Bulletin Daily Paper 03-17-13

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TODAY'S READERBOARD Tuder testing —Most Europeans areopposedto genetically modified crops,

• A 2nd, in Christmas Valley, maybecoming

but that's not stopping Irish scientists from

By Dylan J. Darling

trying out ways to make a

The Bulletin

blight-proof potato.A3

Life expectancyResearch shows how it's tied

sae

rescentcom ost roectis e Ll The Tualatin trucker planning to start a compost operation near Crescent says he won't likely be hauling until June, given delays in the permitting process, and he is looking to building a

similar setup in Christmas Valley. Klamath County is set to meet with Larry Morrison, owner of Morrison Trucking, Tuesday in Klamath Falls to discuss his new application for a permit. The public may attend but not comment, said

Mark Gallagher, senior planner for Klamath County. An opportunity for public comment will come later, he said. The county approved the operation last year, but last month that approval lapsed and county officials have learned the project requires a different type of permit than originally granted.

ax is

At iSSue —A proposal to transport thousandsof tons of materials (including

food waste) eachyear from the Willamette Valley, to be composted ata site near Crescent, a small town

0

along U.S.Highway 97just south of the Deschutes County line.

ar e

SeeComposting/A5

to the income gap.A4

• But full repeal isn't in the cardsthis time

DANCE OF THE IRISH CPAC wrap-up —Three

By Lauren Dake

days, two 2016 stars and one

The Bulletin

Big Gulp — theannual conser-

SALEM — While Sen. Tim Knopp campaigned for election in 2012, he used every opportunity he could to talk about one of his top priorities: repealing the state's estate tax. In November, voters weighed in on the issue and defeatedMeasure 84,which would have phased out the tax. But Knopp hasn't given up. Despite a 54-to-48 percent defeat of Measure 84, he's introduced legislation that would eliminate the tax for estates worth less than $5 million. "It's the right policy," Knopp sa>d. Senate Bill 671 would raise the threshold from the current $1 million mark to $5 million rather than completely eliminate the tax, as the measure would have done. Deschutes County voters supported Measure 84 with 55 percent voting in favor. But with Democrats controllingboth chambers of the Legislature, it's unlikely Knopp's bill will gain much momentum. Plus, Democrats are hoping to cut $275 million in tax breaks to funnel more money toward schools. SeeKnopp/A6

vative conference (with Sarah

Palin) comes andgoes. A7

Active economy — Recreation brings a high number of sporting goods stores (and jobs) to Deschutes County.E1

EDITOR'5CHOICE

30 yearsof

gg lll A g l I O gr " n G I"t

( OP unity

c

on foreign

policy slips By Michael D. Shear

Jee Kiine / The Bulletin

New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — For more than three decades, the Republican brand has been deeply tied to a worldview in which the aggressive use of American power abroad is both a policy imperative and a political advantage. Now, a new generation of Republicans like Kentucky Sen. Rand Paul is turning inward, questioning the approach that reached its fullest expression after the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, and signaling a willingness to pare back the military budgets that made it all

possible. That holds the potential to threaten two wings of a Republican national security establishment that have been warring for decades: the internationalists who held sway under the elder President George Bush and the neoconservatives who led the country to long and costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan under President George W. Bush.

SeeForeign policy/A6

Dancers from the Dillon-Moore Academy of Irish Dance ushered in the local St. Patrick's Day festivities Saturday, performing during the "Celtic Journey Homeward" show at the Bend High School auditorium. The Irish, their descendants and their wannabes are donning green across the globe for today's official holiday honoring the patron saint of Ireland. The St. Patrick's Day Dash (a 5K through beer is served. See the calendar on Page B2.

Sponsors:Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend, is the

Ethanol's daysof promiseare fading By John Eligon and Matthew L. Wald New York Times News Service

MACON, Mo. — Five years ago, rural America was giddy for ethanol. Backed by government subsidies and mandates,

"Flight to L.A. is ago" published Saturday, March16, on Page A1, officials with Economic De-

velopment for Central Oregon

hundreds of ethanol plants rose among the golden fields of the Corn Belt, bringing jobs and business to small towns, providing farmers with a new market for their crops and generating billions of dollars

in revenueforthe producers of this corn-based fuel blend. Those days of promise and prosperity are no more. Nearly 10 percent of the nation's ethanol plants have stopped production over the

past year, in part because the drought that has ravaged the nation pushed commodity prices so high that ethanol has become too expensive to produce. See Ethanol/A4

chief sponsor; dozensof legislators have signed on, including local lawmakers

Conger, Huffman, McLane, Whisnant and Whitsett.

Status:It has been referred to the finance and revenue committee. Check its status

online atwww.leg.state.or.us, clicking on the Oregon Legislative Information

System image.

With priceyclasses,creative education paysoff for startups By Nick Wingfield

After a story headlined

Senate Bill 671 would exempt estates worth less than $5 million from the state estate tax.

downtown Bend) is also today, as are a couple of holiday celebrations at places where, of course,

New York Times News Service

Clarification

Bill in Salem-

SEATTLE — Anyone who wants to learn calculus, statistics or ancient Greek history can take free online courses in those subjects at a variety of sites from instructors with distinguished academic pedigrees. For more mundane

pursuits, like learning how to paddleboard or build a planter box for the garden, there is an inexhaustible supply of free how-to videos on YouTube, eHow and other sites. But if you'd like to watch a recording of a three-day course on the minutiae of photographing clients who com-

mission high-end portraits of themselves in lingerie, that will cost $149 on a website called CreativeLive. While companies like Udacity and Coursera — providers of giant online open courses — are just beginning to introduce courses with fees that count for academic

credit, other online learning companies have carved out a lucrative niche in courses on design, photography and other creative pursuits. CreativeLive, Lynda.com and others have tapped into an audience of customers who are highly motivated to hone skills that might help enhance

their careers. The online courses are usually less expensive than intensive in-person work-

shops on photography and other subjects, and can attract top-notch instructors with their promise of big national audiences. SeeCreative/A5

wanted to emphasize that the ticket-selling effort to secure a

Redmond to LosAngelesflight now hinges on their securing

the money from thepledges by Friday. AmericanAirlines will make a final decision after the funds are actually delivered.

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 44, Low 19

Page B6

INDEX Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife C1-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts Classified G 1 - 6L ocal/State B 1- 6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C7

4 P We userecycled newsprint AnIndependent

vol. 110, No. 76, 7 sections

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88267 0233 0

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A2 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 'l7, 2013

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• . cance s missi e e ense • Shift to counter N. ICoreamaythaw relations with Russia New York Times News Service MOSCOW — As part of its plan to deploy additional ballistic missile interceptors to counter North Korea, the United States has effectively scrapped the final phase of a Europebased missile defense system that was fiercely opposed by Russia and cited repeatedly by the Kremlin as a major obstacle to cooperation on nuclear arms reductionsand other issues. Russian officials have so far

declined to comment. But Russian news accounts quickly noted the decision could portend a breakthrough in what has been a largely intractable dispute between Russia and the United States for years. P entagon o f f i cials s a i d those longstanding objections by Russia played no role in the decision to reconfigure the missile interceptor program, which they said Friday was based onthe increased threat from North K orea, and on technological difficulties and budget considerations related to the Europe-based program. Still, other Obama administration officials acknowledged potential benefits if the decision

LaCrOSSe duS CraSh —A road trip by a college women's lacrosse team came to a tragic end Saturday whenthe team busveered off a Pennsylvania highway and crashed into a tree, killing a pregnant coach, her unborn child and the driver and injuring numerous others. Seton

Hill University team playersand coacheswereamongthe 23aboard when the bus crashed just before 9 a.m. No other vehicle was involved, and police couldn't immediately say what caused the crash.

NOrth KOrea —TheHermit Kingdom said Saturday its nuclear weapons werenot abargaining chip to trade for economic concessions, warning that it would never negotiate with the United States as long as Washington maintained a hostile policy. The statement was the latest in a series in which North Korea has appeared to harden its posi-

is well-received in Moscow. "There's still an absolutely firm commitment to European missile defense, which is not about Russia; it's about Iran," said a senior administration official. "... If there are side benefits that accrue with Russia, so be it. But that wasn't a primary driver of this policy change." In recent weeks, Russia had also indicated there was virtually no possibility of agreeing to further nuclear arms reductions beyond what was included in the New START Treaty — a major priority for President Barack Obama without the United States first addressing Russia's concerns about missile defense.

tion on its nukes. Chlna tranSltlnn —China's new leaderXi Jinping pledged acleaner, more efficient government asthe country's ceremonial legislature wrapped up a pivotal session this morning, installing the latest gener-

ation of communist leaders in aonce-a-decade transfer of power. The new leadership hasstressed it will make apriority of social spending and other measures to spreadprosperity more evenly andnarrow a politically volatile gap between China's wealthy elite and poor majority,

as well combat endemic corruption that hasangeredthe public. India rape —A Swiss womanwhowas on acycling trip in central India with her husbandhas beengang-raped by eight men, police said Saturday. Authorities detained and questioned13 men in connection with the attack, which comes three months after the fatal gang-rape of

a woman aboard aNewDelhi bus outraged Indians. NeW pOpe —Thefocus of PopeFrancis' papacy beganto emerge Saturday as he offered someintimate insights into the conclave that elected him pontiff, describing how he was immediately inspired to name himself after St. Francis of Assisi because he wants to see a

church that is "for the poor." Hiscomments perhaps provide further evidence that this first Latin American papacy would be one that looks beyond the confines of the church itself to the most disadvantaged. He told

smuoo Aw.

reporters thanwhenthe two-thirds voting threshold was met, installing him as pope,applauseerupted in the frescoed Sistine Chapel.

Dcsuuesie

Afghan unrest —The continued presenceof U.S. Special Operations troops in Wardak province, against the wishes of the Afghan government, brought about 300 demonstrators to the capital Saturday and

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provoked astrongly worded denunciation from Muslim clerics. Presi-

DEPARTMENT HEADS

Eurn CrlSIS —In a movethat could set off new fears of contagion across the eurozone,anxious depositors lined up atcash machineson

dent Hamid Karzai had given the Americans until March10 to remove all Special Operations troops from the province, after complaints about

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Human Resources Traci Donaca ......................

Kenya —Raila Odinga, the second-place finisher in Kenya's presidential race this month, filed a petition before the Supreme Court

on Saturday contending "glaring anomalies" in the vote andcalling for a new election. Odinga hasbeen urging his supporters to remain

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:

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peaceful and refrain from rioting. So far, the peace has held.

Zlmhahwe constitution —Longtime rivals President Robert

Muhammed Muheisen /The Aeeociated Press

A disabled Pakistani soldier runs while carrying his national flag during a sports competition Saturday in

al areas bordering Afghanistan, gathered Saturday for a sports competition designed to help them recover

Mugabe and Prime Minister Morgan Tsvangirai said they cast identical "Yes" votes in a referendum Saturday on a new constitution that curbs

Rawalpindi, Pakistan.

— in body and spirit.

presidential powers. Elections areslated for around July to end ashaky

Dozens of wounded Pakistani troops, many of them maimed during the fighting in the country's trib-

The country itself seems to be recovering as well, as its government shows signs of stability.

coalition government formed after the last violent vote in 2008. — From wire reports

Milestone inPakistan: Nocoup By Declan Walsh New Yorh Times News Service

ISLAMABAD — Pakistan's fragiledemocracy reached a milestone on Saturday when the government stepped down at the end of its five-year term, setting the stage for elections due to take place by mid-May. The action was a first in a country where the powerful military has regularly ousted civilian governments, either directly through coups or indirectly through constitutional maneuvers, and i t o f f ered hope that the parliamentary system was maturing. Still, a f altering economy and widespread militant violence have left many Pakistanis grumbling about the lack of tangible dividends from democracy, and the governing Pakistan Peoples Party, whose performance has been widely criticized, will face a strong challenge from the opposition leader, the former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. In a t elevised address to the nation that was heavily steeped in his party's history, Prime Minister Raja Pervez Ashraf defended his government's record. Talks with the opposition over the formation of a caretaker administration, which would run the country until the elections, were continuing, he said. A peacefultransfer of power to a new government would be a political victory of sorts for President Asif Ali Zardari, the party co-chairman, who has confounded regular predictions of the demise of his government over the past five

say he is unlikely to muster an outright majority, a range of ethnic, regional and religious parties could hold the balance of power in determining a coalition government. Other personalities and factors are also expected to play a role. The cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan, who has campaigned heavily against corruption and in opposition

ilAXt' IIfVAIIY> 1)110JKCL

to U.S. drone strikes, hopes to eat into Sharif's support base in Punjab province, which accounts for over half of the 272 elected seats in Parliament. The political system last

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SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

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

It's Sunday, March17, the 76th day of 2013. There are 289 days left in the year.

CUTTING EDGE

SCIENCE

HAPPENINGS

RaPe trial —A verdict will

its own troubles, being responsible for a great famine that killed a million

One sinkhole killed, but there's noneed to panic, expertssay

be handed down in the Steubenville, Ohio, case against two

people in the mid-1800s.

By Michael Wines

HOliday —St. Patrick's Day parades kicked off in big cities that honors all things lrish is today.A1

high school football players, a day after closing arguments ended.

HISTORY Highlight:In 1973, U.S. Air Force Lt. Col. Robert Stirm, a freed prisoner of the Vietnam

War, was joyously greeted by his family on the tarmac at Travis Air Force Base in California

oao

0

from Dublin to New York on Saturday, but the real holiday

Ah, that most Irish of foods. Like the country itself, the tuber has experienced

So while most Europeans say they are opposed to genetically engineered crops, plant scientists in Ireland are testing potatoes via genetics that may be more resistant to a still thriving fungal blight called Phytophthora. The disease has become even more damaging in the past five years with the arrival of new, highly aggressive strains. Unchecked, blight can destroy entire crops in just days.

in a scenecaptured in a Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph by Slava Veder of the AP.

How blight-resistantpotatoesare beingtested

In461 (or 493, depending on sources), St. Patrick, the patron

Blight-resistant genes are

... and transferred to blight-

taken from wild potatoes ...

susceptible potatoes. Stem fragments of nonresistant

Potato plants grownfrom the stems are then tested for resistance.

potatoes are placed in the

Leaves from the engineered plants

agrobacterium containing the R genes, inserting the blight-

recognize the presence of phytophthora proteins and induce plant

resistant DNA into the cultivated potato DNA.

cells around the infection to die, also killing the fungus.

saint of Ireland, died in Saul. In1762, New York's first St. Patrick's Day parade took place. In 1861, Victor Emmanuel II was proclaimed the first king of a united Italy. In1906, President Theodore

Resistance (R) genes of wild potatoes from the Americas, closely related to blightsusceptible cultivated potatoes, are transferred to

agrobacterium.

Wild potato DNA fragments

Roosevelt first likened crusading journalists to a man with "the muckrake in his hand" in a

Potato plant grown from stem fragment

Leafinfected with Phytophthora Cultivated potato — l h plant reacts by killing leaf cells around~ theinfection, keepingit from spreading.

OOO OQO OOO

speech to the Gridiron Club in Washington. In1912, the Camp Fire Girls organization was incorporated in Washington, D.C., two years to the day after it was founded in Thetford, Vt. (The group is now

R gene fragment is transferred to agrobacterium.

R genes enter cells of cultivated-potato stemfr agments.

The Washington Post

known asCampFire USA.) In1950, scientists at the Uni-

versity of California at Berkeley announced they hadcreated a

Source: Project group DuRPh, Wageningen University and Research Center

new radioactive element, "cali-

By Adrian Higgins

fornium." In1963, Mother Elizabeth Ann

Bayley Seton, anAmerican, was beatified by Pope John XXIII. (She was canonized12

years later by PopePaulVl.) In1966,a U.S. submarine located a missing hydrogen bomb which had fallen from

an American bomber into the Mediterranean off Spain. In1970, the United States cast its first veto in the U.N. Security Council. (The U.S. killed a resolution that would have condemned Britain for failure to use force to overthrow the

white-ruled government of Rhodesia.)

In1988, Avianca Flight 410, a Boeing 727, crashed after take-

off into a mountain in Colombia, killing all143 people on board. In1993, Helen Hayes, the "First Lady of the American Theater," died in Nyack, N.Y., at age 92.

Ten yearsago: Edging to the brink of war, President George

W. Bush gaveSaddam Hussein 48 hours to leavehis country; Iraq rejected Bush's ultimatum, saying that a U.S. attack to

force Saddamfrom power would be "a gravemistake." Five yearsago:Democratic presidential candidate Hillary

Clinton, recalling a goodwill trip she'd made to Bosnia as first lady in March 1996, said

she remembered landing under "sniper fire" — a statement that conflicted with accounts of the time. David Paterson

was sworn in asgovernor of New York. Paul McCartney's

divorce from Heather Mills was settled for $48.6 million.

One year ago:John Demjanjuk, 91, convicted of being a low-ranking guard at the

Sobibor death camp, but who maintained his innocence, died in Bad Feilnbach, Germany.

BIRTHDAYS

The Washington Post

CARLOW, Irelandwen Mullins is the face of modern Ireland: Young, c osmopolitan, h i g h l y educated, he is a plant scientist whose work on a genetically modified p otato i n h erently looks to the future. But Mullins also must think back to one of Ireland's darkest chapters, the Great Famine of the 1840s. "It's always there," he said. "It's not something we forget or something we should be allowed to forget." From his lab and g reenhouse ina research farm outside Carlow, 42-year-old Mullins deals daily with the potato blight, a pernicious rot caused by a fungus that still thrives in Ireland's wet, cold climate. Mullins and his team have spent the winter cloning new potato stock in a locked temperature control room and, nearby, a secured greenhouse bay where the plant is isolated and any waste must be sterilized in a steamer. In the spring, they will start the test by setting out more than 2,000 transplants in a fenced field at the Irish agriculturalresearch service'sfarm. "There's a lot of public interest" in his work, said Mullins. Not all of it is friendly. Genetic engineering remains h ighly controversial in Europe, and the research in I reland has spawned a campaign against it. The field trials in Carlow are harming Ireland's reputation for local, organic and artisanal food, said Kaethe Burt-O'Dea, a Dublin based local-food activist. "People feel that once you let GM in, there's really no turning back," she said. Butproponents of the GMpotato say it's eventual use could prevent harmful and expensive applications of pesticides and bolster potato yields, which are decimated by the blight in poorer countries today.

E

The popular potato The former national chairwoman of the NAACP,

Myrlie Evers-Williams, is 80. Former NASA astronaut Ken Mattingly is 77. Rock musician

Paul Kantner is 72. Singersongwriter Jim Weatherly is 70. Former National Security

Agency Director and former CIA Director Michael Hayden is 68. Actor Patrick Duffy is 64. Actor Kurt Russell is 62. Actor Gary Sinise is 58. Actor Rob Lowe is 49. Rock singer Billy

Corgan is 46. Soccer player Mia Hamm is 41. — From wire reports

Just as sinkhole madness was starting to die dovim, a The recent bizarre death sinkhole no bigger than a of a man who vanished into Hula Hoop opened up March a huge sinkhole that opened 9 on the 14th hole at the Annbeneath his home in subur- briar Golf Course in Waterloo, ban Tampa, Fla., unleashed a Ill., swallowing Mark Mihal, wave of sympathy, and not a a 43-year-old mortgage brolittle fear, among fellow Flo- ker. He was hauled out with ridians. This is the "sinkhole what was initially reported season" in Florida, a ti me to be a dislocated shoulder. w hen homes, cars and But on Wednesday his friend rarely — people can drop into and business partner, C.A. the abyss without warning. Schmidt, disclosed on FaceBut for fans of sinkholes, book that Mihal's shoulder of which there are more than actually had been broken in one might think, this is a very two places. "He's pretty bummed — no good time, indeed. Since the Florida tragedy, golf the rest of the year for word has spread of another him," Schmidt wrote in an Tampasinkholeandsinkholes email exchange. in Allentown, Bethlehem and There followed a sinkhole the suburban Philadelphia on Tuesday in the Adams borough of Rockledge, Pa. M organ n eighborhood o f The hole in Rockledge swal- Washington, and a 17-footlowed a creek and drained deep sinkhole d i scovered a duck pond ("Boom! It was Wednesday morning in Holygone overnight," the town's oke, Mass. grounds manager was quoted According to g e ologists, as saying). There was a nine- sinkholes have opened up on acre sinkhole in Assumption a daily basis for as long as Parish, La., that drew a visit anyone can remember. But from the environmental activ- nobody paidthem much heed ist Erin Brockovich. until now. "I don't believe we're havThe University of D elaware's student newspaper, ing any more today than The Review, seized on the me- we've had before," Randall dia frenzy to deliver comfort- Orndorff, director of the Geoling news: No sinkholes are ogy and Paleoclimate Science likely in Delaware. ("Geolo- Center at the U.S. Geological gists unconcerned," the head- Survey, said in an interview. "They happen all the time." line read.) New York Times News Service

The potato is the third most consumed crop on the planet after wheat and rice, and has become increasinglyimportant in the developing world, which now has more potato fields than developed countries, according to Dutch scientists at the forefront of the effort. Today the amount of Irish farmland devoted to the potato pales in comparison to pasture land and cereal production. And yet the potato remains an iconic vegetable here, in many homes arriving nightly on the dinner table in a big steaming

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Adrian Higgins/The Washington Post

,I

Ewen Mullins examines genetically modified potatoes that will be tested at the Irish government's agricultural research farm outside Carlow, Ireland. Mullins deals daily with a disease that not just afflicts his native land, but haunts it. bowl — boiled, floury and in their skins. Like other potato farmers, David Rodgers is wary of a bio-

logically engineered superpotato. "We are fighting the blight, we are growing the potato." Pressed some more, he says everything depends on consumer acceptance. "You can't decide to do it without finding out if the consumer would want to buy it. Europe is so against GM." St. Patrick's Day marks the traditional start of th e new potato planting season; some growers have already put seed spuds in their fields. Without the sprays, the potato fields of Ireland would echo the destruction that began in 1845. No one suggests the GM potato stands between Ireland and another famine — the whole economic, political and agricultural universe has changed — but the research carries a special poignancy here. "There is no country that has suffered the ravages of blight more so than our country," said Thomas Carpenter, a potato farmer in County Meath. The potato Mullins is testing is one of three varieties created seven years ago by scientists at the University of Wageningen using donor genes from about halfa dozen species ofw ild potato in Mexico and Argentina. Once thepotatoes are successfully tested, the Dutch university will grant licenses to companies who want to introduce them, with EU approval, but on a nonexclusive basis to avoid monopoly control, said Anton Haverkort, project leader. In addition, the potatoes will be available free in developing countries with a humanitarian need.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 20'I3

IN FOCUS:AGING AND ENTITLEMENTS

Ethanol

IC er or oorer,w o iveso er? • Neighboring Florida counties illustrate how income inequality can affect life expectancy By Michael A. Fletcher The Washington Post

ST. JOHNS COUNTY, Fla. — This prosperous community is the picture of the good and ever longer life — just what policymakers have in mind when they say that rais-

Dollars andyears: Asnapshot of2 counties In Florida, less affluent Putnam County is near the life-expectancy basement,

with an average of about 75 years for either sex. Neighboring St. Johns County, which is far more affluent, has the highest in the state, at about 80.5 years

putnam Qpunty • A~

Life expectancy in years

rzR

ing the eligibility age for Social Security and Medicare is a fair way to rein in the nation's troublesome debt. The county's plentiful and well-tended golf courses teem with youthful-looking retirees. The same is true on the county's 41 miles of Atlantic Ocean beaches, abundant t e n n is courtsand extensive network of biking and hiking trails. The healthy lifestyles pay off. Women here can expect to live to be nearly 83, four years longer than they did just two decades earlier, according to research at the University of Washington. Male life expectancy is more than 78 years, six years longer than two de-

cades ago. But in neighboring Putnam County, life is neither as idyllic

nor as long. Incomes and housing values are about half what they are in St. Johns. And life expectancy in Putnam has barely budged since 1989, rising less than a year for women to just over 78. Meanwhile, it has crept up by a year and a half for men, who can expect to live to be just over 71, seven years less than the men living a few m iles away in St. Johns. T he widening gap in l i f e expectancy b etween t h ese two adjacent Florida counties reflects perhaps the starkest outcome of the nation's growing economic inequality: Even as the nation's life expectancy has marched steadily upward, reaching 78.5 years in 2009, a growing body of research shows that those gains are going mostly to those at the upper end of the income ladder. The tightening economic connection to longevity has profound implications for the simmering debate about trimming the nation's entitlement programs. Citing rising life expectancy, influential voices including the Simpson-Bowles deficit-reduction commission, the Business Roundtable and lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have argued that it makes sense to raise the eligibility age for Social Security and Medicare.

Men so -

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

zC

Women -

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

-

78.3

82.5 ---------------

ST. JOHNS

78.5

PUTNAM

70 '

1,067

residents

per

PUTNAM ~ r ' >"'" r

1990

1 doctor PuTuAM

71.4

6 5 's" r

Nu m ber of residents per d octor

ST. JOHNS

ST. JOHNS

75 "'

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1995

200 0

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r'

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2005

1990

n ''' ' I ' 'I' Vn ''' '( ' I ' ' '

1 9 9 5 2000

2,623 residents

2005

Percentage of people who ... ... are obese ST. JOHNS ~ 22% P UTNAM ~

... smoke

... are uninsured ... graduate fromhigh school

~

~

35% ~ 2

15%

7'I, ~

92%

17% 24%

Sources:County Health Rankings and Roadmaps program, RobertWood Johnson Foundation

75% The Washington Post

How long might you live —and how long in good health? A recent analysis compares life expectancy in different countries. See aninteractive chart at wapp.st/UDXsTQ

said that in a l most half of the nation's counties, women Overall, life expectancy younger than 75 are dying at has improved substantially rates higher than before. The since the first Social Secucounties where women's life exrity payments were issued pectancy is declining typically in1940. Then, amanwho are located in the rural South made it to 65 could expect and West, the report said. to live 12.7 years, comPutnam C o u nt y s h a r es pared with 18.6 years in many of those characteristics. 2010. A woman who turned Forests, picturesque lakes and 65 in 2010 could expect to the beautiful St. Johns River, live 20.7 more years, comthe longest in F l orida, dot pared with 14.7 in 1940. the area. But amid that rural splendor there are few good jobs and, officials said, little tive handful of older workers accesstomedical care. would be harmed and that the E ven people w h o h a v e vulnerable could be protected health insurance often struggle by enacting hardship exemp- to make it to doctor appointtions. Meanwhile, they say, ments, complicating efforts to with a wave ofbaby boomers manage chronic diseases. "I see a lot of people with moving toward retirement and health care costs always on the uncontrolled diabetes or who rise, the retirement programs haven't had their high blood are sustainable only if people p ressure treated in a y e a r are willing to pay higher taxes or more," said Dr. Terrence or acceptfewer benefits. Soldo, medical director for In fact, past improvements St. Vincent's Mobile Health, in life expectancy helped per- which runs regular medical suade lawmakers in 1983 to clinics in Putnam. "There are slowly move the age people health caredeserts out here. could receive full Social Secu- ... There is a lack of access rity benefits from 65 to 67, a because there are not enough change that will be complete doctors around." in 2027. Now, as the cost of The problem goes beyond POb~yrarmfi~atlOnS providing old-age benefits has access.In St.Johns, residents But raising the eligibility e m e rged as the key driver of are more likely to seek out ages — currently 65 for Medi- t h e nation's long-term budget information to b olster their care and moving toward 67 for d e f icit, there is increasingpres- health. Even when St. Johns full Social Securitybenefits — s u re to again raise the retire- residents do not search for would mean fewer benefits for m e nt age — this time for both health information, medical lower-income workers, wh o M e d i care and Social Security. professionals say they are at typically di e y o unger tha n But g i v en the widening dif- minimum more likely to folthose who make more. ferences in life expectancy for low doctors' orders. "People who are shorter- p e ople on opposite ends of the "Being more affluent and lived tend to make less, which i n c omescale,"thatwouldmean educated you are likely to have means that if you raise the re- a b enefit cut that falls heaviest better access to information tirement age, low-income pop- o n p eople who generally are and you are also more likely to ulations would be subsidizing m o st reliant on Social Security want it," said Joe Gordy, chief the lives of higherfor their retirement executive of Flagler Hospital, income people," income. It is totally which is in St. Johns County. "~ffe ~xl0«fol« V said Maya Rockclass-based," said Jeff Feller, chief executive eymoore, presi- h a SinCreaSed Eric Ki n g son, a officer of WellFlorida Coundent and chief ex- mp/r1/y pm prig Syracuse Univer- cil, a state-designated regional ecutive of Global <f1< <<<>1<~<d sity Professor and health care nonprofit organiza~ + Policy Solutions, co-chair of Social tion, described Putnam as part a p ublic p o l icy CioISS Fo" Security Works, a of "the Southern disease belt." consultancy. many people, coalition opposed With 38 percent of its chilA Social Secu- r gjSjr1g fgg to reducingold-age dren in poverty and just 31 perrity A d m i nistrabenefits. cent of its population with even rgt jygmgf7t ggg tion study several The gap in life some college education, there OU d ol years ago found e xpectancy h a s is little wonder why more than that the life ex- tO a SignifiCant w ide n ed as t h e a fifth of Putnam residents are pectancy of male Qgiir fjf CU<," country's econom- in poor or fair health, double workers r e t iring ic life has grown the rate in St. Johns. at 65 had risen six — Monique Morrissey, more bifurcated. Adults also smoke at nearly an economist The high-income double the rate they do in St. years in th e t op half of the income Washington, D.C., Johns and they are far more d istribution, b u t region inc l udes likely to be obese, and far less only 1.3 years in the bottom t w o counties with some of the likelytobe physically active, achalf over the previous three n a t ion's longest life expectan- cording to rankings developed decades. cies. In Montgomery County, by Robert Wood Johnson. In 1980, life expectancy at M d . , life expectancy was 81.4 "It doesn't take a rocket scibirthwas 2.8 years longer for years for men and 85 years entist to figure this out," Feller the h i ghest s o cioeconomic f o r women in 2009. In Faittax said. "You just have to look at group defined in a research C o u nty, Va., it wa s slightly the socioeconomic and demostudy than the lowest, accord- l o wer — 81.3 years for men and graphic differences — uneming to a report by the Congres- 8 4.1 years for women. ployment, education l evels, sional Budget Office. By 2000, In D. C ., where 18.7 percent income between the two counthe gap had grown to 4.5 years. o f the population lives in pov- ties — to understand what is "Life expectancy has in er t y , lifeexpectancywas 72.6 going on. This is fueled by creased mainly among th e ye a r s for men and 79.6 for poor economics and a lack of privileged class," said Monique w o men in 2009. accesstohealth insurance and Morrissey, an economist who health coverage." focuses on retirement issues at AffiuenCe an" i'feStyie Those differencesare comthe Economic Policy Institute, Not o n l y is life expectancy pounded by the resource gap a liberal-leaning research or- d i v erging b y i n c ome level, separating the two counties. ganization. "For many people, b u t n o w some demographic With a healthy tax base that raising th e r e t irement ag e g r o ups — particularly low-in- is recoveringfrom the receswould amount to a significant c o m e white women — are los- sion, St. Johns officials are in benefit cut." ing ground. a better position than those in Advocates of raising the reA stu d y published last week Putnam to address problems tirement age say only a rela- i n t h e journal Health Affairs as they arise. When St. Johns

In perspective-

officials learned of a change in the infant mortality rate, they quickly joined forces with local nonprofit groups to get information out encouraging prenatal care. Cyndi Stevenson, a member of the St. Johns County Commission, said the county has formed similar partnerships to tackle a wide range of problems. The result is a county ranked as one of the healthiest places in Florida. Putnam, meanwhile, is ranked near the bottom. She added that the county's relative wealth helps make life not only better for its residents, but also longer. "A good economy does a lot for a family," Stevenson said.

ple who worked there have since found new jobs, but the Continued from A1 salary and benefits are not A dip in gasoline consump- nearly as good, he said. Jacktion has compounded the in- son manages his family's bar dustry's problem by reducing in town, and he said Friday the demand for ethanol. end-of-week gatherings did The situation has left the not happen as much because fate of dozens of ethanol people had less to spend. "It's been hard on every plants hanging in the balance and has unsettled com- business up and down Main munities that once prospered Street," he said. "I don't know from this biofuel. that people realized how big "It's a more somber mood," of an impact that plant clossaid Todd Sneller, the adminis- ing had on the community. trator of the Nebraska Ethanol Now we're a year into it; evBoard. "The growth erybody's feeling the opportunity that expinch." isted some years ago • Naturalgas Congress set out i s still out there i n glu t f u to create an ethanol ing theory, but the reality ex p ort industry that would ,E1 p rod u ce enoug h that it's going to take d e bate an awful lot of time, to make up 10 permoney and political battles cent of every gallon of gas to realize that opportunity" is pumped into a car, but the causing consternation. l awmakers assumed t h at Thousands of barrels of demand for fuel would grow. ethanol now sit in storage Instead, it has shrunk to 8.7 because there is not enough million barrels a day from gasoline in the market to 9.7 million in 2007, said Larblend it with — and blends ry Goldstein, an economist calling for a higher percent- and a director of the Energy age of ethanol have yet to Policy Research Foundation. catch on widely in the mar- And with corporate average ketplace. Advanced biofuels fuel economy rules now in from waste like corn stalks place to double the number and wood chips have also yet of miles that the average car to reach commercial-level gets per gallon by 2025, "you production as some had pre- know we're on a trend," he dicted they would by now. added. Referring to the plants that As the gasoline market got have been idled, Eric Lee, a smaller, so did the amount of commodities expert at Ciethanol it could absorb, betibank, said: "Is that going to cause most service stations be temporary or permanent? are set up to sell fuel with an It's hard to say." ethanol content of only up to Not only do the plants em- 10percent. Millions of cars are ploy residents of these small "flex-fuel vehicles" and can communities, but they also run on blends of up to 85 perprovide a market for farm- cent, known as e85, but that ers to sell their crops and buy fuel is not popular and is not grain to feed their livestock. even widely offered outside a They attract a steady flow few corn-producing states. of trucks whose drivers use But the ethanol producers truck stops and patronize were encouraged to build beother local businesses. Con- causethe federalgovernment tractors visiting the plants had mandated that refiners stay in local hotels. And the use their product, and it estabplants hold large accounts lished a tax credit of 45 cents with local banks. per gallon of ethanol. The tax "It's been quite an ordeal, credit was allowed to expire honestly," Mayor C h risto- on Dec. 31,2011, but not before pher Jackson of Walhalla, it had stimulated construction N.D., said of the closing of an of ethanol plants. Archer Daniels Midland ethThe value of ethanol has anol plant there last April. also sagged. Its price is creAbout a d ozen families ated in part by the price of who had moved to Walhal- the gasoline it displaces, and la, a town of about 1,000, to gasoline prices have been work at the plant have left, relatively modest for the past he said. Many of the 61 peo- few months.

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SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A S

Creative

game developers, available to subscribers who pay $45 a a Continued from A1 month. Amanda Picone, a wedding Coursera, too, has begun photographer i n Ba b y l on, to beef up its arts and design N.Y., bought the CreativeLive offerings, including a course course on p h otographing t itled "Introduction to P r opeople in l i ngerie, a genre gramming for Digital Artists" known as boudoir photogrataught by an instructor from the California Institute for the phy, because she thought it would enhance her appeal to Arts. clients, some of whom want L ynda.com is one of t h e boudoir shots. Picone learned largest sites in the category. t hat asking subjects to l i f t C o-founded 17 y e ar s a g o their chins slightly while posb y Ly nda W e inman, w h o ing can result in more flatterworked o n s p ecial e f fects in "Return of the Jedi" and ing portraits. Stuart Isett/New York Times News Service "They've all been incredi"Tron," the company had revDave Cross, an expert on Adobe Photoshop, leads a live webinar bly helpful," Picone said of the from CreativeLive studios in Seattle last month. CreativeLive and enue of more than $100 milseveral CreativeLive courses other online companies are finding people are willing to pay for lion last year, up 30 percent she has bought. learning that enhances their careers. from a year earlier. Like CreC reativeLive has a t w i s t ativeLive, Lynda.com says it that most of its rivals do not: has been profitable since its Courses are broadcast live The company's live broad- corporate head shots. earliest days. over the Internet and shaped casts are free, but CreativeD igital-Tutors ha s m o r e The company charges inin real time by input from a Live charges $19-$249 for re- t han 1,000 courses on t h e d ividual c ustomers $2 5 a small studio audience and the plays of the courses; 3-10 per- special effects and graphics month for unlimited access much larger group of people cent of its live audience ends tools used by filmmakers and to a library of 90,000 training watching online. About 20,000 up buying the replays because to 60,000 people on average they weren't able to tune into tune in for the live broadcasts. the entire course live or want One exception was the audi- to study it more closely. "They see it a s f u r t herence for a three-day course by the author Ramit Sethi called ing their career or life," said "Essentials for Creative En- Mika Salmi, a longtime Intertrepreneurs," which t opped net and media executive who 150,000. used to run Viacom's digital In some cases, instructors operations and joined Creearn six-figurepayments for ativeLive as chief executive teaching multiday c ourses. last year. "This is an investI n t otal, C r eativeLive h a s ment in me." "paid out millions" to its inKelbyTraining.com, a phostructors, said Chase Jarvis, tography education site, has a commercial photographer about 100,000 s ubscribers who co-founded the company who pay $25 a month, or $199 in 2010. a year,for fullaccess to video "Creativity is the new litcourses on topics as varied eracy," Jarvis said. as photographing wildlife or

. QP-

videos, many of them on programs used byartists,designers and editors — what Weinman calls "the creative side of software." "I don't feel any resistance to charging for it," Weinman said in a phone interview. It is not clear yet how such sites will influence the more traditional sources of education in creative fields, including art schools, community colleges and weekend photography seminars. Weinman said that schools "initially felt very threatened" by Lynda. com, but many of them, including C o lumbia C o l lege Chicago, have now paid for licenses to the site so their students and faculty can watch its videos. John Upchurch, d i rector of computer an d t e chnology resources for Columbia C ollege Chicago's art a n d design department, said the

videos gave instructors time to teach more than just how to use software tools. "A lot of people want to get more toward creative thinking, critical thinking kinds of things," Upchurch said. CreativeLive brings more of an e ntertainment sensibility to its courses than rivals, blending the banter of a daytime talk s how w i t h the instructional content of a classroom. It operates out of a loftlike space in Seattle with multiple studios, each outfitted with four to seven video cameras, including one on a crane, for mimicking the slick production qualities of television. The company is constructing another broadcasting studio in San Francisco, and has plans for studios in New York and London to cater more to live audiences in other time zones, Salmi said.

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SALES EVENT

Composting

The Crescent project 6

Continued from A1 "So we are sort of starting over with the project," Galla-

1 Gil rist I

gher said. While Mor r i so n and Klamath County sort out a permit for the composting operation near Crescent, the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality has stopped its review of potential state permits for the operation. DEQ officials said Morrison must reapply with the agency. Klamath County and the DEQ both would hold public hearings on the permits once Morrison applies.

Obtaininga DEQ permitmay take six months or longer, said Audrey O'Brien, solid waster manager with the agency in Portland. She said the DEQ will be screening the planned operation for potential odor, groundwater and pest concerns. Klamath Soil Amendments, as Morrison has called the project near Crescent, must first obtain county approval. "They w il l h a v e t o go through the l and use p r ocess with Klamath County," O'Brien said. Morrison said he plans on pursuingpermits for the operation at the old Glanville Box Co. mill site south of Crescent, where he would haul y ard and food waste from the Willamette Valley to be processed into compost for farmers on this side of the Cascades. "It's still the same plan," he sa>d. The plan drew criticism from Crescent residents andbusiness owners when they first learned about it in early February. At an impromptu community meeting they raised concerns about the odor that might emanate from the compost and the possibility of tainted water leaching into the shallow aquifer. A Klamath County commissioner, a DEQ official and the superintendent for Morrison's operation were at the meeting to answer questions. Karen Shaw, who lives in Crescent and helped organize the Feb. 4 meeting, said Thursday she's still opposed to the plan. "It's a really bad idea all the way around," she said. On Feb. 12, Morrison, while hauling a truckload of finished compost for use for landscaping, met a road block created by a pair of Crescent business owners opposed to the operation. They relented after a Klamath County sheriff's deputy said they could face arrest if they didn't move. Shaw points to North Plains, a small town west of Portland, as an example ofwhy a community would be opposed to a composting operation. The smell of a compostingoperation that includes food waste has been an issue there for a year an a half, says Marilyn Schulz, co-founder of Stop the Stink, a nonprofit group opposed to the composting. San F r ancisco-

based Recology, a recycling,

P fPPP

ompostin~ operation~

y

resc e n t

)N rthPla Newport~ j

w~> Crescent Source: Oregon Department of Environmental Quahty Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin

compost and garbage company that collects from homes and businesses, is running the North Plains operation under the name Nature's Needs. "It stinks and it is terrible," Schulz said. Recology off icials d i dn't return messages Fridayfrom The Bulletin. Starting next month, Washington County, which includes North Plains, will forbid the composting operation f r om accepting commercial f o od w aste. Barred f ro m N o r t h Plains, Schulz wondered if the commercial food waste from Portland could end up in Central Oregon. Morrison, who said he plans on hauling compost materials but is not in a business venture with Recology, said that waste will being going into Washington until the composting operation near Crescent is permitted. And even then, he said, food waste from Portland will represent only a portion of each load. "Most of it is going to be nothing but residential yard debris," he said. He has estimated that 3-5 percent of the waste would be food waste, mainly overripe produce tossed out by grocers and coffee grounds from java shops. In February, Morrison said the waste would be coming from North Plains and another facility near Salem. He now says there will be more sources. "It would be coming from all over the (Willamette) Valley, not just Portland," he said. Along with the composting operation near Crescent, in far northern Klamath County, Morrison is planning on establishing one in Christmas Valley, in Lake County. "It would be the same thing," he said. Morrison said a Christmas Valley farmer t h ere h eard about his plans for making compost for agriculture near Crescent and wanted him to produce somethere as well. "He wants 10,000 to 20,000 pounds per year," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, darling@bendbulletin.com

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

LOOKING AHEAD: MIDEAST TRIP

one person gets to decide Foreign policy "No the law," he said.

ama wi visit Israe an or an — ut ria ooms

Continued from A1 Members of both camps said recently they fear returning t o a m i n i m alist foreign policy, as articulated in different ways by Paul,Utah Sen. Mike Lee and Michigan Rep. Justin Amash. The foreign policy hawks fear it would lead to a diminished role for America in an increasingly unstable world. And they worry about their p arty losing its f ir m g r asp of what has traditionally been a winning issue. "A real challenge for the R epublicans as they a p proach 2016 is, what will be their brand?" said Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations and a former aide to the first President Bush. "The reason Rand Paul is gaining traction is o verreaching in Iraq. What he is articulating represents an alternative to both." The split in the party was on display in muted terms here at the opening session of the Conservative Political Action Conference last week, when Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Fla. — a possible presidential candidate in 2016 — expressed concern about a return to isolationism. Without mentioning Paul directly, Rubio said the United States "can't solve every war" but added that "we also can't be retreating from the world." Moments later, Paul told the conference the 13-hour filibuster he conducted last week over the Obama administration's drone policy was aimed at the limits on p residential p o wer a n d American power abroad.

Some Republicans are so nervous about the positions championed by Paul and his supporters that they have begun talking about organizing to beat back primary challenges from what Da n S enor, a veteran of the younger Bush's team of foreign policy advisers, described as a push to reorient the party toward a "neo-isolationist" foreign policy. That policy, Senor said, "is sparking discussions among conservative donors, activists and policy wonks about creating a political network to s upport i n t ernationalist Republicans." But in Paul and the tea party, Republicans face a philosophical disagreement from within their r a nks. A r i zona S en. John McCain, who is his party's most prominent spokesman for an aggressive foreign policy, recently dismissed Paul and those who agree with him as "wacko birds."

Knopp

"I'm hoping (for a chance) to explain to the D's

The president will hear plenty about Syria when he steps off Air Force One in the Middle East this week, very likely facing new pressure from worried allies to help rebels oust the regime but carrying no change in U.S. policy that could calm fearsofthe crisisspreading across borders and destabilizing the region. Wednesday:Obama will arrive in Tel Aviv, Israel. Later, he meets

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Friday:Obama meets with Jordan's King Abdullah in Amman, the capital.

Saturday:Obamatours the ancient ruins of Petra, Jordan, before returning to Washington.

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he United States' Syria policy has remained unchanged for some time. President Barack Obama has resisted using the American military in the effort and isn't planning any change to a U.S. approach that's had little effect in aiding rebels' efforts to dislodge Syrian President Bashar Assad. Analysts say it's unclear what message Obama can convey as the conflict hits the two-year milestone Friday with no end in sight and no good policy options left for the administration. The trip is about "managing expectations, managing the problems, not necessarily offering solutions to these problems," said Haim Malka, deputy director of the Middle East program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, a research center in Washington. U.S. officials failed to imagine that Assad could cling to power this long. Their mantra that his "days are numbered" was long ago rendered moot with the death toll in Syria rising to 70,000. "All this conversation about post-Assad Syria, it seems almost unreal," said Joel Charny,a vice president at InterAction, an u mbrella group for i n ternational aid agencies that have been operating in and around Syria.

Regional angst As the crisis shows little sign of abating, Israel and Jordan havebecome increasingly anxious. Israel fears the rise of jihadists, the possibility that Syria's rich cache of weapons might fall into the hands of Hezbollah, the Lebanese military group, and the general disintegration of Syria. Jordan, already squeezed

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© 2013 MCT

much on Syria," noting that there'sno domestic pressure in the U.S. for intervening. He warned, though, that the fear of not wanting to arm individuals who might become terrorists might become a self-fulfill-

ing prophecy. "The more you wait, the more you radicalize the opposition, the more you disintegrate the country and the more you destabilize the neighbors like Jordan and Lebanon," he said.

Calls for intervention Obama's 2008 Republican electionopponent, Arizona Sen. John McCain, marked Friday's anniversary of the uprising by renewing his call for intervention, saying the U.S. should not "stand idle," but impose a no-fly zone or attack Assad's aircraft. The risks of intervening, he said, are "real and serious, but the risks of continuing to do nothing are worse." Administration off i c i als have spent millions to build up a credible, pluralistic opposition coalition to little avail: The leaders are at loggerheads over competing ideologies and are derided by Syrians asexiles riding out the revolt in five-star hotels. They've failed to pick a prime minister or agree on whether to negotiate with the regime, much less form a viable government in waiting. And the leader of the U.S.backed coalition, Mouaz alKhatib, has expressed support for the militant rebel Nusra Front faction, which the U.S. has designated as part of the al-

Qaida in Iraq terrorist group.

Israeli officials wouldn't telegraph what they intend to tell Obama, but Israel's ambassador to the U.S., Michael Oren, said they wanted Assad to go. "We understand there's a growby a poor economy, is facing a ing jihadist element among mounting humanitarian crisis: the opposition," he said. "But More than 400,000 Syrian ref- Assad's departure will deliver a ugees have fled over the bor- tremendous blow to Hezbollah der to Jordan, a country with and Assad's patron in Tehran." a population of just 6 million. Some estimates say the num- Defections ber might hit I million by the Meanwhile, on S a turday, close of the year. one of the highest-ranking milThe White House fears that itary officers yet to abandon sending weapons to the rebels Assad defected to Jordan. Maj. might further destabilize the Gen. Mohammed Ezz al-Din region. Critics say the U.S. ap- Khalouf announced his defecproach has been marked by tion in a video aired on the Almiscalculations and waffling Arabiya satellite channel. He that's exacerbated the conflict also said fighters from Hezboland led to an anti-American lah were fighting in Syria in backlash from the opposition "more than one place," but did the U.S. professed to support. not give further details. For Jordan, t hat s t r ikes The video showed him sitat fear that goes beyond the ting next to his son, Capt. Ezz refugee camps onitsborders. al-Din Khalouf, who defected As the Syrian regime dete- with him. The twin blows ilriorates, and Islamists in Syria lustrated the slowly spreading grow emboldened, the Islamic cracks appearing in Assad's opposition in J ordan might regime as well as its deepening become similarly emboldened international isolation. While and push forfurther reforms, few analysts expect the civil said Marwan Muasher, a for- war between Assad's forces mer foreign minister of Jordan and rebels seeking his ouster to who's a vice president of the end soon, most say it appears Carnegie Endowment for In- impossible for the 4-decade-old ternational Peace. regime to continue to rule. Muasher said he " u nder— McClatchy Newspapers stands perfectly the adminand The Associated Press i stration's reluctance to d o contributed to this report.

Continued from A1 J ody Wiser, with T a x F airness O r egon, s a i d Knopp introducing his bill is akin to "blowing in the wind." Democrats have made clear they are going target tax breaks for u pper-income earners. The Oregon Department of Revenue estimated about 1,200 estates are subject to the estate tax. "The public understands how massive the wealth inequality in our country is ... and that we need services, and that's where the money is," Wiser said. Out of the thousands of bills introduced this session, only one other, so far,

Eyes on 2016 But other party leaders are rushing to embrace Paul and tea party Republicans as they build coalitions of young voters who dislike the foreign wars and the cost of fighting them. Those voters may be a key to winning back the White House in 2016. After Paul's filibuster, leading Republican figures heaped praise on the freshman senator. Lee and Texas Sen. Ted Cruz joined the filibuster, offering their ideological support for h i s c ause. Reince Priebus, chairman of the Republican Party, said Paul "was able to capture some national attention in standing up to the president. My view is that he is an important voice in our party."

••

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to embrace it because it goes too far." — Richard Haass, former aide to President George H.W. Bush Haass said Republican leaders arebeginning torecognize the electoral power appeal among some voters to Paul's foreign policy views. "Some of what Rand Paul says resonates," he said. "Either party that ignores it does so at its peril. On the other hand, one does not simply want to embrace it because it goes too far." Paul calls himself a "realist, not a neoconservative nor an isolationist." But his view of America resembles that of his father, former Rep. Ron Paul, who built a deeply committed following of libertarians and tea party Republicans by opposing most American involvement overseas. The younger Paul, who is mulling a presidential bid in 2016, is less strident and more subtle than his father. In a speech at the Heritage Foundation last month, he insisted he is not against all foreign intervention but pledged to fight for "a saner, more balanced approach to foreign policy."

'Festering' divide The question for the Republican Party is whether Paul and his followers will emerge as a vocal enough part of the Republican electorate to reshape the party's foreign policy without taking it backto the strictly isolationist approach. "This is a divide that has been festering and deepening for a generation," said Thomas Donnelly, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute,

in charge of this place that their counterparts at the federal level supported the same concept." — Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend takes aim at the inheritance tax. House Bill 3025 would specificallyearmark revenue created from the tax for higher and early childhood education

programs. Usually, Wiser said, dozens of bills are introduced to eliminate the inheritance tax. But, she said, she's surprised anyone would tackle it now with voters so recently rejecting the measure. "It has to be just ... to respond to c onstituents," she said, noting that, this way, a candidate can introduce a bill and then tout that he or she

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"Some of what Rand Paul saysresonates. Either party that ignores it does so at its peril. On the other hand, one does not simply want

TheB u lletin

tried to do something. But Knopp said he believes he can convince afew members across the aisle of the value of raising the threshold. It would align the state's tax code to the federal code, he said, making it simpler for people to settle affairs when a family member dies.

"I'm hoping (for a chance)

to explain to the D's in charge of this place that their counterparts at the federal level

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a conservative policy group. "It's bad for the country, bad for the party in a whole host of ways — particularly in presidential elections." Some Republicans are less worried. They view Paul's crusade as nothing more than the usual attempt by members of the opposition party to undermine the assertive foreign policy of an incumbent president. In the 1980s, Democrats harshly criticized President Ronald Reagan's attempts to arm Nicaraguan rebels. During the 1990s, Republicans derisively called President Bill Clinton's intervention in Kosovo "Clinton's war." In Obama's first term, critics assailed his expansion of the war against terrorism, including the expanded use of drones. "The last three presidents have worried about a rising tide of isolationism," said Peter Feaver, a professor of political science at Duke University who served as a national security aide for both Clinton and the younger Bush."Sometimes it's the protectionist sentiments among Democrats. Sometimes it's the l ibertarian, extreme wing of the Republican Party. Sometimes it's just war fatigue." Feaver said many Republicans who praised Paul do not share his broader views about a limited role for the United States abroad. "Part of what you're hearing is cheerleading for someone on our side who actually dunked the ball and it actually went through the net," Feaver said.

supported thesame concept. ...Oregon needs to raise the threshold or phase out t he death tax to be competitive," he said. And although it could be a difficult battle, everything is a negotiation in the Legislature. "The r eality is, t o r a i se taxes, (the Democrats) are going to need Republican votes," Knopp said. — Reporter, 541-554-n62 ldalze@bendbulletin.com

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I am trying to find a placement for my 84 year old mother who can no longer live at home and is of modest means. I have visited several assisted living facilities, but they all want me to guarantee payment of their private pay rate for a certain period of time before they will accept Medicaid. I think my mother would qualify for Medicaid in a month or two. Is this legal?

My mother has been diagnosed with dementia. Although she is competent right now, what should she do to allow me to manage her affairs in the event that she is unable to manage them herself? Your mother should execute an A dvance Directive, Durable Power of Attorney and Medical Authorization. Your mother can appoint you a~ her health care representative to make health care decision~ Melissa P. Lande for her in the event she is not competent to make her own Artorney ar Law decisions. A lso,she can nominateyou asheragentunder a BRYANT, LOVLIENDurable Power of Attorney. This would give you the authority & JARVIS, P.C. to manage her financial affairs if she was not able to do so ATTORNEYSATLAW for herself. Finally, she can ~ign a medical authorization 591 S.W. Mill View Way so thatyou can have access to herm edicalrecordsand her Bend, Oregon 97702 physici ans.Since she can only sign thesedocuments ifshe 541-382-4331 understand~ what they mean, it is advisable not to wait.

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REAL ESTATE

EMPLOYMENT An employeerequested time offfor a non-work related back injury. We have just eight employees, so we're too small for OFLA/family medical leave to apply. Do i have to givehimtime off'?

I want to seH my house to a person who is willing to make a down payment to me and take over my payments to the bank. Can I do that?

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>~ g Yes, but you may find yourself in financial ~ trou b le if the bank learns about the sale and demands that you immediately pay off the balance of your loan. Virtually all banks use loan

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a variety of circumstances, including the difticulty/expense to the company, the impact on operations and more. Work with counsel to see if you must accommodate.


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

A7

IN FOCUS:CPAC

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ainsri es ac-

Saturday's Conser vative Political Action Conference headliner, returning to the national stage, took CPAC'S 2016 favOrite? —In theCPACstraw poll Saturday ,Sen.RandPauledgedSen.MarcoRubioas the top vote-getter of the2016presidential hopefuls,

turns jabbing President Barack Obama and the Republican professional class, urging the crowd to reject the ideas of the president, the political consultants and the pollsters alike. But some at the three-day

25-23 percent. Mitt Romney won CPAC'spoll one year

ago, when he described himself as "severely conservative." Therewere23 candidates in the nonbinding

annual gathering of conservatives have taken an almost conciliatory tone toward their opponents, and

personal sphere." The yearly assembly of the Conservative Political Action Conference is a showcase of the Republican Party's top presidential prospects, whose reception before a crowd of critical, future primary voters and volunteersisw atched carefully by party leaders, donors and news media handicappers. The conclave, held by the American Conservative Union, is typically at its least consequential four years before the next presidential campaign. But this year it has taken on more significance as Republicans undertake examinations of how to improve their prospects in 2014 and 2016 and activists seek new reasons for optimism at the start of President

Barack Obama's second term. Here's what some of the top speakers have said:

Sarah Palin The former Alaska governor and 2008 vice presidential candidate has maintained a low profile. She's expected to play a limited role in the future of the GOP but shared several recommendations Saturday. Instead of focusing on rebuilding the Republican Party, she said that party leaders should focus on rebuilding the middle class. Still, her speech consisted mostly of one-liners slamming the president. Taking a shot at Obama's call for universal background checks on gun owners, she said, "Dandyidea, Mr. President — should have started with yours." Palin's appearances no longer inspire speculation about her presidential aspirations, but her reception at CPAC underscored her enduring popularity with the right. "We must leave no American behind," she said in a populist speech that electrified the crowd. "And we must share our powerful message of freedom and liberty to all citizens — even those who may disagree on some issues."

Carolyn Kaster/The Associated Press

Sarah Palin saved her most pointed criticism for the president, likening him to Ponzi-scheme felon Bernie Madoff. Palin drew the most cheers when she paused in the middle of her remarks to sip soda from a "Big Gulp" — the type of supersized, sugary drink that New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg tried to ban. "Oh, Bloomberg's not around," she mocked. "Our Big Gulp is safe."

to carry the party standard in presidential elections. "The GOP of old has grown stale and moss-covered," Paul said. "I don't think we need to name any names here, do we'?" And Paul didn't, though the referencewas clear,after McCain recently labeled Paul and other members of the new Marco Rubio and RandPaul generationof conservative ReThe two top 2016 White publicans "wacko birds." House hopefuls made a conSpeaking to the same crowd spicuous effort t o d i stance earlier, Rubio sought to cast themselves from the past two himself as the anti-Romney, GOP presidential nominees. attacking some of Romney's On Thursday, Rubio and most controversial statements Paul offered sharp, and only from the campaign, in which slightly veiled, critiques of the former governor, in a surMitt Romney and John Mcreptitiously recorded video, Cain, the two most recent men dismissed47 percent of Amer-

ican voters as victims. " Our p e ople h a v e no t changed," Rubio said."The vast majority of the American people are hardworking taxpayers who take responsibility for their families, go to work every

day, they pay their mortgage on time, they volunteer in their community. This is where the vast majority of the American people are. What's changed is the world around us."

Mitt Romney and PaulRyan For his part, the 2012 presidential nominee on Friday received standing ovations from the audience as he expressed optimism about the Republican Party's future and vowed

to work with conservatives to achieve "larger victories." "Like you, I believe that a c onservative vision can a t tract a majority of Americans," Romney said. He called on Republicans especially to heed the GOP leaders in the "blue and purple states.... These are the people we've got to listen to and make sure their message is heard loud and clear." Romney also gave a shoutout to his 2012 running mate, hailing "the clear and convincing voice of my f riend Paul Ryan." Earlier Friday, Ryan, R-Wis., delivered a policy-laden speech, one week after releasing the latest version of his House budget. Ryan argued that the government's debt is a sign that it is doing too much. "We don't see the debt as an excuse to cut with abandon, to shirk our obligations," Ryan said. "We see it as an opportunity to reform government, to make it cleaner and more effective. That's what conservatives stand for."

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a false attack that we don't need new ideas," he said. "I'd like to draw a distinction. We don't need new principles." Said Bush, "I'm here to tell you there is no 'us' or 'them.' The face of the Republican Party needs to be the face of every American, and we need to be the party of inclusion and acceptance. It's our heritage."

Other speakers Gingrich was followed by Rep. Michele Bachmann, who characterizedconservatives as a"growing movement of people who care about all Americans." She cited as evidence their support for $2-a-gallon gasoline and for p r eserving Second Amendment rights for women. On Thursday, Donald Trump combineddirepredictionsabout the GOP's future with boasts of his own career. "The Republican Party is in serious trouble," Trump said. He warned that it could not win by changing Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security "for the worse." He declared that if 11 million illegal immigrants are given legal status, "every one ... will be voting Democratic." CPAC wrapped up its conference with remarks Saturday night from freshman Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, whose hard-charging ways have rankled even some Republicans.

O

Monday through Friday until 6 PM

.

Paul

On the same day that Palin spoke, former House Speaker Newt Gingrich took a starkly different tone, saying the party needs to stop being defined by its opposition to Obama. Echoing former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, who the night before said the GOP needs to stop being viewed as anti-everything, Read a full wrap-up of Gingrich said, "We are not the the three-day conference, anti-Obama movement." including an analysis of the GOP's Gingrich also decried partisan politics. "The Republican latest responses to its surprisingly establishment is j u s t p l a in poor 2012 election showing, at wrong.... You're going to hear denddulletin.com/extras

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other figures considered to be the future of the GOP took shots at its recent past. Bulletin wire reports OXON HILL, Md. — The largest annual gathering of Republican activists b egan here Thursday, with appearances by r i val p r esidential hopefuls offering their party starkly different paths back to prominence — and diagnoses of what ails it — after last fall's demoralizing losses. "We don't need any new ideas," Florida Sen. Marco Rubio told a room packed with cheering grass-roots activists, anticipating what he predicted would be liberal critiques of his remarks. "The idea is called America, and it still works." Speaking immediately after him, KentuckySen. Rand Paul declared, "The GOP of old has grown stale and m oss-covered." A "new GOP," he said, "will need to embrace liberty in both the economic and the

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

www.bendbulletin.com/local

REDMOND

I

LILYRAFF

McCAULOU rt

Estate

plans for pets

w

hen customers walk into the Bend pet shop Reptopia with plans to buy a tortoise, Allie Steele first tries to talk them out of it. The petite 18-year-old has nothing against landlubbing turtles, although she admits she is "more of a snakes and lizards girl." She pulls up the leg of her jeans to reveal a tattoo of her first snake, a ball python named Elssie, coiled around her shin. "I actually watched her hatch," she sard. No, the trouble with the sulcata, or African spurred tortoise, native to the Sahara Desert, is that it lives a long time. A really, really long time — about 150 years. Buttercup, a 10-year-old whose shell looks like an aerial photograph of the painted hills, weighs about 40 pounds and, according to Steele, "can move furniture." "She probably has another, maybe, 50 years until she's full-grown," Steele said. The tortoise will eventually weigh about 150 pounds. Steele doesn't mean to dissuade a committed tortoise owner. But she wants to make sure the reptile won't be returned to the shop once the novelty of a cute little turtle gives way to the reality of a lumbering pet almost certain to outlive its owner. "Your grandchild or great-grandchild will probably end up with it," Steele said. "You will need to put it in your will." Even Elssie, the snake that Steele has ownedforthreeyears,could live to be 40. So Steele has had to plan for when she moves to Portland to finish her bachelor's degree. When billionaire Leona Helmsley died in 2007, her will included a $12 million trust for her Maltese, Trouble. Though it was reduced in court to $2 million, the trust more than covered the lap dog's whopping annual bills — $100,000 for security, $8,000 for grooming,$1,200 forfood and $60,000 for a guardian fee. Bend attorney Steven Leventhal said it's not just millionaires who plan for their pets. The topic regularly comes up when clients are planning their estates, he said. In most cases, people are concerned about dogs or horses. Leventhal has never worked on a case involving a pet as long-lived as a tortoise. "That would be very interesting," he said. Twenty-eight years ago, Bette Fraserpassed a bird store and noticed a young African grey parrot for sale. She'd had parakeets as a girl, and worked at Busch Gardens, an amusement park and tropical bird sanctu-

ary, during college. She swooned at this bird, named Greystoke. She knew that parrots have a long life expectancy. And the shopkeeper reminded her that this would be "a lifelong pet." "But Iwas 28at thetime... when you're that young, you kind of think you'regoing to live forever,"she said. Fraser and her husband bought the bird. Greystoke — Grey, for short — soon became abeloved member of the family. According to Fraser, he has the intelligence of a 2- or 3-yearold human. He sings, whistles, makes conversation and imitates machinery. He's part of the family. "We're part of his flock," Fraser said, correcting herself. Eventually, the fact that parrots live an estimated50-70 years — meaning this one could easily outlive Fraser — settledin.So when Fraser and her husband got around to writing their wills, they included Greystoke. The plan is for three of their grandchildren, ages 13, 11 and 10, to adopt him after the couple dies. JarrineShaw, chairwoman of the nonprofit Exotic Bird Rescue of Oregon, recently devised a form for folks who want to specify who should inherit their pets and how to care for them. Her organization adopts birds but, like Steele, tries to weed out fairweather owners. Shaw recently became allergic to dander and gave away her birds. 0therwise,she said,shewould have included a donation to the rescue group in her will, to cover the cost of finding the birds new homes. — Lily Raff McCaulouis a columnist for TheBulletin. 541-617-7836, fraff@bendbuiletin.com

Lan use extensions ace review By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bulletin

In 2009, as the aftereffects of the economic meltdown were being felt in earnest in Central Oregon, the city of Redmond looked at all the development projects with approved land use plans but no funds and decided to grant them a blanket two-year extension to begin work. Another two-year extension and four years later, 51 projects still have approved land use applications that will expire July 30 unless owners notify the city that they need more time. The majority of the projects were approved between 2006 and 2008, accordingtoJames Lewis, Redmond planning manager. There are a few older

"Typically a considerable amount of money is spent before a land use plan is even submitted for review, from engineers to architects to consultants," said Lewis. "We want to be as fair as possible." However, enough time

List ofprojects The city of Redmond provided basic information on several projects requesting extensions: • St. Thomas Catholic Church parish hall addition

• Industrial structure for indoor motocross • 125-lot planned unit development in southwest Redmond • 17,000-square-foot Rite-Aid Pharmacy • Whitewater Carwash in northeast Redmond • Ken's Ice Company,10,898-square-foot building • 234-unit apartment complex

has gone by, and enough changes in city design and development codes, that city staff thought it was time to winnow the outstanding projects down to those with true viability. A handful of the approved projects are industrial, but the majority are residential and commercial. Eight of the project applicants have contacted the city already to say they are interested in extensions, said Lewis. See Land use/B2

• 43,750-square-foot industrial building projects, including a couple of phased subdivisions, but few newer, because the city felt that developers beginning a project after 2010 should have been aware of the economic realities. The city made the choice to grant the across-theboard extensions in an

effort to keep the projects viable and protect initial developer investments. Land use fees vary widely, said Lewis, but as an example, he said a 20-lot subdivision fee is $11,600 and the site plan fee for

large commercial building is $7,100.

WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — Now that the House of Representatives has passed a bill that would

avoid a government

shutdown by extend-

ing operational funding through September, members of the Senate are trying to attach

amendments to it. On Wednesday, the

Senate rejected an amendment by Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas,that would have defunded the Affordable Care Act. Needing 60 votes to

pass, the measure failed by a 45-52 margin. All 45 of the chambers'

GOP membersvoted in favor of the amendment, with all the no votes

coming from Democrats andIndependents. Three Democrats did

not vote. U.S. SENATEVOTE • Amendment to defund the Affordable Care Act

Merkley (D) .................. N Wyden (D).................... N See Week/B2

Have astory idea or sudmission? Contactus! The Bulletin Call a reporter:

r( g tg.4tgg

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onster truck fans packed the Hooker Creek Event Center at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center for the second night in a row Saturday, the final night for the Monster X Tour's visit to Redmond.

• Letters and opinions: Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In My View P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside. Contact: 541-3e3-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendar notices:

On both nights, fans who arrived early were treated to a "Pit Party" in the hour before the main event began, during which they could wander around the floor of the arena, meet the drivers and see the trucks up close, or a take a ride on "Bone Crusher," a monster truck outfitted with two rows of passenger seating in the bed.

Email event information to news©bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• Obituaries, Death Notices:

Above, Bill Payne, driver of the "Rockstar" truck, signs an autograph and jokes with Elena Kendrick, 9, of San Diego, during the Pit Party Saturday.

Details on theObituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits©bendbulletin.com

PAID ADVERTISEMENT

Number ot homesteaders near Bendincreasing in 1913 Compiled by Don Hoiness

YESTERDAY

fromarchivedcopies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.

100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Mar. 16, 1913

Advertisement: Are you wise? If you are W ise, as I surmise you'll take your clothes to Harry Wyse For he, your old suit will disguise and fix it up so neat and nice, Your girl will open wide her eyes in ecstasy and

glad surprise; And think your just the

proper size to share her nook in Paradise; So if you're wise, as I surmise, you'll take your clothes to Harry Wyse. Sather Building

• p+ p + 5

@

4 %

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N

dent, E.A. S ather, Vi ce President, O.S. Hudson, Cashier

Many homesteadstaken in southeast

The rapidity with which public lands to the southeast are being taken up is Advertisement: First indicated by the fact that National Bank, More during the last couple of dairy cows coming weeks, one local firm of We expect to ship in two locators, the Oregon Land or three cars of high grade 8r Immigration Co., has lodairy cows from Wiscon- cated 28 homesteaders. sin about April 1. As each took up a 320 T hese cows w i l l be acre tract, the total acresold on easy terms. Parage involved i s 8 , 9 00, ties wishing same should while o t h e r l oc a t ions m ake a p plication n o w . made recently doubtless Write or call at the bank bring the total up perhaps for particulars. to 25,000 acres. Dr. U.O. C oe, P r esiSee Yesterday/B3

Sunday, March 3rst Bring the ent ir e f am il y to celebrate Easter at

P ronghorn . Executive Chef K evin L i n d e wi l l prepare an exceptional buf fet m enu to d elight all ages and a special visitor will be hosting the

egg hunt and leaving gifts for the youngsters. $38/adults, $I6/ages 6-I2, children 5 8t. under Free

Seatings available at 1 ot OoamEc1:30 Pm

P RO N G H O R N A n Au b e r g e R e s o r t

656oo Pronghorn club Dr. I 54 I 69 $ - 5 3 00 I www.pronghornclub.com

Reservations at 54.1-69$-5300. Menu 0 additionalinformation available online.

Also,besure to check outourW inemaker'sD inneron M arch 28.


B2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

E VENT TODAY KNOW SHAKESPEARE:BECOMING THE BARD OF AVON: Southern Oregon University professor David McCandless shares surprising information about Shakespeare; free;1 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-3121034 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. "THE SHADOWBOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical.

AL E N D A R College Way, Bend; 541-389-2579 or cascadebrass@bendbroadband. com. BEAUSOLEIL: A Cajun-zydeco act performs, with Michael Doucet; $19 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-3170700 or www.towertheatre.org.

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

TOM RUSSELL: The folk-rock artist plays Sisters Folk Festival's Winter Concert Series; 15 or $10 students plus fees in advance, $20 or $10 students at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; 541-549-4979 or www. sistersfolkfestival.org. "THE SHADOWBOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. ol'g. LAST TO LEAVE:The Nevada-based Americana act performs, with Third Seven and Harley Bourbon; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand.

St. Patrick's events TODAY ST. PATRICK'S DAYDASH: Race 5K from the pub

through downtown Bendand areaparks, with an after party adjacent to the pub; contests for costumes and best wearing of green; registration

Thinkstock

required; proceedsbenefit the Boys 8 Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; $15-$40; 10:05 a.m.; Deschutes Brewery 8 Public House,

MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED

TUESDAY

"WRITING YOURFAMILY HISTORY": Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by OI'g. Glen Roberts, Lori Hill and Jan REDMOND COMMUNITY CONCERT Wilhelmsen; free; 10 a.m.; First ASSOCIATIONPERFORMANCE: Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth Liana Forest and her band perform St., Bend; 541-317-9553 or www. contemporary and classical music; orgenweb.org/deschutes/bend-gs. $50 season ticket, $20 students, LUNCH ANDLECTURE: Learn about $105 family ticket; 2 and 6:30 p.m.; how Imperial Stock Ranch, one Ridgeview High School,4555 of the oldest ranches in Oregon, S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-350-7222, hasadaptedto changing laws, redmondcca@hotmail.com or www. philosophies and economics; bring redmondcca.org. a sack lunch; included in the price "THE KING OFNAPAVALLEY": of admission; $12 adults, $10 ages Thoroughly Modern Productions 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; andJames Leepresenttheplay HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. about the world of California Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or winemaking and the families www.highdesertmuseum.org. involved; $18, $15 students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, THE LIBRARY BOOKCLUB: Read 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541- and discuss "The Sisters Brothers" 312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater. by Patrick deWitt; free; noon; East com. Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3764 or www. CASCADEBRASS QUINTET: The band performs classic works, titled deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "Flirting With Legitimacy"; free; 6 KNOW SHAKESPEARE: p.m.; Central Oregon Community SHAKESPEAREONSCREEN: A College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. screening of the1998 R-rated film

Landuse

Redmond City Council during a me e t ing la st w e e k. Continued from B1 Councilors voiced some conMany of the land parcels cern about the older projects have b e en f o r e closed, o r with the potential to be out of sold, or their partnership dis- compliance with current city solved, he added, so the city standards. does not expect a large numCouncilor E d O ni mu s berof extension requests. asked about ADA standards And m a r ket co n d itions that may have changed since might not be sustainable for t he applications w ere a p some of the projects, even if proved and w a s to l d t h a t funding could be found, he wasn't an issue. added. Councilor Camden Ki n g, Lewis made a r e port o n who was on th e pl a nning the land use applicants t o commission during the time

1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.bendstpatsdash.com. ST. PATRICK'S DAYCELEBRATION: Featuring performances by Bend 'N Strings, Burnin' Moonlight, Grit'N Grizzle,

Wild Rye andmore, with a raffle; free; noon-10 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749 or

www.goodlifebrewing.com. ST. PATRICK'S DAYCELEBRATION: Featuring performances

by the Portland-based rockact Jerry Joseph, with the Moon Mountain Ramblers, Sweatband and more; free; 1 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend;

541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. "Shakespeare in Love"; free; 6 p.m.; TinPan Theater,869 N.W .Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. HENHOUSEPROWLERS: The Chicago-based bluegrass band performs; free; 7 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749.

6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. BRENT WALTH"TOM MCCALL CENTENNIAL LECTURE": A presentation by Brent Walth, author of "Fire at Eden's Gate: Tom McCall and the Oregon Story," as part of the Mark O. Hatfield Distinguished Historians Forum; $10 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. DEAD WINTERCARPENTERS: The California-based roots-rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com.

WEDNESDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: PARSIFAL": Starring Katarina Dalayman, Jonas Kaufmann and Peter Mattei in an encore performance of Wagner's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18;

many of the applicants were approved, expressed concern about the design standards that have changed in the last 10 years, adding, "I know some of the things we looked a t back t h e n a n d w e ' v e learnedfrom our mistakes." Lewis said staff had considered the ramifications of projects going forward that may not meet current regulations, but it was estimated that the number and size of any of those projects would have minimal impact.

THURSDAY THE LIBRARY BOOK CLUB: Read anddiscuss"SheWoke" by Hilary Jordan; free; noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-3121090 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. "THE KING OFNAPAVALLEY": Thoroughly Modern Productions andJames Leepresenttheplay about the world of California winemaking and the families involved; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE SHADOWBOX": Cascades

The city wi ll ma il no tification letters to the original plan applicants and to current landowners, as found on county tax records, to ensure any interested parties know about the extension deadline, said Lewis. The window to apply for an extension will re main open until late June, when the City Council will consider an ordinance allowing extensions for select proj ects.

Week

welfare recipients were not either working or looking for work, but

Continued from B1

the new policy grants exemptions

Coburn said that it was

based on asuggestion from the Office of Managementand

Budgets on ways to reduce the impact of sequestration's mandatory spendingcuts,and that many furloughs for federal by a hiring freeze. The amendment fell short of the 60 votes needed to pass, 45-54, with all Republicans voting for it and all

Democrats voting against it. For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit wwvvbendbulletin.com/officials.

U.S. Senate • Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http:I/merkley.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W.Hawthorne Ave., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-318-1298

• sen. Ron wyden, 0-0re.

223 Dirksen SenateOffice Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 W eb: http:I/wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-330-9142

U.S. House of Representatives • Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River 2182 Rayburn House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http:I/walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452

STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kltzhaber, D 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary of State Kate Brown, D 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos©state.or.us • Treasurer Ted Wheeler, 0 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, 0 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avaklan 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli

LEGISLATURE Senate • Sen. Ted Ferrloll, R-Dlstrlct 30 (includesJefferson, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-323 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferrioliC!state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • Sen. Tlm Knopp, R-Dlstrlct 27 (includes portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., 8-423 Salem, OR97301

Phone: 503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp©state.or.us W eb: www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • Sen. Doug Whltsett, R-Dlstrlct28 (includes Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., S-303 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett

House • Rep. Jason Conger, R-Dlstrlct 54 (portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-477 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1454 Email: rep.jasonconger@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/conger • Rep. John Huffman, R-Dlstrlct 59 (portion of Jefferson) 900 Court St. N.E., H-476 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/huffman • Rep. Mike McLane, R-Dlstrlct55 (Crook, portion of Deschutes) 900 Court St. N.E., H-385 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep. Gene Whlsnant, R-Dlstrlct53 (portion of DeschutesCounty) 900 Court St. N.E., H-471 Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant

• Mike Ahern, John Hatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner@co.jefferson

CITY OF CULVER 200 W. First St., Culver, OR97734 Phone:541-546-6494 Fax:541-546-3624

CITY OF BEND

Mayor

710 N.W.Wall St. Bend, OR97701 Phone: 541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us

• Shawna Clanton

On Wednesday, theHouseof Representatives passed abill

City Council

that would overturn the Obama administration's 2012 decision

• Nancy Diaz, Laura Dudley, Amy McCully, Sharon Orr, Shannon Poole, Hilario Diaz Phone:541-546-6494

• City Manager Eric King Phone:541-388-5505 Email: citymanager@ci.bend.or.us

U.S. HOUSEVOTE • Overturn waiver for welfare work requirements Walden (R)....................Y Blumenauer (D)............ I Bonamici (D) ................I OeFazio (D)................... I Schrader (D)................. Y — Andrew Clevenger, The/3u//etin

Previously, a state could be fined if 50 percent of its

CITY OF METOLIUS 636 Jefferson Ave., Metolius, OR97741 Phone: 541-546-5533

WILSONSofRed mond

City Council

541-548-2066 Adjustable Beds-

• Bob Bozarth, John Chavez, Bill Reynolds, Tla Powell, Patty Wyler Phone:541-546-5533

I

In-Home Care Servlces

Email: sramsay@ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell

HWY 20E & Dean SwiftRd. (1 block West of Costco)

MN'TRESS G allery- B e n d

EVERGREEN

Phonei 541-388-5505

the measure with178 Democrats.

to waive awork requirement for receiving welfare.

City Council • Jodie Barram Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jbarram©ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone:541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jlm Cllnton Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: 541-749-0085 Email: vchudowsky@ci.bend.or.us. • Doug Knight Phone:541-388-5505 Email: dknight@ci.bend.or.us • Scott Ramsay

Republicans to form the majority Three Republicans voted against

U.S. SENATEVOTE • Hiring freeze on non-essential federal employees Merkley(D) .................I I/I/yden (D)..................... N

Phone: 541-480-8141 Email: srussell@ci.bend.or.us

.OI.US

for states that can quickly move 20 percent of recipients into jobs and off the welfare rolls. Under the new bill, the administration could

no longer grant theseexemptions. The measure passed,246-181, with18 Democrats joining 228

employees couldbeavoided

CONGRESS

ROLLER RUMBLERACESERIES: Competitors race a sprint on bikes attached to fork-mounted rollers, with music and raffles; $5 to race, $3 spectat ors;7 p.m .,6:30 p.m . sign-up; Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-382-2453. LOW HUMS: TheSeattle-based rock act performs, with Gabriel Mintz $5 8 p m The Horned Hand 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.facebook. com/thehornedhand. "ROAD TOROUBAIX": A screening of the 2008 cycling film, with door prizes; proceeds benefit the Central Oregon Trail Alliance; $5; 9 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. PROFESSOR STONE: The electronic act performs, with Lyfe, Rada, Critical Hitand Bass Member; free; 9 p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.slipmatscience.com.

AUTHOR PRESENTATION:T.J. Brown talks about her book, "Summerset Abbey: A Bloom in Winter"; $5; 6 p.m.; Paulina Springs Books, 422 S.W. Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491.

sought to place ahiring freeze on non-essential federal employees.

PUBLIC OFFICIALS

OI'g.

FRIDAY

On Thursday, the Senate deniedan amendment bySen. Tom Coburn, R-Okla., that

— Reporter: 541-548-2186, Ipugmire@bendbulletirLcom

Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical.

care for loved ones. comfort for au.

541-323-3011 •starks.com

541-330-5084

541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com

Sewing Machine Repair & Service

\

DESCHUTES COUNTY 1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

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• •

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Project Location

County Commission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney©co.deschutes

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• •

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-

.

.

OR 58 Suggested Alternate Routes

CROOK COUNTY 300 N.E. Third St., Prineville, OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555 Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration@co.crook.or.us

8 • C~ 1

.Qr.us

• Alan Unger, D-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger©co.deschutes.or.us • Tony DeBone, R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email :Tony DeBone©co.deschutes.or.us

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• •

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Web: co.crook.or.us

• Crook County Judge Mike McCabe Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@co.crook.or.us

126

/

County Court • Ken Fahlgren Phone: 541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@co.crook.or.us

«0

JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 S.E. D St., Madras, OR97741 Phone: 541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us

County Commission

-$g.

Construction Begins as Early as April 1"


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

B3

REGON

Large California winemaker buysland for vineyards inWillamette Valley

AROUND THE STATE MRI lawsuit —A teenage boyand his mother have sued aPortland hospital, alleging the boy was burned after a technician left metal

discs from an electrocardiogram on his body during amagnetic resonance imaging exam. The Oregonian reports that Aaron Lee and his mother, Sharon, seek $2 million for pain and suffering and $30,000

in economic damages.Thelawsuit was filed Wednesday against OrThe Associated Press PORTLAND — J a c k son F amily Wines, one o f t h e nation's largest wine producers, has purchased nearly 400 acres of land in the Willamette Valley. The purchase by the company best known for its Kendall-Jackson brand is the first large-scale acquisition of Oregon vineyard lands by a California winemaker, The Oregonian reported. The company said it looks forward to p roducing highquality Oregon pinot noir at the three parcels: two in the Eola-Amity H i l l s g r o w i ng area and one farther south in the foothills near Dallas.

tion for pinot noir. "There's plenty of market to go around. I "There's plenty of market to go around," Willamette Valley welcome the further development of the Vineyards founder Jim BerOregon wine industry." nau told the Statesman Jour— Willamette Valley Vlneyards founder Jlm Bernau nal. "I welcome the further development of the Oregon wine industry." The company p u rchased closed how much it paid for Earlier this month, Wine Willamette Valley pinot noir the land. Wine industry reSpectator reported that Jackgrapes during the 2012 har- ports said the parcels were son Family Wines was intervest and was impressed by the previously owned by C o m- ested in the Oregon vineyards. quality of the fruit, said Bar- monfund, a Connecticut-based The company wouldn't conbara Banke, chairwoman of institutional investor. firm its plans at that time, but Jackson Family Wines. Wine B u siness M o nthly the article got plenty of atten"I admire pinot noirs from ranks Jackson Family Wines tion in Oregon's wine country. "It's the talk of the neighthe Willamette Valley and its as the ninth-largest wine pros ub-appellations l ik e E o l a- ducer in the country. Interest borhood. In fact, the valley," Amity Hills," Banke said in a in the Willamette Valley by the said Pat Dudley, president and statement. prominent winemaker could marketing director of Bethel The company has not dis- enhance the region's reputa- Heights Vineyard.

egon Health & Science University. In a statement, the university said it couldn't comment due to privacy laws.

TreSpaSSing Sheep —A Douglas County man whocalled police to report that a neighbor fired a shotgun at him has been arrested on

an outstanding warrant. TheNews-Review reported 38-year-old Eric Percell called police Thursday night to say he was fired at while trying to retrieve his sheep. About three hours before the call, the neighbor

contacted the sheriff's office to report that Percell's sheepweretrespassing on his property. A sheriff's deputy concluded the report of a

shotgun blast was unfoundedandarrested Percell on a warrant charging him with misdemeanor contempt of court in an unrelated matter. Whale license plate —From Crater LakeandCultural Trust to wine country andWillamette University, Oregon hasa lineup of morethan 30 different vanity-license plates. What's one more? The Oregonian reports that coast lawmakers are supporting House Bill 2180, which would es-

tablish a new commemorative whale plate that drivers could buy for an extra $30 per year. The fee would fund Oregon State University's Marine Mammal Institute, boosting gray whale research and tourism. — From wire reports

Lawsuit overrevokedjob offer canmoveforward, OregonSupremeCourt says The Associated Press

ised him a job and then denied it. Michael Cocchiara worked at a Lithia Motors dealership for eight years until suffering

a heart attack in 2004. Doctors told him to decrease his stress and work fewer hours, said hisattorney G. Jefferson Campbell. Cocchiara discussed the situation with his sales manager while pursuing other employment options. When Cocchiara got an offer to be a sales r epresentative for t h e M a i l Tribune newspaper, a position

Yesterday

Bend's newest bridge open to travel Friday afternoon

MEDFORD — The Oregon Supreme Court ruled that a jury should decide whether a M edford sales associate is entitled to compensation from an

employer who he says prom-

that satisfied his doctors' requirements, he told his boss he was leaving, Campbell said. "And they said, 'Oh, don't take that job. You're too valuable,' "Campbell said. The lawyer said Lithia offered his client a "corporate job" that would satisfy his health needs. But the company never followed through, and the Mail Tribune job was filled when Cocchiara

of the killing — a witness people on the desert know as Don, Bend's newest bridge, a Continued from B1 a former employee of Mellin, $90,000 structure on the site of but whose full name sheriff's the Pioneer Portland Avenue officersrefuse to reveal. 75 YEARS AGO span, was opened to travel FriOut in the desert, Mellin's For the week ending day afternoon. friends an d a c q uaintances Mar.16,1938 An i n f o r ma l c e r emony gathered Wednesday aftermarked the opening and at noon outside the building, gaHitler seizes 5:05, the first "official" cross- rage and gas pumps that make control of Austria ing of the span was made by up the Millican Store. Some of Fuehrer Adolph Hitler, pre- an automobile,when a car ceded by thousands of Ger- operated by City Manager Hal man troops, came to Austria Puddy crossed from the east today and was hailed by the side with Don Denning, actn ow dominant Nazis a s a ing mayor, as one of his pasliberator. sengers. First "non official" T he Nazification o f t h e car over the span was driven country was accomplished and by Dave MacMillan, a new aranti-Jewish agitation began. rival from California. The ousted Chancellor, Kurt Aside from Denning, other Schuschnigg and other officity commissioners present cialswere in custody, guarded for the ceremony were Jack by storm troopers. German Dempsey, Paul Reynolds and mechanized troops were ev- Leon Devereaux, Jr. Interesterywhere in the country and ed spectators included Robone detachmentcrossed tothe ert L. Coats, contractor, P.B. Brenner pass, gateway to Italy. Johnson, who worked on the The f i rst t a nk s e n tered original span, constructed in the suburbs of Vienna in the the fall of 1912, more than 50 late afternoon. Fifty German years ago, hoped to be present planes arrived at the military for the opening but was kept airport of W einer Neustadt, home by illness. 25 miles from Vienna. A great Just before traffic r olled torchlight parade will be held over the new span, city workin Vienna tonight and Hitler ers completed installation of will speak by radio from Linz. a Cyclone fence, at the north Government circles said the side of the road and adjacent fuehrer would come hereto- to Pioneer Park. Although the morrow. Most businesses and new bridge is open to traffic, many banks were suspended paving of approaches remain today in honor of the German to be completed, and some coup and celebrations were timbers must be removed. held throughout the country.

He'll put "roaring drunks" in a tiger cage Crusading William E. Kane, mayor of Woburn, Mass., apparently believes in the corrective value of publicity. He has announced plans to build a "tiger cage" on wheels in which drunks of both sexes would be drawn through the downtown streets of the city until they sobered up. It will have a steel roof and a pine floor and its steel bars will be covered with rubber. The whole job is to be painted silver. It is said the mayor will pay the cage's cost of $400 out of his own pocket.

50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Mar.16,1963

Drop in gas prices reported A 5-cent drop in the price of gasoline was quite general around town today, with most pricesposted at 29.9 cents per

gallon. The former price was 34.9. The move to slash gas price was "in the making" for some time, but did not break here until Thursday of last week. Over the weekend, most stations fell in line with the lower

prices.

later tried to accept it. Lithia attorney Ryan Vanderhoof said his clients deny Cocchiara's allegations, and he characterizedthis week's Supreme Court ruling as "just a procedural victory." "It's a legal decision that means he can have his case heard as a m atter of l aw," Vanderhoof told the Mail Tribune. "There's no winner or

loser yet." The high court ruling reversesthe decisions of a Jackson County circuit judge and the Oregon Court of Appeals. V anderhoofsuccessfully argued before those courts that Cocchiara's case be thrown out because Oregon law allows employers to hire or fire employees "at will" i n most cases.Because the alleged of-

fer from Lithia entailed "an atwill position," Cocchiara could have been terminated on his first day, Vanderhoof argued. The unanimous Supreme C ourt opinion, w r i tten b y Chief Justice Thomas Balmer, determined the l egal r i g ht to fire an employee does not carry with it a "conclusive presumption that the employer will exercise that right."

them were crying and some of them had a few drinks, and they all were talking about the sometimes gruff old man who owned and operated the Millican Store for the 42 years since he left the Navy and his position as a Seabee diver after World War II. Ed Park and Mark Dunaway stayed at the store all afternoon long.

Park, a photographer and writer who is M ellin's closest neighbor, lived four miles from the Millican Store. He often came to talk to Mellin about the history of the Milllican area. Dunaway is the caretaker at the Pine Mountain Observatory, nine miles from the store. He'd come down to the store

during the daytime when the astronomers were asleep and the observatory got lonely. He and Mellin would play cribbage, "and shoot the breeze and talk about old times." "We had a similar philosophy on th e c ountry," Park said. "We liked the desert. We appreciated it, and very few people do appreciate it."

IIII

25 YEARS AGO For the week ending Mar.16,1988

Lifejustisn'tthe sam e in Millican Talking to the scattered few people who live along a flat, barren stretch of U.S. Highway 20 southeast of B end brings together the story of a man who had become an institution on the High Desert and the drifter who has been charged with killing him. They'll tell you about Bill Mellin sitting on t h e f r ont porch of his Millican Store on

sunny days, or playing cribbage with the ranchers and other folks who stopped by, or just watching television in his kitchen with his ancient black Lab, Tramp. Some of them also will tell you about David Wareham, the paroleefrom the Oregon State Penitentiary who drifted from job to job among the tiny stores that stand as landmarks along the High D esert between Bend and Burns. Wareham was arrested near Burns about an hour after he allegedly shot his employer, Bill Mellin in the head with a rifle. He also was charged with the attempted murder of the witness who called police to the scene

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B4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

BITUARIES DEATH NOTICES Concepcion (Connie) Schossow, of Bend Dec. 7, 1922 - March 7, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: Services are being planned for a later date at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland. Contributions may be made to:

Lions Clubs International Foundations www.lionsclubs.org

Dorris Mae Johnson, of Bend Feb. 16, 1937 - Mar. 11, 2013 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.com Services: No services will be held. Contributions may be made to:

Partners in Care Hospice House in Bend, or the Humane Society.

Daniel Eilers

Carl Freeman Brock, of Terrebonne Aug. 29, 1934 - Mar. 14, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook at redmondmemorial.com Services: Memorial service details are pending.

Grace Laverne Archer, of Bend Dec. 8, 1923 - March 11, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A graveside service will take place on Monday, March 18, 2013, at 10:30 a.m., at Willamette National Cemetery, located at 11800 SE Mt. Scott Blvd., Portland, Oregon 97086. Contributions may be made to:

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

April 3, 1955- March13, 2013 Dan Eilers passed away W ednesday, after w a g i n g a heroic battle w it h b l a d d er c a ncer i n M ou n t a i n View, CA. Dan's enthusiastic p o sit ive s p i r it , k e e n i n t e l l i g ence, and kind heart wi l l be missed by those people whose l i ve s h e t o u c h ed, a nd e specially b y th o s e w ho k ne w h i m w e l l . H e and hi s w i f e , R o s emary l oved B end, t h ei r n e i g h bors, and their life here, as they t r a n s i t ioned f r o m Silicon Valley to their new home. Dan was born and raised i n P o r t l and , O r e g on , t o Cliff and Lois Eilers. He attended M ar s h al l Hi g h S chool th ere an d c o n t i n ued his higher education at the University of Washington and received his MBA i n 1982 at S t a nford U n i versity. B e f or e r e c eiving h is MBA a n d w o r k i n g i n Silicon Valley, Dan had a broadcasting career on the radio in Eugene and Portland, Oregon, and as a TV news a n cho r i n Se a t t l e, Washington. Dan held various execut ive p o s i tion s a t A p p l e C omputer, Inc. i n t h e 1 2 y ears h e w a s t h e r e , i n c luding leading t h eir c o r p orate venture capital e f f orts, and w e n t o n t o b e CEO of t h e i r s u b sidiary, C laris. D a n he l d ot h e r C EO positions i n S i l i c on Valley as well as being the CEO-in-residence at Kleiner Perkins Caufield tL Byers. Dan became a partner in Vanguard Ventures i n 2000 an d sa t o n m u l tiple Boards of Directors. D an i s s u r v ived b y h i s l oving w i f e , Ros e m a ry , daughter, Megan; and also R osemary' s d aug h t e r s , Stephanie ( Joe) D a i e k , Danielle Russi, A ngelique ( Christopher) V i e rr a a n d seven grandchildren. M emorial S e r v i ces w i l l b e an nounced o n D a n ' s C aringBridge s i te . D o n a t ions i n h e u o f fl o w e r s should be directed in Dan's name to: Stanford Cancer C enter, 875 Blake W i l b u r Drive, Stanford, CA 94305. A ttn: S andy S r i n i vas f o r research in bladder cancer.

Renee Viola Peterson July 30, 1938 - March 8, 2013 L ongtime L a P i n e r e s i dent, Renee V i ol a P e t ers on, 74, p a ssed i nt o h e r new life on Friday, March 8, 2013, at her home. Born in Man kato, Minnesota, to F red a n d Lauraine W ard o n 1 938, t h e family m oved t o Renee Oregon in Peterson the 1940s. Renee w ent t o S p r i n gfield H i g h S chool an d i n t h e 1 9 7 0s s he moved t o t h e B e n d a rea. Sh e l o v e d a n i m a l s a nd horses w er e h e r f a -

Margie Louise Howarth Dac. 21, 1935 - March 2, 2013 M argie L o u ise H o w a r th was born Dec. 21, 1935, in Belt, MT, th e d aughter of l ate P e r c y Cl a r k and Pauline Sttcka Clark. She was raised and received her educat ion in Forest Grove, OR. Margie was u nited i n Margle Howarth marriage to h er high s c h o o l sw e e t heart W illia m Dav i d 'Bill' Howarth on Oct. 3, 1953, in Forest Grove, OR. Following their m a r riage t hey r e s i de d i n Sac r a mento, CA, where Bill was stationed in the Air F orce. While in Sacramento both t heir son s, M i ch ae l W illia m and Ti mot h y Allen, were born. In 1 9 5 7 , aft e r b il l ' s d ischarge f r o m t he A i r Force, t h e y m ov e d to S eattle, WA , w h e r e t h e y b oth w o r k e d f o r B o e i n g A ircraft . Ret u r n in g to Forest Grove in 1960, they built a n e w h o m e , r a ised t heir b o ys , e n j oyed r e l a tives and life-long friends, a nd w o r k e d a t v ar i o u s c areers. Afte r r e t i r in g i n 1989, Cr o o k e d Ri ver R anch became t h eir n e w h ome, spending th e w i n t ers t r a v elin g s o u t h f o r twenty years. Margie enjoyed g o l f i ng, long power w a l ks, t r aveling, and Nevada gaming. S he w a s p r e c e ded i n death by her sister, Mable; a nd survived by h e r h u s band, Bill; sons, Michael of Cougar, WA, and Timothy a nd C a ro l o f Hi l l s b o r o, OR; f o u r gr a n d c hildren; and s everal g r e at-grandchildren. If sodesired, please make d onations in he r n am e t o Partners In C are H ospice, 2075 NE Wy a tt C t., Bend, OR 97701. v orite, but s h e l o ve d t h e L ord J e sus C h r is t m o r e t han a n y t h in g e l se . S h e s erved man y y e ar s a s a Bible study leader. One of h er hobbies w a s m a k i n g c ards fo r p e o pl e t o e n courage them. S he is s u r v ived b y h e r children, D e br a B l a c k ley of Alaska, Joe Peterson of T exas, Daw n M i t c h ell o f Bend and Tracie Landsem of Sunriver; sisters, Sherry Ross, Arizona and N a n cy S imar, I l l i n ois. S h e h a s five grandchildren and two great-grandchildren. W e, th e f a m i ly , a r e s o grateful t o t h e w o n d erful people at Hospice and her care qivers. In heu of f l o w ers please m ake d o n ations t o H o s pice House, Z075 NE Wyatt Ct. Bend, OR 97701. P lease s ig n o u r gue s t book at www.niswomger-reynolds. com

Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •• • Th eeeullelin

Joseph Edward Vaughn

FEATURED OBITUARY

May10, 1937- March11, 2013 J oseph Ed w a r d "Ed" V aughn pas s e d aw ay Monday, March 11, 2013 in Medford, Oregon. He w as :I b or n M ay 10, 1937 in Wilmington, DE to Joseph Burton

. Ij

a nd Ali c e

Todd Ed Vaughn Vaughn. On March 11, 1967 he married N a nc y N i e dermeyer, who survives. Ed earned a b a c h elors degree from West Virginia W esleyan College, and a m asters o f f o r e stry f r o m Duke University. He spent twenty-five years work ing for the U.S. Forest Service o n t h e U m p q ua , R o g u e and D e s chutes N a t i o nal Forests. He worked for the Fort Rock Ranger District from 1974-1985. There he w as r e sponsible f o r r esource m a n a g ement of recreational sites, and later served as district silvicult urist. F o l l owin g h i s r e tirement f r o m t h e F o r e st Service in 1985, Ed worked t welve y e ar s f o r Mi c r o sphere Computers in Bend. In 1994, he began planti ng a pear orchard on h i s a nd Nancy's f a m il y f a r m near Jacksonville, OR. He became engaged in the loc al f a r m i n g co m m u n i t y a nd s erved a s a bo a r d m ember an d advi s o r y committee m em b e r of v arious a g r i cultural a n d natural resource organizations. In October, 2012 he was honored as a member of th e D i a m on d P i o n eer Agricultural Career A chievement R egistry b y Oregon S t at e U n i v ersity, College o f A g r i c u l t u r al Science. A mateur radio wa s E d ' s favorite h o b by . He became a l i c ensed amateur r adio o p e r ator , K 7 Y L O , w hen i n h i g h s c h ool. H e was past president of Cent ral O r egon R a di o A m a t eur Club. H e w a s n o t e d f or b ei n g un usu a l l y k nowledgeable a n d w i l l ing to share his expertise. At the time of his death, he was a member of C entral Oregon DX Clu b an d R ogue V a l l e y A m a t e u r Radio Club. Ed is survived by his sons, M ichael B r u c e V au g h n ( Kimberly M a y n a rd ) a n d A lan To dd V au gh n (Michelle Brandt); his sist er, M ar g a re t V au g h n Harvey (A. Dabney Harvey) of Richmond VA ; an d stx grandchildren. H e w as p receded in d e ath b y h i s son, Burton Louis Vaughn. A memorial service w i l l b e held 2 :00 p .m . M a r c h 23, 2013 at H a nley Farm, 1053 Hanley R d., Central Point, OR. Memorial donat ions m a y be m a d e to CASA of C entral Or egon, Central O r e gon E n v i r o nmental Center, or a charity of choice.

Where Buyers And Sellers Meet ClaS'S'ifIedS

Gardnerwaspopular governor of Washingtonstate for 8 years By Janet I.Tu The Seat tle Times

SEATTLE — W hen Gov. Booth Gardner first ran for the state's highest office in 1984, many in Washington did not even know his name. That soon changed and he went on to become a two-term governor and one of the most popular politicians in state history. From his time in Olympia to his recent campaign championing the "Death with Dignity" initiative, Gardner's legacy is still widely felt today. Washington state's 19th governor, he died Friday night at his Tacoma home from complicationsof Parkinson's disease. He was 76. "I learned so much from Booth because he was a man that led by example," Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., said after learning of Gardner's death. "He demonstrated that governing is about the people you serve — and serve with — by learning e v eryone's n ame, what issuesthey cared deeply about, and bytaking the time to work with anyone that shared his desire to make Washington state a better place to live." Under Gardner's tenure from 1985 to 1993, with an economy that was largely booming, the

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state took notable steps on education and the environment and on expanding social and health services. The state began to institute requirements for students to pass standardized tests before graduating from high school, raised state university faculties' salaries, enacted the Growth Management Act, initiated the Basic Health Plan and began First Steps, which helps low-income pregnant women obtain health and social services. Gardner also had an astute eye for talent, assembling a Cabinet whose members — including former Gov. Chris Gregoire — have gone onto further

was crucial and would pay real dividends." In recent years, Gardner, who was diagnosed with Parkinson's disease in 1994, was perhaps best known for championing an initiative allowing physicians to prescribe lethal doses of medication for terminally ill patients seeking to hasten their own deaths. Voters passed that measure by a wide margin in 2008. Throughout his life, Gardner had a likability that served him well, from his days as a businessleader to those serving as the first Pierce County executive, from t h e s t atehouse in Olympia to the U.S. prominence. deputy trade representative in "He brought people together Geneva. and he had a vision," said John His entry into politics began Hughes, author o f " B o oth in 1970 when he won a Pierce Who'?," a biography of the for- County seat in the state Senmer governor that is part of ate against Republican incumthe Office of the Secretary of bent Larry Faulk. He wasn't a State's project documenting standout legislator, according Washington's history makers. to news accounts at the time. For G a rdner, "the imIn 1984, he decided to run for portance of e ducation was governor, despite a lack of statep aramount — i n v esting i n wide name recognition that programs that helped young prompted his campaign staff people escape poverty and to come up with the slogan: drugs," Hughes said. And he "Booth Who?" It wasn't a queshad "just his sunny optimism tion statewide voters asked for and idealism. He had this bully long, as he defeated incumbent pulpit that investing in people Gov. JohnSpellman.

DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Niculae Asciu, 70: Prolific i llustrator whose work a p peared regularly in The New York Times and other publi-

cations, including The Wall Street Journal and cover illustrations for The New Yorker. Died March 3 at his home in

Queens. — From wire reports

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& 8~ry ~ ot (~ony) ~

e n s on

Qu/y 3/" I vI v — ~mch 10" 2013

Born in Harrison, Arkansas onJuly 31,1919, Mary LouLong Henson died after a two month battle with shingles and the complications which followed. She moved to Bend in 2012, to be near her family after living most of her adult life in Medford, Oregon. She loved her family,

Paul "Loran" Levings hpril 25, I 929 - March 6, 20 I 3

paul "Loran" Levings, of La pine, OR, passed away March 6, 20I3. Loran was born April 25, l929 in Tacoma, WA. Loran was the oldest of 6 children, four brothers and one sister. He graduated from Drain High School in 1947, and went onto study at Southern Oregon College receiving a BS in Education. He then received his Master of Education degree at the University of Oregon in 1967. Loran is survived by his loving wife of 33 years, Joanne Hawkins Levings. Loran was raisedto work in the woods and sawmills most of his early years. After graduating from college Loran became an elementary and middleschool teacher, moving on to administration as an elementaryschool principal in the South Lane School District. He then had a successfulstint as an insurance broker for American Bankers before he returned backto what he loved the most, working in the woods. He finished his working years back in the classroom teaching where his education began with the North DouglasSchool District in Drain. Upon retirement he and his wife Jo movedto La Pine, OR, where Loran became active in many of the town organizations, including Meals on Wheels, the Senior Center and theMoose Lodge. Loran was an avid hunter and fisherman. He and Jo traveled around the country, Canada and Mexico with their Winnebago clubs and chapters. Loran is survived by four daughters,Susan, Debra, Lori and Patti, along with their husbands; I 7 grandchildren, and many greatgrandchildren. He is also survived by his five step-children, Rnn, Philip, Lisa, Sally and Susan, along with theirspouses; 6 grandchil dren, and two great-grandchildren. A memorial celebration will be held on April 25, 20 l3 at 2:00 p.m. at theMoose Lodge in La pine,O R.

her flower gardens, playing bridge and reading extensively. Shewas active in the PresbyterianChurch asa deacon and in choral music. In her early family life, she loved her children and enjoyed cooking, canning and sewing. As an empty nester, she worked in a fine

drapery shop for several years. Most of all, she and her loving anddevoted husband John experienced a 60 yearmarriage and many joyful and peaceful days at their cabin on the RogUe River. The fact that their retreat had no electricity or running water did not diminish the joy or fun there. They also had numerous trailer traveling adventures with her sister Bess and husband Jack.

She grew Up as the youngest of nine children, trekking back and forth between Colorado and Oregon with her

family. Her parents were Benjamin and Clercy Jane (Jennyj Hightower Long. Mary Lou was the last survivor of her large family. She met and married

John W. Henson in 1937. They were a teamuntil his death in 1997. Mary Lou is survived by her daughter Jonna Maxwell and grandson Matthew Maxwell of Muskogee and

LocustGrove, Oklahoma; son James Henson (Annis), grandson Aaron (Sara) all of Bend, granddaughter Beth Hammerstrand (Jamesj of SanDiegoandher great grandchildren. She is also survived by one sister-in-law, Sara Henson Carlson Oliver of Albany,

Oregon andmany nieces and nephews. There will be agathering of family and friends on the Rogue River this summer. Memorial contributions can be made to The Salvation Army and to Partners ln

Care Hospice House,Bend,Oregon.


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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THE %7EsT

Nevada reaches deal with wild horse advocates

e rison or wes eac es is an eerie remin er o sLinami By Hal Bernton The Seat tle Times

By Scott Sonner

FORKS, Wash. — From a distance, John A nderson thought he had spotted another plastic float, like the hundreds he has gathered since debris from the Japanese tsunami be-

The Associated Press

pressingforsuch an agreement say it's a significant developRENO — The state of ment — the only one of its kind Nevada has signed a coop- in the country. "We are extremelyproud of erative agreement with wild horse protectionadvocates this important step toward preallowing longtime critics of venting Nevada's iconic wild mustang roundups to have horses from falling into the the first chance at purchas- clutches of kill-buyers at aucing state-captured animals tion," said Kevin O'Neill, a senthat otherwise might end up ior legislative director for the at the slaughterhouse. American Society for the PreThe agreement between vention of Cruelty to Animals. Nevada's Department of Neda DeMayo, p resident Agriculture an d C a l ifor- and founder of the nonprofit nia-based Return to Free- Return to Freedom that prodom Inc. d oesn't a ffect videsrefuge to 40 0 wild horses the roundup of f ederally at a refuge in Lompoc, Calif., protected horses on mostly is hopeful the agreement will U.S. Bureau of Land Man- lead to long-term changes that agement lands in Nevada include more emphasis on tryand much of the West. But it ing to keep the animals runmeans that in at least three ning wild on the range through northern Nevada counties, alternative management. "A host of solutions — includthe mustang's allies won't have to outbid slaughter- ing birth control, fencing and house buyers at state-spon- diversionary feeding and wasored auctions, as they were tering — are available to mitiforced to do this year when gate public safety concerns," dozens of horses were of- she said. fered for sale. The deal forbids purchasers Instead, the group that of the horses from returning serves as the parent orga- them to the Virginia Range. nization for th e n ational A merican W i l d Hor s e Preservation Ca m p aign will have two business days

gan washing ashore along the Northwest coast. He got closer, reaching behind a log last spring to discover one of the most memorable finds in three decades of beachcombing: a volleyball covered with inked Japanese inscriptions. Some of the writing, faded by the sun, was illegible. Other characters, once Anderson scraped away barnacles, were surprisingly clear. "This was a shocker," said Anderson. "I wondered whose ball it was, and whether they were still alive." On March 12, 2011, a 9.0 earthquake off the coast of Japan triggered a powerful tsunami that killed nearly 19,000 people as it transformed large swaths of coastal communities into giant debris fields. Survivors' cellphone videos captured the terrifying movements of the ocean as dark raging waters — filled with boats, houses and cars — pushed onshore. Here in the Pacific Northwest, those images alsowere powerful reminders of the tsunamis that have struck our coasts in centuries past and are predicted to hit again. Two years later, large areas of shoreline in Japan have been largely cleared of rubble, yet flotsam that has made a trans-Pacific journey continues to wash up on U.S. and Canadian coasts, and federal officials predict this d ebris will continue to sporadically pulse on to beaches for years to come.

Cleaning up So far, only 21 items have been definitively declared tsunami debris by U.S. and Canadian officials who — with the help of the Japanese consulates — have been able to identify owners. They include a motorcycle, a plastic tote and a 65-foot-long stretch of dock from the city of Misawa that lodged along a remote stretch of Olympic Peninsula shoreline in December. In the coming weeks, that dock will be cut up and hauled away by helicopter in a $628,000 salvage effort largely financed by the Japanese government. "We don't like to leave a mess," said Tomoko Dodo, acting consulate general in Seattle for Japan, which has donated $5 million to debris cleanup in the United States and another $1 million in Canada. "(U.S. officials) say it is not our fault, and we agree with them. ... I think that it is a goodwill

a'ir

i'

Erika Schultz I Seattle Times

At his rural home in the woods, Forks, Wash. resident John Anderson sits among hundreds of buoys used at Japanese oyster farms. Since the tsunami, the longtime beachcomber has found other debris, including a volleyball. Below, Anderson holds a piece of plastic with Japanese text. gesture. We want to show the United States our g ratitude for the support we received from your country during the tsunami." A handful of i t ems have b een returned to Japan i n the past year for longshot reunions with owners. A yellow buoy retrieved in Alaska was emblazoned with a large Japanese character, Kei, and traced to Sakiki Miura, a widow who had used the float as part of a signfor a restaurant destroyed in the tsunami. Last June, Miura was over-

who surveyed the coast last summer found a soccer ball with an inscription that was traced to a team in a town on the northeast coast. During one of their survey trips, they also came upon an eerie scene: a pile of house timbers that contained a child's potty, a bottle of cough syrup, a laundry hamper and a piece of a washing machine. "It was one of those slowly developing things. We realized, we were in someone's bathroom . in someone else's house," recalls Ken Campbell, joyed to regain the buoy, a kayaker who has produced and decided to r eopen the a documentary about their restaurant. surveys, which is called "The "Kei-Chan has returned," Roadless Coast." she tearfully declared, accordFederal and state officials ing to a report published in caution that it is difficult — and The Asahi Shimbun. often impossible — to figure out just what debris came from Finding owners the tsunami, and what is part A nderson, of t h e F o r k s of the broader stew of plastics area, is planning to return to and other items carried by Japan this summer with filmPacific currents toward the makers producing a tsunami Northwest coast, where some documentary entitled "Lost & blows ashore and the rest head Found," and hopes to reunite in gyres that loop south along the volleyball with its owner. the West Coast and north up to So far, a translator's review Alaska. of the inscriptions found a few partial names, and well-wishes Treasures ondisplay that make it appear the volleyFor Anderson, through deball was a farewell gift, pos- cades of beachcombing, the sibly to a graduating student, o cean's marine debris h as from other team members. yielded plenty of t r easures, "I'm sure you will have a which have been put on imgreat life," said one inscription. pressive display at his home"I sincerely wishyou the best stead just outside Forks. of luck in your new endeavor," In his front yard, a towersaid another. ing beachcomber's monument But so far, no owner has made up of thousands of floats been identified. rises like some kind of mari"There have got to be other time totem pole. In an upstairs teams that they played that loft, his museum includes sake would recognize those names bottles thrown out of ships, from somewhere that didn't Nike shoes and thousands of get wiped out — you would other items. think so," Anderson said. All this on the beach has Two Washington kayakers given Anderson a keen sense

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to pay $100 per horse for of the yearly ebbs and flows of marine debris. Within the past 18 months, the pace of his beachcombing finds has picked up dramatically, with many items that appear likely to havecome from Japan. Last week on stroll along Second Beach near La Push, Anderson's found a chunk of what once appeared to be a dock, house beams with the notches typical of Japanese construction, a black float of the type used by Japanese oyster farms and bottles bearing Japanese markings. Trapped within th e d r iftwood, Anderson found hunks, pellets and slivers of blue, yellow and white foam insulation, which were among the first objects to arrive more than a year ago and continue to show up on the beaches. "I've seen pockets of Styrofoam packed 2 feetdeep," Anderson said. "Before the tsunami, I never saw anything like that." In Washington state, kayaker Campbell and his survey colleague Steve Weileman also are trying to spread the world about the tsunami and other marine debris. They formed an organization called The Ikkatsu Project, which they hope can help fund future survey expeditions. "Ikkatsu is a Japanese word that means 'all together as one,'" Weileman said. "What happens on that side of the Pacific will one day happen on this side."

those the state gathers due to threats they pose on state roads and highways in the Virginia Range southeast of Reno, the municipality of Carson City and surrounding Washoe, Storey and Lyon Counties. Members of the national coalition who have been

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Raisin casegoing to highcourt McClatchy Newspapers WASHINGTON — Dissident California raisin growers will soon get their day in the Supreme Court sun, with a case that's juicier than it seems. The case with roots in raisinrich Fresno County will put the nine Supreme Court justices on the spot Wednesday morning. The eventual outcome will have consequences well beyond the vineyard and the packing shed. "Give the l ittle f armer a chance," grower Marvin Horne said an interview. "We haven't done anything wrong." The case, scheduled for an hour-long oral argument, pits Marvin and Laura Horne, proprietors of Raisin Valley Farms, and their allies against the U.S. Department o f A g r i culture. More broadly, the case is the latest front in a series of long-running disputes between farmers who like to go their own way and farmers who prefer to unite for collective action. With t h ei r h e adquarters in the Fresno County town of Kerman, the Hornes have b een producing r aisins i n

Fresno and nearby Madera counties since 1969. Marvin Horne, now 67, said he didn't set out to be a rebel. "All we want to do is pack our raisins and sell them," Horne said. "The only thing I wanted, along with my group, was to be free." But S u n-Maid G r owers, along with the Justice Department and others, say that the Hornes shouldn't be rewarded for breaking the rules.

how much handlers will be paid for this set-aside tonnage. Raisin handlers set aside 47 percent oftheir crop during the 2002-03 season and 30 percentfor2003-04,but they were paid for only part of what they surrendered. The Hornes grew disillusioned and helped organize other growers into the Raisin Valley Farms Marketing Association, which took care of the packing. By identifying themThe u n derlying l e g al selves as producers rather than challenge, though not the pre- as handlers, the group's memcise issue that will be heard by bers reasoned, they were exthe Supreme Court, involves emptfromthe set-aside requirethe raisin marketing order. Au- ment imposed on handlers. thorized by Congress, and apThe O bama a d m inistraproved by industry, marketing tion, however, termed this a orders can undertake various "scheme" designed to avoid actions to boost demand and legal requirements, and the stabilize prices, including regu- Agriculture Department subselating how much product enters quently ordered the Hornes and the open market. their coalition to pay more than The raisin marketing order $650,000 in fees and penalties. requires "handlers" who proThe Supreme Court won't decess andpack raisins to place cide on the wisdom of the raisin part of their product in reserve program. Rather, the court esduring certain years, with the sentially will decide when and industry-run Raisin A d minwhere the takings claims can istrative Committee deciding be raised.

OPEN HOUSE on Wednesday March 13, 2013 •

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420 Butler Market Rd Bend Oregon 97701

541-317-8383


B6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 20'I3

W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013. 4•

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Today:1 Partly cioudy.

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Bs

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Chance of rain

Chance of rain

showers.

showers.

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CHANNE Ktvz.c«M

44

19

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49/33

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41/26 ~ "

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Coos Bay « Bandon

Roseburg 54/33

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Port Orford

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39/1 4

39/1 4

39/16

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5i/35 •

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44li9

Sunriver Bend

" /34

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Jordan Valley

Chr i stmas Valley 43/i 8

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state extremes

40/22

Frenchglen

l.ake

46/24

Rome

47/21

• 61'

47/21

Paisley 49/23

• 58/30

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47/21

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Las Vegas

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La Paz 81/53 Juneau 32/16

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76/64.

Housto 80

lando 0/62 • Miami 80/69

Monterrey Mazatlan • 78/51

97/64«

CONDITIONS

FRONTS Cold

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 713 a m Moon phases Sunsettoday...... 714 p.m F irst Ful l La s t Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:11 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 7:16 p.m Moonrise today...10:1 9a.m Moonsettoday ...12:39 a.m Mar.19 Mar.27 April2 Apnl10 •

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....619 a m...... 5 17 pm. Venus......7:15 a.m...... 6:59 p.m. Mars.......7:31 a.m...... 7:47 p.m. Jupiter.....1019 a.m...... 1 27 a.m. Satum.....10;41 p.m...... 9:10 a.m. Uranus.....7:37 a.m...... 8:01 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 50/30 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........76m1947 Monthtodate.......... 0.12" Record low......... 10 in 1955 Average month todate... 0.40" Average high.............. 51 Year to date............ 1.92" Average low .............. 28 Average year to date..... 3.02" 6arometric pressureat 4 p.m29.95 Record 24 hours ...0.39 in1930 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

OREGON CITIES

S K IREPORT

Yesterday S unday M o nday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i / Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

Astoria ........49/44/0.27....47/38/sh.....49/40/sh Baker City..... 56/22/trace....43/25/pc.....49/28/pc Brookings.... MM/MM/NA....55/37/pc.....54/43lpc 6urns..........51/23/0.00....43/21/pc.....48/27/pc Eugene........52/44/0.04....51/34/pc.....57/38/pc Klamath Falls .. 56/22/0 00 ...50/23/pc ...56/32/pc Lakeview....... 55/1 9/0.00 ...46/23/pc.....51/32/pc La Pine........51/25/000....41/1 5/sn.....49/29/pc Medford...... 58/41/trace....58/30/pc.....63/38/pc Newport.......48/43/0.20.....48/38/c.....50/41/sh North Bend......50/48/NA....50/35/pc.....52/43/pc Ontario........61/34/0.00....52/30/pc.....54/34/pc Pendleton..... 56/40/trace....53/30/pc.....54/34/pc Portland .......52/47/0.04....50/39/sh.....54/42/pc Prineville....... 50/26/0.00....41/20/pc.....52/35/pc Redmond.......54/24/0.00....44/17/pc.....53/35/pc Roseburg.......53/48/0.02....54/33/sh.....57/42/pc Salem ....... 52/46/0 06 ..52/34/c ...56/38/pc Sisters.........57/27/0.00....42/18/sn.....50/30/pc The Dages......58/44/0.00....52/30/pc.....54/36/pc

for solar at noon.

Snow accumulation in inches

2

Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 72 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . . 72 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .70-114 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . .106-119 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 99 Mt. HoodSki6owl...........0.0......56-62 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 138

LOW MEDIUM HIGH 0

2

4

6

8

10

ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires

Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires

Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .36-90 Aspen, Colorado..... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . .38-44 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . .88-190 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .49-67 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . .18-98

TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL

INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS

YeSterday'S

HIGH LOW

57 39

Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-54 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .61 76 Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 41 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to the latest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace

Ontario

46/24

Igedford

52/38 tt

.

ll mYesterday's

mnr

Ri 1 R ey

I

Baker City' i , i

EAST I Partly to mostly Ontario cloudy with a 52/30 slight chance Vale« 52/30 • of rain or snow Nyssa showers. • 52/30 Juntura

• MitcheR 43/zt

edmond

42/18

Partly cloudy skies can be expected.

43/25

• I'rineville «<0

Sisters'

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EUgene•

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'

47I24

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WEST Partly to mostly cloudy with a chance of showers especially to the north.

3 5/19 s xss CENTRAL

41/26 UnioM

41/28

Willowdale

Camp Sherman

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• La Grande •

43/28

ondon

52/34•

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Ruggs

MauPin

% Governmentg

Y CamP 33/27

Salem

Sandy

6iggS

Da g es 44/31 «Arlington • 52/30 • 50/30 • «Wasco

• 48/36

McMinnvigeP 50/36 « f

g

51/30

River Thee

Nx HIIJsbojo POrtland 50/39

49/35

Umatilla

HOOd

.Cannon Beachh

' 48/40

Tigamook • x<6 "" ' t'

HIGH LOW

53 37 BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I

HIGH LOW

• ++tQ

.++++ '

* *

84

* * *

* *

4>

***+*

xt + +

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......90/60/0.00...72/52/s. 76/42lpc GrandRapids....35/26/0.11...34/24/s. 38/26/sn RapidCity.......33/27/016..51/23/sh.39/25/pc Savannah .......72/50/0.00..77/54/pc...76/5B/t Akron ..........39/32/005..36/26/pc...45/31Ii GreenBay.......30/18/007..24/17/pc. 34/20/sn Reno...........70/37/0.00...62/33/s. 64/36/pc Seattle..........51/45/017..48/38/sh. 51/40/sh Albany..........36/20/000...34/15/s...36/30/r Greensboro......77/47/000...58/38/c. 49/47/sh Richmond.......71/43/0 43..48/35/sh. 47/44/sh SiouxFalls.......30/19/0.00 .. 38/25/rs. 28/12/sn Albuquerque.....73/46/000...69/42/s.. 65/41ls Harnsburg.......45/32/023..43/30/pc..37/34/rs Rochester, NY....30/23/0.00..30/21/pc...40/36/r Spokane .......51/40/trace.. 45/29/rs..48/29/rs Anchorage ......27/13/0 00..29/16/pc. 31/16/pc Hartford,CT.....39/30/0.00...40/23/s...38/33/r Sacramento......77/42/0.00...73/44/s. 74/47/pc Springfield, MO ..65/48/0.00...48/39/r. 52/28/pc Atlanta .........74/52/0.00..73/57/pc...71/48/t Helena..........55/36/0.00..37/24/sn..42/28/rs St.fouis.........64/42/0.02...43/37/r.50/27/pc Tampa..........75/50/0.00..79/61/pc.. 80/64/c Atlantic City.....43/36/012..43/32/pc.. A4/43/r Honolulu........79/68/000...80/63/s.. 79/65/s Salt Lake City ....60/43/0 00..47/31Ipc.. 52/34/s Tucson..........90/54/0.00...85/54/s.. 83/54/s Austin..........85/52/000..86/62/pc. 88/49lpc Houston ........81/59/0 00..80/64/pc. 83/54/pcSanAntonlo .....84/54/0.00..87/62/pc.. 90/52/s Tulsa ...........73/53/0.00... 50/38/r. 59/35/pc Baltimore .......52/39/000...45/35/c...42/41/r Huntsville.......76/54/0 00..73/59/pc...74/42/t SanDiego.......61/53/0.00..65/54/pc.. 64/58/s Washington, DC..61/43/003...46/35/c...42/41/r 6illings.........49/25/000..45/21/sh. 43/27/pc Indianapolis.....47/37/0.00..39/33/pc.. 47/27/c SanFrancisco....62/47/0 00..63/46/pc. 63/46/pc Wichita .........$5/45/0.00..46/36/pc. 54/29/pc Birmingham.....76/53/000 ..72/60/pc...74/43/t Jackson,MS.... 79/51/000. 79/59/pc .. 80/47/t SanJose........70/50/000.. 67/44/s 68/46/pc Yakima .........60/35/0 00 5 U28/pc,52/31/pc Bismarck.........19/3/000...31/9/sn..19/0/pc Jacksonvile......80/44/000..79/59/pc...7I61/t SantaFe........67/32/0.00..60/36/pc.. 56/35/s Yuma...........90/60/0.00...88/56/s .. 86/59/s Boise...........58/34/000..48/29/pc. 53/34/sh Juneau..........30/16/0.00..32/16/sn. 31/24/sn INTERNATIONAL Boston..........40/30/000...38/24/s. 35/34/pc Kansas City......53/38/0.00 .. 39/33/rs. 48/23/pc Bndgeport,CT....39/32/001 ..40/26/pc...36/34/r Lansing.........30/24/012...32/23/s ..39/26/rs Amsterdam......45/36/007 45/36/sh47/32/pc Mecca.........1 02/79/000 100/75/s .. 95/72/s Buffalo.........29/25/0.00 ..30/21/pc...40/36/r LasVegas.......86/61/0.00...80/56/s .. 76/60/s Athens..........55/46/0.00 .. 55/43/pc. 54/48lsh MexicoCity .....59/50/0.00..75/48/pc. 77/52/pc BurlingtonVT....27/18/000..24/13/pc. 32/27/pc Lexington.......72/54/000...43/36/r...61/34/t Auckland........73/61/000 ..77/68/sh. 77/61Ish Montreal........23/16/002... 21/16/s.. 32/25/s Caribou,ME.....26/13/000....19/0/s .. 21/12/s Lincoln..........41/27/000...45/31/c. 41/21/pc Baghdad........89/62/0.00 .. 78/56/pc.70/55/pc Moscow........39/25/011 ... 32/12/c .. 32/12/c Charleston, SC...82/54/000 ..76/54/pc...75/59/t Little Rock.......80/59/0 00... 6661Ir...64/39/t Bangkok........95/79/0.07 100/76/pc100/78/pc Nairobi.........81/61/0.00... 82/55/s .. 83/58/s Charlotte........79/56/000...70/47/c...59/51/t LosAngeles......61/53/0 00 ..63/53/pc .. 63/54/s Beiling..........59/36/000..70/31/pc.. 64/31/c Nassau.........75/61/0.00 ..75/66/pc. 76/71/pc Chattanooga.....77/58/000 ..70/54/pc...71/46lt Louisville........73/52/000...44/36lr. 59/33/shBeirut..........66/57/000 ..58/50/sh.61/51I pc New Delh/.......82/57/0.00...86/62ls ..88/64/s Cheyenne.......51/32/000 ..50/22/pc.. 41/23/s MadisonWl.....30/21/000..31/20/pc. 35/15/sn Berlin...........37/1 4/0 00... 41/31/s.. 34/30/c Osaka..........59/34/0.00...60/52/c...62/47/r Chicago.........36/30/000 ..34/29/pc. 39/23/sn Memphis....... 76/58/000 65/56/r .. 57/41/t Bogota.........68/48/0.19... 66/54/t...71/51/t Oslo............30/21/0.07 .. 29/17/sf ..28/10/sf Cincinnati.......63/37/015...40/3Ir. 55/32/sh Miami..........76/56/000 ..80/69/pc. BU70/pc Budapest........34/1 8/000.. 39/26/pc. 35/35/sh Ottawa.........19/12/000..25/10/pc. 28/21/pc Cleveland.......35/29/021 ...33/2is. 43/32/sh Milwaukee......30/25/0.02..29/25/pc. 35/21/sn Buenos Aires.....68/36/0 00... 68/56/c. 73/59/pc Paris............48/36/0.00...51/32/r.42/34/sh Colorado Spnngs.53/36/000 .. 56/28/w. 47/26lpc Minneapolis.....27/19/0.01 ..29/22/pc.. 30/7/sn CaboSanLucas ..93/64/0.00... 84/61/s .. 84/66/s Rio de Janeiro....86/77/0.00... 80/73/t...81/74/t Columbia,MO...65/40/001 ... 42/36/r. 49/23/sh Nashville........78/62/0.00... 59/53/r...70/40/t Cairo...........73/59/000..69/47lpc ..71/49/s Rome...........52/32/0.00...50/50/c. 57/49/sh Columbia,SC....83/58/000 ..78/53/pc...72/55/t New Orleans.....76/52/0 00..76/64/pc...78/59/t Calgary..........16/9/000...16/7/sn. 19/16/pc Santiago........82/52/0.00..75/62/pc.77/60/pc Columbus, GA....76/49/000..74/56/pc...74/52/t NewYork.......40/32/012..42/29/pc...39/38/r Cancun...........81//000 ..81/76/pc.84/76/pc SaoPaulo.......81/70/0.00...73/64/t...64/62/t Columbus, OH....53/36/007 ..39/35/pc. 53/31/sh Newark, Nl......40/33/0.03..42/27/pc. 38/35/sh Dublin..........46/27/001... 42/29/c. 43/34/pc Sapporo ........37/25/0.18..39/32/sh. 43/37/pc Concord,NH.....35/23/000...32/14/s. 36/27/pc Norfolk, VA......72/47/009...48/38/c. 56/50/sh Edinburgh.......37/28/0.00 .. 37/32/rs.. 40/32/c Seoul...........52/32/0.00 ..53/37/pc. 54/37/sh Corpus Christi....84/60/000..76/64/pc.. 80/59/s OklahomaCity...79/57/0 00..51/42/pc. 58/38/pc Geneva.........43/21/0.00... 41/33/r ..34/31/rs Shangha/........68/48/0.00..61/54/sh.. 67/50/c DallasFtWorth...82/57/000 ..70/53/pc. 71/45/pc Omaha.........39/30/000..44/30/pc. 38/20/pc Harare..........79/59/000... 80/58/s. 82/59/pc Singapore.......91/79/0.00...89/75/t.89/76lpc Dayton .........49/34/000 ..39/34/pc. 51/29/sh Orlando.........80/41/0.00..80/62/pc.. 83/65/c Hong Kong......77/66/000..75/71/sh.. 76/70/c Stockholm........34/7/0.00..35/24/pc. 28/18/pc Denver..........54/39/0.00 ..60/28/w. 49/31/pc PalmSprings.... 94/64/0.00. 89/60/s .. 87/58/s Istanhul.........46/36/0.60... 46/35/c.49/44/pc Sydney..........84/70/0.00..75/61/pc.73/61/pc DesMoines......39/32/000..40/31/pc..38/18/rs Peoria..........44/34/0 00 ..39/31/pc ..43/21/rs lerusalem.......67/49/000.. 55/46/sh.55/43/pc Taipei...........79/61/0.00...74/67ls. 80/68/pc Detroit..........34/28/016...33/23/s. 39/29/sn Philadelphia.....47/35/0 04..43/29/pc...42/39/r Johanneshurg....84/71/0.00... 79/57/t ..79/57ls TelAviv.........68/59/000..64/52/sh. 65/49lpc Duluth...........19/9/011..22/17/pc. 26/10/sn Phoenix.........88/61/000...88/57/s.. 87/Sls Lima...........81l70/000... 81/6it .. 80/71/c Tokyo...........63/46/0.00...59/54/c. 68/57/sh El Paso..........85/60/000...81/53/s .. 77/52/s Pittsburgh.......40/34/0 04 ..38/33/pc. 44/36/sh Lisbon..........61/48/000 60/44/sh 57/42/c Toronto .........28/21/0 01 34/23/pc. 36/32/sn Fairbanks....... 24/12/000. 15/19/pc.l6/11/pc Portland,ME.....37/24/000... 32/17/s .. 34/27/5 London.........46/41 /064 ..48/32/sh. 47/32/sh Vanceuver.......50/41/013..46/36/sh. 52/36/sh Fargo............ 9/ 6/001 ...20/15/c ..21/2/sn Providence......40/29/0 00...41l20ls. 37/32/pc Madrid .........52/43/0.02... 56/34/r. 51/31/pc Vienna..........37/23/0.00...43/29/c.. 36/33/c Flagstaff........62/32/0.00...61730/s.. 59/31/s Raleigh.........78/46/0.00...56/38/c. 49/48/sh Manila..........88/77/000..88/74/pc. 90/71/pc Warsaw.........32/14/0.00...35/24/s .. 3U28/c

Eugene homelesstry living in experimental shelters By Edward Russo The Eugene Register-Guard

EUGENE — Next time you complain about your house being too small, think about Mark Hubbell, Diane Sciacca or Phill Bregg. They are among the people in Eugene who reside in 6-footby-10-foot living spaces, in an experimental type of housing for the homeless called Conestoga huts. Some of the huts could become the first shelters at Opportunity Village Eugene, a proposed homeless community on city property on Garfield Street. Hubbell lives in a Conestoga hut at the Episcopal Church of the Resurrection on Hilyard Street. He said the value of having a home again— even a temporary, extremely small one — is "immeasurable." «You really can't put a price on it,n he said. "When you become homeless, your day-today life is about survival." "It's home," Hubbell said of the hut. "It gives yott security." Two other huts are on the church's parking lot, under oak trees. Three other huts are at Westside Apostolic Church on Grant Street. The Unitari an Universalist Church i n Eugene plans to put two Conestoga huts on its property by the end of the month. Assembled by volunteers out ofnew and donated materialsfor a few hundred dollars apiece, the huts are being placed on the church properties as part of the city-sponsored overnight camping program forhomeless people. Managed by St.Vincent de Paul, the program lets people sleep in vehicles, including old motorhomes and trailers, on privately owned land, including church properties, in Eugene and Springfield. The Eugene City Council last December expanded the program to accept huts. St. Vincent de Paul is willing to accept more huts if it can find additional sites through agreeable property owners, said program manager Keith Heath.

./ GetawaY ~I

ll

JkCAI'IIOOM 'r O O Chris Pietsch /The Register-Guard

Mark Hubbell sits on the porch of his Conestoga Hut recently in the parking Iot of the Episcopal Church of the Resurrection in Eugene. The shelter is one of the first, small portable living structures for homeless people that has been built as part of a demonstration project by the city of Eugene and area shelter advocates. Vehicle campers are asked to follow overnight camping rules at the sites, including no drugs, alcohol, violence or panhandling. "If you are at a church, you can't approach parishioners after the services," Heath said. "There are basic rules and regLtlations and one would think that if you are on a church site, that you are on holy ground and there as just some things that yOu dOn't dO.« Homeless advocates and church leaders who formed the nonprofit group Opportunity Village Eugene are raising money to buy materials to make more huts. They hope some of the structures can be moved this summer to the proposed Opportunity Village site on Garfield Street, near Roosevelt Boulevard. "Some ofthe churches may want to retain their huts, but those that don't will go to the village," said Jean Stacey, a member of the Opportunity

mingling with church members in various ways, Was said, including attending c hurch potlucks and using the church kitchen to prepare meals. "We are building community with them here," he said. The wood huts, mounted on concreteblocks, have a front wall with a door and a back wall with a window, attached to an insulated floor. The structures are covered with a curved roof that extends down the sides, giving the huts their Conestoga wagon-like appearance. The roof and side walls are made from wire livestock fencing bent over the top of wood framing and covered with plastic and insulation. The huts were created by Erik de Btthr, a 31-year-old Eu-

gene designer and builder of

small houses for what he calls "community village living." He builds the floors, walls and other hut components at his shop on Grant Street, next Village board. to Westside Apostolic Church. The Rev. Brent Was, priest The parts are taken to veat the Episcopal Church of the hicle camping sites and asResurrection and an Opporsembled by volunteers. tunity Village Eugene board The first huts seem to be member, said th e c h urch's performing well, though de board was happy to allow the Buhr lengthened the struchuts on church property. The tures by tw o f eet s o t h ey church had previously partici- would have a larger covered pated in the vehicle camping front porch. "This is still beta testing" he program. Hubbell and Sciacca are sard.

Enjoy a spectacular 5-nighI French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays, Getaways Travel and The Bulletin. This fabulous trip for tvvo includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights'accommodation af Borci Bora Pearl Beach Resort 8c Spcg.A prize package valued at $7,000 -0.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ORTO SUBSCRIBE, CALLTHE BULLETIN AT

,

541-385-5800

For complete rules and regulations, visit www.bendbullefin.com/vacafionrtJles or stop by The Bulletin af 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Additional entry forms are available in newspapers for sale across Central Oregon and in the lobby of TheBulletin. Entry forms should be delivered or mailed fo TheBulletin. Last day fo enter is March 22, 2013 af noon. Winner will be drawn March 25, 2013.

«

*Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELESand Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required.

M Ce ~ ~ ~

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~ OIPRCIIAIL IUILILIR'l'IIN CIKMWAVS VIRAVR VACAI'HQN CEMWM' $%KKHMKB KMYIRV IFOIRM Sign me up to win The Bulletin's Sixth Annual Subscriber Vacation Getaway Sweepstakes! Official entry form only, No other reproductions are accepted. NAME:

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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2

Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6

© www.bendbulletin.com/community

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

SPOTLIGHT

est- e t

A bartender

manages the vacant bar at The Gallery 301, a combination art gallery, wine and tapas bar lodged in a historic bank building in downtown Hood River.

rrn

j; . Iev

ote

Submitted image

Third-grader Jorun Downing's winning entry in the 2013 Mini Pole Pedal Paddle logo contest.

By John Gottberg Anderson

Winner picked for Mini PPPlogo Jorun Downing, a third-grader at Seven Peaks School, won the art competition to create

the official logo for the 2013 Mini Pole Pedal Paddle T-shirt. Her art

inspire awe at any time of year. Most museums and historic attractions are HOOD RIVERopen year-round, albeit with abbreviinter is a sl ow time of a t ed winter hours. y ear in t h e Columbia The m a i n streets of Hood River River Gorge . Fruit or a n dThe Dalles are well known to chards are not yet i n re g u lar visitors. Shops, restaurants a n d hotels on main streets and at Inblossom; waters haven 't warmed sufficiently for terstate84 exits atriver sports. tract business We NORTHWEST TRAVEL Some residents a magnet draws of Hood River and xt weep: Las Tregas,old-style metal. But there's The Dalles may much more to both tote their skis or of these Oregon snowboards uphill to M ount Hood c o m munities, and to th e 22-mile Meadows resort, but m any more d r i ve between. simply bide their time, enjoying the On my o w n r e cent mid-winter region's beers and winesastheywait s w i n g t hrough the towns on the for spring sunlight to onceagainkiss O r e gon side of the Gorge, I found the apple and pear trees,and sparkle a n opportunity to look beyond the off the crests of breakingwaves. obvious, to gaze into back streets In the meantime, visitors may still a n d basements, to drive into neighenjoy the dramatic views for which b o r hoods that are not as often seen the Gorge is so well kn own. Mult- b y c a sual tourists. And I found a nomah Falls and dozens of other number of placesworth the extra watetfalls, especially w est of Cas- e x p loration. cade Locks; vantage points such as Rowena Crest, between Mosier and Central The Dalles The Dalles; and the ceaseless flow P erhaps no community in O r of one of America's great rivers will egon brings so many key chapters of regional history together as The Dalles. For The Bulletin

• An exploratory visit to TheDallesandHood River

was chosen from 40 entries. Jorun will be awarded

Q UL UMB A/

Q

a gift from Saxon's, shoes from Teva,a Round Table pizza party

/

Hood River Mosier

for her classand a free entry in the Mini Pole Pedal Paddle.

W,Ar S H I N G T 0 N

Finalists and prizewinners included Kaylee Carlton, a fourth-grader

Hood River The Dalles

from Miller Elementary, Claire McDonald, a second-graderfrom Highland Elementary, Sam

OREGON

ree Hodes~

.Send

Greg Cross /The Bulletin

Henry, a sixth-grader from High Desert Middle

School, and MeganAn-

See Gorge /C4

derson, a sixth-grader from Cascade Middle

School.

'IHH

The Mini Pole Pedal Paddle will take place

!

'~k:

May19 in the Les

r' /

Schwab Amphitheater.

Teams of six participants between first and sixth grade will compete in river rafting (with a

guide), biking, an obstacle course and arun.

Group seeks educators The National Alliance on Mental lllness is

seeking Central Oregon residents interested in

becoming Basics educators. Those interested would take a training in Portland April 5-7 and

then commit to teaching two classes on Basics. The NAMI Basics is

a peer-education program designed to help parents and caregivers of children who have

rel

serious mental illness or emotional disturbance.

The program is free and lasts for six weeks.

The class is designed to promote communication and coping skills in

parents. The training in Portland is free and will

take place at Legacy Meridian Park Medical Center in Tualatin. Ap-

plications are dueMarch 22. Individuals must be

NAMI members (or join the organization by the

due date). Applicants should also be aparent or caregiver to someone who began experiencing

Photos by John Goitberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin

The Baldwin Saloon, built in 1876, was a working saddlery for decades until new owners refurbished and began serving meals in 1991. Behind its 18-inch-thick stone walls, The Dallas restaurant displays a fine-art collection of landscape art — and several bar nudes.

mental health illness

symptoms before age 13. Contact: www.nami

raises $30,000

Coraline to have cameo at film center event

The12th Annual Make-A-Wish Radiothon

By David Jasper

oregon.org.

Make-A-Wish

helped raise $30,369 in cash and110,254

frequent flier miles to help grant wishes for Central Oregon children

who are living with a terminal disease. The two-day event was held

at Subaru of Bendand featured Horizon Broad-

casting Group personalities DaveClemens, Robin Fox, David Miller, Debby Beaver, Jim

Schoebel andJohn Tesh. — From staff reports

The Bulletin

Puppets, film, beer, wine and more will be on hand Friday evening at Jefferson County Library's Rodriguez Annex in Madras, where the library will hold a fundraiser for its Film Center. Those headed to the event will have the chance to see rare footage from the making of the films "Coraline" (2009)

and "ParaNorman" (2012).

Mark Shapiro, of LAIKA, Inc., the Portland animation studio that brought those stop-motion films to the

screen, will have along with him the Coraline puppet and ParaNorman zombie puppets used in the making of the

If you go Details: • Jefferson County Library Film Center Fundraiser, 7-9

films (see "If you go"). And on Saturday, Shapiro will host a free film workshop offering do's and don'ts and tips on marketing, along with a QgrA session. Suggested donation to Friday evening's event is $15. Saturday's workshop is free. LAIKA is owned by Nike's Phil Knight, and his son, animator Travis Knight, serves as its president and CEO. See Film center /C3

p.m. Friday; $15 suggested donation

• Film workshop, 10-11:30 a.m. Saturday; free Where:Jefferson County Library's Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. E St., Photo courtesy LAIKA, Inc

Behind-the-scenes footage from "ParaNorman," an animated film about a boy who takes on ghosts,zombies and adults to save his town, will be on hand at Friday's event in Madras.

Madras Contact:www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351


C2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

M II ESTONE~

FormsforengagementweddinganniversaryorbirtitdayannouncementsareavaiiabieatTheBugetin i777sw c h andterAve.,send orby emaaing milestones@bendbulletifI.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.

MARRIAGE

ANNIVERSARIES

e'

„t

x

Srgrry

Ingrid Folkestad and Jordan Senior

Folkestad — Senior

land State University, where she studied liberal arts. She Ingrid Elizabeth Folkestad taught E n glish a t p r i v ate and Jordan Anthony Senior s chools in V i etnam and i s were married Jan. 5 in Leeds currentlypursuing a master's Town Hall in Leeds, England. degree in Amsterdam. A reception followed at the The groom is the son of Adelphi pub in Leeds. Paul and Joanna Senior, of The bride is the daughter S cunthorpe, E n gland. H e of Randy and Janis Grout, is a 1995 graduate of Les Be of Bend and Chris Folkestad Avenue in Scunthorpe and and Pam Resnik, o f P o r t- a 1999 graduate of L e eds land. She attended Summit College of Music, where he High school, is a 2005 gradu- studied h omeopathic j a zz. ate of St. Mary's Academy He works as a musician and in Portland, attended Pacific event producer. Northwest College of Art and They w i ll sett l e in is a 2010 graduate of Port- Amsterdam.

Ron and Marilyn Jay

Dave and Lorene Houston

Jay

Houston

Flora), al l o f Pri n e ville; 12 grandchildren; and 15 Ron and Marilyn (Ellis) great-grandchildren. Jay, of Prineville, will celThey owned and operated ebrate their 60th wedding Park Service Chevron Staanniversary with a f a mily tion in Prineville from 1953dinner on April 13 at Juniper 1977 and the City Center Golf Course in Redmond. Motel in Prineville from 1971 T he couple w ere m a r - until their retirement in 1992. r ied March 29 , 1 953, i n They enjoy traveling and Bend. They have three chil- playing cards with relatives dren, DeAnn (and Gary) and friends. Frazee, of Bend, Tom (and They have lived in Central M arlise) a n d L y n n ( a n d Oregon for 62 years.

Indian weddings,SouthernCalifornia style By Nita Lelyveld Los Angeles Times

ENGAGEMENT

t

( +~,~, ',w/ Tyler Levin and Gina Collins

Collins — Levin

where she received a dent al a ssistant d e gree. S h e G ina Collins a n d T y l e r works as a dental assistant Levin, both of Bend, plan to in Bend. marry Aug. 3 in Salem. The T he future groom is t h e future bride is the daughter son of Jeff and Ruth Levin, John and M o n ica C ollins, of Keizer. He is a 2005 graduof Redmond. She is a 2006 ate of McNary High School in graduate of Redmond High Keizer and a 2010 graduate School, attended W e stern of Oregon State University, Oregon University and is a where he studied business 2009 graduate of Concorde management. He works for Career College in Portland, Nike in Bend.

Lori (and Joe) Buchanan, all of Bend, and Kim (and Dave and L orene (Sch- Misti), of Long Beach, Calif.; neider) Houston, of B end, 10 grandchildren and two w ill c elebrate their 6 0 t h great-grandchildren. wedding anniversary with Mr. Houston owned and a trip to Orlando, Fla. and operated DL H Co n strucplan to have a reception this tion and Mrs. Houston is a summer. homemaker. The couple enT he couple w ere m a r - joy volunteering at Westside ried March 22, 1953, in El- Church, traveling and spendwood, Neb. They have four ing time with family. children, Connie (and Bob) They have lived in Central Stratton, Dave (and Leslie), Oregon for 20 years.

L OS ANGELES — T h e b ride wa s M e xican. T h e groom was Iranian. Vanessa Domenech of Best Dream Weddings brought in mariachis and belly dancers. The wedding planner and resident of L o s A n geles's Woodland Hills n eighborhood has done Latin wed-

dings and Filipino weddings. She'd like to try her hand at Chinese ones. And while she's planned Sikh nuptials, she has yet to do Hinduwhich is why she signed up for "Indian Weddings 101." Knowledge of white dresses and waltzes may be all you need in some places. In the Southern California wedding business, it will only get you so far. The seminar held on a recent evening was organized by a nuptial clearinghouse in the heart of L.A.'s Little India, and it promised to open up new worlds. Wedding Store 24 had assembled a parade of speakers to break down Hindu and Muslim ceremonies, bridal henna, Bollywood music and South Asian etiquette do's and don'ts. More than 100 people — including regulars on the Indian wedding circuit — came to learn, find business and

mingle. Astheyarrived atthegrand old Ebell of Los Angeles club, they weregreeted outside by a white horse adorned in bejeweled cloth, ready for an Indian groom to ride to his wedding ceremony. Magnolia's owner, Enchanted Carriages o f Moorpark, serves t h e South Asian market as well as those looking for horse-

d ecoratively applied t o t h e bride's hands and feet). A Japanese American specialist in South Asian weddings described the jai mala, or flower garlands, that Hindu brides and grooms place around each other's necks. A DJ went over the basics of beloved Bollywood numbers (reception staples). And all the experts told attendees to be prepared for very large and lavish gatherings, often with some 500 guests. Know that an Indian wedding Robert Gauthier / Los Angeles Times celebration typically stretches Dancer Ashley Rogers, of the Karmagraphy Bollywood Fusion on for days and that it's not just studio, leads guests to the dining hall at the Wedding Store 24 the couple that plans it but often fashion show and Indian wedding exhibition at the Wilshire Ebell many other family members. Theater in Los Angeles last month. A Muslim planner advised women working on M uslim weddings not to be"tootouchy," drawn Victorian carriages brought Alka Seltzer. especially with the men. If a and pumpkin-shaped CinderMore Bollywood dancing man nods, she said, just nod ella coaches. followed (perhaps to accelerate back, don't try to shake hands During drinks in the art sa- digestion and boost energy) be- or "initiate." lon, two musicians (who were fore the main work of the eveOne rule seemed to run not Indian) sat lotus-style on ning got underway. through all the rules, however: a platform, playing tabla and In the club's formal dining This being Southern California, Indian slide guitar. room, a handbook chock-full almost no rule is set in stone. Domenech swapped stories of Indian wedding terminolwith photographer Karina ogy had been placed on each Pires, who told her about the seat. Speakers started with the wedding of a Chinese bride basics: the Indian subcontinent and an Indian groom — how is huge and diverse, Hinduism asD in the Hindu rites, the bride is a religion and Muslims don't stepped on seven symbolic eat pork. Then they moved on piles of rice and then, in Chi- to the finer points of Indian nese tradition, she served weddings, including the Hindu tea to her parents and new baraat (the groom's processionin-laws. al on horse, elephant or by car), After drinks came a buffet the Muslim nikkah (religious dinner in the Ebell's enormous contract) and the popularity of • I • lounge, where a multiethnic such symbols as peacocks and r • troupe of sparkly Bollywood mangoes in mehndi (the henna dancers swirled and spun up and down a staircase. Placards explained the contents of each chafing dish — nan, aloo ~l

The Bulletin Mn.Es TONE

gobi, gulab jamun — although one older attendee was not suNciently assured to keep from telling people that she'd

G UI BIRTHS Delivered at St. Charles Bend

Robert and Jennifer McKennan, a boy,SullivanJosephMcKennan,6 pounds, 11 ounces, March 4. Kreighton and Katie Edmonds, a boy, Nathanie lJohnJosephEdmonds,8 pounds, 4 ounces, March 6. Kyle and Michelle Watt, a girl, Caralyne AlexandraWatt, 6 pounds, 12 ounces, March10. John and Dina Sullivan, a boy, GannonIsaacSullivan,8 pounds,9 ounces, March 3. TimothyandNyssa Billingsley, a girl, Calla Lucca Billingsley, 7 pounds, 6 ounces, March 7. Jeremy and BethGuy, a boy, Tabor William Guy, 7pounds, 13ounces,

MERRILL LYNCH

March 7. Willie and Margaret SittinghorseKirk, a girl, Juanita Lolita Sittinghorse-Kirk, March 7.

WELCOMES

s •

THE GREER GROUP, OUR NEWEST TEAM.

Dellvered at St. Charles Redmond

Scott and Michelle Pierce, a boy, Collin Martin Pierce, 9 pounds, I ounce, March 5. Jerry and Alisha Capson, a boy, Joshua Stewart Capsott, 7 pounds, 4 ounces, March 5. Lonny RosaandKatelind Penhollow, a boy, ZaneLewyt Rosa, 8pounds 5 ounces, March 6. Jon and Cami yarcoe, a girl, Jordee Madison Varcoe, 6 pounds,11 ounces, March5.

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If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers:

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SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C3

Film center

o

o e s o u on' nee o eave playing a baby grand piano

McClatchy-Tribune News Service While many travelers treat the hotel as simply a spot to sleep while vacationing, some of us enjoy a one-stop shop that has everything from awardwinning restaurants and daytime entertainment to a great location and comfortable accommodations. For those who prefer an a l l -encompassing hotel, the members and editors of travel website VirtualTourist.com have found "The Top 5 Hotels You Don't Need to Leave."

v

hi

• W South Beach — Miami When you're located in the middle of prime South Beach real estate, only six b locks from the pedestrianmecca of Lincoln Road, it may be hard to stay inside all day. Nevertheless, the W South Beach provides guests with m any p ersuasive a r g uments f o r neverleaving the property. To start, the hotel's two restaurants are excellent: Mr. Chow serves its Chinese cuisine in a see-and-be-seen venue, while The Dutch, a m odern take on theoyster bar, serves delicious comfort food in a beautiful but unpretentious setting. In addition to a nightclub on the premises, the hotel's communal spaces are creatively allocated leaving many dark corners and comfy couches, both indoors and outdoors, for lounging and drinking. The hotel also features a heated outdoor pool, a Bliss Spa, a full fitness center, and the sands of South Beach and the Atlantic Ocean are only a few short steps away.

• Faena Hotel 8 Universe — Buenos Aires, Argentina Few hotels are as grand and comprehensive as the Faena; after all, it single-handedly revived an entire district of the Paris of South America. Built in the Puerto Madero area of Buenos Aires, the complex began a complete revitalization within the district. Designed by Philippe Starck, the hotel has both rooms and resi-

v

McClatchyirribune News Service

The view of the Pacific Ocean from Namale Resort in Fiji. All activities are included in a stay at Namale, from guided hikes to water-centric sports like snorkeling, water-skiing, kayaking and scuba diving. dences, fostering a sense of community as well as a great variety of venues and spaces throughout the complex. Food is served at El Mercado, the hotel's traditional restaurant, as well as the Bistro, a bright white Philippe Starck creation that serves a mix of European and Argentinean dishes. The Poolbar provides some serious-people watching, as well as food and drinks, and stays open to 3 am every night. If you'd prefer to catch a true performance, El Cabaret also presents a nightly show that explores the history of tango with food and drink served throughout the performance. For those who need to recover from overindulging, the hotel's second floor features a Spa Hammam & G y m , o ffering

daily yoga lessons, crystal and stone energy work, and more traditional spa therapies.

• Casa Camper — Berlin The Camper brand, famous for its footwear and philosophy that luxury is found in simplicity, authenticity, and sustainability, has expanded

its hotel chain to a new culture capital: Berlin. Casa Camper Berlin occupies a b u i lding in the heart of the Mitte area that is surrounded by up-andcoming art galleries and only a few minutes from Berlin's Museumsinsel (Museum Island). On the top floor of the hotel, Tentempie offers views and dining that are only accessible to hotel guests — food, coffee, and alcoholic beverages are available 24 hours a day and are completelyfree. A cooked-to-order breakfast is even included. Unlike many hotel lounges that beckon to be used but remain empty, many visitors commented that the comfortable couches and chess boards invited lounging and enjoying a glass of wine while checking email with the free Wi-fi. If you're looking for a more traditional dining experience,the ground floorof the hotel hosts dos palillos, a restaurant serving Asian tapas by Albert Raurich, former head chef of el Bulli, Ferran Adria's restaurant. Th e r e staurant, which recently won a Michelin star, is set up with an entirely

open kitchen in the middle of the space, allowing a direct dialogue between the 10 chefs and 30 diners. Each diner has a front-row seat to the action, watching some of E u rope's most renowned chefs prepare dishes from conception to completion. After this spectacle, guests may want to unwind in the spacious co-ed sauna or burn off some calories on the multiple cardio machines in the fitness center, both complementary to all guests and open 24 hours a day.

• The Istanbul Edition — Istanbul The Istanbul Edition is the first hotel in a new branded concept by Ian Schrager, of M organs Hotel Group a n d Gramercy Park Hotel fame in partnership with Marriot I nternational. Choosing I s tanbul as the first location for the new concept, the hotel is designed to provide personal, modern service with one of a kind food, beverage and entertainment offerings within the hotel. Upon entering the

property, you'll find someone

in the middle of the expansive lobby. The primary restaurant is Cipriani, an offshoot of the Venetian original, and the first floor bar, Gold Bar, includes a twenty-foot aquarium and low built-in sofas inspired by the traditional Turkish tea room. An exclusive nightclub, Billionaire, can also be found in the hotel for those who wish to take the revelry into the later h ours. In keeping with t h e hotel's trend for only partnering with the best brands, the ESPA spa encompasses 20,000 square feetand three-fl oors of the hotel. In addition to the traditional sauna and steam room, the spa also has a snow room, essentially a w a l k-in freezer with snow, for further hot and cold therapeutic experiences. The hotel's other unique spaces include a drawing room with modern raised fireplaces and a state-of-theart screening room. In keeping with the focus on service, visitors repeatedly comment that the concierge service and staff is impeccable.

• Namale ResortSavusavu, Fiji Our last pick is one that you won't need to leave during your vacation, but you'll also be tempted to never go home. The Namale Resort, the renowned all-inclusive resort and spa in Fiji, is a special combination of remote yet flawless luxury. The all-inclusive amenities include daily champagne breakfast, three-course lunches, and five-course dinners, with no limitations on alcoholic beverages. All activities are included, from guided hikes to any number of watercentric sports, like snorkeling, water-skiing, kayaking and scuba diving. One activity not to miss is spotting spinner dolphins in n earby Natewa Bay — an early morning boat ride will take you to watch the dolphins feed after which you can snorkelthe coral reef and spot the bay's variety of tropical fish.

Continued from C1 T he c o mpany's n e x t animated f eature, "The Boxtrolls," will premiere in October. When the library's Film C enter C ommittee w a s looking to inv olve a fi lm

company in its fundraiser, "We came up withLAIKA," says Maura Sha piro S chw a r t z , a member of the committee who lives in Madras.

"(Shapiro) called me right back. He really loves coming to small communities and bringing puppets and letting people know about LAIKA and animation and ... was just very excited about coming down and being able to do this with us.

Shapiro manages mark eting efforts f o r b o t h LAIKA's corporate identity and the films the studio makes. Schwartz says the f undraiser will h elp t h e library's Film Center continue to show three movies a month from September to June. Depending on the film screening, the events draw anywhere from 15 viewers to a f u l l h o use, which is closer to 70. According to Schwartz, the Film Center is equipped with a large screen, surround sound and Blu-ray projector. Additionally, the library s hows an o u t door f i l m one day each summer in an event c alled S creen on the Green. "We show avant garde, international and classic movies," said Schwartz, w ho's s erved on the committee for five years. "It's pretty expensive to continue to show all these," she said. "We like to be able to offerthis as a free service in our community." Shapiro "loves doing this type of hands-on work with filmmakers, so we're en-

couraging people of all ages to attend," Schwartz said. "Come on up to Madras." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper®bendbulletin.com

Southern California beachcommunities beckon The Washington Post Adapted from th e W ashingtonpost.com Flight Crew chat conductedweekly by the Travel staff of The Washington Post: I'm looking for a nice • small town in Southern California where I can rent a beach house. I'm thinking of something like the Outer Banks. • T here's n o t hing l i k e • the sparsely populated Outer Banks in Southern California. OBX is a seasonal destination dominated by tourists in the summer and relatively empty during w i nter; most people in Southern California call it home year-round. Take a look at the beach communities north of San Diego, including Leucadia and Cardiff-by-theSea in Encinitas. — Carol Sot tili

Q•

A

is too early Q •• toHowplanearly a trip to Disney? We're looking at November or December 2014. If we book a hotel, we'd need a suite for my immediate family, and my inlaws do love the Disney hotels. What about renting a house? . I'm never of the opin. ion that it's too early to

plan. I don't think you need to book j ust y et, a lthough you may want to do it sooner rather than later if you're going around Thanksgiving or Christmas. I recently stayed at a resort property for the first time, and it was pretty great. I appreciated the complimentary transportation to and from the parks and the airport. The extra hours for resort guests are nice, too. Look into the available Disney villas. Several resorts have two-room options. — Becky Krystal After years of t aking Q ..unenthusiastic children to cities with amazing art museums, I'vebeen forced to admit that they just don't enjoy painting and sculpture. Can you recommend any barbecue tours? Bonus points if there's a baseballor science museum, or if we could travel part of the route by train. • Go to Memphis. See a • Redbirds game. Eat at Three Little Pigs, Leonard's, Tom's, Payne's, Central, Cozy Corner, Charlie Vergo's — so many more. You'll have your pick of science museums at the Pink Palace Family of Museums: Sharpe Planetarium,

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Coon Creek Science Center, Lichterman Nature Center. As for traveling part of the route by train: Fly to Chicago or New Orleans, spend a night or two, and then take the City of New Orleans Amtrak to Memphis. Do a n o p en-jaw plane ticket and fly back from Memphis, or get back on the train. — Joe Yonan

pulco, 1,200 miles from Cancun. Use your common sense, and don't hang out in seedy bars or neighborhoods. If you stay in the main resort areas, you'll be safe. — Carol Sottili be passing through Q •• I'llTokyo for a few days.

What shouldn't I miss'? • Go to Tsukiji Fish Mar• ket early one morning We're con s i d ering to see the auction and all the • traveling to C a n c un crazy seafood, then have sushi but are concerned because of for breakfast at one of the atstories about drug traffick- tached places — it's the freshing and a group of women est I've ever had. — JoeYonan tourists getting raped. How risky is travel to a Mexican resort? Do you have any off. Go, anddon'tworry. The • t he-beaten-path s u g . rapes occurred in Aca- gestions for a couple of days in

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March 19th, 2013, Education Meeting SOCIAL SECURITY BENEFITS Presenter:

Francine Marsh, Disability specialist from Abilitree; Ms. Marsh's passion is helping folks with disabilities successfully apply for benefits. When: 3rd Tues. 3/19/13, 7-9 PM Where: St. Charles Medical Center-Bend Conference Room "D" Come learn how to successfully navigate the SSI application process. Find out who qualifies, what supporting data is needed, and other important steps for successful application submission. In addition to the educational topic, attending helps you connect with others interested in supporting, educating and advocating for mental health in our community. View our website www.namicentraloregon.orgfor information on classesand support groups.

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Glass artists create their own forms in the working studio of Nichols Art Glass in The Dalles. Owner Andy Nichols, a former restaurateur, built his own equipment and taught himself the art of glass blowing; he is now well-known for his exquisite fish and flowers.

Gorge

— pays tribute to that time of L her life. OP<N Continued from C1 The Parlour serves more ' s ..I.'. I1. From the Lewis and Clark t han t hree d ozen t eas i n I expedition and Oregon Trail quaint tea sets with handmade i mmigration t h r o ugh l a t e lace doilies. Lunches may in|ts cea 19th-century urban develop- clude fresh Devonshire cream ment and m i d-20th-century scones, chicken-almond tea hydroelectric de v elopment, sandwiches or even traditionBuilt as a steam-powered flour mill in the late 19th century, rebuilt this city of 12,000 people dis- al Australian meat pies. But with modern electric technology in1911, the125-foot-tall Sunshine gstass plays its heritage in a majestic E agy's specialty is A N Z A C Mill is the tallest building in The Dalles. Rechristened the Historic riverside setting. cookies, r olled o a t-and-coSunshine Mill Artisan Plaza, it now houses a boutique winery. Nearly 70 historic commer- conut pastries that honor the cial buildings, more than two famed World War I A u stradozen of them dating from the lia and New Zealand Army Oregon's oldest bookstore, Klindt's Books was established in Cyclists, in particular, love boarding, the town of 7,500 1800s, are preserved within Corps. The Dalles in 1870 and moved to its current location in 1891. With the Rowena Crest hill climb. offerslots of distractions even The Dalles National Historic Nearby in the Trevitt's Ad- only three owners in its 143-year history, the shop specializes in And at the end of their work- when the weather isn't optimal District. In its pioneer heyday, ditional Historic District is one regional authors, many of whom visit and give readings at The out, as often as not, they find for water sports. the town had its share of ho- of The Dalles' most charming Dalles business. a stool or a table at the Thirsty A half-dozen blocks of shops tels, banks, mercantile stores bed-and-breakfast inns. The Woman Pub. Thereare actual- and cafes along Oak Street, the and theaters — as well as sa- Windrider Inn B&B, a 1921 ly two pubs here — the rustic, principal thoroughfare, make loons and brothels, the last of Dutch Colonial-style home on is a short menu of small plates Historic Balch H otel, b uilt European-style "Little Pub" itan easy place to spend severwhich closed as recently as the the National Register of His- to accompany wine tastings. of bricks in 1907. It was purand the spacious "Bigger Pub," al hours browsing. Most estab1950s. toric Places, was converted Long-range plans are for offic- chased in 2006 by Jeff and where full meals are served at lishments could be described Among them is the Baldwin to a four-room guest house in es and condominiums on the Samantha Irwin, who continlarge antique tables. Owners as cozy, their wares packed Saloon, built in 1876 at East 1987 by an avid local board upper floors. But visitors can ued an ongoing restoration Manda and J.R. Frakes prom- into limited floor space. First and Court streets. It's a sailor named Chuck Langley. still explore the original inner and opened the old hotel on its ise "great beer, good food and Continued next page full block off the main drag be- It continues to cater to river- workings of the wheat mill on 100th birthday as a 19-room amazing people." side the railroad tracks, but its sports lovers with its low rates a self-guided tour. bed-and-breakfast inn. With red-brick exterior is not hard and sailboard storage. Another historic structure, no TVs, radios or telephones, Hood River's main drag to spot. The Baldwin was a A little farther west is Nich- and one several blocks "out it's truly a getaway, although it About five miles west of iPPu.re Coadk Co. working saddlery for decades ols Art Glass. It wasn't easy to of the way," is the Riverenza does have wireless Internet. Mosier, Interstate 84 races past before new owners stripped spot on the drive-by, but having C afe and G a thering H a l l . Another tiny community is Hood River. Famed worldwide and refurbished the old build- been inside, I won't soon forget Eight blocks uphill from the Mosier, population about 450. for its windsurfing and kiteing and turned it into a restau- this 2,700-square-footroom. Sunshine Mill, this century- It's worth a brief detour off Inrantin 1991. Blown-glass forms of salmon old stone church, once home terstate 84 between The Dalles Bend www-.AgateBeachMotel-.com N ow a p o pular stop f o r and flowers, as well as various to a Church of Christ congre- and Hood River, as much for Private, vintagge gocean.front getaway Redmond lunch and dinner, the Baldwin abstract forms, occupied the gation, was purchased in 2004 its quaint historic buildings as se pogt, QR>. John Day serves a s t eak-and-seafood flashy gallery inside the street by Greg and Molly Ott, who for its location at the west end '! + 1 -800-755-5674 menu every day but Sunday. entrance. In the rear, two art- moved into the basement and of the historic highway that Burns Behind its 18-inch-thick stone ists created their own forms in turned the former sanctuary climbs to Rowena Crest and Lakeview walls, the restaurant displays a working studio. On another into a space for weddings and the Tom McCall Preserve. a fine-art collection of land- visit, I hope to meet the owner, other events. scape art by Joseph Englehart former restaurateur Andy For casual weekday visitors (1867-1915) and several nude N ichols, who built hi s ow n who may not have a wedding portraits by noted California equipment and taught himself in the works, there's still ample painters. the art of glass blowing. reason to visit Riverenza: A Not far around the corner stone courtyard has been conis Oregon'soldest bookstore. The Dalles' east side verted to an espresso bar, open Klindt's Books was established The tallest structure in The until 4 p.m., where Stumptown GOlf 5 COuntry Clllh in 1870 by Frisian immigrant Dalles is th e ol d S unshine Coffee is served with pastries Inwer Nickelsen, who moved Biscuit Mill at the east end of and bagel sandwiches. Est. 1925 his shop across the street to its downtown. Located at the foot Further east — across U.S. current location after an 1891 of Brewery Grade, it was origi- Highway 197, which connects fire. It has had only three own- nally built as a steam-powered The Dalles with Bend — is ers in 143 years. (Nickelsen flour mill in the late 19th cen- my favorite restoration projsold in 1927 to the Weigelt tury. After a 1911 fire, it was ect in The Dalles. Three years family, which transferred title rebuilt using new hydroelec- ago, new owners converted "Classic golf, warm friendships — in Gentral Oregon's most in 1981 to Linda Klindt and her tric technology from the White the hillside Celilo Inn from a late husband, Philip Klindt.) River Dam in Tygh Valley. tacky 1950s motel into a beauc omplete an d c o m f o r t a bl e c o u n t r y c l u b . . . s i n c e 1 9 2 5 . " Today the store continues Today, more than a century tiful boutique property with a to exhibit new books and clas- later, the 125-foot-tall build- view overlooking the Bonnesic used editions in its original ing still houses the equipment ville Dam. It even offers com19th-century b oo k s helves, that was built into it. In fact, plimentary wine tastings each with stationery and greeting new owners have developed afternoon. cards. a design that i n corporates the unique and historical me- Midway surprises Historic homes chanical shaft-and-belt drive Often overlooked by Gorge In an 1865 Victorian home, system, powered by electric visitors is tiny Dufur, 13 miles hidden away in a residential motors said to have been de- south of The Dalles on Highn eighborhood a d jacent t o signed by T h o mas E dison way 197. The farming town of downtown, is the ANZAC Tea himself. 600 is especially proud of its P arlour. Although she w a s T oday, th e b u i l ding i s Dufur Living History Museborn and raised in Hermiston, known as the Historic Sun- um, which each August hosts owner Bev Eagy spent her shine Mill Artisan Plaza. On t he D ufur T h r eshing B e e young adulthood in Sydney, its ground floor is a boutique — perhaps the only threshing Australia, and this small cafe winery and retail space. Live event in the United States to — open from ll a.m. to 4 p.m. music is performed here sev- use horse-drawn machinery. Wednesdays t o S a t u rdays eral nights a week, and there Just down the street is the '

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From previous page That's not a p r oblem for the imposing Gallery 3 0 1, however. Lodging in a historic bank building, its Grecian columns rising high above Hood River's main street, this combination art gallery, wine and tapas bar displays an intriguing variety of creations — canvas, metal, fabric — including co-owner Claudia Lane's own collection of 1960s'psychedelic concert posters. Yet I a lways get a sense that potential patrons are intimidated by the building's size. They shouldn't be. Across Oak Street, at the rear of a courtyard behind another wine shop, Zella Shoes and Treasures has a great selection of women's footwear and handbags. It's not obvious to casual foot traffic, but seems to have no problem attracting business. I'm sure the same philosophy is true for women's shoes as it is for Knot Another Hat, located on the second floor of an office-and-retail building a few blocks east. "You don't need foot traffic when you are a yarn shop," owner Sarah Keller told me. "They sniff you out." Knitting enthusiasts love the wide choice of colors and fabrics sold here with a view toward the Columbia. Side streets extending north of Oak encloseseveral notable hideaway restaurants. There's the North Oak Brasserie (now under renovation) on T h ird Street, Nora's Table on Fifth, and a block further, the Sixth Street Bistro. A s w e ll , Feliza Greenwald's outstanding Knead Bakery caters a steady clientele just south of Nora's. The Double Mountain Brewery & Taproom, at the foot of Fourth Street by C o lumbia Avenue, is a destination wellknown to Oregon beer lovers, even if its cobalt-blue building takes a little extra effort to find. And the Stella Fino winery tasting room, in a basement unit on Second Street, is worth searching out for its I talian-style v arietals f r o m Walla Walla vineyards. Continue downhill and east from here,past the seasonal Mount Hood Railroad depot, to find Springhouse Cellar. Ensconced in a co n v erted 1920s cannery, Springhouse is more than a winery — it's a major event venue, where live music several nights a week, especially Tuesdays, inspires a party atmosphere. On Cascade Avenue, almost opposite the train depot, the discreet Waucoma Club is a classy and classic bar and grill that seems to belong in the speakeasy era. Opposite is Artifacts, a store whose tag line — "Good Books and Bad

Expenses

If yougo

• Gas, Bend to Hood River

INFORMATION

via The Dalles and return,

• Hood River County Chamber of Commerce. 541-3862000, 800-366-3530, www.

294 miles © $3.70/gallon: $43.51 • Lunch, ANZAC Tea Parlour, The Dalles:$11.95

hoodriver.org • The Dalles Area Chamberof Commerce. 404 W.Second

• Dinner, Baldwin Saloon, The Dalles:$40

St., The Dalles; 541-2962231, 800-255-3385, www. thedalleschamber.com

• Lodging (one night), Celilo Inn, The Dalles:$104.75 • Breakfast, The Riverenza, The Dalles:$7.50 • Lunch, Sixth Street Bistro, Hood River:$14

LODGING • Celilo Inn. 3550 E. Second St., The Dalles; 541-769-0001, www.celiloinn.com. Rates

• Dinner, Stonehedge Gardens, Hood River:$45 • Lodging (one night), Vagabond Lodge, Hood

from $97

River:$59.40 • Breakfast, Knead Bakery, Hood River:$10

• Lunch, Marley's Corner Pub, Hood River:$11 • Total:$346.11

Outside of downtown Hood River, several venues are worthy of special note. Among them is my favorite Gorge restaurant, Stonehedge Gardens. Mike and Shawna Caldwell — Mike is a Hood River native, a former winery cellar master and a published author — bought a large estate in a p r i vate woodland at the western edge of Hood River in 2000. Today it is a continental-style, fine-dining restaurant where garden weddings are booked throughout the summer. Look for a small sign pointing up a gravel road, into the trees, off East Cascade Avenue. I was delighted to stumble upon Marley's Corner Pub on my last trip through Hood River. It's on 13th Street in the neighborhood known as The Heights. This tiny pocket pub, which can expand outdoors with a few more seats in summer, specializes in s erving Cornish pasties of beef, chicken and vegetable. It's the sort of placewhere Icould become a regular. Destined to become a major attraction in Hood River — but for now, a hidden discovery — is Pfriem Family Brewers. It's a brand-new brew pub in a brand-new office-and-warehouse complex beside Hood River Waterfront Park, the top local venue for water sports. Board sailors no longer have to climb the hill to downtown to relax with a frothy brew.

• Stonehedge Gardens. 3405 CascadeAve., Hood River; 541-386-3940, www.

• Windrider Inn B8 B. 200 W. Fourth St., The Dalles; 541296-2607, www.windriderinn.

com. Rates from $45 DINING • ANZAC Tea Parlour. 218 W. Fourth St., The Dalles; 541296-5877, www.anzactea.

com. Lunch Wednesdayto Saturday. Budget • Baldwin Saloon. 205 Court St., The Dalles; 541-296-5666,

www.baldwinsaloon.com Lunch and dinner Mondayto Saturday. Moderate • Knead Bakery. 102 Fifth St., Hood River; 541-436-2866,

www.kneadhoodriver.com Breakfast and lunch Tuesday to Saturday. Budget • Marley's Corner Pub. 1216 C St., Hood River; 541-386-

0153, www.marleyscorner. com. Lunch and dinner Tuesday to Sunday. Budget • Nora's Table. 110 Fifth St., Hood River; 541-387-4000, http:I/norastable.wordpress. com. Breakfast Friday to

Sunday, dinner nightly. Moderate to expensive

• The Riverenza Gathering Hall & Cafe. 401 E. Tenth St., The Dalles; 541-980-1743,

www.riverenza.net. Breakfast and lunch Monday to Friday. Budget • Sixth Street Bistro. 509 I find good motel value at the Vagabond Lodge. Owned by the same family since it opened in 1954, this accommodation has five blufftop acres overlooking the river near the much-more-famous Columbia

I

• The Waucoma Club. 207

CascadeAve., HoodRiver;

,,

We make advancedcomprehensive

541-387-2583, www.

waucomaclub.com. Lunch Saturday andSunday, dinner every day. Moderate

dental careaffordable.

• Double Mountain Brewery 8 Taproom. 8 Fourth St., Hood River; 541-387-0042, www.

Plans aslow as $24.99/mo. As a cost-saving alternative to dental insurance, our membership plans include periodic cleanings, regular and emergency exams, X-rays. 15% discount on all other services. All with the latest technology.

doublemountainbrewery.com • Historic Sunshine Mill Artisan Plaza. 901 E. Second St., The Dalles; 541-298-8900, www. sunshinemill.com

Same daycrowns coming soon! Newest technology. Superior quality. Omnicam eliminates impressions.

Portway Ave., Suite 101, Hood River; 541-321-0490, www.

pfriembeer.com • Springhouse Cellar. 13

Gilmore Dental

Railroad Ave., Hood River; 541-308-0700, www.

Treating People Not Just Teeth

springhousecellar.com • Stella Fino Winery. 111 Second St., Suite 200

(downstairs), Hood River, 509240-2748, www.stellafino.com •ThirstyW oman Pub.904

Second Ave., Mosier; 541-4780199 or 541-490-2022, www. thirstywoman.com. Dinner

Wednesday to Sunday.Budget

541-504-5707

OTHER SHOPSAND ATTRAGTIONS • Artifacts. 202 Cascade Ave., Hood River; 541-387-2482. • Dufur Living History Museum. 010 Main St., Dufur; 541-467-2205, www. dufurthreshingbee.org • The Gallery 301. 301 Oak St., Hood River; 541-436-0281,

I

www.thegallery301.com • Klindt's Books. 315 E. Second St., The Dalles; 541-296-3355, www.klindtsbooks.com • Knot Another Hat. 16 Oak St., Suite 202, Hood River; 541-308-0002, www. knotanotherhat.com • Nichols Art Glass. 912 W. Sixth St., The Dalles; 541-2962143, www.nicholsartglass.

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First Place: 5200 • Second Place: 5100 Third Place: S75 • Fourth Place 550

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Gorge Hotel. Yet rates begin at just $55 a night. For upscale bed-and-breakfast lovers, the Sakura Ridge BSB offers a taste of farm life in the heart of a 72-acre cherry orchard just outside of town. It's a beautiful spot, and not easy to find. Make a reservation — rates startat $185 a night — and call for directions. Like much of the best of the Gorge, it's off the beaten path.

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25 MileS NOrth ofKlamath FallS 35 MileS SOuth ofCiater Lake =

• '- 4

34333HWy.97 + Chiloquin,OregOn97624

— Reporter: janderson@ bendbufletin.com

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adulthood in Australia.

stonehedgegardens.com. Dinner Tuesday to Sunday. Moderate to expensive.

• Pfriem Family Brewers. 707

www.vagabondlodge.com. Rates from $55

young

liilill(,' " ~ ".66

$185 • Vagabond Lodge.4070 541-386-2992, 877-386-2992,

Away from the core

to moderate

BREWPUBS AND WINERIES

Westcliff Drive, Hood River;

Art" — could not be more appropriate. It does, indeed offer a fine selection of used books and some very a mateurish canvases.

s'a'a

and dinner every day. Budget

• Historic Balch Hotel. 40 S. Heimrich St., Dufur; 541-4672277, www.balchhotel.com. Rates from $75 • Sakura Ridge Bed & Breakfast. 5601 York Hill Drive, Hood River; 541-3862636, 877-472-5872, www.

sakuraridge.com. Rates from

The charming decor of the quaint ANZAC Tea Parlour recalls the owner's

CascadeAve., HoodRiver; 541-386-5737, www. sixthstreetbistro.com. Lunch

=541'.783.7529 )y888-KLAMOYA~

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• Pain or swelling in legs, ankles or feet Photos by John Gottberg Anderson/ For The Bulletin

The Thirsty Woman Pub in tiny Mosier welcomes cyclists on the Historic Columbia River Highway, especially those who have conquered the Rowena Crest hill climb. Owners Manda and J.R. Frakes

promise "great beer, good food andamazing people."

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JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3

SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3

The snow-capped Andes Mountains rise above the vineyards at Vistalba Winery in Mendoza, Argentina.

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DAILY BRIDGE CLUB

A woman times four By FRANK STEWART Tribune MediaServices GJ O

spades, and declarer had the A-J-6 of spades. Cy had to pitch a spade to keep his queen of hearts,and declarer promptly took the K-A of spades,

Cy the Cynic has two unfavorite

holdings. One is a doubleton K-Q, which reminds him of marriage, an institution he distrusts. (Cy says that he who marries best puts it off until it's too late.) The other is a hand with four queens, which reminds him of women, whom h e d i s trusts even more. "Can't live with 'e m o r w i t hout

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McCtatchy-Tribune News Service

rejecting a finesse. Making seven. You c a n gu e s s h o w man y matchpoints East-West scored for minus 1,470. "Blame those women in my life,"

'em," Cy grumbles. So when I watched him pick up

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spade from dummy, and finished the Opening lead — 0 2 clubs. With three tricks left, dummy

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(C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD Edited by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols Lewis "DISORDERLY 93 Mmes., across CONDUCT" By the Pyrenees ALAN ARBESFELD 94 Polite title 95 Puta coaton? ACROSS 96 Inside look, I 1994 Nobel briefly? Peace Pifze 97 LAX postings

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CROSSW ORD SOLUTION IS ON C3

By Anne Z. Cooke

and Steve Haggerty

©2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

MAIPU, Argentina — Ten minutes in the orchard and already my hands felt raw. How do they do this all day without gloves, I wondered, shuffling my feet for a better foothold in Argentina's sandy clay. It was Thursday, the day we'd expected to be tasting wine at the Zuccardi family's finca (ranch) and winery, in Maipu, Mendoza Province. Instead, we w e r e c l awing through a tangle of branches, trying to pick enough olives to feed Zuccardi's state-of-the-art olive oil press. It looked so easy when Torey Novak, Zuccardi's tour guide, gave a demonstration. You hang a cone-shaped canvas sack around your neck and pick a tree loaded with ripe fruit. Reaching up into a branch, you grab it with both hands and yank down hard, stripping the olives off and into the sack. When your neck cries uncle, you empty the sack into the 40-pound crate handily stacked nearby. Then you fill the second crate, and the third, all day every day until the harvest ends or your hands scream uncle. R Nah, most good pickers don't wear gloves," said Novak, amused. He could see I was hopelessly awkward. "I couldn't do it either," he admitted. "Not for long, anyway. But our best picker can fill 45 crates in a day.n Mercifully, my career as a field hand died before it was born. But why in blazes were we fooling with olives when we'd left Buenos Aires three days earlier on a mission: to smell, savor, taste and compare Malbec, Argentina's signature red wine, at the source? And why was R La Familia Zuccardi,w a family-owned, t h r ee-generationold winery and leading Malbec producer, growing olives? As it happens, a number of long-established wineries here in the Cuyo area, scrubby desert land on the sunny east slope of the Andes Mountains, grow multiple crops. The soil, irrigated for centuries before Europeansexplored the region, is ideal for growing both grapes and olives; more than 6,000 olive growers and 1,200 wineries are scattered through the two adjacent provinces of Mendoza and San Juan. The region's newer wineries stick mostly to grapes, concentrating their efforts on building sales. But for visitors to the region, the complete farm-to-bodega tour adds another dimension altogether. When you've mucked around in the man's orchards and harvested his olives, you feel invested. A fter p i cking t h e fr u i t , clumping through the mud and riding back to the processing plant with the crates stacked on the golf cart, we watched our olives macerated into mush. Tasting the newly pressed oil, we proudly pasted labels on our take-home bottles. Then we knocked the dirt off our shoes and headed for the bodega itself. Here, in the Casa Del Visitante, sepia-toned photos serve a slice of late 19th century history, capturing tired-looking Italian immigrants toting lug-

Ifyou go GOING THERE Fly from Miami to Buenos

Aires, and on aregional carrier to Mendoza orSan Juan. Or fly LAN Chile Airline to Santiago, in Chile,

and on to SanJuanor Mendoza. WHEN TO GO Any time of year is lovely in Mendoza. But February,

March and April (autumn in the Southern Hemisphere), when the harvest is under

way or just completed, is especially nice. PLANNING ATOUR Our tour guide, a family

friend, no longer leadswine tours. Other recommended tour guides are listed below.

Before making reservations, visit all the websites listed here, which, taken together, offer a wealth of information

you call or email and make a reservation for a specific time. On the appointed day, the bodega schedules a staff member to conduct the tasting, chooses sample wines and polishes the wine glasses. Anyone can make a reservation for a visit and tasting. But there are advantages to signing up for a one- to five-day tour with a wine tour company, someone who knows the industry, the wineries and Argentine culture. It's akin to renting an audio guide when you visit an art museum. You come away better informed and certainly more entertained. A typical tour — you choose the length — generally visits threewineries each day and includes daily lunch (with wine), hotels and transportation by van. If you have specific wine labels or vintages in m i nd, they'll customize your route.

Taking the tour

Our cousins, who knew the drill, handled the p lanning for the four of us, arranging a three-day guided tour with a guide they'd used before. We started in Sa n J u an listed phonenumbers in Province, going first to Callia Argentinaare precededby Winery and then to Grafflgna, 54, the country code. The where Chief Wine Maker Gerest are in the United States. rardo Danitz, eager to answer • The Ampora Wine Tours: even the dumbest question, mendozawinet ours.com fielded a tasting that could • Mendoza Holidays: have doubled as Wine Wisdom www.mendozaholidays. 101. His patient explanations com (917)267-8781 were an ideal send-off for what • Trout & Wine: www. would be three days of tasting, troutandwine.com 54-261spitting, tasting, sneaking a 425-5613 swallow here and there — for • Uncorking Argentina: the strength to push on — and uncorkingarentina.com running out of adjectives to (866) 529-2861, or (916) describe the infinite range of 396-0456 fruity, nutty flavors. • Aventura & Wine: Heading south to Mendoza, we stopped first at Vistalba www.aventurawine.com 54-261-429-3014 Bodega, wine czar Carlos Pulenta'sshow place,where most • The Grapevine Wine visits include both tasting and Tours: thegrapevinelunch at his much-acclaimed winetours.com 54-261five-starrestaurant, La Bour429-7522 gogne. Then it was onto Tupungato Winelands to see recently planted vineyards and the new and eventually to the tasting golf course; to Salentein and a room. The tour ended not with culture museum; and finally S gO,Mbut With to Zuccardi. Which is how we a RWe'redOne, let' a traditional Argentine meal found ourselves in the dirt, disprepared by Chef Ana Rodri- cussing olive cultivation. guez at the winery's casual cafe Until then I h a dn't given and food shop, the Pan Y Oliva. much thought to i m migrant history and the parallels bePlanning ahead t ween A r gentina a n d t h e For wine aficionados, Men- United States. But in most of doza is a destination in its own the towns we saw, you could right. One way to get there is by walk down t h e s t reet and flying through Miami to San- — except for the signs in Spantiago, Chile, and east over the ish — think you were at home. Andes (a short flight or drive) Both countries were settled into Argentina. But for us, the by immigrants from Europe winery visits were an add-on, a who brought farming skills last minute addition to a family to the New World. Settling in reunion in Buenos Aires. Our places like Wisconsin, Iowa, third cousins in Buenos Aires Virginia and throughout Ar(newly-discovered on F a ce- gentina, they saw what looked book) had invited us to visit like empty land, and displacing more than once. When they or killing the indigenous tribes, proposed a trip to Mendoza, claimed it. heart of the world's fifth largEarly S p anish e x plorers est wine industry, we couldn't and missionaries had already say no. introduced grapes and cattle; What we'd forgotten is that with land to spare, beef cattle, Argentina is nearly as large as herded by cowboys in the U.S. the United States (four times and by gauchos in Argentina, the size of Texas); Mendoza, became a staple. And grapes, 646 miles west of Buenos Aires, initially grown for the fruit or to is hardly a weekend getaway. make table wine for home use, And w it h l i m ited v acation became acommercial success. time, flying was the only opLikeArgentina'simmigrants, tion. We'd rent a car at the air- Malbec grapes are also an import, we assumed, and explore port,brought from France.But the wine country on a relaxed it took Mendoza's sandy clay schedule, just as we've done in to create those tongue-tingling gage, working the fields, pick- California's Napa and Sonoma, perfect fruity, nutty, oaky, youing grapes and vegetables and in Oregon, in Washington, even name-it flavors. A wine bottle, building r a i lroads. Framed in France. tucked into my luggage for the photos of Zaccardi's founding But that isn't the way they return trip, would have been ancestors,frozen in ankle- do it in Mendoza. Because the nice. But the custom-picked, lengthdresses and high collars, wineries are scattered far apart personally selected, orchardhighlight the exhibits. Then it and road signs are poor, drop-in to-table olive oil made a better was on to the fermentation vats guests are nonexistent. Instead, souvenir.

on Mendoza, onthe types

of tours available, and the wineries each guide or outfitter likes to visit. There are differences. The


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

C7

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

Comcast, networks plana TV binge week By David Bauder The Associated Press

NEW YORK — The nation's

largest cable company is planning a television "watchathon" for the last week of March, collaborating with several television networks to make entire series availablefor free on demand. The Comcast Corp.'s plan encourages binge v i ewing, where people spend hours catching up on television series they may have missed the first time around and serves as a grand look into what may be the future of TV viewing. Comcast ha s c o n v inced more than 30 TV n etworks to make their programming available for the March 25-31 promotion. More than 3,500 television episodes will be offered, said Matt Strauss, senior vice president of digital and emerging platforms for Comcast. B roadcast networks l i k e ABC a n d C B S g e n erally make only the four most recent episodes of a series available to on demand services. For the promotion, participating networks will make all of a season's episodes available for people to catch up on viewing.

'o 0

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ic

TV SPOTLIGHT

serves as a coach.

"Duck Dynasty,"

By Chuck Barney Contra Costa Times

10 p.m. Wednesday, A&E On "Duck Dynasty," the company throws a c a sino night party to celebrate the sale of its 5 millionth duck call. Now, that's something to really quack about.

"Girls" 9 tonight, HBO It's crunch time for Hannah (Lena Dunham) in the Season 2 finale of "Girls." She has to finish her novel in just

"Scandal"

one day, or risk being sued by her publisher. "The Walking Dead" 9 tonight, AMC On "The Walking Dead," the Governor (David Morrissey) leaves Woodbury to chase down a deserter. While he's gone, a traitor tries to sabotage his evil master plan. "All-Star Celebrity Apprentice" 9 tonight, NBC Daytime TV stars Susan Lucci ("All M y C h i l dren") and Jack Wagner ("General Hospital," "The Bold and the Beautiful") drop by "All-Star Celebrity Apprentice" to oversee a challenge in which the contestants must stage a soap opera scene. "Top of the Lake" 9 p.m. Monday, Sundance Channel E lisabeth Moss of " M ad Men" delivers an Emmy-worthy performance in this edgy, disturbing and altogether fascinating miniseries mystery

from Jane Campion ("The Piano"). Moss plays a detective

10:02 p.m. Thursday, ABC So, just who isn't sleeping around on "Scandal"'? In tonight's episode, the pres-

ident's (Tony Goldwyn) top choice for a Supreme Court seat is caught in a torrid affair with a h i gh-powered CEO (Lisa Edelstein), who just happens to be a client of Olivia's

Sundance Channel

David Wenham and Elisabeth Moss star in the edgy and disturbing "Top of the Lake," a miniseries airing on the Sundance Channel. Moss plays a detective investigating the disappearance of a pregnant12-year-old in the backwoods of New Zealand. from Sydney who is investigating the disappearance of a pregnant 12-year-old among the beautiful, but forbidding, backwoods of New Zealand. The saga is full of intriguing twists and eccentric characters, including a bizarre mystic (Holly Hunter) who heads up an all-female commune.

"Bates Motel" 10 p.m. Monday, A&E Is it time to avoid the shower again? In "Bates Motel," a prequel to Alfred Hitchcock's l andmark f i l m "Psycho," we're introduced to troubled teen Norman Bates (Freddie Highmore) and his domineer-

"Dancing With the Stars" 8 p.m. Monday, ABC Let's get ready to rumba. "Dancing With the Stars" is back for its 16th season with a roster that includes wannabe hoofers Wynonna Judd, Kellie Pickler, Andy Dick, D.L. Hughley and Dorothy Hamill.

"Splash"

(Kerry Washington). "Nikita" 8 p.m. Friday, The CW On "Nikita," our title hero

(Maggie Q) wants the president of Chad to be killed in Paris, but Alex (Lyndsy Fonseca) disagrees and refuses to take part in the plan. We say make her go stand in the corner.

ing mother (Vera Farmiga). "Kids' Choice Awards" 8 p.m. Saturday, Nickelodeon Josh Duhamel is our host for the 26th annual "Kids' Choice Awards," which honor kids' favorites in TV, movies,music and sports.Scheduled performers include Pitbull, Christina Aguilera and KeSha.

8 p.m. Tuesday, ABC Will "Splash" make a big one in the ratings? It's a new reality series that has celebrities — some of whom you may actually recognize — facing off in a diving competition.

Olympian Greg Louganis

x'ssonisa remin ero t e ast

MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I

Dear Abby:I was divorced when my son was 9. He's now 24. My exwife married the man she had been having an affair with and they have a 12-year-old son. I am also remarried and in a good place in my life. For the past two

years, my son has b rought h i s hal f DEAR brother to our beach ABBY house for a weekend of fun. We honored this request and enjoy time with our son, but it is difficult having his half brother in my home. It brings up emotions I thought I had put behind me years

ago. I do not want these visits to continue, and I need to communicate this. I'd like to have an adult conversation with my son to explain the situation. How much do I tell him about my emotional reasons without being negative about his mom? I also don't think he should have to carry the news to my ex or disappoint a 12-year-old. Should I send a simple note to her and explain that we will no longer host her son? — Needs The Right Words Dear Needs: By all means write your ex. Explain that entertain-

ing her son brings up emotions

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013:This yearyou

you would rather not have to relive. It's not the boy's fault that he's the flesh-and-blood symbol of his mother's infidelity, but you don't have to have him there if you don't want to. If you would like to have a man-to-man talk with your son, go ahead and do it. He's an adult. Tell him pretty much the same thing — t h at having the boy over is painful for you and,therefore,you prefer the beach house visits stop. You are entitled to your feelings, and your son is old enough to appreciate them. Dear Abby: I'm a widow, as are many of my f r iends these days. Widowhood is difficult. If you're not prepared, it can be horrible. That's why I'd like to urge women to learn to take care of themselves because the odds are they will be alone sooner or later after the age of 50. Some suggestions: l. If you haven't already, learn to drive. 2. Learn to pump gas and how to check your tires and the fluids in your car. 3. Learn to use a few basic tools and do home repairs. 4. Pay attention t o f i n ancial

YOURHOROSCOPE

work on fine-tuning your communication By Jacqueline Bigar skills. You will note a tendency to have misunderstandings with others. Use the chaos surrounding plans and important together. Make a point of stopping by. You situations to might discover that an assumption you Stars showthe kind learn better made could be totally wrong. Expect the of day you'll have in t erpersonal skills. unexpected. Tonight: All smiles. ** * * * D ynamic People find you ** * * P ositive extremely unusual CANCER (June21-July22) ** You could decide at the last minute ** * Average and interesting. to downplay what is happening and stay ** So-so If you are single, close to home. A misunderstanding might * Difficult the issue won't be be affecting your mood, which also might meeting people, affect your perspective. Either way, you but rather choosing the right person. If will find out what happens in a few days. you are attached, your mate could find Tonight: Vanish if you want. you to be unpredictable. Determine if this is a problem for him or her. Count on LEO (Joly23-Aug. 22) ** * * Y ou might be invited to go GEMINI to spill the beans. to a St. Patrick's Day party or two. ARIES (March 21-April 19) Know that you will have a good time. A ** * * C onfusion surrounds misunderstanding could have certain communication. Do notstand on implications. Be willing to take a risk ceremony. There is a surprising tone to anyway. Tonight: Forget tomorrow; live plans when getting together with friends today. andloved ones.Someone mightshare his or her good news, and a celebration could VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) be in order. Tonight: Go with the moment. ** * T ension begins to build within your immediate circle. Honor your feelings, TAURUS (April 20-May20) and follow through on what you think is ** * You have a tendency to go right. Let go of judgments, and encourage overboard. Perhaps you simply need others to do the same. Tonight: A loved to have some fun. A meeting could be one is unusually reactive. waylaid because of one person, but LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oot.22) try to maintain your sense of humor. R each out to someone at a Tonight: You treat, theytreat ... the cycle ** * * distance. You have put this person on the continues. back burner long enough. Unexpected GEMINI (May 21-June20) behavior from a loved one could confuse ** * * L i sten to news with an open you. Don't overthink it. Tonight: Read mind. A friend makes it clear that your between the lines. presence is desired at his or her get-

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m atters such a s b a l ancing a checkbook. 5. Know where your records are, what's in them and what information you will need for taxes. 6. Buy a shredder and shred unnecessary papers. 7. Make friends with other women. If you don't, life gets lonely. 8. Be courageous and do what you need to do to be happy. 9. Start to simplify your home. It will free your mind from clutter and, if necessary, allow you to move to smaller quarters. 10. Let your children lead their lives, lead your own and present a cheerful face to the world! — Kathleen in Duluth, Minn. Dear Kathleen: Those are excellent suggestions, to which I would add how important it is to consult a CPA and a lawyer if your spouse hasn't already shown you what you need to know.

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • 21 AND OVER (R) 11:55 a.m., 2:20, 8, 10:25 • THE CALL (R) 1:25, 4:30, 7:35, 10:05 • DARK SKIES (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 5:15, 7:45, 10:10 • DEAD MAN DOWN(R) 12:20, 3:15, 6:35, 9:45 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH(PG) 3:55, 9:20 • ESCAPEFROM PLANET EARTH 3-0(PG)I:35,6:55 • A GOOD DAYTODIEHARD(R) 'l1:45 a.m., 2:10, 7:05 • IDENTITY THIEF(R) I:20, 4:25, 7:30, 10:10 • THEINCREDIBLE BURT WONDERSTONE (PG-13)12:40, 3:30, 6:50, 9:35 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-13) 3:35, 9:30 • JACKTHE GIANT SLAYER 3-0(PG-I3)12:45,6:40 • LIFE OF Pl (PG)12:05 • LIFE OF PI 3-0 (PG) 3:05, 6:15, 9:15 • 01 THE GREAT ANDPOWERFUL(PG) 11:45 a.m., 12:15, 3, 3:45, 6:30, 7, 9:30, 10 • OZTHE GREAT AND POWERFUL 3-0(PG)Noon,3:25, 6:25, 9:35 • OZTHEGREATAND POWERFULIMAX(PG)I2:30,4, 7:15, IO:15 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 1,4:10, 7:20, IO:05 • SNITCH(PG-13) 1:10, 4:15, 7:10, 9:55 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 9:25 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.

A happy St. Patrick's Day to my

Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • ARGO (R) 12:I5, 3, 6 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) Noon, 4 • EMPEROR (PG-13) 1:15, 4: I5, 6:45 • QUARTET(PG-13) 1, 3:15, 7 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 12:30, 3:45, 6:15 • SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30

Irish readers: May you always have A sunbeam to warm you Good luckto charm you And a sheltering angel, so noth-

ing can harm you

f

Laughter to cheer you — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069

SCORPIO (Oot. 23-Nov.21) ** S tay level-headed, as others might not be. Don't allow others' haziness to affect howyou feel. You could reverse directions if you want, but that is your call to make. Trust a partner, as he or she often comes through for you. Tonight: Follow a loved one's lead.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * T ake your cues from your significant other or whomever you are with. There is a lot of room for misunderstandings to happen — you don't need to add to it. Relax, take a nap, then make decisions. Tonight: Play "follow the leader."

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I

6 p.m. on ESPN, "30 for 30" — The documentary "Survive and Advance" looks back at one of sports' most inspiring stories: Jim Valvano's North Carolina State Wolfpack and their improbable run to the 1983 NCAAbasketball championship. Director JonathanHock takes apoignant look through the eyes of senior captain Dereck Whittenburg at a dream fulfilled and explores what at times has been atragic and heartbreaking aftermath in the 30 years since. 8 p.m. on TRAV,"Trip Flip" — Back-to-back episodes kick off Season 2 of this quirky travel series, in which host Bert Kreischer seeks out typical tourists on average, unexciting vacations and turns their trip into an adventure. In tonight's first episode, Kreischer takes Los Angeles-based outdoorsy couple Ryan and Katie Down Under to the tropical wonderland of Cairns, Australia. In the second episode, he takes a couple from California's Orange County up the coast to Seattle. 9 p.m. on H g), "Revenge" — Victoria and Conrad (Madeleine Stowe, Henry Czerny) start a charitable foundation in AmandaClarke's name,butJack (Nick Wechsler) sees through their plans and makes one of his own. Emily's (Emily VanCamp) past comes back to haunt her — again — in the new episode "lllumination." Gabriel Mann also stars. 9 p.m. on l3, "The GoodWife" — Alicia and Will (Julianna Margulies, Josh Charles) attend an inquest at the coroner's office, where they are prohibited from asking any witness more than three questions. Cary's (Matt Czuchry) father (John Shea) returns with some new business for the firm. Eli (Alan Cumming) plots against Jordan (T.R. Knight). Christine Baranski and Archie Panjabi also star in the new episode "Invitation to an Inquest." 10:01 p.m. on H g), "Red Widow" — Marta (Radha Mitchell) prepares to flee the country with her children, but her plans are scuttled when Irwin (Wil Traval) leaves prison early, full of plans for them that include a deal between Schiller (Goran Visnjic) and a marijuana kingpin. Those plans hit a snag of their own, however; Andrei (Rade Serbedzija) refuses to finance them. Mike (LeeTergesen)takes an extreme step to pay off his debts in the new episode "The Escape." ©zap2it

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Baseball, D4 Scoreboard, D2 NHL, D3 NFL, D4 Sports in brief, D2 NBA, D3 College basketball, D4 Prep sports, D6 Golf, D3 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports

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• Oregon cruises past UCLA to takethe title of the Pac-12tournament By John Marshall

Mikaela Shiffrin holds the crystal globe as the winner of the overall women's slalom World Cup at the Ski World Cup finals in Lenzerheide, Switzerland, Saturday.

American Shiffrin wins seasontitle

The Associated Press

LAS VEGAS — Oregon hit bottom at the end of the regular season, its chances of a title washed away with consecutive losses. A week l ater, the D ucks ar e back on top, with a shiny new title to go with it : Pac-12 tournament champions.

Shaking off a disappointing finish tothe regular season, Oregon

Inside • More results from Saturday's men's college basketball,04 got the postseason off to a great start, completing a three-game run through the Pac-12 tournament with a 78-69 victory over No. 21 UCLA in the title game Saturday night. Next sto p : the NCAA tournament. "We lost the opportunity to win one championship, so we said let's go get another one, and that's what we did," said Oregon guard Johnathan Loyd, who had 19 points and was named tournament MVP. Oregon lost a chance to win the

regular-season title with losses to Colorado and Utah last week. The Ducks (25-9) bounced back quickly, knocking off Washington and Utah, two teams that had been on a roll, in its first two games of the Pac-12 tournament. After a shaky start in the title game, Oregon pulled itself together with superb perimeter shooting and pulled away in the second half after the Bruins made a run. Carlos Emory had 20 points, Arsalan Kazemi had 12 points and 12 rebounds, and the Ducks hit seven of 14 from 3-point range to win their third Pac-12 tournament title. See Ducks /D4

Julie Jacobson / The Associated Press

Oregon's Dominic Artis shoots against UCLA's David Wear in the first half of Saturday night's Pac-12 tournament final in Las Vegas.

LENZERHEIDE, Swit-

zerland — MikaelaShiffrin cried and left Tina Maze in tears. A thrilling

U.S.NATIONAL SNOWSHOE CHAMPIONSHIPS

climax to the World Cup slalom season delivered all its promised drama

Men's runners leave the starting line of the U.S. National Snowshoe Championships on Saturday at Virginia Meissner

Saturday. The victorious Shiffrin, the American teen-

age sensation of alpine skiing, fell to her knees when Maze couldn't

match her astonishing second run that

wrapped up animprobable come-from-behind win. After letting what

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seemed certain success slip away, the 29-yearold Slovenian — who

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had one of the best World Cup seasonsever — sobbed on the side-

I'

line as Shiffrin paraded

west of Bend. Photos by Joe Kline /The Bulletin

»5»D DD IID D D

with her crystal trophy. "I started crying,"

said Shiffrin, laughing later at the memory. "I didn't really mean to. I

was thinking, 'Comeon woman, pull yourself together, it's just a race.' "

Hardly. It was awin-

ner-take-all contest that Shiffrin must surely

t

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have lost after gifting

•5

Maze a massive 1.17

seconds lead in the morning's first run. Instead, Shiffrin scorched the sunbathed

Swiss slope to set an unbeatable mark and overtake her great rival

in the points race. Shiffrin finished in a combined time of1 minute, 55.60 seconds, with Bernadette Schild 0.20 behind in second. Maze trailed by 0.35. — The Associated Press

• Bend's StephanieHoweclaimswomen's race, Mario Mendozathird in men'sevent

'4~f

Ligety wins 6th GS of season

By Mark Morical The Buuetin

VIRGINIA MEISSNER SNO-PARK — Stephanie Howe and Mario Mendoza had never even heard of snowshoe racing before this winter. But no matter. The two Bend runners' lack of experience on snowshoes had little effect on their performance at the 2013 U.S. National Snowshoe Championships on Saturday southwest of Bend. Howe won the senior women's 10-kilometer race in I hour, 14 seconds, nearly three minutes ahead of runner-up Brandy Erholtz (I:02:47), of Evergreen, Colo. Carolyn Stocker, of Westfield, N.Y.,

LENZERHEIDE, Switzerland — Ted Ligety

capped his dominant season in giant slalom with a sixth World Cup

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win Saturday, fueling comparisons with the best GS skier in history.

The American skier joined lngemar Sten-

mark as the only menin the 47-year World Cup history to get six GS

victories in a season. Stenmark's 10-race sweep in 1978-79 is the

record. "It's very surreal for any ski racer," Ligety said of being likened to the Swede. "He is at another level that's not really achievable."

Ligety's 17 career

World Cup wins in his

specialist event are a long way from Stenmark's 46, though the latest came with similar authority. He raced smoothly

down the steep slope in a two-run time of 2 minutes, 14.76 seconds, beating overall World

Cup winner Marcel Hirscher by 0.37 sec-

onds. Hirscher was runner-up to Ligety for the fourth time, and

French prospect Alexis Pinturault trailed by 1.16 in third. — The Associated Press

was third (I:02:52).

Josiah Middaugh, of Vail, Colo., heads for the finish line of the U.S. National Snowshoe Championships on Saturday. Middaugh was the top men's finisher.

Mendoza finished third in the men's race in 51:08, behind winner Josiah Middaugh, of Vail, Colo., whose first-place time was 47:08. Eric Hartmark, of Duluth, Minn.,

finished second (50:04).

Howe said Saturday's nationals race was just her second time ever on snowshoes. Her first, she noted, was the nationals qualifier she won in Bend two weeks ago. "It's hard," the 29-year-old Howe said of snowshoe racing. "It's like running, but just slower. You're working really hard and you're not moving very fast." Saturday's course for the two-day national championships, being staged in Central Oregon for the first time, consisted of two laps of a 5K loop at Meissner, most of it on ungroomed singletrack but some on wide, groomed trails. The men's race included 70 competitors from across the country, who qualified at various events throughout the season, and the women's race had 42 runners on a breezy, partly sunny day at Meissner Sno-park. See Trail /D6

Stephanie Howe, of Bend, heads for the finish line of the U.S. National Snowshoe Championships on Saturday at Virginia Meissner Sno-park. Howe was the top women's finisher.

Cougs lose two to Qlys Bend Highsplits with TDW Bulletin staff report Jitters may have played a factor in Mountain View's season-opening nonleague baseball doubleheader Saturday afternoon, but according to Cougars coach Dave McKae, it came down to two big innings in each contest and a couple mistakes by Mountain View that allowed visiting Sprague to take the twin bill.

PREP BASEBALL The Class 6A Olympians from Salem scored twice in the second inning of the first game and added three more in the fourth en route to a 6-2 win. In the ensuing matchup, Sprague used a tworun fifth inning and a three-run sixth to pull away and seal a 6-4 victory. See Cougs/D6

Bulletin staff report The season is still young, but Bend High softball coach Wade Kinkade liked the way his team handled its first pressure situation of the season during a doubleheader against The Dalles Wahtonka. The Lava Bears split their opening two games of the season Saturday, falling to the Eagle Indians 11-3 in the

PREP SOFTBALL opener before holding off the Columbia RiverConference squad 8-7 in the late contest at Bend High. "That second game is exactly what we need," Kinkade said. "Game one we were shaking off the rust. In game two, we never relinquished the lead." See Bend /D6


D2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY BASEBALL 6 a.m.:MLB, spring training, Kansas City at Chicago Cubs

(taped), MLBNetwork. 10 a.m.:MLB, spring training, St. Louis at Miami, MLB Network.

1 p.m.: MLB, spring training, Texas at Seattle, Root Sports. 1 p.m.: MLB, spring training, Cleveland at Cincinnati, MLB Network.

Ohio State, CBS. 12:30 p.m.:NBA, New York at

Los AngelesClippers, ABC. 2 p.m.: W omen'scollege,NEC tourney, final, St. Francis at

Quinnipiac, ESPNU. 3 p.m.:Men's college, NCAA tourney selection show,CBS. 6 p.m.:Men's college, NIT selection show, ESPNU.

SOCCER

10 a.m.:MLS, Houston at 6 p.m.:World Baseball Classic, championship round, Dominican Dallas, ESPN2.

Republic vs. Japan, MLB Network. 10 p.m.:MLB, spring training,

Colorado at SanFrancisco (taped), MLBNetwork. GOLF 6 a.m.:European Tour,Avantha Masters, final round, Golf

Channel.

TENNIS Noon:BNPParibas Open, men's andwomen'sfinals,ESPN2.

MONDAY BASEBALL 1 a.m.:MLB, spring training, San DiegoatLos Angeles Angels

10 a.m.:PGATour, Tampa Bay Championship, final round, Golf Channel.

(taped), MLBNetwork. 4 a.m.: MLB, spring training,

Minnesota at Baltimore (taped), Noon:PGATour, TampaBay MLB Network. Championship, final round, NBC. 7 a.m.:MLB, spring training, 1 p.m.: LPGATour, LPGA Founders Cup, final round, Golf Channel.

4:30 p.m.:Champions Tour, Toshiba Classic, final round, Golf Channel. HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.: NHL, Boston at Pittsburgh, NBC. 4 p.m.:NHL, Buffalo at Washington, NBCSN.

MOTOR SPORTS 9:30 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Food City 500, Fox. 4 p.m.:NHRA, Gatornationals,

qualifying (same-day tape), ESPN2.

BASKETBALL 10 a.m.:Men's college, SEC tourney, final, Florida vs. Mississippi, ABC. 10 a.m.:Men's college, Atlantic 10 tourney, final, Saint Louis vs. VCU, CBS. 10 a.m.: M en'scollege,ACC tourney, final, Miami vs. North Carolina, CBS.

10 a.m.:Women's college, Horizon Leaguetourney, final, Loyola ofChicagovs.GreenBay,

COREBOARD

ESPNU.

12:30 p.m.:Men's college, Big Ten tourney, final, Wisconsin vs.

Milwaukee at Los Angeles

Dodgers (taped), MLBNetwork. 10 a.m.: MLB, spring training, Philadelphia at Atlanta, ESPN. 1 p.m.: MLB, spring training, Milwaukee at Cleveland, MLB Network. 6 p.m.:World Baseball Classic,

championship round, teams TBD, MLB Network. 10 p.m.:MLB, spring training,

Kansas City atTexas(taped), MLB Network.

SOCCER 3 p.m.:English Premier League, Manchester United FC vs.

Reading FC (taped), Root Sports. BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Women's college, NCAA tourney selection show,ESPN. 4 p.m.: NBA, Portland at

Philadelphia, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 5 p.m.:NBA, Miami at Boston, ESPN. 7:30 p.m.: NBA, New Yorkat Utah, ESPN.

HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:NHL, Philadelphia at

Tampa Bay,NBCSN.

ON THE AIR:RADIO

ON DECK Today Girls lacrosse: Clackama sat BendUnited (Summit High School)noon ,

Saturday's Games Tournament America EastConference Championship Albany(NY)53,Vermont49 Atlantic10 Conference Semifinals Saint Louis67, Butler56 Tuesday VCU 71, UM as s 6 2 Baseball: MountainViewat West Linn, 4:30p.m.; Atlantic CoastConference Henley atSisters, 4:30p.m.; Shermanat Culver, Semifinals 430 p.m.; Redm ond at SouthMedford (DH),2 Miami81,NCState71 p.m.; SouthEugeneat Summrt, 4:30 p.m. North Carol i na 79 Maryl and76 Softball: SouthEugeneat Summit, 4:30 p.m.;Sisters Big EastConference at MountainView,4:30 p.m. Championship Boys tennis: Sistersat Ridgeview,4 p.mzMadras, Sherman atCrookCounty, 4p.m. Kansas70,KansasSt 54 Girls tennis: Ridgeviewat Sisters, 4 p.m.; Crook Louisville 78,Syracuse61 Big SkyConference CountyatMadras,4 p.m. Championship Montan6a7 WeberSt.64 Wednesday Big TenConference Baseball: Bend atMadras,4:30 p.m.;GrantUnionat Semifinals Ridgeview (DH), 2p.m.; LaPine atCrookCounty, Ohio St.61, MichiganSt 58 4 p.m. Softball: Madras at Bend, 4:30 p.m; Ridgeview Wisconsin68,Indiana56 Big WestConference at GrantUnion(DH), 2 pm.; SouthMedfordat Championship Redmond(DH), 2 p.m. Girls golf: Bend, MountainView,Summit, Crook Pacific 64,UCIrvine 55 ConferenceUSA County,Redm ond, Ridgeview, Madrasat Juniper, Championship noon;Sisters,Madrasat Tokatee,noon Memphi s 91, Sout hernMiss 79,20T Track: Sisters,Ridgeview,Gilchrist, La Pineat SumMid-AmericanConference mit, 3:30p.m.;Redmond,Burns atMountain View, Championship 3.30 p.mzCrookCountyatBendRelays,TBA Akron65,Ohio46 Girls tennis: SistersatRedmond,4pm. Mid-EasternAthletic Conference Championship WINTER SPORTS NC ABT57,MorganSt.54 Mountain WestConference Championship Snowshoeing NewMexico63,UNLV56 U.S. NationalSnowshoeChampionships SoutheasternConference At Virginia Meissner Sno-park, Bend Semifinals Saturday's results F lorida 61, Al abama51 Men's1BK Mississippi64,Vanderbilt 52 (Top10, otherCentral Oregonfinishers) SouthlandConference 1, JosiahMiddaugh,Vai, Co o, 47082 2, Eric Semifinals Hartmark,Duluth, Minn.,50:04.1. 3,Mario Mendoza, NorthwesternSt.68, StephenF Austin 66 Bend,51:08.5.4,ColeCrosby,Cortland, N.Y.,51:55.2. Southwestern Athletic Conference 5, RyanPhillips, Sturgis, S.D., 52:16.0. 6, Daniel Championship Prahl, Portland,54:13.9. 7, CharlieNowacki, Aravada, SouthernU.45,Prai rie View44 Colo., 55:15.1.8, NichoasScafone,Mountain View, Western Athletic Conference Calif., 55:39.7.9, Eric Sambolec, Ithaca, NY., 55:15.1. Championship 10, Chad Carroll, Fairbanks,Alaska,56:22.6. NewMexicoState64,Texas-Arlington 55 Monday Baseball: Madras at LaPine,4p.m. Softball: LaPineat Madras, 4 pm. Girls golf: TrinityLutheran,Ridgeview,LaPine, Sisters, Madras at CrookedRiverRanch, noon Girls tennis: Redm ondatMadras, 4 p.m.

Also: 42, BryanReichert, Bend, 1:13:23.7; 44, JordanGregory,Bend, 1:15:12.1; 50,JamesRantala, Bend,1:20:06.1;51, Clayl-lalverson, Bend,1:20:44.8. Women's 10K

(Top10, otherCentral Oregonfinishers)

1, StephanieHowe,Bend,1:00:148. 2, BrandyErholtz, Evergreen,Colo., I:02:47.0. 3,CarolynStocker, Wesffield,N.Y.,1:02:52.8. 4,Dolores Bergmann,Chester, Calii., 1:03:59.2. 5,Christy Runde,BrushPrairie, Wash.,1:06 299 6,MichaylaHeil, Medford,1:08262 7, CarrieZografos,Portland,1:10:28.5. 8,ClaireDoule, Montreal, 1:13:52.1. 9, MyraKlettke, LakeOswego, 1:14:19.9.10,Kristi Speer,Philips, Wis.,1.15:03.2. Also: 14, JaneCleavenger, Bend,1:19:27.1; 15, Siri Berg,Bend,1:19:45.1;19,ColeenSullivan, Bend, I:22:09.6;28, SarahBrisier, Bend,I:40:30.5; 29, Pat Highlander, La Pine, 1:40:49.2, 30, LauraKantor, Bend,1:41:24.8;32, Jill Duncan,Bend,1:44:43.0; 37, BrendaRantala, Bend,1:54:04.5;38,HelenShepard, I:56:01.1;41, JeanetteKing, Bend,2:06:13.1. Citizenrs 5K (Top10, other Central Oregonfinishers) 1, MarkRobins,Salem,2945.5. 2, Justin Miller, LakeOswego,30:23.1.3,LouisFerrone,PauSmiths, N.Y., 30:28.7. 4, McKennaRamsay, Dilon, Colo., 32:04.6. 5,PaulSchmitt, Stoddard,Wis., 33:01.0.6 Sam King,Fairbanks,Alaska,35:13.1. 7, ChuckAr nold, Bend,37:12.6. 8, LurenStocker, Boise, Idaho, 37:16.3. 9,DanielCuadrado,Frisco, Colo., 37:47.4. 10, Andrew Nutt, Phillips, Wis.,37:47.9. Also: 27,TrentJoggler-Webb,Bend,1:00:54.7; 28, Robert Curzon,Bend,1:12:379; 29, AnnieMuskeDukes,Bend,I:14:23.0.

HOCKEY

TODAY BASEBALL Noon:College, OregonState at Arizona, KICE-AM 940.

MONDAY

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL Ducks rally for winOregon scored six runs in the eighth inning to rally for an 8-4 win over USC on Saturday night

Busch's second victory of the season and fifth career Nationwide victory at Bristol, tying him with Kevin Harvickfor the most in the series.

in Los Angeles. Scott Heine-

Kalitta leads qualifying

man led the Ducks (15-5, 2-0 Pac-12), going three for six with

— Doug Kalitta qualified first in the NHRA Gatornationals on

two RBls andtwo runs scored.

Saturday in Gainesville, Fla.,

The big blow in the eighth was Heineman's two-run double that

with a run of 3.779 seconds at a top speed of 326.32 mph. Cruz

broke a 4-4 tie. Oregonwill go

Pedregon topped theFunnyCar

for the sweep of the three-game

field, Mike Edwards led the Pro Stock competition, and Matt Smith was the fastest in the Pro

series with USC (7-11, 0-2) at noon today.

Stock Motorcycle seasonopener.

BeaVS triumPh — Jake Rodriguez hit two sacrifice flies to send the Oregon State baseball team to a 4-3 win over

Arizona in Tucson, Ariz., onSaturday night. TheBeavers(18-1, 2-0 Pac-12) used athree-run sixth inning to claim the win. Dylan Davis drove in two on a

double before one ofthesacrifice flies by Rodriguez.OSUwill try to complete asweep of Arizona (15-7, 0-2) today at noon.

SOCCER TimderS tie —RodneyWallace cameopen inthe penalty box and headed inthe tying goal

WINTER SPORTS Kim winswomen'stitle

— The Queenhas reclaimed her crown. Back at the World Figure

Skating Championships for the first time in two years, Olympic champion Kim Yu-na looked as if

she had neverbeenaway Saturday night in London, Ontario. It wasn't just her margin of victory — with 218.31 points, she was a whopping20 points ahead of defending champion Carolina

Kostner — but the stunningly simple beauty of her performance. Kim's longtime rival, Mao

in a perfectly placed cross from Steve Zakuani in the13th minute

UFC welterweight champion

for Seattle (0-1-1). TheSounders held the lead until they failed to

Georges St-Pierre manhandled Nick Diaz for five rounds en route

clear the ball from danger in the

to a lopsided unanimousdeci-

91st minute, and Andrew Jean-

sion at UFC158 in Montreal on

Baptiste's centering pass found Wallace completely uncovered.

Saturday night. St-Pierre (24-2) earnedaunanimousdecision,

MOTOR SPORTS BIISCh WlllS —Kyle Busch

Montreal Boston Ottawa Toronto Buffalo

PtsGF GA 42 106 79 3 2 72 81 2 9 83 91 2 8 65 67 2 7 79 88

Norlheast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA

28 19 5 4 4 2 90 70 26 19 4 3 4 1 80 55 28 14 8 6 3 4 68 61 2 9 15 12 2 3 2 86 83 2 8 10 14 4 2 4 73 88 Southeast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA W innipeg 2 8 1 5 1 1 2 3 2 76 81 C arolina 27 1 5 1 1 1 3 1 82 76 T ampaBay 28 12 15 I 2 5 92 84 W ashington 27 11 15 1 2 3 73 82 Florida 29 7 16 6 20 70 109

WesternConference Central Division

GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 2 8 2 3 2 3 49 95 60 S t.Louis 28 1 6 1 0 2 3 4 85 80 D etroit 29 14 1 0 5 3 3 78 75 C olumbus 29 1 1 12 6 2 8 64 76 N ashville 2 8 1 1 1 1 6 2 8 65 74 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Minnesota 2 7 15 10 2 3 2 70 68 Vancouver 27 13 8 6 32 77 77 Calgary 2 6 11 11 4 2 6 75 87 Edmonton 2 7 10 11 6 2 6 66 79 Colorado 2 7 10 13 4 2 4 69 84 Pacific Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Anaheim 2 7 2 0 3 4 44 90 66 L osAngeles 27 15 10 2 3 2 81 71 P hoenix 28 1 3 1 1 4 3 0 77 78 SanJose 2 7 1 2 9 6 30 64 69 Dallas 2 7 12 12 3 2 7 69 81 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime

loss.

Saturday's Games Winnipeg 5, Toronto 4,SO Columbus1,Phoenix0,SO Boston 4, Washrngton1 Pittsburgh3, N.Y.Rangers0 Ottawa4, Buffalo3, OT Minnesota 6, Colorado4 Montreal 2,NewJersey1 Tampa Bay4, Carolina I N.Y. Islanders 4, Florida 3 St. Louis2,Anaheim1, DT Chicago 8, Dallas1 Detroit 5,Vancouver2 Los Angele5, s SanJose2 Today's Games Bostonat Pittsburgh,9 30am. Winnipegat Dttawa,2p.m. Buftalo atWashington, 4p.m. Nashville atEdm onton, 5p.m.

Men's college Pacific-12 ConferenceTournament At MGMGrandGardenArena Las Vegas Championship Saturday, March16 Oregon 78 UCLA69 Saturday's Summary

Oregon78, No. 21 UCLA 69 OREGON (25-8)

winning 50-45 on all three judg-

Artis 0-20-00, Kazemi 4-54-612, Dotson4-82-2 13, Singler4-100-08, Woods2-50-1 4, Loyd8-14 1-219, Austin 0 0000,Carter1-30 02, Emory6-14 6-620. Totals 29-6113-17 78.

challenger, rag-dolling him at times and bullying him on the

Powell 3-62-410, Anderson4-10 2-411, DrewII 6-11 0 014, Muham mad5-13 4 814, T.Wear4 12 5-613, D.Wear2-30-05, Parker1-1 0-02. Totals 25-56 13-22 Bg. Halftime—Oregon41-32. 3-Point Goals—Oregon

es' cards. Asexpected, St-Pierre used his wrestling to control the

held off rookie Kyle Larson at the ground. But healso usedhis jab finish Saturday to win the Nationwide Series race at Bristol Motor

GP W L OT Pittsburgh 2 9 21 8 0 N ew Jersey 29 13 10 6 N .Y.lsanders 28 13 12 3 N .Y.Rangers 27 13 12 2 Philadelphia 29 13 15 1

BASKETBALL

MIXED MARTIAL ARTS St-Pierre retains title-

1-1 draw. Eddie Johnson tapped

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division

Asada of Japan,wasthird.

at the beginning of second-half

stoppage time, andPortland (01-2) cameout of Seattle with a

NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PDT

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:NBA, Portland at Philadelphia, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.

and kicks to pick apart Diaz on his feet. — From wire reports Speedway in Bristol, Tenn. It was

bounds Oregon37(Kazemi 12), UCLA28(T. Wear 7). Assists —Oregon 13(Loyd, Singler 3), UCLA8 (Drew 6). II TotalFouls—Oregon16, UCLA14. Technical — UCLABench. A—11,101.

UCLA(25-9)

7-14 (Dotson 3-4,Emory 2-3, Loyd2-4, Singler0-3), UCLA6-10(DrewII 2-3, Powell 2-4, Anderson1-1,D Wear1-1, Muham mad 0-1). FouledOut—None. Re-

Women's college Saturday'sGames Tournaments America EastConference Championship Albany(NY)61, Hartford 52 Atlantic 10 Conference Championship Saint Joseph's47, Fordham46 Big SkyConference Championship Montana56, N.Colorado43 Big WestConference Championship Cal Poly63,Paciiic 49 Colonial Athletic Association Semifinals Delaware75,Hofstra 54 Drexel 50,JamesMadison34 ConferenceUSA Championship Tulsa75, UCF66 Mid-AmericanConference Championship Cent. Michigan 86,Akron68 Mid-EasternAthletic Conference Championship Hampton59 Howard38 Missouri ValleyConference Semifinals llinois St.64, Creighton61, OT WichitaSt.75, N.Iowa71,OT Mountain WestConference Championship FresnoSt.76,SanDiegoSt. 70 Patriot League Championship Navy72, Holy Cross53 SouthlandConference Championship Oral Roberts72,SamHouston St.66 Southwestern Athletic Conference Championship PrairieView100,MVSU87,40T Western Athletic Conference Championship Idaho67,Seatle 64

BASEBALL MLB MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL

Spring Training

Saturday'sGames Baltimore3,Toronto I Detroit 3,St. Louis0 Boston 9,TampaBay2

Philadelphia7, NY. Yankees(ss) 0 Minnesota2,Pittsburgh1 Miami 4,N.Y.Mets2

ChicagoCubs(ss)5, Texas(ss) 1 Oakland(ss) 13,L.A.Angels13, tie Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati (ss)9, tie ChicagoCubs(ss)8, Kansas City 3 San Diego10,Arizona6 ChicagoWhite Sox11, Oakland(ss) 5 Texas(ss) 4,LA. Dodgers0 Cincinnati(ss)7, SanFrancisco(ss) 6 Seattle 5,Colorado2 Atlanta4, N.Y.Yankees(ss) 0 Housto n4,Washington2 Cleveland 4, SanFrancisco (ss)3

WBC World Baseball Classic Glance All Times PDT SecondRound GroupTwo

At Miami Saturday, March15 DominicanRepublic 2, PuertoRico0

Semifinals At San Francisco Today, March17 Domini canRepublicvs.Japan,6p.m. Monday, March18 Netherlandsvs. Puerto Rico,6p.m. Championship At San Francisco Tuesday, March19 Semifinalwinners,5 p.m.

SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT

EasternConference

W L T P t sGF GA Montreal 3 0 0 9 5 2 Philadelphia 2 1 0 6 4 4 Columbus 1 1 1 4 5 3 SportingKansasCity 1 1 1 4 4 3 D.C. 1 1 1 4 1 2 TorontoFC 1 2 0 3 3 4 Houston I 0 0 3 2 0 NewEngland 1 1 0 3 1 1 NewYork 0 1 2 2 4 5 Chicago 0 2 1 1 0 5 Western Conference W L T P t sGF GA Vancouver 2 0 0 6 3 1 RealSaltLake I I I 4 3 2 1 1 1 4 3 4 SanJose Los Angeles 1 0 0 3 4 0 ChivasUSA 1 I 0 3 3 4 FC Dallas 1 1 0 3 2 3 Portland 0 1 2 2 5 6 Colorado 0 2 1 1 2 4 Seattle 0 I I I I 2 NOTE:Threepoints for victory, onepoint for tie.

Saturday's Games

NewYork0, D.C.United0,tie

SportingKansasCity 0, Chicago0,tie Montreal 2,TorontoFC1 Philadelphia I,NewEngland 0

Columbus1,SanJose1, tie RealSaltLake1,Colorado1,tie SeattleFC I, Portlandl,tie Today's Games HoustonatFCDallas, 10a.m. ChivasUSAat l.os Angeles,2 p.m.

GOLF GA TouI' TampaBay Champinoship Saturday At Innisbrook R esortand Go lf Club, Copperhead Course PalmHarbor, Fla Purse: 55.5 million Yardag e:7,340;Par:71 Third Round KevinStreelman 73-69-65—207 71 69-67 207 Justin Leonard 71-68-68—207 GeorgeCoetzee 72-69-67—208 JimFuryk BenKohles 72-67-69—208 71-68-69—208 GregChalmers 68-70-70—208 TagRidings 70-72-67—209 LukeDonald 72-69-68—209 BryceMolder 72-68-69—209 Jordan Spieth BrianHarman 67-70-72 209 65-70-74—209 Shawn Stefanr 69-73-68—210 RobertoCastro 70-71-69—210 Justin Hicks 71-67-72 210 SergioGarcia 68-69-73—210 HarrisEnglish 73-68-70—211 JimmyWalker 71-70-70—211 Cameron Tringale 72-68-71—211 Matt Kuchar 71-66-74 211 JasonDufner 76-68-68—212 StewartCink 73-71-68—212 RorySabbatini 73-70-69—212 RobertStreb 72-71-69—212 StephenAmes 69-73-70—212 DickyPride 70-72-70—212 NickWatney 71-71-70—212 Pat Perez 72-70-70—212 Scott Langley Erik Compton 75-65-72 212 James Dnscog 74-66-72—212 70-70-72—212 ScottBrown PeterTomasulo 69-68-75—212 K.J. Choi 69-67 76—212 AdamScott 70-66-76—212 LucasGlover 69-74-70—213 WebbSimpson 73-69-71—213 BooWeekley 72-70-71—213 RyanPamer 71-70-72—213 BrianDavis 71-69-73—213 Jerry Kelly 70-70-73—213 Jeff Overton 72-72-70—214 George McNeil 72-72-70—214 ChezReawe 69-75-70—214 GrahamDeLaet 73-71-70—214 David Lingmerth 74-70-70—214 CharlieWi 71-72-71—214 Sang-MoonBae 73-70-71—214 Vijay Singh 69-73-72—214 Tim Herron 71-71-72—214 John Rollins 76-68-71—215 John Mallinger 74-70-71 215 RobertGarrigus 72-71-72 —215 AaronBaddeley 72-71-72—215 Troy Kelly 72-70-73—215 Martin Flores 73-69-73—215 MarcLeishman 70-70-75—215 BrendondeJonge 71-73-72—216 J.J. Henry 70-74-72—216 JesperParnevik 72-72-72—216 JonasBlixt 75-69-72 216 Chris Stroud 75-67-74—216 StuartAppleby 74-68-74—216 SeanO'Hair 73-68-75—216 Martin Laird 73-71-73—217 BrianStuard 75-68-74—217 Brendan Steele 68-75-74—217 Colt Knost 71-72-74—217 Billy Horschel 70-73-74—217 JasonDay 70-72-75 217 GeoffOgilvy 69-72-76—217 RichardH. Lee 72-72-74—218 DanielSummerhays 71 -73-74 —218 AngelCabrera 74-69-75 218 70-73-75—218 TrevorImmelman 71-70-77—218 CharleyHoffman 74-69-77—220 JoshTeater 71-72-77—220 TroyMatteson

LPGA ToUI" FoundersCuP Saturday At JW Marriott Phoenix De sert Ridge Resort fk Spa, Wildfire G olf Club Phoenix Purse: $1.5 mi llion Yardage: 6,583;Par: 72 Third Round 63-67-67—197 Ai Miyazato 68-65-68—201 StacyLewis 65-64-72—201 JeeYoungLee 68-70-65—203 AngelaStanford 69-68-66—203 LizetteSalas 70-66-67—203 AnnaNordqvist GerinaPiler 66 69 68—203 69-71-64—204 InbeePark 71-67-66—204 NicoleCastrale 69-69-66—204 Giulia Sergas Jimin Kang 68-69-67—204 70-67-67—204 SydneeMichaels 70-70-65—205 BeatrizRecari 70-69-66—205 KarrieWebb ThidapaSuwannapura 69-68-68—205 I K. Kim 69-67 69 205 DanieleKang 68-67-70—205 JessicaKorda 70-67-69—206 SandraGal 67-69-70—206 Danielalacobelli 71-65-70—206 CandieKung 66-69-71—206 AmyYang 68-67-71—206 HeeYoungPark 71-69-67—207 MinaHarigae 70-68-69—207 Juli Inkster 68-70-69—207 Pernilla Lindberg 72-66-69—207 LindseyWright 68-67-72—207 Austin Ernst 70-72-66—208 So Yeon Ryu 72-70-66—208 StacyPrammanasudh 69-72-67—208 CarolineHedwag 70-70-68—208 BelenMozo 74-66-68—208 Pornanong Phatlum 66-74-68—208 PaulaCreamer 69-70-69—208 HeatherBowreYoung 72-66-70—208 Hee-WonHan 69-68-71—208 KatherineHull Kirk 67-70-71—208 Jiyai Shin 67-70-71 208 CrrstieKerr 71-65-72—208 Na YeonChoi 69-72-68—209 MoriyaJutanugarn 70-68-71—209 Jodi Ewart Shadoff 71 -71-68 —210 JacquiConcoino 70-70-70—210 KarineIcher 71-68-71—210 Veronica Felibert 69-69-72—210 BrittanyLang 66-72-72—210 BrookePancake 71-71 69 211 Maria Hjorth 72-69-70—211 AzaharaMunoz 69-72-70—211 HeeKyungSeo 71-70-70—211 PaigeMackenzie 70-70-71—211 CindyLacrosse 69-68-74—211 Chie Arimura 71-71-70—212 JenniferJohnson 70-71-71—212 72-69-71 212 SarahKemp Lexi Thompson 67-74-71 212 72-70-71—213 SeonHwaLee Kris Tamulis 68-74-71—213 69-72-72—213 JulietaGranada Mo Martin Eun-Hee Ji

JennieLee Moira Dunn KatieFutcher YaniTseng Lauren Doughtie JenniterGleason ChristelBoeljon KarenStupples lheeLee Silvia Cavalleri Meaghan Francella RyannO'Toole

69-70-74 213 68-70-75—213 71-67-75—213 72-70-72—214 73-69-72—214 70-72-72—214 69-71-74 —214 68-74-73—215 75-67-74—216 70-70 76—216 69-73-75—217 70-70-77—217 71-71-77—219 70-71-78—219

Champions Tour Toshiba Classic Saturday At Newport BeachCountry Club Newport Beach,Calif. Purse: $1.75 million Yardage: 6,584; Par71 SecondRound, LeadingScores 63-66—129 DavidFrost 64-66—130 FredCouples Jim Gallagher, Jr. 66-68—134 71-64 — 135 Scott Hoch Jay Haas 69-66—135

BobTway D.A.Werbring DanForsm an Esteban Toledo PeterSenior FredFunk TomWatson BernhardLanger TomPerniceJr. Jay DonBlake MichaelAllen RoccoMediate Willie Wood Jeff Freem an BarryLane Tommy Armour III CoreyPawn StevePate LorenRoberts BradBryant MarkBrooks ChienSoonLu ScottSimpson DuffyWaldorf

68-67 135 67-68—135 68-68—136 68-68—136 68-68—136 70-67—137 70-67—137 67-70—137 72-66—138 70-68—138 70-68—138 70 68—138 69-69—138 68-70—138 67-71—138 68-70—138 71-68 — 139 71-68 — 139 69-70 — 139 69-70 — 139 68-71—139 67-72—139 71-69 — 140 72-68 — I40 70-70 — 140 70-70 — 140 69-71—140 69-71—140 68-72—140 71-70 — 141 72-69 — I41 72-69 — 141 72-69 — 141 70-71—141 73-68—141 73-68 — 141 73-68—141 69-72 — I41 68-73—141 72-70—142 70-72—142 70-72—142 70-72—142 73-69—142 69-73—142 71-72 — 143 71-72 — 143 72-71 — 143 73-70 — 143 76-67 — 143

SteveJones SteveElkington Olin Browne RogerChapman Gil Morgan

l.arry Nelson Joe Daley DavidEger John Cook TomLehman CraigStadler Mark McNulty Jeff Sluman WayneLevi

RodSpittle Morris Hatalsky

RussCochran MarkWiebe TomJenkins Mike Goode s Dana Quigley John Huston SteveLowery Jim Rutledge GaryHagberg Andrew Magee

TENNIS Professional BNP PanbasOpen Saturday At The IndianWells TennisGarden Indian Wells, Calif. Purse: Men:$6.05 million (Masters1000); Women: 6.02million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Semifinals RafaelNadal(5), Spain,def.TomasBerdych (6), Czech Republic,6-4, 7-5. Juan Martindel Potro(7), Argentina,def.Novak Djokovic(I), Serbia,4-6,6-4, 6-4.

MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Food City 500 After Friday pualtfytng; racetoday At Bristol Motor Speedway Bristol, Tenn. Lap length: .533miles

(Car number inparentheses) 1. (18)KyleBusch, Toyota,129.535. 2. (5) Kasey Kahne, Chevrolet,128.995. 3. (11)DennyHamlin,Toyota,12896 4. (55)BrianVickers, Toyota, 128.528 5. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,128.356. 6. (1) Jamie McMurray,Chevrolet,128.288. 7. (2) Brad Keselowski, Ford,128.211. 8. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,128.005. 9. (56)MartinTruexJr., Toyota,127.946. 10. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford,127 877. 11. (24)JeffGordon,Chevrolet, 127.869. 12. (20)MattKenseth, Toyota, 127.852. 13. (48)JimmieJohnson, Chevrolet,127.835. 14. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,127792 15. (13)CaseyMears, Ford,127588. 16. (31)JeffBurton, Chevrolet,127.512. 17. (42)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet,127.47. 18 (29)KevinHarvick Chevrolet 127453 19. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,127.393. 20. (43)AncAlmrrola, Ford,127.377. 21. (99)Carl Edwards,Ford,127.36. 22.(9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 127.36. 23.(15) ClintBowyer,Toyota, 127.3. 24.(16) Greg Biffle, Ford,127.258. 25.(83)DavrdReutrmann,Toyota,I27.132. 26. (30)DavidStremme, Toyota, 126.595. 27 (95)ScottSpeedFord 126578 28. (17)RickyStenhouseJr., Ford,126.528 29. (51) AJAllmendinger, Chevrolet,126.42. 30. (34)DavidRagan,Ford,126.403. 31. (39)RyanNewman,Chevrolet,126.237. 32. (88)DaleEarnhardtJr., Chevroet,125.947. 33. (7)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet,125.848. 34. (98)MichaelMcDowell, Ford,125.74. 35. (36) JJ.Yeley, Chevrolet,125.732 36. (19)MikeBliss, Toyota, 125.708. 37. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,Owner Points. 38. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota, Owner Points. 39. (47)BobbyLabonte, Toyota, Owner Points. 40. (35)JoshWise, Ford, Owner Points. 41. (10)DanicaPatrick ChevroletOwnerPoints 42. (33)LandonCassill, Chevrolet,OwnerPoints. 43. (32)TerryLabonte, Ford, Owner Pornts. Failed to Gualify 44. (44)Scott Riggs,Ford,124.452.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL

American League BALTIMOREORIOLES— Optioned RHP Dyl an

Bundy to Bowie(EL) andRHPTodd Redmond to Norfolk (II.) BOSTON REDSOX—OptionedCDaniel Butler and RHP AlexWilsonto Pawtucket(IL). LOS ANGELES ANGELS Reassigned RHP Billy Buckner,RHPRobert Coello andOFTrent Oeltjen to their minorleaguecamp. MINNES OTATWINS—OptionedOFOswaldo Arcia to Rochester (IL). NEW YORK YANKEES— Placed RHP Michael Pinedaonthe60-dayDL OAKLAND ATHLETICS—Released LHP Garrett Olson. TAMPA BAY RAYS— Optioned RHP Josh Lueke and OF BrandonGuyer to Durham(IL). TORONT OBLUEJAYS ClaimedRHPGuilermo Moscoso off waiverstromKansasCity. National League CINCINNATI REDS—OptionedRHPCurtis Partch, IF HenryRodriguez,18 Neftali SotoandRHPPedro Villarreal toLouisville (IL)and18/OFDonald Lutzto

Pensacol(SL a ).

MILWAUKEEBREWERS Opti oned RHP Hiram

Burgos to Nashvile (PCL). ST. LOUISCARDINALS—OptionedRHPMichael BlazekandRHPEric Fomataro to Memphis (PCL).

FOOTBALL National Football League GREENBAYPACKERS—Re-signed LB Robert Francois. NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signed CB Kyle ArringtonandCBAqib Talib. SignedSAdnanWilson. Released WRBrandonLloyd. NEW YORKGIANTS— Signed LBDanConnor. NEWYORKJETS—Re-signedKNick Folk. SANFR ANCISC049ERS—SignedSCraig Dahl to athreeyearcontract. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS—SignedDEMichaei Bennett. HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague CAROLINAHLIRRICANES—Claimed FAdamHaI off waiversfromTampaBay. FLORIDAPANTHERS— Returned D Nolan Yonk-

man toSanAntonioRampage(AHL). ST. LOUISBLUES—ActivatedF Vladimir Tarasenko off injuredreserve.PlacedFTJ. Oshieplacedon injuredreserve. TAMPABA Y LIGHTNING RecalledF Dana Tyreg from Syracuse (AHL). WASHINGTON CAPITALS— Assigned D Cameron Schilling toHershey(AHL). COLLEGE NORTH WESTERN—Fired men's basketball coach Bill Carmody. TEXAS TECH Retainedinterim men'sbasketball coachChrisWalker. Firedmen'sassrstant basketbaI coachesJeremy Cox andBubbaJennings; men's basketbaloperati l onsassistants Craig Wels andJim Shaw;andmen's basketba I video productionassistants JoshMills andDerrick Jasper.


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

GOLF ROUNDUP

NHL ROUNDUP gpjjg

Three top leaderboard at TampaBay The Associated Press PALM HARBOR, Fla. — Justin Leonard walked toward the 12th green Saturday at Innisbrook and saw a scoreboard that showed he was tied for the lead in the Tampa Bay Championship. He knocked in his 8foot birdie putt, assumed he was ahead, and then never looked at another board the rest of the day. He might do the same today. There's no point in staring at scores, not with so many names separated by so few shots.Besides, the Copperhead course atInnisbrook is playing so difficult even in pleasant weather that it's best not to think about anything except the next shot. "It is hard," Leonard said after his 4-under 67 put him in a three-way tie for the lead with Kevin Streelman and George Coetzee of South Africa. "There's not a whole lot of birdie holes on those last six holes. With the greens getting firmer and faster as they did today — which I'm sure they will again tomorrow. You have to be pretty patient out there and really pick your spots pretty

/

(.!<sg'

'

Don Ryan/TheAssociated Press

Portland Trail Blazers center J.J. Hickson (21) goes to the basket past Detroit Pistons center Greg Monroe during the first quarter of Saturday night's game in Portland.

ri e scores as azers e ea is onS

carefully." Adam Scott and K.J. Choi set the tone early for this wild day by going into full retreat. That allowed for a game of musical chairs at the top of the leaderboard, with nothing remotely close to being settled going into the final day. Sixteen players were separated by only three shots at a tournament where the winner has come from behind to win in four of the past five years. Streelman finished his 6-under 65 nearly three hours before the last group walked off the 18th green. "I wanted to get to 6 under today," Streelman said. "I had that number in my mind to at least have a chance going into tomorrow, so I was happy to get there." He had no idea at the time that he would go all the way to the top of the leaderboard. Leonard ran off four birdies in a five-hole stretch around the turn and had the lead to himself before a bogey from the bunker on the 15th. Coetzee bounced back from his lone bogey with a birdie on the rowdy 17th hole,where Hooters waitresses serve wings in the grandstands. That gave him a 68. They were tied at 6-under 207, more evidencethatthe Copperhead course isperhaps the most complete test in Florida. Even on a w arm, breezyafternoon, itwas easier to go backward that to move away from the field. Scott and Choi were proof of that. Scott had a two-putt birdie on the opening hole to briefly take the lead, and that was the highlight of his day. He three-putted from about 15 feet for bogey on the third, made bogey with a wedge in his hand on the par-5 fifth hole and stumbled to a 76. Choi, who also was one shot out of the lead, didn't make a birdie in his round of 76. They still were only five shots out of the lead. In other events on Saturday: Ai Miyazatoleads LPGA Founders Cup: PHOENIX — Ai Miyazato pulled back in front in the LPGA Founders Cup, making three birdies in a four-hole stretch on the back nine and saving par with a long putt on the par-4 finishing hole. The diminutive Japanese star shot her second straight 5-under 67 after opening with a tournament-record 64. At 19-under 197, she had a two-stroke lead over Stacy Lewis. The third-ranked Lewis, coming off a victory two weeks ago in Singapore, is in position to take the top spot in the world from Yani Tseng with a win today, as long as Tseng — tied for 63rd at 2 under after a 72 — finishes third or worse.

The Associated Press PORTLAND — The Portland Trail Blazers aren't giv-

ing up yet. The Blazers are still in a crowded fight for a p l ayoff spot in the Western Conference. The Utah Jazz are a halfgame back of the Los Angeles Lakers for the eighth and final spot, while Portland and Dallasarethree games out. Taking advantage of Saturday night's visit by the struggling Pistons, the Blazers got 31 points and 12 rebounds from LaMarcus Aldridge to hand Detroit its eighth straight loss with a 112-101 victory. But the Blazers are now staring at a f ive-game road trip, which kicks off Monday in Philadelphia. "This is a m a ke-or-break road trip fo r u s," A l dridge said. "I keep saying, we're right there. If we play good on this trip, then anything is possible." Rodney Stuckey had a season-high 32 points for the Pistons, who have yet to win a game in March. They've lost 11 of their past 12. After trailing by as many as 11 points in the first half, the Blazers took a 90-81 lead on Nicolas Batum's 3-pointer w ith 8:33 remaining in t h e game. Portland extended the lead to 99-87 on J.J. Hickson's dunk. The Pistons scored 10 in a row to close within 99-97 on Wil l B y n um's r u n ning jumper with 2:54 left, but Batum answered with another 3-pointer. After Stuckey made a layup, Aldridge's hook shot ended Detroit's threat and put

NBA ROUNDUP the Blazers in f ront 104-99 with 1:45 left. "We did not come up with plays at the end of the game," Pistons forward Kyle Singler said. "To their credit, Portland played well. They are a tough team to beat at home

and when Aldridge is playing like he did tonight, they're tough."

The Blazers (31-34) have won nine of their past 12 at the Rose Garden and were coming off a 105-90 victory at home over the Knicks on Thursday night. "Hopefully it's a little momentum for us going out on the road," Blazers coach Terry Stotts said. Detroit (23-45) was coming off a 105-97 loss at Golden State on W e dnesday. The Pistons were without guard Brandon Knight for the second straight game because of a sprained left ankle. Knight is averaging 13.8 points, 3.4 rebounds and 4.1 assists. Detroit went ahead 21-18 on Jose Calderon's 3-pointer late in the first quarter, as Portland sat Aldridge because of two early fouls. The Pistons extended the lead to 28-20 on Jonas Jerebko's layup. Bynum's jumper p u shed Detroit's lead to 50-41, but Portland scored the final six points of the half to close the margin to 57-52. Stuckey led all players with 17 first-half points. The Blazers opened the second half with an 11-2 run,

capped by Aldridge's jumper, to go in front 63-59.

Greg Monroe's layup pulled the Pistons into a 73-all tie before Bynum's high-arching running jumper gave Detroit back the lead. Portland opened the fourth quarter with Aldridge's jump shot to go ahead 79-75. It was Aldridge's fifth game this season with more than 30 points and 10 rebounds. Hickson had 18 points and 15 rebounds, and all of Portland's starters were in double

figures. Also on Saturday: 76ers 98, Pacers 91:PHILADELPHIA — Spencer Hawes had 18 points and career highs with 16 rebounds and seven blocked shots to lead Philadelphia past Indiana. Jrue Holiday added 27 points and 12 rebounds for the Sixers. Celtics 105, Bobcats 88: BOSTON — Paul Piercehad 14 points, eight assists and six rebounds before sitting out the fourth quarter, and Boston won its 11th straight at home. Spurs 119, Cavaliers 113: SAN A N T O NIO Tim Duncan had 30 points and 12 rebounds, Kawhi L eonard added 24 points and 13 boards, and San Antonio beat Cleveland. Wizards 127, Suns 1 05: WASHINGTON — M a r t ell Webster scored a career-high 34 points and became Washington's first 30-point scorer this season. Jazz 90, Grizzlies 84: SALT LAKE CITY — Gordon Hayward scored 17 points in his first start since November, including a 3-pointer with 17 seconds left, and Utah beat Memphis.

NBA SCOREBOARD

Frost maintains lead at Newport Beach: NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — David Frost maintained a one-stroke lead over Fred Couples in the Champions Tour's Toshiba Classic, eagling the final hole for a 5-under 66. After opening with a 63, Frost had a 13under 129 total. The South African made an 18-foot putt for the eagle on the par-5 18th, while Couples two-putted from 35 feet for birdie and a 66 of his own. South African leads: GREATER NOIDA, India — South Africa's Thomas Aiken shot a 10-under 62 to take a three-stroke lead after the third round of the Avantha Masters. Aiken was 18 under.

R

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((

Chris O'Meara/The Associated Press

Justin Leonard blasts from the sand trap on the 15th hole during the third round of the Tampa Bay Championship golf tournament on Saturday in Palm Harbor, Fla.

D3

Standings NATIONALBASKETBALLASSOCIATION All TimesPDT

EasternConference x-Miami d-Indiana d-NewYork Brookyn Chicago Boston Atlanta Milwaukee Toronto Phi adelphia Washington Detroit Cleveland Orlando Charlotte

W 50 40 38 38 36 36 36 32 26 25 23 23 22 18

L 14 26 25 27 29 29 29 32 40 40 42 45 44 48 14 52

Pct GB 781 606 11 603 11//'/ 585 12//z

554 14'/~ 554 14'// 554 14'//

MinnesotaatMemphis, 5p.m. GoldenStateatNew0/leans, 5p.m. Miam< at Boston,5 p.m. LA Lake/sat Phoenix,7p.m. NewYorkatUtah,7:30p.m.

Summaries

Leonard 8-167-824, Duncan13-194-430,Splitter 33 4 510,Joseph341-2 7,Green3 52-28, Neal000-0 0,Ginobili 4-95-814,Diaw4-7 0-0 8,Jackson 2-70-05 DeCol04-60-011, Blair1-20-02. Totals 45-7823-29 119. Cleveland San Antonio

Saturday'sGames

Blazers112, Pistons101

DETROIT (101) Singler 2-100-0 4, Maxiel 4-6 2-4 10, Monroe 500 18 394 25 5 9 4 B14,Cal/jeron 5 80-013, Stuckey12-23rj-7 385 25'/z 32,Je/ebko 2-4 0-0 4,Middeton 0-20-0 0,Bynum 354 27'/~ 10-14 3-3 23,Villanueva0-0 1-2 1. Totals 40-76 16-24 101. 338 29 PORTLAND (112) 333 29 273 33 Batum7-140-017, Aidridge13-215-531, Hickson 7-14 4-518, Lillard 312 7-714, Matthews4-10 7-7 212 37 WesternConference 17, F/eeland 4-6 0-08, Mayno/1-3 0-03,Leona/d1-3 1-3 0-0 2.TotaIs 41-86 23-24112. W L Pct GB 0-0 2, Barton x-SanAntonio 51 16 .761 Detroit 30 27 18 26 — 101 Portland 24 28 25 35 — 112 x-Oklahoma City 49 17 .742 1'// 3-Point Goal — s D e tr oi t 5-17 (I:alderon3-5, Stucke y d-LA. Clippers 45 21 682 5'// 2-6, Middleton O-t BynumO -t SinglerQ -2, JerebkoIj-2), Memphis 44 21 .677 6 Denver 45 22 .672 6 Portland 7-19(Batum3-7,Matthews2-5,Mayno/1-2, Lilard 1-5).FouledOut—None.Rebounds—Detroit 38(Monroe9), GoldenState 37 30 .552 14 P ortl a nd 52(I-lickson15).Assists—Detroit19 (Monroe6), Houston 36 30 .545 14'// Portland25(Lilard 7). Total Fouls—Detroit 22,Portland20. LA. Lakers 35 32 .522 16 (19,980). uiah 34 32 515 16'// A—20,161 Dallas 31 34 477 19 Portland 31 34 .477 19 Mmnesota 22 41 .349 27 Sacramen to 23 43 .348 27'// Jazz 90, Grizzlies 84 NewOrleans 22 44 .333 28'// MEMPHIS(84) Phoenix 22 45 328 29 princ e 3-0 3-4 9,Randolph 7-0 5-719,Gasol d-divisionleader;x-clinchedplayoff spot 5-14 1-1 11,Conley6-18 1-2 13, Allen 1-32-4 4, Saturday'sGames Davis 2-40-0 4, Bayless9-142-224 Pondexter 0-2 Washington127,Phoenix105 0 2 0,Daye000 00,Leuer000 0 0 Totals 3377 Boston105,Charlotte88 14-22 84. Philadelphia98,Indiana91 UTAH (90) sanAntonio09, clevelandu3 Hayward 5-104-617, Milsap4-85-613, Jefferson po/Ilan/I 02, Detroit101 7-16 0-2 14,M.Wiliams5-133-5 13, Foye1-5 2-2 Utah90,Memphis 84 5, Favors4-52-2 10, Ma.Wiliams1-43-45, Kanter Today'sGames 2 6 4 4 8,Watson 1-2 0-0 2 Bu/ks1-20-03 TotaIs Orlando atMilwaukee,10 a.m. 31-71 23-31 90. Miami atToronto,10a.m. Memphis 21 29 9 25 — 84 NewYorkat LA. Clippers,12:30p.m. uCah 22 23 24 21 — 90 GoldenStateat Houston, 4pm NewOrleansatMinnesota, 4p.m. Oklahoma City atDalas, 4:30p.m. Atlantaat Brooklyn, 5p.m. Spurs 119, Cavaliers 113 Sacramento at LA. Lakers,6 30j/ m. Monday'sGames CLEVELAND (113) IndianaatCleveland,4p.m Gee4-7 7-815,Thompson 3-12 2-78,Zeller3-4 WashingtonatCharlotte, 4p m. 0-06, Livingston8-130-016, Waiters6-122-415, Portlandat Philadelph>a , 4p.m. Walton1-20-03, Ellington 8-131-1 21, Miles2-73Dallas at Atlanta, 4:30p.m. 4 8, Speights7-135-619, Gibson1-2 0-1 2 Totals Brooklyn at Detroit,4.3rj p.m. 43-85 20-31 113. DenveratChicago,5p.m. SANANTO NIO(119)

76ers 98, Pacers91 INDIANA (91)

George6-174-618, West8-132-318, Hibbert 926 7-8 25, Hill 5-15 0-013, Stephenson1-60-0 2, T.Han sj/rough2-34-48,Johnson2-40-05,Augustin 0 Ij 000 Mahinmi140-02,SYoung0-00-00.Totals34-88 17-21 91. PHILADELPHIA (98) Turner5-0 1-2 11,TYoung5-7 3-413,Hawes7143-418, Holiday12-251-127,Wilkins4-0 4-612, MI/ultrie 0-00-00,Wright 4-62-213 Allen 2-40-0 4, Jenkins0-10-00.Totals39-7914-1998. Indiana 24 25 23 19 — 91 Philadelphia 23 25 23 27 — 98

Celtics105, Bobcats 88 CHARLO TTE(88) Kidd-Gilchrist 3-7 0-0 6, McRoberts4-9 1-1 9, Biyombo2-3 1-25, Walker6-13 0-1 14, Henderson 6-12 4-416,Gordon4-0 0-0 8, Pa/go5-124-418, Mullens3-51-5 8 Adrien0-21-21, Taylor1-21-2 3. Totals34-7613-21 88. BOSTON (105) Pierce4-74-514, Green5-9 0-010, Bass5-9 0-0 10, Bradley4-124-4 13, Lee5-7 0-012, Wilcox232-2 6,Terry5-62-315, Crawford3-80-0 8,White 3-4 0-3 6,TWiliams2-51-2 5, Randolph3-90-1 6. Totals 41-7913-20 105. 24 19 23 22 — 88 Charlotte 24 26 33 22 — 105 Boston

Canadiens beat Devils for fifth straight win The Associated Press NEWARK, N.J. — Things are going so well for the Montreal Canadiens that even the kids they are bringing up from the minor leagues are contributing. Making his NHL debut, big defenseman Jarred Tinordi set up Tomas Plekanec's tiebreaking goal in the third period, and the Canadiens extended their winning streak to five games with a 2-1 victory over the New Jersey Devils on Saturday night. "What a start for the kid," Canadiens coach Michel Therrien said of the 20-yearold son of former NHL defenseman Mark Tinordi. "We're all pleased with the way he played the puck at net. It looked routine out there for him. "He showed a lot of poise for his age and played very solid. He wasn't nervous. He saw more ice time because you can see him become more comfortable.He made the right decisions." The bestdecision by Jarred Tinordi was understanding that goalie Johan Hedberg's clearing pass from behind the net took a bad bounce off the sideboards and was heading to open ice above the left circle. The 6-foot6 Tinordi skated toward the puck from the right side and let go a shot that Plekanec deflected past Hedberg at 6:49. "I felt pretty comfortable out there," said Tinordi, who played 19 shifts and almost 15 minutes just two days after being called up from Hamilton. "I think the nervousness and the butterflies were gone after the first couple of shifts. "I tried not to think about the way I was playing. I knew we scored on the play. I didn't realize I got an assist. The boys were pretty happy for me. I was just shooting it to get it on net." Colby Armstrong also scored for Montreal, and Carey Price made 32 saves. The Canadiens moved into a tie with Pittsburgh for the most points in the Eastern Conference. In other games on Saturday: Penguins 3, Rangers 0: PITTSBURGH — Marc-Andre Fleurystopped 23 shots to break a tie for Pittsburgh's career shutout record with 23, and the Penguins beat the New York Rangers for their eighth straight victory. Bruins 4, Capitals 1: BOSTON — Nathan Horton had a goal and two assists, Milan Lucic set up Boston's first two scores on hustle plays behind the net and the Bruins beat Washington. Senators 4, Sabres 3: BUFFALO, N.Y. Kyle Turris scored his second goal 3:54 into overtime to lift Ottawa past Buffalo. Wild 6, Avalanche 4: DENVER — Devin Setoguchi scored twice and added the 100th assist of his NHL career to help Minnesota hold off slumping Colorado. Blackhawks 8, Stars 1:DALLAS — Jonathan Toews and Marian Hossa each scored twice in leading Chicago to a rout of Dallas. Islanders 4, Panthers 3: SUNRISE, Fla. — Casey Cizikas broke a third-period tie, and the New York Islanders held on to beat Florida after blowing a three-goal lead in the final frame. Lightning 4, Hurricanes 1:TAMPA, Fla. Tyler Johnson and Ondrej Palat both scored their first NHL goals, and Tampa Bay beat Carolina. Blue Jackets 1, Coyotes 0: COLUMBUS, Ohio — Sergei Bobrovsky made 39 saves in regulation and overtime, then two more in the shootout to finish with his second NHL shutout — both coming in the past weekto lift surging Columbus over Phoenix. Blues 2, Ducks 1: ST. LOUIS — Chris Stewart scored 45 seconds into overtime and rookie Jake Allen made 27 saves, helping St. Louis end Anaheim's five-game winning streak. Jets 5, Maple Leafs 4: TORONTO — Zach Bogosian scored in the 10th round of the shootout to l ift W i n nipeg over Toronto, which lost its fifth straight. Red Wings 5, Canucks 2: VANCOUVER, British Columbia — Henrik Zetterberg and Justin Abdelkader both scored two goals, and Detroit surged past Vancouver. Kings 5, Sharks 2:LOS ANGELES — Kyle Clifford recorded his first two-goal game in the NHL, and Justin Williams, Jarret Stoll and Dwight King also scored as Los Angeles beat San Jose. -

-

TLNPttj

'- et ~Q43

Wizards127, Suns105 PHOENIX(105) Marc.Mo/ris 0-2 Ij-0 0, Mark.Morris 5-9 2-2 13, O'Neal6-110-012,Dragic5-141-1 12,Johnson4-10 0 08, Ha/jda/ji1-1 0-02, Tucke/482-3u, Dudley 6-12 3-416, Scola3-51-2 7, Marshal 0-2 0-0 0, Beasley 7-126-821, Garrett 1-20-03. Totals42-88 15-20 105. WASHINGTON (127) Webster10-187-7 34, Nene5-10 4-4 14, Okafor 7-123-517, Wal8-u l 1-217, Temple4100-00, Booker4-90-0 8,Bea5-10 0-013, Seraphin3-72-2 8, Martin 2-5 0-05, Vesely0-10-0Ij. Totals 48-93 17-20 127. Phoenix 29 30 24 22 — 105 Washington 27 39 36 25 — 127

Julio Cortez/The Associated Press

Montreal Canadiens right wing Colby Armstrong, center, celebrates with Ryan White (53) and Jarred Tinordi (42) after scoring a goal against the New Jersey Devils on Saturday in Newark, N.J.


D4

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

Ducks Continued from D1 "It was a tough week. A lot of negative things were said about u s," O r egon coach Dana Altman said. "The guys bounced back, and I thought they showed a lot of character." UCLA (25-9) had a hard time keeping up with the Ducks without freshman Jordan Adams, the Bruins' second-leading scorer who sat on the bench with a boot on his right foot after breakingit inthe semifinals against No. 18 Arizona. Without Adams, UCLA didn't have the same scoring punch i t n e eded to match the Ducks. "He's one of ou r b e st players, so I guess when you lose one of your best players, it's always something you've got to try to overcome," UCLA c oach Ben Howland said. "And we'll get better at that." L arry Drew I I h a d 14 points and six assists, but had five turnovers. Shabazz Muhammad had 14 points and Norman Powell added 10 in Adams' place for the top-seeded Bruins. Oregon beat UCLA by nine in t heir l one meeting during t h e r e g ular season, but was shaky on the big stage at first, with turnovers on its first four possessions and six in the opening three minutes. Once the Ducks settled down, they settled in, hitting their first five 3-pointers during a 17-4 run that put them up 23-18. Oregon kept hitting from the perimeter — seven of nine from the arc — and led 4132 at halftime. Muhammad got UCLA started in its two previous rallies in the tourney after struggling in the first half and did it again. Held to three points on one-oft hree shooting, th e f a b freshman s cored s even points in the opening 4'/2 minutes, pulling the Bruins within 49-46. Oregon kept its composure, though. The Ducks scored six straight points and did a better job of containing Muhammad, keeping a decent cushion until Damyean Dotson helped them stretch the lead to 7162 on a 3-pointer with 2'/~ minutes left. Oregon pulled away from there and celebrated at midcourt, its turnaround from last week's debacle complete. "It's s omething that I hope the guys can learn from," Altman said. "What a difference if you keep looking ahead a week can make. A week ago at this time I think it's safe to say that we were probably as low as we could get. But we bounced back. I think it showed a little bit of the characterofou rteam."

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL: TOP 25 ROUNDUP

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The Associated Press NEW YORK — There was so much to reflect on just minutes after the last championship game of the Big East tournament as we know it. L ouisville b ecame j ust t h e fourth school to repeat as champions, beating Syracuse 78-61 on Saturday night in an incredible game that saw the fourth-ranked and second-seeded Cardinals turn a 16-point, second-half deficit into an 18-point lead. There were moments to remember over this being the final Big East tournament as has been familiar for the past three decades with the seven basketball-only schools leaving to form their own conference. There had already been somuch conference realignment with football-centric schools such as Syracuse, Pittsburgh, and West Virginia leaving and others to follow. While Louisville cut down the nets, there was quite a bit to think about. "Obviously, it's a real special night for the University of Louisville," Cardinals coach Rick Pitino said of the school's third Big East title. "The final minute of play, first thing I thought of is what an incredible group of guys I'm coaching. Then I thought how happy I was for my family, and then immediately I t h ought of (Big East founder and first commissioner) Dave Gavitt and what he formed, and all of us in some way or another flourish because of Dave Gavitt. Frank Franklin II i TheAssociated Press "This was a special, special Louisville's Peyton Siva (3), Luke Hancock (11) and Montrezl Harrell night." celebrate during the second half of Saturday night's Big East Conference There couldn't have been many tournament final against Syracuse in New York. Louisville won 78-61. in the sellout crowd at Madison Square Garden who would have thought early in the second half 12th consecutive win against In- ed Gators (26-6) will face Missisthat this game would be anything diana and will play Ohio State in sippi in the final. Alabama led today's final. 37-27 with 16:05 remaining before more than a spectacular exit for Syracuse,which isheaded for the No. 10 Ohio State 61, No. 8 Michi- Florida's big run. Atlantic Coast Conference next gan State 58:CHICAGO — Aaron No. 15 New Mexico 63, UNLV 56: season. Craft came onstrong in the sec- LAS VEGAS — Tony Snell scored T he 19th-ranked an d f i f t h - ond half to finish with 20 points 13 straight points for New Mexico seeded Orange had a 45-29 lead and lead Ohio State (25-7) to the during a second-half run as the with 15:50 to play. It seemed to Big Ten tournament final by edg- Lobos (29-5) pulled away late and be a matter of watching the clock ing the Spartans (25-8). added the Mountain West tournaw ind down and t hinking of a No. 7 Kansas 70, No. 11 Kansas ment title to their regular season celebration for Syracuse's sixth State 54: KANSAS CITY, Mo. crown. title. Jeff Withey had 17 points and nine No. 16 Saint Louis 67, Butler 56: But the Cardinals turned up rebounds, Perry Ellis and Naadir NEW YORK — Dwayne Evans the fullcourt pressure and started Tharpe added 12 points each, and nearly set a career high in points playing the kind of defense that Kansas (29-5) pounded Kansas for the second straight game by had them win 10 straight games. State (27-7) to win its ninth Big 12 scoring 24, and Saint Louis' (26Suddenly the Orange (26-9) tournament championship. 6) defense locked down Butler in couldn't buy a basket, and the No. 9 Miami 81, N.C. State 71: the second half to advance to its Cardinals didn't miss. The run GREENSBORO, N.C. — Durand first Atlantic 10 title game. was 27-3 and when it was over Scott scored a c areer-high 32 No. 20 Memphis 91, Southern Louisville had a 56-48 lead with points to help Miami (26-6) earn Miss 79: TULSA, Okla. — Chris 8:51 to play. In seven minutes ev- its first trip to the ACC champi- Crawford scored 23 points,inerything had changed. onship game. The H u r ricanes cluding the go-ahead 3-pointer in Freshman Montrezl Harrell led will take on North Carolina, who the second overtime, lifting MemLouisville with a season-high 20 defeated Maryland in the other phis (30-4) to its seventh Conferpoints semifinal. ence USA tournament title in the Also on Saturday: No. 13 Florida 61, Alabama 51: past eight years. No. 22 Wisconsin 68, No. 3 Indi- NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Kenny No. 25 VCU 71, UMass 62:NEW ana 56: CHICAGO — Ryan Evans Boynton scored 11 straight points YORK — Troy Daniels made six scored 16 points to help Wiscon- during a 15-0 second-half run 3-pointers to score 20 points, and sin upset Indiana in the semifias Florida rallied from 10 points VCU (26-7) advanced to the Atnals of the Big Ten tournament. down to advance to the SEC tour- lantic 10 tournament title game in The Badgers (23-10) earned their nament title game. The top-seed- its first season in the conference. -

NFL

New Falconjackson flirted with retiring By D. Orlando Ledbetter

the Lombardi Trophy." Jackson has been one of the ATLANTA — Steven Jackson more productive running backs was conflicted. in the NFL over his nine years. He's rushed for 10,135 yards and The years of losing with the St. Louis Rams had taken a toll. has posted eight c onsecutive Unless adeal came across his 1,000-yard seasons. He's also a agent's desk that he liked, he was pass-catching threat out of the prepared to do a"Barry Sanders" backfield and has 407 career and walk away from the game. catches. "I was thinking about maybe However, he has never played r etiring," said J a ckson, w h o o n a w i n ning team and h a s signed his contract with the Falreached the playoffs once, when cons on Friday. "I really considhe was a rookie in 2004. During ered that. I really contemplated David Tulis i TheAssociated Press that season, the Rams made the 'do I continue to play football' or Atlanta running back Steven playoffs as an 8-8 team and were 'do I retire.' That's one thing I ad- Jackson, the NFL's active rushing eliminated by the Falcons in the mire about Barry Sanders." leader, smiles after signing with divisional round. Jackson voided the final year the Falcons as an unrestricted free Jackson played hard through of his contract with the Rams that agent Friday in Atlanta. all of the losing and normally was set to pay him $7 million. He was the lone bright spot for the talked to the Green Bay Packers, Rams. "I have a never-(say)-die atbut preferredthe Falcons, who they came up 10 yards short of offered a three-year contract that the Super Bowl. titude," Jackson said. "That is " The philosophy and w h at something that I plan on bringwas worth $12 million, with $4 million guaranteed. coach (Mike) Smith brings, it just ing to this team. They don't need "It was something where I took reallymade a lotof sense," Jack- much; they are already a good my time with it," said Jackson, son said. "It looked like a mar- team. I'll try to bring leadership who flew in to sign his contract riage that was meant to happen." and that relentlessness to this from the Bahamas (where the The Falcons' chances of land- team." NFLPA is meeting) on owner Ar- ing Jackson improved drastically Jackson said that he's already thur Blank's private plane. "We when future Hall of Fame tight friends with Falcons wide rehad a number of teams that we end Tony Gonzalez announced ceiver Roddy White and that he were looking at." Tuesday that he was returning really enjoys how White and felJackson said he picked the Fal- for another season. low wide receiver Julio Jones "To be able to play with a first- block down the field. cons because oftheir recent success with five consecutive win- ballot Hall of Famer (is great)," He also won't mind splitting ning seasons. He also noted the Jackson said. "He knows how time with Jacquizz Rodgers in Falcons' appearance in the NFC close (the Falcons) are to going to the backfield. They both played Championshipgame and how the ultimate game and winning at Oregon State in different eras. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"I've known Quizz since he was a teenager," Jackson said. "To see him have that one run where he ran the guy over at midfield (in the playoffs), I literally jumped off the couch. So, I'm really looking forward to working with him as well." When with the Rams, Jackson was basically the entire attack. He's looking forward to being a part of the Falcons' potent offense. "Early in m y c areer, I took great pride in being in the bell cow, theone guy that you could always depend on," Jackson said. "I've learned that over the years you did need some extra guys on your team to be successful in this league. To be another tool in the tool box is quite all right with me." Jackson said he can't wait to start practicing with the Falcons. "I look forward to seeing some of the spectacular plays that are going to happen in p r actice," Jackson said. "There's one thing about guys that make plays constantly, it seems like they make the better plays in practice. "I'm looking forward to sharpening my tools and learning from

Tony, learning from the guys on how to run routes. I enjoy doing that part of the game as well as protecting and working with the offensive linemen in the blocking schemes."

U.S. looking for answers after latest failure By Ben Walker The Associated Press

TAMPA, Fla. — Ryan Braun and Ryan Vogelsong are out, Team USA is ruined. Either that, or a much simpler reason a club loaded with big league All-Stars got jettisoned in the World Baseball Classic: For one night, a pitcher who is the very definition of a journeyman became the best pitcher in the universe. "As an American, I wanted them to win. It's surprising," Cincinnati outfielder Jay Bruce said."They had a great team out there, but that's baseball." A day after Joe Mauer, Brandon Phillips and this latest U.S. team again failed to reach the championship game, there was plenty of talk around the sport about what Friday night's 4-3 loss to Puerto Rico meant. Some wondered whether the United States should put together an even more packed roster next time. Others say the U.S. has lost its hold on the game it invented. Many suggest the format of the tournament needs to be tweaked. "It was a bit of an upset," said Milwaukee infielder Taylor Green, who played for Canada in the WBC. "Both teams were good. But with one game in baseball, you just never know. It might have been different if it had been in the regular season." Whatever,there was only one thing for sureNelson Figueroa, who was born in Brooklyn and has pitched all over the globe, threw a fastball that never topped 88 mph and still put his team into the semifinals while eliminating manager Joe Torre's side. Defeated by the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico in Miami, the U.S. team watched those two clubs advance to the finals. They'll join two-time champion Japan, which doesn't have a single major leaguer onits roster,and a surprising squad from the Netherlands starting today in San Francisco. For Team USA, it was a semi-familiar resultthe club didn't reach the semifinals for the initial WBC in 2006, then lost to Japan in the 2009 semis. Netherlands manager Hensley Meulens, with his unlikely semifinal club, figures attendance at AT&T Park for the last two rounds might take a hit without the Americans. He is thrilled to see baseball's continued growth worldwide, yet still considers the Americans the best team in the world despite their absence in this event again. "I think it's gotten to where Major League Baseball again is globalizing the game and you can't tell who is going to be in the finals. The better teams who play better are going to be here," Meulens said Saturday in San Francisco. "Teams have played better than the United States has played, no knock against them. But that's the beauty of having competition within countries. To say they should be here? Maybe yes, but at this point they're not. "The branching out of the MLB program to go overseas and then bring them back here to play tournaments like this, anybody can win," Meulens said. Nationals pitcher Ross Detwiler was back at spring camp Saturday, having pitched well earlier in the WBC. "It was kind of cool getting my first-ever save, but it wasn't enough to get to the championship round and that was the ultimate goal," he said. Vogelsong, the winning pitcher in Game 3 of the World Series last October, dismissed talk that his U.S. teammates treat these matchups merely as an extension of spring training. "These games are intense. They mean a lot. There's a lot of pride at stake. Being in the postseason and being here is very similar. It's quite honestly the same. For people to think this is just an exhibition, that's just false." Plus, the U.S. team had beaten Puerto Rico 7-1 three days earlier behind Gio Gonzalez. It piques some fans that many top names were not on the roster. Justin Verlander, David Price and Jered Weaverwere among thebest pitchers absent, while Mike Trout, Buster Posey and Josh Hamilton weren't in the lineup. That's led many fans to say the timing of the tourney should be changed to somehow make it convenient for every star to take part. But, the U.S. Iineup against Figueroa featured three former MVPs — Mauer, Braun and Jimmy Rollins. The lone player in the starting nine who wasn't an All-Star was Kansas City first baseman Eric Hosmer. Hosmer grounded out with the bases loaded to end the eighth. Royals manager Ned Yost was glad Hosmer and other young players got to participate in the tournament. "It gives them a chance to experience a high level of competition that you can't get in a spring training or regular-season game," Yost said. Hosmer was a late replacement for Yankees star Mark Teixeira, who injured his wrist swinging a weighted bat. Mets third baseman David Wright also pulled out with a strain in his rib cage. Despite worries about injuries in the WBC, what happened to Teixeira and Wright could have happened as easily in camp with their New York teams. Instead, the final defeat had more to do with Figueroa. The 38-year-old righty is 20-35 for six major league teams, and is currently in camp with Arizona on a minor league contract for his 19th pro season. He's pitched in Mexico, Venezuela, Taiwan, the Dominican and Puerto Rico, has played in independent ball and has spent plenty of time on the waiver wire. Figueroa's last big league season was 2011, when he had an 8.69 ERA in a brief stint with Houston. He played last season in the minors with the Boston and Yankees systems. Yet for one night at Marlins Park, he was virtually untouchable, pitching two-hit ball for six scoreless innings. Until this win, his best game had been a four-hit shutout for the Mets on the final day of the 2009 season. Funny thing, too, about that shutout Figueroa threw against Houston at Citi Field. The final out was a flyball caught by Angel Pagan — it was Pagan who also gathered in Jimmy Rollins' fly for the last out Friday to seal a win Figueroa will cherish forever.


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D6 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 201i3

PREP ROUNDUP

Dou les teams help lea Cougars over White Bu s • Mountain View girls tennis holdoff s Madras for a 5-3nonconferencevictory Bulletin staff report MADRAS — After taking three straight singles matches to jump ahead 3-1, Mountain View found itself in a heated girls tennis dual. Madras claimed the Nos. 1 and 2 doubles contests to even things up, but the visiting Cougars tallied wins in the final two doubles matches to seal a 5-3 nonconference win. "It was a pretty tight match all the way through," Mountain View coach Shane Therrian said. "It really could have gone either way." The tandem of C ourtney Horrell and Brandy Graham, as well as that of Missy Burke and Rae Ann Morelli, came through for Mountain View in the Nos. 3 and 4 doubles, respectively, after Grace Cole, Aileen Murphy and Yesenia

Erlandson paced Bend, going one for two with a double and two runs batted in. The Lava Bears' bats came alive in the second game when B end scored eight r uns i n the second inning on its way to victory. Erlandson again had a big game at the plate, ending the contest three for five with two triples and two RBIs. Kyle Bailey went three for four with four RBIs and Sami Godlove added two hits and one run batted in. Duke DeGaetano earned the win in relief, pitching the final 3'/3 innings for the Bears. SOFTBALL Panthers split with Titans: REDMOND — The Panthers dropped the first game of a doubleheader 7-4 before using a six-run sixth inning to lift themselves to a 9-3 win in the second contest. Taylor DockGradilla picked up singles ins h ighlighted Redmond's wins. opening game with a two-run S tephanie Garcia put t h e home run in the seventh inWhite Buffaloes on the board ning and Kiahna Brown addat No. 1 singles with a 7-5, 7-5 ed a pair of hits. In the second victory. Madras' top doubles matchup, with things knotted team of Kaitlyn Carter and up 3-3 heading into the bottom Yvette Ruiz earned a tiebreak- of the sixth, Ashley Pesek's er win, followed by a 6-3, 6-4 two-run homer sparked a sixvictory by S ophie Gemelas run inning to help Redmond and Jenni Young. improve to 3-1 on the season. "I was very pleased with Brown recorded two doubles (Garcia)," White Buffalo coach in the win. Dave Jordan said. "She really CrookCounty2, Estacada1: stepped up to the plate, as did PRINEVILLE — Katie Estes our No. 1 doubles." delivered a sacrifice fly in the In other Saturday action: bottom of the sixth to score BASEBALL Taylor Hilderbrand, breaking Bears split d o ubleheader a 1-1 tie and sending the Cowon the road: THE DALLES girls to a nonconference vic— Opening the season with tory. While Miranda Smith a pair of games against The and Emily Benton each went Dalles Wahtonka, Bend High two for three at the plate, it lost the first contest 6-3 be- was Crook County's defense f ore exploding fo r 1 9 h i t s that shined. Center fielder in a 14-10 victory in g ame Karlee Myers-Hollis gunned two. In the opener, the Bears d own a R a nger t r y in g t o managed just six hits. Justin score, and Jena Ovens made

Joe Kline/The Bulletin

Myra Klettke, of Lake Oswego, ascends a hill on the course of the U.S. Snowshoe National Championships on Saturday at Virginia Meissner Sno-park west of Bend.

Trail

of months training in snowshoes. A c o mpetitive trail Continued from 01 runner, he said snowshoeing Howe, a n ult r a r unner was a good way to rehab from sponsored by N o rt h F ace, the ankle surgery he undersaid course designer Rich- went this past December. "I knew this would help me ard Bolt emailed her a few months ago to persuade her get strong again and get in to race at nationals. shape faster," said Mendoza, "He said, 'I know you're 27. "It's really hard. Your into really crazy things, so cardio is just off the charts, this might be right up your you're just breathing so hard alley,' " Howe said. "So I got the whole way. You put so these demo snowshoes and much more effort and power I raced. It's good strength into it, especially when it's t raining, more o f a c o r e soft, slushy (snow) like today, workout. Every step is more the effort is incredibly hard." e ffort. Maybe r u nners i n M endoza sai d h e ha s Bend should start to do it a good speed, but h e l a cks little more, like (this past) De- the strength of Middaugh, a cember, when it was snowy triathlete who on Saturday all over town." claimed his sixth n ational Howe is not expected to snowshoe title in the past 10 race in today's final day of years. He is six for six, having competition in the snowshoe won every nationals in which nationals. She also was not he has competed. prepared after S a turday's Middaugh, 34, won l a st race to commit to racing in year's XTERRA off-road trithe 2014U.S. snowshoe cham- athlon U.S. championship, pionships, set for Vermont. which includes swimming, "I kind of... might retire," a trail running and mountain smiling Howe said of her ca- biking. He said he was happy reer in snowshoe racing. with Saturday's challenging Unlike H owe, M e ndoza snowshoe course, which feaactually spent the past couple tured many difficult climbs

Cougs

and descents. "The tougher the better for me," Middaugh said. "There's some really strong runners here, but I was able to just do my own race, and keep my head down and run hard." Middaugh said h e u s es s nowshoe racing a s w i n ter t r a ining f o r of f - road triathlon. " Snowshoe racing i s a really good way to keep a high fitness level through the winter," he said. Also at Meissner on Saturday, Paul Schmitt, of Stoddard, Wis., won th e b oys junior 5K national championships in 33:01, and Bonnie Nutt, of Phillips, Wis., won the girls junior race in 39:14. Mark Robins, of Salem, won the citizens' 5K race in 29:45. McKenna Ramsay, of Dillon, Colo., was the top fe-

Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg 4

"Quality Painting Inside and Out"

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Baseball Saturday's results Class 5A Nottconferettce

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The U.S. National Snowshoe Championships conclude today at Meissner Sno-park with 4x2.5K relay races for all ages. Registration is at 9 a.m., and racing starts at 10 a.m.

t 00 023 0 — 6

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WestSalem Redmond

11000t 0 3 7 1 200 106 x — 9 t 0 4

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Tennis Saturday's Results Boys

Softball Nottconferettce

— Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com.

1117 0 3 9 1

Secondgame

Bend

game. Landrus shined on the mound for the Cougars (0-

Continued from 01 "They came with the pressure and w e h a n dled i t ," Kinkade added. With the score tied 5-5 going into the bottom of the fifth inning, Awbrie Elle Kinkade's RBI double put Bend ahead 65. The Dalles Wahtonka (2-2 overall) scored in the top of the sixth to tie the game, 6-6, but an RBI by Lisa Sylvester and a run scored on an error put the Bears ahead 8-6. Bend allowed one run in the top of the seventh before pitcher Alexis Hill-Gruenberg finished off the Eagle Indians to seal the victory and earn the save. Meredith Berrigan received the victory, pitching 2'/3 innings in

2), pitching three innings and giving up one run on one hit to go along with four strikeouts. McKae saidthat throughout the lineup, each player put together good at-bats. Unfortunately, he n o ted, some of them resulted in balls hit right at Olympian defenders. "I think we have a lot of really dedicated ballplayers with this group, and they're willing to put in the time and effort needed to be successful," McKae said. "That's why we have such a positive outlook with this

group."

Girls Nottcottference

Mountain View 5, Madras3 At MadrasHighSchool Singles — Garcia, M,d. Coplin, MV,7-5, 7-5; Cole, MV, d. Fortistall, M, 6-4, 7-5; Murphy,Mv, d. Lawrence,M, 6-2, 6-2; Gradila,MV,d. Romero, M, 4-6, 9-7,10-8.Doubles —Carter/Ruiz, M,d. Mays/ Wel s,MV,6-2, 2-6,10-4; Gemelas/Youitg, M, d. Alexander/Waters,MV,6-3, 6-4; Horrell/Graham,MV, d. Galatt/Alonso, M,7-5, 6-3; Burke/Morelli, MV, d. Gonzalez/KaloJordan, i M,6-4, 6-3.

Lacrosse

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Saturday's results First game TheoallesWahtonka031 001 6 Bend 001 000 2

2

— Miller/Tipton,MV,d. Madras,6-3, 6-4, LareneNa/ Mahr, Mtt d. Madras,7-5, 6-2; Smith)Kolodviejcyk, MV, d Madras,6-3, 4-6, 7-6 (t-3); Felix/Pichette, Mad, d.MountainView,6-0,2-6,6-3.

0 00 too 3 — 4 8 5 Secondgame

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Mountain View 5,Madras3 At Mountain View Singles — Atkinson, MV, d. Penaioza,Mad, 6-4, 6-4, GarciaMad, , d. MountainView,3-6, 6-t, 6-2; Geme as, Mad,d. Mountain View,7-6 (8-6), 64; Schoettborn,MtI d. Madras,6-1, 6-0. Doubles

relief of Hill-Gruenberg, who started the game. Sylvester led the Bears (1-1) at the plate, ending the second game two for four with a double and an RBI. In the first game, The Dalles Wahtonka banged out 17 hits, knocking B errigan, B end's s tarting pitcher, out o f t h e circle after two innings. Sylvester ended the opener two

Boys Saturday's results Meridian (Idaho) 10,Sisters6 Timberline(Idaho)12, Sisters3 Boise 6,Sisters1

for three with a double and an RBI to highlight the Lava Bear offense. Brydie Burnham went one for three with one run batted in.

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(0-1).

PREP SCOREBOARD

male finisher (32:04).

said. "They settled in a little bit more in the second game." Continued from 01 M ountain V i e w ea r n ed "They never gave up, all the its first lead of the day in the way to the end, both games," bottom of the third inning of McKae said of hi s p layers. the second contest, when a "They were still rallying in the run-scoring double by Colton last inning." Lovelace was followed by a John Carroll paced the 5A fielder's choice by Carroll to Cougars in the opening game drive Lovelace in. with a t w o-for-three perforBut the Olympians (3-1 overmance at the plate and scored all) came back with a total of both of Mountain View's runs. five runs in the fifth and sixth Jaxson Landrus went two for and held off a s i xth-inning three, Kyler Ayers recorded Mountain View rally to pick a double, and Ronnie Stacey, up the victory. "All we wanted was an opwho only allowed one hit in three innings on the mound, portunity to be in a position to drove in a run. win, and we were right there," S prague, h o wever, s a w McKae said. "A couple balls Jackson Engelking go two for drop, things go differently." two offensively, including a Ayers and Stacey each colleadoff home run in the first lected two hits in t h ree atinning. bats, including an Ayers dou"Season-opener, you know, ble, while Carroll, Lovelace so there may have been a few and Brock Powell drove in jitters the first game," McKae one run apiece in the second

two dtvtng plays at shortstop that stranded Estacada base runners. L akeview 9, L a P i n e 8 : LAKEVIEW — Seven errors doomed the Hawks as they fell to 0-3 on the season. Keara Parrish went the distance and allowed just five hits as La Pine's starting pitcher, but four walks and five unearned runs were too much for the Hawks to overcome. Parrishalso led her team at the plate, ending the game with two hits. Cougs drop two: Mountain View fell to 0-3 on the season with a pair of 15-4 nonconference losses at home to West Linn. The Cougars managed just three hits in the first game against the Lions. Hannah Wicklund went the distance and took the loss for Mountain View while Jenna Henninger led the Cougs at the plate with two hits and two RBIs. BOYS TENNIS Mountain View 5, Madras 3: Philip Atkinson set the tone for host Mountain View with a 6-4, 6-4 win over Alexis Penaloza in the No. 1 singles match as the Cougars edged Madras in their first competition of the season. Brooks Larraneta and Jaydon Mahr won at No. 2 doubles for Mountain View in the last match to finish, locking up the team decision for the Cougars. Carlos Garcia and Jordan Gemelas were singles winners for the White Buffaloes. GIRLS LACROSSE Hood River Valley 10, Bend United 8: Tori Landin scored four goals to lead Bend United, but the v i siting Eagles scored the final three goals of the game to deny the Bendbased squad in its nonconference season opener at Summit High School. Cayley Allen and Katie Alhart added two goals apiece for Bend United

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© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

• .'na ura as u ues e a e over ex or in

I rtstration by Victo Ngai ' New YorkTimes News Service

In changing China, a market for finding love

• Wyden expresses

• Business of outdoor play in Central Oregon brings high number ofsporting goodsstores and employment to DeschutesCounty

concern that exports

will inflate cost By Sean Cockerham McClatchy Newspapers

By Brook Larmer

WASHINGTON — The natural gas boom in North Texas is sputtering, with the number of rigs working the Barnett Shale recently hitting a 10-year low. It's an issue elsewhere, as well, as the glut of domestic energy that's transforming America drives down the price of natural gas and makes drilling less profitable. An industry association based in Fort Worth, Texas, is among those arguing that a solution is for the federal government to allow exports of America's natural gas to foreign nations, where the price can be five times higher. "It is very important to develop a new market for domestic natural gas," said Ed Ireland, the executive director of the Barnett Shale Energy Education Council.

New York Times News Service

From her stakeout near the entrance ofan H8 M store in Joy City, a Beijing shopping mall, Yang Jing seemed lost in thought, twirling a strand of her auburn-tinted hair, tapping her nails on an aquamarine iPhone 4S. But her eyes kept moving. They tracked the clusters of young

women zigzagging from Zara to Calvin Klein Jeans. They lingered on a face, a gesture, and then moved on, darting across the atrium, searching. "This is a good place to hunt," she told me. "I always have good luck here." For Yang, Joy City is not so much a consumer mecca as an urban Serengeti that she prowls for potential wives forsome ofChina's richest bachelors. Yang, 28, is one of China's premier love hunters, a new breed of matchmaker that has proliferated in the country's economic boom. The company she works for, Diamond Love andMarriage, caters to China's nouveaux riches: men, and occasionally women, willing to pay tens and even hundreds of thousands of dollars to outsource the search for their ideal spouse. In Joy City, Yang gave instructions to her eight-scout team, one of six squads the

company was deploying in three cities for one Shanghai millionaire. This client had provided a list of requirements for his future wife,

including her age (22 to 26), skin color ("white as porce-

lain") and sexual history (yes, a virgin). "These millionaires are very picky, you know?" Yang said. "Nobody can ever be perfect enough." Still, the potential reward for Yang is huge: The love hunter who finds the client's eventual choice will receive a bonus of more than $30,000, around five times the average annual salary in this line of work. Suddenly, a signal came. From across the atrium, a co-worker of Yang caught her eye and nodded at a woman in a blue dress, walking alone. Yang had shaken off her colleague'ssuggestions several times that day, but this time she circled behind the woman in question. "Perfect skin," she whispered. "Elegant face." When the woman walked into H8 M, Yang intercepted her in the sweater aisle. "I'm so sorry to bother you," she said with a honeyed smile. "I'm a love hunter. Are you looking for love?" See China /E3

4

Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Staff at Pine Mountain Sports in Bend help customers on Wednesday. Deschutes County has a relatively high level of employment in sporting goods stores, according to the state.

By Rachael Reese The Bulletin

rom rafting dovm the river to bicycling through the Cascades, Deschutes County's recreational opportunities attract residents

to choose from. "We have more than twice as many stores per person as the Portland area does," said Damon Runberg, Central Oregon regional economist for the Oregon Employment Department. Per capita, he said, Deschutes County has a sporting goods store for every 3,410

Oregonemployment in sporting goodsstores 2011 itannual average) 2010 4,342 4,012 Source: Oregon Employment Department

people. " That's not surprising at all ... . Our economy is in a lot of ways based on tourism and recreation ... there's a lot higher percentageofthose types of shops because we live in Central Oregon. It's the name of the game here." Despite a slight decline at the end of 2008 and into 2009, statewide employment at sporting goods stores has steadily grown over the past decade, and it's expected to continue on both the state and national levels, according to a report released this month by the Oregon Employment Department. The reportstates that Oregon had 463 sporting goods retailers in the third quarter of 2012, ranging from specialty stores like Pine Mountain Sports to chains like Sportsman's Warehouse. And Deschutes County, which had 48 stores report employment in 2012, had, proportionally, one of the highest levels of

employment in the sector among the state's 36 counties. Runberg saidDeschutes County's stores supplied a monthly average of 368 jobs for the first three quarters of 2012, with most stores employing fewer than 10 people. Multnomah County recorded an average monthly employment of 1,180 in 94 stores during the same time period. But Deschutes has a higher concentration of sporting goods stores and a higher percentage of the population working in them than the Portland area, according to Runberg. The sector includes stores that offer bicycles, canoes and kayaks, camping equipment, hunting and fishing gear, exercise and fitness equipment and athletic footwear. See Outdoors /E5

The popularity of Central Oregon's outdoor recreation, like mountain biking, helps keep the plethora of sporting goods stores in business.

gas will drive up energy prices for U.S. consumers and manufacturers, killing a "manufacturing renaissance" the nation badly needs. See Gas /E2

Enhance your texting with colorful 'stickers' New York Times News Service

To outfit them all, the county offers nearly 50 sporting goods stores

But there's a powerful voice of skepticism, the new chairman of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee,who says he's worried that exporting America's natural

SAY IT WITH PICTURES

By Jenna Wortham

and visitors alike.

Ron T. Ennis/ Fort Worth Star-Telegram

This natural gas facility is located near Fort Worth, Texas.

To say that I like to send text messages is like saying Garfield likes lasagna. It is my expressive medium. On Wednesday alone, I sent at least 100 — but I like to send more than just words. I'm a big fan of using emoji, the colorful symbol alphabet that contains nearly a thousand images of cute animals food items and expressive smiley faces to convey what words cannot. W hen a end fri recently

told me that she was sick, I replied with a cartoon row of steaming bowls of soup and a flexing bicep — my way of wishing her a speedy recovery. I insert all kinds of visual images into messages, including GIFs — those short, looping animated clips — to emphasize a point. When my friend Ray got an iPhone, for example, I texted him a GIF of the singer Rihanna jumping up and down to convey my own enthusiasm for his purchase. See Stickers /E5 >tt

lllustration by Julia Yellow/ New York Times News Service PAID ADVERTISEMENT

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In a Beijing shopping mall, the "love hunter" Yang Jing, right, and an assistant talked to a woman about joining the database ofDiamond Love and Marriage, a matchmaking service.

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E2

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.

TODAY FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507.

MONDAY AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson St., La Pine; 541-536-6237. KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: 10:30 a.m.noon; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541-536-0515. NURSINGPROGRAM ORIENTATION: Review the selection procedure for students interested in applying to COCC'sAssociate of Applied Science in Nursing program aswell as the prerequisites for applying and support courses necessary for the AAS degree; it is not necessary to be enrolled at COCC to attend this orientation, and reservations are notneeded;Room 305,Building 3; free;1:30-2:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 S.E.College Loop; 541-318-3741. FREETAXPREPARATIONSERVICES: United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who needassistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M .A.LynchElementary School, 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507. ACAREER INREALESTATE?: Informational meeting on real estate careers; RSVP required; free; 6 p.m.; Exit Realty Bend, 354 N.E. Greenwood Ave., No. 100; 541-4808835 or soarwithexit©gmail.com.

TUESDAY CITYCOUNCIL MEETING OR WORK SESSION:Free; 6:45 a.m.; Redmond City Council chambers, 777 S.W. Deschutes Ave. EMAIL,FROM BALL AND CHAIN TO FRIDAY AT FIVE!: Online webinar; learn to control and manage email to improve productivity; hosted by SIMPLIFY; registration required; $45; 8-9 a.m.; Camp Sherman; 503260-8714 or info©simplifynw.com. REAL ESTATEFORECAST BREAKFAST:Speakers will discuss "Opportunities for the Future and Lessons Learned from the Past"; registration required; 8 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www .bendchamber.org. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. MAC HELP:Free; 10-11:30 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. KNOW MORE EMAIL: 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. THE BUSINESSOFAGING: Topics include Medicare supplements, continuum of care, conservatorship,

guardian, trustee, home health and home car eand hospice;free;2-5 p.m .; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-388-1133. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30p.m .; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. BUSINESSAFTERHOURSAND RIBBON CUTTING,FITNESS 1440: Free; 4:30-5:30 p.m.; Fitness1440, 3853 S.W. 21st St., Suite107, Redmond; 541-504-6050. RCAPP:Free; 4:30-6 p.m.; Redmond City Hall, 716 S.W. Evergreen Ave.; 541-923-7710. CROOKEDRIVER RANCHTERREBONNECHAMBEROF COMMERCE NETWORKING SOCIAL:Free; 5:30 p.m.; In the Garden, 336 N.W. SeventhSt., Redmond; 541-923-2679. SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: SCOREbusiness counselors will be available everyTuesdayfor free oneon-onesmallbusinesscounseling;no appointment necessary; free; 5:307:30p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.WallSt.; 541-6177080 or www.scorecentraloregon.org. BUSINESSSTARTUP WORKSHOPS: For people contemplating business ownership; sponsored by Mid Oregon Credit Union; registration required; free; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Madras Campus, 1170 E.Ashwood Road, Madras; 541-383-7290. WOMEN AND MONEY,ARE YOU READYFORCHANGE?:Workshop about howto organize important papers, complete financial documents, tie up estate planning loose ends, review your investment goals and identify reliable resources; free; 6 p.m.; Mid OregonCredit Union, 1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend. WORD III:6-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library,601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080.

OREGON ALCOHOLSERVER PERMIT TRAINING:Meets the minimum requirements by the Oregon Liquor Control Commission Io obtain an alcohol server permit; registration required; $35; 9 a.m.; Round Table Pizza,1552 N.E.Third St., Bend; 541-447-6384 or www. happyhourtraining.com. THINKFORWARD MARKETING MASTERYSERIES: Professionals specializing in tools and techniques from the latest technology to the Iried-and-Iraditional will bring participants up to speed with breakout presentations, personalized round table sessions, panel discussions and after-hours events; includes weekly support between sessions via blog, eNewsletter and periodic informal coffee talks; after hours event at 5:30 p.m.; registration required; $150 per session or $400 for all four; 9 a.m.-noon; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; www.intrepidforward. com/workshops. AARP FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those whoneed assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free;10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family ResourceCenter, 1144 Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcomeandfirst two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; BendHonda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway20; 541-480-1765. CENTRALOREGON INTERGOVERNMENTALCOUNCIL BOARD MEETING: Free;4-5:30 p.m.; City of Redmond Public Works Training Room, 243 EastAntler Ave.

WEDNESDAY

FRIDAY

BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 7 a.m.; BendSenior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. FREE TAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-6507. FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES: United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those whoneedassistance to file both federal andstate Iax returns; appointments requested; free; 4-7 p.m.; M.A. Lynch Elementary School, 1314 S.W.KalamaAve., Redmond; 541-389-6507.

AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREE TAX PREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 10 a.m.-5 p.m.; Warm Springs Family Resource Center,1144 Warm Springs St.; 541-553-1626. CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 or bobbleile@windermere.com. KNOW MORE EMAIL: 2-3:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050.

THURSDAY AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:AARPwill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Senior Center,1600 S.E. Reed Market Road; 541-706-6234. AARP FREETAXPREPARATION SERVICES:United Way will offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who need assistance to file both federal and state tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Pentecostal Church of God, 51491 Morson St., La Pine; 541-536-6237.

Gas Continued from E1 "If you don't get it right, you can do a lot of damage," the chairman, Ore gon D e mocratic S e n . Ron Wyden, said at a recent natural gas forum in Washington. The question of whether to export natural gas is among the top energy issues for Congress and the White House, and it dominated the first Senate e n ergy c o m m i ttee hearing u nder W y d en's leadership. The chief executive officer of D o w C h emical, Andrew Liveris, expressed alarm over the idea of mass exports at that Feb. 12 hearing. He described natural gas as the "first indispensable ingredient for everything that is made and consumed in this country," and said it created eight times more value across the economy as a building block for manufactured goods than if it were exported to other nations. "America's natural gas bounty is more than a simple commodity. It's a oncein-a-generation o p p ortunity," he said. The Department of Ener-

gy is considering 16 applications for terminals to export American natural gas to energy-hungry countries such as Japan, China and India. The W hite House hasn't made a decision. S enior W h i t e H o u s e energy adviser H e ather Zichal said America had the lowest natural-gas prices in the world. That makes the nation attractive for business, she said. "The abundance of aff ordable natural g a s i s supporting a new dawn in American manufacturing," she said last week at the Center for Strategic and I nternational Studies i n Washington. Zichal s ai d a l l o w ing some of A m erican's energy bonanza to go to foreign lands would provide an opportunity to create oil and gas industry jobs in the United States. But that has to be b alanced with the impact on manufacturing, national security and home energy bills, she said. " As a general rule of thumb, we are not opposed to the notion of exports," Zichal said. "But that's through the lens of making sure we are not doing that in a manner that is going to undermine A m erican consumers." The oil and gas industry

The big Haynesville natural gas f i eld i n L o u i siana

"Let's just spend some time looking before we do the

also is seeing a declining interest, said Philip Budzik, an analyst with the Energy Information Administration, which is part of the Department of Energy. "The only natural gas play that seems to be really heavily focused on right now is the Marcellus i n P e n nsylvania and West Virginia," he said in an interview. "I think part of that is due to the fact that gas there has received a higher price because it's closer to (the

leaping." — Sen. Ron Wyden, Senate energy committee chairman

argues that fears of exports are misplaced. American natural gas production would go up if there were new foreign markets, said Ireland, of the Barnett Shale council. So the supply would increase along with the demand and keep prices down, he said. "Does anyone argue that because Apple sells iPads worldwide,that somehow increases the price of iPads for U.S. consumers?" Ireland asked in an interview. He said the dtlemma for North Texas was that the nation's natural gas supply had skyrocketed and it took longer for U.S. demand to catch

biggest) markets." A major study for the Department ofEnergy released in December supported the idea of exporting natural gas to help drillers. The study looked at what the impact on the economy might be if various amounts of liquefied natural gas were exported. "Across all these scenarios, the U.S. was projected to gain net economic benefits from allowing LNG exports," said the report from NERA Economic Consulting. But Wyden, theSenate energy committee chairman, called the study " seriously flawed." He said it shouldn't be used to decide whether to allow exports. Wyden said he didn't oppose all exports. He said he wanted to see whether there was a "sweet spot" where drillers could make money and U.S. natural gas stayed cheap. "Let's just spend some time looking before we do the leap-

up. New natural gas-fired power plants and petrochemical operations take time to build and get online, he said. So rigs leave the Barnett Shale and its natural gas behind in favor of drilling somewhere else for oil, which goes for a much

higher price. The number of active rigs in the Barnett Shale peaked at 200 in September 2008. It was downto a 10-year low of 27before going up to 32 last week.

ing," he said.

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SATURDAY 2013 SPRINGSHEEPPRODUCERS WORKSHOP MANAGING A HEALTHYPASTURE:Central Oregon sheep producers, in cooperation with Oregon State University Extension Service will present this three part series, designed to give all ages and levels of sheep producers an opportunity to connect, observe and learn first-hand knowledge about lambing techniques, pasture management, sheep dairiesand parasite control; free; 9 a.m.; 4-H Clover Club Building, 502 S.E. Lynn Blvd., Prineville; 541-480-1340 or tcf@cbbmail.com. FREETAXPREPARATIONSERVICES: United Waywill offer tax preparation clinics with certified volunteers to help those who needassistance to file both federal andstate tax returns; appointments requested; free; 9a.m.4 p.m.; Prineville COIC Office, 2321 N.E. Third St.; 541-447-3260.

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DEEDS • Joseph M. Carman to Michael T. and Kelly V. Giebelhaus, Northwest Townsite COSSecond Addition to Bend, Lot13, Block 29, $334,500 Inc. and N. P.Dodge Jr., to Erin P. • Wood Hill Enterprises LLC, which Butler, Redside, Lot11, $184,900 • Juanita D. King to Jason S. Kropf and acquired title as Woodhill Enterprises LLC to Sarah L.Chambers, Southern Anne E.George, Forest Hills, Phase2, Pines, Lot 5, $171,000 Lot 9, $350,500 • Matthew J. Gawlikto Fish Hawk • Darin J. and Angela C. Clement to Ventures LLC,Parkridge Estates, Reylynn W.and Bryan D.Husband, Phase1, Lot35, $150,000 Blue Ridge, Lot 21, $346,000 • Steven and Sheila Landis and Solon •JamesJ.and MeaganL.Brandito Robert D. Woodward andTerri S. A. and Anita C. Stone to Edward F. Schuyler, Eastbrook Estates, Phase1, Mouery Jr. and Judith L. Mouery, Lot 5, $160,500 Ridge at EagleCrest 36, Lot 39, $475,000 • Eugene L. andMarci M. Trahern to John G. andDian C. Marr, Loe • Valerie F. andPaul H. Hammer, Brothers Town N Country Addition, trustees for Valerie HammerLiving Lot1, Block 2, $255,000 Trust, to Jeffrey D. Long, Awbrey Butte Homesites, Phase30, Lot 29, • Mark S. and Jennifer M. Roberts to Daniel D. and Linda J. Ellis, Yardley $170,000 Estates, Phase1, Lot 20, $271,000 • Jeryl A. Whipple to Patrick A. and Lenora M. H.Fouts, Deschutes River •DouglasL.and LucindieW .Buysman Woods, Lot1, $265,000 to John M. Rudishauser, Valleyview, Lot 48, $182,500 • John L. Fox Trust to Alvin W. and Gladys C.Smith, Ridge atEagleCrest • Robert A. and JewelF.Payneto Jon 18, Lot 2, $280,000 C. and Kathy B. Richards, Rivers Edge Village, Phase 4, Lot13, $335,000 • Michael J. Tennantand Jim St. John to Kevin S. andMaxine C.McKinney, • Hayden HomesLLCto Lior and Cottage at NorthWest Crossing, Lot Revital Kogot, Aspen Rim, Lot 86, 23, $305,000 $ I89,507 Deschutes County • N. P. Dodge Jr., trustee for trust agreement between National Equity

• Margaret A. Kean and Joan S. Erath to Jeffrey R. andTeresa K.Metke, Golf Course Homesite Section, Eleventh Addition, Lot198, $270,000 • Jason and Sharon Franklin to Justin C. and Kristen N. Yax, Steelhead Run, Lof L $308,000 • Duane F. and Russell B. Greenhoe, trustees for Duane F. Greenhoe and Russell B. GreenhoeLiving Trust, to Brian E. andAmanda L.Albrich, Gosney Meadows,Tract 4, $475,000 Crook County • Robert R. and Shirley M. Hunter to Raymond andReneeFahlgren, Sunset Hills Subdivision, Lot 9, Block 2, $258,500 • Richard C. Kludt Jr. and Kay L. Kludt to Steven B.and Kathy L. Riley, Township14, Range15, Section11, $175,500 • Pamela J. Bicart, who acquired title as Pamela J.Wooldridge, to William J. Akridge II and Millie Akridge, Pioneer Heights, Phase1, Lot1, $195,000 • Scott L. and Sally R. Ross to Equity Trust Company Custodian fbo Sheryl L. Rhoden IRA, Ironhorse1, Phase1, Lot 53, $180,000 • Clinton S., Viola M. and Bill Buie to GaryandDonnaJ.Watson,Ironwood Estates, Phase 3,Lot 55, $177,500

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SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

China Continued from E1 T hree miles away, i n a Beijing park near the Temple of Heaven, a woman named Yu Jia jostled for space under a grove of elms. A widowed 67-year-old pensioner, she was clearing a spot on the ground for a sign she had scrawled for her son. "Seeking Marriage," read the wrinkled sheet of paper, which Yu held in place with a few fragments of brick and stone. "Male. Single. Born 1972. Height 172 cm. High school education. Job in

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Beijing." Yu is another kind of love hunter: A parent seeking a spouse for an adult child in the so-called marriage markets that have popped up in parks across the city. Long rows of graying men and women sat in front of signs listing their children's qualifications. Hundreds of others trudged by, stopping occasionally to make an inquiry. Yu's crude sign had no flourishes: no photograph, no blood type, no zodiac sign, no line about income or assets. Unlike the millionaire's wish list, the sign didn't even specify what sort of wife her son wanted. "We don'thave much choice," she explained. "At this point, we can't rule anybody out." In the four years she has been seeking a wifefor her son, Zhao Yong, there have been only a handful of prospects. Even so, when a woman in a green plastic visor paused to scan her sign that day, Yu put on a bright smile and told of her son's fine character and good looks. The woman asked: "Does he own an apartment in Beijing?" Yu's smile wilted, and the woman moved on.

Photos by Gilles Sabrie / New York Times News Service

Yu Jia, who is seeking a bride for her son Zhao Yung, examines a picture of a possible candidate at an informal "marriage market," at the Temple of Heaven park in Beiling.

One afternoon in Chengdu, after slurping down a bowl of beef noodles at Master Kong's Chef's Table, Yang noticed a young woman sweeping past her into the restaurant, chatting on a cellphone. Long black hair hid most of the woman's face,but there was something captivating about her laugh and easy gait. "She seemed open, warm, happy," Yang said. After a moment of indecision, Yang followed her inside, apologized for the intrusion and switched on her charm. Linking arms with the woman — one of her patentedmoves — Yang came away with her phone number, photograph and a few pertinent details: she was 24, a graduate student and a near-ringer for the TV hostess Zhou Tao.

Culling the prospects

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prospects,these campaigns offer a sense of security. Rigorous background checks screen out what Fei calls "gold diggers,liars and people of loose

morals." Depending on a came

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Posters describe men and women looking for spouses at an informal "marriage market."

or social networks, many men and women have taken their searches online, where thousands of dating and marriage websites have sprung up in an industry that analysts predict will soon surpass $300 million annually. These sites cater mainly to China's millions of 'Leftover' at 28 white-collar workers. But inThree decades of combus- tense competition, along with tive economic growth have mistrust of potential mates' reshaped the l andscape of online claims, has spurred a marriage in China. A genera- growing number of s i ngles tion ago, China was one of the — rich and poor — to turn to world's most equal nations, in more hands-on matchmaking both gender and wealth. Most services. people were poor, and tight China's matchmaking tradicontrols over housing, em- tion stretches back more than ployment, travel and family 2,000 years, to the first impelife simplified the search for r ial marriage broker in t h e a suitable match — what the late Zhou dynasty. The goal of Chinese call mendang hudui, matchmakers ever since has meaning roughly "family usually been to pair families doors of equal size." of equal stature for the greater Like many C hinese who social good. Today, however, came of age in the 1960s and matchmaking has warped into '70s, Yu married a man from a commercial free-for-all in her factory work unit, with which marriage is often viewed their local Communist Party as an opportunity to leap up boss as informal matchmaker. the social ladder or to proclaim As recently as 1990, research- one's arrival at the top. ers found that a vast majority Single men have a hard time of residents in two of China's making the list if they don't largest cities dated just one own a house or an apartment, person beforemarriage: their which in cities like Beijing are prospective spouse. extremely expensive. And deChina's transition to a mar- spite the gender imbalance, ket economy has swept away Chinese women face intense many restrictions in people's pressureto be married before lives. But of all the new free- the age of 28, lest they be redoms the Chinese enjoy today jected and stigmatized as "left— making money, owning a over women." house, choosing a careerDozens of high-end matchthere is one that has become making services have sprung an unexpected burden: seek- up in China in the last five ing a spouse. This may be a years, charging big fees to time of sexual and romantic find and to vet p rospective liberation in China, but the spouses for wealthy clients. solemn task of finding a hus- Their methods can turn into band or wife is proving to be gaudy spectacle. One firm a vexing proposition for rich transported200 would-be troand poor alike. phy wives to a resort town in "The old family and social s outhwestern China for t h e networks that people used to perusal of one powerful magrely on for finding a husband nate. Another organized a caror wife have fallen apart," said avan of BMWs for rich busiJames Farrer, an American so- nessmen to find young wives ciologist whose book, "Open- in Sichuan province. Diamond ing Up," looks at sex, dating Love, among the largest loveand marriage in contempo- hunting services, sponsored rary China. "There's a huge a matchmaking event in 2009 sense of dislocation in China, where 21 men each paid a and young people don't know $15,000 entrance fee. where to turn." Over the last year, I tracked The confusion surrounding the progress of two matchmarriage in China reflects a making efforts at the opposite country in frenzied transition. extremes of wealth. Together, Sharp inequalities of wealth they help illuminate the forces have created new fault lines reshaping marriage in China. in Chinese society, while the In one case, Yu's migrant largest rural-to-urban migra- son reluctantly agreed to allow tion in h i story has blurred his aging mother to make the many of the old ones. As many search for his future wife her as 300 million rural Chinese all-consuming mission. In the have moved to the cities in the other, Yang's richest client at lastthree decades. Uprooted Diamond Love deployed dozand without nearby relatives ens of love hunters to find the to help a r r ange m eetings most exquisite fair-skinned with potential partners, these beauty in the land, even as he migrants are often lost in the fretted about being conned by swell of the big city. a bai jin nu, or gold digger. Demographic changes, too, Between the two extremes are creating c omplications. is Yang herself, whose very Not only are many more Chi- success as a love hunter has nese women postponing mar- made her the breadwinner in riage to pursue careers, but her own family. Despite her China's gender gap — 118 boys growing discomfort with the are born for every 100 girlssexism that p ermeates the has become one of the world's love-hunting business, she has widest, fueled in large part by sympathy for her superrich the government's restrictive clients. "These men are lost souls," one-child policy. By the end of this decade, Chinese research- she said. "They worked hard, ers estimate, the country will made a lot of money, and left have a surplus of 24 million their old world behind. Now unmarried men. they don't have time to find Without traditional family a wife, and they don't know

whom to trust. So they come to us."

A very particular client When I first visited the Beijing office of Diamond Love last year, Yang was fretting over a love-hunting campaign f or a potential client: a d i vorced 42-year-old property mogul who was prepared to spend the equivalent of more than a half-million dollars. This wouldn't be the biggest case in company history; two years ago, a man paid $1.5 million for a successful 12-city hunt. But thepressure felt more intense this time. It wasn't just that Yang would vie with hundreds of other love hunters for a possible winner's bonus of $32,000. Her boss had entrusted her with a central role in this campaign — the firm's biggest of the year — with a client who was known to be an imperious perfectionist. Failure was a real possibility. Mr. Big, as I'll call him — he insisted that Diamond Love not reveal his name — is a member of China's fuyidai, the " first-generation r i c h " who have leapt from poverty to extreme wealth in a single bound, often jettisoning their first wives in the process. Diamond Love's clientele also includes many fuerdai,or "second-generation-rich," men and women in their20s and 30s whose search is often bankrolled by wealthy parents keen on exerting control over their marital choices as well as the family inheritance. But fuyidai like Mr. Big, who has built a fortune in computers and real estate, are accustomed to being the boss and can be the most uncompromising clients. Mr. Big had an excruciatingly s p ecific r e q uirement for his second wife. The ideal woman, he said, would look like a younger replica of Zhou Tao, a famous Chinese television host: slim with pure white skin, slightly pointed chin, perfect teeth, double eyelids and long silken hair. To ensure her good character and fortune, he insisted that her wuguan — a feng shui-like reading of the sense organs on the face — show perfect harmony. "When clients start out, all they want is beauty — how tall, how white, how thin," Yang said. "Sometimes the person they're looking for doesn't exist in nature. Even if we find her, these clients often have no idea whether that would make their hearts feel settled. It's our job to try to move them from fantasy toward reality." Fantasy, of course, is precisely what D i amond Love sells. Yang's boss, Fei Yang, is a smoky-voiced woman in a black leather jacket who used to trade in electronic goods. Inviting me to sit on a bright pink couch in her lushly carpeted office, she explained how the firm has "spread the culture of t h e r e lationship" s ince 2005, when it s f i r st opened in Shanghai. It now has six branches, with 200 consultants, 200 full-time love hunters and hundreds more part-time scouts, virtually all of them women. Besides giving clients a vastly expanded pool of marriage

paign's size, Diamond Love chargesfrom $50,000 to more than $1 million. Fei makes no apologies for the high fees. "Why shouldn't they pay more to find the perfect wife?" she asked me. "This is the most important investment in their lives." Even before Mr. Big signed a contract,Yang sensed trouble brewing. She and a colleague culled the company's exclusive databases to find women to serve as templates for the love hunters' search. Together with Mr. Big, they looked at the files and pictures of their top 3,000women. He rejected them all. "Even if the girl's eyebrow was just a half-millimeter too high, he would toss the photo out and say, 'No good!'" Yang said. "He always found something to complain about." With more than a half-million dollars on the line, Yang was beginning to doubt her ability to deliver. And not just for Mr. Big. One afternoon when we met, the normally animated Yang slumped onto the sofa, exhausted. She had just spent an hour with a rich Chinese businesswoman in her late 30s. The woman pro-

The love-hunting campaign for Mr. Big yielded more than 1,100 fresh prospects who met his general specifications, including 200 in Chengdu. "The cruel process of culling," as Yang called it, whittled that number to 100, then 20, and finally to a list of eight. The firm subjected the finalists to another round of interviews and psychological evaluations. Barely two months after the search began, Mr. Big received thick dossiers on each of the eight, with detailed information about their families and finances, habits and hobbies, and physical and mental conditions. Finally, a series of grainy videos landed in his email inbox. The first showed the top three prospects from Chengdu, sitting and standing, walking and talking, smiling and laughing. One ofthem, a demure 24-yearold with long black hair and black hot pants, was the graduate student whom Yang had pursued on a hunch at Master Kong Chef's Table.

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about to see if the money was well spent. His final date in Chengdu was with the Zhou Tao looka like whom Yang had a p proached at the noodle restaurant. At first, it seemed a mismatch, and not just because of

the 18-year age gap. He knew nearly everything about her — her dating history, her recent acceptance to a graduate school, her father's lofty government post — while she k new little m ore t han h i s height and weight. She didn't even know hi s n ame. Diamond Love had told her only that his net worth exceeded

$800,000. Mr. Big seemed pleased by the woman's sense of privacy when he inquired about her father's job. "He's a civil servant," she said. What level? "Management." It took several minutes — and a blunt question about his title — before she acknowledged that her father was, in fact, the boss of an influential government office. "From childhood," she told him, "my father taught me to keep a low profile." Suddenly, this seemed like a suitable match in the Chinese tradition of family doors of equal size. Here were two discreet people of similar social status, a wealthy entrepreneur and the daughter of a highranking official. After dinner, Mr. Big called off all other dates with finalists and dispatched his consultant to buy a Gucci handbag for the woman, as a token of affection. The couple has not yet decided to marry. But they are still dating exclusively, and

Yang says Mr. Big is serious about marriage. Nobody pays a half-million dollars "just to play around," she said. "He just needs a little more time."

Mr. Big's choice

3 NQRTHWEsT CROSSING

I n June, Mr. Big f lew t o Chengdu for meetings with the three local finalists. Riding an elevator to the lobby of the Shangri-La Hotel, he fidgeted nervously with the part in his moussed hair. He had invested more than a half-million dollars in the search, and was

Award-ceinning

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posed spending $100,000 on a campaign to find a husband who matched her status. "I had to tell her we couldn't take her case," Yang said. "No wealthy Chinese man would ever marry her. They always want somebody younger, with less power." We sat in silence a minute before Yang spoke again. "It's depressing to t h i n k a b o ut these 'leftover women,'" she said. "Do you have them in America, too?"

laak fariiSeVery Siiillay iii TheBulletin

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your weekly national entertainment, food, lifestyle magazine

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The Bulletin



SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Outdoors ContInued from E1 On Bend's north end, Sportsman's Warehouse expects to employ 10 full-time and 25 part-time associates when it reopens, said Karen Seaman, chief marketing officer for the company. Sportsman's Warehouse bought all W h olesale Sports U.S. stores from the Canadian company that purchased them in 2009. "Bend is a very active outdoor market, and we offer complete product lines for those activities in fishing, camping, hunting and other outdoor pursuits," Seaman said, referring to therepurchase of the Bend store. Henry Abel, head of sales and marketing for Pine Mountain Sports, said the store on S outhwest C e ntur y Dr i v e added two employees in 2012 to meetdemand. "It seems like tourism has picked up in Bend again... and that probably equates to more business," he said. "We normally have a staff of 10, and in the last year we've grown to 12." Abel is correct. Based on room-tax collections, tourism had rebounded to prerecession levels, as ofD ecember. And when the number of overnight visitors increases, the money they spend at retail stores, outdoor outfitters and recreationproviders also goes up, said Alana Hughson, president and CEO of the Central Oregon Visitors Association. "The recovery realized by the travel and tourism industry i n C e ntral Oregon wi ll have a tremendous benefit to the overall economy of Central Oregon," she said. "As the business climate improves for tourism businesses it will lead to stronger employment and business diversification for the entire region." For businessesdirectly providing and selling recreation products, she s a id, C O VA anticipates slow bu t s t eady growth throughout 2013, an estimated 5 percent over 2012. Abel s ai d l o c ally-owned stores on Bend's west side, such as Pine Mountain Supply, Mountain Supply of Oregon and Sunnyside Sports, serve different markets and work together to promote business, often making referrals to one another. "There's lots o f s p o rting

Stickers

g oods stores, bu t t h e y all specialize in different things. It's not like we all

sell golf clubs," he said. "There's a pretty good little a lliance between the l ocal stores. In some ways, they're trying to compete against the bigger stores in town." Locally owned stores are not the only ones feeling the surge of sales. Overall s a les n a t ionally increased 4 percent in 2011 over 2010, according to the 2011 annual Sporting Goods Market study from the National Sporting Goods Association. Dustin Dobrin, the association's director of r esearch and information, said athletic and sports footwear saw the highest growth, f ollowed by equipment, then clothing.

So why all the growth? While no qualitative research was done, Dobrin said the consistent introduction of new items, along with trends toward fashion and fitness, likely contributed to the growth. D ata f ro m t h e 2 0 1 2 Sports Part ic i pation Topline Report — w h i ch tracks participation trends in 119 different sports, fitness and recreational activities — suggests Americans overall activity has decreased from 2007 to 2011. But, the core group of participants — individuals who play a sport or take part in an activity 13 or more times a year — has remained strong, which is why the industry has experienced slight g r owth, said Jonathan Michaels, director of membership and business development for the Sports & Fitness Industry Association. "That core group provides a solid foundation for growth in the industry," he sa>d. He also n oted strong growth in the fitness sector, with more people joining health clubs and going to group f itness classes, which could be a contributor in the rise of retail sales for shoes and clothing.

Continued from E1 Using emoji, emoticons and GIFs in a texted conversation instantly signals the d ifference between sincerityand a joke or sarcasm. And it takes less effort. It's easier to smooth over hurt feelings with an impish cat face than to hastily type

a long and winding explanation of why you're 20 minutes late to your dinner date, or to let a friend know that you are sending your love her w ay with an animated GIF of two

pandas hugging. T ypically, t h es e m o b i l e phone features have not been big businesses in th e U . S. But a few young American startup businesses, including a private social networking service called Path and messaging servicescalled Lango a nd MessageMe, ar e t r y ing to change that. Path and MessageMe have r e l eased souped-up versions of emoji and emoticons called "stickers" that can be inserted into messages; Lango's will be introduced Tuesday. Compared with emoji, stickers are elaborate, artsy creations. On Path, for example, the sticker that's intended to convey an upset mood shows a frowning face surrounded by a storm cloud and lightning bolts. "People have always been typing 'LOL,' or putting in a YouTube link while communicating," said Arjun Sethi, one of the founders of MessageMe. "This is a faster and more intuitive way to communicate; it's about more ways to be expressive in this medium." It is an opportunity that has sharp-eyed entrepreneurs and venture capitalists eager to cash in. I

"Messaging as a category

imagine the images gaining

will evolve to be more commerce-oriented," says ChiHua Chien, a partner at Kleiner Perkins Caufield Byers, which has invested in Path and several other messaging applications. The sticker apps are free to download. But for a few dollars, users can buy extra packs that include premium items like hand-drawn caricatures of snacks — a dancing slice of pizza,for example — or cartoon characters from the trippy children's show "Adventure Time." For the Super Bowl, Lango released a theme pack containing cartoon caricatures of the San Francisco 49ers. Like emoticons and emoji, these s t icker a p p l ications have been popular for quite some time in other parts of the world. Line, an app that lets peoplesend stickers,drawings and messages to one another, has enjoyed commercial success in South Korea and Japan. The service, developed by Naver, a South Korean company, says it has more than 100 million users. The company recentlyopened an office in San Francisco to drum up a big audience for Line in the United States. Line's popularity was part of what motivated Lango and MessageMe to bring their own versions of sticker-type messaging to the U.S. The translation might not be as easy as it sounds. Even though I'm in the target audience forthese sticker appsalways looking for new ways to spice up my text messages — I have found some of the stickers a bit too gimmicky, at least when compared with their less fussy, emoji predecessors. I found it hard to

conversational traction among my friends, which is half the fun of using visual icons in the first place. David Lee, one of the founders of SV Angel, an angel investment venture capital firm, has invested in MessageMe. But he does have one niggling question, which i s w h ether "user behavior and cultural norms in Asia and other countries are so different that they don't translate well to the U.S." C ellphone users i n A s i a quickly adopted text messaging and found creative ways to express themselves within those messages' character l i m its. But many Americans became familiar with emoji only when the iPhonereleased a software update that included an emoji

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built around phone address books and texting, rather than a website. Sethi ofMessageMe agrees that my cohort just needs time to adapt to these new visual communication markers. Other forms of visual-based communication are catching on here, so maybe there is hope for the mobile stickers. Big audiences have already been gained by video-chatting services, like Skype, as well as by Instagram, the photo-sharing service, and Snapchat, a tool that lets people send photos and videos that self-destructaftera few seconds. As for me, I'll stick with my simple emoji vocabulary of hearts, blushing women and half-hatched chicken — for the time being.

Security

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the Americanmobile consumer has frustrated companies like Zynga and Facebook, which have struggled to translate Web success to mobile. Nonetheless, Lee says he is confident that Americans will embrace visual texting methods. He also says the applications fit well into what he sees as the future of social network-

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Those who study digital media and culture say the U.S. is still developing its mobile habits andbehavior, so other countries' trends may not be a good metric for what will work at home. Unlike emoji, the sticker apps do not function on the default texting program, which makes using them more of an effort. And figuring out how to satisfy

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

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E6

TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

UNDAY DRIVER

01 ee e

r oniCSDeVie's ro em

ma notre uirea new transmission

• Not much else stands outaboutthe 2013 BuickEncore — but in the new world of autos, it may beenough By Warren Brown

fln- B

Special To The Washington Post

GENEVA The v ery ri ch get r ich e r . For thosewho prefer to drive themselves, there are the Bugatti Veyron Super Sport, the Ferrari F12 B erlinetta and the Lamborghini Aventador Roadster,all super-expensive automobiles on display here at the 83rdannual Geneva International Motor Show, which opened last week and ends today. It is a democratic exhibition, f e aturing REQ(EI/ ca rs s uch a s the Rolls-Royce P hantom a n d Mercedes-Benz E-Class Long Wheel Base for rich people who prefer to be driven. Given that introduction, you might think the wealthy dominate this largest and most influential of all European auto shows. They don't. In fact, they are a distinct m inority c r owded o u t b y the great middle class of the world's automobiles, largely representedin these parts by Volkswagen, Renault, Ford, Hyundai, Skoda, Citroen and Chevrolet. It is notable that the eight finalists in contention for the prestigious European Car of the Year award, given by a panel of 58 European automotive journalists, did not include one car that would be considered outof the fiscal reach of most of the world's middle-income families. The winner was the 2013 Volkswagen Golf MkVII, available for about $25,000, chosen because of its overall build quality and performance, its relatively high fuel economy (estimated 40 miles per gallon on the highway) and its low tailpipe emissions. Ford, the only U.S.-based car company among theeight finalists, finished fourth with

-

'B

General Motors via The Wasington Post

The 2013 Buick Encore is average in handling and acceleration, but gets high marks for its telematics — onboard infotainment and emergency communications.

2013 BuickEncore Base price:$29,690 Type:Compact, frontengine, all-wheel-drive people hauler with four side

doors and a rearhatch Engine:Turbocharged

Sleek, sexy sheet metal gets attention. But to be considered winners nowadays, cars and trucks also have to be intelligent — loaded with electronics and the ability to connect with and enliven all kinds of electronic gadgets.

1.4-liter inline four-cylinder

ATS sedan. GM's Buick and Chevrolet 138 horsepower and148 divisions, its "everyman" marpound-feet of torque; linked keting groups,also presented to a six-speed automatic a group of affordable cars and transmission wagons, including the 2013 Buick Encore, an all-wheeldrive compact wagon that I its compact B-Max p eople drove in the United States behauler. The B-Max is smaller fore flying here. and rounder than the C-Max T he Encore is built by a currently on sale in the United GM affiliate in South Korea. States. It is cute and will sell well in Ford officials here said they China, where all things Buick have no plans to introduce the seem to sell well. B-Max stateside. But they will It looks m ore e xpensive bring to the United States a than it is. It starts at a base people-hauler version of the price of $29,690 in the United company's successful com- States. But my hunch is that pact commercial wagon, the the four-cylinder, gasoline-fuTransit Connect. eled Encore (138 horsepower, The more f amily-friendly 148 pound-feet of torque) will model will be introduced next sell better in China than it will year as the Tourneo Connect. in the United States. U.S.-based manufacturers My Encore prognosis has to GM and Chrysler also had a do with prospective use. presence here — Chrysler with It is a decent short-trip veits Jeep SUVs and Dodge Ram hicle in an A m erica where trucks and GM with its new wagons are long-trip, highway Chevrolet Corvette Stingray vehicles. sports car and a bevy of CadilIt is uncomfortable for four lac models, including the new adults, especially if they are

engine that develops

Fuel injectors probably aren't to blamefor rough-running truck Q

•When I first start my '96 •5.0 GMC engine in the morning, it runs very rough. If I hold the accelerator down for about 30 seconds the engine will smooth out, then start and run great the rest of the day. The truck has 44,000 miles on it, and I have run a pint of Techron through the engine aboutevery 4,000 to 5,000 mi les sincethe truck was new. Ihave replacedthe spark plugs, rotor and distributor cap and cleaned the throttle body. The service adviser at the dealership says the only thing that will cure it is a new set of injectors for $860. What do you think? • I can appreciate the ser• vice a d v iser's h u n c h regarding the fuel i njectors, as GMC/Chevy pickups and SUVs of this vintage employed a somewhat problematic system known as central sequential fuel injection. But, because you've proactively babied the fuel system with Techron fuel additive and the engine runs g reat when w arm, I t h i n k there are other culprits to be checked. In a follow-up message, I asked you to differentiate between "rough" and "slow" running when cold, and you nailed the solution path by telling me the engine runs far too slowly when cold-started and if helped with any throttle, smooths right out. This points straight at the idle air control, or IAC, system

'I

hauling lots of stuff. But it is gifted in telematics — onboard infotainment and emergency communications, showing up in all cars in all price ranges, as evidenced by th e m any products on display here. Automotive exh i b i tions have become electronicsand computer shows. Horsepower and torque are no longer

enough. Sleek, sexy sheet metal gets attention. But to be considered winners nowadays, cars and trucks also have to be intelligent — loaded with electronics and the ability to connect with and enliven all kinds of electronic gadgets. There is a theory here that advances inelectronics eventually will equalize the automotive classes. A Volvo S60 sedan that literally can stop itself and avoid pedestrian injury has a bigger "wow" factor than a bling-laden Rolls-Royce Phantom that cannot. Welcome to the brave new world of automobiles.

Verifying proper GM IAC

— Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Email questions to under-the-hood@earthlink.net.

A

If the slippage is slightly above designated limits, fluid contamination or a stuck valve might be the cause. But if the converter slippage rate is high, the solenoid may be stuck in the "off" position. All of this points toward a torque converter, solenoid or electronic prob-

lem, not necessarily a failing transmission. I 'd st ar t w i t h a car e ful check of fluid level and condition. And, yes, the higher rpm at road speed indicates no TCC engagement or overdrive.

Q

• The tires on my 2007 • Y ukon D e n a li k e e p

losing air. T he dealership says it i s most likely because the rims are rusted. They recommend b uying new r im s or, for a temporary fix, resealing the rims, which would cost approximately $300. Do you think it's really necessary to buy new rims? • S low loss of air f r o m • alloy or steel rims that have had severalsets of tires mounted on them is not uncommon. Residue from previous tires along with road dirt and debris can prevent the new t ir e f ro m seating. Trapped moisture can lead to corrosion. But before spending big bucks for new rims, have the tire from one of the leaking rims dismounted for a careful inspection of the "bead" seating areas on the rim. Unless the corrosion is severe, the rim can be sanded to clean and remove corrosion and sealed to stop air loss. If the rims cannot be saved, it might be possible to find a used set in a salvage yard at a reasonable price.

A

— Brandis an automotive troubleshooter and former race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. Include a daytime phone number.

Find It All Online bendbulletin.com

Audi Truth in Engineering

CarreraA udi CarreraAudi.com

as beingthe cause ofthis symptom. Fuel-injected engines with traditional cable type throttles, now replaced with electronic throttle controls, employ an IAC device to allow air to bypass the throttle during fast idle periods and in compensation for accessory loads. IACs vary in method from simple electrically pulsed solenoids to your more sophisticated stepper motor type. On General Motors vehicles, rather complex electrical signals are sent from the electronic control module, or ECM, through four wires to the IAC, which rotates its internal pintle to any of 256 possible positions. My hunch is your IAC is dirty or sticky and doesn't move well when cold, or a faulty electrical connection may be preventing movement of any kind. electrical commands can be made simple by using an inexpensive IAC testing tool containing a pair of bi-color LEDs. The tester is temporarily connected to the truck's IAC wiring connector. With the engine started — idle speed may need to be assisted — one looks for both LEDs to rapidly change in coloror fl ash from red to green. If this occurs, the ECM and wiring are deemed OK and the IAC is the assumed culprit, based on the process of elimination.

•I have a pristine 2001 •Cadillac DeVille DHS with 96,000 miles. I took it to my Cadillac dealer because the "Service Engine Soon" light was on. I was t ol d t ha t c o de 0741 indicates a sticking torque converter clutch solenoid and would require a transmission rebuild for $4,000. He told me that the transmission won't go into o verdrive w it h t h e b a d solenoid. At 65 mph, the engine runs at 2,000 rpm. Does this indicate it's not going into overdrive? I believe I'm seeing three s h ifts when accelerating. And if the solenoid does need replacing, does that require an entire transmission rebuild for $4,000? • A ccording t o my • Alldata a utomotive database, the P0741 diagnostic fault code is set when the torque converter clutch, or TCC, slips more than its l i mits for m o re than 5 seconds when the TCC solenoid is commanded to apply the clutch. There are a number of p ossible causes for t h i s p roblem, including l o w , contaminated or overheating transmission fluid, a sticking TCC solenoid, or a stuck-closed TCC control, regulator or feed valve. A scan tool can record the "freeze frame" data and failurerecords, then clear the fault code. During a test drive, the scan t ool ca n c o mmand t h e T CC solenoid "on" a n d monitor the slippage rate for the torque converter clutch.

Tg 4F $ 3 n89m / M o. 2 0 1 3 A u d i A 4 2 . O T P r e m i u m q u a t t r o S e d a n 8-Speed Automatic, glacier white, 17" wheel and tire package, titan gray/black leather. $2999 due at lease inception. Excludes taxes, title, other options and dealer charges.

CarrereAudi 1045 SE 3rd street, Bend, Oregon, 541-382-1711 CarreraAudl.com

Audi of Amenca e pleased toofferanincentive of 51,000 off the purchase of a 2013 Audi A4 for etrgibte customers. See dealer for more details.

'Rate based on MSRP 537,S70 of 2013 A42.0r Premium quattroSedan and destmatron charge. Monthly paymentstotal 514,004. Purchaseoption at lease end for S23,S66 36-month rtosed-end lease offered to quahhed customers m Oregon by Audi Financial Services through participatmg dealers. Must take dehnery by 3/31/2013. Lessee responsible for 5.25/mite over 10 000 miles peryear, insurance and other trnancel t abibtes at lease end. Advertised offer requires dealer contnbution. Model shown: AS 2 OT Premium Sedan. Higher MSRP will affect lease pnce. Pnces exclude taxes, title, otheroptions and dealer charges. ©2012 Audi of Amerrca, Inc. See your dealer, visit audrusa.com or call t-800-FOR-AUDI for more details.


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Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

ANALYSIS

DAVID BROOKS

Howthe church recovers he Catholic Church in North Africa was in crisis at the beginning of the fourth century. The Roman emperor Diocletian had persecuted the Christians, and many bishops and priests had collaborated with the regime. Priests had turned over Christian believers to the pagan magistrates. Bishops had surrendered HolyScriptures to be burned in the public square. An air of corruption and lewdness hung over the church. Two rival reform movements arose to restore the integrity of Catholicism. Those in the first movement, the Donatists, believed the church needed to purify itself and return to its core identity. The mission of the church, in the Donatist view, was to provide a holy alternative to a unclean world. The Donatists wanted to purge the traitors from the priesthood. After they pruned their membership, the Donatists wanted to close ranks to create a community of committed believers. They would separate themselves from impurity, re-establish their core principles and defend them against the hostile forces. The Donatists believed that, in those hard times, the first job was to defend Christian law so it wouldn't be diluted by compromise. With this defensive posture, the Donatists would at least build a sturdy ark for all those who wanted to be Christian. This Donatist tendency — to close ranks and return defensively to first principles — can be seen today w henever movement a faces a crisis. Modern-day Donatists emerge after every Republican defeat: conservatives who think the main task is to purge and purify. There are modern-day Donatists in humanities departments, who pull in as they lose relevance on campus. You can see them in the current Roman Catholic Church, which feels besieged in a hostile world. You can identify the modern-day Donatists because they feel history is flowing away from them, and when they gossip it's always about intra-community rivalries that nobody outside their world could possibly care about. In the fourth century, another revival movement arose, embraced by Augustine, who was Bishop of Hippo. The problem with the Donatists, Augustine argued, is that they are too static. They try to seal off an ark to ride out the storm, but they end up sealing themselves in. They cut themselves off from new circumstances and growth. Augustine wanted the church to go on offense and swallow the world. This would involve swallowing impurities as well as purities. It would mean putting to use those who are imperfect. This was the price to be paid if you wanted an active church coexisting with sinners, disciplining and rebuking them. In this view, the church would be attractive because it was hungering and thirsting for fulfillment. This second tendency is also found in movements that are in crisis, but it is rare because it requires a lack of defensiveness, and a confidence that your identity is secure even amid crisis. Like most of the world, I don't know much about Pope Francis, but it's hard not to be impressed by someone who says he prefers a church that suffers "accidents on the streets" to a church that is sick because it self-referentially closes in on itself. I'll leave it to Catholics to decide if Francis is good for the church. The subject here is how do you revive a movement in crisis. The natural instinct is to turn Donatist, to build an ark and defend what's precious. The counterintuitive but more successful strategy is to follow Augustine, to exploit a moment of weakness by making yourself even more vulnerable, by striking outward into complexity, swallowing the pure and impure, and counterattacking crisis with an evangelical assault.

The huntforAnwar al-Awlaki

SAUDI ARABIA

SEPT. 30, 2011

YEMEN

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— David Brooks is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return.

OMAN

Site of U.S. missile strike that killed Anwar al-Awlaki,pictured, and Samir Khan

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MAY 2010

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Site of missile strike that accidentally

killed a deputy provincial governor

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2009 Site of missile strike where al-Awlaki 8 ~

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Gulf of Aden

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OCT. 14, 2011

Aden

Site of missile strike that killed al-Awlaki's16-year-old son, Abdulrahman

100 miles

DJIBOUTI New York Times News Service

How the government came to kill Anwar al-Awlaki, a U.S.citizen By MarkMazzetti, Charlie Savage and Scott Shane eNew York Times News Service

WASHINGTON-

Awlaki, the firebrand preacher, born in New Mexico,

ne morning in late September 2011, a group of wh o had evolved from a peddler of Internet hatred American drones took off from an airstrip the t o a senior operative in al-Qaida's branch in Yemen. CIA had built in the remote southern expanse A n other was Samir Khan, another American citizen of Saudi Arabia. The drones crossed the border into

who h ad moved to Yemen from North Carolina and

Yemen, and were soon hovering over a group of trucks

was the creative force behind Inspire, the militant

clustered in a desert patch of Jawf province, a region of

group's English-language Internet magazine.

the impoverished country once renowned for breeding Arabian horses.

to pinpoint the targets, while the larger Reapers took aim.

A group of men who had just finished breakfast scrambled to get to their trucks. One was Anwar alIt was the culmination of years of painstaking intelligence work, intense deliberation by lawyers working for President Barack Obama and turf fights between the Pentagon and the CIA, whose parallel drone wars converged on the killing grounds of Yemen. For what was apparently the first time since the Civil War, the United States government had carried out the deliberate killing of an American citizen as a wartime enemy and without a trial. Eighteen months later, despite the Obama administration's effort to keep it cloaked in secrecy, the decision to hunt and kill al-Awlaki has become the subject of new public scrutiny and debate, touched off by the nomination of John Brennan, Obama's counterterrorism adviser, to be head of the CIA. The leak last month of an unclassified Justice Department "white paper" summarizing the administration's abstract legal arguments — prepared months after the al-Awlaki and Khan killings amid an internal debate over how much to disclose — has ignited demands for even greater transparency, culminating in a 13-hour Senate filibuster earlier this month that temporarily delayed Brennan's confirmation. Some wondered aloud: If the president can orderthe assassination ofAmericans overseas, based on secret intelligence, what are the limits to his power? This account of what ledto the al-Awlaki strike, based on interviews with three dozen current and former legal and counterterrorism officials and outside experts, fills in new details of the legal, intelligence and military challenges faced by the Obama administration in what proved to be a landmark episode in American history and law. It highlights the perils of a war conducted behind a classified veil, relying on missile strikes rarely acknowledged bythe American government and complex legal justifications drafted for only a

Two of the Predator drones pointed lasers on the trucks The Reaper pilots, operating their planes from thousands of miles away, readied for the missile shots, and fired.

small group of officials to read. The missile strike Sept. 30, 2011, that killed al-Awlaki — a terrorist leader whose death lawyers in the Obama administration believed to be justifiable — also killed Khan, though officials had judged he was not a significant enough threat to warrant being specifically targeted. The next month, another drone strike mistakenly killed al-Awlaki's 16-year-old son, Abdulrahman, who had set off into the Yemeni desert in search of his father. Within just two weeks, the American government had killed three of its own citizens in Yemen. Only one had been killed on purpose.

Anevolving threat In November 2009, when Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, an Army psychiatrist, was charged with opening fire at Fort Hood in Texas and killing 13 people, al-Awlaki finally found the global fame he had long appeared to court. Investigators quickly discovered that the major had exchanged emails with al-Awlaki, though the cleric's replies had been cautious and noncommittal. But four days after the shootings, the clericremoved any doubt about where he stood. "Nidal Hassan is a hero," he wrote on his widely read blog. "He is a man of conscience who could not bear living the contradiction of being a Muslim and serving in an army that is fighting against his own people." As chilling as the message was, it was still speech protected by the First Amendment. American i ntelligence agencies intensified their focus on al-Awlaki, intercepting communications that showed the cleric's growing clout in al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, a Yemenbased affiliate of Osama bin Laden's terrorist network. SeeAl-Awlaki /F6

Home-grown terrorism Nidal Mallk Hasan,from top,

ljmar Farouk Abdulmutallab andFaisal Shahzadall

contacted Anwar al-Awlaki

before carrying out their terrorist

acts. Hasan exchanged emails with alAwlaki before

Bell County Shenfrs Department wa NYT

opening fire at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009. Abdulmutallab, the would-be

„'p s

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underwear bomber, went

to Yemento get help from al-Awlaki in

undertaking the suicide mission.

U S. Marshals Service via NYT

And Shahzad

reached out to al-Awlaki on the Internet

before his failed attempt at a

car bombing in 2010 in New York City. Source: New York Times News Service

U.S. Marshals Service via NYT


F2 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

The Bulletin

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end city officials added a dose of revolution to the city's contract proposal for one of its unions. Rob DuValle, human resources director, told representatives for the City of Bend Employees Association, COBEA, that they should consider adding pay for performance to their

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new union contract. The city should be applauded for bringing pay for performance to the table. As a general rule, pay for performance is just not done in public sector contracts. Pay is based, instead, on step raises that usually automatically accrue based on years of employment and training. Merit doesn't matter. It's a system public sector unions favor, in part, because it's an objective standard. It doesn't allow for favoritism or for a boss to punish an employ simply because he doesn't like the employee.

DuValle replied that if the bonus system werenot rewarding the appropriate behavior, the program would be a failure and should not continue. He said he wouldn't expect the system to be 100 percent perfect, but neither is the current system. It's hard for us to endorse the city's proposal without being able to see it in detail. The critical component will be how the decision will be made to determine who gets the bonuses. But the city and COBEA should try to work to make pay for performance work, instead of stickBut there's also concern that au- ing only with automatic raises. tomatic pay raises don't create incentivesforincreased petformance. Now that we just finished praisIf a road striping crew working for ing the city's efforts, we'd like to the city stripes 800 miles of roads point out something frustrating one year, they don't have a mon- about that"open to the public" negoetary incentive to try to stripe 900 tiating session. miles the next year. The negotiations were officially The city declined to disclose the open to the public. But that meeting actual proposal to the media at the was effectively half-closed. meeting with COBEA, but DuValle Itwas difficult to followwhat was did describe it in broad terms durgoing on.As we mentioned above, ing the negotiations. An employee who has reached the top of the pay the proposals that the city and the scale could earn as much as 10 per- union exchanged were not distribcent more for the following year uted to anyone else other than the if the employee does something two parties. The public could listen, but it couldn't see the actual deals. exceptional. The two parties discussed a host He used the example of the stripof subjects Tuesday — overtime, a ing crew hitting a target set by the city or an employee creating a new simplified pay schedule, health care valued program. The city would re- and more. Without being able to see tain discretion over who gets what the full proposals, there's no way to award and how much. The awards know just how sweet or sour those would not be subject to the union's deals are. grievance procedure. And the emDuValle told us after the meetployee's salary would return to its ingthat he will make extra copies of previous level at the end of a year proposals in the future for anyone unless the employee did something else who attends a negotiating sesexceptional again. sion.We could not reach Snyder by David Snyder, COBEA's attor- our deadline. We hope he will do ney, said the union was going to the same. need time to evaluate the proposal. If the two parties are going to He did, though, throw out initial say the negotiations are "open to the concerns. One was favoritism. public," they should mean it.

Don't remove warning on ballot envelopes ince the late 1990s, Oregon ballots that include a possible property tax hike have carried a warning in red type on the envelope. House Bill 3113, filed at the request of the Oregon Education Association, would remove the warning, supposedly because it's unnecessary. The union argues that the ballot itself contains all the needed information about such proposals, and the red type puts unfair attention on them, according to a report in The Oregonian. Critics say the union wants to lessen awareness of

M Nickel's Worth Preserve Mirror Pond

terms, which expires in 2016. As a physician and a three-time cancer survivor, he u n derstands health care issues, being on the front lines and serving many, many patients. The senator is highly concerned about the future of our children and grandchildren if we as a nation cannot resolve our debt. It is time that "We the People" stand up and hold our representatives accountable to reduce ournation's debt. I am sure a number of you folks out there have to live within a budget and revise it when more taxes (Iocal, state and

Thank you for printing the view of Cary Robles in the Feb. 26 paper. 1 am in total agreement about Mirror Pond. I worry that a huge mistake will be made by removing the dam. What will Bend be without our beautiful river and Mirror Pond? Someday there would be a plea to build a dam again so Bend would have another beautiful pond. Bend residents should at least have the chance to vote on the decision. Not all of us want a mud flat at Drake Park, natural or n ot. We should take care of this treasure that Bend hasand keep itup by more fre-

federal) are imposed on us. Enough is enough! Wayne Holland Bend

quent dredging. Thank you again. Millie Nolan Bend

A different wayto mt costs

Enough is enough

In The Bulletin on March 1, an article on the sequester highlighted It is so refreshing to have a U.S. the fact that if the voting citizens of senator stand up and be counted the U.S. choose to elect goofballs in asking the tough questions and to Washington, D.C., offices (presifighting to reduce our national debt. dent, Senate, House), then all they The book entitled cThe Debt Bomb," can expect is goofball results. Take written by U.S. Sen. Tom Coburn, of the sequester as an example. The Oklahoma, along with John Hart, re- way that Congress put this together ally tells all regarding the careerism and the focus from Washington that of our politicians and politics behind everyone is now receiving is just the scenes in our nation's capital that how painful the cost reductions will has fostered our growing debt. be for the American public. Coburn not only tells the problem Well, Congress put us there, so in the first six chapters but provides obviously, Congress can change it if solutions in the remainder of the it is so inclined. Obviously, Congress book. It is very well documented is not so inclined. Even so, here's one with f o otnotes and a p pendices, very easy way to make $85 billion and written with a nonpartisan ap- in expenditure cuts without causproach, and details what our House ing undue pain to the citizenry. It's and Senate representatives have overly simplistic but still effective. done for a number of decadesto Take the $85 billion in cuts from grow the debt through earmarks all expenditures — no exceptions and pet projects. Coburn voluntari- and do so not on any "straight line ly served in the House for just two across the board" basis but from terms and now the Senate for two anywhere.

And oh yes, do take, as a minimum, a flat 5 percent cost reduction from all o f t h e s alaries/benefits/ perks of all of those elected officials in Washington. Applying the above application, the $85 billion in expenditure cuts — out of a total expenditure of $3.5 trillion — amounts to a reduction of 2.5 percent overall. To put that into perspective, a person who takes home $1,000 a week would have to cut down their expenses by $24.60 in order to achieve that target. Hmm, that doesn't appear to me to be a very painful burden. John D. Phillips Bend

Hurray for WaterWatch In response to "Don't restrict the transfer of water rights," printed March 6, hurray for WaterWatch of Oregon. I definitely support Senate Bill 425 if it would regulate growth in proportion to the purity and extent of our water reserves. This is the High Desert and, obviously, you are not aware that water is becoming an ever more precious resource and commodity, not only here but in the world. The City Council and our citizens are currently debating the millions of dollars it will cost to update Bend's water system infrastructure. Golf courses,restaurants, breweries, etc. and our ever-expanding population continue to put a burden on our water system. Why are we so concerned about growth? It's time to think about sustainability and the other environmental dangers that are facing our world and our community.

Jeanne Brooks Bend

tax hike proposals and thus make them easier to pass. Whatever the union'sreasoning, the fact is that voters need all the help they can get to focus on the measures they consider most important. Many do not have the time or interest to closely follow such matters, and measures that will cost them money certainly deserve extra attention. Legislators should defeat HB 3113 becauseremovingthewarningis certainly unnecessary and likely would be damagingto voter participation.

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Five years later, there is little improvement to show By Al Phillips ust prior to the election in 2008, The Bulletin printed an article I had submitted which outlined publicized points of view of the Democratic Party. Perhaps it's worth reviewing what was said then and what we have now. They said:

• H igher taxation solves IN M Y

problems and leads to prosperity. Today: We have higher taxation. After six trillion dollars was spent, it is generous to say that the economy and resulting prosperity are not robust. • Thegovernmentshouldmake available, if not provide outright, health care to everybody, including illegal immigrants. Today:We have "Obamacare." • Focusing on profits companies make is more important than the disposableincome and tax revenue their jobs provide. Today: We still have the world's highest corporate tax rates.

• A redistribution of wealth from those who know how to make money to those who don't is reasonable. Today: A philosophy President Barack Obama touts almost daily. • Your right to protect yourself via the Second Amendment has little value. Today: Efforts to com-

a legal late-term abortion. • Profits on IRA investments ought to be taxed at elevated rates. Today: That notion is not off the table. • The government should consider taxing profits on all home sales. Today: Does not "Obamacare" include that provision? VIEW p r omise the Second Amend- • Teacher's compensation should ment continue. continue to be tenure-based rather • The U.S. should be a cog in the than performance-based. Today: No wheel of a larger world order. Today: change; basically, still tenure-based. Our stature in the world has signifi• We should continue to alter our cantly diminished. way of life to accommodate immi• A return to the policies of the pre- grants. Today: Lip service but no revious (i.e., Clinton) administration will sults on immigration reform. not lead to another 9/11. Today: We • We should continue to spend pubhad Benghazi on 9-11-2012; four dead lic money to accommodate various rewith varied explanations and cloudy ligions. Today: Public money has been answers. spent to accommodate the Muslim • A woman's right to choose has few, religion. if any, limitations. Today: A lady re• Political correctness makes us a cently died due to complications from better place. Today: We have political

correctness to the point of nausea. • Going green is more important than how we get to work tomorrow. Today: Solyndra is an example. • Restoring voting rights to criminals is a correct thing to do. Today: This may still be on the table. • The government can help you manage your life and do it better than you can. Today: Obama promising the governmentcan and willdo more and more. • "Press one for English" is a way of life. Today: Sure seems that way. • Appointing Supreme Court justices who support these notions will make us a better place. Today: One such justice has been appointed. The Democrats have done what they've said they believe. Obama is clearly in favor of government controlling the nation's wealth. But government cannot create wealth, so it contin-

ues to take from wealth creators. Government that continues to take while giving little back to wealth creators — our golden goose, if you will — is doomed to mediocrity at best. History substantiates that: Cuba, for example. 1 concluded the 2008 article by commenting that you get what you pay for with your vote. Obama was elected. In my view and in that of many others as well, we areverylittle, if any — four-plus years later — better off than we were in 2008. Additionally, 1 see us being led in a direction that has not the slightest chance of returning us to the stature we once deserved in this world — politically, economically or even morally. A modern, progressivecountry is one thing, but an administration relying on executive privilege, executive order andvague answers duringsworn testimony is another thing entirely. — Al Phillipslives inPrineville.


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

F3

OMMENTARY

irmative action' to ' iversit ' ometime in the new millennium, "global warming" evolved into "climate change." Amid growing controversies over the planet's past temperatures, Al Gore and other activists understood that human-induced "climate change" could better explain almost any weather extremity — droughts or floods, too much heat or cold, hurricanes and tornadoes. Similar verbal gymnastics have gradually turned "affirmative action" into "diversity" — a word ambiguous enough to avoid the innate contradictions of a liberal society affirming illiberal racial preferencing. In an i n c reasingly multiracial society, it has grown hard to determine the racial ancestry of millions of minorities. Is someone who is ostensibly one-half Native American or African-American classified as a minority eligible for special consideration in hiring or college admission, while someone one-quarter or one-eighth is not? How exactly does affirmative action adjudicate our precise ethnic identities these days? These are not illiberal questionsgiven Massachusetts Sen. Elizabeth Warren's past claims of being Native American to find advantage in her academic career. Aside from the increasing difficulty of determining the ancestry of multiracial, multiethnic and intermarried Americans, what exactly is the justification for affirmative action's ethnic preferences in hiring or admission — historical grievance, currentunderrepresentation due to

icans, or who still alive is to blame. In 2009, the University of California system changed its admissions policy allegedly to curtail admission to Asian-Americans. Such anti-affirmative action arose not because discrimination, or both? UC was a racist institution, but beAre the c hildren of P r esident cause as an applicant group, AsianBarack Obama or Attorney General Americans w er e o u t performing Eric Holder more inneed of help most other ethnic groups, in numthan the offspring of first-genera- bers disproportionate to the general tion immigrants from the Punjab or population. Cambodia? If nonwhite ancestry no In other words, in the manner that longeroffersan accurate assessment the Ivy League turned away qualiof ongoing discrimination, is affir- fied Jews in the 1920s and '30s, so mative action justified by a legacy of some university administrators aphistorical bias or contemporary eth- parently thought that engineering a nic underrepresentation? campus "to look like America" was Does a recent arrival from Oaxa- more important than simply admitca who fled the racism and poverty ting those with the strongest acaof Mexico warrant special compen- demic achievement. sation upon arrival in the United Affirmative action — fossilized for States? And if so, when? A day, a a half-century — also made few almonth, a year or a d ecade after lowancesforclass.Asian-Americans, crossing the border? How about a for example, have higher per-capita Chilean, Korean or Iraqi immigrant? incomes than Americans as a whole. Should particular coveted employ- Were affluent minority individuals ment match the nation's racial com- eligible for affirmative action'? position — jobs on the faculty, but Will the children of multimillionnot jobs in the NBA or in the Postal aire Tiger Woods — or of Jay-Z and Service? Beyonce — qualify for special considHow do we fairly allocate com- eration on the theory that statistical pensation for past collective sins underrepresentation in some fields or against a bygone generation? Slav- racial pedigrees will make their lives ery, Jim Crow, internment of Japa- more challenging than the lives of nese-Americans, racially exclusion- poor white children in rural Pennsylary immigration laws and the denial vania or first-generation Arab-Amerof U.S. admission to Jews fleeing the icans in Dearborn, Mich.? Holocaust: All were reprehensible; If ossified racial preferences don't but it is difficult to know the degree work i n 2 1 st-century m ultiracial to which these injustices still distort America, then the generalized idea of the career paths of individual Amer- "diversity" — just picking and choos-

VICTOR DAVIS HANSON

ing people without any r ationale other than ensuring lots of different races andethnic groups — offers a better defense of extending preferences in lieu of strictly meritocratic criteria. Yet diversity no more alleviates the problem of bias than does climate change end controversy over global warming. We really do not mean "diversity" in the widest sense of the word. No Ivy League law school is worried that its faculty profile is disproportionately 90 percent liberal, or lacks fundamentalist Christians commensurate with their numbers in the general population. The idea of diversity, racial and otherwise, is deeply embedded in politics. President George H.W. Bush was not especially lauded for appointing the first African-American Supreme Court j ustice, Clarence Thomas, apparently because Thomas was consideredconservative.Liberal Attorney General Eric Holder was seen by the media as a genuinely diverse appointment in a way that a conservative predecessor, Alberto Gonzales, was not. Like Prohibition, affirmative action and then diversity were originally noble efforts that were doomed — largely by their own illiberal contradictions of using present and future racial discrimination to atone for past racial discrimination. It is well past time to move on and to see people as just people. — Victor Davis Hansonis a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution,

Stanford University.

Why we need to raise the minimum wage

Why we shouldn't raise the minimum wage

By Andy Stern and Carl Camden

By KevIn A. Hassett and Michael R. Strain

Los Angeles Times

early 8 million Americans go to work every day yet still live below the poverty line. That is in part because the federal minimum wage is too low. Currently, an individual with a full-time job at the minimum wage and a family of three to support will fall below the federal poverty line. These workers, despite putting in

regular hours, are struggling to provide basic necessities for themselves and their families. By allowing the minimum wage to remain at a nearly unlivable level, we have deemed certain jobs not worthy enough to meet even our country's minimum standard of living. How have we been able to keep wages so low without significant social discord? By using tax revenue anda complicated government bureaucracy to subsidize low-wage employers and supplement minimum-wage salaries. Rather than firms paying a worker's true cost and customers paying an appropriate pricefor the services provided by those firms, the government provides workers with "income transfers" to help them meet basic needs. These include such programs as the earned income tax credit, food stamps and Medicaid. These government supports mask a job's true value and set an artificially low wage. They also represent the height of inefficiency. Raising the minimum wage means that the income requiredforbasic needs is delivered in a one-step approach, via the paycheck directly from firm to worker, rather than requiring additional government expenditures. Beyond efficiency, there is also the matter of human dignity. Think about it: After a long day on the clock, you come home knowing that despite your hard work, you can't feed your family, cover their medical insurance or pay your rent without government support. What message does that send about the dignity of your work and the pride of taking personal responsibility for your family? Low wages push workers into shadow labor markets where they get paid under the table, avoid reporting income and evade tax responsibilities. Artificially low wages teach workers that their work is not valuable — a disastrous policy outcome. In his State of the Union speech, President Barack Obama called for raising the minimum wage to $9 an hour. That would be a start toward restoring dignity and value to low-wage work. But it isn't enough. We propose raising the minimum wage, in stages, to $12.50 an hour, an amount that would allow an individual supporting a family of three to live modestly, at about D8 percent of the federal poverty line. That leveloffersworkers a way to escape poverty, a chance to feed their fami-

lies, buy basic medical insurance and live in secure housing. The most common objection to raising the minimum wage is that it destroys jobs. But a slew of recent studies have pointed out that although raising the minimum wage does increase earnings and reduce poverty, it has a l i mited, almost negligible, effect on employment. Studies have also illustrated that restoring the dignity of work through higher wages reduces worker turnover and increases productivity. Some make the overstated claim that increasing the minimum wage would accelerate companies' offshoring of jobs. But most low-wage jobs today ar e g eographically fixed, or as economists call them, "nontradable." What is sometimes understated is the likelihood o f lo w -wage jobs being automated, a real an d g r owing threat. But if a small g rowth in t h e m i n imum wage is enough to move an industry to automation, it is likely that automation was coming in short order anyway. Technological progress is inevitable and further automat ion u navoidable. If raising the minimum wage leads to productivity gains through investment in automation, so be it. In the meantime, we need to reward American workers for their efforts. Some argue that raising the minimum wage offers benefits to those who may not need them. This argument is also flawed. The Economic Policy Institute's latest analysis shows that most low-wage workers live in low-wage households, and 84 percent of the workers in low-wage jobs are at least 20 years old. But, regardless of age or need, anyone who shows up to work and puts in hard hours deserves a wage that keeps him or her out of poverty. Finally, critics of raising the minimum wage often suggest raising the earned income tax credit instead. But that would simply perpetuate the cycle of devaluing work. It also takes money out of the pockets of taxpayers rather than from the businesses that benefit from the credit. Raising the minimum wage is about reducing inequality, but it is also about restoring the true value of work. Every American's hard work should be rewarded. — Andy Sternis a senior fellow at Columbia University's Richman Center and formerpresident oftheService Employeeslnternational Union. Carl Camden is president and CEOof Kelly Services and co-chairman of the board of trustees of the Committeefor Economic Development. They wrote this for the Los Angeles Times.

younger than age 25 make up only about 20 percent of those who earn Los Angeles Times hourly wages, they constitute about n announcing his wrongheaded half of all workers earning the miniproposal to increase the mini- mum wage or less. Raising the minimum wage to $9 an hour, Presi- mum wage is therefore an ineffective dent Barack Obama spoke in lofty anti-poverty proposal. terms: "In the wealthiest nation on The case for a higher minimum Earth," he said in his State of the wage grows even weaker when you Union address in February, "no one stop to consider that there are vastly who works full time should have to superior alternatives for steering live in poverty." money to low-income households. If the debate proceeds as it hasFor example, the nonpartisan Conmany times — in the past, then most gressional Budget Office has found Democrats will embrace the pres- that expanding the earned income ident's message and back the pro- tax credit is a much more efficient posal, while most Republicans will way to fight poverty than increasing oppose it, on the grounds that higher the minimum wage. labor costs will lead to Why have weso often embraced a higher unemployment. less effective tool'? A tax credit is less But we shouldn't rely politically palatable because it takes on political opinions in money directly out of federal coffers, this debate. Facts clear- while the minimum wage can be ly demonstrate that raised without it showing up directly raising the minimum on the government's books. wage is a bad idea. It is also important to consider The case a gainst the president's proposal to increase raising the minimum the minimum wage in the context of wage i s s t r aightfor- today's labor market. The unemployward: A higher wage ment rate for African-Americanteenmakes it more expen- agers stands at a staggeringly high sive forfirms to hire 43.1 percent. For white teenagers, the workers. How big an unemployment rate is 22.1 percent; a effect does this have on little more than 11 percent of workthe job market'? Econo- ers older than 25 and without a high mists debate this. But school diploma are unemployed. no one argues that inTo putthese numbers in perspeccreasing the minimum tive, overall unemployment at the wage increases the height of the Depression was about number of unemployed workers who 25 percent. Especially for low-skill find jobs. In the end, the trade-off is workers and for young workers, the clear. People who keep their jobs get two groups of workers who will be more money; those who lose their d isproportionately hit by a m i n i mum-wage increase, ours is a labor jobs, or fail to get new ones, suffer. In announcing his proposal to in- market in crisis. Increasing the cost crease the minimum wage, the presi- of job creation now is unwise. dent argued that doing so would alOne reason public officials continleviate poverty. The president is cer- ue to embrace such a bad idea is that tainly correct to turn his attention to it's popular, and thus can provide an the poor,many of whom have been opportunity to score political points. suffering for years in a tough econThe head ofthe Democratic Conomy. And it is clearly desirable for gressional Campaign Committee, households that engage in full-time Rep. Steve Israel, knows this. He told work not to live in poverty. But in- the Washington Post last month that creasing the minimum wage would the minimum wage was "a reminder not accomplish this goal. to suburban independent voters that Research published in 2010 by House Republicans are extreme, and economists Joseph Sabia and Richard out of touch." Burkhauserconcluded that ifthe fedRep. Nancy Pelosi seconded that eral minimum wage were increased notion, explaining to the Post that from $7.25 an hour to $9.50 an hour Democrats intend to embrace a simple (remember that the president's pro- message: "We want to raise the miniposal is to increase the minimum mum wage,and you don't.Why not?" wageto $9per hour), only 11.3 percent Why not support increasing the of workers who would gain from the m inimum wage'? Because it w i ll increase belongto poor households. make itmore expensive forbusinessWhy? es to hire young and low-skill workFirst, many people who live in ers at a time of crisis-level unemploypoverty do not work, and would ment. Because it will not alleviate thus be unaffected by an increase poverty.Because there are much betin the minimum wage. In addition, ter alternatives to help poor families, workers who earn the minimum and because the minimum wage is wage are generally not the primary a dishonest approach that hides the breadwinners in their households. true cost of the policy. They are secondary earners. Or they — Kevin A. Hassett is director of are young people living with their economic policy studies at the American parents. Enterprise Institute, where Michael R. Data from the Bureau of Labor Strainis a research fellow. They wrote Statistics show that while workers this for the Los Angeles Times.

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THOMAS FRIEDMAN

Obama's low-stakes trip to Israel n case you haven't heard, President Barack Obama leaves for Israel this week. It's possible that you haven't heard becauseit is hard for me to recall a less-anticipated trip to Israel by a U.S. president. But there is a message in that empty bottle: Little is expected from this trip — not only because little ispossible,butbecause,from a narrow U.S. point of view, little is necessary. Quietly, with nobody announcing it, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict has shifted from a necessity to a hobby for U.S. diplomats. Like any hobbybuilding model airplanes or knitting sweaters — some days you work on it, some days you don't. It doesn't usually matter when that sweater gets finished. Obama worked on this hobby early in his first term. He got stuck as both parties rebuffed him, and therefore he adopted, quite rationally in my view, an attitude of benign neglect. It was barely noticed. The shift in t h e I sraeli-Palestinian conflict from necessity to hobby for the U.S. is driven by a number of structural changes, beginning with the end of the Cold War. There was a time when it was truly feared that an Arab-Israeli war could trigger a wider superpower confli ct.The discovery of massive amounts of oil and gas in the U.S.,Canada and Mexico is making North America the new Saudi Arabia. So who needs the old one? Of course, oil and gas are global commodities, and any disruption of flows fromthe Middle East would drive up prices. But though America still imports some oil from the Middle East, we will never again be threatened with gas lines by another Arab oil embargo sparked by anger over Palestine. Writing in Foreign Policy magazine last week, Robin Mills, the head of consulting at Manaar Energy, noted that "according to preliminary figures reported this week, China has overtaken the United States as the world's largest net oil importer." Mills described this as a "shift as momentous as the U.S. eclipse of Britain's Royal Navy or the American economy's surpassing of the British economy in the late 19th century.... The United States is set to become the world's biggest oil producer by 2017." At the same time, while the unresolved Israeli-Palestinian conflict emotionally r esonates across the Arab-Muslim world, and solving it is necessary for regional stability, it is clearly not sufficient. The most destabilizing conflict in the region is the civil war between Shiites and Sunnis that is rocking Lebanon, Syria, Iraq, Kuwait, Bahrain and Yemen. While it would be a good thing to erect a Palestinian state at peace with Israel, the issue today is: Will there be anymore a Syrian state, a Libyan state and an Egyptian state? Finally, while America's need to forge Israeli-Palestinian peace has never beenlower,the obstacleshave never been higher: Israel has now implanted 300,000 settlers in the West Bank, and the Hamas rocket attacks on Israel from Gaza have seriously eroded the appetite of the Israeli silent majority to withdraw from the West Bank. For all these reasons, Obama could be the first sitting U.S. president to visit Israel as a tourist. Good news for Israel, right? Wrong. W hile there may be fewer reasons for the U.S. to take risks to resolve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, there is still a powerfulreason for Israelto do so. The status quo today may be tolerable for Israel, but it is not healthy. That's why I think the most important thing Obama could do on his trip is to publicly and privately ask every Israeli official he meets these questions: "Please tell me how your relentless settlement drive in the West Bank does not end up with Israel embedded there — forever ruling over 2.5 million Palestinians with a colonial-like administration that can only undermine Israel as aJewish democracy and delegitimize Israel in the world community'? I understand why Palestinian dysfunction and the Arab awakening make you wary, but still. Shouldn't you be constantly testing and testing whether there is a Palestinian partner for asecure peace? After all,you have a huge interest in trying to midwife a decent West Bank Palestinian state that is modern, multireligious and proWestern — a totally different model from the Muslim Brotherhood variants around you. Everyone is focused on me and what will I do. But, as a friend, I just want to know one thing: What is your long-term strategy? Do you even have one'?"

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— Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.


F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books

THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013

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Kim Fowley's memoir is weird

WHAT THE TIDEBROUGHT IN

Western based on a true story

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"Lord of Garbage"

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by Kim Fowley (Kicks

Books, 150 pgs., $13.95)

"Breaking Point" (Putnam, 384 pgs., $26.95) I

By Oline H. Cogdill Sun Sentinel (South Florida)

C.J. Box melds hot-button ecology issues and thrilling plots while balancing the story between environmental and human issues. Box's h ig h s t a ndards have never been more evident than in the 13th novel in his series about Wyoming game warden Joe Pickett. "Breaking Point" skillfully s hows h o w government can enhance

q li v es and preserve the environment , w hile a l s o

portraying a legal system run amok. But "Breaking Point" is no treatise pitting an individual against the big, bad Goliath of government. The tense plot of "Breaking Point" provides edge-of-the-seat suspense filled w it h u n p redictable twists and realistic characters worth caring about.

Many people are near thr breaking point, as Joe learns when he becomes

personally and professionally involved in the problems of n e ighbor Butch Robertson. The hardworking owner of a construction company, Butch is the prime suspect in the murder of two armed EPA agents who had come to stop him from building on his land. Butch planned to build a retirement home for himself and his wife on land for which they had scrimped and saved for years, but suddenly found themselves in a legal quagmire to which there seemed to be no solution. Based on a true incident, "Breaking Point" is infused with the frontier spirit of an old-fashioned Western as the good guys try to track down the bad guys. Box's con t e mporary spin on the Western makes "Breaking Point" an explosive thriller that careens from o n e u n p r edictable twist to another.

BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the bestsellers for weekending March 9. Hardcover fiction

1. "Alex Cross, Run" byJames Patterson (Little, Brown) 2. "The Striker" by CliveCusslerl Justin scott (Putnamj 3. "The Storyteller" by Jodi Picoult (Atria) 4. "Calculated in Death" by J.D. Robb (Ptttnam) 5. "Frost Burned" by Patricia Briggs (Ace Books) 6. "The Chance" byKaren Kingsbury (Howard Books) 7. "A Week itt Winter" by Maeve Binchy (Knopf) 8."Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn (Crowtt) 9. "DamascusCountdown" by Joel C. Rosettberg (Tyndale) 10. "A Story of Godand All of Us" by Mark Burnett (FaithWordsj

v 5

e

Joshua Bright/ New YorkTimes News Service

Ruth Ozeki's third novel, "A Tale for the Time Being," is about an American woman who finds the diary of a teenage Japanese girl that washed ashore after the 2011 earthquake and resulting tsunami.

e 0 r e a i onS i SiS IlOYe S 8 eB IA

ley's biography while also

insisting that, at the age of I, his first words were: "I have a Los Angeles Times question. Why are you bigger K im Fowley came out of t h a nme'?" "K im Fowley could talk a Hollywood that d oesn't e xist anymore, the H olly- a t ten months," he tells us, wood of Kenneth Anger and "could read and write by one E d Wood. Best known for an da half." cooking up the Runaways, It 's no coincidence that he he began working in refers to himself in the third the music business person, since "Lord in the late 1950s and of Garbage" is clearsince then has turned ly the work of someup in m or e p laces " > ' I I . one who considers than Woody Allen's himself larger than Zelig, producing for life. "You a lready Gene Vincent, writknow the genius music," Fowley declares ing w it h W a r r en Zevon and i n t r oin a brief head note. "Now, know the geducing John L ennon and the Plastic nius man of letters." Ono Band when they And yet, as self-conplayed Toronto in 1969. gr atulatory as that is, as sadF owley is now 73 and re- l y confrontational, it's also, p ortedly has been fighting i n i ts own weird way, slightly b ladder cancer, so it's no sur- t h r i lling — not unlike Fowley p rise that he might choose h i mself. this moment to look back. Indeed, what's most comB ut his memoir, "Lord of Gar- p e l l ing about the book is not b age," may be the weirdest s o much its air of self-harock 'n' roll autobiography giography but the fact that s ince ... well, I can't think of f o rall his posturing, Fowley what. does end up revealing some T he first of a p r ojected i m po rtant t h i n g s ab o u t t hree-volume set ( F owley h i mself. c laims the follow-ups have alMore essential is his framready been delivered), " Lord i n g of rock 'n' roll as an art of Garbage"covers the first of survival, in spite, or even 3 0 years of its author's life, b e cause, of tragedies such f rom his early years bounc- a s t hose that befell Lennon, i ng between a model mother E l vis Presley, the Big Bopper, a nd a B-movie actor father, B u ddy Holly and Ritchie Vat hrough a high school mem- l e n s,to cite a few performers b ership in the 1950s gang the F ow ley mentions here. "I am better than Elvis," Pagans and on to his involvement as a songwriter and he concludes the book. "I am producer in 1960s L.A. better than JFK. I am better H ow much of it is true is t h an the Beatles. BECAUSE h ard to say, exactly: Written I E XIST!" By David L. Ulin

gj i'

by C.J. Box

in bombastic prose, it follows the broad parameters of Fow-

OI S

By Felicia R. Lee

tour: setting up a trailer and a new Facebook author page, Nao was easy. The voice of working with a Web developthe quirky, troubled 16-yearer to update her site, preparing old Japanese schoolgirl whose for an onstage interview at the words begin "A Tale for the Women of the World Festival Time Being," Ruth O zeki's in London and creating a class on "Living More Consciously" new novel, came to the author as she was immersed in a Budat Alain de Botton's School of dhist teaching. But it took five Life. frustrating years for Ozeki to Early reviews of O z eki's round out the story. new book, released on TuesF or one thing, she w a s day, describe it as challengcaught in"abit of a grief fog" ing but satisfying. "From the afterher mother's death from first page of 'A Tale for the cancer, she said. And she Time Being,' Ozeki plunges had a devil of a time conjurus into a tantalizing narration ing the character who would that brandishes mysteries to find Nao's diary w a shed be solved and ideas to be exashore in a Hello Kitty lunchplored," said a review by Wenbox on an island off British Valley job, and her efforts to dy Smith in The Washington Columbia. write a memoir of her 104- Post. "Time Being," Ozeki's third year-oldgreat-grandmother, a The novelist Barbara Kingnovel, a l t ernates b e tween Buddhist nun. solver counts herself a f an. Nao's purple squiggles and the "Ruth doesn't look away from R uth, also s t ruggling t o story of Ruth, who finds the write a memoir, asks: Is Nao our problems, but t h rough journal and sets out to discover reaP Did she survive the tsu- them to the other side," she its writer's fate. Along the way nami? How old is she now? said in an interview. the novel considers Buddhism, Did she commit suicide as she Ozeki is the only child of a the writer-reader relationship threatened in her diary? Japanese mother and a white and the nature of time. Ozeki's first n ovel, "My American father. Both were The book Ozeki began in Year of Meats" (1998), about linguists; he was also an an2006 was not cooked to her two very different women, the thropologist and taught in that satisfaction when she handed news media and the politics department at Yale while she it over to her editor in early of the meat industry, made a became a stay-at-home mother. 2011, already a long time after splash. "All Over Creation" Their daughter grew up mostly her last novel, "All Over Cre- was about farm life and envi- in New Haven, Conn., but also ation," came out in 2003. ronmental activists in Idaho. lived in Japan and worked as a "Then the earthquake and "Readers got distracted by documentary filmmaker for a tsunami hit," said Ozeki, a the themes in the first two Japanese film company. Later thin, intense 57-year-old with novels," Ozeki said. "I became she made her own films, insalt-and-pepper hair and a dis- seen as a political activist." cluding the autobiographical armingly direct gaze. "Japan The new novel is less di- "Halving the Bones" (1995), was changed. And I realized rectly political, and what was about her m aternal grandthat the book I had just writ- l oosely autobiographical i n mother's remains. ten was irrelevant. It no longer "My Year of Meats" becomes She began studying serimade any sense at all. overtly self-referential here. ously with a Zen teacher in "I just threw away half the "My husband said, 'You 2001 and was ordained in book," she went on during an HAVE to be i n t h e novel,'" 2010. "Buddhist practice was a interview in the Manhattan of- Ozeki recalled. Inserting her- way of working with time and fice of her publisher, Viking. "It self into her own novel, he understanding time and getfelt like such a relief." said, would be in line with her ting some insight into time," The tsunami worked its way interest in multiple worlds, au- she said of its influence on the in, as did the character who tobiography, biographical nar- newbook. shares more than the novelist's ratives and i-novels, the JapaIt also influenced her inname: She's a blocked writer nese literary genre in which in- sights about the web of relawho lives on Cortes Island, cidents in a story match those tionships: between Ruth and B ritish Columbia, with h e r in the writer's life. Nao; between the characters husband, Oliver, and t h eir Ozeki, a Canadian and U.S. and readers; and b etween cat. (Only the cat's name is citizen, and her husband, Oli- reader and writer. "The relationship between changed.) ver Kellhammer, an artist, live In the novel, Ruth translates in a house built mostly from reader and writeris reciproand footnotes the diary she dis- cedar and fir trees. She was in cal in a way," Ozeki said. "We covers. Nao writes about being New York(where she stillhas a co-create each other. We are bullied in school in Tokyo, her small East Village apartment) c onstantly emerging out o f father's lingering despair after to complete a laundry list of the relationship we have with being booted from his Silicon writerly tasks before her book others." New Yorlz Times News Service

Book highlightsfor spring By David L. Ulin Los Angeles Times

Here are three books to which I'm especially looking forward: a preview of the writes of spring. "The Flamethrowers" by Rachel Kushner (Scribner) April 2 Rachel Kushner's first novel, "Telex From Cuba," was a sensation: Set in the years before the Cuban revolution, it was a national bestseller and a finalist for the 2008 National Book Award. Her follow-up, "The Flamethrowers," operates in the space between creativity and politics, the saga of an artist who travels from Lower Manhattan in the late 1970s to become immersed in the whitehot center of Italian radical politics. Kushner is a vivid storyteller, worth r e ading for hersentences alone. But even more, read her because of her ambition, her ability to push the novel beyond the

ments and collages by an artist trying to make sense of her husband's suicide. That this husband was David Foster Wallace is beautifully beside the point, for the focus here is on the experience, the bleak and necessary journey of grief. Green is a pointed writer, open and at a distance all at once. The effect is unsettling, elliptical, necessarily open-ended and at times brutally revealing: a necessary explication of loss as a fact of daily life.

"Never Built Los Angeles" by SamLubelland Greg Goldin (Metropolis) April 30 I can't wait for this: an art book featuring more than 400 images that offer a vision of the city Los Angeles never became, in the form of nearly a century's worth of plans, designs and layouts, including the Olmsted Brothers and Bartholomew's "Plan for the Los Angeles Region," a 1930 reimagining of the city as a personal and into an engage- whole. Edited by architecturment with the larger world. al journalists Sam Lubell and Greg Goldin, "Never Built Los "Bough Down" Angeles" is also the source by Karen Green of an exhibition, curated by (Siglio) April 30 the editors, that will open This exquisite book is an this summer at the Architecimpressionistic miracle, an ture and Design Museum on assemblage of short text frag- Wilshire Boulevard.

Hardcover nonfiction

1. "Life Code" by Dr. Phil McGraw (Bird Street Books) 2. "Sum It Up" by Pat Summitt (Crown Archetype) 3. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. (St. Martin's) 4. "The Blood Sugar Solution Cookbook" by Mark Hyman(Little, Brown) 5. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt) 6. "I Declare" by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) 7. "The FastDiet" by Michael Mosley (Atria) 8. "Salt Sugar Fat" by Michael Moss (RandomHouse) 9. "The Soundtrack of My Life" by Clive Davis (Simon &Schuster) 10. "No EasyDay" byMark Owen (Dtttton) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService

Poet Louise Gliick embracesgenuinely simple speech "Poems1962-2012" by Louise Gluck (Farrar, Straus

and Giroux, 656 pgs., $40) By John Timpane The Philadelphia tnquirer

My mixed feelings about Louise Gliick's poetry may, in some eyes, make me unsuited to write a useful review of this book. It's a very important book to have, if you like the U.S. poetry of the last half-century. Gliick, no doubt about it, occupies a singular and influential place — for the good — in poetry

since 1962, inspiring countless m er," not really. poets and teaching countless I fin d G liick's work, for the more.She'soneofthemostan- m o s t p art, impressive rather thologized, recognized than moving. That could and cited poets alive. be just me, just my sensiT here's not a b a d bilities. She writes about poem here; Gliick is in. her se l f, her life, the life

mother's playing cards with

title is the name of a mythological figure, who goes on to tell But dark e x plosions are his/her story — a story always coming. Such plainness always retold, wrung for the wince. gives way to ironies, underminBut don't the poems know ings,reversals.Although she too well where they are going? has sometimes shown humor, What of all this self-dramaticapableof making bad . of p o et, sibling, daughas in the self-satire of the 2001 zation? Maybe there's no way ' poems. It' s scrupulouster, wife. As a young collection "The Seven Ages," around this: Life is a drama, ly made, agonizingly irony is her tone, her cherished and many women's lives are poet, she went in for wrought (maybe a bet- ~ ~-,o ~ „ , f l a shier language, but timbre. She has become fa- tragic. ter word would be won), 1 as she matured, her mous for having mythological So it gives me joy to say time and again finished p referred ope n i ng figuressuch as Telemachus or how wonderful Gliick's two with flat bites of the unavoid- b e came the deceptively plain Persephone speak as though best books — "The Wild Iris" able truth. statement, as in "Vespers" ("I they came from Long Island. of 1992 and "A Village Life" of If you think, "OK, now, he's d o n't wonder where you are Her most influential poems 2009 — really are. They both going to bring down the ham- anymore") or "Widows" ("My are maybe those in which the are and are not "unlike her."

my aunt").


SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013• T HE BULLETIN F S

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U MAG A Z I N E CENTRAL OREGON'S WOMEN'S MAGAZINE I

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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 'l7, 2013

Al-Awlaki

base in Saudi Arabia. In late 2010 or early 2011, Yemeni security troops surrounded a village in Shabwa province w h er e a l - Awlaki was reported to be h i ding, s aid Gregory J o h nsen, a Princeton scholar and author of "The Last Refuge: Yemen, al-Qaeda, a n d A me r i ca's War in Arabia." But a houseto-house search did not find him. At the White House, frustration was mounting.

— with updates from a CIA source inside al-Qaida in the Continued from F1 Arabian Peninsula, officials On Dec. 24, 2009, in the say. That was when a very s econd American strike i n different search for al-Awlaki Yemen in eight days, missiles began. As al-Awlaki had become hit a meeting of leaders of the affiliate group. News accounts one of the world's most hunted said one target was al-Awlaki, terrorists, his 16-year-old son who was falsely reported to Abdulrahman had lived the have been killed. life of a n ormal adolescent. In fact, other top officials of He liked sports and music the group were the strike's speand kept his Facebook page cific targets, and al-Awlaki's regularly updated. But now death would have been collathe sneaked out of the family eral damage — legally defensihome in Sana,Yemen's capiThe hunt narrows ble as a death incidental to the tal, leaving an apologetic note military aim. A s d angerous Even as the hunt went on, for his mother saying that he as al-Awlaki seemed, he was Yemen's strongman began to had gone to find his father. proved to be only an inciter; lose his grip on power as his But by the time the teenager counterterrorism analysts did country was caught up in the headed to Shabwa, his father not yet have incontrovertible r evolts sweeping the A r a b had left for Jawf p rovince, evidence that he was, in their world in early 2011. hundreds of miles away. Aclanguage, "operational." That June, a b a rrage of companied byKhan, the elder al-Awlaki moved about the That would soon change. rockets struck the room of The next day, a 23-year-old Doug Mills/ New York Times News Service file photo the presidential palace where rugged territory, wary of stayNigerian named Umar Farouk President Barack Obama, flanked by Vice President Joe Biden, left, and Navy Adm. Mike Mullen, listens Saleh was hiding, severely ing anywhere for long. Abdulmutallab tried to blow to the National Anthem at a military ceremony at Fort Myer Arlington, Va., on Sept. 30, 2011, the day a injuring him and effectively What he did not know was up an airliner as it approached fleet of drones destroyed a convoy carrying Anwar al-Awlaki. The Obama administration's decision to ending his rule. that the C IA's source was Detroit. The would-be under- hunt and kill al-Awlaki, an American citizen, has become the subject of new public scrutiny and debate. The weakening of S aleh reporting t h e mo v ements. wear bomber told FBI agents gave the Americans more lati- On the morning of Sept. 30, that after he went to Yemen tude for the al-Awlaki man- guided by t h e t i p ster, the and tracked down al-Awlaki, from a judge is necessary; version of the legal analysis tribe, the Aw aliq. Yemen's hunt. By then, American and fleetof drones arrived above his online hero, the cleric had the lawyers concluded that portions would become pub- cagey longtime p r esident, Saudi spies had turned a num- Jawf. Missiles destroyed the discussed "martyrdom and ji- the wartime threat posed by lic in the "white paper," which Ali Abdullah Saleh, negotiber of militants into sources, convoy. had" with him, approved him al-Awlaki qualified as such a stripped out al l r e f erences ated with tribal leaders, who helping to g u ide A merican Then, on Oct. 14, a missile for a suicide mission, helped context, and so his constitu- to al-Awlaki while retaining offered t o h o l d a l - Awlaki strikes. a pparently intended for a n him prepare a martyrdom tional rights did not bar the echoes, like its discussion of under house arrest, accordIn May 2011, days after the Egyptian al-Qaida operative, v ideo and d irected him t o government from killing him a generic "senior operational ing to a Yemeni official. The American commando raid in Ibrahim al-Banna, hit a moddetonate his bomb over United without a trial. l eader." Divorced f ro m i t s talks were inconclusive. Pakistan that killed bin Lad- est outdoor eating place in States territory, according to But a s m o n th s p a ssed, original context and misunAnd there were other prob- en, the Pentagon's Joint Spe- Shabwa. The intelligence was court documents. Barron and Lederman grew derstood as a general state- lems. A disastrous American cial Operations Command, bad: al-Banna was not there, uneasy. They told colleagues ment about the scope and missile strike in M a y 2010 the hub for classified Army and among about a dozen men A legal quandary there were issues they had not limits of t h e g o vernment's accidentally killed a deputy and Navy commando units, killed was the young AbdulDavid Barron and Martin adequately addressed, parauthority to kill citizens, the p rovincial governor i n Y e - had its best chance to kill al- rahman al-Awlaki, who had Lederman had a problem. As ticularly after reading a legal free-floating reasoning would men and i n f uriated Saleh, Awlaki as he moved around no connection to t errorism lawyers in the Justice Depart- blog that focused on a statute lead to widespread confusion. e ffectively suspending t h e Shabwa province. Drones and and would never have been ment's Office of Legal Coun- that bars A m ericans from clandestine war. It would be Marine Harrier jets fired at deliberately targeted. sel, it had fallen to them to killing other Americans over- Heightening intelligence months before the Pentagon's his truck, but he managed to It was a tragic error and, for declare whether deliberately seas. In light of the gravity of Now the lawyers had twice next strike in Yemen. escape and took refuge in a the Obama administration, killing al-Awlaki, despite his the question and with more signed off on killing al-AwlaThe CIA and th e Penta- cave. According to Johnsen, a public r elations disaster, citizenship, would be lawful, time, they began drafting a ki if he could not be captured gon used the pause in the air the Princeton expert, al-Awla- further muddying the moral assuming it was not feasible second, more comprehensive — but the government still campaign to develop more ki told friends that the episode clarity of the previous strike to capture him. The question memo, expanding and refinhad no idea where in Yemen s ources in side t h e c o u n - "increased my certainty that on his father and fueling skepraised a complex tangle of po- ing their legal analysis and, in he was hiding. During the try. The National Security no human being will die until ticism about American assertential obstacles under both an unusual step, researching first half of 2010 the CIA was Agency stepped up monitorthey complete their livelihood tions of drones' surgical preinternational an d d o mestic and citing dense thickets of just ramping up intelligence ing of cellphones in Yemen and appointed time." cision. The damage was only law, and al-Awlaki might be intelligence reports supportgathering i n t h e c o u n try, and p e netrated c o mputer Finally, by late September compounded when a n onylocated at any moment. ing the premise that al-Awand Saudi spies had yet to networks to i ntercept elec- 2011, the CIA base in Saudi mous officials at first gave the According to officials fa- laki was plotting attacks. penetrate militant networks tronic messages. Aware that Arabia was ready. Obama's younger al-Awlaki's age as 21, miliar with the deliberations, As they r e searched the in Yemen deeply enough to Obama, shaken by the uncounterterrorism advi s er, prompting his grieving famthe lawyers threw themselves rarely i n v o ke d o v e r seas- learn th e w h e reabouts of derwear bombing a ttempt, Brennan, directed that lead ily to make public his birth into the project and swiftly murder statute, Barron and l eaders of a l -Qaida in t h e w as closely f o llowing t h e responsibility for the al-Aw- certificate. completed a short memoran- Lederman discovered a 1997 Arabian Peninsula. hunt, a g encies c o m peted laki hunt would be shifted to He had been born in DenAl-Awlaki appears to have to get new scraps about aldum. It p r e liminarily c o n- d istrict c our t d e cision i n the agency. David Petraeus, ver, said the certificate from cluded, based on the evidence volving a woman who was hidden most of the time in Awlaki into the president's who had taken over as CIA the Colorado health departavailable at the time, that al- charged with killing her child Shabwa p r ovince, several daily intelligence briefing, a director on Sept. 6, ordered ment. In the United States, Awlaki was a lawful target in Japan. A judge ruled that hours' drive southeast of former Defense Intelligence severaldrones tobe relocated at the time his government's because he was p articipat- the terse overseas-killing law the capital, turf for al-Qaida Agency analyst said. from Pakistan to Saudi Ara- missile killed him, the teening in the war with al-Qaida must be interpreted as incor- and also the traditional terriAnd, very quietly, the CIA bia. By mid-September, the ager would have just reached and also because he was a porating the exceptions of its tory of his family's powerful began to build its own drone Americans were closing in drtvfng age. specific threat to the country. domestic-murdercounterpart, The overlapping r easoning writing, "Congress did not injustified a s t r ike either by tend to criminalize justifiable the Pentagon, which gener- or excusable killings." ally operated within the conAnd by arguing that it is g ressional authorization t o not unlawful "murder" when use military force against al- the government kills an enQaida, or by the CIA, a civil- emy leader in war or national ian agency which generally self-defense, B a r ro n an d operated within a " n ational L ederman c o ncluded t h a t self-defense" framework de- the f o r eign-killing s t a tute riving from a president's se- would not impede a strike. curity powers. They had not resorted to the They also analyzed other Bush-style theories they had bodies of law to see whether once denounced of sweepthey would render a strike ing presidential war powers impermissible, c o n c luding to disregard congressionally that they did not. For exam- imposed limitations. ple, the Yemeni government Due to return to academia had granted permission for in the fall of 2010, the two airstrikes on its soil as long lawyers finished their secas the United States did not ond al-Awlaki memorandum, acknowledge itsrole,so such whose reasoning was widely strikes would not violate Ye- approved by other adminismeni sovereignty. tration lawyers, that summer. And while the Constitution It had ballooned to about 63 generally r e quires j u dicial pages but remained narrowly process before the govern- tailored to al-Awlaki's circumment may kill an American, stances, blessing lethal force the Supreme Court has held against him without addressthat in some contexts — like ing whether it would also be when the police, in order to permissible to k il l c i t izens, protect innocent bystanders, like low-ranking members of ram a car to stop a high-speed al-Qaida, in other situations. chase — no prior permission Nearly three years later, a

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G2 SUNDAY MARCH 17 2013 • THE BULLETIN

T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D CONDENSATION By Finn Vigeland / Edited by Will Shortz

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I Direct descendant o f t he May f l o w e r Pilgrims, e.g.

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9 8 Auto-shop of f e r i ng s

11 D . M . V . i s s u e 12 Relative of - e sq ue

50 Seltzer

102 Coastal str uct u r es countering erosion

5 3 Many al tar p a i n t i n g s of the Mi d dle Ages

1 04 Tale wr i t te n i n runes, perhaps

56 Long-di s tance letters

106 Unconvinci ng r eason, inf o r m a l l y

5 7 Onetime art g l a ss manufacturer

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108 Pong maker

16 Ski-mask feature

61 Rock subgenre

17 Queen

6 2 Not lo c o

109 Histori c ev ent on June 18, 1815

6 3 Some col l ege dor m rooms

112 Like many Playboy Playmate photos

26 Japanese drama

65 Pickle juice

117 Certain nest eggs, for short

47 Enj o y

5 Way up a mountain 9 Dutch f l o w e r 14 Humorist B o m b eck

18 Sun Valley locale 2 0 Tony of th e D a l l a s

Cowboys 21 Lancaster County folk

22 Kings of ("Use Somebody" band) 23 Claw

66 Bud

24 Puccini piece

6 7 Best Pi c t u r e

25 Prop in many an a ction f i l m 27 Subject of bi g 1970s headlines

119 Greek war goddess

120 SeaWorld resident

3 6 "Be qui e t," o n scores

121 Irish county

35 The s econd Af r i c a American, after H attie M c D a n i e l , t o be nominated f o r an Oscar

7 6 Sitcom d i n e r

125 Chop

78 Quipster

126 Hens and vixens

37 Completes at the request of

8 3 Ignit e

40 Hero of a Hindu epic

sea 88 Pressed upon

42 Zip

89 20-20, e.g.

43 Papal court

breakfast, maybe

92 Nitpick

For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.

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n i co i s e

4 Software for to uch-up artists

5 4 N.B.A. star M i n g

5 Gothic wi n dow

58 Nabob

55 "AC360" channel 59 Unabridged

6 Cleansing agent

60 Like matryoshka do IIs

7 Bygone Ugandan

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69 Kind of i n c o me 70 Antique restorer' s "touch," in brief

73 Sanctuary

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6 4 Horn of A f r i c a resident

90 " A me n t o t h a t ! "

106 Irish county

93 It's cl ear

110 Drop

8 3 Pivotal p o i n t

94 Dol t

84 Prominent f e at ures

97 N.Y.C. airport

of the theme from "Star Wars"

7 7 Coach Don w i t h t w o

Super Bowl v ictori e s t he Seven Dw a r f s "

(gunshot: Fr.) 113 Kind of co nnection

100 First-year

86 C up c a k e

101 Toasts

8 7 Swimming, di v i n g ,

102 Responded sheepishly?

f rom a mob i l e

device to a PC 1 14 Doo-wop syll abl e

103 Wine aperitif

89 Open-faced sandwich to pped

song

111 Coup de

99 Early stone tool

etc.

80 "Snow W h i t e an d

68 What an optimi st has

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81 Word on ei t her sid e of "to "

74 Old Dungeons & Dragons co.

63 Frame jobs

8 MG, e.g.

10 Actress Thurman

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4 9 N.Y.U. at h l e t e

9 Marvin Gaye's record Iabel

97 Unil e ver soap brand

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tyrant

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o rnamentat i o n

9 1 Places to eat a l a t e

45 Ape

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51

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85 Necklace decoration

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13

30

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73

12

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72

11

41 Doc grp.

79 Femme fatale of cartoons

25

39

66

39 Pasta prim avera ingredients

123 Snookums

82 Director Van Sant

24

10

38 Line of defense?

122 Up to

32 Western nickname

48

9

29 Cobbler's tool

P ulitzer- w i n n i n g series of newspaper articles

124 Leaves used in Mediterranean cuisine

47

8

21

38

61

2 8 Adaptable ai r c r a f t , for short

inspired by a

75 Book af ter I I Timothy

39 Old TV' s

19 20/20

35 Gives off

7 2 In other w o r d s

32

53

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34 HP product

31 Adriati c r e sort

31

7

20

43

15 Robes, scepters and such

118 Actress Eleniak

7 1 Sporty car s

28

37

14 Last possibl e moment

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33 Exchange

1 3 Symbol of t h e golden rati o

27

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116 U.K, record co.

PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3

5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

PRIVATE PARTY RATES

Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .

Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise

... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri

or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com

Place a photoin your private party ad for only $t5.00 perweek.

OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50

Garage Sale Special

A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since t903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702

The Bulletin

C©X

4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)

PLEASE NOTE;Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if 8 correction is needed. Wewill gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.

I

255

Guns, Hunting & Fishing

Computers

Misc. Items •

260

267

Misc. Items

Fuel & Wood

Lo s t tk Found

Horses & Equipment I

EdenPURE® Portable Wanted- paying cash F ound skis a t s n o w WHEN BUYING Infrared Heaters. Join for Hi-fi audio & stupark, call to identify, 541-31 8-7264 the 3 million beating dio equip. Mclntosh, FIREWOOD... 541-408-2191. the cold and winter J BL, Marantz, D y To avoid fraud, R EMEMBER: If you heating bills. SAVE naco, Heathkit, SanThe Bulletin have lost an animal, $229 on our sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Where can you find a recommends paydon't forget to check EdenPURE® Model Call 541-261-1808 1989 Logan 19' helping hand? ment for Firewood The Humane Society 750. C A L L NOW 4-horse trailer, exc. only upon delivery 263 in Bend 541-382-3537 From contractors to while supplies last! cond., stored under and inspection. Redmond, I -866-906-6902. Tools yard care, it's all here • A cord is 128 cu. ft. cover, many extras, Hay, Grain & Feed~ 541-923-0882 (PNDC) 4' x 4' x 8' newer paint. $5,000. in The Bulletin's Prineville, Foley-Belsaw Sharp All • Receipts should 541-41 9-1078. 541-447-7178; 1st quality grass hay, "Call A Service sharpening system, used computer. Need help fixing stuff? 70- Ib bales, barn stored, include name, OR Craft Cats, 2 horse slant, like Professional" Directory Call A Service Professional once, stored in shop, phone, price and $250/ ton. Also big bales! 2008 Ruger new model single 541-389-8420. 257 comes w/bevelaid,saw new. $3000. Call for Patterson Ranch, 6 w/mag cyl. Stainfind the help you need. chain, clipper hone & drill kind of wood purdetails. 559-707-1870 BUYING & S E L LING Sisters, 541-549-3831 www.bendbulletin.com grinding attach, all inless w/I brick 22 Ir. Musical Instruments chased. Need help fixing stuff? All gold jewelry, silver $450. 541-318-3354 • Firewood ads Circle J 2-horse trailer, Call A Service Professional struction bks. $1400 new; 6-piece beginner Rock- and gold coins, bars, GENERATE SOME $400 obo. 54t -520-0083 Thoro-bred model exMUST include spefind the help you need. wood drum set, $175. rounds, wedding sets, cies and cost per tra tall-wide, new floor, EXCITEMENT www.bendbulletin.com Need help fixing stuff? Looking for your 541-610-5360 class rings, sterling sil265 back fully enclosed. cord to better serve IN YOUR Call A Service Professional next employee? ver, coin collect, vin$600. 541-480-7085. our customers. Building Materials Thank you for returning NEIGBORHOOD. find the help you need. 260 Place a Bulletin tage watches, dental Plan a garage sale and lost wallet to my home www.bendbulletin.com gold. Bill Fl e ming, help wanted ad Misc. Items don't forget to adverBend Habitat The Bulletin on NE 12th St. Please 541 -382-9419. today and Sening Central Oregon stnrereaa Farmers Column tise in classified! RESTORE call 541-389-8084. reach over Wanted: Collector Advertise V A CATION Building Supply Resale 541-385-5809. Cartop carrier, Thule seeks high quality 60,000 readers SPECIALS to 3 mil10X20 STORAGE 1 cord dry, split Juniper, Quality at LOW fishing items. lion P acific N o rth-Cascade XT, $275. XM GET FREE OF CREDIT each week. BUILDINGS PRICES $190/cord. Multi-cord • A u c tion Sales radio receiver, $25. Call 541-678-5753, or westerners! 30 daily car t/9 cords Your classified ad for protecting hay, discounts, & 740 NE 1st CARD DEBT NOW! Car tire chains, $55. 503-351-2746 newspapers, six firewood, livestock available. Immediate PUBLIC AUCTION will also 541-31 2-6709 rack for t railer Cut payments by up states. 25-word clas- 2-bike etc. $1496 Installed. delivery! 541-408-6193 The appear on Open to the public. to half. Stop creditors hitch, $75. 541-617-0691 Total Liquidation sified $525 for a 3-day 541-617-1133. bendbulletin.com from calling. of Thuro-Bilt Trail 256 All Year Dependable a d. Cal l (916) DISH Network. Starting 866-775-9621. CCB ¹1 73684. which currently I TV, Stereo & Video Company and more! Firewood: Seasoned 2 88-6019 o r vis i t kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Heating & Stoves receives over (PNDC) Sunday, March 24, at $19.99/month (for Lodgepole, Split, Del. SAVE on Cable TV-In- www.pnna.com/advert 1.5 million page 1 2 mos.) 8 Hi g h 10:00 am. Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 375 ising pndc.cfm for the NOTICE TO ternet-Digital PhoneHighspeed Internet EVviews every for $335. Cash, Check 265 Industrial Way, Pacific Nor t h west Speed Internet startMeat & Animal Processing ADVERTISER Satellite. You've Got ERYWHERE By Sating at $1 4.95/month month at no Credit Card OK. Myrtle Creek, OR. Con n ection. Since September 29, or A C hoice! O ptions Daily (where ava i lable.) ellite! Speeds up to 541-420-3484. Trailers, equip., boats, extra cost. All N atural g r ain-fed from ALL major ser- (PNDC) S AVE! As k A b o ut 12mbps! (200x faster 1991, advertising for pickups, fabrication, Bulletin beef $2.88/lb. hangused woodstoves has vice providers. Call us Buying Diamonds 269 than dial-up.) Starting SAME DAY Installamass quantities of Classitieds ing wt, half or whole to learn more! CALL t ion! C A L L No w ! at $49.95/mo. CALL been limited to mod- Gardening Supplies steel, aluminum, trailer /Gotd for Cash Get Results! to b e pro c essed Today. 888-757-5943. 1-866-947-7995. NOW 8 G O F A ST! els which have been supplies, tools & more. Saxon's Fine Jewelers Call 541-385-5809 mid-march. $500 dep. & Equipment c ertified by the O r (PNDC) 1-888-718-2162. (PNDC) 10% buyer premium 541-389-6655 or place your ad Half Hog Sale, $190 inegon Department of (PNDC) applies. cludes cutting wrapon-line at Environmental QualFor newspaper For details see pino and cure. bendbulletin.com (DEQ) and the fedStihl hedge t r immer, ity delivery, call the www.I-Sauctions.com WHILE THEY LAST! E n v i ronmental Circulation gas, like new, $170. eral Dept. at or 541-733-9304 541-573-2677 Protection A g e ncy 541-389-9377 I 541-385-5800 I (EPA) as having met To place an ad, call smoke emission stanThe Bulletin Offers 541-385-5809 dards. A cer t ified Free Private Party Ads w oodstove may b e or email claaaified@bendbulletin com • 3 lines - 3 days identified by its certifi• Private Party Only Held at Richard Bartels Ranch cation label, which is The Bulletin • Total of items adverSening Central Oregon nnre 1903 attached tised must equal $200 permanently 12909 SW Hwy 126, Powell Butte to the stove. The Bulor Less letin will no t k n ow- Where can you find a FOR DETAILS or to SAMPLE ingly accept advertisPLACE AN AD, helping hand? TRACTORS: JD 4640 w/4x4hyl.assist•wh ite 2-150 • JD 4020, power ing for the sale of L% Call 541-385-5809 From contractors to motor• Several small tractors, Ford, Ferguson, Massey Ferguson uncertified Fax 541-385-5802 woodstoves. yard care, it's all here TRUCKS: 1980 Kenworth• 1956 Mac • 1989 Int. 4600 single car hauler• 1999 lnt. Navistar 4700, 79k miles• Central Oregon electric vehicles trucks in The Bulletin's and small vans •Ford,Chevy,G MC, 1995 Toyota 4Runner No Minimums -No Reserves "Call A Service LIVESTOCK: Four squeeze chutes• water troughs • Hay racks • Gates • PUBLIC AUCTION Professional" Directory Panels• Saddles and tack Easy, fIexible, and affordable ad packages 9AM - TUESDAY - MARCH 19 IRRIGATION: Western t/4 mile hydraulic wheel line • Older Wade t/4 mile Prompt Delivery Preview 8-4, Mon., Mar 18 hydraulic wheel line• Some hand line and main line are also available on our Web site. Rock, Sand 8 Gravel TILLAGE: Dyna drive 12' corrugator • JD 1610 12' subsoiler • 14' wheel Multiple Colors, Sizes FUQUA HOMES roller • Int. style 13' offset disc• JD 110 12' tandem wheel disc. • 5~/~' and Instant Landscaping Co. 20495 Murray Rd, Bend, OR 8' Rototiller• 3 pt. 13' cultivator • Darf V hay rake • Hesston 1160 swather To place your Bulletin cfd with cf photo, 541-389-9663 TRAILERS: 1993 Barrett alum. 20' gooseneck• 1988 4 Star alum. 32' 3 visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on (14)Panel, Table, Drywall, Mitre, F rame, SUPER TOP SOIL axlegooseneck • 45' alum. spread axle FB • 45' refervan • 20,000 ¹ Radial Arm Saws; Sanders; (4)Dust Collectors; www.herehe eoilandnartccom "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: equipment trailers• Lots of smaller flatbed and utility trailers (4)Welders; ( 3 ) Compressors; T h r eader; Screened, soil & comTREE NURSERY STOCK: Australian Pine, Blue Spruce, Mugo Pine, Insulation Blower; Texturizer; Proportioning post m i x ed , no Choose ct category, choose ct classification, and Bosnian, Weeping Sequoia and Blue Atlas,Blue Globe spruce •Japanese Pump; (2)Overhead H o is t Sys t ems; rocks/clods. High huthen select your ad package. mus level, exc. f or and Crimson Queen maple. (30+)Chain Hoists; Lg Assortment Hand & Power Tools; Lg Inventory of Bldg Supplies; flower beds, lawns, II W rite your ctd ctnd upload your digital photo. straight *Since this ad was made, more 100 hp tractors and haying (6)Forklifts; J Deere 4520 Tractor; Pickup; gardens, s creened to p s o i l . equipment have been added! TOOMUCH TO LIST! Scissorlifts; Tugs; Carts; More II Create your account with any major credit card. Bark. Clean fill. DeAll ads appear in both print and online liver/you haul. BID LIVE ONLINE!! Check website for photos www.dennisturmon.com 541 -548-3949. Check our website for MurphyLIVE! Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your TERMS: Cash or Check NO BUYERS FEE I bidding info. 10% Buyers Premium. ad appears in print and online. 270 • • • I I • Terms: Cash, Cashier's Check, MCNisa Cards Lost 8 Found Persons Under 12 Not Admitted • • I ILLUSTRATED BROCHURE To place your photo ad, visit us online Found o n Sun d ay, HKNNkh THHNIIN KNTKHPHlhKh, LLl March 10th, unique James G. Murphy Co. or call with questions ww».aendhulletin.rom Dennis Turmon, Auctioneer • 541-923-6261 • Cell: 541-480-0795 auto tire on 27th St., 1 800-426-3008 541-385-5809 Bend. Call to identify. 1515 S. Bent Loop Powell Butte, Oregon 97753 murphyauction.com 541-389-9503. T HE

B U L LETIN r e -

quires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those 541-647-8931 selling multiple sysR emington 700 S P S temsl software, to disTactical .308. 4-16x50 close the name of the or the term scope, bipod, sling, business in their ads. e xtras. 12 0 m a t ch "dealer" rounds and 100 bul- Private party advertisare d efined as lets. $9 7 5 obo. ers those who sell one 541-419-6862

BUYING

Mag-pul AR-15 30-rd P-mag, NIB, $40.

Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories.

March 23

S a t urday 1 0 :00 a.m.

Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.

Ql

.

Classtfteds


THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 G3

To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER W A S P T B I DA H O R O T A L O N A R Ht0G A T E S C A L I D 0 T E X D O E S F O R H O L Y S S A V O R C T R I P T Y C H E M O S A N O P A L 0 N T I D E S T T N A T A S H A F R E S H T I E I H O A H H G E N B R E A K I( t O S A T A R I A I R B R U S H E N Y O S H A D E A R B A S

A M I N

R O A D S P T E E A R S S H E I T G U HtgP P S E S A B E D M U I L

T U A M M A A L W A P L R M I B O N A T T T I E Hto F R U S S C E A R Q U L U X G A A T T I R C O S U

L I P I S H C H I N O E T H A M A M I C A T E D S T E S B 0 N T M E L S A T C H L U I B B L L O A C U Z L E 0 F A S E R K U E Y

E R M A L E O N E G U N V A T E E L Ht OS N I L T A E IIto U B E N R I N E G T S W I T F I R E R G E D E N E R S C O O K Ht 0 L 0 0 R I K A N T I L S H E S

476

476

476

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Employment Opportunities

Seasonal U tilities Worker/Laborer

Caregivers-

fg,/F~>Jirr Ji,jj Jl)IJjjJ~ Jg Can be found on these pages:

FIRE/PARAMEDIC

Establishment of 24 mhour Employment List for

Experienced

EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS Folks must have previ- Part-time & Firefighter/Paramedic 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts ous concrete/utilities caregivers. Home In- Crook Fire and 421 - Schools andTraining 514 -Insurance /construction experi- stead Senior Care is RescueCounty is establishing an 454- Looking for Employment see k i ngemployment ence for a wide vari- currently 528 - Loans and Mortgages list for Fireety of semi-skilled du- Caregivers to provide fighter/Paramedic. Indi- 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds in-home care to our ties. Th e p o sitions 558 - Business Investments who meet the 476 - Employment Opportunities involve installing, ser- seniors. C a ndidates viduals minimum qualifications 573 - BusinessOpportunities vicing, operating, re- must be able to lift, are invited to apply and 486 - Independent Positions pairing and maintain- transfer, provide per- take the examination for 642 ing areas surrounding sonal care 8 assist in Firefighter/Paramedic. A Apt./Multiplex Redmond public right of ways, various home duties. complete job description REMSS water, water reclama- Alzheimer/ Dementia/ for Firefighter/Paramedic 8 MHzcm Country Living! Upstairs tion and storm drain ALS experience is is posted on the district's duplex, small kitchensystems and to per- needed. Must h ave website. Th e sa l a ry ette, 1 bdrm, den, outform o ther r e lated ability to pass back- range is from $4,248side deck. 17735 NW work. 1 yr. exp. oper- ground checks & have $5,002 per month. AppliLone Pine Rd., Terrebating a variety of the valid DL 8 insurance. cations will be accepted onne. $500 per mo. construction t r ade's Training provided. Call until Monday, March 25, 541-504-0837 tools 8 e q u ipment; 541-330-6400, or fax 2013. Contact: Crook County demonstrated ability resume to: 514 627 Duplex - 2 bdrm /1 bath, 541-330-7362. Fire & Rescue to get along well with appliances,W/D hookup, Insurance Vacation Rentals 500 NE Belknap Street coworkers and take fenced yard, s torage Prineville, OR & Exchanges work direction; Safety shed, $599 + dep. 2812 SAVE $$$ on AUTO 97754-1932 1st!; Very Heavy Work USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! INSURANCE from the EAGLE CREST 2 Bdrm SW 24th. 541-815-1146 (541) 447-5011 must be able to lift+/m ajor names y o u www.crookcount condo, April 6-13. 100 pounds o cca- Door-to-door selling with know and trust. No Find It in fireandrescue.com 516-318-6051 sionally, and lift and fast results! It's the easiest forms. No hassle. No The Bulletin Classifiedsl move +/- 50 pounds way in the world to sell. Janitor Supervisor obligation. Call 541-385-5809 frequently without asReliable, mot i vated, READY F O R MY :) ocean front house, beach walk from town, sistance, these posi- The Bulletin Classified detail oriented, good QUOTE now! CALL PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ 2 bdrm /2 bath, TV, tions require you be 648 541-385-5809 c ommunication a n d 1-888-706-8256. Fireplace, BBQ, $85 able to constantly be administrative s kills. (PNDC) Houses for 421 476 per night, 2 night MIN. moving objects/tools Flex schedule, able to 208-342-6999 Rent General t hat weigh +/ - 2 0 Schools & Training Employment travel locally. 528 Circulation Night pounds. These posiOpportunities 800-352-4353 ext 30 Dock Assistant Loans & Mortgages P U BLISHE R'S tions are outside in 630 ATTEND CO L LEGE NOTICE ONLINE 100%. Bend; extreme Rooms for Rent WARNING All real estate adver*Medical, *Business, CAUTION READERS weather c o n ditions The Bulletin is lookThe Bulletin recomtising in this newspa*Criminal Jus t i ce, (hot and cold); con- ing for a motivated, KR I If)IIBER CO, & Kitchenettes in d i - Greal Peopl • . Great Products. Greal Cuslomers mends you use cau- Studios per is subject to the *Hospitality, *Web. Ads published in uEmtinuous noise; work- r esponsible Furnished room, TV w/ tion when you proF air H o using A c t Job placement assis- ployment Opportuni- ing among, around v idual to j oi n o u r cable, micro 8 fridge. Maintenance vide personal which makes it illegal tance. Comp u ter t ies" i n c lude e m - vehicles & traffic; con- Circulation DepartUtils & linens. New Manager team and fill a information to compa- owners. $145-$165/wk to a d vertise "any available. F i n ancial ployee 421 and s tant dust, d i r t & ment Sawmill/Planer Mill vital position worknies offering loans or preference, limitation smells associated with 541-382-1885 Aid if qual i fied. i ndependent po s i Schools & Training C 8 D Lumber Co. is ing within our Circucredit, especially or disc r imination SCHEV a u thorized. tions. Ads for posistreet, water line & seeking a Ma i n telation Dock crew. those asking for adbased on race, color, sewer repair. The poCall 86 6 688-7078 634 tions that require a fee AIRLINES ARE HIRnance Manager. For vance loan fees or religion, sex, handior upfront investment sition d u r ation is This person is reING - Train for hands www.CenturaOnline.c job details and e xcompanies from out of Apt./Multiplex NE Bend cap, familial status, about 6 months. Send must be stated. With on Aviation Mainte- om (PNDC) pectations please visit state. If you have marital status or naresume to centralore- s ponsible fo r al l any independent job nance Career. FAA Where can you find a our website at issues: sorting, concerns or ques- Apt. suite 1 bdrm, 1 tional origin or an inopportunity, p l e ase gonjobs©bbsihq.com, dock approved p r ogram. bath, ki t c henette, cdlumber.com and tions, we suggest you tention to make any helping hand? investigate thor- fax to 541-388-1984 distribution, 550 sq.ft., fenced bk Financial aid if qualiMail resume to: consult your attorney such pre f erence, or s t o p by the loading of all Wesoughly. From contractors to yard w/patio. W/D a fied - Housing availPO Box 27 Com products to Inor call CONSUMER limitation or discrimiBBSI/Bend office lo& util. incl.. Small pet able. Call Aviation In- yard care, it's all here Riddle, OR 97469 d ependent Con HOTLINE, nation." Familial stacated a t 4 9 7 S W Use extra caution when negotiable. $750 mo. of stitute EOE 1-877-877-9392. tractors (haulers/ tus includes children in The Bulletin's Century Drive, ¹101, applying for jobs on$ 1000 sec . d e p . Maintenance. Must have Maintenance under the age of 18 line and never pro- Bend, Oregon 97702 carriers). 541-647-9753 "Call A Service 1-877-804-5293. TURNED YOU living with parents or to fill out an applica- knowledge of pack- PT for residential facil- BANK vide personal infor(PNDC) DOWN? Private party Professional" Directory t r a nsporta- ity. Repair and main legal cust o dians, mation to any source tion. Pre-employment aging, 8 GREATWINTER S will loan on real esand distribution pregnant women, and work o n gr o unds, tate equity. Credit, no you may not have re- drug tests, criminal tion DEAL! methods, as well as people securing cusIndependent Contractor searched and deemed background s creen- inventory skills and equip., and bldg. Prior problem, good equity 2 bdrm, 1 bath, tody of children under exp. i n i n stitutional is all you need. Call $530 & $540 w/lease. to be reputable. Use ings and DMV checks customer se r v ice 18. This newspaper extreme caution when are required. maint. preferred. Carports included! now. Oregon Land skills. M a y d r i ve www.rimrocktrailsats.org will not knowingly ac* Supplement Your Income* r esponding to A N Y Mortgage 388-4200. company vehicles to FOX HOLLOW APTS. cept any advertising online e m ployment transport va r ious Remember.... for real estate which is (541) 383-3152 ad from out-of-state. LOCAL MONEYr We buy WesCom products d l&en Rmo rrt Mmeeamem tmmmv A dd your web a d Cascade Rental in violation of the law. secured trust deeds & f rom time t o t i m e dress to your ad and O ur r e aders ar e Management. Co. We suggest you call note,some hard money as post office, hereby informed that readers on The the State of Oregon PeopleLookforlnformaticn (such loans. Call Pat Kelley etc.). Interacts with all dwellings adverBulletin' s web site Call for Speciais! About Products and 541-382-3099 ext.13. Consumer Hotline at Home Delivery Advitised in this newspawill be able to click Limited numbers avail. 1-503-378-4320 Services Every Daythrough sors, Carr i e rs, through automatically per are available on 1, 2 & 3 bdrms 573 The Bulletin ClassiNeds CSR's, and all manan equal opportunity to your site. w/d hookups, For Equal Opportunity Business Opportunities agement a t Th e basis. To complain of patios or decks. L aws: Oregon B u - ALCOHOL 8 DRUG Bulletin. Hiring retail managers discrimination cal l Mountain Glen reau of Labor & Inand reps in all of Cen WARNING The Bulletin HUD t o l l -free at Counselors 541-383-9313 dustry, C i vil Rights Residential t ral O r egon. m u s t recommends that you Ability t o li f t 50 1-800-877-0246. The Mature individuals to Professionally managed by Division, have retail mgmnt or investigate every work in drug and al- pounds and w o rk toll f re e t e l ephone Norris & Stevens, Inc. 971-673-0764 sales exp. preferably phase of investment cohol resi d ential night shift. Approxinumber for the hearin wireless. Contact opportunities, espeWe are looking for independent contreatment for t eens. mately 24 hours per ing im p aired is 636 If you have any quesJames 541-771-1008 c ially t h os e fr o m 1-800-927-9275. tractors to service home delivery Nights & weekends. week to start. Must tions, concerns or Apt./Multiplex NW Bend or email resume to out-of-state or offered Apply at: have a valid driver's routes in: comments, contact: Rented your by a p erson doing www.rimrocktrailsats.org license and proof of jnosack©cascadewireClassified Department Property? business out of a lo- Small studios close to lii nsurance. W a g e The Bulletin brary, all util. paid. The Bulletin Classifieds cal motel or hotel. InDOE. B e nefits in541-385-5809 $550 mo.w/ $525 dep. Must be available 7 days a week, early mornhas an vestment of f e rings $495 mo.w/$470 dep cluded. All hiring is Find It in ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. "After Hours" Line. must be r e gistered No upon pets/ no smoking. The Bulletin Classifiedsl contingent Call 541-383-2371 with the Oregon Depassing pre - em541-330- 9769 or Serurug Ceutral Oregon sruce 1903 541-385-5809 24 Hours to Please call 541.385.5800 or chasing products or I partment of Finance. ployment drug 541-480-7870 «r. s creen and D M V services from out of I We suggest you con800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or sult your attorney or screening. i the area. Sending apply via email at Bike Mechanic People Look for Information call CONS U MER c ash, c hecks, o r Needed. Must have Please apply by deFeatures News Assistant onljne I bendbujletjn.com About Products and HOTLINE, i credit i n f o rmation previous bike s hop Services Every Daythrough 1-503-378-4320, livering a Letter of i may be subjected to 8.30-noon Mon -Fri The Bulletin is l o o king for a r e s ourceful, exp. Send resume to Interest The Bulletin Classifieds in c l uding FRAUD. self-motivated person to work in the features info@4sro.com. salary requirements For more i nformadepartment as the news assistant. and a resume to The tion about an adver- A Classified ad is an EASY W AY TO Bulletin at 1777 SW i tiser, you may call Organization, flexibility, excellent writing and ACCOUNTANT REACH over 3 million basic computer Chandler Ave. 8-4 the Oregon State skills are key. Attention to deMedical Established CPA firm in Klamath Falls, OR is Pacific NorthwesternM on. thru Fri. O r I Attorney General's tail is essential. Must enjoy working with the seeking a CPA with 3-8 years' experience in pubers. $5 2 5/25-word email t o ci r culaOffice Co n s umer t d. CttrHouc HEALTH public and understand the importance of accuI INITIATIVES lic accounting. The successful candidate shall tion@bendbulletin.c Protection hotline at I c lassified ad i n 3 0 racy and thoroughness in all duties. have a strong technical background in tax and fidaily newspapers for om a Letter of Inter- I 1-877-877-9392. nancial accounting, as well as excellent commu3-days. Call the Pa- This position is full-time and will assist with est including salary nication skills. The applicant should be able to cific Northwest Daily requirements and a i T h t,; Bplletip work both independently and as a team player. Connection (916) various newsroom functions, mostly clerical in resume. Please in27OO 5tewart Parlway Roseburg, OR 9747O Candidate should have experience preparing & 2 88-6019 o r e m a i l nature. clude job title in the reviewing complex individual, corporate, and Tile / Flooring Installer elizabeth Ocnpa.com subject line. partnership returns. Responsibilities will also inExperience preferred, but Specific job duties include: HUMAN RESOURCE ANALYST clude tax planning, business consulting and acwilling to train. Pull-time, for more info (PNDC) Managing the Community Calendar, CommuE OE, D ru g F r e e countinq services. We ar e a p r ofessional nity Datebook, Gallery Exhibits and Talks, local work. This position is responsible for performing high Extreme Value AdverWorkplace. family-like team and offer a competitive salary Call Brian, 541-719-8889 tising! 30 Daily news- Handlinga heavy telephone load and, once level technical and administrative duties to and a complete fringe benefit package. support the work of H R t o t h e h ospital. papers $525/25-word settled into the job, an opportunity to contribPlease send cover letter and resume to: Position oversees complex data systems, Looking for your next classified, 3- d a ys. ute to the features sections risaksonoiscoc as.com Need help fixing stuff? compiles and trends data related to human employee? Reach 3 million PaCall A Service Professional apply, submit a resume and letter of interresources, including: HRIS, compensation, Place a Bulletin help cific Northwesterners. To find the help you need. employee p erformance, a n d wo r kforce wanted ad today and For more information est to Marielle Gallagher by March 15: development. www.bendbulletin.com reach over 60,000 call (916) 288-6019 or mgallagher@bendbulletin.com. Sertrtng Central Oregon since 'l903 readers each week. email: All hiring is contingent on passing a drug test. The ideal candidate will possess a Bachelor's Your classified ad elizabeth@cnpa.com Advertising Account Executive EOE Degree inHuman Resources Management or will also appear on for the Pacific NorthDO YOU NEED business related field and three years relative bendbulletin.com A GREAT west Daily ConnecThe Bulletin is looking for a professional and work experience in HR (preferably in healthwhich currently tion. (PNDC) EMPLOYEE gsEs o oc' 0 care) required. Five years of progressive HR driven Sales and Marketing person to help our receives over 1.5 RIGHT NOW? experience in lieu of degree will be considered. customers grow their businesses with an million page views z DESCHUTES COUNTY Call The Bulletin Need to get an Experience in compensation administration expanding list of broad-reach and targeted every month at before 11 a.m. and ad in ASAP? preferred. PHR certification preferred. Experiproducts. This full time position requires a no extra cost. get an ad in to pubCAREER OPPORTUNITIES ence with d atabase administration, data Bulletin Classifieds background in consultative sales, territory You can place it lish the next day! review and analysis, complex spreadsheets Get Results! management and aggressive prospecting skills. BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST II, Older Adult, 541-385-5809. online at: r equired. Knowledge o f p r i nciples a n d Call 385-5809 Two years of media sales experience is VIEW the Full-time position.Deadline: OPENUNTILFILLED. www.bendbulletin.com practices of Human Resources administration or place preferable, but we will train the right candidate. Classifieds at: and labor laws. Thorough knowledge and your ad on-line at www.bendbulletin.com BENAVIDRALHEALTHSPECIALIST III, Supervisor proficiency of Microsoft Office products with bendbulletin.com 541-385-5809 The position includes a competitive advanced skills in Excel. Experience with — Adult Treatment Team. Full-time position. compensationpackage including benefits,and Lawson preferred. Deadline: WEDNESDAY, 03/20/13. rewards an aggressive, customer focused General salesperson with unlimited earning potential. For additional information or t o a pply for FIELD LAWENFORCEMENTTECHNICIAN, Sheriff's this position please visit our w ebsite at www.mercyrose.org. For questions please call Email your resume, cover letter and salary Office. This recruitment will be used to create a 541-677-2475. history to: hiring list to be used for the next 12 to 18 months. Central Oregon Community College Jay Brandt, Advertising Director has openings listed below. Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & Deadline: SUNDAY,03/24/13. Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer jbrandt@bendbulletin.com apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383-7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon FINANCE DIRECTOR & TREASURER, full-time or drop off your resume in person at Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Nursing Supervisor position. Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED WITH 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, DR 97702; Dr mailto PD Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708; Vice President of Instruction FIRST REVIEW OF APPLICATIDNSON MONDAY, Provide strategic leadership for all academic programs across the colNo phone inquiries please. 03/25/13. lege as well as provide guidance to the instructional areas. Doctoral Degree req. + 5-yr. administrative, management and leadership exp. 5-yr. EDE / Drug Free Workplace INTERN — SUMMER LAW STUDENT, District experienced full-time faculty member and 3-yr. exp. in community col/n Care Attorney's Office, two temporary 40 hr/wk lege. Apply by March 18 to receive first consideration.

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Partners

A Career With Countless Rewards.

A career with Partners In Care Hospice and Home Health is more than a job. I t ' s an opportunity to make a powerful and lasting difference in the lives of your community members. Rediscover the patient-centered care that drew you to your profession in the first place. The following position is currently available at Partners In Care:

Hospice Nursing Supervisor - (full-time)

The Supervisor will work under the supervision of t h e C l inical Operations Director; Responsible for supervising and directing nursing care and all related activities in the Home Care department according to policies, procedures, philosophy, and objectives of the department and organization.

Position requirements:

Oregon RN license and BSN required; Minimum of 2-3 years of previous management experience, preferably in Hospice, and must have a valid driver's license. Partners In Care offers wages and benefits competitive with the local market including health/dental/life insurances, disability coverage, retirement plan with company match on contributions, and paid time off.

If you are interested, please send a cover letter and resume via email to: HROpartnersbend.org or submit via regular mail to: Partners ln Care, Attn: HR, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend OR 97701. 541-382-5882 • Partnersbend.org

Part Time Clerical Assistant (non-benefitted, temporary)

SupervisorRedmond Public Library

Provide clerical assistance and support to the Administrative Assistant of the Allied Health Dept. and various programs. HS/GED+ 1yr. office exp. $10.00/hr. Open Until Filled.

Exciting opportunity in Redmond! Supervisoris key leader of cohesive team providing progressive services. Supervisorneeds proven effectiveness with diverse customer service situations and successful leadership and management skills. Deadline: z:oo on Thursday, April 4. http:iiwww.deschuteslibrary.org/ employment.asp for more details, application, and supplemental questionnaire. Or call (541) 312-1025 for assistance. EOE

D ES C I I U T E S

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Assistant Professor I, French

Provide instruction in French and a secondary language. Includes lecturing and guiding classroom activities in first- and second-year language sequences. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching college level French. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 21.

Assistant Professor I, of Art History

Provide instruction in Introduction to Art History courses, including European, Native American, Asian, and African. Master's req. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes March 28

Temporary Instructor of Forest Resources Technology

Provide instruction in the Forest Resources Technology Program in both classroom and laboratory environments. Master's req. + 3-yr. field exp. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes April 1.

Assistant Professor I, of History

Provide instruction in World History from the origins of civilizations in the Middle East, Mediterranean area, Africa, China, Indian subcontinent and the Americas to the end of the 20th century; including Western Civilization sequence. Master's req. + 2-yr. teaching college level History. Start Fall Term September 2013. Closes April 8

Immediate Need for Part Time Instructors in: Business, Water Distribution Systems, Culinary, College-Level Writing, Nursing, Anthropology, Spanish, and Speech

Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our Web site https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $500 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.

positions working mid-May to mid-August. Deadline: MONDAY,03/25/13. RESEARCH ANALYST (ADMINISTRATIVE ANALYST), Behavioral Health Division, full-time position.Deadline: OPENUNTIL FILLED. RESERVE DEPUTYSHERIFF, Sheriff's Office, oncall positions. Deadline: THIS IS AN ON-GOING RECRUITMENT.

DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY A CCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE.TD APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTEDPOSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT DUR WEBSITE AT www.deschutes.org/iobs. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have beenreviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via emailonly. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County p r ovides r easonable accommodations for persons with disabilities. This material will be furnished in alternative format if needed. For hearing impaired, please call TTY/ TDD 711. EIIUALOPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G4 SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 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 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

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

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654

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Houses for Rent NE Bend

Houses for Rent SE Bend

Houses for Rent Redmond

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Boats & Accessories 21' Crownline 215 hp in/outboard e n g i ne 310 hrs, Cuddy Cabin sleeps 2/ 3 p e ople, portable toilet, exc. BOATS & RVs cond. Asking $8,000. 805- Misc. Items

Real Estate Trades

Open 12-3 2446 NW Dorion Way Ultra Green Super Livable Jody Tuttle, Broker 541-410-6528

for outboard motor. $15. 541-420-4279

Motorhomes

Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please see Class 875.

Call 541-408-6149.

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

541-385-5809

860

The Bulletin

Motorcycles & Accessories BMW K100 L T 1 9 87 52k miles, b r onze, extra windshield, trailer hitch, battery

our spec i al charger, full luggage with hard bags, manuals rates for selling your I and paperwork. Al- I boat or watercraft! ways garaged. $3200. I Place an ad in The Don, 541-504-5989

CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need.

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I 3-month package I I which includes:

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a photo or up to 10 I lines with no photo. *Free online ad at I bendbulletin.com Servmg Central Oregon since 1903 *Free pick up into Harley Davidson Heri- The Central Oregon tage Softail C l assic,I Nickel ads. 2006. Black cherry pearl/ b lack p e a rl , ex t r aI Rates start at$46. I chrome, stage one tune, Call for details! Vance & Hines pipes. 541 -385-5809 excellent cond„always g araged, never l a i d down. 4100 mi, $11,900. gThe Bulleting Call 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Home, 541-548-2258; Cell, 503-970-3328

Harley Heritage Softail, 2003 $5,000+ in extras, $2000 paint job, 30K mi. 1 owner, For more information please call 541-385-8090 or 209-605-5537

Need help fixing stuff?

Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com GENERATE SOME ex-

citement in your neigborhood. Plan a garage sale and don't forget to advertise in classified! 385-5809.

The Bulletin

Servmg Central Oregon since 1903

New Tohatsu 3 gal. gas Harley Limited 103 2011, tank & fuel hose. $50. many extras, stage 1 & air 541-420-4279 cushion seat. 18,123 mi, $21,990. 541-306-0289

garrier. 745

Homes for Sale

N OTICE: ORE G ON Landscape Contrac- BANK OWNED HOMES! tors Law (ORS 671) FREE List w/Pics! r equires a l l bu s i - www.BendRepos.com nesses that advertise bend and beyond real estate t o p e rform L a n d- 20967 yeoman, bend or tractors Board (CCB). scape C o nstruction Peace of Mind A n active lice n se which includes: FOR SALE means the contractor Spring Clean Up p lanting, decks , i s bonded an d i n fences, arbors, •Leaves buying a home, w ater-features, a n d When s ured. Ve r ify t h e 83% of Central •Cones contractor's CCB installation, repair of •Needles Oregonians turn to c ense through t h e irrigation systems to •Debris Hauling CCB Cons u m er be licensed with the 5er ng Central Qregon ince l903 Website Landscape ContracWeed free Bark www.hirealicensedcontracioc t ors B o a rd . Th i s Call 541-385-5809 to 8 flower beds com 4-digit number is to be place your or call 503-378-4621. included in all adverReal Estate ad. The Bulletin recom- Lawn Renovation tisements which indimends checking with Aeration - Dethatching cate the business has 748 the CCB prior to conOverseed a bond,insurance and Northeast Bend Homes tracting with anyone. Compost workers c ompensaSome other t r ades Top Dressing tion for their employ- 2751 NE Sycamore Ct. also req u ire addiees. For your protec- Bend/3 bdrm, 1 bath, tional licenses and Landscape tion call 503-378-5909 Updated home on certifications. Maintenance or use our website: large $149,900 Full or Partial Service www.lcb.state.or.us to 541-388-0882, Debris Removal • Mowing «Edging check license status •Pruning ~Weeding before con t racting Where can you find a Sprinkler Adjustments with t h e bu s iness. helping hand? Persons doing landFertilizer included scape m aintenance From contractors to with monthly program do not require a LCB yard care, it's all here license. in The Bulletin's Weekly, monthly "Call A Service Will Haul Away or one time service. :0 0: Professional" Directory w' FREE EXPERIENCED For Salvage ~'

The Bulletin

Also CleanupsI ' j8c Cteanouts' ~ I®h

Commercial & Residential

Free Estimates Senior Discounts

541-390-1466 Same Day Response USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Handyman

I DO THAT!

Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

AEEEN REINSCH — Provi di ng-

Yard Maintenance & Clean-up, Thatching, Plugging & much more!

ContactAllen

541-536-1294

The Bulletin Classified

COLLINS

LAMlSCAPING

Call Now to Schedule Spring Cleanup and Aerate/Thatch, Weekly or one time Grounds Keeping Service • Mowing • Edging • Hedge Trimming • Pruning ' Weedeating • Fertilizing • Hauling • De-thatching

e Landscape construction e water Feature

541-480-9714

Handyman/Remodeling Residential/Commercial Small Jobs lo Enllre Room Remodels Garage Organlzatlon Home tesPeclion RePairs

QNallly, Honestuure

Dennis 541.317.9768 (.cetu u76 Butiiteitil»srirei/

People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough

The BulletinClassilfeds

ERIC REEVE

>~- HANm ~~ SERVICES Au Home & Commercial Repairs Carpentry-Painting Honey Do's. Small or large jobs, no problem. Senior Discount Au work guaranteed.

541-389-3361 541-771-4463 Bonded - Insured CCB¹149468

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Since 2003 Residential & Commercial

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Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing

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Senior Discounts

Bonded and Insured

541-815-4458 Lce¹ s759

FREE ESTIMATES

BONDED & INSURED

Painting/Wall Covering

MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter

875

Repaint

Specialist! Oregon License e186147 LLC

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FACTORY SPECIAL New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished on your site. J and M Homes 541-548-5511

Springdale 2005 27' 4' Laredo 2009 30' with 2 slide in dining/living area, slides, TV, A/C, table sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 & c h airs, s a tellite, obo. 541-408-3811 Arctic pkg., p o wer awning, Exc. cond! $28,000. 541-419-3301

The Bulletin

CHECK YOUR AD Please check your ad 18'Maxum skiboat,2000, on the first day it runs inboard motor, g reat to make sure it is cor- cond, well maintained, rect. Sometimes in- $9995obo. 541-350-7755 s tructions over t h e phone are misunderNeed to get an stood and a n e r ror ad in ASAP? can occur in your ad. If this happens to your You can place it ad, please contact us online at: the first day your ad appears and we will www.bendbulletin.com be happy to fix it as s oon as w e c a n . 541-3B5-5809 Deadlines are: Weekdays 11:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 a.m. for Sunday and Monday. 20.5' 2004 Bayliner 541 -385-5809 205 Run About, 220 Thank you! HP, V8, open bow, The Bulletin Classified exc. cond., very fast w/very low hours, lots of extras incl. TURN THE PAGE tower, Bimini & custom trailer, For More Ads $19,500. The Bulletin 541-389-1413 775

Fifth Wheels

541-385-5809 Ads published in "Wa- Prowler 2009 Extreme tercraft" include: Kay- E dition. Model 2 7 0 Pilgrim In t e rnational aks, rafts and motor- RL, 2 slides, oppos2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Fifth Wheels ized personal ing in living area, ent. Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 watercrafts. For center, sep. bedroom, HD Fat Boy 1996 Fall price $ 21,865. CHECK YOUR AD "boats" please see 2 ne w e x tra t i res, Completely customized 541-312-4466 hitch, bars, sway bar Class 870. Must see and hear to included. P r o-Pack, 541-385-5809 appreciate. 2012 anti-theft. Good cond, Award Winner. 17,000 RV 'til c lean. Reg . obo. 541-548-4807 CONSIGNMENTS 4/20/15. $19, 9 00. WANTED HD Screaming Eagle 541-390-1122 Please check your ad We Do The Work ... Electra Glide 2005, skslra@msn.com on the first day it runs You Keep The Cash! 103" motor, two tone to make sure it is corOn-site credit candy teal, new tires, rect. Sometimes inapproval team, RV 23K miles, CD player, structions over theg web site presence. CONSIGNMENTS hydraulic clutch, exphone are misWe Take Trade-Ins! WANTED cellent condition. Free Advertising. Kayaks - His & We Do The Work ... understood and an error Highest offer takes it. Sea Hers, Eddyline Wind You Keep The Cash! can occur in your ad. BIG COUNTRY RV 541-480-8080. Dancers,17', fiberglass If this happens to your Bend: 541-330-2495 On-site credit Redmond: boats, all equip incl., ad, please contact us approval team, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! paddies, personal flo541-548-5254 the first day your ad web site presence. tation devices,dry bags, We Take Trade-Ins! appears and we will Door-to-door selling with spray skirts,roof rack w/ be happy to fix it Free Advertising. space for rent Tufast results! It's the easiest towers 8 cradles. Reas soon as we can.• RV BIG COUNTRY RV malo. 30 amp+ water duced price $1100/boat Bend: 541-330-2495 If we can assist you~ way in the world to sell. & sewer. Gravel lot. Firm. 541-504-8557. please call us: Redmond: Avail. now. $350 mo. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 541-548-5254 541-419-5060 Where can you find a The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809 helping hand? Honda 60 0 Sh a dow From contractors to 1995, nice starter bike in yard care, it's all here reat shape, 6770 miles, in The Bulletin's 2000. 541-382-7689 "Call A Service 865 Professional" Directory ATVs

Yamaha Banshee 2001, custom built 350 motor, race-ready, lots of extras, 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, $4999/obo 541-647-8931 no slide-out, Triton eng, all amenities, 1 owner, 749 870 perfect, only 17K miles, Southeast Bend Homes Boats & Accessories $21,500. 541-504-3253 20688 White Cliff Circle. 4 Bdrm, 2 bath home 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, .m E9 FSBO, .46 a c r e, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 single level, w/ office, hp Bowrider w/depth laundry room, paved finder, radio/CD player, driveway, h ardwood rod holders, full canf loors, w h it e v i n y l vas, EZ Loader trailer, Country Coach Intrigue 2002, 40' Tag axle. fence. $26 0 ,000. exclnt cond, $13,000. 707-484-3518 (Bend) 400hp Cummins DieOBO. 541-317-5012. sel. two slide-outs. 773 41,000 miles, new tires 8 batteries. Most Acreages options. $85,000 OBO

Manufactured/ Mobile Homes

Travel Trailers

Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray MONTANA 3585 2008, i nterior, u se d 3X , exc. cond., 3 slides, k $19,999 firm. king bed, Irg LR, 541-389-9188 Arctic insulation, all Southwind 35.5' Triton, options $35,000. 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du541-420-3250 pont UV coat, 7500 mi. • i • B g. Bought new at w $132,913; Want to impress the asking $91,000. relatives? Remodel Call 503-982-4745 Wilderness 2007, FQS your home with the 27'. Great condition! help of a professional Slide-out. Sleeps 6. Full bathroom. Newer from The Bulletin's tires and batteries. "Call A Service One owner. Priced Professional" Directory below NADA low book Winnebago Suncruiser34' at $14,500.00 OBO 2004, only 34K, loaded, 541-419-621 5 NuWa 29 7LK Hi t chtoo much to list, ext'd Hiker 2007, 3 slides, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 32' touring coach, left Looking for your Dennis, 541-589-3243 next employee? kitchen, rear lounge, many extras, beautiful Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and c ond. inside 8 o u t , • Tra v el Trailers $32 900 OBO Prinevreach over 60,000 ille. 541-447-5502 days readers each week. & 541-447-1641 eves. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 milKeystone Cougar 243RKS lion page views ev2008, excellent cond, alery month at no ways stored inside, used extra cost. Bulletin Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th twice, extended service Classifieds Get Rewheel, 1 s lide, AC, contract to 6/15. $17,500. sults! Call 385-5809 TV,full awning, excel541-420-8707 or place your ad lent shape, $23,900. on-line at 541-350-8629 bendbulletin.com

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Four Winds Class A 3 2 ' Hu r r icane 2007. CAN'T BEAT

THIS! Look before

y ou b uy , b e l ow market value! Size & mileage DOES matter! 12,500 mi, all amenities, Ford V10, Ithr, c h erry, slides, like new! New low price, $54,900. 541-548-5216

Gulfstream Scenic Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Cummins 330 hp diesel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 in. kitchen slide out, new tires,under cover, hwy. miles only,4 door fridge/freezer icemaker, W/D combo, Interbath tub & shower, 50 amp propane gen 8 more! $45,000.

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541-379-3530

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4 I • • 9 Reasons~To Consign~Your RV With Larry's RV 1. NO Waiting by the PhOne! 2. We adVertiSe fOr you! 3. We helP you Set a Selling PriCe! I 4. NO miSSed aPPOintmentS! I

5. We certify the RV as sound with a complete systems check! 6. We arrange Financing! 7. RV iS ShOWn at OUR LOT- Not at yOur

home! 8. Wehave excellentHwy 97exposure, Bend's best location! 9. We're OPen 6 dayS a Week, getting you the mOSt eXPOSure fOr yOur RV!

541-948-2310

OOO

20.5' Seaswirl Spyder 1989 H.O. 302, 285 hrs., exc. cond., stored indoors for life $11,900 OBO.

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C O N S I GN M E N T C ENT E R

541-678-5712

541-385-5809

AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles

541-548-5254

Watercraft

www.thegarnergroup.com

Redmond:

B ulletin w it h

garrier.

Any Location >. Removint,

850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories Snowmobiles 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories ( 2) 2000 A r ctic C a t 875 - Watercraft Z L580's EFI with n e w covers, electric start w/ 880 - Motorhomes reverse, low miles, both 22' Custom Weld Jet, 881 - Travel Trailers excellent; with new 2009 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, hrs garaged loaded. 882 - Fifth Wheels drive off/on w/double tilt, 541-923-0854. 885- Canopies and Campers lots of accys. Selling due to m e dical r e asons.A djustable throttle ext. 890 - RVs for Rent

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Northern Arizona Home Seeking trade for Central OR home. Health & age force us to give up our 40acre haven. Gorgeous views, 3BR/1BA, Brookswood Pine interior,1800 sf + 2 Ig decks, open living/ dining/kitchen, Ig rock fireplace, vaulted ceilings, all $8000 all. 541-536-8130 propane appls incl; 40x20 • Yamaha 750 1999 arage/shop. 7 miles off te. 66 near Grand Can- Mountain Max $1400 yon Caverns. $149,000 • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1000. value. Call 928-713-2294 • Zieman 4-place 744 trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Open Houses Located in La Pine.

ga'rrier.

NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires anyone who co n t racts for construction work Zor/f:d' z gaadriI to be licensed with the Zacug ge-e y,. C onstruction Con - More ThanService

OBO. 541-388-8339

719

A very sharp looking Foxborough 3 bdrm, 2 Beautiful T o wnhouse, 2000 sq.ft. 3 Bdrm/ bath, all appl., gas fp, quiet living 2 bdrm, 2y~ 2bath home, gas FP & dbl garage. NICE! No bath, 1400 sq. ft., slate/ www.thegarnergrovp.com furnace, tile floors & smoking/pets. $1000 porcelain/FP/gas/AC. Too much to list! $850. carpet, open l i ving mo. 541-389-1416. + dep. No smoking/no k itchen, dining. N o Open 12-3 pets. 541-420-4155 smoking/no pets. Call 2616 NW TURN THE PAGE 541-388-2250, or Crossing Dr. People Look for Information 541 -81 5-7099. For More Ads NorthWest Crossing About Products and The Bulletin Faces Compass Services Every Day through Park The Bulletin Classiffeds Shelley Griffin, Broker 659 541-280-3804 Houses for Rent Sunriver • • I I r I VILLAGE PROPERTIES Sunriver, Three Rivers, La Pine. Great Selection. Prices range $425 - $2000/mo. View our full inventory online at Village-Properties.com www.thegarnergroup.com Gambling Too Much? Meet singles right now! 1-866-931-1061 Free, confidential help No paid o perators, is available statewide. just real people like Where can you find a Open 12-3 Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT you. Browse greet63410 Overtree helping hand? to talk to a c e rtified ings, exchange mesRd. counselor 24/7 or visit sages and connect From contractors to Country Estate 1877mylimit.org to live. Try it free. Call yard care, it's all here at Edge of Bend chat live with a coun- now: 8 7 7-955-5505. Molly Jurgenson, in The Bulletin's selor. We are not here (PNDC) Broker to judge. We are here "Call A Service 541-815-5248 to help. You can get Professional" Directory your life back.

Call54I 3855809topromotelaurservice' Advertise far28daysstarting ai I4I Ilirespecroipaear isneovaiiablee ourwente)

541-388-7552 Monaco Dynasty 2004, loaded, 3 slides, diesel, Reduced - now $119,000, 5 4 1-9238572 or 541-749-0037

20630 Grandview Dr. in Bend

w w w . la rry s rv . c o m


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY MARCH 17 2013 G5 975

0D

Antique & Classic Autos

I

Sport Utility Vehicles

Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, auto. trans, ps, air, frame on rebuild, rePainted original blue, Chevrolet Blazer LT original blue interior, 2000 -130k miles, Call original hub caps, exc. for info $48QQ OBO chrome, asking $9000 541 48p p781 or make offer. 541-385-9350 ~ ll

Automobiles • CHECKYOUR AD Please check your ad on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. Sometimes ins tructions over t h e phone are misunderstood and an e rror can occur in your ad. If this happens to your ad, please contact us the first day your ad appears and we will be happy to fix it as

Automobiles

r-,;„;..;,.v Vehicle? Call The Bulletin

and place an ad todayl Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers

( The Bulletin (

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Chrysler SD 4-Door s oon as w e c a n . 1930, CD S R oyal Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, Deadlines are: WeekStandard, 8-cylinder, options, new tires, days 12:00 noon for 1/3 interest in Columbia body is good, needs most 159K miles, $3750. Call next day, Sat. 11:00 400, $150,000 located some r e s toration, 541-233-8944 a.m. for Sunday; Sat. @ Sunriver. H o urly runs, taking bids, 12:00 for Monday. If rental rate (based upon 541-383-3888, we can assist you, approval) $775. Also: 541-815-3318 please call us: S21 hangar avail. for 541-385-5809 sale, o r le a s e @ The Bulletin Classified $15/day or $325/mo. N87ZY

1000

Legal Notices

Nissan Sentra 2012 Full warranty, 35mpg, 520 per tank, all power. $13,500. 541-788-0427

541-948-2963

Need to get an Dodge Durango Limad in ASAP? ifed 2004, Leather, You can place it . ~ ~ a • power Wind o ws, online at: FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, power locks, tilt moon door panels w/flowers roof. www.bendbulletin.com & hummingbirds, Vin ¹142655. Chevy Cobalt LT 2010, 1/3 interest i n w e l l- white soft top & hard $9,988 power window, power 541-385-5809 equipped IFR Beech Botop. Just reduced to tilt, XM satelite, U BA R U . locks,Vin¹232901 nanza A36, new 10-550/ $3,750. 541-317-9319 © s prop, located KBDN. or 541-647-8483 $12988 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Toyota Camrys: $65,000. 541-419-9510 877-266-3821 1984, SOLD; Dlr ¹0354 4g®sUBARU. 1985 SOLD; 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1986 parts car

LEGAL NOTICE

IN TH E

C I R CUIT

COURT FOR THE STATE O F O REGON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, G MA C M O RTG AGE, L LC , i t s successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. FRED A. BARBER; MELISSA R. BARBER;

O CCUPANTS O F THE P R E MISES; A ND TH E R E A L PROPERTY LOCATED AT 1 5935 WOO D CHIP LANE,

LA PINE, OREGON 97739, Defendants. Case No. 1 2CV0811.

S UM-

MONS BY PUBLIC ATION. TO T H E DEFENDANT: FRED A. BARBER: In the name of the State of O r egon, you are hereby re877-266-3821 only one left! $500 quired to a p pear R Dlr ¹0354 0 Call for details, a nd a nswer t h e 541-548-6592 complaint filed against you in the above-entitled Court J eep Wrangler 4 . 0 a nd cause on o r Sport 1999, Hard top, before the expirarunning boards, pretion of 30 days from mium sound. Chrysler Sebring 2004 the date of the first Vin ¹432663. 84k, beautiful dark gray/ p ublication of t h is $9,988 brown, tan leather int., summons. The date Toyota Corola 2011, $5995 541-350-5373 first publication in 4j@sUSUBhltUOPBI!ND B A R U. Keyless entry, cruise of COM this matter is March and tilt. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 10, 2013. If you fail Vin ¹630707. 877-266-3821 timely to appear and $14,488 Dlr ¹0354 answer, plaintiff will apply to the suem u above-entitled court 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. for the relief prayed "My Little Red Corvette" 877-266-3821 for in its complaint. ir 1996 coupe. 132K, Dlr ¹0354 This is a ju d icial < 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. foreclosure o f a Toyota Corolla 2004, d eed of t r us t i n Porsche Cay e nne $12,500 541-923-1781 auto., loaded, 204k which the p laintiff Turbo 2005, Very low miles. orig. owner, non r equests that t h e miles, clean, loaded. smoker, exc. c o nd. plaintiff be allowed Vin ¹A92123. $6500 Prin e ville to foreclose your $29,488 503-358-8241 interest in the f o llowing d e s c ribed Toyota Prius 2010 ©s U BA R U . real property: LOT Pkg II, 32,572 mi. Fiat 500 Pop HatchTHREE (3), BLOCK ¹085030 $18,995. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend back 2012, po wer TWENTY-FIVE (25), 877-266-3821 w indows, powe r TALL PINES FIFTH Dlr ¹0354 doors, blu e toothm A DDITION, D E S premium wheels. Oregon CHUTES COUNTY, Vin ¹125141. Toyota 4Ru n n er Astnsnurce O REGON. Com$13,988 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , m only known a s : 541-598-3750 4WD, V6, 5 speed, aaaoregonautosource.com 15935 W o o dchip S UB A R U . t ow pkg., plus 4 Lane, La Pine, Orstuds tires on rims, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. WHEN YOU SEE THIS egon 97739. NOr uns great. W a s TICE TO D EFEN877-266-3821 $ 5500, no w o n l y ~ Oo DANTS: REA D Dlr ¹0354 9UBARUOl BKNO COM

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Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & Cessna 150 LLC radio (orig),541-419-4989 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and Ford Mustang Coupe 1966, original owner, engine, hangared in V8, automatic, great Bend. Excellent pershape, $9000 OBO. formance & afford530-515-81 99 able flying! $6,500. 1/5th interest in 1973

541-382-6752

Ford Ranchero 1979

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. Financing available. 541-948-2126 or email 1jetjock©q.com

with 351 Cleveland

modified engine. Body is in excellent condition, $2500 obo. 541-420-4677

Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, based in Madras, al-

ways hangared since new. New annual, auto pilot, IFR, one piece windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 total t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. 541-475-6947, ask for

Rob Berg.

Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390

engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original m i les, runs great, excellent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

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BUBARUOH tEND COM

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GMC ~i~ ton f971, Only $19,700! Original low

mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 951-699-7171

$4000.541-659-1416

More PixatBendbulletin,cojjj On a classified ad

T HESE PA P E RS CAREFULLY! A

l awsuit has b e e n started against you in th e a b ove-entitled co u r t by GMAC M o rtgage, Ford Taurus wagon 2004, LLC, plain t iff. very nice, pwr everything, Looking for your Plaintiff's claims are 120K, FWD, good tires, stated in the written next employee? $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 complaint, a copy of Place a Bulletin help which was filed with wanted ad today and the a b ove-entitled reach over 60,000 C ourt. You mus t readers each week. "appear" in this case Your classified ad ©3 s U BARU. G R E AT or the other side will will also appear on 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Hyundai Sonata 2007 win a u tomatically. bendbulletin.com 877-266-3821 To "appear" you which currently reGLS, 64,700 mi, excelDlr ¹0354 Hysfer H25E, runs m ust file with t he lent cond, good tires, ceives over 1.5 milOldsmobile Alero 2004, well, 2982 Hours, court a legal docunon-smoker, new tags, lion page views classic 4-dr in showroom $3500,call ment called a "moevery month at $9500. 541-280-7352 condition, leather, chrome • 541-749-0724 tion" or "answer." Vans no extra cost. Bullewheels, 1 owner, low The "motion" or "antin Classifieds miles. $7500. swer" (or "reply") Get Results! Call 541-382-2452 96 Ford Windstar & must be given to the 385-5809 or place 2000 Nissan Quest, court clerk or a dyour ad on-line at People Look for Information both 7-passenger ministrator within 30 bendbulletin.com About Products and vans, 160K miles, days of the date of Services Every Day through low prices, $1200 & Mercedes-Benz E500 first publ i cation Peterbilt 359 p o table The Bulletin Classifieds $2900, and worth 2005, Ve ry c le a n , I The Bulletin recoml s pecified her e i n water t ruck, 1 9 90, every cent! loaded, v e r y low mends extra caution ~ along with the re3200 gal. tank, 5hp PROJECT CARS:Chevy 541-318-9999 miles. filing fee. It pump, 4-3" h o ses, 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & when p u r chasing ~quired Vin ¹688743. must be in proper camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Chevy Coupe 1950 f products or services $16,988 form and have proof 541-820-3724 rolling chassis's $1750 from out of the area. ChevyAstro f service on t h e ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, J S ending c ash , oplaintiff's Cargo Van 2001, S UB A R U . a t t orney complete car, $ 1949; checks, or credit inpw, pdl, great cond., or, if t h e p l aintiff 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. formation may be I / Automotive Wanted Cadillac Series 61 1950, business car, well does not have an 2 dr. hard top, complete 877-266-3821 / subject to FRAUD. a ttorney, proof o f f r on t cl i p ., maint'd, regular oil Dlr ¹0354 DONATE YOUR CAR- w/spare For more i nformachanges, $4500. on the plainFast Free Towing 24 $3950, 541-382-7391 f tion about an adver- service Please call tiff.lf you have any hr. Response - Tax 933 541-633-5149 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! tiser, you may call you Deduction U N I T ED I the Oregon State I questions, see an attorPickups BREAST C A NCER Attorney General's f should Door-to-door selling with ney immediately. If Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 I Office C o nsumer I you F OUNDATION P r o need help in 7 -pass. v a n wit h fast results! It's the easiest f Protection hotline at viding Free Mammo- Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 way in the world to sell. finding an attorney, p ower c h a i r lif t , grams & Breast Can- 1971 new trans, 2 1-877-877-9392. you may contact the $1500; 1989 Dodge cer Info 888-785-9788 new t i r es , ne w Oregon State Bar's Turbo Van 7 - pass. The Bulletin Classified (PNDC) brakes, 2nd owner, ServingCentral Oregon since 1903 Lawyer Re f e rral new motor and 541-385-5809 r uns/drives g o o d . has S ervice online a t t rans., $1500. I f i n Make good wood www.oregonstateterested c a l l Jay Antique & truck. $1995 OBO bar.org or by calling 503-269-1057. 541-350-2859 Classic Autos (503) 684-3763 (in the Portland metrop olitan a rea) o r toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. This 1921 Model T summons is issued Delivery Truck pursuant to ORCP Restored & Runs Ford 250 XLT 1990, 7. R C O LE G A L, $9000. 6 yd. dump bed, P.C., Michael Bot541-389-8963 139k, Auto, $4500. thof, OSB ¹113337, Audi A4 1 . 8 T 2 0 06, 541-410-9997 mbotthof © rcolegal. Turbo, c o n vertible, com, Attorneys for leather. P laintiff, 51 1 S W Vin ¹ 006994. 10th Ave., Ste. 400, $17,988 Portland, OR 97205, ~ggs U B A RU. P: (503) 977-7840, F: (503) 977-7963. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 1966 GMC, 2nd owner, 877-266-3821 too many extras to list, Honda Ridgeline RTL LEGAL NOTICE Dlr ¹0354 $8500 obo. Serious buy- 2008, Hard t o p per, The Earned Income IN THE C IRCUIT loaded, tow pkg, bed ers only. 541-536-0123 COURT FOR THE liner, low miles. Tax Credit. S TATE O F OR Vin ¹534426. E GON FOR T H E $23,988 You may have COUNTY OF DESCHUTES. I n th e 4@ sUsusmuosesvo B A R U. earned it. Why not cov Matter of the Estate BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. o f MARIA R O SA -..-;-::: .~.":zt 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. o wner, e xc . c o n d . claim it? 877-266-3821 I SELA TELL E Z Chevy C-20 Pickup 101k miles, new tires, Dlr ¹0354 MACIEL, Deceased. 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; loaded, sunroof. If yOu're wOrking hard juSt to make Case No. auto 4-spd, 396, model $8,300. 541-706-1897 13PB0004. NOCST /all options, orig. ends meet and have one or more owner, $22,000, Qo TICE TO I N TER~ Children liVing With you, ypu may 541-923-6049 ESTED PERSONS. MorepjxatBendbulletjncom I nternational Fla t NOTICE IS qualify for the EITC. Think of jt as Bed Pickup 1963, 1 '55 Chevy 2 dr. w gn H EREBY GI V E N ton dually, 4 s p d. Buick LeSabre 1996. a reward for doing one of life's most PROJECT car, 350 t hat t h e und e rGood condition, small block w/Weiand trans., great MPG, beautiful, most important and most s igned has b e en dual quad tunnel ram could be exc. wood 121,000 miles. appointed personal lOving jObS. ViSit our Web Site Or Non-smoker with 450 Holleys. T-10 hauler, runs great, r epresentative. A l l 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, new brakes, $1950. $2600 OBO. ask your tax preparer jf you qualify. p ersons hav i n g Weld Prostar wheels, 541-419-5480. 541-954-5193. claims against the extra rolling chassis + BeCauSe when itCOmeS to estate are required extras. $6000 for all. to p resent t h em, getting more for your family, 541-389-7669. Buick LeSabre 2004, with vouchers atconsider it done. 30 mpg, 75k, heated tached, to the unseats, nice wheels, dersigned personal A message from the auto, white, leather, representative at Almost like n e w!! Internal Revenue Service. 12200 East S. 1st RAM 2500 HD '03 hemi, Bring $6000 and it's Ave., Denver, CO 2WD, 135K, auto, CC, www.irs.gov/eitc yours. 541-318-9999 80239 within four (4) am/fm/cd. $7000 obro. or 541-508-9133. Chevy Wagon 1957, 541-680-9965 /390-1285 m onths after t h e 4-dr., complete, date of first publicaThe Internal tion of this notice, or $7,000 OBO, trades. Toyota 4WD, 1985, ask- Cadillac DeVille, 2001, Please call inq $2000; will take best 39Kmi, new cond, loaded, the claims may be /l Revenue Service 541-389-6998 offer. 541-280-8537 $12, 0 00. 541-598-5210 barred. All persons

go to

www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Diamond Reo D ump Truck 1 974, 12 -14 yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812 Jeep Comanche, 1990, Just bought a new boat? original owner, 167K, Toyota Land Cruiser Sell your old one in the 4WD, 5-spd, tags good 2000, Roof rack, tow classifieds! Ask about our till 9/2015, $3900 obo. pkg., moonroof. Super Seller rates! 541-633-7761 Vin ¹124783. $18,788 541-385-5809

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The Bulletin

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L e g al Notices whose rights may be affected by the p roceedings m a y obtain add i tional information from the records of the Court, the personal repres entative, o r th e lawyers for the personal r e p resentative, Luciano Victor Tellez. Dated and first published on March 17, 2013. By L uciano Vict o r Tellez, Per s onal Representative. P ersonal R e r esentative: Luciano Victor Tellez, 12200 East S. 1st A ve., Denver, CO 80239. L aw er f o r P e r sonal Re resentative: J ennif e r Coughlin, OSB 0 65781, 97 4 N W R iverside Blvd . , Bend, OR 9 7 701, (541) 382-5885, F: (541) 38 2 - 3328, jlc©brotherslaw.com

Lookat:

Bendhom es.com fOrCO mPleteLiStingSof AreaRealEstatefor Sale LEGAL NOTICE IN TH E C I R CUIT C OURT O F T H E STATE O F ORE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, NATIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. THE UNK N OWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF ROBERT L. SEAVEY; MARLOWE K. SEAVEY; O CCUPANTS O F THE P R OPERTY,

Defendants. Case No.: 12C V 1 149. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. To: The Unknown Heirs a nd Devisees o f Robert L. Seavey. You are hereby required to a p pear a nd d e fend t h e C omplaint file d against you in the above entitled cause within thirty (30) days from the date of service of thissummons upon you, and in case of your failure to do so, for want t h ereof, Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE TO D E F ENDANT: READ THESE PAPERS CA REFULLY! You m ust

"appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he

court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") must be given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication sp e c ified herein along w ith the required filing fee. It must be in p roper form a n d have proof of service on the plaintiff's a ttorney or, if t h e p laintiff does n o t have an a t torney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, you may call t he Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral Service at (503) 684-3763 or toll-free

in Oregon at (800)

452-7636. The r el ief sought i n t h e C omplaint i s th e

f oreclosure of t h e property located at 15997 Fir Road, La Pine, O R 9 7 7 39. Date of First Public ation: March 1 0 , 2013. McCarthy & Holthus, LLP, Erica Day, OSB¹ 113653, 9 20 SW 3 r d A v enue, First F loor, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: (877) 369-6122, Ext . 3370, Fax: ( 5 03) 694-1460,

eday© mccarthyholthus.com, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff.

Legal Notices

the personal representative, or the lawyers for the personal

Legal Notices contractor's preference). B i d s shall be clearly labeled: 2013 C A T CHBA-

representative, Ryan P. Correa. Dated and SIN REPL A CEf irst p u blished o n MENT P R OJECT M arch 1 0 , 201 3 . TR 13-01. DONNA B. WILKER-

SON, Personal Representative. LEGAL NOTICE IN THE C I RCUIT C OURT O F T H E STATE O F ORE GON FOR T H E COUNTY OF DESCHUTES, THE BANK O F NEW Y ORK MEL L O N F /K/A TH E B A N K OF NEW YORK, AS TRUSTEE FOR THE HOLDERS OF T HE CERTI F IC ATES, FIRS T H ORIZON M O R T GAGE PASST HROUGH C E R TIFICATES S ERIES FHA MS 2005-AA7, BY FIRST H O R IZON HOME LOANS, A DIVISION OF FIRST T E N N ESS EE B A N K NA TIONAL ASSOCIAT ION, MAS T E R SERVICER, IN ITS CAPACITY AS AGENT FOR THE TRUSTEE UNDER T HE POOL I NG AND S E R VICING AGREEMENT,

through its loan serv icing agent N A TIONSTAR MORTGAGE LLC, Plaintiff, vs. THE

UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF SHARON MCM ORRIS; B R I C E MCMORRIS; E *TRADE

BA N K ;

O CCUPANTS O F THE P R OPERTY,

Defendants. Case

No.: 12C V 1 111. SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION. To:

Heirs and Devisees of Sharon McMorris. You are hereby required t o a p pear a nd d e fend t h e C omplaint file d against you in the above entitled cause within thirty (30) days from the date of service of thissummons upon you, and in case of your failure to do so, for want t h ereof, Plaintiff will apply to the court for the relief demanded in the Complaint. NOTICE TO D E FENDANT: READ THESE PAPERS CAREFULLY! You m ust

"appear" in this case or the other side will win a u tomatically. To "appear" you m ust file with t he

court a legal paper called a "motion" or "answer." The "motion" or "answer" (or "reply") m ust b e given to the court clerk or administrator within 30 days of the date of first publication s p e cified herein along w ith the required filing fee. It must be in p roper form a n d have proof of service on the plaintiff's a ttorney or, if t h e p laintiff d oe s n o t have an a t torney, proof of service on the plaintiff. If you

have questions, you should see an attorney immediately. If you need help in finding an attorney, y ou may call t h e Oregon State Bar's Lawyer Ref e rral Service at ( 5 0 3) 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. The r el ief sought in t h e C omplaint i s th e f oreclosure of t h e property located at 19086 Baker Road, Bend, OR 9 7 702. Date of First Publication: March 17, 2013. McCarthy & Holthus, LLP, Russell Whittaker, OSB ¹ 115540, 920 S W 3rd Avenue, First Floor, Portland, OR 97204, Phone: (877) 369-6122,

3370, Fax: 6 94-1460,

Ext .

( 5 03) rwh i t -

taker@mccarthyholthus.com, Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT LEGAL NOTICE COURT O F THE INVITATION TO BID STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY Sealed bids for the construction of the OF DESCHUTES, In the Matter of the EsCity of R e dmond, tate of BARBARA R. 2013 C A T CHBABROOKS, Deceased, SIN REP L ACECase No. 13PB0016. MENT P R O JECT NOTICE TO INTER- TR 13- 0 1, a d ESTED P ERSONS. dressed to the City NOTICE IS HEREBY R ecorder, City o f G IVEN that the u nRedmond, Oregon dersigned has been will be received unappointed p e r sonal til 2:00 P M l o cal representative. All t ime a t t h e C i t y persons having claims Recorder's o ff ice, against the estate are City Hall, 716 SW required to p r esent Evergreen Avenue, them, with vouchers Redmond, Oregon, attached, to the unon April 11, 2 013 dersigned p e rsonal and then p u blicly representative at 747 opened and read at SW Mill View Way, 2:00 PM in ConferBend, Oregon 97702, ence Room A, City within four m o nths Hall, Redmond, Orafter the date of first egon. First tier subpublication of this no- contractor list is retice, or the claims may quired to be be barred. All persubmitted by 4 :00 sons whose r i ghts PM, s a m e day may be affected by (Note: The first tier the proceedings may s ubcontractor l i s t obtain additional inmay also be subf ormation from t h e mitted w i t h t he records of the court, sealed b id at

No mandatory prebid meeting will be held. No bid will be accepted by a general contractor who is not on the plans holder list. This i s a Pu b l ic Works Contract and s ubject to the O regon Bureau of Labor and Industries (BOLI) Wage Rates, dated January 1, 2013 and a mendments for region 10 as defined under ORS 279C.800 to

279C.870. No bids shall be received or considered u nless the bid contains a s tatement by t h e b idder that O R S 279C.838 or 279C.840 shall be complied with. Bidders must identify whether bidder is a resident bidder as defined i n ORS 279A.120.

Scope of Work: Improvements generally include repair or replacement of 42 catch basins and a ssociated c r o s s p iping, AD A u p grades at curb returns, and asphalt patching. The City estimates the c os t o f improvements at $120,000. C ontract Docu ments may be examined at the following locations: • City of Redmond E ngineering D i v ision 243 NE Antler Avenue, Redmond, Oregon. • Central Oregon Builder's Exchange, 1902 NE 4th Street, Bend, Oregon.

C ontract Docu ments may be obtained by qualified bidders only for a non-refundable price of $20.00 at t he City o f R e d mond Engineering Division. The City may provide

soli c i tation

documents by electronic means avail able on the City of Redmond website. www.ci.redmond.or. us

All interested prime b idders must f o rmally request and purchase a h a r dbound set of project plans and specificat ions, w h ich w i l l register them as a plan holder on the project. The City of R edmond will n o t accept any bid that is not from a registered plan h older and submitted on the proposal form from the C ontract Documents p a ckage. All requests for plans, plan holder list, and bid documents s h al l be m ade t o Kat h y Harms, Office Assistant, C i t y of R edmond Eng i neering Department at (541) 504-2002. PUBLISH:

Bend Bulletin Sunday, March 17, 2013 LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE PURSUA NT TO ORS CHAPTER 8 7 .152 through ORS 8 7.206, Notice i s hereby given that t he f ollowing v e hicle will be sold, for cash to the highest bidder, on 04/1/2013. The sale will b e he l d at 1 0:Opam by B a r Towing Inc., 160 SE Logsden St., Bend OR 97702 a 2 0 06

Jeep Grand Cherokee VIN 1 J4GR48K16C2393

79. Amount due on lien $2315.00. Re-

puted owner(s) Lisa

Anne Sch n i ttke, Bank of A m erica. Published on March 17th & March 24th, 2013. PUBLIC NOTICE The Bend Park & Recreation District Board of Directors Tuesday, M arch 1 9 , 201 3 ,

m eeting has b e e n cancelled. The next regularly s c heduled meeting will be conducted Tuesday, April 2, 2013. The April 2, 2 013, agenda a n d meeting will be posted F riday, M arch 2 9 , 2013, on the district's website: www.bendparksandrec.org. for more information call 541-389-7275.

Just bought anewboat? Sell youroldoneinthe classifieds!Askabout our SuperSellerrates! 541-385-5809


TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

G6 SUNDAY, MARCH 17, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?

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List one Item" in The Bulletin's Classifieds for three days for FREE. PLUS, your ad appears in PRINT and ON-LINE at bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (on Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines of text only. Excludes all service, hay, wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals and employment advertising, and all commercial accounts. Must be an individual item under $200.00 and price of individual item must be included in the ad. Ask your Bulletin Sales Representative about special pricing, longer run schedules and additional features. Limit1 ad per item per 30 days to be sold.


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