Bulletin Daily Paper 02-17-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75

MONDAY hbruary17, 2014

cenes rom iner es in en LOCAL• A7, SPORTS• B1

k'-

bendbulletin.com H I G H

Progress made, progress lost in fight against AIDS

D E S E R T

How changing

autism treatment has changed lives

e

Healthy Living in Central Oregon

Winter/Spring 2014 Issue

Plus: Vegetable-based milk alternatives

compared

Earbuds that can make a workout a little more upbeat

Inside today's Bulletin. Also online at www.bendbulletin.com/pulse

TODAY'S READERBOARD

WATER

Bend to

Olymplcs — winningthe

Olt', price

bronze, BodeMiller talks about how it mattered. B1

for filter system

Trophy sculpturesBend resident's creations for golfers have turned headsfor years. B1

Magnet schools — After falling off the radar, public schools with a particular focus are gaining popularity again.

By Sheila G. Miller

• His family also makes a plea for moreawarenessand outreach for teen suicide

The Bulletin

The Bend City Coun-

cil is expected to approve aguaranteedmaximum price of just under $24 million for the construction of the membrane

AS

DOgmythS — A guilty-lookingpoochmightnothavedone anything wrong. A3

water treatment plant as-

sociated with the Bridge Creekwater project. The price would be

ln world news — In In-

an amendment to the

donesia, Kerry calls climate change aweapon of massdestruction, derides skeptics. A2

construction manager/ general contractor contract with M.A. Mortenson Construction that

was originally signed in April 2011. The membrane fil-

And a WedexclusiveA circle of LBJ's family and friends plans apush to refurbish his presidential legacy. beuttbulletiu.cum/extras

tration system at the

Outback facility would

' u.

allow the city to treat

h' •

water forcryptosporidium, a microorganism

I

that can cause illness.

EDITOR'5CHOICE

A social scientist helps guide Intel's path

City officials have debated for several years how best to treat water that comes to the facil-

tty from Bndge Creek. Bend and other cities are

facing a federal deadline to treat surface water !

CD

Joe Kiine/The Bulletin

Sunday eveningatBend High School.

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

Behind the gray, noise-absorbing cubide walls at the

Abigail Leyes gave an emotional plea at a public memorial for her brother Sunday night, nine days after he killed

sense her arrival.

himself in a

Reverberatingdownthe hall comes an emphatic

classroom

carpet. And then, Genevieve

Bell, an anthropologist who is Intel's resident tech intellectual, materializes-

auburn-haired, big-ringed, trailing clouds of Chloe perfume. She may still see herself as "just a feral kid from Australia." But for Intel, she per-

The Leyes family has set up amemorial scholarship fund with the Central OregonCommunity College Foundation. Thescholarship will help BendHigh School students interested in pursuing technical trades. Tocontribute, send donations to the COCC Foundati on,2600N.W.CollegeWay,Bend,OR97701.Todonate online go to http://j.mp/Mr9VMz.

Zachary Leyes

his hunting rifle in an Amer-

after the lockdown was over.

When she did she found she had a text from her older service. It read: "I am sorry, but I

am not coming home. I love you very much. Goodbye."

School auditorium. The

crowd included more than 30

else with the gun he brought

She urged anyone struggling or keeping something painful to themselves to reach out to those around

of his relatives, as well as his fellow students, Bend Police

onto campus. The suicide,

them, to those they love and

Fire Department firefighters. Zack, 17, killed himself

just after noon — in a modular classroom — prompted the lockdown of Bend High for more than two hours on a snowy Friday. Many of the

Feb. 7 with a single shot from

students that day contacted

those who love them. More than 400 people

day and didn't turn it on until

ican Sign Language class-

she said. "He didn't tell us the truth."

Sheriff's deputies and Bend

turned off her phone that

brother, she told the audience at the public memorial room. Police have said Zack didn't intend to hurt anyone

officers, Deschutes County

sage to check in while the campus was closed. Abby happened to have

Tears flowed around Bend

a personal banker at a Wells Fargo & Co.

he will be defined as who he

branch in Vienna, Va.

is and not what he did."

On weekends, he sells coffee machines and occasionally goes to area farms to shear sheep.

See Memorial /A5

at Intel Labs, the company's research arm. She runs a

By Sam Dolnick

skunk works of some 100

New York Times News Service

social scientists and designers who travel the globe, observinghow people use technologyintheir homes and inpublic. The team's findings help inform the company's product development process and are also

KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia — Late last week, a senior adviser to the Sochi Olym-

goods. See Intel /A4

Brown, 34, works as

"Around here the

An Olympic crisis averted with tons of salt

Intel processors in their

WASHINGTON-

said she had to speak about the brother she loved "so that

of user experience research

makers, automakers and other companies that embed

By Kasia Klimasinska Bloomberg News

During the week, Jesse

Bell's title at Intel, the

often shared with the laptop

2nd jobs get more common

High auditorium as Abby spoke about her brother. She

sonifies something grander: the company's aspirations tobe regarded as morethan just a chip maker. world's largestproducer of semiconductors, is director

received an extension until October 2014.

their parents via text mes-

Nemorial scholarshiiI

at their high school. "My brother were at the public memorial is deadbecause for Zachary Leyes on Sunhewa s silent," day night in the Bend High

Australian voice and the

rhythmic thwack-thwack of pointy-heeled boots on

the water by 2012, but it See Water /A4

New York Times News Service

researchers who forecast the future of computing can

for cryptosporidium; originally Bend was supposed to start treating

/

Bella Monical, center, watches as Hailey Kristiansen writes a note with some memories of Zachary Leyes during a memorial service

By Natasha Singer

Intel Corp. in Hillsboro,

n

C

pics convened an emergency meeting with top winter sports officials at the Park Inn hotel in

Chance of rain High 46, Low31 Page B10

shares a townhouse

near Washington in Annandale, Va., with as many as three house-

the Alpine village here. A situation had grown dire. It was not security, attendance or doping that was the prob-

had told Sochi officials that the

organizers had not listened.

Alpine skiing events required more than 19 tons of salt, a

lem. It was salt.

sports officials who want to melt soft snow so it can re-

Now, with 10 days of competition remaining, many of the games' signature events were in jeopardy of being compromised, and perhaps even

mates, and helps support his five-year-old daughter. He says he is "trying to make ends

freeze into a hard surface.

canceled.

as well." See Moonlighting /A5

Four monthsearlier,Hans Pieren, one ofthe worl d'slead-

ing experts on salt and snow,

TODAY'S WEATHER <» @>

cost of living is pretty high," says Brown, who

crucial ingredient for winter

But to their great regret, the

INDEX Calendar A7 Crosswords Classified Cf - 6 D ear Abby Comics/Pu zzles C3-4 Horoscope

C4 Local/State A 7-8 SportsMonday Bf-10 A9 Movies A9 Tee to Green B8-9 A9 Nation/World A 2 T elevision A9

See Salt/A4

The Bulletin AnIndependent Newspaper

Vol. 112, No. 48,

82 pages, 4 sections 0

meet and save for her

Q I/i/e userecyclednewsprint

IIIIIIIIIIIIII 88267 02329


A2

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

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NATION Ee ORLD

e w arns on c ima e By Simon Denyer

ideologues." They argue the West caused He was addressing a group the problem and should fix it.

The Washington Post

JAKARTA, I n donesia Secretaryof State John Kerry,

calling climate change perhaps the world's most fear-

of students and government

But Kerry, who has spent

officials at an American cultural center in the Indonesian

much of his long political career calling for more action

capital, Jakarta, in a country

on the issue, said that every

and region that he said were country needed to play a role tion, urged developing nations "on the front lines of climate in cleanerenergy orthe world on Sunday to do more to cut change" and some of the most would face a calamitous fugreenhouse-gas emissions as vulnerable to the effects of ture, calling climate change he derided climate-change global warming. "It's not an "perhaps the world's most skeptics at home and blamed exaggeration to say that the fearsome weapon of mass big companies for hijacking entire way of life here is at destruction." "It's absolutely true that inthe debate. risk," he said. Kerry painted a picture of Global efforts t o c o u nt- dustrialized countries have to looming drought and famine, er climate change have long play a leading role in reducing massive floods and deadly foundered on a sharp divide emissions, but t hat d oesn't storms as a result of global between developed and de- mean other nations have the warming, and he urged ordi- veloping nations. Although right to repeat the mistakes nary citizens in developing na- developing nations now ac- of the past. It's not enough tions to speak out on the issue count for more than half of for one country or even a few and demand more from their greenhouse-gas emissions, countries to reduce emissions political leaders. He labeled they have been reluctant to when other countries continue those whodenied the evidence commit to meaningful cuts as to fill the atmosphere with carof climate change as "shod- they seek a path to Western in- bon pollution as they see fit," dy scientists and extreme dustrialization and prosperity. he said. some weapon of mass destruc-

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Uganda anti-gay bill —President BarackObamaon Sunday condemned ameasure to criminalize homosexuality in Uganda, publicly warning the country's president that such discrimination could harm its relationship with the United States. President Yoweri Museveni of Ugandasignaled Friday that he was likely to sign a bill that would punish "the promotion or recognition" of same-sex relations with up to life in prison. The bill, Obamasaid, "will be more than an affront and a danger to the gaycommunity in Uganda."

Abbas speaks —The Palestinian president on Sundayreassured a group of young Israeli activists visiting his WestBankcompound that he has nointention of flooding Israel with Palestinian refugees —his most ambitious attemptyet to directly influence Israeli public opinion over the headsof a largely hard-line Israeli leadership. President Mahmoud Abbasmadea series of conciliatory statements onsomeof the most sensitive issues inpeacetalks, including alleged Palestinian incitement against Israel andrecognition of Jewish suffering in the Holocaust, as hesought to rally support for U.S.-backed peaceefforts.

TALK TO AN EDITOR

TALK TO A REPORTER

with her newlywed husbandwith killing a manthey metthrough Craigslist admitted to the slaying in ajailhouse interview with a newspaper and said shehas killed more than 20 other peopleacross the country, claims police said theyare investigating. In an interview with The Daily Item in Sunbury, 19-year-old MirandaBarbour said shewants to plead guilty to killing Troy LaFerrara in November.Shealso said in the interview shehas killed at least 22 other people from Alaska to North Carolina in the last six years aspart of her involvement in asatanic cult. Sunbury police Chief SteveMazzeotold the newspaper that investigators wereaware of Miranda Barbour's claims of involvement in other murders. Hesaid they are""seriously concerned" and have contacted police in other jurisdictions.

DrOne baSeS —TheObamaadministration is making contingency plans to use air bases inCentral Asia to conduct drone missile attacks in northwest Pakistan in casethe White House is forced to withdraw all U.S. forces from Afghanistan at the end of this year, according to U.S. officials and reported by theTribune Washington Bureau. But even if alternative basesaresecured, the officials said, the CIA's capability to gather sufficient intelligence to find al-Qaida operatives and quickly launch drone missiles at specific targets in Pakistan's mountainous tribal region will be greatly diminished if the spyagency loses its drone bases inAfghanistan.

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Craigeliet killing SuSpeCt — APennsylvania womancharged

Mine reSCue —Emergencycrews in South Africa rescued11 miners who weretrappedwhile working illegally in anabandoned gold mine nearJohannesburg on Sunday,but other miners decided tostay underground to avoid beingarrested, emergencyworkers said. More than 200 miners wereinitially believed to beinside themine, basedon estimates from thosewho hadbeentrapped. It was unclear howmany people remained inthe mineSunday night, but emergency crewssaid they had left a ladderandthat the miners could exit safely at anytime.

PROTESTERSVACATE KIEV CITY HALL

Si sil.AvL

Syria talks —Secretary of State John Kerry issued a statement Sunday night that blamedthe Syrian government for the deadlock in peace talks but asserted that the United States remained "committed to the Genevaprocess." Kerry's statement followed two rounds of generally fruitless discussions during which theSyrian government continued its attacks on rebel-held areaswith weapons known asbarrel bombs, and asmorethan 200,000 Syrians remained cut off from humanitarian assistance. Themainaim of Kerry's statement appeared to be to keep upthe pressure on President Bashar Assad andto keep alive the hopethat apolitical settlement might eventually be reached.

— From wire reports

Sergei Chuzavkov/The Associated Press

Opposition supporters shout slogans Sundayduring a rally in Independence Square in Kiev,Ukraine. Anti-government demonstrators in Ukraine's capital endedtheir nearly three-month occupation of Kiev City Hall on Sunday aspromised in exchange for the release of all 234 jailed protesters. But tensions remainedhigh ashundreds stayedoutside the building, vowing to retake it if thegovernmentfailed to drop all charges against the protesters. Latethat night, after a meeting with opposition leaders, Prosecutor GeneralViktor Pshonkasaid the criminal caseswould be closed today. Prospects for an easing of the standoff between theopposition and President Viktor Yanukovych, however, werestill unclear. Yanukovych is expected to nominate anewprime minister in the near future, andWestern officials havebeenadvocating for a coalition government drawn from the ruling party and the opposition. However, opposition leader Arseniy Yatsenyuk said hewill not agree to take the post, which Yanukovych offered him last month, unless the president makes further concessions, including a constitutional reform that reduces presidential powers.

r II I

— The Associated Press

South I(orean tourists

Jljll(IETS IIPANTS

' Iri,

}

I

killed in Sinaibombing By Hamza Hendawi The Associated Press

CAIRO — An explosion

HEj."M ETS• GorIILEiS iS i S • GLOIVE ~POILE

eign currency revenue, has been badly hit by the deadly turmoil that has roiled the

tore through a bus filled with South Korean sightseers in the

country since the 2011 revolt

killing at least four people and raising fears that Islamic militants have renewed a bloody campaign to wreck Egypt's tourism industry. The bombing near the tip of

Sunday's blast came as signs of a slow recovery in the industrywere emerging, especially at Red Sea resorts in Sinai like Sharm el-Sheik.

the Red Sea's Gulf of Aqaba

Egypt is that this takes the

was the first attack against tourists in Sinai in nearly a

tourism industry and devastatesitfor years into the fu-

decade.

ture," said Jon Alterman, di-

There was no immediate claim of responsibility. But the

rector of the Middle East Program at the Center for Strate-

blast bore the hallmarks of

gic and International Studies in Washington. Egyptian security officials said they believe the blast was

iI

that overthrew ruler Hosni Sinai Peninsula on Sunday, Mubarak.

attacks blamed on the al-Qaida-linked militant groups that have been battling government forces in Sinai's restive north for years. At least three South Kore-

an tourists were killed and 12 seriously wounded, according to Egyptian security officials. The Egyptian bus driver was also among the dead, the officials said. "I am deeply saddened by

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"The sad consequence for

as years inven ory

caused by either a car bomb or

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a roadside bomb that was detonated by remote control. R escue w o r k er s

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the remains of four and perhaps five people, according

I

to Khaled Abu Hashem, the

head of ambulance servicesin southern Sinai. In Seoul, the foreign ministhe incident," Tourism Minis- try said in a text message that ter Hesham Zazou told state 31 passengers from a church TV. The Egyptian presidency in Jincheonwere being led by called the attack a "despicable a South Korean tour guide. act of cowardice" and vowed Two of its citizens were killed to bring the culprits to justice. and nine wounded, the minisEgypt's vital tourism sector, try added. which normally accounts for T he discrepancy in t h e about 11 percent of the econ- death toll could not immediomy and 20 percent of all for- atelybe reconciled.

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Prices not applicable to prior sales.

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311 SWCENTURY DR.,HQURs 8AM-7PM, BEND 54'1-389-6234


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Monday, Feb.17, the48th day of 2014. Thereare317 days left in the year.This is Presidents Day.

After winding o y, texts from Tibet findhome inChina

HAPPENINGS ELIN —Financeministers from the18 nations that usethe euro currency meet todiscuss plans for a bankingunion,with wider talks taking placeTuesday. OlymyiCS —NBCsaysBob Costas will return as host of the network's prime-time telecast after missing a weekdue to a stubborn eye infection.

HISTORY Highlight:In1864, during the Civil War, the Union ship USS Housatoni cwasrammed and sunk in Charleston Harbor, S.C., by the Confederate handcranked submarine HLHunley, which also sank. In1863, the International Red Cross was founded inGeneva. In1865,Columbia, S.C., burned as theConfederates evacuated andUnion forces moved in. (It's not clear which side set the blaze.) In1897, the forerunner of the National PTA,the National Congress of Mothers, convened its first meeting in Washington. In1904, the original two-act version of Giacomo Puccini's opera "MadamaButterfly" received a poor reception at its premiere at LaScala in Milan, Italy. In1913,the Armory Show, a landmark modern art exhibit, opened in NewYork City. In1933, Newsweekmagazine was first published byThomas J.C. Martyn under the title "News-Week." In1944, during World War II, U.S. forces invadedEniwetok Atoll, encountering little initial resistance from Imperial Japanese troops. (TheAmericans secured the atoll less than a week later.) In1947, the Voice of America began broadcasting to the Soviet Union. In1959, the United States

launched Vanguard 2, asatellite which carried meteorological equipment. In1964, the SupremeCourt, in Wesberry v. Sanders, ruled that congressional districts within each state had to be roughly equal in population. In1972, President Richard M. Nixon departed theWhite House with his wife, Pat, on a historic trip to China. In1988, Lt. Col. William Higgins, a MarineCorps officer serving with a United Nations truce monitoring group, was kidnapped in southern Lebanon by Iranian-backed terrorists (he was later slain by his captors). Ten years age:John Kerry won the Wisconsin Democratic presidential primary, with John Edwards placing second and Howard Deancoming in a distant third. Cingular Wireless agreed to paynearly $41 billion in cash to buyAT&TWireless Services. Five years a9e:President Barack Obamasigned a mammoth, $787 billion economic stimulus package into law in Denver; he also approvedadding some 17,000U.S.troops for the war in Afghanistan. One year a9e:Danica Patrick won the Daytona 500 pole, becoming the first woman to secure the top spot for any Sprint Cup race. (Patrick covered the2~/~-mile Superspeedway in 45.817seconds, averaging 196.434 mph.) Mindy McCready, 37,who'd hit the top of U.S. country music charts before personal problems sidetracked hercareer, died by her ownhand in Heber Springs, Ark.

BIRTHDAYS Football Hall-of-Famer Jim Brown is 78. Actress Rene Russo is 60. Actor Lou Diamond Phillips is 52. Basketball Hall of FamerMichael Jordan is 51. Actor-comedian Larry, the Cable Guy is51. Movie director Michael Bay is50. Olympic gold and silver medal skier Tommy Moe is44. TV personality Paris Hilton is 33. Actor Joseph Gordon-Levitt is 33. — From wire reports

HISTORY

MISCONCEPTIONS

p'r lritilfiiil l il('ii i From alpha behavior to that guilty look when you walk in the door, it might not mean what you

ilr -"':-",

think. By Alexandra Horowitz

icant differences between the

Special to The Washington Post

species. For instance, wolves

t'~ fl

I,gi

Why is America fascinated use eye contact as a threat, by dog shows? The Westmin- whereas domestic dogs make ster Kennel Club show, held at

1 "

captive in a small endosure. In

Many well-bred purebreds the mid-20th century, animal have genetic disorders that no behaviorist Rudolph Schenkel one hoped for or expected. For instance, tomeetthebreedstan-

determined that these wolves

is so altered that it cannot mate

take over the alpha position.

established ahierarchyinwhich dards, pugs and bulldogs have certain individuals ate and matbeen bred to have squat heads, ed first, and he suggested that which severely restrict breath- other members of the youp ing. The English bulldog's body were in a perpetual struggle to or deliver puppies without hu-

But wolf behavior in prison-

man intervention. The ridge

like conditions doesn't extend that gives the Rhodesian ridge- to wolves in the wild — or to

back it s name often co-occurs with a neural tube defect.

dogs. Researchers have found that wild wolf packs are typically family groups. The parents are in charge, but only in the same way that I am in charge of my son. My son doesn't try to overthrow me, nor do younger

These are the unavoidable results of breeding individuals from a small, closed gene stock. They can be corrected by breeding outside the linewhich might betray the princi- wolves try to overthrow their ples of abreed standard, but the parents.Studies of free-rangdogs wouldbebetter for it. ing dogs have found that they don't form strict dominance hi-

You know what you're • getting when you get a purebred dog. This is the sort of thing people sometimes say to explain why they want a pedigreed

erarchies, either.They do stay together, but they don't hunt cooperatively like wolves do. It makes sense to be a leader for your dog insofar as you

dog rather than a mixed breed. And it's true that the breed

But trying to dominate your dog, lest he dominate you, is like taking a parenting lesson from"Lord of the Flies."

2

standards encourage the perpetuation of lines of dogs with particular characteristics. According to the American Kennel Club, the golden retriever

make your expectations clear.

You can tell your dog is

5 • guilty as soon as you

is supposed to be "friendly, reli- walk in the door. able, and trustworthy," the pooMany people believe that dle "intelligent," the Rottweiler dogs feel guilty for doing "self-confident." something wrong and that we But some people treat the can tell this from their body AKC's listing of dog breeds and language. their characteristics as a cataThe problem is, the "guilty logue. They comparison-shop look" is not what it seems. A dog one breed'sfeatures against may plaster his ears against his another's, and they forget that head, turn away, wag his tail dogs are not fixed products. lowbetweenhis legs orjust take As with people andeveryother offwhen accused ofa mi sdeed. animal, the genome interacts But in research I did where with the environment to create owners confronted dogs both the individual. A timid golden guilty and innocent of eating retriever puppy who gets out a forbidden treat, I found one of a fearful encounter by biting clear result: The "look" hapcouldlearntobecome aregular pened most when dogs saw biter of anyone who approach- scolding, questioning or angry es suddenly. owners, whether the dog was No one should get a dog guilty or not. Later work replibased onbreed specs alone. catedthis finding. And separate Dogs are the domesti• ceted descendants of wolves. The contemporary gray wolf, Canis lupus, is indeed the cousin of the domestic dog. But

ate to look at wolf behavior to

understand dog behavior, and vice versa. Yet there are signif-

who felt the documents should be returned to China.

guages, spent much of his life been lost or destroyed. Many working for the Library of CHENGDU, China had been hidden by Tibetan Congress. His interest in TiDecades ago, the thou- monks during the Cultural betan literature was aroused sands of Tibetan-language Revolution, when B uddhist by an encounter with a Budbooks now ensconced in monasteries, religious stat- dhist lama, Deshung Rina lavishly decorated li- ues and sacred texts were poche, who was among two brary in southwest China systematically destroyed. dozen exiled Tibetans flown might have ended up in In November, robed monks to the United States by the a raging bonfire. During from the Dongkar Monas- R ockefeller Foundation i n the tumultuous decade of tery in western Sichuan ar- 1960, shortly after a failed the Cultural Revolution, rived with a yellowing collec- uprising in Lhasa prompted a which ended in 1976, Red tion of 300-year-old texts that fierce crackdown by Chinese Guard zealotsdestroyed had never been published. troops. anything deemed "feu- S crawled in c i n nabar a n d After converting to B uddal." But a n A m e r i can black ink, the manuscripts, dhism, Smith found his studs cholar, galvanized i n detailing the tantric rituals ies stymied by the paucity of part by those rampages, of Buddhist deities, were cop- Tibetan texts. He moved to embarked on a mission ies of 15th-century texts. The India and began a 25-year to collect and preserve monks stayed for five weeks quest to find Tibetan books, the remnants of Tibetan while a r c h ivists s c a nned many of them smuggled out culture. 6,000 pages, then returned by refugees who had trekked The resulting trove of home carrying their beloved over the Himalayas. 12,000 works, many gath- texts and a single CD-ROM Using money from a U.S. ered from Tibetan ref- of digital copies. They vowed g overnment program, h e ugees, recently ended a to return w it h seven more printed thousands of rare decades-long odyssey that volumes. texts that were later distribbrought them to a new liPainted to resemble a la- uted to libraries and scholbrary on the campus of masery, the library contains ars around the world. Smith the Southwest University thousands of t r avelogues, invariably kept one copy of for Nationalities here in biographies and m e dical each print run, forming a Chengdu. t reatises that bear o nl y a collection that took over his Despite Beijing's tight passing resemblance to Cambridge, Mass., home and control of Tibetan schol- Western-style books. Most eventually filled two trailarship, t h e co l l ection's were printed using hand- ers. In 2007, to the dismay of donor, E. Gene Smith, incarved wood blocks, and several American universisisted that the books be their unbound pages are con- ties that coveted the books, shipped here from their tained between boards, then Smith bequeathed his collectemporary home in New wrapped in brightly colored tion to the Southwest UniverYork because, as he told fabric. sity for Nationalities. But a friends, "they came from The books are displayed few months later, after deadAsia, and Asia is where horizontally behind glass ly ethnic rioting i n L h asa, they belong." Just to be doors, giving the reading university officials suspendsafe, he created a backup rooms the feel of a museum. ed the project. digital copy of every text. The texts are a treasure-trove Officials eventually In October, after a long for scholars seeking to trace opened the center, creating delay imposed by the proj- the evolution of dharma, the the nation's pre-eminent cenect's Chinese partners, teachings of th e Buddha, ter for Tibetan literature. But school officials here qui- from the origins of Buddhism they appear to be reluctant to etly opened the document in India in the fifth century promote it. During a recent preservation o p eration B.C. to its flowering in Tibet, visit, Tibetan students comalongside a huge library China and Mongolia. plained that the doors of the bearing Smith's name. Leonard van der Kuijp, library were often locked, but "This is a gem that Gene a professor of Tibetan and they said they were thrilled thought should be shared H imalayan studies at H a r - about its existence. "This is our culture; this is with th e w h ol e w o r ld," vard, said many of the newly said Greg Beier, chief discovered works were the our heritage," Puchor, a stufundraiser for the Tibetan only known versions. He said dent who like many Tibetans Buddhist Resource Cen- recent finds had yielded for- uses only one name, said after, the American organi- gotten details about a wife of ter touring the library. "We zation that Smith helped Kublai Khan, the 13th-cen- need to learn about our patricreate. tury Mongolian ruler who mony and then protect it for The tale of how Smith, founded the Yuan dynasty in future generations." who died in 2010, amassed China, and the journeys of a the world's largest private 19th-century Tibetan statescollection of Tibetan liter- man who traveled from LhaLittle ad ature and then sought to sa to call on the Qing dynasreturn the books to Chi- ty emperor in Beijing. "There is a magical trajecna is just one strand of a story that traces the tem-

which fill the gaps in Indian and Chinese intellectual the throes of an existen- history," van der Kuijp said. tial struggle. These days, "It's like a larger mosaic with though, it is the assimila- missing pieces that are slowtionist policies favoring ly being filled m." China's ethnic Han majorSmith, a lapsed Mormon ity that are the cause for from Utah who spoke 32 lan-

Advanced Technology

25% to 40/o

concern. That the collection was

dom chance — when asked to

a source of national pride

guess, by looking at their dogs, ifthe dogs had transgressed in

but also unease, given the aspirations many T i b et-

their absence.

ans hold for greater auton-

— Horowitzis the principal investigator in the dog cognition lab at Barnard University and the authorof"OnLooking"and "Inside of aDog."

BIG savings!

tory in many of these works,

pestuous recent history of a people who remain in

conflicted attitude toward Tibetan culture, which is

for whatever it is you think

t hat scholars thought h a d

New York Times News Service

are right only 50 percent of the time — the equivalent of ran-

I did." We don't yet know from which they both evolved whether dogs feel guilt, but we tensofthousands ofyearsago. shouldn't assume that they do. In some cases it is appropri-

By Andrew Jacobs

research has found that owners

The "guilty look" would be the former. Allthe evidence, ge- better called the "submissive netic and otherwise, points to a look," as in, "Don't punish me

The distinction is important.

academic

Gilles Sabrie New York Times News Service

first enthusiastically accepted by China and then put on ice reflects Beijing's

the latter did not descend from shared ancestor: some ancient wolflike animal, now extinct,

largest private collection of Tibetan literature, is the life's work of an American

eye contact with people in a

Madison Square Garden last way that encourages our feelweek, attracted millions of tele- ing of mutual understanding. vision viewers, and that could With so many years of evobe because it blends the novel lution between them, we can and the familiar. Spectators be sure that no dog, let out of may goggle at unusual breeds, the house, is going to "return" such as the proud, long-eared to being a wolf — nor would treeing Walker coonhound or its offspring, nor its offspring's the shepherding puli, nearly offspring. hidden by its heavy dreadlocked coat. At the same time, You need to be the alpha we all have experience with • with your dog. dogs and a sense that we unPerhaps the most influential derstand them. Some of our tenet of the Dog Whisperer, Cecommonly held beliefs, though, sar Millan, is the notion that in deserve reexamination. the dog-owner relationship, the ownerneedstobetheleaderof Best in show" is the best the pack. Ignore this principle, • breed all around. proponents say, and the dog in Since the Westminster Ken- your house will try to displace nel Club was formed in 1877, its you as the pack's alpha. mission has been to "increase But this conception of "pack" the interest in dogs, andthus im- and "alpha" is inapplicable to prove the breeds." Certainly, in- dogs and humans. The idea is t erest in dogs has in~ ov e r rooted in legitimate research the past 137 years. But the effort — but the condusions of that to improve breeds has created a research hold only for the study problem The"bestin show" and population: wolves, most of the runners-up may not be the them adolescent males, held healthiest dogbreeds out there.

The E. Gene Smith Library, the world's

omy. In recent years, those

yearnings have curdled into despair, prompting a wave of self-immolations in predominantly Tibetan

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

Water Continued fromA1 In 2009, a consultant who

conducted a feasibility study on the issue told the City Council a membrane filtration

Intel

then, eventually, by widespread

of that project, which has been delayed by federal lawsuits, include replacingtwo agingpipes that span from the watershed

Continued fromA1 Some years ago, for in-

ry of home electrification and of passenger cars. Even the

at Bridge Creek to the Outback facility near '11tmalo Creek,

viewed parents in China who regarded home computers as

works for years. Other aspects

system was the best option for with a new single pipe. On FriBend. The council voted 5-2 day a federal judge declined in December 2010 to build a membrane filtration plant. But

to issue an injunction on the

pipeline work. Central Oregon

in February 2013, councilors LandWatch and WaterWatch voted 4-3 to re-examine the filed a lawsuit in November artype of treatment facility to guing the U.S. Forest Service build, and a citizen commit- had not properly considered tee researched the issue. The

the project's environmental im-

stance, Bell's team

adoption. That was the trajectoi n ter-

1950s introduction of the Prin-

cess rotary phone, marketed to teenage girls for use in their bedrooms, Bell says, prompted concerns like, "Would it lead to

distractions fmm their chil-

dren's schoolwork Intel developed a prototype "China Home Learning PC," eventually manufactured by an Intel

licentious phone calls?"

Lately, Bell has been reflecting on a more contemporary issue: anxiety over the possibility of intelligent, sensate computers that might take on a life of their

customer, with a key that par-

ents could activate to prevent their children from playing online games during home-

own. In 1818, she notes, the

council voted again in Decem- pacts when it granted the city ber to go with the membrane a permit to begin construction filtration system. on the project. Adding the membrane treatThe new membrane water ment plant at the Outback fa- treatment facility is slated to cility is one piece of a larger be complete by July 31, 2015. $68 million Bridge Creek wa— Reporter: 541-617-7831,

worktime. "My mandate at Intel has always been to bring the sto-

Genevieve Bell, center, director of user experience research et ries of everyone outside the Intel Labs, chats with colleagues Tony Salvador, left, end Alexbuilding inside the buildingendre Zefirogiu about e project studying objects stored in cars. and make them count," says They say their research helped Intel and its customers gain e Bell, who considers herself more grounded view of how drivers often usetheir own hend-

that inventions might come to

ter project that has been in the

among the outsiders. "You have to understand people to

says. With the advent of the In-

smiller@bendbulletin.com

build the next generation of technology." ing Olympic athletes who had

Continued fromA1 Tim Gayda, a Canadian consultant who works as a

all be undone because of 5-mil-

spent their lives training for these competitions. But it could limeter grains of salt, or rather,

the lack of them. "They didn't recognize the ganizers, called the meeting Thursday night, according to importance of the salt," Pieren some people who were there. said. "They don't know anyHetoldthe group that the stron- thing about salt." gest kind of salt, the large-grain variety, was simply not avail- Something missing able in Russia. Gayda asked the It was not just the Alpine skigroup an urgent question: Does ing races that were in trouble. anyone know how we can get Pieren fielded frantic calls from 25tons of salt — tonight'? colleagues across the mounFrom there, a confidential in- tain — at cross-country, the ternational mission unspooled halfpipe, Nordic combined. All — a mountaintop "Ocean's 11" were worried about the condi— that just might have prevent- tions. All were in need of salt. ed a major Olympic embarrassProminent athletes began to ment. This Sochi salt accord complain about the conditions. involved a Swiss salt salesman The halfpipe is "pretty hard to working late into the night; a ride," said Shaun White, a U.S. rerouted airplane that may snowboarder and one of the or may not have come from games' biggest stars. "Once evBulgam; a former Olympian eryone gets in there, it just turns turned salt savant; and Rus- tomush." sianspowerfulenough to dear Sochiofficialshadto actswiftmonths of customs bureaucra- ly. When Gayda asked about arcy overnight. ranging an emergency infusion senior adviser to the Sochi or-

It began with Hans Pieren,

52, a ruddy Swiss skier who works as a senior race director

held mobile devices in conjunction with built-in technology.

side of the United States. Bell

and her team are responsible for sussing out the attributes that people everywhere love, or wish they could have, in

their PCs, televisions and so on. Over the last few years,

they have been concentrating on consumers' appetites for hyper-personal technology, likevoice-recognition systems and fitness trackers. In essence, they are pushing Intel toward a more people-centric era of personal computing. Lately, that work has be-

come all themoreimportantto the company. That is because Intel, which has long dominated the laptop processor Geld, was surprisingly slow to acknowledge the burgeoning market for smartphone chips.

offices. Employees were so interested in the images, she recalls, that there were bottlelet them scour his new white necks in the hallways. Volvo SUV. They searched She also discovered that Intel his car methodically from engineers were more welcomthe glove compartment to the ing of naysayers than many trunk, removing each object professors shehadencountered. "At Stanford, they didn't like they found and placing it on a beige shower curtainthat they it when you told the faculty they had spread outnext to his car. were dead wrong, whereas Soon, the plastic curtain was covered with all manner

of tech gear: iPods, calculators, a Bluetooth headset, a collection of CDs and DVDs,

remotecontrols for the car's DVD players, wireless headphones and a detachable GPS system, plus manuals for all of the electronics. There were

also personal items: umbrellas, golf dubs, credit cards, toys, candy, hand sanitizer, a

of salt, Pieren knew where to turn. He called Schweizer Rhe-

pany recently introduced new chips for mobile devices, PC

small Buddha given to Frank by his mother and an anti-slip pad on which the Buddha rested. When they had finished the car excavation, Bell climbed up a stepladder and photographed the spread. As theytraveled from country to country, asking drivers about how they used every object in their cars, the pair developed amessier counter-

In fact, Beii and her team, among others,had forecast

the mobile trend early on, says Diane Bryant, general manager of Intel's data center group, but Intel didn't prioritize it at the time. Although the com-

insalmen, a 160-year-old compa-

makers are still Intel's largest

for FIS, the international ski federation. He discusses the merits

ny near Basel, Switzerland, that sits on the banks of the river for

customerbase,accounting for narrative to the tech-idealized $33 billion of its $52.7billion in version. Although carmakers

of different salt grains with the precision of a jeweler and often carries plastic sandwich bags with grains of salt — fine, medium and large. (He brought all three to a recentinterview) Last September, Pieren made

which it is named. On its web-

revenue last year. Now, attributable in part

a final inspection of the Alpine

trouble.

site, the companydeclares salt"a worldunto itself."

Pieren reached Marcel Plattner, a sales accountant who

works mostly in food-grade salt. Pieren told him he was in

"Not him personally in trouskiing courses and told Sochi organizers that he needed 19 ble, but he told me Sochi didn't tons of salt for the games — 2

have enough salt," Plattner said.

tons of fine-grain salt, 7 tons of medium and, most important, 10 tons of large-grain Himalaya-style salt. This was the heavy-duty salt that sank deep

Pieren was relieved to hear the Swiss company had plenty of big-grain salt in a nearby warehouse; he said Olympic officials would buy 24 tons if it into the snow, lasted longer could be shipped immediately. and would be most effective in At roughly $150 a ton, the bill warm weather. would be more than $3,500. In emphatic but imperfect

Plattner was on a sales call

English, Pieren placed his order with a supermarket chainwhen in a Sept. 29 email to Yves Dimi- Pieren called. He was thrilled to er, the head of Alpine sports for help — he had been watching Sochi's organizing committee. the games andwas afan of win"If the conditions are incredi- ter sports, hockey and skiing ble bad or wears than expected, especially. "I felt bad for the athletes," he we need maybe more salt and have togetmore,"Pieren wrote. Pieren, who competed in Al-

said. "It wasn't their mistake." Once Schweizer Rheinsalin-

pine skiing events at the 1988 en agreed to the sale, the interand 1992 Olympics and now national ski federation helped works with international com- reroute a plane to Zurich, acpetitions, was used to getting cording to Jenny Wiedeke, a his way on matters of salt. Guid- spokeswoman for the organizaed by intuition and experience, tion. The plane would leave Zuhe combines different grains to rich at 11 a.m., with or without find the right solution for every the salt. "If you're too late, the show kind of snow. "When we order something, is gone," Plattner said. "It was it is not a wish," he said. "It is a the time which was working must." ~ us. But Sochi organizers did not The ski federation and Sochi listen. After spending more officials dedined to describe than $50 billion on the games, how they secured a plane on they did not fill the salt order, such short notice. Plattner said which would have cost perhaps he was told it came from Sofia, a fewthousand dollars. the Bulgarian capital.

MSysalt

Plattner worked until 11 p.m that night to make the arrange-

Dimier and a spokesman de- ments. He said he did not even have time to tellhis boss. "It was veryexciting," he said. in the decision, and the Sochi press office did not directly say After sleeping for a few why organizers did not heed hours, he went to work early Pieren's advice. But they ac- Friday. Because of a miscomknowledged both the impor- munication, he missed the 11 tance of the large-grained salt, a.m. plane but managed to get andits scarcityin Russia. the salt on another plane that Sochi had hardly any large left the main Zurich airport salt crystals at all, less than a about 3 p.m., he said. ton — nowhere near enough to When the plane landed in harden expanses of soft snow, Sochi, Russian officials expeclined to comment on his role

according to Pieren. And the

ditedthe customs process, ac-

temperatures on the mountain were rising.

cording to the Sochi organizing

Homeowners use salt to melt

co Illmttee. After the salt passed a se-

ice on the sidewalk, but Alpine curity check Friday, Olympic experts cieverly use it to over- vehides took the load straight come soft snow conditions when

to the mountain, and about 24

a hatd,icy surfaceispreferable. hours after the emergency salt The salt melts the soft snow, and meeting, workers stood on the when the temperatute drops

mountain, sprinkling the soft

— usually overnight — a layer snow with big-grained salt, of ice forms. Large-grain salt, fresh from Switzerland. about 5 millimeters in size, is Even though problems with best for soft, deep snow, bemm the coursepersisted Saturday, it drops farther into the snow as several skiers inthe women's super-G struggled, Pieren said andlasts for days, nothours. Bythe time of the emergency he believed that the worst was meeting, the world was watch- behind them.

publication of "Frankenstein," by Mary Shelley, stoked fears life and kill us — a theme that later recurred in films like "The Terminator."

It's relevant again now, she

ternet of Things, an increasing number of objects, like thermo-

underground parking l ot in Singapore, where a man ring only to consumers out- named Frank had agreed to By "outside," she isn't refer-

Seit

Leah Nash/New YorkTimes News Service

stats and traffic lights, are being outfitted with sensor chips that can collect and transmit information about their envi-

ronments. Bell sees these connectedobjects asharbingersof devices that will have relationships, rather than mere interac-

tions, with people. As in the past, fiction often

precedes fact. Consider the here, that was a cultural value," movie"Her," inwhich a computBell explains. "Here I would say, er operating system named Sa'You are dead wrong, and here mantha becomes the caretaker, are 17 reasons why and six data companion and, eventually, the sources,' and they would say, virtual paramour of Theodore, 'That's very interesting; tell me ahuman lonelyheart. "Maybe the I nternet of more.'" Even her appearance is a Things will be about delightself-conscious provocation. In a ing us or taking care of us, not corporate culture engendered traffic lights," Bell mused over by male engineers, and still lunch with Brian David Johndominated by them, Bell sees son, a futuristinher lab. flaunting her otherness as part Johnson is leading a project of the job description. to develop a personal robot, "Some things I do quite de- named Jimmy, that would reliberately," she told me. "I wear late to people as individuals. French perfume. I wear heels. I White and curvaceous, Jimmy dress like I am actuallyfemale." is a knee-high customizable Sixteen years after Bell, now system — like a mobile phone 46, arrived at Intel, she contin- on legs — onto which consumues to nudge, contradict and ers could download apps. "Jimchallenge perceptions. But now my is a computational platform she leads her own research en- that can walk around," Johnson terprise. Still, it can be hard to explained. "There's enough describe precisely what Bell computational power to sense herself does, because she tends what your mood is, where you to favor open-ended research are, an understanding that is

have embedded voice-com-

questions that don't have an

mand systems and the like in

immediately obvious practical Jimmy is meant to show Intel's corporate customers what payoff. Newspaper artideswith headlines like "Technolo- its design thinking — and chips gy'sForemost Fortune Teller" — can accomplish. But it is also — have portrayed her as an rooted in Bell'sbelief that the fuorade with magical predictive ture of computing is in personpowers. alized, people-centric devices. But overseveral months of In fact, Intel plans to make the conversations, I came to think software public this spring so of her more as Intel's in-house that people with access to 3-D foil, the company contrarian, an printers can create their own

to the efforts of Bell and her their vehicles with the idea of team, Intel is trying to catch reducing distracted driving, up, forging into realms like the researchers found that wearable gadgets that could when drivers were bored in showcase its new, lower-pow- traffic, they often picked up ered ultrasmall chips. Futur- their hand-held personal deists on Bell's team are also de- vices anyway. "What became dear was veloping a customizable personal robot, about the size of a couple of things: how much a big teddy bear, based on the technology people bring to new minichips. Where even a cars, how much they were decade ago, Intel still focused ignoring the technology that largelyonturningoutincreas- was built in and how much ingly efficient technology for that technology was failing its industrial customers, its them," Bell says. executivessay,the company This more grounded, nunow looks to consumer hap- anced view of driver behavpiness as a starting point of ior served as a reality check product development. for Intel and its clients. In the "What Genevieveand her fall, Intel announced a colorganization have done is to laboration with Jaguar Land

irritant in an industrial oyster

relationship-based."

Jimmys. "Ultimately, it will be

shell.

about people stuff," Bell says, "and Jimmy makes the people opinion thoughtfully and force- stuff readily apparent." fully; she's not afraid to tell you Even so, Bell is the first to say how wrong you are," says Tad that she is no tech oracle: "Ten years from now, do we Hirsch, an assistant professor of interaction design at the Uni- think people will still want to "She is not afraid to voice her

versityof Washington in Seattle whousedto workwith her. "She

credits it to being Australian,

talk to each other? Yes. Will they still want to share cat pictures? Yes. Will they still want

shift our m i ndset," Bryant says. "It takes a very different

Rover to develop, among oth-

er things, better ways for con- of it is just Genevieve." skill set, a unique domain ex- sumersto synctheirpersonal

to tell bad jokes? Yes. Will people want a camera on their person? Probably," she conjectures.

perience, to sense the market

devices with their cars. Intel

'What will that look like?" She

and identify the emerging sig- has a similar effort with Toyonals and what is going to mat- ta, to develop user-interaction ter to the end user." systems involving voice, gesture and touch. Unpackingthe car The goal is to make builtA few years ago, Bell was in technology more seamless thinking about one particular and supersede a driver's reend user: the car owner. If the flex to reach for a hand-held marketing is to be believed, devlce. carsare no longerjusttransportation devices, but mobile Irritant in the entertainment systems. Ford

industrial oyster

promotes its "Sync" in-car

Bell was teaching in the Stanford anthropology de-

i nfotainment system w i t h

slogans like "drive connect- partment in 1998 when a teched," "drive personally" and nologyentrepreneur she met "drive entertained." Audi bills in a Palo Alto bar suggested its latest built-in wireless sys- that she apply for a job at Intel. tem as the "connected car fuAt the time, the company ture," with smoother digital had ahandful ofsocialscienmaps, faster downloads and,

tists on staff. But executives

someday soon, the ability to exchange data with "parking garages and other connected cars.

had been looking for an anthropologist to conduct re-

Bell has never been much

impressed by such idealized visions of technology. So when those notions start to settle into conventional

wisdom — like the car as a superconnected e n t ertainment-and-communication

search into how people used

which is partially true. But part

A robot named Jimmy Bell tends to be indifferent to

shrugs.

the blinking lights of the latest gadgetry. What fascinates her is a pattern, which has repeated itself over the centuries, of soci-

TOUCHMARK

ety's initial embrace of a new in-

SlNCE 1980

vention, often followed by what she terms"moral panic" and

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technology in their homes. (Today, companies like IBM, Microsoft and Google also employ social s cientists, in-house or as consultants, who specialize in applied anthropology.) During her job interview, Bell apprised her would-be bosses that she couldn't see

PiR

the company wouldneed to better understand how real people shifted back and forth between built-in technologies and the personal devicesthey

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bubble- she wants to kick the tires, so to speak This urge is herself fitting in at Intel. After not just contrarianism. If Intel all, she wasn't a technologist, wanted to innovate for its au- she didn't do PowerPoint, she tomaker clients, Bell believed,

used a Mac and she was, she told them, a "radical femi-

nist and an unreconstructed neo-Marxist." She was hired. At Intel, Bell started tak-

ing research trips around the

carried into their cars.

world to see how consum-

So Bell and Alexandra Zafiroglu, a fellow Intel anthropologist, set off on an expedition. They traveled around the world, examining, logging and photographing the contentsofpeople'scars. In a typical encounter, the

ers used technology in their kitchens and living rooms, at

pair found themselves in an

posting them around Intel's

sports events and religious

observances. After she and her colleagues returned, they printed posters with the pho-

tographs and comments of people they had interviewed,

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Moonlighting

Washington.

Continued fromA1

second jobs when their primary employers limit hours to hold down costs, said JonathanJames,assistantprofes-

Americans such as Brown

are holding multiple jobs to earn extra income in a stiII-ermtic labor market, supple-

ment wages that are essentially flat or seek to get paid for time they spend on hobbies or interests anyway. About 4.9 percent of working U.S. adults have more than one job, with about half holding a full-time and a part-

Retail workers often take

sor of economics at California Polytechnic State University

in San Luis Obispo, Calif. Overtime laws g enerally mandate extra pay for hourly employees who work more

IN FOCUS:EDUCATION

e ac 0 ese re aion, ma ne sc oosem race anew

than 40hours a week.

James, who studied moonlighting in a 2012 report when

By Motoko Rich New York Times News Service

moonlighters has been steady of Cleveland, said research since 2010, according to Bu- shows that Americans also

MIAMI — Nearly five decades ago, as racial tension raged in cities, magnet schools

reau of Labor Statistics data,

w ere introduced here

time position. The share of

at Fedeml Reserve Bank take second jobs to earn mon-

though down from 5.2percent ey doing something they alin2008. ready enjoy. The numbers may be highThat was the case for Roer than government statistics han Anand,27, who increased reflectbecause there have hisincome by $2, 000oversix been fundamental changes months by turning his yoga in the labor market since the passion into a part-time inrecession and recovery, said structor position. Anand, a Bernard Baumohl, chief glob- software business analyst al economist at the Economic for Navitaire, an Accenture Outlook Group in Princeton, subsidiary providing airline N.J., in an interview.

reservation and revenue man-

"More peoplehave actual- agement systems, usually ly entered and remained in

the underground economy than we have seen before," he said. Workers are trying to raise their income even as job growth is sluggish, he said. So while employed, they may also do handyman repairs, or tutor, or fix computers. Many of theseare cash transactions

teaches one class a weekend at CorePower Yoga studio in

Minneapolis. Others operate small busi-

nesses on the side. Katie Olson, 30, is a communications

track all moonlighters and their earnings, the money shows up in the economy when it is spent, he said, as seen inretail sales growththat is outpacing income gains. U.S. real disposable personal income grew by 0.7 percent last year while retail sales in-

hope that specialized theme

schools would slow white flight and offer options to racial minorities zoned for low-perform-

ing schools. Magnet schools never quite deliveredon that desegregation promise, and in the past couple of decades they have largely fallen off the radar. But in this multiracial city — and, increasingly, in other urban districts including Chicago, Dallas, Denver, Los Angeles, Newark, N.J., and Washington, D.C. — public school leaders

are ref ocusing on the idea as traditional public schools come

under increasingpressure from tem, but critics worry that magnets, like charter schools andvouchers, could drain zoned neighborcharter schools and vouchers hood schools of the most motivated students and increase racial segregation.

and her fiance, Clint McMa-

for private schools. The number of children in

ta-themed T-shirts. "It's definitely for fun," Ol-

in the district and focus on

business. "We don't really

themes like art, law or technol-

take in aton of money." MPLS / STP Clothing uses

ogy — has grown 35 percent in the past four years. These chil-

Bigcommerce software com-

dren now account for about 1 in 6 students in the district.

up online stores and process

in charter schools, which are publicly funded but privately From left: Bianca Jean-Phiilipe, 16, Kandis Phiiord, 15, and Gerald operated.

ternational University. The pro-

the nearly 2.6 million enrolled

and they follow district rules, whilecharters are run by private entities and are typically not unionized — reviving them

gram, modeled on the popular Maritime and Science Technology magnet school in the elite community of Key Biscayne, i ntendent of schools in M i sions, and many schools set focuses on marine science and ami-Dade County, said it made prerequisites such as specific biology and will eventually alless and less sense to put stu- math or science courses or a low students to enroll in college dents"through the same 7: 30 minimum grade-point average. courses. to 2:30, bell-to-bell instruction Some of the most coveted West believes that attending without allowing them some magnets, which receive far school with peers who have degree of individuality." more applications than they similar academic interests will Teachers unions argue that have seats, do not represent the keep Javonmotivated. "For me, as a parent of a districts need to prioritize com- demographics of the district. munity-based schools. young black male, and with "I think if every one of the Historyand perception statistics in the society being schools in a system are good, At Coral Reef Senior High againsthim, I canprovethe stathe vast majority of people will School, a prestigious magnet tistics wrong," she said. stay in their neighborhood," that includes programs in the Javon said he chose the new said Dennis Van Roekel, presi- arts, engineering and an inter- academy because he enjoyed dent of the National Education national baccalaureate track, watching programs about Association, the nation's largest fewer than half of the 3,229 stu- marinescience on the Discovteachers union. dents are eligible for free or re- ery Channel. One morning M iami-Dade County i s duced-price lunches, and close last month, he was wearing a bigger than Rhode Island, so to a fifth are white, compared sweatshirt emblazoned with

is seen aspart of an effortto

many students opt for their

more explicitly within the tra-

ditional district," said Jeffrey Henig, a professor of political science and education at Co-

has more than tripled over

ognition on the part of districts that at least some of the enthu-

a third stream of income."

Memorial

a school and love for a community," he said.

Continued fromA1

Before the memorial ser-

vice started, Simple Minds' family has called for more "Don't You (Forget About awareness about teen sui- Me)" played a s p h otos cide. Daniel an d L e anna flashed on the auditorium's Leyes, his parents, have also screen of people around set up a scholarship through Bend, the state and beyond the Central Oregon Commu- wearing blue and gold last nity College Foundation for Tuesday. Bend High students looking After Abby's powerful to study applied arts, such as speech, another slideshow woodworking. played, this of Zack's growth Along with Abby, Zack's from a smiling toddler to a favorite teacher, his pastor tall, slender young man with and his principal spoke Sun- long hair — and the same day night at the memorial. smile. Many of the photos A talented woodworker, showed the siblings togethwho had a part-time job as er, from campouts to tricka cabinetmaker, Zack was or-treating to just playing known to help other students outside. with projects. Another p h oto s h owed He was patient and kind, Zack as a youngster standand willing to tackle chal- ing on the back of a firetruck lenges, said Pat Welch, who next to his dad. Daniel Leyes, teaches applied arts at Bend a paramedic with Bend High. Fire, is a "career firefighter," "He solved problems won- said Bend Fire Chief Larry derfully," he said. Langston, who also spoke at Zack's family has attend- the memoriaL ed Calvary Chapel for years, He said many of the powith the kids going to Sun- lice officers, deputies and day school there and attend- firefighters who responded ing camps, said Pastor Terry to the Bend High lockdown Webb of the church. Feb. 7wereback at the school Zack was born on March Sunday night. The first time 23, 1996. He was nearing his they were there to protect 18th birthday. and help the students. The Webb led prayers during second time they were there the public memorial service, to support them. as did Bend High Principal He called Zack's suicide Since Zack's death, his

H.D. Weddel.

"This has been a tough

"terribly sad"

an d t a l k ed

about how the grief for a child is hard to bear. "When a child dies we start of the service. "There is no getting around (that)." mourn the life that was and But he wanted to make the the life that would have event less about death and been," he said. more about life and love. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, "Love for a family, love for ddarling@bendbuIIetin.com

week," Weddel said at the

Barthelemy, 15, work in a room at the iPreparatory Academy, a

Magnetshave "become kind magnet school in Miami. Students at IPreparatory Academyspend of a go-to alternative as a way much of their time working independently.

Membership in th e N ew ing a hobby business on the York-based advocacy group side, while they're working,

vices Committee hearing in

s

magnet schools — more than

ular elements of choice while keeping the choice constrained

the past six years to 234,208 thing really quickly, without this month, according to the committing 100percent." organimtion. Having a second source Earnings per hour for pri- of income isa form of insurv ate-sector w o rkers h a v e ance, said Ford Myers, presidimbed 2 percent a year on dent of Haverford, Pa.-based average since 2011 compaied Career Potential. Myers, who with a 3.1 percent gain in 2007, has been assisting job seekthe last year of the previous ex- ers since 1993, says he helps pansion. Adjusted for inflation, dients land full-time jobs and they've barelygrown at all. then encourages them to de" Certainly fo r m u c h o f velop a sideline. "If something bad happens, the workforce, real wages have been stagnant in re- you won't be totally messed cent years," Fedeml Reserve up," he said. "Instead of being Chair Janet Yellen said Feb. stuck if you lose your position, 11 at a House Financial Ser- now you can have a second or

Some parents see magnets

The pattern is similar across the country. There are about 2.8 million students attending

to incorporate some of the pop-

or their dream is to test some-

strive," Hedgemond said. Most ofher friends from middle school did not even apply to Coral Reef: "Theydidn'tbelieve they could get in," she said. as a way to give their children advantages they never had. Dollie West, a legal secretary, helped her son, Javon Alexander, 14, apply to magnet high schools. He is a freshman at a school that opened in the fall on a campus of Florida In-

executive officer the compa-

said. "People are either creat-

don't have the oomph to want to

admit students from anywhere

son said of their home-based

pany to sell its products. Bigcommerce, which helps set

"Some of those students

Miami-Dade County attending magnet programs — which

help maintain their standard ny, which is based in Austin, of living in a time of weak Texas, and Sydney, Australia. "More and more people are income growth, said Sara Horowitz, executive direc- becoming entrepreneurs," he tor of the Freelancers Union.

Photos byAngel Valentin/NewYorkTimes News Service

A lounge area in use outside classrooms at the iPreparatory Academy, a magnet school in Miami. Backers of the resurgent magnet schools see them as part of the effort to save the public school sys-

puters for Schools in Minneapolis. In her spare time, she

creased 4.2 percent. His esti- credit card payments, says mates concur with academic that about a third of its dients studies, Baumohl said, which log inbetween 6 p.m and 8 put the underground econo- a.m. E-commerce is an extra my at as much as 10percent of business for Bigcommerce's grossdomesticproduct,oras customers, supplementing much as $1.6 trillion. their regular full-time jobs, More Americans arealso said Eddie Machaalani, chief turningto freelancingto tryto

and

elsewhere as an alternative to court-ordered busing in the

manager at Minnesota Com-

and become part of the shad- hon, run MPLS / STP Clothow economy. ing Co., which sells MinnesoWhile it's i mpossible to

A5

lumbia University. "It's a recsiasm and popularity of charters is a resistance to the notion

of a one-size-fits-all school."

Concerns remain Because magnets are fully part of public school systems — their teachers are unionized

save public schools. Still, critics neighborhood school simply worry that magnets, like char- because some magnets are so ter schools and vouchers, could far away. Public transportation drain zoned neighborhood is sparse, and the school district schools of the most motivated does not guarantee bus seats students and increase racial for students who select magnet segregation. programs, although it has start"With completely unregulat- ed to replicate the most popued choice, there are people who lar magnet themes across the choose and those who choose county. not to choose," said Richard Most of the magnets admit Kahlenberg, a senior fellow at students through a lottery, but the Century Foundation. "So most arts programs require the most u nmotivated par-

ents will just get assigned to a school, and motivated parents will eyeball a school racially and ethnically to see if their child will 'fit in.'" Although students in Miami can still attend zoned schools,

scoresofparents entered their

auditions or portfolio submis-

with just 7.7 percent of the district. A f rican-American stu-

dents, who represent closeto a

On the last day to submit pa-

perwork, Susette Holder stood in line in a hallway at the district office downtown to apply

had designed.

"It's the 3 Life Crew," Javon

said during a biology class, 13.5percent of the studentbody where students were learning at Coral Reef. about the major lobes of the Long-held perceptions can brain. "It's a group of kids who affect who applies to some do well in school." magnets in the first place. Patrisha Hedgemond, an 18-yearold senior at Coral Reef, said she had applied to the school's ' NQRTHWEsT legal academy because she CROSSING wanted toleave her neighborhood peers. quarter of the district, are only

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children last month in a lot-

tery for admission to one of the county's 363 magnet programs.

"3LC" that he and his friends

OIA

for high school spots for her 13-year-old twins. "I did not want to send them

to the neighborhood school," Holder said. "One wants to go into law enforcement and the

other wantsmusic, and our area does not provide that." The federal government awards grants to d istricts to open or expand magnet schools with the explicit aim of

increasing diversity, but charter schools receive about four times as much federal money

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A6 T H E BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

LOOKING AHEAD: FALL ELECTIONS

On health act, Democrats running in fix-it mode By Ashley Parker

it on, and I think Democrats are

New Yorh Times News Service

much more ready and willing

WASHINGTON — The ad

to do that in 2014," said Geoff

supporting Rep. Ann Kirk-

Garin, a Democratic pollster whohas done surveys for Dem-

patrick, D-Ariz., opens with a

montage of Americana Main ocrats on the law. "We certainly Streets, followed by the green have enough evidence nowthat fields and dirt roads of the West this is not a fight you can win if — the "small towns and wide- you are in a defensive crouch." open spaces," the narrator exDemocrats will need plenty plains, where Kirkpatrick "lis- of offense as they face a multitens and learns." million-dollar advertising asHis voice remains tranquil sault from Republican-aligned even ashe turns to a more cut- interest groups and candidates ting message about President that want to make the midterm Barack Obama's signature elections a referendum on the health care law: "It's why she Affordable Care Act, using the blew the whistle on the disas- law as an exemplar of the govtrous health care website, call- ernment's ineptitude in managing it 'stunning ineptitude' and ing a vast national program. worked to fix it," he says, before Democrats say their new apadding, "Ann Kirkpatrick: See- proach is consistent with polling what's wrong, doing what's ing data that shows Americans right." would prefer to try to improve As Democrats approach the the law ratherthan repeal it. 2014 midterm elections, they In a CBS News poll conductare grappling with an awk- ed in January, 56 percent of reward reality: Their president's spondents said that the health health care law — passed al- law contained some good most entirely by Democratsthings, but that changes were remains a political liability in needed to make it work better, many states, threatening their

while 34 percent said the law

ability to hold on to seats in the needed to be repealed entirely. Senate and the House. A new ad by Alex Sink, a As a result, party leaders Democrat running to fill the have decided on an aggressive open Florida seat previously new strategy to address the held by Rep. Bill Young, a Rewidespread unease with the publican, embodies the "fix, but health care law, urging Demo- do not repeal" message: After a cratic candidates to talk openly narrator warns that her oppoabout the law's problems while nent "would go back to letting also offering their own pre- insurance companies deny scriptions to fix them. coverage," Sink addresses the The shift represents an camera and says, "Instead of abrupt change from 2010 when repealing the health care law, House Democrats tried to ig- we need to keep what's right nore the law entirely and "got and fix what's wrong." their clocks cleaned," said Sen. Similarly, in a Senate MaChristopher Murphy, D-Conn., jority PAC advertisement supreferring to the more than 60 porting Rep. Bruce Braley, seats that Republicans picked D-Iowa, who is running for u p to regain control of t h e the open Senate seat there, the House. narrator praises Braley for his "Part of what we learned in willingness "to fix the health 2010 is that this is a real issue

of concern to voters and you

care law, make it work for Iowa, and holdinsurance companies

can't dodge it, you have to take

accountable."

IN FOCUS: LIFE BEHIND BARS

rison ce one smLi in rises By Brendan FarrIngton

new ways to get them in.

"You may get a prepackaged, sealed ramen noodle soup — and it's completely sealed — the weight seems to be right, but when you open it,

The Associated Press

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.

They're hidden in babies' diapers, ramen noodle soup packages, footballs, soda cans and evenbody cavities.

»

' XC'»'

»lg »,

there's a cellphone inside," said

Timothy Cannon, Florida's

Not drugs or weapons, but

cellphones. They're becoming a growing problem in prisons

deputy correctionssecretary.

across the country as they are

»l(

used to make threats, plan escapes and for inmates to con-

»

tinue to make money from illeh

gal activity even while behind bars. "You can pick states all

across the country and you'll Florida Department ofCorrections via TheAssociated Press see everything from hits be- A cellphone and cigarettes that were found inside a camouflage ing ordered on individuals to package near an undisclosed Florida state prison. criminal enterprises being

"They're very, very, very creative in the way they do some of these things." Phones have been hidden in the hollowed out centers of largestacks oflegaldocuments. One corrections officer found two liter soda bottles that wereused as floats outside

a prison. When he pulled them out of a pond, bags containing more than adozen cellphones

each were foundtiedto them. "We've found cellphones with cellphones," said Michael guess outside his cell and there and other drugs. A prisoner in Crews, head of Florida's De- was a very d istinct prison Georgia was accused this year and drugs in babies' diapers" partment of Corrections. noise. He said, 'Did you hear of using two cellphones to im- during visitations, Cannon When two murderers serv- that'?' and I said, 'Yup. That's personate a sheriffs lieutenant said. "If they think you'd neving life sentences escaped a prison,' " Whitmire said. and scamelderl y driverswho er search an infant child, that from Florida Panhandle pris- "I said, 'How'd you get that had received red light camera will be the next place they go on last fall, a search of their phone?' He said, 'I paid $2,100 tickets, getting them each to to try to get it in." cells turned up a cellphone for it.' I said, 'How do you keep pay about $500. Phones hidden in body cavused to help plan the getaway, it charged?' He said, 'I have a In Oklahoma, a newspaper ities can't always be picked up drawing attention to the bur- charger.' " investigation found dozens of by traditional metal detectors, geoning problem. It was just The calls continued, and prisoners using cellphones to and many are wrapped in one of 4,200 cellphones con- Whitmire had the phone in- maintain Facebookpages.The electrical tape to further avoid fiscated by prison officials last vestigated. The month before, Oklahoman found about three detection. "We have found cellphones Tablerused 2,800 minutes and dozeninmateswho were disciyear, or 11 per day. "The scary part is, if we was sharing the phone with plined by prison officials and in the private area of visitors found 4,200, we know that's other prisoners, Whitmire itsreporters found about as — I'm talking females and not all of them," Crews said. said. Tabler's mother, in Geor- manywhohadn'tbeen caught. males," said Christopher Epps, And while prison officials gia, was paying the bill and Florida prisoners have also head of the Mississippi prison are trying their best to keep collecting payments from the been using social media with system and president of the cellphones out, it's not such an other prisoners' families. cellphones. American Corrections Asso''We've got inmates running ciation. He said it's not unusual easy task. Jamming cellphone Tabler asked Whitmire if he signals is prohibited by feder- could help arrange a visit with their own blogs and all kinds to find three phones in a body al law, and it costs more than his mother. When she arrived of stuff. We stop it when we cavity. $1 million each for authorized in Texas she was arrested catch it, but it's very difficult States are looking for new towers that control what cell- for her part in the prison cell- to police the whole Internet. ways to find cellphones or to phone calls can come in and phone scheme. Tabler wasn't We don't have Internet police prevent their use. Epps said out of prisons. Some prisons happy aboutthat and made on our staff," said assistant that includes recently installed even have to police their own another call to Whitmire. "He correcti ons secretary James netting held up by 50-foot corrections officers who some- said he was going to have me Upchurch. poles to keep people from times help inmates receive killed," Whitmire said. Those helping i nmates throwing bags over prison contraband. In other cases around the smuggle phones into Florida fencesforprisoners to retrieve. In Texas, a death row incountry, infamous murderer prisons can be charged with a Federal law prohibits jammate made several calls with Charles Manson, imprisoned third-degree felonypunishable ming cellphone signals, but a cellphone to state Sen. John in California, was found with a by up to five years in prison. In Texas, Maryland, California W hitmire, who c h airs t h e cellphone under his mattress, Mississippi, the penalty can be and Mississippi installed towCriminal J u stice C o mmit- twice. 15 years for having a cellphone ers at some prisons that conrun from inside institutions

tee. Whitmire didn't believe it when he started receiving calls from death row inmate

Richard Tabler. "He held his phone out, I

Two Indiana prisoners were

ln prtsons.

convicted of using cellphones As correct ions departments smuggled in by guards to run keep looking for new ways an operation that distributed to stop cellphone smuggling, methamphetamine, h eroin prisoners are finding creative,

trol what cellphone traffic is

allowed. Phone signals reach the tower, but only authorized numbers are t he n p a ssed

through.

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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A7

LOCAL Ee TATE PRESIDENTS

DAY CLOSURES Today is Presidents Day, and someoffices may have changedtheir business hours. • Federal, state, county and city offices will be closed. • Schools will be closed. Central Oregon Community College will be open, andclasses will take place. • The post office will be closed, andmail will not be delivered or picked up. • Most bank branches will be closed. • The Deschutes Public Library system, Jefferson County and Crook County libraries will be closed. • Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center will be open regular hours. • Most Central Oregon liquor stores will be open regular hours.

REDMOND

BRIEFING

C OOS OO ci eci • Change to full-day kindergarten has district concernedabout proposedbudget By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

It will be more than two

all the indicators are moving in the right direction," Fiscal Director Kathy Steinert told

months before the Redmond School District Budget

the committee. "Our longrange plan shows no contrac-

Committee sees a proposed

tion in state funding."

10-car crash diocks highway

0

from 44.8percent 10years dergartners arefully prepared ago. If it remains flat by 2015, for first grade, he added, and when nearly all Oregon dism o r e classroom time may altricts will incur increased

expenses because of the implementation of full-day kindergarten, there will be less funding overall. While Senate Bill 248

levi a t e that problem. The irony, Steinert

Cl l a rt inslde • Share of budget, AO

said,is the new legislatio n will — for the f i r s t time — Provide a full per-student allotment for kindergarten

does not require disstudents. Because if tricts to begin full-day kinder- the total amount of the state

budget for the 2014-15 school year, but during a workshop

It's the portion of the state budget dedicated to K-12

on Wednesday, the commit-

schools — currently 39.5 per-

tee got a glimpse into the future.

cent — that has the Redmond

in that direction because it's th e transition just means more the right thing to do, Superin- s t udents sharing the same

district a bit concerned. That

tendent Mike McIntosh said.

number has steadily declined

Assessments show few kin-

"I'm not an economist but

garten, nearly all plan to move s c hool fund is not increased, poo l of money. See Redmond/A8

— Bulletin staff report

CIVIC CALENDAR TUESDAY

RedmondCity

Councii —Thecouncil is expected to meet in a special meeting at 6:30 p.m. at City Hall, 716 S.W.Evergreen Ave., in order to hold an executive session to evaluate the city manager, Keith Witcosky, who has been with the city since July 2013.

Ten cars were involved in a wreck near Wanoga Sno-park late Sunday afternoon that cut the flow of traffic

between Bendand Mt. Bachelor. The crash temporarily blocked both lanes of the CascadeLakes Highway, said Peter Murphy, spokesmanfor the Oregon Department of Transportation. One lane of the highwaywas open again after15 minutes. Both were clear about an hour after the wreck. "Only a few of (the vehicles) were towed," he said. Just before 5 p.m., Mt. Bachelor sent a message to users of its smartphone appsaying Cascade LakesHighway was completely blocked near WanogaSno-park. The notice also advised anyone driving toward town from the ski area to detour through Sunriver. Murphy said no injuries were reported in the wreck, which Mt. Bachelor initially reported may haveinvolved as many as 20vehicles. Along with ODOT,Oregon State Police troopers, Deschutes County Sheriff's deputies and emergency medical crews responded to the crash. — Bulletin staff report

WEDNESDAY

Bend City Coun-

STATE NEWS

Cll —The council is expected to meet first at 2 p.m. for a goal review, then in a work session at 5 p.m. and finally in a regular meeting at 7 p.m. in council chambers at 710 N.W.Wall St. The council is expected to approve several contracts associated with the city's surface water project, as well as the expansion of the urban growth boundary to include area slated asthe home of a newmiddle school.

Portland

Dave's Killer Bread

Crook CountyCourt

— The commissioners are expected to meet in a 6 p.m.meeting in their meeting roomat 320 N.E.Court St. in Prineville. Amongthe items on theagenda, the commissioners areexpected to vote toapprove a declaration of local disaster and request a state drought emergency for the county. Contact:541-383-0354, news©bendbulletin.com. In emails, please write Civic Calendar" in the subject line. Include s contact name and number. Submissions msy be edited. Deadline for Monday publication is noon Thursday.

EVENT

CALENDAR TODAY "HARVESTOFAN EMPIRE:THE HISTORY OF LATINOS IN AMERICA": A screening of the film about five centuries of Latino history based onthe Juan Gonzalez book; free; noon1:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7412. CENTRALOREGON SYMPHONY WINTER CONCERT:Featuring violinist Lindsay Deutsch and music of Rossini, Tchaikovsky and more; free, but a ticket is required, donations accepted; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info@cosymphony.com or www.cosymphony. com. RUM REBELLION: The Portland-based Irish-punk band performs, with High Desert Hooligans and Tentareign; $2; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com.

Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Metal Mulisha member Justin Homan, left, gives a high-five to Mali Rademacher, 5, of Seattle, after one of the group's performances Sunday afternoon at Oregon WinterFest in the Old Mill District in Bend. At top, Homen does a trick in the air for spectators.

• Mix of weather didn't dampen spirits at the annual festival in the Old Mill District By Dylan J. Darling

five ramps this year. The event itself started 15 years ago, All ramps were in use Friday despite Switzer said, growing each year. the weather, but the wind and rain SatThis year the event changed its name urday caused organizers to scale the rail from Bend WinterFest to Oregon Win- jam back to three ramps, Switzer said. terFest, and Switzer said some of the It was too dangerous for ramp builders staples expanded. Compared with last to use a boom lift and carry snow to the event.

The Bulletin

ain, wind and sunshine all hit this year's Oregon WinterFest in the

Old Mill District. Through the mix of weather, the annual three-

day festival went on. "You have to roll with what you get," year, there was a second large tent to the top of the tallest ramps. The weathsaid Aaron Switzer, producer at Lay It cover vending booths along Southwest er also threatened to crimp or cancel Out Events, the Bend-based company Shevlin Hixon Drive, as well as twice as Metal Mulisha, a freestyle motocross that has put on WinterFest for the past many ice sculptures and metalwork fire jumping show that headlined Sunday's 11 years. Switzer said attendance figures pits. The popular rail jam — in which events, but the skies deared for their for the weekend weren't available yet, snowboarders and skiers slide down performances. "It broke right for them," Switzer said. but they were likely down from previous snow-covered scaffolding and do tricks years when about 20,000 to 25,000 visited off jumps and on rails — also grew to See WinterFest/A8

TUESDAY "HARVESTOF AN EMPIRE:THE HISTORY OF LATINOS INAMERICA": A screening of the film about five centures of Latino history based onthe Juan Gonzalez book; free; 3-4:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600N.W.CollegeWay, Bend; 541-383-7412. KNOW MOVIES: "BRIDGE ON THERIVER KWAI": A screening ofthe 1957 classic film; free; 6p.m.; Tin PanTheater, 869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, Bend; 541-312-1034 orwww. deschuteslibrary.org. GIZMOGUYS:Allan Jacobs and Barrett Felkerexplain mathandphysicsusing juggling, circus tricks and asenseofhumor; $10, $5 children12 andyounger, plusfees;7 p.m., doors

open at 6 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. WEDNESDAY

"FANTASTICMR. FOX": A screening of the2009 animated film directed by Wes Anderson; free; 7p.m.; The OldStone, 157N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend;541322-7273 or www.bit.lyl WAnders. DANIELKIRKPATRICK: The Seattle popartist performs; free; 7p.m.; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com. THURSDAY "BYEBYEBIRDIE": A presentation of the 1960 musical featuring choreography byMichelle

Mejaski; dress inyour '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats,$10 atthe door; 7 p.m.; RidgeviewHigh School, 4555 S.W.Elkhorn Ave., Redmond;541504-3600 or linda.nyeO redmond.k12.or.us. "ROYAL BALLET:SWAN LAKE":A screening of the classic ballet production about Prince Siegfried falling in lovewith acursed woman; $15; 7p.m.; Regal OldMill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. PowerhouseDrive, Bend; 541-312-2901. WILL WEST8t THE FRIENDLYSTRANGERS: The Portland roots band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com. ARMCHAIR

STORYTELLING: Local storytellers perform, thetheme is"Uncharted Waters"; $10; 7:30p.m., doors open 7p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend;541-241-2271 or www.j.mp/TPstories. "RISINGFROM ASHES": Ascreening of the documentary about the first Rwandannational cycling team intheir bid to represent their country at the 2012Olympics; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174 orwww. mcmenamins.com.

Bend; 541-323-1881or www.volcanictheatrepub. com. "BYE BYEBIRDIE": A presentation of the 1960 musical featunng choreography byMichelle Mejaski;d ressinyour '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 atthe door; 7 p.m.; RidgeviewHigh School, 4555 S.W.Elkhorn Ave., Redmond;541504-3600 or linda.nye© redmond.k12.or.us. TELLURIDE MOUNTAINFILMON TOUR: A screening of films from the Telluride Film Festival; proceedsbenefit The Environmental Center; $18 plusfees in advance, FRIDAY $22at the door, $30for "CAPOTE": Ascreening of the 2005 film in celebration both nights; 7 p.m.;Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., of the life of actor Phillip Bend; 541-317-0700 or Seymour Hoffman;$5; 6 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, www.towertheatre.org. "MISS POTTER":A 70 S.W.Century Drive,

screening of the2006 film starringReneeZellweger (PG); free, refreshments available; 7:30 p.m.; RodriguezAnnex,Jefferson County Library, 134S.E E St., Madras; 541-475-3351 or www.jcld.org. AN EVENINGWITH SUZY BOGG USS:The Nashville, Tenn.country artist performs; $30 plus feesin advance, $35at the door; 7:30 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; 541-815-9122 orwww. belfryevents.com. ARCHAEOLOGYFEST FILM SERIES: Ascreening of the best films from the 2013 edition of The Archaeology Channel International Film and Video Festival; $6; 7:30 p.m., doors open7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600

— The co-founder of Dave's Killer Breadis back in Washington County Jail after pleading not guilty Friday to criminal charges from apolice chase last November. The Oregonian reports 51-year-old DaveDahlis being held on$520,000 bail. He hadbeen charged onsuspicion of assault, unlawful useof a weaponandresisting arrest. Thefaceof the organic breadcompany has a criminal history that includes15 years in and out of prison.

Fatal hit-and-run

— Portland Police are searching for the driver in a deadly hit-and-run crash Saturday night in Southeast Portland. The Oregonian reports the accident caused the second pedestrian death in two days in the area. Portland police are looking for a silver minivan, which likely sustained significant damage. — From wire reports Nore state news, AS

N.W.CollegeWay,Bend; 541-345-5538 or www. archaeologychannel.org. TRIAGE: Theimprov comedy troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring vocalist Mary Stallings with Mel Brown, Ed Bennett andTony Pacini ;SOLD OUT;8p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W. Minnesota Ave.,Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com. DJ BARISONE: Electronic music, with Chrome Wolves and Ells; $3; 9 p.m.; Dojo, 852 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-7069091 or www.dojobend. com.

See Calendar IA8


AS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

OREGON NEWS

Calendar

Weston is latest in state

Continued from AT

to consider policecontract The Associated Press PENDLETON — Weston is the latest small city in Oregon

to consider contracting for police protection. The struggle to pay for public safety is common in eastern Oregon's small towns, The East Oregonian reports.

Policing is expensive and dangerous. But a police department can be an important

part of community life. In 1979, the small town of Echo decided to contract with

the Umatilla County Sheriff's office for police services. Before that contract, the city

was putting all its money into two police officers and other costs such as cars and insur-

ance, but they still didn't have someone on call all the time, Echo city administrator Diane

Berry said. The town i s

f i nancially

h ealthier w i t hout

the e x-

pense of a police department, she said. The town now contracts with Stanfield for police

services. Echo also could not con-

cers often will stay only a year The Morrow County Sheror so with a small agency, then iff's Office provides police leave for someplace bigger services to Heppner and Irwith better pay and opportu- rigon, and the Union County nities for career advancement. Sheriff's Office covers multiple Pilot Rock several years small cities. These agreements ago had its own officers, but it arebecoming commonplace in contracted with the Umatilla Oregon. County Sheriff's Office to proMorrow County Sheriff vide administrative oversight. Ken Matlack said small cities Mayor Virginia Carnes said like police contracts because that system worked well, but of the savings, but he underthe people of Pilot Rock ulti- stands that citizens have conmately wanted the city to have cerns about losing community its own police chief. identity. For the people of Pilot Rock, The sheriff's office rotates Carnes said, community own- deputies through Hepper evership was the issue. ery three or four months to Only recently did P ilot make sure police and city resRock, population about 1,500, idents get to know one another. "Once you begin to know get back to full police staff. For months the city was down to someone, you think 'They one officer and Chief Darren are my police officer,' whethRichman. Despite two search- er they are (with) the sheriff's es, they could not find a quali- office or a police department," fied second officer. Matlack said. Pilot Rock got lucky when That kind o f r e lationship Glen Diehl retired from the building, Matlack said, is reUmatilla County Sheriff's ally the key to making police Office in 2013 and offered to contracts work. Contractors work for the Pilot Rock Police must be responsive to city Department. The city saved councils and community conmoney by not having to pay his cerns, he said, and that creates

vince an officer to stay in the job for long, another obstacle insurance or retirement, besmall towns face. Young offi- cause he already was covered.

more involvement for law-en-

forcement administrators.

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Canon Settlemier, 10, right, and brother, Chance, 12, watch as Metal Mulisha member Justin Homan

gets air off a ramp onhis bike during one of the group's performances Sunday afternoon at Oregon WinterFest in the Old Mill District in Bend.

WinterFest

he's here," Aaron Roskowski

restaurant booth, said the Sat-

said.

urday menu originally called

Continued fromA7

for sushi and hot miso soup

Among the crowd watch-

The draw to WinterFest on Sunday was different for Twi-

ing the noon show Sunday

la Rosenberg, 37, who was

from the Bend eatery. Given the blustery condi-

was Aaron Roskowski, 34,

there with her family of four.

tions they scrapped the sushi

of Bend, with his 5-year-old Her 4-year-old daughter was for the day and focused on son, Greyson Roskowski, on excited to play with the ani- the soup. He said the crowd his shoulders. Both were glad mals in the petting zoo and was light when the rain and the motorcycle riders were on jump in the bouncy house. wind was the worst during the hand to do their tricks. The weather caused the weekend. "I think the weather really The younger Roskowski Rosenbergs to skip WinterFest rides a motorbike himself, and on Saturday. held people back," he said. "Definitely not with the rain recently competed on a dirt The sun was shining on track at the Deschutes Coun- and young kids," she said. Sunday, and Sweetman said ty Fair & Expo Center. He asVendors, as well as visitors, they'd be serving up sushi to pires to someday do jumps like adjusted their W i nterFest go with the soup. the Metal Mulisha riders. plans with the weather. Shawn — Reporter: 541-617-7812, "Anything dirt-bike related, Sweetman,working the Juno ddarling@bendbulletin.com

Redmond The state, Steinert continued, has not said if it plans to

bump K-12 funding to compensate for increased numbers of students.

"It sounds simple — just keep them all day — but it's

't

Submitted photo

Daniel Kirkpatrick, center, and his Bayonets band mates, from

left, Spencer Booth andJordan Cassidy, will play Wednesday at McMenamins Old St. Francis School in Bend. yee-paw. "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation of the1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Mejaski; dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 atthe door; 7 p.m.; Ridgeview High School,4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave., Redmond;541504-3600orlinda.nye@redmond. k12.or.us. ARIANASARAHA:The LosAngeles Celtic songstress performs; $10; 7-9 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. LouisianaAve., Bend;541330-0334 or www.hawthorncenter. com. BENDCOMEDY:Mason Woodworth performs; free; 7 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. TELLURIDEMOUNTAINFILM ON TOUR:A screening of films from the Telluride Film Festival; proceeds benefit The Environmental Center; $18 plus fees in advance,$22 atthe door, $30 for both nights; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. THE LIGHTERSIDE OFLINCOLN: Seattle storyteller Norm Brecke performs stories that AbrahamLincoln loved to tell; $10; 7-9:30 p.m., doors open 6:30 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 S.E.Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541-389-1713 orwww. facebook.com/BendStorytelling Circle. ARCHAEOLOGYFESTFILM SERIES: A screening of the best films from the 2013 edition of TheArchaeology Channel International Film andVideo Festi val;$6;7:30p.m.,doorsopen 7 p.m.; Central OregonCommunity College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend;541-3455538 or www.archaeologychannel. ol'g. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS, LOVE 8 HATE:Local storytellers perform, with special guests; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 atthe door; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;541-389-0803 or www.solospeak.com. CHICKSWITHPICKS: Local femalefronted bands perform to raise funds for Saving Grace;$8; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. SASSPARILLA: The Portland indieroots band performs, with TheCrux; $12 plus fees inadvance, $15 atthe door; 8 p.m.; TheBelfry, 302 E.Main Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or www. belfryevents.com.

JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring vocalist Mary Stallings with Mel Brown, EdBennett and Tony Pacini; $49 plus fees; 8:15 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com. CHANCE MCKINNEY: TheSeattle country and Southern rock band performs; $7 plus fees; 9-11:30 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar &Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend;541-325-1886 or www.maverickscountrybar.com. THE MODERNGRASS:TheCanadian roots-folk-bluegrass bandperforms; free; 9 p.m.; Blue PineKitchenandBar, 25 S.W. Century Dr., Bend;541-3892558 or www.bluepinebar.com. SUNDAY TRIO VORONEZH: The Russian folk band performs; $60 for season ticket, $25 for students younger than18; 2 and6:30 p.m.,doorsopen45 minutes prior to show; Ridgeview HighSchool, 4555 S.W.Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-350-7222, redmondcca©hotmail. com or www.redmondcca.org. "CAPOTE": A screeningofthe2005 film in celebration of the life of actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman; $5; 3 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. HONOR FLIGHTSPAGHETTI FEED:A fundraiser to sendWWII veterans to Washington, D.C.; proceedsbenefit Honor Flights of Eastern Oregon; $10 donation; 4-6 p.m.; Jake's Diner, 2210 N.E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend; 541-390-9932. DIEGO'S UMBRELLA: TheSan Francisco gypsy-rock bandperforms; $8 plus fees in advance,$10 atthe door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend;541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub. com. THE MODERNGRASS:TheCanadian roots-folk-bluegrass bandperforms; $10; 10 p.m.; String Theory Music, 1273 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-6780257, stringtheorystudios©gmail.com or www.stringtheorymusicbend.com. Contact:54t-e83-0set, communitylifeO bendbulletin.com or "Submit an Event" online at www.bendbulletin.com. Entries must be submitted at least 10 days before publication.

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The Redmond School District is looking at long-range fiscal plans, including implementing all-day kindergarten in 2015, a transition that will be difficult if the state doesn't give K-12

Oregon K-12share of state budget

41.5% 40%

38.8%

0 0

Tuesday, February 18th, 2014

Steinert estimates that Ore-

Greg Cross i The Bulletin

state forecasters' predictions, and the Oregon Department

gon schools would need to re- of Education reported this ceive a minimum of 44 percent week the surplus would free hasn't reached that b r i dge of the state budget to cover the up $98 million for Oregon yet," he said, adding that while additional kindergarten stu- school districts, including apthe district is moving in the dents in a cost-neutral man- proximately $680,000 for the i n c reasing the ner. For Redmond, more stu-

tosh said. "We don't want to initiate something today that we will have to cut tomorrow. But if we wait until we know

dents without more funding

Redmond School District.

R edmond officials

week said the extra $680,000

$2 million in 2015. "We're looking at this early enough to begin rallying support for more funding and get help from our legislators," she

could help the district hire a director of technology and in-

An early analysis of tax rev-

We are rolling out the Red Carpet and inviting Business Professionals, Families, and Residents to join our Bend Chamber of Commerce Ribbon Cutting 8c SociaL Enjoy Fine Wines, Hors d'oeuvres, 8c Entertainment

this

could mean a hit of more than

sald.

C ome celebrate our new status as partof Prestige Senior Living in Hollywood Style, where our Residents are the STARS!

enuesforthe end of2013 came in about $800 million above

ent value in offering full-day kindergarten, but the water

school day for kindergartners in 2015, the decision is not final. "We're trying to stay focused on sustainability," McIn-

4:15pm - Ribbon Cutting 4:45-6:Oopm -Social

30% 2003-05 2005-07 2007-09 2009-11 2011-13 2013-15

staff and pay them will be a Source: Redmond School District big hit to district coffers if the state declines to give a bigger all the facts about funding, slice of the pie to K-12 schools, we'll be way behind the planMcIntosh said. ning curve." "We think there's an inher-

Everything Hollywood Red Carpet Ribbon Cutting 8c Social

44 8'i

dents is one problem that the

the school, populate it w ith

You are Cordially Invited to our

50%

t h a t,"

district is addressing in part by advising Redmond Proficiency Academy — a charter school currently leasing the district's Hartman school building — to start looking for new digs. But money to reopen

is Happening at Prestige

schools a bigger slice of the state budget pie.

McIntosh said. Finding seats foran average of225m orestu-

direction of

SATURDAY FAMILYFREEDAY:Mid Oregon Credit Union sponsors adayat the museum; free shuttle round trip from the Morning Star Christian School; free;; High Desert Museum, 59800 S.U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www. highdesertmuseum.org. BEND INDOORSWAP MEETAND SATURDAY MARKET:Featuring arts and crafts, collectibles, antiques, children's activities, music and more; free admission; 10a.m.-5 p.m.; BendIndoor Swap Meet, 679 S.E.Third St.; 541-317-4847. PROM ANDBRIDAL FASHION SHOW:Twofashion shows, local vendors and giveaways; free; noon Prom Fashion Show,doors open at11:30 a.m., 2 p.m. Bridal Fashion Show; Historic New Redmond Hotel, 521S.W.Sixth St.; 541-548-6925 or shelly© thedresson6th.com. OPENSTUDIOS:Caldera artistsin-residence present their work followed by atour, film viewing and dinner; free, $45 and reservation requested for dinner; 1-3 p.m.; CalderaArts Center, 31500 Blue LakeDrive, off of U.S. Highway 20, west of Black Butte Ranch; 541-419-9836 or www. calderaarts.org. "BYE BYE BIRDIE": A presentation of the 1960 musical featuring choreography by Michelle Mejaski; dress in your '50s best; $12.50 for reserved seats, $10 atthe door; 2 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 S.W.Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; 541-504-3600 or linda. nye©redmond.k12.or.us. "CAPOTE":A screening of the 2005 film in celebration of the life of actor Phillip Seymour Hoffman; $5; 3 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 or www. volcanictheatrepub.com. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring vocalist Mary Stallings with Mel Brown, EdBennett and Tony Pacini ;SOLD OUT;5 p.m.;The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. SPAY-GHETTI:Live music and a spaghetti feed; proceedsbenefit BrightSide Animal Center; $15, $10 for children younger than 12; 5:30 p.m.; Sleep InnandSuites of Redmond, 1847 N.U.S. Highway 97; 541-504-1500 or www. brightsideanimals.org/events/

E.

State funds toschools

Continued fromA7

more complex t ha n

SASSPARILLA: The Portland indie-roots band performs, with Marshall Law; $7 plus fees in advance, $10 atthe door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70S.W. Century Drive, Bend;541-3231881 or www.volcanictheatrepub. com. YIKEFESTTOUR: A hip-hop show, with Priceless DaRoc, JD J12, tf Getitindy, D-Mac, MTV's Chonk Chonk, Jan NFresh, 99% C2 Saucy and DJKentot; $15 plus fees in advance, $20 atthe door; 9 p.m., doors openat8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51N.W. GreenwoodAve., Bend; 541-4084329 or www.j.mp/YikeFest.

novation, or they may set aside

money to help fund all-day kindergarten. — Reporter: 541-548-2186, Ipugmire@bendbulletin.com

For more information or to RSVP contact: (541) 312-2003 or

Prestige Senior Living

HighDesertMarketing@Prestigecare.com

High Desert www.presttgecare.com

2660 NE Mary Rose Place Bend, OR 97701


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A9

ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT

oma es u iu's e' ementa TV SPOTLIGHT

w riter-director Richard L i n-

By Jay Bobbin

klater's1993 comedy-drama "Dazed and Confused," which

Zap2it

also featured such notables

Elementary" is one of my Q ••"favorite programs. Lucy

as Ben Affleck, Parker Posey, Milla Jovovich, Joey Lauren Adams, Rory Cochrane and

Liu's clothing is very modern and beautifully designed. Who is her wardrobe designer?

Adam Goldberg. Before that, McConaughey

— Anita Ross, Columbus, Ohio

actually had his f i rst listed

credit for a 1992 episode of the television series "Unsolved

A

• Rebecca Hofherr is the • CBS mystery s how's costume designer. Her sense of style also has been seen in

Mysteries." He played the title

role of a murder victim in the story "Larry Dickens."

another CBS series, "Unforget-

• I've been enjoying re• runs o f "Remington

Q

table," and in such movies as "Winter's Bone" — which gave an early showcase to Jenni-

Steele." When did the show

A

fer Lawrence — and "Step Up Revolution."

originally air'? — Michelle Collins,

Photos via Newscom

• anie Z imb a l ist-Pierce Brosnan detective series ran from 1982 to 1987 on NBC. It

Attic," will they be givingus the remaining V.C. Andrewsbooks

A• Even before the cable network's version of

" Flow-

Olsen. Is that true'? — Dave Porter, Lawton, Okla.

is. Though Olsen's A •• ItDeeks has eyes for Ru-

ers" made its debut last month, ah's Kensi on the CBS advenplans were announced by Life- ture series, it's Olsen's older time to develop a film based sibling — David Paul Olsen, on the story's sequel, "Petals who works as his stunt double on the Wind." Since it's set 10 on the show — who is Ruah's years later, different actors will

significant other o ff-screen.

be sought to play Cathy and They welcomed a son on Dec. Christopher, but Heather Gra- 30. ham and Ellen Burstyn will return. heard that the father of Q •• IDaniela Ruah's newbaby

of my favorite comQ •• One edies is Mel B rooks' "Young Frankenstein." Years

ago, I saw an addendum at is the brother of her "NCIS: Los the end, in which the cast dis-

the second straight year, a story taken from the pagesof American history triumphed at the British film awards, with "12 Years aSlave" winning top honors. Here aresome other big wins from across the pond: • BEST FILM:"12 Years aSlave" • BEST DIRECTOR:Alfonso Cuaron, "Gravity" • LEADINGACTOR:Chiwetel Ejiofor, "12 Years aSlave" • LEADINGACTRESS:Cate Blanchett, "Blue Jasmine" • SUPPORTINGACTOR: Barkhad Abdi "Captain Phillips" • SUPPORTINGACTRESS: Jennifer Lawrence, "American Hustle"

See a list of all winners at www.bafta.org. Source: www.hafta.org

A

Q•

Angeles" co-star Eric Christian

British AcademyDfFilm and TelevisionArts —For

Raleigh,N.C. • The lighthearted Steph-

Lucy Liu, left, star of the CBS mystery show "Elementary," has a stylish, modern wardrobe that catchNow that Lifetime has es the eye. Meanwhile on Lifetime, Heather Graham, right, stars in the TV movie adaptation of V.C. An• given us "Flowers in the drews "Flowers in the Attic" and is scheduled to reprise her role in the sequel, "Petals on the Wind."

in movie format? — DomBracco, DeLand, Fla. • One of t hem, at l e ast.

AWAROS

cussed the making of it. Is

minutes and has a number of got one more season than inthere any way that could be the film's principals, from both tended, since the network sudbroadcast again or seen on a sides of the camera, talking denly renewed it after Pierce DVD? about the production that fa- Brosnan was named as Roger — Ed Belcher, mously used some of the equip- Moore's successor to the bigValley Grove,WVa. ment from the 1931 "Franken- screen role of James Bond. • It could have been a 2002 stein" movie. He had to forgo that, though • episode of "Backstory," it came back around to him in I've been enjoying Mat- the mid-1990s. Not as widely a series that ran on AMC and told the histories of certain • thew M c Conaughey's known is the fact that Zimbalmovies. It's been some time award show speeches lately. ist had to withdraw from the since the channel repeated that What was the first movie he movie "RoboCop" for the same series, but something similar is was in? reason, with that role going to available on the DVD and Blu— Judy Lewis, Nancy Allen instead. ray editions of the Brooks comGrand Junction, Colo. — Send questions of general edy classic. • The first one on record interest via email to tvpipeline® "Making Fr a nkenSense • is a cult classic, which tribune.corrL Writers must include of 'Young Frankenstein'" is a not every actor can say about their names, cities and states. featurette that runs dose to 45 his first big-screen role. It was Personal replies cannot be sent.

Q•

TV TODAY 4p.m. on NGC, "Freakonomics" — Based on the book, this special brings together some well-known documentary filmmakers to tell a series of seemingly unconnected stories, which are then woven together for an eye-opening revelation. Participants include Morgan Spurlock ("Super Size Me") Alex Gibney ("Enron: The Smartest Guys in the Room"), Seth Gordon ("The King of Kong") and more. 8 p.m. on 5 B, "XXII Winter Olympics" —One of the hottest rivalries of these Games gets another chapter today in Sochi, Russia, in the finals of ice dance. Canada's Tessa Virtue and Scott Moir will defend their gold medal from the 2010

games inVancouveragainst

Girlfriend's texts leave family in turmoil Dear Abby:My youngest grown I do this to try and make sure the son discovered that his girlfriend parents are at home and responsi— his possible future wife — was ble. (Honestly, if they weren't, I'd texting pictures of herself to his take my son and leave.) I know it stepfather. Needless to say, he told

her the relationship is over. Now, for obvious reasons, he no longer wants to

comfort in knowing that all kids

that their children are safe and su-

be around his stepfather and is deep-

T imes are d i f - pervised. When an entire "village" ferent for our kids is watching, there is less chance of DEAR ly concerned about today. I just can't be- a lamb straying. how it will affect his lieve that someone DearAbby: I have been married ABBY r elationship w i t h would simply drop to my wife for 33 years. I recently his mother, my exoff a child and speed found a pair of her panties with wife. They are close, away when he/she "Booty Call" printed across the which I encouraged, but she seems has absolutely no clue who these back. I can't help but wonder. She to be in denial about the situation.

people are. I'm not a h elicopter

has never had underwear like that

Have you any suggestions on how parent; I'm just a mother who loves to be supportive of my son and all my children enough to make sure they're in good hands. the dynamics? — Too Much Drama in Missouri Recently, a ninth-grader in our Dear Too Much Drama:You say school district had a house party your ex-wife seems to be in denial. where 30 kids received underage Was the reason for the breakup drinking citations! Sorry — but I'm ever explained to her'? If it wasn't, taking no chances. Parenting is then your son should talk to his not being your child's best friend. mother about it, and from then on Pleaseencourage parents not to arrange to see her alone. be afraid to reach out to other parDear Abby: Ijust dropped off my ents. It really does take a village. — Vigilant in Bucks County, Pa. 13-year-old son at a party. He's a seventh-grader, and when I take Dear Vigilant:Your children are

in 33 years. What gives'?

him to a friend's house, if I haven't met the parents, I walk him to the

millions of readers are curious, too.

door andintroduce him and myself to them.

fortunate to have a mother who

is as involved in their lives as you are. Not all young people are so lucky. Your son may find your

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR MONDAY, FEB. 17, 2014:This yearyouevolve and grow in a newway. At times you might feel as if you do not have achoice. If you feel that way, stop and rethink your alternatives. Brainstorm more often with people who do not think like you. Seekto achieve your goals. If you are single, you will meet many people. Comesummer, the possibility of Stars showthe kind meeting someone of dsy you'll have of significance is ** * * * D ynamic likelY. Do not com+++ P ~t~~~ mit unless you are

sure of yourchoice. If you are attached, your relationship

could becomeeven

more significant as your sweetie teams up with you to make adream cometrue. You will enter a very romantic period during the summer. LIBRA likes the wayyou think.

ARIES (March 21-April19) ** * *

You will accomplish more in the

morning. Intheevening, randomcalls and perhaps a visit with a loved onecould take priority. Your instincts about a situation could be off. Someone might pointyou in the wrong direction. Tonight: Make nice, and invite others to dinner.

TAURUS (April2D-May20) ** * Dive into a dynamic problem. You will enjoy the brainstorming involved with heading in a newdirection. You could find that someone is dealing with a level of discomfort during this process. Tonight: Remember thatyou're not always comfortable with change, either.

GEMINI (May21-June2D)

— Surprised Texan

Dear Surprised:Was your wife wearing the lingerie at the time'?

If not, how did you discover the panties'?

The surest way to get to the bottom of this would be to ask your wife this question. She may have

thought they were cute and bought them on impulse — or they may have been a gift. Please let me

know, because not only am I interestedin her answer, but I'm sure — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

resolution in an amiable manner. Oncethe air is cleared, you can direct your energy in a different direction. Tonight: Live life to the fullest.

CANCER (Juns21-July 22) ** * * L isten to your sixth sense when speaking with a close loved one. There might be a lot more going on than meets the eye. This person might not be able to share what the issue is. Give him or her space to work it out. Tonight: In the thick of the moment.

LEO (July23-Aug.22)

** * Decisions made in the afternoon might not be as sound asyou would like them to be. Listen to news and respond accordingly. Recognize that you need to think carefully about the implications involved, especially after you lookat the big picture. Tonight: As you like it.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * You could be full of energy. In the morning, maintain your focus on an important matter involving your career or an older relative. Your sense of humor emerges when dealing with a friend in the afternoon. A meeting will be instrumental. Tonight: Hang with your friends.

CAPRiCORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19)

** * * Detaching will help you deal with ** * * You might be concerned with a a volatile situation. Recognize what is financial matter that needs to behandled happening with a relationship in which inimmediately. Your domestic life could formation might not be properly communipoint to a different direction and anew cated between the parties involved. Know possibility. Listen to feedback, and makea that you can change this situation. Tonight: decision accordingly. Tonight: Reach out to Till the wee hours.

a favorite person. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)

** * * You might feel strongly about a certain matter, so don't hesitate to let others know where you arecoming from. Keep a personal matter quiet, and be willing to have a long-overdue conversation. Focusonyourfinances and eff ectiveness. Tonight: Beam in what you want.

LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) ** * * You might feel out of sync in the morning, but by the afternoon you will draw others to you. Usecare with your fi-

nances; makesmartchoices.Yourperson-

** * * * You will clear up a problem only ality and energy are likely to dominate the afteryou detach and lookat the big picafternoon. You will be all smiles. Tonight: ture. At that point, the solution will permit Visit with a dear loved one.

• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

vigilance embarrassing, but take

your son's age find their parents embarrassing. embarrasses him, but most parOrchids to you for pointing out ents thank me because they want the importance of parents netto meet the parents of the kids who working with each other to ensure are in their homes.

MOVIE TIMESTOOAY

AQUARIUS (Jan.2D-Fsb.1B) ** * * You could discover the benefits of having a conversation in the morning. One-on-one relating resolvesa problem better than any other method can. Usethis opportunity. With new information, you'll gain a new perspective. Tonight: Detach and observe.

PISCES (Feb.19-March2D) ** * * Rethink your interactions with a key person. It can be great to act spontaneously, but sometimes you need to think more carefully about the actions you take. Make a point of having an important conversation later in the day.Tonight: A little consideration goes a long way. © King Features Syndicate

I

I I

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • ABOUTLASTNIGHT(R) 12:45, 3:55, 5, 7:15, 9:50 • AMERICANHUSTLE(R) 1:05, 4:15,7:40 • ENDLESSLOVE(PG-13) 12:15, 3:30, 6:45, 7:55, 9:30 • FROZEN(PG) 11a.m., 4:40, 7:25 • FROZENSINGALONG (PG)2:05 • GRAVITY3-D(PG-13)11:20a.m., 4:55, 7:45 • JACK RYAN: SHADOWRECRUIT (PG-13) 1:40, 10:10 • LABORDAY(PG-13) 10:05 • THE LEGO MOVIE(PG) 11a.m., 1:35, 4:30, 7:05, 9:40 • THE LEGO MOVIE 3-D (PG)12:20, 3:15, 6:20, 9 • LONE SURVIVOR (R) 12:35, 3:45, 6:35, 9:35 • THE MONUMENTS MEN(PG-13) 11:10 a.m., 12:30, 1:55, 3:20, 6:30, 9:25 • THE NUT JOB(PG) 11:35 a.m., 2 • RIDE ALONG (PG-13) 11:05 a.m., 4:45, 7:30, 10 • ROBOCOP(PG-13)12:55,3:40,6:40,9:30 • ROBOCOP IMAX (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 7, 9:45 • VAMPIREACADEMY(PG-13) 7:20, 9:55 • WINTER'STALE(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 1:45, 3,4:20, 6:15, 9:20 • THE WOLFOFWALLSTREET(R) 11:30a.m., 4:10, 8 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •

reigning World Champions Meryl Davis and Charlie White of the United States, tandems who share practice space, a

coach andfriendship. There are also gold-medal finals in men's snowboard cross and men's aerials in freestyle skiing.

Bp.m. on(CW), "Star-Crossed" — This new drama series puts a sci-fi spin on "Romeo and Juliet." Emery (Aimee Teegarden) is human. Roman (Matt Lanter) is an alien and her childhood friend, who she thought was dead. He's alive and attending her school, where they rekindle their bond — amid much disapproval. cr zap2it

Weekly Arts &

Entertainment

MtNssmtslE

r

I

McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • ANCHORMAN 2: THE LEGEND CONTINUES (PG-13)9 • THE SECRET LIFE OFW ALTER MITTY (PG)6 • After 7p.m.,showsare21andolderonly.Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • 2D14OSCAR-NOMINATED ANIMATED SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 6 • 2D14OSCAR-NOMINATED DOCUMENTARY SHORTS (no MPAArating) 2:30 • 2D14OSCAR-NOMINATED LIVEACTION SHORTS (no MPAA rating) 8:30 I

I

TOUCHMARK SINCE 19SO

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Ae~~~ Dishwasher

I

Redmond Cinemas,1535S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)Noon,2:15,4:30,6:45 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 11:30a.m., 2, 4:30, 7 • WINTER'STALE(PG-13) 11:15a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45 • THEWOLF OF WALL STREET (R)11a.m.,2:30,6 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • 12YEARSASLAVE(R)5 • THE BOOKTHIEF (PG-13) 5:45 • THE LEGO MOVIE (PG)3:15, 5:30 • THEMONUMENTS MEN (PG-13)3:30,6 • NEBRASKA (R) 3:15 • PHILOMENA(PG-13) 3

Hbil~bif TV.APPLIANCE Visit Central Oregon's

HunterDoullas

r I~t

Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S.Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • THELEGO MOVIE (PG)Noon,4:40,7 • THE LEGO MOVIE3-D (PG)2:20 • LONE SURVIVOR(R) 6:45 • THE NUT JOB(PG) 12:50, 2:50, 4:50 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 1:40, 4:15, 6:50 • VAMPIREACADEMY(PG-13) 12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7:10 • WINTER'STALE(PG-13) 2, 4:35, 7:20 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • THE LEGO MOVIE(Upstairs — PG) 4:10, 6:45 • ROBOCOP (PG-13) 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.

O

Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine

See 100 life-sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions! See us also for Retractable Awnings, Exterior Solar Screens, Patio Shade Structures

s®aclAssrr COVERINGS

541-388%418 1465 SW Knoll Ave. Bend www.clessic-coverings.com


A10

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

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IlV THE BACI4: WEATHER W Scoreboard, B2 Basketball, B3 Community Sports, B7 THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

The week ahea

A rundown of gamesandevents to watch for locally and nationally from the world of sports:

Today

Wednesday

Friday-Saturday

Friday-Sunday

Sunday

High scboolbasketball, Ridgeview at CrookCountyboys, 7p.m.; Crook County at Ridgeviewgirls, 7 p.m.: It's the second of three meetings this season between theseClass 4A Special District 1 rivals — the only two schools in the district. Both Ridgeview teamswonthe first meetings back onJan. 21, sothe Cowboys andCowgirls will be out to even the score.

NBA basketball, SanAntonio at Portland, 7 p.m. (ComcastSports Net Northwest):The Trail Blazers (36-17) come out of the All-Star break asone of five teams within 5/~ games of the lead in the hotly contested Western Conference. Another of those teams is San Antonio (38-15), and theSpurs visit the Moda Center for the final time this season.

High scboolswimming,state championships at Mt. HoodCommunity College, Gresham:Central Oregon schools are sending an impressive contingent of swimmers in search of team and individual titles. Friday's prelims start at 9 a.m. for Class 5A,6:30 p.m. for Class 4A/3A/2A/1A; Saturday's finals start at 8:15 a.m. for 5A, 6:45 p.m. for

Archery, OregonBowHunters Indoor Championships inBend:Archers from around the state are expected in Central Oregon for three days of competition at The Riverhouse Convention Center. The event includes ayouth tournament on Friday for ages 6-18. For more information, go to www.oregonbowhunters. com.

Winter Olympics, closingceremonies at Sochi, Russia, 8:30 p.m. (NBC): Tape delayed for prime-time viewing, the farewell to the 2014Gamespromises to be as spectacular and captivating as the opening ceremonies. Thetwo-hour broadcast will be preceded at 7p.m. by a 90-minute review program featuring highlights from throughout the competition.

s

4A/3A/2A/1A.

MLB

COMMUNITY SPORTS: SNOW WARRIORS 5K

I

Hudsongets first dullpen session SCOTTSDALE,

Ariz.— Tim Hudson stretched a bit, pawed

ALPINE SKIING

at the dirt with his foot,

and tooka few warm-up tosses. Hewas ready to go. The newest member of the San Francisco Giants' rotation had thrown three bullpen sessions since hesustained a severe injury to his right ankle last

season while with the Atlanta Braves, but none were as significant as this.

Christophe Ena/The Associated Press

Bode Miller breaks down in tears during an interview after his bronze medal run in the super-G on Sunday.

2 medals,strong emotions for Miller, Weibrecht By Howard Fendrich The Associated Press

KRASNAYA POLYANA, Russia This medal mattered to Bode Miller. Not somuch because, at36,his bronze

in Sunday's super-G — behind winner Kjetil Jansrud and surprise runner-up

)k

Andrew Weibrecht — makes Miller the

oldest Alpine medalist in Olympic history. Or even because he now owns six

medals in all, the second-highest total for amale ski racer and tied for second

among U.S. Winter Olympians in any sport. The guy who for years and years insisted results don't mean much to him

declared he actually did care about this one. The last year has been a difficult one for Miller: the death of his younger broth-

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Ryan Dills, of Bend, and a group of runners tackle the water trough near the start of the Snow Warriors 5K course on Sunday in the Old Mill District in Bend.

• From Wonder Womanto adragon andher rescuer,the Snow t', obstaclerun presenteda mud-filled challengeto all Warriors Si

er, Chelone, in April 2013; the court fight over custody of his infant son; the work it took to come back from left knee surgery

By Beau Eastes

staged at the Old Mill District as part of

The Bulletin

the 2014 Oregon WinterFest. Competi-

and return to the Alpine apex.

onathan Doyle had just one goal at torsbraved four waist-deep water crossthis year's Snow Warriors 5K obsta- ings, multiple hay bale hurdles, a snow cle course run. hill runup and slidedown, fire pits, and The 27-year-old Bend resident was a military barrier wall while making not out to set a course record, place in their way twice around the 2.5K loop

SeeSkiing /B5

MEDAL TABLE G S 8 T . :Netherlands 5 5 7 1 7 .:Russia 4 7 5 16

TODAY'S QUOTE

"I think Sochi just

needs to go ahead and put their bid in for the

Summer Games. Go ahead and

UnitedStates 4 4 816 Complete medal table : andresults, B4 TV HIGHLIGHTS NBC, 8 p.m.:Primetime show, including ice dancing, men's snowboard cross, men's aerials and men's ski jumping NBCSN,Tuesday, midnight:Men's Hockey, Elimination Round(TBD) Complete schedule,B4

J

the top 10, or even best his pal Caleb Hicks, whom he entered the race with.

"It was way tougher than I thought it would be," said Bend's Nolan King, 20,

No, Doyle's main objective was much simpler. the race's overall winner. "I just wanted to beat that (freaking) Based on feedback from last year's penguin," he said. event, race director Cynthia Evans said Approximately 220 adventurers this year's Snow Warriors course was inmany dressed in costume — came tended to be more challenging. out for Sunday's Snow Warriors run, SeeWarriors/B7

'You didn't want

Numerous sets of siblings in Sochi provide — Bobsledder both teammatesand (and hurdler) rivalries,B5

This was a lot harder this

year. The water, at least on me, came up to my : waist." — Mindy Blair, of

Talent, dressed as Wonder Woman

The Bu/letin

Not many golf trophies this side of the PGA Tour can turn heads. But this is no plastic golfer stand-

O

during Sunday's game.

Ducks roll to win over Beavers Oregon gets afast start en route to a 93-83 victory in the Civil War,B3

• Offseason update from BendGolf and Country Club,Bg • Watson near perfect at Riviera,Bg

ing on a wooden base. No, Rich Crnich'screations are

process created by his father

green. "Usually if you win a trophy or a per coloring highlights the metallic plaque you hang it in your den or you pine trees that sprout from the base, hang it in the office," says Crnich.

Rich Crnich.

fashioned to

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

This sculpture created by Mark Crnich that is made with a

Oregon's Johnathan Loyd, left, battles Oregon State's Eric Moreland for a rebound

NBA

Inside

By Zack Hall

Lolo Jones, B4

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

in the back.

From anartist's touch, special trophies for golf tournaments

inside

sald. — 7/te Associated Press

to get stuck

TEE TO GREEN

do it."

For all our Olympic cover- • age, go online to bendbulletin.com/ Olympics

course.

.:'

This was his first official turn on the bullpen mound,andthe audience was of greater importance, notably Giants manager Bruce Bochy and trainer Dave Groeschner. Hudson was the third pitcher to work on this particular mound on Sunday, following fellow right-handers Ryan Vogelsong and Tim Lincecum. Buster Posey caught the three pitchers, who all worked out of the stretch. The 38-year-old Hudson threw about 30 pitches andappeared to have no difficulties. He said he felt good. "I feel like I'm the same as far asthrowing goes. It's all a process," he said. "I didn't think about the ankle. The only time I really notice it on occasion during the side to side (movements during conditioning)." Hudsonusually works the lower part of the strike zone,and some pitches were abit lower than he liked. "You don't want to be making your best pitches right away," Hudson

unmistakable with the way the cop-

r esemble a p u t ting

SeeCrnich /B8

LeBron James, of the Miami Heat dunks

during Sunday's game.

East beets West Kyrie Irving leads his team to victory in the NBA All-Star Game,B3


B2

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

ON THE AIR

CORKBOARD

TODAY Time Men's college, North Carolina at Florida State 4 p.m. Women's college,MarylandatDuke 4 p.m. Women's college,UCLAatOregon 4 p.m. Women's college, Georgia Tech atNotre Dame 4 p.m. Men's college, Delaware atTowson 4 p.m. Men's college, Oklahoma State at Baylor 6 p.m. Men's college, M ississippi Valley State at Southern 6 p.m .

TV/Radio

BASKETBALL

ESPN ESPN2

Pac-12 Root NBCSN ESPN

ESPNU

BOXING

Manuel Avila vs. Enrique Quevedo

7 p.m.

Fox Sports1

ON DECK Today Boys basketball: Ridgeviewat CrookCounty,7 p.m. Girls basketball: Crook Countyat Ridgeview,7 p.m.

IN THE BLEACHERS In the Bleachers O 2014 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Uclick www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Tuesday Boys basketball: Bend atCrookCounty, 7p.m.; Ridgeviewat Summit, 7 p.m.; Redmondat Mountain View, 7p.m.; JunctionCityat Sisters, 7:15p.m.; La Salleat Madras,7p.m.; LaPineat Elmira, 7;15 p.m. Girls basketball: Summit at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Mountai nViewatRedmond,7p.mcCrookCounty at Bend, 7p.m.;JunctionCityatSisters,5:45 p.m.; MadrasatLaSalle, 7p.m.; LaPineat Elmira, 5:45 p.m. Wednesday

TUESDAY SOCCER Time TV/Radio UEFAChampions League, Roundof16, Manchester City vs Barcelona 11:30a.m. Fox Sports1 UEFAChampions League, Roundof16, Bayer 04 Leverkusen vsParis Saint-Germain 11:30 a.m. FoxSports 2 AUTO RACING

NASCAR,Whelen Modified Tour: Daytona NASCAR, K8 N Pro Series: Daytona

4 p.m. Fox Sports 2 5:30p.m. FoxSports2

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Kentucky at Mississippi Men's college, Texas at lowaState Men's college, N.C.State at Clemson Men's college, WakeForest at Maryland Men's college, Villanova at Providence Men's college, George Washington at Richmond Men's college, lowa at Indiana Men's college, Georgia atTennessee Men's college, FresnoState atWyoming Men's college, Butler at St. John's Men's college, Utah State atSan DiegoState

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. 8 p.m.

ESPN ESPN2 ESPNU Root

Fox Sports1 NBCSN ESPN ESPNU

Root Fox Sports1 ESPNU

BASEBALL

College, CalState Fullerton at USC

6 p.m.

Pac-12

Listingsarethemostaccurateavailable. TheBulletinis not reSpOnSible far late ChangeS made by TrtrOr radiO StatiOnS.

SPORTS IN BRIEF

Boys basketball: Gilchristvs.TBDinMountain Valley League play-in gameat Gilchrist, 7 p.m. Girls basketball: Culverat EastLinnChristian in Tri-RiverConferenceplayoffs, 6p.m.

TENNIS Professional Qatar TotalOpea Sunday At TheKhalifaTennisComplex Doba, Qatar Purse: $2.44million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship SimonaHalep(7), Romania, def.AngeliqueKerber (6), Germ any, 6-2,6-3. ABN AMRO World Tournament

Sunday At Ahoy' Stadium Rotterdam,Netherlands Purse: 52.05million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship TomasBerdych(3), CzechRepublic, def. Marin Cilic, Croatia,6-4, 6-2. CopaClaro Sunday At BuenosAires LawnTennis Club BuenosAires, Argentina Purse: $557,750(WT250) Surface:Clay-Outdoor Singles Championship DavidFerrer(1), Spain,def. FabioFognini (2), Italy,

6-4,6-3.

U.S. National IndoorChampionship Sunday At TheRacquet Clubof Memphis Memphis, Tenn. Purse: $647,575(WT250) Surface:Hard-Indoor Singles Championship Kei Nishikori(1),Japan,def. IvoKarlovic, Croatia, 6-4, 7-6 (0).

"It's a ruling on the field, your honor. It rose through the appellate process and now players, coaches and millions of viewers are awaiting your decision."

Durant14-274-4 38,Griffin 19-230-0 38,Love 5-111-413, Curry4-142-212, Harden3-7 0-08, Paul 4-92-211, Parker2-50-0 4, Nowitzki 0-2 0-0 0, Howard4-6 0-08, Aldridge2-9 0-04, Davis5-6 0-010, Lillard3-80-09. Totals 65-1279-12155. East AH-Stars 42 34 47 40 — 168 WestAll-Stars 4 4 45 37 29 — 155 3-PointGoals—East Ag-Stars14-44 (Anthony8-13, Irving 3-6,Bosh1-2,George 1-5, Johnson1-6, Wal

0-1,Hibbert0-1,DeRozan0-1,Migsap0-2,James 0-7), WestAll-Stars 16-56(Durant6-17, Ligard3-6, Harden2-6, Love2-7, Curry2-11, Paul1-4, Nowilzki 0-1, Griffin0-2,Howard0-2). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —East Ag-Stars48 (James7), West Ag-Stars 62 (Howard11).Assists—East All-Stars46(Irving14), WestAg-Stars42(Paul13). TotalFouls—East Ag-Stars 13, WestAll-Stars8.A—14,727(17,188).

Men's College Pacific-12Conference AH timesPST

BASKETBALL

BASEBALL

Conference Overall

NBA

BeaVerS get dig Win OVerPacific — TheOregonState baseball team scored early and often in a14-6 win over Pacific Sunday afternoon at Diablo Stadium in Tempe,Ariz. The win pushed the Beavers to 3-0 in the young season with one gameremaining on the trip, today against Pacific at10 a.m. TheTigers, meanwhile, are 1-2 on the year. OSU scored in the first and at one point was tied with Pacific — at1-1 in the second — but the Beavers reeled off four consecutive innings with at least two runs. This included a threerun third inning that was highlighted by Michael Conforto's two-run single. Conforto, Dylan Davis and Jeff Hendrix provided plenty of offense for the Beavers as the trio combined to go 5-for-9 with10 RBls and five walks.

NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION

AH TimesPST

EasternConference W L Pct GB 40 12 .769

OregOn beatS HaWaii in10 inningS — Oregonrallied from a

d-Indiana d-Miami d-Toronto Chicago Atlanta Washington Brooklyn Charlotte Detroit NewYork Cleveland Boston Orlando Philadelphia Milwaukee

Red SOX pitCher DempSter WOn't play in 2014 — Boston

d-Dklahoma Cit y d-SanAntonio Houston d-L.A.Clippers Portland Dallas Phoenix Golden State Memphis Minnesota Denver NewOrleans Utah L.A. Lakers

two-run ninth inning deficit with a pair of runs andthen took advantage of a Hawaii error to claim a 6-5 win over the RainbowWarriors in 10 innings at LesMurakami Stadium on Sunday in Honolulu. Oregon (3-0) got three consecutive pinch hits with one out to tie the gamein thetop of the ninthinning. In the10th, Tyler Baumgartner scored the winning run on a throwing error by Hawaii shortstop Austin Wobrock on a ground ball hit by Connor Hofmann. Oregon (3-0) faces Hawaii once again in the series finale today at 3:05 p.m.The Ducks beat the Rainbow Warriors10-5 Saturday night and 3-2 onFriday night. Red Sox pitcher RyanDempster says hewill not play this season. The 36-year-old right-hander says he isstepping away for physical reasons and to spendmoretime with his family. Dempster finished last season 8-9 with a 4.57ERAand didn't get a start during the Red Sox's postseason run to a World Series title. He has pitched for16 seasonswiththeCubs,Marlins,Reds,RangersandRedSox.Heis 132-133 with a 4.35ERA. Hemadethe All-Star team in 2008.

Reddick, A'S agree to deal —JoshReddicktook somebatting practice swings Sunday attheOakland Athletics' spring training camp and, the waythe ball was jumping off his bat, it was hard to tell he had atroublesome wrist last season. Theinjury now behind him, Reddick andthe Oakland Athletics avoided salary arbitration by agreeing to a $2.7 million, one-year contract Sunday.The26-year-old outfielder had askedfor $3.25 million when the sides swapped figures last month andhadbeen offered $2 million.

Kimdrel, Bravesagree to $42M, 4-year contractCloser Craig Kimbrel and the Atlanta Braves avoided salary arbitration by agreeing to a$42 million, four-year contract. Kimbrel gets a $1 million signing bonus underSunday's deal and salaries of $7 million this year, $9 million in 2015, $11million in 2016 and$13 million in 2017. TheBraves have a$13 million option for 2018 with a $1 million buyout. He also canearn abonus of up to $3.5 million, payable at the end of the contract, based on apoint system tied to All-Star appearances, MVP andCyYongvotingandgamesfinished.

37 28 27 25 25 24 23 22 20 20 19 16 15 9

14 24 25 26 27 27 30 30 32 33 35 38 39 43

WeslernConference

Sacrame nto d-divisionleader

,725 2t/t

.538 12 .519 13 .490 14t/t

.481 15 .471 15t/t .434 IPlt .423 18 .385 20 .377 20t/t

.352 22 .296 25 .278 26 .173 31

L Pct GB 43 12 .782 W

38 15 36 17 37 18 36 17 32 22 30 21 31 22 29 23 25 28 24 27 23 29 19 33 18 35 18 35

.717 4 .679 6 .673 6 .679 6 .593 10'/~ .588 11 .585 11 ,558 12t/t

.472 17 .471 17 .442 18'/z ,365 22'/z .340 24 .340 24

Sunday'sGame East163,West155 Today'sGames No games scheduled Sunday'sSummary

Easi163, WesI155 EASTALL-STARS153 George6-135-518, Anthony10-182-230,James 11-22 0-022,Irving14-170-031, Wade5-60-010, Hibbert4-50-08, Bosh2-30-05, DeRozan4-70-08, Wall 5-72-212,Migsap3-50-06,Johnson2-70-0 5, Noah 4-50-08. Totals 70-1159-9168. WESTALL-STARS(155)

By Jenna Fryer

Ferrer WinS 3rd Straight at Copa Claro —DavidFerrer of Spain has won his third straight CopaClaro title, defeating Fabio Fognini 6-4, 6-3 Sunday onoutdoor clay in BuenosAires, Argentina. It was the 21st ATPsingles title for the top-seeded Ferrer. Second-seeded Fognini was playing his fifth consecutive clay-court final since the French Open.TheItalian won the final a weekago in Chile for his third tour singles title.

Halep deats Kerder towin1st title of year —sev-

enth-seeded SimonaHalep of Romaniawon her first title of the year with a 6-2, 6-3 victory over sixth-seededAngelique Kerber of Germany in the Qatar Openfinal on Sunday in Doha. It is the seventh career title for Halep, with the other six all won last year.

Berdych wins ABIIIAmro tournament —TomasBerdych won his first ATPtournament title since October 2012, beating Marin Cilic of Croatia 6-4, 6-2 Sunday in theABNAmro final in Rotterdam, Netherlands. — From wire reports

Sunday'sGames

Oregon93,OregonState83 Colorado83,USC74

Wednesday'sGames WashingtonatOregon, 6p.m. Arizonaat Utah,7 p.m. UCLA at California, 7:30p.m. Arizona Stateat Colorado, 8p.m. Thursday'sGames WashingtonStateatOregonState,6 p.m. USCatStanford,8p.m. Sunday'sSummary

Oregon 93, OregonSI. 83 OREGON ST. (13-11) Moreland8-101-217, Brandt5-101-1 11, Cooke 3-88-816,Morris-Walker1-54-47, Nelson7-152-4 18, Duvivier2-30-04, Gomis 2-40-04, Schaftenaar 0-0 0-0 0,Reid0-00-0 0, Collier 2-3 2-66. Totals 30-5818-25 83. OREGON (16-8) Moser4-113-415, Austin2-3 0-04, young8-15 7-825, Loyd4-82-211, Dotson6-93-315, Artis 0-2 0-00, Calliste4-62-414,Amardi1-23-45,Cook2-2 0-04, Carter00 00 0.Totals 31-58 20-2598. Halftime —Oregon45-35. 3-Point Goals—Oregon St. 5-16(Cooke2-4, Nelson2-5, Morris-Walker1-4, Duvivier0-1,Brandt0-2), Oregon11-21 (Moser4-6, Calliste 4-6,Young2-4, Loyd1-3, Artis 0-1, Dotson 0-1). FouledDut—None. Rebounds—OregonSt. 29 (Moreland 10), Oregon28 (Moser 7). Assists—Oregon St. 9(Brandt, Cooke4), Oregon18 (Loyd 5). TotalFouls—OregonSt.23, Oregon22.TechnicalsGomis,Moser.A—10,013.

Sunday'sScores East Canisius92,Siena88,30T Llu Brooklyn69, St.Francis (NY)68 Manhattan90,Niagara72 Marist 96,Monmouth(NJ) 92, 20T

Women's college Sunday'sScores East Albany(NY)58,Maine56 Delaware52,Towson43 lona 73,Rider66 JamesMadison69,Drexel58 NewHampshire 76,Harlford 71, OT PennSt.78,Wisconsin68 Pittsburgh56,Clemson43 Quinnipiac83,Monmouth (NJ)50 Syracuse 71, BostonCollege47 UMBC 77,Vermont62 WestVirginia61, TCU57 South Coll. ofCharleston87, Hofstra 74 Georgia 67, Florida58 Kentucky75,Tennessee 71 Louisville82,Memphis 66 McNeese St.84,NewOrleans54 Miami76,FloridaSt. 73 MississippiSt.64 Vanderbilt 62 Missouri68,Auburn58 NorthCarolina89, NCState82 SouthCarolina73, LSU57 TexasASM71,Alabama46 Uconn63,SouthFlorida 38 Virginia80,Virginia Tech64 Midwesl Drake79,Missouri St.69 Eyansville63,IndianaSt.56 f linoisSt.68,S.Illinois 63,DT Michigan70,glinois 63 N. Iowa80,Wichita St.71 Nebraska 76, Indiana61 Purdue74,lowa73 Southwest Baylor72,Texas56 Oklah omaSt.73,Oklahoma57 Far West California74,ArizonaSt.63 Oregon St. 58,SouthernCal48 Stanford74,Arizona48 Washi ngton67,utah66 Washington St.80, Colorado77

BudweiserDuel 2Lineup Aller Sundayqualifying; race Thursday AtDaytonaInternational Speedway DaytonaBeach,Fla. Lap length: 2.5miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,195.852 mph. 2. (99)CarlEdwards,Ford,195.712. 3. 2) BradKeselowski, Ford,195.296. 4. (24)JeffGordon, Chevrolet,195.042. 5. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,194.919. 6. (33)BrianScott, Chevrolet,194.776. 7. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,194.637. 8. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,194.582. 9. (7) Michael Annett, Chevrolet,194.574. 10. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,194.523. 11.(11)DennyHamlin,Toyota, 194.477. 12.(42)KyleLarson,Chevrolet, 194.41. 13.(21)TrevorBayne,Ford, 194.334. 14.(41) KurtBusch,Chevrolet, 194.078. 15. (51)JustinAggaier, Chevrolet,193.616. 16.(40LandonCassill, Chevrolet,193.732. 17. 66I MichaelWaltrip, Toyota,193.428. 18. (35)EricMcclure, Ford,192.905. 19. (1)JamieMcMurray,Chevrolet,192.695. 20. 34)DavidRagan, Ford,192.328. 21.(32)TerryLabonte,Ford,192.135. 22.(52)BobbyLabonte, Chevrolet, 192.493. 23.(83)RyanTruex, Toyota, 190.347. 24.(93) Morgan Shepherd,Toyota, 189.542.

DEALS Transactions

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Afler Sundayqualifying; race Sunday,Feb. 23 At DaylonaInternational Speedway DaytonaBeach, Fla. Lap length: 2.5miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,196.019mph.

BASEBALL AmencanLeague BOSTON REDSOX— Agreedto terms with RHP FranciscoCorderoonaminor leaguecontract. OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Agreedto termswith OF JoshReddick onaone-year contract. National League ATLANTA BRAVES— Agreedto termswith RHP CraigKimbrelonafour-yearcontract. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Agreedto termswith RHPA.J. Burnettto a one-yearcontract. Designated LHPJoeSaveryfor assignment. COLLEGE LAMAR — Firedmen'sbasketball coach Pat Knight. Promoted assistant coachTic Priceto interim

coach.

Dillon doesn't take the responsibility lightly. "Everybody wants to see hardt iytVictory Lane following his breakthrough 1998 this number perform well, and

with the company at the 1998 Daytona 500 with Earnhardt,

that's what my goals are," Dii-

death. Dillon has now given the organization a shot in the

Dillon was a kid when he

posed for a picture with Earn-

Nishikori of Japan successfully defended his title at the U.S.National Indoor Tennis Championships, beating Ivo Karlovic of Croatia 6-4, 7-6 (0) on Sunday.Nishikori won his fourth career title along with the $103,100 winner's checkand 250 points on the ATPTour by making this event at TheRacquetClub his first successful title defense. He became the first back-to-back winner sinceTommyHaaswon in 2006 and 2007.

utah Washington OregonSt. Oregon WashingtonSt. SouthernCal

L 2 5 6 8 7 8 8 12 11 8 16 15

Dillon putsNo. 3 enpele fer Daytona 500 DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. With the famed No. 3 on his

NIShikori beatS KarlOVIC todefend MemphiS title — Kei

Arizona UCLA ArizonaSt. California Colorado Stanford

W 23 20 19 17 19 16 17 14 13 16 9 10

BudweiserDuel1 Lineup Aller Sundayqualifying; race Thursday AtDaytonaInternational Speedway DaytonaBeach,Fla. Lap length: 2.5miles (Car numberin parentheses) 1. (3)AustinDilon, Chevrolet,196.019mph. 2.I6) GregBiffle, Ford,195.818. 3. I31) Ryan Newman,Chevrolet,195.707. 4. (88)DaleEarnhardt Jr., Chevrolet,195.211. 5. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,195.004. 6. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,194.894. 7.(43) AricAlmirola, Ford,194.658. 8.(22)JoeyLogano,Ford, 194.582. 9.(20) MattKenseth,Toyota, 194.574. 10.(5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet, 194.544. 11.(18)KyleBusch,Toyota,194.502. 12.(4) KevinHarvick, Chevrolet, 194.422. 13.(10)DanicaPatrick, Chevrolet, 194.38. 14.(47) A JAllmendinger,Chevrolet, 194.108. 15.(36)ReedSorenson,Chevrolet, 194.066. 16.(38DavidGililand, Ford,193.736. 17. 30I ParkerKligerman,Toyota,193.594. 18. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,193.365. 19.(55BrianVickers,Toyota, 192.798. 20. 26I ColeWhitt, Toyota,192.538. 21. (95)MichaelMcDowel, Ford,192.291. 22. (98)JoshWise,Ford,192.061. 23. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota,19048, 24. (23)AlexBowman,Toyota,189.685. 25. (77)DaveBlaney, Ford.

MOTOR SPORTS: NASCAR

The Associated Press

TENNIS

W L 10 2 9 3 8 4 8 4 8 5 7 5 6 7 6 7 5 7 4 8 2 11 1 11

NotreDam e73, BostonCollege69 Quinnipiac74,St. Peter's 64 St. John's82, Georgetown60 Temple71,SMU64 Wagner 73,Bryant 61 South Lipscomb 76,KennesawSt. 73 Louisviffe102,Rutgers 54 McNeese St.72,NewOrleans69 Mercer89,N.Kentucky67 W.Carolina82, UNCGreensboro 77,OT Midwest Creighton101,Viganova80 Minnesota 54, Northwestern 48 Nebraska 60, MichiganSt.51 WichitaSt.84,Evansville 68 Wisconsin 75, Michigan62 WrightSt.72,Oakland71 Far West Colorado83, USC74 Oregon 93, OregonSt.83

2. (78)MartinTruexJr., Chevrolet,195.852. Failed toQualify 3. (16)GregBiffle, Ford,195.818. 4. (99)CarlEdwards,Ford,195.712. 5 (31)RyanNewman Chevrolet 195707 6. (2) Brad elowski, Ford,195.296. 7.88) DalKees Earnhardt. Jr., Chevrolet,195.211. 8. (24) Jeff Gordon, Chevrolet,195.042. 9. (17)RickyStenhouse.Jr., Ford,195.004. 10.(27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,194.919. 11. (9)MarcosAmbrose,Ford,194.894. 12. (33)BrianScott, Chevrolet, 194.776. 13. (43)AricAlmirola, Ford,194.658. 14. (48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet,194.637. 15. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,194.582. 16. (13)CaseyMears, Chevrolet,194.582. 17. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota,194.574. 18. (7)MichaelAnnett, Chevrolet,194.574. 19. (5)KaseyKahne,Chevrolet,194.544. 20. (15)Clint Bowyer,Toyota,194.523. 21. (18)KyleBusch,Toyota,194.502. 22. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,194.477. 23. (4)KevinHarvick, Chevrolet,194.422. 24. 42)KyleLarson, Chevrolet,194.410. 25.10DanicaPatrick,Chevrolet,194.380. 26.I21I TrevorBayne,Ford,194.334. 27. (47)AJAgmendinger, Chevrolet,194.108. 28. (41)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,194.078. 29. (36)ReedSorenson,Chevrolet, 194.066. 30. (51)JustinAllgaier,Chevrolet,193.815. 31. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,193.736. 32. (40)LandonCassig, Chevrolet,193.732. 33.(30)ParkerKligerman,Toyota, 193.594. 34. (66)MichaelWaltrip, Toyota,193.428. 35. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,193.365. 36. (35)EricMcClure, Ford,192.905. 37. (55)BrianVickers, Toyota,192.798. 38. (1)JamieMcMurray, Chevrolet,192.695. 39. (26)ColeWhitt, Toyota,192.538. 40. 34)Da yid Ragan, Ford,192.328. 41. (95)MichaelMcDowel, Ford,192.291. 42.(32TerryLabonte,Ford,192.135. 43. 98I JoshWise,Ford,192.061. 44.(52)BobbyLabonte, Chevrolet, 191.493. 45.(87)JoeNemechek,Toyota,190.480. 46.(83)RyanTruex, Toyota, 190.347. 47. (23)AlexBowman,Toyota,189.685. 48. (93)MorganShepherd, Toyota,189.542.

car and memories of the late win. Dale Earnhardt fresh in his He will have many more mind, Austin Dillon took the memories from this milestone, fabled number out of hibetYta- like the congratulatory handtion and straight to the top at shake he received from Daytona.

R ichard P etty

w hen

lon said. "I love getting in that race car and driving it. I think once we get through some of these races here at the beginning of the year, everything will s i nk in and I'ii get comfortable and be able to have

Dillon reawakened the days qualifying ended. of The Intimidator and proved NASCAR's f a mily he can handle the spotlight roots rtm deep, so Chilthrust on his ride in the 3, win- dress never had to leave some fktn." It's the fourth ti me ning the pole Sunday for the the family tree to find D i l lon season-opening Daytona 500. the right driver for the the No. 3 has won the He took the top spot with number. pole for the Daytona 500. Buda lap at 196.019 mph in NADillon has been using it dy Baker did it in 1969, Ricky SCAR's season opener iyt a car

in NASCAR national com-

Richard Chiidress has refused petition since 2009, when he to field at NASCAR's top level since Earnhardt's fatal acci-

made his Truck Series debut in the No. 3. He won the

dent on the last lap of the 2001 Truck championship in 2011 race. driving the No. 3 for Richard But with h i s 2 3 -year-old Chiidress Racing, and the Nagrandson ready to move to the tionwide title last season in the Sprint Cup Series, Childress same number. allowed Dillon to use the numSo Childress knew — he ber widely associated with the always knew and has insisted seven-time champion. Earn- that Earnhardt gave his blesshardt won 67 races, six cham- ing long before his deathpionships and the 1998 Dayto- that Dillon could use the numna 500 driving the No. 3. ber if he ever made it to Cup.

Rudd in 1983 and Earnhardt irt 1996. But this one was emotion-

said the company ran on adrenaline afterEarnhardt's

"On the sentimental side, I

was really pretty good about this 3 thing," Lawrence said. "But when I saw that car hit

the race track today, it kind of tore me up a little bit. Austin is

such a good guy, he has been great for our company." Said Childress: "The energy that he brings to our whole organization is huge. He's been in the shop so long, him and his brother, Ty. I can remember Dale pushing them around

ai all the way through RCR, on a creeper down there in the which had its ups-and-downs garage when they were just in performance in the 13 years little babies, so that's how far since Earnhardt's death. Now they go back." Dillon comes in at

a nother

Martin Truex Jr., driving a

changing of the guard, as Kev- Chevrolet for Furniture Row in Harvick, the driver who slid Racing, qualified second with into Eamhardt's seat the week a lap at 195.852 mph. Truex's after his death, has moved to engine is built b y E a rnanother team. hardt-Childress Racing, givEngine builder Danny Law- ing the company a sweep of rence, who made his debut the Daytona 500 front row.


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL

B3

NFL

as s a ea s uc s over eavers Manziel, Sam to draw

The Associated Press

Also on Sunday:

EUGENE — Oregon's Mike Moser

No. 4 Wichita St. 84, Evansville 68: EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Ron Baker

said good shooting is contagious, and that certainly was the case during the

scored26 points and Fred VanVleet

opening minutes of the Ducks' 93-83

finished with 18 points, eight assists

win over archrival Oregon State on Sunday. ing a blistering 12 of 16 from the floor and led 31-12 after a Jason Calliste

and five steals, leading Wichita State to a victory at Evansville. The Shockers (27-0, 14-0 Missouri Valley Conference) remained one of two perfect teams in major college basketball and

3-pointer at the 10:39 mark. Oregon

extended their school-record win-

went 7 for 7 on 3-pointers during the stretch, with Moser making three.

ning streak. They are the 21st team in Division I history to go 27-0, a list No.

The Ducks started the game shoot-

"For a while there, we were 100

1 Syracuse could join later this week.

percent. You just didn't want to be that guy to miss," said Moser, who

No. 18 Creighton 101, No. 6 Villanova 80: OMAHA, Neb. — Doug McDermott matched his season high

finished with 15 points and seven

rebounds. "Taking good shots, good shooters were shooting the ball, good passes. Just knocking it down," said Ducks point guard Johnathan Loyd. Joseph Young scored 25 points for Oregon (16-8, 4-8 Pac-12), which had five players in double figures. Eric Moreland led Oregon State with 17 points and 10 rebounds, while

with 39 points and passed Larry Bird for 13th place on the Division I career scoring chart, and Creighton defeated Villanova. Creighton's second win over Villanova in a month moved the

RobertoNelson scored 18 forthe Bea'I

vers (13-11, 5-7 Pac-12). Oregon State

/

now has lost three in a row.

"You can't play any game, let alone the Civil War game, where you start the game off and give them a 19-point lead," said Oregon State coach Craig

t 3U C ; K' :

State responded with a

15-3 run,

away lay-in with 5:13 left in the half.

But the Ducks pulled away again and took a 45-35 advantage into the Chris Pietsch/The Associated Press break. Oregon's Joseph Young, left, shoots over Oregon State's Angus Brandt during In the second half, the Beavers twice trimmed the lead to two points,

the latter when Hallice Cooke sank two free throws to make the score 7270 with 5:11 remaining.

"That's a lot of character there,"

Robinson said. "That's not just bas-

ketball. You have to know how not to giveup and keep chipping away and sticking with your game plan to make that kind of comeback."

the first half of Sunday's game in Eugene. Young led the Ducks with 25 points.

Nextup

Nextup

Washington at Oregon When:Wednesday, 6 p.m. TV: ESPN

Washington State at Oregon State When:Thursday, 6 p.m.

Radio:

TV:Pac-12

1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Radio:940-AM

Missed shots and offensive fouls on two straight possessions doomed

The Associated Press

INDIANAPOLIS — J o h nny Manziel and Michael Sam will be

the headliners at the NFL's scouting combine. W orkouts forthe league's predraft event began Saturday. The most important aspects of

the combine are often the ones that get the least publicity — players measuring in, going through the medical checks and the team interviews that could put many

51:EAST LANSING, Mich. — Terran

Petteway scored 23 points and Wal-

biggest offseason event on the NFL calendar — and the only

ter Pitchford added 18 and Nebraska

that draws team owners, team ex-

topped Michigan State. Petteway had 16 points in the last 20 minutes after

ecutives, league officials, coach-

LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Luke Hancock

making it 34-27 after a Nelson break-

By Michael Marot

questions to rest or raise an en-

break for the Cornhuskers (14-10, 6-6 Big Ten). No. 13 Louisville 102, Rutgers 54:

After falling behind early, Oregon

combine

Bluejays (21-4, 11-2) into a first-place tie with the Wildcats (22-3, 11-2) in the Big East. Nebraska 60, No. 9 Michigan State

Pitchford had scored 12 before the

Robinson.

spotlight at

scored acareer-high 25 points,including six 3-pointers, and Louisville throttled Rutgers. The Cardinals (21-4, 10-2 American Athletic Conference) made a season-high 16 shots from beyond the arc on 30 attempts for their fourth straight win, com-

tirely new set of concerns. So with more than 300 NFL draft hopefuls attending the second

es, agents and potential future stars to the same venue — this

week will be far more than just a two-man show.

Here are five things to watch this week in Indianapolis. Johnny begood: Manzielis a dynamic playerwho may have more on the line this week than

anybody else in town. After two sensational years at Texas A8zM,

he's trying to position himself to be considered the first over-

pleting a season sweep of the Scarlet

all pick by the Houston Texans.

Knights (10-16, 4-9). No. 21 Wisconsin 75, No. 15 Mich-

While the 2012 Heisman Trophy winner has said he will not work

igan 62: ANN AR B OR, Mich.

out next weekend, scouts will be

-

Frank Kaminsky had 25 points and 11 rebounds, and Wisconsin smothered Michigan in the first half before holding on. The Wolverines (18-7, 10-3 Big Ten) cut an 18-point deficit

looking at Manziel's height and weight to determine if he can hold up against the NFL's bigger, faster, stronger defenders. Coaches and team executives also will be

to three in the second half, but Kaminsky went on a 7-2 run after that,

eager to see how he handles the

helping Wisconsin regain control. The Badgers (21-5, 8-5) have won four straight — and they committed only

of the combine outsiders never see — to determine whether he's

any hopeofa comeback forthe Bea- school record if it holds for the rest of by two points. vers, and the Ducks went on a 9-0 run theyear. Altman said Oregon isn't a tourcapped by another Calliste 3-pointer The Beavers hit 5 of 16 from be- nament team right now. "But we can two turnovers. with 2:51 left. yond the arc on Sunday. change that.We're going to have Temple 71, No. 23 SMU 64: PHILA"We just wanted to find a way to No college basketball teams have plenty of opportunities, if you look at DELPHIA — Dalton Pepper scored stop them and rebound down the played more against each other than our schedule," he said. 24 points and Temple upset SMU. stretch," Moser said. the Ducks and Beavers, whose game Four of the Ducks six games before Playing without injured starter and "When they got it back to a twoSunday was the 341st matchup in the Pac-12 tournament are at home. leading rebounder in Anthony Lee, point game, our guys struggled a the "Civil War" series. Oregon State With the win, Loyd is tied for the Temple (7-17, 2-10 American Athletlittle bit with that, but we had some leads the series 185-156. most victories ever in a Duck uniform ic Conference) beat a top-25 oppoguys make some plays," said Oregon Young, Oregon's leading scorer, with 89. Former teammate E.J. Sin- nent for the first time since March 10 coach Dana Altman. had just five points in the Ducks 80- gler shares the record. against No. 21 VCU. Oregon made 12 of 14 free throws 72 lossto the Beavers on Jan. 19.OrLoyd had 11 points and five assists Colorado 83, USC 74: LOS ANin the final 2 minutes to seal the egon State held Oregon to 38 percent on Sunday. "This is my last Civil War, GELES — Xavier Johnson scored game. shooting in that game. so I definitely wanted this game," 20 points and Colorado completed a The Ducks were 11 of 21 on 3-pointOn Sunday, the Ducks shot 53 Loyd said. season sweep of Southern Califorers. Ironically, long-range shooting percent from the floor, compared to Nelson entered the game leading nia with a victory, sending USC to its has been a strength for the Beavers nearly52percentfortheBeavers. the Beavers and the Pac-12 with 21.5 sixth straight loss. Five players scored this season. The Ducks started the season 13-0 points per game. in double figures for the Buffaloes Oregon State entered the game before losing five of their first six The Beavers were looking for just (19-7, 8-5 Pac-12). This is the school's ranked first in the Pac-12 and fifth games in conference play. The Ducks their second season sweep over the best start after 26 games since the in the nation for 3-point shooting at had dropped three of their previous Ducks since 1993. The last was in 1996-97 squad opened 19-7 and end41.4 percent. That figure would be a four games, and all of the losses came 2010. ed up in the NCAA tournament.

private interviews — the one part the guy they want as the face of their franchise for the next

decade. Michael Sam:Last week, Sam became the first NFL draft prospect to acknowledge he is gay. This week, he will face a media circusin Indy.He also has some questions about his physical ability to answer. The SEC's defensive player of the year was listed last season at 6-foot-2, 255 pounds,

meaning Sam must demonstrate he has the speed and the agility to change directions to make it in the NFL. The heavy shift to 3-4

defenses has put a premium on heavier defensive ends, forcing lighter players to make the move to linebacker. If Sam demonstrates he's quick enough to be a

pass-rushing end in a 4-3 front or athletic enough to move to rush linebacker in a 3-4 front, his draft

stock should improve. The No. 1 question:Manziel is

NBA: ALL-STAR GAME

only one part of the equation at the top of the draft. And if Man-

East rallies to overtake West at All-Star game

ziel doesn't go No. 1, who will? That answer

p r obably w o n 't

be settled after this weekend, though most analysts believe a quarterback will once again be taken with the first pick. If the

By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press

NEW ORLEANS — The Eastern

Conference finally stopped Kevin Durant and Blake Griffin — then

strongly from an uneven All-Star Saturday night. The new format of the slam dunk contest Saturday wasn't a hit, but every night is a dunk contest when

stopped its losing streak at the NBA All-Star game. Kyrie Irving had 31 points and 14 assists and was voted the game's

Griffin is involved. The guy who once jumped over a

MVP, Carmelo Anthony made a record eight3-pointers and scored 30

the backboard often barely finished

points, and the East rallied for a 163155 victory over the West on Sunday night in the highest-scoring All-Star Gerakd Herbert /The Associated Press game ever. Damian Lillard, of the Portland Trail Blazers goes for the ball during the NBA All "It's a great honor," Irving said. Star game Sunday night in New Orleans. "We had afew MVPs. Everyone out

here today is an MVP." Durant and Griffin each finished thony nailed his final 3-pointer, and halftime, both two shy of records set w ith 38 points, four shy o f W i l t James scored to make it 161-155. by Glen Rice in 1997. Chamberlain's All-Star game record. George closed it out with two more And there was plenty of music, the But the East scored the final 10 points free throws and finished with 18 rosters and starting lineups introto pull out a game it trailed by 18. points. duced around a concert by Pharrell "We wanted it," LeBron James The game that usually doesn't get Williams, who was joined by his own said. "I've been a part of the last three tight until the final minutes was close All-Stars in Nelly, Busta Rhymes, and in defeat." throughout the fourth quarter, nei- Sean "Diddy" Combs and Snoop Irving scored 15 points in the ther team leading by more than four Dogg. fourth quarter as the East ended a until the final minute. M agic Johnson led aband,too,enthree-game losing streak. James had Chris Paul had 11 points and 13 as- couraging the All-Stars to join him 22 points, seven rebounds and seven sists, and first-time All-Star Stephen in singing "Happy Birthday" after assists. Curry had 12 points and 11 assists for the first quarter to Hall of Famer Bill "The superstars of our league were the West. But the best point guard on Russell, the NBA's greatest champion just telling us to compete on every the floor was Irving, who shot 14 of 17 who was celebrating his 80th. play," Irving said. "Trying to play as and helped the East ring up 87 points The All-Stars played better than much defense as possible. You know, in the second half after it surrendered they sang. sticking to our game plan. We had a a record 89 in the first. The East finished with 61 percent game plangoing in andwe executed." In a colorful tribute to New Orle- shooting, needing all sorts of offense The 318 points broke the record of ans, players wore sneakers and socks after it simply couldn't defend Durant 303 set in 1987. that ranged from green and blue to and Griffin. Griffin shot 19 of 23, while Durant orangeand purple,m aking the game Durant made 6 3-pointers and easfinished with 10 rebounds and six look like a Mardi Gras parade. ily blew past the 28.8 points he had assists. The parade was one of layups and been averaging in All-Star games, But the West was shut out after dunks for the West, which scored 44 which was an NBA record. Durant's 3-pointer gave it a 155-153 points in the first quarter and 45 in Outside of the ugly sleeved jerseys, lead with 1:59 left. Indiana's Paul the second. Griffin had 18 points in it was a good look for the NBA's midGeorge made three free throws, An- the first quarter and Durant had 22 at season showcase, bouncing back

car to win a slam dunk contest had eight slams in the first 11 minutes,

choice is not Manziel, it could be Blake Bortles or Teddy Bridgewater. The Texans recently hired Central Florida's former college quarterback coach, and Bridgewater was considered the front-runner to be No. 1 throughout most of the college season. A

year ago, at this point the oddson favorite to go No. 1 was Utah

shaking from the last one when he threw down the next.

defensive tackle Star Lotulelei.

The Westbegan to open a gap in

now and May's draft, and don't

the second quarter behind a hometown star and a former one — Antho-

So a lot can change between

better than he and the West had two

rule outa possible resurgence by South Carolina defensive end Jadeveon Clowney. Junior jam: A record number of college players (102) have given up their remaining college eligibility to jump into this year's

years ago in Orlando.

NFL draft. While the first-round

Durant and Griffineach had 30 points by the end of the third quarter, but the East trimmed what was a West 18-point lead to 126-123 after three.

is sure to include plenty of un-

James Harden started for the West in place of Kobe Bryant, who was elected by the fans but was knocked out by a broken left knee. Bryant said before the game his recovery is "coming slowly" but hopes to be back in another All-Star game. With Bryant sitting out and long-

thy of being drafted. If the underclassmen do well and go high, the

time regulars Tim Duncan and Kevin

tions about their character. The

Garnett not selected, it was a chance for the younger guys to make their mark. The rosters were loaded with players 25 and younger, including

list of indiscretions includes everythingfrom arreststo drug-re-

first-time starters George, Irving, Ste-

and team execs will try to do is

phen Curry and Kevin Love.

sort fact from fiction as they at-

The All-Star newcomers also included official Violet Palmer, who

tempt to figure out whether these were simple youthful missteps or

became thefirst female to referee a major U.S. sports league's All-Star game.

a pattern of behavior that could

ny Davis of the Pelicans and ex-New Orleans guard Paul. Durant made

a 3-pointer with 26 seconds left to make it 89-76 at the break, one point

derclassmen draftees,led by the

likes of Manziel and Clowney, dozens of other early-entry draft hopefuls must show they're wortrend of seeing more and more

underclassmen enter the draft could continue in future years. Character counts:The toughest job this week goes to any of the players having to answer ques-

lated suspensions to the use, or misuse, of Twitter. What scouts

continue to cause problems in the future.


B4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

0

Seven medals events are on tap, including the ice dancecompetition on Tessa Virtue andScott Moir, the Canadiandefending champions.

Curling

Hockey

Bodsled

MEN

WOMEN

China vs. Britain, Germany vs. Russia, Switzerland vs. United States, Norway vs Denmark, 2 a.m.

Semifinals United States vs. Sweden, 4:30 a.m. Canada vs. Switzerland, 9 a.m. Classification Round TBD,Tuesday,midnight TBD, Tuesday,4:30 a.m.

Men's Two-Man (Run 3), 6:30 a.m. Men's Two-Man (Run 4), 8:05 a.m.

WOMEN

China vs. Switzerland, Denmark vs. Britain, Canada vs. South Korea, Sweden vs. Japan, 7 a.m. Men's and Women's tiebreakers, 9 p.m., if necessary

Ice Dancing free dance, 7 a.m.

Freestyle skiing

Qualification round TBD,Tuesday,midnight TBD, Tuesday,4:30 a.m.

Men's Aerials Qualification, 5:45 a.m. Men's Aerials Finals, 9:30 a.m.

Alpine skiing

Biathlon

Speedskating

Women's Giant Slalom, first run, 11p.m.

Women's12.5km Mass start, 7 a.m.

Men's10,000, Tuesday, 5a.m.

Ski jumping Men's Team (large hill) First Round, 9:15 a.m. Men's Team (large hill) Final, 10:15 a.m.

Men's Individual Jump (large hill), Tuesday, 1:30 a.m. Men's Individual 10km,Tuesday, 4 a.m.

Figure skating

MEN

Medal table

Nordic comdined

Short track Snowdoard

Women's1,000 Heats, Tuesday, 1:30 a.m. Men's 500 Heats, Tuesday, 2:15a.m. Women's 3,000 Relay Final, Tuesday, 2:55 a.m.

Men's Snowboard Cross Quarterfinals, 1:15a.m. Men's Snowboard Cross Semifinals, 1:30 a.m. Men's Snowboard Cross Finals, 1:45 a.m.

Events through 6a.m. Tuesday PST. All events streamedlive online at NBCOlympics.com

OLYMPICS SCOREBOARD

c;enc.s aIOun OC; i

Ttfrough Sunday (55 medal events) GSB T N etherlands 5 5 7 1 7

Alpine skiing ~ - -sszti

~

~ Wl/+g(

Russia 4 7 5 16 UnitedStates 4 4 816 N orway 5 3 614 C anada 4 6 414 G ermany 7 3 2 1 2 Sweden 2 52 9 Switzerland 5 1 1 7 Austria 24 1 7 France 2 04 6 China 3 20 5 Japan 1 31 5 S lovenia 1 13 5 Italy 0 23 5 Poland 4 00 4 Belarus 3 01 4 CzechRepublic1 2 1 4 SouthKorea 1 1 1 3 Latvia 0 12 3 Britain 1 01 2 Finland

1:18.14.

2. (29) Andrew Weibrecht, United States,LakePlacid, N.Y.,1:18.44. 3.(22)JanHudec,Canada, 1:18.67. 3. (13) Bode Miler, UnitedStates, Easton,N.H.,1:18.67. 5. (15) OtmarStriedinger, Austria, 1:18.69. 6.(14) Max Franz,Austria, 1:18.74. 7.(16) AkselLundSvindal, Norway, 1:18.76. 8.(8) PeterFil,Italy, 1:18.85. Other U.S. Finishers 14. (9) TedLigety, ParkCity, Utah, 1:19.48. 23. (25)Travis Ganong, SquawValley, Calif.,1:20.02.

Curling Men

Canada8,USA6 Norway 7 Britain 6 Sweden 8, Russia 4 Norway 5,Switzerland 3 Canada 9,China8

Denmark6,Germany3 Sweden 6, USA4 Women Denmark 7,South Korea4 Japan 9, Switzerland 7 Sweden 5, Russia 4 Canada7,USA6

0 2 0 2

A ustralia 0 1 1 2 Slovakia 1 00 1 Croatia 0 10 1 Kazakhstan 0 0 1 1 Ukraine 0 01 1

Hockey Men's Sunday'sGames Austria 3,Norway1 Russia1,Slovakia0, SO UnitedStates5, Slovenia1 Canada 2,Finland1, OT Tuesdey'sGames Qualification PlayoffRound Russiavs.Norway,TBA Switzerland vs. Latvia, TBA Czech Republicvs.Slovakia,TBA Sloveniavs.Austria, TBA WednesdayrsGames Quarlerlinals Sweden vs.Slovenia-Austria winner,

Television sehedule •ARTimesPST,Subjecttochange • Primetimrepl e aysare showneach night beginningbetweenmidnight and 2a.m. • Events to beairedlive ontheWe st Coastarenotedwith anasterisk (*)

TBA USA vs.Czech Republic-Slovakia winner,TBA Canadavs. Switzerland-Latviawinner,TBA Finlandvs. Russia-Norwaywinner, TBA

17

Today NBC

3-5 p.m. — Women's Biathlon, 12.5km MassStart Gold Medal Final; Men'sSnowboarding, SnowboardCross;Men'sFreestyle Skiing, Aerials 8-11:30 p.m.— FigureSkating, Ice DancingGoldMedal Final; Men's Snowboarding,Snowb oard Cross Gold MedalFinal; Men'sFreestyle Skiing, AerialsGold MedalFinal; Men's SkiJumping,Team K-125 LargeHil GoldMedal Final 1-2 a.m.— Two-Man Bobsled,Gold MedalFinalRuns;FigureSkating, Ice DancingGoldMedalFinalPostgame NBCSN Midnight-4 e.m.— Women'Cu s rling, USA vs.South Korea 4-7a.m. —Women'sHockey, Semi*

final

7-10:80 e.m.— FigureSkating, Ice Dancing GoldMedalFinal * 10:30 e.m.-noon — Men's Ski Jumping,TeamK-125 LargeHil *; Women's BiGold Medal Final athlon, 12.5kmMassStart Gold MedalFinal

Mark Humphrey/The Associated Press

Glass encasing the penalty box shatters as Austria forward Andreas Nodl checks Norway defenseman Jonas Holos in the second period Sunday.

The Associated Press SOCHI, Russiareliminary? So what. Don't try to tell

INTO THIN AIR

off the course unscathed. "So scary," she said. "Snowboardcross is my toughest one. It's absolutely brutaL"

P

Noon-2p.m.— Hockey Encore 2-4 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey MSNBC

sia in a thriller with relatively small stakes,

9-11:30 a.m. — Women'sHockey, *

Austria beat Norway 3-1 Sunday in a game that featured a glass-shattering check by

about the medals as giving all the events a try — a way to prove something to herself,

Austria forward Andreas Nodl on Norway's

while also spreading the word about the

Jonas Holos. Nodl checked Holos on the boards near the glass along the side of the penalty box, hitting the glass at an awkward angle to break it. Replays showed glass fragments hit the ice. The game was delayedseveral minutes. But because the glass wasn't on the wall of the rink, the teams resumed play while stadium workers quickly replaced the broken pane.

wonders of snowboarding to a country that

Nodl said afterward that the game was big for his team's confidence and a response to

gold medal, a lined mustache on her upper lip begged the question: Hipster or political

critics. "You read things in the newspapers about how we don't belong here,and hopefully we have proved a couple wrong," he said. "We

statement'? Turns out the thin lines in red, white and blue — thecolors of the Czech flag — were

2-5 p.m.— Women'sCurling, Denmarkvs.Britain USA sCurling, USAvs. 2-5 a.m.— Men' * Switzerland

Tuesday NBC

3-5 p.m. — Men's Speedsk ating, 10,000 Gold MedalFinal; Men's NordicCombined,Individual K-125 LargeHil GoldMedal Final 0-11:30 p.m.—Women'Al spine Skiing, Giant SlalomGold MedalFinal; Men's Freestyle Skiing, Halfpipe Gold MedalFinal; Wom en's Bobsled, ;Women'sShortTrack,3000 RelayGoldMedal Final 1-2 a.m.— Women'sShort Track, 1000 NBCSN Midnight-2:30 e.m.—* Men'sHockey, EliminationRound 2:30-4 e.m.— Men'sNordicCom bined, IndividualK-125LargeHil, Ski Jumping 4-7 a.m.* —Men'sHockey, Elimination Round

7-0 e.m. — Men's Speedsk ating, 10,000 GoldMedalFinal*; Men's NordicCombined,Individual K-125 LargeHill, Cross-Country 9a.m.n -oon— Men' sHockey,EliminationRound* Noon-2 p.m.—HockeyEncore 2-4 p.m.— GameoftheDay:Hockey MSNBC 9-11:30 e.m.—Men'sHockey, EliminationRound* CNBC 2-5 p.m.—Men'sandWomen'sCurling, TiBre e aker

Women's Sunday'sGames Qualification (5-8) Finland2, Germany1 Russia6,Japan3 Today'sGames Semifinals UnitedStatesys. Sweden, 4;30a.m. Canada vs. Switzerland, 9a.m. Tuesday'sGam es Sevent h Place,Germanyvs.Japan, midnight Fifth Place,Finlandvs. Russia, 4:30 a.m. Thursday'sGames BronzeMedal, 4 a.m. GoldMedal,9a.m.

Nordic skiing

these Olympic hockey players to conserve their energy for elimination games. They're simply not playing that way in the Sochi Games. One day after the United States beat Rus-

Semifinal CNBC

Men's Super-G (Sterf position in parentheses) 1. (21) Kjetil Jansrud, Norway,

take it to heart."

Playing coy

Bright won't walk away from the Sochi Games empty-handed. She won the silver medal in the event she calls "her pet" — the

halfpipe, where she won the gold medal in 2010. She also finished seventh in slopestyle. She said the mission wasn't so much

has a short winter season and not a ton of terrain.

"It is absolutely brutal, but would I go through it again?" she said. "Why rkot? It's good fun."

Samkova's stache When Eva Samkova (top right) dominated the snowboardcross final Sunday to win the

Matthias Schrader /The Associated Press

An evening of fog produced this stunning

in national colors."

image of Germany's Andreas Wank launching

Samkova started wearing the lucky mustache at the world championships in 2011.

This year's Winter Olympics could go down during men's ski jumping training. as the Tinder Games. But — surprise, surprise

— athletes are coy about the smartphone app knownto help mutually attracted singles meet. Some saythey've heard ofthe app butaren't using it. Others say they're on it, but only as a joke or out of curiosity. And some say its popularity is inevitable in the sexually charged atmosphere of athletes'villages. A quick browse of the app in Sochi turns

about superstition and patriotism. "It's a lucky mustache," she said. "Today, it's

Too hot for Lolo "I haven't been on it for a few days now — I believe that the boys seem to enjoy it," said

Lolo Jones remains on a quest for Olympic gold. For now, she'd settle for cold.

Kennedy-Sim, married to former Olympic Warm weather during the first week have cross-country skier Ben Sim. given the Sochi Games more of a summer

Torah and the trifecta

feel, and Jones, now a U.S. bobsledder after

running hurdles in Beijing and London, isn't happy that she's not getting to wear any of her up more than two dozen profiles that appear Australia's most f a mous snowboarder stylish winter gear. "I'm pissed," she said, cracking a smile. connected to athletes, though only a few talk completed her history-making Winter Olymopenly about it and there's no way to be certain pics trifecta — the first rider to compete in "I wanted to wear all my winter clothes and it's them. three disciplines. Slopestyle. Halfpipe. And hats and gloves.... I think Sochi just needs to Australian freestyle skier Sami Kenne- on Sunday, she finished 18th in snowboard- go ahead and put their bid in for the Summer dy-Sim says she used the app out of curiosity. cross. Every bit as importantly, she walked Games. Go ahead and do it." Good on ya, Torah Bright.

Men's 4x10km Relay 1. Sweden(Lars Nelson, Daniel Richardsson, JohanOlsson, Marcus Hegner),1:28:42.0. 2. Russia (Dmitriy Japarov,Alexander Bessmertnykh, Alexander Legkov, Maxim Vylegzhanin), 1:29:09.3. 3. France (JeanMarc Gailard, Maurice Manificat, Robin Duvigard, IvanPerrilat Boiteux),1:29:13.9r 4. Norway(Eldar Roenning, Chris Andre Jespersen,Martin Johnsrud Sundby,Peter Jr. Northug), 1:29:51.7.

5.Italy (Dietmar Noeckler, Giorgiodi Centa,RolandClara, David Hofer), 1:30:04.7.

6. Finland(SamiJauhojaervi, livo Niskanen, Lari Lehtonen,Matti Heikkinen),1:30:28.4. 7. Switzerland(Curdin Perl,Jonas Baumann,Remo Fischer,Toni Livers),1:30:33.8. 8. Czech Republic (Ales Razym , LukasBauer,Martin Jaks, Dusan Kozisek),1:30:36.8. U.S. Finish 11. United States (AndyNewe g, Shaftsbury, Vt., Erik Bjornsen, Winth rop,Wash.,NoahHoff man, Aspen,Colo., SimiHamilton, Aspen,Colo.),1:33:15.1.

Snowboard Women'sCross Medal Final 1. (1)EvaSamkova, Czech Republic. 2. (3) Dom iniqueMaltais, Canada. 3. (13)ChloeTrespeuch,France. 4. (9)FayeGulini, USA,Salt LakeCity. 5. (11)AlexandraJekova,Bulgaria. NR.(18)MichelaMoioli, Italy,DNF.

Speedskating Women's1500 1. Jorien Ter Mors, Netherlands, 1:53.51(OR). 2. Ireen Wust, Netherlands,1:54.09. 3. Lotte van Beek, Netherlands, 1:54.54. 4. Marrit Leenstra, Netherlands, 1:56.40. 5. YuliyaSkokova,Russia, 1;56.45. 6. KatarzynaBachleda-curus, Poland, 1:57.18. 7. Heather Richardson,UnitedStates, High Point,N.C.,1:57.60. 8. Yekaterina Lobyshe va, Russia, 1:57.70. Other U.S.Finishers 14. Brittany Bowe, Ocala, Fla., 1:58.31. 18. JilleanneRookard, Woodhaven, Mich., 1:59.15.


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

ROUNDUP

Skiing Continued from B1

"It's almost therapeutic for me to

be in these situations, where I really had to test myself, so I was happy to have it be on the right side of the hundredths," said Miller, who grew up in New Hampshire and is now based in California. "Some days ...

to really look at what you're doing. I didn't know how

medals don't matter, and today was one of the ones where it does."

the first five alpine events of the Sochi Olympics before Weibrecht and Miller tripled their nation's total in one fell swoop. Through 28 starters Sunday, Miller and Jan Hudec of Canada

He wiped away tears in the finish area after someone mentioned

Petr David Josek/The Associated Press

USA forward Phil Kessel celebrates one of his three goals in a 5-1 win over Slovenia on

"All kidding aside, it's been a pretty difficult four years. It's kind of one of those things that you can only be beat down so many times before you start

B5

cent day of giant slalom practice in Austria alongside Ligety with helping him carry speed. Being quick has never been a problem for the 5-foot-6 Weibrecht,

who's 28. Mid-race errors usually

many more beatdowns I could take."

set him back.

— United States skier Andrew Weibrecht

Just last week, Ligety called Weibrecht "the fastest skier in the

world for 20 seconds in every sin"I've had t o evaluate wheth- gle event." er this is really what I want to Understanding where Miller's

do. Even," Weibrecht said, then paused before adding, "as recently Chelone, a c h a rismatic snowas yesterday." boarder who was 29 and hoping to He laughed at his own punch make theU.S.team in Sochiwhen were tied for second place, about a line. "All kidding aside," Weibrecht he died of what was believed to be half-second slower than Jansrud's a seizure. run of 1 minute, 18.14 seconds. But said later, rubbing his left temple, "Everything felt pretty raw and then came the 29th racer, Wei- "it's been a pretty difficult four pretty connected," Miller said, "so brecht, who had come out of no- years. It's kind of one of those it was a lot for me." where towin the super-G bronze things that you can only be beat Weibrecht couldn't help but be behind Miller's silver at the 2010 down so many times before you moved by his own journey, calling Olympics but since then has dealt start to really look at what you're Sunday "probably the most emo- with injury after injury, including doing. I didn't know how many tional day of ski racing that I've to both shoulders and both ankles. more beatdowns I could take." He's had four operations in the ever had." That Weibrecht pulled off a It also was an important day for past four years, lost funding from silver medal did not shock U.S. the U.S. ski team. The Americans the U.S. ski team at one point, and coaches or teammate Ted Ligety, had managed to collect only one was not a lock to make the Sochi the super-G world champion who of the 15 medals awarded through Olympic roster. was 14th. Weibrecht credited a re-

goals lie can be tricky. He will talk about the purity of skiing. He will saytangible rewards aren't significant, that "skiing 80 percent would get me more medals, but it just doesn't feel right." Here, though, he was bothered

by finishing eighth in the downhill, sixth in the super-combined. In thesuper-G, one error coming out of the final jump cost Miller what he estimated to be about a half-second. Still, he appreciated

the accomplishment. "After the year we've had, and the fact we just keep pushing through it," said Miller's wife, Morgan, "it just shows how resilient Bode is."

Sunday.

Kessel nets hat trick in 5-1 win over Slovenia

sorgl Itr

Pj

• Netherlands wins record 16th speedskating medal By David Pace The Associated Press

SOCHI, Russia — Phil Kessel became the

first American player in 12 years to score an Olympic hat trick in the 5-1 U.S. win over Slo-

venia. Canada defeated Finland 2-1 in overtime, while Austria won its first men's Olym-

pic hockey game in a dozen years, defeating Norway 3-1. In the women's preliminaries, Finland topped Germany 2-1 and Russia beat Japan 6-2. All four had already been eliminated from medal. Russia was forced into a second straight shootout on Sunday and now

ll I• Lee Jin-man /The Associated Press

must play an extra game to reach the men's

Switzerland's Selina Gasparin prepares to shoot as her sister Elisa is seen at left, during the women's biathlon15k individual race on

hockey quarterfinals. Canada, Sweden, the

Friday. The Gasparins, along with youngest sister Aita, also a biathlete, are just one sibling set of many at the Sochi Olympics.

United States and Finland advanced to the

quarterfinals. They will be joined by the winners of a four-game qualifying round Tuesday among the eight remaining teams. Russia lost its chance to skip the qualify-

ing round when it was forced into a shootout by Slovakia, winning 1-0. That allowed Finland to claim the bye on goal difference. Canada,Sweden and the U.S. each finished the qualifying round undefeated.

Speedskating Dutch skaters swept the podium in the women's 1,500 meters. Overall, the Nether-

lands has won an astounding 16 speedskating medals in Sochi out of 24 awarded so far, smashing the Olympic record of 13 set by East Germany at the 1988 Calgary Games. Jorienter Mors earned the gold, pre-race favorite Ireen Wust settled for silver, with

bronze going to Lotte van Beek. If there had been a medal for fourth place, the Dutch stra finishing just after Van Beek. Ter Mors turned in a stunning time of 1 minute, 53.51 seconds,an Olympic record and the second-fastest ever at sea level.

• Games' family affair provides familiarity and abuilt-in support group for manysets of siblings

Alpine skiing

By Mattias Karen

Kjetil Jansrud continued Norway's dominance in super-G, outracing two Americans

The Associated Press

would have won that, too, with Marrit Leen-

and a Canadian for the Scandinavian coun-

try's fifth gold in the event in the past seven games. Andrew Weibrechtearned the sil-

KRASNAYA GOLYANA, Russiaen Martin Fourcade won his first area with the teammate he grew up trying to

Miller and Jan Hudec of Canada tied for bronze. It was Miller's sixth Olympic medal, moving him two behind all-time Alpine leader Kjetil Andre Aamodt of Norway. At 36, Miller is the oldest Alpine skier to medal.

beat — older brother Simon. "Being an Olympian is something wonderful, but sharing it with him is something incredible," Fourcade said. The Fourcadesare far from unique atthese

Eva Samkova won the women's snow-

boardcross, the firstgold ofthe games for the Czech Republic. Samkova led from start

to finish in all three qualifying and elimination races. Lindsey Jacobellis of the U.S.

crashed while leading her semifinal, the third straight disappointing Olympic finish for the eight-time X Games winner.

Nordic skiing Sweden's win in the 4x10-kilometer re-

lay came one day after the Swedish women had won gold in the same race. No country has won both relays since the Soviet Union

did it 42 years ago. Swedish anchor Marcus Hellner skied alone for the entire fourth leg and grabbeda Swedish fl ag to wave as he entered the stadium.

Curling Sweden and Canada became the first men's teams to qualify for the semifinals. Norway, Britain and China are battling for

the other two spots. The Swedes and Canadians also advanced to the semifinals in the women's tournament. China, Britain, Swit-

zerland and Japan still have a chance for the remaining two semifinal spots.

dreas Linger and Wolfgang

" +e

Linger won a silver medal in doubles

luge.

®

Michael Sohn/The Associated Press

Olympic gold this week, the French biathlete got to celebrate in the finish

ver medal, while American teammate Bode

Snowboarding

Austrian brothers An-

Sochi podium with siblings on it. ly" can often be used literally. In the speedskating arena, Dutch twins MiAll over Sochi, siblings are competing next to cheland Ronald Mulder won gold and bronze each other — some as teammates, some as ri- in the men's 500-meter race. In men's double vals. For all of them, the experience makes for a luge, Austrian brothers Andreas and Wolfgang special addition to the family album. Linger took silver, and Latvian brothers Andris "It's not like we're going to go back home and Juris Sics won bronze. from Sochi and it's like, 'OK, good working In skeleton, two-time world champion Marwith you,' " said American ice dancer Alex tins Dukurs of Latvia has brother Tomass on Shibutani, who is competing with sister Maia. the team. "She's my sister for the rest of my life. To be on Cross-country skier Dario Cologna will try this journey, it means so much more to us for for his third gold in Sochi when he competes in that very reason, and to our family as welL" the team sprint next week with younger brother While famous siblings can also be found in Gianluca for Switzerland. Winter Games, where the term "Olympic fami-

Selena Gasparin, 29, has been a trailblazer for women's biathlon in Switzerland, and for

years was the country's only representative at major events. So getting her younger sisters Elisa and Aita involved was the only way to get

some company. "Before, I was really alone," Selena said. First, she convinced the seven years younger Elisa to take up the sport. Then, after Aita

turned 16, the two gave baby sister a rifle as a present and told her to join them.

Fouryears later, thethree are all onthe Olympic team. And on Friday, they cried together in the finish area after Selena surprisingly took summer sports — tennis has both the Williams It can lead to mixed emotions when one sib- silver in the 15K individual race. "It's really cool. They are happy, they've been sisters and doubles pair Bob and Mike Bryan ling succeeds and the other doesn't — such as in for instance — the number definitely goes up at the men's 20-kilometer race on Thursday. Mar- crying for me," Selina Gasparin said. "And the Winter Olympics. tin Fourcade won that event for his second gold I think it also helps for them for the future, to The biathlon venue especially is one big fam- medal, but this time Simon wasn't in a celebra- see that it's possible. I think they're really proud ily affair. Aside from the Fourcades, there are tory mood. and motivated." "I didn't talk to him much because I was retwo brothers on Norway's team, three sisters on In the team events, family connections help Switzerland's and female twins on Ukraine's, ally disappointed about my race," Simon Four- in different ways. while women's sprint gold medalist Anastasi- cade said after the finish. "Last time during In the luge doubles, where one rider lies diya Kuzmina — who competes for Slovakiathe pursuit I enjoyed Martin's medal a lot. But rectly on top of the other as they zip down the has her brother Anton Shipulin on the Russian today ... it will take a bit of time to let these bad course at high speed, knowing your partner team. feelings disappear about my race, and then I well is crucial. "We understand each other, without words, Over at the Extreme Park, the three Du- will enjoy Martin's performance." four-Lapointe sisters of Canada made headFor perhaps the best example of the influence without gestures even," said Latvia's Andris lines when Justine and Chloe took gold and an older sibling can have, one should look to the Sics, the bronze medalist with brother Juris. "Just a look." silver in moguls. And that hasn't been the only three Gasparin sisters.


B6

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL:SPRING TRAINING

a ionas' ras ur wor in o

e e er stinct," he said. "And don't

By Joseph White

wants to go about his busi-

The Associated Press

ness without all the hoopla. necessarily, like, do w hat He's known for having a dour other people do. And so that's disposition when d ealing kind of what I've stuck to. A with the media, but he's much lot like pitching, when I try to more comfortable around the do stuff that other people do, cameras and notebooks than it doesn't really work for me, he used to be. Fans could see so I just try and learn on the him joking with p itching fly. And just learn through coach Steve McCatty during experience." the bullpen session, and he Baseball experience has alcracked a joke or two while ready taught him plenty. The speaking with reporters. old Strasburg used to show But the best way to get up thinking he had to put on

VIERA, Fla. — Because Stephen Strasburg is Stephen

Strasburg, the Washington Nationals gave him one of the bigger lockers in the clubhouse at spring training. He would prefer they didn't. In fact, last year, he turned

it down, moving to a smaller one and letting Dan Haren have the roomier digs. He wasn't able to do the same this year because he was one

S trasburg t o

and everyone else had already moved in their various belongings. "It's a little foreign to me," Strasburg said. "Back in college, my pitching coach was adamant. He'd remind me every single day that you're just another donkey. And I think

the message there is to always stay humble and always work hard and always strive to be just that other guy in the clubhouse that doesn't necessary come in and expect attention,

or expect special treatment." But he will command atten-

tion nonetheless. Strasburg is only 25, but has yet to get really rolling as a pro. He has a 2.96 career ERA and has

struck out 10.4 batters every nine innings — the best ratio

out of here and getting to see

Now it's time to get even

the stretch. The reason was obvious: He has become an easy mark

he is in relation to first base,"

Strasburg said. "And hopefully pick a couple of guys off this year."

ally have much time in the minors to work on the little

nuances of pitching," Strasburg said. "And that was one thing where I just compensated for it by just being really quick to home plate. And big league baserunners, hitters, coaches, they're going to pick up on that. They're just going to cheat and sell out. If I can't even see where they're at,

By RONALD BLUM

it's just something I'm going

AP Sports Writer

to have to make sure that I

eira took swings from the right side of the plate and

loosen up, and make sure I do all the proper rehab and strengthening exercises."

then the left, his first time

A two-time All-Star, Teix-

TAMPA, Fla. — Mark Teix-

batting outdoors since a wrist injury ended his 2013 season

were signed to fortify a batting order that dropped from a team-record 245 homers in 2012 to an un-Bronx Bomb-

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5:00 pm - 6 00 pm APPetiring Food SPecials Starting at $2~5

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+" " , ' I 0

mean he hasn't sufficiently /

healed. "I can always use that

7

@W IP

transformed Mur m u r ers' Row back i nt o M u r derers' Chris O'Meara/The Associated Press file Row. Mark Teixeira looks to return "You look at ou r l i n eup, to the Yankees after missing we're back to being the Yan- much of the 2013 season with a kees again," he said Sunday. wrist injury. " Last year w e w e ren't t h e

Ellsbury and Carlos Beltran

Happy Hour

April 30 each year his average is just .238 with 33 home runs in 11 seasons. A poor April wouldn't necessarily

a berration, when th e N e w

Yankees." Brian McCann, Jacoby

Pine Tavern

He has a .278 career average and 341 homers, but through

He pronounced himself ready to return and gave what seemed like a warning to the rest of Major League Baseball. Last year was an

an offseason spending spree

• Pl64 e9CEA d e5' iRA8

eira usually is a slow starter.

almost before it began.

time in 19 years. In his mind,

learned how to dial back the throttle. "Yeah, I think the first cou-

overall. "My situation, I didn't re-

New York's Teixeira We're back to being the Yankees again'

York Yankees missed the playoffs for only the second

spring training. Now he's

her," he said as his day at the ple years it would be like, let's park wound to a close. go, the fans are watching and Strasburg became a first- you want to go out there and time father in the offseason, 'impress,' " he said, using his adding a new perspective to hand to make air-quotes. "I've Susan Walsh/The Associated Press file life and baseball. Wife and come to realize there's not a Washington Nationals starting pitcher Stephen Strasburg has struggled to get his career going with baby came with him to Flori- hitter in the box, and there's injuries that have limited him to only 75 starts. da for spring training. He was still six weeks of spring trainasked to compare Strasburg ing, and I need to just get my the pitcher to Strasburg the work in. I just wanted to take healed, he threw his first forIf he does, it would triple his they know I'm going to home father. that kind of approach this "The thing that I've heard year, just try to make baby mal bullpen session of spring career number of pick-offs. plate, so they're gone." training. Of the five pitchers These are the type of rough Strasburg has a reputation from a lot of people, you steps and get a little better in his group, he was the only edges that are left unpolished as a man of intense focus who know, just use your gut in- each day." one to deliberately look to- when a player makes his maward an imaginary runner at jor-league debut at age 21, a first base when pitching from year after being drafted No. 1

of any pitcher in the majors for would-be base-steal ers, with at least 425 innings since who have timed his delivery 2010. But, because of injuries, with ease and have been sucincluding the bone chips that cessful 79 percent of the time. "It's just trying to change required right elbow surgery in October, he has only 75 my setup so I can see the runstarts and a record of 29-19. ner a little better, know where better, specifically by ironing out the Strasburg flaws. On Sunday, with his elbow fully

s m i l e t h e se a show from the first day of

days is to mention his baby daughter. "I look forward to getting

of the last arriving pitchers,

them into games to see ex-

actly where they're at, to be fair to them and probably to alleviate any doubt that you

might have,"Yankees managerJoe Girardisaid.

er-like 144 last year, the largThe retirement decision by est falloff in baseball history Jeter, who turns 40 in June, for a non-strike season. Teix- shocked Teixeira. "I thought that Derek had eira was limited to 15 games and Derek Jeter to 17, and a couple years left in him. I Alex Rodriguez and Curtis knew how excited he would Granderson also missed long be about this season, just the stretches. same way I am when you After two days of can- only play 15 or 17 games," he celed flights from New York, said. "I really could have seen Teixeira s t arted w o r k outs Derek playing until he was 44 four days ahead of the other or 45." position players. He fielded Teixeira turns 34 in April grounders at first base, took and hopes to have five more 53 swings off a tee and 43 productive seasons. He might more in batting practice in not be ready when New his first outdoor session since York's exhibition season surgery last July 2 to repair starts Feb. 25, but he thinks a torn tendon sheath in his he will be on the field someright wrist. time during the first week, get Jeter, still recovering from 50 exhibition at-bats and be the effects of a broken ankle able to play at least 150 games in October 2012, has been during the regular season. working out at the minor He had more pop from his complex since Jan. 20. He re- bat during his 49 right-handports to the big league camp ed swings than his 47 from Wednesday, when he will the left side — although he hold a news conference to said he felt his swing path discuss his announcement was a lot better from the left. last week that this will be his Given his injury, sustained

a mmo,"

Y a n k ees h i t t i n g

coach Kevin Long said. "So that's in our back pocket." Teixeira said his surgeon,

FRIEE SANDI WICH

*

Dr. Keith Raskin of New York

University School of Medicine, told him the wrist will

continue to improve for a year after the operation. But there always will be worries of a setback until Teixeira proves to himself that the injury isn't a hindrance, that he regularly can clear Yankee Stadium's right-field wall with w hat broadcaster Joh n

Teixeira watched from his

home in Connecticut as Yankees general manager Brian Cashman made his moves. "I was texting Cash like every two weeks, telling him congrats on another signing and great offseason," he said. "I basically told him: You did your job, now it's time for us to do ours. So no excuses this year. We have a team

that can compete for a world championship." h a s n't

gANOIlr

+e

TOGO'S

S t e rling

calls a "Tex message." "There's going to be a mental part of it. He's going to have to get over the hump," Long said.

Teixeira says h e

+ e~

+ I

I

I

~

opsy 0+

,jsst +East ef Pilot Butte 2115. NE)Hwy 20

' Cascade'Village „63455' ¹Hwy, 97

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been this eager for a season since he was a rookie with Texas in 2003. His bounce

back could determine whether the Yankees rebound. "I take (a) silver lining in everything, and for me this year off — basically a year off — was me realizing how lucky I am to play baseball, realizing how much I loved final season. while hitting off a t e e l ast playing baseball," he said. "I With the Yankees weakMarch 5, his wrist stiffness did a lot of charity stuff this ened at second following the likely is more of an issue hit- offseason and spent a bunch departure of Robinson Cano ting left-handed — when the of time with my family, and and at third because of Rodri- right hand provides most of I loved that time, but I'm a guez's season-long suspen- the power. baseball player, and there's "You can definitely tell I nothing cooler than playing sion, New York is counting on Teixeira and Jeter to stabilize had surgery. But I had ankle baseball for a living. And takan infield in flux. surgery 13 years ago and I ing that year off really made "They'reback in my mind, could tell I had ankle surgery me realize that I want to do it but I think you have to get after 13 years," he said. "So, as long as I can."

.,a-q,. " sele

— SLIDER MENU$5.00 Sliders $4.00 During Happy Hour: 4:00-7:00 Daily

[FORMERLV CALDERA GRILLE] 541.389.8899 • 932 NW Bond St., Downtown Bend


MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014• THE BULLETIN

O M M U N IT Y BASEBALL PITCHINGCOACH:One-hour pitching sessions; former-minor leaguer Dave McKae;Feh. 17, Feh. 19and Feh. 25, 6-7 p.m.and 7-8 p.m.;atthe Bend Fieldhouse; www.bendelks.com or 541-312-9259.

CLIMBING MIDDLE It HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Bend Endurance Academy;Wednesdays, March 23-April 23,1:30-6 p.m.; $200; designed for beginners to intermediate levels; transportation to school and back provided by BEA; www. bendenduranceacademy.org.

CYCLING INDOORCLASSES: Individualized, power-based workouts at Bowen Sports Performance; Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridaysat noon; Tuesdays, Thursdays at 6:30 a.m.;Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursdayat 5:30 p.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m.; enduranceSundaysession, 8-11

a.m.; bowensportsperformance.comor 541-977-1321.

MULTI-SPORT PPP TRAINING:Specific training for the Pole Pedal Paddle; Wenzel Coaching; www.

wenzelcoaching.com

NORDIC SKI COMPETITIVE NORDIC PROGRAM: For athletes14 and over; five or six days a week; $2,200; or $1,500through May1; www. bendenduranceacademy.org. HIGH SCHOOLNORDIC TEAM: Through March19;additional training for nordic athletes who are still involved with high school skiing; one to three days a week, Wednesday through Sunday; starts at $375; www.bendenduranceacademy.org. YOUTH PROGRAM:MBSEF Stevenson Youth Program; ages 7-11;through March; www.mbsef.org. MIDDLESCHOOL PROGRAM: MBSEF middle school program; ages11-14;through March;www.mbsef.org.

PORTS

E

HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM: MBSEFhigh March;www.mbsef.org. MASTERS PROGRAM:M BSEF masters program; ages 21 and older;through

March;www.mbsef.org. MIDDLE ANDHIGH SCHOOL PROGRAMS: Bend Endurance Academy;Wednesdays in April,1:30-4:15 p.m.; transportation to school and back provided by BEA; $80; www.bendenduranceacademy.org HOME-SCHOOL NORDIC:Ages11-18; through Feh. 18,Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m. to 2

p.m.; $100;www.bendenduranceacademy. org. SHE'SON SKIS:MountBachelor'swom en's

only nordic program;Wednesdaysor Saturdays; six-week and12-week programs available; at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; www.mtbachelor.com. DAWN PATROLS: Nordic dawn patrols with Dave Cieslowski;Wednesdays,1011:30a.m.;throughMarch 5;limited to15 advanced skiers; sfoster@mtbachelor.com. BABES IN SNOWLAND: Mt.Bachelor program for kids ages 4-5;Sundays,9-10 a.m.; four different four-week sessions, the first started Dec.4.; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfoster@mtbachelor.com. K'S FOR KIDS:Ages 6-8; Sundays,10:3011:30 a.m.; three four-week sessions, first session started Dec. 4; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; $105 clinic only, $125 clinic and rentals; sfoster©mtbachelor.com. INTRO TO SKATESKIING: Skate skiing clinics;Wednesdays, Fridays or Saturdays; four-week sessions; $120 for clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sfosterO mtbachelor.com. INTRO TO CLASSIC SKIING: Classic skiing clinics;Fridays or Sundays;four-week sessions; $120 for clinic and trail pass; $160 for clinic, trail pass and rentals; at Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center; sfoster© mtbachelor.com.

PICKELBALL SUNRIVERTOURNEY: Sage Springs Club and SpaTournament; March 7-9;

men's doubles,women'sdoubles,mixed doubles; $20 registration, $5 per event; Contact Bob Harrington at 541-593-7890 or bharrington©destinationhotels.com for more info.

Emailevents at least 10days before publication to sports@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.com/comsportscal.

1VD

school program;ages14 andolder; through

RUNNING ADVENTURE RUNNING: Runsfrom 3.5 to 5 miles long over trails, roads, parks at10- to12-minute-mile pace; first and third Wednesdays of eachmonth,6

p.m.; run location changes,email laura© footzonebend.com. for locations; dress

warm andbring aheadlamp.

GRIN ANDBEARIT5K/10K: Grin and Bear It 5K/10K in Bend;March 8, 10 a.m.; start and end at Les Schwab Amphitheater; www. myhb.org/events/grin-bear-it-run. PROPER FORM CLINIC: Good Form Running clinics;March 13,5:30 p.m.; drills and videos to work on form; RSVPto angela©footzonebend.com. PERMORMANCE ANDBIOMECHANICS STRENGTH:Rebound Physical Therapy's westside Bend clinic hosts strengthening class for runners;Thursdays,5:30 p.m.; through March 20;$96; info©reporegon. com or 541-419-8208. SNOWSHOERUNNINGGROUP: Saturday morning snowshoe running group;through March15;3-6 miles; SnowshoeWithLaura@

gmail.com. REDMOND OREGON RUNNINGKLUB (RORK):Weekly run/walk; Saturdays at 8 a.m.; all levels welcome; free; for more information and to be added to a weekly email list, email Dan Edwards at rundanorun19@yahoo.com; follow Redmond Oregon Running Klub on Facebook. REDMONDRUNNINGGROUP: Weekly runsonTuesdays at6:30 p.m .;meetat314 S.W. Seventh St. in Redmond for runs of 3-5 miles; all abilities welcome; free; pia© runaroundsports.com; 541-639-5953. MOVE IT MONDAYS: Mondays at5:30 p.m.; carpool from FootZone to trailhead when scheduled (first and third Mondays of each month); all other runs start and finish at FootZone, downtown Bend; 3-5 miles; paces 7-12 minutes per mile; melanie© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. PERFORMANCE RUNNINGGROUP: 5:30 p.m. onTuesdays;with Max King; locations vary; interval-based; all ability levels; max© footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568. REFLECTIVERUN:Group run of 3-5 miles; Wednesdays,5:30 p.m.; bring lights and reflective gear, leaves from Fleet Feet; free. NOON TACORUN: Wednesdays atnoon; meetat FootZone, downtown Bend; order a Taco Stand burrito before leaving and

87

it will be ready upon return; teague@ footzonebend.com; 541-317-3568 LEARN TORUN GROUP RUN: Wednesdays, 5:30p.m.;meetatFootZone,downtown Bend; conversational-paced runs of 2-3 miles; beginners and all paces welcome; 541-317-3568. GROWLER RUN:Group run of 3-5 miles; Thursdays,5:30 p.m.; leave from Fleet Feet and finish with a shared growler of beer from Growler Phil's; free. CORK WEEKLYPERFORMANCE RUN: Thursdays;5:30 p.m.; locations vary; call Roger Daniels at 541-389-6424 for more information. FUNCTIONALSTRENGTH FOR RUNNERS: Thursdays;6:15 p.m.; WillPower Training Studio,155 S.W. Century Drive, Suite 110, Bend; weekly workouts for runners, triathletes and cyclists; $5; 541-350-3938. SATURDAY GROUPRUN: Leave from Fleet Feet; 5-7 mile runs;Saturdays,8:30 a.m.; free. SUNDAYGROUPRUNS: Leave from Fleet Feet;Sundays,2 p.m.; free. FUNCTIONALSTRENGTHFOR ENDURANCE RUNNERS: Produced by FootZone and Athlete Wise Performance Coaching;Wednesdays, 7:15-8:15 p.m. and Thursdays,7:15-8:15 a.m.; at FootZone; $5;

kraig©footzonebend.com.

ALPINE SKHNG/ SNOWBOARDING RECREATIONALDOWNHILL RACING: Hoodoo hosts City League racing; five Fridays, through Feh.28;opento men and women, boys and girls of all ages; for more information, go to www.BendSkiClub.net. MBSEF RACEPROGRAMS: Runsthrough March;www.mbsef.org. DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM:MBSEF development for freeskiers and snowboarders;through March;www. mbsef.org. COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF competition programs for freeskiers and snowboarders;through March;www. mbsef.org. FREESKIERAND SNOWBOARD PROGRAMS:MBSEFfull-time program for freeskiers and snowboarders;through April; www.mbsef.org. FULL-TIMEALPINE PROGRAM: MBSEF winter and full-time program for alpine ski

race program;through March;www.mbsef.

org. COMPETITIONPROGRAMS: MBSEF freerideand snowboard competition programs;through March;www.mbsef.org. MASTERSPROGRAM: MBSEFalpine masters ski racing program;through March;www.mbsef.org.

SOCCER LOCAL YOUTHLEAGUE: Bend FC Timbers spring developmental league; schoolbased, divided byage and gender; games Saturdaysand Sundays;mid-MarchMay19;www.BendFCTimbers.com or 541-749-0462.

SOFTBALL BEND PARKANDRECSIGN-UPS: Bend Park & Rec girls league; ages 6-14;March 31-June 5;registration deadline is March12; $60-$91 depending on ageand district or indistrict residents; www.bendparksandrec.

org.

YOUTH TRYOUTSAND OPEN GYM: High Desert YellowJackets10-and-under and 12-and-under softball tryouts; ages 8-12; call Jeremy at 541-325-3689 (12U coach) or Shane (10U coach) at 541-728-1276 for more info.

TABLE TENNIS BEND TABLE TENNIS CLUB: Evening play Mondays;6-9 p.m. (setup 30 minutes prior); beginner classes available, cost $60; at Boys 8 Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; drop-in fee, $3 for adults, $2 for youths and seniors; club membership available to those who donate $100 or more; Jeff at 541-480-2834; Don at 541-318-0890; Sean at 267-6146477;bendtabletennis©yahoo.com; www. bendtabletennis.com.

TENNIS INDOORTOURNAMENT: Kickoff tourney at the Athletic Club of Bend; Feb. 21-23, starts at noon onFriday, Feh. 21; singles, doubles, mixed doubles and youth categories; best two of three sets, regular scoring; tennis@ athleticclubofbend.com or Jason Quigley, 541-385-3062.

COMMUNITY

SCOREBOARD Basketball Bend ParkandRec A Division Week12

(Playoff seedin parenthesis) 0 Furnish/zenitAut ho 2) Lebron'Si ssters 3) Cheerlead ers/Halrport (4) CountryCatering (5) Redm ondAthletic Club (6) Goody earAuto Care

! ' "2

W 10 7 7 5 5 1

7 5 2 L

11

8 Divisios Week12

0 BendBroadband Business 2I Thoseone r WoGrlduysWide 3 Prestige 4) 541Threads (5) Eye ofthe Needle (6) WidgiCreek 7i OldCreekCompany 8TheBendTrolley

9)corn cob crazies

10) NTheZone (10 BlueRetina Ravens (12) The Vroom

W 10 11 9 8 7 6 5 5 4 3 1

L 2 1 3 4 5 6 7 7 8 9 11 9

Bowling RimrockLanes, Prlnevllle Week22 Grizzly MountainMen'sLeague Team highs — Scratchseries: KBWEngineering, 2,949;Scratchgame: CarsonOll, 1,000;Handicap series:TheUdder Guys, 3,259;Handicapgame: Kiler WhaleAudio,1,130. Men's highs—Scratchseries: MarkHanken,636; Scratchgame:JeffWilliams, 257;Handicapseries: Joe Cain,747;Handicapgame: KenWilliams, 266. Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Week 22

Brandi Jo Miles, right, and Courtney Winter are among the costumed contestants stretching before the Snow Warriors 5K on Sunday.

Warriors

descending a large snow bank. A double-water crossing on Deschtues Brewery's property began thinning out the Continued from B1 "People wanted more mud and crowd, as did the military wall about more wood," Evans said, "So that's one-third of the way along the course. what we did." The course started near WinterFest's

ond straight year. "This was a lot hard- convince a brave knight to carry her er this year. The water, at least on me, across the last water obstacle. "This is for those people that aren't

came up to my waist."

Chasing Wonder Woman for most of the race were a pair of basketball 'You didn't want to get stuck in the officials, the aforementioned penguin, back," said 34-year-old Mindy Blair, of a viking,Buzz and Woody from Toy

snowramps onthe west side of Shevlin Talent, who dressed as Wonder WomHixon Drive with racers climbing and and won the women's race for the sec-

50+

necessarily racers but runners," Evans said. "It's fun to get out here with a

bunch of friendsandreleaseyour inner 8-year-old."

Story fame,several escaped convicts and a small dragon that was able to

— Reporter: 541-383-0305; beastes@bendbulletin.com.

COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF ADAPTIVE SPORTS OAS to hOSt SiSterS eVent — OregonAdaptive Sports (OAS) is hosting a "Heroes in Sisters" event for wounded military veterans Feb.28-March 2. The weekend will include specialized equipment and lessons along with adaptive volunteers at Mt. Bachelor andHoodoo ski areas. Inured Oregonveterans with an injury or disability from any war or conflict area should contact OAS at 541-8489390 for the expense-paid weekend.

BOXING Bend athleteS COmPete at natiOnalS — Four boxerswiththeBend-basedDeschutesCounty Rocksclub represented Central Oregon at the 2014National Silver Gloves TournamentinIndependence,Mo.,Jan.28-Feb.2. Jimmy Montebello (age 8, 55pounds), Kevin Limbeck (age 8, 70 pounds), Victor Bernabe(age13, 85 pounds) and

Kamelia Zacarias (female, age12, 90 pounds) competed but did not place at thenational event. Full results can be found at www.ringside.com/ringside/2014-nsg-tournament-bouts-results.

FENCING

Feb. 7at the U.S.Ski andSnowboard Association (USSA) Junior OlympicQualifier in Soldier Hollow, Utah. AlexHeisler (female, under16), SamBiskup (male, U16)andTeddy Widmer (male, U18/U20)all competed in quarterfinal heats. Tom Schoderbek (male,U16)andRyanSt. Clair (male, U18/U20) qualified for the B finals. Schoderbek placedfourth in Bfinals and St. Clair took second inhis Bfinal race.

LOCalS plaCe at Seattle eVent —Trlstan Krueger, JacobBrown andXunanSmithoftheBend-based High Desert Fencing Cluball placed a the Battle in Seattle fencing competition Jan. 24-26. Krueger andBrown placed 14th and 27th, respectively, in the senior men's epeeevent, which fielded 112participants. Smith took16th in the 48-person senior women's epeecompetition.

NORDIC SKIING BEASkierS COmPete in Utah — FiveBendEndurance Academy nordic skiers advancedthrough qualifying rounds

Team highs — Scratchseries: HotShots,1,920; Scratchgame: Fireballers,620;Handicapseries: It's auTurn,2,411;Handicapgame: RustyRelics,819. Men's highs —Scratchseries: PaulSloIn, 610; Scratchgame: BobCollins, 221;Handicapseries: Bob Freeman ,678;Handicapgame:BuzzStringer,247. Women's highs —Scratchseries: Stella Oja, 574, 431;scratchgame:Iris carlson, 159;Handicap series:cheri Goodman, 628; Handicapgame: Martha Collins,202.

Leagueleaders andhighscores Lava Lanes,Bend Feb. 3-9 CASINOFUN — TheGang;JosiahOhlde300//71; EdieRoebuck171/463 HIS ANDHERS—Timeto Spare; NormBeverstock 255/747 ;BrandlMcclennen214/598 GUYSAND GALS — Kelly D's Sports Bac Mike caiss e236/642;AmyAnderson201/591 LAVALANES CLASSIC— Mo and Pops; NormEdmunson 299/664;MoniqueMcCleary198/570 TEATIMERS— Jakes;ShariHamel2t3/572 FREEBREATHERS— S.O.S.;DaveWhltson253/708; SandyWeaver187/543 HAVE-A-BALL — Team4; Lucas Hughes235/584; AlexisHill- PierceGruenberg 203/527 GREASE DLIGHTENING—SlowRollers; SamBalyeat 247/605 ;vonnieGreen182/521 REJECTS — PinSweepers;DougGray256/645;Lois Gruver183/509 WEDNE SDAY INC — DentureIn; Michelle Smith 25//51; Will Plland 257//39 TNT— "MadeYaLook";DanSample244//03;Shauna Larsen 231/558

pRQGREss lvE — G'sup;Jessewhitson245/T05 TG.I.F.— ManOn;er yanMeeker215/634;Peanee

SOCCER

Denmark 200/543

COtlfSS fOI' OfflCISIS —An introductory course for aspiring soccer referees hasbeenscheduled for March1 and 2 at the St. Charles Medical Center in Bend.Cost is $85. The class runs from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. onSaturday, March 1, and from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. onSunday, March 2. For more information, contact Claudio Muggia atacmuggia©bendbroadband.com or PatEvoy atcosoapat@gmail.com or 541-480-4917. — Bulletin staffreporf

Find It All

Online bendbulletin.com


BS TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 2014

T EE TO

REEN

easonu ae: en o By Zack Hall

an oun

Central Oregon golf facilities for

ter plan for our championship golf members seem to enjoy their time at our gross merchandise sales in the course, which is our primary ameni- the club more. golf shop. We feel these significant ty. The initial interviewphases of the increases are due to our commit- planning process will take place this • Are the local golf facilities doment to facility improvements, the spring. Also, along with increases • ing enough to attract and fosdiversity of our club, and what ac- in course labor, we are investing in ter local play'? If not, what more can

an offseason update. This week we

tivities and events it offers, as well

increase of more than 10 percent in

The Bulletin

This is the latest installment of a weekly Tee To Green feature in which we check in via email with

some new agronomic practices in an

contacted Erik Nielsen, head pro- as the improving economic trends in fessional at Bend Golf and Country our local golf industry. Club. Nielsen, a PGA pro since 1993, is Were any changes of note in his 12th year as head pro at the • made to the facility during the

effortto produce firmer, fasterfairways and the development of new

Q•

diversity.

private club in southeast Bend. This

last year?

is what he had to say about the current business of golf and about Bend

A

Q•

• We're completing the last proj• ectsin a$300,000 campaignto improve our golf course, clubhouse, indoor swimming pool, and indoor/ outdoor tennis and athletic facilities.

Golf and Country Club, Central Ore-

gon's oldest golf facility:

Q •• Q • We were very happy to

These extensive projects, which be-

increase inthe number of rounds

of members.

How was business in 2013?

gan in 2012, were done to upgrade ~ • see a nearly 4 percent our facility for our next generation

played (compared with 2012), and we added morethan 50 new golf m emberships to our club. I w a s

also pleased to see our tournament participation increase in our club

any changes and/or imQ •• Are provements to t h e f a c ility scheduled for 2014?

A• We are renewing our focus on

activities, as well as an impressive

• an updated architectural mas-

tee areas to provide greater tee shot

be done? It's incumbent upon local PGA

A •• professionals to create innovative ways to draw more people to the

game of golf. We've seen increases in participation with our local PGA After a r ecession that be- Junior League, Get Golf Ready, • gan in 2007, how have your and volunteer "Golf in Schools" ingolf operations changed in recent structional programs. The Central years? Oregon Visitors Association and • Due to o u r p r i v ate, mem- Central Oregon Golf Trail, as well • ber-owned operation, we are as the incredible advertising about uniquely qualified to remain func- the variety of golf experiences in Ortional and improve our operation, egon, seem to bring more visitors to yet concentrate on how we can in- ourarea.Asaprivateclub,ourroleis crease our club's efficiency. Because to encourage people to live here full of our number of members and time,and embrace the energy and their commitment to our club expe- healthy lifestyle of Central Oregon rience, we run as a profitable busi- by being a member of our traditional ness.We've focused on creating a golf club. more relaxing, intimate, private club — Reporter: 541-617-7868, golfexperience since 2007,and our zhall@bendbulletin.com.

A

u

BendGolfand CountryClub Number ofholes: 18 Status: Openyear-round,weather permitting Location:61045 Country Club Drive, Bend Information:541-382-3261 Course stats:Par 72, 7,058 yards Head golf professional:Erik Nielsen Course designers:Original nine: H. Chandler Egan, William Hanley (1925); second nine: Bob Baldock (1973) Extras:Practice facilities include two chipping and putting greens, driving range, three greenside bunkers, 275yard practice hole, and a75-yard approach area. Fitness center, pool, restaurant, meeting/banquet facilities and tennis courts Website:www.bendgolfclub.com

Eisen ower Treea casuat a terice storm at Au usta

oip. f"iig 3/ i

'riii . I

By Doug Ferguson

"Over theyears,it's come

The Associated Press

into play many, many times

much a part of Augusta ¹

The Eisenhower Tree, so

on the 17th hole. When I stood on the 17th tee, my first

tional that not even a sitting U.S. president could have it

thought, always, was to stay away from Ike's Tree. Period.

taken down, was removed from the 17th hole this weekend becauseofdamage from an ice storm, the club said Sunday.

... I hit it so many times over

the years that I don't care to comment on the names I called myself and the names

I might have called the tree. Ike's Tree was a kind choice. hower Tree is difficult news But looking back, Ike's Tree to accept," club chairman will be greatly missed." Billy Payne said. "We obWhile players appreciattained opinions from the ed the history, some of them best arborists available weren't terribly fond of the and, unfortunately, were ad- century-old pine that was 65 vised that no recovery was feet high. "Did it get in my way?" possible." With th e M a sters only two-time U.S. Open chamtwo months away, Payne pion Curtis Strange said said there wa s n o o t h er Sunday. "It was like George significant damage to the Brett at third base for me. course. It caught more line drives The loblolly pine, which from me than I'm allowed to "The loss of th e Eisen-

Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Rich Crnich and his son,Mark Crnich, stand next to a type of sculpture they create together with recycled materials such as mild steel, copper, and brass at their Bend home. The pair have worked together to create elaborate trophies for golf tournaments across the United States.

Crnich Continued from B1 The 70-year-old Bend sculptur who

is now retiring from his trophy-making business and passing it on to his 45-yearold son, Mark, who has built trophies with

"My dad has a/ways had a mantra growing up with us and instilled in my brothers and I

that if you can't afford to pay somebody to do som ething

tle as I/~ hours to create. Larger trophies,

sat about 210 yards off the

some are nearly 2-feet tall and sell for

left of the 17th fairway, was feeling." among the m ost f a mous David Duval, who contrees in golf. It forced players tended four times for a green to aim away from the tree jacket at the Masters, played or try to shape the ball from a fade off the tee and had

close to $900, can take from seven to 10 hours, he says. And he can make hundredsoftrophiesduring thegolfseason. "People call me an artist, but I don't really think of myself as an artist," Crnich says. "I am one hell of a welder."

you better learn how to do it." his dad for close to 10 years. "And when they win one of my trophies, — Mark Crnich The transition (wives) want to put it as a centerpiece of the living room table," added Crnich (proSon Mark, too, is a heck of a welder and nounced SIR-nich). "Every one of them is Crnich down and informed him that he artist, which is why he is taking over the a piece of art." had bought that piece for $1,500, Crnich family business. Chances are that anyone who has spent says.) Mark Crnich wants to put his own any amount of time around Central OrMark Crnich, the eldest of Rich's three stamp on the sculptures and to eventually egon golf has at least glimpsed a Crnich sons, says that even though his dad had a turn his own art and trophies into a fulltrophy. late start as an artist, he always used his time job. The family name should help. "That does make it easier for the tranHe has made by hand every trophy for self-taught welding skills to create new every overall champion and flight winner things. sition part of it than just starting out from "My dad has always had a mantra scratch," says Mark Crnich, who doubles at all 17 runnings of the annual Pacific Amateur Golf Classic, an amateur tour- growing up with us and instilled in my as the partsand service manager atBobnament that attracts hundreds of golfers

brothers and I that if you can't afford to

each year to Central Oregon courses. His pay somebody to do something you better work has also been awarded to members at local clubs such as Broken Top and

learn how to do it," says Mark Crnich, who

cat of Central Oregon. "It's a recognizable

last name." Three years ago Rich Crnich's wife of

has formal training as a welder. "I got a lot 46 years, Theresa, died after a long battle of that background working around him with kidney cancer. tournaments throughout the West. with the shop.... We would see something The loss was devastating for Crnich. Crnich's trophy work has afforded him and say 'Hey, that looks like fun.' And Things got even worse six months later, enough commercial success to allow him then we'dgohome and build one." when a cancerous tumor was found on to concentrate on less profitable art, like Rich Crnich's art was more a pastime his bladder. his faceless sculpture of a Vietnam War- until 1997, when Alana Hughson, then and Crnich was treated successfully, but his era soldier on display now at the Central still president/CEO of the Central Oregon eyes were opened. Pronghorn as well as at other amateur

Oregon Vet Center on Bend's east side.

Visitors Association, went on a hunt for a

"You r ealize your

m o rtality w h en

"Every successful artist has a niche," unique trophy that was quintessentially things like that happen," he says. "I have says Crnich, who grew up in Eureka, Ca- Central Oregon for the inaugural Pac Am. enough (money). I don't need any more. I lif., and moved to Bend in 1970. "And if you get that niche thenyou want to exploit

it and try to do the best you can."

Not the plan In a way, Crnich is both an accidental artist and a trophy-maker. When Crnich was 35, hernia surgery kept him out of work — he spent 25 years as a driver for UPS Inc.— for seven weeks. He had long been an expert welder who had built beach buggies, horse trailers, and land yachts, really "anything I could

She first spotted a piece of Crnich's

work — a sculpture of a mountain landscape with towering pines — in a local gallery. Hughson, who describes Crnich as "one of my favorite people of all time," thought that if Crnich could create something sim-

want to enjoy the rest of my life."

A busy 2013 (aided by more than 100 trophies that he created for the PGA Professional National Championship last year in Sunriver) convinced Crnich that it was time to slow down, at least by his

right-to-left to avoid it. A nd i t i n f u r iated o n e of the club members after whom the tree eventually

was named — former President Dwight D. Eisenhower.

Eisenhower, an Augusta member from 1948 until his death in 1969, was said to have hit the tree so often

admit. That doesn't hurt my

to be mindful of the Eisenhower Tree. Told the news

Sunday evening, he was stunned.

"Are you kidding me?

That's terrible," Duval said. "That tree made you really

pay attention to where you were driving it. It made for a very narrow tee shot. You

on his tee shot that he cam- either had to go up over it or paigned to have it removed around it." and proposed during an AuDuval thought the only gusta National governors' tree that got so much attenmeeting that it be cut down. tion on a golf course was the This was in 1956, when Ike original tree near the front was starting his second term of the 18th green at Pebble as president. Clifford Rob- Beach. That since has been erts, the club chairman and replaced, and there is specuco-founder, overruled the lation that Augusta National president and adjourned the could do the same. meeting. The club generally can do It has been known as Eisenhower's Tree ever since.

whatever it wants — except in this case, save Ike's tree. The ice storm last week

such an iconic fixture and symbol of tradition at Au-

caused the tree to lose a

"The Eisenhower Tree is

gusta National," said Jack

significant amount of m ajor limbs. A photo in The

Nicklaus, a six-time Masters Augusta Chronicle showed winner and Augusta ¹ gaping sections missing tional member. "It was such from the left side. The club an integral part of the game had used cables to help hold and one that will be sorely

the pine together in recent

missed.

years.

standards.

ilar with a golf theme she might have her These days, he will sculpt only on pritrophy. vate commission — with one exception. "As soon as I met with Rich and he was

talking about his work, I was absolutely convinced that he was the right fit for the

He will create the Pac Am's trophies

"probably until the day I die," as a thanks for all the tournament has done for him.

Pac Am," Hughson says. "And goodness, Crnich plans to spend the rest of his we've had almost a 20-year relationship." time riding his Harley-Davidson, land While Crnich was laid up, a friend His trophy business bloomed mostly by sailing, or traveling the world, soaking brought him two books: biographies on word of mouth from Pac Am participants. in the experience of it all. (Hughson deold American West artists Charlie Russell He retired from UPS at 55. But his has scribes him as a "daredevil.") and Frederic Remington. been no ordinary retirement. He has no complaints, after all, other "I am looking at (the books) and I say, The detail he puts into each trophy is than the loss of his wife. 'I wonder if I could do that in metal'?'" he remarkable. And he is ready for his next chapter. "I'm excited about the rest of my life," recalls of the artists' paintings. All are made from common recycled Crnich's first piece was a metal replica metals. And he does not use a cast, which he says. "I feel like a little kid ... and I'm of a cutting horse and a rider that he sold makes each piece unique. 70 for $20, a sum he says he never collected His smallest trophies, which Crnich — Reporter: 541-617-7868, from the buyer. (Years later a man tracked sells for about $100 each, can take as litzhall@bendbulletin.com. do to make some extra money."

91

GOLF IN BRIEF Bend physical therapist earnshighest TPI certification

— Chris Cooper, aphysical therapist at Therapeutic Associates at The Athletic Club of Bend, recently earned theTitleist Performance Institute's top designation (level three) for medical and fitness professional. TPI's certification program is designed to improve theoverall knowledge base ofany professional that works with golfers. Cooper attended certification coursework in November atTPI's headquarters in Oceanside, Calif., to earn the designation. Cooper, whospecializes in golf-specific rehabilitation and fitness, is the first in Central Oregon to earn TPI's top designation for medical and fitness professionals, according to TPI. — Bulletin staff report




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C4

TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEB 17, 2014

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 M onday,February17,2014

Things are going well

ACROSS

64 Rights group, for short e.g. 65 Message in 6+ 36 Flown into a 140 or fewer rage characters 10Police officer 41 In a composed 66 British bathroom 13ActorNick manner 67 "Porgy and 14Countless 42 Historical periods 68 , Roebuck centuries 44 Distant and Co. 1SArrow-shooting 47 Cry loudly Greek god 4$Widespread food DOWN 17Buya meal for shortage 1 Always rushing, 1$An operator may 50 Refused to rushing, rushing help place one cooperate 2 Very 20 Hem and 54Savor,as fine inexpensively wine 21 Letter after theta 3 Went without a 55 Marisa of "Anger copilot 23 Luxurious Management" 4 When a plane is country house 56Anise-flavored due in, for short 24 Suffix with liqueur 5 Stop working at shepherd 57 President before 65, say 25 Wine-producing D.D.E. 6 -Bismol area of SE 58 Everybody ... 7 "Freaky Friday" France or part of the actress Lindsay 2$ Pokes in the rear contents of 18-, 8 First numero 25-, 36- and 30Assistance 50-Acroas 9 Nine-digit fig. 31 Fabric amts. 61Adhesive 10 Filmmaker B. DBMille 32 Exclusively 63 Go separate ways 11Throughword of mouth ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE 12 Surveyed, CANADA8LUEGRA55 as before an T RADI T I 0 NA L I RA S election N A V A L E N G A GEM EN T 16 Leaves rolling in 5 TEMLE55 G L A 5 5 E 5 the aisles L AY H I ES 19Avoids,as C DR S K I SOSPA D capture RA I D R A P S NEA L E 22 Noncommittal I NNO W A Y I TS A LO T replies S I GMA O R Z O R EN O 26 Late'8 opposite P OSS U M O E R S EX 27 Britain's last King K ER T S AT Henry 085CENEGE5TURE5 29 In (working P 0TAS5 I U M I 0 D I D E harmoniously) E L EPHANTTRAI N E R 33 Rio carnival DENTALA55 I 5 T A N T dance 1 Bid

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency Mrs. Murphy's Law: "Whatever can go wrong, will; and it wiII happen when Mr. Murphy is out of town." Murphy's Law and its extensions are familiar. I ndeed, at b r i dge, w hatever ca n g o wr o n g , w i l l . Moreover, it will be all your fault, and everybody will know it. T oday's West led th e j ack o f diamonds against four hearts, and South won with the queen and led a trump to his jack. West threw the eight of spades, so South went back to the ace of diamonds to lead a second trump.

bid). Your partner doubles, and the nextplayer passes. What do you say? ANSWER: Your partner's double is for takeout, and since he is willing to undertake a nine-trick contract, he promises a good hand. You have 12 useful points, hence cue-bid three hearts.If partner bids three spades next (likeIy), you'll have an easy raise to four spades. South dealer N-S vulnerable

NORTH 4QJ92 9752

O AQ 7 4QJ6

T HIRD DIAMO N D Everything seemed to be going well, but that's when Murphy says you've overlooked something. Sure enough, East took the ace of trumps and led a spade, and when West won and led a third diamond, East ruffed. South also lost a club; down one. It was all South's fault. He breaks the defenders' communication by leading a spade after he takes the jack of trumps. If East wins and leads his last diamond, South wins in dummy and leads a second trump. East wins but can't give West the lead to get a ruff. South is safe.

WEST 4A875 9 None 0 J1096 4 4K1052

EAST

4 K 10 6 4 9 AQ10 053 1119843

SOUTH 4I3 ( 4) K J98 6 4 3

0K82 4A7 South 1 vi 29 P 4 Q

DAILY QUESTION

W e s t Nor th Pass 14 ass 2 NT All P a ss

East Pass Pass

Youhold: 4 Q J 9 2 (v) 752 Opening lead — 0 J 0 A Q 7 4 Q J 6. The dealer, at your left, opens two hearts (a weak two- (C) 2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

33 1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34 ...,

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PUZZLE BYLYNN LEMPEL

34 Building wing 35 Flower'8 support 37 Enter gently 38 Hard hit 39 Isle of Man's locale 40 Flour or sugar container 43 Groups like Disney'8 dwarfs

44 Camera setting 45 Lacking a key, musically 46 Cesar who played the Joker 48Turkishtopper 49Acceptsformally, as a resolution 51 "Cool!" 52 Lies languidly

53 Real doozies 59 Apply lightly, with Il ll

on

60Snoopy,in his dl'eams 62 Stupefaction

For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.

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By C.C. Burnikel (c)2014 Tribune Content Agency, LLC

02/17/14


THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 17 2014 C5

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./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space

:I.

. IjI j

fe •

s

682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land

®

632

850

Snowmobiles

Arctic Cat 580 1994, EXT, in good condition, $1000. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149. 860 on the first day it runs II!otorcycles & Accessories to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and Harley Davidson 2009 human errors do occur. If this happens to Super Glide Custom, Stage 1 Screaming your ad, please conEagle performance, tact us ASAP so that too many options to corrections and any list, $8900. adjustments can be 541-388-8939 made to your ad. 541-385-5809 TheBulletin Classified 654

Houses for Rent SE Bend

HDFatBo 1996 745

Homes for Sale

NOTICE

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

Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Condition Many Extras Low Miles.

$77,000

541-548-4807

Triumph Da ytona 2004, 15K m i l e s, perfect bike, needs nothing. Vin ¹201536. $4995 Dream Car Auto Sales 1801Division, Bend DreamCarsBend.com 541-678-0240 Dlr 3665

880

Motorhomes

COACHNIAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, Iill-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownerA bargain at $49,900!

V ictory TC 9 2 c i 2002, runs great, 40K mi., Stage 1 Performance Kit, n ew tires, r e a r brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-771-0665 870

Boats & Accessories

motor, g reat details and photos on inboard well maintained, craigslist. $149,900. cond, $8995 obo. 541-350-7755

Aircraft, Parts & Service

Antique & Classic Autos

Pickups

RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...

You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great

Orbit 21' 2007, used

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

1976Silver Streak Hereitis!

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad Winnebago Aspect will also appear on 2009- 32', 3 slidebendbulletin.com outs, Leather intewhich currently renor, Power s e at, ceives over 1.5 millocks, win d ows, lion page views evAluminum wheels. ery month at no 17c Flat Screen, extra cost. Bulletin Surround s o u nd, Classifieds Get Recamera, Queen bed, sults! Call 385-5809 Foam mattress, Awor place your ad ning, Generator, Inon-line at verter, Auto Jacks, bendbulletin.com Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or 882 p ets. L ik e n ew, $74,900 541-480-6900

Ads 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

The Bulletin

SCIIIIng Central Oregan IiIICC 1903

Fifth Wheels .

0 a

Fleetwood D i scovery Winnebago Suncruiser34' 40' 2003, diesel mo- 2004, 35K, loaded, too torhome w/all much to list, ext'd warr. options-3 slide outs, thru 2014, $49,900 Densatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, nis, 541-589-3243 etc. 32,000 m i les. 881 Wintered in h eated shop. $84,900 O.B.O. Travel Trailers 541-447-8664

People Look for Information About Products and Services EveryDaythrough The Bulletin Classiffeds

Forest River Sunseeker Class C, 24-ft -Double bed, roomy bath/shower, lots storage, oak wood, dining area slide-out w/ new awning. Micro, air, newflatscreen TV& RV batt. On-board gen/low hrs, arctic pkg, full cover. Ford 450 V10, 36,300 mi, tow pkg, leather seats, no smoking/pets, sleeps 5-6 $31,500. 541-419-6176

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair l ift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504

KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition.

Fleetwood Wilderness N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 1 slide, sleeps 6 ,

queen bed, couch,

541-480-2019

'

00

Time to declutter? Need someextra cash?

OI'

© $400/mo.

541-948-2963

1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

And sell it locally.

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541485-5809

', ((

I' v

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance & affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

The Bulletin SCCIiny Central OICyanSinCe19N

IIII'Q Layton 27-ft, 2002

Pegasus 2008 24' w ith slide. A/ C , queen bed, sleeps 4, 2 door fridge, microwave, awning, & more! Non-smoker, exc cond, $11,295 541-390-1755

172 Cessna Share

IFR equipped, new Keystone Challenger avionics, Garmin 750 2004 CH34TLB04 34' fully S/C, w/d hookups, touchscreen, center stack, 180hp. new 18' Dometic awning, 4 new tires, new Exceptionally clean & economical! Kubota 7000w marine diesel generator, 3 $13,500. slides, exc. cond. in- Hangared in KBDN s ide 8 o ut . 27" T V Call 541-728-0773 dvd/cd/am/fm entertain center. Call for more details. Only used 4 times total in last 5~/~ years.. No pets, no smoking. High retail $27,700. Will sell for $24,000 including slid1974 Beffanca ing hitch that fits in 1730A your truck. Call 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. for appt to 2180 TT, 440 SMO, see. 541-330-5527. 180 mph, excellent condition, always Laredo 30'2009 hangared, 1 owner

Iv tc

List one Item* in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in P RINT and ON -LIN E

at bendbulletin.com

for 35 years. $60K. In Madras, call 541-475-6302

Redmond: 541-548-5254

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000

Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, 2 slides, AC, recliners, walk-around queen bed, sliding glass door closet, new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand Ford F250 Camper Spenew 20' screen room cial 1966, AT w/limited available. Super clean, 1 slip rear end. A few isSierra 1977 short owner, n o n-smokers.Save money. Learn GMC sues but runs good. Full bed, exlnt o r iginal to fly or build hours $13,499. 541-447-7968 cond., runs 8 drives steel rack w/drs. $1950 with your own airgreat. V8, new paint firm, cash. 541-420-01 56 c raft. 1 96 8 A e r o and tires. $4750 obo. Just bought a new boat? Commander, 4 seat, ~l i l~ •• 150 HP, low time, 541-504-1050 Sell your old one in the full panel. $23,000 classifieds! Ask about our obo. Contact Paul at Super Seller rates! 541-447-5184. 541-385-5809 'CCI MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides, T-Hangar for rent FordRanger XLT king bed, Irg LR, at Bend airport. 2011 Arctic insulation, all Jeep CJ5 1979, Call 541-382-8998. options $35,000 obo. Original owner, 87k 54'I -420-3250 916 miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch Trucks & package, Warn hubs. Heavy Equipment Excellent runner, very dependable. North- 4.0L V6, 4WD, auto., man 6y2' plow, Warn Supercab, 11K mi., 6000¹ winch. $7900 18 MPG Hwy. VIN OPEN ROAD 36' or best reasonable ¹A76782. $21,977 2005 - $25,500 offer. King bed, hide-a-bed R OBBER N 541-549-6970 or sofa, 3 slides, glass Peterbilt 359 p o table 541-815-8105. L INcoLN ~ I M ROR water t ruck, 1 9 90, shower, 10 gal. wa3200 gal. tank, 5hp ter heater, 10 cu.ft. 541-382-4521 p ump, 4 - 3 c hoses, fridge, central vac, DLR¹0205 s atellite dish, 2 7 " camlocks, $ 2 5,000. 541-820-3724 TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling 932 jacks and s cissor Plymouth B a r racuda stabilizer jacks, 16' Antique & 1966, original car! 300 awning. Like new! Classic Autos 541-419-0566 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching f ul l s i z e gw a 1921 Model T canopy, 2WD, 460 over drive, 135K mi., Delivery Truck full bench rear seat, Restored 8 Runs slide rear w i ndow, $9000. Recreation by Design Rolls Royce 1992 Silbucket seats, power 541-389-8963 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. ver Spur II, excellent! seats w/lumbar, pw, Top living room, 2 bdrm, Midnight Blue exterior, HD receiver & trailer has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, Parchment leather inte- brakes, good t ires. entertainment center, rior, 15-inch chrome RR Good cond i tion. fireplace, W/D, wheels, Alpine Sirius $4900. 541-389-5341 garden tub/shower, in DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS great condition.$36,000 navigation system, or best offer. Call Peter, 77,200 miles, dealer307-221-2422, ship maintained, alBuick Skylark 1972 in La Pine ) ways garaged. New, Please see Bend ILL DELIVER Craigslist for details and about $250,000; sell $19,500. 541-480-3348 more photos. RV $19,900. FORD XLT 1992 CONSIGNMENTS Need to get an 541-323-1898 3/4 ton 4x4 WANTED ad in ASAP? matching canopy, We Do the Work, You can place it 30k original miles You Keep the Cash! On-site credit possible trade for online at: classic car, pickup, approval team, www.bendbulletin.com motorcycle, RV web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! $13,500. 541-385-5809 In La Pine, call Free Advertising. 928-581-9190 BIG COUNTRY RV 933 Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: Pickups Ford XLT S upercrew 541-548-5254 2001 w/lots of upgrades Cadillac incl new 35x12.50 Toyo Eldorado, 1978 M/T tires. Must see! Very good condition. $10,200. 541-480-2141 o $3500 obo, cash. Call for full detailsl 0 0 Call a Pro 541-678-5575 (photo for illustration only) Dodge Dakota Quad Whether you need a Cab 2006, automatic, fence fixed,hedges V8, bed l i ner, t ow trimmed or a house pkg., alloy wheels. Vin built, you'll find ¹502517 Price Reduced! 908 professional help in $12,988 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 The Bulletin's "Call a Aircraft, Parts engine, power every- © s u a aau Service Professional" & Service thing, new paint, 54K orig. miles, runs great, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Directory 877-266-3821 exc. cond.in/out. $7500 541-385-5809 obo. 541-480-3179 Dlr ¹0354

Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, licensed thru 2/15, exlnt cond. 3 elec slides, solar panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANV features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call or text 541-325-1956. CHECK yOUR AD 1/3 interest in Columbia 400, $150,000 (located cy Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease,

stove/oven, tub/ shower, front e lec. jack, waste tank heaters, s tabilizers, 2 prop. t a n ks , no smoking/pets, winteri zed, g oo d c o n d. on the first day it runs OBO to make sure it is cor$8500 541-447-3425 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. Keystone Laredo31' 541-385-5809 Rt/ 20 06 w ith 1 2' The Bulletin Classified slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub & shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Fleetwood Prowler Outside sho w er. 32' - 2001 Slide through stor2 slides, ducted a ge, E a s y Li f t . heat & air, great $29,000 new; condition, snowbird Askinq$18,600 ready, Many up541-4947-4805 grade options, financing available! $14,500 obo. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most Call Dick, comprehensive listing of 541-480-1687. classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting Fieefwood goods. Bulletin Classifieds Wilderness2000 appear every day in the model, 28', 1 slide, print or on line. good condition, with Call 541-385-5809 awning and A/C, www.bendbulletin.com $7500. 541-383-8270

Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air condItioninq, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, N ayion R V 20 0 8 , $8495 Sprinter chassis 25'. 541416-1388 Mercedes Benz diesel, 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality throughRV out, rear slide-out w/ queen bed, d e luxe CONSIGNMENTS WANTED captain swivel f ront seats, diesel generator, We Do The Work ... awning, no pets/ smok- You Keep The Cash! On-site credit ing. $77,500 or make approval team, an offer. 541-382-2430 web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495

541-389-8614

541-548-5511

Fifth Wheels

.

similar model & not the actual vehicle)

Lots

FACTORYSPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes

933

Travel Trailers

541-548-0318 (photo aboveis oia

SHEVLIN RIDGE 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, ap- 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, proved plans. More

775

932

Motorhomes

$25,000.

771

Manufactured/ Nlobile Homes

908

The Bulletin

541-548-4969

N ewer 4 b d r m S E , Harley Davidson master main l evel, 2011 Classic Lim2100 SF, large yard, ited, Loaded! 9500 very n i ce. $ 1 795. miles, custom paint 541-480-9200 "Broken Glass" by Nicholas Del Drago, 656 new condition, heated handgrips, Houses for Rent auto cruise control. SW Bend $32k in bike, Prime location on Bend's only $20,000or best west side! S pacious offer. 541-318-6049 floorplan features great room design. 3 oversized bdrms, 2.5 baths, near schools, Tetherow Golf Club, Mt. Bachelor, River Trail & shopping; adjacent to park. Movein ready; yard maint. incl. Harley Davidson 19424 SW B rookside Dyna Wide Glide Way. No pets considered. 2013, black, only $1495. 541-408-0086 200 miles, brand new, all stock, plus after-market exhaust. Has winter Kcel & i f j Rs cover, helmet. ~C ®Q S Selling for what I owe on it: $15,500. Call anytime, 541-554-0384

Redmond Homes

882

Perhaps the cleanest cond! Dishwasher, w/d, original yintage 30-ft central vac, roof satellite, trailer, in incredible conaluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays dition! A/C, full bath, & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 tow- kitchen, twin beds, many Call for details. bar and Even-Brake in- extras. $12,700 obro. cluded. Dave 208-255-2407 Call 541-977-4150 (in 1errebonne). Start your Tioga 24' Class C memonestoday! Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent 875 shape, new tires, Watercraft professionaly winterized every year, cutAds published in cWa off switch to battery, Tango 29.6' 2007, tercraft" include: Kay plus new RV batterRear living, walkies. Oven, hot water ks, rafts and motor around queen bed, zed heater & air condipersonal central air, awning, tioning have never watercrafts. Fo 1 large slide, been used! 'boats" please se $12,000. $24,000 obo. Serious lass 870. inquiries, please. 541-280-2547 or 541-385-5809 Stored in Terrebonne. 541-815-4121 541-548-5174

CHECK yOURAD

750

881

O Q I'

Apt./Multiplex General

All real estate advertised 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, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national 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 this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified

880

overall length is 35' has 2 slides, Arctic package, A/C, table 8 chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com

$28,000

541-419-3301

Dramatic Price Reduction Executive Hangar at Bend Airport (KBDN) 60' wide x 50' deep, w/55' wide x 17' high bifold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent to Frontage Rd; great visibility for aviation business. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock@q.com

BSSl 1C S To reCeiVyO e ur FREECLASSIFIEDAD, Cal 541-385-5809OrViSit

The Bulletinofficeat:1777SWChandler Ave. (OnBend's west side) *Offer allowsfor 3 linesof text only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets,weapons, rentals andemploymentadvertising, andallcommercial accounts. Must beanindividual itemunder $200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincludedin thead. Askyour Bulletin Sales Representativeabout special pricing, longer runschedulesandadditional features. Limit t ad per itemper30 daysto besold.


C6 MONDAY FEBRUARY 17 2014 • THE BULLETIN I

• 8 ~ I •

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

• •

AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts aod Service 916 - Trucks aud Heavy Equipmeut 926 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique aud Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 936 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 976 - Automobiles

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935

935

Pickups

Sport Utility Vehicles

Sport Utility Vehicles

GMC Sierra 2010

975

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975

975

Sport Utility Vehicles

Vans

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

NissanJuke 2012 ~aa

Honda Odyssey

Lincoln MKZ 2009

Porsche 911 Carrera 993 cou e

Toyota Celica Convertible 1993

BMW X3

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

2 0 07, 99K

miles, premium package, heated lumbar 3.5L V6, auto., 30K supported seats, pan- miles, 23 MPG Hwy, oramic mo o nroof, certified pre-owned. Bluetooth, ski bag, XeVIN ¹D08213. non headlights, tan & $25,977 black leather interior, n ew front & re a r ROBBERSON brakes O 76K miles, LlllcDLN ~ IM ROB one owner, all records, very clean, $16,900. 541-382-4521 541-388-4360

DLR¹0205

Check out the classifieds online www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in fphoto for illustration only) BMM/ X5 2005, V 8 , The Bulletin Classifieds auto, AWD, tow pkg., alloy wheels, privacy I nternational Fl a t glass, panorama roof. 541-385-5809 Bed Pickup 1963, 1 Vin ¹V10818 ton dually, 4 s pd. $15,488 trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood S Ua A R U . Jeep Liberty 2008 hauler, runs great, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. new brakes, $1950. 877-266-3821

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541-419-5480.

1999. Very good cond. Runs well, Two sets of tires on rims - summer and winter. $2500. 541-593-2312

1.6L 4 cyl., AWD, C VT, 4 K mil e s , 30MPG Hwy. VIN ¹120304. $20,977 ROBBERSON y LIIICOLII ~

or 541-977-7588 975

Automobiles

5.7L V8, automatic, crewcab, 21K miles, 19 MPG Hwy. VIN ¹142678. $27,977 ROBBERSON y

3.7L V6, automatic, 86K miles, 21 MPG Hwy, VIN ¹279884. $13,977 ROBBERSON

5.7L V8, AWD, automatic, 26K miles, VIN ¹595661. $27,977

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

Nissan Pathfinder 2010

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4.0L V6, 4WD, auto.,

62K mi., 20 m pg hwy. VIN ¹629900. $18,977 ROBBERSON 4 541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

LINcoLN ~

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

DLR¹0205

TiCk, TOck Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!

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CorvetteCoupe 1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil, garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell! 541-923-1781 Audi A4 2001 1.8T 4 door sedan, rebuilt trans w/19K miles, newer clutch, brakes, manifold, extras 8 receipts. Excellent mpg; Carfax. $5,800.

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

with hard& soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

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541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205

Dlr ¹0354

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: '10 - 3 lines, 7 days '16 - 3 lines, 14 days (Private Party ads only)

Cadillac Deville DHS 2000. Most

options, exc. cond. 93,000 mi.. New tires. $6,500.

fphoto for illustration only)

H onda F i t Spo r t 541-233-8944. Hatchback 2009, 4 Cyl., VTEC, 1.5 Liter, a uto, F W D , re a r Chev Malibu LT 2012, spoiler, alloy wheels, leather, 6,638 miles. Vin¹040086 ¹387451 $16,995 $10,788

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fphoto for illustration only)

Subaru Forester XT Limited 2007, 4 Cyl., auto, AWD, leather, moon rof, p r ivacy Corvette 1979 glass, roof rack, alloy L82- 4speed. wheels. Vin¹710326 85,000 miles $15,888 Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 SuaARU SUSARUOP3lMD.OOM years. Never dam2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. aged or abused.

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Mazda Miata 1997 Illl-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior & exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt O 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648

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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Need help fixing stuff? 877-266-3821 Call A Service Professional Dlr ¹0354 find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr

(longer style) sedan, silver, black leather, 4.2L V8, AT, AC, fully loaded + moonroof. Runs great, reliable, always garaged, 116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. Front/side airbags, non-smoker. $7900. 541-350-9938

Nissan Altima2010 v

2.5S 4cyl., FWD, CVT, 76k mi., 32 mpg„Tuscan Sun Metallic, vin¹443778 $11,997 ROBBERSON

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$12,900.

Dave, 541-350-4077 [photo for illustration only)

541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

541-382-4521

ROBBERSON g

877-266-3821

541-598-3750 www.aaaoregonautosource.com

Dlr ¹0354

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$15,977

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541-390-6004

Subaru Forester 2008 black, 33,271 mi., $14,995. ¹726087

877-266-3821

ROBBERSON

VIN ¹613915.

$10,988 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.

Dodge Durango 2011

¹165817

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Dlr ¹0354

Ram 1500 2012

Ford Mustang Deluxe Coupe 2005, V 6, manual, RWD, power 3.5L V6, automatic, seats, rear s poiler, 54K miles, 28 MPG premium wheels. VIN Hwy,

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541-382-4521 DLR¹0205

Ford Flex2013

6.0L V8, 4WD, automatic, c r ewcab, 14K miles, leather. VIN ¹146305. $37,977 LIIICOLII ~

940

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BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Suowmobiiss 860 - Motorcycles Aod Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomss 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies aod Campers 890- RVs for Rent

935

Call The Bulletin At 541-385-5809 Jeep Wrangler UnlimPlace Your Ad Or E-Mail ited Sa hara 2 0 07, (photo for illustration only) Tribeca 2009, CORVETTECOUPE At: www.bendbulletin.com Automatic, hard top, Subaru Glasstop 2010 3.6 Liter, auto, t ow pk g . , all o y H6, AWD, roof rack, priGrand Sport-4LT wheels, running vacy g lass, a l l oy loaded, clear bra boards. Vin ¹120477 wheels. Vin ¹405069 hood & fenders. $25,988 New Michelin Super $17,788 Sports, G.S. floor © s uSUMRUaO ~A DRu OOM © s u aARu mats, 17,000 miles, SIIMRUOÃIEHD.OOM Ford Bronco 114x4, 1989, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Crystal red. 877-266-3821 auto, high miles, runs $42,000. 877-266-382'I good. $1700. Dlr ¹0354 503-358-1164. Dlr ¹0354 541-633-6662

Kia Forte SX Hatchback 2013, 4 Cy l , m oon r o of , re a r spoiler, alloy wheels. Vin¹684485 $17,988

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541-382-4521 DLR ¹0205

Tiptronic auto. transmission. Silver, blue leather interior, moon/sunroof, new quality tires and battery, car and seat covers, many extras. Recently fully serviced, garaged, looks and runs like new. Excellent condition $39,700 541-322-9647 Porsche 911 Turbo

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Volkswagen Jetta 2.0L 2013, 4 Cyl., Turbo diesel, 6 speed w/tiptronic, FWD, moon roof, alloy wheels. Vin ¹356856 $22,988

2003 6 speed, X50 added power pkg. 530 HP! Under 10k miles, Arctic silver, gray leather interior, new quality t ires, © s u a ARLL and battery, Bose p remium sou n d 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. stereo, moon/sun877-266-3821 roof, car and seat Dlr ¹0354 covers. Many extras. Garaged, p e r fect condition, $69,700. 541-322-9647

Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with hardtop. 50K miles, new factory Porsche motor 6 mos ago with 18 mo factory warranty remainina. $37,500. 541-322-6928

$22,988

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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

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Looking for your next employee?

Subaru Legacy 3.0 R Limited 2008, AWD, I The Bulletin recoml leather moon roof mends extra caution l a lloys, spoiler. V i n when p u rchasing ~

• 'Little Red COTVette"

convection micro, er ceramic tile washer/dryer, floor, TV, DVD, sate ie dsh IS, air leueling, passand a through storagetray,

2 0 05 AWD, sunroof, lux/winter pkgs new tires morei $7775 obo.541-330-5818

Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory

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checks, or credit in- g 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. formation may be I 877-266-3821 J subject to FRAUD. For more informa® s u a ARU. Dlr ¹0354 f tion about an adver2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. tiser, you may call What are you 877-266-3821 I the Oregon State Dlr ¹0354 Olds 98 REgency 1990 looking for? Attorney General's s exc. shape, runs as Office C o nsumer I You'll find it in new, one owner, 20 Look at: / Protection hotline at mpg in town. New Bendhomes.com The Bulletin Classifieds 1-877-877-9392. battery, stud snow for Complete Listings of tires. $2000. Serving Central Oregon since19al Area Real Estate for Sale 541-389-9377 541-385-5809

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GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993

1996, 73k miles,

+Pg. Add lOtS fT)0rede-

scrlPtion and interesting facts for $99I Lookhow muChfuf) a glri COuld

Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane ad runs until it sells or up to 12 months

havein a sweet car likethis! $12,500 547 -000-000

(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com

541-385-5809 * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.


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