Bulletin Daily Paper 1-16-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

THURSDAY January16,2014

ain VerSuS C OCO a e mi C COC Cdroneschool? HEALTH• D1

LOCAL• B1

bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD

Bend officer cleared inNovembershooting

COVer Oregun — Thestate is withholding millions from the website developer, but haspaid it $92 million already.B1

By Shelby R. King

JeffSaleonWednesday held a press conference to release

The Bulletin

A six-week investigation by Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty has concluded Bend Police Officer

additional details about the in-

Erick Supplee was justified when he fatally shot a Bend burglarysuspectin November

about items found at the scene. "This was a tragic and

2013.

friends of Tyler Keinonen

Flaherty and Police Chief

cident, includingthe results of atoxicology report conducted on the suspect and information sad event for the family and and for the officers and first

responders," Flaherty said. "This tragic event is yet another example of the destructive

blight that is methamphetamine in our community. "We determined the shoot-

ing was justified because Officer Supplee clearly had a reasonable belief that he was going to be shot and killed," Flaherty said.

Keinonen, 31, died of a single gunshot wound to the chest after disobeying repeated commands from three officers responding to reports of a possible burglary at a home on Northeast Jackdaw Drive on Nov. 22, according to

the death investigation report released Wednesday. SeeShooting/A4

rom oo

Profiling —Underupcoming federal guidelines, it won't be just 'racial' anymore.A4

Bu et PBSSBS

House 8BSI • More money for firefighting added

Plus: Insuranceagents

— They're earning more in commissions after the website's troubles.B1

IN D.C.

10

By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — Fed-

eral hazardous fuels re-

10 |'SSO1

0

Federal clerks —There's no more secretarial pool, but staff are still relied upon.A6

duction efforts will receive

$150 million more than the Obama administration requested for 2014 in the $1.1

trillion spending bill that Congress is poised to pass this week.

The House of Representatives passed the omnibus spending bill easily Wednesday by a 359-67 margin, including "yes" votes from Oregon's fourDemocraticrepresentatives and Rep. Greg

And a Webexclusive

— Texas officials seek to ban 'gassing' of rattlesnakes. beudbulletiu.cum/extras

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Walden, of Hood River, the

delegation's lone Republican. The Senate is expected to vote on the matter

Mexico clasheswith vigilantes

Friday. The spending bill dictates how much each

government department will receive in operational funding for 2014. It formal-

izes the budget agreement struck last year by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash.,

By Randal C. Archibold

and Rep. Paul Ryan,

New York Times News Service

R-Wis., the chairs of the

Senate and House budget committees. The final spending allotments were negotiated by Sen. Barbara Mikulski, D-Md., and Rep. Hal Rogers, R-Ky., who chair the appropriations

ANTUNEZ, Mexico-

Word spread quickly: The army was coming to disarm the vigilante fighters whom residents viewed as conqueringheroes after they swept in and drove out a

drug gangthat had stolen property, extortedmoney and threatened to kill them.

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

They even had to leave flowersand otherofferingsata shrine to the gang's messianic leader. Peasant farmers locked

Sociology professor Ken Ruettgers engages in a discussion with his students while teaching a class Tuesday at COCC.

arms with vigilantes to

block the dusty two-lane road leading here. The

After blocking for a Heisman-winning quarterback at the University of Southern California, Ken Ruettgers

soldiers demanded to be let

left for the NFL in 1985 as the seventh

in; peoplebegged themto leave. Tempers flared, and

overall pick by the Green Bay Packers, a team he played for his entire decade in the league.

rocks were thrown. The sol-

diers fired into the air, and

By Tyler Leeds

It was time well-spent, too. Ruett-

gers ended up as the Packer's 1989

crowd. At least two people were killed Tuesday, offi-

offensive MVP, a 1996 Super Bowl

"He was just a farmer, and now he died for a cause," one resident, Luis Sanchez, said of Mario Tor-

res,48, a lime picker who was not part of the vigilante

security challenge. Should it disarm the loosely organized gunmen who have risen up to fight

long-delayed Senate Intelligence Committee report re-

"I thought it would be nirvana, that

leased Wednesday faulted both the State Department

the tensions in my marriage would just melt away, that we could more or less it would be the American dream," Ruettgers, 51, said. "But when I got to that

government with a thorny

WASHINGTON — A

ment, it made no sense to expect much different.

mourners cried out against

in Michoacan state — where

The Washington Post

good to Ruettgers, and entering retire-

retire, go on vacations, spend more

vigilantes have taken up arms to battle cartel gunmen on village streets — has confrontedthe image-conscious Mexican

By Adam Goldman and Anne Gearan

champion and with a place in his team's hall of fame. The NFL had been

group but was amongthe twoburied Wednesday as the government. As convoys of federal police officers and soldiers crisscrossed the rolling farmland, the turmoil here

Senate: Benghazi 'preventable'

The Bulletin

then, residents said, into a cials and residents said.

committees. See Budget /A4

time with the family. Really, I thought Photo courtesy Ken Ruettgere

Ken Ruettgers, center, rests on the bench with teammates Tootie Robbins, left, and place, that wasn't what I found." While many players struggle finan- Ron Hallstrom during the packers'1992 season. cially, Ruettger's problems were largely with his marriage, as he struggled with a desire to micromanage his wife, Sher- sociology. Ruettgers wrote his disserta- pened was, Tom was shot and killed yl. After working through the transi- tion on what he terms the "sport career by the police. He was recently married tion out of the NFL, apath that took Ru- transition," and he now teaches sociolo- and had a new son, and he had been ettgers into marriage counseling and a gy courses at Central Oregon Commu- unemployed for seven years and denew career in publishing, he chose to nity College, including one on the role pressed. Who knows what was really dedicate his life to athletes facing chal- of sports in society. going on? But I think athletics is often "What triggered all of this was when a coping mechanism for the multitude lenges after retirement. At first, Ruettgers worked through a nonprofit he I got a call about a guy I played next to of issues we face in life, and when that founded, Games Over, but in 2007, he named Tom Neville," Ruettgers said. "It is gone, what's going to be your new graduated from the Oxford Graduate was one of our teammates, and he said, mechanism?" School in Tennessee with a doctorate in 'Did you hear the news'?' What hapSeeProfessor/A4

and the intelligence community for not preventing attacks on two outposts in Benghazi, Libya, that killed four Americans, including a U.S. ambassador, about 16 months ago. The bipartisan report

laid out more than a dozen findings regarding the assaults on a diplomatic com-

pound and a CIA annex in the city. It said the State Department failed to increase

security despite warnings, and blamed intelligence agencies for not sharing information about the existence of the CIA outpost with the U.S. military.

See Benghazi /A5

the drug cartels? Or should it back down and let these

nebulous outfits — with little or no police training, uncertain loyalties and possible ties to another gangcontinue to fight against the

region's narcotics rings'? SeeMexico/A5

TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 55, Low 31 Page B6

The Bulletin

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health D1-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D5 S I E1-6 Dear Abby D5 Lo cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies

B5 C1 4 D5

AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 1e 30 pages, 5 sections

Q l/i/e userecyclednewsprint

': IIIIIIIIIIIIII o

8 8 267 02329


A2

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

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q7Q8Q9Q24Q 29© The estimated jackpot is now $113 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q~QzoQ aQ zsQ mQs The estimated jackpot is now $2.1 million.

N.M. SChOOI ShOOtillg —The12-year-old boy who openedfire on a crowd of students in aNewMexico middle school gym had planned the attackand warned someclassmates to stay awaymoments before the gunfire rang out, investigators said Wednesday. State Police Chief PeteKassetas said it appeared the victims in Tuesday's shooting at Berrendo Middle School in Roswell — an11-yearold boy and13-year-old girl — were chosen randomly. Theshotgun used by the boycamefrom his family's home, and he hadthree rounds of ammunition, Kassetas said at anews conference.

• •

setts law that created buffer

o I gyd

zones around abortion clinics inthe state.

But a significant piece of data was missing: Chief Justice John Roberts, who almost certainly holds the crucial vote,

•n

Soldier held prisoner — Avideo of anAmerican soldier held

asked no questions. His earlier opinions suggest, however, that he is likely to provide the fifth Evan Vucci/The Associated Press vote to strike downthe law. Alan Hoyle, of Lincolnton, N.C., stands outside the Supreme Court The court' sfourm oreliberal Wednesday, where the court heard arguments on a Massachusetts members asked questions in-

captive by Afghan insurgents for the past t4/~ years is in the possession of the U.S.government, and officials said Wednesdaythat it showed the soldier, Sgt. BoweBergdahl, alive but in declining health. Few details were available on thevideo, which was obtained in recent days by the U.S.military. The video refers to current events, prompting officials to believe that it is proof that Bergdahl, the only American being held prisoner in Afghanistan, is still alive. Bergdahl wascaptured in Paktika province in Afghanistan on June30, 2009.

law setting a 35-foot protest-free zone outside abortion clinics.

dicating that they believed that the 35-foot bufferzones created by the 2007 law were a valid

"These people don't want to response to decades of harass- protest abortion. They want

conversations."

ment and violence at abortion dinics in M assachusetts, in-

response from Justice Anthony Kennedy.

two facilities in 1994. Deeesre

es have struck down state bans ongay marriage for the samereason, concluding that they violate the Constitution's promise of equal treatment under the law.Although that idea has beenthe heart of the gay marriage debate for years, the decisions in deeply conservative Oklahoma andUtah offer new momentum for litigants pressing the same argument in dozens of other casesacross the country. And experts say the rulings could represent anemerging legal consensus that will carry the issue back to theSupremeCourt. Thejudge who issued Tuesday's decision in Oklahoma "isn't stepping out on his own," said Douglas NeJaime, aprofessor of law at the University of California, Irvine. "He's doing what acolleague in another court did not long ago." Rulings in Virginia andPennsylvania could follow soon.

1 0 I OA C IIllC Ll e i '

to talk to the women who are

about to get abortions and try

duding a shooting rampage at to talk them out of it." Si sil.AvL

Gaymarriage rulingS — In lessthana month, two federal judg-

"There was a considerable history of disturbances and blocking the entrance," Justice

Ruth Bader Ginsburg said. Justice Stephen Breyer said the clinic setting may justify some limits on speech. "Everyone is in a fragile state of mind," he said. The lead plaintiff in the case, Eleanor McCullen, has said that she seeks to engage in friendly conversations with women seeking abortions in an attempt to tell them they have

alternatives. She added that the buffe r zone frustrated her efforts and violated her First

Amendment rights. The court's more conservative members questioned the

need for the law, which they said was a blunt and selective instrument.

"This is not a protest case,"

Justice Antonin Scalia said.

This drew an i ncredulous eDo you want me to write an

But Breyer said that only a

opinionand say there'sno free general prohibition on entering speech right to quietly converse the buffer zone would work. on an issue of public impor"It's just tough to say whether tance'?" he asked. "In speech they're counseling somebody cases," he added in a chastising or screaming at somebody," he tone, "when you address one sald. problem, you have a duty to The justices and the lawyers protect speech that's lawful." arguing before them tried to Mark Rienzi, a lawyer for convey a sense of just how long McCullen, said the law was un35 feet is, pointing to parts of constitutional for at least two the courtroom and people in it. reasons. In limiting its applica"I guess I'm just a little hung tion to abortion clinics, he said, up on why you need so much the law effectively singled out space," Justice Elena Kagan one subject. And in allowing told Jennifer Grace Miller, an clinic employees to stay in the assistant state attorney general. zone, it favored one side of the Miller, the state's lawyer, said debate, he added. "Public sidewalks occuthe buffer zone left ample opportunities for speech on other py a special position in First parts of the sidewalk near the Amendment analysis," he said, clinics and in other places. adding that his argument to "No one is guaranteed any the justices would sound very specific form of communica- different shouted from 35 feet tion," she later added. "There away, particularly if the opposis no guarantee, as a doc- ing lawyer was allowed to artrinal matter, to close, quiet gue from the usual spot.

Air Forcesuspends officers overseeing nuclear weapons By Helene Cooper

LedanOOattaCk — An international tribunal was setto begin the court case todayagainst five menaccused in a February 2005 bombing that killed former LebanesePrime Minister Rafik Hariri and 22 others. Theattack, which many havelinked to Syria, led to popular uprisings across Lebanonand, ultimately, to a diminishing of Syrian influence onthe country. The casestarts nearly nine years after the attack. The Special Tribunal for Lebanon, basedoutside the Hague,was set up specifically to investigate the 2005attack. It will be the first international court case related to anincident of international terrorism. Anti-NaZi laW —Israel is on the brinkofbanning the N-word. N as in Nazi, that is. Parliament gavepreliminary approval Wednesday to a bill that would make it a crime to call someone aNazi — or any other slur associated with the Third Reich — or to useHolocaust-related symbols in a noneducational way. Backers of the lawsay it is a response to what they see asa rise in anti-Semitism around the world. But critics, including somewith deep connections to the Holocaust, say the proposed law is adangerous infringement on free speech. D.C. pOt laW —The District of Columbia on Wednesdaymoved closer to easing restrictions on marijuana, ascity lawmakers advanced a measurethat would decriminalize possession of up to1 ounce of the drug. In aunanimous voice vote, the City Council's public safety committee sent the full council a measurethat would make possessing marijuana acivil, not criminal, violation, subject to a fine as low as$25 and seizure of the drug. Selling marijuana would remain a crime. Thefull council must approve legislation twice before it goes to the mayor. It would then besubject to a 30-day review by Congress before it could beenacted. — From wire reports

s

I

I

/

He characterized the Malm-

New York Times News Service

strom case as the largest WASHINGTON — The Air cheatingepisode he had come Force said Wednesday that across among missile launch 34 officers responsible for officers. launching the nation's nuclear Defense experts say that the missiles have been suspended, end of the Cold War and the eland their security clearanc- evation of counterterrorism in es revoked, for cheating on the U.S. military has led to low monthly proficiency tests that morale among the men and assess their knowledge of how women, known as missileers, to operate the warheads.

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e

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tI

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r

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to view their mission as a backwater, with little chance of ad-

I

I

in the Obama administration. She called any potential secu-

subcommittee that oversees

nal remained safe. "This is not about the com-

mlsconduct. James said she would trav-

promiseof nuclear weapons,"

el next week to missile launch sites to discuss ways to prevent future problems. She said that

"will not accept or allow that

strom, would retake the proficiency test by today.

type of behavior."

600 missile crew members across the Air Force, including all of the 190 officers at Malm-

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111 WAYS

TO DISCOVER CENTRAL OREGON NEEDAN IDEA FOR HOW 10 SPEND VOURFREE

rltnrr THISselnEnas 111IDEAS.

the nuclear arsenal, said rity lapse in the country's nu- Wednesday of the cheating cleararsenal as "worrisome. scandal, that "there is simPeriod." ply no room in our Air Force, Defense officials insisted and certainly in our nuclear that the nation's nuclear arse- enterprise, for this type of

Force chief of staff. He called the revelations a "compromise of the integrity of some of our airmen" and said the Air Force

f

I' ••f•

ii

vancement to the top ranks of answers to the routine month- the Air Force. lytests. Bruce Blair, a former MinEleven Air Force officersuteman missile launch control including two accused in the officer, said missile officers Malmstrom cheating scandal, routinely cheated, in part beas well as one other nuclear cause the Air Force required missile officer — have also them to score 100 percent on been the focus of suspicion in the proficiency tests. "Perfecan illegal drugs investigation, tion is demanded of all of these defense officials said. crew members, and it's an imA lthough th e A i r F o r c e possible standard," Blair said. has been plagued in recent The Pentagon disclosed years by scandals, the current the original drug inquiry last revelations ar e p a r ticularly week, but officials have dealarming because they involve clined to go into details on the the United States' nuclear ar- investigation, which is consenal, where errors could be tinuing, other than to say that catastrophic. the officers are suspected of "There's no making this possessing recreational drugs. better," said Kathleen Hicks, Sen. Mark Udall, D-Colo., a former top defense official the chairman of the Senate

said Gen. Mark Welsh, the Air

'f

i

who live and work within a

At a news conference, Deb- hair trigger of the country's orah Lee James, the secretary 450 nuclear missiles. The misof the Air Force, said the offisileers have increasingly come cers, at Malmstrom Air Force Base in Montana, either knew about or took part in texting

I

WHEN TO LOOK POR IT: PUBUSHIIG TWOEDITIONSAYEAR • Spring/Summer: April Fall/Winter: October (Dates to be announced)

Presenting the area'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 Tri-county area. This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce and other key points of interest including tourist kiosks across the state. It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors throughout the year.


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Jan.16, the16th day of 2014. Thereare349 days left in the year.

HAPPENINGS Ledallah —The trial is set to begin against five men accusedinthe2005bombing that killed former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik Hariri and 22 others.A2 OSCarS —The nominees for the awards will be announced; the awards will be presented March 2.

DISCOVERY

STUDY

Your friends really are

r n i i n r m in

revea e in ancien

happier

IS OSSI

than you

Scientists have discovered the pelvis of Tiktaalik roseae, a transitional species between fish and

By Caitlin Dewey The Washington Post

HISTORY Highlight:In1944, during World War II, Gen.Dwight D. Eisenhower formally assumed command oftheAllied Expeditionary Forces inLondon. In1547, Ivan IV ofRussia (popularly known as"Ivan the Terrible") was crownedCzar. In1883, the U.S.Civil Service Commission wasestablished. In1920, Prohibition beganin the United States asthe18th Amendment to theU.S.Constitution took effect, oneyearto the day after its ratification. (It was later repealed bythe 21st Amendment.) In1935, fugitive gangster Fred Barker andhis mother, Kate "Ma" Barker,werekilled in a shootout with theFBIat Lake Weir, Fla. In1957, three B-52's tookoff from Castle Air ForceBasein California on thefirst non-stop, round-the-world flight by jet planes, which lasted 45hours and19 minutes. In1964,the musical "Hello, Dolly!" opened onBroadway, beginning a run of2,844 performances. In1969,two mannedSoviet Soyuz spaceshipsbecamethe first vehicles to dock inspace and transfer personnel. In1978, NASAnamed 35candidates to fly onthespaceshuttle, including Sally Ride,whobecame America's first womanin space, andGuionBluford, who becameAmerica's first black astronaut in space. In1989, three daysof rioting began in Miamiwhenapolice officer fatallyshot Clement Lloyd, a blackmotorcyclist, causing acrashthat also claimed the life of Lloyd's passenger, Allan Blanchard. (The officer, William Lozano,was convicted of manslaughter, but then wasacquitted in a retrial.) In1991, the WhiteHouseannounced thestart of Operation Desert Storm to drive Iraqi forces out of Kuwait. In2003,the spaceshuttle Columbia blasted off for what turned out to beits last flight; on board was Israel's first astronaut, llan Ramon.(Themission ended in tragedy onFeb.1, when the shuttle brokeup during its return descent, killing all sevencrew members.) Tenyearsage:Popstar Michael Jacksonpleaded not guilty to child molestation charges during a court appearancein Santa Maria, Calif.; the judge scolded Jacksonfor being 21 minutes late. (Jacksonwas eventually acquitted.) NASA announcedthat the orbiting Hubble SpaceTelescopewould be allowed todegradeandeventually becomeuseless. Fiveyears age:President-elect BarackObamamade apitch for his massiveeconomic stimulus plan at factory a in Bedford Heights, Ohio,saying his proposal would makesmart investments in thecountry's future and createsolid jobs in up-and-coming industries. One yearage: Bracedfor a fight, President BarackObama unveiled themost sweeping proposals for curbing gunviolence in twodecades,pressing a reluctant Congress topass universal backgroundchecks and bans on military-style assault weapons and high-capacity ammunition magazineslike the ones used inthe Newtown, Conn., school shooting.

BIRTHDAYS Movie director John Carpenter is 66. Actress-dancer-choreographer DebbieAllen is 64. Singer Sade is 55. Rock musician Nick Valensi (The Strokes) is 33. NFLquarterback Joe Flacco is 29. — From wire reports

amphibians. The new discovery suggests that hind limbs first developed in fish, not in land-dwelling

It turns out social networks are not at fault: Your

animals. By Meeri Kim Special To The Washington Post

A ll

a n i m al s w i t h fo u r

limbs — reptiles, birds, amphibians and even humansdescendedfrom common ancestors that made that initial transition from fins to feet.

But how and why this evolutionary leap occurred has long been a scientific puzzle. Now, the partial remains of a 375-million-year-old fish have emerged to help fill in some of the blanks. Paleontologists have uncovered new fossils from Tiktaalik roseae,

which, while still a fish, is considered a transitional fossil that also has traits com-

mon to the first four-footed animals. This more complete picture

of Tiktaalik suggests that the

A link hetween fish andfour-legged animals

to land. Known as the "front-

wheel-drive"

researchers in Finland and

France. This little mobius strip of

Scientists have discovered the pelvis of Tiktaalik roseae, a transitional species between fish and amphibians. Remains Mammals of a 375-million- year-old fossil with front appendageswhich had fins but also hefty shoulder and wrist Reptiles bones — were first found in 2004. The new discovery suggests that hind limbs first developed in fish, not in land- dwelling animals. Amphibians

a phenomenon is called the

"generalized friendship paradox," and at first glance it makes no sense. Everyone's

friends can't be richer and more popular — that would just escalate until everyone's

a socialite billionaire. The whole thing turns on averages, though. Most people have small numbers of friends and, apparently,

Tiktaalik

(Extinct) Tiktaalik's pelvis

moderate levels of wealth

andhappiness. A fewpeople

Lungfish

Tiktaalik had gills and lived

in shallow water, where its appendages would haved helped it crawl through the mud and lunge at prey.

creature had strong, mobile

hind fins. That challenges the view that such enhanced rear appendages arose much later,perhaps even after animals had made the transition

friends really are richer, happier and more popular than you, according to a depressing new study from

have buckets of friends and

Coelacanth

money and are (as a result?) wildlyhappy. When you take the two groups together, the really obnoxiously lucky people skew the num-

Ray-finned fishes

bers for the rest of us. Here's

Early vertebrates

how MIT's Technology Review explains the math: "The paradox arises be-

Sharks

cause numbers of friends people have are distributed in a way that follows apower law rather than an o~

Sources: University of Chicago, University of California at Berkeley

hyp o thesis,

that view held that front fins evolved into limbs first, while

back fins stayed small and unimportant. "These a r e

fo u r -wheel-

as frogs, tigers and seals. But Tiktaalik's incomplete

drive animals, not just frontwheel-drive only," said study

remains forced scientists to only guess what its rear porauthor a n d p a l e ontologist tion was like. A few years Ted Daeschler of the Acad- after the original discovery, emy of Natural Sciences in Daeschler and his team finalPhiladelphia. The r e sults ly excavated the remaining were published online Mon- pizza box-size blocks grainday in the Proceedings of by-grain to reveal the surt he N a tural A c a demy o f prisingly robust back portion Sciences. of the same animal. Stretching up to 9 feet long, Earlier evidence suggested the original 2004 discovery that the rudder-like hind fins of Tiktaalik in the Canadian remained small while front Arctic included fossils from fins evolved into strong limbs its front half only — skull, that could propel the fish shoulders and front f i ns. along the ground; hind limbs The initial excavation was

made by Daeschler and study co-authors Neil Shubin of the University of Chicago and Farish Jenkins of

H a r vard

University. Jenkins died in 2012. The ancient fish caused a stir in the scientific commu-

nity due to its hodgepodge of features:It ha d scales and

didn't find a femur bone, the socket shape and size means Tiktaalik likely had a larger rear fin range of motion than traditional fish.

Tiktaalik, what could truly

"For you and I, w e h ave

were still tied to the water

group that causes the paradox. People with lots of friends are more likely to number among your friends

this nice ball-and-socket ar-

but could also h andle the

in the first place. And when

rangement, but for more finlike fishes, that is not a deep

gravitational force and dryness of land.

rounded socket — it's flatter,"

T he exact r easons w h y

they do, they significantly raise the average number of fri ends thatyour friends

Daeschler said.

d er-like

that holds the front fin," he said. "That was not what we have predicted."

with th e

v ertebral column

said. "It's the parts nearest the

body that get modified first, both in terms of embryo development an d

al researcher Inbal Ben-Ami Bartal.

As part of what Bartal show kindness to strangers, calls th e "Mowgli experibut only if the rats in distress ment" — a reference to the are of a familiar type, a new boy raised by wolves in Rustudy has found. dyard Kipling's "The JunN eurobiologists from the gle Book" - researchers University of Chicago have plucked albino pups from h u m ans, w i l l

d iscovered t ha t

r a t s d i s - their mothers on the day they

play empathy-like behavior t oward other r ats, but t h e

were born and transferred them to a group of black-

onaverage,yourfriendshave more friends thanyou do." And this rule doesn't just

apply to friendship — other studies have shown that your Twitter followers have

more followers than you and your sexual partners have more partners than

you've had. This latest study, by Young-Ho Eom at the University of Toulouse and Hang-Hyun Jo at Aalto University in Finland, centered oncitations and coauthorsin

scientificjournals. Essentially, the "generalized friendship paradox" applies to all

Beingableto move around and push off the ground in

interpersonal networks, re-

shallow waters became an

e v o lution," evolutionary

said paleontologist Jennifer Clack of the University of Cambridge, who was not involved in the study. Extremities, like fins and distinct dig-

adv a ntage. Clack said she believes fish had a number of

WILSONSof Redmond

low waters and, subsequent-

ly, land: to escape predators, catch land-dwelling insects

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eLife.

The researchers said empathic behavior is common in the natural world. "Helping and empathy are evolutionary advantages," Mason said.

gardless of whether they're set in real life or online.

d i f ferent

motives to venture into shal-

mplements Hsae ) n , i e ~ts~s

Rats help other rats, but only ones they are familiar with R ats, lik e

have. That's the reason that,

water.

STUDY

By Meeri Kim

c r e a tures. T h e y

" For T i k -

ans, or more generally, tetra- — crucial for walking on all pods. These are animals that fours. Also, the hip socket of have (or whose ancestors Tiktaalik is strikingly differhad) four legs and include all ent from that of a typical fish. its, are last in line to develop. land-living vertebrates such Although t h e r e s earchers Ten million years after

Special To The Washington Post

"It's this second small

be called four-limbed animals finally emerged in the form of clunky, salaman-

the move toland happened taalik, it was a really deep, remains a mystery, but the round socket." environment of the time proHowever, some o f t he vides some clues. Tiktaalik bones that made up the pelvis and other transitional speremained fishlike and primi- cies lived in the Late Devonitive in a piecemeal fashion as an period about 395 million seen in the front half of the to 362 million years ago. emerged afterward. But fossil — an example of what A few million years earliTiktaalik's enlarged pelvis scientists call mosaic evolu- er, plants had started growpoints to the possibility that tion. It means that different ing on dry ground, not just hind limbs started to evolve parts of the body change at in w ater, an d l a n d-based simultaneously and were be- different rates through many ecosystems slowly began to ing used for propulsion. years. form,said Daseschler.Before "The size of the pelvic gir"Tiktaalik is like a poster that, he said, land was barren dle, the region that holds the child of an animal that has and provided no incentive for fins, was as big as the region mosaic features," Daeschler vertebrates to pop out of the

gills like a fish, strong limblike front fins, a flexible neck and a flat alligator-like head This means the uppermost with eyes on top. part of the pelvis, the ilium, The latter characteristics is big enough to have contact are reminiscent of amphibi-

linear relationship. So most people have a few friends while a smallnumberof peoplehave lots of friends.

The Washington Post

G allery-Be n d

541-830-5084

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I

I

I

i@<® s

"If Mom doesn't know how

her pups feel, the pups dieand that's not going to work

evolutionarily." In social animals, including humans, empathy starts

.' ge

BB,

basis of that empathy is en- patched rats. As adults, the v ironmental, r a t he r t h a n albinos refused to help othgenetic. The creatures aren't er albinos but readily freed

with the mother-child bond

born with a n i n n ate moti- black-patched rats. "There's no mirror in navation to help rats of their

pathy is not the same as human empathy, the basis is the

own kind, but instead those ture," said study author and with whom they are socially neurobiologist Peggy M ason. "They are not born with familiar. "Rats choose to help ac- an idea of who they are, and cording to which rats they've therefore, who they should had a positive social experi- help." ence with in the past," said The study was published study author and postdoctor- online Tuesday in the journal

same: We are upset by anoth-

Iieceive 2,0% off room rate when you bring this ad and

er individual's distress. "That's the building block

Valid.Sun-Thurs, iXow - Feb i3, zoi4.

but develops to include a peer network. And though rat em-

of the empathic response," Bartal said. "When we help

end the distress of that person, it relieves the distress in

ourselves."

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

• .toex an imitson ro iin incu in cassiications e on race By Matt Apuzzo

official briefed on the meeting The government also began who spoke on the condition of The J ustice D e partment a program known as special anonymity because the conwill significantly expand its registration, which required versation was private. definition of racial profiling to tens of thousands of Arab and De Blasio was elected in Noprohibit federal agents from Muslim men to register with vember afterrunning a camconsidering religion, national the authorities because of their paign in which he criticized the origin, gender and sexual ori- nationalities. city Police Department's stop"Putting an end to this prac- and-frisk tactic, which overentation in their investigations, a government official said tice not only comports with whelmingly targets minorities Wednesday. the Constitution, it would put and which a federal judge deThe move addresses a de- real teeth to the FBI's claims clared unconstitutional. The cade of criticism from civil that it wants better relation- mayor and attorney general rights groups that say federal ships with religious minori- did not discuss when the rule authorities have in particular ties," said Hina Shamsi, a change would be announced, singled out Muslims in coun- national security lawyer with the official said. terterrorism inv e stigations the American Civil Liberties A senior Democratic conand Latinos for immigration Union. gressional aide,however, said investigations. It is not clear whether Hold- the Obama administration had who had no ties to terrorism.

New Yorh Times News Service

The Bush

a d ministration er also intends to make the

those provisions. "These ex-

security loophole, then it's real-

Limitsonrace

ceptions are a license to profile ly irrelevant." As written, the Justice DeAmerican Muslims and HisSarsour said she also hoped partment's rules prohibit fedpanic-Americans," Sen. Rich- that Holder would declare that eral agents from using race as ard Durbin, D-Ill., said in 2012. surveillance, not just traffic a factor in their investigations stops and arrests, was prohib- unless there is specific, credAfter 9/11 ited based on religion. ible information that makes President George W. Bush said in 2001 that racial profil-

The J ustice

descriptions of suspects.

The rules cover federal law enforcement agencies such as the FBI. They do not cover lo-

cal or state police departments. That is significant, because

Muslim groups have sued the New York Police Department over surveillance programs that mapped Muslim neighborhoods, photographed their businesses and built files on

where they eat, shop and pray. Holder's comments about the new racial profiling rules came up in a conversation about that topic, the official

said. William Bratton, the city's indicated that an announce- new police commissioner, ment was "imminent." has said he will review those The J ustice D e partment practices.

banned profiling in 2003, but rules apply to national security investigations, which would apply to national security cas- further respond to complaints would not confirm the new es, and it covered only race, from Muslim groups. rules Wednesday night but re"Adding religion and nation- leased a short statement saying not religion, ancestry or other factors. al origin is huge," said Linda that the mayor and the attorney Since taking office, Attorney Sarsour, advocacy director for general had discussed "preGeneral Eric Holder has been the National Network for Arab venting crime while protecting under pressure from Demo- American Communities. "But civil rights and civil liberties." crats in Congress to eliminate if they don't dose the national

with two caveats: It did not

witnesses who use race in their

D e partment race relevant to a case.

has been reviewing the rules

For example, narcotics ining was wrong and promised for several years and has not vestigators may not increase "to end it in America." But that signaled how it might change traffic stops in minority neighwas before the terrorist attacks them. Holder disclosed his borhoods on the belief that of Sept. 11. After those attacks, plans in a meeting Wednes- some minorities are more likefederalagents arrested and de- day with Mayor Bill de Blasio ly to sell drugs. They can, howtained dozens of Muslim men of New York, according to an ever, rely on information from

While the rules directly control only federal law enforcement activities, their indirect

effect is much broader, said Fahd Ahmed, the legal director of the New York-based South

Asian immigrant advocacy group Desis Rising Up and Moving. For instance, he said, immigration bills in Congress have

Professor

comment one day about football, and so I went home and Continued fromA1 Googled his name, and said, Ruettgers said the key 'Holy crap, he was a top pick to understanding the dif- f o r the Packers,"' said Loren ficulty of the sport career Baily, 44, another of Ruettger's transition is a close look at identity. "When you've sunk so

s t udents. 'The funny thing was thathe made a similar comment th r ee weeks later, and I watched

much of your life and self- a young lady Google him on her worth into what you do, smart phone in class, and she then who do you become turned tome and said,'Oh my when what you do becomes God, canyoubelieve this?'" what you did?" Ruettgers R u e ttgers said he considers said. "So if someone comes his NFL career to be "ancient up to you and says, 'I know history," but he does bring it up you, you used to be Ken whenpromptedbystudents,esRuettgers,' well then the p ecially in his courses focused question is, 'If I used to be on the sociology of sports. "Recently we Ken Ruettgers, who am I now?' It's hard to be in

s tarted

talki n g

slght of

s o meone

~U about the Richie Inyour thirties and Sunk S pmuCh c og to bullying stoasked what you pf ypUr /jf8 ry,an d we were able do at a cocktail to ask him about the party and have to and Self-WOrth cu iture of NFL locksay 'I'm retired.'" Irlfp Wfl Bt er room s and whethRuettgers said ypU Qp )fIprI er o r not he ever saw when he's asked anything like that," what he does, he WlIP ClP ÃU Bailey said. "It was says he teaches beCOme Whefl co ol having the ina t COCC.

For

Wh>~ypU dp

players just beginning the i r b B C PmBS transition, he en- Wh8t ypU courages them to yjygbe frank and say, 'Tm i n a t r a n sition, which is

who had actually been t h ere." Tom Barry, a colleague of Ruettger's in the sociology de-

— KenRuettgers, pa rtment, said the profes s or and st udy of sPort "is an

something every-

ex-NFL player imPortant area, as the field is a place where you can see boildownwhatIthinkthe w h at's going on in society one canrelate to." "If I c o u l d

transition is about, I'd say

p l ayed out, whether it be issues

cal agencies to change their policies. "Federal guidelines definitely have an impact," Ahmed said. "Local organizers can say, 'These policies are not in line with what's coming from

it's about the opportunity of gender inequality or class or to do things for others," Ru- race. There are also the issue of ettgers said. "When you're power dynamics in sports, es20-something and playing pecially the role of the universisports, the world is all about ty incollege athletics." you, but how do you best Ru e ttgers said he would adjust to a new world, one someday like to do more rewhere your poop stinks like searchinthe areaof sports. "I think i t's an u n der-reeveryone else's? I think we getmost ofourpurposeand searched field,butathletes are meaning from the impact interesting to look at, in one

the federal level.'"

we make on others."

way you can see them as the

copied the Justice Department

profiling language. And civil rights groups can use the rules to pressure state and lo-

Ruettgers is working on power elites, as they certaina book for athletes deal- ly have status and can likely ing with the transition, but

Budget

While the Obama administration has favored "Race to

Continued from A1

the Top" competitions for fundings, rural Oregon schools told

In a

p r epared statement,

Walden praised the spending package as a plan for reducing spending, growing the economy and making sure taxpayer dollars are spent wisely. "This plan reduces spending below 2009 levels — be-

jrjjj,'

t

courses, rangingfromintro-

adjust to life back home after deployment. While the admin-

ductory work to dasses spe- huge thing that was no longer cialized in everything from part of my life," Ruettgers said. sports to religion to gender. "But now I follow the Packers "He likes to say we're go- and like watching the Ducks ing to 'unpack' a topic, and and Beavers, but I think my he really means it, as we w ife's the bigger sports fan. dig deep into the subjects What I really like is showing through conversation," said up early to a game, football or Kellie Calkins, 45, a COCC a Blazers game, and watchstudent. "He's been able to ing the players prepare, seeing lead us from thinking about them visualize the game and

vantage in securing funds. The additional education funds should alleviate some of that

he said. "This year will mark War that spending has been J. Scott Applewhite/The Associated Press cut four years in a row — a to- Speaker of the House John Boehner, R-phio, leaves the House tal of $165 billion since 2010." chamber Wednesday after the final vote on a massive $1.1 trillion Between the Department of

ing veterans and their families

they felt they were at a disad-

the first time since the Korean

spending bill at the Capitol in Washington.

Agriculture, which includes the Forest Service, and the Department of t h e I n terior, more than two million acres the budget contains $3.9 bil- of federal forests in Western lion in wildfire suppression Oregon. and prevention. This amount Oregon Democrat J eff funds fire services at the 10- Merkley became a member year average, and backfills of the Senate Appropriations money borrowed from other Committee in January 2013. Forest Service accounts to pay Thanks to the Murray-Ryan for fire suppression last year. budget deal, Mikulski set fundThe budget for hazardous ing limits for each subcommitfuel reduction was set at $452 tee chair to in turn set funding million, more than $150 mil- for agencies and programs. lion higher than the Obama Merkley said the cardinals administration asked for in its — as appropriations subcom2014 budget. mittee chairs are known in The Forest Service receives Washington slang, after the re$306 million in 2014 for reduc- ligious authorities — were very ing hazardous fuels, a slight open to his one-on-one lobbyreduction from its $317 million ing on behalf of Oregon priin 2013, but far higher than the orities. While he was pleased

terns paints a grim future for western forests, he said.

istration wanted to "zero out"

the program, or defund it completely, Merkley said $13 million in 2014 funding was vital for helping returning veterans

Droughts and increased pine assimilate back to civilian life beetle activity put g reater so "the ghosts of war" don't set stress on trees, making them

r e a l power elites, and there's

pressure, he said. Merkley also applauded the inclusion of funding for the Yellow Ribbon reintegration program, which helps return-

ey for a full-time grant writer,

low even what it was when President Obama took office,"

children, Matthew Ruett-

gers, 24, was killed in Au- the question of if they are opgust 2012 in a motorcycle pressingtheathletes,asasocial crash in Bend. conflict analysis would sug"My wife and I have been gest. But of course, to the averfocusedon the hardw ork of age Joe making $40,000, they grieving, and it's m ade ev- are nowhere nearoppressed." erythinghard,butteaching Ty p ical for an academic, has been good," Ruettgers Ruettgers spends his free time said. "I think I've just had r e ading John Locke and Karl to take care of myself, focus Marx, but he has also found andworkhardatteaching." a way to enjoy football as a At COCC, Ruettgers spectator. "It was hard to watch at first, leads a full load of sociology

Merkley that without the mon-

a c complish more than the av-

the project was put on hold erage person," Ruettgers said. when the oldest of his three "But I think the owners are the

in.

more likely to die and more The Murray-Ryan budget susceptible to lightning strikes, deal angered veterans groups which are also predicted to by cutting the cost-of-living inincrease. crease for benefits of military "Our western forests will be retirees younger than 62 by I substantially degraded in the percent. While the spending short term and devastated by bill doesn't remove this change the end of the century," which completely, it will no longer makes hazardous fuel reduc- apply to families of a military tion even more critical, he said. member killed in action or disMerkley said he was also abledveterans,Me rkley said. pleased with funding levels for Merkley said he is "deeply severaleducation programs. frustrated and offended" that The earlyeducation program veterans'benefits have been Head Start will receive $8.6 reduced as a cost-cutting meaadministration's $201 million with the increase in funding billion, an increase of more sure, and he hopes to roll back request. The remaining $145 for hazardous fuels reduction, than $1 billion from 2013 lev- the cost-of-living decrease bemillion-plus goes to the De- he wished it could be more. els, while Title I funding, which fore it goes into effect in two partment of the Interior, which A draft report by the De- goes to fund low-income stu- years. includes the Bureau of Land partment of Energy on chang- dents, receives an increase of — Reporter: 202-662-7456, Management, which oversees ing climate and weather pat- $629 million over 2013 levels. aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

things from our personal

i t w a s such a reminder of this

t r y to get to that peak level just

perspective to a sociological at the right time. That's what I perspective, where we are reallylike." outside of ourselves. And

— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com

he's encouraging and warm the whole time." Ruettgers does not make

a point of mentioning his

BOS C H D ishwasher

past life to his students, but

it seems to have a way of

with this great valusl

conllng Up. "There was kind of an off

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Shooting

following the shooting. "So I only one woman had permis- thought what's he walking toContinued from A1 sion to be at the residence. The wards the back of that house The report states Keinonen report states officers respond- for? I know that a female is in was at the home to collect a ing to the possible burglary there. Is he going back to get a drug debt. report recognized a vehicl e weapon?" "A laboratory analysis of parked in front of the home Supplee reported seeing his blood showed that he was as being associated with Kei- Keinonen in t h e b a ckyard heavily under the influence of nonen, who was wanted in through gaps in the gate. He methamphetamine at the time connection with th e earlier appeared to be "holding a of his death and confirmed warrant. smartphone in one hand and witness statements that he had Bend Police officers Victor gripping what (Supplee) dealso consumed Oxycodone," Umnitz and Justin L ovrein scribed as a 'bulge' in the othaccording to the DA's report. knocked on the front door er hand, and that his hands "His drug use may explain his and identified themselves as were close together." failure to respond to the offi- officers while Supplee and his This position caused Supcers' commands." K-9, Zlatan, went to the back plee to believe Keinonen was L aw e n forcement h a d of the home, according to the pointing a gun at him. Supplee served a search warrant at report. Umnitz told Supplee he told the approaching person the same home earlier that saw a man and woman mov- to show his hands, but got no day, making three arrests ing inside the home and ad- response. and confiscating stolen prop- vised Supplee it appeared the Instead of obeying Supplee's erty, illegal firearms and con- male was heading toward the orders, K e i nonen i n s tead trolled substances, according back of the house. flung the gate outward toward "Immediately, I'm thinking Supplee and "'stayed in that to the DA's report. They also arrested three suspects and the guy is not answering the same exact position' with the were looking for Keinonen as door, he's walking towards the illuminated cell phone in one a fourth suspect, according to back of the house. Normal cit- hand and what Officer Supizen — the police knock on the plee believed to be a gun in the the report. Officers responding to the front door of your house and other hand, pointed directly

kill me, thought he was going to shoot me," Supplee told in-

s econd call spoke with t h e

shift, according to Sale.

three people who were known residents o f

Drive home, who confirmed

a normal citizen will answer the front door of the house,"

t h e J a c kdaw Supplee said in an interview

toward him," the report states.

"I threw up my arm because I thought the guy was going to

terviewers. "I threw my arm up in the defensive position,

and I fired." No gun was found near Keinonen's body, and Flaherty said investigators did not determine what the "bulge" Supplee saw might have been. "Corporal (Troy) W i l es spoke with Officer Supplee a short time later and reported

that Officer Supplee repeatedly asked him, 'Did you find a gun?'" according to the report. "No gun was located."

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Flaherty said a B luetooth headset was l o cated n ear

Keinonen's body. Officers searched the home following the shooting and found 9mm ammunition but no 9mm gun. They did locate a "long gun," such as a rifle, and drug paraphernalia, Flaherty said. Supplee has been on paid administrative leave since the incident. He will return to work on his next scheduled — Reporter: 541-383-0376, si'ting@bendbulletin.com

Since >955

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THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5

Mexico

Benghazi

Continued from A1 Here in th e t ow n w h ere the civilians were killed, the

government seems to have chosen the second option: to

back off and cool down. After Mexican officials urged the vigilantes to disarm and

go home, this small farming town and at least one other that resisted the government

remained under the control of gunmen — some of them teenagers — i n ba t t ered pickups. The rise of the so-called self-defense groups is perhaps the most striking example of the weakness of policing, exposing a strain of vigilantism that courses through the country, especially in rural

C'

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kill

Rodrigo Cruz-Perez / New York Times News Service

Members of a local "self-defense group," whose goal is to fight back against drug cartels, stand on the street Wednesday in Antunez,Mexico. Two people were killed Tuesday when members of the group clashed with soldiers; the government ultimately decided to back down.

a lack of confidence in institu"Michoacan, and especially its western mountainous region,has suffered persistent problems of violence and perhaps amore persistent problem with the state's weak re-

sponse to violence," said Matthew Ingram, a n a s sistant professor at the University at

Albany who studies Mexico's justice institutions. " If t h e state cannot or will not do it, then, in short, ordinary citi-

zens take it upon themselves to do it." Or, as th e Rev. A ntonio Mendoza, the Roman Cath-

olic priest who presided over the funeral of the two victims here Wednesday, put it, "the

solution is legality and ruleof-lawreforms."

heavy presence. Still, a pharThe self-defense group, macy had been burned under armed with automatic rifles suspicious c i r cumstances, and police-style pickups that and several businesses had it said had been seized from closed under threat by the the gang, swept in. The group Knights Templar, local report- denied suggestions by some ers said. in the government that it repHere i n A n t u nez, t h ere resented another gang, the were no signs of federal po- New Generation, but when lice officers or soldiers, and questioned about how ordicertainly no d isarmament. nary farmers could disarm And residents would not have vicious and hardened crimit any other way. inals, members declined to "Since they came last week, discuss tactics. everything changed," said a The local police disapfruit vendor who, like many peared, they said, and the here, spoke in whispers and gang members,outmanned, anonymously out of fear that went into hiding or, perhaps, the gang that had ruled would left to regroup. return. "It is peaceful." The vigilantes set up a In ne a r b y Par a c uaro, checkpoint at the entrance to where the burned remnants Antunez, screening visitors of a truck and a bus left over and receiving fruit, tacos and

even small cash payments from residents, voluntariadded, "people will take jusly, they insisted. They have tice into their own hands." trance thatprevented anyone a ragtag look to them, and It was clear that the attempt not from there from entering. some are clearly not accusby the government to reasAccording to residents, the tomed to handling weapons. sert authority would come at Knights Templar moved in a As a leader of the group spoke best in fits and starts, offer- coupleofyearsago,erecting a to areporter,another member ing little interference with the shrine to its mysterious lead- accidentally discharged his groups in some towns where er, Nazario Moreno Gonzalez. rifle as he got into a truck. "Careful there!" the comthey agreed to put down or The government says that he at least hide their weapons, was killed three years ago mander shouted. and backing off where it was and that his followers, who But it was difficult to find not welcome. Late Wednes- revere him with something residents who did not appreciday, the federal government approaching religious ado- ate them. named a commissioner to di- ration, have forced people to One of the first things the rect its effort in Michoacan. leave offerings to him. Yet vigilantes did was destroy the In Apatzingan, the small there have been many reports image of Moreno Gonzalez city that the vigilantes had across Michoacan that More- in the shrine's doghouse-size vowed to seize because they no Gonzalez is still alive. (The c hapel. Residents later r e see it as the stronghold of the Knights Templar are an off- placed it with a statue of the Knights Templar drug ring, shoot of his old gang, La Fa- Virgin of Guadalupe, the pafederal police officers kept a milia Michoacana.) tron saint of Mexico. "Until we have them," he

from a clash with the gang remained, the vigilantes kept a blockade at the town's en-

~I

(JI

cuit television video from the

at overseas posts and make Mission facility that showed Continued from A1 other changes recommended therewere no protests prior The committee deter- by an independent oversight to the attacks." mined that the U.S. military panel — the Accountability But it took six more days command in A f r ica didn't Review Board — shortly af- for intelligence officials to know about the CIA annex ter the attacks. revise their chronology of "While risk can never be events and say that "there and that the Pentagon didn't have the resources in place to completely eliminated from were no demonstrations or defend the State Department our diplomatic and develop- protests" at t h e d i p lomatcompound in an emergency. ment duties," the State De- ic compound "prior to the "The attacks were pre- partment statement said, "we attacks." ventable, based on extensive must always work to miniT he report said i t w a s intelligence reporting on the mize it." problematic that the CIA and terrorist activity in LibyaThe agency said it is refin- State Department were not to include prior threats and ing procedures for assessing working out of the same faattacks against Western tarrisk and evaluating security cility together in the dangergets — and given the known measures in highly volatile ous Benghazi environment. security shortfalls at the U.S. areas, including when to That meant the CIA and its Mission," the panel said in a depart from the usual reli- well-trained cont r actors, statement.

ance on local hired securi-

who had served in elite U.S.

to whether the United States

a crisis.

ty guards. "Hard decisions forces, were not on location must be made when it comes at the outpost in the event of

The investigation The report also noted, chillingly, that the FBI's in-

areas where frustrationand tions is deepest.

efforts to improve security

vestigation into the attacks

has been hampered in Libya, and that 15 people "support-

ing the investigation or otherwise helpful to the United States" have since been killed

should operate in dangerous Six armed CIA employees overseas locations," the state- and a linguist responded to ment said. State Department deputy

the attack on the compound late on Sept. 11, 2012, the re-

spokeswoman Marie Harf

port says. About 30 minutes

said the Senate report adds little new information and

passed before the CIA team

in Benghazi. The report said does not do much to expand it was unclear whether those to the government's underkillings were related to the standing of the attacks. "We investigation. should have been better then, The report found no evi- and we need to get better godence of the kind of political ing forward," Harf said. cover-up that Republicans The report was based on have long alleged. Much of it dozens of committee hearrecounted now-familiar facts ings, briefings and interabout deteriorating securi- views — including with surty conditions in Benghazi in vivors of the attacks — and 2012, a year after the fall of on thousands of pages of longtime dictator Moammar intelligence and State DeGadhafi. It filled in new details about the relationship

partment materials collected

arrived on the scene and "exchanged fire with the attack-

ers." They neither asked permission to come to the aid of

those inside nor were told to stand down. Detailed accounts provid-

ed to the committee describe a harrowing attack and U.S. personnel scrambling to survive the assault. Attackers used "diesel fuel to set the main building

ablaze, and thick smoke rapidly filled the entire struc-

between September 2012 and ture," the report says. December 2013. The committee found that ment compound andthe CIA The document contains the military response to the annex about a mileaway, only one mention of former attacks was slow and hinand described the rising secretary of s t ate H i l lary dered, but not purposely so. concern among many intel - R odham Clinton, wh o i s "At approximately 1:15 a.m. ligence specialists about the named by the panel's Re- Benghazi time (on Sept. 12), growing potency of Islamist publicans as the official who a seven-man reinforcement between the State Depart-

militants in the city.

"In spite of the deteriorating security situation in Benghazi and ample strategic warnings, the United States Government simply

should ultimately be held re-

team of additional U.S. secu-

sponsible for the failures at Benghazi. Even so, the report will likely provide fodder for both Republicans and Dem-

rity personnel from Tripoli landed at the Benghazi airport and began to negotiate

ocrats as Clinton ponders a

did not do enough to prevent

possible presidential run in

for transportation and a security convoy," the report says.

with the local Libyan militias

these attacks and ensure the 2016. safety of those serving in Benghazi," said Sen. Saxby 'No protests' Chambliss, R-Ga., vice chairThe committee described man of th e Senate Intelli- the attacks as opportunistic gence Committee. and said there was no specif-

The team would not leave the

ic advance warning that they

deaths of two security officers, who were killed by mortar fire "as they engaged the enemy from the roof of the Annex," the report says.

The response

were about to be carried out. In response to the report's The report said that on

release, the State Depart-

Sept. 18, 2012, the "FBI and

ment issued an update of its

CIA reviewed the closed cir-

airport for the annex until more than three hours later. A separate attack on the CIA annex at about 5:15 a.m. on Sept. 12 resulted in the

PECIRE

INRNCING ' VAIULSEE EEIVEIY .-a IL N of Redmond

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

e era overnment'scer s ecomea vanis in ree By Lisa Rein

brushed white-out over it and

mand in Huntsville, Ala., a

The Washington Post

typed a correction. Somehow

secretary is assigned to every general and many other se-

W ASHINGTON —

Gi n -

that was easier than making the change in the computer.

ger Davis is a survivor, one of barely five dozen clerical In her desk drawer, she still workers left at the Govern- keeps apile ofpencilerasers ment Printing Office. and little yellow message pads Even as her agency has with the options "You were been redefining its mission in called by," "You were visited an electronic age, Davis has by" and "is waiting to see you." remade hersel fafter 26 years There are also ink pads and with the federal government, rubber stamps to mark corrising from the secretarial respondence as "Draft" and ranks tobecome an executive "Confidential." "They remind me of how far assistant. When she was offered a job in the human re- I've traveled," she said. sourcesoffice two years ago, The data-processing bushe was initially daunted and r eaucracy started t o g r o w read every book on executive during the Civil War. To pay assistants she could find. for the war, the government "This is my time to shine," began printing greenbacks Davis told herself.

for the first time, and the new

Ginger Davis,

nior officers. Andrea Turner, the executive assistant to the

of the Government Printing Office in Washington,

command sergeant major, said she spends some of every day writing letters that go into the mail: for birthdays, promo-

keeps some

tions, condolences and invita-

antiquated tools at her

tions to all official functions. "You n am e

i t , " T u r n er

write a letter, we write a let-

desk,such as rubber stamps snd

ter. A lot of things are still

an electric

tradition-based."

typewriter, as

Angela Bailey wistfully recalls the hubbub around her when, as a young clerk-typist for the Social Security Admin-

reminders of the past.

said. "If there's a reason to

Bill O'Leary The Washington Post

istration, she churned out letters at an IBM Selectric, white-

out at her side. Typewriter keys click-click-clicked and Across the federal govern- turned to an untapped labor metal file cabinets squealed ment, the broad rows of desks pool that would work for less as they opened and closed, where secretaries and clerks thanthegoing wage: women. opened and closed. From 8 once typed at least 40 words a By the 1950s, secretaries a.m. to 5 p.m., the phones rang minute have vanished. While were typing, filing, taking nonstop. The office hummed automation has been trans- dictation, answering phones forming the federal work- and opening mail in just about force for two generations, that every American business and change has now accelerated government office. The jobs because of budget cuts, with were a woman's ticket into the the government under pres- workforce. sure to keep only the clerical When Mary White arrived staff it needs. Those who re- in Washington from Illinois main have often had to re- fresh out of college in 1958, vamp the role they play in this she took t h e c i vi l s e rvice new-look workforce. exam and a typing test and For decades, the steno pool looked upher senator,Everett was the face of the modern Dirksen, who helped her land bureaucracy. The women in a secretarial job in the U.S. polyester suits and necker- Senate. She was so good that chiefs, hair coiffed and fingers she soon moved to the White flying across the keyboards, House, where she assisted Ted came to embody the industry Sorensen, President John F. of the postwar public sector. Kennedy's speechwriter and In 1950, clerical jobs repre- political strategist, and later sentedthree-quartersof the worked for President Lyndon federal workforce. By the mid- B. Johnson's aide and confi1980s, the figure was down dant, Jack Valenti. She was to a fifth. Today, these jobs paid $3,500 a year. "We didn't worry about are a mere 4 percent ofthe workforce of 2.1 million. That finding jobs as much as people amounts to 87,153 people, less do now," recalled White, now than a quarter of them secre- 80 anda real estatebroker in taries, according to FedScope, Washington's G e orgetown the federal database of work- area. place statistics. In just the past But times would change, eight years, the government and a milestone came in has shed 40,000 clerical jobs. 1997, when for the first time At many p r ivate compa- the number of higher-paid nies,secretaries and clerks employees, GS-9 and above, long ago became relics asthe outnumbered lower-paid ones technology revolution spread such as most secretaries and from the lean startups of the clerks, GS-8 and below. IT sector to thebroader econoToday, almost 70 percent of my. But in government, clerks these lower-ranking workers and typists held on longer, an- are women, government data sweringphones outside corner show. One in three have been suites, shuffling paper records in their jobs between 10 and 24 and stashing personnel files in years. Almost two out of three squealing metal cabinets. are 40 or older.

Budget cuts

Some federal staff members

notes had to be cut and count-

with t h e

ed. The Treasury Department

clerks taking Social Security

could ride out the changes un-

Keeping pace

til they retired, the job security

Not all of the remaining clerical staff members are

of government work allowing them to stay put even as private industry was shedding thousands of office jobs, especially during the recent recession. Tight federal budgets and the automatic cuts of sequestration, however, have meant that very few clerical workers

who leave are replaced. Now that most Americans file their taxes electronically, the Internal Revenue Service

needs fewer clerks to open paper returns. The Federal Aviation Administration has

put its accident inspection reports online, so it needs fewer assistants to scan them in. In

an age of teleconferencing,

uncertainty, there's an absolute need for these positions," claims. argues Bailey, who has risen Now, the ringing phones to become asenior executive and clattering typewriters at the Office of Personnel have gone silent. Management. "Even in a time of budget These clerical workers, she

says, are often the bureaucracy's bridge to the public

c o nversations of

Q

and the "right arms" of senior

managers. But even Bailey acknowledges that secretaries

in many ways have become obsolete.

RED '.

® '.ZONE •

mere vestiges. Some have kept

pace with a workplace that dem ands more specialized tasks than ever. Instead of taking dictation with shorthand, they

load presentations into PowerPoint. Instead of typing and faxing, they scan documents into a computer — although

>

k i

e •

• i

the 40-word-per-minute re-

quirement still applies for clerical job applicants. And instead of supporting one executive in the C-suite, they work for

t

five. Or for 50, as at the General Services Administration,

t

I

I

t

t il

I

where one assistant works for

the entire executive staff.

"I'm prioritizing resources,"

the front-office receptionist es-

said GSA Administrator Dan

corts fewer visitors to see the boss. The downsizing is cementing the government as a bastion of white-collar, increasingly specialized professional work that demands a college degree, eliminating what was once a significant source of jobs for those with limited

Tangherlini, who a nswers his own phone, responds to email directly from his iPhone and schedules many of his meetings. As a management assistant

5

at the Navy support command in Mi llington, Tenn., Doris

Goode has taken on new res ponsibilities.

S h e or d e r s

fitness and recreation equip"They're doing away with ment for sailors at sea, pulls us," said Elizabeth Lytle, 55, together spreadsheets, gets an administrative program bids from vendors and preassistant for the Environmen- pares contractsand invoices tal Protection Agency in Chi- for payment. " Administration r un s t h e cago. As her colleagues have retired, the EPA has looked to business," Goode said. "The part-time contractors to type job has really changed so form letters and handle other m uch, they had to change the clerical tasks, she said. name." At the printing office, Davis, In some corners of the gov-

+

• •

• •

education.

58, has repositi oned herself as the right-hand woman to

OR

• -

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.

'

.

.

'

.

ernment, though, traditional

clerical work is holding on. the head of human resources. At the Department of VeterShe's an indispensable, calm- ans Affairs, for instance, clering presence, her colleagues ical employees are working to say, a discreet problem-fixer. tackle the agency's backlog of She has also learned to man- disability claims, many filed age her boss' Outlook cal- on paper. Others work in medendar, scan personnel docu- ical support, gathering patient ments and process the depart- records, making a ppointment's electronic timecards. ments and providing forms. Next to her computer still At the National Archives, sits an IB M S electric 2000 about 800 clerks transport Wheelwriter. "We're nev- o riginal d ocuments t o r e er going to get rid of it," she searchers in cardboard boxes quipped. On a recent workday, because so few of the records Davis slipped in a document have been computerized. with a g rammatical error, And at Army Materiel Com-

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014

BRIEFING Bendbiologist won't meetOdama A Bend biologist who was a finalist for a national award didn't win and won't get a chance to meet with President Barack Obama. Dirk Renner, aU.S. Fish and Wildlife biologist, came upwith a cost-saving idea good enough to beone of four finalists for the 2013Securing Americans Value and Efficiency Award. Renner suggested that the federal government could save timeand money by allowing certifications to be recognized by more than one agency. Obama gavethe first SAVE Award in 2009, and the prize includes the winner meeting with the president to discuss his or her idea. Kenneth Siehr, a Department of Veterans Affairs worker in Wilwaukee,Wis., won the award this year for his idea of making mail deliveries of prescription medicines trackable online for veterans, according to the White House website.

awma ers amen ea we si e By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Cover Oregon officials continue to shore up problems with the state's glitch-ridden

health care exchange website and hope to have it close to full functionality in the next month.

But key issues with the Cover Oregon website persist

more than three months after the site was supposed to launch without problems. Sev-

eral state legislators, including a Bend lawmaker, blasted Cover Oregon's management and missed deadlines during a pair of hearings with legisla-

tive committees Wednesday.

"It's no secret to anybody in this room or in this state that we do not have a fully functioning website today," Bruce

Goldberg, Cover Oregon's interim director, told lawmak-

ers. "This system is not where

withholding more than $20

tems designed by other states

website. Gov. John Kitzhaber

million owed to Oracle until

or the federal government. Still, Goldberg said the site has improved considerably. Two months after a health

this month announced an independent investigation into

more than 65,000 people

Conger, R-Bend, said the state

have enrolled through Cover Oregon, while an additional

health care exchange has lost credibility with the public.

all the problems are fixed, he said. Oraclehasbeen paid $92 million — so far — to develop the website. Users are still unable to

Cover Oregon information technology staff have been working with Oracle, the

create and manage their own accounts through the Cover Oregon website, meanwhile. Customers have to call in to Cover Oregon to shop for

firm contracted to set up the

plans and ultimately select a

exchange, and have lowered the number of critical website

health insurance policy. If the website isn't functioning more smoothly by March, Cover Oregon officials may

we want it to be."

errors from 48 in early De-

cember to 13 today, Goldberg sard. Meanwhile, the state is

have to scrap part or all of its

Web portal, relying on sys-

the website's problems. During an afternoon hearcare research firm ranked Or- ing between Cover Oregon egon last in enrollment among officials and a House health the 14 state-run exchanges, carecommittee,Rep.Jason

23,000 have selected private

Oregon, lost all faith in Ore-

tioned why the state continues

and I don't believe it's going to happen today, tomorrow or six months from now," Conger said.

to pay Oracle, accused by lawmakers on both sides of the aisle of botching numerous aspects of the Cover Oregon

BEND

/1m7LOjF.

Comments may be sent by email to oprd. publiccomment@state. or.us. Theyare due by5 p.m. Friday. — Bulletin staff reports

gon's ability to fix the website,

See Website /B5

COCC

Pro ram ans or courses on UAVs

Parks consider smoking dan The Oregon Parks and Recreation Department is taking public comments on a potential smoking ban expansion until the end of the week. Smoking is already banned in buildings on lands overseen byState Parks, according to the department. The rule change under consideration would expand the ban to park lands, such as trails, roadways and common areas in campgrounds. Smoking would still be allowed in cars and trucks, camping sites and where permitted by apark manager for anAmerican Indian ceremony. For more information, visit http://1.usa.gov

"I've lost all faith in Cover

plans. But some lawmakers ques-

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

Even though federal regulations on unmanned aviation

vehicle operators have not yet been announced, Central Oregon Community College is preparing for a UAV course of study within its aviation

program. COCC currently offers an introductory course in UAVs, and hopes to have a second

Rob Kerr/The Bulletin

John Hancock and his wife moved into their home about eight years ago — and he was aware of its proximity to the Bend Municipal Airport. New plans, however, have Hancock and some residents of the Cimarron City subdivision worried.

simulation-based class ready by the spring. Outside of government programs, UAVs do not operate in domestic airspace, though American companies currentlytrain pilots for

esi ensarema in n oise OVC1 B1I' 01 S e ico er an

foreign operations. President Obama, however, required the Federal Aviation Authority to

propose rules for integrating UAVs into American airspace

by2015. "No one yet knows what the FAA will require of UAV operators," said Karl Baldessari, head of the COCC aviation program. "We do know what the machines looklike, and

By Elon Glucklich The Bulletin

Well shot! Reader photos

• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot! that will run in the

Outdoors section. Submityour best work at hendbulletin.cem /snow2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerphetes© bentlbulletin.cem and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication. Submission requirements: Include as much detail ee possible — when and where you took it, and any special technique used — aewell ae your name, hometown and phone number. Photos must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot bealtered.

City officials hope a new helicopter area at Bend Mu-

nicipal Airport provides an

The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-218e Sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367

sunriver................541-383-03e7 Deschutes.............541-617-7820

this."

economic shot in the arm

and eventually helps recoup some of the jobs lost when Cessna Aircraft departed in 2009.

But some residents in a

and designating land on the

subdivision east of the airport

airport's east side for future

are worried about the noise impact from more helicopters taking off and landing near their homes. Bend city councilors on Jan. 8 gave an engineering firm the go-ahead to study how a growing airport might affect the surrounding area. The work is part of the

aviation businesses. Three residents in the near-

by subdivision showed up to the meeting, voicing concerns about the growing noise issue and telling councilors they hadn't been informed in ad-

"If they fly east, they're going right over our houses. Everybodyouthereisaffected by this," Hancock said. More than 200 homes and — John Hancock, Peacock Lane resident home lots are spread across the subdivision, called Cimarron City, according to Deschutes County property noise from the airport just records. west of them. City and airport officials But Hancock said the

solely to give the engineering firm, Century West Engi-

morning maintenance work

an evaluation process to make sure the master plan is feasible. The helicopter project is still several years away, assuming the master plan moves forward, Airport Manager Gary Judd said. SeeAirport/B5

John Hancock, 67, is one of them. He and his wife,

airport's long-term master

Nancy, moved into their home

area for helicopters on the

plan, which also includes extending the airport runway

on Peacock Lane eight years ago, expecting some plane

northeast edge of the airport would only make the problem

vance of the meeting.

said the Jan. 8 meeting was

growing helicopter traffic, coupled with dozens of flights a day and noise from early at the airport, has had a dramatic impact on his quality oflife. The creation of a new, designated takeoff and landing

neering, permission to start

there's plenty of variety out there, and we know what it takes to operate them. But

we're waiting on the rules to be unposed. Baldessari said earlyindications point to the FAA re-

quiring UAV operators to hold some form of a pilot's license. "You could be the best XBox-er in the world, but that

doesn't meanyou'd understand airspace rules, weather or even the mechanics underlying the machine you are operating," Baldessari said. "There's also something to be said for feeling connectedtowhathappensout there. If you crash into a bunch of rocks in Afghanistan, that's

one thing, but if you land in a schoolyard and take out three kids, that's different. Pilots un-

derstand that better." SeeCOCC /B5

Earlier allegationssurfaceinvolving gymnasticscoach By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

"If they fly east, they're going right over our houses.Everybody out hereis af fected by

worse, he said.

Prosecutors nowbelieve a Bend gymnastics coach suspected of sexually abusing two young girls at a New Year's Eve sleepover may have abused four or more girls. Richard Gustafson,49, was arraigned Wednesday afternoon in Deschutes County

Circuit Court on nine counts of first-degree sexual abuse. Bend Police began investigating Gustafson, one of the owners of Acrovision Sports Center, after receiving a report

that an 8-year-old girl had been abused during a sleepover at the center. A second suspected victim, a 9-year-old girl, had been identified by the time

Gustafsonwas arrestedJan.8. In court Wednesday, Deputy

be identified, he said. Police said 51 children attendedthe

New Year's Eve sleepover this month.

Gustafson's attorney, Jon Sprmger, asked

lease, Springer said. Springer described how Gustafsonhas been a coach inthe community for 20 years and held sleepovers at Acrovision four times ayear during that period with no allegations of misbe-

instead consider raising Gustafson's bail to $500,000, in light of the additional suspect-

havior until now.

family has assembled $10,000

District Attorney Jon Char told

Forte to consider releasing his ¹i

Circuit Court Judge Stephen

ent from custody.

Forte investigators have discov-

Gustafson is cur-

no criminal record,aside from

eredtwo more suspectedvictims. The two new suspected victims were allegedly abused

rentlybeingheld

an arrest for drivingunder the

priorto the New Year's Eve

party, Char said, and are girls between the ages of 8 and 10. Additional victims may still

Gustafson

Springer saidGustafsonhas

at the Deschutes influence of alcohol in Lane County jail on County in 1986.

$300,000bail and would need $30,000tobe released. Gustafson is an "excellent

candidate" for conditional re-

"He's a positive, contributing

member of the community,

your honor," Springer said. Char said Forte should

edvictims that havebeen locat-

ed since his arrest. Springer said Gustafson is not a flight risk and that his that they could contribute to

meetinghisbail. Forte dedined to make any decision on Gustafson's release

Wednesday and has scheduled a hearing to consider his release today. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

EvxNT TODAY LUNCH AND LECTURE: Jeremy Maestas presents"TheSageGrouse Initiative: Wildlife Conservation Through Sustainable Ranching"; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older,

$7ages 5-12,free ages4 and

younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. "EVERY WARHAS TWO LOSERS": A screening of the award-winning film based on poet William Stafford's journals; free; 4 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. KNOW STAFFORD:PACIFICISM AND POETICTRUTH-TELLING: Literature and writing teacher Annemarie Hamlin discusses William Stafford's poetry of protest; free; 6 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. RUBBISHRENEWED ECO FASHION SHOW:Sustainable fashion show

featuring repurposedmaterials

made into clothes; proceeds benefit REALMS Charter School's arts program; $15, $10 for students;

6p.m.allages,8:30p.m.ages21 and older; Bend Armory, 875 S.W. Simpson Ave.; 541-322-5323 or www.rubbishrenewed.com. BIRDING SRILANKA:A talk and photographic presentation of birding and culture; free; 7 p.m.,

ENm a

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

doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-385-6908 or www.envirocenter.org. NATURE NIGHT: THE CROOKED RIVER CALDERA:Ochoco Ranger District geologist Carrie Gordon presents information on the ancient volcano and its history; free, but a ticket is required; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre. org. "ANGELSTREET":A preview of CascadeTheatricalCompany's new play; $10; 7:30 p.m., doors

Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring Arturo O'Farrill Afro-Latin Septet; $55 plus fees; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com. TONY SMILEYANDKEEZ:The Washington-based alternative-loop ninja singer performs with the California rapper; $7 in advance, $10 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.

open at 6:30p.m.; Greenwood

Playhouse,148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "THE LONG BIKEBACK": Central Oregon Trail Alliance presents a screening of the documentary film about cyclist Pearson Constantino's recovery; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. KEITH ANDERSON:Nashville Unplugged presents the country artist; $16 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar 8 Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. OLD MANMARKLEY:The Los

Angeles-basedpunkandbluegrass

band performs, with Avery James and The Hillanddales; $10; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

Joe Kline 1Ttte Bulletin

"Picasso at the Lapin Agile," a play about Albert Einstein and Pabio Picasso meeting, is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Friday at the 2nd Street Theater. Proceeds from the event are intended to help offset David Dacosta's family medical expenses. For more information, visit www.2ndstreettheater.com or call 541-312-9626.

FRIDAY THIRD FRIDAYSTROLL:Featuring music, art, food and drinks; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com. "ANGELSTREET": A suspenseful play about a man slowly driving his gentle, devoted wife to the brink of insanity; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "BARBARA":A screening of the

2012 German film (PG-13) about a doctor working in East Germany, with subtitles; free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. "PICASSO ATTHE LAPIN AGILE": A play about Albert Einstein and Pablo Picasso meeting ata bar called the Lapin Agile; proceeds tonight benefit David DaCosta's family medical expenses; $19, $16 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m., 6:30p.m.champagne reception; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E.

CALIFORNIA NEWS

SATURDAY BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E. Third St.; 541-317-4847. CENTRALOREGON WEDDING EXPO:A showcase of High Desert event professionals with fashion shows, exhibitor booths, grooms' lounge and dance demonstrations; proceeds benefit Ronald McDonald House Charities of Central Oregon; $5; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-317-0450 or www. centraloregonweddings.com. MASTER-FLY:A fly-tying competition in the format of popular reality cooking shows; free for

spectators, $5 for competitor; 11 a.m.; Fin and Fire, 1604 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 12, Redmond; 307-680-0652 or www.facebook.

com/centraloregonmasterfly.

SPIRIT OFTHEWESTDAY: Hear stories of the region's pioneers, take part in interactive fun and see firearm shooting demonstrations at11 a.m., 12 p.m., 1 p.m. and 2 p.m; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; 11 a.m.-3 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. HIGH GRAVITYEXTRAVAGANZA: Celebrate January in the High Desert with special beer tasting, live music and fire pits; free to attend, $1.25 per taste; 1-10 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or

www.mcmenamins.com.

WRITE NOW!:Learn more about William Stafford and gain inspiration from his style; free; 1 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. KNOW STAFFORD:PACIFISM AND POETIC TRUTH-TELLING:Discuss William Stafford's poetry of protest; 2 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1032 or lizg@deschuteslibrary.org. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring Arturo O'Farrill Afro-Latin Septet; $55 plus fees; 5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com.

NEws OF REcoRD

In March, Hispanicsare anticipated to bethe state'slargestethnicgroup high," he said. Schooling said new data S ACRAMENTO, C A L I F . get proposalbecause of the pate the state's population suggest the current trend won't continue to the point — California is growing old- potential economic impact, will grow by 300,000people. er and more diverse. such as the increase in reGrowth rates vary d r as- of Latino groups becoming The Latino population is tirees affecting the scope of tically between age groups, a majority. State demograprojected to surpass that of services needed for an aging with retiring Baby Boomers phers previously p rojectwhites in California in March population or income dispar- projected to reshape the la- ed the Latino population to to become the single largest ities among minority groups. bor force in the next 15 years, reach more than 50 percent "race or ethnic group," ac"Demographic c h anges as more than 1,000 Califor- in 2042. "In our projections, they cording to a report on shift- that are coming will reshape nians will turn 65 years old ing demographics in Gov. the electorate, and in turn each day. get higher and higher, but not Jerry Brown's2014-15budget that will likely have impacts At the same time, lower reaching a majority," SchoolproposaL on policies and issues that birth rates have resulted in ing said. Also, the number of resi- decision makers focus on in fewer young people, with Asian groups, which curdents 65 and older will jump the coming decades," said the 18-to-24-year-old group rently make up 13 percent of by 20.7 percent over the next Mindy Romero, director of experiencing a 4.5 percent the state, are also projected five years, the report said. the California Civic Engage- decline and 5- to 17-year-olds to see strong growth, mostly State demographers ex- ment Project at the UC Davis increasing just 0.2 percent. through immigration. "It's less about one group "A big question mark is pected Latinos t o s u r pass Center for Regional Change. the non-Hispanic white popGeographic data for the about what that means for being acouple tenths more of ulation seven months earlier, state's 58 counties show the policy for y o uth," Rome- the population than another but Latino birth rates were Bay Area is leading the state ro said. "Older voters of- group, but more about a conlower than anticipated. Now, in economic and population ten aren't as supportive of tinuing trend for California officials say, by March, Lati- growth, said Bill Schooling, youth-specific policies." being a m ajority-minority nos will make up 39 percent chief demographer for the Schooling said the median state," said B r uce M i r ken, of California's population, state Department of Finance. age for Latino groups — 28 spokesman for the Greenlinedging out n o n-Hispanic Statewide, coastal cities are — shows many are in their ing Institute, a Berkeley, Cawhites at 38.8 percent. Near- growing faster than the Cen- childbearing years, which lif., nonprofit that advocates ly 25 years ago, non-Hispanic tral Valley. w ill d r i v e f u t ur e g r o w t h for communities ofcolor. "Everything that governwhites made up 57 percent of As a state, California examong the group. "Considerably more births ment does, that private inthe state, while Latinos made perienced modest growth in up 26 percent. the past fiscal year, with es- are Latino, even though the dustrydoes,needs to reactto The state's Department of timates pegging the number birth rate is not particularly that reality." By Melody Gutierrez

Finance includes the projec-

at 38.2 million residents. By

San Francisco Chronicle

tions in the governor's bud-

July, demographers antici-

POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynew information, such asthe dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.

BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 7:08 a.m.Jan. 9, in the 61200 block of Crescent Court. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at12:44 a.m. Jan. 10, in the area ofNorthwest Bond Street andNorthwest Oregon Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 4:03 p.m. Jan. 11, in the600 block of Northeast Butler Market Road. DUII —Daniel Patrick Tovar Jr., 22, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at12:06a.m. Jan.12, in the area of Northwest Irving Avenueand Northwest OregonAvenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported and an arrest made at8:37 a.m. Jan. 13, in the1800 blockof Northeast Second Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:26

p.m. Jan.13, in the 2700 block of Northwest Fairway Heights Drive. DUII —Constantino Salvador Lazaro,33, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at11:06 p.m. Jan. 13, in the 61500block of U.S. Highway 97. DUII —Benjamin Jeffrey Smith, 26, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at 11:26 p.m. Jan.13, in the1100 block of Southeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:45 p.m. Jan. 6, in the100 block of Southwest15th Street. Theft —A theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported and an arrest made at9:11 p.m. Jan.12, in the1800 block of Northeast Third Street. Theft —A theft was reported at1:08 p.m. Jan. 8, in the 63300 block of Britta Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 5:15 p.m. Jan.13, in the 2500 block of Northeast Twin Knolls Drive.

PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 1:44 p.m. Jan. 14, in thearea of Southeast Lynn Boulevard.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

COMGRESS U.S. SENATE • SEN. JEFFMERKLEY, D-ORE. 107 RUSSELL SENATEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20510 PHONE:202-224-3753 WEB:http://merkley.senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNE AVE., SUITE 208 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-318-1298 • SEN. RONWYDEN, D-ORE. 223 DIRKSENSENATEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20510 PHONE:202-224-5244 WEB:http://wyden.senate.gov BENDOFFICE: 131 N.W. HAWTHORNEAVE., SUITE107 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-330-9142

U.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES •REP.GREG WALDEN, R-HOOD RIVER 2182 RAYBURNHOUSEOFFICE BUILDING WASHINGTON, D.C.20515 PHONE:202-225-6730 WEB:http://walden.house.gov BENDOFFICE: 1051 N.W. BOND ST., SUITE400 BEND, OR97701 PHONE:541-389-4408 FAX:54 I-389-4452

STATE OF OREGON •GOV.JOHN KITZHABER, D 160 STATE CAPITOL, 900 COURT ST. SALEM, OR 97301

PHONE: 503-378-4582 FAX:503-378-6872 WEB:http://governor.oregon.gov • SECRETARY OFSTATEKATE BROWN, D 136 STATECAPITOL SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1616 FAX:503-986- I616 EMAIL:oregon.sos©state.or.us • TREASURER TEDWHEELER, D 159OREGON STATE CAPITOL 900 COURTST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4329 EMAIL:oregon.treasurer@state. or.us WEB:www.ost.state.or.us • ATTORNEYGENERALELLEN ROSENBLUM,D 1162 COURTST. N.E. SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-378-4400 FAX:503-378-4017 WEB:www.doj.state.or.us •LABOR COMMISSIONER BRAD AVAKIAN 800 N.E. OREGON ST.,SUITE 1045 PORTLAND, OR 97232 PHONE: 971-673-0761 FAX:971-673-0762 EMAIL:boli.mail©state.or.us WEB:www.oregon.gov/boli

LKGISLATURE SENATE • SEN. TEDFERRIOLI, R-DISTRICT 30 (JEFFERSON,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., 8-323 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE: 503-986-1950 EMAIL:sen.tedferrioli@state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli •SEN.TIM KNOPP, R-DISTRICT 27 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., 8-423

SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1727 EMAIL:sen.timknopp©state.or.us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/knopp •SEN.DOUG WHITSETT, R-DISTRICT 28 (CROOK,PORTION OF DESCHUTES) 900 COURT ST. N.E., S-303 SALEM, OR 97301 PHONE: 503-986-1728 EMAIL:sen.dougwhitsett@state. oi'.Us

WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett HOUSE DFREPRESENTATIVES

•REP.JASON CONGER, R-DISTRICT 54 (PORTIONOF DESCHUTES) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-477 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1454 EMAIL:rep.jasonconger@state. oi;us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/conger •REP.JOHN HUFFMAN, R-DISTRICT 59 (PORTIONOFJEFFERSON) 900 COURTST. N.E., H-476 SALEM, OR97301 PHONE:503-986-1459 EMAIL:rep.johnhuffman@state. oi;us WEB:www.leg.state.or.us/huffman

• p •

January 21, 2014 Education Meeting N~

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on~

ttt~

A pettel pf lpeet etqte~ ett Chjldgett e Metttet Heetut.

Does a child you love and care about have a mental illness? Do you work with children and want to know more about challenging kids? This educational meeting is open to everyone; parents, friends, & professionals. THE PANEL WILL INCLUDE:

• Shannon Pugerude Programming Director of Wyldwoodz resource center

• Dr.Angelina Montoya Child . Adolescent & General Psychiatrist

20% OFF

• Dr. Amy Waite Yillik, Psd.. School Psychologist with BendLapine Schools • Tracey Colacicco Child & Family therapist with Deschutes County Behavioral Health

when: 3rd Tuesday • January 21, 2014 • 7:00 - 9:oopm Where: St. Charles Medical Center-Bend Conf. Rm. "D"

All meetings are FREE and open toall. See our website www.nam1centralore on.or for more information on our classes and support groups

All Bark Butter QfiN QXh 4kefstc'

*While supplies last, through January 19th

Forum Center, Be nd

5 41- 6 1 7 - 8 8 4 0 w ww.wbu . co m/ b e n d


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON AROUND THE STATE

econsiers atient riva • DEA asserting its right to information, though it says it hasn't sought anyrecords

ney Nathan Freed Wessler. C ongress authorized t h e

U.S. Attorney General to issue administrative subpoenas

in any investigation related part of drug investigations. to controlled substances, a The Associated Press Four patients and a doctor responsibility delegated to PORTLAND — The Amer- intervened,saying they were the DEA. As it stands now, ican Civil L i b erties Union concerned their records could the DEA can request patient asked an Oregon federal also be accessed. records from a p harmacy court judge on Wednesday to The state objected, saying and, should the pharmacist review the constitutionality of the records were private, but refuse, seek a judge to issue a the federalgovernment's use a U.S. magistrate judge found court order demanding their of warrantless subpoenas. that the federal law trumped release. The request came during state law. The state was orBut instead of a w a r rant oral arguments before U.S. dered to turn over the records. based on probable cause, the District Court Judge Alcer The state sued, and the ACLU DEA need only show in that Haggerty in U .S. District joined them. instance that w hat t h ey're Court in Portland over the The DEA c o ntends that seeking is "material and relU.S. Drug Enforcement Ad- the warrantless subpoenas, evant," a lower standard of ministration's d e m an d to called administrative subpoe- proof. searchthe records of a state nas, are a critical investigative The DEA says Haggerty pharmaceutical monitoring tool. The ACLU responds that should toss the case, because database. such searches violate patients' the ACLU and the state of OrThe state o f Or e gon Fourth Amendment rights to egon failed to show that the launched the database, the Or- be freefrom il legal searches DEA ever used an adminisegon Prescription Monitoring and seizures. trative subpoena to obtain "The factpeople are forced specific prescription mediProgram, in 2011 in the hopes of tracking prescriptions and to choose between protecting cal information, and to asidentifying abuse. Within a their health and protecting sert that they will is "purely year, the DEA sought infor- their privacy is offensive, and speculative." "They have no evidence mation from the database as it's wrong," said ACLU attorBy Nigel Duara

"There's no excuse to forget a gun is in your

bag."

— Nico Melendez,

TSA spokeswoman

TSAfinds 30 guns in 2013 at BIFPOVtS By Mike Francis The Oregonian

PORTLAND — Last year, Transportation Security Ad-

ministration agents found 21 guns, 17 of which were loaded, being carried by passengers boarding at Portland International Ai rport. They

also stopped passengers carrying firearms three times each at airports in Eugene,

Medford and Redmond. Most often, the f i rearms

were found inside carry-on bags passing through an X-ray scanner. In most cases, passengers said they simply forgot they were inside.

NeWlaWmaker — Oregon's neweststate lawmakerhastaken office. Rep.BarbaraSmith Warner, D-Portland, tookthe oath of office on Wednesday. ShereplacesMichaelDembrow,whomoveduptothe Senate after JackieDingfelder resigned towork for thePortland mayor's office. TheMultnomahCounty Board of Commissioners unanimously backed SmithWarnerlate lastyear. Smith Warnertold commissioners she's a field representative for U.S.Sen.RonWyden. Commissioners in MultnomahandClackamascounties havenotyet selected areplacement for Rep.Chris Garrett of LakeOswego,whoresignedwhenhewas appointed to theCourt of Appeals.

"The fact people are forced to choose between protecting their health and

protecting their privacy is offensive, and it's wrong."

PriSOn Superintendent reaSSigned — An Oregonprison superintendent put onleaveduring aninvestigation has beendemoted andreassigned. RickCoursey is reportedly leavingthestate's Pendleton prison for what wasdescribed asa job working on special projects at the Snake River prison inOntario. Theannouncement camein anagency email from Corrections Department Director Colette Peters.Thedepartment official who overseesEastern Oregonprisons, SteveFranke,put Coursey on paid leaveNov.13. Department officials said theinvestigation wasa personnel matter that didn't involve misconduct. Assistant Superintendent Bridgette Amsberry remains inchargeof the Pendleton prison, the Eastern OregonCorrectional Institution.

— Nathan Freed Wessler, ACLU attorney

that the DEA m ight access

thoserecords at some future time; we don't know," Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Dan-

Oneman, tWOSuSpeCted DUIIS —A62-year-old Astoria man was arrested twice inlessthanthree hours onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants. DonaldGradyCarter wasarrested by Oregon State Police at7:09 p.m. Thursday. Troopers wereresponding to areport of a possibly intoxicated driverandstopped the manin a red DodgeCaravan. Carter wassaid to havea blood alcohol content of.17 percent, police reported. Hewasreportedlyalso in possession of an opencontainer of alcohol andlackedadriver's license. Carter wastakento the Clatsop County Jail, where he wascited andreleased.Twoanda half hourslater, however,Carterwas backonthe road,this time with BarbaraAnnCarter, 72, in thepassenger's seat. Thetwo were reportedly stopped byatrooper, and DonaldCarterwasarrested again, andsaid to beunder the influence of intoxicants, with areported.14 percent blood alcohol content..

ielson told Haggerty. Even if the court does allow

the suit to proceed, federal attorneys wrote in a memo, the patients and the doctor "do

not have a reasonable expectation of privacy interest in

their prescription information that is protected by the Fourth Amendment."

Haggerty said Wednesday he would rule "fairly soon."

PantSleSSman — OregonState Police saya manrammed aCreswell school bus toforce it to stop onInterstate 5 in LaneCounty thentook off his pants andtried to board.Therewere nochildren on the busat the time Tuesdayafternoon, andthe busdriver keptthe doorclosed. Astroopers and deputies arrivedthemanreportedly got back in hiscar andtried to drive away. Ithadtwo flat tires andcrashed into a pond. Troopers arrested the 38-year-old Bothell, Wash.,manandjailed him onsuspicion of drunken driving, hit-and-run andbeingfelon in possession of afirearm.

New I(eseyfilm examinesmore than the psychedelicprankster

GangtaSk fOrCeraidS — Officersfrom a Portlandregional gangtask force raidedseveral sites beforedawnWednesdayand servedwarrants. Sgt. PeteSimpson, aPortland police spokesman,saidthat details about the raids willbe releasedbythe U.S.attorney's office. Theraids were carried out bythe Metro GangTask Force, which has membersfrom police departments intheregion andfederal lawenforcementagencies.

By Kelsey Thalhofer The (Eugene) Register-Guard

EUGENE — When Oregon

— From wire reports

Public Broadcasting television producer Eric Cain set out to tell the story of Ken Kesey for

the station's "Oregon Experience" series, he wasn't sure

5pectacujar OceanViews

what he would find.

But he knew what parts of the story already had been

From Every Room.

told. "I didn't want to just tell

• • •

r'i 'The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test' all over again," Cain said, referring to the 1968 book by Tom Wolfe that chronicled Kesey and his followers. San FranciscoChronicle/The Associated Pressfile photo So last May, he dug past Ken Kesey awaits sentencing in Redwood City, Calif., during the story of the Oregon writ- 1966. A new documentary explores the men at horn, while not er, past the prankster with a engaged with counter-culture antics. wildbus and discovered ahusband, father, grandfather and friend who was loved "fierce- to accommodate about half be streamed on OPB's website ly" by those who knew him. of the 200 people who signed starting Tuesday afternoon. "It's a whole different look up on a waiting list. No more The film covers what made at Ken Kesey," Cain said of the seats are available. Kesey, a Springfield High hourlong documentary, simA second screening is slat- School graduate, so iconic in ply titled "Ken Kesey." ed for Friday in Portland, and the first place — namely, his The film's Eugene screen- residents across the state can most famousbooks. But it also ing, tobe held tonight at down- see it in the comfort of their delves into the lesser-known town's McDonald Theatre, al- own homes when the docu- side of Kesey's life, which beready has filled up its 400 free mentary airs on K OPB-TV gan after he relocated to his RSVP spots and will be able Monday. The show also can family farm in Pleasant Hill.

''-4s

p j l,

year by about 20 percent, to 1,828 incidents.

While the number of confiscations in Portland is mi-

nuscule in comparison to the 7 million-plus passengers who boarded planes at the

airport last year, it happens frequently enough to keep agents alert. For e x ample, five times in August, a trav-

eler sought to pass through airport security with a loaded

firearm. Each incident represents a case in which TSA shut down

the security line, summoned Port of Portland police, then helped move the passenger into a back room. The cases usually end with a citation by police and the confiscation

of the firearm, TSA officials said. The police forward citations to the U.S. Attorney and

Multnomah County prosecutors, who can decide whether to proceed with the case.

The TSA also can hit passengers with civil penalties of up to $11,000, Melendez said. A confiscated gun is either destroyed or, if legally possessed, returned to the passengerlater,said Port of

Yachats, Oregon

OvERLEAf LoDGE 6 3PA 800-338-0507 overleaflodge.com o verleafspa.com

with dangerous dogs. Bunn said the council M EDFORD — A dan - would like a law that offers gerous-dog law i n M e d- a graduated approach to ford might feature a twodealing with the owners of pronged approach t h at problem dogs. would deal both with aniHe said he might sugmals that turn vicious and gest that a pit-bull breeder their irresponsible owners. or owner be added to the At its meeting today, the committee for the purpose City Council, which has of getting a dog owner's received about 100 emails perspective. and many phone calls on The council would also the issue, will give direc- like a recommendation on tion to the Police Advisory laws discussed in other

of the nine cases, the pistols

were loaded.

Prestige Senior Living High Desert

By Damian Mann

Committee. The council plans to ask

on specific breeds, manda-

the committee to devise tory sterilization and other a graduated enforcement measures, such as cages. plan to deal with residents So far, abreed-specific and dogs who are repeat ban has been a problematic offenders. idea for council. The council also wants to Bunn, who owns a labdevise a law that offers pro- rador, said he thinks most active means to address a dog owners in Medford are dangerous dog. responsible. "I work with a guy who Last week, councilors learned that 89 cases of dog has pit bulls," he said. "They bites on other animals or

e

seem nice, and I don't want However, t h e

co u n c il

Councilors rec e ived has received complaints graphic photos showing from residents whose dogs dogs that had been attacked. have been attacked, which C ouncilor D aniel B u nn prompted the discussion. " Half o f a l l b i t e s a r e said the city will likely ask the Police Advisory Comcoming from pi t b u lls," mittee to hold public hear- Bunn said. "That's the realings and come up with a ity we're faced with at the recommendation on dealing council."

0y

Thursday, December19th,2013,3pm

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Downsizing with Dignity

Are you thinking ofdownsizing for Senior Living and feeling overwhelmed? Lorie and Tammie give yougreat advice andtips for preparing and getting organized! They alsohaveimportant advice on where to put AdvanceDirectives, Insurance policies,etc.

Thursday, January 30th,2014,3pm 4

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Living Life without the Fear of Falling St Charle sH ome Health givesUssom esim pletechniquesforhom esafety and strengtheningtodecreaseyourri skoffalls.

communities, such as bans

in the past three years.

mond, agents confiscated the compact pistols. In seven

<0

(Medford) Mail Tribune

Johnson. In Oregon, the firearm of Six times in Portland, twice at Medford and once atRed-

e

Valid Sun-Thurs, Now - Feb 13, 2014.

Medford honing law on dangerousbreeds

humans had been reported to take his dogs away."

— was the .380-caliber pistoL

<Offer is not good with other discounts. Food donated to Lincoln County Food Share.)

Portland spokesman Steve choice — or rather, neglect

e

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N evertheless, sai d T S A spokesman Nico M elendez,

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Thursday, February20th,2014,3pm O Presented by Lorie Weber, PA-C, Partners In Care Home Health and Hospice

Partners In Care

What's on your Bucket List?

This in depth talk is gearedtowards folks who are slowing down with age andare contemplating the meaning in their lives, not just the activity. 1his is a very interactive presentation with attendees you aresure to enjoy.

Thursday, March 27th,2014,3pm 4 P ! t edby Th N i g 5 t t f fS t C h I sH Diabetes 101

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St. Charles HomeHealth reviews diabetes self management. Come learn the warning symptoms, and howto effectively managediabetes with diet and medicationsto prevent long term complications for a fuller and healthier lifestyle.

Thursday, April 24th,2014,3pm

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Stress Reduction for Seniors Lorie re view sthetypesofstresssenior'sdealwith,how torecognizethest ress,manageitandtransform it .Shegivesgreatexam plesofhow folks living in Assisted Living candeal with the stressorsofbeing a senior adult.

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

EDj To

The Bulletin

s

ov.< over Oregon's website troubles forced some people to

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forgo tax credits or suffer a gap in their health insurance coverage. Now Oregon officials have traveled to the nation's capital to try to repair the damage. It's aworthymissionthatshould t h e same plea. He was accompaget positive response from federal n ied by Dan Carol, the governor's officials. director of multistate and strategic initiatives. The Affordable Care Act re quires applicants to buy insurance Alth o ugh the federal governthrough the exchanges in order to m ent can'tbeblamed for Cover Orequalify for possible tax credits. But gon's computer troubles, the federal Oregon's exchange website didn't w ebsite has had its share of glitches work, and state workers were un- as well. The failures certainly result able to keep up with the paper appli- at least in part from the ACA's efcations that resulted. Some people fort to do too much too fast, leaving who qualified for tax credits had to individuals trapped by mandates buy insurance independently or risk and failed systems. Whoever is to havingno coverage on Jan. 1. blame , it certainly isn't the individuTwo officials from Qov. John al who tried to sign uP and couldn't, Kitzhaber's office this week sought because the system s™Ply didn't approval from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to Pre s ident Obama's administragive those people tax credits any- t ion has made numerous adjustway, according to a report from Kai- ments to the ACA, because of timing ser Health News. If approved, the a ndotherissues,includingdelaying change would apply only to those certain mandates and provisions. who had tried to enroll through J ust this week, for example, HHS Cover Oregonbut couldn'tbecause extended coverage for people with of the website's failure and the back- serious illnesses who had insurance up of paper applications. through the federal high-riskpool. Sean Kolmer,who serves as the The adjustment Oregon and othgovernor's health policy adviser, er states are seeking on tax credits told Kaiser that Oregon is not alone should be an easy choice: an opporin this effort, although he didn't t u n ity to repair at least one of the identify the other states making m a nyerrorsinthiscomplexsystem.

v

0

M IVickel's Worth Pond more inviting than river

Testof characterforall Waldenis correct on joblessbenefits When I read in the Jan. 8 edition of The Bulletin that Valerie

Wright, a respected local attorney,

Before we moved toBend, my husband and I lived in the original

was asked to leave John Hum-

mel's recent gathering attended daimed by Terry Cunningham in the Missoula, Mont., for 25 years. We by Central Oregon lawyers, I was Jan. 10 My Nickel's Worth. Cunningloved that place. And we loved the shocked. Who kicks out their own ham may be, however.Walden isabClark Fork River, which runs wild invited guest with an, "I'm sorry, solutely correct when he stated, "An and free,pretty much unencum- you weren't supposed to get an extensionproposal inthe House could "A River Runs Through It" town,

bered through downtown Missou-

invitation — please leave"? I was

actually increase the length of unem-

la. And there are parks along the way and nice walking and biking

angry for Wright to be treated in such a manner. And I was embar-

trails. But in the city of Missoula,

rassed for Hummel, who has said,

ployment for some Americans and would increase the budget deficit." The purposeofunemployment benefits is to provide temporary monetary relief, untilthe recipient can find ajob.

most folks don't spend much time "How I campaign is how I am godown by the river — not like they ing to serve." do in Bend's Drake Park. Some-

If W r i ght

h a d n o t a t t ended,

New schoolsappraisal doesn't tell entire story

how, water rushing by doesn't ask would the headline have read: you to linger like the stillness of a "DA's trial attorney wife snubs

t first blush, it sounds pretty awful: A respected publication reviews reputable test scores and gives Oregon a D in academic achievement, saying it ranks 40th in the nation. But the publication Education Week considered a lot more than test scores to determine the academic achievement rankings in its Quality Counts report earlier this month. In fact, the scores themselves take up only four of the 18 lines of information in that section of the report. Education Week used the¹ tional Assessment of Educational Progress, which is given to a sample of students nationwide. Here's how Oregon stacked up: • 40.2 percent of 4th graders were proficient in math, compared with 41.3 percent nationally. • 34.3 percent of 8th graders were proficient in math, compared with 34.4percent nationally. • 33.4percent of4th graders were proficient in r eading, compared with 34.0percent nationally. • 36.7percent of 8th graders were proficient in r eading, compared with 34.3 percent nationally. Hardly the results you'd like to see for Oregon or the nation, but

A

also hardly support for the idea that this state is doing terribly in comparison with other states. Oregon didn't do as well on Advanced Placement test scores and in its rate of increasing achievement and reducingthepovertygap. Graduation rates were also considered, but outdated measures may make those figures misleading, according to a report in The Oregonian. With all those factors, the nation got aC-minus and Oregon got a D. The topgrade of B went to Massachusetts, with an F for the District of Columbia and Mississippi and 32 states in the D to C-minus range. We appreciate the importance of all the factors Education Week used in its calculation. But it's confusing when achievement scores are mixed with other factors to produce a grade. The actual scores need independent attention. Education Week's report also delves into multiple other education issues, including an assessment of an individual's "chance for success" and comparative school financing, among others. It's auseful examination of the state of education today and deserves serious attention that can't be simplified into letter grades that mislead, rather than enlighten.

U.S. Rep Greg Walden, R-Hood River, is not the one out of touch, as

poild.

invitation"? The actual headline

Case in point: I have a relatke

who has been drawing unemployment benefits for the past two years in another state. When I asked why

We used to fish and camp along was at the very least misleadthe upper and lower Clark Fork ing, as you can't "crash" a party

he is still unemployed, he said, "Why should I work and risk losing my un-

and have rafted it m any t i mes.

you've been invited to attend. Was

employment check'? I make more

But we never enjoyed it in quite

this a trap? It almost sounds like

money staying at home collecting

the same way as we have the Deschutes, where it slows its pace

the start of a cliched joke: "A defense attorney walks into a party

unemployment." This attitude on a

and meanders through Bend's parks. Although the Clark Fork

As is often the case, what be-

Democrats in America today. Why

government subsidy seems to be prevalent with the progressive left wing

gan as one's mistake became a should people work when the governsomething about the placid nature test of character for all. Hummel ment will paythem? and serenity of Mirror Pond that is lost an opportunity to be gracious According to The Wall Street Joursimply more inviting. A river near- and proud for Wright to observe nal Market Watch artide of Jan. 8, ly always enhances the beauty of the enthusiasm and confidence ''What happens when jobless benefits its surroundings. But a still surof his campaign. Hummel's team are cut? North Carolina may offer face reflects the beauty and then reacted like children whose secret dues," Republican Gov. Pat McCrory creates a refuge from the rush of hideout was just discovered. cut weekly benefits from a maximum traffic and city goings-on. Mirror Wright accepted the invitation of $535to $350.Unemployed people Pond is a quiet place where folks in good faith. When she was told could only draw benefits for 12 to 20 want to slow down life and be idle she was not welcome, she excused weeks instead of the normal26weeks. is every bit as beautiful, there is

for a while. It seems appropriate to

herself. Wright demonstrated im-

us that the pond be maintained as pressive grace and courage unthe lovely stopping place it is, no der fire. If Hummel is looking for matter what the cost. justice and integrity, he shouldn't We all need a place to stop and have let it walk out the door with reflect. Valerie Wright. Doris Pulis Rita Lage Bend

The unemployment rate fell from 8.7

percent in August to 7.4 percent in November. What happened to all the people who were unemployed? They apparently got off their behinds and wentback to work or went on welfare.

William Logan

Terrebonne

Bend

Letterspolicy

In My Viewpolicy How to submit

We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to oneissue, contain no more than 250words andincludethe writer's signature, phonenumber andaddress for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar,tasteandlegal reasons. We reject poetry, personalattacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereand those appropriate for othersections of The Bulletin. WrIters arelimited to one letter or Op-Edpiece every 30days.

In My Viewsubmissions should be between550and650words, signed and includethe writer's phone number and addressfor verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar,taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In MyView piecesrun routinely in thespacebelow, alternating with national columnists. Writers are limited to oneletter or Op-Edpieceevery 30 days.

Pleaseaddress your submission to either My Nickel'sWorth or In MyView and send,fax or email themto The Bulletin.

Write: MyNickel's Worth/In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804

Email: bulletin@bendbulletin.com

Irrigation districts' collaborative efforts lead the way By Steve Johnson here's a trend underway in Central Oregon, one built on

er Conservancy and others, the dis-

IN MY VIEW

trict began the first phase of the project by lining five miles of its main irri- Department of Fish and Wildlife and cooperation and collaboration. gation canal with concrete. The newly its Water Resources Department, as And the result is that Oregon is be- lined canal conserved Deschutes Riv- well as private companies, construccoming a national leader in river res- er water that would otherwise have tion is underway on the first of sevtoration and renewable energy. been lost to seepage. The conserved eral smaller "in-canal" hydropower In a surprising twist, some of the water will be used to irrigate produc- projects. These small hydropower leading institutions driving this pos- tive farmlands that historically relied projects, placed inside historic irrigaitive change are among our state's on water pumped from the Crooked tion canals, will generate clean, reoldest irrigation districts. Central River. newable electricity by harnessing the Oregon irrigation districts are taking When t hi s i n n ovative p r oject, normal flow of water through these unprecedented steps to conserve wa- which will include additional phases canals. Hydropower projectsofferthe ter, improve habitat for fish and wild- of canal lining and other conserva- promise of a remarkable new synergy life and, at the same time, generate tion efforts, is complete, up to 220 between irrigation deliveries and the carbon-free, renewable hydropower. cubic feet per second of water will be generation of clean energy. And they're doing it without con- restored to the Crooked River north Five miles north of Bend, the Censtructing large, new dams. of Smith Rock State Park, benefiting tral Oregon Irrigation District reNorth Unit Irrigation District, locat- salmon, steelhead and other fish and cently completed the Juniper Ridge ed near Madras, is beginning the first wildlife. Hydropower Project and the Swalley

T

stages of the largest streamflow restoration initiative in Oregon's history.

North Unit and the Central Oregon

with the support of the Deschutes Riv-

terests. With the support of Oregon's

Irrigation districts are also working During the winter of 2011 and 2012, together with the state and private in-

Irrigation District completed the Pon-

tured in Portland, now buried at the

pastures, schools and parks. But the

bottom of 100-year-old canals. During

districts are now driving a change to responsibly manage their water re-

the six-month irrigation season, new turbines spin 24 hours per day, generating nearly 4.25 megawatts of electricit y — orenough renewable energy to power 1,850 homes for an entire year. By placing pipe in the older dirt and rock canal to convey water to local farmers and ranchers, the districts

sources for multiple benefits. Their

conservation projects and fishery restoration activities are some of the most innovative measures underway in the West.

For Oregon's economy and environment, the results are stunning. These

are ableto conserve water previously projects will strengthen agricultural lost to seepage. In an averageyear, the productivity in one of our state's most projects will return nearly 58 cubic important farming regions, generate feetper second of water — or more renewable electricity and enhance than 20,000 acre-feet of water — to conditions for salmon, steelhead, other the Deschutes River. This is an incred- fish and wildlife and improve recreible amount of water and will benefit ation. These are real, meaningful acsalmon, steelhead and other fish and complishments and illustrate the very wildlife, as well as recreation values.

best of collaborative conservation.

Many of Central Oregon's irrigation districts date back to the late 1800s.

— Steve Johnson is the general manager of the Central Oregon Irrigation District and thepresidentoftheDeschutesBasinBoard of Control, which represents all seven major irrigation districts in Central Oregon.

derosa Hydropower Project. These Their canals, built out of the black new projects include nearly 7.5 miles basalt that defines this region, convey of pipe, most of which was manufac- life-sustaining water to farmlands,


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

B5

WEST NEWS

BITUARIES

Tribal health care probed FEATURED OBITUARY

DEATH NOTICES Chika 'Kay' Glueck Arthur C. Krantz, of Eugene July 30, 1924 - Jan. 13, 2014 Services: Services will be held on January 21, at 2:00 P.M. at theEugene Masonic Lodge, 2777 Martin Luther King Blvd. in Eugene.

Diane Dolores Siebert, of Cuiver Mar. 18, 1948 - Jan. 10, 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

Diane Esther Cable, of Redmond May 1, 1947 - Jan. 11, 2014 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held.

Dorothy Rose Richards, of Madras Aug. 29, 1925 - Jan. 13, 2014 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Graveside services will be held on Friday, January 17, 2014 at 1:30 PM at Mount Jefferson Memorial Park in Madras.

Mary Elizabeth Allen, of Bend June 23, 1928 - Jan. 11, 2014 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds is honored to serve the family. Please visit the online registry at www.niswonger-reynolds. com 541-382-2471 Services: The family is planning a time of remembrance at a time to be decided. Contributions may be made to:

American Cancer Society, PO Box 22718, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 73123-1718.

Myrtle Eudora Cosier, of Prineviiie Aug. 4, 1917 - Jan. 11, 2014 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: A family service will be held at Hillcrest Memorial Park in Medford. Contributionsmay be made to:

Oregon Right to Life or a charity of your choice through Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 185 N.E. 4th St., Prineville, OR 97754 .

William Donald Wallace, iii, of Simms, MT Jan. 24, 1964 - Dec. 3, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel, La Pine www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A memorial service will be held in Simms, MT at a later date.

Winifred E. Edwards, of Madras Nov. 25, 1926 - Jan. 13, 2014 Arrangements: Bel-Air Colonial Funeral Home, 541-475-2241 Services: Graveside services will be held on Friday, January 17, 2014 at 10:00 AM at Mount Jefferson Memorial Park in Madras.

Aug. 24, 1926- Jau. 12, 2014 Chika 'Kay' G l u e ck, a R edmond resident for t h e last 10 years, died January 1 2, 2014, at age 87 . S h e was bor n i n K a g o shima, Japan, August 25, 1 9 2 6. She is survived by her loving husband, Donald Glueck; six Kay Glueok children; eight g randchildren; a nd six great-grandchildren. A m e m o r ia l w a s h e l d January 15, 2014, at 2 :00 p.m., at R edmond M e m orial Chapel. P lease sig n o u r on l i n e g uestbook ww w .r ed mondmemorial.com.

Deborah Lee Patterson Fub. 3. 1952 - -Jau11, 2014 Deborah was born at US A rmy B a s e C am p A t t e r b ury, I N , a n d r a i s e d i n Bend, OR from the age of four. Sh e graduated from B end S e n io r H i g h an d b riefly a t tended Uof O. She was a free spirit w it h a ready smile. She passed peace-

Deboruh

iully

in

Patterson the l ov ing arms of her t h ree sisters as a result of p ancreatic cancer. S he is s u r v ived b y t h e l ove o f h e r l i f e , M a n u a l Baptista, her parents, Dick and B e v erley P a t t erson, son, Jacob, and her sisters,

Beth (Larry) Pool, Cindy (Cal) Ozaki, Sue (Frank)

P otje, e i gh t n i e c e s a n d nephews. A Celebration of Life will b e held S u nday, J an . 1 9 f rom 1 - 3 p . m . a t 6 1 7 3 9 Tomahawk St., Bend, OR. In lieu of flowers, memor ial contributions may b e m ade to Partners in C a r e or G r ac e F i r s t L u t h e r an Church Family Center. P lease sig n o u r on l i n e g uestbook at w w w .n i s wonger-reynolds.com

Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or

funeral homes.Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services 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 must be

received by 5p.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 adsvary; please call for details. Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obiis©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254 Mailr Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708

Landwehr, a detective, hunted

serial killer

Deaths of note from around the world:

& Co. Died Dec. 24 in Charles-

Dr. John Freeman, 80: A longtime Johns Hopkins University pediatric neurologist and medical ethicist who was known as an expert in pediatric epilepsy. Died Jan. 3 in

Vugar Gashimov, 27:A chess grandmaster from Azerbaijan

Baltimore.

Thomas Chrystie, 80: A top executive in the early 1970s, a

ton, S.C. who was one of the world's top

players for a decade and who helped lead his team to the gold

staff noticed on Jan. 8 that

while the needle itself was working at the tribes Diachanged between patients, betes Wellness Center last the same blood glucose pen summer — was placed on was being used repeatedly leave pending the investo administer the tests with- tigation. He said he was out proper sterilization. among a number of tribal

The U.S. Department of New York Times News Service

vices' Indian Health Services does not believe any

Lt. Ken Landwehr, a homicide detective in Wichita, Kan.,

who played a pivotal role in

— a woman who started

into a potential violation of

testing protocols at a tribal clinic's wellness program. Health and Human Sermembers of the Fort Mc-

"There was an instance

members tested who fear

the capture of the serial killer known as BTK, whose terroriz-

to disease last week at the

in which a blood sugar, the entire 3 00-member finger-stick device was po- tribe could be at risk of an tentially used improperly," outbreak of HIV or Hepati-

ing spree went unredressed for

clinic near the Nevada-Or-

Russell confirmed.

more than 30 years, died at his

home Monday in Wichita. He was 59.

The cause was kidney cancer, said Joel Vanatta, who is married to the lieutenant's stepdaughter. Landwehr, whom the city's mayor, Carl Brewer, called "the Dick Tracy of Wichita," served

on the Wichita police force for more than 30 years. He was commander of

t h e d e part-

ment's homicide unit from 1992

Dermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe were exposed

tis B and C.

"It was brought to our ategon line, said Dr. Marie Details of the follow-up Russell, deputy chief med- tention by a participant. We t ests have not b een r e ical officer for th e feder- immediately removed any leased, but Russell said al agency's area office in testing supplies and we are there's no indication there Phoenix. in the process still of unis any basis for concern But she said Wednesday derstanding what occurred about an outbreak. they've made contact with "To be clear, there is no and investigating what all 21 individuals to be re- happened," she said. outbreak," she said. "We tested as a precautionary The wellness program don't believe there was exmeasure and have com- continues at the reservation posure. We have no knowlpleted tests on the majority in rural Humboldt County, edge of any exposure to of the people. She said the about 200 miles northeast bloodborne disease or anyagency recently began an of Reno, but all testing for thing else."

until his retirement in 2012, by which time he'd had a hand in

more than 600 murder investigations, the department said.

They included a pair of unrelated quadruple murders that occurred within eight days in 2000 and the rape and murder

of a 9-year-old girl in 1990. But by far, his most promi-

Oregon teen isfound guilty in hit-and-run that killed two sisters

nent case was that of Dennis

Rader, who killed 10 people from 1974 to 1991 and who, in communications with the news

media and the police, called himself BTK, an abbreviation

of his working method: bind, torture, kill. An egotist who enjoyed playing cat-and-mouse with the police, Rader bragged of his crimes and taunted the police

with letters, poems and packages delivered to local news agencies and left in public places. After his final murder — he strangled Dolores Davis, 62, in her Wichita home in 1991-

he vanished. But he resumed sending messages to newspapers and television stations in

The Associated Press HILLSBORO

-

A

19-year-old woman who drove an SUV into a pile of leaves that concealed two girls has been found guilty in the fatal hit-and-run case.

A W ashington County jury took less than two

hours Wednesday to find Cinthya G a rcia-Cisneros guilty of felony charges. The woman is said to have learned after arriving

the scene of the accident as b rother returned to t h e soon as she learned of it. Her scene on his way to his girldefense lawyer said the law friend's house and saw a doesn't say anything about man standing over the pile, the requirements when screaming. a driver learns only later The girls were later idenabout an accident. tified as step-sisters, 6-yearGarcia-Cisneros was res he drove

D i e ter-Eckerdt

t h r ough t h e

scene. Abigail died later at a

leaves. Her boyfriend and brother were passengers in

Portland hospital. Defense attorney Ethan

the vehicle.

Levi said Garcia-Cisneros

Neighbors had r a ked piles near the curb for leaf Street in Forest Grove but pick-up. G a rcia-Cisneros didn't come forward. Police hit the leaves shortly before found her the following day. 8:30 p.m., she testified, and The prosecution said she felt a bump. home Oct.20 she may have struck two children on Main

was required to return to

old A nn a

portedly on her way home and 11-year-old Abigail from getting fast food when Robinson. Anna died at the

W ithin

min u tes, he r

was in a state of denial after learning of the children and fixated on the possibility she

wasn't the driver who struck them.

Sentencing is scheduled for Jan. 31.

2004.

He was finally caught in 2005. Landwehr and Rader had been exchanging coded messages placed in newspaper ads when the detective tricked him into using a floppy disk for his next communication, falsely telling him that the disk could

Website

the towel." Kim

not be used to track him down. Afewweeks later, Rader sent

Continued from B1 "People are not going to sign up because they don't believe it's going to work. Or they believe their information

such a disk to a local television

will not be private or believe

station. It was quickly traced to

that they're signing up for insurance but find out they're Care Act for the 36 states

at the point where we need to

not covered ... All of these

turn to contingency plans."

a computer atthe churchwhere Rader was a congregation lead-

In an earlier hearing, Rep.

premature.

"We certainly made a large

T h atcher, R - Keizer, investment," he said. "If (the

questioned if the state would website) becomes operational be better off cutting its loss-

in the next month, we'll have

es with Cover Oregon and a system that will be able to jumping into the federal enroll people ... I think the health care exchange, which next month will, in essence, adminiters the Affordable tell us whether or not we're without state exchanges.

er. He was arrested days later,

things lead one to the condu-

Goldberg said scrapping

confessed to his crimes and was sentenced to 10 consecu-

sion, that it's time to throw in

the site at this point would be

Airport

and provide an opportunity for input from neighbors."

next several months "will

two months, county senior

involve a public hearing

planner Peter Russell said.

COCC

the UAV sequence within a more broad aviation course

— Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbulletin.com

tive life terms, which he is serv-

ing at El Dorado Correctional Facility in El Dorado, Kan. Born Jan. 23, 1954, Kenneth

Landwehr grew up in Wichita, where local news reports said he was an Eagle Scout, a high school debate champion and a devotee of Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes tales,

— but also a drinker and an occasionalbrawler as a teenager. His father, Lee, worked at Cessna, the aircraft company; his mother, Irene, was a homemaker.

By his own admission he was a poor student at Wichita

Still, Hancock said he and some of his neighbors Continued from B1 The airport sits on land feel their concerns are beCity officials said they're owned by the city but is sit- ing ignored by the city. aware of concerns from res- uated outside of Bend's ur- They plan to hold neighboridents near the airport. ban growth boundary and hood meetings to discuss "I think there was some Deschutes County-zoned what, if anything, they can confusion as to where we property. do to lessen the impact from are in the process," Bend So the a i rport m a ster increased flight traffic. "I'm all for business, and City Manager Eric King plan needs to be incorposaid, referring to the Jan. 8 rated into the county's com- all for aviation," Hancock meeting. The environmen- prehensive land plan, a pro- said. But the helicopter protal impact phase over the cess likely to take at least posal "is a bad fit." — Reporter: 541-617-7820, eglucklich@bendbuiletin.com

State University, although he excelled in algebra and criminal justice and

c onsidered

applying to join the FBI. He decided to pursue a career in law enforcement in 1977, after the

store where he was working as a clerk was robbed. He and others in the store

were tied up, and one robber stood over him, loading a pisepisode gave Landwehr the experience of being a victim and fosteredcompassion for crime victims and their families that

he said became his prime motivation in doing his job. He was known among friends and colleagues for taking cases personally. "When I did my interview to

get on the police department, medal in the European Team they always ask you one quesChess Championship in 2009. tion, 'How far do you want to go He had reportedly been receiv- in the department'?', and at that ing treatment for a brain tu-

blood sugar has been susa complaint from a person pended, Russell said. Citing RENO, Nev. — Federal she did not identify who personnel policies, she said tribal health officials are had blood tested as part of she could not comment on testing the blood of 21 mem- the wellness program that reports that an IHS official bers of a northern Nevada included efforts to combat affiliated with the program tribe to be sure they weren't diabetes. had been placed on adminexposed to HIV or any othT ribal c hairman T i l - istrative leave. er bloodborne diseases as don Smith said earlier Smart said Monday the part of a n i n vestigation this week members of his HIS diabetes coordinator investigation in response to

The Associated Press

By Bruce Weber

tol. No one was killed, but the

DEATHS ELSEWHERE

By Scott Sonner

interview, I said, 'I want to com-

rocky time for Wall Street bro- mor. Died Friday in Germany. mand homicide,' " Landwehr — From wire reports said in a television interview. kerage firms, at Merrill Lynch

Continued from B1 of study. Baldessari sugDespite the a nticipat- gested early concepts ined pilot license require- volved a three-course UAV ment, Baldessari said it is sequence, complemented rare for UAV operators to by either airplane or heli-

ly $900,000 to create the

Unmanned Aerial Systems Center of Excellence, which would include a flight-test

site with a proposed location in Central Oregon. Additionally, the University of

Alaska-Fairbanks has FAA as most directions are course would be the cur- approval to open a testing pre-programmed. rent introductory class, folsite in Warm Springs. "Talking to people who lowed by the second class "The UAV education have done this overseas based in a simulator. The part is an important piece and in A f ghanistan or third course would involve of the industry," said RogIraq, it is a rare occasion more simulations and actu- er Lee, executive director when someone puts their al flying missions. of Economic Development "I don't see us owning for Central Oregon. "For hands on a controller to direct anything, and that our own aircraft anytime the industry to grow, you it really only happens in soon, but it would be good have to have people who an emergency situation," to partner with an indus- can operate the vehicles. By Baldessari said. "It's my im- try provider in the area," jumping in on the training, pression that people would Baldessari said. COCC is providing another want a pilot and not a proCOCC is well-positioned piece of the puzzle for the grammer in case of such an to find such partners. An industry." emergency." item in the 2013-15 legisla— Reporter: 541-633-2160, COCC plans to embed tive budget allocated neartleeds®bendbulletin.com manually s t eer

v e h icles, copter training. The f irst


B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided byWSI ©2014.

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41/37

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SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE

Yesterday' sw eatherthrough 4 p.m .inBend High/ low..............59/27 24 hoursending4p.m.*..0.00" Remrdhigh........ 58in1994 Month todate.......... 1.19" Remrdlow........ -10 in1947 Averagemonthto date... 084" Average high.............. 41 Year to date............ 1.19" Average low............... 25 Average yearto date..... 0.84" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.44 Remrd 24hours ...0.69 in 1974 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLETINDEX

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10

QOAD CONDITIONS Snow levelandroadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m.yesterday.Key:T.T. = Traction Tires.

Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ....... . . . . . . .0-0.. . . . . . . 48 Hoodoo....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Mt. Ashland.................0.0...no report Mt. Bachelor...... . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .63-79 Mt. Hood Meadows...... . . . .0.0.. . . . .52-76 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl...... . . . . .0-0... . . .16-22 Timberline....... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 66 Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0...no report

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thuuday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp HilLNW HiRo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W HidLNW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene1X......61/25I 00...62/30/s .. 59/35/s GrandRapids....3021N 02.. 31Q3/sn. 27/12/sn RapidCity.......5$20/0 00..36/18/pc. 47/31Ipc Savann ah.......6$36/0.00...5032/s.58/32/sh Akron ..........35/26/000... 30/22/c. 30/16/sn GreenBay.......18/1 ON00 .. 31/11/sn.. 17/Npc Reno...........56/22/0.00... 57/22/s.. 58/23/s Seattle..........52/42I.00... 42/34/I.. AO/35/I Albany..........47/240.00.. 3$25/pc. 39/27/pc Greensboro......55/2$000..43/28/pc.4924/pc Richmond.. .....56/37/0.00..43/2Npc.49/2Npc Sioux Falls....... 33/2I 00... 30/lysn. 21/2Npc Albuqu erque.....54/25I.00...53/27/s..54/2Ns Hamsburg.......40/27/00039/27/pc. .. 41l25/pc Rochester,NY....37/28/002..33/27/pc. 37/23/sn Spokane........37/3CN.00 ..42/29/pc...37/29/f Anchorage......35/28/0.1 7.. 33/29/rs..37/34/rs Hartbrd,CT.....SN25/000..41/26/pc.43/27/pc Saoamento......67/34/0.00... 68/37/s .. 68/37/s SpringfielzMO t ..34/19I 00 ..46/16/pc. 2N19 /pc Atlanta ........ 46/37I.00..44/33/pc.42/21/pc Helena..........SN39/000..43/25/pc.. 45/24/s St. Louis.........3$23I.00...43/14/c. 23/16/pc Tampa..........6950I.00... 56/42/s.67/43/sh AtlanticCity.... A6/34/0.00..4308/pc. 46/32/pc Honolulu........79/65/0.00.. 80/68/pc. 81/68/sh Salt Lake City... 43/27I 00 ..37/16/pc .. 36/1Ns Tucson..........73/34/000... 73/41/s.. 74/41ls Austin..........63/38N.00... 67/38l..s 61/35/s Houston ........59/41N.00..67/43/pc.. 62/37/s SanAntonio .....65/41N.00...6N39/s.. 65/36/s Tulsa...........49/24I0.00...5N27/s .. 43/28/s Baltimore.......45/32/0.00 ..41/28/pc. 43Q7/pc Huntsville...... 43/34/trace ..43/27/pc. 35/18/pc SanDiego.......82/52N.00... 79/52/s.. 76/51ls Washington,DC.50/39I.00 ..4109/pc. 41/2Npc Billings .........54/28/0.00 ..40/31/pc. 47/3Npc Indianapolis.....27/19N00 34/1 .. 8/sn. 24/12/sn SanFrancism....73/48I.00... 6N45/s.. 66/45/s Wrchita.........49/21I.00...5N21/s .. 43/27/s Birmingham.....47/37/0.01 ..47/31/pc. 3903/pc Jackson,MS.....50/35N.00.. 57/33/pc.. 45/25/s SanJose........71/39000... 71/39/s.. 69/39/s Yakima.........61/27N.00...46/23/s. 4t/22/pc Bismarck.........43/6I 00... 24I/pc ..33/1Nc Jacksonvile......62/43/0.00... 51/31/s.61/3Nsh SantaFe........48/150.00...47/19/s .. 47/24/s Yuma...........79/4N0.00...77/49/s .. 77/4Ns Boise...........45/25/0.00 ..42/27/pc.. 40/24/5 Juneau..........43/3N025... 41/37/r...43/36/r INTERNATIONAL Boston......... 4N35N.00...42/31/c. 44/32/pc Kansas City......34/W000 ..44/16/pc.. 29/23/s Bridgeport,CT....43/30I.00 ..4109/pc. 41/31Ipc Lansing.........27/20N.00..3023/sn. 2N11/sn Amsterdam......43/37/0.15... 44/41Ic.. 44/39/c Mecca..........90//5/0.00 ..85/67/pc. 81/64/pc Buffalo .........36/27I.00...30/26/c. 32/2Nsn LasVea gs.......68/43N.00... 71/43/s .. 69/43/s Adrens..........67/48I.00... 60/4NI. 58/50/pc MeximCity......55/500 00... 61/42/s. 60/37/pc BurlingioVT....53/3M.00 n, ..34I25/pc.. 3N2Nc Lexington.......35/25/000... 35/26/c.31/17/sn Auckland........72/59/000...70/61/c. 70/SNpc Montreal........36I27I.00 ..25/1Npc ..27/19/sf Caribou, ME.....37/29I.05...33/24/c. 33/22/sn Linmln..........42/10/000 39/11/pc. .. 32/22/pc Baghdad. .......6045100 ..64/St/pc.64/50/sh Moscow.........14M.00...17/7/sn....8/0/sf Charleston, SC...64/37I.00 ..4N34/pc. 55/32/sh Little Rock.......SN2$000... 56I27/s .. 41/24/s Bangkok........84/66I.00... 86/63/s .. 89/63/s Nairobi .........81/55N.00...78/52/s .. 81/53/s Chariotte........SN26I.00 ..4509/pc.4N24pc LosAngeles......83/52/0.00... 8054/s .. 7NSNs Beijing......... 41/14I.00...43/22/s ..42/19/s Nassau .........82/73N.00... 70/60/c. 67/62/pc Chattanooga.....47/33/0 00... 43/29/c..38/18/rs Louisvile........34/27/000...36/26/c. 31/tf/sn Beirut ..........6455N.00..67/56/pc. 65/52/pc NewDdhi.......61/48I II...71/Suc .. 73/55/c Cheyenne.......47/24/0.00... 42/23/s .. 47/3$s Madison, Wl.....16/1ON.00... 32/8/sn.. 14/2/pc Berlin...........39/36I.00 ..38I34/sh.43/33/sh Osaka.. ........5M2 /0.00..4$33/pc.4N32/pc Chicago.........22/15/000..34/14/sn.1$1Npc Memphis........43/3N000..51/28/pc. 3N24/pc Bogota.........68/43N.00... 71/52/t...74/49/t Oslo............1 9/18/007.. 24/1Nsn..20/1 7/sf Cincinnati.......31/24/0 00 .. 34/23/sn. 27/15/sn Miami..........71/62N30...62/43/s. 6$53/pc Budapest........4307/0.21...44/34/c .. 45/39/c Ottawa .........36/19I.00..25/1Npc. 30/14/sn Cleveland.......33/27/0.00.. 30/23/sn. 3N17/sn Milwaukee......19/1 2/0.00 .. 33/15/sn .. 19/Npc BuenosAires.....93/70I.00 101/77/pc.103/7% c Paris........... 4N36I.07...47/42/c.41/36/pc Colorado Springs.58/14/0 00... 48/21Is.. 52/24/s Minneapolis.....18I-1/002 .. 30-3/sn .. t t/Npc CaboSanLucas ..NJ/61/0.00...85/61Is.. 8457/5 Rio de Janeiro....91/77/0.00... 89/74/t .. 83/73/t ColumbiaMO , ...30/22I 00...42/11/c. 23/16/pc Nashville........42/2N000...44/27/c. 32/1Nsn Cairo...........6$50/000...73/50/s .. 69/51/s Rome...........57/41/0 90 .. 5953/pc. 5654/sh Columbia SC....TN31I.00...47/29/s. , 52/27/pc NewOrleans.....54/43N00..55/41lpc.. 53/32/s Calgary........ 48/IN000 ..43/37/pc.. 4932/s Santiago........90/63/000... FN61/5.. JJN61 It Columbus GA...49/34I.00 ..48/36/pc.. 5024/s NewYork.......45/39/000..43/33/pc. 44/31/pc Canrun.........75/66/0.00..72/56/pc. 70/62/pc SaoPaulo.......BN64/0.00... 79/66/t...76/65/t ColumbusOH....36/25I 00 .. 33/26/sn. 31/15/sn Newark,NJ......46/32I000..43/31/pc. 44I3Npc Dublin..........52/41/015..484Nsh ..46/39/c Sapporo ........2501I.00... 25/3/sf.. 23/11/c Conmrd, NH.... 44/25N.00... 39/26/c.. 3905/c Norfolk,VA......53/35/000..44/3$pc. 51/31lpc Edinburgh.......52/36/000.. 39/JNsh.36/35/sh Seoul...........3414I.00 ..42/24/pc .. 41/24/s Corpus Christi....66/46/0.00 .. 70/47/pc.. 68/45/s Oklahoma City...57/25/0.00... 56/26/s .. 4N28/s Geneva.........39QB/0.14... 3$34/r. 37/30/sh Shanghai....... 4NJCN.00 ..47/39/pc.. 4N36/s DallasFtWorth...58/33I 00... 63/37/s.. 57/36/s Omaha..........33/9/000....37/9/c. 2601/pc Harare..........79I59I.00... 7$52/t. 78/54/pc Singapore.......82/77N.00 ..82/74/pc. 83/75/pc Dayton .........29/23/0.00 .. 32/21lsn. 26/14/sn Orlando.........6651/0.00... 55/37/s.65/4Npc HongKong......6952N.00... 6N49/s.. 63/53/s S tockholm.......21/16I.00 ..2$20/pc.. 27QS /c Denver..........55/19/000... 4$22/s .. 56/29/s PalmSprings.....82/58/000...81/51/s .. 7$50/s istanbul.........5$37I 00...56/45/c.56/50/pc Sydney..........BN72/0.00 ..89/69/pc. 89/6Npc DesMoines..... 28/15/trace.... 36/Nc. 22/16/pc Peoria..........23/14/000...309/sn .. 15/11/c Jerusalem.......62/47N.00...62/50/s.6044/pc Taipei...........61/55/0.00 ..65/56/pc. 64/55/pc Detroit..........3N25I 00 ..32/26/sn. 31ll4/sn Philadelphia.....4N35N00..40/30/pc. 43/30/pc Johannesubrg....84/66/0.00... 86/57/s.. 85/5Ns Tel Aviv.........70/480.00... 72/5Ns.69/52/pc Duluth........... 9/4/0.01 .. 25/-6/sn... 9/llpc Phoenix.........75/48/0.00... 76/47/s.. 77/46/s Uma ...........79/720.00...77/IO/c .. 81/71/c Tokyo...........4167N.00...43/33/s. 4434/sn El Pa«.........61/31I 00... 62/30/s .. 6032/s Pittsburgh...... 40/26/0.00... 30/23/c. 30/1 7/sn Usbon..........57/52/0 00 .. 54/50/sh. 55/48/sh Toronto........ 34/25N.00.. 29/27/sf. 34/19/sn Fairbanks......... 3/-7I.00 .. 11/-6/sn .. 10/1Nc PortlandME.....44/29N.00... 4029/c. 40/29/sh London.........52/45/0.29 ..48/41lsh.. 47/43/c Vancouver...... 46/41N.00...45/39c. 46/36/pc Fary)........... 34/ BIO 22. 21/10/sn. 11/11/pc Providence..... 46/301.00... 43/29/c.44/3Npc Madrid.........52/43/0 00 .. 51/37/sh.44/38lsh Vienna......... 46/30lt4...40/31/c..39/33/c Flagstaff........59/19I 00... 50/18/s .. 51/1Ns Raleigh.........59/33/000..45/29/pc.5107/pc Manila..........at/72/0.00..80/71/pc.. 80/71/c Warsaw. ........34/28N.68...30/26/c..3?/30/c

vwwv

o~ o ~o

Winnipe -2/-6

48/31

• 90'

TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....8:25 a.m...... 5:53p.m. Venus......6:32 a.m...... 4:27 p.m. Mars......11:44 pm.....11:12 am. Jupiter......3:36 p.m...... 6:58 a.m. Satum......2:39 a.m.....12;35 p.m. Uranus....10:36 a.m.....11:04 p.m.

JRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

wv w o a a w

Yesterday's extremes

PLANET WATCH

Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill.......... Carry chains or T.Tires Aspen, Colorado....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .36-38 Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass ...... Carry chains or T. Tires Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0... . ..15-25 Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Park City, Utah ....... . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 48 Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires Squaw Valley, California.......0.0... . . .18-21 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T. Tires Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .19-26 Hwy. 138 at DiamondLake .... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico....... . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .34-36 Hwy.242 atMcKenzi e Pass........Closed forseason Vail, Colorado....... . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . 53 For links to the latest ski conditions visit: For up-to-minute conditions turn to: www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weatherPcp-precipitation, s-sun, pc-partialclouds,c-clouds, h-haze, sh-showers, r-rain,t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

Yesterday's stateextremes

Jordan Vialey

BENDALMANAC

Astoria ........ 53/38/0.00.....55/36/s......57/39/s Baker City 35/20/0.00.....40/22/s......37/20/s Brookings 71/43/0.00 .....64/43/s.....59/43/pc Burns.......... 45/1 3/0.00.....46/22/s......45/20/s Eugene 39/35/0.00..... 42/28/f...... 44/31/f Klamath Falls ...30/21/0.00.....34/1 4/s.....37/1 7/pc Lakeview....... 52/1 0/0.00.....51/23/s......49/22/s La Pine........ 54/1 5/0.00.....48/1 5/s......47/1 9/s Medford 36/32/0.00.....46/28/s.....48/30/pc Newport 55/37/0.00.....63/43/s......62/44/s North Bend.....63/34/0.00.....63/38/s.....59/39/pc Ontario 38/1 9/0.00....38/25/pc.....36/20/pc Pendleton 58/30/0.00.....47/25/s......46/25/s Portland 42/37/0.00..... 48/31/f...... 51/32/f Prineville 54/29/0.00.....51/23/s......51/28/s Redmond 57/24/0.00.....54/21/s......53/22/s Roseburg 49/38/0.00.....48/34/f.....St/34/pc Salem 40/38/0.00..... 45/30/f...... 48/32/f Sisters......... 55/21/0.00.....54/22/s......52/27/s The Dages 48/33/0.00.....47/30/s.....46/30/pc

43/23

46/22

53 35

EAST

3525

Juntura

• Burns

Lake

• 46/28

• Broqkings

3N

HIGH LOW

53 33

Yesterday Thursday Friday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeandskin protection. Index is City Precipitationvaluesare 24-hourtotalsthrough4 pm for solar at noon.

tario Sunny skies and mild conditions.

.«Q2

47Q6

HIGH LOW

53 33

OREGON CITIES

yssa

52/2

-

40722

• Br ers 4N 3

L Pnle

52/30 j

antsPas

Baker C

cloudy and mild

HIGH LOW

Sunny skies and mild, except for low clouds and fog in the valleys.

39/24

49/2 • • Mrewsente Lake Crescen • Foit Rock sinz

46I3O -

6N37

55/31

O a kridge

61/38 •

Po Orfo

pray46Q4

• Prineville-siQ • p ,lina 4Ntg

52/20 4

Cottade' Grove I •

41/24

• e mo~n Sunriver Be

Eugene•

44/25

—Gre nlei

• Madras ,NU«h II 49Qg

Florence•

~ nt g

a"y

partly to mostly cloudy and mild

-

-

I a

55 32

Sunset«day " "4:54Prn Last New F j ist Full Sunrisetomorrow .. 7:36a.m. Sunsettomorrow... 4:56 p.m. MoonFis etoday....5:55p.m. Moonsettoday....730am Jan.23 Jan. 0 Fe.6 Feb.14

CENTRAL

Josep

44Q6 Union

War m Springs •

Camp Shermane

43/30 '

Ente rpris

HIGH LOW

Sunrise today...... 7:36 a.m. MOOnphaSeS

low clouds and fog in the valleys.

• 39/20

45/21

I l.a (irande •

48I27

43Q9

38Q3

• • Mdacham,

47/25

• on n

Wigowdale

all o wa

• Pendleton

I L

Ruggs

Government I

Aibany ~

Yachats

45/26

45/27

45/30•

NeWPOrt •

• Wksco

Lincoln Ci 6N45

H ermiStOn 43Q4 ~ Il ngtun[ • 44Q7

CannonBeachg River ~ f 47/30 + ~and Hitisboro PO and n Tillamook• L 4 9 /30 ' ~ Mctuginnville d

a"y cloudy and mild

Sunny and mild

Tonight:1 Clear and cool

55

Ia

CONDITIONS tnx

i nn+n.

* *** * 4 4 4 x4 ' * * ** * *

+es+ra . Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

CALIFORNIA NEWS

Earthquakesafety andpublicpolicy collide inLosAngeles By Rong-Gong Lln II and Rosanna Xla

ened in Los Angeles.

Los Angeles Times

for 2014 will bridge earthquake science and public policy to re-

LOS ANGELES — Los Art-

Show off your little bundle of joy for all the world to see in our special edition of...

Jones said her assignment

geles Mayor Eric Garcettl re- duce earthquake risk. uWe are donatingthe majoricently announced an aggressive new plan to tadde earth- ty of my time this year to workquake safety, induding how ing together and trying to find to better protect vulnerable solutions to problems," Jones buildings. said. "It's a good prototype of Marking the 20th anni- taking our science and getting versary of t h e destructive it applied to actually making a earthquake that hit the San difference." Fernando Valley community Garcetti made the announceof Northridge, Garcetti said ment a few days before the Los Angeles would for the 20th anniversary of the 1994 first time partner with the U.S. Northridge earthquake, which Geological Survey to build a killed about 60 people. He said comprehensive strategy for it is essential for the city to dealing with how to better pro- make progress on earthquake tect private buildings and other safety. resources, such as telecommuWhile Northridge was damnications and the water supply aging, Garcetti said "the Big during a major temblor. One could be a lot worse. Too The move comes as the City many in our city have stopped Council is considering several thinking about how we can seismic safety initiatives, in- bestprepare." cluding investigating potential Garcetti said he is particudangerous concrete and soft- larly interested irt the concerns first-story buildings. of property owners, nas we disTaken together, the moves cuss how to retrofit privately mark the most significant ef- owned buildings." fort to i m prove earthquake Garcetti laid out a timeline safety in Los Angeles in a for the year's goals, starting generation. with developing in the first two "What's really at stake is the months a list of problems and viability of this city," said U.S. consequences. By spring, Jones Geological Survey seismologist will seek input from relevant Lucy Jones, who will spend a stakeholders, as well as input year meeting with stakehold- from technical experts. Later ers and experts to devise policy in the year, public hearings will recommendations for the city be heldand recommendations of Los Angeles. will be submitted to the mayor nWe are here to make sure by December. we are ready when, not if, the Jones willcontinue tobepaid next earthquake hits," Garcetti by the U.S. Geological Survey. said at a news conference. The partnership with the The U.S. Geological Survey city and USGS also follows a will essentially loan out Jones Los Angeles Times report on this year to convene public concrete buildings that were meetings, talk with property built before 1976. By the most owners and consult with tech- conservative estimate, as many nical experts about how to as 50 of the more than 1,000 comprehensively deal with a old concrete buildings in the persistent, unresolved problem city would collapse irt a major — how to get privately owned earthquake, exposing thoubuildings seismically strength- sands to injury or death.

Do you know a beautiful baby born between:

January 1, 2013 R. DeCember 31, 20137 Send us a photo to i n clude in our Baby Book, which will be published Saturday, February 15, 2014 in The Bulletin. Just bring in or mail your baby's photo along with the information requested below and a $30 fee to cover the cost of the baby photo by Friday, January 17th. Photos will be returned only if accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ete This Year! The 2014 Baby Book ~ill be a special feature inside U Magazine!

2

'ri

ONLY $30." 2 XZ /2

P I c T URE

A SPECIAL SECTION FROM;

ABAZINE The Bulletin

I PLEAsE TYPE oR PRINT cLEARLY QNLY THE INFQRMATIQN BELow I I B ABY's NAME

I

I

DATE OF BIRTH

MAIL TO:

I PARENTs NAMEs

AttentiOn: StaCie OberSCIn

Bulletin Baby Book

I

P,O, Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 I

(Please do not add additional relatives.) GRANDPARENTS

The Bend Bulletin 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend

i P HQNE NUMBER

]

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OR DELIVER TO:

EMAIL ADDREss

L ~

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aJ


IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N FL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 Tennis, C2 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014

www.bendbulletin.com/sports

"Right now we're just trying to get the right surgery and try

1

OLYMPICS Bend X-Ccoach headed to Sochi Bend's J.D. Downing has beennamed head coach and "Chef de Mission" of the Dominica National Nordic Team that will compete in the 2014 Winter

Olympics next month in Sochi, Russia. Thefounderand director of the Bendbased XC Oregon nordic ski team, Downing will coach at least one athlete, Gary di Silvestri, who has qualified for the15K individual men's race. Angelica Morrone di Silvestri, Gary di Silvestri's wife, will attempt to qualify for the Sochi Games inthe women's10K individual race this weekend atan event in Maine.

OREGON STATEFOOTBALL

Skotte's football future in doubt • Mountain View graduate to have necksurgery in upcoming weeksto fix injuries suffered during season By Zack Hall

fered during the 2013 season.

The Bulletin

The severity of the injuries were not Joel Skotte is expecting to undergo discovered until winter break when, afsurgery to repair neck injuries that have ter suffering increasing pain, Skotte had cast his football future in doubt. an MRI performed in Bend. Skotte, an Oregon State middle lineSkotte said his prognosis is not yet backer from Bend who justcompleted

hissophomore season,said Wednesday by phone from Corvallis that he has a ruptured disk, a protruding disk and some spinal cord damage that he suf-

to make it so l

can play again. ~ We'rejust kind ~ of on standstill

"Right now we're just trying to get the right surgery and try to make i so I can play again," said Skotte, a

right now until I

star on Mountain View High School's 2011 Class 5A state

~< getit all figured

championship team. "We're

out and try to

just kind of on standstill right now until I get it all figured out

get surgery."

and try to get surgery."

Oregon State

Skotte said he first injured his neck

linebackerand Mountain View grad Joel Skotte

during the week of practice before ern California in the coming weeks to OSU's 31-14 loss to USC on Nov. 1, have a specialist there examine the inju- when he took a hit in practice "that ry. After that he hopes to be able to plot a jackedmy neck uppretty good. " course to recovery. SeeSkotte/C4 known, and he expects to travel to South-

Bulletin file photo

The di Silvestris, citi-

zens of Dominica — not to be confused with the Dominican Republichave beenattending XC Oregon camps since 2005 and havebeen personally coached by Downing since the

• Eighty wrestling teams from acrossOregonto compete at fairgroundsin Redmondstarting Friday

2005-06 winter ski

season. Dominica is anisland nation of approximately 70,000 residents about 700 miles off the coast of Venezuela.Theformer French colony is nestled between Guadeloupe and St. Lucia in the Lesser Antilles region of the CaribbeanSea. The 2014 Winter

Olympics kick off Feb. 7 and run throughFeb. 23. Gary di Silvestri's 15K race is scheduled for Feb. 14,andAngelica Morrone di Silvestri's 10K event — if shequalifies — is set for Feb.13.

, ~

N t l.'eIe

— Bulletin staffrepoit

BASEBALL Kershaw signs $21SM deal LOS ANGELES-

Pitcher Clayton Kershaw agreedWednesday to a $215million, seven-yearcontract with the Los Angeles Dodgers, a person familiar with

the negotiations told The Associated Press, a deal that makesthe two-time CyYoung Award winner baseball's first player with a $30 million averagesalary. Kershaw receives the most lucrative deal for a pitcher, breaking the mark of $180 million set by Justin Verlander last March for his seven-year contract with Detroit. Kershaw would have beeneligible for free agency after the upcoming season if the new deal hadn't been reached. Hewas eligible for salary arbitration, and those figures were set to be exchangedon Friday. — The Associated Press

NBA

Bulletin file photo

With 80 high school teams from around Oregon expected at Redmond's Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center on Friday and Saturday, the stage is set for

the 33rd Oregon Wrestling Classic. By Grant Lucas The Bulletin

u

You want to seek these opportunities out

ulver trailed 30-6 as much as possible and put them on that h eading into t h e stage so that they're not overwhelmed when 195-pound m atch, they get to Memorial Coliseum (in Portland) and it seemed the Bulldogs' seven-year at the end of February." reign as the Class 2A/1A Oregon — Redmond Highcoach KrisDavis Wrestling Classic champions was nearing its end. But in stepped Mitch Adams, who pinned Lowell's Noah Casa- championships as a sophomore mance during dual meets and rez in45 seconds to spark a furi- the year before, went on to take tournaments was a significant ous Culver rally that included six fourth at the state tournament in ingredient. wins in the final seven matches Portland at 182 pounds. Especially at the Oregon Wresen route to the Bulldogs' 45-36 While many f actors may tling Classic, where second-tier win in last year's Classic final. have played into the Culver se- wrestlers have the potential to be nior's rise, Bulldogs coach J.D. bred into state champions. A month later, Adams, who went 0-2 at t h e 2 A /1A state Alley believes Adams' perforSeeWrestling /C4

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

Robinsondecriestransfer rules, takes ajab at Ducks Next up:Civil War Oregon at OregonState When:5 p.m. Sunday

Portland guardDamian

By Chris Hansen

Lillard looks for room against Cleveland.

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

CORVALLIS Craig Robinson took to his "soap-

his weekly news conference TV:ESPNU Tuesday, spoke out against Radis:100.1FM,1110AM, 940AM the NCAA rule that allows the

OregonWrestlingClassic When:Friday, 8:45 a.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m.; Sunday, 9a.m. (youth only) Where:Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, Redmond Who:Eighty teams from across the state, including local squads Redmond, Bend,MountainView,Crook County, Madras, La Pineand Culver What:High school dual-meet tournament Friday andSaturday; youth tournament on Sunday Admission:$10 adayfor adults, $5 for students

Harding thought skating would makeherrich • TV doc showsfailed rags-to-riches story By Amanda Hess

home and shot onto the ice in

Slate

the mid-1980s. "She lives in a terrible rental house. There's

LOS ANGELES — "Skat-

box" this week and took a subtle swipe at the Beavers'

signing of one-and-done senior transfers, something Or- ed that "this week's opponent" egon has done with regularity was not the intended target of

ing, for Tonya, is her ticket out of the gutter." That is what figure skating

no supervision at all. She has

Blazers struggle to beat Cavaliers

Civil War counterpart in the

— and with much success-

coach Diane Rawlinson said

wasn't for her skating."

Portland pulls away in fourth for 108-96 win, C3.

process. The Oregon State men's

in four seasons under coach certainly put the Ducks in the Dana Altman. cross hairs. Even though Robinson statSeeRobinson/C4

of Tonya Harding, a rising teen star she had plucked

We all know what happened next. SeeHarding/C4

basketball coach, at the end of

his dissatisfaction, the timing

from a broken Portland

no direction. Tonya would have nothing in her life if it


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY Time T V/Radio EuropeanTour,AbuDhabiHSBC Championship 1 a.m. Golf PGA Tour, Humana Challenge noon Golf GOLF

FOOTBALL

Men's college, Collegiate Bowl, practice Men's college, Collegiate Bowl, practice

10 a.m. E SPNU 1 p.m. E S PNU

BASKETBALL

Men's college, whiparound coverage Women's college, Virginia at Duke Men's college, Connecticut at Memphis Men's college, Missouri at Vanderbilt Men's college, Belmont at Eastern Kentucky NBA, NewYorkat Indiana Men's college, Providence atSt. John's Men's college, UCLAat Colorado Men's college, Ohio State at Minnesota Men's college, BYU at SanFrancisco Men's college, ArizonaState at Arizona NBA, OklahomaCity at Houston Men's college, USC at Utah Men's college,GonzagaatPepperdine Men's college, Long BeachState at UCSanta Barbara

3:30 p.m. ESPNU 3 :30 p.m. R o ot 4 p.m. ESP N 4 p.m. ES P N2 4 p.m. E S PNU 4 p.m. TNT 4p.m. FoxSports1 5 p.m. Pa c -12 6 p.m. ES P N2 6 p.m. E S PNU 6p.m. FoxSports1 6 :30 p.m. TNT 7 p.m. Pa c -12 7 p.m. Root 8 p.m.

E S PNU

5 p.m.

N B CSN

HOCKEY

NHL, Los Angeles at St. Louis TENNIS

Australian Open, third round Australian Open, third round

8 p.m. ES P N2 midnight ESPN2

FRIDAY SOCCER English Premier League, Sunderland vs. Southampton

Time

TV/Radio

4:45 a.m. NBCSN

BASKETBALL

NBA, Los Angeles atNewYork Men's College, GreenBayat Wright State Men's College, Canisius at lona Women's College, OregonState at USC NBA, GoldenState at OklahomaCity High School, Summit at BendHigh Women's College,OregonatUCLA

4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12 6 p.m. 6:30 p.m. ESPN 7 p.m. COTV Pac-12 8 p.m.

BOXING

Ivan Redkachvs. Tony Luis

10 p.m. Showtime

GOLF

PGA Tour, Humana Challenge noon Champions Tour, Mitsubishi Electric, first round4 p.m. EuropeanTour,AbuDhabiHSBC Championship 1 a.m.

Golf Golf Golf

HOCKEY

College, LakeSuperior State at Notre Dame

4:30 p.m. NBCSN

TENNIS

Australian Open, third round Australian Open, third round

6 p.m. midnight

ESPN2 ESPN2

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis notresponsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF SOCCER TimberS Sign twO ArgentinianS — ThePortland Timbers signed striker Gaston Fernandezand center back Norberto Paparatto, both of Argentina, on Wednesday.TheTimbers also loaned Columbian forward JoseValencia to Argentina first-division side Olimpo de Bahia Blanca for aseason. Fernandezand Paparatto will join the club once their transfer and visa documents are complete. Fernandez,30, has played for several first-division teams in Argentina, winning season titles with three different clubs. Hehasalso played in Mexico's top league.

MLS tO Sign TVdealS With ESPN, FOX— Major League Soccer is expected to announce anew long-term television deal with ESPN andFoxthis week, leaving NBCSports Networkafter the end of the 2014 season. Akeypart of the new deal, which will reportedly pay MLS $70 million a year (double its current deal), is the rights to televise games involving the U.S.national teams. Fox dropped its game coverage of MLSafter the 2011 season but owns the rights to World Cupsin2018and 2022,andFoxcouldseeMLS asavehicleforpromoting those tournaments. ESPN,which will televise the 2014World Cup from Brazil, wants to retain rights to the U.S.national teams.

WINTER SPORTS Bilodeau, Dufor-Lapointe win freestyle moguls — can-

ada's Alex BilodeauandJustine Dufour-LaPointe won the World Cup moguls at Whiteface Mountain onWednesday. United States freestyle skiers took the next spots on the podium in themen's and women's competitions. Patrick Deneen and Bradley Wilson claimed silver and bronze for the U.S.men,and Heidi Kloser and HannahKearney followed suit for the women.Deneen, from Snoqualmie Pass, Wash., locked up anOlympic berth with his second-place finish. Russia's Alexandr Smyshlyaev placed fifth and Mikael Kingsbury of Canada finished sixth. Dufour-LaPointe won the women's event after finishing with the 14th-best result in the first of two qualifying runs of the day. She finished with a winning total of 79.66 points. — From wire reports

ON DECK Today Wrestling: Madras vs. Ontario at CrookCounty, 5 p.m. Friday Boys basketball: Summit at Bend, 7p.m.; Ridgeview at MountainView,7p.mcCrookCounty at Redmond, 7p.mcSistersatCascade,5:30p.m.; Madrasat Banks, 7p.m.; LaPineat Sutherlin, 7:30 p.m.;Culverat East LinnChristian, 6:30p.m.; Sherman at Central Christian, 7:30p.m.; Gilchrist at Hosanna Christian, 7:30p.m. Girls basketball: Bend at Summit, 7 p.mcSisters at Cascade, 7p.mcMountain ViewatRidgeview,7 p.m.; RedmondatCrookCounty,7p.m4Banksat Madras,7 p,mcLaPineat Sutherlin, 6 p.m.; Culver atEastLinn Christian, 5p.m.; Trinity Lutheran at Prospect, 4 p.m.; Shermanat Central Christian, 6p.mcGilchrist atHosannaChristian, 6p.m. Wrestling: Bend,Mountain View,Redmond, Crook County,Madras,Culver, LaPineat OregonClassic at Deschutes CountyFair 8 Expo Center,10a.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS

Germany, 7-5, 2-6,6-4. SamStosur(17), Australia,def. Tsvetana Pironkova, Bulgaria6-2, , 6-0.

HOCKEY

In the Bleachers © 2002 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.comnnthebleachers

NHL Btandingc All TimesPBT

Boston Tampa Bay Montreal Toronto Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo

EaclernConference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 46 29 15 2 47 28 15 4 47 26 16 5 49 24 20 5 46 20 16 10 47 21 18 8 46 18 21 7 46 13 27 6

60 132 102 60 136 113 57 118 111 53 136 149 50 118 127 50 134 146 43 109 141 32 83 129

Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Pittsburgh 48 34 12 2 70 156 115 Philadelphia 47 24 19 4 52 125 132 PREPS Washington 47 22 17 8 52 140 141 N.Y.Rangers 48 24 21 3 51 119 126 Wrestling NewJersey 48 20 18 10 50 112 118 Bend 66, LePine12 Columbus 46 22 20 4 48 129 131 At La Pine C arolina 4 6 1 9 1 8 9 47 111 130 106 —DavidKerr, LP,winsby forfeit. 113N.Y.lslanders 48 18 23 7 43 132 156 Kevin Lara,8, pins Austin Russel,LP,3:19. 120WeclernConference Thorin Wilson,LP,pins KadeQuinn, 8, 1:35. 126 Central Division — Kasey Beuschlein, B,pinsNiico Haddad,LP,1:44. GP W L OT Pls GF GA 132 —Austin Palmer,B, pins LoudenOleachea, Chicago 49 30 8 11 71 177 135 St. Louis 4 5 32 8 5 69 163 100 LP, 2:42.138— Nicolai Spring, 8,winsbyforfeit. 146—JacobDupuis,8, pins Keegan Kriz,LP,2:41. Colorado 46 29 12 5 63 135 117 162 —DacodaCrane, 8, pinsTonyPrice, LP,1:04. Minnesota 49 25 19 5 55 118 122 180 —Justin Vinton,8, pinsChristopherLove,LP, Dallas 46 21 18 7 49 132 141 Nashyiffe 48 20 21 7 47 113 143 2:29.170 —Tucker Pies, B,def. Tanner Hanson, LP, r.re 12-9.182 —CadeFoisset, B,wins byforfeit. 196 Winnipeg 48 20 23 5 45 133 146 — JordanGentner, 8, def. ChadonJaynes, LP,10-6. Pacific Oivision "Listen up! I want you to pass the ball, set 220 —Mic haelHageman,8,pinsGageYeager,LP, GP W L OT Pls GF GA A naheim 4 9 3 6 8 5 77 170 120 3:25. 285 — DavidO'Connor, 8, pins AdenWilscreens, look for the open shot. Don't be SanJose 4 7 2 9 12 6 64 150 117 yard-Komm, LP,4:00. selfish. Remember, there is no 'I' in herd." LosAngeles 47 28 14 5 61 120 96 Vancouver 48 24 15 9 57 124 124 Girls basketball P hoenix 4 6 2 1 1 6 9 51 135 143 Calgary 4 7 1 6 2 5 6 38 105 148 Class 2A E dmonton 49 1 5 29 5 35 128 174 Tri-RiverConference M ississi p pi 88, LSU 74, O T LIMITED; S M i k e A dam s ( thi g h). FU LL: TE Jo el D re es Wednesday'sGames Culver 44,Toledo24 ortheastern56,James Madison52 sen (knee), SDukeIhenacho(knee), TWinston Justice Toront o4,Buff alo3,SO Toledo I24) —SavannaRilatos10, McKinney9, N Tennessee 78,Auburn67 finger), GChris Kuper(ankte), QBPeyton Manning Pittsburgh 4, W ashington3 Blodgett3, Watson2. Totals512-2424. U Mass 88, G e orge M a son 87 ankle), CB K a yv on W ebs ter (t h um b). Anaheim 9,Vancouver1 Culver I44) —Hannah Lewis13, Fritz11, Slaght VMI101,Radford 88 S AN FRANCI S CO 49ERS et SEA TTLE SE Today'sGames 8, J. Johnson 5, Hoke4, Retano3. Totals1710-2944. WakeForest70, NCState69 AHAWKS — 49ERB:DNP:LBAhmadBrooks Detroit atN.Y.Rangers, 4 p.m. Toledo 5 3 5 1 1 — 24 Southwest (itfness), DT DemarcusDobbs (knee, shoulder), C Nashville atPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Culver 8 7 14 15 — 44 St.82,TCU50 JonathanGoodwin (foot), DT Justin Smith (shoul- Montrealat Ottawa,4:30p.m. Three-point goals — Toledo:McKinney2;Cul- Oklahoma SMU 71, South Fl o ri d a 54 der). LIMITED: CBCarlos Rogers (hamstring), RB N.Y. Isl andersatTampaBay,4:30p.m. ver: none. TexasA&M 75,SouthCarolina67 Will Tukuafu(knee). FULL:LBNaVorro Bowman SanJoseat Florida,4:30 p.m. Texas Tech82, Baylor 72 (wrist), WR Michael Crabtree(wrist), RBFrankGore Los Angeleat s St.Louis, 5p.m. Fer West Boys basketball (knee), LB DanSkuta(foot). BEAH AWKB: No Data EdmontonatMinnesota, 5p.m. Air Force 77, Sa n J os e St . 62 Reported BostonatDallas, 5:30p.m. Class 2A SanDiegoSt. 68,FresnoSt. 60 NewJerseyat Colorado, 6p.m. Tri-RiverConference Stanford 80, W a shi n gton St. 48 Winnipegat Calgary,6p.m. ToledoBB,Culver 41 Betting line UNLV 76, Ne w M e xi c o 73 Vancouverat Phoenix, 6p.m. Toledo (68) —David Ammons30, C. Cross12, utah St.57,ColoradoSt.50 NFL Friday's Games Eshleman8, Marchant6, R.Otis 4, K.Otis 4, T.Cross Home Teem i n Caps Washingtonat Columbus,4 p.m. 2, Tam2. Totals2010-2068. Bunday' s Games A nahei m at C hi c ago, 7p.m. Culver (41) — JohnSlaght13, Bogart7, Knepp Women's Basketball AFCChampionship 6, McDonald4, Olivares3, Rumbarger 3, Sledge3, Wednesday' c Games Favorite Op e n C urrent Underdog Honeywel l2.Totals1016-2441. East DEALS BRONCOS 6 5 t/t Pa t riots Toledo 15 1917 17 — BB Ameri c an u. 70, Lehi g h 61 NFC Championship 17 1 14 9 — 41 Culver SEAHAWKS 3 3 t 7t 49e r s Transactions Three-point goals — Toledo:none;Culver: Army70,HolyCross57 Buffalo51,Toledo46 Bogart2, Olivares,Rumbarger,Sledge. BASEBAL L Colgate81,Boston U.64 AmericanLeague TENNIS Duquesne 67,UMass52 B OSTON R E D S O X — A gre edto terms with RHP Harvard75,NJIT56 COLLEGE BurkeBadenhop onaone-year contract. Lafayette65,Loyola(Md.) 53 Professional CLEVELANDINDIANS— SignedLHPJoshOutNavy94,Bucknell92,20T Men's basketba Australian Open man toa one-year contract. NewHampshire60, UMBC47 At Melbourne Park SEATTLE MARINERS—Agreed to termswith OF Btandings Providence 70, Georgetown61 Melbourne,Australia MichaelSaundersonaone-yearcontract. Pacific-12Conference St. Bonaven ture58, LaSalle 35 Purse: 829.72million (GrandSlam) TEXASRANGERS— Agreed to termswith LHP AO TimesPST St. John's58,Butler 55 Surlece: Hard-Outdoor NealCottsonaone-yearcontract. Stony Brook48,Binghamton45 Singles National League Conference Overall Villanova55,Penn54 Men MILWAUKEE BREWERS— SignedLHPZachDuke W L W L South Today to a minorleaguecontract. Arizona 4 0 17 0 EastCarolina69, Tulane65 SecondRound WASHIN GTONNATIONALS—Announced afourCalifornia 4 0 13 4 FIU 96,FAU88 Kei Ni s hi k ori (16), Japan, def. Du san La j o vi c , Seryearworkingagreement with Harrisburg (EL). Colorado 3 1 14 3 Fordham 76,VCU73 bia, 6-1, 6-1, 7-6 (3). BASKETB ALL UctA 2 1 13 3 Louisiana-Lafayette 65, SouthAlabama60 Jo-WilfriedTsonga(10), France,def. ThomazBelNational Basketball Association Washington 3 2 11 7 Louisville75,UCF56 l u cci, Brazi l 7-6 , (6), 6-4, 6-4. BOSTONCELTICS— AssignedGRajonRondoto Stanford 2 2 11 5 MiddleTennessee69,UTEP58 Late Wednesday Maine(NBADL). ArizonaSt. 1 2 12 4 Old Dominion 92, Southern Miss. 82 T ommy R obr edo (17), S pai n , def. Jul i e n B enn ete au, CHICAGOBULLS— RecalledGMarquisTeague Oregon 1 3 13 3 Richmond 67,GeorgeMason64,OT France, 6-3, 6-7(4), 6-1,7-6 (6). from lowa (NBADL). Utah 1 3 12 4 W. Kentucky65, UALR39 JerzyJanowicz (20), Poland,def. PabloAndujar, GOLDENSTATEWARRIORS — SentG Toney Oregon St. 1 3 9 7 Midwest Spain,4-6, 7-6 (3), 7-6 (5), 6-3. D ouglas to Miami,whosent CJoel Anthony, a2015 WashingtonSt. 1 4 8 9 BowlingGreen72,Ball St.61 Jeremy Chardy(29), France,def.AlexandrDolgop- first-rounddraft pick, a 2016 second-rounddraft SouthernCal 0 3 9 7 Cent.Michigan65, N.Illinois 60 olov,Ukraine,7-5, 7-6(5), 6-7(3), 7-6(5). pick andcashconsiderations to Boston.Bostonsent Wednesday'sGames Creighton79,Xavier 50 Denis Istomin,Uzbekistan,def. DmitryTursunov Gs JordanCrawfordandMarShon Brooks to Golden Stanford80,Washington State 48 E. Michigan83,W.Michigan 77 State. (30), Russia7-6 , (3),4-6, 6-1,6-4. California 82,Washington56 lffinois76,Northwestern74 KevinAnderson(19), SouthAfrica, def. Dominic PHILADEL PHIA 76ERS — Recalled G Lorenzo Today'sGames Miami(Ohio)79,Akron76 Thiem,Austria,6-4, 6-3,6-4. BrownfromDelaware(NBADL). UctA atColorado,5 p.m. M ichigan 65, Pu rdue 4 9 EdouardRoger-Vasselin, France, def. Guilermo FOOTBAL L ArizonaStateatArizona,6p.m. Oakland 88, Valparaiso55 Garcia-Lopez, Spain, 7-6(t), 6-4,4-6, 6-1. National Football League UscatUtah,yp.m. Ohio76,KentSt.59 Sam Querrey, Uni t ed St a t e s, def. Ernests Gul b i s MIAMI DO LP H I N S — N am e d Bil Lazoroffensive Saturday'sGames WestVirginia73,lowaSt.59 (23), Latvia,6-2,6-3,6-4. coordinator. USCatColorado,11 a.m. Wisconsin65,lndiana60 Fabio Fognin(15), i Italy, def.JarkkoNieminen, MINNES OTA VIKINGS — Named Mike Zimmer Washington Stateat California,1 p.m. Southwest Finland,7-5,6-4, 3-6,6-2. coach. UCLA atutah,1 p.m. NorthTexas63, Marshall 50 Stanislas W aw r i n ka (8), Sw i t z erl a nd, def. Al e j a ndro NEW YOR KGIANTS — Fired tight endscoach Washingtonat Stanford, 8p.m. Rice82,LouisianaTech 68 Faff a,Colombia,6-3,6-3,6-7(4),6-4. MichaelPopeandrunning backs coachJerald InSundey'cGame Texas70,Kansas58 VasekPospisil (28),Canada, def. MathewEbden, gram. OregonatOregonState,5 p.m. TexasSt.68,Texas-Arlington60 Australia,3-6,7-6(6), 7-6 (9),6-1. NEWYORKJETS— SignedCJacolbyAshworth, UAB76, Tulsa65 SBrandonHardinand DBNickTaylor to reserve/future Wednecday'sGames UTSA 61, Charlotte 60 Women contracts. Eacl Fer West Today WASHING TONREDSKINS—Promotedtight ends AmericanU.65, Lehigh63 BoiseSt.67, Nevada64 SecondRound coach SeanMcvaytooff ensivecoordinator. Bostontf. 66,Colgate58 Colorado St. 88, utah St. 78 Zarina Di y as, Kaz a kh st a n, def. Mari n a Erakovi c , GOLF Dayton80, Fordham68 SanDiegoSt. 70,FresnoSt. 69 NewZealand, 6-4,6-0. LPGA — N a m e d M i k e Tragerchairmanoftheboard Delaware 76,Wiliam 8 Mary 71 SanJoseSt.79,Air Force70 AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova(29), Russia, def.Man- of directors. Holy Cross78,Army75 UNLV 78, Ne w M e xi c o 56 dy Minella,Luxem bourg, 6-2, 6-2. HOCKEY La Salle72,Rhode Island62 Elina Svitolina, ukraine, def. Olivia Rogowksa, National HockeyLeague Mass.-Lowel70, l Albany(NY)66, OT Austral i a, 6-4, 7-5. NHL PL A Y ER S A S S OCIATION— FJamieLangenNavy62,Bucknell 61 FOOTBALL SimonaHalep (ff), Romania, def. VarvaraLep- brunnerannouncedhis retirement. NewHampshire 56,UMBC42 chenko, unitedStates,4-6, 6-0,6-1. Rutgers85,UCF75 ANAHEIM DUCKS—RecalledGFrederik AndersNFL DominikaCibulkova(20), Slovakia,def. Stefanie en fromNorfolk (AHL). SaintJoseph's84,Duquesne75 Playoffc VoegeleSwi , tzerland,6-0,6-1. Stony Brook67,Binghamton47 EDMONTONOILERS— TradedGDevanDubnykto All TimesPST AlizeCornet(25), France,def.Camila Giorgi, Italy, Nashvillefor FMatt Hendricks. South 6-3, 4-6, 6-4. Alabama 80,Mississippi St. 61 LOSANGELESKINGS— AssignedFTylerToff oli Conference Champi o nshi p s Charleston Southern95, Presbyterian58 Carla SuarezNavarro (16), Spain, def. Galina to Manchester (AHL). TradedGBen Scrivens to EdClemson56,VirginiaTech49 Sunday,Jen. 19 Voskoboeva, Kazakhstan,7-6(2),3-6,8-6. montonfor a2014third-round draft pick.Recaled G CoastalCarolina81, UNCAshevile 78 NewEnglandat Denver,noon(CBS) Garbine Muguruza,Spain, def.AnnaSchmiedlova, MartinJonesfromManchester. FloridaSt. 63,Miami53 SanFranciscoatSeattle, 3:30p.m.(Fox) Slovakia,6-3,6-3. MONTREALCANADIENS — Assigned D Matt Gardner-Webb 56,Winthrop51 SuperBowl Maria Sharapova(3), Russia,def. KarinKnapp, GrassifromHamilton (AHL) toWheeling (ECHL). High Poin83, t Longwood75 Sunday,Feb.2 Italy, 6-3,4-6,10-8. NEWYORKISLANDERS— LoanedFRyanStrome Hofstra69,UNCWilmington64 At EastRutherford, N.J. CarolineWozniacki (10), Denm ark, def. Christina to Bridgeport (AHL). AFCchampionvs.NFCchampion,3:30p.m.(Fox) McHale, unitedStates,6-0,1-6, 6-2. NEWYOR KRANGERS—AssignedGScott Stajcer Maryland74,Notre Dame66 Mississippi88,LSU74,OT Agnieszka Radwanska(5), Poland,def. OlgaGovo- from Harfford (AHL)to Florida (ECHL) andGJason NFL Injury Report rtsova,Belarus,6-0,7-5. Missiaen fromHartford to Greenvile (ECHL). Northeastern 56,JamesMadison52 NEW YORK—TheNationalFootball Leagueinjury Late Wednesday OTTAWASENATORS— ReassignedFJean-GabriTennessee 78, Auburn67 report, as providedbytheleague(OUT— Definitely wil DanielaHantuchova(31), Slovakia,def. Karolina el Pageau to Binghamton (AHL). UMass88, GeorgeMason87 not play;DNP- Did not practice;LIMITED- Limited Pliskova,CzechRepublic, 6-3,3-6,12-10. COLLEGE VMI101,Radford 88 Casey Det f a cqua, Aust r al i a, def. Ki r sten Fl i p kens C ALIFOR NIA— AnnouncedRBBrendanBigelow WakeForest70,NCState69 participation inpractice; FULL—Full participation in will entertheNFLdraft. South practice): (18), Belgium, 6-3, 6-0. NEW ENGLAND PATRIOTS atDENVER EugenieBouchard(30), Canada, def. Virginie RazNORTH ERNARIZONA — Extendedthe contract Alabama 80,Mississippi St. 61 BRONCOS— PATRIOTS:DNP:C DannyAiken zano,France,6-2, 7-6(10). Charleston Southern95, Presbyterian58 of football coachJeromeSouers through the2018 A lison Ri s ke, uni t ed St a t e s, def. Y a n i n a W ick m a yer , Clemson 56,VirginiaTech49 (iffness),QBTomBrady(right shoulder,ilness). LIMseason. CoastalCarolina81, UNCAshevile 78 ITED: PRyan Alen (shoufder), WRDannyAmendola Belgium,6-1,6-1. OHIOSTATE— Named Larry Johnsonassistant FloridaSt. 63,Miami53 (groin), CB KyleArrington (groin), CBAlfonzo DenZheng Jie, China,def. MadisonKeys, united headcoachanddefensivelinecoach. Gardner-Webb 56,Winthrop51 nard (knee,shoulder), WRAaron Dobson (foot), LB States,7-6(5), 1-6,7-5. SETONHALL— Announcedmen'sbasketballC High Poin83, t Longwood75 DaneFletcher(groin), LBDont'a Hightower(ankfe), G Ana Ivanovic(14), Serbia,def. AnnikaBeck, Ger- ChierAjouwil transferfromNorthwestern. Hofstra69,UNCWilmington64 LoganMankins (ankte), WRKenbrell Thompkins(hip, many,6-1, 6-2. TEXASTEC H— Announced junior QBMichael Maryland74,Notre Dame66 concussion),RBShaneVereen (groin). BRONCOS: LaurenDavis, unitedStates, def.Julia Goerges, Breweris transferring.

Extreme heat brings fourth day of Australian Open to a halt By John Pye

6-3, 4-6, 10-8 victory. It was 102 degrees when Sharapo-

The Associated Press

MELBOURNE,

A u s t r alia

va's match started at just after ll a.m.

TENNIS

the third game, draped ice bags over shoulders and poured water over her another break point and a chance to head to keep cool

Soaked with sweat and clinging des- local and almost 109 degrees by the extend it further. But with a reflex perately for survival, Maria Sharapo- time she finished. That was just shy backhand from Sharapova that just va was serving for the match when of the maximum forecast during the caught the line, and two errors from Australian Open organizers finally third straight day of a heat wave in Knapp, it was over. "I wanted this match," Sharapova decided that the searing heat was ex- sweltering Melbourne. The 3-hour, 28-minute match was the longest so said. "I didn't play my best tennis; I treme enough to suspend matches. didn't do many things well ... (but) I That was 5-4 i n t h e t h ir d set, far in the 2014 women's tournament. 2 hours and 38 minutes into her Sharapova wasted three match s econd-round match a gainst N o . points on serve in the 10th game of 44-ranked Karin Knapp today, but the third set, and then had to save it didn't apply to the pair on Rod La- break points and serve to stay in the ver Arena because the Extreme Heat m atch. She earned a crucial break

got through it, and sometimes that's

what's important. "When you win match point you

She hit 34 winners but made 67 un-

forced errors in an increasingly frustrated push to finish points early. The four-time major winner will next meet No. 25 Alize Comet of

France, who sobbed on court after beating Camila Giorgi of Italy 6-3,

10-seeded Wozniacki won 6-0, 1-6,

6-2 over Christina McHale and described the relatively mild conditions

as "pleasant."

No. 29 Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova had a6-2,6-2 win over Mandy Minel-

ia in 1:17, but said her two first-round matches had taken a tolL She said she had almost passed out in her first-

4-6, 6-4 in 2 1/2 hours.

round match.

its. It was really hot, that's why I'm so

first round, equaling a Grand Slam record. Ivan Dodig's retirement on

"I went really further than my lim-

emotional," Cornet said of the condifeel and how tough it was ... I love tions. "Doing something physical in get off the court, no matter how you

Policy only kicks in at the end of sets seven games later, but it wasn't a sim- these moments. " in progress. So they continued with- ple matter of serving out. Sharapova, playing her second out reprieve and it took another 50 Three double-faults in t h e l a st tournament back from extended time minutes before Sharapova converted game — Sharapova's 10th, 11th and off for a right shoulder injury, wore her fourth match point for a grueling 12th of the match — gave Knapp ice vests in every changeover after

after Sharapova finished. The No.

There were nine retirements in the Wednesday increased the tally to 10

— Dodig said he felt like he could die Former No. 1-ranked Caroline on the court. Others said it was inhuWozniacki got the luck of the draw, mane tomake players go on courtwith her match played under the roof and that was before Thursday's peak on Rod Laver Arena immediately temperatures. this heat it's just unbelievable."


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

NBA ROUNDUP

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings AH TimesPBT

Eaclern Conference W L Pct GB d-Indiana 30 7 811 d-Miami 27 11 711 3'/r Atlanta 20 18 526 10'/2 d-Toronto 19 18 514 11 Washington 18 19 486 12 Chicago 18 19 486 12 16 22 421 14H Detroit Brooklyn 15 22 405 15 Charlotte 16 24 400 15'/2 NewYork 15 23 395 15'/a Cleveland 14 25 359 17 14 26 350 trr/~ Boston Philadelphia 13 25 342 17H Orlando 10 29 256 21 Milwaukee 7 31 184 23'/2 Weclern Conference W L Pct GB d-San Antonio 31 8 795 d-Portland 763 1H 29 9 Oklahoma City 28 10 737 2'/r d-LA. Clippers 27 13 675 4'/2 Houston 26 14 650 5'/a GoldenState 25 15 625 6'/i Phoenix 22 16 579 Br/a Dallas 23 17 575 BH Denver 20 18 526 tg'/r Memphis 19 19 500 11'/2 Minnesota 18 20 474 12'/a NewOrleans 15 23 395 15'I~ 14 23 378 16 Sacramen to LA. Lakers 14 25 359 17 13 27 325 16'/r Utah d-divisionleader

Wednesday'sGames Chicago128,Orlando125,30T Philadelphia95,Charlotte 92 Washington114,Miami97 Boston88,Toronto83 Sacramento111,Minnesota108 Memphis82, Milwaukee77 Houston103,NewOrleans100 SanAntonio109, Utah105 Phoenix121, L.A.Lakers114 Portland108,Cleveland96 Denver123,GoldenState116 LA. Clippers 129,Dagas127 Today'sGames Brooklynvs.AtlantaatLondon, England, noon NewYorkatIndiana, 4p.m. Oklahoma City at Houston, 6:30p.m. Friday'sGames Charlotteat Orlando,4p.m. Miami atPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Chicago at Washington, 4p.m. L.A. ClippersatNewYork, 4p.m. Minnesota at Toronto,4p.m. LA. LakersatBoston, 4:30 p.m. Utah atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Sacrame ntoat Memphis, 5p.m. PortlandatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Dallas atPhoenix, 6p.m. ClevelandatDenver, 6p.m. GoldenStateat OklahomaCity, 6:30p.m.

Summaries Wednesday'sGames

Trail Blazers108, Cavaliers 96 CLEVEL AND(96) Deng10-203-425,Thompson4-82-210, Vareiao 4-70-08, Irving7-206-621,Miles2-60-05, Waiters 8-19 1-418, Zeller3-30-2 6, Jack1-30-0 3, Clark 0-30-00,Dellavedova0-00-00,Sims0-00-00. Totals 39-8912-1896. PORTLAND (168) Batum 3-51-1 7,Aldridge12-267-732, Lopez4-5 0-0 8, Lillard10-203-4 28,Matthews5-12 2-215, Williams3-110-0 8, Freeland2-30-1 4, Mccollum 1-3 0-0 2,Robinson2-3 0-24. Totals 42-88 1317108. Cleveland 27 23 25 21 — 96 Porlland 26 28 23 31 — 108 3-PointGoals—Cleveland 6-23(Deng2-7, Jack 1-1, Waiters1-3, Miles1-3, Irving 1-7, Clark0-2), Portland11-27(Lilard 5-10, Matthews3-7, Wiliams 2-6, Aldridge1-1,Mccollum0-1, Batum0-2). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds —Cleveland 51 (Vareiao 14), Portland 55(Aldridge18). Assists—Cleveland 17 (Vareiao, Irving 4), Portland 27(Wiliams7). Total Foul— s Cleveland 21, Portland 12. Technicals — Cleveland defensivethreesecond.A—19,998 (19,980).

Nuggets123, Warriors116 DENVER (123) Chandler6-177-8 22,Faried2-4 0-04, Hickson 6-12 1-4 13,Lawson6-149-12 22, Foye8-12 1-2 21, Mozgov 5-7 0-0 10,Fournier2-4 0-05, Q.Miger 1-1 0-0 2,Robinson9-123-3 24. Totals 45-83 21-29123. GOLOEN STATE(116) Iguodala1-71-2 3, Lee8-1612-13 28,Bogut 5-6 0-010, Curry7-196-7 24, Thompson9-19 2-221, Barnes 4-85-615, Bazemore0-2 0-00, Speights 2-8 0-0 4, Green 3-5 3 311. Totals 39-9629-33116. Denver 35 36 26 32 — 123 Golden State 32 2 6 24 34 — 116

NFL NOTEBOOK

Salmons 5-9 0-213, Patterson1-30-02, Hayes1-3 0-02, Vasquez020-00, Fields0-00-00,Novak2-4 0-06. Totals38-7812-2583. BOSTON (88) Green4-164-613, Sullinger 7-1410-1425,Humphries 5-102-212, Pressey0-5 0-00, Bradley8-21 4-620, Bayless051-21,Wallace3-40-07,Bassl-5 5-6 7, Faverani1-2 0-03, Olynyk0-20-0 0. Totals 29-84 26-3688. Toronto 25 16 15 27 — 83 Boclon 23 22 28 15 — 88

49ers must find way to play at loud CenturyLink

Bulls128, Magic125 (30T) CHICAGO (128) Dunleavy3-112-211,Boozer11-171-1 23,Noah 9-16 8-1026,Hinrich 3-110-0 7, Butler6-17 7-8 21, Gibson3-100-0 6, Augustin7-18 2-219, Sneg 6-12 0-015,Mohammed0-10-00.Totals48-113 20-23 128. ORLANOD (125) Harkless1-1 2-2 4, Harris10-161-2 22, Davis 7-18 2-3 17,Nelson13-302-2 31, oladipo15-24 4-5 35,Moore1-2 0-02, Nicholson1-4 0-0 2, Price 0-30-00,O'Quinn5-6 2-212.Totals 53-184 1316125. Chicago 26 20 27 28 10 8 9 — 128 Orlando 28 29 31 21 10 8 6 — 125

From wire service reports SANTA CLARA, Calif.

— Jim Harbaugh will turn to lip reading, motioning and even sign language if he has to i n o r der to communicate with C olin

Kaepernick to keep things running smoothly in the deafening noise of Seattle's home stadium. K aepernick plans t o repeat his calls as many times as necessary in the huddle during the NFC championshipgame Sunday to make sure his team-

Grizzlies 82, Bucks77 MEMPHIS (82) Princ e2-73-48,Randolph2-102-26,Gasol0-4 0 00, Conley6131-215, Lee3 72 29, Koufos4 7 2-410, Davis7-80-214, Johnson7-130-015, Calathes1-31-2 3,Miler 1-8 0-02, Franklin 0-20-00. Totals 33-8211-1882. MILWAUKEE (77) Antetokounmpo 2-4 2-2 6, llyasova2-11 0-0 4, Sanders4-12 2-210, Knight 10-172-227, Ridnour 4-80-09,Middleton1-60-02,Henson3-92-48, Mayo 0 30 00, Radulica 001-21, Butler 5-120 0 10. Totals 31-829-1277. Memphis 28 22 16 24 — 82 Milwaukee 16 25 25 17 — 77

mates hear him.

"He just has to be louder,"

centerJonathan Goodwin

said. "There's really no special tricks. You've just got

Kings111, Timberwolves108

to be as loud as possible

ry

SACRAM ENTO(111)

and hope everybody hears

Gay12-196-633, Thompson 3-7 0-06, Cousins 9-192-220,Thomas10-164-426, Thornton0-52-2 2, Williams7-112-316, McLemore 0-00-0 0, Acy 1-1 0-22, Fredette1-20-02, Gray2-20-04,0utlaw 0-00-00. Totals 45-8216-19111. MINNESOT A(188) Brewer 4-84-512, Love9-165-627, Pekovic5-12 4-5 14,Rubio2-6 0-05, Martin 6-142-214, Shved 4-10 4-5 13,Turiaf2-2 0-2 4, Barea5-14 3-4 14,

Budinger1-40-03, Cunningham1-20-0 2. Totals 39-88 22-29108. Sacramento 24 34 25 28 — 111 Minnesota 23 24 26 35 — 188

it >1

Solid

amount for Kaepernick, Don Ryan/The Associated Press

Portland Trail Blazers forward LaMarcus Aldridge, right, drives on Cleveland Cavaliers forward Tristan Thompson during the first half of the Trail Blazers'108-96 win Wednesday night.

Team leadefs

Through Wednesday' sgames TeamOffense G Pls Avg HOUSTON (103) Portland 38 4146 109.1 Parsons 6-153-417, Jones10-17 5-1025, How- Minnesota 38 4068 107.1 ard 4-54-1112,Lin6-121-1 13, Harden7-1410-11 Clippers 40 4235 105.9 26, Casspi0-10-0 0, Canaan0-1 0-0 0, Garcia 0-0 LA. 40 4209 105.2 0-0 0, Motieiunas 4-72-410. Totals 37-7225-41 Houston 39 4085 104.7 San Antoni o 103. Oklahoma City 38 3980 104.7 NEWORLEANS (100) 38 3955 104.1 Aminu 1-5 4-4 7, Davis8-13 8-11 24,J.Smith Miami 40 4148 103.7 5130 010, Roberts 4111-110, Gordon11-177 8 Dallas Golden St a t e 40 4144 103.6 35,Aiinca1-1 002, Migerl-6002, Rivers2825 Phoenix 38 3933 103.5 6, Morrow 0-00-00, Stiemsma2-30-04, Withey0-0 Denver 38 3921 103.2 0-00. Totals 35-7722-29100. 38 3887 102.3 Houston 19 26 29 29 — 103 Philadelphia Sacramen t o 37 3773 102.0 Newerleans 30 2 6 25 19 — 108 Atlanta 38 3855 101.4 NewOrleans 38 3851 101.3 76ers 95, Bodcats92 LA. Lakers 39 3906 100.2 Detroit 38 3781 99.5 CHARLO TTE(92) Toronto 37 3655 98.8 Kidd-Gilchrist 0-21-2 1,McRoberts 4-8 0-010, Washington 37 3639 98.4 Jefferson11-20 2-3 24,Walker9-21 6-6 26, Hen- Indiana 37 3603 97.4 derson2-144-5 8,Togiver2-71-2 6, Zeller 2-41-2 Brooklyn 37 3562 96.3 5, Sessions5-111-211, Adrien 0-1 1-41, Doug- Cleveland 39 3750 96.2 lasRoberts0-0000.Totals35-8817-2692. Memphis 38 3651 96.1 PHIUIOELPHIA (95) Orlando 39 3744 96.0 Turner10-192-2 23,Young4-112-411, Haw es NewYork 38 3627 95.4 7-12 0-017,Carter-Wiliams8-153-620, Anderson Boston 40 3802 95.1 3-4 0-1 6,Thompson0-01-21, Wroten 4-101-3 9, Utah 40 3784 94.6 Dedmon 0-20-00, Davies0-10-00, Wiliams3-32-2 Charlotte 40 3735 93.4 8. Totals 39-7711-20 95. Chicago 37 3415 92.3 Charlotle 27 18 23 24 — 92 Milwaukee 38 3469 91.3 Philadelphia 24 2 9 19 23 — 95 TeamDefense G Pls Avg Indiana 37 3258 88.1 Wizards114, Heat97 Chicago 37 3433 92.8 Toronto 37 3558 96.2 MIAMI (97) Charlotte 40 3864 96.6 James8-189-1025,Battier1-50-03, Bosh10-19 SanAntonio 39 3768 96.6 3-3 26,Cole6-132-215, Wade4-110-0 8, Haslem Memphis 38 3677 96.8 1-20-02, Allen0-50-00,Beasley3-60-06,Mason Oklahoma C it y 38 3715 97.8 Jr. 0-00-00,Oden2-32-26, Jones2-20-06, Lewis NewYork 38 3733 98.2 0-00-00. Totals 37-8416-1797. Miami 38 3746 98.6 WASHINGTON (114) 40 3947 98.7 Ariza 4-70-010, Nene 6-157-919, Gortat 6-11 Boston Golden St a t e 40 3959 99.0 0-012, Wal7-14 l 8-8 25, Beal7-13 3-319, Booker Washington 37 3671 99.2 5-5 3-413,Webster4-8 0-011, Tem ple 1-11-2 3, 38 3799 100.0 Seraphin0-00-00, Singleton1-10-02, PorterJr. 0-0 Milwaukee Atlanta 38 3803 100.1 0-00.Totals41-7522-26114. Clippers 40 4004 100.1 Miami 18 36 29 20 — 97 L.A. 37 3725 100.7 Washington 43 26 17 28 — 114 Brooklyn Phoenix 38 3836 100.9 Utah 40 4052 101.3 Celtics 88, Raptors 83 Houston 40 4067 101.7 Cleveland 39 3971 101.8 TORONTO (83) Dallas 40 4075 101.9 Ross3-70-0 8, Johnson2-4 2-66, Valanciunas Orlando 39 3977 102.0 1-7 3-4 5,Lowry6-173-418, DeRozan9-22 4-923, Denver 38 3877 102.0

Rockets103, Pelicalrs100

a 29-3 Week 2 lossto the

Seahawks. In preparation, music co's practice field Wednesday. The 49ers regularly practice with

t h e s ound

system at full blast, but it is that much more important this week as they head

to what is considered the NFL's loudest venue. "Other teams may ap-

proach it differently," Harbaugh said. "You've got to

Suns121, Lakers114

DALLAS (127) Marion6-90-014, Nowitzki8-228-827, Dalembert 9-132-520, Calderon6-90-016, Ellis 6-130-4 13, Crowder1-60-02, Blair4-50-1 8,Carter2-82-2 6, Wright6-71-1 13, Larkin1-3 0-02, Ellington2-2 0-06.Totals51-9713-21 127. LA. CLIPPERS (129) Dudley4-9 0-010, Griffin 5-1113-1623,Jordan 3-61-27, Collison5-112-313,Redick10-146-733, Barnes10-180-225,Crawford 4-136-716, Morris 1-10-02.Totals42-8328-37129. Dallas 32 30 36 29 — 127 LA. Clippers 38 4 2 28 29 — 129

who had one of his worst performances as a pro in

blared across San Francis-

UTAH(185) Jefferson 5-103-515, Wiliams0-20-00, Favors 8 16 3 519, Burke7 191-1 17, Burks8 174 6 20, Garrett0-40-00, Kanter12-151-125,Evans3-50-0 6, Rush1-11-1 3,LucasIII000 00. Totals 44 89 13-19105. BANANTONIO(109) Leonard6-121-1 15,Duncan7-101-1 15,Ayres 5-60-010,Parker9-167-825, Ginobili 4-113-413, Diaw1-30-03, Belinelli 5-124-415,Migs3-60 06, Joseph2-20-04, Baynes0-1 0-00, Bonner1-10-0 3.Totals 43-8816-18 109. Utah 25 20 24 36 — 165 BanAntonio 28 2 2 31 28 — 189

Clippers129, Mavericks127

co m m u nication

through the chaos at CenturyLink Field will be par-

Spurs109, Jazz105

LA. LAKERB (114) Johnson 7-146-722, Hill4-100-08, Gasol1020 4-524, Marshal4-160-010, l Meeks5-93-314, Kelly 3-72-29,Young4-81-1 9, Kaman6-76-618. Totals 43-91 22-24114. PHOENIX (121) Tucker5-105-515, Frye9-201-320, Plumlee2-7 2-2 6,Dragic7-154-718, Green12-182-228, Mark. Morris 9-145-624, Smith3-6 0-0 6, Goodwin0-2 0-0 0, MarcMorris1-5 0-02, Len1-30-02. Totals 49-10619-25121. LA.Lakers 27 31 24 32 — 114 Phoenix 26 28 34 33 — 121

C3

be able to

communicate with-

out being a ble t o hear very

• Late 12-0 run gives Portland 108-96 win over Cleveland The Associated Press PORTLAND — LaMarcus

Aldridge knew when it was his time. The two-time All-Star went

on a personal nine-point rally to pull Portland ahead for good and the Trail Blazers dosed out the Cleveland Cavaliers with a 12-0 run for a 108-96

victory on Wednesday night. Aldridge finished with 32 points and 18 rebounds for his

22nd double-double of the season. The 6-foot-11forward also made his first 3-pointer.

"I had missed somanyshots early and I looked up and it was two minutes left and I told Will Barton, 'It's my time.'

final margin. NEW ORLEANS — James Deng, acquired in a trade Harden capped a 26-point with the Chicago Bulls last performance with a tiebreakweek in exchange for Andrew ing jumper with 28 seconds Bynum and draft picks, con- left, and Houston won its third tinues to fit in nicely with the straight. Cavaliers. He had 27 points, Grizzlies 82, Bucks 77: matching his season high, in MILWAUKEE — Mike ConCleveland's 120-118 victory ley and James Johnson each in Los Angeles on Tuesday. It scored 15 points and Memphis was the Cavaliers' fourth win won its season-high fourth on the road this season. straight. Irving went into the game Spurs 109, Jazz 105: SAN averaging 21.4 points, iden- ANTONIO — Tony Parker tical to Lillard, last season's had 25 points and nine assists, NBA Rookie of the Year. When the Blazers visited Cleveland on Dec. 17, Lillard

late rally to beat Utah and extend its winning streak to six sank a long 3-pointer at the games. buzzer and the Blazers came Kings 111, Timberwolves

I stepped up and just made

away with a 119-116 victory. shots down the stretch," he Lillard finished with 36points, sald. Irving had 25. D amian L i l l ar d a d d ed It looked at first like this 28 points for t h e B l azers game might come down to (29-9), who won their third which of the talented point

straight and sit behind only San Antonio in the Western

guards would have a better night. In the end, however, Aldridge made the differenceprompting fans to once again

Conference. Newly acquired forward Luol Deng had 25 points for shower him w it h " M -V-P!" the Cavaliers, who were play- chants. The Blazers are 19-3 ing the second of a back-to- when he has a double-double. T he 3-pointer was A l back after a victory over the Lakers on Tuesday night. Ky- dridge's first after six unsucrie Irving added 21points. cessful attempts this season. "He said he was going to Dion W a iters' 3 - pointer gave the Cavs a 94-93 lead shoot a 3 every game now," with 3:44 to go. Aldridge made Matthews joked. his first 3-pointer of the season Also on Wednesday: to give Portland back the lead, W izards 114, H eat 9 7 : but Anderson Varejao's tip tied it at 96.

and San Antonio escaped a

WASHINGTON — Washing-

108: MINNEAPOLIS — Rudy

Gay had 33 points, five rebounds and six assists, and Isaiah Thomas had 26 points and seven assists to l ead

Sacramento. Celtics 88, Raptors 83: BOSTON — Jared Sullinger scored 25 points and grabbed a career-best 20 rebounds, Av-

Qext pp

well. You

can sim-

NFC ulate that Championship s o m ewhat

S an Francisco i n pr a c 49ers at Seattle tice. SigSeahawks nals, hand WhenSunday s ign a1 s v erb a I noon signals, TV:Fox body language, reading lips, different ways. But, we'llpractice that. We've been in some of those environments."

Harvin's playing status unclear: Seattle Seahawks

receiver Percy Harvin, who suffered a concussion in Saturday's game against N ew Orleans, met w i t h

doctors for a concussion evaluation

Wed n e sday

afternoon. He didn't practice, and his status fo r

S u nday's

game against San Francisco is unknown. Harvin will have to be

cleared by a team doctor and an unaffiliated concussion expert physician in order to return. Players have returned from con-

ery Bradley had 20 points and Boston held on to snap a ninegame losing streak.

cussions in one week, but

76ers 95, Bobcats 92:PHILADELPHIA Thaddeus

to the doctors performing

Young made the go-ahead 3-pointer with 3.2 seconds left to lift Philadelphia. Clippers129, Mavericks 127:

ical tests.

LOS ANGELES — J.J. Redick

no-nonsense disciplinarian, is the new coach of the Minnesota Vikings.

scored a career-high 33 points and the Los Angeles Clippers rallied from 17 points down

ton had a 34-point lead against Miami reduced to single digits with 4 t/a minutes left. pair of free throws, a 19-foot before holding on for a victory Nuggets 123, Warriors 116: jumper and a layup that made in Greg Oden's first game in OAKLAND, Calif. — Nate it 102-96. more than four years. Robinson scored 14 of his 24 "He knew it was winning Bulls 128, Magic 125:OR- points in the fourth quarter, time and I just felt like you LANDO, Fla. — Joakim Noah J.J. Hickson grabbed a seacould see him with the deter- had a season-high 26 points, son-high 24 rebounds. mination of making a play at Carlos Boozer scored 23, and Suns 121, Lakers 114: the rim," coach Terry Stotts Chicago extended Orlando's PHOENIX — Gerald Green said. season-high losing streak to had a strong second half to The Blazers added consec- nine games with a triple-over- finish with a season high 28 utive 3-pointers from Wesley time victory. points and lead Phoenix Suns Matthews and Lillard for the Rockets 103, Pelicans 100: over the L.A. Lakers. Aldridge answered with

the decision is out of Harvin's hands and will be up numerous neuropsychologVikings to hire Bengals' Zimmer as head coach: Mike Zimmer, known as a

A

20- y ea r

vet e r an

NFL assistant coach who worked with Hall of Famer Bill Parcells in Dallas be-

fore turning the Cincinnati Bengals' defense around as their defensive coordi-

nator the past six seasons, Zimmer will be named the ninth head coach in the Vi-

kings' 54-year history. Zimmer, a 57-year-old who has never been a head

coach at any level, replaces Leslie Frazier, who was fired on Dec. 30.

Ducks go ongoal-scoring spreein 9-'1win overCanucks The Associated Press ANAHEIM, Calif. — Corey Perry had two goals and two assists, Teemu

Selanne had two goals and an assist, and the relentless Anaheim Ducks

NHL ROUNDUP Nick Bonino also scored two goals

two-decade history. Andrew Cogliano, Jakob Silfverberg and Sami Vatanen also scored,

for the NHL-leading Ducks, who and Frederik Andersen made 31 earned their eighth consecutive vic- saves. b eat the V a ncouver Canucks 9 - 1 tory by scoring a club-record six Also on Wednesday: Wednesday night for their 18th victo- power-play goals in the highest-scorPenguins 4, Capitals 3: PITTSry in 19 games. ing performance in the franchise's BURGH — Olli M aatta's slap shot

beat Michal Neuvirth with less than 2 minutes remaining to rally Pittsburgh for the victory against Washington. Maple Leags 4, Sabres 3:TORONTO — Tyler Bozak scored the clinch-

McAulay named Super Bowl ref: Terry McAulay will be the referee at the

Super Bowl, marking the third time he has worked the NFL title game. The

rest of his seven-man crew on Feb. 2 will be umpire Carl Paganelli, head linesman Jim Mello, line judge Tom Symonette, field judge

ing goal in the third round of the

Scott Steenson, side judge

shootout and Toronto won its third

Dave Wyant and back judge Steve Freeman.

straight.


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

PREP ROUNDUP

Bend High wrestling cruisespast La Pine Bulletin staff report LA PINE — With the Ore-

gon Wrestling Classic just a few days away, Bend High's performance on Wednesday night was a great way to roll

Wrestling

ipants as shown by the more than

Continued from C1 "You bet," Alley says. "That can, and will, happen." This weekend, 80 high school teams are expected atRedmond's Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center for the 33rd Classic — a two-day

dual-match tournament that begins with four pools in each of the state's five wrestling classifications, setting

up competition in 16-team brackets. The Oregon Classic wraps up Saturday night with championship finals in each bracket. Of the 80 teams, which will be divided by classification (6A, 5A, 4A, 3A, 2A/IA), 33 of last season's 40 topeight teams at state will take part in the Classic this weekend, including all five champions and four of five runners-up.

into the state championship

It makes for the premier dual-meet

of dual tournaments. Kasey Beuschlein kicked

tournament in the state, and one of

off the Lava Bears' dual with

for the good of your team," Alley says, stage, which is important as the state "if it works out, it can be a tremendous championships draw near. After all, year's Oregon Wrestling Classic. steppingstone for an individual." the Classic, as Davis observed last The tournament's origins date Such individual progress, Davis year, is "basically the state dual-meet back to the early 1980s. Now the and Alley agree, is a product of the championship." "You try to seek these opportustage is set for the 2014 Classic, which team concept featured in the Classic's will be held in Redmond for the 12th dual-match format. nities out for kids, especially if you "It's huge," Davis says. "When you think that they're heading to the state s traight year. Star w r estlers wi l l stand out, such as Crook County's have kids that are willing to do any- tournament," Davis says. "You want Tyler Berger, a three-time Class 5A thing to win a team event, that's when to seek these opportunities out as state champion while at Hermiston. you know you have a good team." much as possible and put them on that But other wrestlers have the potential Adds Alley: "Quality individuals stage so that they're not overwhelmed to break out — like Mitch Adams did will do for others what they can't get when they get to Memorial Coliseum — as the state championships draw done for themselves. That seems to (in Portland) at the end of February. closer. manifest itself in that dual-meet cate- You've got to put them in these situa"I think it's a big confidence boost gory. That kid's going to fight a little tions and see how they react. This is for those kids that are maybe the sec- bit harder because he's going to let where you kind of see what these kids ond-tier kids, that maybe win a match down 13 teammates, not just himself. are made of and whetherthey can here or there," Redmond High coach It amplifies the intensity of the wres- handle it. "You have your expectations of Kris Davis says of the Classic. "They tling, or it potentially can." get that feel that they're contributing The Oregon Wrestling Classic of- kids," Davis continues. "When kids to the team. That's a great thing to fers an opportunity for wrestlerslive up to those expectations, it usualbuild off of and maybe get these kids and not just the stars — to get extra ly translates to them moving forward to that next level and light a little fire time on the mat, which is a significant and creating more opportunities for under them." advantage through the eyes of Alley. themselves." "Anytime that you're given an opNot only that, the Classic provides — Reporter: 541-383-0307, portunity to excel and do some things a chance tocompete on a bigger glucas®bendbulletin.com. 3,000 wrestlers who took part in last

the largest wrestling events in the nation in terms of individual partic-

a pin at 126 pounds, and Bend added six more en route to a 66-12 victory over La Pine. "I didn't know what to ex-

pect," Bend coach Luke Larwin said. "I know L a P i ne has some good kids at certain weights. I think anything can

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL ROUNDUP

Skotte Continued from C1 His initial thought was that perhaps the injury was something minor, such as a neck spasm. On the opening kickoff against USC at Oregon State's Reser Stadium,

happen in a match.But our

kids wrestled really tough and were in good positions to do what they needed to do."

With Austin Palmer (132 pounds), Jacob Dupuis (145), Dacoda Crane (152), Justin Vinton (160), Michael Hageman (220) and David O'Connor (285) each logging falls,

Skotte was knocked uncon-

scious while blocking for a kick return. He suffered a

Skotte file Ht: 6-2 Wt: 240

So., LB Prep:Mountain View S tats G Tk FF - FR 2 013 11 6-7-13 0 - 0 2 012 13 3 - 4-7 1-0 Total 24 9-11-20 1-0

concussion and did not return to action until the Bea-

the Lava Bears built a 60-0

lead. David Kerr won by forfeit

at 106 pounds to put La Pine on the board, and T h orin

Wilson capped the dual with a pin in 1 minute, 35 seconds

vers' loss to Washington on

not healthy enough to play in

Nov. 23.

2014.

The hit also worsened his neck injury, Skotte said.

most serious in a series of

The neck injuries are the

Despite that, he finished blows for Skotte in a season out the season by logging started with much promise. six tackles against the HusHe was named the startkies and another tackle the ing middle linebacker early following week against Or- in preseason camp, and he egon. He suited up for the started the Beavers' first four Beavers' game against Boise games. But he was benched State in the Sheraton Hawaii against San Diego State and

for the Hawks.

"This was a great confidence booster for our kids," Larwin said.

In other Wednesday action: WRESTLING

Redmond takes three: LEB-

Bowl on Christmas Eve but

supplanted as starter.

He also suffered through a painful case of "turf toe" (a

the four-team dual meet. Red-

did not play. "The trainers here (at Oregon State) thought it was muscle spasms in my neck so we didn't do anything all

mond came back with a 51-12 v ictory over M i l w aukie o f

season about it," Skotte said. Skotte said he met with

ANON —

J acob Brauchler

logged a first-periodpin at 285 pounds to help the Panthers

Tori Eichberger/Lubbock Avalanche-Journal

Texas Tech's Jaye Crockett and Randy Onwuasor, center, battle for a loose ball against Baylor's Isaiah Austin and Taurean Prince, right, Wednesday night in Lubbock, Texas.

rally past Lebanon 37-35 at

Portland, followed by a 60-23 win over Hillsboro's Liberty. Austin Rystedt (126 pounds), Mitch Willett (138) and John Hickey (145) all posted 3-0 re-

OSU coach Mike Riley last week to discuss the injury. He still has a redshirt sea-

son available to him if he is

cords for the Panthers, as did Hunter Smith at 160 pounds and Brennan Yates at 182. GIRLS BASKETBALL

15-8 lead at the half, the Bulldogs poured in 14 third-quar-

LUBBOCK, Texas — Jaye

points he scored in a loss at Texas last weekend.

Crockett had 19 points, Tod-

Texas Tech kept Baylor's

ter points and 15 more in the

drick Gotcher added 17 and

fourth to pick up a Tri-River C onference w i n .

Ha n n a h

Lewis paced Culver (2-4 TRC, 5-9 overall) with 13 points,

The Associated Press

top scorers in check for much Texas Tech beat No. 12 Baylor of the night. Cory Jefferson, 82-72 on Wednesday night the Bears' leading scorer (13.5 for its first Big 12 win of the points per game), had just season. eight points and center Isa-

keyed a 12-2 run for San Diego State, which rallied for its 14th straight win.

about the rule.

"It's a slippery slope," Robinson said. "Technically, I'm

— Marcus Smart scored 20 points to lead Oklahoma

not allowed to talk to a guy

State.

with the media, Beavers ra-

well before that. If I'm following the letter of the law, I'm

No. Oklahoma 9 St.82,TCU 50:

S T I LLWATER, O k l a .

George Mason 87:FAIRFAX, Va. — Chaz Williams had 26

Toledo 68, Culver 41:CULVER — John Slaght posted 13 points and seven rebounds, but the Bulldogs dropped to

10.7 average with four poinst. the Red Raiders (9-8, 1-3), The Red Raiders simply who ended a four-game slide had more energy and Baylor against Baylor in Lubbock looked lethargic until late in with their first victory over the game. And the Red Raida ranked opponent in 35 ers shot well. Texas Tech games. made 57 percent of its 49 Texas Tech led all the way shots to 41 percent for Baylor, and was able to hold off a which took 63 from the field.

Bonaventure 60: ST. LOUIS — Dwayne Evans scored 18

1-5 in Tri-River Conference

late comeback attempt by the

points and Saint Louis won

play and 2-11 overalL Tristan

Bears (13-3, 1-2) after they

Bogart finished with seven

pulled to 76-66 on a 3-pointer by Taurean Prince with 2:02

who limited Toledo to just five

field goals on the night. BOYS BASKETBALL

points for Culver, while Adam Knepp contributed six points and eight boards. North Lake 45, Paisley 23: PAISLEY —

M a t t H e n k el

scored a team-high 12 points to lead the Cowboys in the

Mountain Valley League victory. North Lake (2-2 MVL, 4-9 overall) led 21-18 at halftime before outscoring the Broncos 21-7 in the second half.

Dejan Kravic and Robert 'Iirrner scored 14 apiece for

After hitting on all 21 of their free t hrows i n t h eir win at TCU on Saturday, the

Bears made only 16 of 24

left. That was the closest Bay- from the foul line this time. lor had been since late in the In other action Wednesday: first half, but it got no closer No. 4 Michigan State 54, down the stretch. Northwestern 40: E V A N Kenny Chery scored 22 STON, Ill. — Gary Harris points and Prince had 13 for scored 14 points and Michithe Bears. They finished with gan State got its ninth straight only six assists, a season low

win.

for a team averaging 16.3.

No. 10 San Diego St. 68,

All five Red Raiders start-

Fresno St. 60: SAN DIEGO ersscored in double figures. — Xavier Thames scored 28 C rockett matched th e 1 9 points and Winston Shepard

Harding

tack on her biggest rival.

Continued from C1 Harding's husband, Jeff Gillooly, conspired to whack Nancy Kerrigan out of competition at a practice session before the 1994 U.S. Figure Skating Champion-

makes clear, the Kerrigan-Harding affair unfolded in a commercial landscape in which economic potential hinges on appearance as much as it does athleticism. By the early 1990s, Kerrigan and Harding

ships, the event that would determine the

were toe-to-toe in American figure skat-

American delegates to that year's Winter Olympics. Kerrigan recovered and won the silver

medal, then reigned over Disney floats, game shows, TV specials and charity spokeswoman gigs. Harding biffed her Olympic routine, pleaded guilty to conspiring to hinder the prosecution of the attack, and was barred

from competition for life. She turned to exploitation films, celebrity boxing and landscaping work. She never got her ticket out. Now, 20 years after the Kerrigan attack, ESPN's new documentary "The

Price of Gold" (which airs tonight at 6 o'clock) complicates the narrative of the

American skater who triumphed against adversity to great fortune, and the one who sank to the bottom after a brazen at-

As Nanette Burstein's documentary

prefaced his remarks by saying he was not specifically adContinued from C1 dressing theOregon program, Oregon State and Oregon he expressed strong opinions Civil War games this season Sunday at 5 p.m. in Gill Coliseum. In the final question of Robinson's regular meeting

No. 16 Massachusetts 88,

anne Slaght chipped in with eight points for the Bulldogs,

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

will play the first of their two

iah Austin was well below his

and Alysha Fritz had 11. Rae-

sue between the foot and the bigtoe). "It's been a rough year, for sure," Skotte said. "But things can only go up from here."

Robinson

Culver 44, Toledo 24:CULVER — A f t e r struggling from the field en route to a

sprain of the connective tis-

points and eight assists, Derrick Gordon made a go-ahead layup with 8 seconds remaining for Massachusetts. No. 24 Saint Louis 66, St.

diobroadcasterMike Parker stepped forward and asked the coach his thoughts on the transfer rule. Robinson said he thinks it is too easy

until he gets his release. But these situations are handled gonna be late anyways. But we've been building ourroster from the bottom up since I got here"

for fifth-year seniors to transR obinson also said t h e fer from one team to another NCAA should be more agwithout sitting out a season

its first game since breaking

after they graduate, especially when they have spent so much time being groomed by another program.

into the Top 25 for the first time.

"That's a tough rule because a lot of coaches like

gressive in its enforcement of hardshiptransfers,which

includes players who want to play closer to home or be near ailing family members. As the rule is currently written,

myself and people around the country spend time developing (players)," Robinson said. "The programsthatcan'trecruit the blue-chip guys, they

Robinson said, a player can transfer to a program within an 80-mile radius of his home with no penalty. "If you're transferring to a school that's 81 miles out of

do their homework, they find

that, you have to sit out ayear,"

fornia stayed unbeaten in the

a guy, they develop them into a really good player and then he graduates and takes his talent and moves on to a bigger program and you've done

Pac-12.

all the work. That seems a bit

he said. "It's pretty dear-cut." That was the case for former Oregon State player Ahmad Starks, who transferred to Illinois after last season to be closer to his sick grand-

Stanford 80, Washington St. 48: STANFORD, Calif. Josh Huestis and Anthony -

Brown each scored 15 points and Stanford ran away from Washington State.

California 82, Washington 56: BERKELEY, Calif. — Tyrone Wallace scored 14 points with eight rebounds as Cali-

a silver in 1994), Harding needed to defeat everyone else, at any cost, to collect anything from her skating prowess. So even as federal investigators zeroed in on

Harding in connection with the Kerrigan assault, she told reporters at a pre-Olym-

pics presser that her mind was consumed with "these little dollar signs in my head." ing competition, but when it came to monWhen Harding turned in a dismal peretizing their skills, Kerrigan was skat- formance in L i llehammer, punctuated ing on anelevated plane. Though both by a false start because of a broken lace, athletes emerged from working-class it marked the end of a career that had backgrounds, Kerrigan was blessed with never brought Harding dividends. Meanpatrician good looks and a sophisticated while, the scandal that loomed over the air that easily courted corporate sponsor- games attracted Super Bowl-level viewships and Hollywood attention. ing numbers and vaulted ice skating to "Nancy looked like she was wealthy," an unprecedented level of popular interis how Boston Globe reporter John Pow- est. Everybody made money except for ers puts it in the documentary. Harding, Harding. counters Connie Chung, was the "girl But what would have happened had with frizzy blonde hair from the wrong Harding won? Perhaps she had misside of the tracks." And their performance calculated. Even if she had managed to styles reinforced the divide: While Hard- neutralize Kerrigan at the Olympics and ing powered through technical routines, take home the gold, it is unlikely that Kerrigan danced. Harding would have inherited all of KerWhile Kerrigan could profit off of per- rigan's endorsements, too. She might no sonality and appearance without taking longer have been dismissed as "crap," but the gold (she won a bronze in 1992 and she would never be the queen.

unfair. It would be nice if they mother. But the school, locould fix that rule a bit." cated in Champaign, is more The Ducks have built a rep- than 100 miles from his home utation as a landing spot for in Chicago. Starks is redshirtsenior transfers and have ben- ing this season and will be a efited from bringing in ma- senior for the Illini next year. ture players. This season they Oregon guard J oseph added forward Mike Moser Young, a redshirt junior who from UNLV and guard Jason leads the Ducks in scoring, Calliste from Detroit. Both transferred from Houston graduated from their previous and was granted immedischools, Moser earning a de- ate eligibility by the NCAA. gree in sociology and Calliste Young's father, former Housin communications studies. Both transferred with imme-

ton star Michael Young, was the director of b a sketball

diate eligibility. Moser is Oregon's second-leading scorer at 14.6 points per game and is the

operations for the Cougars

team's top rebounder at 7.7

season. He declined the new

but wasreassigned to a comm unity service role in t h e

athletic department after last

per game. Calliste averages 11 job and later filed suit against points off the bench. Last sea- the school. son the Ducks added Arsalan When his father left, so did Kazemi from Rice, and the Joseph Young. He presumforward played a pivotal role ably based his appeal to the in their run to the Sweet 16. In 2011-12 it was forward Olu Ashaolu from Louisiana Tech, and in 2010-11 it was Jay-R

NCAA on the circumstances surrounding his father's

departure. If that appeal had been denied, he would have

Strowbridge from Jackson- had to sit out this season and ville State. then have just one year left to Again, while Robinson play.


C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014

+'

N ASDAQ ~ 3 i

16,481.94

Todap

+

SstP 500

1,840 "

UnitedHealth Group is the biggest provider of Medicare Advantage plans, privately run versions of Medicare. With the federal government cutting funding for Medicare Advantage as it looks to fund the health care overhaul, some analysts are worried that could slow growth for the governmentsubsidized plans this year. How will that affect UnitedHealth's business? Investors will be looking for hintstoday when the company reports fourth-quarter results. $74.84

UNH

$11.63

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.

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17,000"

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16,500"

16,000"

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... Close: 16,481.94 Change: 108.08 (0.7%)

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1,700

1,650 "

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16,240" ""' 10 DAYS "

1,800 " 1,750 "

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NYSE NASD

Vol. (in mil.) 3,680 2,059 Pvs. Volume 3,287 1,982 Advanced 1990 1693 Declined 1 052 8 7 3 New Highs 2 51 2 5 9 New Lows 19 12

A

HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 16505.28 16376.78 16481.94 +108.08 DOW Trans. 7508.74 7454.90 7503.83 +47.57 DOW Util. 491.07 488.72 489.37 -0.52 NYSE Comp. 10393.89 10351.00 10385.39 +42.30 NASDAQ 421 8.80 4195.98 4214.88 +31.86 S&P 500 1850.84 1840.52 1848.38 +9.50 S&P 400 1354.65 1347.61 1353.75 +7.67 Wilshire 5000 19760.54 19643.79 19743.78 +99.99 Russell 2000 1171.96 1166.04 1171.35 +7.93

DOW

%CHG. WK MO t0.66% L t0.64% L -0.11% L t0.41% L t0.76% L t0.52% L t0.57% L t0.51% L t0.68% L

50Operating 4 Q '12

Price-earnings ratio:

4 Q' 1 3

NAME

14

based on trailing 12 months' results

Dividend: $1.12 Div.yield: 1.5% Source: FectSet

Holiday sales bump? American Express is expected to report today that its earnings and revenue improved in the fourth quarter. Investors will be looking for an update on how cardholders' spendingand payment trends fared during the OctoberDecember period, which coincides with a traditional spike in consumer spending for the holiday season. That can benefit card issuers like American Express, which can ultimately earn interest income when cardholders ramp up spending.

AXP $100 $61.21 80

$88.25

60

'13

40

Operating EPS

I'

4Q '12

Price-earnings ratio:

L L L L L L L L L

4 Q' 13

21

based on trailing 12 months' results

Dividend: $0.92 Div. yield: 1.0%

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp A VA 24.34 ~ Bank ofAmerica BAC 10 . 98 — o BarrettBusiness B BS I 3 8 . 15 — o Boeing Co BA 7 2 .68 ~ CascadeBaacorp CA CB 4 .85o — ColumbiaBokg COLB 1 8.62 ~ 2 Columbia Sportswear COLM 47.72 — o Costco Wholesale CO ST 98.95 ~ Craft Brew Alliance B R EW 6.26 ~ FLIR Systems F LIR 22.86 ~ Hewlett PacKard H P Q 1 6 .03 — o Home FederalBocp ID HOME 10.84 ~ 1 Intel Corp INTC 20.10 — o Keycorp K EY 8 .82 ~ Kroger Co K R 2 5 .59 ~ Lattice Semi LSCC 3.89 ~ LA Pacific L PX 14.51 ~ MDU Resources MDU 21 .72 — o MentorG raphics M EN T 1 3.21 ~ Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.76 ~ 3 Nike Ioc 8 N KE 52.81 ~ NordstromInc J WN 52.16 ~ Nwst Nat Gas NWN 39.96 ~ PaccarIoc PCAR 45.52 — o Planar Systms PLNR 1.39 ~ Plum Creek P CL 42.95 ~ Prec Castparts PCP 180.06 — o Safeway Ioc S WY 17.22 ~ Schoitzer Steel SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 Sherwin Wms SHW 153.94 ~ StaocorpFocl SFG 37.71 — o StarbocksCp S BUX 52.52 ~ Triquiot Semi TQNT 4.31 ~ UmpquaHoldings UM PQ 11.45 ~ 1 US Baocorp USB 31.99 — O Washington Fedl WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 WellsFargo & Co WF C 3 4.50 — o Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 6.38 ~

29.26 28.2 6 +. 1 4 + 0 .5 T L 16.93 17 .15 + . 38 +2.3 L L 98.00 97 .49 +2.14 +2.2 L L 142. 8 0 14 0.62 + . 61 +0.4 T L T 7.18 56 . 8 -.06 -1.2 T 8.3 7 27.23 +.17+0.6 L L T 80.00 79.86 + .04 +0.1 L

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T L L L

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L +2.8 +24. 6 57575 14 0 . 9 0 L +1.9 +55 . 4 7 4 66 1 5 0 . 2 2 T -0.7 +53.2 3686 13 0.66f L +6.2 +38 . 8 1 8 34 8 3 T -2.3 -8.8 2729 11 L + 0.1 +43 . 1 45 7 4 6 0 . 71f T -4.1 + 4 1.2 7 1 9 2 6 0. 1 8 -1.7 +36.7 43202 14 1 . 12 T -4.1 +4 3.0 2 902 26 0 . 96f T -1.5 +13.2 1483 1 6 1 . 20 T -2.4 - 1.6 87 20 1. 8 4 T -0.5 +30.6 1354 19 0.80a T -4.7 +58.7 51 dd T -4.8 -1.4 1026 28 1 . 76 L +1.1 +44. 1 38 1 2 5 0. 1 2 T -2.7 +88.6 3161 1 8 0 . 80 T - 10.5 + 3 . 1 2 7 3 d d 0 . 7 5 L t 5.3 +21. 3 54 5 26 2. 0 0 L +3.5 +79. 4 14 1 15 1. 1 0f T -2.8 +39.7 4306 34 1.04f L +0.4 +67 . 6 3026 dd 9.6 5 18.54 +.07+0.4 T T T -3.1 +53.3 7 9 7 2 0 0 .60a 41.50 41 .50 + . 6 1 +1 .5 L L L +2.7 +24. 8 12460 14 0 . 9 2 4.3 5 23.36 -.15 -0.6 T T L +0.3 +39 . 2 36 8 1 6 0. 4 0 46.20 46 .40 + . 8 1 +1 .8 L L L +2.2 +34. 4 24838 12 1 . 2 0 33.24 31. 0 5 +. 1 1 +0.4 T T -1.6 + 3 . 1 2 048 2 7 0 . 88

Source: FactSet

PC chip bellwether Intel supplies chips for about four out of every five PCs, but its sales have been hurting recently. That's because shoppers are increasingly buying tablets and smartphones, rather than PCs. Intel has tried to offset the decline with higher sales of chips for servers, phones and tablets. Wall Street will get an update on the strategy today, when Intel reports fourth-quarter earnings.

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last12 months. I - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittution date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months.

:':Raytheon CEO to step down There will soon be a change in Raytheon's front office CEO William Swanson plans to step down in March. Swanson, who will turn 65 in February, has served as CEO ofthe Waltham, Mass.-based company since 2003. He had previously notified the board of his intention to leave his post after turning 65. He will remain as chairman of the defense contractor while the company completes the transition process.

RaytheonsaidSwanson willbe succeeded by Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer Thomas Kennedy. The CEO appointmentis eff ective on March 31. Kennedy has been with Raytheon for more than 30 years and has served in his most recent post since April 2013. The 58-year-old Kennedy was also elected as a board member, effecti ve Wednesday.

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'""' + -.007i 1.3601

Stocks rose a second straight day Wednesday, and the Standard & Poor's 500 index closed at a record high. Financial stocks were among the day's big winners after Bank of America said that its fourth-quarter profit more than quadrupled from a year earlier. Optimism in the global economy also helped to drive the market higher. The World Bank expects global economic growth to accelerate to 3.2 percent this year from 2.4 percent in 2013, largely due to strengthening economies in the U.S. and other developed markets. Wednesday marked the first time this year that the S&P 500 set a record high. Last year, it happened 45 times. MWV

NQ Mobile

52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TO 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV +7.3 +71 . 8 73 6 1 3 0. 8 0 A LK 45.45 ~ 80.20 7 8. 7 3 -.65 -0.8 T L L

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Close:$37.38L1.72 or 4.8% D J The packaging company plans to trim costs by up to $125 million yearly by the end of 2015 through job QTR YTD cuts and other initiatives. -0.57% $45 L +1 .40% 40 -0.24% -0.14% 35 +0.92% D J 0 N +0.84% 52-week range +0.19% $$7.14~ $$ 5.5$ L +0 .66% Vol.:3.8m (3.5x avg.) P E: 38.5 Mkt. Cap:$6.65 b Yie l d : 2.7%

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$94.17

MeadWestvaco

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$20.10

Dow jones industrials

Close: 1,848.38 Change: 9.50 (0.5%)

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10 YR T NOTE 2.89% ~

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1,848.38

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NQ Close:$15.63%1.71or 12.3% The software company will power the next Sprint ID, a package of apps, ringtones and other services used on Android smartphones. $30 20 10

Dick's Sport. Goods

DKS

Close:$56.39L1.14 or 2.1% Credit Suisse delivered an upgrade to the sports retailer, citing new focus from management and strong private label sales. $60 55

0

D N 52-week range

$45.50~

$ 55.$7

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Netflix NFLX Close:$330.38T-7.58 or -2.2% A new ruling may allow Internet providers to charge higher fees, possibly increasing costs at the streaming video service. $400 350

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52-week range $5.$5~

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XONE NuVasive NUVA Close:$56.85T-5.41 or -8.7% Close:$36.66 L2.88 or 8.5% Some international customers deThe medical device company raised ferred orders from the 3-D printer its revenue expectations for 2013, company until at least 2014, leading saying its growth exceeded the to a round of analyst cuts. broader spinal device market. $70 $40 35

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DTLK Close: $14.96L4.09 or 37.6% The data infrastructure and services company said fourth-quarter results should come in ahead of its earlier forecasts. $16 14

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SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU

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The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 2.89 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 3 .0 3 . 0 6 .05 + 0 .01 T

T

T

.07 .11

52-wk T-bill

.11

T

T

.13

.11

2-year T-note . 3 9 .38 + 0 .01 T L 5-year T-note 1.67 1.65 +0.02 T L 10-year T-note 2.89 2.87 +0.02 T 30-year T-bond 3.82 3.80 +0.02 T T

BONDS

L .25 L .75 L 1.84 L 3.03

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.61 3.60 +0.01 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 5.01 5.01 . . . T T $52 92 Barclays USAggregate 2.43 2.38 +0.05 T L Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):15 PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 5.45 5.45 ... T T YTD return: 1% 3-YR*: 26% 5-YR*: 16% 10-y r ":14% Ann . dividend: $2.20 Div. yield: 2.4% RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 4.50 4.47 +0.03 T T *Annualized AP Total returns through Jan. 15 Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.86 1.83 +0.03 T L 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays USCorp 3.19 3.15 +0.04 T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds

RaytheOn (RTN) W

J

L 2.61 T 3.99 L 1.79 T 5.72 T 3.7 6 L 1.03 T 2.72

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 24.4 0 + .69 -0.1 +18.5 +12.2+15.4 A A A CaplncBuA m 58.12 +.68 -0.7 +12.4 +9.3+12.5 8 A C CpWldGrlA m 45.34 +.68 0.0 +21.9 +10.6+16.1 C C C EurPacGrA m 49.35 +.10 +0.6 +18.6 +7.1+15.2 8 8 8 BkofAm 3027932 17.15 +.38 FnlnvA m 51. 8 7 +.26 -0.2 +27.0 +13.9+19.3 C C 8 S&P500ETF 853724 184.66 +.99 GrthAmA m 43.21 +.16 +0.5 +30.1 +14.6+19.5 C 8 C GenMotors 785298 39.38 -.64 Artisan IatlVal d ARTKX IncAmerA m 20.66 +.65 0.0 +16.1 +11.4+15.4 8 A A AMD 662630 4.47 +.17 InvCoAmA m 36.58 +.13 -0.3 +27.8 +13.7+17.4 C C D Cisco 610232 22.78 +.37 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m37.67 +.69 0.0 +23.3 +11.8+18.5 C 6 8 FordM 609678 16.70 +.30 WAMutlnvA m39.30 +.20 -0.3 +27.8 +15.9+18.1 8 A 8 SiriusXM 601149 3.69 +.02 SPDR Fncl 585000 22.14 +.26 Dodge &Cox Income 13.62 .. . +0 .7 +1 . 2 +4 .6 +7.1 A 6 8 Intel 575751 26.67 +.16 IntlStk 43.35 +.18 +0.7 +23.4 +8.2+18.4 A A A iShEMkts 446629 40.21 -.01 Stock 168.95+1.19 0.0 + 34.9 +16.7+20.9 A A A Fidelity Contra 96.44 + . 46 +0.3 +30.8 +15.1+20.1 C 8 C Gainers GrowCo 121 . 28 +.47+1.8 +35.8 +16.7+24.0 A A A NAME LAST CHG %CHG LowPriStk d 49.76 +.22 +0.6 +30.8 +16.1+22.9 8 A 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0 ldxAdvtg65.63 +.34 +0.1 +28.2 +15.0+19.5 C 8 8 ChelseaTh 4.41 +2.11 + 9 1.7 500ldxlostl 65.63 +.34 +0.1 +28.2 NA NA C Datalink 14.96 +4.09 + 37.6 «C FrSeas rs 2.30 +.55 + 3 1.4 5$ FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 44 .. . 0. 0 + 1 1.5 +8.9+15.3 A A A Cootrol4 n 31.45 +5.96 + 2 3.4 IncomeA m 2. 4 2+.61 +0.4 +12.1 +9.6+15.9 A A A EagleBulk 4.41 +.73 + 1 9.8 Intl I Do Oakmark 26.48 +.19 +0.6 +24.5 +12.0+23.1 A A A Astrotch h 3.58 +.59 + 1 9.7 RisDivA m 19 . 66 +.12 -0.3 +22.5 +12.9+16.0 E D E Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer Laotrooix 2.74 +.44 + 1 9 .1 RisDivB m 17 . 59 +.11 -0.3 +21.4 +11.9+14.9 E D E ChiFn0nl 7.18 +1.13 + 1 8.7 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 17 . 48 +.10 -0.3 +21.5 +12.1+15.1 E D E AgiosPh n 42.19 +6.61 + 18.6 average of stock holdings SmMidValA m44.61 +.18 +0.6 +33.5 +11.1+19.8 A E D Virco 2.73 +.39 + 1 6.7 • Represents 75% of Iund's stock holdings SmMidValBm 37.59 +.15 +0.6 +32.4+10.2+18.9 8 E E Losers CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.79 +.16 -0.2 +25.1 +13.6+18.7 D C 8 NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR GrowStk 52.82 +.17 +0.5 +35.8 +16.8+23.3 A A A R ATING™ **** * HealthSci 60.97 -.10 +5.5 +50.1 +30.9+29.5 8 A A -1.61 -21.4 Dolan pfB 5.90 QIWI n 45.02 -8.94 -16.6 ASSETS $8,853 million Vanguard 500Adml 170.47 +.88 +0.1 +28.2 +15.1+19.5 C 8 8 -21.24 -15.6 NuSkin 115.23 500lnv 170.46 +.88 +0.1 +28.0 +14.9+19.4 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.22% VersoPap 3.13 -.56 -15.2 CapOp 47.19 +.17 +2.2 +40.3 +15.8+22.1 A A A MANAGER Daniel O' K eefe -.73 -14.3 PainThera 4.39 Eqlnc 29.58 +.14 -0.6 +25.1 +16.8+19.0 D A 8 SINCE 2006-10-16 IntlStkldxAdm 27.92 +.69 -0.3 +12.2 +4.5 NA E E RETURNS 3-MO +6.3 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 30.29 +.67 +1.0 +37.3 +18.6+23.9 A A A YTO -0.2 TgtRe2020 27.19 +.67 +0.3 +13.9 +8.9+13.8 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +27.1 Tgtet2025 15.79 +.64 +0.3 +15.9 +9.5+14.9 8 6 C Paris 4,332.07 +57.87 +1.35 3-YR ANNL +13.8 TotBdAdml 10.62 -.61 +0.7 -1.3 +3.4 +4.4 C D E London 6,81 9.86 +53.00 + . 78 5-YR-ANNL +20.0 Totlntl 16.69 +.65 -0.4 +12.1 +4.4+14.0 E E C Frankfurt 9,733.81 +1 93.30 +2.03 TotStlAdm 46.82 +.25 +0.3 +29.3 +15.2+20.4 8 A A Hong Kong22,902.00 +110.72 + . 49 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TotStldx 46.80 +.24 +0.3 +29.2 +15.1+20.3 8 6 A Mexico 42,511.25 +71.46 + . 17 CompassGroupPLC 4.95 Milan 20,045.76 +315.38 +1.60 USGro 28.75 +.13 +0.2 +30.8 +15.5+20.3 C 6 C TE Cormectivity Ltd 3.72 Tokyo 15,808.73 +386.33 +2.51 Welltn 38.12 +.16 +0.5 +17.1 +11.3+14.6 8 A 8 3.59 Stockholm 1,342.99 +19.10 +1.44 Tesco PLC Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, or redemption 3.58 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,255.50 +35.70 + . 68 Reed Elsevier PLC Zurich 8,423.42 +38.77 + . 46 Atm plc 3.21 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.

Artisan International Value has a superb track record but MorningMarhetsummary star cautions its shareholders to Most Active make sure the fund hasn't NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG exceeded their target allocation.

FAMILY

Commodities Crude settled at its highest price in nearly two weeks after oil supplies in inventories fell more than expected last week. Natural gas fell for the first time in four days.

Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against other major currencies, including the British pound, euro and

Japanese yen. It was nearly flat against the Canadian dollar.

55Q QD

FUELS

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)

CLOSE PVS. 94.17 92.59 1.91 1.93 2.98 2.94 4.33 4.37 2.63 2.62

%CH. %YTD +1.71 -4.3 -0.3 -0.16 +1.47 -3.2 - 1.01 + 2 .3 +0.15 -5.7

CLOSE PVS. 1238.10 1245.20 20.10 20.25 1427.10 1431.90 3.41 3.39 743.10 738.00

%CH. %YTD - 0.57 + 3 . 0 - 0.73 + 4 . 0 - 0.34 + 4 . 1 +0.55 -1.0 + 0.69 + 3 .6

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.39 1.38 + 1.29 + 3 . 7 Coffee (Ib) 1.17 1.19 - 1.68 + 5 . 9 Corn (bu) 4.26 4.32 - 1.33 + 0 . 9 Cotton (Ib) 0.85 0.84 + 1.27 + 0 . 2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 361.00 361.20 - 0.06 + 0 . 3 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.45 1.45 - 0.14 + 6 . 4 Soybeans (bu) 13.18 13.39 + 0.82 + 0 . 4 -6.2 Wheat(bu) 5.68 5.79 -1.99 1YR.

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6369 -.0069 -.42% 1.6061 Canadian Dollar 1.0956 +.0008 +.07% .9843 USD per Euro 1.3601 -.0071 -.52% 1.3299 JapaneseYen 104.60 + . 4 1 + .39% 8 8 . 83 Mexican Peso 13. 2 107 +.1105 +.84% 12.6271 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4874 +.0029 +.08% 3.7285 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1386 +.0539 +.88% 5.5705 SouthAfrican Rand 10.9007 +.0756 +.69% 8.8073 Swedish Krona 6.4 7 0 9 + .0308 +.48% 6.5009 Swiss Franc .9089 +.0060 +.66% . 9 321 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1225 +.0061 +.54% .9466 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.0463 +.0054 +.09% 6.2183 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7544 -.0000 -.00% 7.7518 Indian Rupee 61.560 +.070 +.11% 54.625 Singapore Dollar 1.2731 +.0038 +.30% 1.2257 South KoreanWon 1064.63 +2.04 +.19% 1058.40 Taiwan Dollar 3 0.10 + . 0 1 +.03% 28.97


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014

BRIEFING

ena orS See

Report Shrle's ecooomII Imprwlllg

rie in

Oregon's economy continued its sustained expansion in November, according to an index released Wednesday. The University of OregonIndexofEconomic Indicators gained 0.6 percentin November and has risen in 11of the last12 months, according to Tim Duy, director of the Oregon Economic Forum, UO professor and author of the index. Initial claims for unemployment declined sharply, suggesting hiring may increase in the comingmonths,according to the index, while an indicator of trucking activity reached its highest level since January 2008. Building permits, manufacturing activity and other indicators improved or continued at recent levels.

are

ig

By Jim Spencer

III)i I, )

(Minneapolis) Star Tribune

— Staffand wire reports

BEST OF THE

BIZ CALENDAR

(• t

'I

leq

CENTRAL OR AVALANCHEASSC ALL. 1. CAN OCT 20 8PM

OPEN YOUR VON SOUND OF MUSIC SING—ALONG NOV 25

guests andmembers,$35

for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, Centerfor Health & Learning, 2500 N.E.Neff Road; 541-385-6390 or www.cityclubco.org/. • The Power ofEmail Marketing:10a.m.noon; Redmond

Chamberof Commerce,

446 S.W.Seventh St.; 541-335-1846; holly©7touchmarketing.com or wwwJctouchmarketing.

com.

SATURDAY • How to Start aBusiness Course:Develop afinancial plan andcreateanLLC or Sole Proprietorship business, registration required; $50per farm/ranch one timefee; 9a.m.-noon; COCC- CrookCounty Open Campus,510S.E Lynn Blvd., PrIneville; 541-4801340 or tcf©cbbmail.com. • OregonAlcohol Server Permit Training: Meets Oregon LiquorControl Commission minimum requirements toobtain an alcohol serverpermit; registration required;$35; 9a.m.-1 p.m.;RoundTable Pizza,1552 N.EThird St., Bend; 541-447-6384or wwtiy.happyhourtraining. conL • Neil KellyRemodeling workshops: Designers will be available toanswer questions concerning projects; free;9:30a.m.; Neil Kelly,190 N.E.Irving Ave., Bend;541-382-7580 or www.neilkelly.com. • For the complete calendar, pick UpSunday'8 Bulletin or visitbendbulletilLcom/bizcal

WASHINGTON — Two U.S. senators want answers

committee, and McCaskill,

and Transportation Committee on how information from

information.

so many customer accounts was stolen.

demonstrates the need for

"It has been three weeks

since the data breach was discovered and new information

wrote to SteinhafeL

wrote. "We expect your se-

tomer accounts were compro-

curity experts have had time to fully examine the cause

mised by data thefts between Nov. 27 and Dec. 13. But earlier this month Target said

names, addresses and other information from as many as 70 million customers were

On Wednesday, a Target spokeswoman said the company had received the

compromised. Rockefeller and McCaskill

senators' letter and was "continuing to work with them

biggest data breaches in recent memory."

and other elected officials to keep them informed and Andy Tullis/The Bulletin file photo

such federal legislation," Rockefeller and McCaskill The company initially reported that 40 million cus-

the committee with detailed information."

Organizations that bring visitors to Bend for arts and cultural events, like some held at the Tower Theatre, will likely be eligible for grants funded by an increase in the city's lodging tax.

"Target's recent incident

continues to come out," they

and impact of the breach and will be able to provide

updated as our investigation continues." The spokeswoman did not

say when Target officials might meet with Commerce

called it "one of the nation's Steinhafel and Target have

undertaken a national campaign of apologies and offers to monitor credit ratings,

ensuring that there's been no fiscal injury to customers affected by the crime.

en rou s e ine orts to oost cutura tourism Yahoo's Mayerousts By Rachael Rees

consensus on how the commission seats will be repre-

The Bulletin

TODAY • BendChamberoi CommerceMaster Series —BuildingyourBusiness for Success: Session one: Business Development; registration required;contact Bend Chamber for pricing;1 p.m.; SmartSalesSolutions inc.,123 S.W.Columbia St., Suit8110; 541-382-3221, bonnie©bendchamber.org or www.bendchamber.org. • City ClubJanuary Forum: Finding our economicniche;lunch included; registration required; $20 for first time

Committee members. Rockefeller, who chairs the

who chairs its Consumer Profrom Target Corp. CEO Gregg tection, Product Safety and InSteinhafel about the recent surance subcommittee, have data breach that put millions backed legislation for better oftheretailer'scustomers at security of consumer data and risk. prompter corporate discloIn a Jan. 10 letter, Sens. sures of security breaches. Jay Rockefeller, D-WVa., and Target waited four days Claire McCaskill, D-Mo., after learning that its dataasked Steinhafel to brief the base had been hacked to anSenate Commerce, Science nounce the theft of customer

Albertsons to close 7 stores The grocery chain Albertsons plans to close several stores in the Northwest. Seven of 111 stores are reportedly to be shuttered. Theaffected stores are inWashington and Oregon. Albertsons spokesman Dennis McCoy says the Boise-based companyiscontinuously evaluating its stores, pulling the plug on locations that are less profitable. He says some of the employees whoworked at the affected stores may be able to transfer to a different location.

e s

he creation of the Bend

sented, said Noelle Fredland,

Cultural Tourism Fund

marketing director for The

willbring representa-

Old Mill District and Visit Bend board member.

tives from arts and cultural organizations together with tourism officials to attract

"If you look at the makeup at the board, there are

more visitors to the city. more tourism than arts and "It will cause organizaculture representatives," she tions that have never worked said. "However, we want together before to work arts and culture to be a together and leverage each strong and unified voice in other," said Cate O'Hagan, this process." executive director of the Fredland said whoever Bend nonprofit Arts Central. sits on the board will have to The purpose of the fund is set aside his or her own perto promote arts and cultural sonalagenda. programs that will increase Establishing the board is tourism during slower just one step, she said. Bymonths, according to the laws and polices will have to city's tourism agency. be written and grant-fundThe fund grew out of the ing criteria established. proposal to increase Bend's Any arts or cultural orgalodging tax in order to pay nization making efforts to for programs, including attract tourists will likely be cultural tourism, Doug La eligible to receive grants, La Placa, Visit Bend CEO and Placa said. The commission president, wrote in an email. will determine who receives Voters approved the inthe grants, which are excrease in the transient room pected to be awarded in tax in November. The rate will rise from 9 percent to 10

percent starting June 1, and to 10.4 percent June 1, 2015. A 13-member commis-

sion will oversee the fund, and tourism officials have planned a Jan. 28 public meeting to gather feedback on how the fund should be structured and managed.

The goal is to come to a

2015. The size and quantity

Ifyou go: What:Bend Cultural Tourism Fund public meeting When:3:30 p.m. Jan. 28 Where:Visit Bend, 750 N.W. LavaRoad,Ste. 160, Bend For many arts and cultural organizations in the area — such as The Nature

of Words, BendFilm, Bend WebCAM, Cascades Theat-

rical Company, High Desert Chamber Music and the Tower Theatre — the period

from October through April is prime time for scheduling productions, presentations,

screenings and concerts, Ray Solley, executive director of the Tower Theatre Foundation, wrote in an

email. "By marketing the programs and offerings of these and other groups to Seattle and Northern California, Visit Bend can

the company'sCOO By Michael Liedtke The Associated Press

SAN FRANCISCO — Ya-

hoo CEO Marissa Mayer is

name his replacement. It's doubtful de Castro the Internet company's efforts would be leaving if he were to revive its long-slumping bringing in the revenue that advertising sales aren't paying Mayer envisioned, said BGC off. Financial analyst Colin Gillis. "This was one of her key Wednesday's surprise announcementofthedeparture hires, and he is already gone," of Yahoo's chief operating of- Gillis said. "It doesn't look ficer, Henrique deCastro,rep- good. resents a setback for Mayer, The Sunnyvale, Calif., who signed him to a $58 milcompany hasn't warned that lion deal just 15 months ago to it missed its revenue forecast help her lure more advertisers for the three-month period to a company that has been ending in December, an indistruggling to compete against cation that Yahoo must have Google and Facebook in the at least been reasonably close race for online marketing to hitting that financial target. tenant in a possible sign that

Transportation funding at a crossroads inthe U.S.

bring much-needed tourists

tide is one that will lift all

WASHINGTON — The Obama administration

theirrevenue, which increas-

our boats."

Wednesday again touted cor-

"That means more revenue for hotels. And more

patrons to experience the

By Ashley Halsey III

the House Transportation and

growing variety of arts and culture here. That rising

The Washington Post

Infrastructure Committee. "We've got to look at every-

es their chances for survival, while promoting tourism.

— Reporter:541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

poratetax reforms as a means

to pay for roads, bridges and transitbut acknowledged that Congress may take the

lead, as a traditional funding sourcefortransportationnears

PERMITS City Of Bend •RPB Land Investments LLC, 724 N.EVail Lane, $201,836 •RPB Land Investments LLC, 720 N.E.Vail Lane, $194,823 • 2001 Steven B. Dandurand Revocable Trust, 20254 S.E.Narnia Place, $193,737 • Yelas Development Inc., 2652 N.W.Nordeen Way, $379,474 • Creative RealEstates Solutions, 1623 N.W. Third St., $250,000

• G.H. Monster Revocable Trust, 63050 CorPOratePlaCe, $105,000 • Hayden HomesLLC, 61126 S.E.ConeFlower St., $259,233 Deschutes County • Silver Family Trust, 61373 Bonneville Loop, Bend $407,262 • Albert L. Shirk, 52376 Pine Forest Drive, La Pine $229,182 • Christopher Rattigan and Philip Rhodus, 64841 Half Mile Lane,

abrupt exit. Mayer didn't

cutting loose her top lieu-

of grantsare scheduled for discussion at the meeting, he said. Initially, there will be one funding cycle each year. By working together, O'Hagan said, arts and cultural organizati ons can increase

into our city," Solley wrote.

dollars. Yahoo declined to comment on the reasons for de Castro's

Bend $137,750 • Michael and Karen McLaughiin, 17485 Mountain View Road, Sisters $446,136 • Brian R. Steely et al, 3150 N.W.Anderson Ranch Road,Bend $322,727 • John T. Lohrman Trust et al, 17900 Mountain View Road, Sisters $100,000 • Lot 23 LLC, 19425 Randall Court, Bend $384,157 • Jeremy and Heather

extinction. Neet, 63290 Deschutes Market Road, Bend $325,520 • Heiserman Family Trust, 60706 Golf Village Loop, Bend $326,175 City Of RedmOnd

• P.L. Redmond U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 3244 S.W. 28th St., $227,693 • P.L. Redmond U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 3232 S.W. 28th St., $175,638

"I'm talking to members of Congress all the time. This is a dialogue, it's not a monologue," said Transportation Secretary Anthony Foxx. "We fully ex-

thing," Shuster said after chairing a three-hour hearing at which he said he hoped to have anewlong-termtransportation bill on the House floor before

the August recess. With the Highway Trust Fund forecast to go bankrupt nextyear and the current two-

year transportation bill set to expireOct.I,Congressfacesa struggle to find funds for anew long-term transportation plan. Several solutions are on the

pect that there will be other ideas out there and it's a matter

table: increasingthe federal gas

of gettingthose ideas on the table. We're going to continue engaging with Congress."

relied for decades, shifting the taxburden to wholesale fuel at the refinery and allowing U.S.

Foxx's comments Wednesday after a speech at the Trans-

corporations that have stock-

portation Research Board's annual meeting were an echo of those madeTuesday by Rep. Bill Shuster, R-Pa., chairman of

tax on which the trust fund has

piled billions of dollars abroad to bring the money home at a reduced tax rate, with that rev-

enue goingto rebuilding U.S. infrastructure.


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Health Events, D2 Nutrition, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

NUTRITION

We site woes oon to a ents

• In a local study,students drankmore plain milk whenother wasn't available By Tara Bannow» The Bulletin

By Tara Bannow The Bulletin

For countless Oregonians, the meltdown of the

he question of whether chocolate milk

state's health insurance exchange website was a nightmare. For insurance agents, it was a financial blessing. "We're extremely need-

should be served in K-12 cafeterias isn't one that tends to draw objective

t '

responses.

Li4

On the contrary, it's a highly politicized

ed right now N said Dan

Neils, the owner of Agape Insurance in Oregon City. "If the system would have been like MONEY bu yingtickets

issue known to drum up emotional reactions from parents and comprehensive marketing

I•

campaigns from the dairy industry. Jamie Smith, district nurse for the Jefferson

County School District, decided to take a look for him-

self. Aided by a small grant from Oregon Health & Science University, he studied

what would happen when he removed chocolate milk from school lunches in Ma-

dras Primary, a kindergarten through second-grade

off of Expedha

ci.

"My stance is that

as a school, we should try to use the food service setting as an educational opportunity as well."

like they promised — set up payments on the spota lot of people might have

'I

chosen to do that without

,

,l

consulting an agent." With members of the public still unable to enroll

directly through Cover Oregon's website, agents have become crucial in advocating for those who need to get enrolled in policies as quickly as possible. Agents argue their ser-

— Jamie Smith,

district nurse for Jefferson County School District

vices would still be neces-

saryeveniftheexchange website did work. In many cases, they're right. Cover Oregon-certified agents receive training to sell policies off the exchange, many of which contain convoluted language

school, for a three-week

period between April and May 2012. It should be noted that

Smith himself is not an unbiased source on the subject. For years he'd sided with the large camp of people that argue if kids don't get chocolate milk, they won't drink milk at all and will miss out on the crucial nutrients it contains: calcium and vitamins A and D. But after not being able to

find hard evidence to support the claim, he switched sides. Now, Smith said, he

thinks children in schools

are just too young to make an educatedchoice,especially with the barrage of marketing directed at them. N My stance is that as a school, we should try to use

that could cause even the

the food service setting as an educational opportunity as well," he said. In any case, the study, Smith said, was done objectively, and even followed training from OHSU on performing research within

discerning consumer to end up with a policy that's drastically different from

what they had expected. What agents often leave out, however, is the fact

that they get paid for every policy they sell. And insurance companies vary widely with respect to how much they pay agents who sell their policies. Their bread and butter

communities. SeeMilk/D3

on the line, some agents could be steering custom-

ers toward policies that will make them the most

money, a possibility that Cheryl Martinis, spokeswoman for the Oregon Insurance Division, said her

office warns people about. Clients shouldn't hesitate to ask their agent what

commissions they receive from variouscompanies,

Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Kindergarten student Noah Wisemsn, 6, right, drinks white milk along with his classmates during Iunchtime at Culver Elemen-

A stu d ent grabs a plain milk for lunch at Culver Elementary School. The Culver School District

tary School.

restricted serving chocolate milk in its school lunches to Fridays about three years ago.

she said. Commissions are the same regardless if the agent sells the plan through Cover Oregon or directly through the company. SeeAgents/D2

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"1spa@.lasercenter 2065 NEWilliamson Ct. Bend 54 I - 3 30-5551 www.ExhalespaAndLasercenter.com


D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

HEALTH EVENTS GREAT DISCUSSIONS:SAY WHAT? HEARINGAND LISTENING: Join in a lively discussion with other seniors; free, registration requested; 1-2:30 p.m. today; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-617-7080 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. "NO PAINLIFEGAIN" WORKSHOP SERIES: STRESS:Learn strategies that help with chronic pain; proceeds benefit Healing Reins Therapeutic Riding; free, donations accepted, registration requested; noon-1 p.m. Friday; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 N.E. Penn St., Bend; 541-318-7041 or www. healingbridge.com. IMPACT CONCUSSIONBASELINE TESTING:For children ages 11-17 who have not already received the baseline through their high schools in the past two years; $10, registration required; 9, 10 and11 a.m. Monday; The Center: Orthopedic& Neurosurgical Care & Research, 2200 N.E. Neff Road, Suite 200, Bend; 541-322-2321. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:To schedule an appointment or to learn more call 800-REDCROSS;11a.m.-4 p.m .M onday; RedmondGrange,707 S.W .Kalama Ave.; 541-480-4495 or www.red

crossblood.org/pnw. "SLEEPWELL WORKSHOP": Learn proven sleep and relaxation techniques; bring pads and pillows to lie on; $36 in district, $49 out of district; registration required; 5:30-7 p.m.Monday;Bend SeniorCenter, 1600 S.E Reed Market Road;

541-388-1133 or www.register. bendparksandrec.org. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Toschedule an appointment or to learn more call 800-REDCROSS; 11 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Tuesday; Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 450 S.W. Rimrock Way, Redmond; 541-548-3684 or www. redcrossblood.org/pnw. CHILDREN'S MENTALHEALTH PANEL DISCUSSION:Local experts lead a discussion on children's mental illness; free; 7-9 p.m. Tuesday; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-382-4321 or www.nami centraloregon.org. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Toschedule an appointment or to learn more call 800-REDCROSS; 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Wednesday; Big Country RV, 63500 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 800-537-7841 or www.redcrossblood.org/pnw. KIDS ANDKARMA:A weekly yoga class for children to help develop self-confidence and learn to manage stress; adjacent to adult class; $5; 3-4 p.m. Wednesday; Juniper Yoga, 369 N.E. Revere Ave., Suite104, Bend; 541-389-0125. REBUILDINGBONES WITHOUT MEDICATION:Part of Central Oregon Community College's Community Learning Healthy Living series; $15, registration required by Jan. 24; 10:30 a.m.-noon Jan. 31;COCC, 2600 N.W. College W ay, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/community-learning.

How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents@bend bulletin.com orclick on"Submitan Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 daysbeforethe desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses.Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

PEOPLE • Jennlfer Grlswold recently joinedBend Memorial Clinic's pediatric department. She received her undergraduate degree in psychology from the University of California, Davis, and hermaster's in nursing from Massachusetts General Hospital Institute of Health Professions in Boston. Griswold hasmorethan 15 years of experience inpediatric medicine andwill be practicing at the

BMC BendWestside Clinic, 1080 S.W.Mt. Bachelor Drive. • Peter Schrey recently joinedStep &Splne PhysicalTherapy in Sisters. Hereceivedhis doctorate in physical therapyfrom RegisUniversity in Denverandbecameboard certified in orthopedics in2011.Schrey has completed morethan500hours of post-graduatecontinuing education and has eightyears ofexperiencepracticing physical therapy.

MEDjCjNE HEALTH WISE

4stepsfordattlinl influenza Know the signs: CaninAlways get your annual • clude fever, cough, sore • flu vaccine. It protects throat, runny or stuffy nose, against three of the most body aches, headaches, chills common strains: H1N1and and fatigue. Sometimes there influenza Aand B. It's strongly can be vomiting and diarrhea. suggested for young children, the elderly, pregnant women and those with pregnancy, asthma, diabetes, heart and lung disease.

1

2

By Menssa Healy Los Angeles Times

larly sneaky trick for a virus already known for lying in

As if the fiery rash and wait for years to attack. Left painful blisters of shingles behind when an individual were not punishment enough, is infected with wild-type t he a v erage p a tient w h o chickenpox, the herpes zossuffers a resurgence of the ter virus settles in and eludes dormant chickenpox virus detection by the immune sysknown as herpes zoster — or tem by lying dormant. Typshingles — has a higher risk ically decades later, when a of heart attack or mild stroke person who had chickenpox two decades ormore afterthe has some dip in immune reblisters and rash recede, a sistance, the v i r u s t r avels new study says. along a sensory nerve to the For those who suffer a case skin, where it can replicate of shingles between the ages and cause painful, burnof 18 and 40, the outlook is ing rashes and blisters. The w orse: They're m ore t h a n

twice as likely to suffer a mild stroke and 50 percent more likely to have a heart attack

than those who have not had shingles. British researchers calcu-

lated these increased average risks even after taking account of subjects' cardiovascular risks, such as smoking, obesity, hypertension, diabetes and w o rrisome

cholesterol readings. In other words, all other things being equal, a case of shingles in your medical history puts you at higher risk of cardiovascular disease. Writing i n t h e j o urnal Neurology, the British au-

nerve inflammation it causes can persist for weeks and

even months, and for an unlucky few, the resulting nerve damage can bring unrelenting pain.

By Dr.M.P. Ravindra Nathan uations, increase productivity Special to the Times

Life comes in different packages to different people.Some are lucky to go through their days without major problems. But for many of us, challenges abound — and so does stress. However, if we face our daily struggles with a degree of equanimity and common sense, we can live a happy life. Easier said than done, right? Well, that is where meditation comes in.

"Meditation is a c onscious effort to change how the mind works," said the

Lord Buddha, an original proponent of this discipline. The main purpose is to keep your mind steady, strong, relaxed and peaceful. Then you can t hink

better, act properly, lessen reactivity to unpleasant sit-

Agents Contlnued from 01 Trillium

Com m u n ity

Health Plan, for example, pays agents $7.75 per enrolled member per month in an individual plan, while

say the findings strengthen

Moda Health Plan, for ex-

ample,pays 6 percent of premiums for individual plans. An agent who sells Moda's silver plan — the standard rate for which is

$221 per month — would make about $159 a year on

which doesn't sell policies in Central Oregon, began this year offering agents a flat payment of $180 per client enrolled in an individu-

al policy. The agent gets to keep that money even if the client drops out of the pol-

icy, said Kaiser spokesman Michael Foley. In some cases, the com-

t han 1,800 p eople i n t o

its plans through the exchange, the second-high-

rounding an eye, the patient has a nearly five-fold risk of stroke in the year following. But over as many as 23 years, shingles patients followed

est, while L i feWise had

subjects who had not had

The findings raise the possibility that getting the shinleashed as shingles, the her- gles vaccine could for many pes zoster virus may plant head off a slide toward cardioseeds ofdestruction in some vascular disease. But other of the body's blood vessels studies will be needed to test which could take years to that proposition, the authors wreak havoc. They suggest acknowledged. that the herpes zoster may In the meantime, they sugbe an underappreciated con- gested, the shingles vaccine tributor to the incidence of could be off ered to any pacardiovascular disease in a tients that are at risk of carpopulation. For untold num- diovascular disease in a bid to bers, they suggest, the dis- reduce their risk factors. And ease process that ends in a patients who've had shingles heart attack or stroke may before age 40 might be treathave started with a mild or ed more aggressively to drive asymptomatic case of herpes down heart attack and stroke zoster infection. risk, and urged to live a heartThat would be a particuhealthy lifestyle.

~

~

~

Source: U.S. Centers for Disease Control

— San Jose Mercury News

Initially, it was difficult for

University found that "amonth

me to focus on one image. Af- of relaxation exercises boostancient sages and saints spent ter the first minute, my mind ed natural killer cells in the a lot of time in meditation. started wandering. With per- elderly, giving them a greater and improve creativity. Our

Volumes have been written

sistent effort it has gotten bet-

immunity to tumors and vi-

on the subject, but it's best not ter. Every morning I sit in my to make it too complicated. prayer room, close my eyes, Start with these four P's: concentrate on the image of I. Place: Find a place where my late parents and pay atyou won't be disturbed. tention to my breathing. I start 2. Posture: Sit in a comfort- the session by chanting "Om" able posture with legs crossed. and mentally repeat the manIf you prefer, you can sit in a tra. Once I finish my five minchair or lie down on the floor utes, I feel relaxed and ready or abed. to face the world. 3. Practice: Close your eyes, Sri Swami Rama, one of the f ocusing attention on y o u r first yogis studied by scienbreathing. Try summoning tists at the Menninger Clinic the image of a deity or some- in Houston back in the 1960s, body you love and respect. demonstrated his ability to vol4. Problems: Be prepared to untarily control his heartbeat, confront and conquer prob- blood pressure and body temlems like body discomfort, in- perature, allofwhich are nortruding thoughts and extrane- mally considered to be involous disturbances. Try to note untary. Imagine having comthem and let them pass, rather plete control of your mind and, than allowing them to become through that, your entire body. your focus. A study at the Ohio State

ruses." People who practice meditation have significantly lower blood pressure, according to studies from Harvard

MedicalSchool.The body becomes less responsive to stress hormones. This is the essence

of biofeedback as a treatment for hypertension. R emember, meditation i s

a spiritual journey, requiring months or years of practice to become good at it. So if you are a beginner, allow yourself just five minutes of silence twice a day and gradually increase it to fifteen minutes. I promise you the rewards will be great. — M.P. Ravindra Nathan is a Hernando County cardiologist and author of "Stories From My Heart: A Cardiologist's Reflections

on the Gift of Life."

2012insurancecompanyagentcommissions* vs. CoverOregonenrollments asofJan. 5 Companies are ordered from highest to lowest by estimated annual commissions. Moda Health: 6 percent of client premiums 13,488 people; 9,611policies LlfeWiseHealthPlanof Oregon: $18 per memberpermonth (PMPM) 479 p eople; 347 policies Kaiser Permanelte:** Flat rate of $180 for eachclient enrolled 1,838 people; 1,504 policies Health Republic Insurance: $1 4 PMPM 450 people; 341 policies Pacificsource Health Plans: $11 PMPM (average) 868 people; 650 policies Bridgeepan Health Company: $9 PMPM 9 people; 9 policies ** Health Net: 4 percent of client premiums 430 people; 330 policies Trillium: 1 client; 1 policy $7.75 PMPM ProvidenceHealth Plan: Nof l at rate; agents hit tiers 1,061 people; 788 policies depending onbusinessmodel OregonHealth Co-op: Information not provided 153 people; 126 policies Atrlo Health Plals:** Information not available 14 people;12 policies. Source: Information provided by companies *For individual policies. Group policy commissions may differ.

**

Not offered locally.

best policy for each individu-

c ommission rates that a r e respect to how much business crease one's premiums. attractive to agents. Moda's they bring in, said spokesman Kaiser Per m a nente, w ebsite contains a vid e o Gary Walker. As of Jan. 5,

of the trigeminal nerve in the face andaffects the area sur-

mild strokes than matched

~

is free and does not in-

along the opthalmic branch

percent more heart attacks and roughly 16 percent more

~

that client. Using an agent

It's been known that when the shingles v i ru s t r avels

thors of the latest report shingles. the suspicion that once un-

pays almost double that rate at $14. LifeWise Health Plan of Oregon pays $18. Some companies pay agents based off a percentage of clients' premiums.

panies with the highest commission rates are leadingthe enrollments through Cover Oregon. As of Jan. 5, Kaiser had enrolled more

in the current study had 14

Faithfully take pre• scribed antiviral ~drugs: l~ Within two days of getting sick is best, but taking them later is better than not taking them at all. Theycanmake the flu milder and shorten the time you are sick.

Meditation: 5 minutestoward improving health

Health Republic Insurance

Shingles canincreaserisk of heart attack andstroke

Take all possible preven• tive actions: Wash hands frequently. Avoid contact with sick people. If youhaveflu symptoms, stay homefor at least 24 hours after your fever isgone.Keepsickkidshome from school. Coveryour nose and mouth with a tissuewhen you cough or sneeze—and throw the tissuesaway.Avoid spreading germs bynot touching your eyes,noseand mouth. Drink plenty of fluids and get bedrest.

enrolled 479 people. Health Republic had enrolled 450 people, and Trillium had enrolled only one person. Moda is seeing far-andaway the highest enrollment numbers through Cover Oregon: a b out 13,400 people as of Jan. 5.

al client, even if it means less

money for her. "I would make even less Providence had enrolled 1,061 people in 788 plans. money if I had unhappy clioffer commissions that benefit The I n surance D i v i sion ents that left me because I was them as well as the company. does not regulate commis- just trying to do what was best In an e mail explaining sionrates,aside from as they for me and not best for them," PacificSource Health Plan's relate to a company's overall she said. "So that's the way I commission rate, s pokes- administrative costs. Nonethe- work." That's not to say there arwoman Kathy Jost said the less, Martinis said, it's helpful en't unscrupulous agents out company pays a "competitive information. "It's a good consumer tip," there, Akenson said. commission rate for the as"Unfortunately, I think there sistance they provide in the she said. marketplace." Cover Oregon charges in- are, as in most things, peoAt the same time, insurance surance companies a fee for ple who are going to choose companies are facing mount- selling policies off the ex- the wrong thing that benefits ing pressure to keep their ad- change, currently $9.38 per them and not necessarily the ministrative costs down un- member per month. A docu- client," she said. der the Affordable Care Act, ment on the exchange's webNeils, of Agape Insurance, which mandates that a minisite analyzed the scenario of said a professional agent will mum of 80 percent of premium more than doubling that fee put the client first. His own revenue from individual poli- to $20.67 in 2015 once the ex- philosophy is to not regard cies must be spent on medical change's federal funding dries commissions when he's helpcare. up. Cover Oregon spokesman ing clients. Over the years, that's meant Michael Cox said that is not That said, no one is perfect, agent commissions have spi- currently a proposal. he said. "Are we completely unbiraled downward, said Jeffery Kristine Akenson, an agent Briggs, owner of Briggs Finan- with High Desert Insurance ased?" Neils said. "No, there's cial Services in Bend. in Bend, said she never sells no person on Earth who is "We make less," he said, insurance based on what she completely unbiased." "and I think we're a great ser- gets from the company. Rath— Reporter: 541-383-0304, vice to our clients." er, she always tries to find the tbannow@bendbulletin.com In a report designed to promising that the company values its producers and will

That's from atotal of nearly 19,000 people covered under newly purchased poli- help insurance companies set cies through the exchange. "strategic" commission rates, Moda's success on the New York-based consulting exchange is not surprising; firm D e l oitte r e commendtheir policies are the cheap- ed they shift away from the est at every tier. long-running practice of pay"We think that we priced ing agents based on a percentand packaged a range of age of premium and move toplans that would appeal ward per-member per-month to people throughout the systems. state," said Moda spokesThe report also recomman Jonathan Nicholas, mends companies reward "and they seem to be re- their top earners with highsponding in a way that we er commissions rather than hoped they would." compensating equivalently regardless ofperformance. Finding the right rate Providence Health Plans Insurance companies, has adopted such an approach, for their part, try to set and now pays its agents with

Juniper Ridge Clinic

Tom Coehlo, FNP-C • Familyhealth care 7 yrs and above • Treatment of adolescents and adults withADD

• SchoolAge Vaccines available • U.S.DOT/National Registry of Certified Medical Examiners

Office 541.385.5515 •

' •

Please call office for questions.

I

Currently accepting private insurance


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

TION BETTER CHOICES

Eating nutritiously in the sticks? Yesyou can This question comes from afriend: "Iknow someone who ismovingto the sticks for an extendedperiod, and will probably go into town once a week for groceries. However, refrigeration is very, very limited. Howcan hemake sure he gets his leafy greensand such with no refrigerator to keepthings cool?" I'd advise your friend to eat his leafy greens on thedays hegoes to town when they are asfresh as possible. Fresh produce losesvaluable nutrients during days of storage, evenwith refrigeration. In fact, a comprehensive study on this topic by the University of California at Davis found that — by the time

they are consumed —fresh, frozen or canned vegetables and fruit may contain similar amounts of nutrients.

Milk

Canned fruits and vegetables are packed at their peak of freshnessand retain most of their original nutrients since the canning process shields the food from oxygen. Theheating process of canning primarily lowers the vitamin C content of cannedfood, the researchers said. Some nutrients may bemore concentrated in cannedfoods. One-half cup of canned tomatoes, for example, contains almost12 grams of lycopene, an antioxidant that may help reduce the risk for heart diseaseand some cancers such asprostate cancer. Amedium fresh Cuncooked) tomato contains less than 4 grams of lycopene. Canned pumpkin, according to data from the United States Department of Agriculture, contains more than three times the vitamin A asfresh cooked

pumpkin. Lutein, an antioxidant in corn known to protect the eyesfrom cataracts and macular degeneration, was found by researchers at Cornell University to more bioavailable in canned corn than fresh. Heat treatment also kills dangerous bacteria. And in thecase of canned carrots, tomatoes andspinach, it also enhances the body's absorption of carotene, anantioxidant that converts to vitamin A in the body.And Oregon State University scientists found that canned blueberries havesomeenhanced antioxidant benefits over fresh blueberries. Have your friend stock up oncitrus fruits like orangesand grapefruit that don't require refrigeration andare rich sources of the vitamin C heneeds. Tell him to ditch the salt shaker,

since canned foods arenotoriously high in sodium. Or look for lower sodium versions. Remember too, that canned food is cooked food. Acanned pear is a poached pear.Cannedtuna has been filleted and steamed.Cannedbeans havebeensoakedand simmered.This might save him someenergy costs. Experts say the canning process helps a food maintain its quality and nutrient content for about two years. And it remains safe to eat aslong asthe container is not bulging or leaking, according to the CannedFoodAlliance. Bottom line. Fresh, frozen or canned, your friend in the sticks needs avariety of foods from eachnutrient group: fruit, vegetables, grains, protein, and calcium sources. A study at the University of Massachusetts concluded that

F

that after chocolate milk was

removed from school lunches the percentage of children who chose plain milk jumped to about 42 percent from 6 percent. Overall milk consumption,

however, dropped from about 69 percentofstudentswho selected milk — an average of 63 percent of which was chocolate — to 42 percent. That

Thinkstock

Canned tomatoes have three

times more lycopene than an uncooked tomato.

"it's the ingredients you choose, not the form of the ingredients, that really determine a recipe's nutrient content." — Barbara Quinnisa registered dietitianand certified diabetes educatorat the Community Hospital ofthe MontereyPeninsula.

Breast milk preferred despite contaminants

gl

II

Continued from 01 Smith and his team found

ToMATOES

~%p.

data could be skewed, how-

By Stephanie M. Lee

ring PFAAs to their children

San Francisco Chronicle

through their milk. The scien-

It's advice that doctors impart t o m o t hers over and over: Breast milk is the most nutritious, fortifying

tists found no immediate signs

food they can feed their babies.

children are unlikely to suffer long-term health effects.

But women may not be

"It isa source of concern,

of harm in the children, and noted that since the source of contamination has ended, the

aware of the strong possi- of course — as is anything at bility that their milk is also all that's a man-made chemi-

ever,by the large proportion of students who chose bottled water, an average of about

less than pure, an unin-

cal in the environment that's

49 percentof students after chocolate milk was removed.

tended consequence of living in a developed nation.

potentially getting into breast milk," said Tony Fletcher, an

That's b e cause

Bottled water is usually not

served during school lunches, but became necessary to offer as an alternative for students

t h e ir

epidemiologist at the London

bodies are exposed to School of Hygiene and Tropichemicals like pesticides, cal Medicine who led the study

1

flame r e tardants, a ddi-

along with collaborators that

who did not choose plain milk.

tives and other chemicals from h ousehold p rod-

included former UC Berkeley

Critics of chocolate milk in

ucts, air, water and food.

Breast milk's high fat and

schoolsare chiefly concerned about the amount of added

sugar in chocolate milk versus plain milk, which con-

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Students eat lunch and drink plain milk during lunch at Culver Elementary School. The Culver School District restricted serving chocolate milk in its school lunches to Fridays about three years ago.

tains natural sugar. In Smith's study, he found that prior to

chocolate milk removal, Madras Primary students aver-

to be served on occasion in Bend-La Pine Schools.

aged about 7.9 grams of added Bob Eberhard, the owner sugar per lunch. Afterward, of Eberhard's and the school's that went down to about 0.7 milk supplier since 1969, grams of added sugar, he said. spoke against the proposal at Smith has calculated the the Jeff erson County School amount of added sugar kids Board meeting, even passing get from flavored milk each out samples of his company's day could add almost 2 pounds chocolate milk for the board perchildperschoolyear,oral- members to try. "The only difference bemost 25 pounds over 13 years of schooling. tween regular milk and chocThe researchers also mea-

olate milk is the fact that we

sured the amount of liquid the put some cocoa powder in it students actually drank with- and some sugar in it," Eberthe lunch line, including water

in the selections they made in

hard said in an interview. "But all the nutrients are still there.

and milk. Prior to the removal of chocolate milk, students

That outweighs the little bit of sugar — and the cocoa powder

drank an average of 0.57 cups is not even an issue." of their beverage of choice. AfEberhard said he didn't terward, they drank 0.63 cups.

Although the study was

make the Bend-LaPine meeting, but he did work with Ter-

small — it only included about 300 kids — S m ith f eels it

ry Cashman, the district's

holds weight as an argument against serving chocolate milk in schools. "The argument for years has been if you take flavored milk away, they're not going to drink milk," he said.

and operations, and "made sure he had the information he

"What our study showed is that the white milk choice did

increase as well, and that was d efinitely c o ntradictory

to

what the argument had been for years."

Conflicting opinions Smith and his team took

their results before the Jefferson County School Board in late August 2013. The mem-

bers debated a proposal to limit chocolate milk to Fridays only, but ultimately rejected

the proposal. The Bend-La Pine School Board agreed to hear arguments on the issue back in May 2012 after receiving a petition with more than 500

signatures urging it to ban flavored milk in schools. The board did not vote on the is-

sue, and chocolate milk is still served in schools. Since the U.S. Department

of A g riculture m andated that flavored milk served in schools be fatfree, chocolate

milk has become the only flavored milk served in local

schools.That's because local supplier Eberhard's Dairy Products in Redmond wasn't

able to f ormulate fat-free strawberry or root beer-flavored milk — flavors that used

director of nutrition services needed." Plain, 1 percent milk has 12

grams of natural sugar, Eberhard said. When the company makes chocolate milk, it adds 10 grams of sugar, bringing

line. She could not provide

Dietetic Association in 2008

numbers on the amount of milk being taken or thrown away. Students are not required to take milk, as long as they have

found that consuming either flavored or plain milk had a positive impact on nutrient intake and neither were asso-

other components on t h eir

body mass index measures. That study was funded by

trays that meet federal guidelines, Cretsinger said. "They don't have to take the

ciated with adverse effects on the private consulting firm ENVIRON Inter n ational

milk, but, all in all, they do," Corp., whose principal conshe said. sultant lists dairy as an area S chools are r e quired t o of expertise on the company's abide by a strict set of nutrition website. guidelines under the Healthy, B rian W ansink, a Co r Hunger-Free Kids Act of 2010 nell University professor and that include specific levels of co-director of the Cornell Cenfruits, vegetables, whole-grain ter for Behavioral Economics foods, milk, fat, calories and in Child Nutrition Programs, sodium. Removing the choc- co-wrote the Journal of Nutriolate milk eliminated sugar tion Education and Behavior content that was making it dif- article. He said the stringent ficult to meet the guidelines, peer-review processarti cles Cretsinger said. go through before being pubE berhard, o n t h e o t h e r lished in academic journals hand, said he thinks schools is a "powerful equalizer" that would need to change their ensures they are based on menus to have enough nutri- high-level research as opposed ents to meet the guidelines if to questionable press releases they took away the chocolate put out by a dairy council. milk. Asked about the multitude

The power of big dairy It's difficult — if not impos-

of marketing content that's

circulated by the dairy industry, Wansink said he doesn't

sible — to find studies on the pay much attention to that. In serving to 22 grams. health effects of flavored milk fact,he said,he doesn't read Eberhard's has r educed compared with plain milk that other articles beyond his own the number of calories in its are not sponsored by the dairy research. chocolate milk from 190 calo- industry or the USDA, one of In the end, taking away ries per serving in 1967 to 130 the responsibilities of which small indulgences like choccalories as of 2011, and it's fat- is to keep dairy farmers in olate milk d o esn't actually free, as per USDA regulations, business. lead to healthier food choices, Eberhard said. A 2012 study in the Journal Wansink said. In fact, it can The Culver School District, of Nutrition Education and Be- actually prompt people to act a three-school district within havior, for example, found that out by doing the opposite, he Jefferson County, is in its third when flavored milk was re- sard. "You take chocolate milk school year of restricting choc- moved from a school district, olate milk to Fridays only, said overall milk sales dropped by away, people say, 'Wait a Diana Cretsinger, the district's 11 percent, or a daily average minute, I don't have choconutrition services supervisor. of 15 fewer students consum- late milk, I can't get a cookCretsinger said she got the ing milk. The study's authors, ie — why would I eat school idea to cut down on chocolate each of whom work in Cornell lunch?'" He said. "'I'm going to milk while watching the Brit- U niversity's Center for B e - bring potato chips and a 2-liter ish chef and media personal- havioral Economics in Child bottle of Dr. Bob's pop.'" ity Jamie Oliver on TV. Oliver Nutrition Programs, concludS mith countered that i f remarked that anybody will ed that while eliminating fla- schools offer chocolate milk, eat something that's covered vored milk reduces sugar in- parents and students will aum sugar. take, it also takes away a good tomatically think it's OK be"It just kind of got me to source of nutrients, like calci- cause it's served in an educathinking, 'Yeah, that's true,'" um and vitamins A and D. tional setting. she said. "We'll all eat someA closer look at the study, Rather, he said, it should thing with extra sugar in it, however, reveals it was funded be offered once a week as a because it tastes good." in part by the USDA. In fact, "treat." "As opposed to offering it Since makingthe change, nearly half of the published Cretsinger acknowledges the and ongoing research per- daily as something that then district has seen a slight in- formed by the Center for Be- potentially trains the young crease in the amount of white havioral Economics in Child kid's palette to crave a sweet milk being thrown away, al- Nutrition Programs was spon- with every meal for the rest of though she said the students sored by the USDA. their life." are taking just as much milk Another study published in — Reporter: 541-383-0304, as they go through the lunch the Journal of the American tbannow@bendbulletin.com the total sugar content per

researcher Rosana Hernandez Weldon. But, Fletcher said, "This is

protein content tends to attract heavy metals and other contaminants that m ake their w a y i n t o a

not a cause for high alarm in mothers generally." Researchers were swift to

woman's body from the

had been heavily exposed to the chemicals and that most peoplehave much lower levels.

environment,and are then passed on to newborns, al-

point out that the participants

beit usually in minuscule PFAAs are not the only conamounts. taminants to have been found Scientists have known about chemicals in moth-

in breast milk, either. For ex-

month in the scientific journal Environmental Health

also found non-persistent pes-

ample, a 2010 UC Berkeley analysis of breast milk samples provided by women in the Bay Area and Salinas Valley detected polychlorinated biin infants. phenyls and persistent pestiOne of the latest such cides. Both are potential endostudies appeared l a st crine disruptors. The analysis ers' milk since the 1950s. But new research highlights the evolving presence of various compounds

ticides whose health effects Perspectives and involved are largely unknown. a former University of Cali-

Even

so,

ped i atricians

fornia at Berkeley scientist. The study examined the

agree that breast milk's nutritional, i m mune-boosting

milk of mothers who live

combination of f ats, carbo-

in a community near the state line of West Virginia

hydrates, and proteins far outweigh the dangers of its

and Ohio, where a DuPont

environmental pollutants. "I

plant had contaminated the still think that the main gist is drinking water with perflu- that breast-feeding has been orooctanoicacid,or PFOA, shown again and again to be achemicalused in process- associated with optimal infant ing plastics. outcomes," said Dr. V alerie In adults, the chemical Flaherman, an attending phyhas been linked to kidney sician at the newborn nursery and testicular cancer, and

at the University of California

is being phased out in the at San Francisco Benioff ChilUnited States. It belongs to dren's Hospital. a broader classof chemi-

cals called perfluoroalkyl acids, or PFAAs, which are

used for products ranging f r o m

s t a in-resistant

Beltone

sprays to nonstick cooking surfaces. T he detection o f

the

chemical in the community's drinking water led DuPont to settle a class-action

lawsuit for $107 million in 2005 and put the residents

in a unique position for scientific study. Researchers tasked with the assignment interviewed 633 mothers

with young children in 2005 and 2006.

The team

m easured

concentrations of PFAAs in both mothers and in-

fants over time, and found slightly higher levels of the chemical in breast-fed infants than in their nonbreast-fed counterparts,

suggesting that mothers were i ndeed t r ansfer-

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D4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

FrmEss ROAD TO FITNESS

Overheadtriceps extensionwill helptoneyourouter arms DAYTON,Ohio —The overhead Lowering phase: Bendelbows in a triceps extension is a great exercise for slow, controlled manner, allowing the strengthening andtoning the back of dumbbell to travel downward, behind the upper arms. It can beperformed your head. Throughout the exercise, using one dumbbell or two, or with a look straight ahead,and asyou are resistance band. lifting and lowering the weight, keep upper arms stationary and close to TECHNIQUE: your head, with elbows in. Starting position:Stand with arms To complete the repetition, slowly straight andoverhead,holding adumbstraighten the armsand press the bell with handswrappedaround the dumbbell overhead to starting position. handle or with handssecurelycupped around oneend. Tohelp maintain normal Repeat. posture/alignment of thespine, pull the TIPS: shoulder bladesdownand backslightly, •The overhead triceps extension andengagetheabdominalmuscles. can be performed onearm at a time.

ru o exercise

In this case, while lifting and lowering the weight with the right arm, use the left hand to hold the upper arm/elbow in place. • If you have existing joint problems or medical conditions, get clearance from your doctor before starting an exercise program. • Do your best to maintain a normal lumbar arch. If your low backtends to overarch, you cantry doing the exercise in a seatedposition, using a chair with a back rest low enough sothat it will not get in the way of themoving weight. • During the lowering phase of the

exercise, the triceps are lengthening/ stretching. While during the pressing phase, they arecontracting/strengthening. For the fullest strengthening effect and optimal range of motion, be sure to lower the weight to its furthest comfortable range of motion, and tighten the back of the upper armsonce the weight has come to astop overhead. Beginners should start with one to two sets, performing eight to 12 repetitions or as many aspossible with good form. This exercise doesnot require Thinkstock heavy weight in order to beeffective. Overhead triceps extension can — Marjie Giiiiamis a personal trainerand be performed using onedumbbell

Tips

fitness consultant. or two.

LQ

Continued from 01 How often should a

2 • beginner work out?

A beginner should aim

Jordan D. Metzl

cent are obese, and only a very Slate small fraction exercise for the N EW YORK — I f t h e r e 150 minutes per week rec-

to work out three times a

were a drug that treated and

minutes of

ommended by the American

prevented the chronic diseas- Heart Association. What can es that afflict Americans and we didn't give it to everyone,

we'd be withholding a magic pill. If this drug was free, in a country that spends more

than $350 billion annually on prescription drugs, where the average 80-year-old takes eight medications, we'd be foolish not to encourage this

we do to motivate them? In a r ecent study, Kevin

Volpp from the Center for Health Incentives and Behavioral Economics at the Univer-

sity of Pennsylvania, took 56 morbidly obese, middle-aged, male participants and studied

c a r diovascu-

lar exercise (walking, jogging, cycling), 30 minutes of strength training (free weights or machines), and 10 minutes of stretching (hold each stretch for 10 seconds). What are the critical areas to work out?

3•

ery doctor in every country

systems to incentivize weight loss. In the world of obesity, morbidly obese men are tough customers; it's very difficult to get them to change their be-

around the world didn't pre-

havior patterns. Obesity and

also known as your core

cheaper and saferalternative as first-line treatment. If ev-

scribe this drug for every pa- related conditions and diseastient, it might almost be con- es, including high blood pressidered medical malpractice. sure, diabetes and high cholesWe have that drug today, terol, account for more than 50 and it' s safe,free and readily percent of annual health costs available. in the U.S. Solving the obesity Exercise has benefits for epidemic is the key to reducing every body system; it is ef- health care costs. fective both as a t r eatment Volpp randomly divided and for prevention of disease. subjects into three groups: a It can improve memory and control group and two financoncentration, lessen sleep cially incentivized groups, in disorders,aid heart disease a study in which the goal was by lowering cholesterol and to achieve a 16-pound weight reducing blood pressure, help loss over 16 weeks. The consexual problems such as erec- trol group was weighed at regtile dysfunction, and raise low l ibido. Exercise does it a l l . Even with cancer, particularly colon and recurrent breast

ucated onthe role of exercise

financially incentivized to and nutrition for weight loss treat disease. The more tests at the beginning of the study. that are run on patients, the

After 16 weeks, both the fixed

more medicines that are dis- payment and lottery system pensed, the more procedures subjects had lost more than that are performed, the great-

16 pounds while the control

er the financial burden for us all. Despite far outspending any country in health care, the United States is currently

group had not. The financial

ranked 28th in life expectan-

isn't a

incentive was relatively small,

averaging $350 in total payments over 16 weeks. This l o n g-term s olution:

cy. Our current system does Four months after the study's very little to encourage pre- completion, most subjects ventive health. We are mort-

gaging our country's financial future to pay for increasingly expensive treatments for the

had returned to their prestudy weight. But it shows that even

the most challenging cases of obesity can be helped with the

same diseaseswe could effec- right incentives. tively delay or prevent. In the U.S., we routinely in-

Medicinal movement

I like to start wrth legs, because they are your body's foundation, and your stomach muscles, muscles. But remember, your body will burn more Fitness instructor Jeff Pierre, left, and editor Eddie Alvarez do pushups. fat if you develop muscles throughout your e ntire body.My recommendation

centivize behaviors deemed

conducive to a highly funcProfessionally and person- tioning society. Financial inally, I have made dispensing centives encourage marriage, the drug of exercise a large having c hildren, o w ning part of my life. I treat limping property, even accruing debt. and hobbled athletes of all As much as we believe we are ages in my sports medicine free to choose, Big Brother's practice at the Hospital for tax code is pulling our strings Special Surgery in New York from above. I'm not arguing City. My waiting room is filled that this is poor policy. On the with 8-year-old gymnasts to contrary, encouraging favor80-year-old marathoners, all able behavior for the greater wanting one thing: movement. good helps keep the fabric My job is to fix their aches and of our society together and pains and to keep them going. the wheels of our economy Before and after work, I am turning.

in one session, work your

biceps (pull) in the same session.

4•

I'm overweight. What can I do?

Have an

a ssessment

done by a fitness instruc-

tor. The assessment will give you information about your body composition and help you set realistic goals. Many people want to lose weight, but what they re-

ally want to do is lose fat. Focus on body composition (your body fat percentage); the right percentage for you depends on your overall health, age and sex. A fitness instructor can personalize a body fat goal for you. And remember, the more muscle you build, the easier it will be to burn fat. That's

Fitness instructor Myriam Charleston performs dips.

Pierre helps Alvarez perform a rowing workout in the Miami Herald's on-site fitness center. Doing

5

7

Instead, focus on healthy

hear all the time. It is usually

eating, which means consuming healthy carbohydrates (whole wheat bread and pasta), fruits, vegetables and lean proteins (chicken or turkey breast, fish, lightly marbled red meats). Eat five or six times

difficult for women to build program if you can change up muscle, and it usually takes a the routine. Consistency is the long time. Women don't have key to success, so keep yourthe same amount of muscle self interested and change up cells that men have, on aver- the exercises you perform.

a day but eat small portions

build bone density to combat

age. But for women, strength

training is very important because it helps burn fat and

during each meal. Use un- osteoporosis. Muscles also healthy items in modera- help us shape and tone our

you work out daily you won't get sick. I'm also not suggest-

simple sugar/white flour

afraid of building muscles.

league Bob Sallis, past president of the American College of Sports Medicine says, "Lack of fitness is the public health epidemic of our time."

Inneed of incentive Seventy percent of Americans are overweight, 30 per-

ing that exercise cures all ills.

Genetics, chance, socioeconomic,and otherfactorsclearly play significant roles in affectinghealth profiles. What is becoming increasingly apparent, however, is that the drug

calledexercise can help prevent, alleviate, or treat almost every disease state. — Metzl is a sports medicine physician at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York. His newest book is "The Exercise Cure."

A beginner should aim to work out three times a week and have a program that includes at least 30 minutes of cardiovascular exercise (walking, jogging cycling), 30 minutes of strength training (free weights or machines), and 10 minutes of stretching (hold each stretch for 10 seconds).

why an effective weight- a variety of exercises can help prevent boredom lossprogram incorporates with your exercise routine. a good strength-training routine. An effective way to lose fat is to incorpo- make sure you warm up with home'? rate healthy eating habits a brisk walk or light jog for You can purchase a few with frequent, small meals 10 to 15 minutes to get the body items to create a home gym: (five to six per day), car- moving and warm. And don't a stability ball, a mat, a few dio, strength training and forget to stretch. Incorporating dumbbells a n d re s i stance consistency. flexibility, core and strength bands. There are also bodytraining will maintain overall weight exercises you can do: What a b ou t di e t '? body health and minimize the squats, lunges, biceps curls, • What kinds of f o o d chance of injury. dips, crunches, pullups and should I be eating? Can pushups. However, the benefit I'm a woman and I don't of going to a gym lies in the I s til l e a t m y fa v o rite desserts? • want build big muscles. variety of exercises you can Don't use the word "diet." This is a misconception I do. You are less likely to be-

who has run 30 marathons

about inactivity. As my col-

<a~

you work your chest (push)

bodies. So ladies, don't be

but I'm much more worried

. rg ]

balance. For instance, if

tion, like desserts and other

thing as too much exercise,

®

groups (Iegs, back, chest) with minor ones (biceps, triceps, calves) and incorporate push/pull movements to create muscle

I can't promise you that if

what you might call an exercise fanatic. There probably is such a

4

is to work major muscle

one of them, an avid athlete and 11 Ironman triathlons. I'm

Photos by Marsha Halper/Miami Herald

ular weekly intervals with no

financial reward. One financially incentivized group was given a fixed sum of money cancer, the data show clearly weekly that they could win if that exercise is a deterrent. they hit their target weightNewer studies on a glyco- loss goal per week, and the protein called Interleukin 6 other group was enrolled in a suggests that general body lottery system in which they inflammation, a factor in al- had the chance of winning most every chronic disease, is smalleror larger amounts of reduced by regular exercise. money but could qualify for The U.S. currently spends payment only if they hit their more than $2.7 trillion, rough- weekly weight goals. Subjects ly 17 percent of GDP, on a from all three groups were edh ealth care system that i s

• ae ~. ~>

week and have a program that includes at least 30

a personal trainer who can keep you motivatedand can

customize a workout program to meet your goals. It is important to set realistic goals

and track your progress so you don't become discouraged. And if you miss some workouts or have a weekend where yo u o v erindulged, don't despair! Just rededicate

yourself and get back to your routine.

come bored with your fitness

g

g

I've started workout 'U. routines before and lost interest. What can I do to stay motivated'?

Many people complain of losing interest with their

workouts. One of the most important things is to find How long will it take be- something you enjoy doing. cent of the time and indulge • foreIseeresults? Start with any physical ac20 percent. It depends on the individ- tivity that you enjoy doing to ual. Usually, people will start keep yourself motivated. Is it I'm older. Can I still to notice changes after two or a sport'? Is it working out with • work out safely'? three months. Remember your a friend? Absolutely! As we get results will depend on how A nother option is to h i r e older, o verall m u scle consistent you are with your mass tends to decrease strength training, your cardio REDMOND and there is an increasing and your eating habits. ConOW risk of bone diseases. But sistency in those three areas is you can minimize those the key. gREATS effects of aging with a I don't like going to the 711 SW10th • RedmOnd • (S41) S48-8616 consistent fitness routine. www.redmondwindowtreats.com Prior to each workout, • gym. What can I do at items. Follow the 80/20 rule: Eat healthy meals 80 per-

6

g

~

Newb erry

~ H a bitat WI e v for Humanlty' www.newberryhabitat.org


THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D5

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

so-sore oo o

n rews' nove

TV SPOTLIGHT

Mason Dye

Cathy (Kiernan Shipka) and moppet twins Cory and Carrie

and Kier-

— what she expects of them. For starters, there will be

nan Shipka

"Flowers in the Attic"

star as the older siblings

By Maria Sciullo

none of this undressing in the stashed away same room, or brothers sharin the attic by ing the bed with sisters.

Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

their wicked

On the face of it, Lifetime's "Flowers in the Attic" should

grandmother

8 p.m. Saturday, Lifetime

What doesn't V.C. Andrews' f

w

L1

y4.

really Cathy's story, and Ms. Shipka mopes her way through much of it. Given the young "Mad Men" actress's track record, one presumes

in the in the Lifetime adaptation of the best-selling V.C. Andrews tale "Flowers in the Attic."

have been a slam dunk. 1979 best-selling book have? It contains family strife, a wicked grandmother, plucky kids imprisoned in a mansion, whippings, a tarring, killer in-

" Flowers in th e A t t ic" i s

't

tentions, a greedy mom bent

this was a directorial choice, as was t h e u n comfortably

chummy way Chris interacts with their mother. After learning the incestu-

Courtesy Lifetime

on getting herself writtenback into her wealthy father's will. Also, there's that whole in-

ous truth about his parents, Chris declares, "I don't care

humanity). "Flowers in the Attic" purists, rest assured, Lifetime

cest thing. Fans of the five-book Dollanganger series — press ma- announced last week it will terials state 106 million copies begin work on "Petals on the havebeen sold in 95countries Wind," the second book in the — hated the 1987 movie ver- series. sion with Louise Fletcher and Perhaps "Petals" will imVictoria Tennant for pulling its prove upon "FITA," which punches. plays it safe and a bit boring. That version also added a This is material that screams bizarre new final act, culmi-

for a campy touch, but director

nating in the deadliest wed- Deborah Chow and teleplay ding this side of "Game of writer Kayla Alpert tell the Thrones." It left no chance for

tale with mostly straight faces.

a sequel, horrifying fans who What a tale it is: Mom and wanted to see the entire saga Dad Dollanganger have the played out on the big screen. perfect marriage and four (It's currently available on perfect children. They're all Netflix and well worth check- blond-haired and blue-eyed, ing out, if only for the truly as wellas unnervingly cheerhorrible l a t e-'80s f a shion. ful and loving. Tennant's turtleneck wedding The producers wisely chose ensemble is a crime against to set "FITA" in the 1950s, in a

time before cellphones, Face- her way back into a hefty what you did, Mom, or do. I'll book or Instagram (Cathy's inheritance. always love youf" status: still stuck in attic). Her father is dying, but the A s C o r r in e s e em s i n So when a tragedy forces idea of Corrine showing up creasingly forgetful that she the mom, Corrine, to uproot with four little "devil's spawn" stashed her kids in the attic, the family and return to her might just push him over the that oath will be put to the test. childhood home of Foxworth edge. So, into the attic they go, As worst mom ever begins Hall, the kids — not having at least until the lawyers draw living the high life again and been brought up on a cyni- up a new will. weeks stretch into years, the cal diet of television and that Corrine doesn't count on kids are growing up. Chris d ad-blasted Internet — a r e her mother Olivia's enduring takes notice of Cathy practrusting enough to go along disapproval. As portrayed by ticing her ballet one day and with her scheme. Ellen Burstyn, Olivia is the comments on her tight leotard: Seems Corrine (Heather best thing about the movie. "You're outgrowing a lot of Graham, whose wooden line After Corrine thanks her for things." readings are only slightly taking them in at their time There are so many oppornorth of Carrie Underwood of need, Olivia replies, "I'm tunities for Chris and Cathy in "The Sound of Music") was not your father, Corrine. Your to get together (hiding togethbanished almost 18 years ago groveling has always bored er in a liquor cabinet, taking a when she married her father's me." moonlight swim, Chris washhalf-brother. She figures the Grandma Olivia is big on ing Cathy's hair), the only suronly way to save the family punishment and spares no prise is that it takes so long for and make "all their dreams words telling the childrenit to happen. come true" is to sweet talk teens Chris (Mason Dye) and Oh, brother, indeed.

ac o sex urtin reations i Dear Abby:I have been seeing a guy, 'Karl," for eight months now,

answer is no, your boyfriend may have a physical or emotional proband we have never had sex. After lem, be asexual or gay. two or three months, Ibroughtup the Before agreeing to marry him, subject. Hesaid he was stressed be- I recommend you schedule some cause he had just lost his job. He also time alone together by spending a said there is never any privacy at his few romantic weekends at a hotel place because he has or motel. It may give roommates/tenants. you a better idea of I offered to go to my w hat y ou r f u t u r e PEAR would be like if you ABBY with my son there, it's two decide to tie the the same issue.

Karl says he's very attracted to me, but doesn't want our "time" together to be ruined by

do. In f act, it's understandable.

However, in the case of a wedding or baby shower, people give gifts as a way of offering congratulations and good wishes. And I would hope that, even if same-sex marriage isn't recognized by the state of Texas, your co-workers would do something to honor you if you had a spiritual ceremony, which some religious denominations offer. Dear Abby:I am turning 60 and knot. naturally looking a little "worn." Dear Abby:I am a My man friend keeps telling me 30-year-old gay man who works in I need a facelift and to lose 10 an office with 20 women. In the five

pounds, so I'm starting to save

his current money problems. I told years I have worked here, many of my money. Something tells me he him I understood and I have wait- my co-workers have either gotten wants a "hot chick" and thinks he'll ed. I also explained that it makes

married or had children.

have one once I get these proce-

Our office has a tradition of dures done. It's expensive. What do He now has a job, but we still ha- throwing showers for the lucky la- you think'? ven't had sex. He has, in the inter- dies, and I am always asked to con— Loose-facedLouisianan im, told me he loves me and wants tribute money toward food for the Dear Louisianan: It's not only to marry me. I constantly worry party or an extravagant gift. expensive; as with any other mathatthere'ssomeone elseand wonWhile I'm happy to donate to a jor surgery, there is some risk inder what's wrong with me. I love charity or help a friend in need, volved. If you had said you wanted Karl, too, but I don't know what to Iwonder ifa wedding or a baby cosmetic surgery because YOU do. Please help. shower would be given for ME? Am thought you needed it, I would say — Love, But No Sex I selfish for feelinghesitant to donate to go ahead. However, if it's only Dear Love, But:Is there any inti- money or gifts when it's likely the fa- because your man friend is pushmacy AT ALL in your relationship vor will never be returned? ing you, then he should save HIS — Minority Male in Texas money and offer to foot the bilL with Karl? Is he affectionate? Is there any physical response when Dear Minority: I don't think you — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com he holdsand kisses you? If the are selfish for feeling the way you or PO. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069 me feel insecure and unwanted.

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 47 RONIN3-O (PG-13) 9:25 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 12:40, 3:50, 7, 10:05 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13) I:25, 4: I5, 7:05, 9:55 • AUGUST:OSAGECOUNTY(R) 1:15,4:20,7:15, 10:10 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 3,8:30 • FROZEN(PG) 11:50 a.m., 3:35, 6:45 • HER(R) 11:55 a.m., 3:10, 6:10, 9:05 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 6:05, 9:45 • THE HOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUB IMAX 3-O (PG-13) 12:30,4,7:35 • THE HUNGER GAMES: CATCHINGFIRE (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:05, 6:20, 9:35 • INSIDE LLEWYN DAVIS (R) 1:05, 3:40, 6:35, 9:10 • THE LEGEND OFHERCULES(PG-13) 3:20, 9 • THELEGEND OF HERCULES3-O (PG-13)12:50,6:15 • LONE SURVIVOR(R) 12: I0, 3:25, 6:30, 9:20 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEMARKED ONES (R)1:45, 4:45, 7:45, 10 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) Noon, 6 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-I3) 1:35, 4:30, 7:20, 10: I5 • THESECRET LIFE OFW ALTER MITTY (PG)12:05,3:55, 6:50, 9:40 • WALKINGWITHDINOSAURS(PG)12:55,3:15 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)12:20,4:10,8 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.

DAY, JAN. 16, 2014:This yearyou reveal your true inner light. Others come toward you, which allows for many more choices. You also will feel more secure. A newfound confidence affects nearly all

facets of yourexistence. If youaresingle, do not be surprised if someone strolls into your life in the next12 months. You won't be able to Stars showthe kind resist this person. ef day you'll have If you are attached,

** * * * Dynamic as a coupIeyou * p o sti ve ** * Average

** So-so

become much closer. You value your time together

more andmore.

Your domestic life will liven up, as excitement seems to head your way. LEOhas a way of encouraging

you to openup. ARIES (March21-April19) ** * Nearly everyone you meet today will be in a great mood. The oneexception might be an important partner who seems to get easily aggravated. You'll want to consider helping this person change his or her mood. If that doesn't work, just let it go. Tonight: Add a little romance.

TAURUS (April 20-May26) ** You might be inordinately tense right now. It would be wise to go out and get

some exercise orchoosesomeother type of stressbuster. You know what works best for you. A misunderstanding could emerge. Don't let this happen. Tonight: Close to home.

GEMINI (May 21-Juns 20) ** * * You speak your mind, and others seem to get the authenticity of your words. You could feel a bit awkward dealing with someone of importance. Don't

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

worry — your wit will carry you through any problem you might encounter. Tonight: Hang out with friends.

CANCER (June21-July 22) *** * Your possessive sideemerges, which could leave you feeling extremely vulnerable. If possible, detach as quickly as you can. The sooner you do, the better you will feel. A challenge comes from an unexpected interaction. Worry less. Tonight: Your treat.

LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * * A n effort to communicate on a more cordial basis with a loved one will be well received. An unexpected call could result in a lot of talk and excitement. The other party is extremely dynamic, and he or she enjoys that same quality in you. Tonight: Go, do andbe.

VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

you can push someone. The person you are dealing with could be unusually difficult or complex. Be careful to not

let anger becomeacomponent in this struggle. Encourageconversation and brainstorming. Tonight: A must

appearance. SAGITTARIUS(Nov.22-Oec.21) ** * * You'll have an opportunity to learn a lot more about a situation. Explore your options. Tap into information that seems to have considerable validity. In the process, you will see that a new perspective could point to different paths. Tonight: Put on a favorite piece of music.

CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19) ** * A partner's responses will remind you to spend more one-on-one time with this person. A financial matter could demand quick thinking. Understand that you have a choice as to how to handlethe issue. Reach out for feedback. Tonight: Quality time with a favorite person.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)

** * Stop pushing so hard. Beaware of your limits, and consider taking a fewdays off. Take another look at what might be weighing you down. Plan to visit someone at a distance. Whenyou return, you will be at your best. Tonight: Not to be found.

** * * Others will come forward with surprising requests. A blast from the past might call you out of the blue. Maintain a sense of humor, and be willing to do your part to make a situation work. Tonight: Outand about...onceyou decidewho, where and when.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)

PISCES (Feb. 19-March26)

** * * You can't help but go for what you want. Someone's path could be confusing, soyou will opt to become more independent. Others are bound to react. You might anticipate this, yet you still could be shocked by one person's response. Tonight: Ask a friend for advice.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * Use your intuition to see how far

** * Dedicate your time and attention to completing a project and getting past a problem. Your sense of humor will emerge with a partner who might be on the warpath. You have the ability to help this person gain a new perspective. Tonight: Clear your desk, run errands, and then relax. Cr King Features Syndicate

I

Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • THE CRASHREEL(no MPAArating) 8 • THESE BIRDS WALK(no MPAArating) 6 I

I

one that Raj(Kunal Nayyar) has organized for his friends. A test of their scientific knowledge and street smarts, it brings out the best — and the worst — in all of them. 8:31p.m. on 6, "TheMillers" — What's the best age to have that birds-and-the-bees talk with your child? If you haven't had it by the time he's an adult — and been married, to boot — it's probably too late. Nevertheless, when Carol (Margo Martindale) discovers that Tom (Beau Bridges) never had TheTalk with Nathan (Will Arnett), she insists on correcting that oversight. Embarrassment ensues. 9:01 p.m. on 6, "The Crazy Ones" —Singer Josh Groban guest stars in this episode as a former co-worker of Sydney's (Sarah Michelle Gellar) who's infatuated — make that obsessed — with her. He writes her a song, which ratchets up the stalker vibe considerably. Simon (Robin Williams) tries to woo the tourism board in Australia, the site of his last bender, as a client. 9:31 p.m. on 6, "Twoand a Half Men" —With all the wild oats Charlie Harper sowed during his life, it's no surprise that one sprouted. In this episode, which opened Season11, Alan (Jon Cryer) is bowled over by the arrival of a young woman named

Jenny (AmberTamblyn), who shows up at Walden's (Ashton Kutcher) claiming to be Charlie's daughter. She turns out to have a lot in common with her late dad — including a fondness for females. 10 p.m. onTLC,"W elcome to Myrtle Manor" —As the reality series set in a South Carolina mobile home park returns for a

newseason,Beckyfinds herself being put to a test, while Jared conducts an investigation of Chelsey, and Amanda prepares to throw a party. 10:01 p.m. on 6, "Elsmsntary" — When Sherlock and Joan (Jonny Lee Miller, Lucy Liu) investigate the murder of a well-known mathematician, they try to identify both the killer and the purpose of the important equation the victim was trying to solve. Joan isn't sure how to

respond whenaformer patient's son (JeremyJordan)asks her for a loan.

© Zap2it

' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 3:45, 6:30 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 6 • NEBRASKA (R) 4:15, 6:30 • PHILOMENA(PG-l3) 4 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 3:45, 6:15 Madras Cinema 5,101 1 S.W. U.S. Highway 97, 541 -475-3505 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13) 3:10, 6:30 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:30, 7 • PARANORMAL ACTIVI TY:THEMARKED ONES (R)5:15, 7:10 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-I3) 4:15, 6:50 • THESECRET LIFE OF WALTER MITTY (PG)4:50,7:20 •

teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

eeeeeC1ASSIC COVERINGS

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Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 4:30, 7:30 • ANCitORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)6:30 • FROZEN(PG) 4:15 • THEHOBBIT:THEDESOLATION OF SMAUG (PG-13)4, 7:15 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 4:15, 6:45

Also see usfor

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

(541) 388-441 8 lESSCNNM

BEST TIRE IAI.IIE PRONIIE •rg • I

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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • LAST VEGAS (Upstairs — PG-13) 6:30 • SAVING MR.BANKS(PG-13) 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.

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8p.m. on 6, "The BigBang Theory" —"Cutthroat" is not a word generally associated with scavenger hunts, but it fits the

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • THOR:THE DARK WORLD (PG-13)6 • '7heLong BikeBack"screensat9tonight. • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings befofe 7p.m. ifaccompanied by alegal guardian. t

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURS-

TV TODAY

Plae Well, Retire Well

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

775SW BonnetWay,Suite120•Bend 541-728-0321 ewww.elevationcapital.biz


D6 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL

PUT KIDS ON THE RIGHT PATH QLJEsrtoN: How can I put my child on the right path for dental health? ANswER: In just about every aspect of parenting, setting a good example is the best thing a parent can do. Now, add patience,education and positive reinforcement and you're giving your child a nudge in the right direction. And that Carlo Arredondo, applies to oral health habits, too. By the time your child is three, he or she should have a full set of 20 baby teeth. It's time for the child to start brushing. Start with a soft bristled brush and a pea-sized dab of toothpaste. It's fine to sample a few different ones to find one that your child likes. But be sure to pick a toothpaste with fluoride that has been approved by the American Dental Association. Fluoride is important because it strengthens tooth enamel. Show your child how to brush properly, hitting both the backs and fronts of the teeth. When your child is old enough to understand about plaque, the clear film that develops on teeth and holds cavity-causing bacteria, you and your dentist can explain the importance of removing it. Ask your dentist about "disclosing" tablets, which contain a harmless vegetable dye that will adhere to plaque and let a child, and parent, see where plaque lurks. Then let him or her brush it away. As your children grow more independent, they will want to brush their teeth without your help. If you've shown them the right way, they'll handle it fine. Talk with your dentist or with a pediatric dentist, one who specializes in dealing with kids, about other things you can do to put your children on the right path.

QumsTrorc I was recently involved in a car accident, and I have neck pain. My doctor diagnosed me with whiplash, and suggested I go to physical therapy. I already see a massage therapist, so why would I add physical therapy? ANswRR: When you have a whiplash injury, you notonly over-stretch themuscles atthe Zeyla Brandt PT back of your neck, but you also strain all of the individual joints in the neck and may have some pre-existing postural and strength issues that can affect your idealrecovery. Massage is an excellent way to address the muscular component of your whiplash, but not the other components involved. A physical therapist can be of tremendous help, not only can a PT help get your joints moving properly, we can also address the soft tissue irritation, range of motion limitations, muscular weakness, and postural changes. We will also start you on a gentle and progressive exercise program that will help maintain the gains you make in therapy, and reduce the likelihood oflong term symptoms. At Healing Bridge Physical Therapy our h our-long individual treatment sessions are ideal fo r h elping you r ecover from your accident. ~ +pgj I/f gp/'ggp PHYSICAL&THERAPY&

D r. Dondo D e n t a l E x c e l l e n c e D r. Carlo A r r e d o n do , D D S 660 NE 3rd Street, Suite 3, Bend, OR 97701 oDoNDO DENTAL EXCELLENCE

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Z eyla B r a n d t , P T 404 NE Penn Ave, Bend, OR 541-318-7041 www.Healing Bridge.com

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ANswKR:Scars are formed when we damage tissues either surgically or due to other Adam p Aogatea tyPes of trauma. Each time we oPerate we M.D. hea lby making scar or adhesions. We can remove some ormost of the scar,however, Plastic Surgeon new scar will be formed which in some instances may be better than the old scar. For example a person who has had multiple abdominal operations and develops dense adhesions around the bowel may develop a bowel obstruction. If serious enough, they may need to have theses adhesions released surgically. But when we do this, we also cause adhesions to form. As surgeons, we hope that new scaror adhesions don't become so severe as to cause problems. This issue has plagued surgeons for centuries.

BEND P LASTI C SURGERY

A dam P. A n g e l e s , M . D . M edica l D i r e c t o r , B end Pl a s t i c & R e c o n s t r u c t i v e S u r g e r y

2400 NE Neff Rd., Suite B• Bend, OR 97701 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com • info@bendprs.com

Q txsrrow: Ihavecardiovasculardisease.Isit okay for me to use an Infra-red Sauna? ANswER: Recent studies have shown that individuals with cardiovascular disease receive benefits from the use of Infra-Red saunas. Five different studies have looked at this issue. Regular use has helped decrease blood pressure, and in individuals with stable heart failure, they have also shown improvement M.D. after a number of regular sessions. It can be especially helpful for individuals that have mobility limitations, because Infra-Red sauna produces some of the same benefits as exercise itself. So just like exercise can help heart health and blood pressure, it also produces a type of relaxation that can improve mood. Infra-Red sauna is different than the more common Swedish Sauna, which uses high heat. Infra-Red sauna occurs at lower heat, because of the unique way that it heats up. It is enough of a difference that Infra-Red sauna is helpful for high blood pressure, but Swedish Sauna is not recommended, or needs to be done cautiously in individuals with high blood pressure. If you think Infra-Red sauna maybe helpful for you, check with your health care provider, or you can give our office a call.

M ark H a l l , M . D .

(

Mark Hall, MD

541-878-0020 www.centraloregondermatology.com

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QumsTrorc I LOVE eyeliner. I never go without it. I use eye drops during the day (chronic dry eye) so it never looks as good as first thing in the morning. Would permanent eyeliner be a better option? ANswER: Just recently there was an article in Ageless relating to relief for dry eyes. Local eye specialists mentioned one type... Susan Gruber, evaporative dry eye is a blockage of eye lid cosmetichfessional g lands Women are at a higher percentage of dry eyes. Eyeliner, in particular, clogs the ducts under each eyelid that produces oils to keep eyes lubricated. Permanent eyeliner not only looks good all day but is recommended to so many of my eyeliner clients. Topical cosmetics have to be applied and removed daily which is hard on the thin skin around your eyes. Dry eyes cannot be eliminated by permanent makeup but it could really make a difference! Plus think about all the time you will have added to your day not even thinking about it. Any further questions.... please ask! Call me or set up a private consultation.

] Lifestyle Medicine

M ary H u n t s m a n M D 497 SW Century Drive - Ste. 120, Bend, OR 97702 541-213-2265 LifestyleMedc e nt ralOR.com

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www.bendnaturopath.com 541-389-9750

1164 1 / 3 8 9///760 I

QUKsTtox: I found a lump in my breast. What do I do? ANswKR: If you find a lump in your breast contact your primary care physician or OB/CYYN, who will order tests such as a mammogram, an ultrasound or a biopsy. Jaaa VRHAE abarg When the results are received the course Mo;PAcs of treatment is discussed and you may be referred to a Surgeon. You should choose a physician specializing in breast care, who can educate you on the many options and treatments availableto you. Ifyou have breastcanceryou have a choice in the specialists you see. The treatment of breast cancer is advancing and changing continuously so choose physicians who are well educated, interested in breast cancer and compassionate to your individual situation. Ideally your surgeon will develop a treatment plan in conjunction with the St Charles Breast Cancer Center and you. You should thoroughly understand your options before proceeding with definitive treatment.

J ana M . V anAm b u rg , M D , F A C S V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e

central oregon Central Oregon Dermatology De rm a t o l o gy 388 SW Bluff Dr., Bend, OR 97702

. 3 of Central Oregon PC

H olistic W o m e n s H e a l t h c a r e

• II

QLtzslloN: My brother was just diagnosed with Melanoma and he told me I need to see a Dermatologist because I am at increased risk. I am concerned and wanted to know if I should be worried. ANswRR: Your brother iscorrect in his advice to have a thorough skin exam by a Dermatologist. Risk factors for Melanoma Mark Hall, include fair skin, a history of sunburns M.D. (particularly blistering sunburns), history of using a tanning bed, and in your case family history of Melanoma involving a first degree relative. A thorough skin exam by a Dermatologist would determine if there are any moles (nevi) that would be of concern to you. Worrisome clinical features for Melanoma follow the "ABCDE's" you may have heard of. This refers to nevi that show Asymmetry, where one side of the mole does not look like the other. Borders that are irregular or notched, Color that is varied particularly with black or red, and Diameter greater than 6mm (size of a pencil eraser) are also concerning features. Lastly, moles that are Evolving, either new or with a change in size, coloror shape may be worrisome. The Dermatologist will be able to determine if any nevi should be evaluated further with a biopsy, which is done under local anesthesia in the office. The biopsy would show if Melanoma is a concern, and would prompt surgical removal to ensure the margins were clear.

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D r. Azure K a r l i , N . D . Bend Naturopathic Clinic

Acdkg~

541-241-1 299 www.DrDondoBend.com

QUKSTtotv: If scar t i ssue/adhesions are caused from surgical procedures and must be removed surgically, doesn't this create a vicious circle? Can one expect more scar tissue after scar tissue removal?

QUKSTtoN:I think I am starting to go through menopause. Should I be taking hormones? ANswKR: Not every woman needs totake ,/-: hormones during/after menopause. The first step to determining if you are a candidate is talking with a practitioner about menstrual and medical history and obtaining lab values >0 to help determine your menopausal status. Weighing quality of life against possible risks of hormone use with your provider is the next step. The third step is determining if there are other areas of your life and lifestyle that can be modified to support your transition; like foods, fluid intake, sleep, and herbaVsupplemental support. If hormone use is warranted, it is best to use bioidentical hormones which are both commercially available and available through custom compounding. Every woman should be treated individually, so there is no blanket answer for your question. I highly recommend speaking to a provider that is aware of all of the options available to best help you through this shift.

P erma n e n t M a k e u p B y Susan , C P C P 1265 NW Wall Street• Bend 541-383-3387 www.permanentmakeupbysusan.com

2275 NE Doctors Dr., Bend OR97701 s ur g e r y

C ar e e '

541-323-2790 Offices inBend e Redmond

Ask one of our Health Professionals on the following categories Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plasbc Surgery General 8z Specialty Surgery • Dermatology Holisbc Medicine • Physical Therapy Pain Management • Chiropractic • Health & Beauty Send your questions to: Ask A Health Professional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802• Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O.Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:


ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014 • •

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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

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24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad

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Tpe • Bj u l l e t i n :

ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - 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 andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools

208

210

Pets & Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

2 solid Maple bar stools, $60 for the pair. 541-382-6773

00 202

Want to Buy or Rent

1 7++

264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsendSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood

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A1 Washerss Dryers

Cavalier Puppies, 2 females, dewormed, parents on site, $900 ea. 541-408-5909

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$150 ea. Full warranty. Free Del. Also wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355

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97 $ 0 2

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Furniture & Appliances

Exercise Equipment

Musical Instruments

E lliptical t r ainer b y Sharper image, $75. don1puttknowles@gmai I.com

Art, Jewelry & Furs

Computers

R efrigerator new i n crate Hotpoint 18.1 cu.ft. w/ top freezer, $400. 541-549-6639 Wanted: Queen Oak bedframe/headboard for reg. or waterbed mattress. 541-408-0846

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

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The Bulletin recommends extra '

I caution when pur-I chasing products or, services from out of I the area. Sending II cash, checks, or I credit i n f ormation may be subjected to

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I I I FRAUD. For moreI about an I I information advertiser, you mayI

Life Fit R91 Recumbent BikeAbsolutely like new with new batteryoperates perfectly! Clean, always housed inside home. $2100 new; selling for $975. Great Christmas gift! 541-647-2227

OregonI

I c all t h e State

Attor ney ' People Lookfor Information

I General's O f f i ce I

About Products and Consumer Protec- • Services EveryDaythrough tion h o t line at I The Belletin Classiffeds i 1-877-877-9392.

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Golf Equipment

212

Assorted drivers, fairway woods, 3 sets of irons 7 utters, all nice condition. rices nego, or $250 takes it all. Come take a look! 541-306-3662 Brasada Ranch golf membership lease. Unlimited golf, complete access to athletic club, swimming fac., private members pool, all member activities. 541-408-0014 CHECK YOURAD

Antiques 8 Collectibles

5' Showcase, oak & glass, w/sliding doors, $475 541-382-6773 CAROUSELhorse reproduction. Perfect condition. $250. 541-322-6281

The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.

Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to yard care, it's all here in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Colt .32 cal 1903 auto pistol, nickel, beauty! $500. In Terrebonne, OR call 907-299-8869.

IOW'~MI TMIII DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS?

Non-commercial advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12

Oil painting by noted NY artist Julie Heffernan, 22nx18n framed, $500. 541-548-0675

requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systemsl software, to disclose the name of the Mason & Hamlin business or the term Baby Grand Piano. "dealer" in their ads. Beautiful black lacPrivate party advertis- quer finish. Still uners are defined as der warranty. those who sell one A great Christmas computer. Gift! $25,000 (orlg. $47,000) Take care of swingroll61 Ogmail. com your investments

with the help from The Bulletin's Find exactly what "Call A Service you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS Professional" Directory

541-312-2425 Check out the

classifieds online www.tgendtggdleiun.oom Updated daily

ake your giassifie 8

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~g e ek e 2 N Ad must include price of

en te temotgooo ~ or less, or multiple items whose total does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at

541-385-5809 www.bendbullstin.com

GUN SHOW: E Albany Lions, Linn C ounty F airgrounds, E x p o Building. Jan. 18th & 19th. Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-4, Admission $5. Info - 541-928-7710

on the first day it runs Donate deposit bottles/ CASH for dressers, to make sure it is cordead washers/drvers cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for rect. nSpellcheckn and 541-420-5640 human errors do ocferal cat spay/neuter. The Bulletin cur. If this happens to Wanted: $Cash paid for Cans for Cats trailer your ad, please con- W inche s t e r N o d . 9 7 1 2 vintage costume jew- at Bend Petco; or doBULLETINCLASSIFIEOS elry. Top dollar paid for nate M-F a t S mith tact us ASAP so that g a. pump shot g u n , Armoire for sale, Search the area's most Gold/Silver.l buy by the Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or corrections and any 3 0bar r e 1 5 2 5 0 Lol t Cherry/wrought iron comprehensive listing of Estate, Honest Artist at CRAFT, Tumalo. adjustments can be 3&ax.auto,withtwo Perfect condition, classified advertising... Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Call for I g q uantity made to your ad. 1 0 round c l i p s a n d handmade, real estate to automotive, pickup, 541-389-8420. 541-385-5809 s ome ammo, 8 2 5 0 . solid wood. WANT TO BUY merchandise to sporting www.craftcats.org The Bulletin Classified 714-322-4112. 69 ex39 ex23.5". MYRTLEWOOD goods. Bulletin Classifieds Just bought a new boat? $650. 541-382-4842. appear every day in the Sell your old one in the kcaravelli Ogmail.com print or on line. classifieds! Ask about our 208 Call 541-385-5809 Super Seller rates! Pets & Supplies www.bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809

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T HE B ULLETIN

CASH!! MINK JACKET in exc. For Guns, Ammo & c ondition, size 1 0 . Reloading Supplies. $300. 541-548-9970 541-408-6900.

The Bulletin Jack Russell T errier CpncePt Sening Central Oregonsincetgtg The Bulletin recom- purebred puppies, 2 fe- A Coucig1l fieclgn mends extra caution male, 1 male, tri-colored, Visit our HUGE Twin bed frame antique when purc has- rough coat, 1st shot, home decor iron oval shape $65. ing products or ser- avail now, $550 each. consignment store. 541-420-2220 286 288 vices from out of the 541-576-4999 / 536-4115 New items area. Sending cash, (Summer Lake, OR) 240 Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend arrive daily! checks, or credit in930 SE Textron, Crafts & Hobbies Labradors AKCf ormation may b e INSIDE MOVING Bend 541-318-1501 subjected to fraud. Whites & yellows, shots, www.redeuxbend.com ** FREE ** SALE, 61445 SE wormed, health/ hip guar For more informaAGATE HUNTERS 27th St. ¹58B. Garage Sale Kit 541-536-5385 tion about an adver• Saws Fri. and Sat. 9-5. SOM E k Poushers Place an ad in The www.welcomelabs.com G ENERATE tiser, you may call • • t • Bulletin for your gaEXCITEMENT in your the O regon State POODLE pups AKC toy, neighborhood! Repair & Supplies 290 Plan a rage sale and reAttorney General's tiny teacup, cuddly people e e l ceive a Garage Sale garage sale and don't Sales Redmond Area Office C o nsumer dogs. 541-475-3889 forget to advertise in Kit FREE! Protection hotline at classified! Garaae Sale, Sat-Sun, ATTENTION 1-877-877-9392. QueenslandHeelers KIT INCLUDES: 1/1 8-19, 8-5, 1173 NW 541-385-5809. CRAFTERS Standard & Mini, $150 • 4 Garage Sale Signs SPRING FAIR Mar 28-30 • $2.00 Off Coupon To 22nd Place. Lots of girls' The Bulletin 8 up. 541-280-1537 clothes, washer & misc. Serving gengel Oregon sincetgttg at Douglas County FairLOVESEAT www.rightwayranch.wor Use Toward Your grounds. Our 39th year! Southwest style, dpress.com Next Ad Unique Garage Sale at Booths available for • 10 Tips For "Garage entry to CRR Artwork, blues & browns, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Rodent control specialquality crafts. For info, Sale Success!" plush & comfy, slat wall, S/S t ables, send SASE to: Spring ists (barn cats) seek looks like new, fishing tackle, tools, furDoor-to-door selling with Fair 2014, PO Box 22, work in exchange for $225. niture, restaurant equip/ Dillard, OR 97432 fast results! It's the easiest safe shelter, food, PICK UP YOUR 541-923-7616 GARAGE SALE KIT at supplies, 21' toy hauler& way in the world to sell. water. We d e liver! much much more. Fri241 1777 SW Chandler FREE. 541-389-8420. Sat-Sun, 8-4, 12785 NW Bicycles & Ave., Bend, OR 97702 Chinook Dr. (corner of The Bulletin Classified Need to get an Accessories 541-385-5809 ad in ASAP? The Bulletin Antelope), Terrebonne. Serving Cenvel Oregon since1903 You can place it 292 A dog sitter in NE Bend. online at: Loving home w/no cages, Sales Other Areas Store ClosingSale! www.bendbuffetin.com $25day. Lindaatnew Kearney St. Boutique number - 541-576-4574 Siberian Husky pups, 4 NOTICE is closing! wks, 2 males, 3 females, 541 -385-5809 Remember to remove Everything must go! Adopt a rescued kitten $100 deposit. High your Garage Sale signs Sales starts Wed. or cat! Fixed, shots, chance of 2 blue eyes. Pecan dining room table, 2005 Maverick ML7 Mountain Bike, 15" Jan. 15, until gone. (nalls, staples, etc.) ID chip, tested, more! Norm, 541-633-6894 rectangular, 2 leaves, 4 frame (small). Full after your Sale event date Jan. 31) Rescue at 65480 78th padded chairs on rollers. suspension, Maverick (flnal is over! THANKS! Open 11-5, St., Bend, Thurs/Satl Wolf-Husky pups, 3 mos $499. 541-536-5067 s hock, SRAM X O From The Bulletin 355 NE Kearney. Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. old, reduced to $250!! and your local utility Queen brass bed, $85. drivetrain & shifters, 9 www.craftcats.org 541-977-7019 companies. Serta Perfect Sleep matt/ speed rear cassette, Just bought a new boat? Aussies, Mini AKC, blk Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, boxspring, 6 mo old,10-yr 34-11, Avid Juicy disc Sell your old one in the Bulletin tris, red/blue merles 2 2 girls, potty training, UTD warr; orig $500, sell $250. brakes. Well t aken classifieds! Ask about our The gertrtngCentral tgregonetnceIggg litters. 541-598-5314 shots, hea™(th guar., $600 2 oak rocking chairs, $40 c are o f. $950 . Super Seller rates! or 541-788-7799. & up. 541-777-7743 each. 541-306-3662 541-788-6227. www.bendbulletln.com 541-385-5809

CUSTOM ACOUSTIC GUITAR Plays and sounds beautifully. Includes hard-shell case and acoustic pre-amp. Solid top, sides and back. Must see to believe!

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E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

476

Can be found on these pages:

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

:l Qty J~;QJlq t~k

Employment Opportunities

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Automotive

476

Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opporlunitles" include employee and independent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra c aution when a p plying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor 8 I n d ustry, Civil Rights Division,

Looking to hire a parts counter person! • Agriculture and/or automotive parts experience necessary. • Full time with benefits. • Pay DOE • Two locations in Oregon. Call Chuck 509-547-1795

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic 6 In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions

FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

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476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Caregiver DRIVER Pharmacy Prineville Senior care Whispering Winds Reh ome looking f o r tirement is seeking a Temp Positions Caregiver for multiple f ull-time Driver f o r s hifts, part-time t o Call The Bulletin At Sunday — Thursday Luminary full-time. Pass with occasional eve54t -385-5809 Solutions, lnc., criminal background nings. Will drive co. Oregon s leading Place Your Ad Or E-Mail check. 541-447-5773. van and car, as well pharmacist temp At: www.bendbulletin.com as help with various agency, needs help Place aphotoin yourprivate party ad activities. MUT have PRIVATE PARTY RATES Oregon. TURN THE PAGE foronly$15.00par week. prior driving experi- in Central Starting at 3 lines Banking 2 references ence. Benefits availFor More Ads *UNDER '500in total merchandise required. OVER'500 in total merchandise able. Must be outgo) first communit The Bulletin Contact ing, friendly and enjoy 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 Dave Schulberg, interacting with seWe are excited to 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 niors. Please apply in ~daoholhar S Courier-Driver announce an *iiiiust state prices in ad 14 days .................................................$33.50 yahoo.oom available position for The Newspaper in Edu- person at 2920 NE 26 days .................................................$61.50 Conners Ave., Bend, cation Campaign for Garage Sale Special a full-time teller in The Bulletin needs a OR. Pre-employment Plumber, Journeymen 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 (caii for commercial line ad rates) Bend, Oregon. d river t o p i c k u p drug test required. Needed for new cons ponsorship pa y struction. Start immediSalary Range: m ents f r o m lo c a l ately! Good pay/benefits $9.50-$17.00 The Bulletin's A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: businesses on behalf Call Gary, 541-410-1655 "Call A Service Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. of their Newspaper in For more details Education Program. Professional" Directory please apply online: BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) The Bulletin D aytime w or k 2 - 4 is all about meeting www.myfirstccu.org REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well hours daily. Average your needs. EOE $30-$40 per h o ur. as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin chasing products or I Call on one of the Must have reliable, from out of • bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at e conomical tra n s- professionals today! I services the area. Sending portation and proof of any time. is located at: c ash, checks, o r liability ins u rance. 97'I -673- 0764. Linen Supply- I credit i n f ormation 1 777 S.W. Chandler Ave. This is an indepen- Mission Production help • be subjected to dent contractor posi- wanted. Contact our I may Bend, Oregon 97702 The Bulletin FRAUD. t ion. C a l l (330) 541-382-6778, For more informaINTERFOR 605-6767 9 a.m. to 4 Office 541-385-5809 apply I www.mistion about an adverPLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction p.m. only. sion.linen.com. I tiser, you may call Benchman is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Add your web address the Oregon State Interfor is seeking a to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these to your ad and readI Attorney General's newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party ers on The Bulletln's Benchman with 5 years' Special Projects Office C o n sumer s b enching Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. web site, www.bend- experience Protection hotline at l and fitting round saws The Bulletin bulletin.com, will be I 1-877-877-9392. sahahgcaotraf oregon since faoy band saws. Knowl260 260 265 270 able to click through and edge of stellite and carBulletin Advertising Department LThe Bulletin automatically to your b ide t i p ping al s o Misc. Items Misc. Items • Building Materials Lost & Found Special Projects Image Coordinator website. n eeded. Pay u p t o Buyfng Dlamonds Wanted- paying cash REDMOND Habitat Found Haro Mountain $25.15 DOE. Bulletin is seeking a motivated, energetic, Looking for your next for Hi-fi audio & stuRESTORE Bike on Black Butte. /Gofd for Cash Interfor also offers a The creative and skilled image coordinator to join Need to get an ad employee? Call to identify, Saxon's Fine Jewelers dio equip. Mclntosh, Building Supply Resale competitive b e n efits the Special Projects team. A full-time position, Place a Bulletin help Quality at 541-923-7286 after 541-389-6655 JBL, Marantz, D yin ASAP? package. Apply to the image coordinator will excel as a photogwanted ad today and naco, Heathkit, SanLOW PRICES 4p.m. debb.kraftOinterfor.com rapher, page designer and content adminisreach over 60,000 1242 S. Hwy 97 BUYING sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Applicants offered a trator, working side-by-side with the special 541-548-1406 Lost men's w edding Fax it to 541-322-7253 readers each week. Call 541-261-1808 Lionel/American Flyer position must pass a projects managing editor in support of the ring, titanium 8 gold, Your classified ad Open to the public. trains, accessories. pre-employment production of magazines, tabloids, commerD icks S p ortingThe Bulletin Classifieds will also appear on 541-408-2191. drug screen. WHEN YOU SEE THIS Vintage exterior doors, in cial products and other special publications. Goods, at Cascade bendbulletin.com EOE Competent writing and editing skills are also 3 at $50 each or 3 for Village Mall, S a t., which currently BUYING tn SE LLING required. Dec.14th. Feel s ick receives over 1.5 All gold jewelry, silver $100. 541-548-0291 over it. 541-408-4531 Start Acquisition Coordinator million page views and gold coins, bars, M arePiXatBendbijletin.CO m The successful candidate will contribute by: 266 Hourly with bonus, 8 a.m.-5 p.m every month at rounds, wedding sets, On a classified ad Missing - $100 reward for Monday-Friday and/or as needed. Full-time. class rings, sterling silno extra cost. go to Heating & Stoves • Being a Visual Storyteller — The visual return of railroad lamp & This position is responsible for the overall outBulletin Classifieds ver, coin collect, vin- www.bendbulletin.com coordinator must prove to be a capable visual Model T hea d hght reach of acquiring new subscriptions. Part of tage watches, dental to view additional Get Results! NOTICE TO marked by owner, kero- this will entail managing (and negotiating) storyteller, one whose photos and designs not gold. Bill Fl e ming, photos of the item. Call 385-5809 ADVERTISER only complement feature stories, themes and sene lamps, coin collec541-382-9419. or place Since September 29, tion, misc. Indian head Independent Contractor contracts to ensure a messages, but also encourage reader interacdiversification of starts- kiosk, telemarketing, your ad on-line at 1991, advertising for nickels. 541-548-2224 263 tion. The ideal candidate will be Creative Craftsman lawn mower door-to-door, etc. as well as recruitment of bendbulletin.com used woodstoves has Suite-fluent and a key player in driving the look Tools IC Gold, 12.5 hp, 42"; new contract sales companies to match probeen limited to modand feel of our products and publications. Craftsman snowblower duction goals. els which have been 10 hp, 4 spd, 36" $300 Coordinator may have to operate and/or set-up certified by the OrNewln box, • Demonstrating Versatility — Ideal candidates both. 541-389-2636 REMEIIIIBER:If you kiosks at events, etc. when ICs are not availRBEIIIIRQ egon Department of or nearly new must demonstrate versatility as a t alented have lost an animal, able. Also, Coordinator will be looked upon to Environmental Qual® Rl@XM Craftsman Tools: photographer. Projects throughout the year will don't forget to check investigate new acquisition methods and Hovv to avoid scam ity (DEQ) and the fed• 10o Stationary require the ability to photograph people, The Humane Society marketing of Circulation. He/she will have a and fraud attempts eral E n v ironmental radial arm saw, objects, settings and events under various Bend budget to monitor sales and expenses. Protection A g e ncy YBe aware of internalighting conditions, both in the field and in a Model ¹315.220100, 541-382-3537 Position may make promotional item pur(EPA) as having met tional fraud. Deal lostudio setting. $375. Redmond chases for start acquisition. Entry level wage smoke emission stancally whenever pos• 10a Stationary table 541-923-0882 with monthlybonus based on goals accomdards. A cer t ified sible. saw w/guide rails, ad O rlla • Coordinating Content — Candidate will be plished. Must be organized, able to operate inw oodstove may b e Y Watch for buyers model ¹315.228590, tasked to occasionally work with staff and/or 54r -447-7r 78; dependently as well as in a team environment, 526 identified by its certifiwho offer more than clients to coordinate the submission, organiza$325. or Craft Cats and have a drive for success. Other tasks may h cation label, which is Loans & Mortgages your asking price and • 6-1/8 Jointer tion, presentation and layout of content (photo, 541-389-8420. be assigned by Management. permanently attached who ask to have art and editorial) for special sections, commerplaner "Professional" Position will attend weekly manager meeting to the stove. The BulWARNING money wired or model ¹351.227240, cial products, ads and fliers. and be expected to contribute to operation/ letin will not knowThe Bulletin recomhanded back to them. $250 obo. planning/goals of department. ingly accept advertismends you use cauFake cashier checks • Sharing Ideas — We're seeking a creative Call 541-504-6413 1. Working knowledge of newspaper ing for the sale of tion when you proand money orders thinker as well as a creative doer. Contribute daytime hours. circulation a plus. uncertified vide personal are common. to our team by sharing a part of yourself — your 2. Must have strong skills in Excel and Word. woodstoves. information to compaVNever give out perideas, your personality and your flair for turn3. Strong sale s background and knowledge of nies offering loans or sonal financial inforing ideas into stories and/or visual concepts 264 social media. 267 credit, especially mation. (e.g. feature photography). The ideal candi4. Strong verbal/written and interpersonal Snow Removal Equlpment • those asking for adPTrust your instincts F I & Wood date will be eager to work toward his/her full communication skills. vance loan fees or p otential both independently and a s a and be wary of 5. Highly organized and detail oriented. Snowblower companies from out of someone using an member of the team. 6. Must be insurable to drive company Craftsman electric or state. If you have WHEN BUYING 306 escrow service or vehicles. Drug free workplace. pull-start, 29" wide, concerns or ques• Serving as a T e am P layer — Expect agent to pick up your FIREWOOD... Farm Equipment 7. Great attitude and desire to succeed. 9HP, 5 forward 2 retions, we suggest you opportunities to s how off s k ills beyond merchandise. To avoid fraud, & Machinery verse speeds. $400 consult your attorney photography and design — from writing, editing Drug free workplace, EOE. The Bulletin cash. 541-815-6319 or call CONSUMER The Bulletin and assisting with community events to servingcaorrar oredohsince raoy recommends pay- N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 If interested, please contact via e-mail:Adam HOTLINE, managing small projects. Everyone within the Sears, asears©bendbulletin.com. ment for Firewood swather, 14' header 1-877-877-9392. special projects department wears several 265 No phone calls please. only upon delivery with conditioner, cab • h hats, and all team members are personally i I Building Materials and inspection. heat/A/C, 1300 orig. Look at: driven to continually evolve creatively and The Bulletin • A cord is 128 cu. ft. hrs. $29,000 obo. yahihg centraloregon since ryoy Bendhomes.com professionally. x 4' x 8' 1486 International, cab you St Jude Sr Double Vinta e French • 4' for Complete Listings of Receipts should heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 ) Sacred H e art of T his i s an id e a l o p portunity fo r a n Area Real Estate for Sale 541-548-0291 include name, Pto, 3 sets remotes, Pressroom up-and-coming creator of quality content to nice tractor. $18,000. phone, price and Night Supervisor discover his/her full potential while publishing BANK TURNED YOU 541-419-3253 kind of wood work within some of Central Oregon's most DOWN? Private party The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, Orpurchased. will loan on real esegon is seeking a night time press supervisor. successful publications. Besides demonstrat325 • Firewood ads ing a high level of photography and design tate equity. Credit, no We are part of Western Communications, Inc. MUST include Hay, Grain & Feed skills, qualified candidates must possess good which is a small, family-owned group consistproblem, good equity species & cost per writing/editing skills, be computer savvy, and is all you need. Call of 7 newspapers: 5 in Oregon and 2 in cord to better serve Alfalfa Hay 1st, 2nd, 3rd ing Oregon Land MortCalifornia. Our ideal candidate will manage a have access to reliable transportation (proof of our customers. cutting, Hay tests on insurance required). gage 541-388-4200. crew of 3 and must have prior press exCall 54 I -385-5809 request. delivery avail. small perience. The candidate must be able to learn to r o m ot e o u r service The Bulletin $200 ton. Mitchell, OR LOCAL iyfONEyrWe buy We offer benefits including 401(k), paid life our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on yarrdary Cahrral Oregondaoa rae 541-462-3156 secured trust deeds & style is a requirement for our 3t/a tower KBA insurance, paid vacation and sick time. note, some hard money press. Prior management/leadership experiBuilding/Contracting Handyman loans. Call Pat Kelley 1 cord dry, split Juniper, First quality Orchard/Timence preferred. I n ad d ition t o our To apply, send a cover letter, resume and 541-382-3099 ext.13. othy/Blue Grass mixed $190/cord. Multi-cord 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous photography/design samples to: NOTICE: Oregon state I DO THAT! hay, no rain, barn stored, discounts, 8 t/a cords law requires anyone Home/Rental repairs Patterson Ranch commercial print clients as well. Besides a Need help fixing stuff'? available. Immediate $250/ton. competitive wage, we also provide potential bmontgomeryobendbulletin.com. who con t racts forSmall jobs to remodels delivery! Sisters, 541-549-3831 Call A Service Professional 541-408-6193 opportunity for advancement. construction work to Honest, guaranteed find the help you need. Drug free work place / EOE be licensed with the work. CCB¹151573 www.bendbulletin.com If you provide dependability combined with a Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 All yearDependable Looking for your Firewood: Seasoned; tors Board (CCB). An positive attitude, are able to manage people next employee? and schedulesand are a team player, we active license ERIC REEVE HANDY Lodgepole 1 for $195 Place a Bulletin or 2 for $365. Cedar, means the contractor would like to hear from you. If you seek a SERVICES. Home 8 help wanted ad is bonded & insured. Commercial Repairs, split, del. Bend: 1 for stable work environment that provides a great YOVR ADWILLRECEIVECLOSETo 2,0D0,000 today and $175 or 2 for $325. Verify the contractor's place to live and raise a family, let us hear Carpentry-Painting, EXPOSURES FORONLY 52lu reach over 541-420-3484. CCB l i c ense at from you. Pressure-washing, 60,000 readers Ooyoa ClaorraradarahhrNemark h a serviceof rlreOregon Naorrrro Paaliraro yrrorrh lioa www.hirealicensedHoney Do's. On -time each week. Log truck loads of contractor.com Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at promise. Senior Weekof January 13, 2014 Lodgepole Firewood, Your classified ad or call 503-378-4621. anelsonowescom a ers.com with yourcomDiscount. Work guardelivered. will also The Bulletin recom- anteed. 541-389-3361 plete resume, r eferences an d s a l ary mends checking with Call 541-815-4177 appear on history/requirements. No phone calls please. or 541-771-4463 the CCB prior to conbendbutletin.com Drug test is required prior to employment. Bonded 8 Insured Serving Central Oregon since 1903 tracting with anyone. which currently EOE. CCB¹181595 Pine & Juniper Split 541-385-5809 Some other t rades receives over also req u ire addi1.5 million page Landscaping/Yard Care tional licenses and PROMPT DELIVERY views every certifications. 54i-389-9663 Auto Renew Coordinator month at no NOTICE: Oregon LandDIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, extra cost. scape Contractors Law Immediate opening in The Bulletin Circulation custody, support, property and bills division. No court Debris Removal 269 Bulletin (ORS 671) requires all department for a full time Auto Renew Coordibusinesses that ad- Gardening Supplie Classifieds appearances.Divorced in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. nator. Job duties primarily encompass the provertise t o pe r form JUNK BE GONE Get Results! cessing of all subscriber Auto Renew pay• & E q uipment www.paralegalalternatives.com legalalt©msn.com Landscape ConstrucCall 541-385-5809 I Haul Away FREE ments through accounting software, data entry tion which includes: For Salvage. Also or place your ad of new credit card or bank draft information, l anting, deck s , on-line at Cleanups & Cleanouts and resolution with customers of declined Auto ences, arbors, BarkTurfSoil.com Mel, 541-369-8107 bendbulletin.com Renew payments. Other tasks include mainDRIVERS-Whether you have experience or need training, we water-features, and intaining accurate spreadsheets for account balstallation, repair of ir- PROMPT DELIVERY offer unbeatable career opportunities. Trainee, Company ancing purposes, transferring funds from subPeople Lookfor Information rigation systems to be 541-389-9663 341 scriber accounts for single copy purchases, l icensed w it h th e Driver,LEASE OPERATOR, LEASE TRAINERS. 877-369About Products and Horses & Equipmen dispatching of all promotional items associLandscape ContracServices EveryDaythrough 7104 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com ated with new subscriptions and upgrades, as Board. This 4-digit The Bulletin Classineds tors For newspaper well as tracking/ordering Circulation office number is to be indelivery, call the supplies. cluded in all adverCirculation Dept. at DRIVERS-Regional Runs, Western States - Excellent Pay tisements which indiDomestic Services 541-385-5800 2008 Thuro-Bilt 3H cate the business has To place an ad, call Responsibilities also include month-end billing Package, Great Bonus Potential, Great Equipment, Steady slant Shilo, great for severalI/VESCOMpapers and back up to a bond, insurance and A ssisting Seniors a t 541-385-5809 c ondition. $ 5 9 00 the CSR and billing staff. Ability to perform all Freight, CDL-A, 1-Year OTR Experience Required. HazMat Home. Light house- workers compensaor email obo.541-317-0988. for their employ- claaaitiedytbendbulletin.com these tasks accurately and with attention to keeping & other ser- tion Required. 888-929-9140 www.andrustrans.com ees. For your protecdeadlines is a must. Work shift hours are vices. Licensed & tion call 503-378-5909 Monday through Fri day 8: 00 a. m. t o 5: 00 p. m. The Bulletin Bonded. BBB Certi- or use our website: a Say ogoodbuy fied. 503-756-3544 Gordon Trucking, Inc. CDL-A Solos 8 Team Truck Drivers. Up to www.lcb.state.or.us to Please send resume to: to that unused check license status ahusted Obendbulletin.com $5,000 Sign-On-Bonus & $.54 CPM. Consistent Miles, Benefits, 270 A ssisting Seniors a t before contracting with item by placing it in Home. Light house- the business. Persons • 401k,EOE. Call7 days/week 888-435-8590 Lo s t & Found The Bulletin Classifieds keeping 8 other ser- doing lan d scape Sewing Central Oregonsince 1903 v ices. L icensed 8 maintenance do not Found F .G . r e a der Bonded. BBB Certi- r equire an LC B l i - glasses at Bend dog EOE/Drug free workplace 5 41-385-580 9 fied. 503-756-3544 cense. park. 541-480-9947

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 16, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

TO PEACE AN AD CALL CEASSIFED• 541-385-5809

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD Wiii Shortz

C L U B T hursday,January16,2014

The Louie files

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Tribune Content Agency

My club was closedfor repairs.A crew of roofers was banging away, and noteven Unlucky Louie would have tried to play amid the racket. Luckily for me, Louie is such a prolific source of misplays that I had a fat file on him. As declarer at four spades, Louie took the queen of clubs, drew nmnps, cashed two more clubs and then needed one trick in hearts or diamonds to make his game. "All finesses have an equal chance of working, which in my case is zero," Louie muttered. He led a diamond to his king, and West won and returned a diamond. East took the queen and led a heart, and West took the queen and ace. Down one.

EQUAL

diamonds and he rebids two spades. What do you say? ANSWER: Yo u h ave enough values to invite game but not to force, especially if your partner often opens light hands. Hence you can't afford to bid three hearts. A raise to three spades is possible, but his rebid did not promise a suit longer than five cards. Try 2NT despite the lack of a sure club stopper. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 49652

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE

Youhold: 4I 1 0 4 9 A Q 8 4 Opening lead — 4 10 0 A I 9 3 A 10 9 8. Your partner o pens one spade, you bi d t w o (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswcrds from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT8T users: Text NYTX to 388 tc download puzzles, or visit nytimes.ccm/mcbilexwcrd for more information. Online subscripticns: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswcrds ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wcrdplay. Crcsswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 16 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

)

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./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

s

f e

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 648

I

Houses for Rent General

Houses for Rent General

663

745

771

Houses for Rent Madras

Homes for Sale

Lots

860

$579,900 I Powell Butte SHEVLIN RIDGE Home On Acreage. 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap3275 sq.ft. home. Pri- proved plans. More v ate 30 A c res. 4 details and photos on carport. 541-475-3519 bdrm, 3 bath, 2 mas- craigslist. $149,900. ter suites. Incredible 541-389-8614 outdoor living. 40X60 693 shop. 541-480-7183 775 Office/Retail Space Barbara Myers, Manufactured/ for Rent Broker 541-923-4663 Mobile Homes Windermere Central 500 sq. ft. upstairs Oregon Real Estate Cute 2 bdrm, 1 bath office on NE side of 1000 sq. ft., t otally town, private bath, all NOTICE util. paid. $500 month All real estate adver- remodeled, handicap plus $500 d eposit. tised here in is sub- ready. $26,500. $343 rent never goes 541-480-4744 ject to th e F ederal space Fair Housing A c t, up. 541-647-1333 which makes it illegal SPECIAL to advertise any pref- FACTORY Bw0 &M tl New Home, 3 bdrm, erence, limitation or $46,500 finished ~o ~ P S discrimination based on your site. on race, color, reliJ andM Homes gion, sex, handicap, 541-548-5511 familial status or national origin, or intenLOT MODEL tion to make any such LIQUIDATION preferences, l imita- Prices Slashed Huge tions or discrimination. Savings! 10 Year 719 We will not knowingly conditional warranty. Real Estate Trade accept any advertis- Finished on your site. ing for real estate ONLY 2 LEFT! ALASKA LAND FOR which is in violation of Redmond, Oregon SALE - Sacres Hay- this law. All persons 541-548-5511 stack Mountain on SE are hereby informed JandMHomes.com Slope, near r i ver, that all dwellings adgreat sun, hardwood vertised are available f orest. $20,000 o r on an equal opportutrade for land in Ornity basis. The Bulleegon. 701-580-5453 tin Classified

541-388-8939

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

QoP o

HDFatBo

2012/2013 Award

Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

748

Multiplexes for Sale

N o rtheast Bend Homes

2 bdrm, 2 bath duplex 3 bdrm 2 bath, 1258 sf, PUBLISHER'S Powell Butte house for 1000 sq. ft. each side. upgrades vaulted culdeNOTICE rent in secluded location. landscaped & fenced sac. 2574 NE Cordata Pl. All real estate adver- 3 bed 1 b a th, W/D $189,900. 541-815-3279 yard, $179,900. 850 tising in this newspa- hookup, woodstove, new or 541-815-3241 541-280-1746 Snowmobiles per is subject to the refrigerator, has carport, F air H o using A c t $650/mo, 1st/last + de- Just bought a new boat? 750 1994 Arctic Cat 580 which makes it illegal posit. 541-447-4750 Sell your old one in the 630 Redmond Homes "any EXT, in good to a d vertise classifieds! Ask about our Rooms for Rent condition, $1000. Super Seller rates! preference, limitation Find It in Located in La Pine. or disc r imination 541-385-5809 Looking for your next Room fo r r e n t in based on race, color, The Bulletin Classifiedst Call 541-408-6149. emp/oyee? top-notch, b e a utiful religion, sex, handi541-385-5809 745 Place a Bulletin help area $500/mo. + part cap, familial status, wanted ad today and Homes for Sale utilities. 541-279-9538. Call a Pvo marital status or nareach over 60,000 readers each week. Whether you need a tional origin, or an in$339,000 I His t oric Houses for Rent tention to make any Your classified ad R anch On 9 AC , fencefixed,hedges What are you SE Bend will also appear on such pre f erence, Bend. 3-4 bdrm, 2 trimmed or a house limitation or discrimibath, 1 9 5 9 sq . f t., bendbulletin.com looking for? which currently rebuilt, you'll find nation." Familial sta- IN MOUNTAIN HIGH 36X28 3 ba y s hop tus includes children 2+2, large den/office building. ceives over 24X25 professional help in You'll find it in forced air plus 2 gas 1.5 million page under the age of 18 fireplaces, formal din- equipment c a rport. The Bulletin's "Call a with parents or Completely f e nced views every month The Bulletin Classifisds living ing room, walk-in closat no extra cost. Service Professional" legal cus t odians, ets, 3-car garage. with corals. Borders pregnant women, and Bulletin Classifieds BLM, MLS¹ Directory $1500 you garden Get Results! people securing cus201306096 $1600 we garden 541-385-5809 tody of children under Call 385-5809 or Dave Disney, Broker 541-385-5809 541-647-2153 18. This newspaper place your ad on-line 541-388-0404 707-496-4220 will not knowingly acat Windermere Central 860 632 cept any advertising Advertise your car! bendbulletin.com Oregon Real Estate Iifotorcycles & Accessories for real estate which is Apt./llllultiplex General Add A P/cture/ in violation of the law. Reach thousands of readers! O ur r e aders a r e Catl 541-385-5809 CHECK YOUR AD hereby informed that The Bulletin Classifieds all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity 2013 Harley basis. To complain of Davidson Dyna on the first day it runs d iscrimination ca l l On Dry C anyon, 2 Wide Glide, black, to make sure it is cor- HUD t o l l-free at only 200 miles, bdrm/2 bath, gas stove rect. eSpellcheckn and 1-800-877-0246. The brand new, all stock, human errors do octoll f ree t e lephone & fireplace, elec. heat, plus after-market cur. If this happens to number for the hear- new carpet, fenced exhaust. Has winter space, back your ad, please con- ing im p aired is garden cover, helmet. deck, patio, 2 car gatact us ASAP so that 1-800-927-9275. rage, room for RV. 8 Elk Lane, Sunfivef Selling for what I corrections and any owe on it: $15,500. $1100 first/last/$500 Great investment - Income Potential! adjustments can be TURN THE PAGE dep. Small pets neg www.StuartRealtyGrouplnc.com Call anytime, made to your ad. For More Ads w/dep. P l ease call 541-554-0384 503-263-7253 541-385-5809 T he B u l l e t i n 541-480-9848 for appt. The Bulletin Classified

.00

Victory TC 2002, runs great, many accessories, new tires, under 40K miles, well kept. $5000. 541-771-0665

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 865 ATVs

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric

s hift, n e w tir e s , $2500, 541-980-8006. 870

Boats & Accessories

$17,000

541-548-4807

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader how the item will help them insomeway. This

The Bulletin

21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker H onda E l it e m o t o r50hp, live well, fish fndr, scooter with 6 , 205 new int, extras, exc cond, miles, Asking $250. $7900. 541-508-0679 Serving Central Oregonsincefatg

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Clsssifieds

Triumph Da y tona 2004, 15K m i les, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536.

$4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, etc. 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h e ated shop. $84,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664

Garage Sales Garage Sales in The Bulletin Classifieds

G ulfstream S u n sport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l i ft . 4 0 0 0W

541 -385-5809

g enerator, G o o d condition! $12,500

obo 541-447-5504 Ads published in th "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishNeed to get an ing, drift, canoe, • ad in ASAP? house and sail boats. You can place it For all other types of watercraft, please go online at: to Class 875. • 541-385-5809 • www.bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

COf 1 e]] Ottyeg]b

FeatureS inClude SO lid surtr!dge faCe Co te[s' 4-dr bul)t-ln

, autow'~h 32 miles gets 26 24 mpg. Add lots more description and interesting

convection micro, er ceramic tile washer/dryer, flOOr, TV, DVD, Sate IB

$149,000

Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...

Garage Sales

Find them

gonaco DypastY 2ppg L~OADEo'

541-000-000

COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-5484969

541-389-2636

,ve

king SiZe bed - All tor Only

880

Motorhomes

$8995obo. 541-350-7755

'Little Red COf Vette"

dsh IS, air leueling, passand a through storagetray,

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

inboard motor, g reat cond, well maintained,

es •

I

The Bulletin

18'Maxum skiboat,2000,

advertising tip brought to you by

I

tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870. 541-385-5809

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

19 96

Completely Rebuilt/Customized

875

Watercraft ds published in aWa

Harley Davidson 2009 Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming Eagle performance, too many options to list, $8900.

House for rent on the Flats, in Madras. 3/1, big garage, shop &

738

860

Motorcycles & Accessories Motorcycles & Accessories

faCtS fOr $99!LOOk hoW muChfuil a girl COuld

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

havein a sweet car likethis! $12,500 547-000-000

(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border,

full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace — DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.

• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.

541 -385-5809


E6 THURSDAY JANUARY 16 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 0

• •

0

00 •

BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

932

933

975

975

975

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4

Corvette Coupe

Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt O 81K & more! $5995. 541-548-5648

Volkswagen Touareg 2004

00 908

Aircraft, Parts 8 Service

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

O

matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil,

garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!

Meticulously maintained. Very clean inside and out. V6. Recently serviced60 point inspection sheet. $6,800.00 Call 541-480-0097

541-923-1781 Buick Skylark 1972 What are you Matchless! 17K original Good classified ads tell miles! Sunburst yeHow/ the essential facts in an 880 881 882 looking for? interesting Manner. Write white vinyl/Sandalwood. Motorhomes Travel Trailers Fifth Wheels 15 factory options includ- from the readers view -not Porsche Carrera 911 You'll find it in ing A/C. 'Sloan docu- the seller's. Convert the 2003 convertible with Fleetwood Wilderness mentation." Quality re- facts into benefits. Show hardtop. 50K miles, The Bulletin Classifieds N.W. Edition 26' 2002, new factory Porsche paint. COMPLETELY ori- the reader howthe item will Super winter car! motor 6 mos ago with 1 slide, sleeps 6 , inal interior & trunk area help them insomeway. Audi 4000CS Quattro, 18 mo factory warPRISTINE). Engine com541-385-5809 queen bed, couch, This 1986, close ratio 5 4a 0 0 • ranty remaining. partment is VERY MUCH stove/oven, tub/ advertising tip spd fun car to drive original. No r ust, no $37,500. shower, front elec. WHEN YOU SEE THIS brought toyou by new tires, runs great, 541-322-6928 leaks, evervthino works! jack, waste tank heat- Arctic Fox 2003 Cold KOUNTRY AIRE needs paint, 187k Weather Model 34 5B, $19,900. 541-323-1898 ers, s tabilizers, 2 licensed thru 2/15, exlnt 1994 37.5' motorThe Bulletin miles. $2500. EereineCenlrntOregon rrnre retn 1/3 interest i n w e ll-Chevy 1955 PROJECT prop. t a n ks , no home, with awning, 541-771-8661. cond. 3 elec slides, solar equipped IFR Beech Bosmoking/pets, winterWant to impress the and one slide-out, car. 2 door wgn, 350 10 gal water htr, On a classified ad A36, new 10-550/ small block w/Weiand i zed, g oo d c o n d.panel, relatives? Remodel Only 47k miles 14' awning, (2) 10-gal nanza Have an item to go to prop, located KBDN. OBO $8500 and good condition. dual quad tunnel ram propane tanks, 2 batts, your home with the www.bendbulletin.com $65,000. 541-419-9510 541-447-3425 sell quick? with 450 Holleys. T-10 I nternational catalytic htr in addition to Fla t $25,000. help of a professional to view additional 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Bed Pickup 1963, 1 If it's under 541-548-0318 central heating/AC, genphotos of the item. from The Bulletin's Weld Prostar wheels, ton dually, 4 spd. tly used, MANV features! (photo above is of a '500you can place it in "Call A Service extra rolling chassis + trans., great MPG, similar model & not the Must see to appreciate! extras. $6500 for all. could be exc. wood actual vehicle) Professional" Directory $19,000. By owner (no The Bulletin Looking for your 541-389-7669. dealer calls, please). Call hauler, runs great, next employee? Classifieds for: or text 541-325-1956. new brakes, $1950. Place a Bulletin help Subaru STi 2010, 541-419-5480. wanted ad today and 1/5th interest in 1973 KeystoneLaredo 31' '10 -3 lines, 7 days 16.5K, rack, mats, cust reach over 60,000 Want to impress the Cessna 150 LLC RV 20 06 w ith 1 2' snow whls, stored, one'16 - 3 lines, 14 days readers each week. slide-out. Sleeps 6, 150hp conversion, low owner, $29,000, relatives? Remodel Price Reduced! TiCk, TOCk Your classified ad time on air frame and (Private Party ads only) 541.410.6904 queen walk-around your home with the will also appear on Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 bed w/storage underengine, hangared in help of a professional bendbulletin.com engine, power every- TiCk, TOCk... N avion R V 200 8 , neath. Tub & shower. Bend.Excellent perAudi A4 2001 1.8T 4 dr which currently refrom The Bulletin's thing, new paint, 54K Sprinter chassis 25'. 2 swivel rockers. TV. rebuilt trans, newer Toyota Celica formance& afford...don't let time get orig. miles, runs great, ceives over 1.5 milMercedes Benz diesel, Air cond. Gas stove 8 "Call A Service clutch, brakes, maniConvertible 1993 able flying! $6,000. away. Hire a lion page views exc. cond.in/out.$7500 24,000 miles, pristine refrigerator/freezer. 541-410-6007 fold, etc. High-perforProfessional" Directory obo. 541-480-3179 every month at cond., quality through- Microwave. Awning. mance. Extras, reprofessional out no extra cost. Bulleout, rear slEde-out w/ Outside c eipts, exc . m p g . sho w er. Find exactly what of The Bulletin's tin Classifieds queen bed, d e luxe Slide through storCHECKYOUR AD $6300 obo you are looking for in the Get Results! Call captain swivel f ront a ge, E a s y Lif t . "Call A Service 541-390-6004 seats, diesel generator, $29,000 new; CLASSIFIEDS 385-5809 or place Professional" Audi TT 2005 like new awning, no pets/ smokAsking$18,600 your ad on-line at GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 33k, always garaged Directory today! ing. $78,500 o b o . 541-447-4805 bendbulletin.com $'I 8,500. 541-280-1746. speed, a/c, pw, pdl, Ready to deal! Financnicest c o nvertible GMC M ton 1971, Only 935 ing avail. around in this price $10,500! Original low on the first day it runs Take care of 541-382-2430 Have an item to Sport Utility Vehicles range, new t ires, I The Bulletin recoml mile, exceptional, 3rd to make sure it is corO your investments owner. 760-985-4016 wheels, clutch, timsell quick? mends extra caution 8 rect. Spellcheckn and ing belt, plugs, etc. when p u rchasing • human errors do ocwith the help from If it's under Is~ 111K mi., remarkcur. If this happens to l products or services 1974 Bellanca F The Bulletin's able cond. inside '500you can place it in from out of the area. your ad, please con1730A and out. Fun car to l S ending c "Call A Service ash , 'E' I tact us ASAP so that The Bulletin drive, Must S E E! corrections and any checks, or credit inProfessional" Directory 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Classifieds for: $5995. R e dmond. formation may be I adjustments can be Providence 2005 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K 180 mph, excellent 541-504-1993 made to your ad. l subject toFRAUD. Fully loaded, 35,000 GMC Sierra 1977 short miles, premium packcondition, always '10 -3 lines, 7 days For more informa541-385-5809 miles, 350 Cat, Very bed, exlnt o r iginal age, heated lumbar hangared, 1 owner l tion about an adverclean, non-smoker, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days The Bulletin Classified for cond., runs & drives supported seats, pan35 years. $60K. n tiser, you may call mo o nroof, 3 slides, side-by-side (Private Party ads only) great. V8, new paint oramic Say ngoodbuy I the Oregon Statel refrigerator with ice and tires. $4750 obo. Bluetooth, ski bag, Xeto that unused In Madras, s Attorney General's s non headlights, tan & 541-504-1050 maker, Washer/Dryer, call 541-475-6302 black leather interior, Flat screen TV's, In item by placing it in I Off!ce C o n sumerI itgr'E n ew front & re a r Buick Regal S Cusl Protection hotline at motion satellite. brakes O 76K miles, tom 1994, 6 1,752 The Bulletin Classifieds 1-877-877-9392. $95,000 Dramatic Price Reducone owner, all records, mi., exc. cond., V6, 541-480-2019 tion Executive Hangar very clean, $16,900. 3.1 L, fuel injected, Fleetwood Prowler at Bend Airport (KBDN) 541-385-5809 ServingCentral Oregon since ERS 541-388-4360 32' - 2001 60' wide x 50' deep, 4 dr., FWD, exc. all Get your Layton 27-ft, 2001 season tires, new 2 slides, ducted w/55' wide x 17' high biCadillac SRX 2005 Jeep CJ5 1979, heat & air, great fold dr. Natural gas heat, Original owner, 87k AWD luxury & nav. pkg. battery and alternabusiness Front & rear entry tor, very clean, exc. condition, snowbird offc, bathroom. Adjacent miles, only 3k on new 68,500 mi. ¹1921 71 doors, bath, shower, ready, Many upto Frontage Rd; great and heater, pb, 258 long block. Clutch $14,995 541-598-3750 a/c a queen bed, slide-out, visibility for aviation busipw and s t eering. grade options, fie ROW I N G package, Warn hubs. oven, microwave, air ness. 541-948-2126 or nancing available! $3000. 541-419-5575 Excellent runner, very conditioning, patio email 1jetjockOq.com $14,500 obo. dependable. Northwith an ad in awning, twin proWhere can you find a man 6 0/0' plow, Warn www.aaaoregonautopane tanks, very The Bulletin's Call Dick, 6000¹ winch. $7900 nice, great floor plan, helping hand? source.com "Call A Service 541-480-1687. or best reasonable $8895. From contractors to 541-316-1388 offer. Professional" 1000 1000 For the avid flyer, 541-549-6970 or yard care, it's all here Directory I 0• Madras Airport Legal Notices Legal Notices 541-815-8105. in The Bulletin's W • • nn Hanger for sale, The Bulletin ]p "Call A Service To "appear" you $8000. Call for info. To Subscribe call Call a Pro LEGAL NOTICE 541-419-8583 must file with the Professional" Directory 541-385-5800 or go to IN THE C I RCUIT court a legal docuWhether you need a Chevy Suburban www.bendbulletin.com 1500 LT 2009 COURT FOR THE ment called a nmofence fixed, hedges Cadillac Deville For Sale S TATE O F OR tion" or "answer." 5.3L V8 Flex fuel. trimmed or a house DHS 2000. Most EGON IN AND FOR The "motion" or nan1990 5th Wheel 4wd Heavy Duty tow options, exc. cond. THE COUNTY OF swer" (or "reply") built, you'll find pkg., Cargo Racks, Transporter NVIIFE Rexair 28-ft DESCHUTES. running boards, 93,000 mi.. New must be given to the Low miles, EFI 460, professional help in motorhome, 1991tires. $6,500. PENNYMAC LOAN court clerk or adleather interior, 4-spd auto, 10-ply The Bulletin's "Call a Ideal for camping or SERVICES, LLC, its power locks, XM 541-233-8944. ministrator within 30 tires, low miles, alSave money. Learn hunting, it has 45K successors in interdays of the date of Service Professional" satellite, OnStar most new condition, to fly or build hours Orbit 21'2007, used miles, a 460 gas enmulti-disc MP3, est and/or assigns, first pub l ication $3500. with your own airDirectory Chev Malibu LT 2012, only 8 times, A/C, gine, new tires, auPlaintiff, v. UNs pecified her e i n Bluetooth. Summer c raft. 1968 A e ro leather, 6,638 miles. oven, tub shower, 541-385-5809 tomatic levelers, KNOWN HEIRS OF and new studded along with the reAsk for Theo, Commander, 4 seat, ¹367451 $16,995 micro, load leveler Onan generator, DANIEL EVERETT tires. 81,000 highquired filing fee. It 541-260-4293 150 HP, low time, hitch, awning, dual king-size bed, awCONARTY; CATHway miles. $25,000 must be in proper full panel. $23,000 batteries, sleeps 4-5, ning. Nice condition LEEN PA T R ICIA form and have proof OBO. 541-480-8231 obo. Contact Paul at EXCELLENT CONSell or trade? $8700. CONARTY; STATE of service on the 541-447-5184. DITION. All acces541-815-9939 OF OREGON; OC541-598-3750 plaintiff's a t t orney sories are included. CUPANTS OF THE www.aaaoregonautoor, if t h e p l aintiff II/g FIND IT! $14,511 OBO. P REMISES; A N D does not have an source.com Plymout . . Ba«acuda 541-382-9441 SfIV fr! THE REAL PROPattorney, proof of 1966, original car! 300 Just too many ERTY L O CATED service on the plainSELL IT, Keystone ChallengerThe Bulletin Classifieds hp, 360 V8, centerAT 52450 AMMON tiff.lf you have any collectibles? Chevy Tahoe 2001, 5.3L IEnes 541 593 2597 2004 CH34TLB04 34' ROAD, LA P I N E, questions, you V8, leather, air, heated fully S/C, w/d hookups, OREGON 9 7 739, should see an attor933 seats, fully loaded, 120K, Sell them in new 18' Dometic awDefendants. Case ney immediately. If $7500 obo. 541-460-0494 The Bulletin Classifieds No. 13CV1499FC. TIFFINPHAETON QSH ning, 4 new tires, new Pickups you need help in 2007 with 4 slides, CAT Sprinter, 35' 2008 Kubota 7000w marine SUMMONS BY finding an attorney, 350hp diesel engine, Rear living, large diesel generator, 3 PUBLICATION. TO you may contact the $125,900. 30,900 miles, refrigerator, walk-in slides, exc. cond. in541-385-5809 T HE DEFEN Oregon State Bar's new Michelin tires, great shower, queen bed, side & out. 27" TV SuperhawkDANTS: UNLawyer R e f erral lots of storage inside cond! Dishwasher, w/d, dvd/cd/am/fm entertain 1966 Ford F250 KNOWN HEIRS OF S ervice online a t Only 1Share central vac, roof satellite, & out, new tires, center. Call for more 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, DANIEL EVERETT www.oregonstateAvailable electric jack, aluminum wheels, 2 full details. Only used 4 Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, P/S, straight body, CONARTY: In t he bar.org or by calling Economical flying excellent condition, slide-thru basement trays times total En last 5 0/0 auto, high miles, runs runs good. $2000. name of the State of only used 3 times. in your own (503) 684-3763 (in & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towyears.. No pets, no good. $1700. 541-410-8749 O regon, you a r e the Portland metroCall toseei IFR equipped bar and Even-Brake insmoking. High retail 541-633-6662 hereby required to 541-318-6919 p obtan area) o r cluded. $27,700. Will sell for Cessna 172/180 HP for Corvette 1979 appear and answer toll-free elsewhere only $13,500! New Chevy 1986, long bed, Garage Sales Call 541-977-4150 $24,000 including slidL824 speed. the complaint filed in Oregon at (800) Garmin Touchscreen four spd., 350 V8 reing hitch that fits in 85,000 miles against you in the 452-7636. This your truck. Call 8 a.m. avionics center stack! built, custom paint, Garage Sales Garaged since new. above-entitled Court summons isissued Tioga 24' Class C Exceptionally clean! to 10 p.m. for appt to great t i r e s and I've owned it 25 a nd cause on o r Hangared at BDN. pursuant to ORCP Motorhome see. 541-330-5527. Garage Sales wheels, new t a gs, years. Never dambefore the expira7. RC O L E G AL, Bought new in 2000, Call 541-728-0773 obo. $5000 aged or abused. tion of 30 days from currently under 20K P.C., Michael BotFind them 541-389-3026 916 the date of the first miles, excellent thof, OSB ¹113337, $12,900. in publication of t h is mbotthofOrcolegal. shape, new tires, Tango 29.6' 2007, Dave, 541-350-4077 Trucks & Dodge 1-ton 4x4 1984, professionaly wintersummons. The date com, Attorneys for Rear living, walkThe Bulletin Heavy Equipment doesn't run, good fixerized every year, cutof first publication in P laintiff, 51 1 S W around queen bed, upper/parts truck, it's all Classifieds off switch to battery, this matter is De5 10th Ave., Ste. 400, there! $800. 541-647-0295 central air, awning, plus new RV batterMONTANA 3585 2008, cember 26, 2013. If Portland, OR 97205, 1 large slide, Ees. Oven, hot water 541-385-5809 exc. cond., 3 slides, you fail timely to apP: (503) 977-7840 $12,000. heater & air condiGet your king bed, Irg LR, pear and answer, F: (503) 977-7963. 541-280-2547 or tioning have never Arctic insulation, all business plaintiff will apply to 541-815-4121 been used! options $35,000 obo. the a b ove-entitled CORVETTE COUPE $24,000 obo. Serious Peterbilt 359 p otable 541-420-3250 court for the relief Glasstop 2010 inquiries, please. water truck, 1 990, a ROW I N G prayed for En Ets LEGAL NOTICE Grand Sport - 4 LT Stored in Terrebonne. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp complaint. This is a TO INTERESTED n loaded, clear bra 541-548-5174 p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, judicial foreclosure PERSONS with an ad in hood & fenders. camlocks, $25,000. Kurt Schroeder has Infiniti FX35 2012, of a deed of trust in New Michelin Super 541-820-3724 The Bulletin's which the p l aintiff been appointed PerP latinum sil v e r, Sports, G.S. floor "Call A Service r equests that t h e sonal Representative 24,000 miles, with mats, 17,000 miles, 931 WEEKEND WARRIOR plaintiff be allowed of the estate of David factory wa r ranty, Professional" Crystal red. Automotive Parts, Toy hauler/travel trailer. to foreclose your Myron Schroeder, deOPEN ROAD 36' f ully l oaded, A l l $42,000. 24' with 21' interior. Directory 2005 - $25,500 Service & Accessories interest in the folceased, by the Circuit Wheel Drive, GPS, 503-358-1164. Sleeps 6. Self-conlowing d e s cribed C ourt, State of O rKing bed, hide-a-bed sunroof, etc. tained. Systems/ sofa, 3 slides, glass 4 like-new studded tires real property: LOT egon, Des c hutes $33,900. Winnebago Aspect appearancein good shower, 10 gal. waC ounty, Case N o . on Toyota Camry rims 541-550-7189 31, B L OC K 2, 2009- 32', 3 slide- condition. Smoke-free. ter heater, 10 cu.ft. P195-70/R14 90S N EWBERRY E S 13PB0154. All perouts, Leather inte- Tow with 0/0-ton. Strong fridge, central vac, TATES PHASE I, sons having claims $225. 541-389-3375. Lexus GX 460 2010 rior, Power seat, suspension; can haul s atellite dish, 2 7 " DESCHUTES against the estate are Premium Sport. locks, win d ows, ATVs snowmobiles, 4 studded tires, TV/stereo syst., front Ford F250 Camper Spe- 4WD, required to p resent COUNTY, OR¹002691 $41,995 Aluminum wheels. 235/65-17, $300. cial 1966, AT w/limited even a small car! Great front power leveling EGON. Commonly them, with vouchers n n chrome rims, 17 Flat Screen, slip rear end. A few isFord Thunderbird price - $8900. jacks and s cissor 4 Jeep 17 known as: 5 2450 attached, to Patricia L. $75. 541-280-0514 sues but runs qood. Full Surround s o u nd, Call 541-593-6266 stabilizer jacks, 16' 2004 Ammon Road, La H eatherman at 2 50 steel rack w/drs. $1950 camera, Queen bed, awning. Like new! Convertible NW Franklin Avenue, P ine, Oreg o n 4 studded tires, only firm, cash. 541-420-0156 541-419-0566 Foam mattress, Aw541-598-3750 with hard & soft top, 97739. NOTICE TO Suite 402, Bend, Orused 2 trips, 245/65R-17 Looking for your ning, Generator, Insilver with black www.aaaoregonautoDEFENDANTS: egon 97701, within Wintercats for 1 7-inch next employee? verter, Auto Jacks, source.com interior, READ THESE PAfour months after the wheels. New, were $159 Place a Bulletin help Air leveling, Moon all original, PERS CAREdate of January 16, ea; sell for $75 ea. wanted ad today and very low mileage, roof, no smoking or 541-548-8818 FULLY! A l a w suit 2014, the first publireach over 60,000 in premium condition. p ets. L i k e ne w , has been started cation of this notice, readers each week. $19,900. $74,900 BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS against you in the or the claims may be Your classified ad 702-249-2567 541-480-6900 Ford Supercab 1992, barred. Add i tional above-entitled court Search the area's most will also appear on (car is in Bend) color with by PennyMac Loan information may be bendbulletin.com Recreation by Design comprehensive listing of brown/tan m atching ful l s i z e Services, LLC, o btained from t h e which currently re2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. classified advertising... plaintiff. P l aintiff's records of the court, Range Rover ceives over 1.5 milTop living room, 2 bdrm, real estate to automotive, canopy, 2WD, 460 over drive, 135K mi., claims are stated in the Personal Reprelion page views evhas 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, merchandise to sporting HSE, 2011 t he w ritten c o msentative, or the lawery month at no entertainment center, goods. Bulletin Classifieds full bench rear seat, Super clean, loaded, slide rear w i ndow, p laint, a c opy o f yer for the Personal fireplace, W/D, appear every day in the running boards, extra cost. Bulletin bucket seats, power which was filed with Representative, Patrigarden tub/shower, in Classifieds Get Reprint or on line. luxury & towing seats w/lumbar, pw, cia Heatherman. Pathe a bove-entitled Winnebago Suncruiser34' packages. Up top sults! Call 385-5809 great condition.$36,000 Call 541-385-5809 Lincoln LS 2001 4door C ourt. You mu s t tricia H e a therman 2004, 35K, loaded, too or best offer. Call Peter, www.bendbulletin.com HD receiver 8 trailer or place your ad pod, 43,000 miles, brakes, good t ires. sport sedan, plus set "appear" in this case 250 NW Franklin Avmuch to list, ext'd warr. 307-221-2422, $54,000. on-line at thru 2014, $49,900 DenGood cond i tion. of snow tires. $6000. or the other side will e nue, S u it e 4 0 2 , 541-593-9116 bendbulletin.com The Bulletin AILL DELIV/R Sernn0 CentralOregonrrnre 19EO 541-317-0324. win a utomatically. nis, 541-589-3243 $4900. 541-389-5341 Bend, OR 97701.

1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, I $400/mo. 541-948-2963

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