

PS EBERHARD

ROTISSERIE CHICKEN

PS EBERHARD

ICE CREAM 56 Oz Selected Varieties

SOURCRHLM EA

16oz

EA

FOOD 4 LESS - BEND I TUESDAY, APR 15,2014 IPAGE 3


P~ G~, SPECIALS.

p~EQ'D o~eaec C48RO

HONEYGOLD ASIAN PEARS

> Lb Bag

~ ee, ,n •

SWEETGRAPE TOMATOES

C ertif i e d

RQ~1C ' . '

0• •

1 Pint

,) A ' •

'

"

.

"

'. N " '

':: . P

'- •

.

' ,

'

88

-

'

.

'

" .

'

T

ULRGE ORGANIC BARTLElT PEARS

SNOWWHITE CAULIFLOWER LB

~S

FOSTERFARMS GRILL PACK CHICKEN

LB

uAG~,SPECIALS. WILD RDDK'FISH • ~FILL LIE<TS

Northwest Grown

28

n

Previously Frozen Longline Caught

1

LB

BAR-SPREMIUM DELI HAM OR HONEYHAM 16 Oz

98

g

ig

LB

!Ilili)

oual>e +OIIB PBESI gg l

FARMLANDROPE SAUSAGE

EXTRALEAN HAMBURGER Not to Exceed15% Fat

14 Oz, Polish or Smoked

98

ggglBO

paeL

LB

WE ACCEI%

• Food Stamps

$3455 Hwy. $7 N. 541-388-2100 PAGE 4 I TUESDAY, APR 15,2014 IFOOD 4 LESS - BEND

• WIC Vouchers We reserve the right to limit quantities

• Manufacturer's Coupons


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.