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DESCHUTES COUNTY
Bound forNormandy
Zoning fixcould have broad implications
— Five Madras High students have been invited on ajourney of a lifetime this summer, a trip to Normandy, France, for D-Day ceremonies.B1
PragreSS repOrt —Taking stock of the Blazers' seasonat the All-Star break.C1
• Analysts predict the race for governorwil make for a 'high-turnout,"exciting' election
CDStnm dikeS —Bend company crafts customized racing bicycles for riders worldwide.C6
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
MORE COVERAGE INSIDE • Kitzhaber out of public view as transition speedsahead; update on death penalty moratorium,AS
If Brown wants to stay in
The Bulletin
Kitzhaber
tion says she must be elected
serve another term. While 2016 is already a presidential election year, the addition of a top-ticket statewide race could speed
statewide office and could elevate the election onto the
complicated and tricky
for the final years of his term
in November 2016 and then again in 2018 if she wants to
up changes within the Republican Party as it looks for
national stage. SeeBrown/A5
Plus: Houseplants-
schutes County. The county has explored using an Oregon land use law passed in
Some ways tohelpkeepthem alive.D4
2009 that allows counties to correctforest and farm
Weed dating —Speed dating is so passe. Find adate at a garden bedinstead. D1
the office she's filling after
By Ted Shorack Brown
SALEM — The movement
of Kate Brown from secretary of state to the governor's office is already shaking up Oregon's 2016 general election, political analysts say.
the resignation of Gov. John Kitzhaber, the state constitu-
WHATEVER And a Wed exclusive-
A zoning fix for five a candidate who can end the
rural subdivisions could turn out to be a lot more
party's long drought from
than anticipated for De-
zone designations. Deschutes County would be
Following up onCentral Oregon stories that have beenout of the headlines. Email ideas to news@bendbulletin.com.
HAPPENED TO ...
the first to use the option
Romance fiction writers, readers, publishers and scholars gather for the first conference on the literature of love at the Library of Congress. bendbuuetin.cem/extras
but recently found out the process could open up more land to potential
zone changes. Lands used for farming and timber production are
zoned with strict requirements in Oregon to prevent residential develop-
EDITOR'5CHOICE
ment from encroaching on the rural landscape and to , fip
Insurance
co-ops stumble out
of the gates By Abby Goodnough New Yorh Times News Service
RED OAK, Iowa — A
out of money, and its future
dead.
tious and an unintended
result for county planners. "All of a sudden it rais-
a erinu in t e ne o u t an a i t or t atreco nition
few days after Christmas, Lisa Lovig's doctor called with jarring news. The health insurer covering her cancer treatments had run
Shawn Manning recovers at Seton Medical Center in Round Rock, Texas, in 2009 after the shooting at a U.S. Army base in Fort Hood that left13 others
preserve open space. The prospect of reconsidering such land beyond the five subdivisions would likely be conten-
Submitted photo
es the potential level of
conflict to a degree that we were not anticipating with our prior approach," said Nick Lelack, director of the Deschutes County Community Development Department.
Rezoning the subdivisions would not only make
county maps accurate but also allow property own-
ByJasmineRockowe The Bulletin
ers to build homes without
Former Central Oregonian Shawn Manning nearly lost his life in the 2009 shooting in Fort
going through a lengthy and costly conditional use
was at best uncertain. "I was terrified," said
Hood, Texas, when a fellow soldier entered the U.S. Army base's processing center with a pistol
process before construc-
Lovig, 59, who has pancreatic cancer and relies
and pockets full of ammunition, shouted "Allahu Akbar!" and opened fire in a room full of Army
The subdivisions are spread throughout the
on her insurance to cover
personnel preparing for deployment.
county and were platted
frequent doctor appointments, tests and a litany of expensive drugs. "I didn't know what was going to happen to me." Her insurer, CoOportu-
nity Health, was one of 23 nonprofit cooperatives created under the Affordable
Care Acttogeneratemore competition and choice in
insurance markets dominated by huge for-profit companies. SeeCo-ops/A6
tion could begin.
before 1973, when
land use legislation was passed and required
Manning was shot six times but survived. Many
counties to adopt compre-
of his colleagues were not so lucky; 13 people, including a pregnant woman, were killed that day, and
hensive zoning plans that followed newly created land use goals. SeeZoning/A6
more than 30 others were
wounded.
Map inside
The attack turned Man-
The five rural subdivisions in question:
ning, a soft-spoken mental health counselor, into a vocal
critic of some of the Army's decisions in the wake of the
attack. He'sbecome avisible victim of the attack, speak-
TODAY'S WEATHER i<~~r
Mild and sunny High 52, Low 28 Page B6
~pr
Sisters Redmond
ing often to the media and
Tumalo
Area of detail
penning an opinionpiece for the Washington Post in August 2013. He and other vic-
•
tims of the shootingsuedthe Army in 2011 for denying
Ben d
• sttttriver
complicity in the attack and
INDEX At Home Df-6 Business C6 Calendar B2 Classified Ef-6 Comics E3-4 Crosswords E4
Dear Abby D6 Horoscope D6 Local/State Bf-6 Obituaries B5 Sports Cf-4 Tv/Movies D6
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
refusingto callthe shooting an act of terrorism.
SeePurple Heart/A5
Scott Eklund, Red Box Pictures/Submitted photo
The U.S. Army has announced that all victims of the 2009 Fort Hood shooting, including Shawn Man-
Why do somanycollege students lackjob skills? By JeffreyJ. Selingo
which hires more entry-level
vol. 113,No. 4e, 30 pages, 5sections
Special to The Washington Post
Q I/I/e use recyclenewspri d nt
seen the ad for Enterprise Rent-
A-Car featuring former college
college graduates annually acqu i sition at Enterprise. than any other compaEven so, Enterprise, ny in the U.S. — likes ANA L Y SI5 li k e many employers, recruiting college athstill finds today's colletesbecausetheyknowhowto l egegraduates severelylacking
athletes working behind the
work on teams and multitask.
:'IIIIIIIIIIIIII o
88 267 02329
• La Pine
ning, whogrew upin Oregon, will be awarded thePurple Heart or its civilian equivalent.
If you watch college sports on television, you've probably
counter at your nearby Enterprise location. Enterprise-
A r ti m , vice president of talent
i n s ome basic skills, particu-
prioritize tasks.
"This is a generation thathas been'syllabused'through their
pull the trigger and make a decision." There is a growingbody of
lives," Artim said, referring to
evidencethat what students
the outline of a dass students receive at the beginning of a college course. "Decisions were made for them, so we're less
learn — or more likely don't learn — in college makes them ill-prepared for the global job
"Wesee alot oftransferable l a r lyproblem-solving, deciskills in athletes," said Marie sio n-making and the ability to likely to find someone who can
market.
SeeCollege/A5
A2
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
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e sil.rva Dtseuies rr
• .U S
US
0 II'
recrui in e o S By Eric Schmitt
ibility with Islamic State's tar-
New York Times News Service
getaudience ofyoung men and women than the U.S. govern-
WASHINGTON
-
The
Obama administration is revamping its effort to counter
ment would. With the Islamic State and
the Islamic State's propagan- its supporters producing as da machine,acknowledging many as 90,000 tweets and the terrorist group has been othersocialmedia responses far more effective in attracting every day, U.S. officials acnew recruits, financing and knowledge they have a tough global notoriety than the Unit- job ahead to blunt the group's ed States and its allies have digital momentum in the same been in discrediting it. way a U.S.-led air campaign At the heart of the plan is has slowed Islamic State's adrevamping and expanding a vances on the battlefield. "We're getting beaten on tiny State Department agency, the Center for Strategic Coun- volume, so the only way to terterrorism Communications, compete is by aggregating, cuto harness all of the existing rating and amplifying existing attempts at countermessaging content," Richard Stengel, unby muchlargerfederaldepart- dersecretary of state for public ments, including the Pentagon, diplomacy and public affairs, Homeland Security and intelli- said by telephone Monday. Ungence agencies. til now, he said, the efforts to The center would also co- counterISIS could have been ordinate and amplify similar better coordinated. messaging by foreign allies Many of the plan's details and nongovernment agencies, are still being worked out, but as well as by prominent Mus- administration officials are lim academics, community expected to describe at least leaders and religious scholars its broad outlines during three who oppose the Islamic State, days of meetings beginning and who may have more cred- today.
Created at the direction of Obama in 2011, the Center for Strategic C o u nterterrorism
Communications has coordinated c o untermessaging against extremist groups, mainly aligned with al-Qaida, and devised ways to counter extremists' narratives. It also
employs digital outreach specialists fluent in Arabic, Urdu, Punjabi and Somali to counter
terrorist propaganda and misinformation about the United States on the Internet in real time.
The same analysts also post messages on English-language websites that jihadists use to recruit, raise money and promote their cause.
Skeptics of the new campaign voiced concerns that the
program marks an attempt by the White House to end a long-simmering turf war with the counterterrorism center's director,Alberto Fernandez, and exercise more control over
the kinds of messages produced and coordinated with domestic an d
i n t ernational
partners.
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EgyPtian IS StrikeS —Egypt bombed Islamic State militants in neighboring Libya on Mondayand called on the United States and Europe to join an international military intervention in the chaotic North African state after extremists beheaded agroup of Egyptian Christians. The airstrikes bring Egypt overtly into Libya's turmoil, a reflection of Cairo's increasing alarm. Egypt now faces threats on two fronts — a growing stronghold of radicals on its western border and a militant insurgency of Islamic State allies on its eastern flank in the Sinai Peninsula — aswell as its own internal challenges. Islamic State group weapons cachesand training camps were targeted "to avenge the bloodshed and to seek retribution from the killers," a military statement said. "Let those far and near know that Egyptians have ashield to protect and safeguard the security of the country and a sword that cuts off terrorism." GreeCe daiiOut —European creditors issued Greece with an ultimatum Monday, saying the country must accept a keycondition in bailout talks by the end of the week or face having to meet its debt commitments on its own — a prospect that many in the financial markets think would leave Greece little option but to leave the euro. After a meeting of the19 finance ministers of the eurozone over how to make Greece's debts sustainable broke down in seeming-acrimony after barely more than three hours, Greecewas told it has to ask for an extension to its bailout program before further negotiations on the country's future financing and economic course can take place. Without some sort of financing arrangements in place after the current bailout ends after Feb. 28, Greecewould face real difficulties meeting its obligations, such as debt repayments, over the coming months. Bankruptcy and a potential exit from the euro would loom for Greece onceagain. Japan puake —Small tsunami waves hit the northeast coast of Japan after a magnitude-6.9 earthquake early today, weather authorities said, as evacuation orders and alerts were lifted in the region. Tsunami waves hit coastal regions of Iwate prefecture, the Meteorological Agency said. The quakeoccurred at 8:06 a.m. In March 2011, a magnitude-9 quakeandtsunami struck the northeast, including Iwate prefecture, leaving about18,500 dead or missing. A nuclear plant in Fukushima suffered a triple meltdown after the tsunami swept through the complex. AtrOCitieS in Sri Lanka —The United Nations Human Rights Council on Monday agreed to defer the release of a landmark inquiry into possible war crimes in Sri Lanka, after an intense lobbying campaign by the country's newly elected government and what the U.N.'s top rights official described as "signals of broad cooperation" from Sri Lankan officials. The release of the report on suspected rights abuses during the war with the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam hasbeen put off until September. The release was originally scheduled for March. In a sense, this puts the onus on the Sri Lankan government not only to demonstrate cooperation with the U.N. inquiry, but also to show whether it can credibly mount its own investigation into possible wartime atrocities and whether it can take on criminal prosecutions of the most serious offenders.
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226 NW Sixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box788 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-548-3203
Denmark attaCkS —The Danish gunman who attacked a freespeechseminarand asynagogue inCopenhagen wasreleased about two weeks ago from a jail where hemay havebeen radicalized while serving time for a vicious stabbing. As Denmark mourned the two victims, these and other troubling details emerged Monday about Omar Abdel Hamid El-Hussein's path to the country's worst terror spree in three decades. El-Hussein was arrested 15 months ago in a vicious knife attack on a train passenger, and while he was awaiting trial, a change in his behavior last summer set off enough "alarm bells" for jail authorities to alert PET,Denmark's counterterror agency, a source close to the investigation told The Associated Press. Such warnings usually set in motion counter-radicalization efforts, such as counseling in jail. It wasn't immediately clear how aware the court was of this issue before El-Hussein was convicted of a lesser charge.
Y
— From wire reports
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Performers from the Beija Flor sambaschool parade during Carnival celebrations at the Sambadrome in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, earlier today. Racial pride andthe fight against racism in Brazil were the themes of sambagroup presentations and street parties on Monday asRio deJaneiro's parades entered their second night of over-the-top festivities. Some sambagroupsputtogetherdancenumbers to honor Afro-Brazilian heritage, andone built a giant Nelson Mandela float. The float was meant to remind people of his fight for equality, while calling for more
racial integration in this South American country, which has more blacks thananynation aside from Nigeria. To start the secondday of the Carnival shows, thousands of performers carpeted theentire half-mile street with fluorescent orange-and-yellow costumes and Halloween-like floats of tarantullas and Jackthe Ripper. Tens of thousands of people gathered onboth sides of the imposing sambadrome towatch and sing along to the blasting music.
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5 Ukrainesoldiers killed in fight for rail hLib Separatist military l eader The encircled government Eduard Basurin also signaled troops, which some reports Ukraine accused pro-Russia that the Russian proxies would number as high as 7,000, were separatists of launching 112 withdraw their artillery only offered safe passage out of rebattacks on government posi- if they see Ukrainian troops el-held territory in exchange tions during the first day of a complying with the next step for surrenderingtheir weapcease-fireas both sides cast of the Minsk agreement. ons, separatist officials told re"We will begin pulling back porters in Donetsk. There was doubt on their likelihood of complying with the next stage equipment from the line of no immediate reply by the govof the peace plan: withdrawing contact if we receive a certain ernment, which made clear its heavy weaponry from the war signal, which is if the Ukrai- intent to hold on to Debaltseve zone. nians also do the same thing," when it deployed thousands of Fighting was most intense Basurin was quoted as say- newly recruited troops to the around the Debaltseve rail ing by Russia's Interfax news area last month. junction, where government agency. A monitoring mission of the forces and separatistshave The rail hub at Debaltseve, Organization for Security and been battling for control for which the insurgents want Cooperation in Europe, which weeks. Five Ukrainian soldiers to control so they can shuttle has been patrolling eastern were killed and 25 were insupplies and fighters between Ukraine since April, w as jured, Col. Andriy Lysenko of their strongholds in the east- blocked by separatist gunmen
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the Ukrainian National Security and Defense Council told
reporters in Kiev on Monday.
ern regions of Donetsk and Lu-
Minsk last week that all hostilities would cease at 12:01 a.m.
Sunday and the two warring factions would begin pulling back heavy weapons from the front lines today. " Fulfillment o f
t h e fi r s t
provision of the Minsk agreements is mandatory for the pullout of heavy weapons from the line of contact. One hundred and twelve attacks are notan indicator ofa cease-
fire," Lysenko said. "At the moment, we are not ready to with-
draw heavy weapons."
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Tuesday, Feb. 17, the 48th
day of 2015. Thereare317 days left in the year.
PICTURETHIS
HAPPENINGS
eres ow o s o or am erin
Putin visits HungaryRussian President Vladimir Putin travels to Budapest to meet with Prime Minister Viktor Orban. Thevisit is mostlyabout renewing Hungary's gas contract, which expires this year.
Fat TueSday —Revelers partake in Mardi Grascelebrations in cities throughout the world.
HISTORY Highlight:in1865, during the Civil War, Columbia, South Carolina, burned asthe Confederates evacuatedandUnion forces movedin. (It's not clear which side wasresponsible for setting the blaze, orwhether it had beendeliberate.) In1815, the United States and
Britain exchangedthe instruments of ratification for the Treaty of Ghent, ending theWar of1812.
In1863, the International Red Cross wasfounded in Geneva. In1925, the first issue ofThe New Yorker magazine(bearing the cover date ofFeb.21) was published. In1933, Newsweekmagazine was first published underthe title "News-Week." In1944, during World WarII, U.S. forces invadedEniwetok Atoll, encountering little initial resistance from Imperial Japanese troops. (TheAmericans secured theatoll less thana week later.) In1959, the United States launchedVanguard 2, asatellite that carried meteorological equipment. In1965,comedianJoanRivers made her firstappearanceon "The Tonight Show" with Johnny Carson. In1972, President Richard Nixon departed theWhite House with his wife, Pat, on a historic trip to China. In1995, Colin Fergusonwas convicted of six counts of murder in the December1993 Long Island Rail Roadshootings. (He was later sentenced to a minimum of 200years in prison). Ten yearsago:President George W.Bushnamed John Negroponte, the U.S.ambassador to Iraq, asthe government's first national intelligence director. Iraq's electoral commission certified the results of theJan. 30 elections andallocated140 of 275 National Assemblyseats to the United Iraqi Alliance, giving the Shiite-dominated party a majority in the new parliament. Five yearsago: President Barack Obama markedthe one-year anniversary of the $787 billion American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, saying it had stavedoff another Great Depression andkept up to2 million people onthe job. Eight American missionaries charged with childkidnapping in Haiti were releasedafter nearly three weeks in aHaitian jail. One yearago:Theco-pilot of an Italian-boundEthiopianAirlines Boeing 767 lockedhis captain out of the cockpit, commandeered theplane,then headedto Geneva, where he wasarrested upon landing bySwissauthorities. (No onewasinjured).
BIRTHDAYS Actor Hal Holbrook is 90. Mystery writer Ruth Rendell is 85. Singer BobbyLewis is 82. Actress Christina Pickles is 80. Football Hall of Famer Jim Brown is 79.Actress Rene Russo is61. Actor Lou Diamond Phillips is 53. Basketball Hall of FamerMichael Jordan is 52.Actor-comedian Larry, the CableGuyis 52. Movie director MichaelBay is 51. Olympic gold andsilver medal skier TommyMoeis 45. Actress DeniseRichards is 44. Rock singer-musician Billie Joe Armstrong (GreenDay) is 43. Actor Jerry O'Connell is 41.TV personality Paris Hilton is 34. Actor JosephGordon-Levitt is 34. Actor ChordOverstreet (TV: "Glee") is 26. Singer-songwriter Ed Sheeran is24. Actress Meaghan Martin is 23.Actress Sasha Pieterse (TV: "Pretty Little Liars") is19. — From wire reports
Jerry Grymek is no ordinary concierge. He's the dog concierge at the Hotel Pennsylvania, which each
Jack Russell terrier.
February is home to hundreds of canines competing in the Westminster Kennel Club dog show.
This is not a job Grymek applied for. It fell into his lap like an eager Chihuahua as his PR duties expanded to include catering to guests' pet-related needs. Grymek became such an expert at dealing with the dogs that he was dubbed the dog concierge. Grymek has no dogs of his own, because they require
By Tina Susman Los Angeles Times
NEW YORK — The guest with the exotic name want-
ed opera, and Jerry Grymek was going to give him opera, even if it meant cordoning off a section of one of the city's
he were a dog, he might be a
,<3s4ll;: . 0
busiest hotel lobbies and sub-
time and attention his hectic
jecting everyone in it to an aria that evoked howls, plus a few whimpers and shrieks. This was n o o r d inary guest,though, and Grymek is no ordinary concierge. The eternally cheerful Grymek is the dog concierge at the Ho-
lifestyle does not allow. Instead, he and his wife keep guinea pigs, and he whipped out his phone to show a picture of the pair. "I love all animals," said
Grymek, stopping to greet a woman pushing two cats in strollers through the lobby. The cats were there to take
tel Pennsylvania, which each
February becomes home to hundreds of canines, including an opera-loving Spinone Italiano, who are competing
part in a pet fashion show at the hotel, which would raise
to be crowned best in show by the Westminster Kennel
Club. "I wouldn't say it's chaotic, but I'm running around non-
stop," Grymek said as he ran
Carolyn Cole/Los Angeles Times/TNS
During the Westminster dog show,which began Monday, one of the issues for workers at the Pennsylvania Hotel is keeping the floors clean.
"We've seen it all," Grymek
around nonstop to accommo-
date the needs of four-legged guests for the event, which began Monday and continues today. By check-in time, pet crates of varying sizes, luggage carts bearing pet beds and grooming devices, and little strollers carrying little dogs filled the lobby. Outside, vans bearing canine competitors jockeyed for
such as how long he has been featuresmore than 2,700 dogs doing this. "Two dog years," from 48 states and 14 counGrymek replied. That's 14 tries. Grymek said several years to humans. hundred of them will stay at "We welcome all animals
money for animal causes. Neither seemed nonplussed by the dogs surrounding them. Later, a woman pushing a carriage with two pet chickens, one dressed up for the fashion show, strolled past.
the Hotel Pennsylvania. And
with open paws," Grymek added, sprinkling his dog
many have requests. There are requests for red
talk with PR pitches for the
carpets to be laid out for ar-
18-story hotel, whose location
riving dogs. Done. There are requests to track position curbside to unload ison Square Garden, where down cheeseburgers, filet mitheir prized passengers, who the best in show is crowned, gnon and special meatballs were oblivious to the icy wind makes it ideal for dog com- for dogs. Done. and startled looks of pass- petitors even if human cusThere are requests for dog ers-by suddenly surrounded tomers give it less than stellar treadmills. Done. by glossy, shaggy and curly- online reviews. There is a dog spa with haired dogs of all sizes. grooming stations, bathtubs Grymek, who does public Frombats to bullmastiffs and a l arge, sawdust-covrelations for the 1,700-room T he hotel a dvertises it - ered area for dogs to answer hotel when he is not on dog self as the city's largest an- nature's call if t hey do not duty, looked calm as he zig- imal-friendly hotel, and it want to brave the cold. The zagged through the crowds. takes all pets, from a bat that liveperformance by an opera On his remarkably hair-free belonged to a performer to a singer, in 2012, was arranged gray suit ("I have a lot of 300-pound bull mastiff. for a competitor named Ecco lint brushes," Grymek exBut the hotel's pet friendli- D'Oro, who apparently found plained), his usual name tag ness is displayed best during arias calming before entering was replaced by one reading the days surrounding the the ring at Westminster. "Doggie Concierge." Westminster com p e tition, Nothing fazes Grymek, He was in full dog mode one of the world's most presti- who notes that show dogs are as he answered questions, gious dog shows. This year, it not prone to temper tantrums, across thestreet from Mad-
sard. lobby brawls or room trashThe hotel is able to meet ing, as are human celebrities. most requests, he said, though "They're trained so well. one proves elusive to all but a They're groomed. They smell single lucky guest during the impeccable,"he said as a days surrounding Westminnews conference introducing ster. That is the request to stay dog breeds to reporters was in Room 213, which is considwrapping up. "We could have ered lucky because it housed an accounting conference a beagle named Uno in 2008. here next week and no one Uno won best in show. would know it!" Grymek admits to a tinge As if on cue, a dog squatted of sadness when the compeon the carpet and did what tition ends and the dogs head excited dogs sometimes do. home. "Oh, I stepped in it!" a woman For now, though, Grymek exclaimed as her high-heeled was focused on getting dogs shoe plunged into the pile. to their rooms and bracing Grymek quickly c a lled himself for later in the weekhousekeeping. "I'm talking, e nd, when the bulk o f t h e like, number two," he said to
competitors would pour in.
"It's going to be a dogthe person who picked up the phone. house," he said. "'S' happens," Grymek said good-naturedly. 2 Locationsin Bend
Unexpected career turn
Main Center
Grymek speaks and walks at a rapid-fire pace, all the while texting, emailing and talking on his cellphone. If
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STUDY THE No N p ROFIT
Too little sleepfor U.S.teens By Lindsey Tanner The Associated Press
CHICAGO — U.S. teens are
versus 24 percent in 2012. Reports were slightly better for younger teens and worse for
getting sleepier: Many lack
the oldest teens.
even seven hours of shut-eye
In most surveys, girls and nonwhites were the least likely
each night and the problem has worsened over two de- to report seven hours of sleep. cades, a study found.
More than half of kids 15 What giVeS? and older would need to sleep Reasons for the trend are unat least two hours more each
night to meet recommendations for adequate rest, heightening concerns about the impact on their health and academicperformance. That's
certain but lead author Katherine Keyes, a Columbia Univer-
sity public health researcher, said factors that might have
contributed include increasing use of social media, smart-
according to researchers who
phones and other electronics,
analyzed the University of Michigan's annual "Monitor-
and rising rates of obesity, which has been linked with
ing the Future" national sur-
sleep deprivation. Other re-
veys of youth behavior. The study involved nearly
searchhas suggestedthat early school start times play a role
300,000 teens asked in 1991-
and advocates have been push-
2012 surveys if they regular-
ing for later times for teens. Kids who don't get enough
ly got at least seven hours
of sleep nightly and enough sleep are at riskfor mood sleep. Results were published problems,depression, memin Monday's Pediatrics. ory and learning difficulties Some highlights: and poor grades, said psychologist Daniel Lewin, a sleep
Eye-openers
Experts generally recommend nine or 10 hours of sleep
for teens; over half the 15- to 19-year-olds surveyed in 2012 said they didn't even get seven hours each night. Declines in nightly sleep were seen in teens ofallages during the two decades. The biggest drop was a mong 15-year-olds — just over half the kids this age reported at least seven hours nightly in 1991, versus less than 43 per-
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
TODAY'S READ:AN IMPROBABLE CANDIDACY
ica o's ma or race
-t e- ootstra sstor in By David Heinzmann and Rick Pearson
Wilson is a Louisiana sharecropper's son who has said he
produced four children. But the less than clear. He talks genermarriage was strained from ically of saving city money by the start, and Wilsonhad rocky cutting contractual spending. At relationships with his three the same time, he also pushes a sons and one daughter from plan to use contracts to leverage thatrelationship. jobs and economic development "I was not there for my kids in impoverished city neighborbecause I was always too busy," hoods. City contracts, he said, wrote Wilson, who added that should reflect the diversity of the he saw nothing wrong with his neighborhoods that they impact.
left home at 13. He's a janitor
behavior at the time because his
who rose to owning McDonald's franchises and now heads glove distributionbusiness. "He's totally blind to ob-
relationship with his own father versy during the campaign. At had been similarly distant. a recent City Club of Chicago His son, Omar, was mur- appearance, he criticized Afdered in 1995 in a drug-related rican-American aldermen for shooting in the Hazel Crest their backing of Emanuel initia-
stacles," said Roland Jones, a
home he shared with his sib-
former McDonald'scorporate consultant who met Wilson in
lings. A Chicago gang member was convicted of the killing and is serving a 40-year sentence, accordingto court records.
Chicago Tribune
As his friends are quick to note, Willie Wilson hasn't let
his seventh-grade education prevent him from becoming successful.
a multimillion-dollar plastic
the 1970s and remains a friend. "Willie Wilson is the kind
of guy who 'no' means 'not now,'" Jones added. "If we said,
'You can't do this,' it means not immediately." And so it is that Wilson de-
cided to run for mayor of Chicago despite having no political experience. As he campaigns ahead of the Feb. 24 election, Wilson has been selling his seemingly improbable success story and betting more than $2.1 million of his own money that it will resonate withvoters.
'Acommitted Chicagoan' The foundation of his per-
sonal success story is built partly on his lack of formal education, though he refers to
himself in printed and campaign literature as "Dr. Willie Wilson." That's based on a
handful of "honorary doctorate"degrees bestowed by religious organizations. Wilson says he's a committed Chicagoan. He talks about wanting to be mayor for all Chicago, buthispolicies and strategies have focused on encouraging the African-American vote.
Wilson talks about his private sector success as a qualification to lead city government and its
large bureaucracy, but he runs his current business out of a suburban town house and em-
ploys fewer than 10people. And he's said he wants to
break down racial barriers in
Wilson has created contro-
tives. Then, Wilson addressed
the few white people in the audience, largely working media, "To the whiteys, I'm letting you know, I ain't prejudiced." Afterward, Wilson denied A new direction saying it, then said he was Wilsonoperated McDonald's misunderstood because of his restaurants for the better part drawl. Later, he acknowledged of two decades before deciding sayingit and apologizedbut dehe needed a new direction. In nied he had any racist attitudes the late 1990s, he began selling orbeliefs. E. JasonWambsgans/ Chicago Tribune/TNS his stores and looking into busiWilson surfaced in politics Mayoral candidate Willie Wilson smiles at his home in Chicago last week. Wilson runs his company, ness as a vendor supplying Mc- last year in supporting RepubOmar Medical Supplies, out of his Chicago penthouse and a Hazel Crest town home. Donald's and other chains with lican Bruce Rauner over Demdisposable plastic gloves. ocratic incumbent Pat Quinn. Wilson was able to t rade Four years earlier, Wilson the cit,y but said he sold one old recounted his humble beAccording to Jones, Kroc on his name as a McDonald's had given Quinn's campaign of hisrestaurants because the ginnings. Born into a Louisiana took a liking to Wilson, part- vendor to eventually win glove $30,000. "Look at my track record. I neighborhood became most- share-cropping family, Wilson ly because he himself had supplybusiness from Wal-Mart, ly Hispanic and he thought said he left school in the sev- dropped out of school at an ear- and two major food-service supported Bruce. The Repubit needed a Hispanic owner enth grade to help in the fields. lyage. chains. Wilson said his privately lican. Went against my own "Most people would not call held company does $60 million neighborhood and Democrats, because he "couldn't relate to He hadaseriesofdiscouraging the Hispanic community as experiences working menial Ray Kroc, or be as persistent in a year in revenue, up to $20 mil- all right?" said Wilson, who did well" as he had to the black jobs in Florida and then later meeting him as Willie Wilson lion of it from Wal-Mart alone. not contribute to Rauner's camcustomers. New York and Chicago, where was," Jones said. At first, manWilson's company doesn't paign fund but served on the While a r ecent Chicago he said he first arrived in 1965. agers in McDonald's franchise manufacture the gloves, which new governor's transition team. Tribune poll showed Wilson He ended up with an en- department rejected Wilson's are made in China. And he W ilson's $2.1 m i llion i n pulling just 7 percent of the try-level job at a McDonald's, application because of his lack hires other firms to distribute self-funding for the mayor's vote, he is well-known in many which abruptly turned into a of education, Jones said. But the gloves. He runs his compa- race is dwarfed by Emanuel's African-American neighbor- management position when Kroc overruled them, Jones ny variously out of his Chicago $13.6 million raised. Wilson hoods, especially in church cir- other employees walked off the said, and eventually Wilson penthouse and a Hazel Crest dismisses the gap, contending cles that have benefited from a job and the owner gave Wilson opened his first McDonald's, on townhome. it is the result of sweetheart "I don't know a person in the dealings by the administration. bounty of charitable donations a chance, according to Wilson the South Side, around 1980. — an amount he said exceeds and Jones. world who runs a $60 million Wilson said if elected, he would $700,000 a year. Wilson, who Throughout the 1970s, Wilson Arockypersonallife company with less than 10 em- not accept similar dealings has not released his tax re- m anaged McDonald's stores for Wilson offered many details ployees. I can only speak to my with friends seeking contracts turns,said he also passes out other people but wanted to own about his personal life in his experience," he said. and citybusiness. "EvenbeforeIdecided to run "My faith wouldn't allow me $40,000 a month tohomeless one. Without enough savings or 2008 self-published autobiogpeople and in tips, often in $100 the wherewithal to get financ- raphy, "What Shall I Do Next for mayor, I was only putting in to do that. I've got something bills. ing, Wilson tried an unconven- When I Don't Know Next What 10 hours a week. It was not a bigger than that: my faith. I betional tactic: he tracked down To Do?" big deal," he said. lieve in eternal life, alright?" A lengthy resume McDonald's founder Ray Kroc Alongthe way, Wilson's hard Wilson said. "Beyondthat is that Wilson clearly has done a at a shareholders' meeting and work in the fast-food business Creating controversy I wouldn't do it because I'm not lot. In an interview in his pent- asked the burger mogul for a exacted a toll on his personal During the campaign, some running for friends. I'm running house apartment, the 66-year- store of his own. life. Wilson's first marriage of Wilson's policies have been for all of Chicago's citizens."
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 5
Brown Continued from A1 "In a presidential election
(we've been) just irrelevant nationally, but because of the Kate Brown election we'll get some national attention as
well," said Jim Moore, director of the Tom McCall Center for Policy Innovation at Pacific
University. The Oregon Republican Party, fresh off a thrashing in 2014 when the party lost two seats in the state Senate
and one in the House, might change gears slightly in an effort to become more "elect-
able," said Greg Leo, a spokesman for the party. "Republicans have a lot to
run against in 2016 and a lot of offices to run for," Leo said.
Republicans are in a gubernatorial drought that started when Vic Atiyeh left office in January 1987. In 2014, Kitzhaber beat Re-
publican challenger Dennis Richardson by five points despite several high-profile and expensive failed projects and early news reports in October about ethics issues that finally led to Kitzhaber's resignation last week.
Leo said the party will look to run candidates who are
conservatives and who appeal to fellow Republicans but also meet changing demographics and a strong Democratic registration edge in Oregon. There are 172,000 more Dem-
ocrats than Republicans in Oregon, according to the latest state data.
The number of unaffiliated voters and Independent Party members is also growing fast, meaning there is a large pool of centrist voters for both parties to consider when running
candidates for statewide office. "The term I
t h i n k w e ' re
looking for is more electable, more broadly electable by the large number of people," Leo sard. Oregon Republicans will
As he preparesto leavethe governor's office, Kitzhadersteersclear of pudlic view PORTLAND — With two days left before Gov. John Kitzhaber leaves office amid anethics scandal and criminal investigations at both the state andfederal level, he remained out of public view Monday, as theLegislature tried to get its new session back on track and death penalty opponents made alast-minute appeal. House SpeakerTina Kotek briefed reporters on the Legislature's plans andmadeclear she's not seeking the secretary of state post that will becomevacant Wednesdaywhen Kate Brown is sworn in asOregon's next governor. Kotek said, "clearly the last week has beenvery emotional for everybody." Shesaid she wanted to assure the state that the Legislature is "very focused onthe people' sbusiness"andwould be"focusedontheworkaheadthis week" despite the change in leadership. STAFF ANNOUNCEMENT Brown's spokesman,Tony Green, said Mondaythat Brian Shipley will be Brown's chief of staff. Shipley was a deputy secretary of state under Brown until he took ajob as alobbyist for Oregon Health 8 Science University in 2013. Hehasworked for Govs. Kitzhaber andTedKulongoski as well as SenatePresident Peter Courtney. DEATH PENALTY MORATORIUM Kitzhaber had ordered amoratorium in 2011 onexecutions, and on Monday,Oregonians for Alternatives to the DeathPenalty urged him to again "do the right thing" by commuting the sentences of the state's 35 death row inmates to life in prison without the possibility of parole. If Kitzhaber declines to order the commutation, the group encouraged Brown to continue the moratorium on executions. THE INVESTIGATIONS Kitzhaber announced his resignation Friday — thesame day federal prosecutors sent a subpoena to theDepartment of Administrative Services demanding it bring a laundry list of documents and records relating to the governor and his fiancee,Cylvia Hayes, to a federal grand jury on March10. Hayesfaces allegations she used their relationship to win contracts for her consulting business and failed to report income onhertaxes. Legal experts say the subpoenaindicates federal agents are investigating possible violations of public corruption laws and financial crimes, including wire or mail fraud, bribery and tax evasion. The state attorney general's office is also conducting an investigation into Hayes. In a letter madepublic Monday by TheOregonian newspaper, the attorney general's office denied Hayes' claims that the newspaper can't have heremails becauseshe's not a public official. Deputy Attorney General Fredrick Boss said although Hayes was not in a paid position, she advised thegovernor, worked onstate business and directed state employees in their work. He ordered the emails released. Kitzhaber andHayeshave not responded to numerous requests for comment. Kitzhaber's only response to the scandal wasa lengthy resignation letter in which heemphatically stated he did not break any laws or doanything "dishonest or dishonorable." — The Associated Press
on party leaders, which could ant to ensuring victories. "My sense is that it will be lead to a new leadership team, Leo said. a very exciting election. It will The s h ake-up m e ans Bend Republican Rep. Knute Buehler, who won in a swing district that has a s trong Democratic registration edge, might emerge as a viable statewide candidate for the GOP, analysts say. Buehler is "a new variation on the consistent theme of Or-
Continued from A1 It's been a long and arduous fight, but earlier this
month, Manning, his fellow victims and their families earned their f i rst, bitter-
sweet victory. Earlier this month, the Army announced that military victims of the 2009 Fort Hood attack willbe awarded the Purple Heart, and civilian victims will receive the SecretaryofDefense Medal
for the Defense of Freedom. "It's surreal," Manning
Alonzo Lunsford, left, talk to Attorney General Eric Holder after testifying before a House Appropriations hearing in Washington, D.C., in 2013.
said Thursday."It's been five
years of fighting to get the Army to say it's a terrorist attack. gt gives) a bit of clo- not going to bring him back, tack. The FBI knew almost sure, too, to be recognized but at least that can be brought a year before the attack that as fighting for your country. to light." Hasan initiated contact over It never should have been Manning attendedRedmond email with U.S.-born cleric likethisinthefirstplace." High School as a sophomore in Anwar al-Awlaki, a key al-QaAt the time ofthe shoot1992 and has family that still ida figure killed in Yemen in ing, Manning was a staff lives in the area. He grew up in 2011, according to a 2011 Sensergeant preparing for his Idaho and Oregon. ate report filed by Sens. Joe Lithird deployment to AfToday, Manning is a civil- eberman and Susan Collins. In ghanistan with a r eserve ian mental health counselor at the emails, Hasan expressed unit. He was texting his Madigan Army Medical Cen- his support of religious marwife, Autumn, while wait- ter in Tacoma, Washington. He tyrdom and asked al-Awlaki if ing for a medical exam Nov. has been embedded with the U.S. servicemen killed for at5, 2009, when Maj. Nidal Third Brigade, Second Infantry tacking fellow soldiers would Malik Hasan began shoot- Division since 2013. He said he be considered "shaheeds," or ing. The first bullet hit Man- struggled with the decision to martyrs. ning in the chest and punc- work for the Army again, but In August, Hasan wrote a lettured his lung. As he lay decided he could turn a nega- ter to Islamic State leader Abu gasping for breath, Hasan tive experience into a positive Bakr al-Baghdadi, expressing shot him five more times in one. the honor he would feel to be "I could go back and help one of the group's citizen solhis back and legs. In court, survivors later soldiers, given my experience diers. Hasanwas convictedof 13 recalled floors covered in and what I've gone through," he counts of premeditated murder blood, the smell of smoke said. "It's better to talk to some- and 32countsofattemptedmurandfeces,apregnant soldier one who has been through sim- der and sentenced to death in crying for her baby before ilar circumstances." August 2013. He is incarcerated Hasan shot her in the chest, In August 2013, Manning at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas. as reported by Reuters. It testified as a witness for the Manning hopes the lawsuit may sound like a scene from prosecution in Hasan's court will prevent events like the the battlefield, but the Army martial. Because Hasan chose Fort Hood shooting from hapdeclined to call it an act of
to act as his own attorney, Man-
terrorism, instead classify-
ning faced the prospect of be- sure when or where the Purple ing questioned by the man who Heart award ceremony will be,
ing the attack nonpolitical
"workplace violence." Manning retired from
tried to kill him. Luckily, Man-
the military in 2012 due to
tion him or any of the witnesses
pening in the future. He's not but he and his wife look for-
ning said, Hasan did not ques- ward to reuniting with the oth-
injuries sustained in the who testified. shooting and a diagnosis of While receiving the Purple post-traumatic stress disor-
need to be re-elected in 2018
denied military retirement
be a high-turnout election,"
for afinal term. Had Kitzhaber waited until after 2016 to resign, Brown
Bergstein said. A sked whether he w as thinking about a run for gov-
could have been governor for nearly 10 consecutive years. That leaves open the ques-
benefits and the difference between his reserve and civilian pay, he said. Manning estimates he lost at least $60,000in compensation. After years of pressure
ernor in 2016, Buehler said
tion of who will replace Brown
he was focused on the cur-
as secret ary ofstate. On Monday, House Speaker
Heart will bring the victims of
er Fort Hood victims. "We've gotten dose, even
people that weren't in my unit," he said. "Hopefully we can put
rent session and representing Bend.
Brown Brown has been forced to
Manning and other Fort Hood
victims alleges the Army, the FBI and the federal justice and defense departments are guilty of gross and willful negligence for failing to prevent the at-
changeditsstance.Underthe National Defense Authori-
the running for the position. House Majority L eader Val Hoyle, who chairs the Rules Committee that deals
zation Act of 2015, Congress redefined terrorist attacks
WINDOW TREATS
to include those initiated by
en and other blocs of the Dem-
Hasan's attack on Fort Hood.
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
jrockow@bendbulletin.com
A federal court case filed by
Tina Kotek ruled herself out of
perpetrators inspired or motivated by a foreign terrorist organization, and who were
years and 10 months. If she ran in 2016, Brown would then
unanswered questions.
from the lawsuit and government officials, the Army
quickly establish an adminegon Republicanism because istrationand prepare for her with elections issues, didn't he is different than a lot of time as governor to begin respond to a request for comRepublicans have been in the Wednesday. ment on whether she was inpast," Leo said. The time setting up her terested in the position. Longtime political consul- team cuts into a governorship Brown will be sworn in as tant Len Bergstein said Brown that, at best, could be short- governor at 10 a.m. Wedneswill excite young voters, wom- er than most at about seven day on the House floor. ocratic base that are import-
Molly Riley/The Associated Press file photo
Fort Hood shooting victims Shewn Manning, second from left, and
der. Because of the noncom- Fort Hood some closure, Man- this behind us." bat classification, he was ning said there are still a lot of — Reporter: 541-383-0354,
meet Feb. 28 to hold elections
Buehler
Purple Heart
C om p l e m e n t s
7%1SW10th • Redmand• (541) 5484616 www.redmondwindowtreats.com
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in communication with a
foreign terrorist organization beforethe attack occurred,
a ccording to a n A r m y news release. That included Receiving the
P urple
Heart will allow Manning to get his military retirement
College
disconnect between what em- day's job market is a mix of ployers need and the readiness classroom learning that can Continued from A1 of college seniors. In a pair of be applied in real-world experiTwo studies in just the past surveys by the Association of ences, or a combination of acafew weeks show that the clear American Colleges 5 Univer- demic experience and practical signala college degree once sities, would-be graduates said experience. "Our best employsent to employers that some- college armed them with the ees are problem solvers and are one isready for ajob increas- skills needed for the job mar- able to weave everything they ingly has a lot of noise sur- ket. But employers disagreed. know together," said Artim, of rounding it. On a range of nearly 20 skills, Enterprise. "They can think on employers consistently rated their feet." A lack of reasoning skills students much lower than they What these studies show is One study is the result of judged themselves. While 57 too many students may be foa test administered to 32,000 percent of students said they cused on the wrong things in students at 169 colleges and were creative and innovative, college. Too many of them are universities. It found that 40
for example,just 25 percent of
percent of college seniors fail to graduate with the complex reasoning skills needed in today's workplace. The test, the Collegiate Learning Assess-
employers agreed. picking the right college major If you're a parent of a high- for the job market, when it really
students who graduated from public colleges and those who went to private schools. Not surprisingly, students who graduated from the best colleges did
better than everyone else on the test as seniors, but their gains since taking the test as fresh-
men were actually smaller than those students who graduated from less elite schools.
in the so-called helping and service fields, such as social
choose to be buried at Ar-
lington National Cemetery upon his death. He is grateful his friend, Capt. John Gaffaney, who was shot and killed while charging Hasan, "can be recognized for doing something during an act of terrorism," Manning said. "It's
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in as longas theyare rigorous in their studies as well as activities beyond the classroom.
There is also too much emphasis these days on picking a practical field of study, which is why business is the most popular undergraduate major. But How to overcome the odds employers need people who are Employers say students who broadly educated andhavepracdedicate time and effort to their tical skills. Too many colleges major or an outside-the-class- may not be providing that guidroom activity, secure multiple ance and those opportunities to internships during their four students while saddling them years, and take on leadership with debt they won't be able pay roles are more likely to pos- off in theunemploymentline. sess the skills needed for the Googlehas founditis increasworkforce than students who ingly hiring people without coldrift through college. The best legedegreesbecause thesignal skill that students can learn in of the credential is no longer as college is actually the ability to clear as it used to be that somelearn. one is job ready. If colleges don't "People know how to take a provide the mix of academic
The big difference between the skills of graduates depended on their college major: Stu- course.But they need to learn and practical experiences that dents who studied math and how to learn," said John Leut- students need and students fail science scored significantly ner, head of global learning at to take advantage of them, prethigher than those who studied
III
back and some of his lost wages, he said. He may also
school senior or prospective doesn't matter what they major
college student, these findings might makeyou wonder if there ment Plus, is given to freshmen is any hope for a good job after and seniors and measures the college graduation. There is, gains made during college in but whether a student launches critical thinking, writing and after college depends largely on communication, and analytical what they do while in school. reasoning. The results of the test found little difference between those
H o me I n t e ri o r s
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many workers take time man- ployers looking for alternatives agement courses is that while to the college degree as well. work, and in business, which is they were in college someone — Selingo is a regular contributor the most popular college major. else set their priorities for them. to Grade Point. He is a former "College graduates now," he editor of the Chronicle of Higher Readiness said, "move into a contextual Education and a professor A second study released job, not a task-based job." of practice at Arizona State this month found a similar The best preparation for toUniversity.
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
Amid measlesoutbreak, few rules
Sftuaw Creek Canyon Recreational Estates
7pggg Deschutes County hopes to review rural subdivisions that are already platted and differ from surrounding land uses.
govern vaccinationsfor teachers Otld
By Christine Armario
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The Associated Press
Area of detail
LOS ANGELES — While much of the attention in the
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m embers, who, b y a n d large, are not required to be
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vaccinated. In most states, there is
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no law dictating which vaccines teachers and school
staffworkers are required to get. Some states provide
, Neadow Crest Acres
Section 36
Haner Park
Greg Cross/The BulletIn
Source: Deschutes County
Zoning
Hunnicutt said the bill was meant to give counties more
in the 1970s. The subdivisions
Continued from A1
control over zoning land in their jurisdictions.
ed into lots for development. Three of the subdivisions
He said there's often land
are near La Pine, while anoth-
House Bill 2229, also known as the MBig Look" bill, was
passed by Oregon lawmakers that's "never been used for agin 2009and gave countiesthe riculture and can't be used for option of rezoning agricultur- agriculture, and yet the counal or forest land that may not ty requires them to be zoned meet the statewide definition
for those zones. The zoning dependsprimarily on whether the soil is productive for farming and timber growth. The agricultural zone is also dependent on irrigation.
for agriculture. It just doesn't work very well and the county
needs to have the freedom and flexibility to zone those properties properly." Paul Dewey, lawyer and founder of Central Oregon
had been surveyed and divid-
er is west of Bend and the fifth northeast of Sisters. Rezoning
them on their own would have been fairly straightforward, according to county planners. "When we looked at these known subdivisions, it would
be a fairly easy analysis to perform and not very expensive,e said Lelack. But the Department of Land
h e w o r - Conservation and Developries that using the corrective ment relayed an i nterpretanonprofit Oregonians in Ac- option will open up other tion of the law to the county tion, which represents home resource land to p otential planning division in January and property owners, helped changes and encourage devel- that caused pause. The state draft the bill. Statewide defini- opment in rural areas around agency said theM bill doesn't altionsfor farm and forest land farm and forest land. It would low the county to look only at haven't worked well for coun- be a substantial change from small areas defined by existties east of the Cascade Moun- existing procedures, he said. ing subdivisions, but instead M I don't understand why the requires a review of a substantains, he said. M Deschutes County has al- county is pushing it this much tial part of the county." ways been the square peg in while other counties aren't,e Lelack said the interpretathe round hole as far as farm he said. tion is a "game changer." and forest land," said HunniDewey said the county's Deschutes County commiscutt. "There's a lot of land that approach is "inappropriate" sioners will now have to dethe state requires the county by assuming the subdivisions cide whether to move forward to designateas farm or forest were zoned incorrectly. with the approach or look at "The key error the county is other options to rezone the land that really doesn't have that potential." makingis that thebill was pre- subdivisions. County p l anners w e re mised on correcting mapping Rezoning the land using looking to use the rural sub- errors, and there's no evidence the law would be a multiyear divisions as a test run and that there was a mapping er- project. The state would have then look at other areas in ror here," Dewey said. to approve a work plan that Deschutes County that might County planners found the outlines the county's approach need to be corrected. subdivisions were lumped in before any rezoning could M We saw it as a tiered ap- as forestor farm land because begin. proach," said Peter Gutowsky, they were vacant at the time — Reporter: 541-617-7820, a county planning manager. Oregon adopted land use goals tshorack@bendbulletift.com David Hunnicutt, a land use lawyer and president of the
L andWatch, said
Damian Dovarganes / The Associated Press file photo
a list of recommended vac-
Boxes of the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine sit inside a
cines, but there is no requirement or follow-up for
freezer at a doctor's office in Northridge, California. Teachers and
teachers to receive them.
ments compared with their students. "Most of us don't have our
school staff, by and large, face relatively few vaccination require-
So when a measles case shot records," said one education official. "It would be a hard surfaced at a Ca l i f ornia thing to go back and prove." high school, it was easy for officials to review student records, but there were no we don't see some chang- s choolchildren t o cer t a i n i mmunization records on es in the next year to year adult professions. She said file for employees. and a h alf," said K r i sten her organization has a numThat meant all 24 teach- Amundson, executive di- ber of concerns about requirers and staff exposed to the rector of the National Asso- ing teacher vaccinations, inemployee with measles had ciation of School Boards of cluding safety and job protecto prove their immunity Education. tion for those who cannot or recordsthat,for most, were A lready, some statesare choose not to be immunized. M decades old. considering measles legisI think at the end of the The issue has surfaced lation. In Vermont, Demo- day, the most important prinfrom time to time in state cratic Rep. George Till says ciple to protect is the right to legislatures and is likely to legislators will try this year make an informed voluntary be raised again in response to eliminate philosophical decision, and that includes to the latest outbreak, which exemptions for students and teachers," she said. originated at Disneyland in require that teachers be up A t V i sta M u r r ieta H i g h December and has spread to date on the same vaccines School in California's Riverto a half dozen states and students must receive. side County, a middle-class "If we're trying to limit c ommunity between L o s Mexico. Most of those who fell ill were not vaccinated. the spread in school, why Angeles and San Diego, all As of Friday, public health just students?" Till said. A teachers and staff who had officials said 114 people had similar bill h e i n t roduced been exposed to the measles contracted measles. in 2012 was defeated amid were able to return to work M I was defi n i tely strong opposition from an- within on e t o t h r e e d ays. shocked," Rep. Joanna Cole, ti-vaccine groups, and he Teachers who were born bea Democrat in the Vermont expects another battle. fore 1957 were immediately Legislature, said when she In Colorado, pro-vacci- excused, assuming they had learned in 2012 there were nation groups have been either had gotten measles as no teacher vaccination repushing the Department of a child or been exposed to the quirements in her state. Human Services to require disease. There are still no require- vaccinations for workers at Kathy Ericson, president ments today. MI guess we child care facilities, another of the Murrieta Teachers Asall just assumed that they area withuneven employee sociation, said the instructors would have them." immunization s t a n dards. were willing to do "whatever Cole and other legisla- Measles cases have been needs to be done" to protect tors and parents across the confirmed at day care facil- students. But she stopped U.S. believe the blanket pre- ities in Chicago and Santa short of saying whether vacsumption that teachers are Monica, California. cination or proof of immuniup to date on their vaccines Barbara Loe Fisher, di- zation should be required for should b e re- e x amined. rector of the National Vac- employment. They note that most of those
cine Information Center, a
sickened in the current out-
Virginia-based n onprofit that favors letting parents decide whether to vacci-
break are adults, and that
schools are one of the top places forthe spread of communicable disease. M
I will be surprised if
"Most of us don't have our
shot records," she said. "It would be a hard thing to go back and prove."
nate, said the discussion on
vaccination r equirements has started to expand from
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE? Connect Hearing
Co-ops
beyond Iowa and Nebraska. ring questions to Gerhart. to take on a disproportionate The co-ops, which the law says Carlyle said a unique set of number of customers with exContinued from A1 must be "consumer governed" circumstances had weakened pensive health problems. GerMany of these newcomers to by boards elected by their cus- the co-op. In addition to selling hart said CoOportunity had the industry, seeded with hun- tomers, have received nearly private plans through the ex- paid for 21 organ transplants dreds of millions of dollars in $2 billion in federal loans, in- change, it had agreed to cover over the past 13 months, for federal loans, struggled to at- cluding $145 million that went new Medicaid enrollees under example, and had seen "hightract customers after the law's to CoOportunity. They were Iowa's expansion of the pro- er than anticipated" claims online insurance exchanges initially supposed to receive $6 gram. The co-op pulled out of across the board. The co-op opened in 2013. But CoOpor- billion over time, but Congress the Medicaid program in Oc- had increased its premium tunity had seemed to flourish, later slashed the amount and tober, saying many of the 9,700 rates 19 percent for 2015, but with more than 120,000 cus- virtually no funds remain. enrollees it covered had signifi- Mat the end of the day, they "Certainly I'm very disheart- canthealth needs and were too needed capital," he said. tomers in Iowa and Nebraska — far more than the 15,000 it ened right now e said Dr. David expensive. Lovig's switch to a new inhad anticipated — by the end of Carlyle, a family physician in Another problem was that surer, Coventry Health, has not last year. Ames, Iowa, who served on a Iowa and Nebraska, with the been so smooth. Her new covIts success apparently helped board that advised the Obama Obama administration's per- erage did not start until Feb. 1, doom it. CoOportunity's many administration on how to set up mission, allowed people to keep meaning shehas topay awhole customers needed more med- the cooperatives. MIf you can't old insurance policies that did new out-of-pocket maximum ical care than expected, ac- have competition, you're going not meet Affordable Care Act — $1,850 —before the new bencording to Nick Gerhart, Iowa's to go back to a world where standards through 2016. These efits kick in. insurance commissioner, and it a large percent of the popu- people tended to be relatively Gerhart said the state guarhad priced its plans too low. Af- lation is unable to get health healthy because before the law anty associations in Iowa and ter taking control of the co-op 111surance. took eff ect,insurers could re- Nebraska would cover outin late December, Gerhart deEven before CoOportunity's ject customers who were sick. standing medical claims for cided last month it could not be failure, Republican critics of That left the two insurers CoOportunity customers up saved and asked a court to liq- the health law had pointed to selling plans through Iowa's to $500,000 a person. He and uidate it. The co-op, he said at the co-opsas a risky use oftax online exchange, CoOpor- others, including brokers and the time, faced more than $150 dollars. Sen. Charles Grassley tunity and Coventry Health, enrollment counselors in the million in liabilities. That left its of Iowa last month began an incustomers scrambling for new vestigation into the federal govcoverage, and health care pro- ernment's role in CoOportunividers wondering if millions of ty's collapse. And on the floor dollars in outstanding claims of the House of Representatives would ever get paid. recently, Rep. Adrian Smith Denture 5t Implant Center More broadly, it raised the of Nebraskacalled the co-op's question of whether one of the collapse Mone more example of Affordable Care Act's biggest Obamacare's failure." The Luxury of Personalized Care experiments in holding down CoOportunity executives deinsurance costs was in trouble clined to be interviewed, refer-
two states, had urged co-op
Y OUR HOARIVO Peolllho e e l l
customers to choose a new insurer by Sunday, when the latest open enrollment period
ended. Roughly three-fourths had switched as of last week, hesaid.
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
BRIEFING Motorcyclist injured in crash A motorcycle crash that occurred lateSunday morning nearWarm Springs hasleft the driver with severehead injuries, according to Oregon StatePolice. Arthur BrandonKem, 45, was taken byair ambulance toSt. Charles Bend after helost control traveling eastbound
BEND-LA PINE SCHOOLS
BRIEFING
u erinten entsearz etsro in By Abby Spegman
cipals and staff representatives.
The Bulletin
The group planned to meet in executive session this evening
Bend-La Pine Schools officials will begin interviews to find the district's next superintendent later this week The school board is conduct-
ingthe search along with prin-
son announced in October that he would retire at the end of the
Womancited after crash Crook County Sheriff's deputies were dispatched to multiple traffic complaints involving a Mercury Marquis on SE Juniper CanyonRoad near Prineville on Monday morning before the car ended upcolliding head-on with another vehicle. Responding to the traffic complaints near milepost 6, deputies were advised through dispatch that the vehicle had been involved in a head-on crash on SE Juniper CanyonRoad,approximately a half-mile south of the intersection with Paulina Highway. Law enforcement determined Sherry Authier, 55, of Prineville, was driving northbound on SE Juniper CanyonRoad at10:43 a.m. Monday, when for unknown reasons her vehicle crossed the center line into oncoming traffic. At that point Authier's vehicle
Interviews with the semifi-
nalists are scheduled to take current schoolyear. He came to place Saturday and Monday.
to hear from consultants from
the district in 1998 as director
Those interviews willtake
the search firm McPherson & Jacobson LLC and identify six
ofhuman resources and was made deputy superintendent
the names of the semifinalists
to eight semifinalists. Superintendent Ron Wilkin-
in 2000 and superintendent in
place in executive session and arenotexpectedtobe released. SeeSuperintendent/B5
2008.
on State Route 216.
According to OSP, at approximately11:45 a.m. asaddle bagslid from the vehicle andwascaught in the rearwheel ofthe motorcycle, causing the crash. Initial information indicates Kemis in critical condition; OSP Trooper MatthewZistel is leading theongoing investigation. One laneopenedto traffic at 2:42 p.m.Sunday and theother lane opened anhour later. The Wasco CountySheriff's Office, Juniper Flat Rural Fire Department, South WascoCounty AmbulanceServiceand Oregon Department of Transportation assisted OSP atthescene.
ort to a resst e esc utes' uctuatin ows at 1c u Local filmmaker Scott Nelson
shoots e sectlon of aquatic
vegetation exposed along the Deschutes River just below Wickiup Dam
2504. — Bulletin staffraports
Mercury Sable driven by Wesley "Ray" Maxwell, 76, of Prineville. Law enforcement say alcohol was not afactor in the crash. Following the collision, Maxwell's vehicle came to rest on the west side of SEJuniper Canyon Road,while Authier's vehicle continued off the west side of the road, through a fence, coming to a rest in a field. Authier was later transported to St. Charles Prineville by a family member and Maxwell was transported to St. Charles Prineville by deputies for further evaluation. Authier was cited and released at the scenefor reckless driving. Both Authier and Maxwell were wearing seat belts at the time of the crash.
Nelson has
been documenting how
Man last seen near l.akeview Oregon State Police and the LakeCounty Sheriff's Office areasking for the public's help in finding a manmissing from western Lake County after his motorhome wasfound burned north of the Quartz Mountain Sno-Park. Spencer KingGiesea, 44andofKlamathCounty, was last seenFriday in western LakeCounty north of the Quartz Mountain Sno-Park, approximately 30 miles west of the city of Lakeview. He isdescribed as 5feet9inches and approximately170 pounds with gray hair and blue eyes. Hewas last seenwearing ajean jacket, snow pantsand prescription glasses. OSP reports his motorhome became stuckon Forest Service Road 3660, north of State Highway140, and was found burned in the same location on Saturday. Gieseaand his two yellow labradors were notaround the motorhome, but since then one doghas been found. Lake County Search and Rescueresponded and conducted asearch for Giesea.Anyonewith information on Giesea's whereabouts is encouraged to call LakeCounty dispatch at 541-947-
hit a southbound 2005
Wednesday.
the irregular flows along the Deschutes has had an impact on the fish
populations in the river. Ryan Brennecke The Bulletin
By Dylan J. Darling
constant-flowing rivers in the world," Nel- Spring rivers add to the flow. son said. "And we've changed it." Before the dams went in, the Deschutes SUNRIVER — During his ongoing misThe change came withthe completion of River flowed a fairly consistent 700 to 800 sion to document the Deschutes River in the dams forming Crane Prairie Reservoir cubic feet per second (cfs) year-round, film and photo, Scott Nelson discovered a in 1922 and Wickiup Reservoir in 1949. said Brett Hodgson, district biologist for seldom-visited stretch of the river and how The highly varying flows are the subject the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlow it flows during winter. of ongoing talks among irrigators, conser- life in Bend. There would be occasional Now like many with interest in the De- vation groups and state wildlife managers increases and decreases in flow, he said, schutes, Nelson wonders if anything can and are most noticeable along the about 20 but "no big changes like we currently be done tohave more water in the river miles of the river downstream of Wickiup experience." The Bulletin
this time of year. "It was one of the most
Dam, before the Fall, Little Deschutes and
Change inflows
nriver
DESCHUTES NATIONAL FOREST
See Deschutes/B5
— Bulletin staff reports
OregonWaterResources Department datashowthe differences in flows along astretch of the Deschutes River upstream ofBend before andafter Wickiup Damwas built in1949.
Well shot!
Daily flows (mean) throughout the year: 2 years compared
40 42
Readerphotos
2011
Send us your best outdoor photos at Qebendbulletin.com/ readerphetes.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section.
Wickiup gauge
: rane Prair'la
SECOND
1,500
,iR fvoir
Prlngle Fallsgauge
42
0
1,000
43
o Twin Lakes
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iCkillP
Peservoir 46 cascade
LakesHwy.
T,
Submission requirements: Includeas much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special techniqueused — aswell as your name, hometown and contact info. Photosselected for print must be highresolution (at
500
La Pine
1916 Pringle Falls gauge
Wickiup gauge
0
Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Ocl Nov Dec
Source: Oregon Water Resources Department
»
least 6 inches wideand 300 dp and cannot bealtered.
Greq Cross/The Bulletin
JROTCmemers ea e toNorman By Beau Eastes
class, but we actually get to go to where it all happened."
The Bulletin
MADRAS — Five Madras
The Madras students, who
High students are preparing for a history lesson of a lifetime.
are looking at various ways to fundraise for the trip, will be five of 10 JROTC cadets from around the United States to
Seniors Bailey Brown and
Parker Dominguez, as well as fellow Junior Reserve Officers' Training Corps classmates Sean Leriche, a junior, and sophomores Ginny Huang and Savannah Holliday, have been invited to participate in this year's World
participate in a D-Day parade
War II D-Day ceremonies in
abbey at Mont St. Michel and various stops in Paris. "We'll be walking in the footsteps of our veterans who sacrificed for us," says Park-
at Sainte-Mere-Eglise, the first town in France to be
liberated by American paratroopers in 1944. Their tenta-
tive itinerary includes visits to the American Cemetery in Brittany, Utah Beach, the
Normandy, France, through the nonprofit organization Historic Programs.
Meg Roussos i The Bulletin
The nine-day trip, which includes time in Washing-
From left, Parker Dominguez, 18, Savannah Holliday, 15, Bailey Brown, 18, Sean Lerlche, 17, and Glnny Huang, 15, are the five students chosen from Madras High School to visit Normandy this
ton, D.C., is June 2-10 and
June.
celebrates thesuccess of Operation Overlord, the
daring Allied invasion of German-occupied France on June 6, 1944, and the subsequent liberation of Western
Europe. "I think it's going to be really powerful," says Bailey,
ion commander, who hopes to continue into the Army ROTC in college. "We sit
the Madras JROTC battal-
there and learn about this in
er, the Madras unit's battalion
executive officer, who also is looking at joining an ROTC program in college. "It's going to begreatto seethe beaches theycame up on.Humbling,
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
E VENT TODAY LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Discuss "Truth and Beauty: A Friendship" by AnnPatchett;noon;EastBend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. "CESARCHAVEZ: HISTORYIS MADE ONESTEP AT A TIME": Featuring a film about the famed civil rights leader and labor organizer; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-318-7412. "GIRL RISING":A film about nine girls living in developing countries, and overcoming the odds to achieve their dreams; $12; 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.bendticket.com or 541-382-5174. HIGH DESERTMUSEUM BOOK CLUB:Readand discuss Ivan Doig's "This House of Sky: Landscapes of a Western Mind"; free; 6-7:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. "ROYALBALLET:THE WINTER'S TALE":A screening of Christopher Wheeldon's ballet based on Shakespeare's play and performed at the Royal Opera House; $18, $15 for seniors and children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. MARDI GRASPARTY:Celebration featuring Summit Express Jazz
Band; $13plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
WEDNESDAY "IOLANTA/BLUEBEARD'S CASTLE":Featuring the double bill broadcast of Tchaikovsky's "lolanta" and Bartok's "Bluebeard's Castle"; 6:30p.m.; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fandango.com. "TELLITON THE MOUNTAIN": A screening of the film about six hikers on the Pacific Crest Trail; $3 suggested donation; 6:45 p.m.; The Environmental Center,
ENDA R 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541-389-0785. 18TH ANNUALCOFFEEHOUSE: Featuring an art gallery, art demonstrations, live entertainment from Sisters High School music programs, creation stations, silent auction and studentart to benefit arts programs and scholarships; $5; 7-9 p.m.; Sisters High School,1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www. outlawnet.com or 541-549-4045. THE BLACKBERRY BUSHES: The Americana-roots band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. PROFESSOR GALL: The Portland folk/jazz band performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvMt.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. LUKE SWEENEY: The BayArea psych-pop artist performs; ladies free, $5 for men; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
ARCHAEOLOGY FILMFESTIVAL: Featuring the best films from the 2014 edition of The Archaeology Channel; $7; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 NW College
Way, Bend;www.cocc.eduor
541-383-7700. THE RAINBOW AFFAIR: Featuring dancing and live entertainment to benefit PFLAGCentral Oregon; 7p.m.; $15 plus fees, $20 at the door, $25 for VIP; Bend's Community Center, 1036 NEFifth St., Bend, 541-385-3320 or www. bendticket.com. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring Soul Vaccination, with Chester Thompson; SOLD OUT;8:15 p.m .; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford. com or 541-382-8436. BEAUTIFULTRAINWRECKS:The Portland band performs, with Jenna Ellefson and Wilderness; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
SATURDAY
Submitted photo
The Helio Sequence, a Portland indie-rock duo, will perform Friday at Crow's Feet Commons. Oliver Klozzoff; $10, plus fees in advance; 8 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendticket.com or 541-408-4329. ROSE'S PAWN SHOP:The Los Angeles roots-rock band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "WHAT IT TAKES":A film about four Ironman Triathletes; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www.belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. "BEAUTYANDTHE BEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; THURSDAY $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children12 and BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High SATURDAYMARKET:Featuring arts School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, and crafts, collectibles, antiques, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. children's activities, music and com or 541-322-3300. more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 "SAVING MR. BANKS":Showing p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. of the film about the making of the Disney movie Mary Poppins; LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Discuss free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, "This is the Story of a Happy Jefferson County Library,134 SE Marriage" by Ann Patchett; noon; La E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-475-3351. www.deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or FRIDAY 541-312-1090. "THE PILLOWMAN":A play about "GO IN PEACE!":A showing of the a writer who is questioned about his BEND INDOORSWAP MEET AND stories and possible connection to SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts film about veterans and their health recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors needs, followed by a discussion with and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades the film's producer and director, Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., more; freeadmission;10 a.m.-5 Karen van Vuuren; free; 6-8 p.m.; Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org St. Charles Bend Center for Health p.m.; Bend IndoorSwap Meet,679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. or 541-389-0803. and Learning, 2500 NENeff Road; www.stcharleshealthcare.org or ARCHAEOLOGY FILMFESTIVAL: AUTHOR PRESENTATION: 541-382-4321. Featuring the best films from the Featuring three Oregon authors: Bing Bingham, author of "Shaped by 2014 edition of The Archaeology BLUE LOTUS:The Eugene rock 'n' Channel; $7; 7:30 p.m., doors roll band performs; free; 7 p.m.; the Land," Shelley Houston, author of "A Father's Child," and Janet open at 7 p.m.; Central Oregon McMenamins Old St. Francis Storton, author of "The Grass that Community College Boyle School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or Suffers"; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Education Center, 2600 NWCollege 541-382-5174. Books,422 SW Sixth St.,Redmond; Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-383-7700. 541-526-1491. "THE PILLOWMAN":A playabout a writer who is questioned about his THE HELIOSEQUENCE: The Portland JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring indie-rock duo performs, with Pluto Soul Vaccination, with Chester stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors The Planet; free; 6 p.m.; Crow's Feet Thompson; SOLD OUT;8 p.m.;The and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Commons,875 NW BrooksSt., Oxford Hotel,10 NW Minnesota Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons.com Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford. Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-728-0066. com or 541-382-8436. or 541-389-0803. SLAID CLEAVES:TheAustin, Texas MCDOUGALL:ThePortland band CAGE:The underground rapper folk singer performs; $18 plus performs; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic performs, with Sadistikand DJ fees in advance, $23 at the door; 7 Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive,
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet
BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET: Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Bend Indoor Swap Meet, 679 SE Third St.; 541-317-4847. FAMILY FREE DAY: Free day at themuseum, sponsoredby M id Oregon Credit Union; free;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum.org or 541-382-4754. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring Soul Vaccination, with Chester Thompson; SOLDOUT; 5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford. com or 541-382-8436. AUTHORPRESENTATION: Featuring three Oregon authors: Bing Bingham author of "Shaped by the Land," Shelley Houston author of "A Father's Child," and Janet Storton author of "The Grass that Suffers"; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541-549-0866. HAVE AHEART FORBEND: Featuring a beer and wine tasting, dinner, live music by Out of the Blue, to benefit St. Vincent DePaul; $35; 6-10 p.m.; Bend Elks Lodge ¹1371, 63120 Boyd Acres Road; www.stvincentdepaulbend.org, stvincentbend©integra.net or 541-389-6643. "BEAUTYANDTHEBEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children12 and younger; 7:30 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300. "THE PILLOWMAN":A play about a writer who is questioned about his stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
SUNDAY "BIRDMAN":A showing of the Oscar-nominated film; $10; 2 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "THE PILLOWMAN":A playabout a writer who is questioned about his stories and possible connection to recent murders; $15, $12 for seniors and students; 2 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. "BEAUTYANDTHEBEAST": A performance of the Disney classic by Thoroughly Modern Productions; $22.50 plus fees in advance, $18.50 for seniors and children 12 and younger; 3 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www.thoroughlymodernprod. com or 541-322-3300. SWINGLESINGERS:Theacappell a group performs, presented by the Redmond Community Concert Association; $60, $25 for students 21 and younger, $125 for families, season subscriptions only; 6:30 p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www. redmondcca.org, redmondcca@ hotmail.com or 541-350-7222.
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Parker Dominguez, left, and Bailey Brown, both18, point to Normandyon a map ofFrance. Theyare two of the five students chosen from Madras High School to visit Normandy this June; the groupis still fundraising for the trip.
JROTC Continued from B1
"It'd be nice to meet one of the veterans," adds Savan-
nah, who won a Madras High D-Day essay contest that helped secure her nomination
"We're selling sets of knives, flags for veterans' graves ... I want the kids to see (the Normandy beaches) and get them out of little old Madras, Oregon." — Lt. Col. Larry Renfro, whooversees the Madras JROTCprogram
for the trip. "It'd be like meet-
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Joinusduring the nextsixweeksasvve host a lecture series to increase safety awareness on fall prevention, common home injuries and provide solutions to keep you safe!
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SafetyMan says "Always be Safe to Ensure an Active 8 Independent Lifestyle"
Falls Are Preventable TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 4:00 PM
The opportunity to help reduce falls among older adults has never been better. Today, there are effective fall prevention interventions that can be used in community settings. Fall prevention programs can reduce falls and help older adults live better, longer lives.
ing history, in a way." Lt. Col. Larry Renfro, who oversees the Madras JROTC
The trip, which organizes round-trip airfare from
program, said he in itially Washington, D.C., to Paris nominated just one cadet for and hotel accommodations, is the trip, but organizers en-
not free.
couraged him to submit apHistoric Programs, which plications for as many as five helps stage parades at hisstudents. toric sites around the world, He did, and Parker, Savan- charges students $3,487 for nah, Bailey, Sean and Ginny its nine-day tour. Renfro, who were chosen along with ca- will chaperone the JROTC dets from New Mexico, New students from M a dras and York, North Carolina and Arizona to represent the coun-
try's future military officers. "The biggest thing for me is getting the kids over there and seeing something," says Renfro, a 1976 graduate of the United States Military Academy in West Point, New York. "A kid that was 21 on D-Day,
he's 91 today. They're dying out. This celebration probably won't last much longer."
the rest of the country — the
Jefferson County School District is paying his costs —estimates each of his Central
Oregon students needs to raise approximately $4,000,
Want tohelp? Members of Madras High's JROTCprogram are raising funds for their upcoming Normandy trip. If you're interested in helping send the five cadets to France, contact the school's JROTC coordinator, Larry Renfro, at 541-475-7265, ext. 367,
or at Irenfro@509j.net. Money can also bedonated directly at the website www.gofundme.com/
TUESDAY, MARCH 24, 4:00 PM
Dangers exist all around your home, and unless safety precautions are in place, you leave yourself in danger. Aside from the kitchen, the bathroom is one of the most dangerous rooms in your home. Recognizing these dangers,and making some common sense decisions, will go a long way in protecting you and your family.
Learn the 411 On Medicare Coverage TUESDAY, APRIL 21, 4:00 PM Medicare is a government-sponsored program that people over the age of 65 and those who meet their special criteria turn to for their social insurance. This program provides health insurance normally to seniors. Come and learn more about what it covers and what it does not.
hvbBv8.
as transportation to Washing-
ton, D.C., is up to each cadet. day at Madras. "I want the "We're selling s ets o f kids to see (the Normandy knives, flags for veterans' beaches) and get them out of graves ..." says Renfro, who little old Madras, Oregon." teaches 130 JROTC students over six class periods each
Avoid Bathroom Dangers
— Reporter: 541-617-7829; beastesibendbulletin.com.
Space is limited for this FREE educational series. For more information or to reserve your seat please call (541) 312-2003. Managed by Prestige Senior Living High Desert 2660 NE Mary Rose Place vvvvw.PrestigeCare.com Bend, Oregon 97701
Prestige Senior Living, L.L.C
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
aI' e I'aCia a Ifl SC OOS
AROUND THE STATE Man killed dy police ID'd —ClackamasCounty authorities
BX Ll SIOA I'8 BS IA OI' cll1 The Associated Press PORTLAND — Fewer stu-
dents in the Portland school district are being suspended or expelled, but black and Native A m erican s t udents are still being sent home at
far greater rates than white students.
The school district is trying to reduce the overall rate of exclusionary discipline and the gap between the r ates
Overall, the number of students suspended or expelled last year dropped from 4.7 percent to 3.3 percent. But 15 percent of African-
American boys and 15 percent of Native American boys were excluded at least once, compared with 4 percent of white boys.
can students were excluded between p r e k indergarten and third grade, compared with about 1 percent of white
students. "We are making progress, but we still must maintain a
sense of urgency to close the disparity," Poe said. The district has outlined three main strategies to reach
rates, instead of r e moving percent to 3.3 percent. But 15 them from school when they percent of African-American
of such discipline for whites misbehave, school officials boys and 15 percent of Native and minority groups such sard. American boys were excluded as blacks and Native AmeriOnly 20 percent of stu- at least once, compared with 4 cans, The Oregonian reported dents who had been exclud- percent of white boys. Monday. ed between five and 10 times The trends start as early as The state sanctioned the graduated on time in 2012-13, kindergarten, said Lolenzo district last fall, requiring it to compared with 68 percent of Poe, the district's chief equity spend money on programs to students who were never ex- and diversity officer and partclose the gaps. cluded from school. nership director. The district's ultimate misOverall, the number of stuRoughly 12 percent of Nasion is to keep more kids in dents suspended or expelled tive American students and class to help boost graduation last year dropped from 4.7 9 percent of African-Ameri-
the goal of slicing exclusions and disparities in half, including restorative justice.
That's described as an alternative discipline model that focuses on dialogue and rebuilding relationships. Instead of immediately punishing a student for acting out, the
model encourages students to talk with their peers, principals and teachers about how their actions affect the school
said a 911 call about a stabbing suspect being armed with a gun came from the cellphone of a manwho later advanced on sheriff's deputies with a hatchet and was shot to death. The manwas identified Monday as 34-year-old Bruce LeeSteward, of Colton, an unincorporated community 35 miles south of Portland along state Highway 211 between Molalla and Estacada. Sheriff's deputies said the 911 caller hung up Sundayafter delivering what turned out to be a false report. Deputies said when they arrived in response to the call, they encountered Steward, who moved toward them holding a hatchet. The deputies involved in the shooting have beenput on paid leave, as is the usual procedure in police shootings.
Corvallis park death investigated —corvallis police said they're investigating what appears to be akilling at a city park. Police cordoned a large wooded area in Alan B.Berg Park, where the body of a womanwas found Sunday. Investigators said she died sometime before 10:30 a.m. Sunday of what they describe as "homicidal violence." The police said Monday anautopsy is planned, and they're trying to make apositive identification. They said the woman was white and anadult. Investigators said they don't have asuspect or person of interest. SalemmOtarCyCle CraSh —Police said a motorcyclist suffered life-threatening injuries Monday when a collision on a Salem bridge knocked him into the Willamette River. Police said a boater fished the manout downstream of the Marion Street bridge, and he was taken to the hospital. Police said the motorcycle went out of control after colliding with another vehicle. Police said the driver of the other vehicle stayed at the scene of the accident and cooperated with officers. — From wire reports
community.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
Heart attack victim: Dogskept megoing By Vickie Aldous
die — accompanied by two of
Medford Mail Tribune
his best friends who loved him.
His dogs, however, had other ideas. They both kept urgently to take his dogs on a morning licking his face. "They kept me alert and walkwhen he felt a tightness in his chest that worsened into a going," he said. "I credit them crushing sensation. with saving my life." "I thought, 'Man, I'm having Paramedics were able to aheart attack,'" said the former rush Holm to Rogue Regional teacher who taught in Central Medical Center in M edford, Point schools for more than 20 where a whole team was ready years. to treat the 68-year-old. Sweating and feeling inDr. Todd Kotler, the intervencreasingly disoriented on that tional cardiologist who treated October day, Holm managed Holm, said speed is crucial in GOLD HILL — Gold Hill resident Larry Holmwas about
to dial 911 and tell the woman
who answered he was having a heart attack and where he lived. As he sat on his house steps,
his protective German shepherd, Luna, and affectionate Labrador retriever, Rio, grew
increasingly agitated. "My shepherd starting barking like crazy, and my Lab put her head on my shoulder and she started crying," Holm said. He felthimself driftingaway. "I was going down. I thought, 'OK. I'm going to the other side.' I figured I wouldn't
make it," Holm said. He remembers thinking it
wouldn't be such a bad way to
quickly as possible." He said the pair saved him Once blockages are identi- oncebeforewhen they were all fied, they can be opened with a on a walk and an aggressive, stent, he said. 120-pound dog came barrelRestoring blood flow quick- ing toward them. At first Rio ly leads to less damage to the and Luna hid behind his legs, heart muscle and a quicker re- but then his German shepherd covery for the patient, Kotler jumped out and crashed chestsald. He said it
to-chest into the oncoming dog.
The dog grabbed her by Holm recognized he was hav- the neck, which prompted the ing a heart attack. Lab to dart out and grab the Holm said he was impressed aggressor's legs. All of the anby the care he received. imals survived the melee, and "When I got to the hospital, Holm was left with a different they were lined up and ready view of his otherwise gentle treating heart attack victims. to go. They are all top-notch," pets'personalities. "It told me these dogs will Emergencymedicalpersonnel he said. "They've got it figured who make acorrect heart at- out. You can't find a better protect me," he said. tack diagnosis in the field are group from top to bottom." able to alert the hospital in adHolm is now on the mend vance so the emergency room, after attending a series of carcardiologist and heart cathe- diac rehabilitation sessions. He terization team are readyto go. said he feels lucky he had the Dozens of people are activat- heartattack because doctors ed to focus on the single task of discovered he has an aneuhelping the patient, he said. rysm, or ballooning of a blood "With treatment of h eart vessel. Future surgery will fix attacks, the key is to get the the problem before the vessel blocked coronary artery open bursts. again as quickly as possible," Active his whole life, Holmis Kotler said. "Heart attacks oc- back to walking Rio and Luna cur when coronary arteries four mornings a week. One of become abruptly closed off. their favorite places to go is a Heart muscle starts dying. The Gold Hill park that fronts the key is to restore blood flow as Rogue River. w a s f ortunate
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541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com
III I
Mount Ashland getsadose
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JAI(IETS II PANTS
of snow, recoversandreopens
I
HEL'METS+-GO IQILE~S i OIVE iS P'OIIE~S • QL
The Associated Press A SHLAND —
A n e a rly
February storm has brought skiers and workers back to the troubled ski area at Mount Ashland.
The area has struggled the past two years with poor
I
/I
snowfall. Last year, it didn't open at all, the victim of high temperatures that turned ad-
equate moisture into liquid
OjBMOi Sl(IIS
rather than snow. This year, Mount Ashland
opened Dec. 19 and closed the next day. Then it saw 11 inches
(Last years inventoryi
of snow on Christmas Eve and
reopened until Jan. 12, when it shut down and laid off all but five of its 139 employees. Now the area has reopened with 22 inches of snow at the b ase and 53 inches in t h e
bowl. Skiers, boarders and
lI
snow skaters flocked back
last week, as did the laid-off workers.
I
All of the lifts were running
Saturday and the parking lots
Jamie Lusch/The Daily Tidings via The Associated Press
overflowed, the Ashland Dai-
Eugene Wier catches a little air on a snow skate at Mount Ashland. ly Tidings reported. The long-awaited snow that arrived in early February brought "It's lik e w e h a d n e v er visitors and workers back to the mountain after it was closed all of
closed," said General Manag-
lest season.
Still, the ski area was just
for the past 21 years. For many local residents,
reaching 10,000 visitors for such as Kasey Hayden, the the season — the historical mountain is their only snowaverage is 70,000. sport destination. "This is kind of it for us," Southern Oregon residents started the ski area in 1963. It Hayden said. "If there's no has been community-owned
snow, that's it."
(l
Prices not applicable to prior sales.
er Hiram Towle as he watched
dozens of skiers gliding down the Juliet run.
(
Towle said the area hopes to
m a i n tai n i ts
Thur s -
day-Monday schedule for the rest of the season, but the weather forecast wasn't
w er ouse
% EC S
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% M
C SH IF & W M
ER C 5
promising: highs near 50 for the ski area with no mention
of precipitation.
311 SWCENTURY DR.,HQURs 8AM-7PM, BEND 54'1-389-6234
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lmost nothing wrecks the domestic tranquility like a barking dog. Fido may be loved dearly.He may guard the home from intruders real and imagined. He may even be able to let you know that Timmy fell down the well. But if Fido is barking his head off, he can turn a neighbor into an enemy. The Deschutes County Commission is in a dog fight of sorts over dog barking. Tlnnalo resident Jim Schneider wants the county's ordinance to change. It should not. Schneider was cited in 2013 for a visitor's dogbarkingonhis property. Though he managed to avoid paying a fine by making improvements to his properly where the dog was barking, he was struck by the ordinance's vagueness. Schneider even created a website, fairbark.com. Deschutes County's ordinance is conspicuously unspecific. An animal is considered a nuisance if "it disturbs any person by frequent or
The way Deschutes County's ordinanceiswrittengivesdeputies alotof discn4on.Neighbors could conceivably argue that a few barks violates the ordinance. Adeputycould agree. As reported in Sunday's Bulletin, the Deschutes County Commission is not inclined to change the ordinance at this time. Staff talked to the Sheriff's Office and to county attorneys. They believe the county's ordinance is appropriate. We don't believe there is enough evidence the ordinance needs to be changed. There would need to be clear indications that deputies are abusing their discretion or that prolonged noises." there isa yawning gap between That covers it. It also covers how it is enforced by various deputies. We haven't seen that evidence. most anything. Even then, that likely could be Schneider did some research. Many other countieshave nar- corrected by the sheriff making it clear how deputies are to enforce rower ordinances.They have ti me limits for the disturbance. In Mult- the ordinance. If that didn't work, nomah County, for instance, it's then perhapsthe ordinance would a limit of continuous noise for 10 need to be changed. For now, it minutes or intermittent noise for 30. should stay.
Don't messwitb tbe bees
S
ome Oregon communities allow residents to keep beehives on their properties. 0thers donot,and there's am ove afoot in the Legislature to change that. It should not. A bill before the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee would require the state Department of Agriculture to establish standards for beekeeping in residential zones in the state. The
proposal has beekeepers nervous. Among otherthings,they worry that if the state becomes involved, it will charge them a fee for keeping bees, though House Bill 2653 doesn't mention fees. More important, they worry that statewide regulations will prove to be aproblem forsome beekeepers, whose hives are in communities with relatively liberal policies on the subject. In Portland, for example, beekeepers mayhave as many as 15 hives. In Bend, they're limited to one per 5,000 square feet of lot. Those supporting the bill, meanwhile, counter that they hope to open more doors to beekeepers with state regulations. Some communities do not allow beekeeping at all. The current mea-
sute was written in part after a Portland woman who had kept bees for yearsmovedtoGresham and discoveredthatherhives were illegalthere. The bill's supporters told the agriculture committee Friday they "want to get the doors open for beekeeping."The Oregon State Beekeepers Associationbelieves there's a better way. We agree. The b eekeepers' group, which has chapters around the state, including in Bend, believes the best way to move bees into cities is through information and education. The group notes that honeybees are gentle souls, not stingers by nature, and that even without nearbyhives they're generally present in most communities. They're vital to crop pollination, including the crops in backyard gardens. Backyard hives, beekeepers say, help keep localbee populations healthy in a time when that's becoming increasingly difficult. We're all forbackyardbees. They pollinateplants, andtheymake honey to boot. At the same time, we believe the rules governing bees in Bend should be set by the people of Bend. Statewide standards take local conditions out of the discussion, and that's a problem.
L earnin t e t r u t By Jackson Diehi The Washington Post
prison cell. To his credit, Browder has under-
gone an extraordinary conversion. came to tell The Washington Since the death of lawyer Sergei MagPost's editorial board its criticism nitsky in 2009, he has devoted himof Vladimir Putin was all wrong. It self almost entirely to becoming the was the early 2000s, and Putin was scourge of Magnitsky's killers — and persecuting independent media and of Putin. Thanks to his efforts, Contheir owners and flattening the re- gress passed a law in 2012 mandating public of Chechnya. Browder, then sanctions against those involved in the head of the largest Western in- the Magnitsky case, along with other vestment fund in Russia, argued we Russian human rights abuses; dozens were missingthe fact that Putin was a havebeen subjected to avisa ban and reformerwho was replacing Russia's asset freeze. post-Soviet chaos with liberal capitalNow Browder has written a book ism and the rule of law. recounting in vivid and painfully honBrowder was drastically — and, in est detail his bad bet on Russia and the end, tragically — wrong. In 2005, Putin. It ought to be required reading Putin turned on him, and he was for Western government officials and banned from Russia. Then his compa- businessmen and -women who adnies were seized and used by corrupt vocate engaging the Kremlin — beofficials to steal $230 million in tax re- cause even after everything that has ceipts. When a young lawyer hired by happened during the past decade, Browder exposed the scheme, he was they are inclined to make the same arrested by those same officials and misjudgments.
t
first met Bill Browder when he
so brutally mistreated he died in his
The first is to assume, as Browder
IN MY VIEW
Remembering the way things were in the old days By Mel Coffin
Weclimbed trees and fell out, breaking an arm or a leg. No lawsuits. We weren't supposed to be up there in the first place. Girls played hopscotch, jumped rope and did
N
o matter what the kids and
the new generation think a bout us oldies born b e -
tween 1925 and 1960, we were awesome! Our lives are living proof. We were lucky to survive being born. Some moms smoked, drank beer and took aspirin. Being a kid between 1928 and 1936 was tough
for some of us. The Great Depression was on. Very few people had work. Long soup lines in many cities. Beans for supper, sometimes breakfast. People grew gardens
things with Mom. We all
played outside under the streetiights until we were called home.
and shared with others. If you are
an old oldie — 87-plus years oldyou remember these times. During the Great Depression, the hopscotch, jumped rope and did government set up the Works Prog- things with Mom. We all played ress Administration and the NRA, the National Recovery Adminis-
outside under the streetlights until
in charge of this to make sure the soldiers overseas had all they need-
ed to fight the war. Some of our 18- and 19-yearold friends and young dads went into the Army, Navy, Air Force,
Marines.Some never came home. Dads never returned to see and
help their families grow up. Heroes all, and God be with them always. So let's leave God in all of our
songs, on our money and in the Pledge of Allegiance to the flag. If you don't believe in God, that is
your right. That's what our men fought for ... freedom. They kept our greatcountry free so we could finish growing up and believe in our own ways. We all grew up a lot in those four years. Finished high school and college,
we were called home. served our country or got married. tration (not the rifle guys), a type of At school, if you got into trouble We will always remember those welfare. These types of programs the news got home before you did. years. helped men find work building We'll not talk about this. RememRemember Buck Rogers and his roads and dams, or work in the for- ber listening to the radio and the space travels and his neat invenestservice for $35 a month. president talk about how t h ings tions? Space travel is real, as are But we kids survived. We did our were going to change? We listened some of his inventions. We have chores for 25 cents a week for mow- to the Lone Ranger, Sky King, Jack seen a lot in the past 80 years. The ing the grass, chopping the wood Armstrong and the scary ones too, late'50s were great years for us for the cook stove — and we still with our backs to the wall, all the car buffs. Americans built a lot of had time to play. Rode bikes without lights on and the doors locked. We good and sturdy products. Sure helmets. Chased girls with worms kids were happy, had good friends; we have made a few mistakes, but and snakes. Went fishing with Dad the bigger kids watched over the we are human and hopefully learn and swam in the river. Boys played smaller ones. Oh, there were a few from our mistakes and don't repeat baseball in the streets and broke a fights now and then, but things them. few windows. Boys made scooters worked out. To the younger generationout of orange crates, a two-by-four Things were going along just "May the force be with you," and and an old pair of roller skates, two fine until Dec. 7, 1941. This was the God bless America. Remember one tin cans for headlights. beginning of U.S. involvement in thing: This is your country; enjoy We climbed trees and fell out, World War II. Now all things were it, even with its faults. Many young breaking an arm or a leg. No law- rationed — red stamps for meat, m en and women helped to keep it suits. We weren't supposed to be up blue stamps for other items. The free. there in the first place. Girls played Office of Price Administration was — Mel Coffin lives in La Pine.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
a o u t Putin t e a r w a y says he did, that Putin wants the same 21st-century goods as elites in the
West: liberalism; rapid technological advancement; the slow ceding of the
nation state to regional and global structures. Browder drew that conclusion when, after taking power in 2000, the former KGB spy began taking on Russian oligarchs who were ignoring tax laws and stealing from their shareholders. Browder, who had
gotten rich investing in Russian companies, was waging the same battles. "I naively thought that Putin was
Here again Browder has learned from hard experience. Each time he's His next mistake was to underes- challenged Putin and his cronies, he's timate how deeply corruption and done so against the counsel of assoviolencewere embedded in Putin'sre- ciates and Western government offigime. Even after he was driven from cials, who warn Putin will respond to the country, Browder supposed that pressure by escalating his aggression. Putin would side with him against the Browder's conclusion:They are right, police and tax officials who had hi- but that doesn't mean pressure is the jacked his companies and used them wrongpolicy. On the contrary, he says, for fraud. "I found it inconceivable that Putin plays by "the rules of the prison he would allow state officials to steal yard". Any sign of weakness is an invi$230 million from his own govern- tation to further aggression. It'sa dangerous game, of course. ment," he writes. away returns of the fund that I didn't
understand this," Browder confesses.
acting in the national interest and was Yet even after Browder publicized genuinely trying to clean up Russia," the fraud, and even after Putin and he writes. Only Putin was not trying sidekick Dmitry Medvedev were to make the oligarchs honest; he was challenged both in Russia and abroad trying to make them his. He did not about the Magnitsky case, the corrupt want to modernizethe economybut to officials were untouched. Instead, monopolize it for himself and his cro- Browder himself, along with the denies. Once he succeeded, Browder's ceased Magnitsky, were subjected to a crusadeto raise Russian corporate Moscow show trial at which they were standards was a threat to Putin's new
"convicted" of the same scam they
power and riches. "I was so wrapped exposed. up in my own success and the runHow to respond to such a regime?
"I have to assume there's a very real
chance that Putin or members of his regime will have me killed someday," Browder writes. "If I am killed you will know who did it." For now, the Russian ruler has at least one uncom-
promising adversary in the Westsomeone who has learned the truth about Vladimir Putin the hard way, and is not afraid to share it. — Jackson Diehlis deputy editorial page editor for The Washington Post.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Deschutes
BITUARIES DEATH 1VOTIt ES Margaret (Schneider) Ringer, of Bend Nov. 23, 1923 - Feb. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: No services are planned at this time. Contributionsmay be made to:
St. Charles Hospice 541-706-6700
Kathryn (Stufflebeem) Vester of Redmond Dec. 17, 1955 - Feb. 7, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel, 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorial
chapel.com
Services: There will be no formal ceremony. Instead, a small graveside placement will be held 11:00 a.m. Wednesday, February 18, 2015, at Deschutes Memorial Gardens.
Elizabeth "Bette" Maye Bentley, of Madras July 5, 1932 - Feb. 13, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services will be held at a later date. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Robed B. Foster, of Bend Aug. 31, 1959 - Jan. 16, 201 5 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com Services: At his request, no services will be held. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.
Jon Michael Yeakey, II, of Redmond Mar. 26, 1970 - Feb. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Private Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.
Daniel Ross Thornton Mar. 17, 1950- Nov. 27, 2014 D aniel
R oss T h o r nton,
age 64, a lifelong Orego-
man and resident of R edmond, OR, passed away in h is h o m e surrounded by family and friends on N ov. 27 , 2 014. H e w as b o r n on M ar ch 17, 1 9 50, Daniel Thorntonto Ross C .B. Thornton, M .D . a n d L enor W i l s on , R . N . i n La Grande, OR. As a young man, Daniel served m the Coast Guard. H e pursued a n u m ber o f careers, b u t w as m os t known for his nursing and c aregiving. A m a j o n t y o f h is life w a s s p ent i n t h e service of others. He was a compassionate man with a big heart t hat h e b r o ught to all his endeavors. Daniel w a s p a s s i onate about the outdoors and the Pacific No r t h w e st . H e l oved to share his k n o w l -
edge of local geology and
h istory. W ag o n r oad s , b laze tr e e s , f or g o t t en l akebeds, mor e l s , an d huckleberries ran t h r ough h is b l o o d . D a n i e l h ad m any i n t erests f ro m m o torcycles to current events, but above all else, Daniel was a family man that was deeply fulfilled b y s p endi ng t i m e w i t h t h o s e h e loved. D aniel is survived by hi s b rother, J o n a than; w i f e , Bertha; daughters, Celina and L a u r a ; gr a n d c hild, Ava. A Celebration of Life and b runch w il l b e h e l d S a t ., March 14, 2015, at 1 0 :00 a.m., at Rivers Run; 1730 Blue Heron, Redmond, OR. "That which is will always be."
Continued from B1 The reservoir stores water
for agriculture around Madras. Since Wickiup Dam
Through his film work and photography, (Scott) Nelson hopes to draw more eyes to the riverjust below Wickiup, particularly hoping to capture people living in Bend
low in the winter, when water is being stored in the res-
Resources Department, said the agencymust ensure water
deliveries to irrigators. ervoir, and very high in the The department and irrigasummer, when water is be- tors are taking part in ongoing released from the reser- ing talks to see what changes voir and sent downstream to could happen: "How to help irrigators. those flows out," he said. Decades worth of data from Discussions about flows the Oregon Water Resources along the stretch of the DeDepartment shows w i nter- schutes have gone on since time flows just below Wickiup Wickiup Dam went in, he Dam dropping to about 20 cfs said. The talks have taken and summertime flows reach- place among a variety of ing as high as about 2,000 cfs. groups, alliances and other The fluctuating flows con- gatherings, said Tod Heisler, cern Hodgson, particularly executive director for t he Bend-based Deschutes River the low flow in the winter. "That is very difficult for Conservancy. fish populations to cope with, The latest is the Upper Deand it compromises the eco- schutes Basin Study Work logical integrity of the river," Group, which started in 2014 Hodgson said. and has a combined $1.5 milThe flows also cause more lion in funding from the state sediment to build up in the and U.S. Bureau of Reclamariver, said Matt Shinderman, tion, the federal agency mana naturalresources instruc- aging water around the West. tor at Oregon State Universi- Consisting of more than 30 ty-Cascades. When flows are stakeholders, the work group low, riverside plants die. has been compiling a list "So there is nothing to hold of what should be studied the soils in when the water around the basin spanning levels drop, and then the wa- the Deschutes and Crooked terlevels come back up and rivers, as well as Whychus you have soil that is not held Creek. inby vegetationbecause there Covering a raft of topics is nothing growing on the including climate change, banks," he said. water supply and water deLow flows have an impact mand, the study should take on the river, from silt buildup about two or three years to to the geometry of the water- complete, said Suzanne Butway. While aware of these is- terfield, chairwoman for the sues, Kyle Gorman, regional work group and manager of director for the Oregon Water the Swalley Irrigation Dis-
By Mark Kennedy The Associated Press
SingN EW Y O R K er-songwriter Lesley Gore, who topped the charts in 1963
at age 16 with her epic song of teenage angst, "It's My Party," and followed it up with the hits
"Judy's 'Ibrn to Cry," and the feminist anthem "You Don't
Own Me," died Monday. She was 68. Gore died of lung cancer at New York University Langone Medical Center in Manhattan,
accordingto herpartner of33 years, Lois Sasson.
"She was a wonderful human being — caring, giving, a great feminist, great woman, great human being, great humanitarian," said Sasson, a
jewelry designer. Brooklyn-born and New Jersey-raised, Gore was discovered by Quincy Jones as a teenager and signed to Mercury Records. She graduated from Sarah Lawrence College with a degree in English/ American literature. Gore's other hits include "She's A
In a Facebook post, songwriter Neil Sedaka, who attended Gore's Sweet 16 birthday party, shared his thoughts: "She was a great person and a phenomenal talent, who had opened for me on many occasions. She recorded a few of my songs ("Magic Colors" and "Summer Symphony") and was a great songwriter in her own right. I'm glad I had the chance of knowing her." In the 1990s, Gore co-wrote "My Secret Love" for Allison Anders' film "Grace of My Heart," released in 1996. A coupleof years later,she appeared in "Smokey Joe's Cafe" on Broadway. Gore had been working on a stage version of her life with playwright Mark Hampton when she died.
my Award-nominated "Out Here on My Own" from the film "Fame."
The Life," which dealt with
gay and lesbian issues. During the 2012 presidential campaign, Gore turned "You Don't Own Me" into an
Gevinson, among others
In addition to Sasson, Gore is survived by her brother and her mother, Ronny. Services
will be held Thursday.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deathsof note from around
azine. Died Sunday at a hospice in Washington, D.C. Arnaud de Borchgrave, 88: Philip Levine, 87:The former
the world:
Journalist wh o
trict in Bend. The study will
be a "foundation document" for futurestate and federal
Club worked with the state
funding. "The whole idea is we are working together — no one interest trying to advance its interest at the expense of oth-
Department of Fish and Wild-
ers," she said.
Continued from B1 Nori Juba, co-chairman of the board, said the group
life and other agencies to col-
lect and move fish when the water in the channel dwin-
dled again. Since spotting the fish die-
An underlying question for the Basin Study is one of water management, said Ryan Houston, executive director for the Upper Deschutes Wa-
off in 2013, Kim Brannock,
tershed Council.
Water Resources Department
"How do we improve the
flows in the river in a way that is compatible with agriculture
of Bend, joined the board of the Casting Club and joined the conversation about river flows. She hopes the state can find a way to deliver water to irrigators without dry-
ing out parts of the river like in Central Oregon'?" he said. the side channel near Lava While the stretch of the De- Island Falls. "If they had managed the schutes below Wickiup Dam has the attention of stakehold- flows differently we could ers in the work group many have not affected that ecosyspeople are unaware of the situation. "I think it has been far less
tem at all and left it thriving,"
she said. The fish die-off and rescue understood by the general are warning signs that somepublic," Houston said, "large- thing should be done to imly because that area is out of prove flows along the river, sight and out of mind during said Nelson, who has been a the winter months." photographer for 40 years. Over the past two years the Through his film work and fall lowering of flows along photography, Nelson hopes the Deschutes has caught the to draw more eyes to the river attention of people closer to just below Wickiup, particuBend, when the low w ater larly hoping to capture people led to fish being stranded in a living in Bend accustomed to sidechannel near Lava Island how the Deschutes looks in Falls. In fall 2013 hundreds of town. "People don't know what fish, including rainbow and brown trout, died after be- is going on beyond the river coming stuck in the channel. they see," he said. Last fall, volunteers orga— Reporter: 541-617-7812, nized by the Bend Casting ddarling@bendbulletin.com
Responses included openness and honesty and the abil-
ity to communicate, collabo-
— Peggy Kinkade, member of the board leading the search rate and put students first. for the next superintendent of Bend-La Pine Schools Board members said they
are also looking for someone with integrity and a strong
plans to release the names of two to three finalists ear-
ly next week. They will be
work ethic who understands
March.
board meeting. A pplications were
While the interviews will be inexecutive session, each
Jan. 22. Since then, McPherson & Jacobson has vetted
candidate. Following Wilkinson's an-
finalist will attend two public the applicants and done forums — one in Bend, one some reference checks. Juba in La Pine — for community said 45 applications were members to meet the final- submitted, which is more ists and ask them questions. than he expected.
nouncement that he would
"I think we're looking for someone who really has a
retire, the board hosted a
vision for the future of edu-
series of public forums in December to gather input
cation," said Peggy Kinkade,
interviewed the first week in
Juba said the board hopes
to announce its top choice for the job at its March 10
"Beyond the number, the
quality and the caliber of the candidates is very high,"
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand willbe runfor one day,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
he said, noting the pool ind u e cludes at least one internal
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
staff.
another member of the
board leading the search intendent should possess. process. There was also an online — Reporter: 541-617-7837, survey. aspegman@bendbulleti n.com on qualities the next super-
Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment In
Where BuyersAnd Sellers Meet
Classifjeds
I ••
e
716 SW11th SL Redmond 541.923.4732
ehn
•
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com
the district's challenges and can inspire students and
• a •
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Fax: 541-322-7254
Please tell us what you think about equal accessto ODOT contracting opportunities.
She came out to the public
when she hosted several episodesof the PBS series,"In
online video public service Fool," "Sunshine, Lollipops announcement demanding and Rainbows," "That's the reproductive r i ghts s t a rWay Boys Are" and "Maybe I ring Lena Dunham and Tavi Know." She co-wrote with her brother, Michael, the Acade-
To learn more about Scott Nelson's film and photography project go to www.deschutesriver film.com.
we re looking 'for someone who reallY 5uperintendent has "I think a vision for the future of education."
FEATURED OBITUARY
'lt's My Party' singer was 'a great feminist'
DeschutesRiver flows on film
accustomed to how the Deschutes looks in was built, the flows out of Wickiup Reservoir and along town. the section of river just below the dam have varied greatly throughout the year — very
i n t erviewed poet laureate of the U.S. whose
statesmenand despots across
poems dignified working-class
time zones and war zones as a
life. Died Saturday at his home
swashbuckling foreign corre- in Fresno, California. spondent for Newsweek mag— From wire reports
B5
Public Meeting:
Bend, Feb. 23, 3 p.m. ODOT Region 4 HQ, Building M Crater Lake Conference Rm 63055 N. Hwy 97, Bend, OR 97701 ODOT is conducting a study analyzing whether minorityand women-owned businesseshave equal access to contracting opportunities within Oregon's transportation contracting industry and with ODOT's own contracts. The findings will help us operate the federal Disadvantaged Business Enterprise Program.
i wAttT.YOU 'Tp @$8
IN TAÃ,lllldoo
We're also meeting in Roseburg Feb. 24, Salem Feb. 25 and Portland, Feb. 26.And we'll hold a webinar Feb. 25. Details at www.odotdbestud .or Meeting locations are ADA-accessible. Accommodations will be provided to persons
with disabilities, and alternate formats of printed material are available upon request. Please call (503) 986-4355 at least 48hours prior to the meeting (statewide relay 7-1-1). •
•
•
B6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
i
'
i
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
HIGH Mild with sunshine and patchy clouds
ALMANAC
THURSDAY 'U"
LOW 28'
5a. i f ' 1
WEDNESDAY
FRIDAY yk Jg
53'
Nice and warmwith plenty of sunshine
EAST:Sunshine will prevail most of today. Clear to partly and seasonably cold tonight.
TEMPERATURE
Seasid
4
ria
59/44
•
•
•
UV INDEX TODAY
ROAD CONDITONS
NATIONAL WEATHER
SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Std resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 49-4 9 1-1 Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 21-5 2 0 48-9 0 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 31-72 1-5 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl 0 Timberline Lodge 0 28-3 9 Wigamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 1 30-53 vail, CO 4 47-4 7 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 28-42 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-4 2 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 61-51 Sun Valley, ID 0 36-6 6 Source: OnTheSnow.com
8/.14
59/37
Billings
*
'k *
*
0
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+
Amsterdam Athens
45/27/0.00 8 o 54/37/0.02 Mil * • * New Auckland 68/59/0.16 14/2 * * * * v* ~ %' d $ Baghdad 66/57/0.03 ** $ Ol $ at Watertown, NY Ch * * Bangkok 91/75/0.03 Phgadelphi ~ d d d d 21/1 Chi go Precipitation: 1.57" 8/14 d d4 d4 d4 d4 Beijing 54/32/0.00 11 • Col Sali Lake ity Beirut 63/52/0.02 atColumbus,MS h hc l v CO * * * * $ 2 50/31 St. uis Berlin 36/32/0.00 43/49 * ** * gieq d d d d d d Denver 29/6 us lle L$4 v $6 * Bogota 72/41/0.00 3 3/ .x d d d d d d • +7/y 39/20 d d d d d d , * * 29/8 es/4 Budapest 46/21/0.00 * * * Buenos Ai r es 84/66/0.00 eihvil 44 Cherlo Los An fes Cabo San Lucas 81/64/0.06 SO/1 4 i d d d x ~> • A k * * • / • L' Cairo 64/46/0.00 Phoen d d d A xi Aerlroieue Albuque ue klshoma Ci • Ai x $ d, ni i x . Calgary 36/30/0.08 • 77/51 4 18 ' 3' $,d II 0 55/29 5 45/25, Cancun 81/57/0.00 Bir inghe 6 /54 • uaga ul Ps Dublin 43/40/0.08 43/ 4 2/3 Edinburgh 46/41/0.03 dd Geneva 41/35/0.00 . • Hsndo Harare 75/61/0.12 O vritajfeJrrt 3/aa . Hong Kong 73/66/0.00 Honolulu Chrhuahue Istanbul 46/43/0.36 83/59 68/35 Mismi Jerusalem 50/40/0.04 ss/rka, 53/45 Johannesburg 75/54/0.24 X X XA Lima 81/73/0.02 Lisbon 59/50/0.02 Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 46/34/0.38 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 55/45/0.12 Manila 86/77/0.00 3 4/22
Bois • 53/31
p 25/8
M ne
Partly sunny
i
•
48 contiguousstates) National high:G7 at Death Valley,CA National low: -36'
24'
Yesterday Today Wednesday
•
ORE eaat Wiuamette Pass:Sunnyto partly cloudy and drytoday.Patchycloudsand dry tonight and tomorrow. ORE138 at DiamondLuke:Goodtravel today with plenty of sunshine.Dryandclear tonight.
as.
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatiaa Hood 53/30 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Abilene 43/25/Tr 53/31/pc Cannon High 46 44 70' in 1977 lington 51/28 Portland Akron 10/-9/0.00 20/6/sf Meac am Losti ne 59/48 27' 24' -1'in 1956 Low 11/-8/0.00 19/-1/sn • W co 5 /30 dl9+Il4•9/ 2 5~ 4/28 Enterprise Albany he Oaa Albuquerque 55/31/0.00 55/29/s • 8 2/28 Tigamo • • 49 9 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • Anchorage 37/31/0.02 41/26/c 55/32 63/44 Mc innviu 8/36 Govee • Joseph Atlanta 41/33/0.47 45/26/c • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" and no morethan n t • u p i Condon 1/27 24 5 21 Atlantic City 19/2/0.00 29/19/sn Cam • 81 Record 0.53" in 1956 a few clouds today Lincoln union Austin 64/38/0.07 53/29/pc 50/ Month to date (normat) 0.2 2" (0.65") with a mild afternoon. 60/48 Sale Baltimore 18/5/0.07 29/9/sn • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.47 " (2.18") Clear to partly cloudy 60/ • 8/28 Billings 45/31/0.01 36/22/c 'Baker C Newpo 81/28 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 24" tonight. • +® Birmingham 53/32/1.32 43/24/c 9/40 61/46 • Mitch II 52/21 Bismarck 25/18/Tr 8/-14/pc Camp Sh man Red WEST:Mostly sunny 53/26 n R SUN ANDMOON Boise 51/28/0.00 53/31/s Yach 54/28 • John eu today; a mild after58/41 Boston 19/-3/0.00 • Prineville Day 2/23 Today Wed. tario Bridgeport, CT 20/-2/0.00 22/13/sn noon. Clear to partly 61/47 25/1 2/sn 53/32 • Pa lina BB / 28 7:02 a.m. 7: 0 1 a.m. 5 29 Buffalo 5/-10/Tr 14/5/pc cloudy tonight. Partly Floren e • Eugene • Re d B rothers 5327 5:37 p.m. 5: 3 8 p.m. sunny tomorrow. Valee 61/47 Burlington, VT 8/-10/0.00 15/-3/pc Su iVere 52/28 5:52 a.m. 6: 3 4 a.m. 54/35 Caribou, ME 9/0/0.04 12/-4/pc Nyssa • 5 5 / 1 • La plne Ham ton Charleston, SC 51/31/Tr 57/31/sh 4:32 p.m. 5 : 4 8 p.m. Juntura Grove Oakridge Charlotte 33/24/0.08 43/24/c • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 52/28 Chattanooga 38/29/1.16 38/21/c • FortRock Riley 52/24 YESTERDAY Cresce t • Be/28 Cheyenne 28/22/Tr 31/20/pc d w d 54/21 58/31 Chicago 18/5/0.00 18/1/c High: 72' Bandon Roseburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 12/9/0.39 26/6/c Jordan V gey Feb 1a Feb 25 M ur 6 M a r 13 at North Bend 63/46 Beaver Silver Frenchglen 66/43 Cleveland 8/-12/0.00 20/5/sf Low:1a' 50/28 Marsh Lake 55/21 ColoradoSprings 29/24/0.23 36/19/pc Tuutght'8 utttffIn the evening, the galaxy 61/28 at Meacham 58/21 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 22/13/0.30 28/5/c • Paisley 62/ M31 in Andromeda is visible reasonably high a Columbia, SC 43/31/0.03 50/30/c • 53/26 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 59/38/0.02 51/27/c Medfo d 'eo/27 in the west. Gold ach Rome 0' Columbus,OH 12/0/0.08 22/7/c 59/ eee 53/22 Klamath Concord, NH 15/-5/0.09 20/0/sf Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd e Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 77/64/Tr 58/37/pc Bro ings 57/19 67/ 61/ 60/26 61/24 55/18 Dallas 36/31/0.22 54/33/pc Dayton 14/4/0.12 25/7/c Denver 31/25/0.29 39/20/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Yesterday Today Wednesday Des Moines 27/12/0.00 21/1/pc 2 I~ S ~ Z I O City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. 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Brookings 71/46/0.00 61/46/s 59/45/pc M edford 68/3 0/0.00 66/36/s 63/37/s Redmond 50/ 20/0.0052/25/s 60/27/s Fairbanks 30/0/0.00 29/5/pc Bums 50/22/0.00 52/24/s 59/26/s Ne wport 64/4 6 /0.00 61/46/s 55/43/pc Roseburg 58 / 40/0.00 66/43/s 59/43/s Fargo 15/10/Tr 2/-18/c Eugene 65/32/0.00 57/41/s 56/42/s No r th Bend 72 / 45/0.00 64/46/s 57/43/pc Salem 66/39/0.00 60/38/s 57/42/pc Flagstaff 58/20/0.00 55/22/s Klamath Fags 57/26/0.00 60/26/s 62/27/s O n tario 56/32/0.00 56/29/s 57/31/s Sisters 49/20/0.00 54/25/s 61/27/s Grand Rapids 11/-4/0.00 21/6/sf For webcameras of ourpasses, goto Lakeview 54/23/0.00 61/24/s 62/26/s Pendleton 50/29/0.00 49/29/s 55/35/s The Dages 5 8 /29/0.00 55/32/s 57/39/pc 12/-2/c Green Bay 17/4/Tr www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams Greensboro 24/18/0.10 39/1 7/c Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-ed ut Cabbage Hill: Notravel problems Harrisburg 14/-1/0.00 28/8/c today andtonight; clear to partly cloudy. Harfford, CT 17/-5/0.00 21/2/sn Helena 39/28/Tr 43/25/pc US 20 atSuntiumPass:Goodtravel today; Honolulu 82/66/0.00 83/69/s mostly sunny.Drytonight andtomorrow. ~ t ge ~ 208 ~ 308 ~ 40s ~ 508 ~ 608 ~ 708 ~ a gs ~ 90 8 ~ 1 008 ~ t t c a ~ 108 ~ g e ~ gs Houston 67/65/0.11 53/33/pc US 26 atGov'tCamp:Goodtravel todaywith Huntsville 40/30/1.30 35/22/c Calge NATIONAL sunshine. Patchyclouds anddrytonight. Indianapolis 16/9/0.14 25/5/c Que c 5 35/25 * • i nipeu T nderuay * * 9/.4 Jackson, MS 65/43/1.41 43/25/c EXTREMES US 26 atOchocoDivide:Goodtravel today 58/40 0/-0 4** * * ** Jacksonville 74/42/0.00 65/37/sh and tonight; clear to partly cloudy. YESTERDAY (for the Warr uismsrck p
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Hi/Lo/W 64/38/s 15/-3/sf 63/32/s 36/22/c 41/14/pc
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Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA
22/15/0.07 36/22/0.13 35/17/0.00 77/49/0.00 80/56/0.00 21/13/0.00 17/14/0.00 79/55/0.00 10/-6/0.02 Pittsburgh Portland, ME 21/-3/0.00 Providence 18/-3/0.00 Raleigh 27/19/0.03 Rapid City 39/27/0.12 Reno 62/29/0.00 Richmond 22/12/0.14 Rochester, NY 8/-7/0.03 Sacramento 73/46/0.00 St. Louis 20/16/0.38 Salt Lake City 50/32/0.00 San Antonio 65/48/0.02 San Diego 67/57/0.00 San Francisco 68/51/0.00 San Jose 72/47/0.00 Santa re 48/24/0.00 Savannah 60/37/0.00 Seattle 59/42/0.00
OklahomaCity
Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix
Sioux Fags 30/16/Tr Spokane 50/26/0.00 Springfield, MO 23/16/0.79 Tampa 74/52/0.00 Tucson 73/52/0.00 Tulsa 31/21/0.72 Washington,Dc 20/10/0.08 Yakima Yuma 8
31/21/sn 34/12/pc 52/25/pc 47/24/s
26/3/pc 18/2/s 79/52/1 61/36/s 83/56/s 86/58/s
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23/10/sn 36/19/c 26/8/pc 67/34/s 34/18/c 19/1/sf 69/44/s 29/6/c 50/31/pc 54/35/pc 69/54/pc 63/49/pc 68/44/pc 48/22/s
29/9/c 36/8/pc 28/13/c
69/35/s 35/6/c 17/-2/sf 69/44/s 16/2/s 57/35/s 65/40/s 71/56/pc
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Yesterday Today Wednesday
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95/72/0.00 75/45/0.00 1/-11/0.00 Montreal Moscow 23/9/0.00 Nairobi 84/63/0.62 Nassau 75/63/0.00 New Delhi 77/61/0.00 Osaka 52/31/0.18 Oslo 28/25/0.30 Ottawa 1/-15/0.00 Paris 43/34/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 84/73/0.05 Rome 55/48/0.24 Santiago 86/55/0.00 Sao Paulo 79/66/0.51 Sapporo 38/33/0.05 Seoul 44/38/0.23 Shanghai 60/45/0.00 Singapore gom/0.00 Stockholm 32/26/0.00 Sydney 82/72/0.00 Taipei 74/61/0.00 Tel Aviv 63/50/0.07 Tokyo 52/37/0.04 Toronto 7/-9/0.00 Vancouver 48/36/0.00 Vienna 48/28/0.00 Warsaw 34/28/0.00
97/70/s 75/47/s 8/-5/pc 21/12/s 81/60/pc 81/70/pc 81/60/pc 52/36/r 47/41/r 9/-8/c 47/33/c 90/77/1 62/39/pc 88/56/s 74/67/1 37/26/pc 42/26/sf 56/36/s 88P6/c 36/32/pc 84/71/s 72/60/pc 62/51/pc 44/40/r 15/5/sf 51/37/s 40/27/pc 34/24/s
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS NEWSW Scoreboard, C2 C o llege hoops, C3 Sports in brief, C2 Golf, C4 NHL, C3
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
FOOTBALL
PREP SWIMMING
NBA
Mariota says shoulder is fine
Record is same, but Blazers
FORTWORTH,Texas — Marcus Mariota knows what he hasto do at the NFL combine,
whether he throws there or not. "Youjust have to get one team to love you. That's all
relieved
Mar i ota
that really matters," Mariota said Monday before accepting the DaveyO'Brien Award as the nation's top quarterback. "You are interviewing and trying to market yourself to get a job.... That's what's fun about this process." Mariota said his throwing (right) shoulder that he sprained in the first College Football Playoff championship game wasfeelinggood. But he won't decide for a few more daysabout whether to throw later this week in Indianapolis. "Really, I'm looking forward to throwing if I'm able to do that," he said. "It's going to be a decision that my agent and the team that I have around me will decide when I get closer." Florida State's Jameis Winston, the Heisman andO'Brien winners as a freshman during the 2013 season, and Mariota are considered the top two quarterbacks available in the upcoming NFL draft. Winston ran a pro-style system with the Seminoles. "I'm going to continue to be who I amand find ways to lead and develop relationships around me and bethe best player I can be," Mariota said, when asked his responseto a team asking why he should be a high draft pick. "I'm going to work hard at it and do whatever it takes to win a game." Mariota, who graduated from Oregon in December, has been working out in the San Diego area since the end of the season. —TheAssociated Press
By Anne M. Peterson The Associated Press
PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers are 36-17, the same record they had at last year's All-Star break. But the feeling this
time is more of relief than congratulation. After a fast start, with
just four losses in the first 21 games, Portland was hit by injuries. Its starters
have missed a combined 35 games. Still, the Blazers lead
NeXt up
the Northwest Division
w'
When: TV: Root,
sity this year than last year Raroo: and we've
KBN D 1110-
done a good AM, 100.1job of fightF M ; KRCO ing through 6 9 0-AM, i t," coach 96.9 - F M Terry Stotts said "We still have a lot
of games to go and by no Andy Tullis1 rhe Bulletin
Bend coach Tamas Bessenyei pores over his laptop to fill out lineups for a meet. Putting together a swim lineup is more than just putting one's best athletes in their best events. The strategy goes much deeper.
means is it over, but at this point last year we stayed
healthy and were the surprise team. This has a different feel to it."
• Compiling a lineupfor a big swim meet is part art, part science,part chessmatch overing over a chessboard, Amy Halligan studies her pieces. She analyzes her strongest moves and weighs them against potential
plays by her opponent.
Last season, the Blazers had the same starting lineup in every game going into the All-Star break. Portland went on to win 54 games and advanced to
the Western Conference semifinals for the first
GRANT LUCAS
time since 2000. This seat
It is a game of perfect information. Halligan has seen the decisions made by her opponent from previous meetings. From those moves, she deduces which of her plays is optimal. This is Amy Halligan, the 13th-year Summit High swim coach, toiling away at her lineup.
son they have played 13 different starting lineups. See Blazers/C3
Inside • Trail Blazers stats through 53 games,C3
See Swimming /C4
Swimmersheadedto state
CLASSSA
MDUNTAINVIEW SUMMIT CLASS4A/3A/2A/1A Girls: Rel a ys, 200 medl e y, 200 Girls: Relays, 200 medl e y, 200 free, 400 BEND MADRAS free, 400 free; KennedyBright, free; Mackenzie Halligan, 200 free, 500 Girls:Relays, 200 medley, 200 Girls: Relays, 200 med200 free, 100 free; Julia Gor- f r ee; Merritt Allen, 200 free, 100 fly; Alfree, 400 free; ChynaFish, 200 ley, 200 free; Sophia man, 200 free, 100free; Teresa ison Epple, 200 IM, 100 breast; Mikayla Gemelas,100 fly, 100 free, 100 free; Emily Brockman, Cobb, 200 IM, 100breast; Gro v er, 200 IM, 100 breast; Gianna Bel200 free, 100 breast; Elli Ferrin, breast. 200IM,100back;MadeleineBus- Hannah Peterson, 50 free, 100 za, 50 free; Erin Tyler, 100 fly. Boys: Relays, 200 medback; Justine Hanway, Boys: Relays, 200medley,200 by, 50 free, 100 free; Julia North, 50 ley, 400 Garrett free, 100 free. 4INL%~ free , 400 free; Baxter Halligan,Webb, 50free; 50 free, 100 back; Jennifer Robefree, 100 Boys: Jonathan 200 IM,100back; Tommy son, 100 fly, 500 free; Rebecca breast; Brady Tucker, Davami, 200 Brewer, 50free, 100 Murphy, 100 fly; Bella Wiener, 100 100 fly, 100 back; Cade free, 500 :;+; bre ast; John Hartmeier, Boston, 200 free; Josh back; Alexandra Winslow, 100 100 free,100 back;Taj back; CarmenHansen, 100 breast. free. Hocker,100 free; Keaton Mercer, 200 IM,100 Boys: Relays, 200 medley, 200 Hartman, 100 breast. ,; v,'p,- ,, fly; Tristan Todd,100 free, 400 free; BenBrockman, Girls:Lofly; Jeremy Moon, SISTERS 200 free, 100 fly; Christian Offen- ryn Trail, 100 free; Christian Girls:Relays, 200 free, hauser, 200 free, 500 free; Paul Bergin, 500 free. 400 free; Mary Stewart, Rogers, 200 IM, 500 free; Garrett 50 free, 100 free; Emily .t Ross, 200 IM, 100 breast; Nathan Boys'ReChristen, 50 free, 100 Summlts TalMer Brown, 100 fly, 100 breast; Cole lays,400 back; Madelyn Zadow, cerinthe200IM. Moore, 100 fly, 100 back; Matfree. 100back. Ryan Brennecke/ thew Howell, 100 back. Bulletin file photo '
CYCLING COMMENTARY
Armstrong
has ugly detour from redemption By Juliet Macur New York Times News Service
„
,
.
:
' +;
:
-
; " .'
'
-
'
'
A story headlined "Cowboys send 20 wrestlers to state championships" that appeared in Sunday's Bulletin on page D4 contained incorrect information about Crook County wrestling. Collbran Meeker will look to become the second Cowboy to win three individual state championships, joining Ryan Smith, who was not included on anOregon School Activities Association archive listing of three-time state champions but won titles in 2005, 2006
hd
more adver-
The PGAof America has selected Davis Love III to be captain of the 2016 U.S. RyderCup team,C4
CORRECTION
at Utah
nl ILke what we've done.
GOLF Love to de named Ryder Cupcaptain
Oregon's Jalil Abdul-Bassit has started the past sevengames, and the Ducks are5-2 during that stretch,C3
por t land
the Western
Conference.
Forty-five individual swimmers andanother 22 relay teams from Central Oregon will prep this weekfor the Class 5A and4A/3A/2A/1A state championships at Mt. HoodCommunity College in Gresham.The4A/3A/2A/1A preliminaries are scheduled for1 p.m. Friday, and the finals kick off at1:15 Saturday. Preliminary heats for 5A begin at 5:45 p.m. Friday, and the championship races start at 6 p.m. Saturday. Admission to all sessions is $8 for adults and $5 for students.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL Ducksplayer has 'sense of urgency'
and are tied for third in
- -
-
. -
'
'
Lance Armstrong once told me that it would take
maybe six months to a year for him to rebuild his reputation after the famous cyclist admitted lying to the world about his drug use. He said his plan was to keep a low profile and quietly earn back public trust,
partly by apologizing to the people he had stepped on or, in some cases,tried
NASCAR
Keselowski still taking long road to respect By Dan Gelston The Associated Press
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.-
Brad Keselowski might as well signup as the next celebrity target at a comedy roast. His fellow NASCAR drivers
alreadyhave plenty of practice hurling cuttingbarbs his way — just minus the rim shot.
Nextup Daytona 500 When: 10 a.m. Sunday TV:Fox
to destroy. Armstrong, who in 2012 was stripped of his seven Tour de France titles for doping, seemed proud of his blueprint. He said it
would show that he was a good person who had been
come in like Brad."
to earn as much respect in the
forced to dope because ev-
For eachblunt opinion Keselowski has about the state of
garage as former champs Tony
eryone else was doing it. The plan might have
NASCAR, drivers seem to have
Stewart, Matt Kenseth, Jimmie Johnson and Jeff Gordon.
two or three zingers readyto Denny Hamlin on Keselows- fire right back at Bad Brad. Not
Heck, Keselowski even took the rap for costing Gordon a
ered to follow it.
even winning the 2012 Sprint
shot at a fifth title whenthey
Cup championship earned Keselowski his proper place at the big boys' table. He has yet
tangled in an accident on a late
following it? A court filing Monday in Dallas revealed $10 million worth of proof. See Armstrong /C4
ki's rep: "Nobody wants to be Brad."
Kyle Busch on who young drivers should emulate: "Don't
restart at Texas.
See Keselowski /C4
worked — if he had bothHow do I know he is not
C2 T H E BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY Time 7 a.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m.
TENNIS
ATP, RioOpen ATP, RioOpen ATP, Delray BeachOpen SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Paris Saint-Germain vs. Chelsea Europe, Champions League, Shakhtar Donetsk vs. Bayern Munich
TV/Ragiio Tennis Tennis Tennis
11:30 a.m.
FS1
11:30 a.m.
FS2
BASKETBALL
Women's college, Purdue atOhioSt. Men's college,KentuckyatTennessee Men's college, Baylor at TexasTech Men's college, Houston at South Florida Men's college, WakeForest at Notre Dame Men's college, South Carolina atGeorgia Men's college, St. John's at Georgetown Women's college, lowa at Minnesota Men's college, Michigan St. at Michigan Men'scollege,TexasatOklahoma Men's college, Alabamaat Auburn Men's college, LSUat TexasA&M Women's college, Oklahoma at lowaSt.
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m.
Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNN ESPNU
SEC FS1
Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU
SEC FS1
HOCKEY
NHL, Buffalo at NewJersey
4:30 p.m. NBCSN
ON DECK Today Boys basketball:Redmo nd at Mountain View,7 p.m.; Summiat t Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Elmiraat Sisters, 7:15p.m.; Molala at Madras, 7p.m.; Corhet at CrookCounty, 7 p.m.; Harrisburgat LaPine, 7:30p.m. Girls basketball: MountainViewatRedmond,7p.m.; Ridgeview atSummit, 7p.m.;Elmira atSisters, 5:45 p.m.; Madras at Molala, 7 p.m.;CrookCountyat Corhett, 7p.m.;Harrisburg at LaPine,6p.m.
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers
Thursday Boys basketball: Culver at ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD
Girls basketball:Culverat Columbia Basin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD Friday Boys basketball: BendatSummit, 7p.m.;Mountain View at Ridgeview,7 p.m.;Sisters atSutherlin,7:15 p.m.; Madras at Corhett, 7 p,m.; CrookCountyat Estacada, 7 p.m.; Creswell at LaPine,7:30p.m.; Culver atColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at PendletonConvention Center,TBD Girls basketball:Summ itatBend,7 p.m.;Ridgeview at Mountain View,7 p.m.; Sistersat Sutherlin, 5:45 p.m.;Corbettat Madras,7p.m.; Estacada at Crook County,7p.m.; Creswell at LaPine,6p.m.; Culver at Columbia Basin Conferencetournament atPendletonConventionCenter, TBD Swimming: Class5A,4A/3A/2A/1Astatechampionships atMt.HoodCommunity ColegeinGresham Wrestling:LaPineat Class3A Special District 3 championshipsinRogueRiver,TBD Nordicskiing:OISRAstate meet skate racesat Mt. Shasta,2p.m.
l $55+ jl
TBD
TENNIS
ATP, RioOpen ATP, Delray BeachOpen ATP, RioOpen ATP, Delray BeachOpen WTA, Dubai TennisChampionship
7 a.m. 11:30a.m. 1 p.m. 5 p.m. 2 a.m.(Sat.j
Tennis Tennis Tennis Tennis Tennis
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCARSprint Cup, Daytona 500 practice SOCCER Europe, Champions League, Schalke 04 vs. RealMadrid
11 a.m.
FS2
Girls basketball:Culverat ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center, TBD Swimming: Class5A,4A/3A/2A/1Astatechampionships atMt.HoodCommunity CollegeinGresham Wrestling:La Pineat Class3ASpecial District 3 championships in Rogue River, TBD;Culver, Gilchrist atClass2A/1A Special District 3championshipsinMil City,TBD Alpine skiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor,Slalom, 10 a.m. Nordicskiing:OISRAstate meet classic andrelay racesatMt. Shasta,10a.m.
HOCKEY 1 1:30 a.m. F S 1
NHL
BASKETBALL
Men's college, Wisconsin at PennSt. Men's college, Louisville at Syracuse Men's college, Xavier at Cincinnati Men's college, EastCarolina at Tulsa Men's college, Virginia Tech atMiami Men's college, Vanderbilt at Florida Men's college, Northwestern at Minnesota Men's college, North Carolina at Duke Men's college, UCLAat Arizona St. Men's college, lowa St. at OklahomaSt. Men's college, Missouri at Arkansas Women's college, Stanford at California Men's college, Utah State atSanJose State Men's college, Colorado at Oregon HOCKEY NHL, Detroit Red atChicago NHL, Los Angeles atColorado
4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m. 7 p.m. 8 p.m.
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPST
Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU
Root SEC Big Ten ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU
SEC Pac-12 Root ESPNU
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GOLF
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SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL DuCkSCOmedaCk to deat HaWaii — Oregonrallied for three runs in the ninth inning for a 3-2 win at Hawaii on Monday.Tim Susnara tied the gamewith a pinch-hit single, and Mitchell Tolman followed up with the game-winning single. StephenNogosek (2-Oj pitched three perfect relief innings for the Ducks (3-1j.
BeaVerS lOSe2nd Straight to NeW MeXiCO—Oregon State starter Jake Thompsonwas roughed upfor eight hits and four earned runs over four innings and took the loss in the Beavers' 5-2 setback Mondayagainst NewMexico in Surprise, Arizona. The Beavers (2-2j got two hits apiece from DaneLund and K.J. Harrison. A triple by Harrison in the third inning accounted for both Beavers runs.
EASTERN CONFERENCE
Montreal TampaBay Detroit Boston Florida Ottawa Toronto Buffalo
FOOTBALL Stadium deVelOPer danated $100K+ to lOCal OffiCialS — The development company that is moving quickly on a plan to build a stadium that could host a Southern California NFLteam has given more than $118,000 in campaign contributions to officials in the city where it would be located. Campaign finance forms show the bulk of the moneywent to Inglewood Mayor James T.Butts Jr., a major supporter of the stadium plan. SanFrancisco-based Hollywood Park LandCo. is developing the proposed 80,000-seat stadium on the site of the former Hollywood Park horse racing track. St. Louis Ramsowner Stan Kroenke hasbeen apartner in the company since last year. Thecontributions came during four different campaigns starting in 2006, well before the recent stadium proposal, though the group has long planned aretail and residential development on the site. The rest of the donations went to a pair of city councilmen.
CYCLING Contador SayS heplanS to retire after 2016 — Two-time Tour de Francewinner Alberto Contador says is he planning to retire from cycling in 2016. Contador said "next year will most likely be the last.... I could change mymind if I have a mishap on theTour like last year, for example, but little else could make me change." The 32-yearold Spaniard will start the seasonWednesday in theVuelta aAndalucia, during which hewill compete against fellow former Tour winner Chris Froome.Contador plans to ride in the Giro d'Italia and theTour, but will skip this year's Spanish Vuelta. Hehaswon the Tour twice, the Vuelta three times andthe Giro once. — From staffand wire reports
55 31 14 10 56 28 20 8 55 24 19 12 55 22 23 10 57 23 29 5 56 16 37 3
72 160 141 64 147 145 60 135 153 54 155 158 51 160 175 35 104 193
MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.y.lslanders 57 37 19 1 75 184 162 N.Y. Rangers 55 34 16 5 73 174 136 P ittsburgh 5 6 3 2 15 9 73 161 141 Washington 57 30 17 10 70 168 145 Philadelphia 56 24 22 10 58 151 162 C olumbus 54 2 4 27 3 51 142 170 New Jersey 56 21 26 9 51 124 154 Carolina 5 5 2 0 28 7 47 126 150 WesternConference CentralDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA Nashvile 56 38 12 6 82 170 131 St. Louis 56 37 15 4 78 178 137 Chicago 57 35 18 4 74 172 131 Winnipeg 59 30 19 10 70 165 157 Minnesota 56 28 21 7 63 155 152 Dallas 56 26 22 8 60 175 179 Colorado 57 24 22 11 59 149 161 Pacilic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 57 35 15 7 77 169 160 Vancouver 56 32 21 3 67 158 147 Calgary 57 32 22 3 67 166 147 SanJose 58 29 21 8 66 164 165 Los Angeles 56 26 18 12 64 155 150 Arizona 58 20 31 7 47 131 194 Edmonton 58 16 32 10 42 135 196
Monday'sGames Winni peg5,Edmonton4,SO N.Y.Rangers6, N.Y. Islanders5 Carolina6,Ottawa3 Montreal2,Detroit 0 Colorado 5, Arizona2 Calgary4, Boston3, OT Vancouver 3, Minnesota2 LosAngeles3, TampaBay2 Today'sGames Columbus atPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Washington at Pittsburgh,4 p.m. N.Y.Islandersat Carolina, 4p.m. Buffaloat NewJersey,4:30 p.m. Florida atToronto, 4:30p.m. DallasatSt. Louis,5 p.m. SanJoseatNashvile, 5 p.m. W ednesda yl sGames MontrealatOttawa,4 p.m. Detroit atChicago,4:30p.m. Minnesota atCalgary,6:30 p.m. Los Angeleat s Colorado,7 p.m. Bosto natEdmonton,7p.m. TampaBayat Anaheim, 7p.m.
TENNIS
JaSOn Giamdi retireS after 20 SeaSOnS —Jason Giambi, the 2000AL MVP,announced his retirement Monday in astatement released to the media. Heends his career asoneof 20 players in history with at least 400 homeruns, 1,400 RBls, 1,200 runs and 1,300 walks. The 44-year-old played for Oakland, the New York Yankees, Colorado andCleveland. A five-time All-Star and fearsome power hitter, Giambi batted.277 in his career with 440 homeruns and1,441 RBls. He hada.399 on-base percentage and slugged.516. The first baseman wasalso tarnished by his involvement in the BALCOperformance-enhancing drugs investigation. Henever publicly admitted using PEDs,but has apologized for past actions.
AtlanticDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA 56 37 15 4 78 150 123 59 35 18 6 76 191 159
WTA Rio Open MondayatRio deJaneiro First Round Irina-Came lia Begu(2), Romania, def. Olivia Rogowska, Australia, 6-1, 6-3. JohannaLarsson(5), Sweden, def. Maria-Teresa Torro-Flor,Spain,6-7 (5),7-6(3), 4-2, retired. GraceMin, UnitedStates,def. Chanelle Scheepers (8), South Africa, 6-2,6-1. LourdesDominguezLino, Spain,def.Montserrat Gonzalez, Paraguay, 6-2,6-2. MadisonBrengle(4), UnitedStates, def.AnaBogdan,Rom ania, 6-4,3-3, retired. GahrielaCe,Brazil, def. PaulineParmentier, France, 6-2,6-7(1),6-0. DubaiDutyFreeChampionships Mondayat Dubai, UnitedArabEmirates Firsl Round LucieSafarova(11), CzechRepublic, def.Monica Puig,PuertoRico, 6-1,6-4. PengShuai(16), China,def.ElenaVesnina, Russia, 7-5,6-1.
KarolinaPliskova(17),CzechRepublic, def.Anastasi aPavlyuchenkova,Russia,6-2,6-4. GarbineMuguruza,Spain, def.Jarmila Gajdosova, Australia,3-6,6-1, 6-2. WangQiang,China, def.KurumiNara,Japan,5-7, 6-1, 7-5.
CaglaBuyukakcay,Turkey,def. Gabriela Dabrowski, Canada, 6-2,6-7 (7),6-4. KaterynaKozlova, Ukraine,def. Heather Watson, Britain,6-4, 7-5. BarboraZahlavovaStrycova, Czech Republic, def. YuliyaBeygelzimer, Ukraine,6-4,6-2. DanielaHantuchova,Slovakia,def. MonaBarthel, Germany, 7-6(5), 3-6,6-3. CamilaGiorgi, Italy, def.VeraZvonareva,Russia, 6-4,6-2. Elina Svitolina,Ukraine,def. CocoVandeweghe, UnitedStates,3-1, retired. SecondRound VenusWiliams(8), United States, def. Belinda Bencic,Switzerland,6-1, 6-2.
The AssociatedPressTop25 poll Record Pls Prv 1 . Kentucky (65 ) 25-0 1, 625 1 2. Virginia 2 3-1 1,524 2 3. Gonza ga 2 6-1 1,475 3 4. Duke 2 2-3 1,449 4 5. Wisconsin 2 3-2 1,387 5 6. Villanova 2 3-2 1,302 6 7. Arizona 2 2-3 1,213 7 8. Kansas 2 1-4 1,195 8 9. Uiah 2 0-4 1,051 11 10. NotreDame 22-4 1,038 10 11. N.Iowa 2 4-2 955 13 12. Louisville 20-5 88 2 9 13. WichitaSt. 2 3-3 862 15 14.lowaSt. 18-6 76 1 14 15. NorthCarolin a 18 - 7 6 5 8 12 16. Maryland 2 1-5 640 19 17. Oklahom a 17-8 55 4 17 18. Arkansas 20-5 47 6 24 19. Butler 18-7 45 6 18 20. Baylor 1 8-7 364 16 21. SMU 2 1-5 299 2 5 22.OklahomaSt. 17-8 24 0 21 23. WestVirginia 19-6 15 4 21 24. OhioSt. 19-7 13 9 23 25. VCU 1 9-6 109 2 0 Othersreceivingvotes: Texas70, SanDiegoSt. 64, Providence 44, Murray St.38,Temple 28,Georgetown 23,MichiganSt. 17,Dayton10, TexasA&M8, Valparaiso8,Indiana7. UBATodayTop25 coachespol Record Pls Pvs 25-0 799 1 2. Gonza ga(1) 26-1 74 5 2 3. Virginia 23-1 72 9 3 4. Wisconsin 23-2 70 8 4 5. Duke 22-3 69 0 5 6. Vlllanova 23-2 64 7 6 7.Arizona 22-3 589 7 8. Kansas 21-4 56 6 9 9. Utah 2 0-4 520 10 10. NotreDame 22-4 505 11 11. N.Iowa 24-2 46 9 12 12. Louisville 20-5 44 4 8 13. WichitaSt. 2 3-3 436 13 14. IowaSt. 1 8-6 370 14 15. Maryland 2 1-5 314 19 16. NorthCarolina 18-7 27 7 15 17. Arkansas 20-5 25 7 23 17. Oklahom a 1 7-8 257 17 19. Butler 1 8-7 226 18 20. Baylor 1 8-7 155 16 21. SMU 21-5 13 1 25 22. WestVirginia 19-6 11 9 20 23. OhioSt. 19-7 9 9 21 24.OklahomaSt. 17-8 6 9 24 25. SanDiegoSt. 2 0-6 6 1 Others receivingvotes:VCU51, Texas 32, Providence22, Indiana20, MichiganSt. 20, Dayton 17, Georgetown16,StephenF.Austin12, MurraySt. 10,Valparaiso8,TexasA&M 3,lowa2,LSU2,Boise St.1, ColoradoSt.1, RhodeIsland1. 1. Kentucky(31 )
Saturday Boysbasketball: Culverat ColumbiaBasin Conferencetournament at Pendleton Convention Center,
WEDNESDAY
LPGATour, Australian Open
IN THE BLEACHERS
No more workout — Ever!
DelrayBeachOpen MondayatDelray Beach, Fla. First Round DenisKudla,UnitedStates,def. LukasLacko, Slo-
vakia, 6-3,6-4.
AlexandrDolgopolov(3), Ukraine,def.Teymuraz Gahashvili,Russia,7-6(4), 6-3. Ivo Karlovic(4),Croatia,def.Dustin Brown,Germany, 6-3,6-7 (3),6-2. Open13 Monday at Marseille, France First Round SergiyStakhovsky,Ukraine, def. LukasRosol (8), CzechRepublic, 6-3,6-2. BornaCoric, Croatia,def.DenisIstomin, Uzbekistan, 6-4,7-5.
BASEBALL Co Ilege CollegiateBaseballPoll Record Pts Prv 3-0 1. TCU 494 2 2-1 2. Vanderbilt 492 1 3-0 3. Virginia 489 3 4. LSU 3-0 487 4 5. Florida 3-0 485 6 6. Houston 3-0 483 8 7. Texas Tech 4-0 481 9 8. UCLA 3-0 479 10 9. ArizonaSt. 2-1 477 19 10. Oklahoma St. 1-2 474 5 11. FloridaSt. 3-0 470 11 12. Texas 2-2 468 7 13. Rice 2-2 467 22 14. Miami 4-0 465 14 15. Louisville 2-1 463 12 16. UCSantaBarbara 3-0 460 16 17.Oregon 2-1 458 15 18. MississippiSt. 4-0 457 20 3-0 19. NorthCarolina 454 24 2-1 20. SouthCarolina 452 21 3-0 21. Baylor 450 NR 22. Indiana 2-1 446 NR 1-2 23. Stanford 445 18 2-1 24. Liberty 443 23 1-2 25. CalSt. Fullerton 440 17 4-0 26. Illinois 438 NR 3-0 27. Maryland 436 NR 2-1 28. Georgia Tech 432 26 2-1 29. Kenne sawSt. 430 27 3-0 30. Alabam a 427 NR
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION
All TimesPST
Eastern Conference d-Atlanta d-Toronto d-Chicago Washington Cleveland Milwaukee Charlotte Miami Brooklyn Boston Detroit Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W L 43 11 36 17 34 20 33 21 33 22 30 23 22 30 22 30 21 31 20 31 21 33 21 33 17 39 12 41 10 43
WesternConference
d-Golden State d-Memphis d-Portland Houston Dallas LA. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix Oklahoma City NewOrleans Denver Utah Sacramen to L.A. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
W L 42 9 39 14 36 17 36 17 36 19 35 19 34 19 29 25 28 25 27 26 20 33 19 34 18 34 13 40 11 42
Pct GB .796
.679 6R .630 9 .611 10 ,600 10ia .566 12tyt
.423 20 .423 20 .404 21 .392 21ta .389 22 .389 22 .304 27 .226 30ta ,189 32ta
Pct GB .824
.736 4 .679 7 .679 7 .655 8 .648 Bta .642 9 .537 14'/~ .528 15 .509 16 .377 23 .358 24 .346 24ta .245 30 .208 32
Thursday'sGames
Dallas atOklahomaCity,5 p.m. SanAntonioat LA.Clippers,7;30p.m.
Friday'sGames
NewOrleansat Orlando, 4p.m. IndianaatPhiladelphia,4 p.m. Miami atNewYork, 4:30p.m. TorontoatAtlanta, 4:30 p.m. ChicagoatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Cleveland atWashington, 5 p.m. Phoenixat Minnesota,5 p.m. DenveratMilwaukee,5:30 p.m. HoustonatDalas, 5:30p.m. PortlandatUtah,6 p.m. BostonatSacramento, 7p.m. Brooklynat L.A.Lakers, 7:30p.m. SanAntonioat GoldenState, 7:30p.m.
Leaders Through Sunday's Games Scoring G FG FT PTB AVG Harden,HOU 53 441 429 1451 27.4 James,CLE 45 412 271 1167 25.9 Westhrook,OKC 39 343 283 1007 25.8 Davis,NOR 46 436 256 1129 24.5 Anthony,NYK 40 358 189 966 24.2 Cousins,SAC 40 334 281 950 23.8 51 418 206 1203 23.6 Curry,GO L Aldridge,PO R 47 435 2131108 23.6 Griffin, LAC 51 448 245 1149 22.5 Thompson, GOL 50 397 155 1104 22.1 Irving,CLE 52 407 201 1128 21.7 ATP World Tour Lillard, POR 53 383 242 1138 21.5 Rio Open Bosh,MIA 44 343 179 928 21.1 MondayatRio deJaneiro Butler,CHI 49 322 302 998 20.4 First Round Gay,SAC 48 338 231 955 19.9 AndreasHaider-Maurer,Austria, def. Albert RaRebounds mos-Vi nolas,Spain,3-6,6-3,6-2. G OFF DEFTOT AVG JarkkoNieminen, Finland, def. MarcoCecchinato, Jordan,LAC 54 249 496 745 13.8 Italy, 4-6,6-3,7-5. Drummond,DET 54 266 427 693 12.8 TommyRohredo(3), Spain,def. Elias Ymer, Swe- Cousins,SAC 40 121 377 498 12.5 den, 6-4,6-3. Gasol,CHI 51 151 468 619 12.1 Thiemo deBakker, Netherlands,def. Guilherme Randolph,MEM 44 170 357 527 12.0 Clezar,Brazil, 5-7,6-3,6-1. Chandler,DAL 52 209 407 616 11.8
Women's college The AssociatedPressTop25pol Record Pts Prv 1. Uconn (35) 24-1 87 5 2 24-1 83 1 1 2. SouthCarolina 24-1 80 9 3 3. Baylor 4. NotreDame 23-2 77 2 4 5. Maryland 22-2 71 9 5 6. Tennesse e 22-3 71 2 6 23-2 63 9 8 7. Oregon St. 8. Louisville 22-3 62 4 9 9. FloridaSt. 23-3 57 1 7 10. Duke 19-6 527 11 1 9-6 526 1 0 11. Kentucky 2 2-4 468 12 12. Arizona St. 13. Iowa 21-4 45 3 14 14. MississippiSt. 24- 4 421 13 1 9-6 361 1 5 15. Texas A&,M 2 3-0 350 1 6 16. Princeton 17. NorthCarolin a 20 - 6 3 4 4 17 18. Stanford 1 9-7 296 1 9 19. Rutgers 19-6 27 4 18 22-3 20 9 21 20. Chattanooga 21. Nebraska 18-7 12 2 22 22.FloridaGulfcoast 23- 2 74 23. JamesMadison 2 2 - 2 62 2 4. GeorgeWashington 22-3 59 2 0 25. Syracuse 18-8 4 1 23 Othersreceivingvotes: Oklahoma38, California 36,SetonHall 20,SouthFlorida19, Northwestern 18, Gonza ga16, DePaul 12, Green Bay12, Texas12, Dayton11,LSU9,OklahomaSt. 8,Washington 6,Miami 5,Georgia4, Minnesota4, UALR2, Pitshurgh1, Quinnipiac1,W.Kentucky1, WichitaSt.1.
Monday'sGames
TOP 25 No. 4NotreDame63, No.10 Duke50 No. 5Maryland75, MichiganSt.69 No. 15TexasA&M70,Alabama49 No. 20Chatanooga66,W.Carolina 41 EAST
BostonCollege64,NCState59,OT Bryant63,FairleighDickinson61 RobertMorris67,LIUBrooklyn46 Sacred Heart 66, MountSt. Mary's60 St. Francis(NY)67,Wagner55 St. Francis(Pa.)61, CCSU48 SOUTH Chattanooga 66,W.Carolina41 CoppinSt. 80,DelawareSt.62 ETSU 84, UNC-Greenshoro66 FloridaA&M65, NCCentral 58 Furman 64,Samford 44 Hampton 78,MorganSt.44 Md.-EasternShore61, Howard54 Mercer63,Wofford51 NC A&T52,Bethune-Cookman46 PrairieView59, Gramhling St.51 SouthernU.59, MVSU50 Texas Southern54, JacksonSt.46 MIDWEST
Maryland 75,MichiganSt. 69 NotreDam e63, Duke50 SOUTHWE ST AlcornSt. atArk.-PineBluff, ppd. TexasA&M70,Alabama49 Texas-Pan American54,NJIT53
Men's college Pac-12 All TimesPST
Conference Overall W L Pct W L Pct 10 2 . 8 33 22 3 .880
Arizona 10 2 .833 Utah O regon 8 5 .61 5 UCLA 8 5 .615 O regon St. 7 6 . 5 38 S tanford 7 6 .53 8 C alifornia 6 7 .4 6 2 A rizona St. 5 7 .4 17 C olorado 5 7 .4 1 7 Washington St. 5 8 .385 Washington 3 1 0 .231 Southern Cal 2 11 .154
20 4 .833 18 8 .692 16 10 .615 16 9 .640 16 9 .640 16 10 .615 13 12 .520 12 12 .500 11 14 .440 14 11 .560 10 15 .400
Wednesday'sGames UCLAatArizonaSt., 6p.m.
Coloradoat Oregon,8 p.m. Thursday'sGames SouthernCalatArizona,6 p.m. Utah atOregonSt., 8p.m. Saturday'sGames Californiaat Stanford,3:30p.m. UCLAatAnzona,6 p.m. ColoradoatOregonSt Bpm Bunday'sGames Utah atOregon, noon Washington atWashington St., 5:30p.m. Southern CalatArizonaSt., 5:30 p.m. Monday'sGames
TOP 26 No. 2Virginiavs.Pittsburgh, 7p.m. No. 6Vilanovavs.SetonHal, 7p.m. No. 8Kansasat No.23WestVirginia, 9p.m. No.19 Butleat r Creighton,9:15p.m. EAST
Miami89,BostonCollege86, 20T Monmouth (NJ)69, Marist 65 NJIT89,Maine-FortKent55 Villanova 80, Seton Hall 54 WestVirginia62, Kansas61 SOUTH Bethune-Cookma n77,NCABT56 CoastalCarolina65, Radford 59 CoppinSt. 96,DelawareSt.92 ETSU87,TennesseeTech79 Georgi aTech63,Clemson52 Hampton 93,MorganSt.65 McNeese St.74,SELouisiana69 Md.-EasternShore71, Howard60 NC Central73, FloridaA&M48 NorthwesternSt.86, Cent. Arkansas70 PrairieView95, Gramhling St.44 SouthernU.68, MVSU56 TexasSouthern 71,JacksonSt. 70,OT Virginia61,Pittsburgh49 MIDWEST Butler58,Creighton56 SOUTHWE ST Lamar72,HoustonBaptist 64 SamHouston St.71,AbileneChristian 49 Stephen F.Austin 90, IncarnateWord76 TexasA8M-CC55, NewOrleans53 AlcornSt. atArk.-PineBluff, ppd.
RODEO Professional Leaders AR-around — 1. Trevor Brazile, Deca tur, Tex as, $34,8 58.2.StevenDent,Mullen,Neh.,$13,849.3.Josh Peek,Pueblo, Colo., $11,124. BarebackRiding— 1. TimO'Connell, Zwingle, lowa,$14,833.2. RyanGray,Cheney,Wash., $13,59L 3. LukeCreasy,Lubbock,Texas, 612,274.4. BobbyMote, Culver,Ore.,gf 1,56L 5.David Peehles,Redmond, Ore., $10,969.6.TylerNelson,Victor, Idaho,$10,569.7.Kash Wilson,Gooding,Idaho,$10,374. 8. SethHardwick, LaramieW , yo., $9,928.9. GeorgeGillespie IV,Hamilton, Mont., $8,165.10. StevenDent, Mullen, Neb., $7,706. 18. AustinFoss,Terrebonne,Ore.,$4,005.19. R.C.Landingham, Pendleton,Ore.,$3,894. SteerWrestling—1. TyErickson, Helena,Mont., $16, 392.2.Adam Strahan,McKinney,Texas,$14,708. 3. BayloRo r che,Tremonton,Utah,$14,663.4. Matthew Mousseau,Hensall, On tario, $12,216.5. KyleIrwin,RobertsdaleAl , a., $12,116.6. BeauClark, Belgrade,Mont., $11,139.7.TylerPearson,Louisvile, Miss.,$10017t8. Dirk Tave nner,Rigby, Idaho,$9,333. 9.Austin Courmier, Oakwood,Texas,II,627.10. Darrell Petry, Cheek, Texas, $7,348.6.BlakeKnowles, Heppner,Ore.,$5,773.
TeamRoping(header) — 1. ClayTryan, Bilings, Mont., $17,632.2. Trevor Brazile, Decatur, Texas, $16619.3.JesseStipes,Salina, Okla.,$16440.4. Doyle Hoskins,Chualar,Calif., $13,618.5. MattSherwood, Pima,Ariz.,$12,510.6. RileyMinor,Ellenshurg,Wash., $12,076.7.CharlyCrawlord,Prinevile, Ore., $10,76L 8. Clint Sum mers,LakeCity, Fla., 68,758.9. ChadMasters, CedarHill, Tenn.,$8,397.10. Coleman Proctor, Pryor, Okla.,$7,614. Team Roping lheeler) — 1.JadeCorkill, Fallon, Nev.,$17,632.2. Patrick Smith, Lipan,Texas, $16,619. 3. Billie Saebe ns, Nowata, Okla.,$15,340. 4. Quinn Kesler,Holden,Utah,$12,510. 5. BradyMinor,Ellensburg,Wash., $12,076.6. Shay Carroll, LaJunta, Colo., $10,76 L 7.BuddyHawkinsII,Columbus,Kan.,$8,874. 8. BradCulpepper,Sylvester,Ga., $8r758,9, Kinney Harrell, MarshalTe l, xas,$8,672.10. TravisGraves,Jay,okla., $8,397.20.Russell Cardoza,Terrebonne,Ore., $5,161. SaddleBroncRiding —1.CodyDeMoss, Heflin, la., $23,244. 2.JoeLufkin, Sallisaw,Okla., $16,237n 3. TaosMuncy,Corona,N.M.,$13,468.4.SpencerWright, Milford, Utah,$12t640. 5.ChadFerley, Oelrichs, S.D., gf1,563.6.ClayEliott, Nanton,Alberta,$8,964.7. Jesse Bail, Camp Crook, S.D.,$8,130. 8. LaylonGreen,Meeting Creek, Alberta,$7,303.9. HeithDeMoss, Heflin, La., $7,062.10.BradyNicholes,Hoytsvile, Utah,$7,057. Tie-downRoping— 1. MontyLewis, Hereford, Texas,$22,033.2. Sterling Smith, Qephenvile, Tea xs, $17,494.3.CorySolomon, PrairieView,Texas,$15,168. 4.Jordan Ketscher,SquawValley,Calif., $12,454.5.Dane Kissack,Spearfish, S.D.,$1L873.6.TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, $10,287. 7. ChaseWilliams, Stephenvile, Texas,$9,820.8. TimberMoore, Aubrey,Texas, $9,249. 9.MattShiozawa,Chuhhuck,Idaho,68,468.10.Adam Gray,Seymour,Texas,$8,178. SteerRoping—1.ScottSnedecor,Frederickshurg, Texas,$10989.2. VinFisherJr., Andrews,Texas, $9194. 3. TrevorBrazile, Decatur,Texas, $7,952.4. JasonEvans, Huntsvile, Texas,$7,301. 5. LandonMcclaugherly, Tilden,Texas, $6,805r 6. MikeChase, McAlester, Okla., $4,764.7.Walter Priestly, Rohs town, Texas, $3,920. 8. RogerBranch,Perkins, Okla., $3,888.9. RockyPatterson, Pratt,Kan.,$3,846.10. ChanceKelton,Mayer,Ariz., $3,356. Bull Riding —1. ParkerBreding, Edgar, Mon.t, $18660.2.ZebLanham,Sweet,Idaho,$16975.3. Brennon Eldred,Sulphur,Okla., $15r755.4. ClaytonSavage, Yoder,Wyo., $13,349. 5. Dustin Bowen, Waller, Texas, $12,690.6.NileLeharon,Weatherford,Texas,$11,74L7. Casey Huckabee,GrandSaline,Texas,$10,086.8.Cain Smith,Pend leton, Ore., $10,084.9. ArdieMaier, Timber Lake,S.D.,$10,064.10. JohnJacobs, Little Eagle, S.D., $9,802. BarrelRacing—1.Sarah RoseMcDonald,Brunswick,Ga.,$21,173.2. FalonTaylor, Collinsvile, Texas, $17,230.3. AlexaLake, Richmond, Texas, $16,900. 4. VictoriaWiliams,Kiln, Miss.,$15,682.5.MeganJohnson,Dem ing, N.M., $15,014.6. LaynaKight,Ocala, Fla., $14,748. 7.KellyTovar,Rockdale, Texas, $14287. 9. Callie Duperier,Boerne,Texas, $13,671.8. Shelby Herrmann, Stephenvile, Texas,$13,282.10. JanaBean, Fort Hancock,Texas,611,629.
DEALS Transactions BASEBA LL
AmericanLeague CLEVELANDINDIANS — 1BJason Giamhiannounced hisretirement. NEWYORKYANKEES—Agreed totermswith RHP JaredBurtononaminorleaguecontract. BASKET BALL NationalBasketball Association NEWYOR KKNICKS—WaivedFAmar'eStoudemire. FOOTB ALL NationalFootball League CAROLINA PANTHERS—PromotedSteveWilksto assistantheadcoach. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague NHL —Suspended Florida DDmitry Kulikovfour gamesforclippingDalas FTyler Seguin during a Feh. 13game. COLUMBUSBLUE JACKETS — Recalled F Marko DanofromSpringfield (AHL). NEWYORKISLANDERS— LoanedDMaitCarkner to Bridgeport(AHL ). OTTAWASENATORS— SignedDMarcMethottoa four year contract extensionthroughthe2018-19season. SOCCER
MajorLeagueSoccer
NEWYORKREDBULLS— NamedIhrahimSekagya to thetechnicalstaif. COLLEG E GEOR GIA—Announced runningbackscoach Bryan
Mcclendon wil coachwidereceiversandserveaspassing gamecoordinator. Named Thomas Brown running backscoach. SANJOS ESTATE—NamedAdamStenavich offensive linecoach. WISCO NSIN—NamedTedGilmorewidereceivers coach.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
NHL ROUNDUP
Price shuts out Wings asHabstake division lead The Associated Press
Plekanec came off the bench Klein scored with 4:32 left, and shortly b efore P acioretty the New York Rangers overplenty of blocked shots and sent the puck his way for the came a pair of two-goal deficits precious few scoring chances. game-winner. with three third-period goals. "I saw it was wide open in To the Montreal Canadiens Hurricanes 6, Senators 3:
rally from a three-goal deficit. Avalanche 5, Coyotes 2:
and Detroit Red Wings, this
OTTAWA, Ontario — Andrej
period, and Colorado sent Ari-
Nestrasil had a goal and two assists to lead Carolina.
zona to its fourth straight loss. Canucks 3, Wild 2: VAN-
DETROIT — T here were
the middle of the ice and just
one felt like aplayoff game. tried to put myself in the best Tomas Plekanec snapped a position to put it in the net," scoreless tie with 2:30 remain-
Ji'C-. -/
+ Carlos Osorio I The Associated Press
Detroit's Pavel Datsyuk is unable to hit the puck past Montreal goalie Carey Price during the third period Monday night in Detroit. Price had 25 saves in the Canadiens' 2-0 victory.
ing, and Carey Price made 25 saves in his fifth shutout of the season Monday night, propelling the Canadiens to a 2-0 victory over the Red Wings. Plekanec's slap shot got past Jimmy Howard for his 17th
goal of the season.
Plekanec said.
Jets 5, Oilers 4: WINNIPEG,
DENVER — Cody M cLeod and Matt Duchene scored nine
seconds apart early in the first
COUVER, British Columbia-
Montreal, which
b egan Manitoba — B l ake W h eel- Vancouver's Alex Biega scored the night tied atop the Atlan- er scored the only goal in the the game-winner in his first tic Division with Tampa Bay, shootout, and Winnipeg out- NHL game. stretched its lead to six points shot Edmonton 46-22. Kings 3, Lightning 2: LOS over Detroit. Flames 4, Bruins 3: CAL- ANGELES — Jordan Nolan Also on Monday: GARY, Alberta — TJ Brodie scored the go-ahead goal early Rangers 6, Islanders 5: scored with two seconds left in inthe thirdperiod in Los AngeUNIONDALE, NY. — Kevin overtime to complete a Calgary les' fifth straight victory.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Blazers
F reeland ha s
m i ssed 2 0
games and counting with a right shoulder sprain.
Continued from C1 C enter Robin Lopez was
Por f l a nd's stability h a s
o ut for 23 games after he b een i t s b ackcourt. A l fractured his right hand t h ough Damian Lillard has D ec. 15 against San Anto-
b a t t led at t i mes with u n -
nio. The 7-footer's absence characteristic inconsistenwas felt; the Blazers went 13- cy, especially from 3-point 10 without him. range, he is averaging 21.5 But more than his re- p o ints and 6.3 assists per b ounding an d game. defense, L opez W esley M at is a s t eadyingOU r benCh thews h a s made 161 3 - p ointers f orce. LaMarcus hg S Aldridge is more Qeye/p e d this s eason, tying c reative o n
the
h im w it h
floor when Lopez Bnd gUyS takes the pres- h clye p/pye Q By Steve Mims
sure o
tm A
As Abdul-Bassit stood in a hallway and spoke about the loss that put a dent in Oregon's
t th t dridge, who started in S unday's ma y b e t h ey All-Star g a m e, I/ypU/dn't is averaging 23 6 hgye If <y points and 10.3 rebounds. He has Wel'e heB/thy. 27 double-doubles Thgt j USt this season, ninth t " 8 th n in fhe league. There was PU I 'teBm. i njury dra m a — Portland's surrounding AlWesley Matthews dridge, foo. In a span of just 48
NCAA tournament hopes, an
hours late in Janu-
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
EUGENE
—
J a li l A b -
dul-Bassit could not crack a smile after the best game of
his career. The Oregon senior scored 24 points and made 7 of 12
3-pointers Saturday, but the Ducks had a four-game winning streak snapped with a 7263 loss at UCLA.
G old-
en State's Steph Cur r y and Atlant as y e orv e r for the most in the le a gue. Matthews is riding a career-best streak o f 1 3 ga m e s wit h mult i p l e 3-poin t ers. Matthews said fhaf Por f i and's a bility t o ov e r -
come injuries is a f esfamenf fo u s getting better."
"We're just going to c ontinue ary, Aldridge resigned him- to get healthier — hopefulself to thumb surgery that l y . We already hit the injuwould sideline him for up to ry bug. It's over, so out of six weeks. Then he reversed sight, out of mind," he said. himself and decided to play "But our bench has develthrough the pain. oped and guys have played
elderly UCLA fan tapped him on the shoulder. "Why don't you transfer?" he asked Abdul-Bassit. "The
way you shoot, we could use you."
Aldridge h ur t
It was anunexpected com-
h i s l e f t mi n u tes t hat m aybe they
pliment that let Abdul-Bassit drop his disappointment. "I appreciate it," he said. Abdul-Bassit's performance
thumb when his hand came wouldn't have if guys were down on the knee of Sacra- healthy. That just strength-
at UCLA continued a stretch
victory over the Kings on
during which he is playing his best basketball for Oregon as his college career nears an end. The 6-foot-4 guard has
Jan. 19.Aldridgesaidthein- a m ove before Thursday's jury to his nonshooting hand trade deadline. Denver forstill causes him discomfort.
war d W i l son Chandler and
started the past seven games
ing off to his fourth All-Star
n a m e s connected to Port-
and the Ducks (18-8 overall, 8-5 Pac-12) have won five. In his past 10 games, Abdul-Bassit has made 36 of 75 3-point attempts.
appearance. "I've had it hit a land. The Blazers do not re-
mento's DeMarcus Cousins
in the second quarter of a
after becoming the first Or-
egon player to make seven three-pointers in a game since Tajuan Porter in 2010. "They kept me going. They were telling me to keep shooting and keep moving to open spots." Abdul-Bassit is shooting 45 percent from behind the 3-point arc, which would rank
10th in the nation, but he has not made enough to qualify among the leaders. "When he takes good shots, his percentage is pretty good," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "His shot selection was really good and he shot it reallywell." Abdul-Bassit and g uard Joseph Young are the two Oregon seniors on scholarship preparing for their final
few times and it hasn't been too bad."
Chris Pietsch/The Associated Press
Oregon's Jalil Abdul-Bassit, right, shoots over Washington's Shawn Kemp Jr. earlier this month. Abdul-Bassit has started the past seven games for the Ducks, who are 5-2 in that stretch.
Nextup Colorado at Oregon When: 8 p.m. Wednesday TV:ESPNURadio:
KICE 940-AM;
KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM
and Johnny Lpyd." — Oregon's Jalil Abdul-Bassit
mosphere. Jalil realizes that is
coming to an end." Abdul-Bassit took a long route to Oregon after graduating from Anchorage West High in Alaska. He played as a freshman at Monroe College,
go,'Oh boy, I've got a mo nth in New Rochelle, New York, left here.' You start your ca- before transferring to North reer and think you have forev- Idaho College. er, and then all of a sudden you
more prepared to play this year," Abdul-Bassit said. "I am more focused. Last year was a learning experience trying to learn from Jason Calliste and Johnny Loyd." Oregon remains on the outside of most NCAA tourna-
ment projections and needs a strong stretch run to make a
No. 23 WestVirginia upsets No. 8 I(ansas onlate shot The Associated Press
win game at home," Staten utes after he had gone to the start to a season in program M ORGANTOWN, W V a . said. "We had the crowd be- bench with cramps. history. " That is exactly how w e — Leg cramps weren't going hind us and we fought to the No. 6 Villanova 80, Seton to keep Juwan Staten from end." drew it u p," Staten said. Hall 54: VILLANOVA, Pa. getting West Virginia to 20 With the game on the line, "When I s p inned, I'd seen Darrun Hilliard scored 18 -
Staten too k
a n i n b o unds nothing in the lane. I laid the
seasons. pass and went the length of Staten scored 20 points, in- the court, made a spin move cluding a layup with four sec- around Frank Mason III and onds left to lift No. 23 West hit a left-handed layup over Virginia to a 62-61 victory the outstretched arms of two over No. 8 Kansas on Monday other Kansas defenders. night. It was Staten's first field "This was definitely a must- goal over the final eight min-
The Associated Press file photo
Portland coach Terry Stotts has the Trail Blazers at the exact same spot as last year at the All-Star break, but this year he has had to deal with injuries to many of his top players.
He was injured at the start
start cherishing every game played key roles in helping the because you know they are
wins for the first time in four
The frontcourt has struggled because of Nicolas Ba- break just to relax, take tum's sore right wrist, which care of our bodies and to do has caused him to miss six somethingelse,"Batumsaid. games. Backup center Joel "And come back stronger."
am more focused. Last year was a learning experience trying tp learn from Jason Ca//iste
KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Utah at OregonSt. When: 8 p.m. Thursday TV:Pac-12 Radio:
t u r n to the court until Friday at Utah. "It's n ice to h av e t h i s
"/t is definitely a /pt different from last year. / am a /pt more prepared tp play this year. /
third straight trip, beginning of last season and played spar- when the Ducks are at home ingly for the Ducks, scoring Wednesday to face Colorado. "We just have to bounce Ducks win six of their past coming to an end. I don't think just 32 points in 17 games. eight games to move into a tie anyplayer will ever have it like This season, he ranks fourth back, we have to keep movfor third place in the Pac-12. they do in college, regardless on the team with 8.8 points per ing forward and get better "Jalil has got a sense of ur- of where you go. In college, ev- game and is the team's best every day," Abdul-Bassit said. "Every game in the Pac-12 is gency now," Altman said re- eryone is pulling for you and perimeter defender. "It is definitely a lot differ- a must-win. Every game is as cently. "I think every senior the students are backing you gets to that point where they and so it is a little different at- ent from last year. I am a lot important as the next." homestand against Colorado and Utah this week. Both have
Mea n while, talk persists th a t th e Blazers will make
"It feels OK," Aldridge Nuggets shooting guard Arsaid last week before head- ron Afflalo are among the
"It is all due to my team-
mates finding me in open spots," Abdul-Bassit said
e n s our team."
points, Daniel Ochefu had 11
ball up. It was a good call by
points and 12 rebounds, and
coach."
Villanova won
i t s s eventh
Also on Monday: straight. No. 2 Virginia 61, Pittsburgh No. 19 Butler 58, Creighton 49: C H A R L OTTESVILLE, 56: OMAHA, Neb. — RoosVa. — Malcolm Brogdon evelt Jones made the winning scored 18 points and Virgin- layup with 1.9 seconds to lift ia (24-1) matched the best Butler.
Trail Blazersstatistics Player g mitt igm-fga pct fgm-tga ftm-fla pct pts avg Aldridge 47 36.0 435-940 463 25-59 213-244 873 u08 23.6 Lillard 53 36.3 383-885 433 130-383 242-281 861 u38 21.5 Matthews 53 34.0 310-684 453 161-405 86-118 729 867 16.4 Lopez 30 28.2 125-242 517 0-0 46-61 754 296 9.9 Batum 46 33.7 150-400 375 55-202 55-66 833 410 8.9 Kaman 50 20.2 194-401 484 0-0 56-82 683 444 8.9 19-21 905 188 6.1 Leonard 31 15.8 71-130 546 27-60 McCollum 38 1z5 66-166 398 31-75 26-37 703 189 5.0 Blake 53 20.7 84-230 365 49-149 20-28 714 237 4.5 Wright 28 11.5 3 4-92 370 24-57 23-29 793 115 4.1 Robinson 32 1z2 4 7-91 516 0-0 21-48 438 115 3.6 Freeland 31 13.6 4 6-97 474 0-0 16-19 842 108 3.5 8-9 889 uO 3.1 Crabbe 36 13.0 4 0-94 426 22-57 Barton 30 10.0 38-100 380 4-18 10-15 667 90 3.0 Claver 1 0 7.6 9- 2 0 450 6-11 0-0 0 00 24 z 4 Team 53 242.8 2,032-4,572 444 534-1,476841-1,058 795 5,439 102.6 Opponents 53 242.8 1,982-4,596 431 325-1,017867-1,136 763 5,156 97.3
Player o-reb d-reb tot avg ast at/g Aldridge 124 362 486 10.3 85 1.8 Lillard 37 206 243 4.6 333 6.3 Matthews 35 154 189 3.6 122 z3 Lopez 101 u8 219 7.3 33 1 .1 Batum 36 216 252 5.5 215 4.7 Kaman 99 236 335 6.7 47 0.9 Leonard 29 04 143 4.6 16 0.5
pf dp
s tl to
blk
87 0 3 8 90 5 4 111 0 79 138 16 119 t 64 74 8 u 45 47 76 0 67 0 5 0 83 2 9 109 1 1 2 78 4 5 68 0 6 19 8 McCollitm 7 3 2 39 10 29 0 .8 36 0 2 0 20 2 Blake 13 87 100 1.9 200 3.8 88 0 2 9 67 5 Wright 7 5 4 61 z2 1 3 14 7 26 0.9 33 t Robinson 33 100 133 4.2 9 1 6 33 1 1 0 . 3 54 0 Freeland 51 89 140 4.5 13 0.4 66 I 5 21 15 Crabbe 5 3 7 42 1.2 28 0.8 52 0 1 3 10 1 4 Barton 3 3 1 34 1.1 27 0 .9 20 0 1 4 17 4 Claver 3 17 20 20 1 0 . 1 12 0 1 4 1 Team 583 1,853 2,436 46.0 1,184 22.3 998 4 371 732 266 Opponents 606 1,796 2,402 45.3 1,056 19.9 1,029 5 428 685 190
C4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
GOLF
Keselowski
Love to return as Ryder Cup captain
Gordon spinning into the Continued from C1 Keselowski has accepted wall with a flat tire. Gordon finished 29th and the black hat, better to stir reaction with an outspoken confronted Keselowski in
By Doug Ferguson
Davis Love III,
The Associated Press
right, shown
LOS ANGELES — Davis
Love III is getting another shot as U.S. captain in the Ryder
Cup. Two people familiar with the decision told The Associated
Press on Monday night that the PGA of America has selected Love as captain for the 2016 matches at Hazeltine.
of America organized a task force of players and former captains to build some conti-
return as the captain for
those task force meetingsthesecond and most recentone
the 2016 competition.
was at Torrey Pines two weeks
Feb. 24, when the Honda Clas-
sic is held at PGA headquarters in Palm Beach Gardens,
US
Florida.
Love led the Americans to a 10-6 lead at Medinah in 2012 until Ian Poulter and Europe
staged an improbable rally and petition after a21-year absence. to be in disarray all week, and matched the greatest comeBut he was out of touch with it spilled over into the closing back in Ryder Cup history. his team, made a question- news conference when MickThis will be the second able captain's pick with Webb elson heaped praise on Paul straight Ryder Cup that the Simpson and benched Phil Azinger's winning formula in U.S. gets a repeat captain, and Mickelson for both Saturday 2008 and asked why the PGA it didn't go so well the previous sessions. Europe won for the of America went away from time. Tom Watson, at 65, was
the oldest Ryder Cup captain and returnedforthe2014 com-
Out of that mess, the PGA
with Dustin Johnson during the 2012 Ryder Cup, will
TheAssociated Pressfile photo
He is to be introduced on
the players.
nuity and tradition, similar to what Europe has done. Out of
ago — the PGA decided its best bet was with Love. Azinger was mentioned as
a possibl e candidate,and Fred Couples had the support of key players. It was not immediately clear if they were considered, or if Azinger wanted the job again. Azinger turned down an offer to be on the task force. Couples won all three times he
was captain of the Presidents Cup. Europe is expected to an-
nounce Darren Clarke as its captain. Love and Clarke are close friends.
The Americans have won its dominance. table, Mickelson said the cap- the Ryder Cup only one time in The Americans appeared tain never took any input from the past seven tries. third straight time, extending
that. With Watson sitting at the
between him and Johnson, creating contact that sent
opinion or two than build
the pits, leading to a melee
a career as an irrelevant
between their teams. Gordon
driver.
seethed because he already knew what the rest of the
If he has failed to gain many best friends in the
sport would learn months later — he was ready to call it quits and a sure victory that
sport, it is a small price to
pay for having the type of passion that energizes him
would have guaranteed him a spot in the finale was gone.
to be among NASCAR's best
drivers.
It was one of the rare times
"I know that when I have had whatever run-ins I have
Keselowski took personal offense to criticism.
"What bothered me the had throughout my career, I have had them because I most were people that felt I have done the things that I cost Jeff a championship last feel like I need to do to be the yearbecause I didn't feel that best, and that is why I am in way at all," Keselowski said. "I felt like those were peo-
this sport," Keselowski said. "That is what drives me."
ple that got caught up in the rhetoric and were just trying to use a line to get readers or
Among his most outspo-
ken moments: • A r a n t a g a i nst N A - clicks or viewers or whatever SCAR's move to electronic it is. That bothered me a little fuel injection, which led to a bit. I didn't lose sleep over it,
$25,000 fine.
though." Gordon has mellowed, saying a pit-road speeding
• A diatribe about other
teams poaching team owner Roger Penske's employees. penalty at Martinsville was Penske later said "Brad had more to blame for missing some misinformation" after the championship round rival team owner Rick Hen- than Keselowski's accident. drick blasted the d r iver's "That was just r acing claims. hard," Gordon said. "I don't
• A strong stance against think he really did anything wrong. It's just the outcome all drivers undergo baseline was bad because I got a flat concussion testing. tire and it cost me making NASCAR's requirement that
Swimming Continued from C1
"It's a chess match, for sure,"
says Halligan, whose boys and girls teams have both won the last three Class 5A state cham-
pionships. "You're kind of banking your kids on what everybody else is going to be doing, too, and where you think that all fits in.... You kind of do some guesswork on where you think what events people are going to end up swimming and where that puts people."
Simply put: Filling out a lineup, as Halligan and other coaches around thestate did
beforethispastweekend'sdistrict meets, is not as straightforward as putting swimmers
in their best events. Take it from Halligan — whose girls
"Some years, you have a lot of juniors and seniors and kids
Prep notedook
that have been there before,"
SPRING SPORTSDEADLIHES AT SISTERS Beginning today, theathletics office at Sisters High will open for spring sports registration. Students interested in participating in baseball, softball, boys andgirls tennIs, boys and girls golf, boys and girls track andfield, or boys andgirls lacrosse must be fully cleared through theathletics office with paperwork, physical exams, feesandfInes taken care of before the fIrst day of sprIng practices on March 2.Spring registration closes at 7 p.m. Feb.25, and mandatory player andparent meetings will immediately follow. STORM COACH HONORED BYiIFHS SummitboystenniscoachJoshCordellhasbeennamed asone of nIne Section 8 coaches of theyear for the 2013-14school year by the National Federation of State High School Associations Coaches Association. TheNFHSselected coaches in the top10 girls sports and the top 10boys sports (by participation numbers) and in one "other" category. Cordell — whowas namedthe top boys tennis coach from Section 8, which includes Oregon, Alaska, Idaho, Montana, Washington andWyoming — guided the Storm to the Class 5Astate championship last spring. — Bulletin staff reports
team won 13 straight district
titles before finishing second to Bend High on Saturday, and whose boys squad has claimed six state championships in the past seven years: Arranging the lineup is no frolic in the wading pool. Far from it. Coaches dive much deeper in strategy. While poring over their lineups, for example, many coaches research performances by opponents and their own swimmers at past state cham-
pionships, district meets and invitationals. "I look at results from state
last year, and I look at the times of the kids that I know will be making it to state," ex-
plains Mountain View coach Kory Bright, whose boys team placed second at state last sea-
son. "I look and see, 'Well, with this time that this person has now, how would they place at state?' I do look at that. I try to
figure out where the kids are going to place the highest at state in their events." Not every decision is backed
arrangement is fueled by a gut that I h ave confidence that feeling. And when his assis- they're going to be successful."
Bright says. "Some years your team's a lot more immature. There's a lot of freshmen that
haven't really done it before. So you have to weigh in the experience of the kids that are on
the team as well." Halligan notes that it takes
at least six girls or boys to field threesuccessfulrelay teams. After setting her relay lineups, she turns her attention to
individual events, factoring in what swimmers she has (swimmers can qualify in up to four events) and the turnaround time between races. "You kind of have to look at
thosethings and decidewhere you're going to spread your wealth, if you will," Halligan says. But, she adds, coaches sometimes cannot resist putting their best swimmers in
their best events, taking the gimmes where they are preBessenyei's confidence rises. stems from coaches consult- sented. "It's one of those things Although, every so often there ing with their swimmers pri- where, at times, (a coach has is some second-guessing. or to setting their l i neups. to consider) what's best for the "Sometimes I d o ( s ec- Bright does not always slot team versus what's best for the ond-guess) because I'm trying her swimmers in the events individual swimmer, and you to make the lineup the most they request, but their input is have to weigh that and do a litefficient possible," says Bes- valuable. tle bit of a dance to make it all "I also give the kids the op- work together." senyei, who, like other coaches around the state, finalized portunity to tell me what they Whatever jig Halligan perhis lineup for districts several want to swim because I feel forms has worked well, considdays beforehand, locking in like they have to be invested in ering the success of her Sumhis swimmers for their respec- it, too," Halligan says. "If they mit teams over the years. The tive events should they qualify don't think that this is where same can be said for Bend's for state. "Of course, I don't their best (opportunity) is, then Bessenyei, whose girls squad I'm probably not going to get won the Intermountain Conknow what other teams will do. But I (primarily) try to put their best." ference district championship our swimmers in the best posiThe depth of coaches' strat- Saturday to snap the Storm's tion to win." egy, these coaches agree, usu- long run at the top, and Moun"I'vechanged my mind a ally depends on the depth of tain View's Bright, whose boys couple times (this season)," their teams. This year, with team last year posted its best Bright concedes. "Even when fewer swimmers on her boys finish at state since 2001. you send off your entries, team than in years past, Bright This weekend, at the state you're like, 'Well, I hope I did does not have the luxury of uti- championships in Gresham, this right.' You're always going lizing a complex approach. On t hese coaches will see t h e to second-guess yourself. But the girls side, however, she can fruits of their strategic labor I just trust my instincts and rotate swimmers to different ripen or wane. Their lineups tants express a similar hunch,
know that whatever I put the
That confidence at t imes
events to maximize the chance of state qualification as well as
improved Armstrong, the softer one who admits his wrongs, stepped forward to say, "My 12-time world bridge champi- bad"? Did he apologize to on — had already paid Arm- Hamman and give back SCA's strong a $1.5 million bonus for millions? his 2002 Tour victory and a $3 N o, it w a s t y pical A r m w e're not finished with M r . million bonus for winning the strong. He said: Too bad. Armstrong yet." next Tour. A settlement (in 2006) is a SCA is confident that the But Hamman wanted proof settlement. How's that for contrition? T exas court w i l l r u l e t h at that Armstrong was clean beArmstrong must pay the $10 fore SCA forked over an addi- Armstrong was so sorry about million. But it has also sued tional $5 million. During ar- lying and taking millions of Armstrong in Texas civil court bitration, Armstrong testified SCA's bonus dollars that he to see if it can get an additional that he was clean and would kept the cash he had won be$5 million to $10 million back never dope. In 2006, arbitra- cause he doped — and then fromhim. tors awarded $7.5 million to forced SCA to sue him to get No matter how big the pay- Armstrong. It did not matter that money back. check for SCA, this looks to be whether he had doped — SCA It all shows that Armstrong a sweet ending to a story that still had to pay the $5 million might have started out on a began in 2004, when Arm- bonus, plus $2.5 million in fees, road to redemption two years strong took his first swipe at because Armstrong remained ago, but that he took an early the company. That was the the official Tour winner and exit. year he sued SCA to get a $5 had a right to the money. Truth is still not part of his million bonus that SCA had Hamman would not let it go. daily vocabulary. This month, withheld from him after hear- In 2013, he made another push Armstrong received two trafing rumors of his doping. at getting his money back fic tickets in Aspen, ColoraArmstrong and his man- when Armstrong was stripped do, on accusations that he hit agement company, Tailwind of his Tour titles. Hamman two parked cars and left the Sports, were ruthless. Tail- brought the case back to arbi- scene of an accident. But that wind placed a full-page ad in trators, asking them to recon- was only after his girlfriend, Sports Business Journal ques- sider their decision because Anna Hansen, had gotten tioning SCA's credibility, and Armstrong had committed those tickets. She initially told SCA said it lost customers be- perjury when he lied to them the police that she was driving cause of it. about his doping in the first on the night of the hit-and-run It was a battle that started lawsuit. because Armstrong had been ugly and, for years, stayed Was it then that the new and drinking, but she later admiter with each lawsuit he loses
becauseof his decade-plus of Continued from C1 doping and lying. "This is just a very good In the f i ling, the D allas-based insurance company start to getting SCA full comSCA Promotions, which gave pensation," Jeff Tillotson, the Armstrong millions of dollars lawyer for SCA, said. "Oh, no, in bonuses for several of his
Tour victories, asked a Texas state judge to force him to pay $10 million to SCA. The company wants the judge to confirm an arbitration panel's decision, made on Feb. 4
but announced Monday,that Armstrong must pay the $10 million because he had lied under oath in a previous arbitration involving SCA. "Perjury must never be profitable," the panel said, explaining that the case presented "an
unparalleled pageant of international perjury, fraud and conspiracy" on Armstrong's part. The panel added that "it is almost certainly the most de-
vious sustained deception ever perpetrated in world sporting history" and that "deception
demands real, meaningful sanctions." I'd say $10 million is pretty real and meaningful, especially for Armstrong, whose wallet is getting lighter and light-
it into the final race. I'm just
2010 Daytona 500 winner Jamie McMurray said. "But there is normally a little bit of truth in it, as well. He ob-
Keselowski sent a congratulatory olive branch via text
viously likes attention or he wouldn't say things like
full season. He said Gordon did not respond. Gordon is nearly finished,
when Gordon announced that 2015 would be his last
that."
Even Keselowski's det ractors cannot d eny
a nd w it h S t ewart, D a l e Earnhardt Jr. and other vet-
his
talent. He is coming off a career-best six wins with 17 top-five finishes driving the No. 2 Ford for Team Penske.
erans inching closer toward retirement, Keselowski could
earn a greater voice and use his position as a NASCAR
"I feel like I am a top-three driver in the Sprint Cup se-
champion to grow into an industryleader. "When you are the cham-
ries," Keselowski said. He mentioned reigning series champion Kevin Harvick and Carl Edwards as
pion like he was and win races like he does, you have a voice," two-time Daytona 500 winner Michael Waltrip
the other two drivers in the
gold-silver-bronze class. said. "Your voice gets lisKeselowski and Edwards tened to and played a lot, and feuded for a couple of sea- that makes you think you're sons after they took turns even more important." wrecking each other in a The 31-year-old KeselowsMarch 2010 race at Atlanta. ki has a date with fatherBut as one feud faded, anoth- hood, though he does not er emerged. expect the arrival of a baby Gordon was in position at girl sometime around the Texas for an automatic spot All-Star race to dim his comin the championship round, petitive fire — or muzzle his racing for the lead on a late mouth. restart. His chances ended Love him orboo him, Kez when Keselowski squeezed will not change his ways.
4
,nazsrt
are set. Their chess moves
by hard evidence, however. kids in, they're going to step up have been made. This is the Guesswork and instinct play and race well. They trust them- team points. endgame. roles in coaches' strategies. For selves, and I think they trust Depth is not limited to teams Check. Bend High coach Tamas Bes- me, so they know that if I put size, however.Depth ofexperi— Reporter: 541-383-0307, senyei, 90 percent of his lineup them in something, it means ence is another consideration. glucas@bendbulletirLcom.
Armstrong
"Some of the stuff he says,
all of us shrug our shoulders, going to race the heck out of close our eyes and are like, him and whatever happens, 'I wouldn't have said that,'" happens."
'~7i ,
TerryRenna/The Assoaated Press
Brad Keselowski in the garage area before e practice session for the Daytona 500 on Saturday.
ugly.
ted that she had lied because
and demanded in its contract
By 2004, SCA Promotions' founder, Bob Hamman — a
she did not want his name in
that Armstrong did not dope.
Armstrong could have settled So Armstrong's great blue- that case many times, but he print of winning back the pub- has refused because he still
the news.
lic — tell the truth and reveal
thinks he can win it.
your goodness — was not so The same way he thought great after all. After two years, he could beat SCA'? Tillotson, SCA's lawyer, said has it faded so much that he can no longer make out the Armstrong had offered money words? He continues to lie, and to SCA several times to settle he even had his girlfriend lie the case, but nowhere near the for him. And he still is fight- $14.5 million-plus that Haming some of those people, like m an had dished out in t h e Hamman, whom he tried to matter over the years. That is why Hamman is not backing crush. Last month, Armstrong told the BBC that he would dope
down.
In going up against Hamagain if he were back in his man, who is 76, white-haired early career and his competi- and stocky, Armstrong untors were doing it too. derestimated his competition. Hamman is, after all, perhaps That is not the mark of a changed man. That is the one of the greatest bridge playmark of a m a n w h o l acks ers ever. How did a champion self-perception. He remains like that celebrate winning $10 so stubborn, so unwilling to million from Armstrong7 "I didn't do anything, realadmit failure, but no wonder. Those are two of the qualities ly," he said. "I just planned my that led him to be a champion. next move." Hamman is someone who N ow hi s c o mpetition i s more daunting. He could lose has carefully followed a bluemore than $100 million in a print of his own, without wafederal whistleblower case in vering from it, and has found which the U.S. Postal Service success and happiness becontends that Armstrong de- cause of it. Armstrong should follow frauded it when the service sponsored Armstrong's team suit.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN C5
THEBULEETIN
SPECIAL PROJECTS
U MAGAZINE CENTRALOREGON'SWOMEN'S AND FAMILVMAGAZINE E
E
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They raise families, focus on their careers and still manage to find time to make a difference in their communities. They are the women of Central Oregon. U Magazine is a bright, intelligent and inspiring magazine with a focus on family, health and spirit
c.
that features topics of interest to today's women and their
families. From subjects such as health, style and professional success to personal goals and relationships, U Magazine offers its readers content to educate, empower and inspire. Each edition highlights women, their families and the positive impact they have on Central Oregon and their communities. PUBLISHINGSIX EDITIONSAYEAR
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AGELESS Central Oregon is the perfect place to live life to its fullest, and Ageless Magazine highlights individuals who are doing just that. The Central OregonCouncil On Aging (COCOA) and The Bulletin have partnered to produce Ageless — an award-winning publication with content developed specifically for the largest and fastest-growing segment of our community — those older than 45 years of age. Ageless Magazine features locally written content that is engaging and informative with topics ranging from lifestyle and hobbies to health, legal and financial topics relevant to retirement and aging.
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PUBllSHINGSIX EDITIONS AVEAR qE
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CENTRAL OREGON LIVING CENTRALOREGON'S ORIGINAI.
HOMEAND LIFESTVLEMAGAZINE 1 h~
One of The Bulletin's premier publications, this award-winning magazine features the lifestyle we enjoy and some of Central Oregon's most unique people and places. It also features gardening in the High Desert, local expert columnists, real estate and more. This publication celebrates individuality and appreciation for the natural surroundings that inspire us. Special "Chefs on Tour" edition in June and "Green" edition in October. PUBLISHINGFOUR EDITIONS A VEAR E
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THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
DEEDS Deschutes County • Pineriver Homes LLC to Christopher Auth and Deani Iversen, Caldera Springs Phase 2, Lot 310, $599,900 • Thomas W. Gregg III and Mary C. Gregg to Stanley R. and Diana C.Young, trustees of the Stanley R. Young & Diana C.Young Revocable Family Trust, Overlook Park, Lot 4, Block 7, $296,000 • Todd M. and Elizabeth J. Likens to Scott and Heather Cunningham, Skyliner Summit at Broken Top - Phase 2, Lot 107, $475, 000 • Kim D. Ward LLC to Deer Ridge Investment LLC, Township 18, Range12, Section16, $2,125,000 • Moore Friend LLC to Oasis Capital Management LLC, Oregon Water Wonderland Unit No. 1, Lot 7, Block 9, $501,000 • Randall C. Johnson to Marjorie Kline, Sundance East Phase 2, Lot11, Block 1, $350,000 • Patricia C. Johnson to Karl M. and Mary E.Von Der Heyden, East meadow Homesite Section, Lot 9 and 10, $498,000 • Gloria C. Selbyto Minnie Veasy-Butts, Stonegate P.U.D. Phase 1, Lot 71, $382,500 • John G. and Dodonna Rodriguez to Melissa and Brian Cameron, Foxborough Phase1, Lot 49, $275,000 • Benny D. and Jacklyn A. Quesenberry to Duane and Sonda Balcom, Township 15, Range13, Section 7, $178,000 • Gorilla Capital OR 201 LLC to Daniel and Caitlin Benson, Township 15, Range12, Section 36, $255,920 • Brian Fahrenthold to Keri E. Coggin, Kiwa Meadows, Lot 3, Block1, $209,500 • Karen Malanga to Jacqueline Mullery, Riverrim PUDPhase 5, Lot 378, $328,000 • Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation to Wade andMisty Luckman, Paladin Ranch Estates, Lot 4, Block 2, $168,000 • GW Land Acquisitions LLC to Pacwest II LLC, doing business as Montevista Homes, Angus Acres Phase 3, Lot 76, $192,087.62 • Pacwest II LLC, doing business as Montevista Homes, to Fred E.and Debra L. Linenko, Angus Acres Phase 3, Lot 76, $382,634 • Carey A. Pulido to Corey S. andCatrina M. Christiansen, Tetherow Crossing Phase 3, Lot 8, Block 12, $249,000 • Therese E. Langley to Kathryn Ribeca, Panoramic View Estates, Lot15, Block 3, $200,000 • Muriel M. Polvino to Karen E. Lillebo, River Terrace, Lot1, Block 2, $565,000 • David A. and Laura J. Reeker to Julie Reber and Jason Gillam, Township 18, Range13, Section 6, $544,000 • Roger L. and Jeanne M. Sellgren, trustees of the Roger L. & Jeanne M. Sellgren Trust, to Peter J. and Mary L. Hedren, Starr Ranch, Lot7, Block2, $659,000 • Peter M. Yonan and Anne M. Scott to Terry Adkins, Rivers Edge Village Phase 7,Lot153, $785,000 • Stone Bridge Homes NW LLC to Shawn M.and Tracie G. Gleffe, Reed Pointe Phase 2, Lot 7, $289,900 • Richard G. and Elizabeth A. Darnall to Michael W. and Cynthia L. Stanton, Orion Estates, Lot12, Block1, $150,000 • Elan Evans to Sally A. Warren, Elliger's Addition, Lot6and 7, Block4, $225,000 • Jonathan R. and Vanessa R. Ragsdale to Han and Amarrena Tenty, Marc Estates, Lot10, Block 1, $193,150 • Phillip T. and Elizabeth R. Hervey to Jason and Josselyn Christensen, First Addition to Whispering Pines Estates, Lot15, Block 9, $256,000 • Signature Homebuilders LLC to Mitchell and Lindsey Johnson, Crosswinds, Lot10, $236,400 • Daniel C. Hauswald to Dustin J. Cockerham, Bend Park, Lot19, Block 83, $165,000 • Korren V. Bower, who
EXECUTIVE FILE
Firma e esU.S.
What: ArgonautCycles What itdoes: Builds customized race-style road bikes Pictured: Ben Farver, W ' owner Where: 70 SWCentury Drive, Suite100-193, Bend Employees: Two Phone:503-701-4607 Wehsite: www.argonautcycles. com
ersa ota e By Nicole Perlroth and David E. Sanger
starts. It is beyond the reach
New York Times News Service
and most security controls,
SAN FRANCISCO — The United States has found a way
Kaspersky reported, making it virtually impossible to wipe
to permanently embed surveillance and sabotage tools
out.
in computers and networks it
has targeted in Iran, Russia, Pakistan, China, Afghanistan and other countries closely
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
e ws o i n o w n cus omizes racers In a cramped, hastily remodeled warehouse in the Century Center, Ben Farver builds some of the most customized racing bikes in the country.
cation, we're really the only ones in the country doing this," Farver
sard. Farver, the owner of Argonaut
Cycles, manufactures and ships race-style road bicycles, designed for use on paved and gravel roads. But while most bike stores allow customers to pick from the existing inventory, Argonaut Cycles builds and designs custom bikes for each of its customers from the ground up. "Most of the time my customers have had half a dozen bikes over their lifetime, and they're looking for something new and special and unique," Farver said. Farver has operated Argonaut
to build the appropriate bike," he sard. After the customer signs off on
the bike design, Farver builds the frame, based on the height and weight of the user, from seven carbon-fiber sections.
"Lighter riders, from a physics standpoint, don't require as much
power to move them," Farver said. "So they benefit from not having quite as stiff of a bike." All told, Farver said, the build
process takes about 10 to 12 weeks, including gathering details for the build, assembling the bike and adding paint. Customers pay for Argonaut's services. The company's website says completed bikes start at
Cyclessince2007buthasonly
$9,000,but Farver said most bikes
lived in Bend since October, when the sunlight and outdoor opportu-
end up costing between $12,000 and $14,000.
nities lured him from Portland. "I wanted to get back to a small-
er town for my family, and the closer access to being able to do things outside was really a big draw," he said. Farver said he worked in bicycle shops as a kid growing up in Colorado and began working on bikes with custom steel welding
"The level of craftsmanship that
goes into them as well as the level of technological sophistication inside the frame really sets them
apart," Farver said. A lot of Farver's customers aren't in Oregon at all. Farver
said he sells to people all over the country, from California to the East Coast, and nearly 30 per-
after college, but he was eventual-
cent of his sales were outside the
ly drawn to carbon fiber for bikes because it allows for greater con-
country.
trolover the design process. "There's not a whole lot that
Because of this, customers typically find Farver through cycling forums andsocialmedia, where
what it called the "Equation
Group," which appears to be a veiled reference to the National Security Agency and its military counterpart, U.S. Cyber Command. It linked the techniques to
those used in Stuxnet, the computer worm that disabled about 1,000 centrifuges in
Iran's nuclear enrichment
By Stephen HamWays The Bulletin
"In terms of this style of fabri-
watchedby U.S. intelligence agencies, according to a Russian cybersecurity firm. In a presentation of its findings at a conference in Mexico on Monday, Kaspersky Lab, the Russian firm, said the implants had been placed by
• How would • you describe the type of bikes that you make? • Ben Farver: • They're your summer race bike, your nicest bike. A lot of our customers have a commuter bike, and maybe a winter bike with fenders. This is the bike that they would ride from May through October, the season when they get the most miles in. your Q •• On website, you say that the Pacific Northwest is the best place for cycling. Why doyou think that is? • Justthe
A • diversity of the landscapeand the lack of people. Compared to the East Coast, it's fairly easy to get out of populated areas, and it's so pretty.
program. It was later revealed that Stuxnet was part of a pro-
of existing anti-virus products
In many cases, it also allows the U.S. intelligence agencies to grab the encryption keys offama chineunnoticed and unlock scrambled contents. Moreover, many of the tools
are designed to run on computers that are disconnected from the Internet, which was
the case in the computers controlling Iran's nuclear enrichment plants.
The firm's researchers say what makes theseattacksparticularly remarkable is their
way of attacking the actual firmware of the computers.
Only in rare cases are cybercriminals able to get into the actual guts of a machine.
Recovering from a cyberattack typically involves wiping the computer's operating system and reinstalling software, or replacing a computer's hard drive. But if the firmware
gram code-named Olympic Games and run jointly by Isra-
gets infected, security experts say, it can turn even the most
el and the United States.
sophisticated computer into a
Kaspersky's report said Olympic Games had similari-
useless piece of metal. In the past, security experts
ties to a muchbroader effort to
have warned about "the race
infect computers well beyond
to the bare metal" of a ma-
those in Iran. It detected par-
chine. As security around software has increased, criminals
ticularly high infection rates in computers in Iran, Pakistan
have looked for ways to infect
and Russia, three countries
the actual hardware of the
whose nuclear programs the U.S. routinely monitors.
machine. "If the malware gets
Some of the implants bur-
into the firmware, it is able to resurrect itself forever," Costin
row so deep into the computer systems, Kaspersky said, they
Raiu, a Kaspersky threat researcher, said in the report. "It
infect the "firmware," the
means that we are practically blind and cannot detect hard
embedded software that preps the computer's hardware before the operating system
drives that have been infected with this malware."
Anheuser-Buschdrops opposition to 'Natty' use By Lisa Brown
Greene's produced 17,000
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
barrels of beer in 2014, and
Anheuser-Busch has dropped its opposition to Natty Greene's Brewing Co.'s trademark for the phrase
recently added six new tanks
to expand annual capacity to 30,000 barrels.
Natty Greene's, based in Greensboro, North Carolina,
A-B, the St. Louis-based U.S. headquarters for A-B InBev, frled an opposition to block the trademark
submitted an application in 2013 with the U.S. Patent
last June, arguing "Natty Greene's" is too similar to its trademarked phrase "Natty Light" and other trademarks
"Natty Greene's."
separates different steel bikes,"
he maintains an active presence.
and Trademark Office to
Farver said. "With carbon you
While Farver wants to see more
trademark the name it's used
have more control over the design and engineering." The process begins with an
people from Bend in the shop, he
for more than a decade. The brewery and the town where
it holds for Natural Light
it's based are named after
Late last week, however, A-B withdrew its opposition
interview. Interested customers
must fill out a questionnaire, documenting their height, weight and history with biking, as well as what they plan to use their Argonaut bikes for.
"It's really about getting to
wants to build up his client base
"slowly and organically."
"I think just moving to town
and having expectations of being the new local bike builder is a bit presumptive," he said. "I want to
get established in the local community before I start selling people bikes."
know them as a cyclist, in order to have as much info as possible
acquired title as Korren V. Hough, to Brian A. Fahrenthold, Hunters Highland at High Pointe Phases 4 and 5, Lot 99, $306,900 • Hayden Homes LLC to Kathleen M. Mulvehill, Emily Estates, Lot17, $197,721 • DunlapFine Hom esInc. and C&L Hinton LLCto Bruce Dunlap andChad Hinton, Vista Meadows Phase 3, Lot 71, $275,000 • Helenka Marcinek, trustee of the Geoffrey Hyde Disclaimer Trust and of the Helenka Marcinek Trust, to Scott E. and Sharon Hammons, Parks at Broken Top Phase 3, Lot112, $567,000 • Terry A. and Peggy F. Pickering to Kenneth R. Ticen, Oregon Water Wonderland Unit 2, Lot 6 and 7, Block 37, $175,500 • Daniel C. Hoeschen and Mary J. Sarles-Hoeschen to David W. andAnne M. Wolff, Partition Plat1998-7, Parcel 2, $700,050 • David W. and Christina J. Zandonatti, trustees of
the Zandonatti Trust, to Zandonatti Family Holdings LLC, Township15, Range 10, Section 25, $250,000 • Eric M. and Laurie J. Kutter to Helenka Marcinek, Northwest Crossing Phase 17, Lot 761, $477,500 • Hayden Homes LLC to Gary S. Wilson II and Laurie L. Wilson, Mountain Park, Lot 4, $265,000 • Rebecca Howard, who acquired title as Rebecca Ensign, to Jerry Harris and David J. Vecchi, Obsidian Meadows, Lot10, $174,000 • U.S. Bank National Association to Old Town Properties Inc, Majestic Phase1, Lot 36, $200,500 • Pahlisch Homes Inc to Garrett S. Robertson and Katherine A. Renne, Parkland, Lot 69, $249,950 • LeeRae Ventures LLC to Lewis A. Hatfield, Veranda Glen Phase 2, Lot1, $410,955 • Richard B. Terry to Paul L. and Laura D. Piccard, Deschutes, Lot10, Block 12, $350,000
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, shamway@bendbulletin.com
Revolutionary War General Nathanael Greene. Natty Greene's co-founder
beer. to the craft brewer's Natty Greene's trademark. Its with-
Kayne Fisher said last year the brewer's distribution growth in neighboring states prompted him to seek
drawal filing with the trade-
a trademark to protect the
ately return calls seeking
company's name. Natty
comment.
mark office doesn't indicate
why it dropped its opposition, and A-B did not immedi-
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • Visit Bendboard meeting: Open to the public; free, RSVP by email; 8 a.m.; BendVisitor Center, 750 NW Lava Road; 541382-8048, valerie©visitbend. com or www.visitbend.com. • Beginning QulckBooks Pro 2014: Learn toset upnew customer and vendor accounts, create invoices, recordsales, and enter payments;continues Thursday; $89,registration required; 9a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building,1027 NW Trenton Ave.,Bend;541-383-7270 orwww.cocc.edu/continuinged. • SCORE free business counseling: Businesscounselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferenceswith local entrepreneurs; check in atthe library desk onthe second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.SCORECentralOregon.org. THURSDAY • Blogging for Business & Beyond: Howto set upa WordPress.com blog, integrate it with other social media, engage youraudienceand
other bloggers andcreate original content on thefly; class runs through March 5;$75, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. • Business Startup Class: Cover the basics in this twohour class anddecide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College Technology Education Center, 2324 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. FRIDAY • Grant Writing for Nenprofits: Learn to select grant opportunities for nonprofits and write successful applications; $89; registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged. MONDAY • MS Preject Basics: Learn to manage tasks, timelines and
resources. Work with tracking and reporting features to accurately monitor your projects and prepare professional estimates. Class runs through March 2; $159, registration required; 8:30-11:30a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Intermediate Pheteshop: Master the maskingand compositing and learn howto isolate objects in your photos using PhotoshopCS5.5. Class runsthrough March 2;$99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, 2600 NWCollege Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www. cocc.edu/ continuinged. • Intermediate QuickBeoks Pro 2014: Use QuickBooks for payroll,inventory,job costing, budgets and financial statements. Class runs through March 9; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NWCollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc. edu/continuinged.
FEB.25 • Online Marketing with Faceboek: UseFacebookto market andadvertise your business; must have aFacebook account. Class runs through March 4; $79, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; COCC - Crook County OpenCampus,510 SE Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541383-7270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged.
FEB.26 • Pub Talk: Economic Development forCentral Oregon's February eventfeatures Lauren Wallace ofWallaceTech/Law; Jennifer Clifton, co-founder of Lava Love;Garrett Loveall, founder of July NineandJulia Junkin, founder ofJuju; $20EDCO members, $30nonmembers, registration required; 5-7:30p.m.; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., Bend; 541-388-3236, ereilly©edcoinfo. com or www.edcoinfo.com/ events. • For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Food, Recipes, D2-3 Home, Garden, D4-5
THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/athome
HOME
FOOD
Thesesmart devices •
will giveyourhome
•
a boost in brainpower By Lisa Boone Los Angeles Times
From compact appliances to touchless toilets, today's
home devices are designed for streamlined operations. And with homeowners
spending more time than everon theirsm artphones, designers are responding with apps that allow you to control such devices as lighting and your washing machine with a swipe of a finger. Here, we offer a selection of new designs for 2015
that promise to make home life a little easier.
Wi-Ficonnected
Submitted photo via Los Angeles Times/TNS
appliances
A Wi-Fi-enabled range lets
Want topreheat your oven
before you arrive home? Now you can turn it on remotely using a smartphone app designed by GE for its Profile collection. The Wi-Fi-enabled appliances, which will arrive throughout 2015, include ranges, wall ovens, a French door refrigerator, laundry duo, a Geo Spring water heater and dishwasher. The apps
you set timers, check cooking status or preheat your oven even when awayfrom home. surface by LG Hausyswhich won best of show at the 2015 Kitchen 8t Bath
Industry Show in Las Vegas recently — allows you to
charge your mobile device by simply placing it on top of
are included in the price of
a surface, such as a counter-
GE Profile appliances, one of GE's higher-end brands. • www.geappliances.com
top, embedded with wireless charging technology. It is available only for phones, with laptops and tablets to come. Pricing depends on
Wirelesscharging surface No more searching for cable or wall outlets to charge your fading cellphone. The TechTop wireless charging
I'4
local fabricators listed on the
TechTop website. • www.lgtechtop.com SeeSmart /D5
GARDEN
ll' 0 •
•
•
Weed dating, aquirky take on speeddating
•
By Barbara Damrosch
ently isolated farmers who
Special to The Washington Post
are tied to their work in remote places finding soul mates, though I suspect the site's slogan, "City folks just don't get it," is equally about sharing conservative "rural" values.
The football fans in my family recently put me on to a series of TV commercials for a dating site called FarmersOnly.com. "Where
• Forget the Lone Star State and becreative with your chili fit
died and put Texans
time."
Apparently they're the real deal and a big dealthe site has more than 2 million members, drawn in by hilariously hokey ads complete with talking cows.
By Jan Roberts-DominguezeForThe Bulletin
hat I want to know is, who
have you been, Mom?" one of them asked. "Those have been around for a long
The theme song trills:
in charge of chili?
"You don't have to be lonely at FarmersOnly.com."
Oh sure, they say they
That's fine. But I guess
I'm more aware of progressive venues for bringing farmers or wannabe farm-
ers together, such as regional organic farming and gardening groups, farm tours and creative singles events, such as weed dating. A riff on speed dating, weed dating is like a Virginia reel performed on your knees.
I love the idea of inher-
SeeDating /D4
invented the stuff. But does that give them the right to go around harassing creative, innocent people?
TODAY'S RECIPES J
r' t'8.
~g
+
Prize-filled profiteroles: You don't need to bea chocohollc to appreciate these desserts: Chocolate Ice CreamProfiteroles, Chocolate Hazelnut Ice Cream, Bittersweet Chocolate Sauce,D3
•
People, I might add, whose only fault is that they tend to get a might overzealous in the presence of coarse-ground sirloin and pinto
Morels star in this pasta dish:A recipe from the book "Shroom," by Becky Selengut of Seattle: Pasta With Morels, LeeksandOven-Roasted Tomatoes,D3
beans. Actually, it's my contention that chili's popularity and use are so widespread now that the Lone Star
Thinkstock
Don't be afraid to experiment with different kinds of beans (or vegetables or spices) in chili.
State's right to protect and control the hallowed chili recipe lies only in the collective imaginations of its citizenry. In other words, all of us mortal non-Texans can do what we gol-darn please when it comes to concocting a zesty bowl of red in the privacy of our own homes.
g Burn notice: Charred eggplant maximizes the flavor of this dish, a best-seller at a Washington, D.C., restaurant: Greek Eggplant Dip,D2
SeeChili /D2
Recipe Finder:HessSugar Cookies were asweet staple at a country store in Maryland,D2
D2 THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
FOOD
ant
urnnotice: ree
Sugar cookiesfrom Hess as pretty astheyaretasty
I
By Joe Yonan The Washington Post
When George Pagonis
By Julie Rothman
RECIPE FINDER
The Baltimore Sun
asks for charred, he means charred. As in so burned it's
Sharon Birnie of Finks-
barely recognizable. That's the case, anyway, with eggplant, the main ingredient in
burg, Maryland, was in search of the recipe for the
P1
the melitzanosalata at Kapnos, the Greek restaurant
sugar cookies that were sold at the now-closed Hess
Cg
he co-owns in Washington, D.C. "Hands down, it's our best-selling spread," Pagonis says. The cooks go through 75 large eggplants a day, blackening them for an hour on the wood-fired grill. Anyone who has applied smoke to eggplant knows the alchemy that results. What's an indoor (or propane-loving) cook to do'? Pagonis scoffed at the thought,
Country Store i n
./
ii
R eister-
stown, Maryland. She said the cookies were rolled and dusted with sugar and that
but a broiler and a pinch of a
decidedly non-Greek ingredient — Spanish smoked paprika — can achieve an almostRenee Comet/The Washington Post as-good result. It's not alche- A broiler or grill and a pinch of Spanish smoked paprika help make Greek Eggplant Dip rival the flavor my, but it's close. of the popular spread sold at George Pagonis' restaurant, Kapnos.
they were very crunchy and light in color. Cathy Wagner of Monkton, Maryland, thought she might have the recipe Birnie was looking for. Wagner used to work in a dental office in Pikesville, Maryland, white sugar when you press and said she was given the the cookies down before recipe many years ago by baking, and you'll have a a patient who lived in Reis- delicious and pretty cookie terstown. She was told that suitable for just about any the recipe came from the holiday or party. Dorothy Hess Tea Room in Reisterstown.
Requests
Based on Birnie's description, I would say this is most
cent buns from Sally's. She
I suspect they might have
said anyone who lived in the area in the 1950s should re-
been thesame place — or at t/s C barrel-aged feta cheese /2C toasted walnuts 3 TBS red wine vinegar /2C extra-virgin olive oil
R e i s-
try store or tea room, but
Makes 8 servings 1 med red bell pepper Canola oil /4 C finely chopped red onion
Judi Behnken o f
terstown grew up in Bal-
likely the same cookie. I timore's H igh l a n dtown could not find any informa- neighborhood and said she tion on either the Hess coun- used to get delicious cres-
Greek Eggplant Dip (Melitzanosalata) 3 Ig eggplants
Looking for a hardto-find recipe or can answer a request? Write to Julie Rothman, Recipe Finder, TheBaltimore Sun, 501 N.Calvert St., Baltimore, MD21278, or email baltsunrecipefinder@ gmail.com. Namesmust accompany recipes for them to be published.
t/s tsp fine sea salt
'" tsp Spanish smoked paprika 2 TBS chopped fresh mint leaves
Pita bread (for serving)
Prepare a gas or charcoal grill for medium-high heat. For cooking indoors, preheat the oven broiler and set the rack so the eggplant will be a few inches from the flame or element. Pierce 3 large eggplants all over with a knife. Rubthe eggplants and1 medium red bell pepper with canola oil, and place themdirectly on the grill or on a rimmed baking sheet under the broiler. Turn the pepperevery few minutes, until the skin is lightly blistered all over, 10 to 15minutes total. Transfer to a bowl and cover with a plate to steam. Cook the eggplants, turning as needed, until they have thoroughly blackenedand burned to anashen crisp on each side and completely collapsed, up to1hour total. Let cool. Once the pepperhascooled, discard the stem, ribs andseeds. Cutthe flesh into t/t-inch dice. Slice into eachcooled eggplant andscrape out the flesh. You need about1t/t cups total. Combine the eggplant and pepper in abowl with the finely chopped red onion, barrel-aged feta cheese, toasted walnuts, red wine vinegar, extra-virgin olive oil and seasalt; mix thoroughly. If you have used agas grill or broiler, stir in the Spanish smoked paprika (pimenton). Taste, and addvinegar, salt and/or paprika if needed.Scrape into a serving bowl and garnish with more walnuts, feta and mint leaves. Serve with pita bread.
least run by the same family and therefore likely to share recipes. The cookie is simple but tasty. I was surprised that the recipe called for equal parts margarine and butter, but the butter is all you taste, and the margarine might be what makes the cookies so nice and crispy. Simply add
member them.
a little colored sugar to the
be able to share the recipe.
Behnken
des c r ibed
the treat as a
f l at , c res-
cent-shaped pastry topped with buttery crumbs. She
said they were unique to t hat
pa r t i cular ba k e r y
and she has never come across them anywhere else. Behnken is hoping someone remembers them and might
Hess Sugar Cookies Makes 4-5 dozencookies t/2Ib butter, softened t/a Ib margarine, softened
4 C all-purpose flour 1 tsp baking powder t/4 C sugar (for flattening)
2Csugar 1 tsp vanilla
CIllll
Timberline Mountain&tyle Chili
Continued from D1
Makes 6 to 8servings
But at some point during the
like it a lot.
Such entries always spark discussionafterwe've handed in our ballots. In one particu-
larly memorable chili-philosophizing session, my fellow judge was Leif Eric Benson, who at the time was executive
chef for Timberline Lodge. Once again, we had come across a creation that was really tasty, with nice, ten-
Cream together the butter, margarine, 2 cups of sugar and vanilla until smooth. Add in the flour andbaking powder, mix thoroughly until dough holds together. Using your hands, form dough into walnut-sized balls, then place on ungreased cookie sheet. Flatten eachball by pressing with the bottom of a glass that has been greasedand then dipped in the remaining sugar. Repeat greasing the glass after a few cookies have been pressed. Bake at 350 degrees for 8 to 10 minutes. Do not let the cookies brown.
"In fact," he added, "most
Just don't try to take your
"marches-to-a-different-drum- 4C dry redbeans 1t/s tsp oregano, crumbled mer" chili to a chili cook-off. 8 C rich, strong beef stock, 1 to 2 TBS ground cumin You'll be up against that Texas additional as needed 5 TBS chili powder thing again. I know, because 1'/s Ibs ground beef, coarse 1 Ib canned tomatillos, crushed I've judged a fair number of grlnd 1 Ib canned red tomatoes, diced these events over the years. If t/a C diced onion Garnish suggestions: grated your chili has beans in it, or 3 TBS oil cheddarcheese,cooked if the color can't be likened to 2 tsp salt (or to taste) bacon strips, chopped raw a couple of Rio Grande mud 8 cloves garlic, minced onlons wrestlers, you'll never make it past Round One. Instant Wash beans, then place in a large pot with the beef stock. Bring the elimination will also occur if mixture to a boil, reduce heat and simmer for 3 minutes. Remove from the meat isn't a tidy little quar- heat and let them sit for1 hour. After one hour, cover and simmer in the ter-inch dice — or at least a broth until tender (about1 hour). coarse grind. And if you've left Meanwhile, saute the ground beef and onions together in the oil. Add visible chunks of green pepper the salt, garlic, cumin, chili powder, tomatillos and tomatoes, and cook or onion? Well, brace yourself for10 minutes. Add the cookedbeanswith the stock to the meat mixture. for a barrage of horse laughs Bring to a boil. Reduceheat and simmer for about 30 minutes. You might and smug comments among need to add morestock if the chili becomestoo thick. the judges ("Holy cow! Look at Remove 3 cups of chili and puree in a food processor or blender. Rethe islands of produce floating turn the puree to the pot to provide a richer textured chili. Adjust seasonin this one."). ings. Serve hot, topped with garnishes. stirring, sniffing and slurping, the judges will inevitably come across a sample that doesn't fit the mold. Yet they like it. They
lar among the guests. And in the winter, we go through gallons and gallons of it."
— Adapted from 7imberl ineLodgeCookbook"by ChefLeifEri cBenson
Just don't try to take your "marches-to-adifferent-drummer" chili to a chili cook-off You'll
be up against that Texas thing again. t know, because I've judged a fair number of these events over the years. If your chili has beans in it, or if the color can't be likened toa couple of Rio Grande mud wrestlers, you'll never make
people wouldn't even like the kinds of chili that we judge in these cook-offs. They're too rich."
In more ways than one. When you don't have beans
for filler, a batch of chili can be very expensive to make. So the recipes you're about to
peruse DO have beans. You'll also find that between the for experimentation. So don't be shy. If islands of produce — make that CONTINENTS
of produce — work for you, well, then, don't let yourself be intimidated by any little ol' Texan.
Unless he's packing a
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate
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TheBulletin
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six-shooter. — Jan Roberts-Dorninguez is a Corvallis food writer, artist, and authorof"O regon Hazelnut Country, the Food, the Drink, the Spirit," and four other cookbooks. Readers can contact her by email at janrd®proaxis.com, or obtain additional recipes and food tips on her blog at wwwjanrd.com.
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it past Round One. Instant elimination will also
occur if the meat isn't a tidy little quarterinch dice — or at least a coarse grind.
der chunks of meat. But the
chunks were too big (by cookoff standards), and there was pleaperfectscore. an herb flavor that was just too
Timberline wouldn't do well
"Actually," said Benson, "the a t a cook-off. Yes, it does have
predominant to give the sam- kind of chili we make up at b eans in it, but it's very popu-
Jan's Basic Chili With Beans 1 C dry pinto beans
t/a C minced parsley
5cupscanned dicedtomatoes
1 (4 oz) can diced jalapeno peppers
1 C chopped green bell pepper 6 cloves fresh garlic, peeled and chopped
*
~100 REBATE
Makes10 to12 servings
1t/s TBS extra virgin olive oil 2 C chopped yellow onion
FEBRUARY 1 — APRIL 25, 2015
t/a C butter 2t/s Ibs beef chuck, coarsely
ground
2 to 3 tsp salt 1 /s tsp pepper 4 TBS chili powder 3 TBS ground cumin
2 to 3 tsp green pepper sauce (I use Tabasco brand)
1 Ib ground lean pork
Wash beans, then place in a pot with enough water to cover them byabout 2 inches. Bring them to a boil in the pot of water and simmer for 3 minutes. Removefrom heat andlet them sit for1 hour. After1 hour, cover and simmer in samewater until tender. Add thetomato and simmer 5 more minutes. Heat the olive oil in a large, heavy-bottomed pot, over medium-high heat. Saute theonions, green pepper and garlic until tender, stirring often. Add parsley andthe jalapenos and set aside. Melt the butter in a large skillet; saute the meat in two or three batches, browning each batch well. As it is browned, removewith a slotted spoon to the pan containing the onion and green pepper mixture. After all of the meat has beenadded to the pot, stir in chili powder, cumin, and green pepper sauce, along with the bean and tomato mixture. Simmer covered for1 hour. Uncover andsimmer for another 30 minutes. Skim fat from top. Serve with diced onions, shredded cheese and crackers.
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F OO D
ro i eroes,wi a r izeinsi e
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Mushroomscookbook goes deep,not broad By T. Susan Chang
ter of "Shrooms." A cremini-and-beef bourguignon bubbled its leisurely way through the hours into a
Special to The Washington Post
Every once in a while, a cookbook comes along that you realize you've needed for years. "Shroom," by Becky Selengut of Seattle, is that kind of book. The private chef, cooking teacher and author of "Good Fish" has a clear and disarming style.
s
hearty but straightforward stew
They also served as the principal ingredient in black bean, poblano and mushroom burgers with red onion jam. Something was a bit funny about the proportions,
Her passion for woodsy trea-
Photos by Karsten Moran/The New York Times
Mixing profiterole batter, made simply with water, flour, salt, butter
Use a pastry bag or plastic bag with the tip cut off from a corner to form the profiteroles on parchment paper.
and eggs.
Profiteroles should be baked for 10 minutes at 425 degrees and then reduced to 375 degrees until browned and crisp — about 25
Profiteroles stuffed with ice cream and whipped cream, then drizzled with chocolate sauce and showered with hazelnuts.
minutes more.
New York Times News Service
Fudgsicle or a half-pint of cold, cold chocolate milk, shaken
I am neither a chocophile in the carton for extra froth. I probably still would.
nor a chocophobe, but I'm definitely not a chocoholic. You won't tempt me with a slice of chocolatelayer cake or a
Now that I think of it, there are maybe a dozen other chocolate confections that I l i ke.
Chocolate Ice Cream Profiteroles Time: 1 hour, 15minutes Makes 24 profiteroles 2 oz raw shelled hazelnuts
(optional) molten chocolate souffle. You A small portion of well-made t/4 Ib unsalted butter (1 stick)
won't win my heart with a rib-
chocolate mousse. A bit of tira-
bon-wrapped box of bonbons. misu. Chocolate bark studded And you certainly won't find with pistachios. Wafer-thin me participating in a commu- chocolate mendiants, speckled nal chocolate fondue. with dried and candied fruits. Which is not to say I don't And lately, high-quality dark appreciate good chocolate. I chocolate bars have held a cersimply don't yearn for the stuff tain attraction for me. These as others do. I like a smallpiece don'tcome cheap, but the flaof bittersweet chocolate or a vor is better than in the cheapc ocoa-dusted almond w i t h er mass-produced ones; they an espresso, and I like choco- can be smoky, earthy, bitter. late-covered coffee beans and A small amount is satisfying. candiedorange peel dipped in I might break off a little piece dark chocolate. midafternoon or after dinner. It's partly a preference of When it comes right down to savory over sweet, of salt over it, though, if offered my choice sugar. And when I do want of chocolate dessert, I would dessert, it usually means some- take a bowl of chocolate ice thing fruity, like a French fruit cream. When pressed further, tart or good old peach pie, or I'd say chocolate ice cream something nutty, like Italian profit eroles.Dense,dark chocalmond cookies or Vietnamese olate ice cream on a mound of sesame candy.Or something softly whipped cream, encased frozen, like a tart lemon grani- in crisp choux pastry, drizzled ta or bright raspberry gelato with sauce and showered with or colorful Mexican paletas in hazelnuts. Just the thought of it tropical flavors. gives me a little craving. On the other hand, as a Maybe I do love chocolate child, I really loved a chocolaty after all.
Chocolate Hazelnut Ice Cream Time: 1 hour, plus 4 hours' freezing Makes1 quart 2 oz raw shelled hazelnuts, abouttis C 3 C half-and-half sisC turbinado sugar
2 TBS dark cocoa powder
of the star ingredient after a week. But by the time I got to the end of "Shroom," I
ible blend of practicality and
C
By David Tanis
sures underfoot is infectious. but it didn't seem to matter. Plenty of mushroom books Break out double napkins for on the market focus on how this one, because it's a dribt o hunt an d i d entify t h e bly, sloppy, glorious mess. scores of varieties, or they Far more seductive was tantalize readers with reci- a bowl of Thai khao soi pes calling for the ones most noodles, in which the same difficult to find. Selengut, hedgehog mushrooms got however, skips the foraging slathered in panang curry instructions and zeros in on and roasted. Served atop 15 commonly available spe- d eep-fried noodles a n d cies. g would be surprised bathed in coconut milk, the if you couldn't find at least hedgehogs went up to ll on eight of them, growing wild the volume dial and were and at markets, no matter worth every bit of the giant where you live.) Then she fry-up mess in the kitchen. works them for all they're When I test a single-subworth, drawing deep for fla- ject cookbook, it often hapvor and casting wide for mul- pens that I'm heartily sick ticultural flavor influences, which makes for an irresist-
't r . "tr
2 oz bittersweet chocolate,
chopped 4 egg yolks
romance. Portobellos, creminis and
was perfectly prepared to go
button mushrooms — all close cousins — act as gate-
beginning again. If that's not the definition of a keeper, I
way fungi in the first chap-
don't know what is.
back and start right in at the
Pasta With Morels, Leeks and Oven-Roasted Tomatoes Makes 6 to 8servings
1 qt chocolate hazelnut ice
cream (see recipe), or other icecream
t/4 tsp salt
1 C warm bittersweet chocolate
1 C all-purpose flour 4eggs, plus1 egg lightly beaten for glaze 1 C heavy cream, chilled
sauce (see recipe), or other chocolate sauce Confectioners' sugar, for garnish
1 TBS granulated sugar
Heat oven to 425 degrees. If using hazelnuts, place on a baking sheet and roast until quite dark, about 10 minutes. Let cool slightly, then use a clean kitchen towel to rub off skins, discarding the skins. Crush nuts coarsely with a rolling pin or meat mallet and set aside. To make the puffs, put 1 cup water, the butter and the salt in a saucepan over high heat and bring to a boil. Add flour and stir with a wooden spoon until mixture comes together and forms a sticky ball. Lower heat to medium and continue to cook, stirring, for 1 or 2 minutes more. Transfer dough to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with paddle attachment. Mix at medium speed to cool dough slightly, then increase speed and begin to add 4 eggs, 1 at a time. Make sure eachegg is fully incorporated into dough before adding the next. When all eggs have been added, scrape down sides of bowl and beat again until dough is smooth and glossy. Line two 12-by-18-inch baking sheets with parchment. Put dough in a pastry bag (or use 2 soup spoons) and form mounds that are 2t/~ inches in diameter, 12 mounds per sheet, spaced evenly. Brush each mound with beaten egg, smoothing pointy tops with a finger. Bake for10 minutes at 425 degrees, then reduce heat to 375 degrees and continue baking until puffs are well-browned and crisp, about 25 minutes more. Cool to room temperature. (If desired, puffs may be baked in advance, frozen and recrisped at 400 degrees for10 minutes.) Put cream and sugar in a small mixing bowl and whip to a soft, light consistency. To assemble profiteroles, cut puffs in half horizontally. Place 2 tablespoons softly whipped cream on the bottom half of each puff, then a scoop of ice cream. Replace the tops. Transfer filled profiteroles to dessert plates or bowls, 2 per serving. Drizzle with warm chocolate sauce and sprinkle with reserved crushed hazelnuts, if using. Dust with confectioners' sugar and serve immediately.
1 TBS kosher salt 1 oz dried morels
1 med zucchini, cut into1-inch chunks
1 Ib small dried penne pasta
1 TBS minced fresh oregano (may substitute1 tsp dried)
t/4 C plus 2 TBS extra-virgin olive oil
t/s tsp crushed red pepper flakes Scant1 tsp fine sea salt 1 to 2 cloves garlic, minced
1 pint cherry tomatoes, each cut in half 1 Ig leek, white and light-
green parts, thinly sliced
Pecorino Romanocheese,
and rinsed well (about1tis
grated or shaved, for serving
C)
Preheat the oven to 450degrees. Bring a large pot of water to a boil over high heat. Add thekosher salt. Place the dried morels in a fine-mesh strainer; submerge them in the pot just long enough to rehydrate them, then cut them crosswise into ti4-inch slices. Transfer to a bowl, along with a few tablespoons of the water. Add the pasta to the still-boiling water and cook to al dente according to the packagedirections. Drain and return to the pot (off the heat), reservingt/4 cup of the cooking water. Meanwhile, line a rimmed baking sheet with aluminum foil, then pour in the t/~ cup of oil. Add the rehydrated morels (reserving any remaining soaking water), the tomatoes, leek, zucchini, oregano and crushed red pepper flakes. Useyour hands to toss the ingredients until well-coated. Sprinkle with the seasalt, then spreadthe pieces in one layer. Roast for about15 minutes or until parts of the vegetables are caramelized. Stir the minced garlic (to taste) into the vegetables on the baking sheet, along with the remaining 2 tablespoons of oil. Scrape the mixture into the pot of just-cookedpasta, then addthe reservedmushroom soaking water. Place over medium-low heat; cook just until warmed through and the pasta hasabsorbed juices from the vegetables. If the mixture seemsdry, add some or all of the reserved cooking water. Serve with plenty of the pecorino Romano to sprinkle over each portion.
t/s tsp kosher salt 1 TBS tapioca starch
Heat oven to 425 degrees. Put hazelnuts on a baking sheet and roast until quite dark, about 10 minutes. Let cool slightly. Use a clean kitchen towel to rub off skins; discard skins. Crush nuts coarsely with a rolling pin or meat mallet and set aside. In a saucepan, heathalf-and-half and sugar over medium flame, whisking to dissolve sugar. Donot let mixture boil. Whisk in cocoa powder until completely incorporated, then addchopped chocolate and cook, stirring, until chocolate is melted, about 2 minutes. Reduceheat to low. Put egg yolks, salt andtapioca starch in asmall bowl andwhisk together. Slowly add1 cup of hot chocolate mixture to egg yolk mixture, whisking well to keep yolks from curdling. Pour combined mixture back into saucepan and cook 5 minutes, stirring constantly, until it thickens slightly and coats back of spoon.Strain andlet cool completely, then chill in an ice bath. (This chocolate custard may beprepared aday aheadand refrigerated.) Churn the custard in anice cream makerfor 20 to 25 minutes until semifirm. Stir in hazelnuts and transfer ice cream to a quart-size container. Place in freezer for at least 4 hours, preferably overnight, before serving.
Bittersweet Chocolate Sauce Time: 30 minutes Makes 2 cups 4 oz bittersweet chocolate,
s/4 C heavy cream
chopped or broken into small 2 TBS unsalted butter chunks
'/ C brown sugar
2 TBS Grand Marnier
Place double boiler (or a makeshift version) over medium heat and bring water to a simmer. Put sugar, cream, chocolate and butter in top part of double boiler. Let simmer, without stirring, for about 15 minutes, until cream is hot, sugar is dissolved and chocolate has completely meltecl. Add Grand Marnier andwhisk until glossy and smooth, about1 minute. Remove from heat and keep warm. Sauce may be refrigerated for later use, but cool completely first, then reheat in adouble boiler.
$
rp e,'
• THURSDAY • F EBRUARY 19 T H NUTRITIONQ&A Join us for a 5 course dinner paired with exceptional wines from Northstar Winery
Do little ietary changesreally a up?
5 :30 Cocktail s The Washington Post Healthful-eating columnist and dietitian Ellie Krieger an-
swered questions recently in a Post online chat. Here is an
edited excerpt. quest to eat quickQ •• Inly,myespecially after a
Based on advice from you include beans, nuts, seeds, • can add up to make a • a physician and due to low-fat dairy and/or fish at remarkable diff erence over health issues, I've been ac- each meal, you should be fine. time. So opting for brown tively reducing the amount Your friend says it "couldn't rice or whole-grain pasta of animal protein in my diet. hurt," but although these powover white is a great idea. I've upped my consumption of dersarebasically safe,many Certain foods sound more plant-, legume- and fish-based contain additives and sweet-
A•
Small changes really
healthful but actually have
long day,and also steer clear
a false health halo. Fried sweet potatoes are still fries
of white starches, I will some-
— probably not substantial-
Q•
proteins as a r e sult, but a friend has said that it wouldn't
hurt to supplement with a plant-based protein powder.
sive. Also, a large amount of isolated soy protein has been linked with some negative health effects. I have a bias toward whole foods, which have
6 :00 Dinner
P lease R S V P 7 2 hour c a n c e l l a t i o n n o t i c e I I'
•• t
eners, and they can be expen-
times opt for food such as Cal- ly more healthful than fried I'm not sure whether this is a ifornia rolls (with brown rice), regular potatoes. Similarly, good idea. Thoughts? sweet potato fries or quinoa fried "vegetable chips" are • You should n ot n e e d all the nutrients we need. Stick pasta. Are these substitutions not much better than potato • protein powders to get with those, unless your doctor even healthful? chips. the protein that you need. If tells you otherwise.
A
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D4
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
HOME ck
AR DEN
ee Q UF
QW Q
QUSe an saive
Dating Continued from D1 On opposite sides of a bed in needofweeding, men and women line up and team up
over the task for a set number of minutes, chatting over the chickweed. Then one side moves on to the next partner.
It's an ingenious way for the By Nina Koziol
host farmers to get their oper-
Chicago Tribune
ation cleaned up, for the mere cost ofserving refreshments
There's a lot to be said for growing indoor plants. There's the beauty of a fern with its delicate fronds, or an
afterward.
You can tell a lot about someone by how he or she weeds. Does she linger lazily over each dandelion? Or does she get right into a rhythm
African violet with a duster
of vibrant flowers. Some, like jasmine, add fragrance to a room. Others, like ivy, can adorn a windowsill with trail-
+
d on't
have to be a gardening guru to get them to thrive indoors, Phalaenopsis orchids' exotic beauty might intimidate some,
Q•
performing in "Fiddler on the • growing those big tropRoof" in 1990. ical trees indoors? "I used to be an actor and • Decorators often was given a plant instead of • c hoose plants f or a a bouquet," she recalled. "I design effect, but you can't love houseplants, and a house choose a houseplant the same without them seems sterile to way you choose a bedspread me. I like having growing, liv- or curtains. Most people who ing things in the home." buy plants want to keep them The owner of Acme Plant for the long term. If you've Stuff, Zachos designs, installs got the most perfect spot inand maintains interior and doors to display a palm tree,
A
but it's not the perfect spot
York City area. She talked to us recently by phone from her home in New York about her newestbook, which covers ba-
for the tree, it's going to fail. Think of houseplants as living things, not inanimate objects. I like epiphytic ferns sic plant selection and care, as — not dainty, fussy ferns. well as how to create effective They look like sculpture in displays. The following is an the home. They all grow in a edited conversation.
tering. And p h alaenopsis bloom once a year — it's not going to be a gorgeous flowering plant all year. I get frantic calls (when orchids have finished blooming) by people telling me their plant is dying. They're often overwatering it when the plant should be resting. ow much w ater i s Q •• Henough for i n d o or
plants? • It depends. No drainage
signer, I often felt like a marriage counselor, mediating a
Even the most loving of bed-
have to really look at the plants closely for mealybugs
• just a few pests. You
with line drawings (by Beverly Duncan) and they ac-
misting maidenhair ferns. I and spider mites. The main do like oxalis and cactus and thing is to isolate new plants hoya, which is a succulent so (the pests) don't spread to that grows well in a hanging any others. Each insect rebasket that can be watered quires different treatments. twice amonth. You can buy For spider mites, I put some them at Lowe's and Home dishwashing liquid and water Depot. Clivia is another fa- on my handsand then Icomvorite. It produces a flower in pletely cover every leaf and
centuate the character of the
a saturated orange color that
plants. I find them charming.
stem surface with it. I wash it
I love. The trick to getting clivias to bloom is to let them What's the first thing become pot-bound (where • you should do before the roots fill most of the soil) buying an indoor plant? and letting the plant get cold
off the plant after 15 minutes, and you need to do that every
Q•
four to five days until the spi-
• It's important to assess in the fall. I put the pot out• the light in your home. side in summer and bring it indoors when the temperafeeding — will matter if you tures drop into the 40s.
about fertilizing Q •• What indoor plants?
A Nothing else — watering or
Forever SeriesGold
O
i as at our farm, with a b i g
CQ
A as the labels say. I use prod• need as much fertilizer
about orchids'? Q •• How They seem difficult to
ucts at half-strength once a month and only when they're all the lights — go around and grow. in active growth. For exam• I 'm g r o w ing p h a - ple, if you have cool temperacheck out the amount of light from each window during • laenopsis orchid and tures and shortened days the day. You'll discover how clamshell orchid (Prosthe- — from fall through winterthe light from a north-facing chea cochleata). They get wa- they're not actively growing, window is different (from the tered once a week and they and so they don't need food. light of) a south-facing one, bloom in the middle of July. Start fertilizer as the daylight which is much stronger. A main misconception is that grows longer in spring.
Peace OfMind That Lasfs Foret/er.
E o
urab e:
I
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off by the kale's blue-green leaves, but to avoid competi-
der mites are gone.
• Most houseplants don't
"The Four Season Farm Gardener's Cookbook"; her website is www.fourseasonfarm.com.
s e ra a. a o B
After that I couldn't find the spot again, until late summer
A • tenance kind of gal. You're not going to see me • Well, I'm a l ow-main-
fellows must sometimes de-
fend their turf. — Damrosch's latest book is
couple's relationship with their
marker labeled "Dahlias."
• ners for sure — a small book with essential informa-
plant's requirements. Turn off
served it to the gang at farm lunch.
I once planted a row of dahl-
difficult.
• In general, there are
don't recognize that. You need to match the light to the
tion I pulled out the kale and
donlaln. When I was a landscape de-
and they're not heavy feed- then drain the saucer. It's not
Q •• favorite indoor plants?
per-interesting. It's illustrated
crew members are your own
directions. Rules do not always stick.
• It's a book for begin-
deners who don't know how
certain crops, areas or even
the pot gets wet. Let the water run out of the holes and
north- or east-facing window,
• holes in the pot'? That's
the first mistake. Thoroughly water so the whole root sys-
I
"i
tem down to the bottom of
ers. In winter, I'm watering • books on tropicals and just every two weeks. orchids for indoors. How is this one different? What are a few of your
to take care of indoor plants, or they receive an unfamiliar plant as a gift. I chose plants that people might not think are easy to grow but are su-
drift off, never to return. I met my husband 23 years ago while visiting a neighbor of his down the road. He was helping her tie up her tomato plants, and it was love at first sight. But even when you get that lucky, finding someone with a shared passion is just the beginning, especially when two people like doing things their own way. My strategy, whether in farming, Barbara Damrosch/The Washington Post gardening or any other part After the wedding, the weeding: Barbara Damrosch and her husof daily life, has always been band. You cantell a lot about a person by how he orshe weeds. a division of labor by which
yard. "Where shall we put the path to the lake?" I once asked a couple. "Follow me," each said, setting forth in opposite
• You've written o ther
tion. There are outdoor gar-
't
root behindfor someone else to "soak" in the sink and then
Chuck Berman/Chicago Tribune viaTNS
Plant, Water Wisely, and Con- but these tropical plants are easy to grow.Just don't overwater, trol Pests." cautions garden author Ellen Zachos. An instructor at the New York B o t a nical Ga r d en, Zachos was first intrigued by more water is better. More W hat's th e t r i c k t o plants are killed by overwahouseplants when she was
exterior gardens in the New
stab and pull? Does he yank the pigweed's top, leaving the to dig up after it resprouts'? He'd probably leave the dishes
says Ellen Zachos, author of
"Growing Healthy Houseplants: Choose the Right
I'
with her tool — stab and pull,
ing glossy foliage. What's more, you
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TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
Smart
Succu ents are roc stars o t econtainersta e
Continued from 01
Touchless flush toilet Toilets aren't just toilets anymore. They come with accessories such as LED illuminated night lights, bidet functionality, self-de-
odorizing capabilities and heated seating. In some cases, you don't even have
to flush the toilet using a handle. Kohler's new San Souci touchless flush toi-
n i
!Ii
let is the perfect appliance for the germ-phobic. Simply wave your hand over a sensor mounted inside the tank, and it will trigger a flush powered by
P
st
four AA batteries. Avail-
p („" Itt
able in 10 colors. The toilet starts at $820 in white.
• www.kohler.com
Garden sensor and water valve The sol a r-powered Edyn smart g ardening system allows gardeners to assess soil nutrition, moisture, light and tem-
perature via smartphone alerts. Expect a ping from
TNS
This wooden trough filled with succulents will beautify any porch or patio.
By Norman Winter
examination of their patio or
Tribune News Service
landscape would show all the
not succulents. In fact, the
archenemy will be too much key ingredients for a winning water or inferior drainage, recipe. For example, every which is one of the reasons spring, and if you are not day I hear people comment- many designers go with a soil on the bandwagon yet, you ing that they have been grow- mix geared toward cactus. have been missing one of the ing hens and chicks for years. They are low-maintenance hottest trends of the last five Hens and chicks, known bo- in that they require very lityears. This trend has turned tanically as Sempervivum, tle f ertilizer, n o c o n stant designing mixed containers are what give many children deadheading. on its head as it has partnered their first start at gardening. I like them best when givrare beauty with low mainteMany of those same gar- en a little protection from the nance, too. deners have a patch of lemscorching afternoon summer I first witnessed this in 2009 on-colored sedum, commonly sun. Adequate light, waterwhen the Mississippi Nursery called stonecrop, growing in ing only when needed and a and Landscape Association's the flowerbed nearby yet fail just little light fertilizing will Hot to Trot Pot Competition to realize what a wonderful make this one of the most s tunned everyone when i t marriage they would make enjoyable of your gardening was won by a colorful array as partners in one mixed con- endeavors. of succulents in an Old World- tainer. It seemed forever that I mentioned the Crassula style container. The container these hens and chicks, and family, which will indeed be contest was judged by con- sedums, too, were-hand-me where most of your choices sumers who selected this par- down or pass-along plants. originate. Your choices will Today's garden centers and number in the hundreds. Seticular design by overwhelming numbers. many florists however offer dums, hens-and-chicks, padJ ust a s w ith tod a y ' s incredible choices to let you dle plants, kalanchoe and mixed-succulent containers, be the Monet of your easy-to- jade plants are some you alit's members of the crassu- grow container. To get start- ready know. But unknown la family that stole the show. ed this growing season, pick to many gardeners are some The container held about 11 a container that suits your wonderfully blu e -colored different succulents, from style. It can be old world clay, succulents in the aster family large-leafed kalanchoe, or a wooden trough, a hand- called senecio with fingerlike paddle plant, to a fine-tex- made hypertufa or even a foliage. tured, lime-colored sedum large shallow bowl. The manWhen buying your sucspiller plant. There were blue- datory criteria will be drain- culents, don't be afraid to be green crassula and orange se- age holes and a good desert- bold and adventuresome by dums that complemented the like soil mix. varying your leaf sizes, texother foliage colors as well as Succulents are tough-as- tures and colors. Choose a the container. nails performers because largeone asyourcenterplant, I t's funny that I still f i nd they store moisture in their then add some that cascade, gardeners timid about creat- roots, leaves and stems. and fill in with several pocket ing these living artistic works D rought co n d i tions ca n or filler plants. You are the art for fear that they don't know wreak havoc on most con- director in your garden, and I what to do. Probably a close t ainer-grown p l ants, b u t promise it will be fun.
Fi, Edyn's garden sensor measures environmental factors courtesy of a long
The succulent frenzy looks to continue as we head into
video-cam with your friends
ed in the ground. The system sends the data to your phone, where you can monitor your plants
and family or anyone on the
and activate water valves.
app requires iOS 7.0 or greater and Android 4.0 or greater. • www.petcube.com
The system is composed of the Edyn Garden Sen-
Smallspace tub
W a ter V a lve
The new Halo soaking tub
and Edyn App. One sensor is good for 250 square
from MTI Baths incorporates
be necessary for bigger plots. Available for pre-
years old. As we've had work done, such as the kitchen 10 years ago, we've had two subpanels added to the breaker
box, which is 100 amps. Our current electrician is recommending cleaning up the breaker box with a larger one and possible upgrading to 200 amps.
lastyear'spopularfree-standing tub trend with another hot topic: small-space living. The simple circular design measures 52 by 52 by 26 inch-
Lencva via Lcs Angeles Times/TNS
order on Edyn's website
Lenova'snew Ozone collection and available at Home De- faucets feature a water-air-patpot stores in spring 2015. ented technology that infuses Garden sensor, $99.95. the powerful oxidant ozone Edyn Water Valve, $59.99. directly into the water through • www.edyn.com a patented chamber inside the spout.
Deskswith integrated power outlets Room &
es and consumes little floor
space in a tight bathroom. The Halo also features a built-in seat and can be enjoyed as a soaker tub or as an air bath with 20 air jets, a heated blower and a waterproofremote
Two new desks from
control. Made of Engineered friends with the new Petcube Solid Stone, it comes in clas-
B o ar d f e ature Camera, which allows you to
four three-prong power outlets and four USB
sic white or biscuit with an
watch, talk and play with your optional gloss finish. $6,655. pets from a smartphone. The • www.mtibaths.com
ports that are hidden on
Petcube Camera features a
the underside of the desk. The design provides 10 amps of power for office electronics and k e eps cords within easy reach.
wide-angle camera along with
Ozone faucets
v i deo, which
Lenova's new Ozone col-
allows you to view your pet clearly. You can also talk to your pet via a built-in microAn 8-foot detachable cord phone and speaker. Additionconnects to the back right ally, you can play withyour pet leg of the table. The desk from your smartphone using a
lection faucets feature a wa-
features a modern stain-
its disinfectant and
real-time HD
ter-air-patented technology that infuses the powerful oxidant ozone directly into
the water through a chamber inside the spout. Due to
laser pointer. The camera of-
less-steel base and a va- fers a free mobile app for iOS riety of tabletop options. and Android devices as well Starting at $839 for one as a Petcube Camera — an inwith a glass tabletop. A teractive pet monitor. You can Parsons desk, also avail- also share access to your pet
o x ida-
tion capabilities, the process creates ozonized water that is safe to d r i nk . A v ailable
in April, starting at $995. • www.lenovasinks.com
able with power outlet and
USB ports, starts at $659. • www.roomandboard. com
I
Weekly Arts & Entertainmenf
Interactive pet camera
200 amps, but I spent $665 (I still have the bill) to clean it your power needs at http:// up, as your electrician puts www.wdshar pe.com/200it, part of an $8,000, 13-year Amp-Service.html. upgrade. The contractor's short anCost is important for you, swer: If you don't have 220- but if you are having work volt "electricity hogs" (electric done already, consider this: heat, hot water heater, dryer, 200 amps could be the new range or central air-condi- minimum when you go to sell tioning), 100-amp service in a the house. modest-size home will do for most families. planation of how to determine
have a modest suburQ •• Iban split-level that is 50
Petcube network. $199. The
feet. More systems might
Sharpe offers a detailed ex-
The Philadelphia Inquirer
metal probe that is plant-
sor, Edyn
Should I ampup myelectrical service? By Alan J. Heavens
Petcube via Lcs Angeles Times/TNS
The Petcube Camera is among the first products that allow pet Edyn i f y o u r t o m atoes owners to watch, talk and play with their pet from their smartneed water or f e rtilizer. phone. Funded on Kickstarter, Petcube became one of the most The concept: Using Wi- successful crowdfunding pet products in history.
I nside
Guilt-ridden pet owners
M AG A Z t l lE
••
can check on their furry
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That is, however, the mini-
The 200-amp service would mum service size allowed by cost more and would be more the National Electrical Code, and it leaves little room for
for afuture buyer's needs than
•
•
for our needs. expansion. Another inspector suggestThis Old House's website ed that with the efficiencies of actually calls a 100-amp sermodern bulbs and appliances, vice "antiquated." we should be fine with the 100
A 200-amp service, one
amps. electrician said, will allow you I'm 65 and recently retired. to run multiple appliances at We have no plans to move, once. but while I'm h aving work The website Networx.com
done, I'd like to have things set places the installed cost by a up so there are fewer future
professional, licensed electri-
complications.
cal contractor of a 200-amp service at $1,300 to $3,000.
Sharpe, a North A •• W.D. Jersey electrical c o n -
Don't take
;=::= N:=
I n ternet esti-
tractor, has one of the bet-
mates to the bank, however. I have 200-amp service in
ter answers to the 100-amp
my house, but it came that
question.
way. My last house was also
4 I
cW
C~
+
K=-:
e
Editor's note:Martha Stewart's column will return. Questions of general interest can beemailed to mslletters@marthastewart.com. For more information on this column, visit www.marthastewart. com.
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D6
TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
arr onnic r. on ' merican o ' TV SPOTLIGHT
New Orleans, people were coming in that were from New Orleans and the surrounding
"American Idol" 8 p.m. Thursdays, Fox
areas that didn't sound like
they were from New Orleans when they spoke, when they sang. The music didn't sound
By Rick Bentley The Fresno Bee
PASADENA, Calif. — All
like it.
of the auditions have been
There was nothing indige-
completed for Fox's 14th edition of "American Idol." Now,
nous about the music. And I
think that comes from being able to be influenced by anything, anywhere, anytime.
the singers must impress this year's panel of judges — Harry Connick Jr., Jennifer Lopez
Is being on the show re-
and Keith Urban — to stay in the running for the title.
that hard? Q • Ially give it up to anybody
A • w ho will get on t h e "American Idol" stage and
Connick first appeared on a season nine episode of "American Idol," which aired May 4, 2010. He was a mentor for the
take that ride. It is one of the
top five finalists. He was back
most grueling entertainment
as a mentor in season 12 and
experiences I have ever seen.
moved into a judge's chair for season 13.
Will the judges perform
• with t h e co n t estants Q more this season?
We talked with the New Or-
leans native about picking and judging the competitors. there a difference in Q •• Istalent depending on the city hosting the auditions'?
A
It will remain separate,
• and it s hould, really. There wasn't really an opportunity for us to perform with anybody on the stage that was competing last year. The hardest part for us as
Chad Batka / rhe New York Times file photo
Harry Connick Jr. is in his second season as a judge on the hit Foxcompetition show, alongside Jennifer Lopez and Keith Urban.
• I think you see probably • a higher percentage of talented people in the bigger Are shows like "Amermarkets, like Nashville and • ican Idol" hurting the New York. We certainly did music industry? this year. • Somebody came up to But that'snotto saythat there • m e awhile back and they haven't been some real jewels said, "I don't like 'American in the smaller markets as well. Idol'. I think these young muIt's kind of a mix, though. We sicians should pay their dues." expected great talent to be in I said, "OK. Let me explain Nashville, and we saw it. We something to you. When you expected great talent in New audition and if you get out York, and it was incredible. of it in the very first round, I
Q•
A
would call that experience.
You've experienced something. If you make it all the way to the end and win, you have basically taken six, eight, 10 months out of your
show has been on the air for a
three performers isto sit be-
decade?
hind that panel and watch other people perform and not
A
I think t hat i t's great • there are many benefits
be able to do it. So many times
to having the technology in your back pocket for young year and dedicated it to the people. It's opened up so many most r i gorous, i ntensive, doors and provided creative high-pressure experience." opportunities for so many people. Is it easier or harder to But one of the drawbacks, • find talent now that the and I really noticed this in
we want to jump up there and do it.
So I think if there's any performing to be done, hopefully it would be something like it was last year, because that
was one of my favorite parts of
Q
tIasoun icture ets Iowns
the show.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. f
Dear Abby:Do you know why to my husband for 10 years. Bepeople nowadays feel the need to fore that, we dated for seven. (We announce their pregnancies via met when we were teenagers.) ultrasound pictures? I'm sorry, My problem is, my mother-in-law but I really don't want to see all still misspells my name, which is that. I guess some folks think the Sara. image of a blurry, black-and-white After all these years, she still fetus is "darling." adds an "h" to my But to me, all I see name, regardless of is an up-close-andhow many times my DEP,R personal snapshot of husband has pointa stranger's uterus. ed out the correct Even if we're best spelling. I don't know why friends, I don't need all that detail. TMI, right? this is an issue, because we send I really wish people would de- her cards on all the holidays, liver this kind of news face-to- her birthday, etc., with my name face. Or call me, text me, whatev- spelled correctly. How should I
your name to "Sarah" and she
er. It serves the same purpose and
months to come.
pg gy
isn't nearly as graphic.
— Not Ready For A Close-Up
Dear Not Ready:If seeing a sonogram is "TMI" for your sensibilities, all you need to do is scroll past it. It's not as if you're being
forced to view the fetus. Being able to see the product they're manufacturing predelivery helps many couples to bond with their babies, and when people are happy, they often want to share their joy. So loosen up and let them.
Dear Abby:I have been married
approach this with her'? — Simply Sara In Arizona
Dear Simply Sara: If the two of you get along well, just smile and ask her why she can't get the spelling of your name right. Then listen. However, if there is tension in
I think has traveled to her brain.
I am heartbroken over this. My question is, she seems different
now — angry. She jumped on me when we weretalking about her disease. Should I just leave her be'?
Or what should I do? — Standing By In Texas
Dear Standing By:Your friend might indeed be angry, and she has a right to be. She might also be very scared. Continue to stand
by her, because she will need your support and understanding in the A diagnosis of metastasized cancer can make someone feel alone and isolated. If she wants
to talk about her prognosis, be prepared to listen. If she is too ill to get out of the house, bring the
news about what is going on in your relationship, recognize that her circle of friends to her. (Gossip this may be a form of passive ag- can be distracting.) gression, that confronting her will Do NOT offer advice unless you make her defensive, and she will are asked for it. And if she has a find some other way to needle bad day, try to be understanding and forgiving. you. P.S. Another thought. Tell her — Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom you've changed the spelling of or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTUESDAY, FEB. 17, 2015:This yearoffers
may drop the "h"! Dear Abby: My best friend is dying from lung cancer, which
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
wild situations that arise from out of the By Jacqueline Bigar blue. For the most part, it would be wise to follow up with these, as you will the suddenly might realize how many choices love excitement of it. You'll get along with others much better than you have you really have. Remain direct when in recent years. Look within yourself to dealing with someone at a distance. You determine why. If you are single, you might be surprised by what you hear. Toare likely to meet night: Listen to a favorite piece of music. Starsshow thekind someone verysPe- CANCER (June 21-July 22) of dayyoo'll hatte cial. You will know ** * * Deal with a partner directly. ** * * * D ynamic for sure when you Others will be flattered to have your time ** * * Positive me et this person. and attention, and you'll enjoy connecting ** * Average If y o u are attached, with others on a one-on-one level. Even in ** So-so the two ofyou unpredictable situations, you will land on * Difficult enjoy your life a yourfeet. Trustyour judgment. Tonight: lot more than you Say "yes" to an invitation. have in the past. Your sweetie seems to blossom right in front you, becoming a LEO (July23-Aug.22) more fun-loving and spontaneous person. ** * * You might wonder whether A fellow AQUARIUSmakes an excellent others are ganging up on you. People will friend. have so much to share with you that you could feel overwhelmed. You will hear ARIES (March21-April19) ** * * Emphasize your goals. Reach out somenewsfrom someone atadistance to friends to see where it would be helpful that puts a smile on your face. Tonight: Just do not be alone. for you to be more supportive. Warm feelings seem to be in abundance, which VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) could make you feel as if you want to * ** You might befocusedonyourplans respond in kind. Your perspective will be and on whom you want to spend time with. valued. Tonight: With a favorite person. The unexpected will annoyyou, as it is likely to slow you down. Know whenenough TAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * * You might want to understand is enough. Be willing to try someone else's suggestion. Tonight: Make iteasy. more of what is motivating a key person in your life. Try not to verbalize how erratic LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) you find this behavior; instead, say little, ** * * I t could be nearly impossible to and be moreof an observer. As aresult, keep your nose to the grindstone. You you'll gain a new perspective. Tonight: A can't seem to change your sensibilities must appearance. when it comes to others. No one will be ableto stop you ifyouseesomeone you GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * * E xplore your options rather want to chat with. Tonight: Be the flirt than accept the same old routine. You you are.
** * * When you hit an obstacle, just go around it. The unexpected tends to run through your plans, and you often find yourself on a very different track from what you had intended. A boss or parent might seem unusually happy. Tonight: Expect to burn the midnight oil.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * Be willing to share what is on your mind. How you say what you think has a lot to do with the way in which it is received. Understanding your limits might be more important than you realize. A fun call from someone at a distance will lighten the mood. Tonight: Out late.
GAPRjCORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * Other people seem to be more in touch with your assets and talents than you are. Sometimes you give too much of yourself. A close friend or associate might askyou to join him or her. You aren't likely to say "no." Whatever you do, you'll feel revived. Tonight: Let the party go on.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * * * You might be about to take the next step in renewing a project or going forward with an offer. A sudden call could force you to verbalize your thoughts about a certain matter. You'll know the right thing to say without giving everything away. Tonight: Accept an offer.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * Whether you feel tired or off-kilter, you just might want to isolate yourself. Understandwheresomeone is coming from and why he or she is making certain choices. You need somedowntime right now. Laughter will surround you, once you relax. Tonight: Get some extra zzz's. © King Features Syndicate
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:20 a.m., 12:30, 2:45, 4:15, 6:15, 7:20, 9:20, 10:20 • BLACKOR WHITE(PG-13) 12:05, 3:20,7:15, IO: I5 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 11:30 a.m.,12:15, 1, 3:15,4, 4:45, 6:30, 7, 9:30, 10 • THE HOBBIT: THEBATTLEOFTHE FIVE ARM IES(PG-13) 9:35 • THE IMITATION GAME(PG-13) noon, 2:50, 9:10 • JUPITER ASCENDING (PG-13) 12:35, 6:55 • JUPITER ASCENDIN3-0 G (PG-13) 3:50, 10:05 • JUPITER ASCENDINIMAX3-0 G (PG-13)11:15a.m., 6:20 • KINGSMAN: THESECRETSERVICE(R) 11:05 a.m., 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 3:30, 6:45, 7:10, 9:45, 10:25 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11a.m., 3:25, 6 • PROJECTALMANAC (PG-13)11:40a.m.,3:05,7:45, 10:35 • THE ROYALBALLET:THEW INTER'STALE(no MPAA rating) 10 • SEVENTH SON (PG-13) 12:10, 7:55 • SEVENTH SON 3-0 (PG-13) 2:15, 10:35 • SEVENTH SONIMAX3-0 (PG-l3)3,9:25 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:10a.m., 1:20, 2:30, 6:45, 9:55 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-0 (PG) 3:40,6:05,9 • WILD(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:35, 6:10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. i
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • GIRL RISING (PG-13) 5:30 • TAKEN(PG-13) 3 9 • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED ANIMATION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 3:30 • 2015OSCAR NOMINATED LIVEACTION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 5:30 I
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TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 5, 8, "Parks and Recreation" — As the show heads toward its finale next week, Andy (Chris Pratt) brings a curtain down a bit sooner in the new episode "The Johnny Karate Super Awesome Musical Explosion Show." He presides over the last telecast of his own show, with many of his pals stopping by to mark the occasion. Amy Poehler, Nick Offerman, Aubrey Plaza, Jim O'Heir and Aziz Ansari also star. Another episode follows. 8:30 p.m. on 2, 9, "Repeat After Me" — A segment of Ellen DeGeneres' weekday talk show becomesitsown program with the premiere of this series, a sort of "Candid Camera" in which celebrities are instructed via earpiece what to say to people they encounter... thus, the "repeat after me" angle. Wendi McLendon-Covey ("The Goldbergs") is the host, and the first celebrities put to the test here are Scott Foley ("Scandal"), Sarah Hyland ("Modern Family") and Randy Jackson. 9 p.m. on 7, "The Italian Americans" — The title succinctly describes the subject of this new documentary, narrated by Stanley Tucci and concluding next Tuesday. The first hour, "La Famiglia (1890-1910)," focuses on Italians' moves into urban centers of America. Then, "Becoming Americans (1910-1930)" considers their further assimilation — and stereotypes generated during that period. Tony Bennett, author Gay Talese and "The Sopranos" creator-producer David Chase comment. 10:30 p.m. on TBS, "Cougar Town" — After a hurricane floods a local high school gym, Jules (Courteney Cox) volunteers Gray's Pub as avenue for their prom in a new episode called "The Wild One, Forever."
As the gangserves aschaper-
ones, Jules tries to have an awesome night, but Laurie (Busy Philipps) just can't get in the mood. Andy and Ellie (lan Gomez, Christa Miller) tryto stop a gang of bullies, while Travis and Grayson (Dan Byrd, Josh Hopkins) help their high school counterparts win a girl. Hopkins also directed the episode. ct zap2it
Find YourDream Home In Real Estate TheBulletin
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Redmond Cinemas, 1535 SW OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R)4:30, 7:15 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-I3) G 4:20, 6:55 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)/I:45, 7:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 4,6:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 6 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 6:30 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 6:45 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)6 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG)/I:45
EVERGREEN
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Madras Cinema 5,1101 SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R)4:10, 7 • JUPITER ASCENDING (PG-13) 4:05, 6:50 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)4:25,7:15 • SEVENTH SON (PG-13) 5, 7:20 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG)/I:50, 7:10
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • MORTDECAI (R) 6:30 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (Upstairs — PG)6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES i The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • TUESDAY, FEBRUARY17, 2015 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate art onl
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Call for package rates
Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
:'hours:
contact us: Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
: Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
. Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
: 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
. .Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
: Monday- Friday 7:30 a.m. -5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad Th
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On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
B u I l e t i n :
ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingend Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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255
257
Computers
Musical Instruments
Hutch, oak 5'x6', leaded glass doors & mirror at back, 3 cupboards below. Exc. c o nd. $400. 541-318-8797
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves Refrigerator - white 22 267- Fuel and Wood cu. ft. Maytag, French 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers door with icemaker 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment and bottom freezer, only 2 years old, and 270- Lost and Found has been stored for GARAGESALES most of that time. 275 - Auction Sales Paid $1500, asking 280 - Estate Sales $1000. 541-923-7360. 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend Sleep Comfort Twin 284- Sales Southwest Bend XL adjustable bed 286- Sales Norlheast Bend with vibrator, with or without mattress & 288- Sales Southeast Bend foundation, clean, 290- Sales RedmondArea needs new air pump. 292 - Sales Other Areas $400 cash 541-382-7072 or FARM MARKET 541-410-5165 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Washer 8 dryer white Maytag Neptune, 333- Poultry,RabbitsendSupplies runs great, $500. 341 - Horses andEquipment 541-788-5206. 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals TheBulletin 350 - Horseshoeing/Ferriers recommends extra ' 358- Farmer's Column i caution when pur-i 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing chasing products or, 383- Produce andFood services from out of I I the area. Sending k I cash, checks, or l 208 206 i credit i n f ormationi
HOH'T MIS THIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week3lines 12
205
Items for Free Full size mattress & boxsprings, like new, free! You haul. 541-647-4031
Sleeper sofa, good cond., FREE, we're moving.541-390-9682 206
Pets & Supplies
257
King Trombone,1941 HN White, 7-1/2" bell, $500, obo. 541-388-2045 or 541-280-1912 eves
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Ad must
include price of s~il e t e o f 8500 or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at
541-385-5809 www.bendbulleun.com
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Misc. Items
Buylng Dlamonds iGold for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers 541-389-6655
1981 Yamaha Console Piano with bench, 1 owner, rich tone, excellent condition, currently tuned by Jana.
BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS $1200obo. 541-389-1966 Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds Door-to-door selling with appear every day in the fast results! It's the easiest print or on line. may be subjected to Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies way in the world to sell. i FRAUD. For more Call 541-385-5809 information about an c www.bendbulletin.com Chihuahua Toy pups, Malemute/Husky pups, The Bulletin Classified cute 9 wks, 2 shots, blue eyes 3 females, advertiser, you may i 541485-5809 The Bulletin t call t h e Ore g on t 5 males. Can send $150. 541-977-7766 Strving Central Oregonsince 5ta Atto r ney ' photos. $500 8 up. ' State Dachshund AKC creams 541-977-6150. i General's O f f i ce Glock 34 Gen4, night Drum Kits:Specializing Consumer Protec- • sights, extra mags, hol- in High Quality New 8 Rare color! 541-508-4558 Used Drum Sets! $800. bendweenies.com POODLE or POMAPOO tion h o t line a t i ster, $650. 541-771-3222 Kevin, 541-420-2323 puppies, toy. Adorable! i 1-877-877-9392. Donate deposit bottles/ 541-475-3889 The Drum Shop & Riflescans to local all vol., t TheBulletin I Handguns call for info. Also, Oak Serv>ng Cenrraf Oregon since t903 non-profit rescue, for QueenslandHeelers un cabinet with drawers. For Sale: feral cat spay/neuter. Standard & Mini, $150 vt party, 541-923-8868 Piano Technician T railer a t Jak e ' s & up. 541-280-1537 212 tools 8 supplies, D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; www.rightwayranch.wor Antiques & Smith & Weeson with rolls of piano Petco in Redmond; dpress.com M&P15-22 with string, $725. donate M-F at Smith Collectibles 4x16x44 BSA Cats Call 971-219-9122 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Shih-Tzu Dogs 3-yr old Eye scope, Fieldline in Redmond Bend; or CRAFT in Male $400, Female Old Gas Pumps/Soda Tactical carrying Tumalo. Can pick up Puppy ready Feb 10 Vending Machines large amts, 389-8420. $500. 541-589-4948 WANTED! Will pay cash. case. Excellent condition, was used in www.craftcats.org blossomhut@gmail.com Kyle, 541-504-1050 National Finals Find "The One"! Rodeo for target Siberian Husky-Wolf The Bulletin reserves competition. Comes Cat adoptions at CRAFT, pups! 2 adorable females, the right to publish all featuring special needs $400 each. 541-977-7019 ads from The Bulletin with original sights cats & others! Sat.& newspaper onto The and 25-round magaSun.,2/148 2/15,1 to5 Yorkie AKC tiny pups, 2 zine. $850 obo. Bulletin Internet webpm. A great chance to Fs, 1 M, 12 wks old, UTD site. 541-410-0841 give a senior or special shots, health guar, pics. needs cat a forever $1100.541-777-7743 The Bulletin Wanted: Collector seeks Serwng Cenaa/ Oregon since 19te home! Reduced adophigh quality fishing items tion fees, 8 fee waived 210 8 upscale fly rods. Call for seniors/veterans! 245 Furniture & Appliances 541-678-5753, or Other cats of all kinds Golf Equipment 503-351-2746 also available. A1 Washers&Dryers www.craftcats.org CHECK YOUR AD Full warranty, FREE 541-389-8420. Have an item to delivery! Also, used washers/dryers wanted. sell quick? German Shepherds 541-280-7355 www.sherman-ranch.us If it's under
BUYING Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. BVYING &
SE L LING
266
C o m mercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures
Heating & Stoves NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.
5-drawer Hon Industries commercial file cabinet, 43" wide, 66" high. Originally $1000; asking$450. 541-948-1824
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
267
Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...
265
To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood
All gold jewelry, silver Building Materials and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, Bend Habitat class rings, sterling silRESTORE ver, coin collect, vin- Building Supply Resale tage watches, dental 541-312-6709 gold. Bill Fl e ming, 224 NE Thurston Ave. 541-382-9419. Open to the public.
Wanted- paying cash for Hi-fi audio 8 studio equip. Mclntosh, JBL, Marantz, Dynaco, Heathkit, Sansui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-261-1808 WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
purchased.
• Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin servi
Sisters Habitat ReStore
w centrel onyonsince 19IB
MoreP ixatBendbljlletin.com Building Supply Resale On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Quality items. LOW PRICES! 150 N. Fir. 541-549-1621 Open to the public.
Find It in The Bulletin Classiffeds! 541-385-5809
Sell you r s t u ff f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds
The Bulletin recommends extra caution when purc h asing products or services from out of the area. Sending cash, checks, or credit in$1900+. 541-281-6829 f ormation may be subjected to fraud. Golden Retrievers, AKC For more informa- English Cream, Eurotion about an adver- ean bloodlines, all certitiser, you may call ied. Taking $500 deposthe O regon State its now, puppies due Attorney General's Feb. 25. 541-81 5-8456 Office C o n sumer Protection hotline at 1-877-877-9392.
The Bulletin Serving Centrel 0 eyon sinceWe
Adopt a rescued cat or HAVANESE PUPS, AKC non-shedding, kitten! Altered, vacci- hypo-allergenic, great nated, ID chip, tested, more! CRAFT, 65480 family pets, UTD shots/ wormer. $850. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, 541-460-1277 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 www.craftcats.org
Koi pond, 1200 gallons, Bichon Frise AKC reg'd 10' x 5' x 4' deep. Liner, puppies, 5 fem ale,2 filters, 2 UV l ights, $900/ea. 541-953-0755 ump & fish food. $400. ics avail. 541-515-4799 or 541-912-1905. AKC LAB 1 black male left! 9 wks, dew claws, shots, wormed. $500. 541-410-3635 Brittany Spaniel/ W hoodle mix puppies,2 girls, 1 stud, reddish hypoallergenic coat. $650. 541-408-0490
requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to dis- Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, close the name of the 1977, excellent cond, business or the term only played senior year in "dealer" in their ads. college, $1000 obo.AND Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.
Musical Instruments
9 7 7 0 2
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T HE B U LLETIN
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Elizabeth,541-633-7006
O r e g o n
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
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Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist
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Furniture & Appliances
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Labrador pups,black, born 1/17, $400/ea. $200 dep. ready in 4 weeks. 1 Chocolate AKC male left, $800. 541-408-8880
Armoire Upright Dresser-
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to
your ad, please con-
'500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
S ell your st u f f f aster w i t h c o l o r .
'10- 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)
tact us ASAP so that Custom quality, excelcorrections and any lent condition, crafted adjustments can be walnut & swirly walnut Win. Mdl 12 (1959) 20 made to your ad. burl, 2 upper shelves, 2 541 -385-5809 ga. - immac., 28" full cedar-lined drawers plus The Bulletin Classified choke, field mdl $750. 3 other drawers (2 partiWin. Mdl 12 (1955) 12 tioned for socks). Size: 246 ga. immac., 30" full 73"H x36'Vl x16" D. If choke field mdl SOLD! new, $5,500; Guns, Hunting 7mm Rem. mag selling for $1275. & Fishing HVA action. improved 541-312-2393 M auser 9 8 M o nte Bend local pays CASHI! Carlo stock, Leupold Custom-built futon, for firearms & ammo. 4x scope $600. Win. opens into queen bed, 541-526-0617 mdl 43 - .218B (1952) excellent condition, $200. Weaver 2.5X scope 541-390-8237 By far Central SOLD! Win. Mdl 75.22 LR (1942) Exc. Electrolux Affinity Frigid- Oregon's largest cond., Weaver 2.5x aire front loading washer, Gun 8 Knife Show! s cope $750. W i n. red, 5 yrs old, needs Sat. Feb. 21st, 9-5 electrical part. $225 obo. Sun. Feb. 22nd, 9-3 Pre-64 Mdl 70 "feath541-390-4478 Admission only $6.00! erweight" .243, (1955) E xc., Bushnell 3 x 503-363-9564 G ENERATE SOM E www.wesknodelgunscope, SOLD! 1944 EXCITEMENT in your Mauser Mdl 98K-44, shows.com neighborhood! Plan a Military rifle w/sling, garage sale and don't good cond., SOLD. CASH!! forget to advertise in For Guns, Ammo & Leupold VariX11 scope classified! Reloading Supplies. 3x9, SOLD! Call Bob, 541-385-5809. 541-408-6900. 541-419-5126.
AFTER
SEFORE
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the lob done on the ranch!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough V8 engine will get the iob done on the ranch!
assi je s
www.bendbulletin.com
To place your photo ad, visit Usonline at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions,
5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
E2 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
CAUTION Caregivers Ads published in FINANCEANDBUSINESS w anted t o j o i n EMPLOYMENT "Employment Op410 - Private Instruction 507- Real Estate Contracts our caring portunifies" include 514 - Insurance m emory c a r e 421 - Schools andTraining employee and inde528- Loans andMortgages c ommunity. A l l 454- Looking Ior Employment pendent positions. 470- Domestic 6 In-HomePositions 543- Stocks andBonds Ads fo r p o sitions shifts a v ailable. that require a fee or 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 558- Business Investments Must be reliable. upfront investment 486 - IndependentPositions 573 - BusinessOpportunities Also needed part must be stated. With t ime c hef. F o r any independentjob 476 476 476 opportunity, please more in f o rmaEmployment Employment Employment i nvestigate tho r tion, or a ny Opportunities Opportunities Opportunities oughly. Use extra questions, c aution when a p please call MEDICAL plying for jobs onLooking for your next Mental Health 541-385-4717 line and never proPhysicianl Associate employee? vide personal inforNurse Practitioner Community CounPlace a Bulletin help mation to any source wanted ad today and TURN THE PAGE We haye an immediate seling Solutions has you may not have an opening for a reach over 60,000 researched and For More Ads opening for a licensed part-time, weekend readers each week. deemed to be repuphysician or n u rse Q ualified The Bulletin Men t al Your classified ad table. Use extreme r actitioner a t ou r A s s ociate will also appear on c aution when r e edmond clinic as a Health bendbulletin.com at our JuniPlace a photo inyourprivate party ad PRIVATE PARTY RATES s ponding to A N Y CARPENTER Wanted rimary care provider. (QMHA) Ridge A cute which currently for only $f 5.00par week. online employment Experienced in residenStarting at 3 lines his is an excellent per receives over 1.5 tial work, La Pine / Sun- opportunity for a moti- Care Center located ad from out-of-state. *UNDER '500in total merchandise John Day, OR. million page views OVER '500 intotal merchandise We suggest you call river area. Fax resume vated, caring provider in every month at to: 541-536-1815: to join our growing S tarting wage i s the State of Oregon 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 $11.15-$16.73/hour no extra cost. Consumer Hotline Food Service - Bruno's practice. 14 days................................................ $16.00 7 days.................................................. $24.00 DOE. For more inBulletin Classifieds • Primary care, internal at 1-503-378-4320 *ftlfust state prices in ad Grocery/U-bake is hiring formation g o to Get Results! 14 days .................................................$33.50 For Equal Opportu- for C a shier & Pizza medictne, and/or geriwww.worksourceoCall 385-5809 26 days .................................................$61.50 nity Laws contact Maker. Apply: 1709 NE atric care experience Garage Sale Special regon.org, Job Listor place Oregon Bureau of 6th, Bend. No phone calls preferred. 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 icall for commercial line ad rates) • Competitive salary with ing ID ¹ 1 3 14562. your ad on-line at Labor 8 I n d ustry, Download an applibendbulletin.com paid holidays, liability Civil Rights Division, cation at www.cominsurance, 401k and 97'I -673- 0764. Get your bonuses. munitycounselingA Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: business • Flexible schedule with solutions.org or The Bulletin Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. either part or full time contact Human ReÃ9EI(ji SQ * BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( ) 541-385-5809 available. sources at • Weekday schedule e ROW I N G (541)676-9161. PoREQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well only; weekends off. sition is open until • Recent graduates or as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Accounting/Audit filled. EOE. with an ad in experienced profesHampton In n & bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at The Bulletin's sionals welcome. Suites Bend is acany time. is located at: • Oregon licensure re"Call A Service cepting applications quired. for Night Auditor. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Professional" • Any existing credencaution when purThe shift available is 526 tialing for major insurBend, Oregon 97702 Directory chasing products or I Loans & Mortgages Thurs., Fri. and Sat. ance benefictal for the services from out of • nights, 10 p.m. to 8 position but not rea.m. Ex p erience i the area. Sending uired. WARNING PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction Narketing Sales c ash, checks, o r p referred but w i ll lease reply via email The Bulletin recomis needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right Manager train the right peri credit i n f ormation with your cover letter, mends you use cauto accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these Experience in the be subjected to Please apply in CV, and references to •I may tion when you pronewspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party son. FRAUD. person to 730 SW health care field rossclinic© ahoo.com vide personal Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. Columbia St . or preferred, but not or fax to (541 923-4068. For more informa- I information to compation about an adver• e mail resume t o We thank you in required. Must be nies offering loans or 267 266 325 476 matt.blackburn ©hilt advance for your inter- i tiser, you may call credit, especially outgoing and perthe Oregon State on.com." est in joining our team! Fuel & Wood Sales Northeast Bend • Hay, Grain & Feed Employment those asking for ads onable. Mus t i Attorney General's vance loan fees or Opportunities have reli a ble s Office C o n s umer s All year Dependable Add your web address transportation. from out of Looking for your Call The Bulletin At l Protection hotline atl companies Firewood: Seasoned; ** FREE ** state. If you have to your ad and readnext employee? For more i nforI 1-877-877-9392. 9-1-1Public 541-385-5809 Lodgepole, split, del, Garage Sale Kit concerns or quesers on The Bu//efin's Place a Bulletin m ation, o r a n y Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Communications tions, we suggest you B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Place an ad in The web site, www.bendLThe Bulletin g help wanted ad Officer questions, please At: www.bendbulletin.com or 2 cords for $365. Bulletin for your gaconsult your attorney bulletin.com, will be Multi-cord discounts! rage sale and retoday and (Dispatcher) call 541-385-4717 or call CONSUMER able to click through 541-420-3484. reach over City o f Pr i neville People Look for Information HOTLINE, automatically to your ceive a Garage Sale Police Department is 1-877-877-9392. 60,000 readers website. EDUCATION About Products and Kit FREE! 269 currently accepting each week. Services Every Day through Director of Performing Arts applications for Gardening Supplies KIT INCLUDES: Your classified ad The Bulletin Classifferfa Need help fixing stuff? Jefferson County School Distnct 5094 Banking full-time 9-1-1 Pub• 4 Garage Sale Signs will also Call A ServiceProfessional & Equipment Application Deadline: Open Until Filled • $2.00 Off Coupon To lic Communications appear on find the help you need. ) first communit Use Toward Your Officer. Job conINildland Fire bendbulletin.com Education / Back round: www.bendbulletin.com Next Ad sists of radio disFor newspaper Performing Artsi Business Management/ which currently C ooper Con • 10 Tips For "Garage We are excited to patching for police, delivery, call the Education receives over tracting has lim- BANK TURNED YOU Sale Success!" fire, amb u lance. announce an Circulation Dept. at DOWN? Private party 1.5 million page available position for 541-385-5800 Position is computer Jefferson County School District is seeking a Di- ited openings for will loan on real esviews every oriented with related a full-time teller in To place an ad, call exp. timber fallrector of Performing Arts. The Director will be a viPICK UP YOUR equity. Credit, no month at no 541-385-5809 paper record keepBend, Oregon. sionary who will operate and manage our new Per- ers, engine tate GARAGE SALE KiT at problem, good equity extra cost. ing. Applicants must or email forming Arts Center (PAC). The successful candidate 1777 SW Chandler bosses and is all you need. Call claeeified@bendbulletimccm Bulletin be able to multi-task Salary Range: will be responsible for arranging day-to-day opera- squad b osses. Oregon Land MortAve., Bend, OR 97702 Classifieds between phones and $11.00 $18.00 tions and activities, finances, marketing, promotion, gage 541-388-4200. The Bulletin N ot a n ent r y Get Results! radios. This posiand development. The Director must demonstrate a sewine centraloregon since rsa The Bulletin Call 541-385-5809 t ion will w ork a l l servtng cenrral oregon rtnre 1903 First Community collaborative business sense, have excellent com- level p o s itions. LOCALMONEY:We buy munication skills, create and foster school-commu- Call shifts, holidays, and Credit Union is an or place your ad S e a n at secured trust deeds & Good classified adstell w eekends. En t r y equal opportunity nity paitnerships, enhance economic development, 541-948-7010 for on-line at note,some hard money the essential facts in an and promote cultural diversity. Additional responsilevel salary starts at employer of loans. Call Pat Kellev bendbulletin.com interesting Manner. Write $3,717/mo plus a protected Veterans bilities will include assisting District staff and stu- more info. 541-382-3099 ext.13. dents with music performances and theatre producfrom the readers view not complete b e n efit and individuals with 341 the seller's. Convert the package. C l osing disabilities. For more tions, stage, sound and lighting management, and event planning. Experience in theater production, facts into benefits. Show d ate is M arch 2, details please • Horses & Equipment event planni ng, and management, and business 2015 at 5pm. apply online: the reader howthe item will is preferred. A pply o n line a t www.myfirstccu.org. promotion help them insomeway. The projected salary range for this position is www.cityofprineville. This $30,000-$40,000plus incentwe pay, and includes a com. Equal Opporadvertising tip comprehensive benefit package. A job description tunity Employer. Find exactly what brought to youby and information about the PAC can be found at: 316 you are looking for in the htt://www.'csd.k12.or.us/PAC Pl ease direct inThe Bulletin Irrigation Equipment saving centraloregonslnce raa CLASSIFIEDS quiries to arryl Smith, Director of Human Re3-horse Silverado so rces laemar-~HR@509'.net 2001 29'xs' 5th wheel FOR SALE We ask that interested candidates provide the fol270 trailer. Deluxe showTumalo Irrigation lowing: Letter of Interest, resume, and a list of referLost & Found Nlaintenance 8 Broadband man/semi living Water ence contacts. All materials to be submitted elecquarters, lots of exTechnician tronically as one pDF rle to~HRO509'.nel. Lost keys, on horse trails Call$5,000/acre tras. Beautiful condi541-419<440 around Tumalo ReserCrestview Cable Communications seeks an tion. $21,900. OBO Jefferson County School District 509-J voir & the holding pond, FIND IT! 541-420-3277 experiencedCATV Maintenance 8 Broadband is an equal opportunity employer. Feb. 15. 541-604-6168 Tech in Prineville, Oregon. / SUY IT! A criminal background check is conducted • 356 on aii prospective employees. SELL IT! r Responsible for preventative maintenance of • r Farmers Column r • • The Bulletin Classifieds the 140 mile hybrid fiber coax plant and distriREMEltfIBER:If you Maintenance 10X20 Storage Buildings bution system. Full time job with competitive • •I I I • • • • 325 have lost an animal, for protecting hay, salary and benefits. don't forget to check Hay, Grain & Feed ~ o firewood, livestock etc. The Humane Society $1616 Installed. Send complete resume to Bend 1st Quality, 2nd cutting (other sizes available) agautney©crestviewcable.com or 541-382-3537 grass hay, no rain, 541-617-1133. 350 NE Dunham St., Prineville Oregon 97754. Redmond barn stored, $225/ton. CCB ¹173684 EOE, mandatory pre-employment drug testing, 541-923-0882 Call 541-549-3831 kfjbuilders@ykwc.net physical, criminal background check, Patterson Ranch, Sisters Madras r • • • r and a good drive record required. Maintenance Supervisor 541-475-6889 Just too many Premium orchard grass, Prineville Responsible fo r a l l P r o duction Center barn stored no rain, collectibles? 541-447-7178 (Retread Plant) machinery and equipment, •e• 1st 8 2nd cutting. Del. General or Craft Cats maintenance an d re p air. Su p ervises avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur541-389-8420. Sell them in maintenance and storeroom staff and works or 541-948-7010. day night shift and other shifts as needed. We The Bulletin Classifieds with management to troubleshoot and resolve currently have openings all nights of the week. Say "goodbuy" Quality orchard mixed issues, including nights and w eekends. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts grass hay, $190-$235 Requires High School Diploma or GED along to that unused 541-385-5809 start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and ton, small bales. Deliv. with two y e ars' e xperience i n g e neral end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoitem by placing it in avail.541-280-7781 maintenance and the ability to recognize sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical The Bulletin Classifieds betwn Bend/Redmond Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a malfunctions or equipment failures. Formal minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Wheat Straw for Sale training in related field is a plus. Requires are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Also, weaner pigs. 54g -385-5809 experience managing crew an d s t rong loading inserting machines or stitcher, stack541-546-6171 maintenance background. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent customer service and over 400 stores in the short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid western United States. We offer competitive vacation and sick time. Drug test is required pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash prior to employment. bonus. Pleasego to www.lesschwab.com to 421 apply. No phone calls please. Schools & Training Please submit a completed application attenCall 54 I -385-5809 tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available to r o m ote ou r s ervice Les Schwab is proud to be an HTR Truck School at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanequal opportunity employer. dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care 1-888-438-2235 Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). WIWW.HTR.EDU No phone calls please. Only completed appliAdvertising SalesAssistant NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landcations will be considered for this position. No ij • law requires anyone scape Contractors Law 470 resumes will be accepted. Drug test is rewho con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all quired prior to employment. EOE. construction work to businesses that adDomestic & be licensed with the vertise t o p e r form In-Home Positions Serving Central Oregon since f903 j Construction Contrac- Landscape ConstrucThe Bulletin servingcentral oregon since f9IB tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Child care needed, part The Bulletin is searching for a part-time Adveractive license p lanting, deck s , tising Sales Assistant. This person will support good pay, my home means the contractor fences, arbors, time, the Major Accounts and Executive Sales or possibly yours. 10 yr is bonded & insured. water-features, and in- old boy. References, reTeam. Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- sponsible. Call Joyce for Accounting Supervisor CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be details, 541-390-4478 Duties will include but are not limited to the www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e The City o f Pe n dleton i s ac c epting following: Assist the Major Accounts Departcontractor.com Landscape Contrac- FIND YOUR FUTURE applications fo r a ful l -time A c counting ment with insert work flow and order entry or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Supervisor p osition i n the Fin a nce management, production coordination, hourly The Bulletin recom- number is to be in- HOME INTHE BULLETIN Department. time keeping, maintain expense records and mends checking with cluded in all adver- Yourfutureisjust apageaway. mileage for reimbursement and clerical tasks the CCB prior to con- tisements which indi- Whether Requires working knowledge of generally as needed, including basic departmental you'le lookingfora hator tracting with anyone. cate the business has accepted accrual accounting procedures and reporting and data collection. This person will Some other t rades a bond, insurance and aplaceto hangit, TheBulletin f inancial r e p orting re q uirements fo r also assist the Executive Sales Team with light Classifiedisyourbestsource. also req u ire addi- workers c ompensagovernmental entities; and the ability to delivery, editing and processing ad proofs, tional licenses and tion for their employ- Everydaythousn supervise, train, evaluate and coordinate filing of p aperwork and a d o r der entry. adsofbuyersand certifications. ees. For your protecactivities of employees. Must have excellent Proficient typing, Google Docs and Excel skills tion call 503-378-5909 sellersofgoodsattdservicesdo interpersonal, oral and written communication a plus. Must h ave p ersonal auto f o r or use our website: businessinthese pages. They skills. Five (5) years progressive experience in occasional driving. Debris Removal www.lcbistate.or.us to know youcan't beatTheBulletin accounting, preferably with at least two in a check license status Classified Sectionforselection public or nonprofit agency with an accrual or The successful candidate should be very JUNK BE GONE before contracting with modified a c crual a c c ounting s y stem; detail oriented, able to meet daily deadlines, the business. Persons andconvenience- everyitemis I Haul Away FREE Bachelor's degree from an accredited college exercise excellent organizational skills and doing lan d scape justa phone call away. For Salvage. Also or university with major course work in thrive in a f a st-paced work environment. Cleanups 8 Cleanouts maintenance do not T he Cl a ssi f i e d S ec ti o ni s ea s y accounting, finance or business administration; Should also be able to maintain a strict level of r equire an LC B l i Mel, 541-389-8107 and supervisory experience required. Salary professionalism and contribute to an environcense. to use.Everyitemis categorized range is $4,817 - $6,433/month plus excellent ment of teamwork within the department. Pre andeverycategoryisindexedon benefits. employment drug testing is required. the sectioi'sfrontpage. Handyman Applications are available at Please e-mail your resume to Whetheryouarelookingfor ahome I DO THAT! Get on the list now for www.pendleton.or.us/employment or at City JbrandtObendbulletin.com or need aservice, yourfutureisin Home/Rental repairs Weekly Serviceand Hall, 500 SW Dorion, Pendleton OR 97801 or Small jobs to remodels Spring Clean-ups! the pages of TheBulletin Classfied. by calling 966-0201. Closingdate is March No phone calls please. Honest, guaranteed Free estimates! 3, 2015. The City of Pendleton is an Equal work. CCB¹151573 COLLINS Lawn Maint. The Bulletin Opportunity employer. The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer Semng centraloregonsince rrte Dennis 541-317-9768 Ca/i 541 -480-9714
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
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TH E BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEB 17, 2015
DAILY B R I D G E
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD will sbprtz
C L U B Tuesday,February17,2015
Preemptive action
ACROSS i Soy-based soup s Huge amount io What milk will do if you add lemon juice i4 Diva's number is "Wake Up Little " (Everly Brothers hit) is Diced dish i7 Tounst attraction in Charlottesville
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
"I'm a believer i n fe m i n i ne intuition," a player at my club sighed to me. "My wife can contradict me before I even say anything." My f r i end w a s t o d ay's E a st, d efending a gainst S o uth's f o u r spades, and his wife led the four of clubs. Dummy played the king. "I knew her lead was a singleton," East told me, "so I took the ace and returned theseven. My wife ruffed and cashedthe ace of diamonds, and South took the rest and made his
game.
your right, opens one diamond. What do you say? ANSWER: Expert opinion would vary. To double for takeout would be reasonable,but ifpartner responded in a major suit, the hand would be borderline to continue with a bid of two clubs. Overcall two clubs, getting the five-card suit mentioned and preempting the opponents. If the next player bids two diamonds and two passes follow, reopen with a double. North dealer N-S vulnerable
"When my wife saw my hand, she said we should have beaten the contract. I w a s g o ing t o d e fend myself when she preempted me. She said, 'No, you did NO T h ave to return my lead.'" MUST SHIFT East can see that the defense needs two diamond tricks to have a chance. In case South has the king, East must shift to the ten of diamonds at Trick Two. If South plays the king, West takes the ace andreturns a diamond, and East wins and gives West a club ruff. If instead declarer plays low, West gets aclub ruff and cashes the ace of rhalIlonrls.
DAILY QUESTION
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PUZZLE BY MICHAEL BLAKE
ss Jai ss Ernest nicknamed "The Texas Troubadour" 42 Computer key near Shift 45 One year's record 4s Resident of the so-called "Chicago of Japan"
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Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. ATBT users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/leaming/xwords.
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40 Pest in a swarm 41 Utah city near the Golden Spike
57 Warning from a cll'lve!?
58 Elvis Presley 59 No-frills shelter 60 Hip-hop Dr.
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54 The Gem State
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE:
21 Bochcolegal series 24 Forearm bone
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I T Z A F L R A U I E R R Z C I A M C A T I
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S A A B S R A L L Y S A L O N M T G E E A H T P A C K S T O O Y J A R R A R E S A Z S A T I Z E N O N R B U Z Z M O V I E S W A N N 02/17/15
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By Ga!I Grabowsk! and Bruce Venzke ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
02/17/15
THE BULLETIN• TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
s
I •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
•
s
f e •
•
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land 648
Houses for Rent General
632
Apt./lylultiplex General CHECK YOURAD
based on race, color,
on the first day it runs to make sure it isn core rect. Spellcheck and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad.
634
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
Call for Specials! Limited numbers avail. 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. W/D hookups, patios or decks. MOUNTAIN GLEN, 541-383-9313 Professionally managed by Norris & Stevens, Inc.
RV Parking
Complete RV hook-up near trails & shops in PUBLISHER'S Bend. Winter rates! NOTICE All real estate adver- Call 541-408-0846 for tising in this newspa- more info. per is subject to the F air H o using A c t which makes it illegal EtsnH to a d vertise "any preference, limitation Vee &lh or disc r imination
.00
541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified Senior ApartmentIndependent Living ALL-INCLUSIVE with 3 meals daily Month-to-month lease, check it out! Call 541-233-9914
•
738
771
Multiplexes for Sale
Lots
West side 10 units near old Mill, owner carry for qualified principals only. Broker, 541-480-9947
Awbrey Butte Aa acre lot with Cascade Mtn. views, 3275 NW Horizon Dr. $289,900.
744
775
Open Houses
Nlanufactured/ Mobile Homes
Homes for Sale
NOTICE
541-385-5809
®
All real estate adver:e. tised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reli850 gion, sex, handicap, familial status or naSnowmobiles tional origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of 4-place enclosed Interthis law. All persons state snowmobile trailer are hereby informed w/ RockyMountain pkg, that all dwellings ad- $8500. 541-379-3530 vertised are available YAMAHA 700 2000 on an equal opportu- 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 nity basis. The Bulle- Polaris Fusion 900, tin Classified only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom 747 skis, n e w rid e -on Southwest Bend Homes r ide-off t r ailer w i t h spare, + much more. Broken Top Town home! $6,995. Call for de2003, 2-story, 2310 sq ft. tails. 541-420-6215 Enjoy 3 pnvate suites w/own bath, library, office, 860 large private wood deck. Comfy, quiet, conven- II!otorcycles & Accessories ient! Call to schedule showing: Sam Rawlins, Broker, Rim Rock Investments, 541-620-4242
00
'ppo o
religion, sex, handicap, familial status, marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any such pre f erence, limitation or discrimi- Commercial/Investment nation." Familial sta- • Properties for Sale tus includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or HIGH PROFILE legal cus t odians, LOCATION IN pregnant women, and DOWNTOWN people securing cusREDMOND tody of children under This commercial 18. This newspaper building offers exwill not knowingly accellent exposure cept any advertising along desirable NW for real estate which is 6th Street. in violation of the law. Currently housing O ur r e aders a r e The Redmond hereby informed that Spokesman newsall dwellings adverpaper offices, the tised in this newspa- 2,748 sq. ft. space is per are available on perfect for an equal opportunity owner/user. Two basis. To complain of private offices and d iscrimination ca l l generous open HUD t o l l-free at spaces. Three 1-800-877-0246. The parking places in toll f ree t e lephone back + street parknumber for the hearing. $259,000. ing im p aired is 1-800-927-9275. Call Graham Dent 541-383-2444 People Look for Information COMPASS About Products and Commercial services Every oay through The Bulletin classirreda
750
Redmond Homes
Harley Davidson
Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
870
Motorcycles & Accessories Boats & Accessories
Call 714-510-7388
Nearly New Home, SE Bend, c ul - de-sac, List Your Home quiet neighborhood, JandMHomes.com stainless appl., t i le We Have Buyers counters, upgraded Get Top Dollar cabinets & pantry, gas Financing Available. fireplace in f a mily 541-548-5511 room, huge master & bath w/dbl sinks & Need to get an soaking tub. 4/2.5 + bonus room, 2 192 ad in ASAP? sq.ft. $318,900. You can place it Rick Coffin, Broker online at: Holiday Realty 541-410-9930 www.bendbulletin.com 745
860
2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance 8 Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance & Hines
fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $10,500OBO. Call Today 541-516-8684
Harley Davidson 883 Sportster 1998, 20,200 miles,
exc. cond.,
$3,500.
541-548-2872.
Harley Dyna Wide Glide 2003 custom paint, extras, 13,000 orig miles, like new, health forces sale. Sacrifice $10,000 obo. 541-633-7856.
Harle Fat Bo 2002
ds published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809
he Bulletin
Serein Central Ore on since 1903
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio & Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-548-0345.
14k orig. miles.. Excellent cond. Vance & Hines exhaust, 5 spoke HD rims, wind vest, 12e rise handle bars, detachable luggage rack w/ back rest, hwy pegs & many chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! $10,500. InCRRarea call 530-957-1865
875
Watercraft ds published in eWa
tercraft" include: Kay aks, rafts and motor Ized personal watercrafts. Fo "boats" please se Class 870.
880
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $'I 5,000 541-548-4807 870
Boats & Accessories
$21,995.
541-383-3503 The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting your needs.
Call on one of the professionals today!
Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-81 5-2523
Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m i les. Wintered in h eated shop. $79,995 obo. 541-447-8664
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow package, $66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wrangler tow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual, $1 1,000 541-815-6319
REDUCED! 2007 Wtnnebago
Outlook Class "C" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater excellent condition, more extras. Asking $54K. Ph. 541 -447-9268
t
17.5' Seaswirl 2002
2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804
Beaver Marquis, 1993 40-ft, Brunswick floor plan. Many extras, well maintained, fire suppression behind refrig, Stow Master 5000 tow bar,
41-385-5809
Motorhomes
880
Motorhomes RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
The Bulletin
HDFatBo 1996
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat
880
Motor h o mes
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000.
24' Mercedes Benz 541-350-4077 Prism, 2015 Model G, Mercedes Diesel engine, 18+ mpg, auto trans, fully loaded with double-expando, and only 5200 miles. Perfect condition only $92K. Call 541-526-1201 HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 or see at: 3404 Dogwood Ave., 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, in Redmond. workhorse Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEYI/ TIRES 2 slides Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, Allegro 32' 2007, like was $121,060 new; now, new, only 12,600 miles. $35,900. 541 536-1008 Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-leveling system, 5kw gen, power mirrors w/defrost, 2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driver door JAYCO 1993 27' w/power window, cruise, 50k miles, excellent exhaust brake, central condition. $9300 obo. vac, satellite sys. Asking 541-573-7'I 31 $67,500. 503-781-8812
Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean! Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179 FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME INTHE BULLETIN
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