Serving Central Oregon since 1903$1.5Q
SUNDAY March16,2014
ocoa ein us is rivin in en
'70 IN COUPONS INSIDE
SUNDAY BUSINESS • E1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
KIDS CENTER
20 years
They 'understand human' — How elephants havegrown to understand humanlanguage. A3
helping
• Sepsis affects milions,isdifficult to diagnoseandcankil quickly
victims of child abuse
"I didn't realize
The Bulletin
In a case pending in Deschutes County Circuit
I was tbdeathly
Vancouver USAPortland's neighbor across the Columbia is a great place to learn about Pacific Northwest history. C1
By Shelby R. King
j' , ei
Court, a Redmond man
is accused of using a stun gun, shock collars and waterboarding tactics,
repeatedly, on two young children. The children disclosed the abuse to adults they
sick."
Plus: Stock car salute
— A race car driver honors the troops with a patriotic paint job. C1
trusted, who contacted the state Department of Hu-
man Services and reported what they had learned.
The Great Nordeen-
DHS then contacted the KIDS Center in Bend.
Local racers skied to victory at the 12th annual cross-country race.D1
The child abuse intervention center provides
medical evaluations, forensic interviews, family
Building a district — A new
support and therapy for abused children in De-
business district in Bend?E1
schutes, Crook and Jefferson counties.
Foreign students — osu, other universities are ramping up efforts to makeforeign students feel at home.F1
The professionals at the
Missing jet: Criminal inquiry underway
The Bulletin
Breast
He said my chances were probably 50-50,"
Elster said. "I didn't realize I was deathly sick." early August after developing excruciating pain
MaP
as long as seven on AS hours toward an unknown point
193 000
200,000
Ukraine denounces Russian 'invasion'
215,000
156,000
100,000
sp,ppp 42 000
57,000
in his back. Doctors initially diagnosed a muscle spasm and sent him home.
Source:sepsis.com
After 10 days of treating the spasm,
the Bend man had lost 20 pounds. He couldn't eat or sleep. MRI and CT
He spent 22 days at St. Charles Bend re-
deliberately diverted and then flown for
Colon L un g H e ar t S e psis cancer cancer attacks
150,000
Elster had been in the emergency room in
New Yorh Times News Service
investigation Saturday, after Malaysia declared that the plane had been
2sp ppp cancer
K
muscles around his spine and into the abdominal cavity below his right lung.
370 turned into a criminal
attempt to minimize the trauma. See KIDS /A7
Average numder of deaths per year
week, Peter Elster had no idea how close he
scans revealed a massive abscess in the
laysia — The search for Malaysia Airlines Flight
their story one time in an
Sepsis kills more Americans than breast cancer, colon cancer, lung cancer or heart attacks.
Until his doctor pronounced him cured last
By Keith Bradsher and Chris Buckley KUALA LUMPUR, Ma-
who come in for evaluation are asked only to tell
leading killers in the UnitedStates
By Markian Hawryluk
came to dying.
EDITOR'5CHOICE
dren up to 18 years old for free, Smith said. Children
Pete Elster, of Bend, sits for a photograph at his home east of Bend. Last August, Elster developed an infection that led to sepsis, leaving him hospitalized for 22 days.
And a WedexclusiveGoogle is trying to keepunder wraps how it mines personal data from emails. bendbulletin.com/extras
KIDS Center evaluate chil
Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
thousands of lives and millions of dolAmericans each year, killing 215,000, a lars with little more than antibiotics mortality rate of more than 20 percent. and fluids. "The fascinating thing about sepsis And the longer the condition goes untreated, the higher the death rate. is we don't have new drugs or even new It is one of the most vexing challeng- technologies to treat it, but we've been es in health care and the single most doing better," said Dr. Allan Walkey, a expensive condition for hospitals to medical professor at Boston University condition affects more than 1 million
covering from two surgeries to remove the abscess and treat the infection. treat, accounting for more than $24 bilBut what truly threatened his life lion in spending each year. was the leading killer in U.S. hospitals Yet research studies and hospital initoday, accounting for more deaths than tiatives have shown the rate of sepsis
The Washington Post
KIEV, Ukraine — Rus-
sia's military staged a provocative new act of aggression Saturday, occu pying a natural gas distribution center and village on a strip of Ukrainian
School ofMedicine. "So how have we
been doing better? By improving the processes of care." But with great variation in mortali-
land near the Crimean
ty rates among hospitals — including
heart attacks,lung cancer or breast
mortality could be cut in half without
cancer. Elster's infection had progressed to sepsis, a systemic inflammatory response in which the immune system goes haywire and attacks the body. The
any new scientific discoveries or med- many where more than half of severe ical advances. By focusing the attention
By Anthony Faiola and Will Englund
Peninsula. Kiev's Ministry of For-
eign Affairs denounced the maneuver as "a military invasion by Russia." See Ukraine /A7
sepsis patients die — sepsis care could
of doctors and nurses on the warnings be the biggest untapped opportunity signs of sepsis, catching it early and for improving health care today. treating it quickly, hospitals could save See Sepsis /A4
farfrom itsscheduled route of Kuala Lumpur to
Beijing. Prime Minister Najib
Razak of Malaysia said Saturday afternoon that
he would seek the help of governments across a large expanse of Asia in the search for the jet,
a Boeing 777, which has been missing for a week and had 239 people on board. The Malaysian authori-
In Colombia, bullfighting's luster is fading away By Abraham Mahshie The Miami Herald
practice bullfighting techniques under the light of an
and his mouth bulges. He ends the pass with one leg fully ex-
atrium.
tended behind him, his foot in
BOGOTA, Colombia — In
As 18-year-old Andres Del Castillo sweeps a magenta
the parking garage of a small apartment building across the highway from Bogota's El Campin soccer stadium, a young man and his mentor
cape, he emits a soft guttural
sound. His chest is thrust forward, his lips are puckered
a point, the other firmly planted below. After the imaginary bull passes, his gaze lifts as he takes a fewtriumphant strides His teacher for the past six
weeks has been Gonzalo Rincon, the father of legendary Colombian bullfighter Cesar Rincon, who was famously
In Colombia, most teenagers play Xbox, soccer or chase girls, not bulls. Across the country, from large cities to
lofted on the shoulders of his
small towns, bulls once formed
compatriots after four stunning performances in Madrid
an integral part of annual celebrations.
in 1991.
See Bullfighting /A8
ties released a map showing that the last satellite
signal from the plane had been sent from somewhere
along one of two arcs spanning large distances across Asia. See Jet /A8
TODAY'S WEATHER
The Bulletin
INDEX
Partly cloudy High 61, Low 36 Page B6
Business Calendar Classified
AnIndependent
E1-6 Community Life C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts 61-6 Local/State B 1-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 N/Movies
C6 D1-6 C8
Q We userecyclednei/i/sprint
Vol. 112, No. 75,
7 sections
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Gay rightsgroupspushing for anti-discrimination order By Timothy M. Phelps
crimination based on sexual
Tribune Washington Bureau
orientation or gender identity. WASHINGTON — P r esiAdvocates say an order dent Barack Obama worked would provide employment successfully to end discrim- protections for about 11 million ination against gays in the workers who currently have military an d m o ved s w ift- none. Many of the nation's largly to implement a Supreme est companies and 21 states Court ruling protecting mar- already have policies or laws riedgay couples from federal against sexual-orientation disdiscrimination.
his second term to eradicate discrimination from the work-
place," said Ian Thompson, a legislative representative in the Washington office of
NYC blaSt —Emergency workers sifted through debris Saturday from the site of a deadly explosion at two NewYork City apartment buildings as they worked to clear the way for investigators to search for clues that might reveal what caused the blast. Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano said rescue workers reached the rear of the basement Saturday but said that investigation of the piping and meters in the front of the basement that will help explain what caused the blast that killed eight people will likely start today. Hesaid that the National Transportation Safety Board should be able to start pressure-testing the pipes today.
the American Civil Liberties Union.
Precedent exists for such a move. In 1965, President Lyn-
don Johnson banned companies that do business with the many medium-sized compa- federal government from racial nies in conservative states lack discrimination in employment, such a shield. hiring or promotions. The pro"This is the single most im- posed ban on sexual-orientaportant thing that President tion discrimination is modeled Obama can doon his own in after the Johnson-era order. crimination, but workers at
But gay rights advocates are
541-383-0367
upset about something he has
NEW S R O O M FA X
not done that they say he could accomplish with a pen stroke:
541-385-5804
POliCS CamaraS —Officers at thousands of law enforcement agencies are wearing tiny cameras to record their interactions with the public, but in many cases the devices are being rolled out faster than departments are able to create policies to govern their use. And some rank-and-file officers are worried the technology might ultimately be used to derail their careers if, for example, an errant comment about a superior is captured on tape. Most law enforcement leaders and civil liberties advocates believe the cameras will ultimately help officers, because the devices give them away to record events from their point of view at a time whencitizens armed with cellphones are actively scrutinizing their every move.
an executive order banning
federalcontractors from dis-
StarVing duCkS —The Niagara River corridor from Lake Erie to Lake Ontario is renowned as a spectacular winter haven for hundreds of thousands of water birds. But this year's bitterly cold season has made it notable for something else: dead ducks. Biologists say carcasses began piling up by the hundreds in early January after the plunging temperatures started icing over nearly the entire Great Lakes, preventing the ducks from getting to the minnows that are their main source of food. Necropsies on dozens of birds have confirmed the cause: starvation. "All have empty stomachs. They're half the weight they should be," said Connie Adams, a biologist in the state Department of Environmental Conservation's Buffalo office who has personally seen 950 dead birds.
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TOXiC WaSte Spill —Duke Energy, the giant utility whose spill of toxic waste into a North Carolina river last month is under federal investigation, released wastewater last week from a second site upriver of Raleigh that state regulators said could be illegal. Aerial photographs of two Dukecoal ash ponds at the head of the Cape Fear River show portable pumps and hoses that appear to be siphoning water into a canal leading to the river. A spokesman for the state's Department of Environment and Natural Resources said Saturday that its inspectors noticed the pumping while on a site visit last week. "We are investigating the utility's actions," the spokesman, Drew Elliot, said in an email. "While routine maintenance is allowed under the permit, discharge of untreated wastewater could be a violation." A spokesman for Duke, based in Charlotte, said the pumping was intended to lower the water level in the ponds, which contain a slurry of coal ash with toxic heavy metals, as part of a "routine maintenance" program andwas allowed under the site's antipollution permit.
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NeW Delhi rape —The Indian Supreme Court on Saturday temporarily stayed the executions of two of the four men sentenced to death in the gang rapeand murder of a 23-year-old woman in Delhi in 2012, an attack that set off a public outcry and mass protests in India over violence against women in the country. The Supreme Court stayed the executions until March 31, when the court will hold a hearing on the case. If the court rejects their appeal and upholds the death sentences, the two mencanstill apply for a mercy petition directly from the president of India. A lower court convicted and sentenced the four men in September. A juvenile who wasalso convicted but is exempt from the death penalty was sentenced to a maximum term of three years in prison.
O uahab Hebbat/TheAssociated Press
Demonstrators from the "Barakat!" ("Enough"j group protest during a rally against Algerian President Abdelaziz Bouteflika on Saturday in Algiers. About100 Algerian activists from a newanti-government movement staged a rare protest Saturday against the ailing president and his decision to run for a fourth term. Elections will take place onApril 17.
While there was aheavy police presence, officers didn't violently disperse the young protesters from the "Barakat!" group like they did in similar demonstrations earlier this month.
"The state backed off after the images of repression from last week," group co-founder Amira Bouraoui said, adding that future protests would take place outside the capital. "We will continue our fight against the election and the system." The 77-year-old president will be running for a fourth term after15 years in power, despite having a stroke last year that has madehis speechand movement difficult. While six candidates have been approved for the April17 elections, Bouteflika is expected to win with the backing of the powerful machinery of the state.
— From wire reports
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CONSUNER
Syrian forces closeto taking overrebeltown By Anne Barnard New York Times News Service
BEIRUT — As Syrian government forces on Saturday pushed into Yabrud, a town
long held by rebels near the Lebanese border, opposition activists said that one of
terrorist group by the United
bers of his own family, in exchange for 13 nuns and three attendants held hostage by
States.
the front, a deal that incited
Abu Azzam helpednegotiate the release of women and children held by the Syrian government, including mem-
a backlash from government supporters. A video of the exchange showed him reuniting with his children.
cal residents have joined the front, which is said to be a
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many fighters who fell in battle was a leader of the insur-
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
Sepsis
Thesepsiscontinuum
Continued from A1
Sepsis starts with aninfection with a low risk of death, but asthe condition progresses,themortality rate climbs significantly.
Mystery killer
28-day mortality rates
Despite its high mortality rate and heavy financial costs,
sepsis remains a mystery to most Americans. A 2013 Harris Interactive poll found that
00 /0
more than half have never heard the term. Few under-
80'/
stand the heavy toll it takes in
Infection/ Systemic S epsis trauma inflammatory
Septic shock
syndrome
80%
60'/
terms of both resources and lives, and even fewer would
40%
40%
DRLBY;
rank it a m ong the nation's
deadliest diagnoses. "Not a day goes by that
20%
20%
someone does not look at me
and say, 'No, that's not possible. If it were true I'd would
Source: sepsis.com
know about it,'" said T om
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Heymann, executive director of the advocacy group Sepsis
Sepsis casesfor area hospitals
Alliance. "We felt like we had
found a place on earth where no one had been to before. How could this situation exist that so few people know
Feb. 1, 2013, through Jan. 31, 2014
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
P e te Elster, of Bend, sits for a photograph at his workplace, D.L. Drury Custom Woodworks, in Bend. L s s t A ugustEtstersufferedasepsisinfectionthathospitslizedhimfor22days. Elsterssidhisjob
about it, and so little is being provided a form of physical therapy, helping him improve his range of motion and recover muscle done about it proportionate-
St. Charles Bend St. Charles Redmond Pioneer Memorial Hospital St. Charles Madras Total
f u n ction.
ly to the effect it's having'? It's mind-blowing." Sepsis represents a continu- through. It was the day our um more than a specific diag- beautiful young man died of nosis. The initial stage, known sepsis, something we had nevas systemic inflammatory er heardofbefore." response syndrome, or SIRS, starts when an infection trig-
Mortality rates for sepsis,
meanwhile, are dropping, although the magnitude of the decline is also a matter of de-
bate. If hospitals are getting better at finding and coding
sign that hospitals are implementing proven sepsis protocols. A landmark 2001 study
published in the New England Journal of Medicine found
that jIOU end
man of N a ples, UP haVlng a Fla., noticed a tiny pp p U /atj pn pf bump on her shoulh d er. She assumed it P P / was just a bug bite. are b e r e aVed Thenextmornmg OI'end Up she felt like she had the flu, and by g midafternoon, was SUrtt/IVed, Who unable to get out are yepy yerj/ of bed. Within 24
422
139
127
24
43 8
21 4*
610
188
*Madras totals represent cases from Aug. 24, 2013, to Jan. 31, 2014
that early treatment with flu-
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Source: St. Charles Health System
gers an inflammatory reacSe p sis hasn't become a less severe cases as sepsis, ids could help prevent the sudtion throughout the body. It's household word in part be- it could artificially lower the den collapse that often leads to diagnosed when patients have cause doctors often don't use deathrates.There isalso con- death from sepsis, cutting the some combination of f ever, t h e t er m w it h p atients and cern that hospitals could be mortality rate for severe sepsis increased heart rate, slowed families. In the past, it was gaming the system, diagnos- or septic shock from 46 percent breathing or abnormal white commonly called blood poi- ing marginal cases as septic in to 30 percent. Meanwhile, a blood cell counts. soning, and doctors may still orderto gethigherreimburse- 2006 study found that for every Astheconditionprogresses, refer to sepsis as a compli- ments from public and private hour delay in getting an antibithe immune response begins cation of the initial infection insurance plans. otic after septic shock begins, to affect different organs, a o r disease. Patients could be But Walkey does see signs survivalrates dropby8percent. "We've always known that state known as severe sepsis. admitted to the hospital with of improvement. A study he And if it worsens still, it can c ancer or pneumonia and de- led last year looked at pa- people with sepsis need antibilead to septic shock, when v elopsepsisasaresult.Ifthey tients enrolled in the control otics and fluids," Walkey said. blood vessels expand, caus- die, the death is commonly at- groups of clinical trials, which "And that's still basically what ing a dangerous drop in blood tributed to the underlying dis- assigneda severity score for we do. But how we give them pressure that isn't responding ease even though it may have each patient. He concluded is a little different." to treatment. been sepsis that killed them. that the mortality rate for pa"With sepsis, it's so sudden tients with severe sepsis had Tricky diagnosis At each stage of the progression, the mortality rate and it's so devastating, and it declined steadily from 47 perNow doctors rely on comincreases. About 10 percent so often ends so badly, that you cent in the early 1990s to 29 plex algorithms that trigger inof individuals with infections end up having a population percent in the mid-2000s. terventions on the basis of labdie, but the risk of death goes of people who are bereaved With no new effective drugs oratory test results and patient up to 20 p ercent or end up having or treatments introduced over vital signs. It's a tricky prowith SIRS, 40 pers urvived, who a r e that time frame, it could be a cess, particularly as doctors cent with severe tt/Mth very, very traumasepsis and a stag SepSIS, ItS tizedanddon'tknow what's happened to gering 80 percent ~+en with septic shock. them," Mirman said. , But what makes and it'S SO That has left sepsepsis truly scary de y a s t atjng sis pat i ents much is h o w qu i ckless organized and d .t ly p atients can o utspoken tha n A A • move along that Of t en e rl dS breas t cancer survi• • spectrum. vo s o d vi d uals O bad/ In Dec e mber 2 011, Dana M i r
Primary Secondary diagnosis diagnosis
Hospital
try to juggle a constant flow of ties that had disproportionatereal-time data as well as their ly lower death rates. "The thing that jumps out own medical judgment. One study found that even with the at you is the variation is so data in hand, doctors are able d ramatic," said D r . D a v i d to accurately diagnose sepsis Gaieski,a professor of emerat the bedside only 70 to 80 gency medicine at the school percent of the time. and lead author of the study. And evidence suggests "You sort of think that once that hospitals still have a long you took into account age ... way to go to get it right. Re- you would get similar rates searchers from th e U niver- per 100,000 population across sity of Pennsylvania recent- the country, and you don't. So ly mapped sepsis deaths by then the question is why?" county, finding wide variaVarious theories abound tions in outcomes. They iden- from differences in coding to tified regional hot spots in the variation in genetic susceptiSouth and Mid-Atlantic states, bility to sepsis. Some hospitals where sepsis mortality rates may not make the same comwere four times the national average. In the Southwest and
mitment to training staff and stressing the importance of
Mountain states, they found a early treatment for sepsis. cool spot cluster of 157 counContinued next page
with HIV, who live at home and mteract
•
•
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with o t h ers as they are b e i ng t r eated. Sepsis hits patients
hard and fast, leaving little time to rally
•
•
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e
•
•
e
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or suPPort or Pro
mote public awareness o f the condition. The Stau n tons' storybecame major news in New York,
hours of noticing " prompting state offithe bump, she was and dOn't cials t o adopt Rory's in full sePtic shock. knpw w h a t' S Re g ulations, which "I could have include new prototried to sleep it off," PP n cols for hospitals to said Mirman, who t h e m . " i dentify a n d t r e at now works with sepsis. The Sepsis Dana M'rman Alliance is pushing Sepsis A l l iance. sepsis survivor for similar regula "And it would have been catastrophic." tions to be adopted Her hus b and nationwide. insisted she go to the emer-
Eve ni f patients don't know
gency room, where doctors much aboutit ,sepsis is garimmediately diagnosed her n ering more attention at hosconditionandtreatedherwith
p i t a ls. According to the fed-
antibiotics and fluids. When eral Agency for Healthcare she didn't respond to the ini- Research and Quality, the tial treatments, they quickly n umber of sepsis diagnoses transferred her to the intensive increased 32 percent from careunit,wheredoctorsputin 4 92 cases per 100,000 hospia central line to deliver med-
t a l i zations in 2005 to 651 per
ications to reverse her drop- 100,000 cases in 2010. It's unping blood pressure. clear, however, how much of "I'm here today because that increase is due to more they responded so appropri- actual cases of sepsis and how ately," she said. "I never waited much to hospitals doing a betin the waiting room." ter job of identifying it when it Her case stands in sharp o ccurs. contrast to the experience of Rory Staunton, a 12-year-old
It c a n be a difficult distinct i o n to parse out because hos-
New York Cityboywhoin2012 pitals often differ in how they scrapedhiselbowintheschool apply billing codes to sepsis gym and became sickover- cases. But there is reason to night. His parents took him to suspect that sepsis cases are the emergency room, but doc- becoming more frequent. Age tors sent him home with a diag- is the biggest risk factor for nosis of gastric flu. Three days sepsis, so with an aging poplater, the previously healthy ulation as well as increasing boy was dead from septic shock rates of diabetes and kidney with multiple organ failure. dise ase, sepsis rates can be ex"That was the day our lives pected to climb. "It may not be as dramatic changed forever," his father, Ciaran Staunton, said at a a s w hatthebillingcodesshow, U.S. Senate hearing in Sep- t here may be some inflation tember. "It was the day that there, but it does seem to be inno parent ever wants to go c reasing,"Walkeysaid.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Sepsis cases2011
The 10mostexpensiveconditions treated in U.S.hospitals in 2011
Data from afederal agencygroups sepsis casessomewhat differently than hospital billing data. Thesetotals show the highcost the health care systempaysfor sepsis care. Location U.S.
Total discharges
Average Average length of stay costperstay 8.0
$18,899
$20 billion
11,242
$19,098
$215 million
30
6.4 7.7
$36,948
$1.1 million
197 49
6.7 6.4
$26,229
$5.2 million
$31,107
$1.8 million
Crook County Deschutes County Jefferson County Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
From previous page But Gaieski said it may come down to how difficult it is to recognize sepsis in its ear-
ly stages. "In the vast majority of cases, it just smolders along and has a real mix of symptoms and signs," he said. "It's sort of
Total hospital costs
1,083,057
Oregon
Condition
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
"A lot hinges on an index of suspicion by the physician, careful assessment of the patient's vital signs, physical examination, and some basic laboratory tests." — Dr. Jon Lutz, an infectious disease specialist at Bend Memorial Clinic who treated Elster's sepsis
That is what makes sepsis such a challenge for hospitals. None of the warning signs of sepsis is present in all sepsis cases. International consensus guidelines list no fewer than
24 possibl e signs ofsepsis.So unless doctors and nurses are vigilant, it can be easily overlooked. Patients could come to the emergency room with normal blood pressure and tem-
perature, yet might be well on their way to severe sepsis. "They might be asked to sit
in triage for two hours, and those are two hours in which
their lives could have been saved," Gaieski said. "One of the hardest things for a lot of
healthcare providers to w rap their heads around is that this person who you just triaged and put in a chair before they can be seen, has a mortality (risk) of 40 to 50 percent." And because sepsis can stem from so many different conditions, the treating physicians might not be well-versed in sepsis protocols. A patient with a broken leg, for example, could be treated by an orthopedist who doesn't see as many sepsis cases as an emergency room physician or critical care specialist. "A lot hinges on an index of suspicion by the physician,
$20.3 billion
52%
1.1 million
2 Osteoarthritis 3 Complication of device, implant or graft
$14.8 billion $12.9 billion
3.8% 3.3%
964,000 699,000
4 Liveborn 5 Acute myocardial infarction
$12.4 billion $11.5 billion
32% 3.0%
3.8 million 612,000
6 Spondylosis, intervertebral disc disorders, other back problems 7 Pneumonia (except TB or STDs)
$11.2 billion $10.6 billion
29% 2.7%
667,000 1.1 million
8 Congestive heart failure, nonhypertensive 9 Coronary atherosclerosis
$10.5 billion $10.4 billion
27% 27%
970,000 605,000
$8.7 billion
23%
404,000
10 Respiratory failure, insufficiency, arrest (adult) Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
mainly through education
help with."
of front-line clinicians and a
have seen more than 600 cas-
screening tool. "It was a paper-based tool, an expanded set of vital signs," said Julie Kliger, a consultant
Many firms are now trying to develop technological solutions to the sepsis problem. Some hospitals, including Or-
cently completed a two-year
with The Altos Group, who led
the effort. "Every shift, regardless of the reason the patient was in the hospital, and every admission through the emergency room got screened." A St. Charles spokesperson was not aware of any specific sepsis initiatives in any of the four Central Oregon hospitals. Kliger is n o w w o rking with a technology company that is developing a handheld device that would help
clinicians catch sepsis early and cut down on the time lag
between when a nurse suspects sepsis, the condition is
along the spectrum." sepsiscampaign that reduced Those complexities leave sepsis mortality from 28 per- said. "This is the kind of thing hospitals constantly battling to cent of cases to 17 percent, that assistive technology will
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d octors and nurses on t h e
signs of sepsis. Lockheed Martin, a defense contractor, r ecently
r e p ur-
posed a missile control system adept at updating various streams of data in real time,
to help clinicians make sense of changing vital signs and test results to identify sepsis
faster. Others are working on bedside tests that could more rapidly diagnose sepsis or the type of infection involved. Until those are perfected and proven, however, suc-
cess in reducing the impact of sepsis will continue to rely lost when a nurse must track on very old-school approachdown a physician to order the es, using basic vital signs and necessary lab tests to confirm good clinical judgment to sepsis. They must then contact quickly and accurately diagthe lab to send a phlebotomist nose patients. "People are trying very hard to get ablood sample, and wait for the results. to have technology help us out "Meanwhile, tick-tock, tick- with rapid integration of infortock, it's four hours later some- mation and genetics. That may times," Kliger said. bail us out," said Dr. Stephen By automating the process, Opal, an infectious disease the order for the test can be specialist at Brown University. triggered automatically based "But at the present time, it's really the astute clinician being on preset protocols. "So you're kind of trun- aware of the problem. That's cating the time element," she just the nature of the beast."
in treatment, you have to move
"EELggES gUIPMarr REN TALFEKg. NWafflKSrfffcrfffffg MAYAPKK
versity, are using programmable mannequins to help train
begin. Often valuable time is
the lab and identified. If doc-
bendbroadband"
egon Health & Science Uni-
confirmed, and treatment can
teria cultures to be grown in
give a more targeted antibiot-
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
stay on top of sepsis. The four hospitals in Central Oregon
carefulassessment of the pa- ic, it might be too late. tient's vital signs, physical Moreover, the d i fferences 2011 data submitted to a state examination, and some basic between a normal immune re- hospital database. St. Charles laboratory tests," said Dr. Jon sponse to infection or trauma does not specifically track sepLutz, an i n fectious disease and thestartof sepsis can be sis mortality rates, and therespecialist at Bend Memori- subtle. A patient infected with fore couldn't report how many al Clinic who treated Elster's the flu could have both a fever of those 600 patients died of sepsis. and an elevated heart rate, tech- sepsis, either in the hospital or nically meeting the definition after being discharged to home Constant challenge for sepsis.Yet, doctors aren't health or nursing home care. Additionally, reducing sep- going to pump every flu patient Nationwide, hospitals and sis mortality requires hospi- full of antibiotics and fluids. quality improvement orga"It's so easy to be deemed nizations have made sepsis tals to go against the grain of the current push in health 'septic,'" said Dr. Chris Rich- a point of emphasis, implecare toavoid excess tests and ards, an emergency physician menting v a rious i n i tiatives interventions. Just last week, at St. Charles Bend, using air to improve recognition and Centers for Disease Control quotes to underscore the fuzzi- treatment of sepsis, before it and Prevention Director Tom ness of the definition. "It's kind progresses. Frieden called on hospitals to of a catch-all term." The Center for Transformbe more judicious in their use Doctors and nurses rely on ing Healthcare, a quality imof antibiotics, to help avoid test results to track patients, provement arm of the group the rise of antibiotic-resistant trying to determine when that accredits hospitals, is bacteria. they might be moving beyond completing a pilot program Many believethose super- mere infection to sepsis, and with five hospitals that had a bugs are exacerbating sepsis adjusting treatment as their goal of reducing sepsis morcases among younger, healthy conditions change. But it can tality by 20 percent. The cenindividuals, particularly when be challenging to get it right, ter plans to release the results doctors give more powerful, and patients can go downhill soon after their final meeting broad-spectrum antibiotics as quickly if it's not immediately in April, but organizers called a first therapy. recognized. the results "extremely prom"Patients can come in and ising." They plan to roll out a But sepsis protocols call for the early use of broad-spec- be right on the fence," Rich- web-based sepsis application trum antibiotics that can kill ards said, "and before we can for national use. every type of bacteria. It can start therapy on them, they Meanwhile, nine hospitals take two to three days for bac- can start deteriorating. Even in the San Francisco area retors wait that time so they can
Percentage Number of oftotal costs hospital discharges
1 Sepsis (except in labor)
es of sepsis in the past year, at an average cost of more than $26,000 per case, according to
protean in its presentation."
Total spending
— Reporter: 541-617-7814, mhawryluk@bendbulletin.com
A6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
TODAY'S READ: DEWEY & LEBOEUFSCANDAL
Anun erin amon t eo iciasaccuse o rau atDewey By James B. Stewart
terpreted as background information, according to accounts he subsequently gave to his friends. The exchange seemed cordial, and he heard nothing more.
New York Times News Service
"You've been indicted," an assistant Manhattan district attorney, Peirce Moser, told Zachary
get, and he asked Moser if that was the case. The prosecutor did not answer directly, but
said, "This is a serious matter." Warren asked, "Should I hire an attorney? Maybe I shouldn't
In late October, an SEC law- be talkingtoyou." yer investigating the bond ofT he prosecutor said h e fering contacted him. Warren couldn't advise people whether of Georgetown Law School with a prestigious had had nothing to do with it they should have lawyers. and, because he had not been This, in any event, is what clerkship on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 6th subpoenaed, was under no obli- Warren has told his friends. gation to testify. But he wanted (Others with knowledge of the Circuit in Memphis. to be helpful and cooperative, interview insist that he was told and he agreed to take time off point-blank to hire a lawyer "Can you say that again?" a stunned Warren from work in Memphis and and that he was in jeopardy, a Brian Harkin/The New York Times travel to Washington to provide courtesy not extended to many asked when he received the call two weeks ago Cyrus Vance Jr., the Manhattan district attorney, outlines charges what he continued to think was potential defendants.) against four former top leaders of the lsw firm of Dewey 8 Lejust background information in W arren went t o s e e h i s Friday. Boeuf, at s news conference in New York earlier this month. Zscha civil investigation. friend, the former Georgeary Warren, a 29-year-old Georgetown LawSchool graduate, was Then, in a subsequent call, town dassmate, right after the Almostas surprised asWar- books" of the once-giant law charged in two separate indictments related to the case. He wss an SEC lawyer told him that a meeting. ren himself were Warren's cell- firm? And how did he get there allegedly the target of s prosecutorial tactic in which he thought he lawyer from the district attormates before his arraignment without realizing he should was being questioned only as part of a civil case when, in actuality, ney's office would be sitting in. 'Shaken' "He was shaken," his friend a week ago — the top manag- hire a lawyer? he wss also the target of s criminal investigation. Did Warren mind'? ers of Dewey & LeBoeuf, the This is what upsets Curran, said. "He said he couldn't give global law firm that implod- A deceptive tactic the defense lawyer. them the answers they wanted, "It puts people in a very dif- and they got really frustrated ed in 2012. Although some of According to several crim- cherished right to counsel." a way station. Both his parthem had trouble remembering inal defense lawyers I spoke A spokeswoman for the ents are lawyers: His father is ficult position," he said. "You and upset." The friend added: "I who Warren was, the indict- to last week, Warren became Manhattan district attorney, a retired California state court want to cooperate, you agree to don't think he thought he might ment daims that all four were caught up in an increasingly Erin Duggan Kramer, coun- judge, and his mother is a pro- a meeting, then, whoa, the dis- be a target. He was worried co-conspirators in a m ajor common prosecutorial tac- tered, "The facts here are in- fessor at William & M a r y 's trict attorney is in there. They thathemightbesubpoenaedto accounting fraud. The firm's tic. Warren may have been correct." Sh e added, "The claim Marshall-Wythe School of Law. say, 'You don't have a problem appear before a grand jury as a chairman, executive director na'ive, but he thought he was that an attorney with a federWarren excelled at George- with that, do you?' What can witness." and chief financial officer, ages being questioned as part of a al derkship could have any town, where he was articles ed- you say'? Many times, they As the year was drawing to 60, 57 and 55, had long known civil Securities and Exchange misunderstanding of what it itor of the law review. He land- don't even tell you ahead of a close, the five-year statute of that they were the subjects of a Commission investigation. He means to speak with andagree ed a covetedclerkship on the time a c r iminal investigator limitations was about to excriminal investigation. All had thought he might be a witness to meet with the DA's office is U.S. District Court in Baltimore will be there." pire, since some of the events prominent criminal lawyers, and thus did not need a lawyer. preposterous." with Judge J. Frederick Motz, Warren arrivedat the SEC in which Warren was involved while Warren had hired a law- Only too late did it dawn on and then on the 6th Circuit with offices Nov. 15. After the SEC occurred on Dec. 31, 2008. The yer only after the phone call him that he might be a target Warren'sstory Judge Julia Smith Gibbons. He lawyerasked some introducto- three other defendants — the that Friday. of a criminal investigation. The Warren didn't comment for is a member of the California ry questions, Moser, the assis- firm's top-ranking officersAlone among the defen- defense lawyers said prosecu- this artide. But people dose and District of Columbia bars, tant district attorney, took over. were all asked if they would dants, Warren was charged in tors were increasinglyusing so- to him said he thought he was and has a job offer from the An FBI agentwas also present, voluntarily extend the statute two separate indictments, one called parallel investigations far removed from the troubles prestigious Washington law and other prosecutors were lis- of limitations, which is usually accusing him of a "scheme to to insert c~ inv e stigators of Dewey 5 LeBoeuf, since he firm Williams 8r Connolly. tening from New York. a routine request. They agreed. defraud" and falsifying busi- into what their targets thought left long before the 2010 bond It is rare for a sitting federal Byallaccounts, theinterview But no one contacted Warren, ness records and the other were civil proceedings. offering that is the focus of the judgeto comment on apending was a disaster for Warren. He which would have put him on "It's a serious threat to civ- SEC'scivilfraud charges.War - criminal case, but Motz told me had trouble remembering de- notice that he was a target and charging him with six felony counts of having "made and il liberties, and people should ren was a 24-year-old Stanford this week, "Zack is a wonderful tails from his time at the firm, would need a lawyer to negoticaused" false entries in books know about it," said Thomas graduate when he applied to person, a decent, fine young which prosecutors interpret- ate the extension. and records. Warren pleaded Curran, a criminal defense what was then the LeBoeuf man." He added: "I'm so sorry ed as evasion or, worse, lying. Warren heard nothing until not guilty and was released lawyer in New York and a firm for a position as a para- he's being put through what's They showed him emails and he received the news of his inon $200,000 bail. His once- former prosecutor under the legal.Instead, he was off ered happening. He worked very documents, most of which he dictments.Ordered to appear bright future has now been former Manhattan district at- a $40,000-a-year job helping hard and was a wonderful per- did not recall. He was not pre- in court, he finally said, "I think threatened. torney Robert M o rgenthau. partners collect dient debts. son to have in the office. I trust pared for the hostile tone and I'd better check with a lawyer." How did a 29-year-old with "Now, this is going on all over His hard work so impressed his him completely." became defensive. Hosecutors His friend said: "He was an impeccablerecord, some- the country." colleagues that he was promotFor Warren, the first inkling thought that Warren was arro- caught complet ely offguard. one who had never even taken While this isn't illegal or ed to "client relations manager" of potential trouble came ear- gant, even that he was "playing He had to ask the prosecutor to an accounting course, end up technically improper, "It's dan- in June 2008, earning a salary ly last year, when he received them" by trying to ferret out repeat itbecause his mind went as an accused mastermind of gerous," Curran said. "They're of $100,000 ayear. a call from prosecutors in the what they knew, rather than of- blank." what the Manhattan district at- using civil proceedings to adWarren had long wanted to Manhattan district attorney's fering to help the investigation. A lawyer for Warren, Martorney, Cyrus Vance Jr., called vance their criminal investi- go to law school and saw his office. Warren answered quesAt one point, it occurred to tin Himeles Jr., declined to "a massive effort to cook the gations. It's a real threat to the stint at Dewey & LeBoeuf as tions and provided what he in- Warren that he might be a tar- comment.
Warren,a 29-year-old magna cum laude graduate
PACIFIC FURMITURE DEALERS
)
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See Store for Details
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
ukraine Continued from A1
mation and that the Russians thousands of antiwar demon- monitors to fan out across were still occupying the site. strators turned out in Moscow southern and eastern Ukraine It was not immediately dear
The incident marked the first
whether the incursion was a
face-toface standoff between
temporary mission or a Russian attempt
the Ukrainian and Russian militaries outside the Crime-
to protest Russia's intervention
to independently assess the sit-
in Ukraine, marking the larg- uation on the ground. r ec o n naissance est political rally inthe Russian He also reiterated Kiev's pocapital in more than a year.
sition that today's referendum
to secure the Ukrainian enerActing I n t erior M i n i ster an Peninsula, suggesting that gy outpost just off the Crimean Arsen Avakov wrote on his Moscow is testing the will of coast. Facebook page Saturday that Kiev amid fears of further RusIn Washington, President it was not yet dear whether the sian incursions in eastern and Barack Obama's top national people killed in Kharkiv were southern Ukraine. The move security advisers gathered at pro-Russian or pro-UkraMan, comes on the eve of a vote in the White House on Satur- and activists on both sides Crimea on whether the resi- day afternoon to discuss the were arrested, officials said. dents there want to break away Ukraine crisis, and officials Ukrainian Foreign Minister from Ukraine and join Russia. said Obama was being regu- Andriy Deshchytsya called on Russian troops in four he- larly updated on the situation. Russia to "stop interfering" in licopter gunships and three Earlier in the day, Ukrainian eastern Ukraine, saying that armored combat vehides de- officials reported a shootout authorities here could hanscendedon the naturalgas fa- b etween p r o -Russian a n d dle issues of law and order in cility near the village of Strilk- pro-Ukrainian demonstrators the region. He described the ove about 1:30 p.m. local time, that took place overnight in threatening statements from according to Ukrairnan offi- the eastern Ukrainian city of Russia's Foreign Ministry as an
in Crimea would be "illegal" and would not be recognized by the international commu-
nity. He emphasized the new government's desire to avoid
A7
ed, but in a possible sign of Rus- from the Russian Federation sian isolation, Moscow's close was observed Friday night ally China opted to abstain moving from the city of Feorather than join Moscow in ve- dosia to Dzhankoi in northern toing the measure. The other 13 Crimea. Ukrainian military Security Councilmembers sup- spokesman Vladislav Seleznported the measure. yov said that more Russian U.S. Secretary of State troops have moved in to occuJohn Kerry on Friday warned py Ukrainian military bases against a "back-door annex- that had been abandoned long ation" of Crimea by Russia. But before the crisis began. he conceded that six hours of If Russia does move to an-
any military conflict and referred to the current standoff talks in London with Russia's
nex Crimea after today's vote,
it could trigger the harshest the referendum nor opened a sanctions levied against Mostravel to Brussels on Monday new diplomatic path for Mos- cow by the United States and to meet with NATO's secretary cow to step back from the Cold European powers since the Cold War. general to discuss "military War-tinged standoff. and technical cooperation." The vote will be held under The European Union is exRussia on Saturday blocked the eyes of Russian troops, pected to impose travel bans passage of a U.N. Security who effectively took control and asset freezes Monday on Council resolution that would of Crimea late last month af- Russians accused of complicity in Moscow's military incursion have declared that today's ref- ter protesters overthrew the and the intimidation of Crimea. cials. The Russians said they Kharkiv. attempt to "provoke" an escala- erendum "can have no validity, Ukrainian government. A had seized the site out of fears Two people were dead and tion of the tense situation in the and cannot form the basis for Ukrainian Defense Ministry The E.U. on Friday identified official said that a column of more than 120 individuals as it would be targeted by "terror- several injured after a group east. any alteration of the status of ists," according to a Ukra&an of Russian separatists apDeshchytsya called for U.N. Crimea." The veto was expect- about 50 armored vehicl es potential sanctions targets. Defense M i n i str y of f i c ial proached offices being used who spoke on the condition of by pro-Ukrainian activists, acanonymity. cording to Tatiana GruzinskaA Ukrainian border guard ya, spokeswoman for the city's spokesman, Oleg Slobodyan, mayor. said Saturday evening that The Russian Foreign Min120 Russian soldiers were still
ment Saturday in response to the violence. "There have been mands to leave. No shots had many appeals for Russia to been fired, he said, but added protect peaceful civilians," the that Ukrainian military forces statement said. "These appeals had mobilized to just outside will be considered." the city of Henichesk, putting That warning, which folthemselves between the Rus- lowed similar threats, is likely sian force and the Ukrainian to add to fears that Russia will not agreed to Ukrainian de-
expand its i ntervention be-
yond Crimea and into eastern Foreign Ministry demanded Ukraine. While Russia has that the Russian side withdraw blamed such dashes on righti mmediately and s ai d t h a t wing Ukrainians and on the "Ukraine reserves the right to new government, Ukrainian use all necessary measures to officials placed responsibility stop the military invasion by squarely on Russia's shoulders. Russia." Speaking fr o m the Ukraine's Defense Ministry Ukrainian capital of K iev, initially said in a statement that interim President Oleksanthe Russians had left the area dr ' Ibrchynov said t hat i t after a period of negotiation. was "Russian agents" who But the ministry later corrected were "causing people to be itself, saying its earlier state- murdered." m ent was based on false inforAs Turchynov spoke, tens of
KIDS Continued from A1 The center is c elebrating its 20th year in 2014 and has
helped more than 10,000 children, Executive Director
Shelly Smith said last week. More than 50percent of its $1.4 million annual budget comes from donations provided by individuals, corporations and private foundations.
top diplomat neither stopped
istry issued a menacing state-
occupying the site and had
mainland. In a statement, Ukraine's
as more of a "diplomatic war." But he added that he would
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a L
2014 Healing Hearls luncheon The KIDSCenter's annual fundraising event will teach attendees how to help children who aresuspected victims of abuseand learn how to prevent child abuse.
IF YOUGO When:11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Tuesday, April1 Where:The Riverhouse Convention Center, 3075 N. Business U.S.Highway97 Cost:Free, but attendees are asked to make adonation to the KIDSCenter
•
Tuesday
Tuesday
10
10
•
10
Te5
"We had 404 children referred to us last year," Smith said. "People want to believe it doesn't happen around here, but thereare huge problems everywhere. No community is immune." According to statistics from nonprofit child abuse prevention foundation "Darkness to Once a child has been evalLight, Stewards of Children," uated, the KIDS Center staff approximately 1 in 10 children continues to offer support and will be sexually abused before counseling for up to a year afhis or her 18th birthday. About
® e-
ter the first visit, Smith said.
•
•
•
"If kids don't get help, they 1 in 7 girls and 1 in 25 boys will be sexually abused before often end u p w i t h m e ntal turning 18. health issues or drug and alRobin Antonson, director of
development and prevention for the KIDS Center, said staff
members work hard to dispel myths about child abuse. "There is a high perception that it only happens in lower-class families," she said. "We see kids from the upper class and the lower class." A childcan be referred to the KIDS Center for an eval-
cohol issues," Antonson said. "The cost to our society of not
addressingtheissue ishuge." When a child is abused, statistics show 90 percent of the time it is at the hands of a friend or relative known and trusted by the child, Smith
said. When a child discloses abuse, one of the worst things
an adult can do is accuse the child of lying.
"That's such a devastating uation by law enforcement, DHS, a medical professional statement to make to a child," or a licensed therapist, Smith Antonson said. "Children do said.Once referred,the child not lie about things they havand his or her family are inter- en't experienced." viewed by the professionals at The KIDS Center implethe KIDS Center.
"We have three very skilled
mented th e
"Darkness to
Light" program that empowf orensic i n t erviewers a n d ers adults to protect children. I'm constantly awed by how The program trains adults they're able to read a child," on the five steps to shielding Smith said. "They say, 'I talk kids from abuse. "Darkness to a lot of kids and nothing you to Light" recommends adults can say will surprise me.'" learn the facts about the prevThe interviews are video-re- alence of child abuse; minicordedand are admissible as mize the opportunity for abusevidence in court. While the ers by reducing one-on-one interview is in progress, med- time between children and ical professionals, DHS work- adults; talk openly with kids ers and often law enforce- about their bodies, sex and ment watch in another room.
boundaries; learn to recognize
they will leave mid-interview
closes abuse.
to go and arrest someone," Smith said. "Or they go to
Training costs $20 per person and is available in English
the child's home and collect
and Spanish. The center also
®i
one s
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"We like to have law enforce- the signs of abuse and react ment here because sometimes responsibly when a child dis-
evidence."
offers training on keeping kids safe from Internet predais seen by a medical profes- tors and learning what is apsional. The KIDS Center has a propriate sexual behavior for doctor and nurse practitioners kids 2 to 7 years old. After the interview, the child
on staff full time, Smith said.
For m o r e in fo r m ation about the K ID S C enter or
cal exam if the child will allow it," Smith said. "We won't force
to sign up for a course, visit www.kidscenter.org or call
them, but if we need to collect evidence we will try really
541-383-5958.
"We'll do a full-body medi-
hard to get them to allow it."
— Reporter: 541-383-0376, sking@bendbulletin.com
. US.Cellular. Hello Setter; Thingswewantyouto know: Newsvc. andS35deviceact feerequired. Add, fees,taxesandterms apply andvaryby svc. andeqmt. Useof svc. constltutes acceptanceof agmtterms,Inordertorecelveplan minutes,themonthlychargemust bepaid beforeduedate. Youmay bechargedatanytime of dayonyourduedate andshould refIII beforethatdateto avold svc, Interruptlon. Youwl beunabletousephone If accountbalanceIs negative. Roaming,directory asslstanceandInternatlonal calls requireaddltlonalaccountfundsto complete calls. Oatsspeeds: Full applicabledataspeedsapply for the Ilrst 500MBof usage.Dataspeedsshal beslowedto Ix thereafter fortheremainderofthebiling cycle. Ofers validat participating locatlonsonlyandcannot becomblned. 15-iiay 6uarantee: Act.IeeIs not refundable. Phone must be returnedundamagedin theoriginal packaging.Seestoreor uscelular.comfor details. Limited-timeoffer.Trademarksandtradenames aretheproperty of thelr respective owners, ©2014 U.S,Cellular
AS THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
Bullfighting
KAZAKHSTAN
Continued from A1 Today, the Spanish colonial tradition is disappearing amid sometimes violent protests, changing cultural norms and a struggling business model. The 77-year-old elder Rincon's goal is to "evolve" the art o f b u l lfighting
UZBE CHINA
AFGHAN Retf nerepresents possible po ions of plane when it nsmitted last signal to PAKISTAN sateiilte
P
YANMA IND IA taA:
LA
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and the tradition is restored.
A makeshift bullring was set up outside the city limits, and
the group is anticipating a changethisyear. "I think they are wrong," said Gonzalo Rincon, one of those who think a bullfight
been triedbefore,much as when Cesar Rincon enam-
ored audiences worldwide. The soft-spoken Del
Sear area I
indian Ocean
— Cesar Rincon, Colombian bullfighter
with new expressions and movements that have never
A I LAN
Anda@arr,
"l think this is the lowest moment in the tradition."
C astillo dropped out
Kuaia iu Ap a iiport '
IN I M N .
can do w i thout the k i l ling
of the bull. Rincon likened a
of
high school at 17, but said training to be a bullfighter
deathless bullfight to a soccer match without goals. "If
has made him more disci-
there are no goals, no one is
plined, but with great sacPosition of satellite that . received last known sfgnal Jrom plane.
C o n tact with military radar.
g
Las t contact~. w i t h civilian radar.
Red line re sents possible positions of plane when it hansmitted last signal to satellite.
Jet
and he works odd jobs to pay his rent.
afternoon. More than 10,000 were on hand for the "mano
The New York Times
Achury Viejo bull ranch in the hills outside the capital. "I think this is the lowest moment in the tradition,"
based on something, and until they have something more to go on it's all just theories."
been shut down pointed to
in retirement who lives in Madrid with his father and
mals for sport in the city. Mil-
movement
Before a recent bullfight
" We don't t h in k
gent of 110 officers protecting the Plaza that day. "It's a shift in generations. The
northern corridor, they could
have gone down before they reached land, so it's also posdevelopments. sible," he said. Even with the vastly largAccording to a p e r son er target area, the officials who has been briefed on the insisted the search continue progress of the investigation, with vigor. the two "corridors" were deAmerican investigators cit- rived from calculations by ed the need for hard informa- engineers from the satellite tion in the inquiry. communications c ompany "It doesn't mean anything; Inmarsat, which were proall it is is a theory," one senior vided to i n vestigators. The U.S. official said. "Find the person spoke on the condiplane, find the black boxes tion of anonymity because and then we can figure out details of the search remain what happened. It has to be confidential. on Saturday to discuss the
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For Cesar Rincon, the
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with some teachers telling children that bullfighting is wrong. Colombia's Ministry of Education said bullfighting is not specifically treated in the curriculum. Any reference to bullfighting either in support or against it is the personal opinion of the teacher or school.
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began to give human traits to animals, people began
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China's foreign minister, Wang Yi, convened officials
TueSc Sat., 10-5.
nearby, part of a contin-
crew member was involved
"If they had taken the
CROSSING
egant passes of the torero, but she wishes the bull didn't
fights as a child. Policemen on horseback stood
ings. In Colombia, schools
India and other nations that have tensions with China.
N QRTHWEsT
met at the very arena and used to take him to bull-
suggested that at least one
either went south or, if it flew n orth, did not m ake it f a r, Robertsson said.
to three-quarters over the following two years. Last year, the group decided they would not bullfight in Quito until the law is changed
t hat
making further calculations, which will indicate how far the aircraft may have flown after the last point of con-
Boeing 777 is a relatively new After Najib's announce- and big plane, so it wouldn't ment at a n a i r p ort h o t el, be anyone who could do China's Ministry of Foreign this, not even someone who Affairs said technical experts has flown smaller passenger would be sent to M alaysia. planes, even smaller BoeTwo-thirds of the people on ings," he said. the jet were Chinese citizens. The possible northern corA m inistry spokesman, ridor Najib described bristles Qin Gang, said China would with military radar, making shift its planes and ships to it more likely that the plane
the Plaza still filled at least
T essa is a sweet, happy pit bull mix, 1-2 years old. She has had basic obedience t rai n i n g , s cored a n A in trainability, and is a joy to walk on a leash. She really wants to please and is friendly and affectionate. Tessa gets along with dogs but was really frightened when a cat hissed at her. See photos, video at http:// brightsideanimals.org/dogs-cats-foradoption/adoptable-dogs/ or meet her
anyone has the right to torture anything, animals included," the New Jersey-born Colombian said, noting that his parents had
Chinese government on aviation security, said the details
air traffic control without attracting attention," he said in a telephone interview. "The
ton Calahorrano, president of Ecuador's bullfighting union, said the industry was greatly harmed by the change, but
ESS
Juan G. for fear of threats
ly out of fuel. "The investigation team is
knowledge of how to avoid
broad Moorish facade built in
at la Macarena, a protester have to be killed. who gave his name only as
cial pilot who has advised the
it last made contact with a satellite."
In 2011 in Quito, a politi-
cade as fewer plazas and 1931, has been shuttered for small towns host fights. the past two years, the result Meanwhile, ticket pric- of an anti-bullfighting cames are too high for most paign that won the support Colombians. A lower-level of the city's embattled leftist seat in Medellin costs the mayor and former guerrilla, equivalent of a monthly Gustavo Petro. Colombia's minimum-wage s a lary. other plazas suffered losses Benjamin de Los Rios, di- as a result, but recovered this rector of Medellin's Plaza year. de la Macarena, says pricB ullfighters, t oo , h a v e ing is part of a "vicious cy- had to get a second job. Sancle" as international bull- tiago Naranjo, 28, a matafighters that draw crowds dor since 2010, has a retail command up to $140,000 store at a Bogota shopping per afternoon. The result center and studies business is a half-empty arena and administration. fewer parents p assing Sonia Perez, 28, a neighon the tradition to t heir bor who sees Rincon and Del children. Castillo practice every day in her apartment garage, says Anti-bullfighting she enjoys the faena, the el-
said, it could have been near-
location of the plane when
"Madrid of South America."
of business in the last de-
Beijing, so when its last signal came, at 8:11 a.m., Najib
this involved someone with
Morante de la Puebla last month.
cized national referendum prohibited the killing of ani-
Malaysia or Vietnam. He was like in no-man's country." Xu Ke, a former commer-
unable to confirm the precise
plain of high ticket prices that leave the arena half-empty despite
fighting future is uncertain. dozen bull ranches across Bogota's ornate Plaza de the country have gone out Toros de Santamaria, with its
we want to do away with
in seizing control of the aircraft, either willingly or untact," he said, reading a state- der pressure. "The timing of turning off ment in English. "Due to the type of satellite data, we are the transponder suggests that
roof in 2003 to double as a concert venue. Many aficionados com-
year in Colombia. About a
for the Indian Ocean.
The flight had been sched- when he wasn't in control by
Medellin, Colombia's Plaza de la Macarena added a retractable
agena with his Colombian wife. In Bogota, with the likely ouster of Mayor Petro on corruption charges, aficionados are hopeful that bullfighting will once again reign in the
spends four months of the
from aficionados, led a protest of about 30 college-aged students from across the street.
he found the perfect moment
Abraham Mahshie / Miami Herald / MCT
said Rincon, a bull rancher the presence of top international bullfighters, such as Spaniard
the involvement of someHe said one communica- one with considerable avitions system had been dis- ation expertise and knowlabled as the plane flew over edge of the route, possibly the northeast coast of Malay- a crew member, willing or sia. A second system abruptly unwilling. stopped broadcasting its locaThe Boeing's transponder tion, altitude, speed and oth- was switched off just as the er information at 1:21 a.m., plane passed from Malaywhile the plane was a third sian to Vietnamese air traffic of the way across the Gulf of control space, making it more Thailand from Malaysia to likely that its silence would Vietnam. not arouse attention, he said Military radar data showed by phone from Sweden. "I think the timing of turnthat the plane turned and flew west across northern ing off the signal just after Malaysia before arcing out you have left Malaysian air over the wide northern end of traffic control indicates somethe Strait of Malacca, headed one did this on purpose, and
sia, a region that includes
French bullfighter Sebastian Castella, who lives in Cart-
a small ring at the historic
the plane," Najib said.
search areas west ofMalay-
a mano" between Colombian bullfighter Luis Bolivar and
from aviewing area above
Indian Ocean, roughly 1,000 Off the grid miles off the west coast of M ikael R o b e rtsson, a Australia. co-founder of Flightradar24, The plane changed course a global aviation tracking after it took off. "These move- service, said the way the ments are consistent with de- plane's communications had
The search
de Toros this year for a single
On a recentafternoon,
runs from near Jakarta to the
uled to land at 6:30 a.m. in
to reopen Cartagena's Plaza
Cesar Rincon watched a tienta, or a test of cows,
Continued from A1 Police officers were seen The investigator spoke on the Saturday going to the home condition of anonymity beof the flight's pilot, Zaharie cause of the sensitivity of the Ahmad Shah,in a gated com- inquiry. pound near Kuala Lumpur, American i n v estigators and the Malaysian news me- have much of the flight data dia reported that a search had obtained from radar and sattaken place. The police would ellites, but have been given say only that there would be a far less information about the news conference today. pilots and passengers. Soon A satellite orbiting 22,250 after the plane disappeared, miles over the middle of the FBI agents and other AmeriIndian Ocean received the cans "scrubbed" the names of t ransmission t h a t , b a s e d pilots and passengers — inon the angle from which cluding two Iranian men travthe plane sent it, came from eling on stolen passports — to somewhere along one of the determine whether they had two arcs.One arc runs from any terrorist connections, but the southern border of Ka- found none, the officials said. zakhstan in Central Asia to Officials in W ashington northern Thailand, passing say they are frustrated beover some hot spots of global cause they believe that the insurgency and highly mili- FBI could be of substantial tarized areas. The other arc assistance.
liberate action by someone on
Colombia's bullfighting association helped repay debts
er
Dying tradition
Plane may have flown up to another ho~u afterits iast satellite transmission. Source: Malaysian government
triumphant."
rifice. His father refused to talk to him for six months,
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preserved. "We have to teach our roots, the backbone of our tradition," he said. "In Co-
lombia, bullfighting is not an art, it is not a sport, it is
a profession that is controversial. And since it is con-
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of government support." In recent years, anti-bullfighting advocates appeared to be gaining the upper hand. "Politicians
believes Colombia's bull-
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win votes by saying they are against bullfighting," said Colombian bullfighter Manuel Libardo, 28, who was voted Colombia's
• I
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5
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
BRIEFING
cass o ows oo oi source
Health care forum hosts candidates CandidatesAeleaChristoff ersonandKnuteBuehlerwillbe participating ina discussionpanelonCover Oregonfrom3:30to5 p.m. todayatthe FirstPresbyterian ChurchinBend. Christofferson, aBend Democrat,hasenteredthe primaryfor Republican Greg Walden's2ndCongressionalDistnctseat. Buehler, aRepublican, is runningforthestate Houseseatthat Republican Jason Conger, of Bend, is vacating torunforthe U.S. Senate. Christoffersonisa small-businessownerwho hasservedonthe Cover Oregonboardsince2011, althoughshesaidsheis resigningtoconcentrate on her campaign.Buehleris asurgeonwhopreviously ranfor Oregonsecretary ofstate.
By Tyler Leeds
Now students in his Sus-
The Bulletin
A Central Oregon Com-
tainable Food and Nutrition course have the option to
munity College professor has spend a day working on a begun coordinating a vollocal farm as part of the unteer program for local orcourse. This curriculum, ganic farms, an undertaking with its emphasis on the that reflects a change in the practical implications of professor's understanding of food production, as well as wellness. the limitations, represents Owen Murphy, assistant an evolution in Murphy's approfessor of health and proach to teaching health to human performances, cohis students. "I grew up loving endurordinates Bend's Willing Workers on Local Farms ance sports — things like cyprogram. Murphy, 39, was cling, triathlon and distance recruited earlier this year running," Murphy said. "Ultiafter bringing his students to mately, I wanted to work with Central Oregon Locavore for athletes competing at such a a chance to see how a food high leveL And so over time, I nonprofit is run. competed and coached, but it
was a myopic view of health." Murphy said he's not sure whether there was "a specific day or event that changed things," but over time, he "got less and less joy" out of his focus on performance. "It doesn't do anyone a
whole lot of good to improve your 4K time by 2 percent, when social issues of health
matter so much more," Murphy said. "What happened was, I stopped teaching students to count calories in and calories out, and began to focus on healthy food and
mindset, as well as the social
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
causes and consequences of food production." SeeCOCC /B5
Juniper Jungle Farm owner Chris Casad, left, talks Saturday to Owen Murphy, COCC assistant professor, with his daughter Olivia, 4, about one of the fields he farms.
CLEANING UP
Nuisance ordinance is in effect in La Pine
Nore briefing, 84
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON— The
Senateapprovedlegislation that reworksthe NationalFlood Insurance Planbyscaling back increases topremiums for manyhomeowners. In 2012, Congressenacted legislation tohelprestore the planafter themassive payouts fromHurricane Katrina, butmanyhomeowners, particularly in coastalregions, foundthe sudden spikes inpremiums untenable.Underthe new legislation, insurance rateswill go upbyanaverage of 5percentfor differentflood-riskcategories each year,but theoverall maximum increaseis15 percent. Thebill passed, 72-22, with 51Democrats and 21Republicansvoting for it, and 20Republicans and two Democratsopposing it. U.S. SENATEVOTE
By Monicia Warner The Bulletin
People traveling U.S. Highway 97 into La Pine over the
past few years might recall seeing intricate wood carvings and pieces of scrap wood and metal along a stretch of land
on the east side of the road. The property's longtime tenant, Ken Medenbach-
known locally as the wood carver— recentlyvacated the property, and its owners, Art and Lorraine Willett, are exPhotos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Members of the Sunshine Exchange Cloggers of Redmond perform during the city's St. Patrick's Day Festival at Centennial Park on Saturday. Most places make one day of the holiday that falls on Monday. Redmond is celebrating all weekend.
clean tenant," Lorraine Willett
emon u s ersin s t atric 's a cee ration
Jeff Merkley(D)....................... Y Ron I/I/yden(Df....................... Y
On Friday,the Houseof Representativespassed legislation thatwould prevent thefederal governmentfrom withholding permits from private businesses,suchasski resorts, thatoperateon federal landuntil theysign over their waterrights to the government.The Water RightsProtection Act passed,238-174, with a dozenDemocrats joining 226Republicans in supporting themeasure. Democrats castall of the votes against.
U.S. HOUSE VOTE 8/eg I/Yalden(R)..................... Y Ea/f Blumenat/er(D).............. N SumnneBonamici (D).......... N Feter DeFazio(D)................... N Kurt Sch/ader(D)................... Y
Also onFriday,the Housevoted todelay by fiveyears theAffordable Care Act's individual mandate,which requires people tosign upfor healthinsurance orface a penalty. The bill also included aprovision that would end the possibility of cuts to theratesby which doctors arereimbursedunderMedicare, the so-called"doc fix." The bill's supporters maintainedthe$170billion savedby delayingthe individualmandatewould more thancoverthe$138 billion to funddoctors through Medicare.The bill passed238-181,with 226 Republicansand12 Democratsvotingyes.All of the novotes camefrom Democrats. G/eg I/I/alden(R)..................... Y Ear/B/umenauer(D).............. N SuzvnneBonamici (D).......... N Rter DeFazio(D)................... N KurtSchrader(D).................. N —And eyyClet/enger, The Bulletin
cavating the land and letting a few people salvage what's left. "We just want to clean it up and go back to trying to find a saidTuesday. This change in scenery is one result of the city of La
Pine's new nuisance ordinance. It penalizes owners of
abandoned or deteriorating buildings, those who have sanitation problems, and it also
covers solid waste and septic issues. It took effect Friday. Rick Allen, La Pine's in-
terim city manager, said the city is starting to ramp up en-
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
forcement efforts to beautify the community and make it
REDMOND — Merrymakers at Redmond's
first-ever St. Patrick's Day Festival soaked up the sun on Saturday, enjoying a Leprechaun
more appealing to potential residents.
"It's good for economic development," Allen said. "This has an impact on your business, your quality of life.... We
race, a"Little Leprechaun" costume contest
for the kids and cornedbeef and cabbage soup served up by Bad Boy's Barbecue. It was the warmest day of the year so far,
with the temperature hitting69 degrees at about 5 p.m, according to the National Weather
want the community to look better." Art and Lorraine Willett
Service.
The celebrating started on Friday at Centennial Park, with three straight days of music and revelry. Saturday's lineup featured two Irish-tinged performances, featuring the Cascade Highlanders Bagpipe Band and The Sunshine Exchange Cloggers. Jak Reynolds, 8, of Bend, holds a chick in his hands at a petting zoo See Festival /B4
set up for Redmond's St. Patrick's Day Festival on Saturday.
said the wood carver was leasing the property for his Chainsaw Creations business, but then expanded and began to create decorative cabins.
"He was taking in scraps to make these cabins and he got way in over his head," Lorraine Willett said.
SeeLa Pine/B5
In 19'l4, Bend'splannedcreamery offers a promiseof profits Compiled byDon Hoiness
from archived copiesofThe Bulletin at the DesChutes Historical Museum.
and that Bend business men stand ready to supply the necessary capital. Emphasis upon one point is desirable, so that those who
YESTERDAY ey-making one at that.
are able to repay the loan and run at large in the city. All such take over the stock they are the owners are warned to keep ones to conduct the creamery. their poultry yarded.
Of course the motive behind the workis selfishness. But it
St. Patrick's Dance
have not been present at the Commercial Club luncheons
is a very unselfish selfishness. The business men who will
fourth St. Patrick's day ball
For theweek ending
may understand it thorough-
in Sather's Hall on Tuesday
March 15, 1914
ly. It is that the fundamental desire of all concerned is to
advancemoney togetthe creamerystarted aredoing so
100 YEARSAGO
The Creamery(Editoriag The plan to establish a co-operative creamery here is progressing well. Four facts are established: there are enough cows to warrant the
and operated by farmers
helps the farmer helps the town and themselves. There's
have the creamery owned
The Irish will hold their
evening. The committee of arrangements have made preparations to give their guests an
enjoyable evening. Music for dancing will be furnished by
and for farmers. This should
where the selfishness comes
be emphasized because of a notion abroad to the effect
in. But no business man has any expectation of dividends.
that it was pure selfishness
None of them expect or desire to retain stock. Their financial
Notice
contribution will be in the shape of a loan, and just as soon as the cream producers
of poultry is called to City Ordinance No. 34, providing that
institution; that the farmers would benefit by it; that this
which got the business men interested in the scheme: in
community would benefit
short, that it was entirely a
proportionately to the farmers;
because they know that what
"town enterprise," and a mon-
— S.E. Robe/fe,Chiefof Police
Forrest's orchestra. The attention of all owners fowls shall not be allowed to
75 YEARSAGO For the week ending March 15, 1939
Another Hitler Victory
(Editorial) The Czechoslovakian
republic is falling apart and the parts, quite naturally are falling into the lap of Germany as its dictator, Adolph Hitler,
willed that they should. SeeYesterday/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
E VENT TODAY ST. PATRICK'S DAYDASH: A5K race from through downtown Bend and area parks, with an after-party adjacent to the pub; contests for costumes and best wearing of green; proceeds benefit Bethlehem Inn; free for spectators; 10:05 a.m. race start, 7:30 a.m. registration, 9 a.m.costume judging;Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www. bendstpatsdash.com. EMPTY BOWLS:Featuring hot soup and refreshments made by Ridgeview culinary students in ceramic bowls made by Ridgeview students and others; proceeds benefit Jericho Road; $10 suggested donation per bowl; noon-7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600 or www. rvhs.redmond.k12.or.us. "FUNNY MONEY":A comedy about a mild-mannered accountant accidentally picking up a briefcase full of money and trying to explain himself to a police detective; $19, $15 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. OI'g.
TWO ONTAP: A creative collaboration of song and dance; part of the Redmond Community Concert Association series; SOLD OUT; 2 p.m., doors open1:15 p.m.; RidgeviewHigh School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-3507222,redmondcca©hotmail.com
or www.redmondcca.org. AUTHOR! AUTHOR!:Cheryl Strayed, author of "Wild," will speak; $20-$75; 4 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.
org.
"A HORSE OFCOURSE" FUNDRAISER:A screening of the film "Cloud: Wild Stallion of the Rockies," live music and short films; proceeds benefit EquineCommunity Resources;
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
$10 suggested donation; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. TWO ONTAP: A creative collaboration of song and dance; part of the Redmond Community Concert Association series; $60, $25 for students younger than18, seasonsubscriptions;6:30 p.m ., doors open 5:45 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-350-7222, redmondccatahotmail.com or www.redmondcca.org.
the remainder ofthe country was inevitable. From Berlin
mcmenamins.com.
The train has stopped to change engineers,police said.
charged with first degree theft
Wednesday at McMenamlns OldSt. Francis School. For more information, call 541-382-5174 or visit www.mcmenamins.com.
TUESDAY ALL PICKERSJAM: Sponsored bythe Oregon Oldtime Fiddlers, open to all fiddling styles and instruments, all proceeds to benefit Bend's Community Center; free, donations accepted;6-9 p.m.;Bend's Community Center, 1036 N.E. Fifth St.; 541-647-4789. LADIES NIGHTOUT:Featuring a no-host bar, honey-do auction, light appetizers, silent auction and door prizes; proceeds benefit the Ronald McDonald House; $10; 6-9 p.m.; Armature, 50 N.E. Scott St., Bend; 541-380-0729 ordkbendtajuno.
FIRE PIPES & DRUMS:Celebrate St. Patrick's Day with a bagpipe and drum band and beer; free admission; 6-7 p.m.;BrokenTop Bottle Shop & Ale Cafe, 1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; 541728-0703 or www.btbsbend.com. com. ST.PATTY'S DAY BOOGIE: "ELTONJOHN:THE MILLION Featuring live music with Moon DOLLAR PIANO":A screening Mountain Ramblers; $8 plus of Elton's greatest hits from The fees in advance, $10 at the door; 7-10:30 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. ColosseumatCaesar's Palace and abehind-the-sceneslookat Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 the making of Goodbye Yellow or www.belfryevents.com. Brick Road; $15; 7 p.m.; Regal ST. PATTY'S STOMP:A Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 celebration of St. Patrick's Day S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; with three live bands; $5; 8 p.m.; 541-312-2901. Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 MARTYN JOSEPH:TheWelsh or www.volcanictheatrepub.com. singer-songwriter plays the Sisters
March 15,1964
Bridge to Nowhere Clay breaks with Malcolm X (EditOIIal)
ken with Malcolm X, the for-
made. It was not ignored. Today all Czechoslovakian
mer No. 2 man of the Muslim movement who has begun ordivision have been either tak- ganizing a politically oriented en into Germany or are pup- black nationalist movement. pet states with Hitler pulling Clay said during an airport the strings. They will become news conference after arrivparts ofGermany or not as al here Friday night that he may suit the fancy of the man opposes Malcolm X's suggeswho is out-Bismarking Bis- tion that blacks organize "rifle mark in his acquisition of new dubs" and begin to "fight back territory for the reich. in self defense." With his control of Slovakia, Clay said, "I'm against that. Carpatho-Ukraine, M o r avia There are too many rifles. and Bohemia comes control of There are too many airplanes. I
the world's largest munitions hate nobody. Hateis ignorance, works and with that the threat I don'tbelieve in violence." of force which he has used in Clay carried a thick wooden his bloodless conquests be- cane, carvedlike a totem pole. "It's the kind of cane that Mocomeseven more fearsome. It will be used again when ses carried. I'm a prophet like he starts further expansion to Moses. My predictions come consolidate his empire to the true," he said. north and south from w hat Clay said his Muslim name was Czechoslovakia, and it is "'Muhammad Ali' and I'm a
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B
newspaper says, aren't going to drive to Seattle and paysales
The Howlin' Brothers, a Nashville string band trio, are set to perform a spate of original and traditional compositions 7 p.m.
Heavyweight champion The Portland newspapers came the instructions for the CassiusClay, proclaiming him- insist in ca lling the Astoria nazification of th e Sudeten- self "a prophet, like Moses," Bridge"the bridge to nowhere." land Germans who presently met today with Black Muslim This has managed to cause provided the excuse for Hitler leader Elijah Muhammad "to some hard feelings in Astoria, to take a hand. After that time learn from my teacher." where the newspaper, the DaiSlovakiacame more and more Clay, who claims he has ly Astorian, says the bridge under German influenceuntil been a Muslim for more than will make the drive to the Sean apparently voluntary plea four years, apparently has bro- attle or Tacoma area as easy as for German pr otection wa s
LUNCHANDLECTURE: Learn about plateau bags with Aurolyn Stwyer; bring your own lunch or order from the cafe; included in the price of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: WERTHER" ENCORE: Starring Jonas Kaufmann in the title role of Massenet's adaptation of Goethe's revolutionary and tragic romance; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,
THIRD FRIDAYARTSTROLL: Merchants are open late on Sixth Street for music, food, art and entertainment; free; 4-8 p.m.; downtown Redmond; www. visitredmondoregon.com. OPEN MIC NIGHT:Featuring music, TEHJRSDAY poetry, comedyand more; family BUILD IT! BREAKFAST:Learn how friendly material only; free; 6-9 p.m.; Habitat for Humanity is changing Barnes 8 Noble Booksellers, 2690 lives in Bend and Crook County; E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318free, donationsaccepted; 7a.m.; 7242 or www.bn.com. St. Charles Bend conference HIDDENJEWELS OF THE SPANISH center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; VOCAL REPERTOIRE: Spanishart rcoopertabendhabitat.org or www. song specialists perform works bendhabitat.org. by deFalla,Granadosand more; TREADMILLRACES:Watch10 $12, $6 for students; 7-9 p.m.; bouts between local runners on a Central Oregon Community College, calibrated treadmill; free, reservation Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 requested; 6 p.m.; FootZone, 842 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541-350N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 9805 or www.operabend.org. or www.footzonebend.com/events. "FUNNY MONEY": A comedy "ROYALBALLET:THE SLEEPING about a mild-mannered accountant BEAUTY":A screening of accidentally picking up a briefcase Tchaikovsky's classic ballet full of money and trying to explain performed at the Royal Opera House; himself to a police detective; $19, $15; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W.Powerhouse Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. "FUNNY MONEY":A comedy org. about a mild-mannered accountant "WADJDA":A screening of the accidentally picking up a briefcase full of money and trying to explain 2012 film (PG) about a Saudi girl himself to a police detective; $19, who signs on for her school's $15 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Koran recitation competition; free, Greenwood Playhouse,148 N.W. refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County 0803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Library,134 S.E. E St., Madras; 541or'g. 475-3351 or www.jcld.org. HANNEKECASSELBAND:An PAULA COLE:The pop-rock singerevening of Scottish fiddle music, songwriter performs; $35-$40 plus with cellist Mike Block and guitarist fees; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 Christopher Lewis; $22, $18 for p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall students; 7:30 p.m.;Beckman St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. House, 2826 N.W. McCookCourt, towertheatre.org.
Submitted photo
LATE MODELRACE CAR VIEWING:Viewa race car signed by Central Oregon veterans or sign it if you are a veteran; T-shirt sales benefit race car maintenance; free; 11 a.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-4475304 or kim.phillipptlco.crook. oi'.Us. ST. PATRICK'S DAY CELEBRATION:Featuring live music, bagpipers, Irish drinks, leprechauns and more; free; 2 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.
will be a more potent weapon true follower of Elijah Muhamthan ever before. Only Russia mad. I face east five times a day." He wore a red and white Continued from B1 has the strength to venture a France and England are test of it with any hope of asuc- Muslim pin in his lapel. "You reporters make more of making no effort to avertdisas- cessful outcome. ter from the nation which they a fuss and are more concerned were instrumental in creating. Russian Army over a righteous, clean living It is as well that they should declaredready person like me, but you don't keep out of it; the time has Soviet Russia's peace-time do anything about (ex-heavypassed when their intervention army strength is more then weight champion Sonny) Liscould have helped. When that 2,500,000 men, Defense Com- ton, with the type of life he's time was in the present their missar Klementi Vo roshilov had,"Clay said. intervention, moreover, was of told the 18th communist party Of his own career, he said, the ill-advised sort which must congress in an apparent warn- "I'm king of them all. It's imhave the leaders of the doomed ing against nazi Germany's possible for anyone to beat me. I'mimpossible to hit." But nation to breath a prayer, "march to the east." "Heaven protect us from our he said he is considering refriends." tirement. "I don't know what 50 YEARSAGO I'll do.God's got me picked for The fall of Czecho-Slovakia did not come in a day, but once For the week ending something." into German hands the fate of
Bend; 541-388-5146. BO NAPOLEAN:The Hawaiian reggae band performs, with Island Bound and Tribal Order; $10; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www.volcanictheatrepub.com.
MONDAY
Yesterday
the Sudeten area had passed
680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. THE HOWLIN' BROTHERS: The three-piece string band performs original and traditional music; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. OL' MOUNT'N DUE: The Medford trashgrass band performs, with Championship; $5;9 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.
Folk Festival's Winter Concert Series; $20 plus fees in advance, $25 at the door; $10 plus fees for students in advance, $10 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4979 or www. sistersfolkfestival.org.
WEDNESDAY
and taken to the Deschutes a r r ived County Jail. When one sits here in Cen- soonafter, but the train began Catt admitted he d oesn't tral Oregon, where things are moving. know much about trains. "I heard the noise of the en"Yesterday was my first and generallypretty calm, itis hard to see how or why the Ore- gine racing," Catt said. "He hopefully my last experience gonian went about riling the blew the whistle a couple of with trains under those cirAstorians. On the other hand times and the train started cumstances," Catt said. it has been no secret that As- backing up." The train, which weighs toria has been in theeconomic A Burlington Northern ofmore than 5 million pounds, doldrums for some time now. ficial later told Catt the man probably would have reached tax just to spite Portland.
a dangerous speed due to the
where right now. But it should
train out of neutral. He added
Itwould have traveled north to-
give Astoria a boost in tourist businessat least. And since all
that this would be a near im-
ward Deschutes Junction near Bend.
of us will have to share in the
debt if the bridge doesn't pay for itself, we'd better get busy and push it just a bit.
25 YEARS AGO
What mighthave ended up as a wild train ride for a Vancouver, Wash., man who start-
ed a train Wednesday, ground Since Seattle and Tacoma to ahalt after a Bendpolice offiboth have stores to rival Port- cer demanded he stop the train. the drive to Portland.
land's we would guess that the Astorian is threatening Port-
land with economicretaliation. This won't work, at least un-
A local resident alerted po-
lice at about 4:30 p.m. that he had seen a man crawl into the locomotive of a
Bu r l i ngton
til Oregon can get a sales tax Northerntrain parked behind to match Washington State's. Brandy's Restaurant off highAstorians, no matter what the way 97 in Bend.
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railroad hijacking
SAVE , limifad time only!
The train is almost 2,000 feet long and is valued at more
Police officer halts
~
s~IRIEIIRS
possible featfor som eone who knows little about trains. Catt ran around to the oth-
slope of the track, police said.
For the week ending March 15,1989
3•
~
Officer Rex C att
Tempers are probably short. must have activated several The bridge might lead to no- safety switches to take the
t~~ettattt~tttttete ~ e~m~~
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
ura o ice su o v anis in • Residents resortto calling fire department for assistanceduring crimes,other incidents
He was arrested about 30 minutes later, walking along the Redwood Highway. One of the officers who found him, Sgt.Ray Webb, dows. The female caregiver is the remaining patrol depwas barricaded in the house. uty out of 27, a force that has Hoke said the man threat- shrunk because the federal ed his driver: "'If you get out government no longer subsiof this ambulance, I will kill dizes basic government funcyou.' It just went south from tions in timber dependent
The Associated Press SELMA — Things have gotten so lawless in Southern
Oregon, where there's little money available for law enforcement, that people are now calling the fire depart-
there."
counties, such as Josephine
The chief, though, had a County. weapon. Voters also have rejected "I had to get my concealed higher taxes. weapon out and contemplate, The other officers were 'What am I going to do?' We Deputy Joel Heller, who's
ment to get help even if their
problem is crime. Dennis Hoke, chief of the Illinois Valley fire departm ent, reportedly said h e heard a call on Thursday for medical aid. What he and his medics found when they arrived at
should never be put in that position. I didn't know if he
under contract to the city of
Cave Junction, which pays had a gun. If we had known his salary, and a civil depuan assault was in progress, ty whose entire time is taken the house, Hoke said, was a we never would have re- up serving legal paperwork, man who'd been attacking sponded without backup." such as evictions and suma caregiver. The man was The man reportedly took monses required of the Sherwearing pajama bottoms and off, waving his arms and iff's Office. throwing rocks through win- yelling. Two levies to bolster the
EUGENE
Chief: Officershouldn't have usedcurseword
county's law
MOKenZie RiVer Water rightS — The state hasrejected a Lane County company's effort to secure rights to drawwater from the McKenzie River. TheWillamette Water Co. reportedly sought 22 million gallons a dayfor potential sale to unspecified customers in the southern part of LaneCounty. The State Water Resources Department formally rejected the request last week. Thecompany headed by Greg andJeffrey Demers, of Veneta, canappeal the decision to the board that oversees theagency or to the OregonCourt of Appeals. An administrative law judge in April 2012 recommendedthat the state agency deny the company's application, saying the request was improperly speculative.
e nforcement
s ervices have failed in t h e
past two years. A third is on the May ballot, dedicated to jail operations. County commissioners have promised more money for patrolling deputies if the levy passes. Hoke says people have in the meantime figured out one
No jail for mom who brought son to drug deal —A woman who brought her 3-year-old son along to her husband's drug deal avoided ajail sentence after pleading guilty to child neglect and endangering the welfare of a minor. AClackamas County judge sentenced LesyaShevyakov, 28, Friday to three years probation and 96 hours of community service. Shewas arrested after her husband, Vitaly Fedorvich Shevyakov, sold heroin to anundercover informant last year. Hewill be sentenced May16 after pleading guilty to child neglect and endangerment charges, aswell as possession and distribution of heroin.
alternative to bring help.
"If there's a burglary in progress, they call it in as a structure fire. Why? The
fire department is going to show up with lights and sirens," said H o k e. "People are misrepresenting calls, absolutely." The enraged man w as identified by authorities as
ElementarySChOOISmerge — Twoelementary schools in Southern Oregon will merge this fall. White City and Mountain View elementary schools will be known as Table RockElementary School. The White City schools took suggestions for the name from parents, teachers and staff. Leadership teams from both schools narrowed the choices to AgateDesert Elementary, White Mountain Elementary and Table RockElementary — andthen let teachers vote. About 90 percent choseTable Rock. Students will help pick the mascot, which will be presented to the school board in April for approval. Themerger was approved in January, with the expectation that it will balance class sizes andcreate a sense of community.
Justin Lawrence Bennett, 26. He was booked on suspicion
of robbery, assault, criminal mischief and probation violation.
Additional accesssoUght for Umatilla Riverfishery By George Plaven
— From wire reports
(Pendleton) East Oregonian
Falls Dam at last count. The W i th fish were all but wiped out of s t eelhead the Umatilla Basin for near-
All
PENDLETON —
• Off-duty officer filing suit, saying trooperviolated rights
other officer involved in the incident who recalled hearing McGuire use an "F-bomb" while dealing with Boyd after a reported altercation involv-
ing several spectators, board The Associated Press member Eric Van Houten said. E UGENE — A n off i c er Boyd, 48, was not jailed or mostly followed Eugene Police charged with any crime. He is Department policy during an on paid administrative leave, incident in which an off-duty while state police conduct a state trooper was ejected from personnel investigation. a University of Oregon footPolice typically eject dozball game, according to Police ens of rowdy spectators from Chief Pete Kerns. the stadium during football The chief said Officer Jed games and most incidents inMcGuire made just one error: volve intoxicated people. He shouldn't have cursed at In Boyd'scase, McGuire Trooper Marc Boyd, who filed wrote in his report that the a misconduct complaint af- off-duty trooper smelled of alter the incident that unfolded cohol and acknowledged havin the stands during a game ing consumed "a few" beers against Washington State in prior to being ejected. October. Another Eugene officer , Officials with the Eugene Matthew Grose, wrote in a Police Auditor's Office report- separate report that Boyd edly announced this w eek
wore a T-shirt that read "Beer is the answer. Now what was
that two of the three allegations Boyd had made against the question?"
Boyd was not interviewed as part of the misconduct investigation. He notified Eu-
McGuire wereunfounded.
Kerns ruled that McGuire did not use excessive force
and did not break policy by refusing to identify himself
gene officials in January that he intends to file a l awsuit
against the city, alleging police violated his constitutional rights. tained an allegation that McBoyd accuses McGuire of "jabbing the butt end of his Guire used profanity. "If you swear, you're go- flashlight" against him and ing to get dinged," Lt. Nathan cursing at him before asking Reynolds said during this for his identification. Boyd deweek's meeting of the city's nies resisting officers' efforts civilian review board, which to handcuff him and claims discussed Boyd's complaint. that police misidentified him Police internal affairs in- as having been involved in the vestigators interviewed analtercation.
salmon an d returns booming up the Umatilla River, local an-
ly 70 years, until restoration programs launched in the
glers are finding plenty of fish ripe for the catching. What's missing, they argue, is enough public access on the water. "I've always been un-
mid-1980s.
Mountain Fly Casters in
tunities on the river.
we beat
F(pd /t
adults passing Three Mile
R
Come check us out!
Bill Duke, district fish biologist with the Oregon De-
"-. QHNSQN
bendbulletin.com
partment of Fish 8 Wildlife,
TV.APPLIANCE
said they are predicting 4,000 spring chinook back this c omfortable w i t h tre s - year, as the fishery continues passing, so I've pretty to recover. ODFW is working much avoided using the with the watershed council to river," said John Dado- gauge interest in boat ramps ly, president of the Blue for better recreational oppor-
johnsonbrotherstv.com
541382-6447 ~ 2090 NEWy tr C t ~ S 't 101 Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com
Pendleton. "I'd say it's very underutilized."
S U r olo S~
Looking to renew inter-
est and recreation along the r iver, t h e U m a t illa Basin Watershed Council
is now considering boat ramps at 10 possible locations from Pendleton and
Rieth through Echo, Stanfield and Hermiston.
The ramps would not be parks, but simply a point where users could put in or take out t h eir b o ats
without worrying about crossing over p r i vate property. As it is, Dadoly said he is only able to float
to Boyd, as the trooper had
short sections of the river
alleged. The chief, however, sus-
near Mission and Barnhart Bluffs. "There's a good steelhead and salmon run later in the spring, and just very limited access points to fish them," he said. "It's a
shame, really." Record fall chinook re-
turns surged up from the Columbia River in 2013, w ith
m o r e t h a n 2 , 3 00
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Public Workshop
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T hursday, March 20 , 20 1 4 6:30PM — 8:45PM The City of Bend wants to hear from residents, business owners and others o n how to help create a vibrant futu r e
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f or the Cen t ra l D i s t r i c t . •
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Please attend and comment on
the draft land use assumptions and proposed transportation improvement options for the
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B end Police St a t i o n 5 55 N E 1 5 t h S t r e e t The open h ouse location i s w h eelchair accessible. Services for h earing i m p a i red o r S p a n i s h -language i n t erpretation c a n b e arranged by callingWendy Robinson at least 48 hours Ln advance at 541-388-5598 or by email towrobinson@bendoregon.gov.
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B end Cent ra l D i s t r i c t .
For more information visit the project website: www.bendcentralmma.org Municipal Court Room
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
WASHINGTON NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH NoTIcEs jeanne E.Ppgispn Patricia Ken Rash Feb. 3, 1924- Feb. 24, 2014 Ernestine Adams Nev. 23, 1959- Feb. 19, 2014 Earl Harold Campbell, Jr., of Redmond Jan. 23, 1944 - Mar. 10, 2014
Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, (541) 382-5592;
www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A Celebration of Life ceremony is being planned by his family for the latter part of March. Contributions may bemade to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, OR 97701.
Janet 'Jan' G. (Shaw) Zerkel, of Bend Jan. 28, 1943 - Mar. 12, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend, 541 -382-0903, www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A memorial service will be held in California at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Kathryn Julia South, of Bend (Formerly of
Medford, OR) Feb. 10, 191 9 - Mar. 13, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond, 541-504-9485 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No services will be held. Contributions may bemade to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Jeanne Poulson was born February 3, 1924 to Coral a nd F o r est E d w a r d s i n I daho F a l ls , I d a ho . S h e a ssed peacefully i n h e r ome February 24, 2014. S he attended s chool a t U niversity o f Id a h o a n d went on to become a Western Airlines stewardess in 1946. In 1 947 s h e married B ill B a r nes. They J eanne Poulsonhad t h r e e c hildren an d l i v e d a f u l l l ife until B il l d ied of p a n creatic cancer in 1969. J eanne established a n d r an for 1 0 y e ars th e f i r st c areer center at Sa n C a r los High School, San Carlos, California. In 1979 she m oved from C a l ifornia t o retire in Sunriver, Oregon. H er h o b b ie s w e r e g o l f , playing cards with friends, reading and art. I n 1 9 8 4 s he m ar r i e d Howard Poulson, who then p receded her i n d e at h i n 2010, a f t e r m ov i n g t o Touchmark. She was also r eceded in death by t w o rothers, Jack T. Edwards and Jerry F. Edwards. Jeanne is survived by her t hree children, Jerry B a r n es a n d w i f e , Sh e l l e y , Claudia Barnes, and Jamie Barnes and w i fe, L o retta; f our g r a n d children; t w o r eat-grandchildren; an d er sister, Carol Couch. A Celebration of Life will be held fo r h e r 3 :00 p.m. S aturday Apri l 5 a t R i v e r Lodge, Touchmark at Mt. Bachelor, Bend, OR. In lieu of flowers, please feel free to make a contribution to t he S a l v atio n A r m y or Humane Society.
Those w h o kn e w hi m admired Ken's strength and P atricia A d am s o f R e d - c ourage as h e b a ttled h i s mond, Oregon, died March illness with the loving care 12, 2014, at the age of 78. of hospice. He always had She was born November a smile and kind words for 11, 1935, in Glendale, Orothers. even if he was havegon, t o No r m a n an d ing a bad E mily Ro s e (Lerwell) day. No K rantz. S h e g r e w u p i n matter t he t r i - cities o f D o u g l a s what, Ken County south of Roseburg, always Oregon. believed I n 1 9 75 , s h e mar r i e d tomorrow Gary Adams, they resided w ould b e in H ar r i s b urg , b efo r e better. He m oving t o R e d m ond, O r was a e gon, where t h e y o w n e d great in Ken Rash and operated Gary Adams spiration Trucking. and a source ofstrength for P atricia wa s a n A m e r i - t he many people who w i l l can Indian of Co w C r e ek greatly miss him. Umpqua I nd i a n s . Sh e He is survived by his wife h elped w it h t h e S M A R T of 33 years, Donna; daughr eading program fo r o v e r ter, Maddison 12, and son, s ix y e ars. S h e a l s o e n - Conner 11. 'oyed oil p a i nting, I n dian There will b e a C e lebraead work a n d r e search- tion of Life 2:00 p.m. Saturing her family genealogy. day March 29 at the CZBJ She even wrote a book. H all, 37658 N . M a i n S t . , S he is s u r v ived b y h e r Scio, Oregon, with refreshdaughter an d s o n - in-law, ments to follow. S is a n d L ar r y For b i s ; g randchildren , Mi ch e a l a nd L evi McCl ur e ; and g r e a t -grandchildren, A leena an d D a x t o n M c Clure. S h e w a s p r eceded in death by h e r h u sband, Death Notices are freeand Gary in 1996; and her two will be run for oneday, but s ons, K i m an d Dal l a s specific guidelines must be Paroz. followed. Local obituaries A visitation w il l b e h e l d are paid advertisements a t R e d m on d M emo r i a l submitted by families or fuC hapel March 20 an d 2 1 , neral homes. Theymay be from 10 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. submitted by phone, mail, A graveside service will be h eId Saturday, M a rch 2 2 , email or fax. TheBulletin 2014, at R o n deau F amily reserves the right to edit C emetery i n Ti l l e r , O r all submissions. Please egon, at I:00 p.m. include contact information P lease sig n o u r on l i n e in all correspondence. g uestbook w w w .r ed For information on anyof mondmemorial.com. Nev. 11, 1935- Mar. 12, 2014
Obituary policy
Carol Ann Malone April 6, 1925- March 7, 2014
C arol An n B u l l ar d M a l o ne, age 88 o f B e nd, O R passed on March 7, 2014 at St. Charles Medical Center. She was born April 6, 1925 i n a m a t e rnity h o m e o n Hwy. 97 before there was a h ospital i n Be n d . C a r ol graduated f r o m t he ol d Bend High School in 1943 and w en t t o V a n c o uver, W A to w o r k i n t h e s h i p yards a s a to o l c h e cker d uring W W I I . S h e h e l d three degrees from Portland State University, a BA in English, an MA in Literature, and a BA i n Russian. Carol taught English as a second language at Vestal Elementary in Portland, OR for several years. She was a member of the Trinity Episcopal Church of Bend and she established the first Girl Scout troop in Bend. She is remembered by her family and friends as a very d ynamic a nd educ a t ed w oman w h o l o v e d l a n guages and art, but most of all, her family. Carol leaves b ehind he r h u sband, H u bert Malone, to whom she ing, singing and camping. has been married 70 years. They became girl and boyShe was the mother all our f riend i n j u n io r h i g h a n d friends w i sh e d th ey h ad...we w er e t h e l u c k y have loved each other their w hole l i v es . T h e y we r e ones. M om an d G r a n dma, w e married in Vancouver, WA w ill m i s s y o u e v er y d a y at the Clark County Court House December 23, 1943. but the blessings of g l adn ess that yo u b r o u ght t o They w er e b ot h e i g hteen o ur lives w il l b e w i t h u s years old. They then took a 13-hour b us r id e out always. A Funeral M ass w il l b e t hrough Shaniko an d M a h eld 12:15 p.m. M o n d a y , dras to Bend t o t el l t h e ir March 1 7 a t S t . F r a n cis parents th e n e w s . B u s es H istorical C h u r ch . I n t e r - didn't travel over the mountain passes back then. m ent will t ak e p l ace at a C arol w a s p r e ceded i n date to b e d e t ermined at A rlington N a t i o nal C e m - death by her mother, Caroe tery i n V i r p n i a w he r e l ine Bolte Bullard, her f a P olly w i l l j o i n h e r h u s - ther, Myron Smith Bullard, and her sister, Bea Austin, band, Jack. all of Bend; her sister, Ada A rrangements under t h e C larno o f R e d mond, O R ; direction of B a ird Funeral grandson, Beau M c D aniel Home; 541-382-0903.
and were beloved by their randchildren, Emilie and aroline Hanlet and Crystal, Alexandra an d Seana Feb. 18, 1925 -Mar. 13, 2014 Walsh. H e r g r e a t -grandc hildren ar e H a r ley H a v P olly W alsh, born A p o l lonia Stankewick o n F e b- ern Ruiz, S o lace, Celeste ruary 1 8 , 1 9 2 5 , p a s s ed a nd P a i sley W a l s h a n d away peacefully on March Dylan Forgione. Polly w a s an RN , a 13, 2014 at the Bend home g raduate o f C o r n el l U n i of h er versity School of N u r sing. daughter a nd s o n - As WWII wa s ending, she met and m a rried Jack, in-law, n ewly r eturned f ro m s e r Janet and vice in Europe as an Army Rick HavAir F o rce r e connaissance e rn. U n t i l pilot. Her life as a mother recently, and homemaker began in P olly a n d h er l at e e arnest with th e s w i f t a r r ival of t h e f i r s t o f e i g h t husband, Polly Walsh Jack r e- children. Polly was adored by all sided at Whispering Winds her family for her abihty to Senior Living in Bend. everyone into her Polly, born i n Q u eens, welcome h ome an d he r s e nse of NY, was the youngest and last o f h e r s i x si b l i n g s, h umor a n d f u n . A l w a y s playful, she l o ved s pendmost of whom lived in th e ing time with each generaNew York area. Polly was t ion of c h i l d ren an d p a r t he mother o f e i gh t c h i l t icipated an d e x c elled i n dren, three of w hom h ave a ll t h ei r r e c r eations a n d homes in Bend: Janet Havincluding ic e s k ate rn (Rick), Ro b W a l sh sports ing, skiing, t e n nis, d a nc(Lynda) and Valerie Walsh
Pauline 'Polly' Walsh
(Thomas). Other
d augh-
ters are Christine Madsen
(Douglas) of Pasadena, CA and Connie W a lsh B e ard
(Shane) of Naperville, IL. H er other s on s a r e J a c k Walsh of Wil m ington, NC, James Walsh of Anchora ge, A K , an d Ri ch a r d
Walsh (deceased).
Polly i s t h e w id o w of John X. "Jack" Walsh who p redeceased her i n 2 0 0 9 after 64years of marriage. Polly and Jack raised their l arge f a m il y i n G ar d e n C ity, Long Island, NY b e fore moving to San D i ego t o enjoy r e t i r ement n e a r their California grandchildren, J o l e ne , Ma d e l i n e, K atherine an d Ri cke y Havern, L a u ren F o r gione (Philip), and K elly W a l sh. Even though they lived far apart, Polly and Jack loved
these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines: Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries mustbereceived by5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld:
Melba Hemandez, 92: Became one of the first four members ofFidel Castr o's gen-
eral staff and went on to share many secrets with the man she helped during the Cuban revolution — beginning with its opening attack on an armybarracks in southeastern Cuba in 1953. Died March 9 in Havana.
Shawn Kuykendall, 32: When the former D.C. United mid-
fielder was diagnosed last year with thymic cancer, the U.S. national team and MLS play-
ers began wearing "Kuykenstrong" T-shirts at games and other events. Died Wednesday
in Washington, D.C. — From wire reports
FEATUREDOBITUARY
star when I met him and he
turnedthe former documen-
The Associated Press
took me under his wing. To
tary filmmaker into a hot co-
median, one who was ubiquigodfather of hip, observation- tous on other talk shows and al comedy,"comedian Rich- game shows. favorite whose brand of ob- ard Lewis said in a statement. He also briefly hosted his "He mentored me from day own syndicated talk show in servationalcomedy became a staple for other standups, one.... His passing leaves a 1987 and starred in four HBO including Jerry Seinfeld, died hole in my life that can never specials. Saturday. He was 78. be replaced." B renner moved with t h e Brenner, who had been The lanky, always sharply times, trading routines about fighting cancer, died peace- dressed Brenner became one the humor of everyday life for fully at his home in New York of the most frequent visitors jokes about social and politiCity with his family at his to Johnny Carson's "Tonight" cal issues and appearing on side, according to Jeff Abra- in the 1970s and '80s. cable news programs. ham, his friend and publicist. His 150-plus appearances Although his career fal"David Brenner was a huge as guest and substitute host tered, he w o r ked s t eadily LOS ANGELES — David
Brenner, the gangly, toothygrinned "Tonight Show"
me, historically, he was the
By Lornet Turnbull
The Seattle Community Colleges District board of
The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — Th e w o rd
trustees, which will become
A ll t h ree no w
same low tuition, local stu-
" community" is bei n g Seattle Colleges, voted unanstripped from the names of imously Thursday to approve Seattle's three community the change. colleges — part of the evoIn her presentation to the lution of institutions once board, District Chancellor Jill known as junior colleges that Wakefield said, "We believe nowhavebroader missions. this will inspire prospective The three will become students to reach higher than known as Seattle Central Col- they thoughtpossible. ''With the same open-adlege, South Seattle College and North Seattle College. m issions policies and t h e o ffe r a
Bachelorof Applied Science dents can start at a local colDegree program, with addi- lege that can eventually take tional third- and fourth-year them all the way to a bachecoursework for students who lor's degree." complete a two-year techniThe name changes are excal degree. In the past, that pected to be fully implementtwo-year degree was as far as ed by September, in time for those students could go.
the start of the fall quarter.
Festival
there's a lot of camaraderie — unless I'm getting ready for a show." Demonstrations by mem-
Continued from B1 A clogging instructor for the past 30 years, Loy Sam- bers of the High Desert Celtpels, of Powell Butte, leads ic Society scheduled for all the clogging group. She said three days of the festival did although clogging is not not materialize, because of authentically Irish, it's an scheduling conflicts, accordAmerican outgrowth of old- ing to society member Janet er Irish traditions. Bedell. "Bluegrass, square dancBedell said the group's ing and clogging all came dancers and Celtic games out of the Appalachians, and competitors didn't learn of the immigrants that came to
the Redmond event u ntil
this country," she said. "And there was a lot of Irish influ-
late. With Irish dancers, mu-
ence, because there were a
ers never more in demand
lot of Irish immigrants." Sampels, 72, said while she and her fellow cloggers may not be as young and spry as the "Riverdance"
than on St. Patrick's Day, they'd already c ommitted
troupe that popularized tra-
sicians and other perform-
themselves to celebrations elsewhere. "There's so much going on around St. Patrick's Day,
ditional Irish-style dancing, they've all scattered to the wind," she said. until the p reperformance The festival in Redmond
they have a lot of fun, at least nerves set in. "We do this until we're no
longer able to move," Sampels said with a laugh. "And
continues from 10 a.m. to 2
p.m. today. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com
LOCAL BRIEFING Continued fiom B1
4hurt in crash after high~ c hase near Culver Four peoplewere injured Saturdayafternoonwhenadriver whowas reportedlyfleeingJeffersonCounty Sheriff's Officedeputiesstruckanother vehicle. Sheriff JimAdkinssaid deputies identified acar drivenbya wantedfelon and carryingTylerFuller, 24,who issaid to haveeluded police two weeks ago andis believedto haveeluded police following asingle-vehicle crash Tuesdayevening. Adkins said adeputyattempted to pull overthe car onBear Drive near Dover Lane.Thedriver reportedlysped off, exceeding100mphandnear AshwoodRoadturned around andheadedsouth onBearDrive.Thepursuit ended afteraboutfive miles, whenthe driver ranastop signandstrucka pickup onthe Culver Highway. While deputiessaytheycorrectly identified thedriver, the passengerwas not Fuller, buta runawayjuvenile. The teenagegirl wastakento St. CharlesMadrasbyambulance,then flown to St.CharlesBendfor furthertreatment, Adkins said.Thedriver said to be fleeing from authorities wastakenbyambulance to St. Charles Redmond,whilethetwo occupants of the truckthat was struck weretreated and releasedatSt. Charles Madras.Thenamesof those inthe carand pickup werenotavailable.
Teen cited after March 7 crashnorth of Sisters ASisters teenagerwascited onmultiple counts after hecrashedhis car while attempting topassanothervehicle, according tothe Deschutes County Sheriff's Office. Blake Meany,18,reportedlywasdriving east onSunRanchDrive north of Sisters onMarch7 whenhe attempted to passavehicle drivenbyan acquaintance. While passing onacurve atapproximately50mph, Meany issaid to have encountered two pedestrianswalking dogs. Hiscarthenreportedly left the roadandstruckthe gravel shoulder,eventually rolling overonto the passengerside. Meanyandhis twopassengerswere not injured,according toauthorities. Meanywascited onsuspicion of onecount of recklessdriving andsix counts of recklesslyendangeringanother person—onecounteach forthe two pedestrians,thetwo passengers inhis car,andthetwo passengers in the vehicle heattempted to pass,theSheriff's Office said. — Bulletin staff reports
~%g Dovothg f. Do(an y.~~:
Brenner, acomedian, coachedyoung standups By Lynn Elber
Community colleges in Seattle areevolving
through 2013 doing standup. A four-day gig last December included a New Year's Eve show at a Pennsylvania casino-resort in which he show-
cased young comedians. Brenner, who was raised in working-class south Philadelphia and graduated with honors from Temple University, was "always there helping a bright young comedian, whether it be Richard Lewis, F reddie Prinze o r J i m m i e
Walker, and he was still doing it until the very end," Abraham said.
febrttrriI 7, 1922 — febrttrriI 15, 2014 Dorothy (Dottie) Dolan was born in Cleveland, Ohio, February 7 , 1 922. Wife of Mike Dolan, deceased. Mother of Dianne Kaval,and Carolyn Kaval ~ (deceased at age 5). Granddaughter Lisa Zeltins and great granddaughter Weredesh Zeltins. Brothers Harry and Louis, and sister Ann, deceased. Dottie graduated from Shore High School in Euclid, Ohio and worked as a comptometer operator for Great Lakes Steamship. After moving to California, she was top real estatesalesperson for John Grub Co. in Walnut Creek, CA. After moving to Jackson, CA, she became top salesperson for Century 21 RealEstate. Dottie and Mike spent 5 years of retirement in Sun City, AZ, after which they joined their family in Bend. She was a member of the American Legion, VFW Auxiliary, the D.A.V. and the Orion Ladies Golf Club. Mike and Dottie lived and enjoyed their 35 years together. They worked, traveled, and lived life to its fullest. After living a full life, Dottie is happy to join Mike in the hereafter. Pleasevisit the online guest registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com.
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • T HE BULLETIN B 5
JACKSON COUNTY WA SHINGTON NEWS
La Pine
Debate Pot background checks pit rages over FBI against the federal law
possible
center around the county providingsolidwaste code enforce-
Continued from B1 ment services in exchange for Deschutes County code an office for the county's buildenforcement contacted the ing permit staff in La Pine City Willetts several months ago
Hall. County officials think the
concerning an awning on the property. When the Wil-
costs will offset each other. County code also dictates letts asked the wood carver where residents are legally alto deanup the mess, it never lowed to live. According to Alhappened. len, one of the larger code viola-
By Gene Johnson The Assocrated Press
" It didn't seem to
SEATTLE — The FBI is
g et
tions in La Pine involves people
t MOban
refusing to run nationwide background checks on people applying to run legal marijuana businesses in Washington state, even though it has con-
better, it only got worse; living in camp trailers. "With the economy and for we reached an agreement w here he had tobe offthere," various reasons, people obviLorraine Willett said. ously live in them," he said. "It's Medenbach, 61, said he not legal under county code;
The Associated Press
ducted similar checks in Col-
MEDFORD — A local ban
on genetically modified crops could cost Jackson County
about $200,000 a year to enforce,according to a report the county
c o m missioners
requests. The r e port de l i vered Wednesday by County Administrator D a nn y
J o r d an
also stated that the ban could put a stop to medical marijua-
na crops grown from seed to increase its DNA and yield
complied with code enforce-
they don't have two exits, you
orado — a discrepancy that illustrates the quandary the
m ent and took down theaw- can't get out a window. They're ning, but he needed all the not hooked to a septic or water
Justice Department faces as it allows the states to experi-
other materials on the prop-
system."
erty for his business. "My kind of work, I've got to have lots of material
There's also the case of a property alongside the railroad with 300 full garbage sacks
around to build this stuff
stuffed into a trailer. After re-
with," he said. "The city was getting upset about that; I
searching the ownership, Allen said the property value had depreciated from $100,000 to
ment with regulating a drug that's long been illegal under federal law. Washington state has been asking for nearly a year if Elaine Thompson/The AssociatedPress file photo the FBI would conduct back- Attendees of the 2013 Hempfest in Seattle browse the festivai's ground checks on its appli- various vendors. As Washington state prepares to license more cants — to no avail. The bu- businesses to sell marijuana for recreational use, it has asked reau'srefusalraisesthepossi- the FBI to run background checks on those seeking to run bility that people with trouble- shops. The federal agency has declined the request, despite
and could bar strains of lawn
some criminal histories could
grass that are genetically modified.
wind up with pot licenses in
started toputup a fence." Medenbach said his busi- $15,000 and the owners owe ness started to suffer and he fouryears of propertytaxes. "That's the process that I go ended up two months behind on rent. Both sides went through to find out who's living
taking up the task in Colorado.
to court and negotiated a settlement in which the Willetts would take the financial
the state — undermining the
Advocates of the measure
on the May ballot disputed the estimates, saying costs should be minimal, because
the county has discretion in enforcement efforts.
"We've already heard the opponents trying to scare people by claiming the Family Farms measure would have high enforcement costs, but this is pure political fiction," said Elise Higley, the director for Our Family Farms Coalition.
department's own priorities written statement. "To ensure a consistent nain ensuring that states keep a tight rein on the nascent tional approach, the departindustry. ment has been reviewing its It's a strange jam for the background check policies, feds, who a nnounced last and we hope to have guidance
The Obama administration has said it wants the states
to make sure pot revenue doesn't go to organized crime
Organic farmers who fear their crops will be tainted through cr o ss-pollination have backed the measure. If voters approve it, the
for the trafficking of other il-
measure would b e
to stomach conducting such
u n i que
and that state marijuana in-
dustries don'tbecome a cover legal drugs. At the same time, it might be tough for the FBI
among Oregon's 36 counties. The Legislature has since voted to pre-empt local regulation of genetically modified crops, allowing the Jack-
background checks — essentiallyhelping the states violate
son County measure to be
isn't conducting the checks
grandfathered.
in Washington when it has in Colorado. Stephen Fisch-
Jordan said the estimate
federal law.
The Justice Department dedined to explain why it
was based on having a fulltime code inspector, a hearings officer's time, the cost of
er, a spokesman for the FBI's Criminal Justice Information Services Division, referred
a testing contractor and ad-
an inquiry to DOJ headquarters, which would only issue a
ministrative expenses.
COCC Continued from B1 As part of a more holistic approach to health, Murphy began incorporating lessons on industrial and organic food production systems. To get his dass started, he asks studentswheth-
er they know where their food comes from to spark conver-
sations about the movement of food across the planet and the
"There's nothing more personal than putting food in your mouth. But students are not
always aware of how something got to the grocery, wrapped in plastic." — Owen Murphy, COCC assistant professor
different conditions in which it
is produced. "There's nothing more personal than putting food in your one facet of the modern food mouth," Murphy said. "But system. During a trip the first
months before applying, but some specifically moved to the state in hopes of joining
are all the indicators of where
According to Tim Grun-
ty are taking an educational
deman, a Deschutes County approachto code enforcement; code enforcement techni- the aim is to give people time cian, the county has always to comply with county code behandled building code and fore issuingpenalties. "We're gonna start deanseptic violations in La Pine. The county is negotiating ing them up on a case-by-case anintergovernmental agree- basis," Allen said. "We're not ment with the city of La Pine gonna worry about every little to handle cases involving thing out there, by any means. solidwaste. But some things are pretty ob"What the city would like vious, kind of over the top, and to do, and they've asked if there are people complaining, us to work with them, they we're going to lookinto them as
the new industry.
for states in the near term," it stated in its entirety.
sue to prevent Washington and Colorado from regulating marijuana after 75 years of prohibition.
es current," Allen said. "Those
hit, as long as Medenbach this will go." moved off theproperty. He said La Pine andthe coun-
in Washington state for three
"Both Washington state and Washington, D.C., have been unequivocal that they In Washington, three peo- want organized crime out plesofarhavereceivedlicens- of the marijuana business," es to grow marijuana — with- said Alison Holcomb, the Seout going through a national attle lawyer who authored background check, even the legal pot law. "Requiring, though the state Liquor Con- and ensuring, nationwide trol Board's rules require that background checks on Washthey doso before a license is ington state licensees is a no-brainer." 1ssued. "The federal government The FBI has run nationhas not stated why it has not wide background checks yet agreed to conduct nation- since 2010 on applicants who al background checks on our sought to be involved in medbehalf," Washington state Li- ical marijuana dispensaries quor Control Board spokes- in Colorado, Daria Serna, a man Brian Smith said in an spokeswoman for that state's email. "However, the Liquor Department of Revenue, said. Control Board is ready to de- The applicants provide fingerliver fingerprints as soon as prints to Revenue's Marijuana DOJ is ready." Enforcement Division, which In the meantime, officials turns them over to the Coloare relying on background rado Bureau of Investigation. checks by the Washington The agency conducts a stateState Patrol to catch any in- wide background check and state arrests or convictions. supplies the prints to the FBI Applicants must have lived for a national check.
summer that they wouldn't
there, who owns it, are the tax-
would like to contract with our code enforcement staff
we can." — Reporter: 541-633-2117, mwarner@bendbulletin.com
to enforce their new nuisance codes," said N i ck Lelack, Deschutes County
community d evelopment director. "We provided the draft to Rick (Allen) a few weeks ago, so we're waiting
Pure. &md.6 CO.
aj B~ dU
forthe city'sresponse."
Bend Redmond
Agreement discussions
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 686 NW York Drive, Ste.150 Bend, OR I 541-306-3263
541.382.6447
benduroiogy.com
a COCC student planning to
transfer to Oregon State University-Cascades. "I didn't re-
0 .
alize the depths with which it
takes to have a farm and grow foodforatown.They don'teven
.
have that many people, so what
would they do without some help?" Murphy said the trips aren't
important only for illustrating the way local food production w orks,but also are a means to
drive home that his lessons aren't merely academic.
"You really need to make somethingpersonal if you want it to be relevant to students,"
Murphy said. "In order to mophy's students and 20 other vol- tivate change in a society, you unteersmadeitoutto Rainshad- need to motivate it in individuow Organics in Terrebonne, als. Students have enough peowhere they tore down and ple telling them what's right or cleaned up a hoop house that wrong; I hope this shows them to food — environmental pric- collapsed under the weight of what's out there, so they can es and social costs, especially snowfall. Thegroup also helped thinkabout their foodmore and if there are underpaid workers construct a mushroom-grow- decide what's right for them." involved." ing facility and spread compost. The next WWOLF trip will "Going out and getting to be April 12 to Juniper Jungle Because of this focus, Murphy jumped onthe chance to talk to the people who grow lo- Farm in Bend. students are not always aware
weekend of March, 10 of Mur-
of how something got to the grocery, wrapped in plastic. It's alsoeasy to only see oneprice, the one you pay at the cash register. But there are other prices
help out with WWOLF, which allows his students to observe
•
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cal around us was my favorite
— Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
part," said Justin Warren, 19,
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BERKSH I R E i HATHAWAY I Homeaervices
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N o rthwest Real Estate
IN CONJUNCTION WITH PHIL WILSON
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Incredible bay views i Custom-built home with exquisitefinishes i 4Beds 5 2.5 Baths i 1.62 Acres i 3,230 SF i Renowned area for fishing and outdoor recreation i Secured privacy gate
worldQbid 'yBRAUN BRAUNft0347742 i BRE501912556 i LICtt200911043
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Federally Insured by NCUA
© 2014 Oregon Community Credit Union.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by WSI©2014
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A'nchorage
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724/9 •
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Boston 33/19 .
,
2 5 /1 6• rr 9~9/4 " Detroit ''". :
34/19
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ew York 36/21
Philadelphia
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Washington, DC
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Ghihuahuai 73/37
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Monterrey 87/59
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84/68
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New Orleans 74/50
Houstonr 70/41
LaJPaz
28~/~25
Juneau ~38'/29
82/66
FRONTS
ALASKA
Lai/V
M E DIL2VI I G H
HIGH
ROAD CONDITIONS
Mt. HoodMeadows.............1"....................106 Snow level and road conditions representing condiM t. Hood Ski Bowl............... 0" ...................... 26" tionsat5 pm. yesterday. Key: TT. =Traction Tires. T i m berline............................2"......................73" Willamette Pass................... 0"......................26" pass Cpndjtjpns 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit..............Carry chains, T. Tires 1-84 at CabbageHill................. Carry chains, T. Tires 0" 58 Aspen Cp Hwy. 20atSantiamPass..........Carrychains, T. Tires Mammpth Mtn CA 0' 50 Hwy.26atGovernmentCamp.Carr ychains,T.Tires Parkciiy, UT........................2".................--.81 Hwy. 26 atOchoco Divide........Carry chains, T. Tires S q uaw Valley, CA.................O"......................16" Hwy. 58 atWigamette Pass......Carry chains, T. Tires S u n Valley, ID.......................O"......................41" Redmond Roseburg Hwy.138atDiamondLake......Carrychains, T.Tires T a os, NM.............................I"......................54" sau Hwy.242 atMcKenziePass..........Closedforseason Vail, CO................................O" ...................... 65" Sisters For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: The Dalles www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.onthesnow.com Luiend:W-weather,Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze, shehowers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries,sn-snow, i-ice, rs-rain-snowmix,w-wind, f-fog, dr-drizzle, tr-trace ia Pine iakeview Medford Newport North Bend Oniano Pendleton Porriand Prineville
Yesterday Sunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/py Hilto/yy City
City
Yesterday's extremes
58/44 0.00 53/40 r 5$40 s h 5 7/24 O.iN 6432 p c 4 6 /24 I l 5 7/43 O.iN 58/43 pc 5 4 /40 r 62/19 O.IN 66/30 pc a i /22 pc 68/38 0.00 61/40 r 53 / 33 sh 6 5 /35 0.00 63/31 pc 45 723pc 64/19 0.01 58/29 pc 4 1 /22 sn 62/22 0.00 65/31 s 43 / 2 3 pc 7436 0.00 7 0/39 pc 5 5 /32 sh 55/39 0.00 55/41 r 52 /40 sh 66/ 4 8 0.00 5 6/41 r 50 / 36 sh 6$30 0.00 68/42 pc 5 5/32 pc 6 9/33 0.00 65/41 pc 5 1 /32 r 6 5/40 0.00 57/41 r 52/ 3 6 sh 68/31 0.02 63/34 pc 4 9/27 sn 7$27 0.00 63/34 pc 4 4 26 sn 7 437 0.00 65/40 r 54 3 4 s h 66/37 0.00 59/41 r 52 / 37 sh 68/20 0.00 59/34 pc 4 5 /27 sn 64/39 0.00 61/41 pc 5$35 r
Ski report from around the state, representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday: Snow accumulati ons in inches Ski area Last 24 hours B ase Depth Anthony Lakm..................... 0" ...................... 63" Hoodoo................................ 0" ...................... 48" Mt. Ashland......................... 0" ...................... 66"
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
NATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS - 405 ~35 ~ 2 5
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX E KI REPORT
yesteiday S u nday M onday The higher the UVIndex number, the greater City Hi/Lo/Pcp H i /Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eyeand skin protection. Index is for solar at noon. Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totalsthrough4 p.m.
Sunny Highs 64 to 71. Southwest winds 10 to 15 mph with gusts to 25
Nyssa
Tomorrow Ris e Set Yesterday through 4 p.m. at BendMunicipal Airport Mercury..... 910Pm..... 738am. High/Low..............66'/32' 24hoursendingripm*.. 000" Venus......... 8:01 P.m..... 6:08 a.m. Remrdhlgh 0,30" 69 I n 2007 Monthiodate Mars.........12 20P m....11:27 P m. Remrdlow.........10' in1955 Averagemonthtodale... 030" Jupiter........ 3:20a.m..... 6:42p.m. Averagehigh.............. 54' Yeariodate............ 3.43" Saturn........ 2:42p.m....12:40a.m. Averagelow............... 26' Averageyeartodate..... 1.92" Uranus......1040pm....11:22am. Barometricpressure4pm.3028" Remrd24hours ..024in1979 *Melted liquid equivalent
Apr15
REGON CITIES
Ontario EAST 67/41
63/31
PLANET WATCH T E MPERATURE PRECIPITATION
WEST
Mostly sunny. Highs 58 to 64. South winds 10 to 15 mph becoming west southwest.
63/32
rpthe/5
61/36
Granite • 58029
Mitchell
•
Prinevi e edmond
•
Eursenev
58/43 •
HIGH LOW
CENTRAL
I/38
Chance of rain and snow.
43 27
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE
Highs in the upper 50s to near 60.
P
Mostly sunny.
HIGH LOW
BEND ALMANAC
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Partly i-dy.
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Chance of rain and
FORECAST: 5TATE
Newport
I '
Cold W arm Stationary
CONDITIONS *** * * a d 4 ' * *** * *
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Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
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Yesterday Sunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/WHi/Lo/W City
7056 0.61 5ZI31 sh 65/45 s Grandnapids,iA 36/31 0.00 27/5 pc 3024 pc 46/30 0.00 27/12 01 36/17 pc Green Bay,Wl 3426 O.OO 19/4 pc 27/17 ai Albany, NY 46/39O.OO 22/6 s zanz pc Greensboro,NC 77/44 0.00 47/31 r 37/30 Albuquerque,NM 57/37 0.14 57/35 s 68I39 pc Harrisburg, PA 57/460.00 37/ZZ cd 3421 sn Anchorage,AK 25/1 5OA4 29Q4 pc 33/Za sn uarlront CT 55/370.00 31715 pc 29/17 pc Aiunia,OA 6$50 0.02 6$52 is 5$47 r Helena,Mr 50I36 O.OZ 6$29 pc 43/27 sn Aiuniic Gty, NI 63/43 0.00 43/24 pc 35/27 sn Honolulu, ui 6$700.00 79/72 pc 797IZsh Austin, TX 73/62 0.07 61/za sh65/43 s Houston,TX 6BI620.19 7$41 pc 59/ui pc Baltimore, MO 66I50 0.00 41/26 sn 32/24 sn Huntsville, AL 66I350.00 6439 is uilsa sh Billings, tur 50/36 0.00 62/36 pc 52/30 sh Indianaposciu 55/320.00 31/17 pc nll28 pc Birmingham,AL 67/55 0.00 69/45 is 54/41 sh Inason,SnS 7$540.00 74/41 is 50/36 r Blsnuick, NO 29/19 0.04 50I31 pc 51Q7 r Jacksonville,PL 77/460.00 7$59 ai 72/55 is Boise, ip 59/30O.OO 66/42 pc 51/32 sh Juneau,Ax 41/330.04 3$79 sn 3$31 sn Bosion, MA 57/38 0.01 33/19 pc 27/19 pc KansasCity, Mo 73/35 0.00 36IZ1 sn 54/38 pc Buiiaio, NY 42/33 0.06 17/9 pc 24/15 pc lansing, Ml 36I31 0.00 21/3 pc Za/22 pc Buriimn, Vr 4438 0.00 16/1 pc 2$5 pc msVconcNV 7%61 0.00 8$53 s 61/52 s Caribou, ME 36/22 0.26 14/-5 pc 14/-7 pc lexington, KV 657400.00 37/27 sn 42/30 pc Casper,wv 42/30 0.09 55/35 pc 5425 8 lincoln, NE 7ZIZ30.00 4024 Pc ssimpc Charleston,SC 73/50 O.OO7$47 u 57/45 sh i uk Rock, AR 6$SOONO SBQ9 r 52/37 pc Charlotte, NC 73/46 0.00 51/35 r 41/31 r ios Angeles,CA 7ZI55 0.00 ausa s 71/56 s Czwttanooga,TN 69/41 0.00 584i r 5437 r louisville, KV 67/41 0.00 3alz7 43/31 pc cheyenne,wv 40/29 0.01 55/37 pc 6427 pc Madison, Wi 37/260.00 26I13 pc 37/26 pc Chicago,ic 4$29 0.00 27/13 pc 34IZ6 pc Memphis,TN 66/450.00 61/31 is 46/36 pc Cinrinnaii, OH 6$36 O.OO33/24 sn 4/IZB pc suami, FL BOI64O.OO 64/73 pc 66/70 is Clevelan4 OH 46I36 0.02 23/14 cd 33/19 pc Milwaukee,Wi 39/270.00 23/11 pc 3$12 pc Colo. SPBs,CO 5$39 0.00 55Q9 pc 73/32 pc Minneapolis, Mu31/21 0.00 25/16 pc 37/29<ri Columbia, MO 7ZI36 0.00 37/1 7 4433 pc Nashville, Tu 6Z/45 O.iN uil32 sh 45/33 Columbia,sc 7$53 0.00 57/41 sh 47736sh New Orleans,TA 69/600.00 7450 is 59/44 sh Columbus,GA 7$51 O.OO6$54 u 63/44 sh usw YOIICNV 55440.00 36IZ1 pc 33/25 sn Columbus,OH 53/37 O.OZ 31Q1 crii 39/Zs pc Newark, ui 61/420.00 36n9 pc 35/ZZ sn Concord, NC 5$32 0.00 26lz pc 26IZ pc Noriolk, VA 71/51 O.OO 41I55 r 4ilzs r CorpusChristi, 1X 65/67 0.00 7445 is 6446 pc Okla. City, OK 63/46 0.00 43/Za sh 6442 pc Oallac 1X 66I56 1.20 49I33 r 62/47 pc Omaha NE 61/ZB 0.00 39/24 pc 61/59 pc oaylon, ou 54I36 0.04 3206 cd 39/25 pc Orlando, FL 79/50 0.00 64/67 pc BZ/65 is Denver, CO 4935 0.00 6$35 pc 69/31 pc PalmSprings,CA 69/57 O.OO65/61 s 65I59 s Oes Moines,in 51/33 0.00 3419 pc 55/33 pc Peoria, it 5ZI31 0.00 30/16 pc 41Q9 pc Detroit tul 41 /36 0.00 25/7 pc 29QO pc Philadelphia, PA 63/45 0.00 4$24 pc 34/26 sn Ovivlh, MN 22/11 0.00 22/6 pc 33/16 sn Phoenix, AZ 66I55 0.00 83/56 s 86/56 s 61 Paso,1X 70lu! O.OZ 62lza pc 7453 s Pittsburgh, PA 55/360.03 31/ZO cd 37/ZZ pc Purnsnks, AK 24/12 O.OO19/4 pc 242 cd porllanri Mz 47/35 0.00 27/5 pc Zs/6 pc Fargo, uo 2ZIB O.OO29/24 pc 39IZ7 pc providence,nl 59/370.04 35/la pc 29/19 pc Flagstaff, Az 56IZ7 0.00 57Q5 s 60/29 pc Raleigh, NC 72/46 0.00 49/S4 r 39/32
Abilene, TX
Akron,Ou
Yesterday Sunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City
YesterdaySunday Monday Hi/Lo/Pcp Hilto/py Hilto/yy
Rapid Ciiy, SO 45IZ6 0.03 63/37 pc 67/32 pc Souriu Wa 62/400.01 53/40 r 5$37 sh Reno, NV 70/34 O.O O 7443 pc 6$26 pc Sioux Falls,So 34290.03 36QB pc 59/49 pc Richmond, VA 75/50 0.00 4il29 r 35/79 sn Spokane,WA 51/31 0.00 56I39 r 49Q9 ii Rochester, NY 44I35 0.06 iala ii 21/12 pc SPrinoiieid, MO 6$330.00 3416 sn 52/36 pc saoomenta, CA BOI49 0.00 80/47 s 7$46 pc sc louis, Mo 7ZI36 000 32/le i 41/31 pc Salt lake City, UT 56I43 0.01 65/43 pc 61/32 ii Tampa,FL 77/570.00 6$66 pc 73/64 is San Ainonio, TX 6$64 O.OZ65/41 pc 6$44 s Tvcioll, AZ 767470.00 7441 s BZI52 s SanDiego,CA 74/57 O.OO 81/56 s 6956 pc Tulsa, OK 6$41 0.00 4476 r 59/40 pc san Francisco,CA 76I510.00 65/52 s 6OI51 s Washinpun, OC 7$500.00 43/27 sn 32/29 sn san Jose, CA 79/48 0.00 BOI47 s 6$47 s Wichlka KS 7ZI340.03 43/25 pc 65/40 s 5anla Fu NM 4BIZB 0.00 56/Za pc 65I33 pc Yakima,WA 64300.00 63/37 pc 5432 r Savannah, 6A 71P47 0.00 73/52 sh 62/46 sh Yunw, AZ +0.00 6$57 s 91/56 s
INTERNATIONAL Amsterdam Athens Auckland
51/46 0.00 53/46 pc 55/44 pcMecca 6439 0.00 62/48 s 64/48 s Mexico Cily 71 /66 0.00 71/66 r 75I62 r Montreal Baghdad 69/51 O.OO71/ul r 7151 s Moscow Bangkok 95/ao 0.00 96/76 is 93/BZ cdNairobi Bcijinp 71/32 0.00 69/37 pc 6$44 pcNassau Beirut 64/550.00 66lui s 6$57 pc New Delhi Buiin 51/42 0.00 51/42 pc 55/46 r Osaka Booou 6453 0.00 66I50 r 66/50 r Oslo Budapest 67/30 0.00 66I39 pc sme r pnswa BuenosAires aol62 0.00 76/68 pc 7BI64 s Pans Cabo sanLocas 66I66 O.oo asl66 pc67/66 s Riodelaneiro Cairo 69/48 0.00 66I53 pc 8$66 cd Rome Calgary 48/26 0.00 ui/37 pc 48IZB pcSantiago csncun 64/75 O.oo 64/71 1s BSQ5 pc soo paulo Dublin 57/44O.OO 55/44 cri 55/39 pc 5apporo Edinburgh 51 /44 0.00 53/42 pc 57/42 pc Seoul Geneva 60/35 0.00 6$55 pc 6OI32 s Shanghai Harare 7BI60 0.00 78/62 is 78I57 is Singapore Hong Kong 66/60 0.00 66I60 pc 69I64 pc Stockholm Istanbul 55/41 O.OO57/46 s 55/46 r Sydney Iervsalem 6450 0.00 60/46 pc 71/59 s Taipei iohannesburu -I- 0.00 75/57 s 73/59 pc Tci Aviv lima 75/66 0.00 8$69 pc ao/68 ai Tokyo Lisbon 69I46 0.00 6$m s 66/4! s Vancouver ionrion 6444 0.00 62/44 cd 62/41 s Vienna Madrid 69/33 0.00 71/35 s 71/39 s Warsaw Manila 6%76 0.00 69/75 pc BTQSp
64I64 0.00 66I60 s 93/68 s 6$51 0.00 8$55 s 78I50 s 41/26 0.00 39/6 r 1 3/1 s uil320.00 4BI33 pc 39/26 r 76/600.00 6$59 is 7BI60 u BO/660.00 76I69 pc 6$66 pc asl53 0.00 BZ/60 pc 8$62 s 50/320.00 5%37 pc 67/46 s 427370.00 46I39 s 42/42 r 42/Zi O.OO 35/3 sn 13/4 s 57/440.09 60/41 pc 66/47 s ptpsO.OO69Q5 pc 6$75 pc 6$420.00 66I41 s 68/44 s 76/51 0.00 76/55 pc 7$55 pc 69/71 O.OO 69/69 is 91/69 is
33/240.00 35/26 sn 35/Za pc 57/26 0.00 57/39 pc 62/41 pc 6$420.00 6446 s 71/53 s
9LQTO.OO Bpus u Bpns p 3$520.00 42/ZB r 33I30 s 6$66 O.OOBZ/60 cri BO/64 s 71/57000 71/60 pc 71/64 pc 64500.00 67/46 pc 73/57 s 51/41 0.00 62/41 s 55/4! s 4$440.00 uv42 r 46I37 r 6$370,00 59I42 pc 59/50 r 46/35 0.00 4$53 r 42/37 r
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For ms f o r e ngagementw,eddinganniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatTheSuiietint,rrr g y V C handlerdvev aendo,rby emai l i ng milestones®bendbulletin com. Forms and photos must be submitted within on month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383 0358.
earso ri a a vicemmin oacose By Caroline McMillan Portillo
6 tips for dridesfrom alongtime experi
The Char(ot te Observer
C HARLOTTE, N . C . Betty Ziegler Mims isn't one
to philosophize on love and marriage. But in the 50 years she has spent helping brides find the
Betty Mims knows the makings of asuccessful wedding - and how to jeopardize it. Hereare herdo's and don'ts: DON'Tshop witha posse:Mimssaysyearsago,brides-to-be mostly shopped with their mothers or fathers. Now they'll bring practically the whole wedding party. But that meansbrides are more susceptible to group-think. And though shehates to admit it, she's seenmany ajealous bridesmaid try to talk the bride into a dress that she didn't love. DOmanage your expectations: Mims says most every bride comes in saying,al want something (thoughtful pause) different." But there are only so manystyles: A-frame, strapless, mermaid, high neck, low neck, one-shoulder, ballgowns. It's the bride's personal style that makesthemdifferent. That and accessories, Mims' favorite. "The cutest thing I ever sawfor 'something blue' was a consignment dress that had a Tar Heel sewn inside it." DON'T do something you'll regret: Mims says one pregnant bride wanted to list information about the babyshower onthe wedding invitationatosaveonpostage."Mims,whosayssheneverwants to do something she's not proud of, refused. DOmake a deposit:Many a bride hasthought she secured the reception location only to find it was double-booked or her information was misplaced, Mims says. DON'T ask for moneyas ngift: It's tacky, she says.uAnd everybody already knows youwant money." DO send thank-you a note: "People don't think they haveto do it any more," she says,abut old people love it."
is
perfect dress, invitations and
accessories at her consignment shop in Charlotte, N.C.,
r
she's seen more than taffeta,
silk, lace and card stock. She's seen young high s chool sweethearts ti e t h e
knot. She's seen older couples, still in love, renew their vows. And, though it's not as
glamorous, she's even sewn a grandmother of the bride into her gown on the big day. Now she's closing Bride's House of Originals, the city's oldest bridal shop. At 79, she says she's weary of the six-day week, the compe-
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tition with online retailers and
\
the pressure to learn social media. She hopes to sell the build-
4
ing and inventory in the next
few months to someone who will keep it as a bridal shop. T. Ortega Gaines/Charlotte Observer Mims opened Bride's House Betty Ziegler Mims, left, helps Susan Castillo pick a wedding dress at her shop in Charlotte, N.C. of Originals in 1964 in the heart of Plaza Midwood then a "streetcar suburb" and
everybody-knows-everybody neighborhood. Her goal was to open a small consignment shop that catered to women looking for
Mims recalls — before she had a man to marry in it.
The head-scratchers: One couple were married under
a gazebo in Freedom Park, dressed as Santa and Mrs.
an alternative to the "fancy Claus. and plush bridal salons" of big The oh-my's: One bride department stores, Mims says. and groom, dealing with a Brides need personal ser- busybody mom, ditched the vice, she says. "I hate when wedding and eloped. Anothyou go to a store and (custom- er bride ran off with the best ers) are given a number like man at the rehearsal dinner. 'No. 180438454,'" and have to And then there are the wait. "It's awful to me." poignant: At Mims' store, the dressMims says she'll never fores are rarely more than $350 get one widower who walked and most are about $200. In through her door a few years Charlotte, it's not uncommon ago. He'd lost his wife and was to find a dress priced at $3,000 getting remarried. He needto $4,000 at high-end retailers. ed to rent two tuxedos for the But in this high-dollar wed- ceremony. "He had a son, 6 or 7 years ding market, there's still demand for consignment dresses, old," Mims says. "He was goMims says. Some of those in ing to be the best man." her shop have been worn and Mims opened Bride's House dry-cleaned, but about 90 per- of Originals with $300 and a cent are new, she says. That's prayer. because of a modern phenomTen years earlier, she'd enon: Women find the dress, graduated from Stephens Colbuy it, have second thoughts lege in Columbia, Mo. — then a "finishing school" — with a and buy another dress. Then they'll take the first
knack for fashion illustration.
one to Mims in hopes of get- She then got a job with Belk, ting a few bucks back. Mims training new hires in how to splits the profits with the sell- dress and present themselves er, 50/50.
to customers. At t h e
t i m e,
Mims says, employees could Seen it all wear only black, gray, brown She hopes to sell the busi- and wine. No exceptions. ness and the 1,700-square-foot She then went on to open building for at least $400,000. and manage the city's first Tall To her successor she offers Girls clothing shop. She says this advice: Be prepared for the company founder recruitanything. ed herbecause of her stylish There's the comical: One
instincts and work with Belk.
w oman foundand bought the It helped that she was talldress — a little pink number, 5-feet-10ts2, not including the
emonies for same-sex couples. As the U.S. divorce rate in-
creased by more than 63 perfor (a mother) to have a little cent from 1960 to 2011, accordAfter a few years she was (snack) when the kids came in ing to U.S. Census Bureau esworking in bridal shops — and the door." timates, Mims started seeing itching to start something of After 18 years at the shop more repeat brides. By 2009, her own. at 2113 Commonwealth Ave., 15 percent of adults had marBut running a consignment Mims decided she wanted to ried more than once, census shop required inventory, and be her own landlord, so she data show. "Some," she says, "have she didn't have any. So Mims bought the modest frame looked at the wedding an- structure for $38,000 where been down the aisle more nouncements in the newspa- her shop still stands. On mov- times than a Winn-Dixie cart." per, cross-referenced them ing dayshe piled the dresses A few of her brides have with the phone book, and in her convertible and took her looked unsure — perhaps starting calling. mannequins for a ride. w ondering whether t h ey Mims, who had grown up were doing the right thing. on Commonwealth,rented a Appreciation foreconomy She could tell by the way they Mims' b r i des-to-be have shop a few doors down from looked in th e m i rror w h ile where her store stands now. always had one thing in com- wearing the dress. Something She was 29, married with mon: an appreciation for econ- in the way they slouched. a l-year-old, Marc. The shop omy. And that's never been "I thought, 'They're not was small and the young fam- more important than it is to- happy,'" Mims says. "And I ... ily's budget was tight. For a day, Mims says, when wed- didn't know what to say." while, they lived at the back dings cost more than ever. Mims has never had an apof the shop before moving to In 2012, the average wed- petite for reality TV shows an apartment. A second son, ding cost nearly $28,500, ac- such as "Bridezillas" and "Say Marty, came four years later. cording to wedding website Yes to the Dress," — mostly The rent was about $120 a The Knot. because she hates hearing the month, and Mims helpedpayit But weddings and marriage brides whine about absurd sitby renting out two of the front look a bit different from those uations, such as having "only rooms to her aunt, a clothing of the 1960s, when she opened. $4,000 to spend on the dress." re-weaver, and a seamstress In 1964, customers of But she's always had a soft who did alterations. Bride's House of Originals had spot for weddings — in person All the while, Mims was cat-eye glasses and bouffant or in the movies. "I don't care if I know the teaching herself about busi- hair. They married their high ness. When she couldn't af- school sweethearts in t h eir people at all, when they lift ford the standard monthly ac- family churches, and most that veil and kiss the bride ... I cry," Mims says. "Always, countant fee, she paid for the stayed home to raise the kids. minimum and learned from Nowadays, she says, many her friends how to keep the of her customers are older books. Mims, who would later and career-focused, financing beehive hairdo.
separate from her husband, worked hard into the night
their own nuptials. Some will
be the breadwinners. Others raising her kids on the income have boyfriends who turned from the shop. to roommates long before the "I always enjoyed what I did, pair were engaged. but I regretted that I couldn't She servedher firstinterrabe at home when the children came home," Mims says. "I
cial couple in the 1980s. In the
think it would be wonderful
invitations to commitment cer-
TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO
always." The fate of her own wedding gown was not so sentimentaL
About 10 years after she opened the shop, Mims tried to sell her dress — satin, with a
bateau neckline and full skirt, which was featured on the coverofModern Bride magazine the year Mims bought it. It sat on the rack for months with no takers.
So one winter afternoon, when a heavy snow made for slow foot traffic, Mims built two snowmen in front of the
shop. She dressed one in her father's old tuxedo and the other in her wedding gown — thinking it might bring out some customers. "And sure enough," she says, "a girl came by that day and bought a dress."
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BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend Jeremy Granttand Tessa Stock, a boy, Pablo Seabastain, 8 pounds, 13 ounces, February 26. Chris Dershon andMary Morgan, a boy, JosephDarrell Dershon, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, March 4. Ryan and Shelley Kaiser, a boy,Cole Harrison Kaiser, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, March 7. Fernando andTaylor Romero, a boy,
GARDENING.
Carter Phoenix Romero, 7 pounds, 4 ounces, March 7. Michael and Shaina Peloquin, a boy, DeanEarl Peloquin, 8 pounds, 2 ounces, March 7. M ichael andSamantha Johnson,a girl, Emberlynn GrayceJohnson, 8 pounds,11 ounces, March 3. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Vince and JohannaDowns, a boy,
Duke Downs, 8 pounds, March 3. Chad and Lauren Hlnton, a girl, Teal Joelle eHinton,9pounds,2ounces, March 4.
Northgest ~ hptrntorte f e choice beef
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
C3
STEAMPUNK VACATION
r uisin •
e ari eanin ic orians e
•
By Alan Feuer New Yorh Times News Service
On the first full evening of last month's second annual Steampunk cruise to the Ba-
hamas, I found myself — in aviator's cap — marching in a strange parade past the Deck 5 duty-free shops on the Royal Caribbean cruise ship Explorer of the Seas. Strolling with me were 62 elaborately costumed V i ctorian
I III I
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tuxedo and a World War I-era
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Passengers Jeanene
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actors, including but not restricted to: a Gypsy minstrel playing the accordion, a princess in authentic Turkoman beads, a Russian submarine
Allstead, from left, Todd
Spencerand Lee Asplund loungein
commander, an African ex-
plorerin safari gear, some
their swim-
I
mustached gentlemen in John Bull top hats and, in her tiara,
e
(wg •
a 60-year-old woman dressed up as Her Majesty the Queen. I was at the back the pro-
wear.
.
Photos by Piotr Redlinski/New York Times News Service
cession and had a glimpse of Steampunks gather on the top deck of a Royal Caribbean cruise ship in Nassau, Bahamas. Steamthe vessel's other passengers, punk is a neo-vintage genre that seeks to capture the19th century's spirit of adventure and the whimwho, lined on either side of sy of its steam-fueled innovations. the parade, were busy taking pictures with their iPhones, n o doubt thinking that w e
mixer that took place after were staging yet another of we were underway from Port the cruise ship's many shows. Bayonne, N.J. "I'm not eccenS teampunk, if t h e t er m i s tric, I'm very eccentric. That's unfamiliar, is a neo-vintage the whole reason for coming genre that, taking inspiration on a thing like this. To meet from science-fiction classics other people as quirky as me." like "The Time Machine," Gowin, 55 a n d e x t r avaseeks to capture the 19th cen- gantly bearded, found his tury's pith-helmeted spirit of way to Steampunk a year or adventure and the whimsy of two ago after an eclectic caits steam-fueled innovations. reer as a licensed optician, Which is to say, not exactly a costume designerand the what our fellow cruisers in U.S. ambassador to the World their fanny packs had thought Santa Claus Congress, which they'd find at the end of a is held each summer in the day of frozen margaritas and Danish town of Bakken outstuff-your-face buffets. side Copenhagen, Denmark. But then, of course, that A handyman by nature, he was the point. The Steam- was drawn to the communipunk parade, organized like ty by its DIY aesthetic. "I like the outing itself by a compa- making things," he told me ny called Whodunit Produc- with a shrug, showing off the tions, was not a show — at antique spectacles he'd fashleast not in the sense of a ioned out of gears. spectacle meant for others. Its
Like several other Steam-
60 participants, who board- punks I encountered, Gowin ed the Explorer — which can initially introduced himself take about 3,100 passengers in the guise of a Victorian al— to spend a week with other ter ego, which in his case, aclovers of spats and kilts and cording tothe business card monocles and goggles, were he freely passed around, was simply exhibiting their plum- a "Tinker, Taylor and Time age in a celebratory coming Traveler" named Dr. Nosmo out at sea. King. By the end of the eve"When people tell me I'm ning, a dozen such cards were eccentric, I correct them," a poking from my pockets. I'd man named Douglas Gowin gotten one from Professor said at the get-to-know-you R.W. Supernius, "A Maker of
Car
Nol Forgotten schedule
Continued from C1 H e'll take the car t o t h e
Bend Band of Brothers chap-
Prineville race car driver Rick Maul is asking local veterans to sign his No1 Forgotten race car aspart of a tribute to current and former members of the U.S. military. Herearea few events where it can be found: • Bend — Noon Mondayat Jake's Diner, 2210N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend • Redmensl — NoonMarch 25 at Izzy's Restaurant, 810 S.W. 11th St., Redmond • Madras — July 5 "Salute the Troops Night" at Madras Speedway,N.W. Clackamas Drive, andat other speedwayevents.
ter on Monday and the Red-
mond Band of Brothers chapter on March 25 (See Nol Forgotten schedule"). "I think it's great," said J.W.
Terry, president of Bend Band of Brothers and one of the
many veterans who's eager to get a chance to sign the car when it comes his way. "We're
kind of excited about it and will be even more so when racing season gets closer." Maul said he's been inspiredeven more by theveter-
years with the military before he retired in 2000.
home. "It's like a memorial," said
Other veterans have signed Maul, who in hindsight wishthe car to recognize soldiers
es he put the "Nol Forgotten"
who were listed as missing in
emblem on aretired race car
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD S S N
B R I M
T O O T
C O D E
R E D I
C R O C S
P R E L L A N T A R C T I C C I R C L E
F O R F R E S A S P C H A R U S 0 B S O B I N U N B G C A C K L E D
G O S C A O L A C E D O C E E S S C O E L O N P I N O S T C O O K I T H I C K E L M A S A M A R L E C T A D A S
C O C A Y D H O D I N C K L E O D T C I A N S T E E L L A W
C O A T H S O R C I N L L A I F N E Y I E S C A N U B A E L C R A R E C T P U P E B S
A B L I T P E O L B E A C C SA O E R O C E L O N I C E
S T T C H A L I R I C O K S E
CROSSW ORD IS ON
R U R A L A N D P A E T S E E S C C H U R C H H E S L O E L LO Y D S E L I N A L E M S S A I I T S E N T S A W S H A S T A S S P I N E D C H E C K A R L E N R E 0 T I T I S A Y N O A E R O D E C I R C U I T R A O T R A E N H A P
ce
3/ 1 6 / 14
to watch themselves for heat
stroke." On the third day, the ship
m ore different. Gowin, f or
one, had appeared at the dance with an antique lantern and his bulging body covered in a two-piece, redstriped swimsuit. The "nor-
pulled in to Port Canaveral, Fla., and Kriete's agenda re- mal" cruisers had their own Wondrous Artifacts," who in lennium, these Steampunk quired the S teampunks to props: heaped dessert plates, real life was Todd W. Spencer, fictionshad been more or less debark for a field trip to the Bud Light bottles, sippy cups a Hollywood special effects supplanted by what Falksen Kennedy Space Center. Their of rum. man. Then there was another called "the visual veneer" tour guide seemed unfazed And yet b ot h f a ctions from "The Travelin' Smiths," of its fashion-conscious life- as they, in their anachronistic were so visibly entranced or Dan and Linda Smith, a style. Steampunk magazines outfits, motored on a bus past by the performance that I Canadian couple in their 50s. appeared online, with pock- rows of NASA rockets. By the couldn't help but wonder: If et-watch reviews and helpful end of the excursion, he had Steampunk was a fantasy in A lesson from the professor tips on how to sew a bustle. asked more questions of the which enthusiasts of evening Hoping to learn a bit more Steampunk conventions be- Steampunks than the Steam- wear adorned themselves of the basics, I invited G.D. gan popping up at semipublic punks had of him. in the fashions of the past, Falksen to join me for a cock- venues like the Radisson in When they returned that then wasn't cruising, too, a tail when the mixer broke up. Piscataway, N.J. night, there was a special sort of fantasy'? Wasn't it its Falksen, in his rimless glasses The appeal of all of this, event in the Deck 12 pool: a own form of costume play in and three-piece suit, was the Falksen said, was that Steam- performer in a bright blue which ordinary people set journey's resident intellectual, punk culture provides a way fishtail was called upon to aside their lives and enjoyed, hired to be on hand to answer to rebel against the tenacious entertain the Steampunks by way of lobsters in the tropquestions about the history and informality of the contempo- with a m ermaid dance. As ics, the brief illusion of being culture of Steampunk, and to rary moment. "People like the she turned and t w i sted in upper class? generally lend the trip some ac- elegance and the manners," the chlorinated water, flopOnce the dance was over, ademicballast. he went on. "It caters to their ping under burning Florida both sides took their clothes As we sat down over gimlets taste for sophistication and stars, some regular passen- off and jumped together into and martinis, he rearranged gives them a stronger sense gers wandered down from the Jacuzzi. And, of course, at his waistcoat and offered of self." an adjoining disco party to that point, it was hard — if not me a preview of the speech observe. impossible — to tell who were he planned to deliver in the Dickens in the Caribbean The two groups of look- the masqueraders playing morning, a survey of sorts It was a stretch from the ers-on could not have been make-believe. that he had titled Steampunk
101. "Steampunk is essential-
start that Evelyn Kriete, the
party planner who organized the trip, had thought to place he explained, adding that it a group of anti-moderns on first emerged in the 1980s as a hypermodern cruise ship a literary trend whose best- whose every detail appeared ly Victorian science fiction,"
known authors — W i l l iam
to embody the crass consum-
Gibson, say, or K.W. Jeter-
er culture they were trying to escape. Then there was the
wrote about the tensions of industrialization and technol-
ogy's effect on the society of empire. By the end of the mil-
so he won't lose any signatures in case the car gets dinged up in a wreck. "(Seeing these people sign it) almost brought tears to my eyes."
whole Dickens in the Carib-
bean thing, which was not an easy fit. "I just tell them to
military for their service is his
when racing season starts.
H
"I lost over 100 pounds!" "I have lost 106 pounds on the Meta Slime plan. I feel better than I have in years! I am no longer on blood pressure medication, and no longer prediabetic! My energy level is amazing, and I have no cravingsor hunger. I finally have my health and life back! I look forward to encouraging others in their weight loss joumey!" MRC Weight Loss Specialist in Vsncouver
PROGRAMS as lowas
son with a total of 724 points
where people can sign his ve- — just 79 points shy of first hicle when the Madras speed- place — and Maul said he's way's racing season starts up hoping to repeat or improve next month. upon that success this year H e's also p lanning t o with his Nol Forgotten car. "I can't predict what might f eature the v ehicle i n t h e Prineville Fourth of July Pa- happen," Terry said about the rade and at the speedway's car's chances at a champion"Salute the Troops" night on ship season. "But that would July 5. really be kind of fun." M aul said v eterans w i l l
F
Real PEOPLE!Real RESULTS!
thing he's looking forward to
That's because Maul and on their chance to sign the car his No. 17 car took second this week, Maul said he'd like place during last year's seato set up plenty of occasions
r
current focus, Maul admitted it's certainly not the only
For veterans who miss out
have a chance to sign his car region with his car. at this event as well. They can He said 150 people signed also enjoy discounted admisthe car when he took it to the sion of $3 per person at this Prineville Band of Brothers. veteran's appreciation event, This includes one v eteran according to the speedway's who served from 1935 to 1955 website. and another who spent 42 action and still have not come But while thanking current ans he's met while touring the
wear light colors when they go ashore," Kriete said, "and
— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmclean®bendbulletin.com
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SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 2 13 9 8 5 7 6 4 5 7 58 6 4 2 3 1 9 6 49 3 7 1 2 8 5 1 96 8 3 4 5 2 7 < 5 27 1 6 9 4 3 8 ~ 8 34 2 5 7 6 9 1 3 71 5 9 6 8 4 2 9 65 4 2 8 1 7 3 I 4 8 2 7 1 3 9 5 6 :" SUDOKU IS ON CB
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
Northwest Association of Independent Schools Accredited and Candidate member schools and Subscriber and Affiliate schools admit students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. They do not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of their educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs.
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a Answer: M EDIUM S P IRA L N EA R LY SHOULD M A S CO T B O T A NY She quit her office job to start her own businessfrom home, but she-
MISSED THE COMPANY jUMBLE IS ON CB
Northwest Associatian of Independent Schools This ad placement is to satisfy tax code section 501(c)(3) requiring a Notice of Nondiscriminatory Policy as to Students. NWAIS member schools have adopted nondiscrimination policies which may be broader than this requirement.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
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The restored, art deco-style Kiggins Theatre is a linchpin of urban revitalization on Main Street in downtown Vancouver. Washington's oldest city, established in 1857, Portland's sister city is home to165,000 people and a growing dining and entertainment scene.
wide pedestrian bridge that is an exhibit on the role of opened in late 2007 spans a Fort Vancouver during the busy expressway and links American Civil War (1861the fort to the banks of the 65). Although the fort was Columbia River. Famed ar- officially neutral during the chitect Maya Lin, who first
North-South conflict, it was
gained national prominence for her Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C., was one of the designers.
a training ground for many Civil War officers — including Ulysses S. Grant, the commander of Union forc-
08icers Row
es. Numerous other officers served both the Union and
A great place to begin a
John Gottberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin
Confederacy as generals. Ironically, Grant, a cap-
Volunteer Mick Robins uses tools from the1820s as he begins crafting a chair back in the carpenter shop at Fort Vancouver. Blacksmiths, visit is the Fort Vancouver gardeners, cooks and others contribute their talents to recreating a living history at the national historic site. Visitor Center, operated by the National Park Service. A
modest walk or a very short cause of the kind way he treated the growing number
drive northeast of th e f ort
of American settlers. M cLoughlin made no effort to
drive out the new pioneers.
tain when he served at Fort Vancouver in 1 852-54, did not reside in the house today known as the Grant House.
replica, it has a small but interesting museum and plen-
Continued next page
ty of maps and brochures to
www.AgateBeachwotel.com
guide you around the reserve.
hivate, vintage,oceanfront getaway
Quite to the contrary, he was
An i n formative orientation hospitable and g enerous, video describes the history of selling them supplies and ex- the fort and its residents. tending them credit to start Currently being presented their new farms and mills-
ewport, O tR ' ~1 -
0! 0!-7SS-S674
A,„ateBetlfhmOtel
even when those businesses d irectly competed with t h e t•
tn'!wl~
I
,
"
fort's own sawmills, grist mills, livestock and dairy
ei Irs1," I I IItt l ttlt
farms, salmon fisheries and
I NIII II "'llffllli II~I
'
I
shipbuilding operations.
I
When the British evacuated in 1 8 46, M c Loughlin
left the company, retired to Oregon Cityand became an American citizen.
Outside the fort's palisade, as many as 1,000 people lived in the Company VilA highlight of Fort Vancouver's Officers Row, the plantation-style Grant House was built in1849 and lage, which stretched south named for U.S. President Ulysses S. Grant three decades later. Grant was a fort quartermaster in1852- to the bank of the Columbia. 54, but did not reside in the house, which now serves as a restaurant. They were a diverse group, representing many European
Vancouver
to protect the fort against Indians and other threats, and
almost-gaudy shades of paint that were popular in that era.
Continued from C1 A dozen structures have
to fire salutes to ships arriving up the Columbia River.
The chief factor
been reconstructed; there are
Beside the main fort en-
more than 300 feet wide and 700 feet long. At its northwest
and even Hawaiian islanders. And they comprised the largFrancisco and Russian-con-
the chieffactor' s residence. For two decades, this was
trolled Sitka, Alaska. On the north side of the
the home of Dr . John M c-
palisade, outside the main en-
Loughlin, a Canadian-born Scotsman. McLoughlin was
trance, gardens planted in the 1840s continue to f l ourish.
41 years old when the Hud-
Some consider theseto be the
son's Bay Company posted
seedbeds of Northwest horti-
him at F or t V a ncouver in 1825; as chief factor, it was
culture and agriculture: They represent the first known organized local planting of veg-
his job to keep peace with the Native American population and protect British in-
o f the B r i tish sloop H M S
terests. McLoughlin was an astute businessman, and Fort
Modeste, which anchored
Vancouver thrived under his
corner is a three-story log at the fort for 18 months. Tobastion with eight 3-pounder day those quarters have been cannons; sentries stood here re-created, right down to the
countries, Native American tribes, Canadians, Russians est settlement between San
At the northeast corner is
plans to build more. Black- trance is the Counting House. smiths and carpenters demon- The a d m i n istrative and strate their skills throughout bookkeeping center for Fort the year, always using early Vancouver, it was here that 19th-century tools and meth- clerks kept records of all inods. During summer and coming and outgoing goods, school holidays, other liv- employee pay and expendiing-history interpreters in peri- tures. Even in the 1820s, they od clothing re-enact the chores were required to provide deof daily fort life. tailed annual reports. Surrounded by a stake palFor a time, the building isade as it would have been in also served as quarters for the 1820s, the fort measures Captain T h omas B a i llie
,i( -I
leadership. But he angered his Hudson's Bay Co. superiors be-
I l I
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$3 FREESLOT
etables, herbs and flowers in
PLAY COUPON
a formal plot, reflecting the garden's English origins as well as some exotic additions — purple Peruvian potatoes,
CouponExpiresApril 30, 2014
LEAVETIIE nnlvlnn TOan!
Call for reservations, location a times 541.783.7529 ext. 2on Valid forBend,LaPine&Redmond guestsonly: LocalOneCouponper personper visit.
for instance, and West Indian
gherkins. On the south side of the modern
f ort, a
l
l
l
40- f o ot-
In g Qgl
Vancouver:Wheretostayandeat
are the Hilton, centrally located on the south side of Esther Short Park, and TheHeathman In Vancouver, I like to stay at the RedLion Hotel Lodge, beside the Westfield Shopping Town at the Quay —not asmuch for its facilitIes and Vancouver Mall, a short drIve northeast of comfort level, which are just fine, as for its locadowntown. tion. The RedLion is right on the Columbia River, And some Portland's dining culture is finally beimmediately west of the Interstate-5 bridge, and ginnIng to find its wayacross the river aswell. On views from its QuayRestaurant and many guest my recent visit, I was delighted to discover Lapelrooms are stunning, especially if you're fascinated lah, a restaurant and lounge in theGrand Central with river traffic. shopping village just off state Highway14 east of More than that, it's at the head of theColumbia downtown. Small plates, full entrees andthe wine River RenaissanceTrail, which extends east for 5 list are all excellent. miles along the river's edge to parks, wetlands and An old favorIte of mine Inthe heart of downa viewing tower across the old Kaiser Shipyard. town is Tommy 0's Pacific RIm Bistro. New Rain or shine, locals love it for walking, running discoveries wereWIllem's on Main, featuring the and bicycling. Plans are toextend the trail into a culinary touch of chef Paul Klitsie, formerly of proposed redevelopment area, The Waterfront, Fratelli in Portland; and Niche, abudget-priced envisioned as a32-acre residential and office diswine-and-cheese barattached to theAngst art trict west of the 1-5 bridge. gallery just one block north. Two other fine lodging options in Vancouver — John Gottberg Anderson
7
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the fallowingoptons ClassicBeveragePackagefor Two, RseGelunles for Two,ar Onboard Credit ("OBC"I.Guestsusing Choissttlr hsvethefaurth oplionaf a cruise faresrvings ChoiceAirmustbe pumhasedbyApril I5, 2trl4. Rrst 2 gUests instrtsraommustselect thesameapbon. Onselectouises triple and higher occupancyguestswil eachreceivecruisa faressavings;notapplicableto ouise tours. Taxes snd feesareaddiTional for all guests OsesicBeverageItrdege far Twoappties tstwo guests perststerorm and includes beersupto $6per serving; spiritr, cocktrtls, ant wine upto$8 per serving,soda,fresh squeezedsnd boNedjuirm, premiumooNses, sndtsas sndnonqremium boNedwster andserver grstuilias rnre Grstd Iesfar Twoattsr appliesto twoguests pershtsraom and prrlides forprepaidshtsroom, waiter assishntwaiterand headwaiter gratuities in theamountsuggested byCelebrIVs guidelines.OnboardCrsdit(OBCIis pershtsraomandamount is basedon the numberof ouisenighls: 45 nighe $1On 69 rtghts $20n I0nights ormare$300 OBChas nocashvalue, is applicableto cruiseanltl non trsnsferstte, notredeemablefor cash,wil expire ifnat used IV10:00PM onthefinal nightof thesruier. Cefebrttrr ChaiceAiai r r savingsamount is basedonthenumbaraf or isenights: 4-5 nights$200;6-9 nights $400; I0 nightsar more$600. Csphin's Club Membersareeligible far a 50%Reduord Deposit Offeranindividual bookingsmademarethan 70daysfram departure date. Reduceddeposit must bepaidbyApr 30, 20t 4. All aftsrs subjectto avsilsbr and chan ewilhoutnstor c ' oontrslled. Resticbons I . O20t4 Cel'Cruises InsShi rs istsrsd inMstsand Ruador.PsakTisvsl Grau CSTS2029626-tg
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Envisioned by novelist and poet Richard
acoma ~ ~ Oly ia
W
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i lamoo
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»
"
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the tiny Library for Unpublished Works
—h nd
occupies a corner of
h alles
Salem
poi't
Brautigan,
Y akima
Vancouver
sto
0
the main floor of the Clark County Historical
EGON
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Aa
4~
Madra rineville end
Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/For The Bulletin
The picturesque Interstate-5 Bridge, linking Vancouver with Portland over the Willamette River, was built in1917 and expanded in1958. Two-thirds of a mile long, its costly proposed replacement has been the subject of political controversy since 2005.
Expenses Gas, Bend toVancouver (round-trip), 338 miles © $3.25/gallon: $43.94 Lunch, Niche Wine 8 Art: $14 Admission, Clark County Historical Museum: $4 Lodging (2 nights with break-
fast), Red Lion at theQuay: $152.44 Dinner, Lapellah: $32.10 Admission, Pearson Air Museum: $5 Lunch, Grant House:$16.50 Dinner, Tommy0's: $19.26 Lunch, Willem's on Main: $20 TOTAL: $307.24
Ifyou go
• Lapellah. 2520 Columbia House Blvd., Vancouver; 360INFORMATION 828-7911, www.lapellah.com. Lunch and dinner. Moderate. Vancouver USARegional Tourism Office. 101 E.Eighth • Niche Wine & Art. 1013 Main St., Suite 240, Vancouver; 360- St., Vancouver; 360-980750-1553, www.visitvancou8352, www.nichewinebar.com. verusa.com Lunch and dinner. Budget to moderate. LODGING • Tommy 0's Pacific Rim • Briar Rose Inn Bedand Bistro. 801 Washington St., Breakfast. 314 W. 11th St., Vancouver; 360-694-5107, Vancouver; 360-694-5710, www.briarroseinn.com. Rates www.tommyosaloha.com. Lunch and dinner. Budget and from $96 moderate. • The Heathman Lodge. 7801 • Willem's on Main. 907 Main N.E. Greenwood Drive, VanSt., Vancouver; 360-258-0989, couver; 360-254-3100, 888www.willemsonmain.com. 475-3100, www.heathmanLunch and dinner. Moderate. lodge.com. Rates from $135. ATTRACTIONS • Hilton Vancouver Washing• Clark County Historical ton. 301 W.Sixth St., VancouMuseum. 1511MainSt., Vanver; 360-993-4500, 800-445couver; 360-993-5679, www. 8667, www3.hilton.com. Rates cchmuseum.org from $129. • Fort Vancouver National His• Red Lion at the Quay.100 Site. 1501 E.Evergreen Columbia St., Vancouver; 360- toric Blvd., Vancouver; 360-816694-8341, 800-733-5466, www.redlion.com/vancouver. 6230, www.nps.gov/fova • Officers Row National HisRates from $74. toric District. 750 Anderson St., Vancouver; 360-992-1800, DINING www.fortvan.org • Grant House (TheRestaurant at the Historic Reserve).1101 • Pearson Air Museum. 1115E. Officers Row,Vancouver; 360Fifth St., Vancouver; 360-694906-1101,wwwthegranthouse. 7026, www.pearsonairmuseus. Threemeals daily. Moderate. um.org
ene
isters
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
U.S. Army Air Corps base in younger, hipper sensibility the 1920s and 1930s, although
to the central blocks of Main
Museum. 1 984). Envisioned by t h e ion. In the basement are his- writer in his 1966 novel, "The curiosities and millinery fashtorical archives that document But what I love most about
and Washington Streets, and this museum is its tiny Brau- couver in 2010. It is exactly around Esther Short Park. tigan Library, named for Or- what the name suggests. Today Pearson Field is best The four-square-block park egon-born novelist and poet — Reporter:janderson@ known for its world-class mu- claims to be the oldest public Richard Brautigan (1935bendbulletin.com. seum of aviation history. The square in the Pacific Northmain showroom of the Pear- west, having been named for son Air Museum is filled with a pioneer woman who ardozens of historic aircraft, in- rived here in 1845. Flanked Tired of Denture adhesives? cluding the world's first bomb- on the south by the Vancouer and memorabilia from the ver Hilton hotel and conferAfraid to smile? Cannot eat world's first nonstop trans-po- ence center, to the west by an lar flight, a Russian expedition almost-year-round farmers' your favorite foods? from Moscow to Vancouver in market, the park is the site of 1937. A c o r r idor ar o un d a
frequent summer
flight-simulator
At its heart is the 69-foot Salmon Ru n B e l l T o w er,
l a b oratory,
used in aviation education for youth, leads to an additional
c o ncerts
and festivals.
whose glockenspiel rings sevhangar — the second oldest eral times daily. And on its wooden hangar in America, southwest corner is the Vicbuilt in 1918. An aircraft resto- torian-style Slocum House, rationcenteroccupies one cor- built in 1867 and now used for ner of the building. There's also community events; East Fork a theater with continual show- Cellars, a winery based in ings of aviation films, and an suburban Ridgefield, opened a excellent gift shop and library. tasting room in the house last Fort Vancouver was a U.S. summer. Army post for more than a On the north side of downcentury and a half, and was
town, the Clark County His-
decommissioned only in 2001. torical Museum is at home in Between major conflicts, the the 1909 Carnegie Library Vancouver Barracks sent men to protect settlers from Indi-
ans, to quell labor strikes, to keep order during Alaska's Klondike gold rush, and to serve in the Philippines during
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www.changeyoursmile.com • • •BECAUSE HOW YOU SEE THE WORLD MATTERS
fort assisted with the construction of the Kaiser Shipyards,
Join AAA Travel and guest, Janet Anderson
which between 1942 and 1945 launched 141 vessels, including 10 liberty ships, from its Columbia River docks. The
of Tauck, and learn of unique travel experiences in North America and abroad as we explore various cultures and their
Vancouver Barracks today is home to two National Guard
food, wine and traditions. Tauck is known
divisions, the post hospital
for its cultural engagement programs which
and Red Cross offices.
enhance the travel experience and enrich
1849, the handsome planta-
Red Cross.
to venture i nt o
the lives of Tauck guests.
AAA Travel
d o wntown
Vancouver, which datesits es-
neville. Grant himself was a quartermaster who lived near
tablishment to 1857 as WashAlso essential to the World ington's oldest city. Times are War II e f fort w a s Pearson changing, however. Paced in Field, built in 1905 and now part by a resurgence of the
the Columbia River.
the oldest operating air field in
But the house was renamed the United States. Located on in his honor following Grant's the eastern edge of Fort Van-
dining and brewing scene (when Lucky Lager closed its plant here in 1985, many
1869-77 presidency. It is one of
throats went dry), there's a
couver, it was an important
I
... a new kind of Denture
building. Its current exhibits
the Spanish-American War. During the World War II, the
tary of defense, and later was Only a few years ago, there the president of the American weren't many good reasons
Pearson Field
from Burlington, Vt., to Van-
it no longer sees military or airline activity.
From previous page Built of hand-hewn logs in
Lt. Col. Benjamin de B on-
Abortion: An Historical Ro-
every thread of southwestern mance," the Library for UnWashington history. published Works was moved
Getting hip
tion-style building was then the home of post commander
20350 Empire Blvd., Suite A5
Tuesday, March 18 at 6:00pM ti tsls tisa8asIRI888ae'
RSVP: 541-383-0069
TAUCK4'
WORLD DISCOVERY
21 restored grand officer's residences along Officers Row, on the north side of East Ev-
ergreenBoulevard,facing the visitor center and the grassy Parade Ground. Most of these
beautifully renovated Victorian homes, built between the mid and late 19th century, are
now occupied by small businesses, attorney's and governmental offices, and nonprofit
foundations. Some are private townhouses.
The Grant House today is The Restaurant at the Historic Reserve. The first house on Officers Row and the oldest
house standing in the reserve, it displays many historic photographs — including the earliest images of Grant sporting
T HE E
ND N I H TI F R E Et
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his trademark beard.
The showcase building on Officers Row is the antique-filled Marshall House.
Built in 1886 in Queen Anne style, with steeply pitched roofs and asymmetricalfloor
plans, it has 15 rooms, six baths and nine fireplaces. Tours are available, by appointment or sometimes merely by walking in. Civil War veteran Gener-
al John Gibbon was its first resident, serving as post commander from 1886 to 1890.
But the house was formally named for commanding officer George C. Marshall, who headed training for the region's Civilian Conservation Corps camps in 1936-38. Marshall and his family lived here for 20 months, during which time he acquired funds to rehabilitate the old fort. He was the first to actively lobby for
construction of a replica of old Fort Vancouver, deeding four
Inn AtSpanish Head
acres to the City of Vancouver
for that purpose. Marshall today is best remembered for his M arshall
Plan to rebuild post-war Europe, although he also served in the federal government as
secretaryof state and secre-
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
SU D O K U
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DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
Photos by David Griffin /The Washington Post
An arched iceberg, large enough to pilot a small boat through, in Gouvernoren Harbor.
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
sundsy, M~ch w, zot4
In Antarctica, the call of the ice
Arguing the point By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
C) CD
coy
Cy the Cynic says that anyone who doesn't think every argument has two
worst defensive play?
sides is probably in the middle of
I sympathize with West. Perhaps East
having one.
should have led a club when he took the king of trumps. When he got back in with the ace of trumps and led a diamond, West might draw the subtle inference that East wanted to ruff a
Today's East doubled four spades
as a sure bet. He had two trump tricks and a nearcertainty of scoring a ruff with his low trump.
West led the jack of hearts, and
k
Every argument has two sides, but
heart, not a diamond.
South won with the ace and led a trump. West discarded the nine of
CO CD
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NORTH 4 s8763 2 QK643 0 K1075 A None
to the deuce of diamonds. But when West took the ace, he r eturned a
diamond, thinking East might have had a singleton in that suit. South pitched a heart on dummy's king and led another trump, and East
CCS CD CD
South dealer Neither side vulnerable
diamonds, and East won and shifted
CD
CD) CD
LJ CD
took the ace and led the jack of clubs. South played low, ruffed in dummy and drew East's last trump.
WEST 4s None 9 J 1 09 7
EAST
On that trick, West couldn't find a winning discard. If he threw another diamond, South could ruff a diamond
0AQ963
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dummy to set up his king. If West t hrew a heart, declarer would w i n four heart tricks.
04 AK87
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good defense wouldhave beaten East at five clubs, and the argument was heated. What, in y our o p inion, was the
Antarctic Peninsula.
Tite Washington Post
The ship departed out of Ushuaia on Tierra del Fuego, Argentina, and crossed the Drake Passage, renowned for
mYou come for the animals, b ut you will r eturn for t h e ice,m the trip leader aboard the
Penguins'? There were thousands of Chinstraps, Adelies and Gentoos — enough for a lifetime. And it was spring in the Southern Hemisphere, so
National G eographictLind- seas thatmake fools of those blad Expeditions cruise ship who think that dramamine, Explorer told us as we began wristacupuncture straps or our trip to the A ntarctic in ginger gum are going to make December. a difference. I had all forms of My wife, Kathy Moran, is a defense because I get queasy senior editor at National Geo- just looking at a boat, but they graphic magazine and was in- were unnecessary: We were vited to lecture aboard a cruise luckyto experience the"Drake to the "white continent." I got to Lake." Large rolling swells, but tag along. nothing that had me running I startedmy career as a news for the ship's railing. photographer and have never Once across, we had gorlost my love of the craft, so I geous weather. Temperatures was thrilled at the opportuni- rarely got below 30 degrees ty. The images here are among and were warmer than much the best I was able to capture in
we were there when the first
chicks of the season began to hatch. But it was the ice, alive with
the never-ceasing action of grinding, bobbing, cracking and melting, presenting nature's most fascinating and kinetic sculptures, that enthralled me. I never tired of
watching or photographing it, at all times of day. With only two to three hours of dusk (it
never really got dark), it was hard to retire to the cabin. As
the sametrip leader temptingly warned us: "Sleep is expensive
of what the East Coast was
the nine days that we cruised, experiencing while we were hiked and kayaked along the away.
while on the continent. You
can doiton theway home."
co
in his hand, setting up dummy's fourth diamond. If West bared his ace of clubs, South could ruff a club in
So South wound up making four South We s t Dbl spades doubled. It was a painful loss 1 4 for East-West, especially since only All Pass
By David Griffin
k
Nor th 44
East Dbl
CD CD
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Opening lead — 9 J (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC f v
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD
m
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Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichois Lewfs
=
91 Guinness 130 Pod veggie 13 Download 51 Noisy 89 Slightly bum serving 131 Other, ina option disturbance 92 Jots down 93 Proof of bodega 14 Well-organized 52 Grunted, in a 94 Simba's love ACROSS payment 132 Pops,totots 15 Its southern way 95 A third of neun 1 Data theft 97 Sam's rival 133 Intricate shore is on 53 Group sharing a 96 Dennis target: Abbr. 100 Morro Castle Nantucket crest Eckersley, e.g. patterns 4 Bowler Ieature site 134 Caught, asa Sound 54 FrenchOpen 97 Laughed IOI "Overthe 8 Instant, in show 16 Budget winner before demonically 98 'Tres chic!" product names Rainbow" 135 Occurrence overhauls Biorn 12 Brightly colored composer 18 Diamond 55 Alleviates 99 Went over 59 "Chill out! foam shoes I 02 See 80-Across DOWN thieves' cursorily 17 Traffic noise I03 Picasso's aunt 1 Fills vacancies undoings? 61 Squandered 100 Source ol legal 19 Itmaybe 105 SomeBronx ln 21 Hanger-on early years precedents cracked trains 2 Mexico's 24 Like Louis XV 62 Reception 104 Inside 20 Green shampoo107 Palm Pre second-largest chairs disruption company? 22 Like mostof predecessor state 25 Private beds? 64 Like 106 Headliner western China I08 Tiny songbird 3 Warningsign 30 Immunesystem Calilornia's I 7- 107 "BlurredLines" 23 South 111 It's barely 4 Discreetly send defender Mile-Drive singer Robin Temperate legible a dupe email to 33 D'Urberville who 65 Picasso's sun 109 Former Indian Zone border 115 Call-to-action 5 Campusmilitary seducedTess 67 Memoopener prime minister 26 Ma- store responseto 35 Cornucopia 69 Brief reply? Gandhi gp one's own 27 Do without 6 Folly shape 71 Posh I I0 Dance click 28 Outfielder Crisp rhetorical 7 Muslim holy 36 Not neat 74 Thicken, as 112 Mini racers 29 Helps with ajob city 37 Me.-to-Fla. cream 113 Breakfast treat question 75 "Gimme 31 Some Caltech 117 MergedDutch 8 Troy, N.Y., tech route 114 Advertising grads carrier sch. 40 Condition that 76 Feel concern awards 32 Sprite Zero 118 Daisylike flower 9 Bungle affects focusing, 82 vl don't want to I I 6 Gas acronym altemative 119 Et tg Tattoo briefly be remembered 120 Cornmaze 34 Pope's realm 121 Wear down alternative for 45 "Zip- -Doofor my tennis measure Dah" 38 Airline that co- 122 East Texas the squeamish accomplish- 123 Picasso's here foundedStar university 11 cNo more 47 C-SPAN figure ments" speaker 125 Younglion Alliance 124 Current path guesses, just tel 49 Bebe's 'Cheers" 84 nerve 126 Decorates with me" 39 Maker of Total 128 Putin role 86 Old Frenchcoin Angel Soft, Effects skincare 129 Drink froma 12 Computer 50 Sing like 87 Civil War briefly ploducls bowl problem Michael Buble weapon 127 Actor Holm 41 Colin Hanks, to I 2 s 7 f2 ts t 4 ts ts 4 5 6 s 9 t o ti Tom 42 Commonartlcle ty ts ts 20 2f 22 43 Gin fizz fruit 44 Wore out the 24 carpet 2s 25 2s 46 Ready to eat 48 Companythat 27 2s 29 sc si insured Bruce Springsteen's 32 ss 34 35 ss 37 volce 50 NFL wide 42 39 40 43 receiver who ss once changed his nameto 4s 47 4s 49 match his uniform number 50 st 5 2 53 5 4 55 55 Tiger's 2004 bride ss 57 ss 59 so si s2 56 Sly tactic 57 Pickle pick 58 Island near s4 ss ss sy ss ss 70 71 Corsica 60 NASAmoon 72 73 74 75 7s 77 landers 63 Haunt 7s 79 so si s2 66 Gullible one 68 Actor Morales 70 " open!" ss ss s7 ss sg 90 72 Asian sash 73 Challengefor gt 92 95 gs Henry Higgins 77 Wood cutter 9 7 ss 9 9 too tot 78 Sister 79 Online tos t04 tcs tcs t07 tos tos tio magazinewith a t02 "Runway" section tf2 tts t is tt s
4
"FORESEES" By C.C. BURNIKEL
Diagonal patterns exposed in an iceberg that had shifted in the Errera Channel; kayaking permitted a
closer look at the smaller icebergs.
Do you currently have a frozen
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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
Qualified participants Igill receive: Study-related visits Physical examinations Study medication • Laboratory test and procedures
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
'Crisis' itspowe u parentsw ereit urts TV SPOTLIGHT
5 percent seed for next year to
"Crisis"
do have an ending this year, such a deep rut, more so than and we have an ending every other people. What happens episode." when they are sprung, and As the teens go through they have to make decisions their captivity, sides of their for themselves, when they're personalities emerge. not ready for it?"
10 tonight, NBC
By Kate O'Hnre zap2it
Anyone who's watched the
"We started with Beth Ann,
political and personal machinations on "The West Wing"
or "House of Cards" — or watched cable news for half a day — realizes that the rich
and powerful can be just as vulnerable as human beings as anybody else. We all have our weak points, and when you hit people where it hurts most, they'll
give up just about anything to make it stop. Tonight, NBC premieres "Crisis," a 13-episode drama that tracks the moment-to-moment action when mysterious
forces snatch the progeny of the powerful, to use as lever-
age against their parents. "The machine ofthe season," says executive producer
(with Far Shariat and Phillip Noyce) Rand Ravich, "The machine of the season is, 'What
will you do for your child?' So we want to see parents, week after week, being asked the question, 'Will they say yes?' 'Will they say no?' 'Who will they betray'?' 'How will they betray them'?'
"So there will be satisfying
emotional an d
expectations thrust among them, and they were living in
go back into a world, but we
p l o t-driven,
parent-driven stories almost every week while feeding into the larger series."
M eanwhile, p a rents
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. l
Dear Abby:I have been widowed appease Louise. She has gone befor five years. I have a close friend, yond "taking care of you" and is "Louise," who was also close to my trying to dictate the way you live late husband. She promised him on your life. Bill means well, but you hisdeathbed she would "take care have already tried to get Louise to of me" when he was gone. accept the situation. Because she Well, she has taken it to the ex-
treme. She became very controlling and didn't want me doing I went along with it to keep the peace un-
DFP,R
ABBY
til about a year ago, when I met a wonderful man I'll
call Bill. Bill recently moved into my home. Louise says he has no right to live with me here because my
late husband had it built and I have no right to let anyone else stay here. Now she refuses to visit. People
have repeated to me some of the awful things she has called Bill. We havehad many arguments overthe hurtful things she has said in my presence. Bill feels bad about this. He hasn't
said or done anything to deserve the treatment Louise is dishing out
and has encouraged me to try and work it out. Any advice on how to handle this very stressful situation? — Widow in Salem, N.J.
Dear Widow:Yes. Stop trying to
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014:This yearyou often focus on relationships. The issue for you m ight behow much youneed to give. You will deal with guilt and resentment in learning where the correct boundaries lie for you. If you are single, you will want your potential sweetie to reveal more of him- or herself. Don't rush the developmentofthis bond; Stars showthe kind iet a reiationship of day yon'll havn buiid. If you are athd,h P ~itBN you often see situations differently. Use the many opinions you can come up with as acouple to add to the strength of your decisions. VIRGO can testyour patience!
ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * The Full Moon tugs at others' emotions. You will be smart enough to not get involved in one of these highly dramatic situations; instead, you might opt to do your taxes or start some yard work. Say little and listen more. Tonight: Ready for some fun!
TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * You might feel as if you are being pulled like saltwater taffy as you listen to both sides of a story. Clearly, you can't merge the two divergent opinions. Encourage the parties involved to respect each other's differences. Tonight: Make it early.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * You might want to stay away from
crowds andducksomeone's moodiness. Do whatyou want, but knowthatyou probably need some Rand R. Youwill
Dear Abby:I'm a single mother supporting four children with no help from my ex-husband. I am fortunate to have a good job that I like.
I referred a friend to the company who has since become a regular refuses, perhaps it's time to move employee,and he seems to be hapon. pyhere. Dear Abby: I'min a I was recently told that I'll be rebind when it comes to ceiving a referral bonus, which was hostess gifts. I know a pleasant surprise. My friend apnothing about wine proached meand asked me pointand am not muchin-
blank to split the money with him!
terested in learning because most of my friends and I
I was taken aback. He knows my situation. He has a wife who also
don't drink. I am also allergic to
works full time, and two kids.
flowers and perfumes, so I would I think he has a lot of gall to put never give anyone flowers, soaps me in a spot like this. The bonus or candles, because if I did I would money will be a huge help to me, have to leave the party early. and I don't think it's right that he This leaves me confused as to expects me to give half of it to him. what is appropriate. Could I give a How do I handle this while keeping nice jar of high-quality spice or are our work relationship intact? — Extorted in Nevada there better options? — In The Dark About Hostess Dear Extorted: Ignore your Gifts co-worker's question. If the subject Dear ln The Dark:Aboxof assort- is raised again, laugh and tell him ed chocolates might be nice, if your you thought he was joking. If he hosts are sweet-eaters, or matching says he wasn't, remind him how small- and medium-sized picture hard jobs are to find and tell him frames, or a box of note cards and he's lucky you didn't ask HIM for a matching envelopes. However, un- referral fee. You don't owe him anyless you are certain the spice you thing; he owes YOU his gratitude. select is one your hosts might use, I
don't recommend it as a house gift.
— Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O.Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE want to be up to snuff as you go till the wee hours. Tonight: Add some mischief and fun to a relationship.
** * Use the daylight hours to meet friends for a movie or brunch. You could be concerned that you will say the wrong thing around a roommate or loved one. Try to relax. You might disagree, but that does not mean you need to fight. Tonight: Head home. Make it early.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21)
** * * * T he Full Moon today affects you more than it does any other sign. Don't sit back any longer, and go for what you want. Make calls and reach out to your loved ones. Throw a spontaneous party. Everyone is likely to relax and have fun. Tonight: Speak your mind.
** * * Make time for a friend today. You might be more irritated than you think about a personal matter. Your comments could indicate a brewing issue. Discuss it or let it go. Tonight: A meeting could turn
LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * * You will be coming from a very secure spot with a loved one. You could be questoni i ngwhatyou wantand seeking more information that will give you some insight into a particular person. You might feel awkward when dealing with a child. Tonight: Your treat.
** * * Keep reaching out to someone at a distance. This person could be far more demanding than you had anticipated. Be kind, but maintain your boundaries. Your sense of humor will help everyone relax. Avoid being controlled, even if it is second nature to you. Tonight: Out late.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
AauaRiuS(Jan.20-Fsb.18)
** * * You couldnotbe better, asyou reach out to a loved one. Make special plans together. You could feel torn, should today's Full Moon affect your relationship. Know that you can honor your differ-
ences. Aserious talk will open adoor.
** * * Others clamor for your time and attention. Make it your pleasure. Allow greater give-and-take between you and a keyloved one.Someone from adistance could be frustrated when trying to reach you. Tonight: Where there is great music.
Tonight: Indulge a loved one.
PISCES (Fnd.19-March20)
By Jacqueline Bigar
into a funhappening. CAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan. 19)
** * * The Full Moon emphasizes your ** * * You might feel a bit out of sorts. friendships and major ties in general. You'll have an opportunity to iron out a You could decide to stay close to home and relax. Take aserious look at your fiproblem with a loved one before it gets nances. Some ofyou mightbe doingyour worse. Understand where this person is taxes, while others could be checking out coming from. Aconversation could be an investment. Recharge your batteries. awkward. Tonight: Ease up and relax. Tonight: Out for dinner. © King Features Syndicate
LIBRA (Sspt. 23-Oct. 22)
I
9 p.m.on 5 8,"Believe"— Tate (Jake McLaughlin) takes Bo (Johnny Sequoyah) to Atlantic City in hopes of winning some money. While there, Bo bonds with a struggling mom and her ailing child. The FBI's involvement complicates Skouras' (Kyle MacLachlan) efforts to recover Bo. Delroy Lindo and Jamie Chung also star in the new episode "Beginner's Luck." 9 p.m. on10, "Cosmos:A
SpacstimeOdyssey"— Neil deGrasseTysonfocuses onthe "life" part of life, the universe and everything in this new episode. Topics include how natural select ionshaped the human eye and artificial selection created domestic dogs from the wolf. He also traces the human family tree backto its roots in one-celled organisms and visits the Hall of Extinction to see the broken branches on that tree in "Some of the Things That Molecules Do." 9 p.m. on DISC, "Naked and Afraid" —In each episode of this series, which starts a new season tonight, two strangers — one male, one female — must live by their wits for 21 days in a remote part of the
world. And incaseyou were thinking that title isn't meant to be taken literally, it is. They're out there in their birthday suits. 10 p.m. on 58, "Crisis" — A busload of students from an elite Washington, D.C., high school is ambushed during a field trip, and its occupants are taken hostage
by mysterious forcesseeking
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • 3DAYSTOKILL(PG-13)12:30,4:10,7:25, fo:fo • 12 YEARSASLAVE(R) 11:50 am., 305, 610, 910 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE (R) 9:05 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE 3-D (R) 12:15, 3:30, 6:40, 9:55 • 300: RISE OF ANEMPIRE IMAX3-D (R) 1:15, 4, 7, 9:35 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 1:30, 4:40, 7:45 • DALLASBUYERSCLUB(R) 1:35, 4:35, 7:45 • FROZEN(PG)12:25, 3:15, 6 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13)1:05, 3:55, 7:30,9:50 • THE MONijMENTSMEN(PG-13) 1:45, 4:45, 7:55 • MR.PEABODY 8 SHERMAN (PG)12:10,2:45,6:30,9 • MR.PEABODY 8 SHERMAN 3-D(PG)1,3: 40,7: 10,9:40 • THE LEGO MOVIE (PG) 12:40, 3:20, 6:45, 9:25 • NEED FOR SPEED(PG-13) 3, 9:20 • NEED FOR SPEED3-D (PG-13) Noon, 6:20 • NON-STOP(PG-13) 12:50, 3:50, 7:20, 10 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 1:20, 4:20 • ROBOCOP(PG-13)6: 55,9:45 • SON OFGOD(PG-13) 11:45a.m., 2:55, 6:05, 9:15 • Accessibility devices areavailable for some movies. •
8:30p.m.on10, "Family Guy" — Peter gets tired of watching football players thanking God for their victories after defeating the New England Patriots, so he and the guys go in search of God in hopes of persuading him to stop interfering with the NFL. C.J. Spiller and Mario Williams of the Buffalo Bills guest voice their animated likenesses in the new episode "3 Acts of God."
ac-
the daughter of Francis Gib- customed to being in control son," says Ravich, "and then or having their own way are we kept building around her. either put in the position of Who else would be in t h at being helpless or pinioned world? We started with stereo- beneath the thumb of their types — the jock, the outcast child's captor. ... and found out, 'What is the Even Meg, who seems imreal story of these kids?' " penetrable in the first episode But this isn't any ordinary of "Crisis," reaches the limit of Submitted photo high-school class. Much is her strength. "There's a point," says AnRnchael Taylor stars in "Crisis," premiering tonight on NBC. expected of them, but when put under pressure, some derson, "where it b e comes may turn out to be more than too hard to keep up that faAs the series opens, a bus is Dunn; Halston Sage is Amber they would have become cade. Later on, she t h inks headed out on a field trip, car- Fitch, Meg's daughter (at least otherwise. she is broken. There's a softer rying students from Ballard to the world); Dermot MulSays Shariat, "It's not a side of her that starts to break High, an elite Washington, roney plays ex-CIA analyst true cross-section, like you through, but it's not necessariD.C., school that educates the Francis Gibson; Stevie Lynn would find in a public school. ly sustainable. "It's quite dramatic, how children of top CEOs, interna- Jones is Gibson's daughter, T hat wasn't th e w o rl d o f tional diplomats and political Beth Ann; Joshua Erenberg is this show. It's a funny thing it gets cracked in the show. power players and even the teen Anton Roth, who escapes about schools like this, with Probably, based on how she's son of the president. the ambush with the help of very successful parents, the handled things before, it's But when the bus is am- Secret Service Special Agent alumni of these schools don't quite surprising for the audibushed on a rural road, trai- Marcus Finley (Lance Gross); usually turn out to be that ence to see. It really wrongtors are revealed, and the and Michael Beach plays FBI amazing. The parents are the foots her, and we get to see teens and their chaperons are Director Olsen. overachievers." that wrong-footing for a coutaken, setting off a national Viewers wondering how As to why this should be, ple of episodes, until I don't crisis. The hostages are im- such athing can be stretched Ravich says, "It's probably think she can take it anymore. "It's really important that prisoned on one floor of an out into another complete sea- that they have a level of secushe's not evil, that her moelaborate mansion — and one son can stop worrying about rity and comfort. That's what we've tried to explain on the tivations are coming from of the group may not be what that right now. "We definitely have a hard show — that's what appealed adaptive behavior and survivhe seems on the surface. Gillian Anderson stars as IT ending," says Ravich. "We to us about having these kids al mechanisms. At the same CEO Meg Fitch;RachaelTay- have a climactic, satisfying taken away from their comfort time, she will not take no for lor is her estranged younger — both emotional and plotzone. an answer. "She's complicated." "There were such g r eat sister, FBI Special Agent Susie conclusion, that leaves a small
eat e romise oes too ar
TV TODAY
I
leverage against their parentsmovers and shakers all — in this tense new drama series. Gillian Anderson, Rachael Taylor, Dermot Mulroney, LanceGross and Michael Beach star. 10 p.m. on 6, "The Mentalist" — As Jane and Fischer (Simon Baker, Emily Swallow) investigate a murder at an oil fracking site, Rigsby and Van Pelt's (Owain Yeoman, Amanda Righetti) ongoing search for the person attacking former CBI agents takes them to Austin, Texas. Robin Tunney and Tim Kang also star in the new episode "Grey Water." © Zap2it
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Scoreboard, D2 Collegehoops, D3 MLB, D5 Sportsinbrief,D2 Preps,D4 NFL,D5 Golf, D2 NHL, D4 NBA, D6
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL:CLASS 5A STATETOURNAMENT •
OSU's Rodinson to coach all-stars The Pac-12announced Saturday it will send anall-star basketball team toChina for a tour this August. The team, which will be coached byOregon State's Craig Robinson, will play two to three exhibition games inat least two Chinesecities. Since it was formed in 2011, the Pac-12 has
•
II • Bend High commits 27 turnovers while West Albanydominates at the free-throw line
"I think they'll look back as nament game no doubt will sting for a while. time goes on and feel great about Despite limiting the Bulldogs what they accomplished and to 24.4 percent shooting while w hat they were able to do,"Bend
Bulletin staff report
connecting on 40.5 percent of their own a t tempts, the L ava Bears committed 27 turnovers and were outscored 20-4 from the free-throw line at Matthew
ing away from what Bend High
play, the most wins in program history. But Saturday's 44-36 loss to
accomplished this season — a
West Albany in the fourth-place
EUGENE — There is no tak-
16-game winning streak, an un- game of the Class 5A girls basdefeated record in conference ketball state championship tour-
sent two men's teams and a women's basketball team, awomen's allstar volleyball team, and a delegation of men's basketball coaches to China for competitive exhibitions and clinics. "The Pac-12and our universities are proudto be pioneers in China," Pac-12 Commissioner Larry Scott said in a press release. "This event is a greatstep forward for our initiative designed to usesport and cultural exchangeto support the international strategies that manyof our universities haveembarked on toextend their reach into Chinaand promote good will between our two countries." The Pac-12 also announced Washington andTexaswillbecome the first teams in any major U.S. sport to play a regular-season game in China whenthey
Knight Arena.
coach Todd Ervin said after the
game. "They're competitors, so they're hurting pretty good right now because they really wanted
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
PREP GIRLS GOLF:SEASON PREVIEW
PAUL
' ~ - NEWBERRY
Where have all the fans
gonH • Poor attendance shows conference tourneys unneeded
MLB
A
17-old gets start for LA. Dodgers
wonder if college basketball's conferencetournaments have outlived their usefulness.
Sure, the Southeastern Conference's postseason shindig is a bit of an anomaly — a tournament being played in a lame-duck city, at a domed Joe Kline/Ttte Bulletin
The Summit girls golf team looks to repeat as 5A state champions this season. From right, junior Madison Odiorne, junior Alyssa Kerry, sophomore Sarah Heinly, senior Megan Mitchell, and sophomore Rachel Drgastin at River's Edge Golf Course in Bend.
football stadium with far more
capacity than is needed, after a ho-hum year in which no team stood out except for No.
• Summit has won five straight Class 5Astate championships, have areturning two-time individual state championand isthe overwhelming favorite to win again
fter winning five consecutive Class 5A state championships, a high school sports program might find it difficult to muster motivation. Not so for the Summit High girls golf team. If the Storm need something to shoot for, all they need to do is look at some of Oregon's larger schools. "The goal for us as a team is to beat everyone in (Class) 6A also," says Madison Odiorne, a two-time state champion who returns this spring for her junior season. "My freshman year I believe we did that (by scoring lower as a team at state, even
— The Associated Press
though the teams didn't directly compete), and that would be the goal this year, too. We just want to play our best mtd not really focus on what other people are doing."
NASCAR Kyle Buschwins at Bristol again
Inside
Junior Madison Odiorne is seeking her third straight state championship.
• At-a-glance looks at each girls golf team in Central Oregon,D4
1 Florida. But given the massive conference shake-ups of the past
few years, which have pushed togetherschools from far-
flung places and broken up longstanding rivalries in the quest for the almighty football
By Zack Hall •The Bulletin
ERA in 18starts for Single-A Great Lakeslast season. He saidhis goalis to "finish this season in the big leagues, or at least in Double-A" While Urias may look like a prodigy, Dodgers manager DonMattingly asks for patience. "You can like him all you want," Mattingly said. "But we've got to let him grow up."
— The Associated Press
TLANTA — Looking around at all the empty seats at the Georgia
Dome, onecannot help but
went 2-0 with a 2.48
BRISTOL,Tenn. — Kyle Busch got his16th career win at Bristol Motor Speedway — more than any other NASCARdriver at any other track —by holding off Kyle Larson after a late restart in Saturday's Nationwide Series race. Busch has nowwon three consecutive Nationwide Series racesat Bristol since last March, when he andLarson also went1-2 to the finish. Of his 16 national wins at Bristol, five are in the Sprint CupSeries, seven are Nationwide and four are in theTruck Series. Busch now has65 career Nationwide Series wins. Harvick was third and Ryan Blaneywas fourth.
D4
to get that one today." SeeLava Bears/D4
meet in 2015. — From wire reports
Julio Urias, a17-yearold prospect from Mexico, got the start for Los Angeles and struckout two in a hitless inning in the Dodgers' 5-4 win over Arizona onSaturday. He hadnine strikes in14 pitches. "I wasn't nervous," Urias said through an interpreter. "I was just happy to havethe chance. Pitching for the Dodgers has always been my dream." Urias signed for $450,000 last year. He
Inside • Complete results of Saturday's championship and placing games in 6A, 5Aand 4A,
SeeGirls golf /D4
dollar, it is time to reconsider
the way we use this time of year in college hoops. SeeCrowds/D3
Inside • UCLA upsets Arizona in the Pac-12
tournament championship game,03 • Louisville wins American Athletic Conference in theCardinals' first and last year in the conference,
' 4
03
• Las Vegas in the center of college hoops in theWest this week wants to host a regional final — but the NCAA won let it
despite the popularity of college basketball in the desert,D3
CROSS-COUNTRY SKIING
Dakota Blackhorse-von
Jess sprints
Bend's Backhorse-von Jess,Max win 30ICracesat Great Nordeen
to the finish ss Eric Martin trails closely behind during the Great
Nordeen 30-kilometer
cross-counBulletin staff report
0.7 seconds ahead of run-
Some familiar names in the local endurance commu-
ner-up Eric Martin of Bend-
of the 12th annual Desert
finisher in the 30K
Orthopedics Great Nordeen freestylecross-country ski
was Sarah Max of XC Qregon and Mt.
races. In the 30-kilometer race,
Bachelor Sports Edu-
Dakota Blackhorse-von Jess
1:19:35.4. In the 17K race, MBSEF's
A total of 128 finishers w e r e listed for the two rac-
Zeb Millslagle was first
es combined. The Great
based XC Oregon. nity were among the winners The top female
of Bend Endurance Academy was the overall winner with a time of 1 hour, 8 minutes, 39.3 seconds. He finished just
Ray l e of the Portland-based
try ski race Saturday at
Bow e r man Athletic Club in 45:25.6. I nda " Saturday's events ' P started at the West " " Village Lodge at Mt. e ", Bachelor ski area and
cation Foundation in
"
Wanoga Snopark. Black-
horse-von Jess beat Martin by 0.7
nday s finished at Wanoga " Sno-park.
overallin 34:55.5,and the top Nordeen is a fundraiser for f emale finisher was Maya MBSEF .
seconds. Joe Kline/ The Bulletin C
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY SOCCER EPL, Manchester United vs. Liverpool EPL, TottanhamHotspur vs. Arsenal MLS, Chicago at Portland
Time TV/Radio 6:30 a.m. NBCSN 9 a.m. N BCSN noon Root
HOCKEY
NHL, Philadelphia at Pittsburgh NHL, Detroit at Chicago
9 :30 a.m. F o x
Tuesday Baseball:LaPineat Culver(DH),2 p.m. Soltbaff: LaPineatCulver(DH),2p.m. Boys tennis:Bendat Madras,4 p,mcSistersat Redmond, 4p.m.;RidgeviewatTheDalles,4p.m. Girls tennis: Madrasat Bend, 4 p.m4 Sistersat Redmond, 4p.m.;TheDallesatRidgeview,4p.m.
1 0 a.m.
CB S
10 a.m. E S PN 10 a.m. ESPN2 10 a.m. ESPNU n oon
ESP N
12:30 p.m. CBS 6 p.m. BlazerNet, 1110-AM, 100.1 -FM
1 0 a.m. Go l f noon NBC, Golf 4 p.m. Golf
TENNIS
BNP Pari basOpen,men'sandwomen'sfinals
noon
ESPN2
BASEBALL
College, OregonState at Utah College, UCLA at California OLYMPICS 2014 Paralympic Winter Games, Closing Ceremony
noon 2 p.m.
940-AM
Pac-12
12:30 p.m. NBCSN
BASEBALL
Time TV/Radio
MLB Preseason, St. Louis at Boston HOCKEY NHL, Minnesota at Boston
1 0 a.m.
ES P N
4:30 p.m. NBCSN
BASKETBALL
5 p.m. E S PN 7:30 p.m. ESPN
BOXING
Boxing, Julian Williams vs. FreddyHernandez
CrookedRiver Ranch,11 a.m. Boys tennis:Sistersat CrookCounty,4p.mcMadras at Ridgeview,4p.m. Girls tennis: Sistersat CrookCounty, 4 p.m.; Ridgeview atMadras,4 p.m. Trackandfield: CulveratRegis CoedRelays,4 p.m. Friday Baseball: SouthEugeneat Mountain View,4:30p.m.; Summit atEaglePoint (DH),3 p,mcLaPineat Ridgeview,4 p.m.;Sisters in Arizona; Madrasat Redmond, 4:30 p.m. SoBball:Sistersat Summ it, 4 p.m.; Ridgeviewat La Pine, 4p.m.;RedmondatMadras,4:30p.m.
Boys lacrosse:Bendvs. Rocky Mountain(Idaho) in Boise, 7p.mcMountain Viewat LaSalle, 7 p.m.; Liberty atSisters, 7p.m.; Glencoeat Summit, 8 p.m.
GOLF PGA Tour
MONDAY
NBA, OklahomaCity at Chicago NBA, Los AngelesClippers at Denver
Wednesday Baseball:Sisters at Summi t, 4 p.mcTheDalles Wahtonk aatRedmond,4:30p.m. Soflba ff :TheDallesWahtonkaatRedmond,4:30p.m.; Madras at Summit, 4:30p.m. Boysgolf:Bend,Summit,Redmond,CrookCounty, Ridgeview at BrasadaRanch,12:30 p.m. Track and field: Bend,MountainView, La Pine, Ridgeview,Sisters, Gilchrist at MountainView Icebreaker, TBD Boyslacrosse:WestAlbanyatBend,5p.m.;RedmondatSistersJV6p.m. Girls lacrosse:Bendat Thurston, 4p.m.
Thursday noon E S PNU SoBbaff: Spragueat MountainView,4:30 p.m. 12:30 p.m. ABC Girls golh Bend,Summit, Redmond, Ridgeviewat
GOLF
PGA Tour,Valspar Championship PGA Tour,Valspar Championship Champions Tour,Toshiba Classic
p.m.
Soitbaff: Summit at South Eugene,4:30p.m.; Sisters at Madras,4:30p.m. BoysgolhBendatBandonDunes,TBD Boyslacrosse:Mountain Viewat Harney,5p.m.
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Atlantic10Tournament, final, Saint Joseph's vs. VCU Men's college, ACC Tournament, final, Duke vs. Virginia Men's college, SunBelt Tournament, final, Louisiana-Lafayette vs. Georgia State Women's college, Horizon LeagueTournament, final, Wright State vs. GreenBay Men's College, SEC Tournament, final, Kentucky vs. Florida Women's College, NEC Tournament, final, Robert Morris vs. St. Francis (Pa.) NBA, Houston at Miami Men's college, BigTBnTournament, final, Michigan State vs. Michigan NBA, GoldenState at Portland
Monday Baseball: Sisters atMadras, 4:30p.m.; LaPineat SummiJV, t 4 p.m.; Summit at SouthEugene,4:30
9 a.m. NBC 4:30 p.m. NBCSN
AUTO RACING
NASCARSprint Cup: FoodCity 500
ON DECK
5 :30 p.m. F S 1
Listings are the most accurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for late changesmadeby TV or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL BeaVerS tap UteS far ninth Straight Win —Kavin KoyGs homered andAndrew Moore allowed one run over 6~/sinnings Saturday to lead OregonState to a5-1 Pac-12victory over Utah at Smith's Ballpark in Salt LakeCity. Koyas, whosefirst homo run of the season gave the Beavers a1-0 lead in thesecond inning, had two hits and an RBI for OSU, asdid Trever Morrison. Moore allowed eight hits, striking out three andwalking none onroute to his second victory in three decisions this season.TwoUtah pitchers combined for12 strikeouts against the Beavers, who had 10hits. Oregon State (2-0 Pac-12, 17-3 overall) goes for a sweep ofthethree-game series with Utah (0-2, 8-9) today starting at noon PDT.
DuCkS tap TrajanS fOr firSt PaC-12 ViCtOry — IVlltcholl Tolman hit tvvo doubles anddrove in four runs Saturday to pace Oregon to a 7-2 win over USC at PKPark in Eugene. Thevictory was the first of the season for the Ducks in Pac-12playand evenedthe series at 1-1. Austin Grabeck, Tyler Baumgartner andA.J. Balta joined Tolman with tvvo hits apiece for Oregon (1-1Pac-12, 13-5 overall), which broke the gameopenwith a four-run third inning and lod 7-0after four. Starting pitcher Matt Krook allowed two hits and two earned runs over 6/s innings to earn thevictory. Omar Cotto's pinch-hit single in the seventh accounted for both runs for USC (1-1, 10-7). The series concludes today starting at noon.
MOTOR SPORTS PedregOn tapSFunnyCar qualifying — CruzPodrogon topped FunnyCar qualifying in the NHRAGatornationals in Gainesville, Fla., for the third year in arow andfifth time overall, powering to a 4.068-socond run at 308.21 mphSaturday in his Toyota Camry. The1998 Gainesville winner will open todayagainst16-time world championJohnForce.Shawn Langdon lodinTopFuel,DaveConnolly topped the ProStock field, and Michael Raywasthe fastest in Pro Stock Motorcycle. Langdon improved his leading time from Friday with a 3.776 at 320.58, Connolly had a6.476 at 213.98 from Friday, and Ray finished at 6.793 at197.74 on aBuoll.
Valspar Cha mpionship Saturday At InnisbrookResort and Golf Club, Copperhea d Course Palm Harbor, Fla. Purse: S5.7million Yardage:7,340;Par:71 Third R onlld 69-66-70—205 RobertGarrigus KevinNa 70-68-68—206 72-71-64—207 JohnSenden JustinRose 71-68-69—208 72-73-64—209 RetiefGoosen 70-72-67—209 Charl ye Hoff man ScottLangley 71-69-69—209 71-72-67—210 LukeDonald JasonKokrak 74-68-68—210 MatteoManassero 69-70-71—210 73-71-67—211 George McNeil TedPotter,Jr. 73-71-67—211 Will MacKen zie 73-70-68—211 JamesDriscoll 73-70-68—211 FreddieJacobson 70-71-70—211 DavidHearn 71-70-70—211 Jim Furyk 71-69-71—211 Matt Every 68-71-72—211 ChessonHadley 75-70-67—212 JordanSpieth 71-70-71—212 Carl Pettersson 71-70-71—212 JohnMerrick 70-70-72—212 GregChalmers 68-72-72—212 JasonDufner 72-73-68—213 ChadCollins 73-71-69—213 Matt Kuchar 73-71-69—213 K.J. Choi 72-72-69—213 RusselKnox l 70-73-70—213 GaryWoodland 72-71-70—213 JoshTeater 73-70-70—213 JonathanByrd 70-73-70—213 James Hahn 69-74-70—213 BenCrane 70-72-71—213 KevinStreelman 73-69-71—213 Justin Leona rd 71-71-71—213 Michae lThompson 72-69-72—213 TommyGainey 69-72-72—213 PeterHanson 75-70-6M214 NicholasThompson 76-69-69—214 Justin Hicks 72-72-70—214 RobertAllenby 73-71-70—214 D.H.Lee 74-70-70—214 GrahamDeLaet 75-68-71—214 MorganHofmann 74-69-71—214 Stephen Ames 72-70-72—214 RorySabbatini 70-72-72—214 Bill Haas 69-73-72—214 BrianHarm an 71-70-73—214 Y.E.Yang 73-72-70—215 Cameron Tringale 74-71-70—215 Brendon Todd 70-75-70—215 DavisLoveIII 74-70-71—215 JerryKelly 76-68-71—215 BenCurtis 70-74-71—215 MichaelPutnam 69-72-74—215 CharlesHowell III 71-70-74—215 HarrisEnglish 72-69-74—215 DanielSummerhays 77-68-71—216 J.B. Holmes 71-74-71—216 BrandtSnedeker 72-73-71—216 Sang-MoonBae 72-73-71—216 DavidLingmerth 73-72-71—216 Woody Austin 71-71-74—216 Pat Perez 68-71-77—216 Erik Comp ton 72-73-72—217 Ryo Ishikawa 73-72-72—217 PadraigHarrington 75-70-72—217 MarkCalcavecchia 73-71-73—217 PaulGoydos 75-69-73—217 DarrenClarke 71-74-73—218 JasonBohn 71-74-73—218 SeanO'Hair 73-71-74—218 MarcLeishman 75-69-74—218 StuartAppleby 71-73-74—218 JohnMallinger 71-73-74—218 NicolasColsaerts 69-73-76—218 Failed to qualifyforfinalround Tim Herron 73-72-74—219 BrianGa y 75-69-75—219 Eric Axley 72-70-77—219 RickyBarnes 70-72-77—219 LukeGuthrie 70-70-80—220 Tim Clark 73-72-76—221 KenDuke 71-71-7M221 74-71-77 —222 BooWeekley
Champions Tour
MIXED MARTIAL ARTS Hendricks winsUFCwelterweight championshipJohny Hondricks wonthevacant UFCwelterweight championship Saturday night, unanimously outpointing Robbia Lavvler in five roundsat UFC171 in Dallas. TyronWoodley wontheco-feature, stopping Carlos Condit to sot up alikely title bout against Hondricks in the170-pound division. Fighting in Hendricks' adopted hometown, Lavvlaropened a cut besideHGndricks' right oyGin the fourth round. All three judges scored the fight 28-27 for Hondricks. Thetitle vvas vacated by GGorgos St. Pierre, vvhohadheld it since 2007. In his final defense, St. Pierre took a disputed split decision overHGndricks in November.
TENNIS DjOkOViC, Federer tO meet fOr Indian WellS title —Novak Djokovic beat John Isner 7-5, 6-7 (2), 6-1 onSaturday at Indian Wells, Calif., to roach the final of the BNP Paribas Open,where howill rGsumB his longtime rivalry with Roger Federer in amatchup of former top-ranked players. Federer had a much easier time in the semifinals, boating Aloxandr Dolgopolov of Ukraine 6-3, 6-1 andput himself in position to win a fifth career title at Indian Wells. Fedarer leads their rivalry17-15, having beaten Djokovic two weeksago in thesGmifinals at Dubai. Before that, Djokovic hadwonthree straight times over the Swiss star. No. 2seedAgnieszka Radvvanskawill play Flavia Pennetta in the women's final today before the men's title is decided. — From wire reports
ToshibaClassic Saturday At NewportBeachCountry Club Newport Beach,Calif. Purse: S1.76million Yardage: 6,684;Par71 SecondRound BernhardLanger 63-66—129 KennyPerry 66-65—131 ChienSoonLu 65-66—131 ScottDunlap 68-64—132 EstebanToledo 67-65—132 FredCouples 65-67—132
Jeff Hart PeterSenior StevePate MichaelAllen Kirk Triplett DanForsm an TomWatson TomByrum DuffyWaldorf WesShort,Jr. LorenRoberts Hale Irwin
65-67—132 70-63—133 68-65—133 66-67—133 66-67—133 69-65—134 71-63—134 68-66—134 66-68—134 70-65—135 69-66—135 69-66—135 68-67—135 67-68—135 67-68—135 70-66—136 69-67—136 71-65—136 69-67—136 68-68—136 68-68—136 68-68—136 67-69—136 66-70—136 69-68—137 69-68—137 70-67—137 69-68—137 69-68—137 67-70—137 70-68—138 70-68—138 69-69—138 69-69—138 68-70—138 72-66—138 67-71—138 70-69—139 70-69—139 70-69—139 72-67—139 72-67—139 73-66—139 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 70-70—140 71-69—140 71-69—140 70-71—141 70-71—141 70-71—141 71-70—141 72-69—141 72-69—141 69-73—142 72-70—142 70-73 — 143 70-73 — 143 75-68—143 72-72—144 72-72—144 73-71 — 144 74-70 — 144 75-69 — 144 74-71—145 71-75—146 74-72—146 75-71 — 146 74-73 — 147 75-72 — 147 76-73—149 75-77—152 78-75—153
Jay Haa s FredFunk Kohkildoki RussCochran TomPerniceJr. MarkO'Meara MikeGoodes Jay Don Blake Jim Carter JoeySindelar Bill Glasson ScottSimpson CoreyPavin ScottHoch RogerChapm an BobbyWadkins Tommy Armour II Colin Montgom erie RodSpittle Olin Brown e Bart Bryant BruceFleisher Willie Wood GeneSauers MarkBrooks ChipBeck TomPurtzer JohnRiegger Billy Andrade DavidFrost Jeff Sluman SteveLowery Rick Fehr JohnJacobs MarkMcNulty Jim Gallagher,Jr. MarkWiebe RoccoMediate JoseCoceres MikeReid PH. Horganlll MorrisHatalsky DanaQuigley AndrewMagee BradFaxon CraigStadler BobTway BrianHenninger DonPooley Gil Morgan SandyLyle D.A.Weibring WayneLevi Larry Mize Hal Sutton BenCrenshaw Jim Thorpe BobGilder FuzzyZoeler Joe Daley CurtisStrange GaryHallberg Jim Rutledge
TENNIS Professional BNPParibasOpen Saturday At The IndianWells TennisGarden IndianWells, Calif. Purse: Men:$6.17million (Masters1000) Women:S5.05million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Semitinals RogerFederer(7), Switzerland,def. AlexandrDolgopolov(28),Ukraine,6-3,6-1. NovakDjokovic(2), Serbia,def.JohnIsner (12), UnitedStates,7-5,6-7 (2), 6-1.
BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL
Spring training All TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames Tampa Bay(ss) 6, Pittsburgh3 Tampa Bay(ss)6, Toronto 3 St. Louis6, Atlanta2 Baltimore2,N.Y.Yankees(ss) 1 Washington 2,Miami(ss) 1 Detroit 14,Houston3 N.Y.Mets(ss)3, Minnesota3,tie Cincinnati16,Milwaukee4 N.Y.Mets(ss)9, ChicagoCubs(ss)4 Texas16,Oakland(ss) 15 Arizona 4, Cleveland2 Chicago Cubs(ss) 6, KansasCity 5 SanFrancisco(ss)13,Seattle 6 L.A. Dodgers(ss)5, SanDiego4 Colorado4, LA.Angels 4,tie, 10innings Oakland (ss) 8, SanFrancisco(ss) 1 Philadelphia4, Boston1 Miami(ss)5,N.Y.Yankees(ss)0 ChicagoWhite Sox5, L.A. Dodgers(ss) 4 Today'sGames Miamivs. MinnesotaatFort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. N.Y.Metsvs.St. LouisatJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Bostonvs.Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Baltimorevs. Torontoat Dunedin, Fla., 10:05a.m. Washington(ss) vs. Houstonat Kissimmee, Fla., 10:05a.m. Atlantavs.N.Y.Yankeesat Tampa, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Pittsburghvs.Philadelphiaat Clearwater, Fla., 10;05 a.m. Detroit vs.Washington (ss)atViera, Fla.,10:05a.m. Miamivs. N.Y.Yankeesat PanamaCity,11:05 a.m. Cleveland vs. Chicago Cubsat Mesa,Ariz.,1:05p.m. ChicagoWhiteSoxvs. Texas at Surprise, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Oakland vs.Cincinnati atGoodyear,Ariz.,1;05 p.m. N.Y. Metsvs.ChicagoCubsatLasVegas,1:05p.m. Seattlevs.L.A.Angelsat Tempe, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Clevelandvs.SanFrancisco atScotsdale, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Coloradoys.LA.DodgersatGlendale,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. KansasCityvs.SanDiegoat Peoria,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Milwaukee vs. Arizonaat Scottsdale, Ariz.,1:10 p.m.
College Pac-12 Standings All Times PDT
Conference Overall OregonState 2-0 17- 3 UCLA 2-0 11- 7 Oregon 1 -1 13- 5 Washington 1 -1 11- 5 1-1 10- 7 USC 1-1 9-7 ArizonaState 1-1 12 - 10 Arizona 1 -1 5-9 Washington State Stanford 1-1 8-9 California 0-2 10- 7 0 -2 7 -1 0 Utah Saturday'sGames OregonState5, Utah1 Oregon7, USC2 UCLA3,California2
Washington State6, Arizona5 Washington 9, ArizonaState3 Today'sGames OregonStateat Utah, noon USCat Oregon, noon WashingtonStateatArizona,noon WashingtonatArizonaState, 12:30p.m. UCLA atCalifornia, 2 p.m.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT
EasternConference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT PtsGF GA 6 7 45 17 5 9 5 215 146 6 8 36 24 8 80 201 207 6 7 36 24 7 7 9 194 175 6 8 36 25 7 79 172 174 66 30 23 13 73 174 184 66 28 25 13 69 189 218 6 7 25 35 7 5 7 166 217 6 7 19 40 8 46 132 200 MetropolitanOivision GP W L OT PtsGF GA P ittsburgh 66 44 18 4 9 2206 163 C olumbus 67 3 5 26 6 7 6 195 184 N .Y.Rangers 68 36 28 4 7 6 177 169 P hiladelphia 66 34 25 7 7 5 188 190 Washington 68 31 27 10 72 197 205 NewJersey 68 29 26 13 71 166 176 C arolina 6 7 2 9 2 9 9 6 7168 192 N .Y.lslanders 69 26 34 9 6 1 195 233
Boston Toronto Tampa Bay Montreal Detroit Ottawa Florida Buffalo
WesternConference Central Oivision
MichiganSt.83, Wisconsin 75 Big WestConference Championship Cal Poly61,CSNorthridge59 ConferenceUSA Championship Tulsa69,LouisianaTech 60 Mrd AmencanConference Championship W. Mi chigan98,Toledo77 Mid-EasternAthletic Conference Championship NC Central71,MorganSt.62 MountainWestConference Championship NewMexico64,SanDi egoSt.58 Pacific-12 Conference Championship UCLA75,Arizona71 SoutheasternConference Semifinals Florida56,Tennessee49 Kentucky 70, Georgia58 SouthlandConference Championship Stephe nF.Austin68,SamHoustonSt.49 SouthwesternAthletic Conference Championship TexasSouthern 78, PrairieView73 Sun BeltConference Semifinals GeorgiaSt.72,ArkansasSt.45 Louisiana-Lafaye tte 73,W. Kentucky72 Western Athletic Conference Championship NewMexicoSt.77,Idaho55
Wo m e n's college
Saturday'sScores GP W L OT PtsGF GA Tournament St. Louis 6 7 46 14 7 99 223 151 Atlantic SunConference Colorado 6 7 43 19 5 91 206 180 Semifinals Chicago 67 38 15 14 90 227 178 Minnesota 67 35 22 10 80 164 164 FloridaGulfCoast64, Mercer 47 Stetson 90, Sc-Upstate 60 Dallas 66 32 23 11 75 191 185 Big SkyConference Winnipeg 6 8 30 29 9 69 186 199 Nashville 68 29 29 10 68 164 201 Championship NorthDakota72, Montana55 PacificDivision GP W L OT Pts GF GA Big WestConference A naheim 6 8 4 5 1 6 7 9 7218 172 Championship S anJose 6 8 4 4 17 7 9 5213 165 CS Northndge 73, CalPoly 58 L osAngeles 68 38 24 6 82 165 144 Colonial Athletic Association Phoenix 68 3 2 2 5 11 75188 193 Semifinals Vancouver 69 3 0 29 10 70 163 187 Delaware 60, Col. ofCharleston52 C algary 68 2 7 3 4 7 6 1165 202 JamesMadison55,Drexel43 E dmonton 68 23 36 9 5 5 169 223 ConferenceUSA NOTE: Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Saturday'sGames Columbus 2, Minnesota1, SO Boston 5, Carolina1 Philadelphia 4, Pittsburgh0 Montreal5,Ottawa4, OT Tampa Bay3, NewJersey0 N.Y.Islanders4, Buffalo1 St. Louis4,Nashvile1 Phoenix3, Calgary2 Anaheim 2, LosAngeles1 Today'sGames Philadelphia at Pittsburgh,9:30a.m. Vancouver at Florida, noon TorontoatWashington, noon Edmonton at Carolina, noon SanJoseatN.Y. Rangers,1 p.m. Colorado at Ottawa,2 p.m. MontrealatBufalo,4 p.m. Detroit atChicago,4:30p.m. Dallas atWinnipeg,5p.m.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Food Crty500 Lineup Afler Fridayqualifying; race Today At Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .633miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. 11) Denny Hamlin,Toyota,129.991mph. 2. 2) BradKeselowski, Ford,129.965. 3. 20) MattKenseth, Toyota,129.073. 4. 22JoeyLogano,Ford,128.83. 5. 9))arcosAmbrose,Ford, 128.727. 6. 24 JeffGordon, Chevrolet,128.245. 7. 18 KyleBusch,Toyota,128.159. 8. 16 GregBiffle, Ford,127.946. 9. 31 Ryan Newman, Chevrolet,127.801. 10. 5 KaseyKahne, Chevrolet,127.69. 11. 48 Jimmie Johnson,Chevrolet,127.385. 12. 99 CarlEdwards,Ford,121.073. 13. 41 KurtBusch,Chevrolet,128.322. 14. 88 DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,128.271. 15. 15 ClintBowyer,Toyota,128.245. 16. 38 DavidGilltland,Ford,128.236. 17. 1) JamiM e cMurray,Chevrolet,128.168. 18. 26 ColeWhitt, Toyota,127.929. 19. 34 DavidRagan,Ford,127.903. 20. 42 KyleLarson,Chevrolet,127.792. 21. 17 Rrckv StenhouseJr., Ford,127.682. 22. 47 A JAllmendinger,Chevrolet,127.648. 23. 43 AricAlmirola,Ford,127.605. 24. 95 MichaelMcDowell, Ford,127.605. 25. 13 Casey Mears, Chevrolet,127.597. 26. 3) AustinDilon, Chevrolet,127.529. 27. 4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 127.444. 28. 27 PaulMenard, Chevrolet,127.436. 29. 78 MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,127.351. 30. 51 JustinAllgaier, Chevrolet,127.343. 31. 40 Landon Cassil, Chevrolet,127.182. 32. 98 Josh Wise,Chevrolet,121.174. 33. 23 AlexBowman,Toyota,127.165. 34. 7) MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet, 126.896. 35. 36 Reed Sorenson, Chevrolet,126.645. 36. 10 Danica Patrick, Chevrolet,126.628. 37. 14 Tony Stewart, Chevrolet, Owner Points. 38. 55 Brian Vickers,Toyota,DwnerPoints. 39. 32 TravisKvapil, Ford,Owner Points. 40. 83 Ryan Truex,Toyota,0wner Points. 41. 30 ParkerKligerman, Toyota,0wnerPoints. 42.66JoeNemechek,Toyota,OwnerPoints. 43. 33 Timmy Hil, Chevrolet, Owner Points. Failed to Qualify 44. (35)DavidReutimann, Ford,126.62. 45. (77)DaveBlaney,Ford,125.166.
BASKETBALL Men's college Saturday'sScores Tournament AmericaEastConference Championship Albany(NY)69,StonyBrook60 American Athletic Conference Championship Louisville71,UConn61 Atlantic10 Conference Semifinals SaintJoseph's67, St.Bonaventure 48 VCU74,GeorgeWashington55 Atlantic CoastConference Semifinals Duke75, NCState67 Virginia51,Pittsburgh48 Big 12 Conference
Championship lowaSt. 74,Baylor 65 Big EastConference Championship Providence 65, Creighton58 Big SkyConference Championship WeberSt.88, NorthDakota67
Big TenConference Semifinals Michigan72,OhioSt.69
Championship MiddleTennessee84,SouthernMiss. 55 Mid-AmericanConference Championship Akron79,Ball St.68 Mid-EasternAthletic Conference Championship Hampton 50,CoppinSt.47 Missouri ValleyConference Semifinals Drake66, IndianaSt.58 WichitaSt.66, illinois St.50 MountainWestConference Championship FresnoSt.77, ColoradoSt.68 Patriot League Championship Army68,HolyCross58 SouthlandConference Semifinals NorthwesternSt.61,Lamar60 Stephe nF.Austin80,McNeeseSt.54 SouthwesternAthletic Conference Championship PrairieView63,TexasSouthern58 Sun BeltConference Championship W. Kentucky 61, ArkansasSt.60 Western Athletic Conference Championship Idaho75,Seatle 67
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All TimesPDT
EaslernConference W L T P t sGF GA Houston 2 0 0 6 5 0 Philadelphia 1 0 1 4 2 1 Columbus 1 0 0 3 3 0 TorontoFC 1 0 0 3 2 1 NewYork 0 1 1 1 2 5 SportingKansasCity 0 1 1 1 1 2 Chicago 0 1 0 0 2 3 Montreal 0 2 0 0 2 4 D.C. 0 1 0 0 0 3 NewEngland 0 2 0 0 0 5 WesternConference W L T P lsGF GA RealSaltLake 1 0 1 4 4 3 FC Dallas 1 0 1 4 4 3 Vancouver 1 0 0 3 4 1 ChivasUSA 1 0 0 3 3 2 Seattle 1 1 0 3 2 2 SanJose 0 0 1 1 3 3 Portland 0 0 1 1 1 1 Colorado 0 0 1 1 1 1 Los Angeles 0 1 0 0 0 1 NOTE: Threepoints forvictory, onepoint for tie. Saturday'sGames NewYork1,Colorado1,tie Philadelphia1,NewEngland0 TorontoFC2, Seatle FC1 Houston1,Montreal0 SportingKansasCity1, FcDallas1,tie SanJose3, Real Salt Lake3, tie Today'sGames ChicagoatPortland, noon Vancouverat ChivasUSA,4 p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASKETB ALL
National Basketball Association BROO KLYNNETS—SignedFJasonColins for the remainder oftheseason. DALLAS MAVERICKS— RecalledGShaneLarkin fromTe xas(NBADL). PHILADE LPHIA 76ERS — Assigned F Arnett Moultrie toDelaware(NBADL). FOOTBALL
National Football League BUFFALOBILLS — SignedLB BrandonSpikes and RB AnthonyDixon. CLEVEL ANDBROWNS— Agreed to termswith RB BenTate. GREENBAYPACKERS— SignedDEJuliusPeppers. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— SignedDBBrandon Browner. OAKLANDRAIDERS — Re-signed RBDarren McFadden. WASHINGTONREDSKINS — Signed CB Tracy Porter. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague BUFFALOSABRES— Recalled DRasmusRistolainenfromRochester (AHL)onanemergencybasis. NEWYOR KISLANDERS— Agreed to termswith DAdam Pelechonathree-year,entry-level contract. COLLEGE PURDUE —Announcedmen'ssophomorebasketball GRonnieJohnsonhas been granted hisrelease in ordertotransfer.
Garrigus maintains lead at Innisbrook The Associated Press PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Robert Garrigus missed two short putts on the back
nine and had to settle for a 1-under 70 and a one-shot lead Saturday in the Valspar Championship. GazYigus, who needs a win to get into the Masters next month, opened with
GOLF ROUNDUP the pine straw to set up a birdie on the par5 fifth.
Also on Saturday: Langer leads Toshiba Classic: NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — Bernhard Langer m aintained a t w o-stroke lead i n t h e
He still had a four-shot lead when he Champions Tour's Toshiba Classic, makmissed a 4-foot par putt on the 12th hole,
ing four birdies in a late five-hole stretch
and his lead was down to a single shot when Garrigus missed a 3-foot par putt back-to-back birdies on the Copperhead on the final hole. Kevin Na chipped in for course at Innisbrook and stretched his birdie on the 15th and shot a 68. lead to four shots with a nifty flop shot off Garrigus was at 8-under 205.
for a 5-under 66. Langer, the 2008 winner, had a 13-under 129 total at Newport
Beach Country Club. Kenny Perry and Chien Soon Lu were tied for second. Perry had a 65, and Lu shot 66.
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
u setsArizona or ac-1 tournament tite By John Marshall
tournament final on Saturday.
"We've got an edge to us
The Associated Press
LAS VEGAS — UCLA went into the season with the uncertainty that comes with a new
coach. The Bruins suffered theirshare of setbacks, a nota-
ble one just a week earlier. Once the Pac-12 tournament
now, it's a lot of fun," Alford
15 rebounds and fiveassists. hind its offense and shut down
said. "To win a championship means a lot to us." They definitely earned this one, emerging from a battle of the Pac-12's best teams that featured big plays, big blows
Jordan Adams made a big 3-pointer with 45 seconds left
the Bruins through most of the
right, cele-
second half.
and scored 19 points. Norman
The Wildcats were unable to finish it off for one of the
brates with teammates after UCLA beat Arizona 75-71 in the Pac-12 tournament
got rolling, the Bruins took off. and floor burns. Now, after trading body The Wildcats locked UCLA blows with one of the nation's down in the second half after best defensive teams, UCLA
UCLA's Norman Powell,
derson was at his all-around Arizona (30-4) started flat best, finishing with 21 points, defensively, clawed back be-
an offensive show in the first.
Powell scored 15 points and combined with David Wear to hit four free throws in the final
rare times this season, hurt
by 10 missed free throws and five seconds. questionable shot selection After three games in three down the stretch. days, the B r uins ar e
P ac-
12 champions and on a big roll headed into the NCAA
takes home a Pac-12 champiThe Bruins (26-8) counonship in its first season under tered by doing the same thing tournament. "This gives us the confiSteve Alford. to Arizona down the stretch, Outlasting one of the best and then made the big plays dence that we not only play closing teams in basketball, against the big-play Wildcats with anybody, but beat anybody," Alford said. "But you've UCLA knocked off No. 4 Ar- to finish it off. izona 75-71 in the conference UCLA point guard Kyle An- got to get hot and stay hot."
championship Saturday.
Nick Johnson led A r i zo-
na with 22 points and Kaleb Tarczewski added 12. Aaron
Gordon had 11 points, eight reboundsand eight assistsfor
Julie JacobsonI The Associated Press
the Wildcats, who may have
lost out on a No. 1 seed in the NCAA tournament with the loss.
Crowds
Provi encewins Big East
Continued from C1 Early-round "crowds" in Atlanta
amounted to family and friends. And dare I ask: Do we even need the Atlantic C oast C onference
tournament, the granddaddy of
The Associated Press
Shipley hit a go-ahead 3-pointer with
NEW YORK — Bryce Cotton scored 23 points and Providence won its first Big East tournament title since 1994 with a great defensive effort against
13.7 seconds leftand seventh-seed-
ed Cal Poly won the school's first Big West Tournament championship. Tulsa 69, Louisiana Tech 60: EL Doug McDermott and No. 14 Creigh- PASO, Texas — James Woodard ton in a 65-56 victory Saturday night. scored 27 points to lead Tulsa to a
these events? With the ACC now bloated to 15 teams'?.
How about in place of the conference tournaments we expand the NCAA field from 68 to 96 teams
The fourth-seeded Fri-
and playout the32-game opening round on this very weekend? Instead of focusing on a few bubble teams that are looking to bolster their credentials for the selection
ars used a 2-3 zone to hold t e secon -see e B uejays (26-7) 24 points below their season average and to an 8-for-30effortfrom be-
committee, every contest would
hind the 3-point line.
( PNFEREN( F
determine whose season is over and which teams get to play on.
Also on Saturday: Albany 69, Stony Brook 60: STONY
Plus, the top 32 teams — more
BROOK, N.Y. — DJ Evans scored 16
specifically, the top eight seeds in each regional— would receive a
Conference USA tournament title and a spot in the
fpN5Hfp NCAA tournament. Western Michigan 96, Toledo 77: CLEVELAND — David Brown scored 32 points, Tucker Haymond added 21 and
Western Michigan earned its first trip to the NCAA tournament in 10 years with a Mid-American Conference tourna-
points as Albany won the America ment championship. East championship for its second conN.C. Central 71, Morgan St. 62.: secutive NCAA tournament berth. NORFOLK, Va. — Jeremy Ingram No. 5 Louisville 71, No. 21 UConn 61: scored 29 points and N.C. State won MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Montrezl Harrell the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference
well-deserved bye to the second
weekend, giving them time to rest up and get in some extra practice sessions. Granted, an expanded NCAA
had 22 points, 11 rebounds and three
tournament championship.
blocks to give Louisville the inaugural Stephen F. Austin 66, Sam HousAmerican Athletic Conference tourna- ton State 49: KATY, Texas — Thom-
tournament would dilute the quality of play just a bit, but not all that
ment title.
much, given that there are now
as Walkup had 19 points as Stephen
to claim a spot in the national title
Missouri cheerleaders watch the floor during the first half of a Southeastern
race. But there will always be thrilling
Conference tournament quarterfinal. With rivalries in tatters, league align-
Weber State 66, North Dakota 67: F. Austin earned its first trip to the OGDEN, Utah — Kyle Tresnak scored NCAA tournament since 2009. 27 points and Davion Berry added Texas Southern 76, Prairie View 73: 19 to lead Weber State to the Big Sky HOUSTON — Aaric Murray had 27 tournament championship. points and 10 rebounds to lead Texas No. 16 lowa State 74, Baylor 65: Southern in the Southwestern Athletic K ANSAS CITY, M o . — DeAndre Conferencechampionship game. Kane scored 17 points and Georges New Mexico St. 77, Idaho 55:LAS VENiang added 13 as Iowa State won its GAS — Daniel Mullings scored 18points,
ments all messed up, and tens of thousands of empty seats, it might be time
first Big 12 tournament title since 2000.
moments.
to reassess the need for conference tournaments.
Cal Poly 61, CS Northridge 59:ANA- State won its third straight Western AthHEIM, Calif. — Freshman guard Ridge letic Conference tournament title.
more than 300 Division I schools.
And, we regret to say, eliminating the conference tournaments would wipe out those handful of feel-good stories we have each year, in which some school comes out of nowhere
Steve Helber/ The Associated Press
These days, there are just not many people showing up to see them. In Atlanta, not eventhe arrival of
Not anymore. With Syracuse, Pittsburgh and
"If you have an opportunity to win in New York, I think that's a
the country's top-ranked team did N otre Dame j oining th e A C C, great thing," said Jim Crews, the much to spur interest at the SEC there was a fifth day of games coach of No. 18 Saint Louis, which tournament Friday. The crowd for the first time in the tourna- was upset by St. Bonaventure on was announced at 15,273, but there
ment's 61-year history. Not sur-
were not nearly that many people prisingly, on an opening day that actually in the building for Flori- featured the six l owest-seeded da's 72-49 victory over Missouri. teams, there were plenty of empAttendance can be expectedto ty seats. The league even put up a pick up next year, when the SEC curtainaround the upper deck of shifts to its new semi-permanent the Greensboro Coliseum along home in Nashville. But rest as- three of the four sides, in addition sured, that shine will wear off too, to bringing in former "American while the good folks of Tennessee Idol" winner Scotty McCreery for a are hosting this event during nine brief concert between games, all in of the next 11 years. There are sim- hopes of boosting attendance. ply too many teams playing too The curtain industry is doing many meaningless games, now a banner business this week, bethat the conference has grown to cause the upper deck at the Bar14 schools and the tournament clays Center in Brooklyn was also stretchesover five days instead of covered for the Atlantic 10 tournafour. ment. But the league insisted that Ditto for the ACC tournament, empty seats were a small price to which was once one of the hardest pay for the league getting some extickets to land in any sport. posure in the Big Apple.
Sim Bhullar added 14 and New Mexico
Big Tentitle game anall-Michigan affair
Friday in the A-10 quarterfinals.
"Kids enjoy coming to New York. It's a special place." Saint Louis knows it is going to
The Associated Press
the NCAAs, no matter what happened in its tournament.
then finished the game on a 7-1 run
That is not necessarily the case for teams such as Vermont, High
title game with a 72-69 win over No. BORO, N.C. — Jabari Parker scored 24 Ohio State on Saturday. 20 points as Duke advanced to The league's regular-season Tp p 25 the A t lantic Coast Conference champs will face No. 22 Michi- R p U NpUp t ournament championship. gan State in today's championNo. 22 Michigan State 83, No. ship game. 12 Wisconsin 75:INDIANAPOAlso on Saturday: LIS — Adreian Payne scored 18 points, No. 1 Florida 56, Tennessee 49:AT- and Branden Dawson added 14 for
Point, Green Bay, Iona, Robert Morris, Belmont, Boston University, Davidson and Southern University, all of which won their confer-
ence titles but were knocked off in their league tournaments. Stephen F. Austin went 18-0 in the South-
land Conference, but it still needed to win its tournament. So did Geor-
gia State, despite going 17-1 in the Sun Belt. So unfair. Time to try something different.
GREENSBORO, N.C. — Anthony Gill hit two free throws with 8.5 seconds left gan blew a 12-point second-half lead, to lift Virginia in the semifinals of the INDIANAPOLIS — No. 8 M i chi-
to advance to the Big Ten tournament
LANTA — Patric Young scored 16 points and Florida rallied in the second
Atlantic Coast Conference tournament. No.7 Duke75, N.C. State 67:GREENS-
Michigan State.
No. 23VCU 74,George Washington half in the semifinals of the Southeast- 55: NEW YORK — Treveon Graham ern Conference tournament. Florida scored 22 points and VCU pressed and will play Kentucky after extending its pressured its way into another Atlantic
school-record winning streak to 25. No. 6 Virginia 51, Pittsburgh 48:
10 tournament championship game. The Rams will play St. Joseph's today.
Las Vegashasa little bit of everything, except NCAAtournament games • While colleges flock to the desert for their conferencetournaments, the NCAAstill refuses to comefor March Madness By John Branch
national tournament: Las Ve-
New York Times News Service
gas itself.
year. The NCAA has a strict an-
LAS VEGAS — I n t h r ee For the past week, it has ti-gambling policy for players, arenas along a 3-mile stretch beenthemecca ofcollegebas- coaches and administrators of Tropicana Avenue, 20- ketball. In the weeks ahead, it but says it ha s n o c ontrol
tion that may create — that
presumably makes the NCAA nervous, though there is no
known evidence of betting corruptionduring conference tournaments. College basketball has been besmirched fans, with many more watchby occasional point-shaving ing on television. They were ing to the NCAA. have the tournaments in Las scandals over the decades, playedunder rules setby the The about-face is jolting, Vegas. It creates a strange, but those have not been NCAA, college basketball's but college basketball, as hard-to-understand d e l i n- blamed on physical proximity governing body. much as any sport, has a com- eation for fans, coaches and to legalized gambling. With four conference tour- plicated relationship with Las even conferenceadministraDespite the fact that no naments held in Las Vegas Vegas. Conferences, teams tors:Las Vegas is a perfect games will be played in Nethis week (one ended Tues- and fans flock to the city ev- fit for college basketball one vada, more than $200 million day; the others ended Satur- ery March for the same rea- week but is off-limits the next. is expected to be wagered in "It's like a state rule versus the state on the NCAA tourday), there is no spectacle like sons other tourists do. It is it in on the college basketball easy to reach, has lots of hotel a federal rule," Scott said be- nament — about double the landscape — a neon-lit kalei- rooms and offers plenty to do, tween two of the four games amount for the Super Bowl. doscope featuring dozens of even if your team loses. at the MGM Grand Garden Next weekend will be one of "The coaches, the fans Arena on Wednesday. mascots, bands, cheerleadthe busiest times in Las Vegas ers and fan bases, all hoping — everyone lit up when we A s h or t w a l k aw a y , as bettors flock to the sports to cheer their teams to the talked about Las Vegas," said through a corridor of shops books for early-round games. some postseason men'scollege basketball games were played this week. The games attracted tens of thousands of
NCAA t o u rnament, w h i ch starts in the coming week.
One major college basketball participant with no chance of advancing to the
will be a mere mirage in the over where conferences hold desert,suddenly stripped of their tournaments. Free from its ability to host any games N CAA c o n straints, m o s t in an effort "to ensure the in- leagues in the Pacific and tegrity of the game," accord- Mountain time z ones now
It is that proximity to gam-
a decadebefore returning to Las Vegas in 2011. Its games one of t h e w o r ld's largest are played at Orleans Arena, sports books, at 30,000 square part of the Orleans Hotel and feet. "We want fair and true Casino. The West Coast Congames just like they do." ference holds its tournament (To make room for the there, too, having settled into male-centric betting crowds Las Vegas in 2009. The Pacrace and sportsoperations at
bling — and whatever percep- Las Vegas Hotel, which boasts
during the tournament's first
12 came in 2013. At least one
full weekend, Kornegay said, Las Vegas Hotel makes use of
otherconference is considering making the move, officials sard. Of course, it is fair to won-
a 1,500-person theater with remote betting stations. By Sun-
day, the crowds dissipate in exhaustion. "It's Coronas and
der whether Las Vegas even wants th e N C A A t o u r na-
double-bacon cheeseburgers ment. It already attracts huge for three straight days," he crowds for the tournament's said.) first full weekend. "We don't really need any The Western Athletic Conference first brought its post- help that weekend," said Pat s eason tournament t o L a s Christenson, the president of Vegas, in 1997. It ceded the ter- Las Vegas Events, which has ritory to the spinoff Mountain a mission to bring events that West in 2000 after the Moun- fill hotel rooms. "We'd be more tain West nabbed Nevada-Las interested in the second week"All I can tell the NCAA is Vegas, a university with a rich end, the Sweet 16. That said, Larry Scott, th e P acific-12 and restaurants and into the Conference c o m m issioner, vast hall of slot machines and that we're on the same side as basketball history. we would love, and have been who moved his league's post- gambling tables, fans could they are, to protect the integriThe WAC rotated its tourna- trying, to have conversations season tournament from Los wager on the Pac-12 games at ty of the game," said Jay Kor- ment through various cities in w ith the N CA A a b out t h e Angeles to Las Vegas last the casino's sports book. negay, the vice president for its membership for more than postseason, period."
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
Girls golfataglance
PREP SCOREBOARD
CLASS 5A SPECIAL DISTRICT 1
RIDGEVIEW
MOUNTAINVIEW
Coach:Krista Brines (2nd season) BEND 2013:Did not field complete team Coach:Lowell Norby (5th season) Outlook:With six freshmen, two sophomores 2013:Runner-up at Special District1 champi- and two seniors joining seven players with onship; third at Class 5AState Championships mostly junior varsity experience, Mountain View appears to be onthe upswing after Outlook: TheLavaBearsreturnsomeexpeyears of struggling to field a complete varsity rience from a teamthat earned a top-three team. Juniors Ellen NoppandShelby Tiller, finish at state. Gone isHeidi Froelich, who who both competed in theSpecial District1 finished second in districts as asenior last championshi plastseason,buoytheCougars' year. Butsenior Madeline Rice, who placed i n flux of talent. Evenwith the flood of new 15th (tighter) at state, junior Holly Froelich and players, coach Krista Brines wants to keepher sophomores Maddy Mode all were significant team goals simple: "Toexperience thejoy of contributors on last year's team. Andjuniors the game andplay somecompetitive golf, to Aleyah Ruizand Hailey Nichols add varsity build a strong five-member varsity team and experience. "I think that wehave areasonably good chance of placing second in our district to continue building a strong program," Brines says. and making the state tournament as a team," coach Lowell Norby says. "At state I feel it is possible for us to place in the top four teams, CLASS4A/3A/2A/1A which would give us atrophy." SPECIAL DISTRICT 5
Heaficoach: Vicki Sime (2nd season)
REDMOND
SISTERS
Coach:Jeff Roundtree (2nd season) 2013:Did not field a complete team Outlook:ThePanthers enter another rebuilding year with just one returning golfer: Minnie Huang, anexchangestudentfrom China.Redmond will have aninjection of talent with four freshmen —Sophia Stahl, Kailey Jackson, Karrisa Witt and Emily Joyce —whoareall threesport athletes. With such a young team,coach Jeff Roundtree is tempering expectations. "They all havetremendous attitudes andan eagerness to conquerthis sometimes frustrating game," Roundtreesays. "I haveconfidence that they will do that and in afewseasons this group will challenge for adistrict title." SUMMIT
Head coach:Jerry Hackenbruck (7th season) 2013:Won Class 5Astate tournament Outlook:With two-time state champion Madison Odiorne returning for her junior season on a team that returns all but onevarsity golfer from last year's championship season, the Storm are prohibitive favorites to win their sixth consecutive state title.
Girls golf
CROOK COUNTY Heal coach:Grant Patterson (16th season) 2013:Runner-up at Special District 5 Championship; ninth place atClass 4A/3A/2A/1A state tournament Outlook:TheCowgirls return five golfers with varsity experience, including four of the five players who started in last season's state championship. Two of those golfers, Chelsea Shank andCaitlin Dalton, were all-league performers in 2013. That gives veteranCowgirls coach Grant Patterson a solid nucleus to try to top last season's ninth-place finish at state. "Our girls get to play some of the top courses in the Northwest against some of the top players in the state," Patterson says. "That is a great combination for developing young players." LA PINE
Head coach:Brett Harding (1st season) 2013:Won the Special District 5 Championship; placed sixth at state tournament Outlook:With only three players in the program, the Hawksplan only in junior varsity events this season.
Drgastitt, who played irt the
Special District 1 Championships, and junior Mad-
Girls basketball Saturday'sSummary WestAlbany44,Bend36 WESTALBANY(17-12) CoreyJames5-15 10-1122, Ali Nelke2-8 7-8 11, KyiaOuvall 2-40-0 6, Saylor Siegner0-32-3 2, Georgia Smith1-50-02, AlyviaSam s0-1 1-21, Rylee Wetmore0-50-00, Brianna Smith 0-00-00. Totals 10-41 20-2444. BEND (22-6) JessicaMcclay9-191-5 20, Kendall Kramer3-7 2-29, Marissa Hayes1-1 0-02, BrydieBurnham1-2 0-0 2, LisaSylvester1-5 0-02, SophiaJackson0-1 1-21, AlexaJackson0-1 0-0 0, Allison Parker0-1 0-00, Alexa Evert 0-00-00, TaylaWheeler 0-00-00. Totals15-374-9 36. WestAlbany 1 4 9 14 7 — 44 Bend 10 10 6 10 — 36 3-point goals —West Albany4-13 (James 2-7; Duvall 2-3; Siegner0-1; Sams0-1; Wetmore 0-1), Bend 2-7 (McClay1-4; Kramer1-1; Sylvester 0-1; Parker0-1).Fouledout—Bend-Kendall Kramer; Jessica Mcclay. Rebounds—West Albany22(Nelke12), Bend34(Mcclay8). Assists—West Albany7 (Ouvall 3), Bend9(Sylvester 4). Totalfouls —West Albany 11, Bend17.Technical fouls—None.
2013:Third
at Special District 5
Championship Outlook: The Ravens returnthe majority of
• -
.
~
.
its 2013 team
and appear to Rldgovlow's Tianna Brown be poised for a run at a state tournament berth. Sophomore Tianna Brown, who qualified for the state tournament after placing fifth in the 2013district championship, should anchor the team.Megan Lau andRaelyn Lambertalso return after starting every varsity match in 2013.
CLASS6A ChampionshipTournament At ModaCenter, Porlland Saturday'sGames Fourth/Sixlh Place South Salem50,St.Mary'sAcademy48 Third/Fifth Place Westview 49, Beaverton40 Final Oregon City57, SouthMedford 48
Head coach:Bill Mitchell (3rd season) 2013:Finished fourth in Special District 5 Championship Outlook:Senior Codie Lagaois the lone golfer this season for Sisters. Lagao led theOutlaws with an eighth-place finish in the 2013Special District 5 Championship.
CLASS5A ChampionshipTournament At MatthewKnightArena, Eugene
Saturday'sGames
Fourth/Sixlh Place WestAlbany44, Bend36 Third/Fiflh Place Hermiston62,Lebanon55 Final Wigamette 63, Corvallis 54
TRINITY LUTHERAN
Heal coach:Mike Polk (3rd season) 2013:Did not field full team Outlook:For the first time in school history, Trinity Lutheran should beable to field a full golf team. TheSaints will be led by senior Victoria Sample, who placed third in the 2013 Special District 5 Championship and14th in the 20134A/3A/2A/1A State Championships. Thisyear,coachMikePolksays,Samplecould contend for the district title and atop-five finish at state andhelp push Trinity Lutheran into contention for the district championship. "We will have to put in somehard work to compete for a place at district," Polk says. "Weare looking forward to a great seasonandhopefully have somegreat golfing weather."
improve this year to a point where they could be the best
Continued from 01 group from top to bottom that Bend High, which finished die Hueske, and the Storm we have ever had at Summit," in third place at th e 2013 appear to have uncommon says Hackenbruck, who is Class 5A state tournament, depth. entering hisseventh season "That's what I love about figures to be Summit's closest as coach of the Summit girls. rival in 5A this season. But this team is that even if you "Not very many teams have make no mistake, heading have a bad round you know as much depth as we have. into the 2014 season, Summit everybody else is going to Most of our JV players would is an overwhelming favorite pick you up," Heinly says. be playing on varsity teams "There is so much depth so to repeat as state champion. elsewhere. So we h ope to All but on e significant you can just shake it off and have an environment where contributer from last year's you don't have to worry about all of our players are contribStorm team returns this year. it, as much as it hurts." uting and improving and enAnd four of them placed in With so much returning joying the game of golf." the top 17 at the state tourna- talent, just how good can this Like every team in the rement a season ago: Odiorne, teambe? gion this season, Summit is sophomore S ara h H e i rtly The sky truly is the limit, not scheduled to travel out(ninth), junior Alyssa Ker- says Summit coach Jerry side of Central Oregon for a ry (llth) and senior Megan Hackenbruck. tournament until May. So it "It will b e i nteresting to will be a while before it can Mitchell (17th). Add sophomore Rachel see if ourgirlscan focus and measure itself with the best
BOSTON — Boston winger Milan Lucic didn't hide
the thoughts many of his
teams from elsewhere in the state. The Storm will get their
chance to show what they can do against a number of the
state's best Class 6A schools in late April in a tournament a t Tetherow Golf C lub i n Bend. Soon after that, Summit will make its title push.
Will the pressure of such lofty expectations ultimately weigh on the Storm?
No way, says Odiorne. "I feel like we'll be even stronger this year because of how close we've gotten," Odiorne says. "We know how to push each other in practice. We're here to win it." — Reporter: 541-617-7868, zhall@bendbulletfrr.com.
Berglund scored twice to lead Doan scored his 350th career St. Louis. Vladimir Tarasen- goal on one of Phoenix's six ko and Alexander Steen had third-period power plays. the other goals for the Blues, Ducks2, Kings 1:LOS ANwho have won seven of their
GELES — Patrick Maroon
past eight. scored the go-ahead goal and the Bruins' locker room folCanadiens 5, S enators Coyotes 3, F lames 2: Frederik Andersen made 37 lowing a fairly easy win over 4: MONTREAL — Francis GLENDALE, Ariz. — Shane saves for Anaheim. teammates may have had in
shootout to lift Columbus.
Carolina.
Bouillon scored 1
ing more," Lucic said after the
deficit in the third period.
CU(SS6A ChampionshipTournament At ModaCenter, Portland Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Sunset50, SouthMedford 44 Third/Fiflh Place SouthSalem64,Jesuit 56 Final WestLinn67, Sheldon56 CLASS 5A ChampionshipTournament At MatthewKnight Arena, Eugene Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Sherwood 50,Wilsonvige 43 Third/Fiflh Place West Albany76,Madison74,OT Final Jefferson 69, Churchil 64 CLASS 4A
ChampionshipTournament At Gill Coliseum,Coruallis Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place NorthValley68, CotageGrove39 Third/Fiflh Place Tigamook 52, LaGrande42 Final Philomath48, LaSalle 39
Bend's 56-42 quarterfinal loss
Continued from 01 A couple of quick runs al-
The Lava Bears bounced back
to Lebanon on Wednesday. on Thursday to beat Wilson of Portland 39-33, advancing them to the fourth-place game.
"What a great season it half, including an 8-2 spurt midway through the first quar- was," Ervin said, reflecting on ter to give the Lava the Lava Bears' 22-6 Bears an 8-5 lead. campaign. "They WhBt: 8 With West Albap repared ev e r y ny leading in the g yEu8$SEugSOg game to be ready second period, an I to play. It was such 8-0 string put the /t WBS. a pleasure to coach Intermountain Conthis group of girls." — Bo ference champions Senior J e ssica Todd Ervln back irt front, 18-17. McClay closed her Each Bend High high school career surge, h o w ever, Saturday with 20 was answered promptly by points and eight rebounds for 10th-seeded West A lbany, the Lava Bears. Kendall Kramwhich scored nine consecutive er chipped in with nine points, points itt the opening period four rebounds and two assists to take the lead at 14-8. But for Bend, which topped the prethe back breaker began late in vious school record of 21 wins the second quarter, when the set in the 1990-91 season. "That's kind of a nice thing Bulldogs went on a 6-2 run to close the half with a 23-20 ad- to hear," Ervin said, referringto vantage. They then opened the the record win totaL "Another third period with nine straight thing to look back on." points to grab their biggest lead Corey James paced West of the contest at 32-20. West Al- Albany (17-12) with 22 points, bany would match that margin three rebounds and two asfour more times in the second sists. Ali Neike had posted 11 half, and the Bears would get points and 12 rebounds for the no doser than eight points the Bulldogs, who daimed a state rest of the way. tournament trophy for the fifth In the third quarter, when year in a row. Bend was outscored 14-6, the Bend settled for sixth place Lava Bears committed turn- in the eight-team tournament overs ontheir first eightposses- field. The Lava Bears have sions, which led to nine points appeared in five state tournafor West Albany. That was the ments in the past seven seastoryof Saturday's contest,as sons, including four times in the Bulldogs turned the slew five years under Ervin. "This team has done a lot of Bend High turnovers into 23 points. The Bend turnovers, not only on the court but off," combined with West Albany's Ervin said of his 2013-14 squad. deadly accuracy from the foul "I think the way they held line (20 of 24), more than made themselves and prepared and up for the Bulldogs' cold shoot- worked with the younger kids, they're leaving a mark not only ing from the field. The Bears were playing for if that's a school record with the second straight game with- wins but on how to do things out senior point guard Delaney correctly and being athletes at Crook. The IMC player of the the high school level and being year, Crook suffered a knee successful. That's the biggest injury in the second quarter of Wlll.
Bruins top Hurricanesfor eighth straight win In other games Saturday: Blue Jackets 2, Wild 1:ST. PAUL, Minn. — Ryan Johansen scored a disputed goal in the fourth round of the
Boys basketball
Lava Bears lowed fifth-seeded Bend to seize control briefly in the first
NHL ROUNDUP
The Associated Press
CULSS 4A ChampionshipTournament At Gill Coliseum,Coruallis Saturday'sGames Fourlh/Sixth Place Henley56,Philomath36 Third/Fitlh Place Mazama 43,Seaside38 Final Sutherlin52,LaSale 40
m i n ute,
"I just hope we're not peak- 26 seconds into overtime as ing right now and keep want- Montreal erased a three-goal
• i a
Eastern Conference-l eading Flyers 4, Ponguins 0:PHILBruins beat the Hurricanes ADELPHIA — M a t t R e ad 5-1 on Saturday afternoon for scored a pair of goals and their eighth straight victory. Scott Hartnell and Vincent "We've done a good job of Lecavalieralso scored for staying focused and keeping Philadelphia. on the task at hand," he said. Lightning 3, Devils 0: "It seems like we're playing at TAMPA, Fla. — Ben Bishop our highest level of the season
' •
•
•
'
stopped 23 shots to set Tam-
so far. It seems to have gotten pa Bay's single-season record better since the start of Febru-
ary andOlympic break." Jarome Iginla scored a pair of goals and backup goaltender Chad Johnson made 29 saves. Johnson, playing with regular goalie Ttxukka Rask getting the day off, is 8-0-1 in his past nine starts.
with 31 wins.
u«ururu
Islanders 4, Sabres 1:
+uNflFO
UNIONDALE, N.Y. — Frans
Nielsen and Kyle Okposo scored fi rst-period goals for New York, while backup goalie Anders Nilsson had 33 saves. Blues 4, P redators 1: NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Patrik
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Boston'sChad Johnson playsthe puck while Carolina's Radok Dvorak gives chase. Johnson had 29 saves in the Brtfins' 5-1 win.
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL: MARINERS SPRING TRAINING
D5
NFL: FREEAGENCY
Packerspickup Peppers fromBears The Associated Press GREEN BAY, Wis. — The Green Bay Packers defense
has gotten abig jolt from a big name: Eight-time Pro Bowl
defensive end Julius Peppers. The ex-Carolina Panthers
and Chicago Bears defensive end signed a three-year deal with the Packers on Satur-
day morning, bringing one of
• Prospect turned bartender turned bullpen acehopes to regain hisform
the NFL's best pass-rushers to a team that has historical-
By Bob Condotta
still-frozen tundra of Lambeau Field before the team
ly avoided major free-agent splashes. Peppers' agent, Carl Carey, posted photos to his Twitter account of Peppers signing the deal and standing on the
The Seattle Times
announced it officially later in the day.
S COTTSDALE, A r i z .
Tom Wilhelmsen's journey
"I haven't won a c ham-
f rom Tucson b artender t o
Major League Baseball closer may yet feature the happy ending the once seemingly
pionship," Peppers told the Packers' w ebsite.
inevitable made-for-TV mov-
ie would require. Maybe, Wilhelmsen hopes, last season's struggles when he not only lost his job
there."
Peppers went to the Super Bowl in 2003 with the Panthers, losing to the New En-
as closer for the Seattle Mar-
iners but was demoted for a few weeks to Class AAA Tacoma — were just a last little "You never want to hear
( ®eei~
you are getting sent down," said the 30-year-old Wilhelm-
=
sen, who was out of baseball working in a bar from 2004 to
2008 before restarting his career and then winning Seattle's closing job in 2012. "But I was able to take a step back and analyze a little bit." A nd t hat a n a lysis, W i l helmsen said, led to him de-
veloping another pitch — a cut fastball to go along with his four-seam fastball and
a curve — that he says has been the key to a good start to a spring he hopes will lead to yet another career resurrection. "I wa s h aving t r ouble throwing strikes with my off-speed stuff and that (the cutter) was supposed to be a little bit easier to throw for a
strike," said Wilhelmsen. "So we went ahead and just went at it that way."
Until this weekend, thing were looking good. In his first five spring appearances Wilhelmsen allowed just a .182 batting average with only one walk and six strikeouts while facing 23 batters. On Saturday, however, he
surrendered five hits and four earned runs and got just one
out in a rough outing against the San Francisco Giants. "He's throwing as good as anybody incamp," Mariners manager Lloyd McClendon said earlier this week. "You
are seeing the big arm, all the pitches. Everything is working great for him." Wilhelmsen is not yet ready t o proclaim
h i m self c o m -
pletely fixed. But he says that when he has needed the cutter "it's there. I've thrown it for a strike. So I'll roll with it."
And with each outing, he also puts the 2013 season a
The AssociatedPress file photo
Seattle's Tom Wilhelmsen pitches against Bostonlast season. After being sent down to Class AAA Tacoma, he is back with a new pitch and what he hopes is a new beginning in the big leagues. "You just have to know and understand that you are not
The Wilhelmsen file Drafted in 2002 by Milwaukee inthe 7th round Y ear Team L e vel G W - L I P 2003 Brewers Rookie 2 0-1 4 2003 Beloit 2004
A
15
5-5
88
Suspended for drug violation 2005 Quit baseball 2009 Played independent league 2010 Mariners Rookie 5 0-0 15 2010 Everett 2010 Clinton
AA
3 7
1-0 6-1
14 '/ 44 '/
2011 Jackson A A
14
4-5
60'/
2011 Seattle 2012 Seattle 2013 Seattle
25 75 59
2-0 4-3 0-3
32 '/ 79 '/ 59
14
0-1
12
MLB MLB MLB
2013 Tacoma AA A
Trent Richardson to India-
going to go three up and three ERA 4.50 2.76
0.60 3.68 2.23 5.49
3.31 2.50 4.12 10.50
SEATTLE —Zach Miller will stay with the
Seattle Seahawksafter the tight end agreedto restructure his contract in an effort to free upsalary cap room for the Super Bowl champions. Terms of Miller's new deal were not immediately available, but it keeps an important piece of the Seahawks offense in Seattle after two starterswide receiver GoldenTate and right tackle Breno Giacomini — left earlier this week in free agency. Miller was dueto make $4.8 million in base salary in 2014 before restructuring. It was part of the original deal he signed with Seattle as a free agent before the 2011 season. — The Associated Pess
gland Patriots. The 34-year-old Peppers feel like now that I've been was released Tuesday by the given this opportunity that I Bears in a cost-cutting move. can be one of the top backs Peppers would have counted in the league. I'm going to let $18.183 million against Chi- my play speak for itself. But cago's salary cap this season I want it to be known that I and had a base salary of $13 do feel like I'm a guy who's million. gonna be a top-10, top-8, topIn other moves Saturday: 5 running back." RB Ben Tate goes to the Other moves: The RaidBrowns: Ben Tate signed ers agreed on a two-year a two-year, $7 million free deal to keep free-agent safeagent deal with Cleveland, ty Usama Young after an which has been desperate injury-shortened first year to find a quality every-down in Oakland.... The Carolirunning back since trading na Panthers have agreed
0
tension-building subplot.
there is a reason for it all, and
"That's
where my focus is. I feel like the team is set up to make a run and I feel I canhelp get it
Seahawks,TE Miller agree te restructureddeal
to terms on a two-year con-
napolis early last season. Tate, who spent the past
tract with Saints free agent safety Roman Harper. The four years w it h H o uston, 31-year-old Harper has been fills the void and the 25-year- a mainstay at strong safety old is excited to begin a new in New Orleans for the past
down every time," he said.
"You are going to fail in this game, no matterhow good you are. And the sooner you can accept that, the better off you are going to be."
chapter of his career with the Browns.
eight seasons and went to the
Pro Bowl in 2009 and 2010. In a teleconference, Tate He only played in five games said he's eager to show he last season due to injuries. can be a feature back. "It's been something I've been waiting for, for a long time," he said. "I'm just ready to grab this opportunity and 541-548-2066
That McClendon is in his first year with the Mariners
also helped to give Wilhelmsen something of a clean slate
entering this season. "We all know the stories of
WILSONSof Redmond
last year, the blown saves and all that," McClendon said. "I
run with it and show every-
told him: 'Look, we are all human. It happens to everybody. Put it behind you and move
one what I'm all about.... I
Adjustablg -Beds-
forward.' And he's done that.
"I've played baseball just mirror. He emerged as one of about my whole life, so strugthe best closers in the game gling is a part of the game," in 2012, recording 29 saves he said. "Obviously, it's a litafter taking over the job on tle different when there is a June 4. whole city rooting for your The 2013 season got off to or depending on you. But it's a nice start when he convert- the same game. I've struggled ed his first 11 save opportu- many times before. You've nities. But then he suddenly just got to go back out and do lost command of his pitches, what you know how to do." a spate of walks helping lead Wilhelmsen said the offto four blown saves in one season helped to get him right three-week stretch. He even- mentally, as he returned to tually lost the closer's job and Tucson to spend time with t hen was sent down to f i x his family and get away from what had gone wrong. baseball for a while. Wilhelmsen acknowledged If there was a realization that the swift fall was a rude he made then, he said, it was awakening, but something coming to grips with the fact he eventually realized comes that perfection is impossible with the territory. in baseball. little more in t h e r earview
I think Willie is very relaxed. He's gotten back off the mat, so to speak. It's good to see the look in his eye, the fire in
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
S M O L IC H
NBA ROUNDUP
acers ra
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still had plenty of time. "We needed a little reminder of what we are playing for here," coach Frank Vogel said. The Pacers r esponded with one of the most impres-
sive comebacks of the NBA season, catching the Detroit
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just had to take small steps.
We had tochip away and get this win." Josh Smith scored 23 points for the Pistons, who lost star center Andre Drummond in the first quarter to a neck in-
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and was a bit sore after the
game. "Just a little bit of a scare," Drummond said. "It's hard
for me to make moves left and right sometimes, but it shouldn't be
a n ything t h at
should stop me from the next few days." E van Turner
Duane Burleson/The Associated Press
Detroit center Greg Monroe (10) has his shot blocked by Indiana
center Roy Hibbert, left, during overtime of Saturday night's game in Detroit.
a d ded 2 0
points for the Pacers, and David West scored six of his 15 basket. points in overtime. Also on Saturday: Detroit led 56-31 in the secGrizzlies 103, 76ers 77: ond quarter but couldn't hold PHILADELPHIA — The 76ers on. The Pistons trail Atlanta had a loss for the record book. by five games for the final Mike Conley scored 19 points playoff spot in the East. and Zach Randolph had 14 to It was the second-biggest lead Memphis to a win, sendcomeback victory in the NBA ing the 76ers to a franchise-tyt his season, according t o ing 20th straight loss. The STATS. Golden State rallied Sixers can set the team mark from 27 down against Toronto with a loss Monday night at on Dec.3.
"Really proud of our guys," Vogel said. "I did not like the deficit we built especially in that first half, but we stayed
withthe game and came back with better energy." Drummond, Detroit's prom-
Indiana. Bulls 94, Kings 87: CHICAGO — Joakim Noah had 23
quarter and Washington overcame a 10-point fourth-quarter deficit to beat Brooklyn
and move past the Nets for fifth place in the Eastern Conference. K nicks 115, B ucks 9 4 : NEW YORK — Carmelo Anthony scored 23 points, Tim
firstquarter.He appeared to
Bulls. Wizards 101, Nets 9 4:
be hit in the head inadvertent-
WASHINGTON — John Wall
ly by the Pacers' Roy Hibbert during a scramble near the
scored 33 points, Drew Good- Chandler scored 12 for the en got 11 of his 21 in the final Nuggets.
ERRIOTR Conference W L 49 17 x-Miami 44 I9 d-Toronto 37 27 Chicago 37 29 Washington 35 31 Brooklyn 33 31 Charlotte 32 34 Atlanta 29 35 NewYork 27 40 Cleveland 26 40 Detroit 25 41 Boston 22 44 Orlando 19 48 Philadelphia t5 5t Milwaukee 13 53
WesternConference
d-SaII AntaniO
d-Oklahoma City d-L.A.Clippers Houston Portland Golden State Dallas Memphis Phoenix Minnesota Denver
NewOrleans Sacramen to Utah LA. Lakers d-diyisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
W L 49 16 48 t7 47 20 44 21 43 23 41 26 39 27 39 27 37 28 32 32 29 37 26 39 23 43 22 44 22 44
Saturday'sGames
NewYorkt15, Milwaukee94 Washingtoo 101,Brooklyn94 Memphist03, Philadelphia77 Indiaoa 02, Detroit104,OT Atlanta97, Denver92 Chicago94, Sacramento 87
Today'sGames
CharlotteatMilwaukee,10a.m. PhoonixatToronto,10am. Houston at Miami,12:30 p.m. Bostonat NewOrleans,3p.m. Sacramento atMinnesota,4 p.m. Dallas atOklahomaCity, 4p.m. Utah atSanAntOniO,4P.m. GoldenStateat Portland, 6p.m. ClevelandatLA. Clippers, 6:30p.m.
Mppdpy'3GameS
Philadelphiaat Indiana,4 p.m. AtlantaatCharlotte,4 p.m. PhoenixatBrooklyn,4:30p.m. Oklahoma City at Chicago, 5p.m. Utah atHouston, 5p.m. Bostonat Dallas, 5:30p.m. LA. Clippers atDenver, 7:30p.m.
Summaries Saturday'sGames
Ppa GB 742 698 3'/z
578 u 561 12 530 14 516 15 485 17 453 19
403 22t/2
394 23 379 24 333 27
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Ppa GB 754 738 t 701 3 677 5 652 6'/2 612 9 591 10'/2 59t t0'/z 569 12 500 t6'/z 439 20'/2
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Kenneth Faried with 25 points and
Pacers112, Pistolls104 (OT)
Bulls 94, Kings 87
MEMPHIS (103) SACRAM ENTO(87) Gay5-123-413, Evans2-41-2 5, Cousins10-21 prince341-27, Randolph5-0 45 14,Gasol 36 5-611, Ccnley5-9 7-8 19, Lee3-6 0-16, CalatheS 5-7 25,Thomas7-1810-13 26, McLemore 3-12 0-0 3601 6, DaViS34026, Allen 46009, Miller 1-3 6, Thompson 2-81-45, Williams t-3 1-3 3, Outlaw 0-02, Koufos 4-70-08, Johnson2-42-27, Leoer2-3 0 30 00, Acy1-21-23,McCallum021-21.Totals 2-36,UdrihO-t 2-22.Totals38-7023-32 103. 31-85 23-3787. PHILADEL PHIAI77) CHICAGO (94) Thompson0-5 0-0 0, Young8-19 0-0 20,Sims Duoleavy4-u 5-5 t6, Boozer4-10 t-2 9, Noah 1-4 2-4 4,Carter-Wiliams10-162-3 23,Anderson 9-15 5-623,Hinrich4-1t 1-210,Butler1-113-4 5, 2-tt 0-04, Wroten6-11 t-213, t/aroado1-1 2-4 Augustin3-104 512,Gibson6-97-9 t9, Mohammed 4, Mullens0-3 0-0 0, Williams3-8 1-2 8, John- 0-0000,Snel l0-10-00.TOtalS31-78263394. son-Odom0-50-20,Davies0-01-2t.Totals31- Sacramento 23 2 0 20 24 —87 83 9-19 77. Chicago 23 25 16 30 — 94 Memphis 22 23 29 29 — 103 Philadelphia 21 1 5 21 20 — 77
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ThroughFriday'0 Games G FG FT PTS AVG 64 667 556 2036 31.8 63 630 365 t/70 28.1 61 605 334 1632 26.8 61 520 419 1608 26.4 57 429 418 1404 24.6 67 612 398 1633 24.4 60 572 258 1405 23.4 64 517 246 1486 23.2 62 481 383 1399 22.6 56 44t 360 1242 22.2 65 487 313 1439 22.1 64 500 275 1375 21.5 63 487 261 1352 21.5 57 538 143 1222 21.4 66 458 297 1394 21.1 57 453 291 099 21.0 61 442 272 1254 20.6 59 443 255 1200 20.3 65 448 30 1322 20.3 65 462 266 1275 19.6 Roboppds G OFF DEFTOT AVG 67 270 658 928 13.9 61 189 601 790 13.0 65 352 088 840 12.9 65 218 585 803 12.4 56 177 477 654 0.7 63 228 482 710 11.3 49 159 385 5aa u.t 60 144 520 664 11.t 57 03 482 595 10.4 62 206 430 636 10.3
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MILWAUKE E(94) Ilyasova 3-102-28, Middleton3-100-06, Pachulia 2-30-04, Knight5-134-514, WclteIS5-7 3-415, Henson 4-8I-49,Antetokounmpo2-52-27,Sessioos4-95-614,Adrieo5-100-010, Udoh2-40-04, Wright 0-2 3-43. Totals 35-81 20-27 94. NEWYORK(115) Anthony8-16 6-6 23, Stoudem ire 6-13 3-4 15, Chandler1-20-02, Feltcn4-60-0 9, Smith 5-7 3-3 15, Shump ert5-122214, HardawayJr. 8122320, Prigioni0-10-00, Tyler1-24-66, Aldrich1-12-24, Murry1-2 1-2 3,Brownt-t 0-0 2, Clark1-t 0-0 2. Totals 42-7623-28115. Milwaukee 23 19 24 28 — 94 New York 30 30 28 27 — 115
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Grizzlies103, 76ers77
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BROOK LYN(94) Johnsont-12 0-016, Pierce4-95-615, Plumlee 4-50-08, Williams4-144-414,Livingston2-52-46, Blatche3-73-49, Thornton7-110019, Kirilenko2-4 1-45, Teletovic02 000, AIRIerson1-2 002. Totals 34-7115-22 94. WASHING TON(101) Ariza 3-83-3 9, 6ooker3-70-16, Gortat1-8 0-0 2, Wal10-159-1033, l Beal6-141-315,Webster2-6 2-2 7, Harrington3-7 0-0 6, Goodent-11 4-4 21, Miller 0-1 2-22. Totals36-7721-25101. Brooklyn 26 31 22 15 — 94 WaShingtan 19 29 24 29 — 101
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Chandler 5-10 0-0 12, Faried 9-13 7-13 25, Mozgov3-50-0 6, Lawson0-12 2-42, Foye2-6 2-2 8, Hicksoo 4-83411, Arthur3-72-29, Fouroier4-10 00t0, Miller 1-3002, Brooks39007, Vesely00 0-0 0.TatalS34-83 16-25 92. ATLANTA (97) Carroll 4-130-011, Milsap6-1711-1624,Antic 6121-216, Teague6132315, KOIO VI682218, Brand1-3 1-23, Mack1-2 0-03, Schroder2-7 0-2 5, Scott1-3 0-2 2,Martin0-30-0 0. Totals 33-81 17-2997. Denver 15 22 34 21 — 92 Atlanta 28 25 24 20 — 97
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Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
HIRING
Questions no small business should ask By Jennie Wong Charlotte (N.C.) Observer
Business owners are generally pretty savvy about dis-
a in anea -si e usiness By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
The Makers District started
with a logo, five members and high hopes. Its founders hope their east-
side business district becomes
Bend Velo makes reall y great bikes," said member Mike
where trendy businesses oper-
Ross, owner of Natural Edge Furniture, on Northeast Norton Avenue. "They don't know Kombucha
cessible city neighborhood. The fication is happening over district is loosely bounded by there," she said Thursday. Greenwood and Olney avenues "We're going to make it a desand embraces Northeast First tination for people who like and Second streets. locally made or locally grown
the Old Mill, in the geography of Bend business. "A lot of people walk in
Mama moved over here and has a tasting room." The organization is loose and growing, but its founders express a common goal: a
my door and don't know that
gentrified destination in Bend
a destination, like downtown or
ate in a semi-industrial but ac-
A newcomer to the ranks,
Street by June 20. "I really think that gentri-
1234 N.E. First St., was previously home to two bakeries
and acoffee shop,and live jazzwas played there,Wi ener said. Central Oregon Loca-
vore, where locally grown meats, vegetables and other
products ... and I will be mak-
products are sold, is right next
Sara Wiener, owner of Sara Bella Upcycled, said she's mov-
ing a very strong effort to bring our following down to First
door.
ing her store from NorthWest Crossing to Northeast First
Street."
The spot she plans to lease,
"I think it's the perfect match," Wiener said.
SeeMakers/E5
crimination in hir-
ing. You know you should hire the best
SOCIAL MEDIA
person for the job, regardless of gender or race. Most hiring managers wouldn't deny someone a job offer because of skin color or intentionally pay someone less because of gender. And yet even the
Boost a credit line
by going
most enlightened and well-intentioned em-
ployers can get into trouble during the interview process. Often, illegal questions get asked during the chatty, "getting to
online By Lily Leung Orange County Register
know you" part at the
PLACENTIA,
beginning of the in-
Calif.— John Frank Robinson scrimped enough over eight years to open his own business, RoadShields, an automotive-glass online dis-
terview. This is when
you're trying to build rapportandgetthe candidate warmed up and talking. In any case, avoid the following
tributor and retailer.
Robinson turned to
questions.
%hen did you graduate?' Your interviewee walks into the coffee
an alternative-credit Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Liquid chocolate runs through a machine to cover amaretto truffles as Jenny Harrison sprinkles nuts on top at Goody's chocolate factory
last week. Central Oregon's longest-running chocolatier today is joined byfour other chocolate-making outfits.
shop. You look down at her resume and are reminded that this woman went to your alma mater. It's al-
provider in 2011 for a quick infusion of capital to grow his fledgling company after Wells Fargo turned him down for a loan.
In three years, the 31-year-old has been extended roughly $100,000 in creditand his social media profile likely played a role.
ways nice whenyou discover you have something in common with the person you're interviewing, so you bring it up and start trying to figure out whether you were
Online reviews for
both there at the
services, from car parts to homemade chips and salsa at your favorite Mexi-
same time. "Did you ever
can restaurant, aren't just for consumers.
take a class with
Professor Smith?" is probably OK, but tread lightly around questions about class years, as graduation dates reveal a candidate's age. The Age
By Rachael Rees
grew 2001 to 2011, ac-
The Bulletin
cording to the latest figures available from
Employment Act forbids discrimination against people who
end chocolate maker Lidia Vazquez has a passion for chocolate, but not just
are 40 or older, and
any chocolate. Venezu-
some states have laws that protect younger
elan chocolate — from a single-bean origin, not
workers as well.
blended with beans from
celebrated its 10th anniversary last weekend in
around the world.
Ashland.
Discrimination in
%here are you
Oregon went from 19 chocolate makers in 2001 to 32 in 2011, and the
state's chocolate festival
From Venezuelan and
The industry expects
A lot of hiring managers like to start with some variation
seurscan selectfrom
toseemoderate growth in the next four years, according to a study from Dublin-based Research
it's a nice softball of
treats made by five different chocolate makers operating in Bend. "I would say five in Bend is a huge number,"
of "Tell me about yourself,"because
a question that can settle down a nervous
applicant. Trouble can arise when "tell me about yourself" veers into the issue of
national origin. You may ask, "Are you legally eligible
Bette Fraser, chef and
owner of The Well Traveled Fork in Bend, wrote in an email.
Across Oregon, the business of chocolate
Bendchocolate makers
the U.S. Census Bureau.
organic to old-fashioned and artisanal chocolates, Central Oregon connois-
from?'
Thinkstock
and Markets.
"The average consumer has been exposed to fine chocolate for the past few decades and (is) continually demanding more," Fraser wrote. "Gone are the days of
just milk chocolate, a la Hershey's." SeeChocolate/E2
to work in the U.S.?"
But keep in mind that if you're asking this question, it should be asked of all candidates — not only the
ones who appear to be foreign.
Tricia's True Confections, a newcomerto Bend, prizes organic chocolates, such as these truffles.
• Chocolate Element916 N.W.Wali St.; online at www.chocolateelement.com • Goody'sCandyStore lnc. —factory store and corporate office, 1111S.E. Division St.; Downtown Bend Goody's, 957 N.W.Wall St.; Forum (east-sidej Goody's, 2680 N.E. U.S.Highway20; Sunriver Goody's 57100 Mall Drive; Goody's of Prineville, 346 N.W. DeerSt.; and other stores and purchasing locations in Oregon, Idaho and Washington; online at http://goodyschocolates.com • Lidia's Checelatesonline sales only, at www.lidiaschocolates.com • PegasusGourmetChocolates —1900 N.E.Third St., in the Wagner Mall; online at www.facebook.com/ PegasusGourmetChocol ates • Tricia's TrueCenfections — 1289 N.E.Second St. No. 2, Bend; online at www .triciastrueconfections.com
'Do youhave anykids?'
Facebook accounts of applicants to vet data and help determine creditworthiness.
The idea is to build a more complete im-
age of the companies under consideration to be funded.
"Lenders (think), 'Are they going to pay me back or not?'" said Fadel Lawandy, assistant professor and director at the
Hoag Center for Real Estate and Finance at
Chapman University, a private California college. With the existence
of social media, firms can show how well their products are re-
ceived and perceived in the market, Lawa-
ndy said. "If they're appealing, then there is a high chance of the company being able to sell more products.
More insight into applicants can transand delinquencies
dates are trying to build rapport with
A~
you, too. It's a classic
SeeInterview/E5
checking Twitter and
late to fewer defaults
Of course, candi-
gambit for job applicants to scan your desk or officeforpersonal photos or other mementos to remark upon. And telling people their children are cute is considered a normal piece of politesse. But tread lightly.
They're also creating an audience in the lending and credit marketplace. Following the lead of employers, alternative financial firms are increasingly
— and a better bottom line. That's
especially important for alternative institutions working with
higher-risk small businesses that have
been spurned by major banks due to lack of credit history or credit blemishes. g/
This demographic typically turns to al-
Kaz Moini pipes icingover dark chocolate rocky road pieces movingalong an enrober. (The finished treats, before cooling, are aboveright.)
ternative institutions
Moini designed and built the enrober himself for his business, Pegasus Gourmet Chocolates. He and his wife moved the business from the
as a last resort.
Oregon Coast to Bend10 years ago.
SeeCredit/E3
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
"I think everyone has their own niche....
Chocolate
Goody's has their Goody's crowd that have alwaysbeen coming. And they have everything
Continued from E1 Fraser
c o n tinued,"Even
else to offer with it, too ... so it's like an
milk chocolate has gone gourmet, as have s'mores and hot
experience,an old-fashioned soda shop. And then there's Pegasus Chocolate, and their chocolate is good, and they're old-school."
chocolate."
In Bend, each chocolate maker specializes in something different. For Chocolate Element, a
— Tricia Pollard, an organic chocolatier, mentioning two of four other chocolate makers in Central Oregon
restaurant on Northwest Wall Street an d B e nd's n ewest
chocolate maker, it's about the experience of customers savoring chocolate with a glass of wine, not grabbing a box of chocolate to go.
plies chocolate to other stores
in Oregon and Washington. While more chocolate manufacturers have popped up
For Tricia Pollard, owner
of Tricia's True Confections, her focus is creating organic
ezuelan chocolate online.
She started the company about four years ago and
own n i che," P ollard s a i d. "I think G oody's has their
you are in," he said, pointing to the region's booming craft beer market. "How many is
with it, too ... so it's like an
experience,an old-fashioned
too many? I don't know." Susan Moini, co-owner of
Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin
soda shop. And then there's
survive."
a lot less competition in the
Lavagnio said there's a huge nut butter category, allowtrend to create and eat raw ing the company to better chocolate. spread its message of healthy "Five years ago, we didn't indulgence. Goody's Candy Store Inc. have a single raw chocolatier. Right now it's about half of the can boast of being Bend's oldchocolatiers that come." est existing chocolatier. "We've been making it Jem Raw Organics, formal-
"Because of the down economy, many people are losing jobs. The idea of starting your own business is very tempting. People try to come up with a concept, and chocolate seems like a good plan."
olate. Today, the store makes more than 80 different truf-
fles, along with themed chocolate bars, caramel corn and fudge. On average, Pegasus produces1, 000pieces ofchocolate — Karolina Lavagnio, organizer of the each day on four machines.
makes chocolates, along with fudge, caramel corn, toffee, ly Jem Raw Chocolates, was since 1984 in Sunriver," said peanut brittle and ice cream. on the festival's list of partici- co-owner Dane Danforth. It employs between 50 and 100 Goody's began as a small people in total, depending on pants, but co-owner and CEO JenniferMoore said the Bend candy store in Sunriver and the season, and has four fullcompany stopped making opened a downtown Bend lo- time chocolatiers in its factory. chocolate in April to focus cation in 1989. Today, the comChocolate sales vary, deon sprouted raw organic nut pany owns and operates four pending on the store and time butters. retail stores, four franchises of year, Danforth said. "Each of our stores is pretty Demand was growing, but and its f a ctory o n S o uth-
p o u nds of
chocolate a week out of the certified kitchen in her Bend home. Using only Venezuelan chocolategivesher desserts a different taste, she said.
of," she said. "It separates us."
Pollard said having the deli helps the chocolate sales, but ultimately she just wants to
make chocolates. "We want to be able to shut those front doors and just do
chocolate production, just have all chocolates in here," er, and Susan Moini said she she said. does the rest, from packaging — Reporter: 541-617-7818, unique," he said. "Our east- and selling to cleaning the rreesCbendbulletin.com sidestore is probably 50 per- store. "Everything you see here cent chocolatesales,as where our downtown store is not as is wrapped by my hand," much. We do more ice cream she said pointing to the case down there." filled with decorative boxes of Food. Home Sr Goody's makes about 500 chocolates. pounds of chocolate, on averBecause her shop is off the age, per week, but ramps up beaten path, she said, she to around 700 pounds during doesn't attract tourists and the holiday season. In addition depends on local customers to its own stores, Goody's sup- to spread the word about her • • TheBulletin
Oregon Chocolate Festival in Ashland east Division Street, where it
m akes about 5
Pegasus Gourmet Chocolates In addition to operating Lidin the Wagner Mall on North- ia's Chocolates, she works as a east Third Street, said she's certified nursing assistant at not competing with the other St. Charles, but she hopes to chocolatiers in the area. make chocolates full time. " How many are i n t o w n "In the future, I would love makes no difference. It doesn't to have a small retail store, but matter," she said, "They're not I know that I need to work a hurting me and I'm not hurt- lot," she said. ing them because my location Pollard, who started making organic, fair-trade chocis different." The company was original- olates as Christmas gifts ly established on the Oregon about 17 years ago, operates Coast. Moini and her husband, Tricia's True Confections out Kaz, bought and operated the of her deli, 2nd Street Eats, on business before moving it to Northeast Second Street in Bend 10 years ago. Bend. "It's all organic, and that's When they purchased the company, Pegasus offered what we stand behind, and seven different flavors of choc- that's what we're most proud
Jenny Harrison takes turtles from a tray to run through a machine that will cover them with chocolate on Thursday at Goody's chocolate factory in Bend. Below, the turtles leave the machine, ready to be boxed up. Goody's is Bend's oldest existing chocolatier, since1984.
Pegasus Chocolate, and their chocolate is good, and they're boosting production would old-school." have been too labor intensive Karolina Lavagnio, Oregon and costly because of the price Chocolate Festival organizer of equipment, she said. "We loved our chocolates, and sales and marketing director for the Ashland Springs and we lovedmaking them; Hotel, has seen a number of we just couldn't make a living new chocolate companies because it is so labor intencome and go in the last three sive," Moore said. years. Shipping raw c h ocolate "Because of the down econ- across the country was also omy, many people are losing difficult because it didn't conjobs. The idea of starting your tain any preservatives and own business is very tempt- would melt easily, she said. ing," she said. "People try to Moore said consumers most come up with aconcept, and enjoyed the center of Jem's chocolate seems like a good chocolates, which was made plan. But if they don't have the from the nut butter the comparight product, guidance, op- ny now sells in jars. portunities, luck — they don't In addition, she said, there's
b u siness, Lidia's
Chocolates, only sells her Ven-
comes the competition.
chocolate.
Goody's crowd that have always been coming. And they have everything else to offer
build her
over the years, Danforth weleYou end up having competition no matter what industry
"I think everyone has their
chocolate. Vazquez, who is trying to
Kaz Moini is the chocolati-
Get a taste of Garden In
AT HOME
DEEDS DeschutesCounty •WashingtonFederalSavingsto FereldenLLCandTriple Key LLC, Partition Plat1995-13,Lot1, Parcel2, $750,000 • Mt. BacheloCenter r LLCto Choice One BuildersLLC,ChaseVilage, Lots1 and 11-13, $180,000 •JasonS.Adamsto KaleGray,Donald andNancyGates,Riverside,Lots3and 4, Block8,$155,000 • Peggy Huskey,trustee for the Huskey Family Trust, toKennethD.attd Judy L. Riener,EmpireCrossing, Phases1 and 2, Lot10, $190,500 • Ruth V. Airth to MichaelJ. Spencer, Canyon Park,Lots3and4, Block3, $215,000 • HaydenHomesLLCto Jeannine K. Pedersen,South Point, Lot 28, $210,685 • EquityTrust Company Custodian to Troy Martin, BigSkyCountry, Lot 2, $230,000 •JasonR.and Amber L. Plant to Walter C. andLeslieK.Hanna, Howells River Rim, Lot3,Block7,$263,900 • GaryA. andLeonorS. Gortzto Daniel D. andJennifer L. Cochrane,Country Park, Phase3, Lot1, $165,000 •Ann M. andShannonB.Reitanto Erin L.Weber,Morningstar, First Addition, Lot4, Block3, TownshIp17,Range12, Section15, $310,000 • CharlesF.Deeks,trusteefor the Charles and Mary Jane DeeksRevocableTrust, to Donald W. Deeks,Elkhorn Estates, Phase7,Lot 92,$190,000 •Joel A. Florato Ann M.Reitan, Providence,Phase3, Lot24, Block 2, $257500 •Audrey L.AllenandAllen Contracting toAndrewJ.and Kayla J. Shaff, SouthernPines,Lot11, $199,000 • U.S. BankN.A., astrusteeforthe TerwinMortgage Trust2005-18ALT, assetbackedcertificates series200518ALT, toAndrew Bolkan, Deschutes River Wo ods,Lots46and47,BlockJJ, $164,000 • MarleeS.Ledai,trusteefor the Mart/in M. Smith Trustandthe Virginia C. Smith Trust, to Hal D. andJennifer L Boley, Tollgate,Fifth Addition, Lot 229, $310,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Sarah M. Bolduc, SierraVista, Phase2, Lot 21, $152,990 •DavidW .andJeanMcClaintoJohn E.andDonnaM.Gilmore,PinesP.U.D., Phase7,Lots 3and71,$600,000 • H. Lee and Janette S. Wiliams to Terrence EBelunes,River Canyon Estates, No. 3,Lot 236,$392,000 • EarlE and Judith D. RusselltoHenry Irvine andErikaBeard-Irt/ine, Township 17, Range12,Section13, $617500 • SR HangarLLCto Waverly Properties LLC, Township20, Range11,Section 0, $193,061.96 • PWD Associates LLC to Martin and Denise Novosel,Points West, Lot40, $449,750 •Albertina andGeorgeL.Hurst, trustee for the Albertina HurstRevocable Trust, toColeW. andAshley M.James, Saddleback West,Lot6,Bl ock6, $340,000
• GW-Land Acquisitions LLCto PacWest II LLC,AngusAcres, Phase2, Lot59, $152,486.80 • PacWestII LLCto Robert A. and Michelle R.Churchill, AngusAcres, Phase 2,Lot 59,$313,415 • Tena Grabar,trusteefor the Palms Family RevocableTrust, to JacobT. andJessieL. Singleton, Township15, Range12,Section 23, $417000 • RodneyA.Kohler, trustee for the Gertrude R.HartmannRevocable Trust, toKennethandMuriel Cooper, Park Addition toBend,Lot6, Block11, $425,000 • RonaldT.WernerJr.and ErinV.Werner to Christine M.Wright, CenterAddition to Bend, Lots15 and16, Block36, $190,000 • Audrey P.Kolb, trustee for the Audrey P. Kolb Trust, to Stephen R.Barnes, Squire Ridge,Phase1, Lot3, Block1, $330,000 • Lambert Neighbour to Jill A. Sebring, Northcrest, Lot 28,$219,900 • Greg WelchConstruction Inc. to Central HighDesert Investment HoldingsLLC,NorthWestCrossing, Phase17,Lot754, $375,000 • Violet J. VanArnamto Elizabeth M. Ford-Marsh, Red Hawk, Unit6, Lot12, $178,000 • David A.HoodandJulie Hood Gonsalt/es, whoacquired title asJulie F. Hood,to Isaacand KinseyMartin, First Additionto BendPark, Lots 24-26, Block 106, $231,645 • Rosa M. BarragantoJason Mendell, PromiseLane,Lot14, $212,000 • DeborahE.Martin to Robin and ChristinaPerkins, Timberline,Lot16, $164,900 • Guy H. andNancyW.Greider to Russell T. and Dara Ward, Heights of Bend, Phase6,Lot 99,$328,000 • Margie Dawsonto Taylor J. Porad, MajesticRidge,Phase1 and 2, Lot 27, $274,000 • Raymond P. and Alisha K. Soliz to Jens and Donna M. Andersen, WestCanyon Estates, Phase 4, Lot23, $207,000 Crook County • Miller E and Bettie A.Tweedtto CrookedRiverEastLLC,Township l6,Range 20,Section35, Tracts1-3, $940,000 • FannieMaeaka Federal National MortgageAssociation to Howardand LoisBrittle, Partition Plat 2005-11, Parcel 2, $209,900 • Clint C.Coreyto LeroyW.and Noell A. Devenny,Powell Butte ViewEstates, Lot 9, Block1, $160,500 • NewellLane DevelopmentLLCto Tim E. Carterand Linda D. Cook, Partition Plat 2007-36,Parcel1, $300,000 • Sheriff's Office ofCrookCounty to Wells FargoBankN.A., Prineville LaneAcres, Unit2,Lot13,Block28, $232,887.79 • Linda M. Shane,successor trustee of the DoritaJordanTrust, to DennisD. and Diane K.Holcomb,StoneRidge,Phase 3, Lot40, $150,000 • Richard McAllister, who acquired title as RichardMcAlister, to Rodney J. McCulloch,Township15, Range16, Section 4, $160,000
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
B USI1VESS
E1 V D AR
MASTERGMAIL TOMAXIMIZE PRODUCTIVITY:Learn how to integrate all components of Gmail to be more productive, registration required; $80; 8-10 a.m.; webinar;
Suite 201, Bend; 541-382-3221, shelley@bendchamber.org or www. bendchamber.org. BUSINESSSTARTUP CLASS: Learn what it takes to run a business, how to reach your customer base, funding options for your business,
info©simplifynw.com.
how muchmoneyyouneedtoget
TUESDAY
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at wwrv.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
appointment necessary; free; 5:307:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.scorecentraloregon.org.
for members, $15 for non-members; 5:30 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-3221 or www. bendchamber.org.
WEDNESDAY
CONNECTW'S MARCH MEETING: Learn about eight local non-profits, started and legalities involved, VISITBEND BOARD OF DIRECTORS registration required; $29; 11 a.m.-1 registration required; $25 for MEETING:Opento the public, RSVP members, $40 for non-members; to reserve a seat; 8 a.m.; Bend Visitor p.m.; La Pine Public Library,16425 5-8 p.m.; St. Charles Bend, 2500 First St.; 541-383-7290. Center, 750 N.W. LavaRoad; 541N.E. Neff Road; 541-848-8598 or 382-8048 or valerie©visitbend.com. THE BASICSOFTHE FEDERAL www.connectw.org. ACQUISITIONREGULATION:Class MEMBERSHIP101 - DRIVING LEADERSHIP IN ACTION: Dave will cover what the Federal Acquisition Rathbun, president of Mt. Bachelor YOUR MEMBERSHIP: Connecting Regulation governs, its structure and new Bend Chamber members with and chairman of the BendChamber key elements and who is protected by of Commerce, will speak, registration current members, registration the FAR, registration required; free; required; free; 10 a.m.; Bend required; $15 for members, $20 for 1-3 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, Chamber of Commerce, 777 NW non-members; 5-7 p.m.; Deschutes Wall St., Suite 200; 541-382-3221 or 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541Brewery 8 Public House,1044 N.W. 736-1088 or www.gcap.org. shelley©bendchamber.org. Bond St.,Bend;541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.com. SCORE- SMALLBUSINESS MEMBERSHIP101 - DRIVING COUNSELING: Thosewhooperate YOUR MEMBERSHIP: Connecting LEADERSHIP IN ACTION: Hear new chamber members with or wish to start a small business from Dave Rathbun, president of current members, registration candiscussbusinessplanning, Mt. Bachelor and chairman of the organization and start-up, finance, required; free; 10 a.m.; Charles BendChamber,onwhatmadehim Schwab 8Co.,777 N.W .W allSt., marketing and other issues, no successful, registration required; $10
Oregon, registration required; $305 includes required edition of Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290
or ccb@cocc.edu.
FRIDAY CCB LICENSETEST PREPARATION COURSE:Two day course that meets the CCBeducation requirement to take the test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon, registration required; $305 includes required edition of Oregon Contractor's Reference Manual; 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541383-7290 or ccb@cocc.edu.
SATURDAY CCB LICENSETESTPREPARATION COURSE:Twoday course that meets the CCBeducation requirement to take the test to become a licensed contractor in
By Liz Reyer
Q
• I manage a team and • have one employee who really intimidates me. She resists direction and makes me feel like I don't know what I'm
The key set of behavior to focus on is your own. Do you act like you know what you're doing? Do you lead? If not, you'll bea target for people who want to pursue their own agendas.
doing. How can I manage this relationship so I become the are that a similar dynamic one who's in charge? has played out for you at other • It's time for you to define times; are there certain circum• the tone of your interac- stances or types of people that tions and step up as the leader trigger this behavior? Take a of your team. look at underlying insecurities
A
The inner game At its core, this situation has
less to do with your employee's behavior and more to do with
yourresponse.As a firststep, then, prepare to explore the reasons she intimidates you,
or fears, but be kind to yourself. This isn't something to beat
yourself up over; think of it as a new way to grow and develop. Now, get specific about the behaviors that you're observing. Exactly how does she "resist direction"? Is she actively refusing or passively avoiding? Write down a description, perhaps thinking about it as though you're setting up
which may be somewhat challenging to think about. Breathe deeply, become centered, and let go of anxiety related to this working relationship. a movie scene. Notice everyThe concept that she makes
thing — words, actions, tone,
help. Your firm may have internal coaches or training options. If not, you may want to
find a coach or mentor — or like to have. From opposition-
turn to your own boss for ad-
al to collegial'? From uncoop- vlce and support. erative to respectful? Know your end game. What happens if you can't improve
The outer game
this situation? Worst case, you
The key set of behavior to may end up leaving, which refocus on is your own. Do you inforces possible bad behavior act like you know what you're on your employee's part. Andoing? Do you lead'? If not, other option is to make sure you'll be a target for people thatyou'vecommunicated your who want to pursue their own expectations and the conseagendas. Set leadership goals quences for not meetingthem. for yourself. You may be able Last words? Employees who to inspire cooperation; howev- don't work with you can make er,you'llneed to be perceived your life miserable — but be as a person whose vision war- sure you're sending a message rants buy-in. that you're a manager who deSo know what you bring, serves respect. be able to express it, and be — Liz Reyer is a credentialed clear in sharing it. Also be coach with more than 20years of clear about your expectations business experience. forher performance, coming
March 26
TUESDAY
BUSINESSAFTER HOURS:Celebrate the10th anniversary of renovating, re-opening and transforming the 1940 movie theatre, registration required; free; 5 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3823221 or www.bendchamber.org.
March 25 PROFESSIONALENRICHMENT SERIES:Learn what workforce trends will HR see in 2014
concerning paidsick leave,the Affordable Care Act, time off social
media ban,minimumwageand
direct deposit, registration required; $25 for members; 11:30 a.m.; Bend Golf and Country Club, 61045 Country Club Drive; 541-382-3221 or www.bendchamber.org. SCORE- SMALLBUSINESS COUNSELING: Thosewho operate or wish to start a small business candiscussbusinessplanning, organization and start-up, finance,
FRIDAY March 28 OUTLOOK2007FOR BUSY PEOPLE:Learn how to integrate all components of Outlook to be more productive, registration required;
$80; 8-10a.m.; webinar; info© srmplrfynw.com.
COLDWELL BANKER MORRIS REAL ESTATE
Welcomes
Cliff Feingold
ing clarification of those goals with your boss if needed. This may be a situation in which you want to get extra
marketing and other issues, no appointment necessary; free; 5:307:30 p.m.; Downtown BendPublic Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-6177050 or www.scorecentraloregon.org.
WEDNESDAY
Troublesome employee?First, lookatyourself (Minneapolis) Star Tribune
E3
Cliff is a native Oregonian who has been in business for 38 years. He has an extensive sales background and would love to help you find just the right home in the right location, or list your home to sell quickly in today's market. Cliff graduated from Portland State University earning a Bachelor of Science Degree in Business Administration and Marketing. He enjoys skiing, hiking, golf, and doing anything with his family. Cliff owned a furniture store in Bend for many years and has developed solid, trusting relationships with thousands of clients throughout the state. He is dedicated, hardworking and wants to be your real estate specialist.
Cliff Feingold MORRIS REAL ESTATE
Broker Coldwell Banker Morris Real Estate Cell 541-480-8796 cliffObendpropertycom
you feel a certain way is telling. body language — both for her This tells me that you have, in and for yourself. fact,ceded the power to her. Set your goal for this situa- to common ground aboutthe Consider whether this is a tion so that you can envision goals. If she disagrees with typical pattern for you. Odds the working relationship you'd those, work through it, includ-
Credit Continued from E1 Those testing this new layer of underwriting aren't major banks but smaller financial
firms that cater to businesses that need quick cash but lack credit history. Analysts at American Fi-
nance Solutions, an Anaheim, Calif.-based provider of cash advances to in d ependent merchants, examine Google reviews, Facebook posts and
other social media data for all applicants during the qualification stage, said Chief Executive Scott Griest.
Griest said an ideal borrower generally has favorable customer reviews and is openly addressing customer criticism. Those characteristics show
the business is growing and may be less of a credit risk. "If on social media (customers give) five stars for a new chefand they need money for new marketing, then that's
good sign," Griest said. Business
o w n er s who
demonstrate good social media standings in turn can be rewarded withbetter cash-ad-
Wordsofcaution Merchant cash advances can be agreat way for small businesses with short or blemished credit histories to get fast cash. It's worth noting, however, that they can be pricey. How lt works:A small business takes out acash advance andgets charged a fee. The business typically has a percentage taken out of credit card transactions until the advanceand fee are repaid. Theannual interest rate can range 35 percent to, in more some rare cases, 200 percent. Scenario:An American Finance Solutions customer who takes out a$30,000 advance canexpect a fee of $7,500 and a$295 due-diligence fee. If repaid over nine months, the annual percentage rate comesout to be nearly 35 percent. The averageU.S. credit card APR is15 percent. Sources: AIIBusiness.com, Creditcards.com and American Finance Solutions
vance terms and access to additional funding, said Griest, who declined to give specifics on his privately held firm's vet- at companies that spend time ting process. investing in communicating The firm reports it has is- with customers and engaging sued more than 10,000 cash them, then that means you're advances totaling more than detailed in your financials or $100 million. other items on your balance Social media analysis is less sheet," said Robinson, who has important but still a factor at his headquarters in Anaheim Kabbage, an online credit pro- and a shop in Santa Ana, Calif. vider based in Atlanta. Kabbage found that clients Once clients get approved who have a strong relationfor funding, they have the ship with customers on social option of linking Twitter and media had a20 percent lower Facebook to their credit ac- delinquency rate than c u scounts for future checks. If tomers not active on social Kabbage likes what it sees in media, said Victoria Treyger, customer interactions, avail- a spokeswoman for Kabbage, able credit might be increased. which has advanced$200 milKabbage has shown confi- lion to small businesses. dence in Robinson, owner of Nonprofit lenders who typiRoadshields, by continually cally help disadvantaged borupping his credit limit. Part rowers arepart of the social
website that connects busi-
ness contacts, to see how loan applicants interact with other
firms, said Brandon Napoli, director of microlending. Lending to riskier, underserved communities has largely been based on gut feeling. Adding social media, a "raw, free marketing tool," can make lending calls more cer-
media trend, too.
BREAKFAST FUNDRAISER WEDNESDAY • MARCH 19, 2014 • 7:30AM - 9:OOAM
tain, Napoli said.
All funds raised will support the work of The American Red Cross.
He often brings up negative reviews during the prequalification phase to allow applicants to explain themselves. Often, they're honest and can provide context for the review,
Napoli said. That has been the case with Carla Ulloa, a loan specialist
who serves California's Inland Empire through CDC Small Business Finance.
American Red Cross
+
or e gon Mountain River chapter
M l
l3
ll
TI 18 B u I 1e t m
No one has been declined funding because of a bad review, Ulloa said. Instead, bor-
rowersshould perceivesocial media as "more like a cherry on your cake."
W hat about fakes? There are no rules dictating how lending institutions
can use social media during the underwriting process. But the Consumer Financial Pro-
tection Bureau is tracking the trend, which is not without po-
tential problems. For one, social media is rife
Health & Safety Hero Dana Laite Helped save a heart attack victim.
with fake posts and reviews,
positive and negative. But those using social networks as a lending criteria say the fakes are usually easy to point out. And lenders like ¹ poli only take social media data into consideration when there's a large enough sample. With Yelp, he only looks at aprofile if it has 15 or more reviews. Another worry is that social media reactions are hard to
quantify because interpretation is subjective, said Lawan-
dy, the Chapman professor. What does a good or bad social media profile look like? And how does that translate to
creditworthiness'? "There's always c oncern Facebook and Twitter profiles, Valley Economic Develwhich he linked to his account opment Center in Van Nuys, when there's a lot of r o om two years ago. Calif., looks at Yelp reviews for interpretation," Lawandy "I think if you were to look and is eyeing LinkedIn, a added. of that confidence lies in his
THE 10™ ANNUAL
Health & Safety Hero Nathan Neil Saved four teenage swimmers from drowning.
Health & Safety Heroes SGT. Curtis Chambers 8< Officer Jonny Dickson First responders, saved a heart attack victim.
Health & Safety Hero Carla Gibson Worked to save a heart attack victim.
Health & Safety Heroes Dennis 8r Kris Jennings Worked together to save a heart attack victim.
Public Service Hero Erik Tobiason Devoted service to honoring and caring for our veterans.
Health & Safety Hero Rob Paramore Helped save a heart attack victim with CPR.
I
•
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SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
Makers
Interview ation, the appropriate thing to say is, "Thank you. What about you? Do you have kids?" But in a hiring con-
tional origin, pregnancy/maritaVfamily status, race, religion or sex. These can range from"Didyou have any problems finding the place?" to "How did you hear about this job opportunity?" • Use a strong introduc-
text — no matter how cordial — restraint is necessary. Ac-
tion to build rapport. For example, you can let the can-
- OIL
Continued from E1 Eric Power, owner of Bend
Continued from E1 In a nonwork social situ-
0K SySTElllls
Velo, said he's considered forming a business association since moving to his shop
al $P 0 aTA0r 0
at 1212 N.E. First St. about
Et
two years ago. Power, maker of custom-built bicycles from
E5
recycledframes, seesatiebetween shops like Ross' Natural Edge, which makes furniture from salvaged trees, and Rack 'n' Roll, which sells auto
cording to the Equal Employ- didate know what to expect ment Opportunity Commis- — what types of questions sion, there are circumstanc- you'll be asking, how long the es in which discrimination
interview will take, whether
againstcaregivers may give
anyone else will be meeting
racks and cargo containers
rise to sex discrimination or
with the candidate and when
for bicycles, skis and other gear.
disability discrimination un- you'll be making a decision
"We want t o
der the Americans With Disabilities Act.
l e t p e ople
know that ... there are proprietors, inventors, shops and things going on in this fairly small area," Power said Wednesday. T he association, too,
W hat to ask instead A t this
is
Scott Wilcox's store, Bend Rack 'n' Roll, is located on Northeast First Street. "We want people to think
which its members work is
of (this area) as a destination," he said.
an asphalt reality, more chain link than cedar shake. A few big, utilitarian enterprises dominate a landscape filled in by smaller shops — auto repair, a dry cleaner and a plumbing and electric supply store, for example. Miller Lumber is there, along with North Coast Electric, Mi s-
cycle repair and customizing shop on Northeast Second Street. But, "it's got poten-
ating a similar event for the idea. The district lacks the Greenwood-Olney area. The downtown style and the Old first steps by the informal as-
Mill pedestrian ease. Side-
tial for people to just work
sociation include printing a brochure with a map and in-
walks are few, and on Nor-
together." Power described a future network of a l lied business-
es and a social media campaign to heighten consumer
about the relevant competenp oint, i t m i g ht cies for the job. For example,
cy across candkdates. • Write"ice breaker" ques-
ton Avenue, for one, potholes a re notorious. Israel, w h o
formation on local business-
• Write behavioral questions that elicit good data
seem you have to watch ev- "One of the most important ery word. And the truth is, things this position will be reit is very easy to step over sponsible for is fundraising. the line without realizing it. Can you tell me about times That's why I recommend the you've raised money for a following approach instead good cause in the past?" of improvising: Keep these tips in mind • First and foremost, use when it's time to find great an interview script to ensure people for your business, so your legality and consisten- you can stay in the legal zone
Ryan Brennecke i Ttte Bulletin
small and the district in
about next steps.
tions that avoid the danger zones of age, disability, na-
relocated there 45 days ago,
es that patrons can walk to thinks the area has its own sion Linen Supply, FedEx and via the neighborhood alleys. awareness of the area. Mem- appeal. "I always drove by there Floyd A. Boyd John Deere. Scott Wilcox, with Rack 'n' bers of the core group fanned But a growing number of Roll, talks of luring a food out recently to contact their and always thought, 'I kinsmallerenterprises based on cart to the area and one day neighbors and solicit their da like the whole industrial, hole-in-the-wall-type place,' custom work and creativity seeing another coffee shop support. have found their niche, too: nearby. J amie I srael, o w ne r o f and think this is really cool," Tricia's True C onfections "We want people to think James Michelle Jewelry on she said. (inside Second Street Eats), of us as a destination. We First Street, a custom jewelry — Reporter: 541-617-7815, Crazy Dave's Organic So- want a good relationship with maker, said she's behind the jditzler@bendbulletin.com daworks and Made to Order each other and we want to Woodworks, among others. pull the neighborhood up and A handful of small homes do it without asking the city also line First Street. to do a thing," he said. "It's k inda a c r oss t h e Wilcox envisions taking tral Q ~ I I OII. board, a little bit of every- part in First Friday, the open thing," said Nate Holt, owner house/art walk every month of Gateway Cycles, a motor- in downtown Bend, or creNational Alliance on Mental Illness-Central Oregon
and out of hot water. — Jennie Wong is the founder of the social shopping website CartCentric.com.
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Intercept Pharm ICPT 462 .2 6 Newmont Mining NEM 26. 1 8 Keurig GreenMountn GMCR 1 1 3.25 GoldcorP Inc GG 28.69 Silver WheatonCorp SLW 26. 7 2 Holly Frontier Corp H FC 49.74 Sthwstn Energy SWN 44.0 7 Barrick Gold ABX 20.91 Marathon Petroleum MP C 93.98 Activision Blizzard AT V I 21.00 NRG Energy Inc NRG 29. 9 7 Alexion Pharma ALXN 17 5 .2 8 Ameren Corp AEE 41.14 VMware Inc VMW 10 5 .5 0 Wisconsin Energy WE C 4 5.31
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15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
50. 9 7
12 . 4
33A
1.73 7.25 1.70 15 .4 2.62 2.13 1.00 3.98 0.89 1.27 7.23 1.65 3.99 1.65
zh 6.8 6.3 6 .1 5.6 5.1 5.0 4.4 4.4 4.4 4.3 4 .2 3.9 3.8
9.9 -2A 4.1 5.3 7.5 5.8 2.8 7.1 6.1 5A -2.9 6.5 10.8 3.9
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
1079.2 Chlmerix Inc -32.2 Celladon CorP
94.9 Regado Biosciences -9.3 RCS Capital Corp -1 1.5 Pingtan Marine Ent 0.1 Northwest Blothera 13.7 Montage Tech -26.0 Sandstorm Gold Ltd 8.4 Knlghtsbrldge Tank 40.5 MagicJack VocalTec 19.3 IGI Labs 91.4 Fate Therapeutics 24.8 Capstone Turbine Cp 27.8 Egalet Corp 12.0 BPZ Resources Inc
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
FRIDAY C L OS E
CMRX
27.14
8.41
44.9
40. 8
0.0
CLDN
15.84
4.34
3 77
10 9 .8
0.0
RGDO
11.11
2.93
35.8
86.1
0.0
RCAP
31.72
8.13
34.5
42. 5
0.0
PME
4.03
0.92
29.6
40.9
-59.5
NWBO
7.72
1.66
274
44.8
MONT
21.87
4.71
274
38.2
119.3 Buenos Aires Merval 0.0 Mexico City Bolsa
SAND
6.71
1.40
26.4
15.1
VLCCF
14.00
2.90
26.1
38. 8
CALL
22.76
4.51
24.7
31.9
5.17
0.98
23.4
49.4
FATE
11.15
2.06
22.7
85.5
CPST
2.22
0.39
21.3
39.6
EGLT BPZ
18.09
3.10
20.7
49.5
2.97
0.51
20.7
38.1
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS PVH Corp G eneral Motors Co Icahn Enterp LP Deutsche BankAG Ingersoll Rand Transocean Ltd MGM Resorts Intl United Contl Hldgs
P VH
115 . 0 4
-11.26
-8.9
-2.7
GM
34.09
-3.30
-8.8
-5.2
IEP
105.65
-9.54
-8.3
-6.1
DB
43.30
-3.89
-8.2
-11.5
IR
56.90
-4.79
-zs
-2.6
RIG
38.84
-3.23
-77
-9.9
MGM
26.27
-2.02
-zh
1.0
UAL
44.40
-3.35
-zo
-0.2
ENsco pLc
Esv
48.35
-3.59
-6.9
-5.6
American Airlines Gp
AAL
36.34
-2.68
-6.9
5.6
-3.6 Geron Corporation 21.4 Covisint Corp 86.6 Raptor Pharmaceut -0.7 Ameresco Inc 32.8 Oramed Pharma -20.9 CHC Group Ltd 113.5 BridgePoint Educ 45.7 Addus Homecare -12.7 Sunshine Heart Inc 0.0 CytRx Corp
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong Kong HangSeng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
TICKER
IG
GERN
1.83
-2.70
-59.6
-63.2
covs
7.12
-4.29
-25.1
Title: Senior vice president of retirementat Fidelity Investments
What she says: Women saversare doingmany things well,but many still lackconfidence.
lauren Brouhanf
LAST FRI. CHa 1841.13 -5.21 9056.41 +38.62 6527.89 -25.89 21539.49 -21 6.59 4216.37 -34.14 14327.66 -488.32
5747 .12 +8 1 .57 379 5 0.97 -86.53 Sao Paolo BovesPa 4 4 915.42 -429.62 -30.3 Toronto S&P/TSX 142 27.66 -17.48 83.0 /AFRICA 49.0 EUROPE
267.6 Amsterdam 0.0 Brussels Madrid 1 31.9 Zurich 0.0 Milan 6.3 Johannesburg Stockholm 38.4
FRI. CHG WK MO hhTR -0.28% j +0.43% -0 40% -h 00'/ -0.80% v v j
-3.30%
382.65 -3A1 3000.90 -31.27 h 004.48 -1 4.31 8114.02 -91.88 20346.57 -245.25 46412.40 -41 3.12 -1 0.41 1326.82
+ 1 . 44% T T -0.23% V V -0.95% T -0.12% V
-0.88% V -1.03% V -1.40% V -h.h2% T -h.h9% T 0.88% V -0.78% V
1 034
-3.81
-25.1
-24.7
HELI
7.26
-2.42
-25.0
-23.3
BPI
14.55
-4.73
-24.5
-22.2
ADUS
21.68
-6.69
-23.6
-haa
144.7
SSH
6.19
-1.77
-22.2
-31.8
-0.8
CYTR
4.15
-1.17
-22.0
-29.9
63.5
RPTP
11.25
-4.36
AMRC
7.52
-2.59
-25.6
-21.7
ORMP
-25.4
0.0
+6.61% -11.18%
V A
T i
-12.80% +4.45%
4 760/
2 64% -0.74% -1.08%
L LT
i16.56%
+0.34% -0.46%
T T
v v
-4.55% -2.96% 0 110/
+0.88% -5.28%
''We thinkthe markets are going to trade very netvously, probably with adownward bias."
— Jim Russell, senior equity strategist at U.S. Bank Wealth Management, commenting on the uncertainty surrounding the possibility of Russia being slapped with economic sanctions as early as Monday
It's also surprising given how the survey shows that women are better at saving than men. They tend to stay the course once Were you surprised, given how many the financial plan has been crafted: gainshave bmn made lnrecent Women tend to be plannersby nature generations? and not tojump when the market gets It wassurprising, not only because turbulent. Over many types of markets, womenare working and earning more that serves themwell. How are women lacking ln than ever. It'ssurprising that they may confidence? be creatingtheir own glass ceiling when So what's the answer? How do more They'remore likely to doubt their it comes to their finances. women get ln the driver's seat? We'reseeingthat younger women It's really about being equalpartners. ability to assume full responsibility of finances. Womenare more confident in are themost deferential to their spouse Carve out time to talk about financial their significant other's ability to make whenit comesto planning for the future. planning. Makesure that many of the decisionsthan their own. This is some- AmongBaby Boomer women, who financial decisions —both day-to-day whattroubling because we know that have hadsome experience with life and and longer-term —are made together. womenare living longer than men.And finances, we actuallysee more that are Go to meetings with financial advisors if you combine that with divorce rates, the primaryday-to-day decision-maker together. Know where the important many women will need to assume full compared to GenerationY. documents are. Educate yourself and Womenare doing a better job of saving more and sticking to their financial planswhen conditions get rocky. But many stilldon't feel confident ln their abilities.That's one of the messages fromsurvey data recently compiled by Fidelityon couples and their finances. LaurenBrouhard shares her thoughts.
X V
ASIA
-0.75% Seoul Composite 1919.90 -14.48 Singapore Straits Times 3073 72 -7.67 -0.25% 160.8 Sydney All Ordinaries 534 7.10 -82.00 -1.51% 4.6 Taipei Taiex -0.69% 8687.63 -60.16 32.3 Shanghai Composite 2004.34 -14.77 -0.73% 0.0 Quotable 39.2
-3zs -2zs
v
YTD -0.39% -5 19'/ -3.28% -758'/ -1.85% -1 2.05%
SOUTHAMERICA/CAHADA
Note: Stocks classified by market capitalization, the product of the current stock price and total shares outstanding. Ranges are$100 million to $1 billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8billion (large).
The power I s'der
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N e llness
responsibility,and it's important that they get more comfortable being part of the dialogue.
make sure you're not deferring. Talking finances isn't everyone's favorite dinnertime conversation. It canbe difficult for couples. Money can be an emotional topic. It's important to havethese discussions when there's no crisis, soyou're not dealing with emotionally charged topics when there ls a crisis. We've seen that having these discussions increases peace of mind and reduces anxiety. And now's an interesting time to be talking about this. It's tax time, people are pulling up their statements and it's a good time to plan for 2014 and discuss these issues. Interviewed by Stan Choe. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, March 14, 2014
+
h6,065.67
Nasoaa ~ 9 0 82 4,245.40
S&P500
1,841.13+
3 6 91
h,181Ah
+ -21.90
N
I
+ -384.11
19,770.78
E6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
UNDAY D
ej
R
e s j - gg ej jg pyyg Brake warning light shouldn't be ignored
By Larry Printz The Virginian-Pilot
At what age do you finally realize that you're no longer young? Is it when you no longer recognize a song in the Top 10? Is it when you enjoy abit of peace and quiet? Or maybe it's when
By Paul Brand
Q
• I have a 2003 Buick • R endezvous. A f t e r
the dealer did a brake job, the red "brake" warning • My granddaughter has light on the dash came • a 2008 Chevy Uplandon, along with an audible er with 65,500 miles. In early alarm. The dealer said they January during a nice spell of
Q
you realize, to your ultimate shock and horror, that a mini-
van really is handy for hauling people and stuff. For those who succumb to the i n evitable, REVIEW t here's one min-
didn't cause it, don't know
Honda via McClatchy-Tribune News Service
The 2014 Honda Odyssey offers many interior amenities, including a built-in vacuum. w a s f i rst i n tro-
out. It wasn't as large as its
competitors. Its engine had only four cylinders, not six. Its doors never slid open, but
swung open. Clearly, the Odyssey marched to the beat of a different drummer. It was the
minivan to drive if you hated
2014 Honda Odyssey Base price: $28,825 As tested: $44,450 Qpe: MinIvan Engine: 3.5-liter SOHC V-6 Mileage: 19 mpgcity, 28 mpg highway
spent too much of their lives vacuuming up wayward Cheerios, animal crackersandgummy bears, this will be worth-
priority given toward ride comfort. The van's size and weight is hard to mask in corners and the steering lacks feedback
while. For those of you who
that prior versions had. But it's
don't want to spend so much precise enough to easily mamoney to get one, just stash a neuver this big bus.
car vac in the cargo net. minivans. But it never sold in Other bells and whistles, the numbers more traditionsuch as a rear-vision camera, al minivans did. It seems that Pandora interface, Bluetooth minivan buyers didn't have the connectivity, four-way power inclination to tr y s omething wide, with enough adjustments passenger's front seat and opdifferent. Honda obliged them to satisfy both short and tall tional flip-up trash bag ring, by making the Odyssey more drivers. In fact, this vehicle is are joined by some worthwhile like its competition. wide enough to easily accom- safety items, including a blind-
Given its conservative consumer base, it's understand-
able why, for 2014, the current Odyssey, which debuted in 2011, undergoes modest styling changes. The refresh does little to offset the odd side styling, which stands apart from other nllnlvans.
Because the Odyssey minivan is hardly mini, and is barely able to fit in a standard-size garage,it offers an amazing amount of space to travel in
comfort. The front seats are
ABS System," "Service Trac-
wire to the radio speaker tion System" and "Service Stabut they would not do this bility System" warning lights
It's been that way from the
duced, Honda's Odyssey stood
our famous potholes, I hit one. Shortly after that the "Service
know how to fix it. They said I could disconnect the
as the hippest vehicle in an unhip category: the 2014 Honda Odyssey. When it
weather that exposed some of
why it's doing it and don't
ivan that stands
beginning.
and to suggest that you ignore the light and disable the audible warning is, frankly, almost unbelievable.
Star Tribune(Minneapolis)
As in 2013, the 3.5-liter V-6
still produces 248 horsepower. Now, however, it's hooked to a
six-speed automatic transmission on all models. Last year, only the Touring and Touring Elite models got a six-speed. The others had a less-efficient five-speed. modate three passengers in spot display, which shows veThe Odyssey's V-6is surpristhe second row — as long as hicles in your van's blind spot, ingly up to the task of moving they're not siblings. as well as forward collision all of this metal. It always reAnd the Odyssey is packed warning and lane-departure tains its air of refinement. with c o nvenience features, warning. That's in addition And aside from its odd stylalthoughhow many you get to electronic stability control, ing,the updated Honda Oddepends on trim level. It starts anti-lock b r akes, electronic yssey remains at the top of its with the base LX, and ascends brake distribution, brake as- class for handling, fuel econthrough EX, EX-L and Tour- sist, front and side-curtain air- omy, comfort, safety and feaing trim levels before reaching bags and active front seat head tures. If you have a family, and the undeniably well-equipped restraints. all of the baggage that comes Touring Elite. It is this model When it comes time to start along, a minivan gives you that has a particularly useful your own odyssey, the Odys- maximum bang for your buck. feature: the Hondavac. sey still has the handling preAnd the 2014 Honda OdysFor any parent who has cision you'd expect despite the sey is best in class.
for me. • Really? Even without
came on in a blinking rotation.
the story, it's hard for me to
get some advice on what to
A• hearing both sides of believe an authorized dealer would suggest a car owner ignore a brake warning light and audible warning signal. Beyond this, how a dealer could tell you they
Because the weather has been so bad recently, I'm hoping to
look for before crawling under the car. The brakes work fine and I'm still driving the car. • Have a shop plug in a • scan tool and i dentify the specific C-series DTC don't know what or why the fault codes relating to this iswarning light is on without sue. The most likely cause is a checking the car is just as damaged wheel speed sensor questionable. or harness. The information Typically there are three gathered by these sensors and reasons the brake warning fed to the electronic brake conlight comes on — low brake trol module determines if ABS fluid level in the reservoir, or TCS function is appropriate. an engaged parking brake, If the signal from one or more or a problem with the hy- wheel-speed sensors is absent draulic brake system. or inaccurate, a fault code is
A
The dealer should have
generated, the systems are
checked fluid level in the
disabled and warning lights illuminate.
brake master cylinder reservoir, checked that me-
You probably won't have to
chanical components of the crawl under the car. The scan parking brake or its elec- tool should identify which trical switch are not stick-
wheel speed sensors are at
ing, and, most important, fault. You can access the senscanned for any brake sys- sors and their harnesses by tem, ABS or traction control removing the specific wheel in system (TCS) fault codes. question. For the dealer to have
serviced the brake system, then deny causing the brake warning light to illuminate without any investigation
— Brand is an automotive troubleshooter andformer race cardriver.Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Include a daytime phone number.
Make your selections from Anthony's special earlydinner m enu Choicesi .nclude fresh fish
and featuredentrees, appetizer, chowder or salad, and dessert All for 521 95.
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INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
© www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
JOHN COSTA
SUNDAY READER
• Universities, including Oregon State, are trying to acclimateforeign students and bring in theirmoney
The price of failure in politics
A
t dinner one evening, a friend wondered about the relation-
ship betweenpolicy failure
and political consequences.
It's an interesting question and a timely one, given that this election year is now in full swing. We are two months away from a primary election whoseballot is loaded with important contests.
And when the primary is over, the fireworks of an off-year national election begin, with federal and state
Thinkstock
offices up for grabs, along with local races and a likelynumber of important ballot measures to be decided.
It's useless to say here we go again, since it never seems to end.
By Richard Perez-Pena ® New York Times News Service
That's the way our democracy is
working, but I think my friend asked the key question of any election today. Do informed voters reward policy successesand punish failures,orare
dents answered and asked questions, even offered opinions, but the foreigners — half the class, most from China-
voters so set in their views that success or failure is unrelated to political
sat in silence.
outcomes? Many argue that we are so fixed in our political ways and so selective in our information choices that neither successnor failure are factors.
Some historians argue that has been fairly consistent in our history, and that it takes sea-change eventsabolition and the Civil War, the Great
Depression, a major scandal like Watergate or an unpopular war like Viet-
CORVALLIS — As the anthropology instructor engaged her class, a fault line quickly developed. American stu-
It became clear that some had understood little of the lecture here at Oregon State University and were not ready to be enrolled. In fact, they are not, at least not yet. Instead, those students fit into a fast-growing and lucrative niche in higher education, of efforts to increase enrollment of foreigners with transitional programs to bridge the cultural divide — often a chasm — between what it means to be a college student in their own countries and in the United States. Oregon State's program, a joint venture
nam — to shake up the status quo. Othersargue thatpolicy successes
with a private company, Into University Partnerships, prepares students to move into the university's mainstream
or failures do matter, but only to a
aftera year,asO regon State sophomores.
small, though often defining, number of voters. It's no secret that the nation's Dem-
ocrats and Republicans pretty evenly divide thebody of declared partisans. That's why the votes of indepen-
dents are so critical to either party.
Students par-
Who or what they vote for, or whether they vote at all, can be the
ticipating in a transitional
defining component in the calculus of political victory or defeat.
program for foreign
There will be numerous tests of
students at
political loyalty and independence this year. Not so much in the upcoming primary, where Democrats face Democrats and Republicans face Republicans, ortheracesarenonpartisan bylaw.
Oregon State University live in a dorm
on campus. Some1,400 students,
many Chinese
The general election will be the better test, where partisans face each
nationals
studying engineering, are part
other, with independents determining many outcomes.
One contest would appear at the moment to defy this logic.
of the Into
Oregon State program,
It's the race forgovernor.
Gov. John Kitzhaber is seeking a fourth term in office.
which aims to help students adjust to the classroom
Or, said a different way, Kitzhaber
seeks to lead the state for 12 of 20 years, interrupted onlyby the ten-
expectations
ure of Democratic former Gov. Ted
in American universities.
Kulongoski. You would have thought that, given what is going on in the state today, top candidates wouldbe clamoringto take on Kitzhaber. But they are not. Despite the best of intentions,
Kitzhaber haspresided overoneofthe defining failures in Oregon historythe monumentallyinept and flawed launching of Cover Oregon, the state's version of the Affordable Care Act.
Thanks to terrific reportingin The Oregonian and some other media, Cover Oregon has been defined as a program that was structurally and managerially flawed from the beginning, with responsibility reaching into the leadership of the state. And the state has been led by
Kitzhaber, a doctor himself acdaimed by his believers as a visionary in health care reform. Given the importance ofheath care
Photos by Thomas Patterson/New York Times News Service
Colleges want, and increasingly need, more foreign students, not only for high-minded reasons, but also because foreigners generally pay full price. Recruitment from overseas is a rare and increasingly important financial bright spot at a time when state support for higher education has dropped to historic lows, research grants are declining, consumers are objecting to tuition increases, and the supply of college-age Americans is stagnant. "It is a wonderful source of choices about what work they revenue," said Sabah Randha- will do, and grades are based enwa, Oregon State's provost. "It tirely on a few written exams. "This tradition of dass discushelps us afford to admit more resident students, offer them sion and activities is very strange more aid, expand the faculty and to us," said Yuqi Zhang, a student infrastructure."
from China.
'n.'
to each and every citizen, how can it
The university's joint venture, A recentl y arrived SouthKorecalled Into Oregon State, has an student, Min Jae Lee, said, "In
be that no one of major state standing
about 1,400 students, most from
American university, student is
is willingto take the governor on? The answer is not very flattering to allof us. Too many Democrats would rather vote for the flawed member of their
China and most studying engineering. Randhawa wants to expand it significantly, in part, he said, "because we want more academic and national diversity, and because engineering is an expensive discipline." English is just one of numerous challenges for the foreigners that must be addressed in the transition year. Many say they are
free, study attitude is free."
have to learn Western views of
Shahad Shafee helps lead a class about expectations for students in American collegiate classrooms. As foreign students make the transition to study
used to dasses in which only the
plagiarism and attribution. SeeBridge/F6
as well as learn about Western rules for plagiarism and attribution.
party than someone of a different
stripe. In other places, Republicans are equally afflicted with the same
lemming-like loyalty, a reality that doesn't make it anybetter, just more tragic. — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com
teachers speak, students have few
Even taking notes can be an
obstacle in a class taught in English, with frequent digressions that can make it harder to extract the central points. Instructors
and students say that in many cultures, students are l argely
expected to repeat information given by the authorities, and they
here, they have to get used to anewclass format where students participate,
F2
TH E BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
can i aes s oll in orm, no is rac hen all is said and done, the charges and countercharges about their individual voting records do nothingto enhance the debate between Deschutes County District Attorney Patrick Flaherty and his opponent, John Hummel. Yes, Flaherty has missed a few elections, but they generally were ones in which candidates ran unopposed. And yes, Hummel missed elections during the time he spent in Liberia. Assuming the mail system in that part of the world is as bad as he says it is, that, too, doesn't matter much. There are things that do matter, however, and unfortunately they're not what the two candidates are talking about. Voters deservebetter. In fact, there's only one issue of substance: Does Flaherty do a good job as Deschutes County's top law enforcement officer? If yes, fine. If no, how would Hummel do a better one? Flaherty's record in office is a far better measure of his worth as DA than is his voting record. Does he charge criminals appropriately'? Does he offer plea bargains when doing so will serve the public better than a trial would? Do he and his staff showup in court wellprepared each day? And so on. And what would Hummel do
differently? Does he have serious complaints about how Flaherty handles the nuts andbolts ofhis job, complaints so serious that he thinks justice is not being done as a result? Both men need to recognize the race for what it is and respond accordingly. That means that Flaherty, like it or not, must engage with the public. He should talk to the press, including The Bulletin, as soon as he can. Answers to questions about his tenure cannot be delayed by weeks or ignored altogether. He must engage with Hummel whenever he legitimately can. As for Hummel, he needs to address the issues at hand and leave the more minor stuff alone. He demeans the job he wants to hold if he fails to do otherwise. The district attorney's race is, arguably, the most important contest in Deschutes County this spring. The two candidates have an obligation to inform, not distract from the issues that matter.
Developer should be required to do soil tests ewland Real Estate Group has asked the Deschutes C ounty C o mmission t o change the zoning on about 171 acres at the intersection of Butler Market Road and Hamehook Road east of Bend. In doing so, it asks that the commission ignore a recommendation from Hearings Officer Karen Green that the request be denied because the Newland group had failed to adequately test the soil on the eight lots that make up the property. The commission should require the tests. It may well be that, as Newland's lawyers haveargued, the land in question is not suited for serious agriculture. And it also may well be that Green is asking the Newland group to meet a higher standard of proof than has been the standard in thepast. Even if that's the case, Green's request is not out of line. Unlike the state-owned land at Stevens Road and 27th Street southeast of Bend, much of the Newland property has been in agriculture for years. It has been used for llamas, horses and cows; it contains pastureland and land on which both hay and grass seed
N
have been grown. The state Department of Land Conservationand Development and Department of Agriculture, meanwhile, in a letter to the county last year, argued that the land is suitable for agriculture and take issue with the soil classes described by the Newland group. Meanwhile, it's clear neighbors and others are concerned about the prospect of further subdividing the land, at least for now. It is not within the city's current urban growth boundary nor contiguous to it, and they worry that it will hasten the urban sprawl in the area. All that argues for requiring Newland totest the individual lots in the property, as Green asked. While we've had quarrels with Oregon's land-use laws,they do aim to keep urban sprawl to a minimum by setting the bar high when aproperty owner wants to turn farmland into a subdivision. In this case, there's clearly a difference of opinion about whether the property should or should not be considered suitable for agriculture. Both history and the state argue that it is. It's up to the Newland group to prove them wrong, and the county should insist that it do so.
M 1Vickel's Worth Movie theater sound is earth-trembling
Trucks bring critical goods and services
ishing piece for The Bulletin to even
I long ago joined letter writer Roger Aiken in ceasing to go to our
bother publishing. I know it has all of the favored Republican talking This is in reply to Jane Yenny's points (Benghazi, Fast and Furious, March 9 letter to the editor. I would Obamacare,executive orders, in-
local cinemas for much the same
like to remind her that large trucks
come redistribution and freebies) but
reasons as his, particularly the earth-trembling sound. Before I
are a necessity. The food in her refrigerator arrives at the grocery
previews, I was told by the man-
material that was used to build her
ager that he had no control over the settings, which were set by
home came on a truck. Also, the car bumbling idiot who is unfit to govshe drives and the gasoline she puts ern and is in way over his head. In
the producer of the trailer. When
in it were delivered by a truck. The
the feature started and the sound was only slightly less loud, I got my money back and have not returned. This happened more than five years ago. I go back far enough to remember when our first radio was con-
garbage and recyclingitems she they have their mantra (Benghazi, sets in front of her house each week Fast ...) are, yes, also picked up by a truck Phillips begs us to research Exfor disposal. The irony of all this is ecutive Order 3-16-2012 "and de-
throwing all of these words together does not equal a coherent letter. quit attending the local movie the- store on a truck. The clothes and Sadly, Republicans cannot figaters and being assaulted by the shoes she buys for her family are ure out if Obama is a brilliant masbreastbone-vibrating, interminable delivered to stores by trucks. The termind who is secretly planning a
fined to the front hall, not the liv-
dictatorship bred on socialism or a the end, it does not matter as long as
the fact that the asphalt that will repair her streets and roads will also
cide for yourself." I listened, and in about one minute read the article on
come on a truck. Commercial trucks pay a very
snopes.com that confirms that all of the fear about Executive Order
ing room, and my first exposure high fuel tax to support the mainte- 3-16-2012 is unwarranted. I will supto TV was in the fraternity house. nance of our roads and highways. port my facts by giving you the link: The following generations grew Apparently she has no idea how www.snopes.com/politics/obama/ up with heads in the TV with the hard the trucking industry is work- ndrp.asp. I don't mind true political disremote in hand, followed by the ing to meet tougher emission stanboom-box, and the progression dards mandated by our govern- course about policy and issues. Unof portable devices with ear buds ment. As far as truckers "littering fortunately, these opinions resonate and now phones and, of course, our roadways," there is always an with those who spend too much rock concerts. They have already exception to the rule. I believe most time in their Fox News echo chamlost more aural acuity than I still truckers are very conscious of keep- ber and beat themselves senseless have at my age. This, I suspect, is ing the roadways clean. with conspiracy theories. Executive the probable cause of the guy in The next time people are so quick orders have a long history. This parthe projection booth adjusting the to criticize the trucking industry, ticular executive order goes back to sound level to where he can feel it. t hey might want t o t h ink t w i ce President Truman. President Bush I am sad, because there are movies
about how all of the goods and ser-
amended this order twice during his
which demand the silver screen. vices they receive arrived for their presidency without people screamPerhaps our multiplex will devote convenienceand consumption. ing from the rooftops about hidden a screen to Aiken's suggestion of Steve DeRock agendas. an "adult theater" with no previews Redmond Phillips tells us that our option and reasonable sound levels. We is to vote. I agree, so please vote in can always turn up our hearing Astonishing letter the midterms, because when people aids. vote, Democrats win. Ray Jones Al Phillips' letter, "Obama appears Jason Burge Bend to have hidden agenda," is an astonBend
Letters policy
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Secrecy on Ra o in icative o arger pro em By Fred RIler s a visitor to St. Francis Parish when in Bend, I was shocked to hear that Father Radloff was removed from the parish, and
A
that he has had all priestly duties denied him. Even more shocking was when I heard that no explanation
was given to the parishioners for his dismissal, that no reason would be forthcoming, and the Vatican sup-
ported the bishop in his secrecy behind the events that caused Radloff's dismissal, even though Radloff has requested it be made public! No one can rationalize the bishop saying Radloff remains a "priest in good standing," yet takes away all his priestly duties, including the ability to say Mass. It is frightening in this day and age that the clergy continues to in-
sist the laity never question them, that we can't think for ourselves,
that we must blindly accept whatever
IN MY VIEW
them feel infallible.
Whatever the reason for Radloff's
ful Vatican curia, as well as cardinals dismissal, no one can dispute Radlthey do. Over the years, the Catholic and bishops worldwide that have off's caring, love, commitment and Church has done nothing to warrant been allowed to operate under the dedication to his ministry and the the blind faith and trust of the laity. veilofsecrecy for hundreds ofyears people he serves. Even Pope Francis has acknowlfor their own interests. They are not By doing all he can to keep the seedged this. about to let anyone, not even the crecy, and not respecting the parishThis secrecy and the lack of ac- Pope, take that away from them. ioners of St. Francis parish, the bishcountability by the clergy are what The reason for Radloff's dismissal op is showing he does not share the a llow the abuses to occur in t h e will never see the light of day. The same attributes as Radloff's ministry. church, the problem that it is facing cardinals and bishops of the church While the bishop's actions may today. How many times must we hear support one another in what they do. have been sanctioned by the Vatican, about pedophilia, abuse of power, While Canon Law should not be and protected from public release by nepotism, narcissism, egos, power, an excuse to avoid transparency Canon Law, the bishop has won the pride, envy, greed, materialistic ex- when it allows harm to come to as battle, but lost the war. cesses, clergy living double lives, etc. many people as it has, the reality This issue has created doubt, disbefore the church stops its secrecy? is transparency never has been, is sension, despair, anger, frustration, Pope Francis has insisted on trans- not now, nor will it ever be allowed tension, a destructive environment, parency at all levels of the church. by the church hierarchy. Secrecy and exposed the ugly (secretive) However, Pope Francis is a lone voice is the way of life in the church, and side of the clergy in the church. It rein the wilderness. He faces a resent- the clergy enjoy it that way. It makes mains to be seen what impact it will
have on the parish in terms of attendance, contributions, involvement
and spirit. Continuing this secrecy is destroying Radloff's life and his mission to serve the parishioners of St. Francis. It is just one more issue that contributes to the negative attitude of thinking Catholics toward the church.
The pope reinforces that cardinals,bishops and priestsare here to
serve, not to be served. The Catholic clergy, at all levels, are intended to be God'srepresentatives on Earth. They
are not God, they are not to be worshipped, and they are not infallible. What's the age-old question'? If
Jesus werehere,would his actions mirror what the bishop has done? No. Jesus was a loving, caring and forgiving person toward alL â&#x20AC;&#x201D; Fred Riler lives in Issaquah, Wash.
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ama o owin What would a president do if he were furious over criticism, or felt that
his noble aims justified most means of attaining them'?
VICTORDAVIS HANSON
Answer that by comparing the behavior of Richard Nixon to that of an
increasingly similar Barack Obama. Nixon tried to use the Internal Rev-
enue Service to go after his political enemies — although his IRS chiefs atleastrefused hisordersto focuson liberals.
ed the division that focused inordinately on conservative groups. But she has refused to answer questions
to Congress — invoking the Fifth Amendment to protect herself from self-incrimination.
Nixon ignored settled law and The FCC? According to Commispicked and chose which statutes he sioner Ajit Pai, Obama's agency, until would enforce — from denying funds outrage arose, had planned "to ask for the Clean Water Act to ignoring station managers, news directors, congressional subpoenas. journalists, television anchors and Nixon attacked TV networks and
on-air reporters to tell the govern-
got into personal arguments with ment about their 'news philosophy' journalists such as CBS's Dan Rather. and how the station ensures that the Nixon wanted the Federal Communications Commission to hold up the
community gets critical information."
In otherwords, Obama FCC appoinlicensing of some television stations teesdreamed of predicating federal on the basis of their political views. licensing on having politically correct Nixon went after "enemies." He or-
views similar to their own.
deredsurveillance to hound his susEnemies? Federal authorities jailed pected political opponents and was a video maker for a minor probation paranoid about leaks. violation after the Obama adminisNow, consider how President tration falsely blamed him for causObama has directed government, as
ing a riot that led to the deaths of four
opposed to the platitudes he has of- Americans in Benghazi in September fered about how it should operate. 2012. In truth, the attack was an orThe IRS? So far, the Obama-era
ganized terrorist hit facilitated by our
ixon's a D'Souza on federal charges of violat- the Justice Department fraudulently ing campaign finance laws. If convict- dubbed Rosen a flight risk and a posed, D'Souza could be imprisoned for sible criminal co-conspirator. up to seven years. Usually, those acThere are a few differences, howcused ofsuch transgressions face far ever, between the transgressions of lesser charges involving fines. Nixon and Obama, and America's reSpeaking of the Obama Justice action to them. Department, its former Office of PubThe old watchdogs of civil liberties lic Affairs director, Tracy Schmaler, that took on Nixon — the American was reported to have worked dosely media of the Watergate era — are with the George Soros-funded Media
now silent. For them, Obama is not
Matters for America on stories slam- right-wing, easily caricatured, unming critics of the administration. appealing or an old anti-communist When the story alleging this pub- agitator, but an iconic liberal, charislic-private political partnership came matic, and in the past an experienced out, Schmaler resigned — and then community organizer. A Democratic went to work for former Obama polit- Senate majority now has little inical operative David Axelrod. terest in auditing Obama, though it Going after reporters? Obama reg- once zealously pounced on Nixon's ularly blames Fox News by name for misdeeds. its criticism. In 2008, he seemed to enIf you once suggested that Nixon's ter into a personal grudge match with team was violating constitutional Fox's Sean Hannity. principles, you were hailed as speakIgnoring the law? The Affordable ing truth to power. Try that with proCare Act as currently administered gressive Obama, and you are likely bears little resemblance to the law to be cari catured as some sort of that was passed by Congress and embittered tea party zealot at best, a signed by the president. Federal im- retrograde racist at worst. Nixon endmigration law is now a matter of en- ed impeachedand disgraced;Obama forcing what the president allows and may well enjoy a lucrative and in-deignoring the rest. mand post-presidency. Wiretaps'? Well, aside from the Both presidents once had enorelectronic surveillance conducted mous potential and high poll ratings, by the National Security Agency, but their treatment of the Constitution the Obama Justice Department se- was as Orwellian as it was unnecescretlymonitored Fox News reporter sary. Before Nixon imploded, he was and sometime critic James Rosen. warnedto stop it. The Justice Department even seized Will Obama? hisemailsand phone records in fear — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and
IRS has succeeded in hounding non- own lax security. profit tea party groups into political Dinesh D'Souza has written and irrelevancy. By holding up rulings on filmed some very unflattering things nonprofit status, the IRS ensured that aboutObama. He might be asopenthe Tea Party's big political wins of ly critical of the president as Daniel 2010 would not be a factor in the pres- Ellsberg once was of Nixon. In Janident's 2012 re-electionbid. Disgraced uary, the office of Obama-appointed that he might publish administration former IRS official Lois Lerner head- U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara indicted leaks. To hide these shenanigans,
historian at the HooverInstitution and Stanford University
DAVID
BROOKS
The new leaderless doctrine We're in the middle of a remark-
able shift in how Americans see the world and their own country's role in the world. For the first time in half a
century, a majority of Americans say that the U.S. should be less engaged in world affairs, accordingtothemost recent Pew Research Center survey. For the first time in recorded history, a ma-
jority of Americans believe that their country has a dedining influence on what's happening around the globe. A slight majority of Americans now say that their country is doing too much to help solve the world's problems. At first blush, this looks like isolationism. After the exhaustion from
Iraq and Afghanistan, and amid the lingering economic stagnation, Americans are turning inward. But if you actually look at the data,
youseethatthis isnot the case. America is not turning inward economically. More than three-quarters of Ameri-
cans believe the U.S. should get more e conomically integrated with
the
world, according to Pew. America is not t u rning inward
culturally. Large majorities embrace the globalization of culture and the
internationalization of colleges and
Is Vladimir Putin insane? Hitler? Hardly By Masha Gessen
and-true intimidation strategy: Bald- response to all accusations of graft telling the Russian people for more faced lies render opponents helpless. over the last 14 years: Corruption is ning variety of incarnations in the than a decade: Russia is a country There was nothing insane about it, endemic to all governments; Russian American imagination in his nearly under siege, surrounded by enemies, and it worked all the better because corruption is just less hypocritical. parrots back what Putin has been
Vladimir Putin has enjoyed a stun-
15 yearsas Russia'sleader.He started
perennially on the brink of catastro-
out asan economic reformer and a budding democrat, held those misapplied titles for years — aided by ~sident George W. Bush, who "looked the man in the eye" and "was able to
phe, from which only Putin can save politicians sputtering and Russian ment of minorities and political proit. And the latest: Putin is a defender marketsrecovering. testers, as well as violations of interrather than an aggressor in Ukraine. So if Putin is not insane, is he n a t ional law: Putin and his officials There, and everywhere, he is defend- Hitler? are always quick to point out that ing poor besieged Russians, not to There are some eerie similarities: Western countries are also imperfect
get asense of his soul" — before the
mention the history and honor of the
U.S. media and its consumers noticed U.S.S.R., which have been unfairly his authoritarian tendencies. trampled. His graduation to dictator took years. In that time, he dismantled
it was so unexpected. It left Western
Th e s ame goes for Russia's treat-
his obsession with i m minent cao nt h e seissues. Morethanarhetoritastmphe, his total distrust of the rest cal device, this is an expression of the of the world, his paranoid scapegoat- P utin worldview: He believes that all
ing of particular minorities, and his governments would like to jail their longbeforehebecame president,and appetite for annexing new opponents and i nvade he has consistently acted on it when- territories. But then, these their neighbors, but most ever he saw an opportunity, such as traits also make him sim- The POlitiCa/ poli t ical leaders, most of during political unrest in a neighbor- ilar to many other tyrants CUI/Ure pUfjrl the time, lack the courage ing country. big and small. to act on these desires. QgS Cyegge~ Putin expressed this worldview
Russia's electoral system, took over its media, saw many of his opponents killed, jailed or forced into exile, created one of the most ruthlessly corrupt government systems in history, The day after Merkel's statement made peaceful protest punishable became public, Putin held a news by jail time, waged a long and brutal conference in which he denied that
Knowing that Putin is
"
d
A corollary is Putin's
similar to many 20th cen- Iri RUSSIB IS conv i ction that his oppotury dictators is not very gg Sed Of1 the n e nts act out of self-interwar on his own country's territory Russian troops were in Crimea and useful or even interesting. est rather than on the bam~t. and a short one a~ a n e ighbor- made so many other fanciful state- He does, however, have sis of political conviction. ing country, Georgia, a piece of which ments that the State Department is- onetraitthatsetshimapart fh B P fhe When members of the Russiabit off in 2008. sued a fact sheet exposing 10 of his punk rock group Pussy ~prld tS But it was only after he invaded mostblatant lies. tators have generally tried Riot were sentenced to two f Ukraine last month that Americans' Many analysts concluded that the to convince themselves " years in jail, he said they image of him took another drastic bizarrenewsconferenceproved Putin and others that they were Core. got what they wanted. turn. German Chancellor Ange- had indeed lost his mind. They were good people fighting the This belief that everyla Merkel ostensibly told President wrong. Putin was acting the way he good fight. But Putin has one, without exception, Obama that Putin was out of touch always has, like a playground bully. no positive spin for his aggression — acts solely out of base self-interest is with reality. And then former Secre- It was the last thing an American au- or his actions in general. what has led Putin to ratchet up the tary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton dience expected. The dramaturgy of The political culture Putin has aggression, meanness andvulgarity compared him to Adolf Hitler. war would seem to dictate that Putin created in Russia is based on the as- of both his public statements and poSo is Putin insane, is he Hitler, or is issue a rousing call to arms. But bul- sumption that the world is rotten to l i t i calactionsovertheyears. he both'? He is none of those things. In lies do not aspire to lead through rhet- thecore. For American culture, which relies fact, he may be unlike any politician oric; they dominate by intimidation. This was first evident in the way h e avily on a belief in the fundamental the world has known. When confronted, they either lash out Putin talked about corruption. In his goodness of humanity, this is an imWhat did Merkel mean when she or they obfuscate. official autobiography, published in possible worldview to absorb. It is ansaid Putin was living "in another Putin said the troops occupying 2000, Putin told a joke in which Pres- o t her world indeed. But that does not world"? She was probably comment- Crimea weren't Russian, then prom- ident Carter and Soviet leader Leonid m a ke it crazy. ing on the fact that he has grown ised to deploy the Russian military to Brezhnev compare notes: Both are —Masha Gessen is a Russian American so isolated that he believes his own protect civilians in Ukraine, then dis- embezzling, but Brezhnev embezjourn alistandtheauthorofthepolitical television. owned deposed Ukraiman President zles twice as much, blatantly. This is bio g raphy "The Man Without a Face: The Russian television, for it s p art,
Viktor Yanukovich. This is a tried-
the line Putin's officials have taken in
Unlikely Rise of Vladimir Putin."
workplaces. Americans are not even turninginward when it comes to activ-
ism. They have enormous confidence in personalized peer-t o-peer efforts
to promote democracy, human rights and development. What's happening can bemore accurately described this
way: Americans have lost faith in the high politics of global affairs. They have lost faith in the idea that U.S. political and military institutions can do
much to shape the world. This sense of limits is shared equal-
ly among Democratsand Republicans, polls show. There has been surprisingly little outcry against the proposed defense cuts, which would reduce the size of the U.S. Army to its lowest levels since 1940. That's be-
cause people are no longer sure military might gets you very much. These shifts are not just a result of
post-Iraq disillusionment, or anything the Obama administration has done.
The shift in foreign policy values is a byproduct of a deeper and broader cultural shift. The veterans of World War II returned to civilian life with a
basic faith in big units. They tended to embrace a hierarchical leadership
style. The Cold War was a competition between dearly defined nation-states. Commanding U.S. leaders created a liberal international order. They
preserved that order with fleets that roamed the seas, armies stationed
around the world and diplomatic skill. Over the ensuing decades, that faith inbigunits has eroded — in all spheres of life. Management hierarchies have beenfl attened.Todaypeoplearemore likely to believe that history is driven
by people gathering in the squares and not from the top down. The liberal order is not a single system organized and defended by U.S. military strength; it's flowing alongthe arteries of the Internet.
The real power in the world is not military or political. It is the power of individuals to withdraw their consent.
In an age of global markets and global media, the power of the state and the tank, it is thought, can pale before the
Still too many threats for drastic defense cuts By Jay Ambrose Let's shrivel our military and res-
SocialSecurity and other programs usher us to a continent-shaking debt
cue ourselves from debt, say some. calamity. They are confused. They should note Never mind, says the adminisfor starters that this is the second tration as it proposes something decade of the 21st century, a far dis- resembling a pea-shooter initiative tance from the days when military that includes the hacking of Army spending took up as much as half the manpower to the lowest levels seen budget. It's 18 percent now, a dwarf since before World War II. The presnext to the budgetary Goliath it used ident frets little about the entitlement to be. The Goliath today is entitle- threat, instead giving us another ment programs. entitlement, something a third of Many people don't get that — it's Americans say has already made not entirely clear the Obama ad- their lives worse despite his legally ministration gets that — but the old dubious delays of its imposed tribulanews is that military spending came tions. I speak of Obamacare. I speak down significantly after the Soviet of gross negligence. Union waved goodbye. Remember The confusion about military how economically jovial the Clin- spending does not end with faulty ton years were? One reason was awareness of what's big and small in major military reductions in federal dollar distributions. It extends to the spending. point of not knowing how dangerToday, however, you could start ous the world still is or what kinds of substituting pea shooters for drones strategies might make a difference. as part of a transformation-to-tiny military budget and still w i tness
You see, there's Russia, and there's
Vladimir Putin, and while he is not
bloat in overall spendingover time as exactly another Soviet premier, he is baby boomers retireand Medicare,
tap dancing in that direction. There's
China playing bullying games with Japan and still making threats about Taiwan as it enlarges its military in
emies, some of them plenty powerful in plenty of ways. Yes, it's true that any bureaucracy
anothergreatleap forward. There' sa will have waste, that priorities and nuclear-armed North Korea headed needs change, that readjustments
power of the swarms of individuals. This is global affairs with the head chopped off. Political leaders are not at the forefront of history; real power is in the swarm. It's a radical belief that the nature of power — where it comes
from andhow itcan be used — has fundamentally shifted, and the people in the big offices just don't get it. It's frankly naive to believe that the
are foreverneeded and that some-
world's problems can be conquered through conflict-free cooperation
suring character attributes appear times some savings are involved. But to be murderousness and wackiness. when you run across liberals or lib-
and that the menaces to civilization, whether in the form of Putin or Iran,
We haven't even mentioned Africa or
can be simply not faced. It's the utopian belief that politics and conflict are
by someone whose less-than-reas-
ertarians telling you that we can cut
the Middle East or jihadism yet, and military spending enormously, ask when you put it all together, it's not as them about strategy.
optional.
serving how our military is larger
say all we had to do was have weap-
One set of numbers inthe dataleaps out. For decades Americans have been asked if they believe most people can betrusted.Forty percentofbaby boomers believe most people can be
than the next 10 largest militaries without getting it that it's not a help-
ons and troops on our shore lines.
trusted. But only 19 percent of millen-
ful idea to make this a fairer fight if
No. I was looking for an analysis equal to his opponent's intricate illus-
it comes to that. We want to win decisively with as little loss as possible
trations of what might achieve what where. As best I understood by the
nials believe that. We live in a country in which many people act as if history is leaderless. Events emerge spontaneously from the ground up. Such a society is very
if there's nothing that may need de-
I asked a libertarian that once af-
terring, no possibility of aggression ter a debate had arrived at a quest ion-and-answer period, an d h e requiring response. On, no big deal, retort some, ob-
snarled that I was expecting him to
and we want to keep it from coming time this person had quit rambling to that by scaring possible aggres- in search of an answer was that he sors to shivers and shakes. Not only thought we could just have weapons that, but the challenges to us come and troops on our shore lines. from every possible direction, meanI am sorry. It won't do. ing our forces could be spread here, — Jay Ambrose is an op-ed columnist there and yonder fighting many enfor McClatchy-Tribune.
hard to lead and summon. It can be
governedonlybysomeonewho arouses intense moral loyalty, and even that
may be fl eeting. — David Brooks is a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended March 9. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Words of Radiance" by Brandon Sanderson (Tor) 2. "The Bootlegger" by Clive Cussler and Justin Scott (Put-
nam) 3. "Private L.A." by James Patterson and MarkSullivan (Little, Brown) 4. "The Chase" byJanet Evanovich andGoldberg Lee (Bantam) 5. "Concealed in Death" by J.D. Robb (Putnam) 6. "The Invention of Wings" by Sue Monk Kidd (Viking) 7."TheGoldfinch"byDonna Tartt (Little, Brown) 8."Sycamore Row" by John Grisham (Doubleday) 9. "Bone Deep" byRandy Wayne White (Putnam) 10. "Killer" by Jonathan Kellerman (Ballantine) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1."The Blood SugarSolution: 10Day ..." by Mark Hyman(Little, Brown) 2. "Uganda BeKidding Me" by ChelseaHandler (Grand Central) 3. "The Body Book" byCameron Diaz (HarperWave) 4. "Killing Jesus" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Holt) 5. "Grain Brain" by David PerImutter (Little, Brown) 6. "Things That Matter" by
Charles Krauthammer (Crown Forum) 7. "I CanSeeClearly Now" by Wayne W.Dyer (Hay House) 8. "The Future of the Mind" by Michio Kaku (Doubleday) 9. "A Short Guide to aLong Life" by David B.Agus (Simon 8 Schuster) 10. "David andGoliath" by Malcolm Gladwell (Little, Brown)
niconic ums oe e saieviva • Phillip Marlowe is back onthe case, but with a new author at the helm
K EITH R I C H A R D S
' Gus6zMe
Keith Richardswrites children's dook NEW YORK — Keith Rich-
ards is writing a children's book. He really is. The Rolling Stone who came to define theadults-only lifestyle of rock has adeal with Little, Brown Books for Young Readers for a picture story called "Gus 8 Me:TheStory of My Granddadand My First Guitar." The publisherannounced Tuesday that the bookwill come out this fall and will include illustrations by Richards' daughter, Theodora Richards. Barnaby Harris and Bill Shapiro are assisting with the writing. "Gus" is GusDupree, Keith Richards' beloved musician-grandfather. In a statement issued bythe publisher, Richards said the book was based on "one of those magical moments" he hadwith Dupree. Richards, 70, has five grandchildren of his own. His memoir "Life" was a million seller published in 2010.
Mizrahi has deal to write memoir NEW YORK — Isaac Mizrahi will tell the whole story. The fashion celebrity has a deal with Amy Einhorn Books for a memoir that will track
Iiliizrahi
his rise from an unhappy childhood in Brooklyn to hanging out at Studio 54 to
international fame. Amy Einhorn Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House, announcedThursday that the book is scheduled for release in 2016. It is tentatively titled, "I.M." — From wire reports
the tune of 'Mother Machree'
— he was, I could barely believe it. Maybe he was paid to do it, bringing the true lilt of the Old Sod to the city of the
Angels." But most tongue-in-cheek
The Washington Post
W ASHINGTON —
may be the scene in which a
Mafia don is taking Marlowe on a drive along Cahuenga,
C l are
Cavendish. Irish dame, gorgeous, loaded, living in early
then making a turn onto Chan-
1950s L.A. Got a husband and
dler Boulevard.
a boyfriend. The first one is no good and louting about. The second is no good and can't be found. The lady wouldn't mind getting rid of the first but
"Nice street, Chandler," Marlowe observes. "Nothing mean
about it: it's broad and dean and well-lighted at night." Cahuenga and Chandler are real thoroughfares, but
wants the second one back. A woman like this, a situa-
tion like this — she can't go to
Banville slips the latter in as a shout-out to the old man him-
the cops.
self. "Nothing mean" is a play
Philip Marlowe, private eye, that's the ticket she needsexcept that Marlowe's creator,
legendary L.A. novelist Raymond Chandler, took the Big Sleepexpress more than halfa century back. What's a fictional girl to do? E nter I r ish w r i ter J o h n
Banville, the Man Booker Prize-winning novelist who also turns out highly regarded crimenovelsunder the pen
on the oft-repeated description that Chandler wrote about Irish novelist John Banville, a Man Booker Prize winner, was selected by the Raymond Chandler estate "the mean streets of L . A ." And "clean and well-lighted," to write a new Philip Marlowe novel, in Chandler's style and voice. Jahi Chikwendiu/Washington Post
ly dense novel after another and building an international
laughing. "I don't research. I make it up."
reputation. Today, he's one of
The results are Chandlere-
man" and knows the way a roastbeef sandwich is served "down Lambeth way," but he's
as any English major can tell you, is a riff on Ernest Hemingway's short story, "A Clean, Well-Lighted Place." "I like Marlowe," Banville
sque, sure, but you can see not quite sure if it's the Irish or is saying, talking about how on the planet. "The Sea" won Banville's sense of fun. the English who tend to take he got to know the man in the the Man Booker Prize in 2005, Chandler was born in Chica- their whiskey "with water, no course of writing the book. over the likes of Salman Rush- go but lived in Britain for years ice" (the Irish, says his femme Come now, we've got time, name Benjamin Black. The die, J. M. Coetzee, Zadie Smith and "fancied himself an En- fatale). why not another Chardonnay Here's Banville's Marlowe, while we talk this down? The Chandler estate hired him to and Ian McEwan. There's the glish gentleman," Banville says. revive Marlowe. So Franz Kakfa Prize, So, in "Blonde," L.A.'s most walking into a cheap L.A. bar: afternoon spills out ahead. "Lanigan's was one of those "Marlowe, he's old-fashin the just-released the I r i s h PEN famous detective is something "The Black-Eyed Award, the Guin- of an expert on ye olde coun- pretendIrishplaces with sham- ioned," Banville continues, Blonde," Banville/ ness Peat Aviation try. He knows what the dying rocks painted on the mirror be- settling in. "He would have fit Black/Chandler's Book Award (one Oscar Wilde said about the hind the bar and photographs in at the Knights of the Round ghost has Cavenof Europe's richest wallpaper in his room ("one of of John Wayne and Maureen Table. He believes nobility is dish and Marlowe prizes), the Lannan us will have to go") and detests O'Hara. ... Among a shelf of still possible.. . he's an unrestand up, cast shadLiterary Award for a club owner's "phony British bottles was a quart of Bush- constructed romantic, which I ows and w restle fiction and — you accent." He can tell you about a mills wearing a tam-o'-shanter. suppose I still am." e w ith t he tr u t h , get the idea. "The "cottage loaf" of English bread, Scotland, Ireland, what's the Ray Chandler's L.A. It's still Sea" sold nearly observes that a woman has the difference?" treachery and one hard to see it clearly, that tearanother. 200,000 print cop- voice of "an Irish longshoreMarlowe sits down in this drop of affection in the eye. It's vintage L.A., ies in the United toots: The hot sum-
the most decorated novelists
States alone, ac-
mer, rain on the asphalt, the cording to Nielsen Bookscan, woman with the lipstick, cig- which captures about 70 percent of the print market but
coupes, tough guys, snub- none of the e-booktrade. "The Banville books have nosed pistols, the ice melting in the bourbon; the City of Angels a serious intellect and a great as it probablynever existed. sensuality running through "The worst thing you could them," says Molly McCloskey, do," Banville says over lunch, a novelist and professor of crehis soft Dublin lilt falling ative writing at George Washfaintly on the ear, "is write a ington University. An Amersolemn, serious Chandler hom-
ican who has lived in Ireland
age.... I had fun with all of it. I
since 1989, she interviewed
hope that communicates itself." He's 68, slim, not tall, wear-
Banville on stage at the univer-
ing the author-on-book-tour A>tr T HEOD O R A R I C H A R D S
hears the bartender "whistling
By Neely Tucker
arette ash and alienation, V-8
BRIEFING
joint and is floored when he
uniform of slacks, dress shirt, tie and a sport coat. Sitting in a
hotel restaurant late last week, he's soft-spoken at first (you almost have to lean forward)then he gets that mischievous twinkle and is in full swing as your charming Irish novelist and storyteller, the unde or granddad you always wish you'd had. This thing he's doing, a new Marlowe novel? It's not a trifle.
Raymond Chandler is an icon of American Lit. He started writing late in life, after his
business career collapsed (due in part to the Depression, in part to his drinking) but did as much as anybody to create the nowubiquitous hard-boiled genre. "The Big Sleep," "The Long Goodbye," "The Lady in
sity recently. These books convey "an appreciation and wonder at the
world around us," she says. "The prose is capable of achieving the potency of poetry." By contrast, his Benjamin
Black novels are moody, atmospheric affairs, set in Dublin in
the 1950s."Vengeance,""Christine Falls," "Holy Orders" they all follow Quirke, a 6-foot6pathologistwho winds up in a series of unsavory events. "Fog, coal grit, whiskey fumes and stale cigarette smoke, these are the atmospherics of Benja-
/ I'I" ' n
min Black's Dublin," Banville
writes on his website. (The Black books have sold around 10,000 print copies apiece in the United States, according to Nielsen, with the same caveats
as above.) So when his agent and a repthe Lake," "Farewell,My Loveresentative of the Chandler esly." Humphrey Bogart played tate suggested writing a Philip Marlowe in the film version of Marlowe novel, Banville didn't "TheBigSleep,"which became really blink. a staple of cinema; Chandler
co-wrote the screenplay to "Double Indemnity," which did the same.
His books were so goodand Marlowe such an arche-
type of the loner detective, pursuing justice on his own terms — that people have had a hard time leaving it alone, like that
good bourbon in the decanter inthekitchen. One of Chandler's literary
"Richness of texture" is what
Chandler was about, he says, and he thought he could probably do that. Early last summer, Banville read through some of Chandler's dassics and watched "The Big Sleep" as a refresher course. He wrote "The Black-
Eyed Blonde" over three or four months, about the same pace at which he writes his other crime
novels, finishing in September. One thing he did not do was er, was hired in the 1990s to go to Los Angeles — a city he's finish the novel Chandler was visited only a few times — to working on when he died, soak up the feel, consult maps, "Poodle Springs." Parker then get the right number of stories did anotherone from scratch. for the right buildings, things And there was an anthology of like that. Marlowe short stories by a colSacrilege? lection of writers. Chandler was no stickler Not everybody loved those for L.A. topography, either, he things. A lot of not everybody. says, and he took the same liA lot of it was the idea that cense. One of Banville's proofMarlowe and Chandler should readers was Candice Bergen, a be left in their long Los Ange- friend and L.A. native, and he les twilight. says the actress kept messaging him with corrections about Two decades passed. descendants, Robert B. Park-
Meanwhile, Banville w as
working as a journalist in Dublin, writing one poetical-
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"I said, 'It's a book of fiction,
not a travelogue,' " he recounts,
Mun $nud~
• •
•
SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
ave ar muses e- isne i n a a i • Novel is inspired by 'Snow White,' but it defies classification on arent oo "Boy, Snow, Bird" by Helen Oyeyemi (320pgs., RiverheadBooks)
an ot erto ics
By Miriam Krule Slate
By Maggie Gaiehouee
M irrors can be the unlikeliest of deceivers. They suggest a clean retelling of
"I'll be driving five or
Houston Chronicle
Dave Barry has written close to30 books. Sounds like alot, right? Not really, Barry says.
SIX fp yppf. pld g/f.lS
I'I in the SameSPaCe
Wjth Nem, Bnd jhgy'yg "There's a lot of white space 811 Sgfl8glAg Bfi in them," he cracks.
j ust the facts, an accurate r eflection of what's placed
move that feels more biblical,
There are no dwarves, no
calling to mind Sarah's ban- matter how convincing she ishment of Hagar and Ishma- can be. el after Isaac's birth, than evil. But then Oyeyemi is less The world of this novel is one i nterested in d e ceiving u s in which mothers and daugh- than she is in letting us know tersdisappear from each oth- we're being deceived. Over er's lives: Boy doesn't know and over again we read the what happened to her mother; fairy tales that the characters Snow's mother died shortly tell each other, and each time after giving birth; Arturo's Oyeyemi has them doubt the mother sent one of her daugh- veracity, and sometimes the validity, of one version of ters, Clara, away to live with an aunt — only to have the a story over another. Bird, next generation do the same Arturo explains, used to thing, sending Snow to live love hearing the Cinderella story before bed. She never with Clara. Unsurprisingly, in a novel expressed approval or disabout appearances, the send- approval, but one night she ing away has everything to asked if the story was true. do with physical traits. The "Not the fairy godmother adored and praised Snow stuff and her dress turning may appear to be white back to rags at midnight — I ("skin as white as snow," as know that's true. But Cinderthe saying goes), but her half ella just sweeping up all those sister Bird has a darker ap- ashes every day and never pearance, suggesting that putting them into her stepthe Whitmans are in fact a mother's food or anythinglight-skinned black family is that true?" To a young girl, attempting to pass as white that is the most implausible yet another deceptive part of the story, and her faname and another deceptive ther can't see the harm in telling her yes. "So what — she appearance.
poisonous apple and no aw akening kiss. In its place are simply women. Women o f allages, races,economic b ackgrounds and motives. W omen who dealwith, and s ometimes inflict, all the horrible injustices — racism, u al identity — that aren't on
est -
actly. It's the surface
of things, and even that is often distorted. We know this, yet we
the way, must instead
find ways to solve their own problems. T he
f i f t h no v e l
can't stop looking at
COAklf1UUm. I CBfi f: always kidding. Most of us got to know the Qg / igyg prgSidgnf.
Obama's daughters
From 1983 to 2004, Barry
wrote a weekly syndicated are like that With him." column for the Miami Herald, winning a Pulitzer Prize for
— Dave Barry
commentary in 1988. A lot of those columns got collected
into books. into One Direction now. Who Over the past decade, Barry knows how long that will last. has written five Peter Pan pre-
quels for younger readers with Ridley Pearson, along with some other (allegedly grownup) books on his own, including "Insane City" (2013) and
~ . We are becoming a na~ . t i o n of i lliterates, your book claims. You blame our increasingly bad grammar on "a combination of factors, in-
" I'll M ature W h en
I'm Dead" (2011) H is ne w b o o k
. .
'
. . '
covers parenthood,
Viagra, manliness o~."'" ~~Q „ and Israel — among ~ ~ ~~ ' . ' W L; other things Barry, 66, lives in ~ f, > v ,
cluding the Internet, reality tel e vision,
'hip-hop,' global climate change and Starbucks."
A re
these in any particular o r d er? Q. No.
Coral Gables, Fla., and divides his time
between writing and carting around his teenage daughter, Sophie.
Q•
Can you describe your • brand of humor?
A • my own life and try to pick things I figure other peo• I just kind of write about
~.
Y o u 're on book
M. t our. In y our new book, you write: book tours can be grueling because you go from city to city appearing on TV and radio shows where you will be interviewed by perky on-air per"
.
.
.
sonalities who have not read
from th e e n viably them fo r c o n f irma- Oy eyemi prolific (and enviably tion. We crave the reyoung) Oyeyemi deflection, choosing to trust its fi es classification, seeming a ccuracy against our better t o dip its toes in one genre, say magical realism, hop judgment. Helen Oyeyemi's latest o ut, and settle into histornovel, " Boy, Snow, Bird," i c al fiction or f r actured b egins with just this co- f airy tale. Or perhaps the nundrum. " Nobody ever s tory'sa mystery. Oyeyemi w arned me about mirrors, i s constantly changing perso for manyyears I was fond sp ectives an d na r r ators, of them, and believed them a Iternating between t he t o be trustworthy," says Boy, f i rst-person narration of t he first of the book's three
her protagonists and letters w ritten between Snow and doesn't stop her from ob Bird, keeping her readers sessing over mirrors, to the at full attention. As she did p oint of kissing the glass i n her previous book, "Mr. w ith her fists against it, her Fox," Oyeyemi in telling a
t itular protagonists. That
mouth meeting her "mouth." st ory explores how stories
A nd she's not the only one: are told. As with the mirrors S now, he r s t e pdaughter, t hat haunt the novel, the
and Bird, her daughter, have re flections we get from Oysimilarly troublesome and ey emi'snarrators are often o bsessive relationships with unreliable and only shown to us when convenient, rev ealing many unexpected don't see any reflection at d etails that we don't see at all. fi rst — eitherbecause of our
t he reflective material — in t heir case, they occasionally
A magical mirror? You o w n biases or because we
k now that old story. On its
e r — the sort of turnabout t actic made standard thanks
to books like "Wicked."
exact same experience!"
i t for the most part in 1950s
radio or TV in the first place." • President Obama has Dare I ask, has this tour been • been a big supporter of any different? fatherhood initiatives and now This morning I did a TV you have a book that claims to • satellite spot. You sit in a
Q
er," Boy, who settles down in
As in "Mr. Fox," where a
w e shouldn't trust h er, n o
can't prove it isn't true," he
character comes to life to figures. It's not just Boy, Snow and scold her author for killing off a story's heroines, mag- Bird who, in some way, disic sits side by side with the cover themselves by doubting banality of day-to-day life in their mirrors. In the end, one "Boy, Snow, Bird." It's left to of the novel's biggest transthe reader to decide what she formations takes place as a wants to believe — does Bird resultof coming face-to-face reallyspeak to spiders,asone with one's reflection. But, like vivid scene seems to suggest? a good mirror, I won't reveal What exactly is happening everything here. I'll leave that with the mirrors? Not every- to Oyeyemi's stunning and enthing makes sense — but not chanting fairy tale. everything has to. Oyeyemi isn't just pulling the rug out from under our feet, playing with our assumptions about
how people look — she's holding a mirror up to our memories of fairy tales and of histo-
perspective of the stepmoth- a Massachusetts town with
ple are going through. My hu- your book and sincerely do mor is not some weird, crazy not give a $%& about it. If they thing. It's "Oh yeah! I had the were interested in books, they would never have gotten into
h aven't been given all the
s urface, the plot of "Boy, i nformation. Snow, Bird" is th e "Snow Take the "evil stepmothW hite" tale told from th e
want to t rust m i rrors even
agery, making it her own.
When I tell him it took me 56Xfifig and Singing. just four hours to read his lat- I'II Sgy S pm8ggjfl g
"You Can Date Boys llg6 pg IO Ok at tgat!
ry. Just as we so desperately
ro's beloved Snow away — a though we shouldn't, perhaps
o f course what we see in display in a Disneyfied vera mirror isn't always the s i on. Women who, with no Prince Charming on truth, at least not ex-
When You're Forty" — he And they'll all StOP like says: "Oh really? That's how long jt ' S Bf) jg/gyyUp~jpg g
ae
almost all the familiar im-
b efore them, without judg- ab ortions, questions of sexm ent or commentary. But
But the talented Oyeyemi
takes a familiar story, sets
A rturo Whitman — a wido wer with a daughter, Snow. (T he name Snow Whitman i s the book's only overt refer ence to the classic fairy t a le.) When her own daugh-
New England, and removes te r is born, Boy sends Artu-
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A•
be about parenting. Is it fair to
chair and every five minutes
say you two are tag-teaming
for two hours they switch you
this issue? • I don't know w hat h e
to a new station. When you do that, the percentage of peo-
A • thinks about fathers, but he's got girls so he probably has no clue. And he's probably not so embarrassing to his children because he's the president. I always feel that
ple you talk to who have read your book is about 10 percent. I don't blame them, exactly.
That's the way the system is. But you have to steer them.
Sometimes all they know is
I'm feeling my way, especially with Sophie. I don't know
that it's me sitting there.
from day to day what it is that
you still write Q •• Although occasionally for the Mi-
she's thinking. When my son
ami Herald, you've been mostcial media. But Sophie is net- ly untethered from newspaworked with all her friends pers for the past decade. Your — pretty much every other thoughts on the current and was a kid, there was no so-
14-year-old girl in North and
futurestates ofnewspapers?
South America. She is non-
A• I still read newspapers.
stop focused on all her friends,
and at times I cease to be part of her universe. We have a soccer carpool. I'll be driving five or six 14-year-old girls. I'm in the same space with
• M y wi fe works at t h e Herald, and my son works at
the Wall Street Journal. Most of our friends are newspaper people. But there's no getting around it. The industry has
them, and they're all shriek-
been gutted, and the new busi-
look at that!" And they'll all
the same kind of journalism
ing and texting and singing. ness model doesn't work very I'll say something — like, "Oh, well anymore. They can't do
stop like it's an interruption, a they used to do. I don't think blip in the space-time contin- newspapers will survive, I reuum. I can't believe President ally don't — not on paper for Obama's daughtersare like sure. Maybe in some Internet that with him. form. The question is, what will happen to journalism? Sophie mind that Q •• Does you write about her?
A
Q • I interviewed Mitch Al-
• She really doesn't mind. • bom last fall and asked • My kids figured out ear- about the alleged breakup of ly on that their dad was kind the Rock Bottom Remainders, of weird. Secretly, they both
a rock band of wr iters that
kind of liked it.
includes you, Stephen King, Ridley Pearson, Amy Tan and
• At t h e J u s tin B i e ber Scott Turow, among others. • concert you took Sophie Albom said: "Like all really
and her BFF to — the one you bad bands, we can't even do describe in the book — did our breakup right." And he they really invite him to their batmitzvahs?
mentioned that you got the
They really did. They
ami Book Fair last November. So, what's the status of the band now?
A •• t hrew t heir b at m i t z -
vah invitations onstage. I saw them land just in front of Justin Bieber. It's possible that the
band back together for the Mi-
someone else tried to get us
Q•
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knows. It's true, A•• Nobody I got us back together
soles of his shoes did touch the a t the Miami Book Fair invitations. But he didn't at- everybody except Stephen tend the bat mitzvahs. And it's King. We had a lot of fun and his loss, I have to say. then we disbanded. Again. If
together again, we'd do it, be• Bieber anymore, does cause we're pathetic that way. she? We could never end our songs • She dropped him like right, and we can't end our • a used Kleenex. She's music careers right, either. Sophie doesn't even like
A
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F6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014
History and faith
merge in 'Pilgrimage' lllustration by Danica Novgorodoff
Eve hing youever
"Five Came Back: A Story of Hollywood and the Second World War" by Mark Harris (Penguin Books, 511 pgs., $29.95) By Carrie Rickey San Francisco Chronicle
lied in the war effort to make
propaganda films for civilians and training films for GIs. For Ford, "naval service repre-
sented the last chance to live the seafaring life he had always dreamedof."Wyler and Capra, both immigrants, were recruited by Signal Corps, but
mark of veracity."
By Michelle Boorstein
Stationed in Alaska, where
he expected an attack by the Japanese Imperial Navy, Huston took a more straightfor-
ward approach with "Report From the Aleutians" (1943). It explained the tactical sig-
the frenzied nature of the killings bestows them with
metal; its progenitors (Ba-
As merciless as the murders have been, the ongoing campaign of church arsons adds psychological terror and reli-
its early flowerings in Cana-
nificance of islands 500 miles in Europe in 1939, for the most both would have enlisted out away from Japanese-occupied part Hollywood was leery of of gratitude to their adopted territory and the tense boremovies about the Nazi threat. country. dom of soldiers waiting for enWhen filmmakers John Ford Stevens, noted for his com- gagement with the enemy. "Adroit use of newsreel footand George Stevens proposed edies, volunteered for the Sigpolitically u r gent f e ature nal Corps because he wanted age was no longer enough," films, the studio brass thwart- to make movies with r ele- Harris observes. "Moviegoers ed their efforts. vance. And Huston, exhausted didn't want the story behind W arner Bros. broke t h e from hiding his lover, Olivia de the war — they wanted the isolationist ice by releasing Havilland, from his wife, Les- war brought home in pictures "Confessions of a Nazi Spy" ley, accepted a Signal Corps they couldn't see anywhere — billed as "The Picture That commission as an opportunity else." Calls a Swastika a Swasti- to redefine himself as a man of By 1944, American movka!" — on the same day Hitler action in the original sense of iegoers — like many soldiers announced that the subthe expression. and sailors overseas — had "Within the Sig- battle fatigue, preferring esjugation of Poland was central to GerliriIK llr nal Corps, there capist entertainment to war many's goals. was stiffresistance movies. There were excepEven so, there to any movie that tions. W yler's "Memphis was pushback. In would use plot or Belle" focused on the mission "Five Came Back," character, a n ima- and the personality of each ASTORY OFIIOlrrWOOD Mark Harris' can'ttion techniques, or man in the "Flying Fortress," 4ID nrr gECOIID WINUIWllt put-rt-down h r s toeven nonmilitary jolting audiences out of their ry of World War II music to drive home apathy. propaganda films, its point," H a rris The recording of the D-Day he writes that advowrites. Fortunately, invasion and its aftermath (sucates of neutrality Gen. George Mar- pervised by Ford and Stevens) in th e P r oduction shall (who in the was a film r ecord "without Code office "argued that the postwarperiod developed the precedent in the h istory of movie courted disaster by Marshall Plan) overrode the warfare." The processed footfailing to depict Hitler's un- complaints. age was shown immediately to challenged social and political Marshall assigned Capra, Churchill and Roosevelt and achievements." who remained in Washing- made it to U.S. theaters in a litAuthor of the likewise su- ton throughout the war, to tle over a week.
da, Switzerland, Greece and the United States; its Cam-
perlative "Pictures at a Revolution," Harris structures his
brian explosion in Norway;
book cinematically, with es-
tively known as "Why We Fight." Capra, shattered by
wood to make "They Were Expendable" (1945), about the
gious intimidation to the list
its developments in France,
tablishing shots of this trans-
Leni Riefenstahl's Hitler glo-
1941 Battle of the Philippines.
wanted to know about black metal "Black Metal: Evolution of the Cult"
by Dayal Patterson (600 pgs.,Feral House) By Michael Robbins Slate
"The annals of Black Metal are fraught with violence,"
intone Michael Moynihan and Didrik Slilderlind at the
beginning of their 1998 history "Lords of Chaos: The Bloody Rise of the Satanic Metal Underground," "exploding in both self-administered suicidal shotgun blasts and cold-blooded, knifeblade murders. The number of deaths incurred worldwide is hard to calculate, but
like industrial refrigerators, drums jackhammer, lyrics concern "sons of northern
darkness under the throne of the moon" and are screamed byyetis. With 600 pages of interviews and photographs documenting the genre's birth and evolution, black metal is as definitive an encyclopedia of the music as the human
race is likely to produce. Patterson seems to have spoken
to every person who ever pondered the relationship of Satan to guitars in winter-
time. Every aspect of black metal is allotted its 15 minutes of blasphemy: its roots in punk, thrash and death
thory, Mercyful Fate, Venom, an unmistakable essence. Hellhammer, Celtic Frost);
of Black Metal's arsenal." Sweden, Poland and Japan; This extraordinary pas- its snaking into increasingly sage raises troubling ques- unwieldy subgenres; its prestions for m u sic c r iticism, ent-day "post-black-metal" such as: Aren't suicidal shot- incarnations. gun blasts self-administered by definition? Isn't murder
It's the Norwegian scene that receives the most atten-
always merciless? What is
tion, since Norway is black
the "list"of an "arsenal"? And most important: Why is
metal's Liverpool, Memphis
knows about black metal?
ter the most: Darkthrone,
Well, I suppose Satanism, arson and murder are sort of attention-grabbing. And it wasn't so long ago that
Mayhem, Burzum, Immor-
I didn't know Fenriz from a hole in the northern sky
in these bands burned down
extended to AC/DC, the first few Sabbath records, a little
these bands. Some of them
and New Orleans all in one, this all the average music fan home to the bands that mattal, Emperor, Satyricon, Ul-
ver, Gorgoroth, Enslaved. And, yes, some of the people
really gorgeous old churches myself. My metal acumen and/or killed other people in killed people who weren't Slayer, and Appetite for De- in any band. Some of them struction. I was begging the killed themselves. local record store clerk to let
Patterson covers all this
me buy his advance copy of without resorting to senthe new Pavement CD.Black metal seemed to be trying t oo hard — W E A R E S O EVIL, FOR REAL — while
s ationalism. It
m a kes f o r
queasily fascinating reading. Mayhem singer Per "Dead" Ohlin, wh o
w o ul d s h oot
indie rock could barely get himself before he could out of bed, which was more appear on the group's stumy speed. dio albums, auditioned by B ut at s ome p oint, i n - mailing the band a crucified die began toseem overly mouse. "He had issues," says safe and insular. The world Kjetil Manheim, the group's doesn't need another article drummer. about how boring indie rock Mostly, Patterson just lets is, so I'll just skip to the part where I heard Darkthrone's
Transilvanian Hunger for
H o l l y-
formational era and close-ups rification " Triumph o f t h e Wyler lost his hearing while on each of its five subjects. By Will," used Axis propaganda taking aerial footage over Itcrosscutting the personal jour- to motivate American soldiers. aly, because of the roar of the neys and wartime films of five "Let our boys hear the Nazis plane's engines. Stevens went Hollywood directors — Ford, and the Japs shout their own to Dachau when the cremaStevens, Frank Capra, John claims of master-racecrud," toria were still burning. He Huston and William W yler Capra said. Capra would pro- saw evidence of cannibalism. — Harris shows how the war duce "The Negro Soldier" "We went to the woodpile," he changed the filmmakers and (1943), a recruiting movie in said, "and the woodpile was how the filmmakers changed the guise of a chronicle of Af- people." the cinematic language and rican American achievement. He stayed there for weeks. content of Hollywood movies. He then made tw o f e a"Five Came Back" focuses In the midst of the action ture-length d ocumentaries. primarily on the period from H arris w r ites w it h y o u - The first recorded crimes and 1941, when Ford enlists in the are-there intimacy, taking conditions at Dachau and othNavy a month before Pearl the reader to Midway, where er camps. The second, "The Harbor, to 1945, as Stevens John Ford, awakened by the Nazi Plan," demonstrated that meticulously documents what noise, films an aerial battle the death camps were the rehe found at Dachau. that turned out to be a turning sult of a decade of planning. Before the U.S. declaration
point in the war in the Pacif-
"The films were intended to
of war, studio heads, many of them Jewish, faced attack
ic and was blown off his feet by an enemy bomb,hiscamera still running. Proprietary about his footage and wary
have only one showing, and only one audience: the judges at Nuremberg."
from isolationists within the industry and in th e Senate.
Anti-Semites such as Charles Lindbergh and Sen. Gerald P. Nye, R-N.D., accused the moguls of political agitation,
of it being cut up into parts for
After their service, all five directors returned to Holly-
newsreels, Ford defied Navy wood. Their films became protocol, secretly editing "The more naturalistic and socially Battle of Midway" (1942) in engaged. You may have heard interventionism and Commu- a week and supplementing it of Capra's "It's a Wonderful nism. Nye demanded a Sen- with narration by professional Life,"Ford's "The Man Who ate hearing, which was called actors. Shot Liberty Valance," Hus"The juddering, jolting, ton's "Treasure of the Sierra off on Dec. 8, 1941, the morning after the attack on Pearl damaged images captured Madre," Stevens' "A Place in Harbor. at Midway had, it turned out, the Sun" and Wyler's "The Almost overnight the "com- created a new standard for re- Best Years of Our Lives." War peting principalities" of Hol- alism," Harris writes. "Lack of changed them, and their films lywood and Washington al- polish was taken as a bench- changed us.
books about God. Yet the dry-witted former business executive had never been
to Jesus's birthplace. He was afraid that visiting the Holy Land would kill his "pristine" ideas about Jesus with images of "cheesy touristsites."
Yet a few years ago, the 53-year-old Jesuit changed his mind. Merging the historical Jesus with the "Christ of faith" — the spiritual figure Martin and so
many millions turn towas essential, he decided, not just for him, but for oth-
ers, too. The result is "Jesus: A
Pilgrimage," a new book that's part travelogue, part memoir and part a very Martinesque — that i s ,
funny, conversational and deep — meditation on how
one rational modern person merges biblical history with the miraculous. made you want Q •• What to do this book'? • I'd long wanted to do
A • a book on Jesus that combined insights about the historical Jesus with the Christ of f aith. Nor-
mally those two things are kept apart in books. His-
tory-focused books don't treat the subject of miracles and resurrection. The more
spiritual ones don't treat historical considerations. If you just look at the Jesus of
history it's man pretending to be God. Or the other way it looks like God pretend-
ing to be man. want the book to Q •• You reach people of var-
ious faiths or no religious faith. Why should people who don't believe in Jesus care about this stuff?
A Jesus as a wise teacher, I'll
• Even if it's someone • w ho just t h i nks o f
show you why the miracles are important. To be blunt, I do believe they did happen. The Gospels fall apart without miracles. Today's discomfort with the miraculous reflects a fundamen-
tal unwillingness to believe God can do anything. Frankly, if God can create
the world out of nothing, having his son still a storm to meseems reasonable.
infest my apartment with
"I thinkit's absolutely critical for folks to know different cultures and understand the world. To me, this is more important in the long haul
sition. Most do.
than any discipline they learn."
twist. Irene Rolston, for exam-
But who cares'? Fans aren't looking for good writing
Bridge
from a book like black met-
Continued from F1 Into Oregon State has a
listen to, for absurd state-
that offers workshops and per— Sabah Randhawa, OSU provost sonal counseling on cultural issues that go far beyond the academic: dating etiquette, notions of personal space and but now at least 15 American build our own program, which privacy, driving and drinking universities have them, work- in retrospect was probably a laws, attitudes toward mental ing with companies like Into mistake," Stearns said. "We're health, body language, and and Study Group, both based pleased with what we've got,
ple, teaches several sections of Comparative Cultures, some
standards of interaction with
in Britain; Navitas, an Aus-
work with the foreign students
peers, faculty members or even, if needed, the police.
tralian company; and Kaplan want to do it on a much bigger Inc., with more scheduled to scale,and we've come to the come online. conclusion that we can't." The trend of colleges' hirThe p r i v ate c o m panies ing private companies for new have recruitment operations functions has been underway around the world, so they can for decades.Few colleges,for find students, screen them for example, run their own dinquality, direct them to Westing halls anymore, and many ern schools they might not campus bookstores have be- have heard of and provide come outposts of national support services on camchains. pus. The programs vary in
Immortal and other early al — they're looking for lore, black-metal bands began to for new and eviler bands to
their brambly logos. Metal ments from their metal gods. gave me a new lease on rock On that score, as your aver'n' roll, and it was black met- age metal reviewer might al that set the paperwork in have it, it delivers the goods motion. Brothers and sisters, and then some. I am here to testify that pale,
Patterson's authorial r e-
sicklybeings once created a beautiful racket under the
straint is regrettable, though, in at least one respect. A mi-
nority of black-metal musicians are white-supremacist fools. Graveland's Rob Dark-
12-person student care team
The most prestigious Amer-
and death metal. As Dayal
en, for instance, says "I am a warrior protecting tradition-
ican schools have no shortage of foreign applicants and have
Patterson writes in his new book "Black M etal: Ev o-
al white man values." And Patterson informs us t h at
their pick of the best. But most
ence between black metal
F ord returned t o
Twitter followers and has written several best-selling
strategy that has the fortunate effect of keeping his own prose to a minimum.
I often find myself called upon to explain the differ-
supervise the movies collec-
The Rev. Jim Martin is
probably America's bestknown Catholic priest. He appears on "The Colbert Report" when a Jesus expert is needed. He is a Christian spiritual figure to tens of thousands of
the band members talk, a
the first time. Then I'll skip to the next day, when I heard it for the 10th time. Soon Emperor and Bathory and
Scandinavian moon.
Despite the certainty of war
The Washington Post
colleges and universities are
but it's small, 125 students. We
The foreign students take
courses that a domestic freshman might take, but with a
with only Oregon State stu-
dents, and some where about half the students are in the Into program. In the mixed
classes, she is helped by language instructors who also outside class on their English skills. Students in the Into pro-
gram pay slightly more than the usual price charged to n on-oregonians, which i s roughly$34,000 this year for
lution of the Cult," black murderer Varg Vikernes, of metal features "high-paced Burzum, recently posted on percussion, h i g h-pitched his website about "Negroes 'screamed'vocals,and fast and otherinferior races"tremolo picking on the gui- which, according to Pattertars," with an emphasis on son, is "politically charged" "atmosphere," while death speech.
relatively u n k nown w o r l dwide and lack the resources
metal emphasizes "brutali-
prepared for it is much more
leap because it's m uch closer nue-sharing arrangements. In international students, fewer to our core mission," said Pe- Into's program, the universi- than half of them undergraduter Stearns, provost of George Mason University in Fairfax,
This sort
o f no n sense
to dooverseas recruiting.And while the supply of students abroad who want an Amer-
ican education is immense, the number who are actually
ty or technicality" and uses "'growling' vocals and frequent riff changes." Black metal's sound is frequently described as "cold"
should be countered with the mockery it deserves.
limited. A number of for-profit com-
To be fair, Patterson does
panies have stepped into that breach, offering recruitment servicesor college preparatory boot camps, but a handful offer something more ambi-
of Winter," "Where Cold
band Watain: "Black Metal is
allow nonracist black-metallers to slam their idiot and "icy," in part because it brethren, quoting, for examdraws its tropes from its Nor- ple, Erik Danielsson, of the dic origins — "At the Heart not exactly politically correct Winds Blow," the grim reap- a cult of Satan, its foundation er riding through snow-cov- is the cultivation of Chaos
tious, working with American
colleges to create bridge programs for foreigners, a more common practice in Britain
ered mountains. But it's an
and Darkness, and no little
effective descriptor, as well — guitars buzz and whine
pimple-ridden Internet-nazi
and Australia. Six years ago, there were no programs of
m ovement can change that."
that kind in the United States,
"But this is an additional
tuition, fees, room and board. Once they enroll in the univer-
sity at large, they pay the standard out-ofstate charges.
structure, duration and reve-
Before the program began, Oregon State had about 900
ties control the academic side,
ates, out of more than 20,000.
providing the curriculum and That figure has more than Va., which recently announced employing the professors, and doubled and continues to rise. an agreement with Into. He the students attend for at least The next goal is a big increase and other administrators say a full academic year before en- in the number of Oregon State universi ties have moved cau- rolling in the university. students who study abroad, tiously with t h i s p a rticular At Into Oregon State, some said Randhawa, the provost. "I think it's absolutely critistrain of outsourcing, worried students are just studying Enabout ceding control of curric- glish, while others are heading cal for folks to know different ulum or admissions, or water- to graduate school, but most cultures and understand the ing down either academics or intend to enroll as undergrad- world," he said. "To me, this the caliber of the student body. uates. The university decides is more important in the long " Into approached us f i ve whether they have performed haul than any discipline they years ago, but we decided to well enough to make that tran- learn."
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T HE N E W NOSY NONSENSE By BRENDAN EMMETT QUIGLEY /
ACROSS 52 Business transactions 1 Top off, as free from someone's drink government 8 Isolated hill regulation'? surrounded by 57 Spanish bear lava 15 Shine 20 Lubrication point
21 Snapping things 22 Avoiding the
rush, say 23 She "speaks things in doubt, / That carry but
half sense"
61 Narrow land
projections into the sea 62 Floors 64 Billet-doux recipient 66 Hands,
informally
67 Orbit rival 69 Coat style 70 Bank run 71 Change structurally 72 It's nothing at all
24 They're not accented in music 25 Unimaginative 26 One unsatisfied with a "She loves 73 Carefree dairy me, she loves me product? not" result'? 77 "Really!" 28 Picky little dog? 80 Radiohead head 30 Faint trace Yorke 82 Modest response 31 A lot to a comphment 33 Neglect 83 French 101 34 Detests
pronoun 38 Game equipment 84 It covers 40 Haitian couple 41 Bandleader's cry 42 Called off 43 Lay atop 47 "L'Arlesiennere
composer 48 It's not much 49 Lake
(Austrrata s lowest point)
Hector's death 86 Continental free
trade group
88 Block, as a stream 91 Likes lots 92 F.S.U. player, for short 93 Bright red 84 One spinning
one's wheels?
50 Audition winner's part, maybe 51 Peep
95 Optimally 98 It's often heard
Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 4,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords
89 Reconstructionera cartoonist 101 Optimistic theater
($39.95 a year).
at a ballpark
audience?
1
Ed i t ed by Will Shortz
103Marvel from Idaho's largest
58 Vanquish
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
city? 108 Soot 110 Kind of seat 112 Straightshootu1g 113 I t's bi e r t h a n a family 114 Slalom, for one 115 Winston's home in "1984" 116 Snapchat
demographic
117 Nuts 118 In words
29 "Hold your horses" 32 Boosted, as an ego
3 Educ. book category 4"
Like the
~ t n '(song from "Dirty
Dancing") 5 Sunday reading 6 Supporter oft h e 1>jp, say 7 Advances on 8 Missile name 9 Got to the point?
10Eagerly adopt ll Polish leader?
12Developers' expanses
34 Heat alerts, for short'? 35 Tiny indicator
8
7
8
9
21
23
24
1o
11
35
36
13
1s 1 6
14
28 31
37
12
38
17
32
39
64
59
53
60
45 Actress Elizabeth with older twins
55
56
62
66
67
70 73
80
reel?
54
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46 Fagin's end
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50
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44 Sports score most likelv to be o n the hi l i g h t
46
40
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33
48 51
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seaman? 37 "Listen up, Lucia!" 39 Hoosier capital, informally 40 Detective writer Earl Bigge s
18
25
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36 Barely remembered
84
9O
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48 Pulled tight 48 Defib team 52 Post office
9S 9 6 101
102
short'? 53 CBS series that, oddly, was filmed in L.A. 54 Lens 55 Sen. McConnell 56 "Downton Abbey"
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sa
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99 103
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workers, for
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19 "Like hell!" 27 Mollify
s
20
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58 Museum
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4
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43 Some loaves DOWN 1 Kind of pyramid 2 TV's Kelly
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78 "I
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79 Fumes may
74 Venice's oldest
84 Brand of gloves and slippers
75 "Fumes" is a form of it 76 Birds with inflatable neck
85 Blitzed
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60 "Sherlock"
channel,
67 An Arnaz 68 Busy travel day,
business bridge
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66 Labyrinthine
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100 "The Two Pots" storyteller Balearic Islands 102 College up the coastIrom L.A. 91 Countv seat of Suffolk, England 104 March time 105 Certain tourney 93 Stupid sort overseer 95 Specialized talk 106 TV spots 96 2014 Baseball 107 City near Hall of Fame Presque Isle inductee StatePark 97 The Beatles' "P.S. I Love 108 Like some tea
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produce one
81 Financiers
87 Concertgoers
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88 Rice paper'?: Abbr.
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leaves
lll Sports
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
o s' go to w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m
Placea photo in your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. t777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracythefirst day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reservesthe right to accept or reject any adat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 253
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Misc. l t e ms
Misc. Items
Snow Removal Equipment
Fuel & Wood
Sales Redmond Area
Irrigation Equipment
Pre-moving Sale! Fri. The Bulletin Offers WANTED: Snow blower JUNIPER - split, dry, 39 links of 3" handline FreePrivate Party Ads tire chains, size 13x4. ready to burn, $t 85/cord, 10-6, Sat. 9-1, Sun. 1-5, plus extra heads, ris• 3 lines - 3 days deliyered. Honest cords. 3138 SW Glacier Ave. Call 54t -408-0846 ers, plugs, elbows, Computer, entertainment • Private Party Only Fast, friendly service. etc. $2000. Madras, 265 • Total of items adverCall Dan, 541-4t 0-6792 ctr, qn bed, living rm set. 541-475-3321 tised must equal $200 Building Materials 780-ft x 4" wheel line or Less Pine at JuniperSplit Get your pipe with 4-ft wheels & FOR DETAILS or to Bend Habitat 308 mover, stt60. 40 each business RESTORE PLACE AN AD, Farm Equipment PROMPT DELIVERY 3"x40-ft hand line pipe, Call 541-385-5809 Building Supply Resale 541-3s9-9663 8 Machinery $20 each if you take all. Quality at LOW Fax 541 -385-5802 $35 each a Row l N G (4) 5'x12' horse panels, ick-through PRICES rineville, 541-419-9486. Wanted- paying cash 740 NE 1st Seasoned Juniper $75/ea. Assorted wafor Hi-fi audio & stu541-312-6709 $1 50/ cord rounds; with an ad in 358 ter and feed tubs, call dio equip. Mclntosh, Open to the public. st 70/ cord split. The Bulletin's for prices. Farmers Column JBL, Marantz, D yDelivered in Central 541-923-9758 266 "Call A Service naco, Heathkit, SanOR, since 1970! Call Storage Buildings sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Heating & Stoves eves, 541-420-4379 Professional" N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 10X20 for protecting hay, Call 54t-26t-t808 swather, t 4' header Directory livestock etc. NOTICE TO 269 with conditioner, cab firewood, Where can you find a $t496 Installed. ADVERTISER heat/A/C, 1300 orig. (other Gardening Supplies sizes available) 292 Since September 29, helping hand? hrs. $29,000 obo. & Equipment 541-617-1133. t99t, advertising for t486 International, cab Sales Other Areas From contractors to CCB ¹f 73684 used woodstoves has heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 kfjbuilders@ykwc.net yard care, it's all here been limited to modBarkTurfSoil.com Construction materials Pto, 3 sets remotes, els which have been in The Bulletin's stovepipe, Jeep tires, nice tractor. $t8,000. (PNDC) The Bulletin 375 Computers Serv~ngCentral Oregon since saes certified by the Orclothes, Thurs thru Sat. 541-4I 9-3253 "Call A Service PROMPT DELIVERY Meat & Animal Processing 9-5, Sun. 12-4. 68885 Buying Diamonds egon Department of 542-389-9663 316 18e Compaq monitor, like Environmental QualHurtley Ranch Rd. /Gofd for Cash H P ph o to smart C-3150Professional" Directory Irrigation Equipment Little Bit of Texas Saunew, not flatscreen, $10. Saxon's Fine Jewelers p r int/scan/copier, $20 ity (DEQ) and the fedWedding gown by Al- eral MOVING SALE Sat& sage, 8 links to 1s/a-lb. 541-548-6642 E n v ironmental Greenhouse, Shelter 54t -389-6655 541-280-1797 fred Angelo, sze 8, pkg, $t0; 3 or more pkgs, 1/4 mile wheel line, Protection A g e ncy Logic 10'x20'xS', still in Sun. 10-4, lots of great T HE B ULLETIN r e - BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS stuff!69480 Crooked © $8 ea. 830-822-3945 $30. 541-410-3029 7-ft wheels, $4950. (EPA) as having met box, $300. 830-822-3945 We deliver in Bend! quires computer adHorseshoe, Sisters 541 389 8963 smoke emission stan(in Bend) Natural gas Ruud 261 vertisers with multiple Search the area's most dards. A cer t ified tankless water ad schedules or those comprehensive listing of Medical Equipment w oodstove may b e heater, brand new! For newspaper selling multiple sys- classified advertising... identified by its certifi199 Btu, $t 800. real estate to automotive, delivery, call the temsl software, to discation label, which is Also brand new 80 merchandise to sporting Falcon 4-w h eel Circulation Dept. at close the name of the permanently attached gal. electric water 541-385-5800 power scooter with business or the term goods. Bulletin Classifieds to the stove. The Bulheater, $500. "dealer" in their ads. appear every day in the accessories, gently To place an ad, call letin will not knowIn Sunriver area. print or on line. used, in mint condi541-385-5809 Private party advertisingly accept advertis530-938-3003 tion. $400. Call or email ers are defined as Call 541-385-5809 ing for the sale of cleeeified@bendbulletin.oom 5 41-389-1821 f o r those who sell one www.bendbulletin.com uncertified details. computer. woodstoves. YOUR The Bulletin "REDUCE Serving Centrel Oregon sincel%8 serving central oreeansince nas CABLE BILL! Get an 267 Need to get an All-Digital Sa t e llite Fuel & Wood BUYING ad in ASAP? 270 system installed for Lionel/American Flyer FREE and programYou can place it Lost & Found trains, accessories. m ing s t arting a t 54t -408-2t 91. WHEN BUYING online at: $ 24.99/mo. FRE E Found black coat, looks s FIREWOOD... www.bendbulletin.com BUYING a SE LLING HD/DVR upgrade for brand new, Matson trail Flatscreen MagniTo avoid fraud, new callers, SO CALL head on Cline Falls Hwy All gold jewelry, silver tier Optlec ClearThe Bulletin 541 -385-5809 3/11. Call 541-815-2079 and gold coins, bars, NOW (877)366-4508. view+ viewer, magrecommends payrounds, wedding sets, (PNDC) nifier for reading, ment for Firewood Found Cat, black Ik white class rings, sterling sil256 writing and viewing only upon delivery Tuxedo look, male? Near ver, coin collect, vin- Reduce Your Past Tax for those who have Photography and inspection. Gosney & Rickard tage watches, dental Bill by as much as 75 vision loss. $900 • A cord is 128 cu. ft. Roads. 541-318-6030 gold. Bill Fl e ming, Percent. Stop Levies, obo. (otheritems Minolta QTSI Maxxum 541-382-9419. 4' x 4' x 8' Liens and Wage Garcamera, includes 100listed previously Lost Cat 3/2, big black Ik • Receipts should nishments. Call The 300mm zoom lens + filhavebeen so/d) white 'Sylvester', no colinclude name, Tax DR Now to see if ters & c a se , $ t 95. Cemetery space: al .re4.-4 • In Bend, call lar, OB R i ley/Sawyer phone, price and Qualify 1 Yashica Microtec Zoom I double depth inter- ~ you 541-480-5162 Park area, Sadly missed. ~ kind of wood 1-800-791-2099. 90 camera & case, like ment grave space Call 541-480-2700 purchased. (PNDC) new, $20. 541-383-1629 with outer b u rial • Firewood ads ~ container built in, L OST he a ring a i d Full size power MUST include 257 J located in Meadowsomewhere in RedCheck out the adjustable bed species & cost per park area of Desmond on 3/10. ReMusical Instruments classifieds online w/memory foam cord to better serve ( chutes M e morial www.bendbuttetin.com mattress, ward if f ound. Call $800. Porour customers. ~ Gardens, $900. Call 54t -788-2662. table wheelchair, Updated daily 5 41-389-1S21 f o r 4 leg walker, The Bulletin Lost Jack Russell Terrier, Sarvine Central Orveen sinceSaet Quadri-Poise cane, fem, black, white, gray bathroom assist face, blue collar, last chair, all for $200. Call The Bulletin At Guaranteed Income For seen 3/7, 23rd/Hemlock Call 541-526-5737 Your Ret i rement. 541-385-5809 Redmond. 541-420-5557 Beautiful Lowrey Avoid market risk 8 Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Adventurer II Organ get guaranteed inAt: www.bendbulletin.com Absolutely perfect come in retirement! Call a Pro Sunvision Pro CALL for FREE copy 28LX Tanning Bed condition, not a 1 Cord dry, split Juniper, Whether you need a REMEMBER: If you scratch on it, about of our SAFE MONEY St 90/cord. Multi-cordHas only 300 hours, have lost an animal, fence fixed, hedges 4-feet wide, does GUIDE Plus Annuity discounts, & s/a cords (lamps have average don't forget to check available. Immediate everything! Includes Quotes from A-Rated life of 800-t 000 hours trimmed or a house Wl s an~~ The Humane Society delivery! 541-408-6193 Companies! a nice bench, too. of effective tanning built, you'll find Bend =.:- The BII!jetm 800-908-7035. usage). 1 owner, $1600 obo. 541-382-3537 professional help in Aff year Dependable (PNDC) great condition, 541-385-5685 s neves dn Firewood: Seasoned; Redmond includes manual, The Bulletin's "Call a 54'I -923-0882 Lodgepole 1 for $195 WHAT svwsv.bendtsulletin.com goggles & head A DIFFERENCE Findexactlywhat Service Professional" or 2 for $365. Cedar, Prhe ille Piano 6 bench lester nnz n' A DECADE MAKES pillow. $900. 541-447-7178; Spinet, che r rywood, you are looking for in the split, del. Bend: 1 for to PlaCean all, Call 5414854808 Directory Ca/I to see! f9708 USA made $450 st75 or 2 for $325. or craft oats 541-385-9318 in Bend 544 -385-5809 541-508-t 749 541-420-3484. 541-389-8420. DISH T V Ret a iler.Advertise VACATION How to avoid scam Starting at SPECIALS to 3 miland fraud attempts $t9.99/month (for 12 lion Pacific N o rth- YBe aware of internamos.) 8 High Speed westerners! 29 daily tional fraud. Deal loI nternet starting a t newspapers, six whenever posst4.95/month (where states. 25-word clas- cally available.) SAVE! Ask sified $540 for a 3-day s/sible. Watch for buyers About SAME DAY In- a d. Ca l l (916) who offer more than v is i t stallation! CALL Now! 2 88-60t 9 o r asking price and I -800-308-1 563 www.pnna.com for the your ask to have (PNDC) Pacific Nor t hwest who wired or Daily Con n ection. money handed back to them. REDUCE YOUR (PNDC) Fake cashier checks CABLE BILL!* Get a and money orders whole-home Satellite 260 are common. system installed at Misc. Items V'Never give out perNO COST and proramming starting at Auto Accident Attorney sonal financial information. 1 9.99/mo. FRE E IN AN av'Trust your instincts HD/DVR Upgrade to INJURED AUTO A CCIDENT? new callers, SO CALL Call InjuryFone for a and be wary of NOW using an free case evaluation. someone I -866-984-85t 5. escrow service or Never a cost to you. agent to pick up your (PNDC) Don't wait, call now! merchandise. 1-800-539-99I 3. 255
The Bullein
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THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 0
Employment Opportunities
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Add your web address HOTEURESORT OUTSIDE SALES to your ad and readThe Riverhouseis Work f ro m h o m e. seeking an experienced ers on The Builetin's Make y o u r own Front Office Manager. schedule. C o mmisweb site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be Qualified applicants will sion Based Program. haye previous mana- S elf-Starter, Mot i able to click through 476 automatically to your gerial experience in vated, Experience in mentoring employees, Advertising Sales a website. Employment forecasting / revenue plus. Send Resumes Opportunities m anagement, a n d to cecelia@cnpa.com Good classified ads tell prioritizing/managing the essential facts in an or fax 916-288-2003. multiple tasks e ffiinteresting Manner.Write o p h on e ca l l s CAUTION: ciently. C o m puter, N from the readers view not please! Ads published in multi-line phone systhe seller's. Convert the "Employment O p tem, and o rganizaporrunities" include facts into benefits. Show tional skills are reTake care of employee and inde- the reader how the item will quired. E x e mplary help them insomeway. your investments pendent positions. customer service skill Ads for p o sitions This is a must. Must be with the help from that require a fee or advertisingtip able to work a varied The Bulletin's upfront investment schedule. Medical inbrought toyouby must be stated. With surance, va c ation "Call A Service ay, and use of the any independentjob The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregonsince tglta iverhouse facilities Professional" Directory opportunity, please including FREE i nvestigate tho r GOLF. Come work for oughly. Use extra EMPLOYMENT Bend's finest! Bring ProgrammerAnalyst caution when ap- Now taking applications! resume and complete High Desert ESD is plying for jobs onA newBehavioral application in person hiring a Programmer line and never proHealth Centeris at The Riverhouse, A nalyst within o u r vide personal inforopening in the Bend/ 3 075 N H w y 97 , Technology Departmation to any source La Pine area. All posiend, OR. Or y o u ment. 4 0 hrs / wk, you may not have tions available, including: B may apply and sub- Mon.-Fri., 250 days/ researched and • Counseling Staff mit your resume/cover year. $78,000/yr. Paid deemed to be repu- • Dietary letter online at: leave, full b enefits. table. Use extreme • Housekeeping www.riverhouse.com For details & applicac aution when r e - • Maintenance Pre-employment drug tion: www.hdesd.org s ponding to A N Y • Support staff screenisrequired. online employment • Clencal ad from out-of-state. Competitive benefits and Housekeeper - Private FIND YOURFUTURE wages. Please email We suggest you call cleaning team HOME INTHE BULLETIN the State of Oregon your letter of interest and homes member needed, week Your future is just apage resume to Consumer H otline Emil @kleancenter.com days only. No week- away. at 1-503-378-4320 Whetheryou're looking ends, eves or holidays. forahatoraplacetohangit, For Equal Opportu541-815-0015 nity Laws contact The Bulletin Classified is Just too many Oregon Bureau of your best source. Driver Labor & I n dustry, collectibles? Every daythousandsof REGIONAL & OTR Civil Rights Division, buyers andsellers of goods RUNS 971-673- 0764. Sell them in * WEEKLY PAY* and services dobusinessin these pages.They know The Bulktin The Bulletin Classifieds - Regional 8 OTR Positions you can't beatThe Bulletin 541-385-5809 - 2013/2014 Equipment Classified Section for 541-385-5809 - Health Ins/401k Match selection andconvenience - No-Touch Freight - every item isjust a phone - Direct Deposit 8 Pd. call away. NURSING Vacations The Classified Section is ~ylAN Rl Vg easy to use. Everyitem is categorizedandevery cartegory is indexedonthe tgg4 Slnoe HEALTH PLANS section's frontpage. Whether youarelooking for Mana er- Utilization Mana ement Bend TRANSPORT a home orneeda service, Manage the day-to-day functions, including Class A CDL w/1 yr your future is inthe pagesof supervision of utilization-related staff and inteOTR exp. The Bulletin Classified. grally involved in program development and Food Grade Tanker implementation. If you have 7 years clinical 888-895-1275 The Bulletin experience and a minimum of 3 years direct ServingCentral Oregonsince igtg health plan experience in case management, www.indianrivertransport.com utilization management, or disease management this may be the opportunity for you! Prior instructors - Part-time supervisory experience is required. Excellent benefit package! OSU-Cascades, in Bend, is recruiting part-time instructors in the disciplines of Sociology, Nurse Case Mana er Bend Psychology,Biology,and Spanish to teach on If you have a broad clinical background and a term by term basis in the 2014/2015 would like to enhance patients' quality of life academic year. T h ese a r e fi x ed-term and maximize health plan benefits, this posiappointments w/renewal at the discretion of tion may be the opportunity for you! Pacificthe Dean. Salary is c ommensurate with Source Health Plans is seeking an RN to join education and experience. our team as Nurse Case Manager. The ideal candidate will have a current Oregon RN liRequired qualifications: MS, MA, Ph.D. or cense and five years nursing experience with Terminal degree in discipline or closely varied medical exposure and experience. related field and evident commitment to Case management, utilization, and/or health cultural diversity & ed u cational equity. plan experience preferred. Preferred qualifications include teaching experience at the college or university level. Review the full job descriptions and complete Applications should be received by 04/30/14. the online application at To review posting and apply, go to website: www.pacificsource.com/careers. h ttp://oregonstate.edu/jobs a nd revi e w posting number 0010921. EOE OSU is an AA/EOE. Event Coordinator / Sales & fI/farketing
Paci ficSource
Juniper GolfCourse, in Redmond, isseeking a Event Coordinator / Sales and Marketing person. Candidate must have 3 years experience in sales and marketing. Must be able to prepare event contracts, facility tours, meetings with clients, event management with emphasis on effective operations, controls, communication, team management and financial reporting for banquet and restaurant operations with a hands-on style. This role demands a dynamic, polished leader that fosters relationships, interacts at the highest levels of the community, and has the ability to represent Juniper Golf Course with the utmost standards of service, integrity and professionalism. Candidate must also have general computer knowledge. (Word, Excel, Outlook, & POS Systems). We are a Drug Free Workplaces. Applicant will be required to pass a pre-employment background check and drug screen. EOE Please email resume to: sbratcher@playiuniper.com or mail to: Juniper GolfCourseEvent Coordinator/Sales 1938Syr Elkhorn Ave., Redmond,OR 97756 Clerical/Office We are looking for a full-time employee that is resourceful and self-motivated to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred.
Organization, flexibility and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. Ability to work for long periods of time doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.
To apply, please send a resume to: Box 20473443, c/o The Bulletin, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 EOE
Auto Renew Coordinator
Immediate opening in the Circulation department for a full time Auto Renew Coordinator. Job duties primarily encompass the processing of all subscriber Auto Renew payments through accounting software, data entry of new credit card or bank draft information, and resolution with customers of declined Auto Renew payments, as well as, generating subscriber renewals and refunds. Other tasks include entering employee subscription adjustments, transferring funds from subscriber accounts for single copy purchases, dispatching of all promotional items associated with new subscriptions and upgrades, as well as tracking/ordering Circulation office supplies. Responsibilities also include month end billing, invoicing and collections for Buffalo Distribution and back up to the CSR and billing staff. Ability to perform all these tasks accurately and with attention to deadlines is a must. Work shift hours are Monday through Friday 8:00 AM to5:00 PM. Please send resume to: ahusted@bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Serving Centra/ Oregon since tggg
EOE/Drug free workplace
General
Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities
Systems Administrator — Clerk's Office $4,146.00 to $4,564.00 mo.— DOQ OR Network Assistant II — Clerk's Office $3,546.00 to $4,276.00 - DOQ Second Review of Applications March 26th, 2014
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.jefferson.or.us; click on Human Resources,then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to:
JeffersonCounty Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCountyis an Equal Employment
CustomerService & Marketing Assistant Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing, dba Fuel Safe Systems is looking for an experienced customer service representative. This position works closely with our sales staff in handling customer calls, order processing and follow up, as well as coordination of marketing advertisements. Re uired ualifications include: • Excellent service aptitude • Excellent communication skills, both written and verbal • Computer skills: Keyboard, Word, Excel, Outlook • High level of organization and time manage ment • Attentive to details • Proven work history in a similar capacity • Desktop publishing experience • Experience in internet marketing / e-commerce Work location is Redmond, Oregon. Hours are 7:00 a.m. — 4:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. Benefit package includes group health insurance, generous vacation and paid leave, Flex. Spending account, and 401 (k) plan.
Pre-employment drug screen required. EOE. Qualified candidates are invited to send your resume to HR ©fuelsafe.com.
Midoregon CreditUnion Controller Mid Oregon Credit Union is looking for a Controller to supervise all credit union accounting functions. The successful candidate will analyze statistics, prepare financial reports, ensure accuracyand compliance, conduct and document complex financial analysis projects and supervise staff. Position requires thorough knowledge of accounting principles and the general ledgersystem. Accounting degree preferred. Must be PC-proficient in a Windows environment. Excellent benefits package and competitive salary. V i s i t our web site at www.midoregon.com for more details.
Please send resume and cover letter to: NfidOregon FCU Attn: HumanResources P.O. Box6749, Bend, OR 97708
F 0 Resort Maintenance Tech Wanted O General maintenance of interior/exterior of D
RESORT
Black Butte Ranch el e' e * c*oe'
Current
Seasonal Openings: Food& Beverage• Robert's Pub Supervisor • AM/PM Line Cooks • Servers/Bartenders • AM/PM Dishwashers • Host/Hostess • Bussers • Catering Servers/ Facility set up staff • Barista/Espresso Staff (Ali F & B positions require prior Hospitality exper.) Golf• Greens Keepers • Assistant Mechanic Recreation• Life Guards • Activity Leaders
R I P A
H O L Y W B H O R L A Y I I Z E T P Y S U B E A R E L I N E I L B H O M U R O M N O T B E S O S Y H R I M E R D E R E E N S
buildings, 2 years experience r e q uired, knowledge in pool/spa A m aintenance. Fu l l time position. Must P have valid ODL and B insurable. Must have own hand tools. Must S be drug free and a team player.
D Housekeepers A Wanted Part-time only, includes N weekends and holidays. Must be drug T free, a team player, E and detail oriented. Must have own transportation.
Call 541-593-2024 for
applicationprocess. Sheet Metal Workers Apprenticeship
Employment Opportunitiesin CentralOregon Pick up application packet at Cascade Heating,
A R G O T
E L H I
S H E S
E L I T I S T E D S R I A L T O
N E A R A S P P E T A A S U E T P E E T R R T E O U S C A S K B A
1507 NE 1st St.
• Bike/Equipment Techs
Spa• Nail Techs • Licensed Massage Therapists Visit our website & apply online at
wttww.BlackBuitenanch.com
or Contact Human Resources at (541) 595-1523.
Black Butte Ranch is a Drug-free work place. EOE
Where buyers meet sellers
Need to be High School grad with 1 year of High School or college equiyalent Algebra with a C or better, or COCC placement test. For info or directions call 541-279-1543
Minorities and females are urged to apply
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: s1 0 -3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
T A P E R I E N D D Y C S M I A N Z Y Y D C E R G E T B I R N A
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G E T S O U T
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L A R Y N X E S
E R I T U
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M Y E Y E
O L S E N
N O O S E
L I T
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H A T E
O D O R
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D E N S
E R I E
R E A D
A T M
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@ Olney, Bend, OR Ililarch 10-21 from 9-4 weekdays.
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one man's trash".
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Classifjeds Thousands of sdsdaily in print snd online. •
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NOW HIRING!! orthwest ontracting Inc.
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476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
SOCIAL SERVICES
TELEFUNDRAISING
CRISIS RESPONSE TEAM MEMBER
Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels, •Defeat Diabetes Foundation, •Veterans (OPVA).
OPENING DATE: March 11, 2014 CLOSING DATE: March 21, 2014 11:59 PM
Seniors anda/i others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30-8:30 p.m. $9.10/hour.
Position will provide community based assessment and crisis intervention on the phone and face to face, in a variety Call 541-382-8672 of settings, and provide hospital liaison/ c oordination a n d Look at: pre-commitment inBendhomes.com v estigations. R e sponse area for this for Complete Listings of position is C r ook Area Real Estate for Sale County and D eschutes County. For more information, go to toen .os ~ click "About Us", chasing products or I Employment. services from out of • l the area. Sending Send resume to: c ash, checks, o r Resume - LCSNW, l credit i n f ormation 365 NE Court St., Prineville, OR 97756 • may be subjected to I FRAUD. Fax: 541-447-6694 For more informaEmail: crooktion about an advercount ©Icsnw.or
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3420 E. Century Ave., Bismarck, ND TURN THE PAGE
For More Ads The Bulletin
l l l I l l tiser, you may call l the Oregon State I Attorney General'sl s Office C o n s umer s l Protection hotline atl I 1-877-877-9392. I
LT
XES C
z DESCHUTES COUNTY
ene > s Include: P o sitions Available: • Health • Dental • Paid Vacation • Competitive Pay • Year Round Work • 0 + Hours/Week
• Laborers • Carpenters/Framers • Concrete Finishers • Foreman/ Superintendent • Steel Erectors
Apply online at www.northwestcontracting.com Or send resume to: jobs@northwestcontracting.com
Central Oregon Community College has openings listed below. Go to https:/ffobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.
Director of Library Services Provide administrative direction in planning, implementing, and supervising Library programs. Allocates staffing, financials, and resources to a chieve accreditation standards. Masters + 5 - y r s e x p . r e q . $65,224-$77,646/yr. Closes Mar 17. ENfr Practical ExamTest Proctor Seeking test proctor for EMT testing stations, during National Registry EMT practical exam. Test date is April 12. Current CPR+ EMT Certifications req. $20/hr. Temporary, non-benefited position. AssistantDirector, Recruitment and Outreach Provide oversight to on-and-off campus recruiting events. Identify and implement recruiting strategies, student communications, and outreach programs. Bach+ 2yr. exp. req. $45,376-$54,018/yr. Closes Mar 19. Financial Aid Veterans Certification Specialist Serve as certifying official for veterans' education benefits. Act as resource to students, community, faculty and staff for financial aid related needs.Assoc+ 1-yr.exp.req.$2,440-$2,905/mo. Closes Mar 23.
Assistant Professor 1of Non-Destructive Testing and Inspection (TenureTrack) Provide instruction in the Non-Destructive Testing and Inspection (NDTI) program at the Manufacturing and Applied Technology Center (MATC) in Redmond. Provide small group discussion, lectures, hands-on demonstration, student advising and assistance. 10-yrs NDTI exp. + 5-yrs using NDTI techniques req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Open Until Filled. Assistant Professor 1of Veterinary Education DI/M (Tenure Track) Provide instruction to students in Veterinary Technician training. Place and supervise clinical practicum, provide student advising and evaluate student development. Doctor of Veterinary Medicine degree + 3-yrs exp. as Licensed Veterinarian. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Closes Mar 21. Assistant Professor 1 of Veterinary Education CVT (Tenure Track) Provide instruction to students in Veterinary Technician training. Place and supervise clinical practicum, provide student advising and evaluate student development. AAS in Veterinary Technology or Veterinary Technician degree + 3 -yrs exp. as Certified Veterinary Technician. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Closes Mar 21. Assistant Professor 1 of Anthropology Provide instruction in all four fields of Anthropology. Provide advising, curriculum development, and participate in projects. Masters + 1-yr. college level teaching exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Closes Mar 21.
Assistant Professor 1of Pharmacy Technician Education (Tenure Track) Provide instruction, curriculum development and program leadership to the Pharmacy Technician Training Program. Maintain course planning, budget, scheduling, and supervision to program. Assoc/Bach's + 3-yrs Pharmacist or Pharmacy Tech exp. req. $41,449-$46,309 for 9mo. contract. Closes Mar 24 Part Time Instructor New! Chemistry,French, and Fire Ecology Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $525 per load unit (1 LU= 1 class credit), with additional perks.
CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ADMINISTRATIVEANALYST, Sherlff's Office (201400027). Full-time position. Deadline: MONDAY,
II3117fl4. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST I, ACT, Employment Specialist, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00026). Full-time, limited duration, grant funded position. Deadline:SUNDA Y, O3/23/14. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Bipolar Disorders, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00029). Full-time, limited duration, grant funded position. Deadline:THURSD AY, N/27fl4. BENEFITS COORD INATOR, Personnel Dept. (201400028). Full-time position. Deadline: SUNDAY, 03II23114. BUILDING SAFEN INSPECTOR II, Community Development Dept. (2014-00024). Full-time position. Deadline:THURSD AY, N/20114. PAROLE 5 PROBATIONSUPERVISOR, Community Justice, Adult Division (2014-00033). Full-time, ongoing, grant funded position. Deadline:SUNDAY, 03II23114. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER —Adult Treatment Program,Behavioral Health Division (201400001). Will consider any full or part-time equivalent. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. liUALIN IMPROVEMENTSPECIALIST, Behavioral Health Division (2014-00022). Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDA Y, 03/16/14. RESERVE DEPUN SHERIFF - Sheriff's Office (201300013). On-call positions. Deadline:THIS IS All OllGOINGRECRUITMENT.
COMINGSOON: BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST I, Behavioral Health Division BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST II, Behavioral Health Division BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST III, Behavioral Health Division DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TOAPPLY FOR THEABOVE LISTEDPOSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT tgtNLileschutes.org/jobs. All candidates
will receive an email response regarding their application statusafter the recruitment hasclosed and applicationshavebeenreviewed. Notifications to candidatesaresent yia email only. If you need assistance, pleasecontact the Deschutes County PersonnelDept., 1300NWWall Street, Suite201, Bend, OR97701(541j 617-4722. Deschutes County encouragesqualified persons with disabilities to participate in its programs and activities. To request information in an alternate format, pleasecall (541j 617-4747, fax to (541385-3202 j or sendemail to accessibility© deschutes.org. EQUALOPPORTUNITYEIHPLOYER WOmen,minOritieS, anil the Iligableil are
encourageil toapply.
G4 SUNDAY MARCH 16 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 860
746
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5 l3z@zm
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Northwest Bend Homes
BSKIRXlj(-'-)
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Awbrey Road - 3/2 on a huge 12,00 sq. ft. Iot, private, quiet, convenient, $398,000 Call Glenn Oseland, Principal Broker, (541) 350-7829 Holiday Realty
604
Loans & Mortgages
Storage Rentals
Open Houses
For rent, 8'x20' container in secure facility. Dry, clean, only $90/mo. Call 9th Street RV Storage Center, 541-420-6851.
Open 12-3 1472 NW Portland Ave.
WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
605
Roommate Wanted
Your own room & bath, bckgrnd check req. $360 + electric. 541-280-7722
Snowmobiles
Southeast Bend Homes
n
Say wgoodbuy
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
850
749
Remodeled Home West Side View Lauri Miller, Broker 541-480-8958
thegarnergroup •
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6613634360
wwwtiwgomorgroop.com
Arctic Cat 580 1994, EXT, in good Nottingham Square 1300 condition, $1000. sq ft nicely updated 3/2, backs to canal, 2 car gar. Located in La Pine. 20747 Canterbury, FSBO, Call 541-408-6149. $210,000. 541-390-1579
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.
$17,000
541-548-4807
860
Garage Sales Garage Sales Garage Sales
Motorcycles & Accessories
HONDA XR650L 2002
Nice bike, $2900. 541-480-4744.
Find them
in The Bulletin Classifieds
Moto r homes
880
Motorhomes
HDFatBo 1996
ppp p 528
880
870
FXSTD Harley Davidson 2001,twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500 OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
18'Maxum skiboat,2000, Fleetwood Discovery inboard motor, great 40' 2003, diesel, w/all cond, well maintained, options - 3 slide outs, $8995obo. 541-350-7755 satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. ds published in the Wintered in h eated "Boats" classification shop. $84,900 O.B.O. include: Speed, fish541-447-8664 ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
he Bulletin
Forest River Sunseeker Class C,24-ft - Double bed, roomy bath/shower, 875 lots storage, oak wood, Watercraft dining area slide-out w/ new awning. Micro, air, ds published in eWa new flat screen TV & RV tercraft" include: Kay batt. On-board gen/low aks, rafts and motor hrs, arctic pkg, full cover. Ized personal Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, watercrafts. Fo tow pkg, leather seats, no "boats" please se smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 lass 870. $31,500. Serwn Cenfral Ore on since 1903
Monaco Lapalma,
2002, 34'10w - Work-
horse 8.11 Less than 18,000 mi, 5.5 Onan
gen., 2 slides, 4 dr. refrig w/icemaker, micro/convection oven, water purifier, hydraulic jacks, power pilot seat+ more options. Exceptionally clean. $59,900/make offer. 541-504-1008
G K E AT
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National RV
Tropical, 1997,
35-ft, Chevy Vortec engine, new tires, new awnings, 12-ft slide-out, queen bed, Italian leather couch and recliner, excellent condition. Ready to travel„ towing hitch included. $19,900. 541-815-4811
BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party 5 41-385-580 9 541 -385-5809 Want to impress the will loan on real esTriumph Daytona tate equity. Credit, no relatives? Remodel 632 541-419-6176 762 41-385-5809 2004, 15K m i l es, problem, good equity Apt JMultiplex General your home with the Homes with Acreage perfect bike, needs is all you need. Call nothing. Vin Oregon Land Mort- Small studio downtown help of a professional from The Bulletin's 5780 NW 66th Lane ¹201536. gage 541-388-4200. area, $495 mo., $475 "Call A Service Redmond. 4 bdrm on 5 880 $4995 dep. No pets/smking. acres, 40x50 shop, LOCAL MONEY:We buy Professional" Directory Dream Car Motorhomes All util. paid. 541-330fenced, borders BLM. secured trust deeds & Auto Sales $289,000. 541-815-1216 note,some hard money 9769, 541-480- 7870 1801Division, Bend Gulfstream S u nloans. Call Pat Kelley What are you Best Motor Home 634 DreamCarsBend.com Open 12-3 771 sport 30' Class A 541-382-3099 ext. t 8. 541-678-0240 Selection In C.O.! AptJMultiplex NE Bend 61117 Snowbrush looking for? 1988 new f r idge, Lots Over 40 New & Dlr 3665 Dr. S TRUGGLING W I T H TV, solar panel, new You'll find it in Pre-Owned To Navion RV 2008, River Canyon Call for Specials! refrigerator, 4000W Y OUR M O R T G AG E Central Oregon, PrinevChoose From! Sprinter chassis 25'. Estates and worried about Limited numbers avail. The Bulletin Classifieds generator, w h eelille. Grandfathered-in On the spot financMercedes Benz diesel, Formal Living, Dining 1, 2 & 3 bdrms chair lift avail. Good foreclosure? Reduce one acre building sites ing, low monthly 24,000 miles, pristine John Anderson, w/d hookups, your mortgage & save cond. $11,500 obo on paved dead end payments. cond., quality throughBroker patios or decks. 541-385-5809 541-447-5504 money. Legal loan road. Ideal summer Over 350 RVs in out, rear slide-out w/ 541-420-8855 Mountain Glen modification services. retreats for snowbirds Inventory! queen bed, deluxe 541-383-9313 Free co n s ultation. or year round living. Best Selection! captain swivel front Call Preferred Law Professionally managed by Harley Davidson 2009 Power & water, wildBest Value! seats, diesel generator, Norris & Stevens, Inc. TiCk, TOCk 1-800-335-6592. Glide Custom, V ictory TC 9 2 ci life. Near to mtns, riv- Super Visit us online at awning, no pets/ Stage 1 Screaming (PNDC) 2002, runs great, I no smoking 654 ers & lakes. 6 miles to www.bigcrv.com TiCk, TOCk... Eagle performance, 40K rn., Stage 1 new hospital & shopBend: 541-330-2495 $75,500. Houses for Rent too many options to 573 thegarnergraup Performance Kit, ...don't let time get 541-382-2430 ping. $34,500. Terms. Redmond: list, $8900. • R I a m w ccc • SE Bend Business Opportunities For sale by owner. 541-548-5254 n ew tires, r e a r 541-388-8939 away. Hire a 6113634360 541-350-4077 brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. wwwthegamorgroup.com professional out Need to get an ad WARNING The Bulletin N ewer 4 b d r m S E , 541-771-0665 recommends that you master main l evel, 775 of The Bulletin's in ASAP? i nvestigate ever y 2100 SF, large yard, Manufactured/ "Call A Service n i ce. $ 1 595. 870 phase of investment very Open 12-3 Mobile Homes opportunities, espe- 541-480-9200 Boats & Accessories Professional" Fax it to 541-322-7253 8 Tournament Ln. c ially t h ose f r o m The Bulletin 659 Directory today! Sunriver Resort FACTORY SPECIAL 12'1969 Sears alumiout-of-state or offered The Bulletin Classifieds To Subscribe call One-Owner Home New Home, 3 bdrm, Houses for Rent by a person doing num fishing boat, Suzanne Iselin, 541-385-5800 or go to $46,500 finished Sunriver business out of a loHarley Davidson low hours on new 8 on your site. Broker cal motel or hotel. In2011 Classic Limhp engine, with trailer www.bendbulletin.com 541-350-8617 J andtyl Homes vestment o f f e ringsVILLAGE PROPERTIES and extras. Good ited, Loaded! 9500 541-548-5511 must be r e gistered Sunriver, Three Rivers, miles, custom paint shape!$1600. La Pine. Great with the Oregon De"Broken Glass" by 541-382-2599 780 partment of Finance. Selection. Prices range Nicholas Del Drago, Mfd./Mobile Homes $425 $2000/mo. We suggest you connew condition, KOUNTRY AIRE • w t t View our full with Land Providence2005 sult your attorney or heated handgrips, 1994 37.5' motorFully loaded, 35,000 call CON S UMER inventory online at auto cruise control. home, with awning, thegarnergraup • R I w w w ccc • miles, 350 Cat, Very HOTLINE, Village-properties.com 3 bdrm, 2 bath mobile $32k in bike, Meet singles right now! and one slide-out, Dodge 1-866-931-1061 clean non-smoker 1-503-378-4320, 6413634360 home for sale or rent. only $20,000or best No paid o perators, Only 47k miles Brougham 1978, wwwthogamergroup.com 3 slides, side-by-side 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. Private, along COI caoffer. 541-318-6049 just real people like and good condition. 687 15', 1-ton, clean, refrigerator with ice nal. 541-389-2636 you. Browse greet$25,000. maker, Washer/Dryer, CLASSIFIED ADVERCommercial for 69,000 miles. ings, exchange mes541-548-0318 TISING! Reach Over Flat screen TV's, In sages and connect $4500. lphoto above is of a Rent/Lease motion satellite. 3 Mi l lio n Pa c ific live. Try it free. Call similar model & not the In La Pine, Northwesterners. now: 8 77-955-5505. call 541-602-6652 actual vehicle) $95,000 Your dream, our building! 541-480-2019 $540/25-word classi- Must see to appreciate. (PNDC) fied ad in 2 9 daily 2400 sq ft commercial/ newspapers for retail building on busy 3-days. Call the Pa- corner in Prineville. Large cific Northwest Daily open space with new Connection (916) cement floor & vehicle 2 88-6019 o r e m a il door. Separate office elizabeth©cnpa.com space with street access for more info. (PNDC) & large window. $725/mo Coll 54I-385-5809to promote your serviceeAdvertise for 28 doyg starting at 'l40 Iriris speciapackagei l snocavailable onoorwciwgc! + deposit (30¹ sq ft per EXTREME VALUE AD- mo). Call 406-350-0883 VERTISING! 29 Daily newspapers Building/Contracting Handyman LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care The Bulletin deliVerS yOurwHELP WANTED" ad to $540/25-word classi- Office/Retail Space fied 3-days. Reach 3 70,000 print readers and 20,000 online visitors a day. for Rent NOTICE: Oregon state million Pacific Northlaw requires anyone I DO THAT! COLLINS The Bulletin, local, hassle-free, worry-free advertising. westerners. For more Office space a v ail. who con t racts for information call (916) 300-500- sq. ft., priconstruction work to 288-6019 or e mail: vate bath and confer6 be licensed with the sERVINQ CENTRAL OREQON 3 e stnce 2003 elizabeth©cnpa.com Construction ContracAeration/llethatching ence room, all util. Restgtenttat & Commerclal for the Pacific North- paid. $300-$450 mo. tors Board (CCB). An Ask aboutFREE added west Daily Connec- + dep. C all Jim at active license Sprtnkler services with seasonal tion. (PNDC) means the contractor Handyman/Remodeli 541-480-4744 ng Activation/Repair contract! is bonded & insured. • Spring Clean-up Residential/Commercial Back Flow Testing Verify the contractor's And get $31 in ad upgrades for FREE! • Mowing 'Edging CCB l i c ense at Sznal/ Jobsro • Pruntggg eWeedeating MAINnlvAIVCE BASED ON A 2" AD SPACE www.hirealicensedEntire ROO>nRepnedelg Serving CentralOregon since 1903 • Feguugtng eHauung contractor.com • Thatch ai Aerate Carage Orgapiizalios • Grounds Keeping or call 503-378-4621. Home Igspecrion Repairs Home Delivery Advisor • Sprlnbg Clean up Ow4166gr groeNysgrwropggptigg The Bulletin recomFREE ESTIMATES Quality, Hcniesr Work • Weekly Mowlng mends checking with Callrrorptoscbedrrrgr The Bulletin Circulation Department is seeking 8 Edging the CCB prior to con- Oennis 54t.317.9768 a Home Delivery Advisor. This is a full-time j41-480P714 tracting with anyone. Ccgpl51573Bolrrtedllllwllw/ • Bi-Monthly & BONDED & IN URED position and consists of managing an adult Some other t rades Monthly Maintenance carrier force to ensure our customers receive also req u ire addi- People Look for Information superior service. Must be able to create and • Bark, Rock, Etc. tional licenses and perform strategic plans to meet department About Products and i certifications. 0 objectives such as increasing market share Services Every Daythrough LANDSCAPIWG and penetration. Ideal candidate will be a The Bulletin Classifisrfs • Landscape self-starter who can work both in the office Debris Removal Construction and in their assigned territory with minimal ERIC REEVE • Water Feature supervision. Early a.m. hours are necessary with company vehicle provided. S t r ong Installation/Maint. "It'S SimPle. The Bulletin iS eaSy to WOrk Wi t h, alWayS HANDY customer service skills and management skills • Pavers — Providingare necessary. Computer experience is 4 SERVICES. make good suggestions and the price for the ads are • Renovations Yard Maintenance required. You must pass a drug screening • Irrigations & Clean-up, and be able to be insured by company to drive All Home & decent. Circulation of your newspaper covers our Will Haul Away Installation vehicles. This is an entry-level position, but Commercial Repairs Mowing, Thatching, we believe in promoting from within, so area of interest in drawing good candidates for the Carpentry-Painting Plugging FREE~ Senior Discounts advancement within company is available to Honey Do's. & much more! positions we have open at the time." For Salvage tj!I Bonded and Insured the right person. If you enjoy dealing with Small or largejobs, Contact Allen, people from diverse backgrounds and you are Any Locatlon 541-8154458 no problem. energetic, have great organizational skills and Mike ThrooP, JefferSOnCOunty Human ReSOurCeS LCIN 8759 541-536-1294 ,@ Removal Senior Discount interpersonal communication skills, please 541-815-SN All work gusranteed. Alao Cleanupa send your resume to: i &a Cleancwts 541-389-3361 NOTICE: Oregon LandThe Bulletin 541-771-4463 scape Contractors Law c/o Kurt Muller General Curtis Seslar's (ORS 671) requires all PO Box 6020 Bonded - Insiaet Total Lawn Care CCIN149468 businesses that adBend, OR 97708-6020 Thatching & vertise t o p e r form Time forRedmond or e-mail resume to: area Construc- Aerating! kmuller©bendbulletin.com only: 541-279-1821 Landscapin~ard Care Landscape tion which includes: No phone calls, please. Domestic Services l anting, deck s , The Bulletinis a drug-free workplace. EOE ences, arbors, we're the local dog. we better be good. water-features, and in- Painting/Wall Covering , k$'$I$TiIHIG ' Zerreirgau/rtp stallation, repair of irrigation systems to be Bend Broadband has been a Local Company since Salesand Marketing Representative Za~<0e l icensed w it h th e - Inside Sales 1955. We believe in the power of ideas and creativity :-:ChWiacirgS a SergiOrgg' Landscape ContracMore Than Service ..6-'6: and foster this environment with our employees. at Horgge.'@j>. tors Board. This 4-digit Peace of Mind Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing and Fuel Safe number is to be inWe're all in it together and believe that teamwork and Ught housekeeping „ Systems is looking for an experienced sales cluded in all adverSpring CleanUp community among our employees only makes us pe otllel servlces. si.', and marketing professional. We are an ISO tisements which indiEuropean •Leaves '. ', Ucensed e sonded.'.. 9001 certified manufacturer of fuel containbetter for our customers. cate the business has •Cones ment systems for the motorsports, aerospace BBB Certflfegtf:. a bond,insurance and Professional •Needles and military industries. workers compensaA I to d a i f o n eo ft hefolloM/in isamatchfor ou .'~5'0~$'-75'6-3'54 •Debris Hauling Painter tion for their employ..;.,uxigtsd inaedmond Requirements for the position include: ees. For your protecWeed Free Bark Repaint Accounts Payable & Payroll Specialist tion call 503-378-5909 1+. 8 Flower Beds • Be recognized and appreciated for your careful attention to detail. Your • Excellent communication skills, both written or use our website: SPecialistl team will applaud when you notice things others don't and ask clarifying and verbal www.lcb.state.or.us to questions. Lawn Renovation • Sales and marketing experience of a Oregon Llcense check license status • Collaborate with others to make things happen and check things off the Aeration - Dethatching technical nature ¹186147 LLC before contracting with list. Overseed • Mechanical aptitude the business. Persons • Master a myriad of new systems and tools and train others as the exCompost • A passion for sales and the ability to identify doing land scape 541-815-2888 HOM% I$ WHKRK Top pert. Dressing and pursue new markets maintenance do not • Continue to grow your Accounting skills and learn from other smart require an LCB TH5 people like you. Landscape cense. Desired qualificationsinclude: Tree Services • Uncover opportunities where we can work more efficiently and drive out DIRT IS Maintenance cost and waste. • Bachelor's degree in engineering, business or Full or Partial Service marketing 9 YEARS •Mowing ~Edging • Interest in automotive racing and motorsports •Pruning wWeeding Senior Network Operations Technician EXPERIENCE IN • Ability to interpret CAD / mechanical drawings • Work at one of only a handful of Tier III data center centers on the West Sprinkler Adjustments HOUSEKEEPING. • Experience in internet marketing / Coast. That's 99.982% availability and highest level of security! e-commerce • Use your programming skills to automate processes that are currently References & rates Fertilizer included manual- be our hero! with monthly program Vtuummz LawN CAss to fit your needs. Work location is central Oregon. We offer • Work under a manager that empowers his team and is looking for you L6Noscgpe Mg,rNYgigrugcg competitive pay and an excellent benefits Call Julie & Hovana to lead your peers. Weekly, monthly package including group health insurance, • Get to play with new technology and gain experience within a or one time service. Weekly, Monthly or Mr. StumpBttster Today! 401K, flex spending account, paid vacation, "mission-critical" service provider environment. One-Time Service Professional Stump PTO and more. 541-728-1800 EXPERIENCED SpringClean-up & Tree Removal We'll klwwt or Beat any Commercial View full job descriptions and apply online at Dethatching/Aeration 541-410-0648 Pre-employment d r u g scr e e n and Writlwn Estimate! & Residential Mowing •Edging•Pruning non-competition agreement required. E.O.E. www.bendbroadband.com/careers • 24 Years experience Just bought a new boat? Fertilizing• DebrisRemoval • Insured Sell your old one in the Join a winning team! Submit your resume, with BendBroadband is an equal opportunity employer; applicants are conBark andMore! • Free Estimates Senior Discounts work history, cover l e tter a n d s a lary sidered for positions and evaluated without regard to race, color, religion, classifieds! Ask about our FREE ESTIMATES 541-2 I 3-9103 541-390-1466 Super Seller rates! requirements to hr©fuelsafe.com national origin, military or veteran's status, sex or sexual orientation. 541-981-8386 mrsgumpbusger.com Same Day Response 541-385-5809
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bendbroadband
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MARTIN JAMES
GOTSTUPS?
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 16 2014 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 880
881
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Motorhomes
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DONATE YOUR CARFAST FREE TOWING. 24 hr. Response Tax D eduction. UNITED BR E AST CANCER FOUNDATION. Providing Free Dodge Ram 2500 M ammograms & 2008 Diesel, Breast Cancer Info. excellent towing 888-592-7581. vehicle, 55,000 (PNDC) miles. New batter-
•
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, central vac, roof satellite, aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150
Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne. 541-548-5174
People Lookfor Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The BufiutiuCluuuifiuds
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Salem Cruise Lite 18', 2014 Only $10,999! Zero Down! $112 Per Month! $10,999, 0 Down, $112 per month, 132 months, 5.75% apr,
Tier One credit score, on approved credit.
Over 350 RVs in Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value! Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Winnebago Aspect
541-480-6900
WINNEBAGO BRAVE 2003 • 34D, 2 slides • Tires 80% • Just completely serviced • 39,000 miles • No trades • $48,000 firm 541-815-3150
Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121
sults! Call 385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 882 Fifth Wheels
Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 881
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Keystone Luredo31'
RV
20 06 w i th 1 2'
slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide through stora ge, E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking$18,600 541-447-4805
only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441
Fleetwood Wilderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500. 541-383-8270
15" rims, 94 Toyota 4x4 pickup, set of 4, $95.
Financing available.
$150,000
(located © Bend.) 541-288-3333
Laredo 30' 2009
overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C,table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com
pMt N! I nternational Fl a t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.
541-604-1285
541-508-1749
4 Michelin P225/45R-18 low p r o file ra d ials mounted on 5 spoke, 5
FORD F-1502010
932
Antique & Classic Autos 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
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1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored & Runs $9000. 541-389-8963
IFR equipped, new avionics, Garmin 750 touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. Exceptionally clean & economical! $13,500. Hangared in KBDN Call 541-728-0773
$28,000
Cadillac Eldorado, 1978
New brakes, tires, axles, needs paint & vinyl top. Very good condition. $2200 obo, cash. Call for full details! 541-678-5575
1974 Bellanca 1730A
541-419-3301
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
engine, power every-
Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2180 TT, 440 SMO, 2 slides, AC, recliners, 180 mph, excellent walk-around queen bed, condition, always sliding glass door closet, hangared, 1 owner new tub & 10-gal water for 35 years. $60K. heater, good tires. Brand new 20' screen room In Madras, available. Super clean, 1 owner, n o n-smokers. call 541-475-6302 $11,999. 541-447-7968
less than 25k mi., heated leather seats, Vin¹F01898 $41,944 ROBBERSON LIIICOLII ~
Lariat Supercrewcab! less than 53k miles heated seats Vin¹D04934 $32,977
541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com
ROBBERSON ~
935
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541.312.3986
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Best 5th Wheel Selection in C.O.!
Over 45 New & Preowned To Choose From! On the spot financing, low monthly payments. Over 350 RVs In Inventory! Best Selection! Best Value
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SUT a ut o 4 -spd. 6.0L V-8, less than 88k mi., 4x4, leather seats. VIN¹ 101123 $26,977 ROBBERSON LINCOLII ~
OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500 King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-419-0566
Call A Service Professional find the help you need.
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
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CHECKYOURAD
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to tact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5609 The Bulletin Classified
Need to get an ad in ASAP? Fax it te 541-322-7253 The Bulletin Classifieds
Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422, in La Pine ) ILL DELIVER RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 •
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541.312.3986
541.312.3986 DLR¹0205
DLR¹0205
Jeep Wrangler 2011 Unlimited Rubicon BMW X3
2 0 07, 99K
miles, premium packillllll age, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic mo o nroof, 2013 S u percrew- Bluetooth, ski bag, XeLeather trimmed non headlights, tan & cab! Iess than Sk seat, 4 spd auto, black leather interior, mi., 5.01 V8, 4WD. Vin¹611550 n ew front & r ear Vin¹E12866 $32,977 brakes @ 76K miles, $30,977 one owner, all records, ROBBERSON ~ very clean, $1 6,900. ROBBERSON~ 541-388-4360
541.312.3966
541.312.3986 DLR¹0205
DLR¹0205
Ford F250 Camper Special 1966, AT w/limited slip rear end. A few issues but runs good. Full steel rack w/drs. $1950 firm, cash. 541-420-01 56 Ford F-350 4x4,
BMW X3 2011 black on black, sport/prem packs leather 3.5i turbo, nav., 20k miles, 19" wheels, cold weather pkg, Xenons, warranteed to 9/2015.$38,000 One owner, 503-789-9401 (Portland)
Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sa hara 2 0 07, Automatic hard top t ow p k g . , all o y wheels, running boards. Vin ¹120477 $25,988
Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $6,500. 541-233-8944.
CHECKYOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and an error can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as s oon as w e c a n . Deadlines are: Weekdays 12:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. 12:00 for Monday. If we can assist you, please call us: 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Chevy Cr u ze LT Sedan 2012, 4 Cyl., Turbo, auto, F WD, running lights, alloy wheels. Vin ¹103968 $13,988
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Hwy 20, Bend. SuaaaLL 2060 NE 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
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Lincoln MKZ 2009
2006 XLT 4-door Crew Cab
thing, new paint, 54K (Photo for illustration only) orig. miles, runs great, 6.0L Turbo diesel, full Chevy 1500 Extended Corvette 1979 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 power, a u t omatic, ceb 1997, bed liner, L62- 4 speed. obo. 541-480-3179 tow pkg, alloy wheels. 6-disc CD, cruise, fog 85,000 miles Vin ¹196866. lights, running boards, Garaged since new. Leather seat, Bluetow pkg, bedliner, grill $6,988 I've owned it 25 tooth, auto 6 s pd, guard, folding rear years. Never damS UBA R U . F WD 5 4 k mi l e s seat. Tan cloth inteSUMRUOHIRMD ODM aged or abused. rior, metallic tan exte- 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend vin¹613915 $12,900. $15,977 rior. 91,400 miles. 877-266-3821 Dave, 541-350-4077 IIIIIIWCl Dlr ¹0354 ROBBERSON GMC 2500 2003 Priced to sell $21,500 HD SLE Crew Cab 541-350-6925 4-wheel drive, 6.6 541.312.3986 liter V8 Turbo DieDLR¹0205 sel Duramax engine, Ford Ranger 1990 Allison transmission, Cessna 182Q, 1977, K ing Cab, g o o d many options, Nissan Pathfinder SV mid-time engine/ cond, new motor, 107,000 miles. fphoto for illustration onlyi CORVETTECOUPE 2012, red, 36k mi., prop, custom panel, tinted windows, bed Very good condition, Glasstop 2010 $23,995. ¹604777 S-Tec 30+ altitude liner, 2 sets tires, Chevy Silverado 1500 $24,500. 2001, Extended cab, Grand Sport - 4 LT hold, Garmin 430, dual pipe. Must see 707-484-3518 Bed liner, tow pkg., loaded, clear bra GPSS, oversized to appreciate. $4000 (located in Bend) alloy wheels. Vin¹ hood & fenders. tires, digital fuel flow, obo. 541-948-9061 185489 New Michelin Super excellent paint & 541-598-3750 $8,888 Sports, G.S. floor interior. Must see to www.aaaoregonautomats, 17,000 miles, appreciate. source.com SUBA R IJ. Ford Ran er XLT Crystal red. Asking $68,000. $42,000. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Bill, 541 <80-7930 503-358-1164. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, center- 2011 S u percrewAV/Att (photo forillustration only) lines, 541-593-2597 cab! Iess than 12k Subaru Forester X T mi., 4WD, Ford certiLimited 2007, 4 Cyl., fied. Vin¹PA76782 Save money. Learn auto, AWD, leather, Dodge Avenger SE to fly or build hours $21,947 moon rof , p r ivacy fphoto for ruustrstron only) with your own airglass, roof rack, alloy Sedan 2012, 4 c y l , Dodge Durango 2005, ROBBERSON auto, FWD, MP3. c raft. 1968 A e ro wheels. Vin¹710326 4WD, V8 5.7L, Tow Vin ¹293948 L INCOIII ~ II IBRDB Commander, 4 seat, $15,888 pkg., running boards. $12,988 150 HP, low time, Rolls Royce 1992 Silthird row seat, moon541.312.3986 © s u a aau full panel. $23,000 ver Spur II, excellent! roof. Vin¹ 534944 DLR¹0205 © s u a aau obo. Contact Paul at Midnight Blue exterior, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $10,999 541-447-5184. Parchment leather inte2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 rior, 15-inch chrome RR 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 T-Hangar for rent wheels, Alpine Sirius Dlr ¹0354 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS at Bend airport. 940 877-266-3821 navigation system, Call 541-382-8998. Dlr ¹0354 Vans Call a Pro 77,200 miles, dealer916 ship maintained, alWhether you need a ways garaged. New, Trucks & Ford Supercab 1992, fence fixed, hedges about $250,000; sell brown/tan color with Heavy Equipment trimmed or a house $19,500.541-480-3348 m atching full s i z e built, you'll find c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 933 over drive, 135K mi., professional help in Pickups full bench rear seat, Chrysler Town & The Bulletin's "Call a slide rear w i ndow, Ford Bronco II Country LXI 1997, Service Professional" bucket seats, power 4x4, 1989beautiful inside 8 seats w/lumbar, pw, Directory Automatic, power Peterbilt 359 p otable out, one owner, nonHD receiver & trailer water truck, 1 990, steering, stereo smoker,. Ioaded with 541-3B5-5809 brakes, good tires. options! 197,892 mi. 3200 gal. tank, 5hp Good cond i tion. upgrade, set-up to pump, 4-3" h oses, Service rec o rds tow, runs good. $4900. 541-389-5341 camlocks, $ 25,000. available. $4 , 950. Chevy 3500 Crew $1700. 541-820-3724 Call Mike, (541) 815Cab, 20054x4 Dually 541-633-6662 8176 after 3:30 p.m. Duramax Allison, 4 925 lift, Edge Chip, only Utility Trailers 66,000 miles. LS trim BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS pkg, split-bench front Honda Odyssey Ford Thunderbird Search the area's most seat, tow pkg, brake 1999. Very good 2002 c o nvertible comprehensive listing of controller. Very good cond. Runs well, with brand new tonFORD XLT 1992 classified advertising... condition - looks Two sets of tires on neau cover, white 3/4 ton 4x4 real estate to automotive, good, pulls better! rims - summer and with grey i nterior, Carry-On ali steel merchandise to sporting Original owner needs matching canopy, winter. $2500. loaded, 88,600 low 6'x10' utility trailer 30k original miles, goods. Bulletin Classifieds to sell - $35,000. 541-593-2312 miles, choice condiwith loading ramp appear every day in the 541-408-7826 possible trade for tion, everything or 541-977-7588 3500-lb. capacity print or on line. classic car, pickup, works. Great fun car like new, $1100. motorcycle, RV Call 541-385-5809 to d r ive. I l l ness Chevy Ext. Cab 1991 253-312-0595 $13,500. www.bendbulletin.com VW Eurovan 2000, no forces sale $13,950 with camper shell, In La Pine, call pop top, V6, only 62K (located in cash. C all Bi l l ood cond., $1500 928-581-9190 Good condition, 541-604-9307 The Bulletin miles. Terrebonne -CRR) SeningCentml Oregonsince f9t8 BO. 541-447-5504. $9500. 907-321-1013
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Cadillac d' E legance 1998, low miles 66k, non-smokers, $3200 obo. 541-389-5488
Hummer H22006
Sport Utility Vehicles
FORD F-150 XLT
Corvette Coupe 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! 541-923-1781
DLR¹0205
Toyota Tundra 2011 Crew Max LTD 42k mi., ¹181270 $37,988
lug Chevy rims, $1200 obo. 541-647-2640
Keystone Challenger 2004 CH34TLB04 34' fully S/C, w/d hookups, new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new 1/5th interest in 1973 Kubota 7000w marine Cessna 150 LLC diesel generator, 3 150hp conversion, low slides, exc. cond. inBuick Skylark 1972 s ide 8 o ut . 27" T V time on air frame and Please see Bend engine, hangared in dvd/cd/am/fm enterCraigslist for details and Bend. Excellent pertain center. Call for more photos. formance & affordmore details. O nly $18,900. able flying! $6,000. used 4 times total in 541-323-1898 541-410-6007 last 5~/~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including sliding hitch that fits in your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to *"~ i see. 541-330-5527. 172 CessnaShare .
3585 2008, Alpenlite 29' 1993, MONTANA exc. cond., 3 slides, w/ goos eneck. king bed, Irg LR, $5500 or best offer. Arctic insulation, all Call 541-306-1961. options $35,000 obo. Leave message. 541-420-3250
your ad, please con-
Orbit 21' 2007, used
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Cluusifiuds
GMC Sonoma 2001 4x4 Ext Cab, 4.3L V6, 87,650 miles, very good cond. $5500. 541-388-1714
ies, rear air bags, Roll-n-lock bed cover, spray-in liner. 5th wheel hitch available, too. $19,000.
931
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories
Columbia400,
Ford Expedition Limited 2012
LINCOLII ~
Visit us online at www.bigcrv.com Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Travel Trailers
Aircraft, Parts & Service
1/3interestin
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Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Re-
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Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
908
Call Dick, 541-480-1687.
2009- 32', 3 slide-
outs, Leather interior, Power s e at, locks, win d ows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900
Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.
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Auto m obiles
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B eautifu l P a h l i s c h H omes c o m m u n i t y f eaturin g a m a z i n g n eig h b o r h o o d a menities: pool, h o t tub, clubhouse, sports 20862Golden GatePlace,Bend center, gym, game room Dirvctions:from theparhrcay, eur and more! Come tour a riarher,southon 15th,then variety of single level on Reed/ and 2-story floor plans. follonr sigru.
HOmeS Starting Mid-$300s
EDIE DELAY
RHIANNA KUNKLER
541-420-2950
Broker R 8
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R 8
541-30G-0939
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SAT. 12-3 PM SUN. 12-3 PM
Homes start under 1200,000. Brand new homes in Bend with the quality Pahlisch is known for - s t ainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with under20781 NE Comet Lane mount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention given Directions:North on Boyd Acres, to allow for tons of natural Right on Sierra, Le ft on Black Powder, light & much more. Come Right on Comet Lane. Loo/rforsigrK by the model home for more statting under information and plans.
HOSted 6LiSted byr
Principal Broker
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T HUR - S A T 12PM - 4PM
THURS. - SUN. 12PM - 4PM
Hosted 6 L 'sted by: TEAM DELAY
i l
$200,000
Location-Location-Location! This home is located in such a terrific LOCATION - close to the NW Canyon with various views available - all new homes will surround this new construction home. The home itself is a single level with 2020 SF and triple car garage - what a nice 3088 NW 17th St., Redmond rioorplan - very open with great room and kitchen to the eating bar Direcffoss:North on Hwy 97, left and nook. Kitchen has large walk- on QuinceAve., right on NW 10th in pantry, corner sink, wrap around eating ba| wilh knotty Alder natural Sl, lefi on NyrSpruce Ave, right cabinets. There is full landscaping on 17th St. House on right past and a fenced yard. Teakwood.
Hosted by: JEANNE SCHARLUND Principal Broker
$297,000
541-420-7978 z'sted by: s E A
I. T 0 R s
BRUCE DUNLAP & JIM HINTON
CEWH4K OREGON
RsiuziiGROUP, ILC Addiny va4te tn seaksdats 6 7
G6 SUNDAY, MARCH 16, 2014 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Automobiles
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Porsche 911 Turbo
Mazda3 2012
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Toyota Celica Convertible 1993
goag
More PixatBeltdboletin.com On a classified ad Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible with hard & soft top, silver with black interior,
au original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend) TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
fphoto forillustration only)
Kia Forte SX Hatchback 2013, 4 Cy l , m oon r o of , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels. Vin¹684485 $17,988
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
ROBBERSON y o II c 0 c e ~
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Mazda CX-7i 2011
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ROBBERSON y
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an saa
541.312.3986 DLR ¹0205
877-266-3821
541-389-9377
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809
Sport, 5 spd, Bluetooth, remote pwr locks, less than 25k mi., vin¹368668 $17,977 \ Illcece ~
Olds 98 Regency 1990 exc. shape, runs as new, one owner, 20 mpg in town. New battery, stud snow tires. $2000.
Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior & exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt O 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648
Sport, 5 spd, leather seats, hatchback, FWD. 68,398 mi. vin¹532282 $17,977
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! A s k about our "WheelDeal"! for private party advertisers
L'"" " " '
Dlr ¹0354
J
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Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e
1996, 73k miles, Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $29,700 541-322-9647
iphoto for illustration only)
Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Limited 2008, 6 Cyl., 2003 6 speed, X50 auto, AWD, leather, added power pkg., m oon r o of , re a r 530 HP! Under 10k spoiler, alloy wheels. miles, Arctic silver, Vin ¹207281 gray leather interior, $22,988 new quality tires, and battery, Bose SUSAau p remium so u n d stereo, moon/sun- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 roof, car and seat covers. Many extras. Dlr ¹0354 Garaged, p e rfect condition, $59,700.
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54'I -322-9647
Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remaining. $37,500. 541-322-6928
PeopleLookforInformation AboutProductsand
ServicesEveryDaythrough ThettvlletinClassinels
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541-385-5809 to advertise. www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Seming Central Oregon since 19IB
go to rphoto forillustration only) Volkswagen Jetta 2.0L www.bendbulletin.com 2013, 4 Cyl., Turbo to view additional GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 diesel, 6 speed w/tipphotos of the item. tronic, FWD, moon speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible roof, alloy wheels. Looking for your Vin ¹356856 around in this price next employee? $22,988 range, new t ires, Place a Bulletin help wheels, clutch, timS UBA R U . wanted ad today and ing belt, plugs, etc. reach over 60,000 111K mi., remark- 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. readers each week. able cond. inside 877-266-3821 Your classified ad and out. Fun car to Dlr ¹0354 will also appear on d rive, Must S E E! bendbulletin.com $5995. R e dmond. Volvo C-30 2009 which currently re541-504-1993 R-Design hatchback, ceives over 1.5 mil39k mi., white, Orig. lion page views T oyota Prius IV 2010, owner. $17,984. every month at char. gray, 51k mi., 541-923-0445. no extra cost. Bunetin Classifieds Get Results! Call Check out the 385-5809 or place classifieds online your ad on-line at www.bendbulletin.com bendbulletin.com 541-598-3750 Updated daily www.aaaoregonautosource.com What are you Need to get an looking for? ad in ASAP? You'll find it in You can place it
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online at: V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 The Bulletin Classifieds www.bendbulletin.com AWD, sunroof, lux/winter kgs, new tires, more! 541-385-5809 6775 obo.541-330-5818 541-385-5809
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and to accrue during lar system; approval scribed real property In construing this noLEGAL NOTICE the pendency of this NOTICE OF PUBLIC of Discovery, First and the singular ini ts int e rest tice, a ction. T h e tot a l S treet Rapids a n d cludes the plural, the HEARING therein; and prepayamount of judgment Canal Ro w p a r ks ment penalties/premi- word "grantor" inand money award to The Desc h utes master plans, and ap- ums, if a p plicable. cludes any successor accrue interest post C ounty B oard o f pointment of a Bud- W HEREFORE, n o i n interest t o t h e judgment at the legal Commissioners w i ll get Committee memas well as any hereby is given grantor rate of interest; and hold a Public Hearing ber. The b u siness tice other person owing an that the undersigned 452-7636. IF YO U foreclosure of interon Wednesday, April session will be f o l- trustee will on June obligation, the perforARE REPRE- ests in real and per- 2, 2014, at 10:00 a.m. lowed by an execumance of which is se2014 at the hour cured SENTED BY AN ATs onal p roperty t o in t h e by said trust D e s chutes tive session pursuant 30, of 10:OO o'clock, A.M. TORNEY, I T IS which you may have a County deed, and the words Ser v ices to ORS 192.660(2)(e) in accord with t he "trustee" and "benefiYOUR R E SPONSI- c laim. NOTICE T O B uilding, Bar n e s for the purpose of dis- standard of time esB ILITY T O MA I N - THE D E F ENDANT: Room, at 1300 NW cussing real property t ablished by O R S ciary" include their reTAIN CONT A CT R EAD THESE P A - Wall Street, Bend, to transactions. spective successors 187.110, at th e f o lW ITH Y OU R A T - PERS CAREFULLY! take testimony on the in interest, if any. The lowing place: inside T ORNEY AND T O You must "appear" in following item: FILE T he a g enda a n d the main lobby of the trustee's rules of aucEEP Y OU R A T - this case or the other NUMBER:TA-'I 3-3. s upplementary r e may be accessed has been filed asking K Deschutes C o unty tion TORNEY A DVISED side will win automati- SUBJECT:Text ports are posted on Courthouse, at ww w . northwestthe court to enter a 1164 NW YOUR WHERE- cally. To "appear" you amendments to Des- the district's website, Bond, in the City of trustee.com and are judgment establishing OF A BOUTS. (2) If y o u must file with the court chutes County Code www.bendparksanby this the paternity of the Bend, County of Des- incorporated the petition, a legal paper called a Title 18 to have the drec.org. For more chutes, reference. You may above-named child. contest State of Or- also "motion" or "answer." County Code be con- information the court will schedcall access sale staYOU ARE DIegon, sell at public tus a t a hearing on the The "motion" or nan- sistent with the Or- 541-389-7275. ww w .northRECTED TO FILE A ule auction to the highest allegations of the peti- swer" must be given egon Revised StatWRITTEN ANSWER LEGAL NOTICE bidder for cash the westtrustee.com and tion and order you to to the court clerk or utes an d O r e gon TRUSTEE'S NOTICE i nterest in th e d e - www.USA-Forecloto the p etition NO appear personally and administrator w i t hin Administrative Rules O F SALE File N o . LATER T HA N 30 scribed real property sure.com. For further schedule other 30 days of the date of (for th e E x clusive 7827.20493 R e f e r- which the grantor had information, p l ease DAYS AFTER THE may related to the first publication speci- Farm Use Zone) to Bre a non DATE O F LAS T hearings is made to that or had power to con- contact: petition and order you fied herein, along with respond to changes ence Miller Nort h west P UBLICATION O F vey at the time of the Trustee c ertain trust d e ed to appear personally. the required filing fee. Services, Inc. T HIS S U M M O N S , F YOU AR E O R - It must be in proper made by the Legisla- made by Henry Quir- execution by grantor P.O. Box 997 Belleture and Oregon De- ing, as g rantor, to specified herein, con- IDERED of the trust deed, toTO APPEAR, form and have proof p artment o f WA 98009-0997 La n d senting to or object- YOU MUST American Title gether with any inter- vue, 586-1900 Qu i r ing, APPEAR o f service on t h e Conservation and De- First ing to the establish- PERSONALLY Insurance Company, est which the grantor IN Plaintiffs attorney or, if velopment, and other as trustee, in favor of or grantor's succes- Henry (TS¹ ment of t h e c h ild's THE COURTROOM, the Plaintiff does not changes to the Code B ank of t h e C a s- sors in interest ac- 7827.20493) paternity and inform- UNLESS THE have a n a t t orney, that are s o mewhat 1002.264976-File No. ing the court of your COURT as beneficiary, quired after the exproof of service on the minor in nature. AP- cades, LEGAL NOTICE current residence ad- GRANTED YOUHAS dated 07/30/07, reecution of the trust AN Plaintiff. if you have PLICANT:Deschutes d ress, mailing a d corded 08/03/07, in deed, to satisfy the TRUSTEE'S NOTICE EXCEPTION IN ADany questions, you STAFF the mortgage records foregoing obligations OF SALE File No. dress and telephone VANCE UNDER ORS should see an attor- County. CONTACT:Paul Blik- of Deschutes County, thereby secured and 7210.20091 number. YOUR AN- 4 19B.918 T O AP - ney immediately, if R e f e rstad, Senior Planner SWER SHOULD BE P EAR B Y O T H E R y ou need h ell) i n Oregon, as the costs and ex- ence is made to that (Paul.Blikstad ©desMAILED TO Klamath MEANS INCLUDING, finding an attorney, 2007-42787 and sub- penses of sale, inc ertain t rust d e e d County Courthouse, BUT NOT L I MITED you may call the Or- chutes.org). Copies of sequently assigned to cluding a reasonable made b y Rob e rt an documents in the 316 Main Street, Kla- TO, Bank FSB charge by the trustee. Steele, J a c queline T E L EPHONIC egon State B a r's file and a p plicable OneWest math Falls, Oregon OR OTHER Notice is further given Assignment reSteele, as grantor, to ELEC- Lawyer Referral Sercriteria are available by 97601. This sum corded as that for reinstatement Regional Trustee SerMEANS. AN vice at 503-684-3763 for inspection at the mons is p u blished TRONIC 2013-051809, coveror payoff quotes revices C o rp., as MAY or toll-free in Oregon Planning Division at pursuant to the order ATTORNEY ing the following de- quested pursuant to trustee, in favor of NOT ATTEND THE at 8004 52-7636. no cost and can be of the circuit court HEARING(S) scribed real property O RS 8 6 .757 a n d Mortgage Electronic IN ARNOLD GALp urchased fo r 2 5 situated in said county 86.759 must be timely Registration Systems, judge of the Y OUR PLACE . LAGHER PERCELL cents a page. Docuabove-entitled court, P ETITIONER'S A T state, to wit: Lot 9 communicated in a Inc. solely as nomiR OBERTS & P O T - ments are also avail- and dated March 6, 2014. in Block 6 of Chapar- written request that nee for GB Mortgage, ORNEY: John D . TER, P.C., Attorneys able on l in e at: r al E states, D e s- complies with t h at LLC, as beneficiary, The order directs that T orton, Senior A s - a t Law , 8 0 0 W i l - www.co.deschutes.or. chutes County, Or- statute addressed to dated 01/1 4/08, rethissummons be pub- N Attorney Gen- lamette Street, Suite us/cdd/. l ished once e a c h sistant egon. P R OPERTY the trustee's "Urgent corded 01/18/08, in Department of 800, Eugene, Oregon week for three con- eral, ADDRESS: 5812 Request Desk" either the mortgage records LEGAL NOTICE Justice, 14 N. Central, 97401, T e lephone: secutive weeks, Suite 211, Medford, Southwest Mesa Way by personal delivery of Deschutes County, 541-484-0188, B e nmaking three publicaRedmond, OR 97756 to the trustee's physi- Oregon, as lamin M. K e arney, neeorr tions in an, in a pub- OR 97501, Phone: Both the beneficiary cal offices (can for ad- 2008-02376 and subOSB No. 014666, At(541) 776-6002. ISlished newspaper of SUED this 12th day of torney for P l aintiff. Sub-Bids Requested and the trustee have d ress) or b y fi r st sequently assigned to general circulation in March, 2014. Issued D ATE O F elected to sell the real class, certified mail, Guaranty Bank by AsRite Aid Deschutes C o unty, by: John D. N orton P UBLICATIONFIRISST: property to satisfy the r eturn r e ceipt r e - signment recorded as Redmond, OR Oregon. Date of first ¹993310, Senior As- March 16, 2014. obligations secured by quested, addressed to 2014-001372, coverBids Due: p ublication: M a r c h sistant Attorney Genthe trust deed and a the trustee's post ofing the following deMarch 18, 2014 notice of default has fice box address set scribed real property 16, 2014. Date of last eral. © 10:00am publication: March 30, LEGAL NOTICE been recorded pursu- forth in t his n otice. situated in said county 2014. NOTICE READ LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC Due to potential con- and state, to wit: A Scope of Work: The ant to Oregon ReT HESE PAP E R S IN T H E CI R CUIT HEARING vlsed Statutes flicts with federal law, parcel of land in the project includes a CAREFULLY: IF YOU COURT O F Northeast Quarter of T HE n ew, g r ound u p , 86.735(3); the event persons having no D O NOT F I L E A STATE OF OREGON The Desc h utes 17,400 sf pharmacy of default under the record legal or equi- the Northeast Quarter WRITTEN ANSWER FOR D E SCHUTES County Hearings Of- with masonry walls, a n ote and deed o f table interest in the (NE1/4NE1/4) of SecAS DIREC T ED COUNTY. OREGON ficer will hold a Public steel roof structure, t rust, p u rsuant t o subject property will tion 18, Township 14 ABOVE, th e c o u rt HOUSING AND Hearing on April 22, TPO/built up roofing, Section 9(b)(i) of the only receive informa- S outh, Range 1 3 , may proceed in your C OMMUNITY S E R - 2014, at 6:30 p.m. in finishes, p l u mbing, Deed of Trust, which tion concerning the E ast o f the Wil absence without fur- VICES DEP A RT- the Barnes and Saw- HVAC, fire sprinkler, provides that, "Lender lender's estimated or lamette Meridian, Dether notice and issue MENT, State of Oryer Rooms of the De- electrical. Construc- may require immedi- actual bid. Lender bid schutes County, Orschutes Ser v ices tion type: VB non-rate ate payment in full of i nformation is a l s o egon, being more a judgment establish- e gon, Plaintiff v s . ing the paternity of the UNKNOWN H E I RS Center, 1300 NW Wall with automatic fire all sums secured by available a t the particularly described above-named c h ild OF GA R Y R. St., Bend, to consider suppression system. this Security Instru- trustee's web s ite, as f o llows: C o mO N THE DATE A N SALSER; OREGON the following request: ment if... The prop- www.northwestmencing at a 5/8 inch ANSWER I S RE- AFFORDABLE FILE NUMB E RS: erty ceases to be the trustee.com. Notice is iron pin at the section Questions: Q UIRED BY T H I S HOUSING AS S IS- PA-14-1 and ZC-14-1. Call Matt Winkler at principal residence of further given that any c orner common t o SUMMONS OR ON A TANCE CORPORA- SUBJECT:The appli- 503.444.0661 or email a Borrower for rea- person named in ORS Sections 7, 8, 17 and FUTURE DATE, and TION, a n O r e gon cant requests a Plan mwinkler@jrabbott.com sons other than death 86.753 has the right, 1 8, T o wnship 1 4 may make such or- nonprofit corporation; Amendment and Zone and the Property is at any time prior to S outh, Range 1 3 , ders and take such ANGELA ROSE Change f or a We are an equal op- not the principal resi- five days before the E ast o f the Wil action as authorized S ALSER, a n in d i - 4.28-acre portion of dence of at least one date last set for the lamette Meridian, Deportunity e m ployer by law. RIGHTS AND v idual; ORE G O N the subject property to and request sub-bids other Borrower.". De- s ale, to h av e t h is schutes County, OrOBLIGATIONS: (1) WATER W O NDER- change the plan des- from minority, women, fault date of foreclosure proceed- egon, the initial point YOU HAVE A RIGHT LAND P R O PERTY ignation and zoning d isadvantaged a n d 05/30/2013 and pay ing dismissed and the as well as the point of T O B E REP R E- OWNERS ASSOCIA- from Sunriver Forest emerging small busi- the following sums: trust deed reinstated beginning; th e n ce SENTED BY AN ATTION, UNIT II, an Or- District to S u nriver ness enterprises. principal balance of by payment to t he North 89 degrees 13' T ORNEY I N T H I S egon nonprofit corUtility District, and for 02" West 625.00 feet $108,194.67 with ac- beneficiary of the enMATTER. If you are poration; and an exception to Goal crued interest from tire amount then due along the North line of CCB ¹54656 currently represented OCCUPANTS OF 4, Forest Lands. AP04/30/2013; together (other than such por- S ection 18 t o t h e by an attorney, CON- THE PRE M ISES, PLICANT:Sunriver PUBLIC NOTICE with title e x pense, tion of the principal as Northeast corner of T ACT Y OU R A T - Defendants. Case No. Service Dist r ict. The Bend Park & Rec- costs, trustee's fees would not then be due that parcel described TORNEY I M M E D I- 14CV0103FC. PUBPROPERTY OWNER: reation District Board and attorney's fees had no default ocin deed to Edgar L. ATELY UPON LICATION SUM- Sunriver Env i ron- of Directors will meet i ncurred herein b y curred) and by curing Dodren and Donna J. in a w or k s ession R ECEIVING THI S MONS. To: Unknown m ental, L LC . A T reason of said default; any o t he r d e f ault Dodreu, recorded AuNOTICE. Your previ- H eirs of G a r y R . TORNEY: Tia M. Tuesday, March 18, any further sums ad- complained of herein gust 16, 1988 in Book ous attorney may not Salser. IN THE NAME Lewis, Schwabe, Wil- 2 014 beginning a t vanced by the benefi- that is capable of be- 175, Page 2526, Desbe representing you in OF THE STATE OF liamson and Wyatt. 3:00 p.m., at the Dis- ciary for the protec- ing cured by tender- chutes County t his matter. IF Y O U OREGON: You are LOCATION:The sub- trict Office, 799 SW tion of t h e a b ove ing the performance R ecords; the n c e CANNOT A F FORD hereby required to Columbia, Bend, Or- described real prop- required under t he ject property is l oSouth 00 d e grees T O HIRE A N A T - appear and answer cated at 18305 Cotegon. The board will erty and its interest o bligation o r tr u s t 24'28 e West 1235.48 T ORNEY and y o u the First A mended tonwood Road, receive updates on therein; and prepay- deed, and in addition feet to the North line meet the state's fiComplaint filed S unriver; Tax M a p the Simpson Pavilion ment penalties/premi- to paying said sums of that p arcel d enancial g u idelines, a gainst you in t h e 19-11-00 (index map) and Colorado Dam ums, if applicable. By or tendering the per- scribed in Memoranyou are entitled to above entitled cause a s Ta x L o t 1 0 2 . Safe Passage reason of said default, formance necessary dum of Contract to have an attorney ap- within 30 days from STAFF C O NTACT: projects, information the beneficiary has to cure the default, by John H. Gunzner and p ointed for yo u a t the date of service of Cynthia.Smidt@desr egarding a par k d eclared al l s u m s paying all costs and Joann E. G unzner, this Summons upon chutes.org or (541) stewardship program, owing on the obliga- expenses actually in- r ecorded July 1 8 , state expense. TO REQUEST AP- you, and if you fail so 317-3150. Copies of the 2014-15 Needs tion secured by said curred in enforcing the 1985 in Book 99 Page POINTMENT OF AN to answer, for want the staff report, appli- Based As s i stance trust deed i mmedi- obligation and trust 1914, Des c hutes ATTORNEY TO thereof, the Plaintiff cation, an documents Plan and a report from ately due and pay- deed, together with County Rec o rds; R EPRESENT Y O U will apply to the Court and evidence sub- the Park and Recre- able, said sums being trustee's thence South 89 deand e AT ST A T E EX- for the relief prayed mitted by or on behalf ation Foundation re- the following, to wit: a ttorney's fees n o t grees 1 3 '02 East PENSE, YOU MUST for in the Complaint to of the applicant and garding fundraising. A principal balance of exceeding the 625.00 feet along the IMMEDIATELY CON- wit: Monetary judg- applicable criteria are regular meeting will $108,194.67 with inamounts provided by N orth boundary o f TACT the K l amath ment in favor of Plain- available for inspec- begin at 6:30 p. m . terest thereon at the said OR S 8 6 .753. said Gunzner parcel Juvenile Department t iff in t h e s u m o f tion at the Planning Agenda items include note rate o f 1 . 140 Requests from per- to the East line of at 316 Main Street, $82,053.55, plus unDivision at n o c o st consideration of ap- percent per annum sons named in ORS Section 18; t h ence K lamath Falls, O R paid interest in t he a nd can b e p u r - proval of: the Simp- beginning 04/30/2013; 86.753 for reinstate- North along the East chased for 25 cents a son Pavilion concept; together with title ex- ment quotes received line of Section 18 to 97601, phone num- amount of $2,573.90 ber (541) 883-5503, as of J a nuary 21, page. The staff re- a new park manager pense, costs, trustee's less than six d ays the point of beginning. between the hours of 2014, plus interest at port should be made position; a resolution fees and attorney's prior to the date set Excepting therefrom 8:00 a.m. and 5:00 the rate of 4.95% per available 7 days prior to apply for a local fees incurred herein for the trustee's sale that portion lying with p.m. for further infor- annum until entry of to the date set for the government grant for by reason of said de- will be honored only at Lower Bridge Way. mation. IF YOU WISH judgment, plus attor- hearing. Documents McKay Park; 2014-15 fault; any further sums the discretion of the PROPERTY A DT O HIRE A N A T - ney fees and costs are also available on- Needs Based Assis- advanced by the ben- beneficiary or if r eDRESS: 3648 NorthTORNEY, please re- now du e in the line a t ww w .des- tance Plan; a contract eficiary for the protec- quired by the terms of west Lower B ridge tain one as soon as amount of $4,989.56, chutes.org. for a district office so- tion of the above de- the loan documents. Way Terrebonne, OR LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON F OR KLAM A T H COUNTY J u v enile D epartment. In t h e Matter of N A T ION DEVON DER E AS ARNETT, A Ch i l d. Case No. 1 100568JV3. P U B LISHED SUMMONS. TO: NUKKI L. THOMAS. IN THE NAME OF THE STATE OF OREGON: A petition
possible. If you need help finding an attorney, you may call the Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Referral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll free in Oregon at (800)
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97760 Both the ben-
eficiary a n d the trustee have elected to sell the real property to satisfy the obligations secured by the trust deed and a notice of default has been recorded pursuant to Oregon Revised Statutes 86.735(3); the default for which the foreclos ure i s m a d e i s grantor's failure to pay when due the following sums: monthly of payments $1,474.54 beginning 01/01/13; plus l a te charges of $0.00 each month beg i nning 01/16/13; plus prior accrued late charges of $239.56; plus advances of $0.00; together with title expense, costs, trustee's fees and attorney's fees incurred herein by rea so n of aid default; any further sums advanced by the beneficiary for the protection o f the above described real property a n d its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. By reason of said default the beneficiary has declared an sums owing on t h e ob l i gation secured by the trust deed immediately due and payable, said sums b e in g the following, t o wit: $344,733.68 with interest thereon at the rate of 2 percent per annum be g inning 1 2/01/1 2; plus l a te charges of $0.00 each month beg i nning 01/16/13 until paid; plus prior accrued late charges of $239.56; p lus advances o f $0.00; together with title expense, costs, t rustee's fees a n d attorneys fees i ncurred herein b y reason of said default; a ny f u rther s u ms advanced b y the b eneficiary for t h e protection o f the above described real property a n d its interest therein; and prepayment penalties/premiums, if applicable. WHEREFORE, notice hereby i s given t ha t t h e undersigned trustee will on June 17, 2014 at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, A . M . in accord w i t h the standard o f tim e established by ORS 187.110,
at
the
following place: inside the main lobby of the Deschutes C o unty Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, C o unty of Deschutes, State of Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in the described real property which the grantor had or had power to convey at the time of t he e x ecution b y grantor of the trust deed, together with any interest which the grantor or g rantor's successors in interest a cquired after t h e execution of the trust deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the co s t s and e xpenses of s a l e , including a reasonable charge by the trustee. Notice is further given that for reinstatement or payoff quotes requested pursuant to O RS 8 6 .757 a n d 86.759 must be timely c ommunicated in a written request that c omplies with t h a t statute addressed to the trustee's "Urgent Request Desk" either by personal delivery to the trustee's physical offices (call for address) or by first
class, certified mail, return receipt requested, addressed to the trustee's post officebox address set forth in this notice. Due t o pot e ntial conflicts with federal law, persons having no record legal or equitable interest in the subject property will o n l y rec erve information concerning the lender's estimated or actual bid. Lender bid i nformation is a l s o available a t the trustee's web s ite, www.northwesttrustee .com. Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the trust deed reinstated by payment to the beneficiary of the entire a mount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by t endering the p e r formance r e q uired under the obligation or t rust deed, and i n addition to paying said sums or tendering the
performance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in
enforcing the obligation and trust deed, together with trustee's and a ttorney's fees n o t exceeding the amounts provided by said OR S 8 6 .753. Requests from p ersons named i n ORS 8 6 . 75 3 for reinstatement quotes received less than six days prior to the date set for the trustee's sale will be honored only at the discretion of the beneficiary or if required by the terms of the loan documents. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well
as any other person
owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by said trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include their
respective successors
in
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