Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q
SUluDAY January18,2015 fifl
en ll
I
en 'Sa nI'a I BUSINESS • E1
nn
MORETHAN
QLISlll CI'ISIS,'„.„.„„ „„
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
LEGISLATURE
Pot
Northwest TravelSkiing the"Inland Empire" of Washington and Idaho.C1
I5
I'0 in II1 I10W
Long-lost lander — A failed Mars mission turns up a decade after its loss.A3
By Taylor W.Anderson
I .jd
The Bulletin
«"g(%>,'
entists from Chicagoareteaming up with Israeli experts to make sure there's enough to go around — adaunting task. A7
Learning togrieve —Too often we cling to society's expectations whendealing with loss — how to take it at your own pace.F1
And a Wed exclusiveAfghanistan's spymaster defies simple label. bendbnlletin.cnm/extras
SALEM — Oregon leg-
t
World water crisis — scl-
islators filed more than a
dozen marijuana-related bills last week, giving early insight into how they'll tinker with a new law that will
,%458~NI •A Bendwoman spentseveralmonths working in aschool in Liberia — and when the outbreakhappened, shewas determined to return, despite the risk By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
legalize recreational marijuana startingthis July. The proposals show what lawmakers may do now that Oregon is the nation's fourth state to take on
Janessa Wells I Submitted photos
Workers with More Than Me, the organization Janessa Wells worked for, distribute disinfectant and work to educate people about Ebola in Monrovia, Liberia.
When Janessa Wells
EDITOR'SCHOICE
agreed in late 2013 to work for a nonprofit opening a new school for girls in Liberia, she never anticipated
regulation of the federally banned drug. M easures filedwould prevent marijuana from
being grown or sold near schools, would require labeling at marijuana shops and require the state to study pot taxation. House Bill 2147 would or-
iI
enue to create a report on
h
that within a year the coun-
der the Department of Revthebest wayto taxpot sales. The bill would give the de-
Court takes
try would be overwhelmed by the largest Ebola outbreak in history.
up marriage,
Wells, 30, first went to Li-
state will start licensing rec-
beriafrom November 2013
reational retailers in 2016, to deliver the report.
but on its ownterms By Adam Liptak New York Times News Service
WASHINGTON — The
firstpage of apetition seeking Supreme Court review
— a month after the school
opened — through last May, then went back to the U.S. for a few months with the intention of returning in
Anotherbill, by Rep. John Lively, D-Springfield, would limit aphysician to approving medical marijua-
August 2014. She grew up in Central California, and although
na cards for no more than 450patients. SeeBills /A4
she currently lives in Monrovia, she lists Bend-
out the"question presented," the one the court will
where her father, Jim Wells, moved eight years ago — as her permanent address. She's spending a few weeks here during a short break
answer if it takes the case.
before returningto Liberia.
The justices do not ordinarily tinker with the wording of
scheduled to return to Li-
is the most important. It sets
ANALYSIS those questions. But
on Friday something unusual happened: In agreeingto hear four same-sex marriagecases,the court
framed for itself the issues it would address. Lawyers and scholars scrutinized the court's
By the time Wells was
end of July, the number of cases spiked dramatically, andby August, the country had reached its peak of
'
By Jack Healy
•
New York TimesNews Service
more than 300 cases per
week, according to World
DENVER — When Col-
orado legalized marijuana two years ago, nobody was quite ready for the problem of exploding houses.
order with the anxious in-
Me, the organization Wells works for, had closed its
Some saw an attempt by Chief Justice John Roberts
school and dedicated all
right to same-sexmarriage.
ABOVE: The ambulance team for More Than Me, the organization Wells worked for in Liberia, removes a potential Ebola patient from a Liberian slum.
raled out of control. At the
tensity of hypochondriacs attendingtheir symptoms.
nationwide constitutional
Legal pot byproduct: homes exploding
beria, Ebola, a deadly virus BELOW: Rice, oil and other necessities are provided to a homeunder quarantine. marked by fever and severe internal bleeding, had spi-
Health Organization data. By that time, More Than
to elicit a rulingthat would stop short of establishing a
partment until Sept. 15 of this year, months before the
But that is exactly what
of its resources to the Ebola response. Many of its
firefighters, courts and lawm akers acrossthestateare confronting Related these days: • Combining amateur pot with m a r ijuana e cigs A3 al chemists who are
staff members had left the
country. When Wells tried to re-
The court's order was not issued until3:30 in the after-
turn to Liberia, she was told
noon, long after the justices' private morning conference conduded. That suggested the drafting had taken some
pressed the matter, insisting she wanted to be a part
of the Ebola response. Finally, with help from More
basements into "Breaking
time and had involved some
Than Me's director, who
negotiation.
already hadbeen permitted
using flammable chemicals to extract potent drops of
Richard Hasen, a law professor at the University
to return, in September,
a marijuana concentrate
Wells finally was allowed
of California, Irvine, did not
in. When she arrived at
commonly called hash oil, and sometimes accidentally blowing up their homes and lighting themselves on fire in the process.
like what he saw. Has the Supreme Court"stacked the
deck against gay marriage in how it has framed the question?" he asked in a
blogpost. But there are perfectly innocuous explanations
for the court's new questions. It agreed to hear four
it was too dangerous. She
turning their kitchens and Bad"-style laboratories,
More Than Me's headquarters in Monrovia, Liberia's
capital city, Wells said she was terrified of catching Ebola. The initial shock
The trend is not limited to Colorado — but the blasts
wore off, she said, but the
ache for lawmakers and courts here, the state at the
are creating a special head-
fearnever left.
center of legal marijuana. SeeExploding/A4
See Ebola/A5
different petitions, from
Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio and Tennessee, and they featured different questions,
whichneeded to be harmonized since the cases were
consolidated. SeeMarriage/A6
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny intervals High 46, Low30 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
Ef-6 Community Life Cf-8 Obituaries B4 Sp o rts B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Opinion/Books Ff-6 Stocks Gf -6 Local/State B f -6 Puzzles C6 TV/Movies
D1-6 E4-5 C8
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. te,
4e pages, 7 sections
Q I/i/e userecyclednewsprint
:: IIIIIIIIII I o
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
7
A2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
How to reachUs Syria talkS fizzle —A Russian initiative to host peace talks this month between the Syrian government and its opponents appears to be unraveling as prominent Syrian opposition figures shun the prospective negotiations amid deep distrust of Moscow and concerns the talks hold no chance of success. The faltering effort suggests that even after four years and at least 220,000 people killed, the antagonists in Syria's civil war are far from burning themselves out and will likely keep fighting for a more decisive battlefield advantage before any real talks can take place. The planned meetings in Moscow, scheduled to start Jan. 26, would be the first on Syria since a U.N.-sponsored conference in Genevacollapsed early last year after making no headway.
STOP, START OR MISS YOUR PAPER?
541-385-5800 Phonehours:5:30a.m.-5 p.m. MoncFri. ,6:30a.m .-noonSat.-eun.
GENERAL INFORMATION
541-382-1811 ONLINE
www.bendbulletin.com
Yemen abduCtian —Gunmenabducted a senior aide to Yemen's president Saturday, highlighting the frailty of the central government and the growing sense of lawlessness asYemensuffers its most severe political crisis in years. Thekidnapping of the aide, Ahmed Awad bin Mubarak, the office director for President AbedRabbo Mansour Hadi, was carried out by gunmenloyal to the Houthis, a former rebel militia that took control of Sanaa, the capital, in September, according to government officials and astatement from the group. The attackers intercepted Mubarak's car in Sanaa,officials said. No information was available late Saturday on Mubarak's whereabouts.
bulletin©bendbulletin.com N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
541-383-0367 NEW S R O O M FA X
541-385-5804 N EW S R O O M E M A IL Business .....business@bendbulletin.com Ciiy Desk..........newsetbendbulletin.com CommunityLife communitylife@bendbulletin.com Sperts..............sports©bendbulletin.com
OUR ADDRESS Street ...........1777 SW Chandler Ave Bend, OR97702 Mailing.........P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706
Si oil.ArL
Drsarirsre
Thibault Camus / The Associated Press
A plane takes off as aFrench soldier patrols at the RoissyCharles de Gaulle airport, in Roissy, north of Paris, on Saturday. France ordered10,000 troops into the streets last week to protect sensitive sites.
uro ean error crac own wi ens By RafCasertandDemetnsNellas
Authorities said that even
The Associated Press
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher Gordon Black .................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa........................541-383-0337
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt.....541-363-0370 Circulation AdamSears...541-365-5605 HumanResources Traci Oonaca.....................541-363-0327
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Ooran.........541-363-0360 CitySheila G.Miler..........541-617-7631 CommunityLife, Health JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....541-363-0353 GD! Magazine Ben Salmon.......................541-363-0377 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey.....541-363-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............541-363-0359
REDMOND BUREAU Street address.......226NWSixth St. Redmond, OR 97756 Mailing address....P.O.Box766 Redmond, OR 97756 Phone................................541-504-2336 Fax ....................................541-546-3203
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primaryconcern isthat all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story, call us at541-363-0356.
TO SUIISCRISE
Home deliveryandE-Editien: One month: $17 <Printonly:$16)
By mail in DeschutssCounty: One month: $14.50 By mail outsideDeschutes County:Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only:Onemonth: $13 TO PLACE AN AD Classified...........................541-365-5609 Advertising fax..................541-365-5602 Other information .............541-362-1Bt t
OTHER SERVICES Photo reprints...................541-363-0356 Obituaries.........................541-617-7625 Back issues ......................541-365-5600
All Bulletin payments areaccepted at the drop box atCity Hall. Checkpayments may beconvertedto anelectronic fundstransfer.TheBulletin, USPS P552-520, ispublisheddaily byWestem CommunicationsInc.,1777 SWChandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicals postagepaidat Bend,OR.Postmaster. Send address changesto TheBulletin circulation department,PO.Box6020, Bend, OR 97706. TheBulletin relains ownershipandcopyright protection of all staff-prepared newscopy,advertising copy andnewsorad ilustrations. They may not bereproducedwithout explicit prior approval.
though they had broken up BRUSSELS — With Europe the alleged terror cell they on edge, soldiers fanned out to were still looking for some guard possible terror targets suspects abroad and briefin Belgium on Saturday while ly hoped Greece could have police in Greece detained at clinched the breakthrough by least two suspects as part of detaining one remaining key a widening counterterrorism suspect. dragnet across the continent. A Greekpolice official earliIn France, one of the terror-
ists behind last week's attacks
some 1,500 miles from Brussels, and included an individual who at first sight matched rorism and civil unrest amid a the description of a key terror groundswell of popular antag- suspect in Belgium. onism across Europe against The official spoke on conradical Islam, and p r otests dition of anonymity due to against caricatures of the the sensitivity of the ongoing in Paris was given a secret
burial as authorities sought to head off glorification of ter-
Prophet Muhammad across the Muslim world that have
investigation.
underscored vast c ultural
Brussels of ID
differences. For the first time in three
federal magistrate Eric Van der Sypt said there was no
As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
POWERBALL
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
QteQteQ aaQ ar Q aeO The estimated jackpot is now $208 million.
MEGABUCKS
The numbers drawnSaturday nightare:
Q4QsQ2aQ asQ 2eQ ae The estimated jackpot is now $7.3 million.
After careful vetting in
After an initial refusal to
provide a burial place for Kouachi, the mayor of Reims, Arnaud Robinet, said he was
forced to backtrack. Robinet said the government had insisted he allow th e elder
brother to be buried in Reims because according to French
law residents of a town have the right to be buried there. "He was buried last night,
in the most discreet, anonymous way possible," Robinet sard.
Kouachi and his brother Cherifwere killed by French counter-terrorism police Jan.
9 after they killed 12 people at the offices of Charlie Hebdo. Cherif Kouachi is to be buried
i n f ormation, in Gennevilliers, a suburb of
decades, authorities used positive match with any indiparatroopersto reinforce po- vidual they sought and said lice in Belgium's cities, guard- "they had nothing to do with ing buildings within the Jew- the Belgian case." ish quarter of the port city of With some suspects still at Antwerp and some Belgian large, it was an uneasy calm embassies. The move came in Belgium, and paratroopers a day after anti-terror raids on the street did not necessarnetted dozens of suspects ily help. eYou know, when people across Western Europe and increased anxiety across big see the soldiers on streets they swathes of the region. will get scared. That could Belgium has increased its make more problems than terror warning to 3, the sec- solutions," said student Greg ond-highest, following the Verhoeven in Antwerp. anti-terror raids of Thursday France tried to stave off unwhich left two suspects dead. rest there when Said Kouachi, Police believe the cell they one of the gunmen who atlargely dismantled was on the tacked the offices of the satirverge of a major attack. ical magazine Charlie Hebdo,
Paris where he lived. A uthorities said a
th i r d
gunman, Amedy Coulibaly, killed five people including four hostages at a
k o sher
market in Paris before he was killed by police. There has been no word of plans for his burial. F rench a u t horities a l s o banned an anti - I slamist
demonstration in Paris, arguing it might incite civil unrest. "We are one country, one
people, one France — without distinction by religion, belief or sensibility," President Fran-
cois Hollande said Saturday in south-central France. "An ar-
dent France against those who want to instill among us whoknows-what war of religion."
Oil PIICSS —Wall Street may be growing anxious about the negative impact of falling oil prices on energy producers, but the steep declines of recent weeks are delivering substantial benefits to U.S. working-class families and retirees who have largely missed out on the fruits of the 5t/a-year economic recovery. Just last week, the U.S. Energy Information Administration estimated that the typical U.S. household would save $750 because of lower gasoline prices this year. People who depend on homeheating oil and propane to warm their homes should enjoy an additional savings of about $750 this winter. FIOrida mall ShOOting —A Florida man had"several pockets full of ammunition" when he targeted his wife in a shooting Saturday morning that killed two people at amall food court where thewoman worked, police said. Authorities said the shooting happenedabout a half hour before the mall was to open tocustomers. Jose Garcia-Rodriguez, 57, of PalmBay,died at ahospital following an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound at Melbourne SquareMall, said Cmdr. Vince Pryce of Melbourne Police. Theman's 33-year-old wife, Idanerys Garcia-Rodriguez, washospitalized with a gunshot wound and was in good condition late Saturday, Pryce said. A police statement later identified her as a worker at the mall's food court. "The survivor is the intended victim," he said. AnChar leaVing CNN —Theveteran CNNanchor Jim Clancy has left the network after aseries of Twitter messages hewrote about the terrorist attack onthe Frenchsatirical newspaper Charlie Hebdothat left12 people dead. Inthetweets, which were sent onthe dayof theattack, Clancy wrote about thecartoons the paper hadpublished depicting the Prophet Muhammad,but hethen begancriticizing supporters of Israel andsparring with other Twitter users. Clancy's Twitter account has since beendeleted, but the tweets werepublished on several websites. CNN confirmed Saturday that Clancyhadleft the network.
COShy takeS Stage deSpite prOteSt —About100 people chanting "Rape is not a joke!" and "Nomeans no!" protested outside a theater in Denver before comedian Bill Cosby took the stageon Saturday. Shortly before his performance at the Buell Theatre, one woman held anews conference at a hotel in the city to accuse him of sexually assaulting her in1986. Beth Ferrier said during the gathering called by LosAngeles attorney Gloria Allred that Cosby put drugs in her coffee whenshewent to see oneof his shows in Denver. Shesaid the next thing she rememberedwaswaking up hours later in the back of her car "practically naked." The77-year-old comedian is facing sexual assault accusations from at least15 women, with some of the claims dating back decades. Hehas denied the allegations through his attorney andhasnever been charged with a crime. — Fromwirereports
Find It C arie He o rotests eave All Online at east 10 ea in Ni er
TOUCHMARK rlacs 1980
bendbulletin.com
blasphemous. The Associated Press While many Muslims have CAIRO — At least 10 people expressed disgust at the deadhave been killed in violent pro- ly assault on the magazine's tests in the West African na- Paris office, many are also tion of Niger over the French deeply offended by the magsatirical weekly Charlie Heb- azine's cartoons lampooning do's depiction of the Prophet Muhammad. Muhammad, th e c o u ntry's In Iran, the government has president said. publicly condemned both the By Ashref Khalil
President Mahamadou Issoufou said that five deaths
Oregon Lottery results
er Saturday said the men were detained separately in Athens,
was quietly buried.
POPe in PhiliPPineS —Pope Francis braved an approaching tropical storm to travel to the far eastern Philippines to comfort survivors of the deadly TyphoonHaiyan. Hewas so emotionally undone by their loss that he barely found thewords to offer solace, and then had to cut the trip short because of the dangerous weather that also threatened his culminating Mass today. Before he left the typhoon-wracked city of Tacloban, though, asoaking wet Francis brought many in the crowd to tears as heached at their suffering and recounted how in thedays after the Nov. 8, 2013, storm he decided that he simply had to come inperson to offer his comfort. "I wanted to come to bewith you," he told a rain-soaked crowd during Mass on a muddy airport field. "It's a bit late, I have tosay, but I amhere."
attack on Charlie Hebdo and
stan President Ashraf Ghani condemned Charlie Hebdo,
He also reiterated his condemnation of the attacks on
innocent victims in Paris, saying that terrorism, "has noth-
R
ing to do with Islam in any way."
LOSE WE/GHT faster than you ever dreamed possible!
Protestersalso demonstrated in front of the French Em-
"I lost 35pounds!"
also rejects this barbaric, irre-
sponsibleactunder the name calling the newest cover im- of freedom of expression," the age ofProphet Muhammad a statement declared. blasphemous and irresponsiIn Gaza City, the capital of w ith it s d e pictions of t h e ble act. the Gaza Strip, unknown van"Freedom of e x pression dals scrawled graffiti on the prophet, carried a cover cartoon depicting Muhammad should be used in a way to walls of the French Cultural holding a "Je Suis Charlie" boost understanding between Center. In addition to stateSlgn. the religions," he said in a ments praising the Prophet According to mainstream statement issued by the presi- Muhammad and declaring Islamic tradition, any physi- dential palace. him off-limits for ridicule or Iraq's P r im e Mi n i ster satire, the vandals also wrote: cal depiction of the Prophet M uhammad — even a r e - Haider al-Abadi also issued "To hell, to a miserable destispectful one — is considered a statement of condemna- ny, French journalists." people dead. The magazine, which had long antagonized Muslims
•
words might lead to further bloodshed."
the magazine itself, calling the bassy in the Yemeni capital of were reported after demon- continued publishing of Mu- Sanaa, as well as in the Pakistrations in Niamey, the capi- hammad caricatures "provoc- stani city of Karachi. tal, on Saturday. Another five ative" and an insult to Islam. In Egypt, the Islamist Noor people died Friday in the town Iranian judicial authorities Party denounced the latest of Zinder following prayer ser- on Saturday banned a daily Charlie Hebdo cover on its vices there. The victims were newspaper for publishing a French-language Facebook insidechurches and bars that front-page headline that al- page. "Just as the Noor Party rewere set ablaze, he said. legedly indicated support for The violence erupted after Charlie Hebdo. jects the assault on civilians Charlie Hebdo published its Elsewhere in th e M uslim and the negative effects it has first issue since the Jan. 7 at- world on Saturday, Afghani- for all Muslims of Europe, it tack on its headquarters by Islamic extremists that left 12
•3
tion, warning that, "offensive
Neet Renee
"I am so glad my friend told me about MRC! I am goat oriented so naturally I'm driven to succeed. The program is easy to follow and the weight came off quickly! Every time I received a ribbon representing my inch toss, I wrapped them around the gear shirt in my car for inspiration. The MRC team is AMAZING and my biggest cheerleaders!"
Let Metabolic Research
Center Energize, Change, Transform, Inspire, Propel and Improve your life!
REAL People! REAL Food! REAL Coaching! REAL Results!
Meiabole ResearchCenter Client
0
Call NOW for your FREE Consultation! It's the First Step to Changing Your Life!
541-213-5657
RELuouc" RESEARCH CENTER
aEIGHr LOSS SPECIALISTS
ot aehbolL More', most dienis canexpect lo lose1-2 as. perweek Resulhvap pemnlo paeon
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
T TODAY
A3
T ART • Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, Jan. 18, the18th
day of 2015. Thereare347 days left in the year.
Mars orbiter rediscovers lost Beagle 2 lander
TRENDING
HAPPENINGS
•
•
PrO fOOtball —TheSeahawks face thePackers in theNFCchampionshipgame, determining which teamwill go to the Super Bowl.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1943, during World War II, Jewish insurgents in the Warsaw Ghetto launched their initial armed resistance against Nazi troops, who eventually succeeded in crushing the rebellion. A U.S. ban on the sale of pre-sliced bread — aimed at reducing bakeries' demand for metal replacement parts — went into effect. In 1778,English navigator Captain James Cook reached the present-day Hawaiian Islands, which he named the "Sandwich Islands."
By Amina Khan
The Ju Ju Joint is a combination of the psychoactive ingredient in marijuana with a disposable e-cigarette.
BIRTHDAYS Movie director John Boorman is 82. Singer-songwriter Bobby Goldsboro is 74. Comedian-singer-musician Brett Hudson is 62. Actor-director Kevin Costner is 60. Actress Jane Horrocks is 51. Comedian Dave Attell is 50. Singer Christian Burns (BBMakj is 42. Former NAACPPresident and CEDBenjamin ToddJealous is 42. Actor Jason Segel is 35. Actress Samantha Mumba is 32. — From wire reports
NASA's M ar s R e con- Croon spotted a strange little naissance Orbiter has re- feature on the surface that did discovered a "lost" British not look like a Martian rock,
spacecraft thatdisappeared without a trace more than
and sent the information along to his former colleagues. The scientists followed up with more images, including one in
11years ago. The discovery of t he Beagle 2 lander, hailed by color. planetary scientists, solves Having multiple images was a decade-old mystery as key, Zurek said — with only to the fate of this missing
one, the scientists wouldn't be
spacecraft — and may re- able to say for sure whether it veal what exactly led to its was real, or a flaw caused by a untimely demise. cosmic ray hitting the camera. Mark Sims of the UniTwo objects near the spaceversity of Leicester, who craft matched where the para-
In1862, the10th president of
the United States, John Tyler, died in Richmond, Virginia, at age 71, shortly before he could take his seat as an elected member of the Confederate Congress. In1911, the first landing of an aircraft on a ship took place as pilot Eugene Ely brought his Curtiss biplane in for a safe landing on the deck of the armored cruiser USS Pennsylvania in San Francisco Harbor. In1919, the Paris Peace Conference, held to negotiate peace treaties ending the First World War, opened in Versailles, France. In1949, Charles Ponzi, engineer of one of the most spectacular mass swindles in history, died destitute at a hospital in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, at age 66. In1967, Albert DeSalvo, who claimed to be the "Boston Strangler," was convicted in Cambridge, Massachusetts, of armed robbery, assault and sex offenses. (Sentenced to life, DeSalvo was killed in prison in 1973.) In1988, a China Southwest Airlines llyushin 18 crashed while on approach to Chongqing Airport, killing all108 people on board. In1990, a jury in Los Angeles acquitted former preschool operators Raymond Buckey and his mother, Peggy McMartin Buckey, of 52 child molestation charges. In1993, the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday was observed in all 50 states for the first time. Ten years age:Secretary of State nominee Condoleezza Rice, at her Senate confirmation hearing, insisted the United States was fully prepared for the Iraq war and its aftermath and refused to give a timetable for U.S. troops to come home. Five years agn:Taliban militants wearing explosive vests launched a brazen daylight assault on the center of Kabul with suicide bombings and gunbattles that paralyzed the Afghan capital for hours. Mehmet Ali Agca, the man who shot and seriously wounded Pope John Paul II in 1981, emerged from a prison on the outskirts of Ankara, Turkey, after more than 29 years behind bars. One year agn:Results showed that nearly 20 million Egyptian voters backed the country's new constitution, almost double the number of those who'd voted for one drafted in 2012 under the government of toppled Islamist President Mohammed Morsi.
team, started looking through the HiRISE images himself.
Los Angeles Times
served as the spacecraft's
chute and rear cover would
m ission manager, e x - havelanded.The evidence all pressed "elation that we've lined up, Sims said. "You see something which found it." The U.K.-led Beagle 2 isn't red, you see something hitched a ride to the Red Planet with the European
which doesn't look like a rock,
Space Agency's Mars Ex-
you see something which is very flat because it doesn't cast
press spacecraft, with the
a shadow," Sims said. "It's not a
goal of searching for signs blob, it's actually got structure of life on Mars, past or to it, and that structure is conpresent. This was an ambitious
sistent with the shape of Bea-
gle 2 and the size of Beagle 2. c o mpari- It's in the right place, it's in the son, NASA's twin rovers landing-site ellipse, just in the Spirit and O pportunity, 5 kilometers from the center of which reached Mars just that ellipse." endeavor. By
Matthew Ryan Williams / New York Times News Service
Joe Good, a sales representative for JuJu Joints, shows how the product works at a lounge in Seattle.
The disposable vapor pen is pre-filled with cannabis oil, and produces no smoke and no smell. By Kira Peikoff New York Times News Service
At a recent Seahawks football game in Seattle, Shy Sadis, 41, took a drag on a slim vapor pen that looked like a jet black Marlboro. The tip glowed red as he inhaled. But the pe n c ontained no nicotine. Instead, it held 250 milligrams of cannabis oil loaded with THC, the
e-cigarettes themselves, to cal School. Each JuJu Joint contains smoke pot in the presence of 100 milligrams of THC, twice
t h ei r parents and at school,
as much as a traditional joint, and getting by," said Barbaas well as propylene glycol, ra Carreno, a spokeswoman
ate professor of psychiatry v ey, an annual study of 40,000 at Yale University School of t eenagers conducted by the Medicine. University of Michigan and "We do not know the ef- f u nded by the National Infects of inhaling constant s t itute on Drug Abuse, 2014 doses of this agent," she said. marked the first year that "We know very little about m ore teenagers used e-ciga-
and was never heard from
years in the tobacco industry, defended
"YOU WOuldn't seems all but inevitable: mar- content, pointing Q gltgyg gQg ijuana and t h e e - cigarette, out that each inha~ ~~ I . the device's THC
lation is metered by
thiS hBS For years, people have been the device. "Our goal is not p p p f la d U p stuffing marijuana in various forms into portable vaporiz- to getpeople stoned T~. . I ers and into the cartridges so they sit in the of e-cigarettes. But the JuJu corner and vege- Old6f; f'Btll'ad Joint is disposable, requires tate," he said. Sg~ Thg no charging of batteries or Local r e tailers loading of cartridges, and r eport t h a t J U J u ~ o ~a comes filled with 150 hits. Joints are catching CBA 5 BffOfd You take it out of the package on, especially with w omen an d c o n sumers in their 40s
it. There is no smoke and no smell. to 60s.
"You Since t h ei r i n t r oduction wouldn't in April, 75,000 JuJu Joints believe the demo-
marijuana, making it the most common il l i c it drug among high school seniors. But users of medical marijuana may p rove to b e t h e larg e st market for e-joints. The Food andDrugAdminis-
trat i on r ecognizes no legitimate med-
ical use, and there is little high-quality res earch backing marijuana as a remedy for the
— Ed Vallejo, 60, scores of conditions
a manager at New for which it is being Vanst e rdam, a used.
rec r eational pot A few s t u dies, have been sold in Washing- graphic this ha s s t ore in Vancouver, however, suggest ton state, where marijuana is opened up," said Washington ingredients in marrecreationally and medically Ed Vallejo, 60, a ijuana may h elp relieve pain and imlegaL The maker says that manager at New 500,000 will be sold this year Vansterdam, a recreational prove appetite in patients with and that there are plans to potstoreinvancouver,Wash- cancer, AIDS and multiple expand to Colorado and Ore- ington. "This isthe older, sclerosis.Some researchers gon, where recreational use is retired set. The younger set arguethatmarijuana — espelegal, and to Nevada, where it can't afford it." cially in the form of nebulized is decriminalized. Ju Ju Joints for recreational vapor — could be found beneuse cost $65 to $100 each, 25 f i c ial to even more patients, if
ery hassle that has to do with smoking marijuana," said
percent of which goes to the the federal government loosstate's Liquor Control Board. enedresearchrestrictions. "There may be and probRick Stevens, 62, the inventor It costs a suggested donation and co-founder of JuJu Joints of $25 at medical dispensa- ably is a legitimate medical with Marcus Charles, a Se- ries. Purchasers must be at u se for vaping cannabis, but attle entrepreneur. "I wanted
2012 rover Curiosity went with a more modest goal:
gland, Beagle 2 entered solar panels deployed, Sims the Martian atmospheresaid. This was a fatal problem
you're done. It's so discreet."
"I wanted to eliminate ev-
ty of Arizona, agreed. "I feel like we should have found it sooner, in fact," McEwen said with a laugh. "It
cosmetics, s a i d Suc h i tr a A cco r d in g t o t h e l a t e st Krishnan-Sarin, a n a s soci- M o n i toring the Future Sur-
f o r t h e D r u g E n f orcement
ing executive who spent 30 of 12th-graders consumed
and put it to your lips — that's
goal: to look for signs of water. Even the high-tech
to absorb water in foods and Administration.
a chemical normally u se d
a cigarette, put it back, and
together at last in an e-joint.
Alfred McEwen, lead scientist for HiRISE at the Universi-
to find hints of habitable environments. On Christmas Day 2003, a round 2:51 a.m. in E n -
psychoactive ingredient in marijuana. "Nobody noticed," said Sadis, who owns several marijuana dispensaries in Wash- these products and what they r e t tes than traditional ones. ington state. "You pull it out contain." The study also found that of your pocket, take a hit like Stevens, a former market- in the past year, 35.1 percent The device, called a JuJu Joint, heralds a u nion that
weeks after Beagle 2, were sent with a much simpler
we need to do the research least 21. "The underlying reason t o figure out if it's true and to
it to be discreet and easy for people to handle. There's no people buy it is because of its find out the dosing," said Otis odor, matches or mess." design and because you can Brawley, the chief medical ofNot everyone is so en- smoke it in public," said Lind- ficer of the American Cancer thusiastic. M an y a d d iction say Middleton, 21, a bud-ten- Society. "But with marijuana researchersfear that e-cig- der at Green Lady Marijua- being a Schedule I drug, it's arettes will pave the way to na, a recreational store in s o oneroustogetthelicensure reliance on actual cigarettes, Olympia. Though smoking t hat many people actually especially in teenagers. And marijuana in public is illegal, skilled to do the research just THC adversely affects the de- customers report using JuJu choose not to." veloping brain, some studies Joints while skiing, hiking St e v ens is developing a JuJu Joint that contains only have found, impairing atten- andgoingto concerts. tion and memory in adolesLaw enforcement agencies cannabidiol, or CBD, a noncents and exacerbating psy- are concerned that discreet p s y choactive extract of marichiatric problems. vapor pens filled with can- j u ana that advocates say can "In some ways, e-joints nabis oil are already being preventseizures. Thisversion are aperfect storm of a prob- abusedbyteenagers,andthat containsless than 0.3 perlematic delivery system, the many are sure to lay hands on cent THC, so it would be legal e-cigarette, and in addition Ju Ju Joints. nationwide. "If you go on Instagram, "This day and age, everya p r o blematic s u b stance, cannabis oil," said Dr. Petros you will find hundreds of b ody has a vapor pen," SaLevounis, the chairman of thousands of postings by d i s said."You don't know if the psychiatry department kids on how they are using t hey'resmokingmarijuanaor at Rutgers New Jersey Medi- variants of e-cigarettes, or n i cotine."
was very close to the predicted
landing site." It appears that at most, only two orthree ofthe spacecraft's for the lander, given that the
again. The scientists waited radio antenna was packed unfora signalfrom thespace- derneath the solar panels, and craft, but none came. In
would remain blocked until all
February 2004, the lander four solar petals had unfolded was officially declared lost. into their flower-like pattern. Other spacecraft scoured
Without the radio antenna,
Beagle 2's landing area in
there was no way to reach the
Isidis Planitia, an impact basin close to the equator,
lander.
with no luck. "It really is a needle-in-a-
haystack job," Sims said. A few possible sightings
It's possible the hardware might have been damaged during a hard bounce as the spacecraft hit the Martian sur-
face, Sims said — perhaps an ill-placed rock punctured the airbag landing system. small — around 73 pounds, The fact that the spacecraft compared to the Curiosity at least partially deployed
were reported in the years since. But the Beagle 2 was rover's I-ton weight — and
means that the entry, descent
hard to pick out on the sur- and landing process succeedface. None of the orbiters ed — which is good news for seemed to have a powerful engineers designing future enough camera to conduct missions, McEwen said. the search, until the Mars
Nonetheless, Sims said, it
Reconnaissance Orbiter ar- was also frustrating to see rived in 2006. how close the lander came to The o r biter's
H i R ISE actually starting its science
camera, with its roughly mission. 30-centimeter-per-pixel "We came so close, " said scale, was roughly 10 times Sims, who also expressed better than its peers. It has
sadness that the scientist who
pinpointed the location of a spearheaded the m i ssion, host of other Martian space- Colin Pillinger of Open Unicraft, and for good scientific versity, died in May last year and engineering reasons, and did not live to witness the said Richard Zurek, project rediscovery. scientist for the Mars ReStill, the Beagle 2's discovconnaissance Orbiter at the ery was an opportunity for Jet Propulsion Laboratory.
"These are known ob-
iects to us, and we can look
some resolution, said Zurek,
who said he still held out hope that his own previous mission,
at how they're changed by the 1998 Mars Polar Lander, being in the Mars environ- might one day be discovered. ment," said Zurek, who was
previously project scientist for another long-missing (and still-lost) spacecraft, NASA's 1998 Mars Polar Lander.
The spacecraft began to image the landing site in bits and pieces as it circled the planet, but there were few leads until M i chael
Croon of Trier, Germany, who was once part of the
Mars Express operations
Visit Central Oregon's
HunterDouglas See 100 life sized samples of the latest innovative and stylish Hunter Douglas window fashions!
See us also for: • Retractable Awnings • Exterior Solar Screens • Patio Shade Structures
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
s~a CMSSIC
Connect Hearing YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
COVERINGS
FORMERLY
i.EAQELO HEARINGAIOCENTER
1-888-568-9884 •
•
•
1465 SW Knoll Ave., Bend www.classic-coverings.com ••
g )
•
A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Newyoung Me icai enro eesare itter, ut many nee treatment or a iction By Christine Vestal •Stateline.org
eligible for Medicaid and subsidized health insurance for the first time. Now states face a huge challenge: how to deal with an onslaught of able-bodied, 18- to 64-year-olds who haven't seen a doctor in years. "It took a lot of time and effort to enroll everyone, particularly those who were new to the system," said Matt Salo, director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors. "The next big step, and the biggest unknown, is finding out exactly how this newly insured population will use the health care system." Until now, the vast major-
able-bodied adults
w i t hout
children qualified, so states did not set up their Medicaid programs to treat them.
The newly insured, most of them young adults, have different needs. Though not as
ness and addictions. As a result, the number of new Med-
Medicaid expansionin 2015
icaid enrollees with severe
Have decidedtoexpand Medicaid • May decideto expand Medicaid • Are not expanding Medicaid
+ CR~ ~m~%f5 ~,,;
addiction cases, those that
already have caused serious health problems, could be relatively low. But states are no longer will*
sick as existing Medicaid beneficiar ies,the newcomers are more likely than the general population to have undiagnosed and untreated chronic illnesses such as diabetes and
heart disease.
Hl
The starkest difference be-
tween the new population and the old one, however, is that
the new enrollees have much higher rates of drug and al- Insurance was rarely billed.
ing to wait for people to walk into a local clinic and ask for
help. Instead, many state Medicaid agencies are working with primary-care physicians and hospitals to reach people with addictions before their physical and mental health crumbles and their work and family relationships fall apart.
"Now, venture capitalists are
maintain insurance coverage.
tion between p r imary-care
illness. Of the estimated 18 million adults potentially eligible for Medicaid in all 50 states, at least 2.5 million have sub-
starting to say there's money Even less clear is when and to be made," Vaughn said. whether they will seek help.
A new health care infrastr ucture
doctors and behavioral health specialists to make sure that happens.
Americans were classified with substance-abuse disor-
stance-abuse disorders. Of
The first step for states is to create ACA-compliant addic-
ders. Of those, 2.8 million had problems with both alcohol
In 2012, about 22 million
tion-benefit packages and fee and drugs, 4.5 million had structures to compensate the
ing that individuals with un-
problems with drugs but not
by the U.S. Substance Abuse
and Health.
Medicare and private health
People with drug and alcohol problems are prone to deny that they have a problem, and most tend to neglect their health even when they have
care spending. Mounting evidence also shows that physical
requirementsand offerprofes-
and Mental Health Services sional and business training to Administration. promote an expansion of the i nsurance, the ACA for t h e
first time made coverage of addiction services and other behavioral health d i sorders
like when the OLCC starts
A similar law is in effect issuing licenses. in Washington, where stores Anthony Johnson, direcmust give notice that mari- tor of New Approach Orejuana should not be used by gon, the chief proponent of women who are pregnant Measure 91, said in a written or breast-feeding, said Brian answer to questions that the Smith, spokesman for the Legislature should "get the Washington liquor board, basics right" first, before adwhich regulates marijuana dressing other issues. "Measure 91 is a well-writthere. The notice in Washington says nothing about ten law that's flexible enough birth defects. to be changed as needed," he A bill by Rep. Julie Par- said, adding the state should rish, R-West Linn, would pre- focus on labeling, testing and vent the Office of Child Care childproofing "before addfrom certifying child care fa- ing in a bunch of last-minute cilities and giving them state changes that could disrupt funds when regular employ- the implementation process." ees at the facility possesses a Lawmakers in early meetmedical marijuana card. ings showed their views difTwo more bills by Sen. fer on the state's role in mariDoug Whitsett, R-Klamath juana regulation. Some were Falls, and his wife, Rep. Gail dismayed that voters passed Whitsett, R-Klamath Falls, the measure, others thought would create a 1,000-foot the state could do a good job bufferzone between schools of regulating marijuana if it and marijuana dispensaries. was regulated like alcohol. The Legislature's involve— Reporter: 406-589-4347, ment in m arijuana is just
tanderson@bendbulletin.com
workforce.
Eight million people have signed up for exchange insurance policies and 7.2 million have enrolled in Medicaid since last year, according to
insurance. Most do not seek addiction treatment until they
are in a crisis. When they or
this year and next. Under the ACA, states have
the option of expanding Medicaid to adults with incomes
had penetration rates of about 10 to 15 percent of the people
health care costs decline sig-
nificantly when people with substance addictions get treatment. The longer they maintain sobriety, the lower their
medical bills are. "All of a sudden there's a
chief executive of Arapahoe who need services," Vaughn House, Colorado's largest prosaid. "No other chronic dis- vider of drug and alcohol adease would have that kind of diction services. "Many of the low (treatment) rate." people we used to deal with didn't have a primary-care Measuringuse physician, and we couldn't get In th e c o m in g m o n ths, them one," he said. states and the federal governA major goal for nearly all ment will begin releasing data, states is to find ways to better based on Medicaid claims, integrate physical and behavshowing how many newly el- ioral health, including adigible Medicaid enrollees are diction treatments. Now that using their new health cards, addiction treatment is an inteand for what. So far, there is gral part of Medicaid's overonly anecdotalevidence and all health plan, Schutt said he limited state data. expects health outcomes to In California, for example, improve and costs to go down. "We're at the point where 10,568 newly enrolled beneficiaries had signed up for ad- we're actually treating subdiction services by May, an in- stance use illness the way we crease of more than 30 percent treat other illnesses. There's a under the state Medicaid pro- realization in the commercial gram. The number of adults in and public marketplace that Washington state's Medicaid health outcomes are importtreatment facilities doubled ant and that (substance use
up to 138 percent of the federal poverty level ($11,670 for tion treatments has been spot- an individual). The federal ty. Optional under Medicaid government will pay the enuntil now, coverage in most tire bill for 2014 through 2016, states was limited, typically and then it will pay a declining just for pregnant women and share over the following three adolescents. years, and 90 percent thereaf"It's the biggest change in ter. So far, only 27 states have a generation for addiction taken up the option, but sevservices," said Robert Morri- eral Republican-led states are son, executive director of the considering it, potentially addNational Association of State ing millions more adults to the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Di- Medicaid rolls this year. rectors. "Comprehensive adF ourteen percent o f t h e diction programs didn't exist low-income adults who are in Medicaid until now." newly eligible for Medicaid Behavioral health profes- under the ACA have drug and sionals typically earn far less alcohol addictions, compared than other health care provid- with 10 percent in the general ers, in part because few insur- population. Because the new ers have been willing to pay Medicaid population is domfor their services. Many who inated by young, single men enter the profession quickly — a group at much higher risk in the first six months of the disorder) treatment contribabandon addiction treatment for drug and alcohol abuseyear. Vermont Medicaid offiutes significantly to overall for more lucrative specialties. Medicaid enrollees needing cials also reported a substan- health. It's transformational The result: a national short-
treatment could more th an
age of a ddiction-treatment
double, from 1.5 million before Medicaid enrollees seeking last year's Medicaid expan- treatment.
stance use," he said.
sion to about 4 million in the
example, the health agency invested in a drug and alcohol
next five years. Without t r eatment, t h eir
overall health care costs will be considerably higher. Comnew state licensing policies to pared to people without adexpand the pool of providers dictions, alcohol and drug to meetthe new demand. abusers have poorer overall "Providers are now having health. Their families often to run to be ready to bill Med- have poorer health as well. icaid and insurance compaBecause of this, most Medi caid agencies want to f i nd
managed care companies and treat newly eligible adults a nd understand what t h i s with substance-abuse disornew market looks like," said ders as quickly as possible. Becky Vaughn, vice president The hope is that they will turn for addictions at the National their lives around and move Council for Behavioral Health.
up the income scale and out of
For more than two decades,
ciation. Medicaid officials also
the U.S. Department of Health
want to make sure people with
"Medicaid directors are also Medicaid altogether, said Salo hustling to catch up," she said. of the Medicaid directors assoand Human S e rvices h as addicti ons see primary-care handed out grants to states doctors before their physical
to pay for addiction services. health worsens. Walk-in clinics and residential facilities treated indigents and
It's not clear what portion of
system, as well as uninsured
last year have addiction disor-
the adults who signed up for people in the criminal justice expanded Medicaid coverage people who paid out-of-pock- ders. In general, people with et on a sliding income scale. serious addiction disorders
tial increase in the number of Colorado's director of
health policy and planning, Susan Birch, said Medicaid officials there feared the worst
but were "delighted" to find
Matthew Staver / New York Times News Service
manufacturing marijuana after explosions ripped through a
health care," said Art Schut,
nies, negotiate contracts with
cause birth defects."
tem, contributing to a substantial share of rising Medicaid,
over the next two years.
Now, as billions of dollars from Medicaid and other insurersarebecoming available, behavioral health experts say it will take time, training and
ijuana licenses and sales, but pregnant women ... and the lawmakers will have a big potential for marijuana to hand in what the law looks
Paul Mannaioni was charged with fourth-degree arson and
great deal of interest in people who are 'high utilizers' of emergency rooms and who don't have any connection to
provlders.
Commission to regulate mar-
users of the health care sys-
mandatory for all insurers, in- the U.S. Department of Health their families decide treatment cluding Medicaid. As a result, and Human Services. Because is needed, it is often difficult to the number of Medicaid en- Medicaid enrollment is confind a facility nearby that can rollees receiving addiction ser- tinuous, those numbers are take them. "Up until now we have only vices is expected to skyrocket expected to rise substantially Although Medicaid and other state and federal programs have provided care for people with serious mental illnesses,coverage of addic-
ready tracking more than two dozen marijuana-related proposals. Ballot Measure 91 directed the Oregon Liquor Control
Much of the current empha-
sis on addiction services stems from medical research showtreated drug and alcohol disordersareamong the heaviest
number of people with health
derson, D-Gresham, is chief sponsor of Senate Bill 445, which would require a posted notice at marijuana retail shops to warn of "the harm-
Early intervention
mostly small businesses that alcohol, and 14.9 million had currently offer detox and reha- problems with alcohol only. lion h av e s u bstance-abuse bilitation services. Over time, Only 2.5 million received help, problems, according to the states are expected to loosen according to the most recent most recent national survey behavioral health licensing National Survey on Drug Use
In addition to increasing the
in the industry, said he's al-
Sen. Laurie Monnes An-
that are pre-catastrophic cases," Birch said. "We hope we Source: Stateline research can keep people from getting worse before they get into the PewCharitable Trusts/O2014TNS organ transplant and suicide realm," she said. Colorado has are not the first to sign up and begun a statewide collabora-
cohol addiction and mental
the 19 m i llion uninsured adults with slightly higher incomes who are eligible for subsidized exchange insurance, an estimated 2.8 mil-
Continued fromA1
"We're talking about those
AK
Addiction care
getting started. Geoff Sugerman, a lobbyist with clients
ful effects of marijuana on
WASHINGTON — Under the Affordable Care Act, millions of low-income adults last year became
ity of Medicaid beneficiaries were pregnant women, young children, and disabled and elderly adults. Relatively few
Bills
for health care, not just subIn Washington state, for treatment program in 2 0 05 and found that for every dol-
lar spent, the state saved $2 in that the 290,000 newly enmedical and nursing facility rolled adults were healthier costsin thefirstfouryears. "It's hard for Medicaid dithan expected."We budgeted as if they would be in more of rectors watching mounting a dire, acute stage," she said. claims for addiction medica"People aren't coming in as tions and treatments to take sick as we thought and they're into account th e e x penses not staying as long in our sys- they're not seeing," said Mortem," Birch said. rison, director of the state alPart of the reason some cohol and drug abuse group. Medicaid agencies are ini- But he said nearly every state tially seeing milder cases of agency is on board with the addiction is that many of the concept that addiction treatheaviest and most prolonged ments, including medications, drug and alcohol users in do result in substantial overall Colorado and elsewhere have health care savings. ended up in jails, prisons and Colorado's Schut said most emergency rooms, or entered providers already are trying state health care systems as to integrate physical and beindigents. havioral health, but until MedIn addition, many states icaid agencies develop better have covered a limited num- financing options, their efber of addicted adults under forts will be hard to maintain. state-funded programs aimed "The ACA opportunities are at helping their poorest resi- a dream come true," he said, dents with severe mental ill- "but we're not quite there yet."
marijuana cooperative in Denver.
Exploding
Mannaioni, 24, was charged with committing fourth-de-
Continued fromA1 gree arson and manufacturEven as cities try to clamp ing marijuana after explodown on homemade hashoil sions ripped through a mariand lawmakers consider out- juana cooperative in Denver lawing it, some enthusiasts that was filled with cannabis argue for their right to make plants and littered with boxes it safely without butane, and of butane, burners, pressure criminal defense lawyers say cookers,metal pipes and the practicecan no longer be other equipment commonconsidereda crime underthe ly used in butane hash-oil 2012 constitutional amendment that made marijuana
extractions.
n orthern Colorado who i s
The police said that one of his
grappling with how to address the problem of hashoil explosions. "These things come up for the first time,
companions, Danielle Cor-
and no one's dealt with them before."
trate, but that the "hash bath" exploded when th e t h r ee stepped into a tent where it
When emergency respondlegal to grow, smoke, process ers showed up, they found and sell. Mannaioni and two other "This is uncharted terri- people with severe burns "all tory," said state Rep. Mike over their arms and legs," acF oote, a D e m ocrat f r o m cording to a police affidavit. dova, later told them that she did not know who had been
manufacturing the concen-
The explosions occur as people pump butane fuel had been cooking. through a tube packed with To prosecutors, a crime raw marijuanaplants to draw had taken place. Legalization out the psychoactive ingre- may have given licensed and dient tetrahydrocannabinol, regulated marijuana manuor THC, producing a golden, facturing facilities the abilihighly p otent c oncentrate ty to extract hash oil legally that people sometimes call in controlled environments, honey oil, earwax or shatter. but off icials say dangerous, The process can fill a room homemade operations using with volatile butane vapors flammable butane — a fuel that can be ignited by an er- for lighters, portable stoves or rant spark or flame. heaters — are still illegal. "They get enough vapors Mannaioni's lawyer, Robinside the building and it ert Corry, a prominent marigoes off, and it'll bulge out the juana advocate,had a differwalls," said Chuck Mathis, ent take. When Colorado's the fire marshal in Grand voterspassed Amendment Junction, where the Fire De- 64 to legalize marijuana for partment responded to four personal use and recreationexplosions last year. "They al sales, Corry told the judge, always have a different sto-
ry: 'Nothing happened' or 'I was cooking food, and all of a sudden there was an ex-
plosion.' They always try to blame it on something else." There were 32 such blasts
they called for a fundamental shift in how Colorado treat-
ed marijuana. It is no longer an issue for the police and courts, he said, but for the
regulators and bureaucrats who enforce the civil codes
across Colorado in 2014, up surrounding mar i j uana from 12 a year earli er, ac- growers and dispensaries. "That constitutional procording to the Rocky Mountain High-Intensity Drug vision renders my client's Trafficking Area, which co- accused conduct to be legal," ordinates federal and state Corry said in c ourt. "The drug enforcement efforts. No court system is not to be used one has been killed, but the for marijuana regulation fires have wrecked homes anymore." and injured dozens of people, He compared making buincluding 17 who received tane hash oil to processing oltreatment for severe burns, ive oil, brewing beer or distillincluding skin grafts and ing whiskey at home — risksurgery, at the University ier, perhaps, and vulnerable of Colorado Hospital's burn to devastating results, but no center. longer a drug offense worth The legal complexities sending a young man to prisplayed out one snowy morn- on, according to Corry. The ing in a Denver courtroom as state lawbeing used to prosea district judge puzzled over cute Mannaioni, he said, was the case of Paul Mannaioni. simply no longer valid.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Ebola
sic needs met. The More than Me school
Continued from A1 " It was definitely a
•P
I
low-
said.
More Than Me was formed in 2009 with the mission of educating an d e m powering young girls who live in West Point, a densely popu lated, c r i me-ridden
school had t o c l ose. She'll teach the girls sex education
and leadership skills and also incorporate yoga, meditation and mindfulness techniques. She hopes to help the girls deal with grief and pain in the way
slum
w a l king d i stance g r oup's Monrovia
headquarters.
When Ebola was at its peak, the o rganization's school
Janessa Wells / Submitted photo
became an Ebola response
During the outbreak, the More Than Me school in Monrovia, Liberia, was turned into an Ebola response site. The school is set to reopen to its more than150 students next month.
headquarters, where staff members and community vol-
will reopen next month with
more than 150 students, many of whom were orphaned during the Ebola crisis. When that happens, Wells will finally get to teach the curriculum she had developed but was put on hold when the
grade level of fear that you're always dealing with," Wells
within of the
A5
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
that's culturally relevant to
Janessa Wells, pictured in her father's home north of Bend, recent- them. ly spent four months doing Ebola response in Monrovia, Liberia, Liberia, ravaged by a deadly with the More Than Me organization, where she had been teaching
civil war that ended in 2003, is
unteers went door to door in
previously. Wells will return in February to Monrovia to teach a
West Point distributing food and supplies.
wellness curriculum at a school for girls.
not an easy place to live, Wells said. The people who served as child soldiers during the
"The reason this epidemic Wells also oversaw a clinic was so horrible in Liberia is for children at risk of having tional staff members had been because these other systems contracted Ebola, usually beevacuated at that point, aside are not in place," Bell said. cause their family members from Wells and Katie Mey- "The health care system col- had contracted the virus. Chiller, More Than Me's found- lapsed, the education system is dren had to stay there for 21 er. Nigerian staff members nonexistent, and there wasn't days, the maximum amount of also worked throughout the the human capacit y needed to time someone can have the viepidemic. handle the logistics and plan- rus before showing symptoms. More Than Me purchased ning of this response." It was there Wells experian ambulance and gathered Wells said she often rode in enced firsthand the trauma a team of nurses, including its the ambulance that went door kids endured. She recalls a own school nurse and nurses to door in West Point checking young boy named Anthony in from the Ministry of Health, for people with Ebola and oth- the clinic who developed a suswho could recognize not only er illnesses. They also brought tained fever and had to be sent the symptoms of Ebola but food and supplies to families to an Ebola treatment facility. tend to other illnesses in peo- that were quarantined in their When Wells called for an ample's homes. homes. bulance, Anthony panicked. "The last time the ambuEbola overwhelmed MonThe ambulance alleviated rovia's health care clinics, so fear for many people, she said. lance showed up, his mom and "People knew they were dad were carried away and locals died of diseases they wouldn't usually die from sim- going to get support," she they died," she said, "and so ply because they couldn't get said. "Mom was pregnant and when I called the ambulance, care, said Emily Bell, More there was no way to get care he just started screaming and Than Me's marketing and de- anymore. Hospitals were shut grabbing onto our caregiver velopment manager. down. What do you do?" and saying, 'I don't want to go! Most of the group's interna-
•
8
war are now the adults who I don't want to go!'"
Meyler, who initially brought are supposed to lead the counWhen the ambulance first her on board to lead a yoga try forward, she said. began making its r ounds program at the school in MonWhenever she returns to through the slum, people re- rovia designed to promote the U.S., Wells said she doesn't acted violently, Wells said. healing after trauma. After a have to worry about dying if They thought the team was few months, they asked her to she drinks the tap water, or bringing Ebola into the area. stay on in an expanded role as whether her child will die of By November and December, the health and wellness pro- malaria. Without having exhowever, people were more gram manager. perienced a place like West "It's something I always Point, a willing to allow the sick to be vi o lence-plagued taken to treatment facilities, saw myself doing, I just didn't place with roughly 75,000 she said. know how I was going to get people and maybe two public But there were happy times there or what it was going to toilets, she said she might take in Monrovia, too. Wells, a cer- look like," Wells said. "I took a those things for granted. "It's definitely easy to take tified yoga instructor, taught roundabout path." twice weekly yoga classes for Meyler, 32, was among those things for granted withthe Red Cross and Doctors the Ebola fighters profiled in out those experiences, without Without Borders workers. Time magazine's Person of seeing what the majority of the "We all needed it," she said, the Year section. Her vision world actually lives like," she laughing. "It kept me sane as was to open Liberia's first tu- said, "but I come home and I'm well." ition-free, all-girls school in like, 'latte! Hot water!' Both In fact, it was yoga that got West Point, where girls are at are true and both are right." Wells a job with More Than risk of becoming sexually ex— Reporter: 541-383-0304, Me. She became friends with ploited in order to get their batbannow@bendbulletin.com
•
Question: My husband passed away
Question: My wife and I each have revocable living trusts. When one of us dies, what assets will receive a new tax basis? Answer: A ssets acquired f r om a decedent by i n heritance receive a new tax basis equal to the value of JohnD.Sorlie t h e a sset at death. Since you and your wife ow n a ssets in separate revocable trusts, you will each be deemed to own the assets in your respective trusts. So, if you were to die first, the assets in your trust would receive a new tax basis at your death. The same would be true for the assets in your wife's trust if she were to die first. For assets you own jointly, the basis would be adjusted only for the decedent's one-half interest unless the asset is considered community property, in w hich case the entire assets would receive a new tax basis. Because of the difference in basis adjustment of community property at death, it can be beneficial to preserve the community property status of assets of those that have relocated to Oregon from a community property state. I often recommend a joint community property trust to accomplish this.
BRYANT, LOVLIEN 8 J A R V IS, P.C.
for Medicaid. Upon my death, will
•
Attorney at Lau
sell the house? Answer: P u r s uant to a r e c ent O regon Court o f Appeals case, the State's recovery fo r M e d i caid a ssistance paid i s l i m ited t o a ssets in w h ich t h e Medicaid recipient had an interest in at the time of his or her death. T h us, no recovery can be made against a home that was transferred to you prior to your spouse's death and during your lifetime you can retain or sell the home as you wish.
HENDRIX, BRINCH 8 BERTALAN, L.L.P.
Attorneys at Law 716 NW Harriman St., Bend 541-382-4980 t
i
Question: I a m a "30-something." I dutifully pay my taxes, including the Social Security tax (FICA), every month. Am I wasting my money? Will there be a Social Security Retirement system when I reach retirement age or disability benefits if I am unable to work? Answer: Technically, this is a "political" pitiiip H Qarro~ q uestion rather than a legal one, but Pll AtlornesatLaw pell you what I know.The Social Security Retirement program was the result of a bill enacted by Congress in 1935,80years ago. In 1956 the Disability program was added, initially only for workers aged50-64. Your FICA taxes fund both programs.There are separate Trust Funds for both programs, though there have been frequent transfers of funds between the Disability and Retirement Funds over the years. You have heard about the possible insolvency of either the Disability Fund or the Retirement Fund, or both, if changes aren't made soon. The rumors are true. If Congress doesn't act, both funds could run out of money, despite the fact that you, and nearly every working person in the United States, continues to pay into the funds. The solvency problems are fixable and many smart people, including those in the Social Security Administration, have proposed solutions, some of which are quite simple. It will take political will, and an act of Congress, to put the ideas to work.
PHILIP H.GARROW
Attorney at Law Practice Limited to Workers Compensation Cases and Social SecurityD!sability/SSI Claims
127 SW Allen Rd., Bend 541 -382-3736
the State come after the house for recovery of a ssistance paid? What h appens down the line if I w ant t o
Lisa Bertalan
Attorneys at Law 591 S.W. Mill View Iay, Bend 541 -382-4331
•
Question: What i s t h e s t a t us of the 2007 law t hat exempts homeowners from paying tax on the portion o f t h ei r m o r tgage loan that was cancelled as part of a short sale, foreclosure, or loan modification?
and received M e d icaid a ssistance during his lifetime. Our house was i n my name only at the time of h i s d eath as it w a s t r ansferred to m e prior t o m y s p o u se's application
i
• Question: How far do we have to "Spend-Down" our assets to qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits?
Answer: Almost all the couples I meet with about high long-term care costs are "misinformed" about Medicaid and the "Spend-Down." Most
Craig Edwards
A nswer: The package of " t a x extenders" passed by Congress in December included the Mortgage Debt Relief Act of 2007! If your lender agreed in 2014 to cancel the amount of your debt left after a short sale, loan modification, or foreclosure, it may report to the IRS that you received "income" in the amount that was cancelled. Under the extended law, this "income" will not be taxed IF you borrowed the money to buy, build, or improve your principal residence, or to refinance that debt. To claim this exemption you'll have to include IRS Form 982 with your 2014 tax return. Now we have to worry about another extension for 2015! A o
o Lo
EDW A R D S LAW O F FICES PC
Attorney at Law 225 N.W. Franklin Ave., Suite 2, Bend 541-318-0061
Ask one Ofour Legal Professionals a question... My question is:
believe that they have to literally be "broke" to
Will Dennis
qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits. NOT TRUE. It is true that the ill spouse needing longtontt care may have only $2,000.00in resources.
Attorney
However, the well spouse is entitled to keep up to
$117,240.00 in countable resources and all his or her income. The well spouse's income is not counted. Neither is your
home, one car, and other resources. Excess assets above the $117,240.00 can be converted to assets which are not counted by Medicaid. You do not
have to spend down to $117,240.00 to qualify for Medicaid long-term care benefits. The best part is that once the ill spouse is qualified, the well spouse
can amass assets over the $117,240.00. If the ill spouse's income exceeds $2,163.00 per month it is disqualifying. However, processing the excess income through a qualified income trust removes the disqualification. The well spouse may even be entitled to receive part of the ill spouse's income.
My clients are always surprised to find that there are numerous solutions to the "Spend-Down" limits set by Medicaid. Through proper evaluation and planning there are solutions to the Medicaid dilemma. I successfully qualify clients with income and assets well in excess of the Medicaid
limits. There are also evaluations and plans for those not yet needing longterm care but who want to plan to protect their assets from future high costs
of long-term care. There is no charge for the initial consultation. Address your long-term care cost questions today. You will find peace of mind.
WILL DENNIS
Medicaid Planning Attorney Irving Professional Building 160 NW Irving Ave., Ste. 204, Bend 541-388-3877 wdowilldennislaw.com
Send your questions to: Ask A Legal Professional • Pat Lynch By email: plynch@bendbulletin.com Or mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 We are looking for attorneys in legal fields that are not currently represented. Please contact Pat Lynch for more information.
A6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Marriage
amount to "taking just one short step beyond the court's
Continued fromA1
invalidation of DOMA r ath-
"The c ourt's order r e p - er than moving all the way resents good housekeeping," to full equality," Tribe said. said Laurence Tribe, a law pro- "But I doubt that the court fessor at Harvard.
But Tribe also voiced a small note of caution.
will in the end stop with that
half-measure."
In its order, the court split
"The rephrased questions,"
the case in two, scheduling he said,"technicallyleave open separatearguments over the a middle path along which the right to marry and the right court would p revent states to have out-of-state marriages from discriminating against recognized. same-sex couples lawfully T he court w i l l h e a r a married in their home states 90-minute argument on the without requiring any state to first question and an hour take the affirmative step of is- on the second one. If the arsuing its own marriage licens- guments proceed in that sees to same-sex couples." quence, the proceedings may Such a ruling would be mod- seem disjointed, as establisheled on the court's 2013 deci- ing a right to same-sex marsion in United States v. Wind- riage would make the question sor, which struck down part of recognizing out-of-state of the Defense of Marriage marriages moot. Act, or DOMA, and required Some were puzzled by the the federal government to rec- court's language in the new ognize same-sex marriages questions. They invoked, as from states that allowed such the petitions had, the 14th unions. The Windsor decision
Amendment to the Constitu-
did not, however, require any tion, which guarantees due state to issue mamage licenses processand equal protection. to same-sex couples.
But some saw a subtle shift
The court's rephrased ques- of emphasis, away from the tions would potentially allow rights of people seeking to get a similar decision. That would
married and toward the obli-
gations the amendment impos- court's decision to review four es on states. petitions and two discrete The court's first question: issues was a welcome devel"Does the 14th Amendment opment for advocates of gay require a state to license a mar- rights. "It's a good sign that they riage between two people of the same sex?" took all o f t h e c ases," she The second: "Does the 14th said. "It demonstrates that Amendment require a state to these cases are going to covrecognizea marr iage between er the breadth of the pressing two people of the same sex issues." when their marriage was lawIndeed, she said, the pefully licensed and performed titions challenging bans on out-of-state?" the recognition of o ut-ofMichael Dorf, a law profes- state marriages were woven sor at Cornell, said that the through with the stories of gay wording was at first blush was couples and families who had "a bit odd." faced hardships. "After all," he wrote in a They include parents who blog post, "one might think sought to be listed on birth that the answer to both ques- and a d option c e r t ificates, tions is no, so long as the state surviving spouses whose doesn'tlicense or recognize out-of-state marriages were any marriages, same-sex or not recognizedand a funeral opposite-sex." director barred from noting "But in fact, the states all do same-sexmarriages on death license and recognize oppo- certifi cates. site-sex marriages, so the ob"When you put all the cases jection is academic," he added. together," Sommer said, "you "Moreover, under the court's have an incredibly dramatic fundamental rights jurispru- look at all of th e cradle-todence, states probably can- grave harms." not simply deny marriage to A decision resolving the everyone." questions the Supreme Court Susan Sommer, a lawyer presented itself with on Friday with Lambda Legal, said the isexpected by the end of June.
address competes for views
ama osee axcu s OI emi e cass By Julie Hirschfeid Davis New York TimesNews Service
WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama will use his State of the Union ad-
By Julie Pace AndNancyBenac
dress to call on Congress to
The Associated Press
raise taxes and fees on the
cable television, Netflix, You-
wealthiest taxpayers and the largest financial firms to
'Iirbe and other attention-grab-
finance an array of tax cuts
bers on the Internet, American presidents had little competi-
Congress with a stem-winder of a speech Tuesday night.
forthe middle dass,pressing to reshape the tax code to help working families, administration officials said Saturday. The proposal faces long odds in the Republican-controlled Congress, led by Charles Dharapak/The Associated Press lawmakers who have long VicePresident Joe Biden and House Speaker John Boehner of opposed raising taxes and Ohio listen as President Barack Obama gives his 2014 State of the who argue that doing so Union on Capitol Hill in Washington. Obama will give this year's would hamper economic address on Tuesday. growth at atimethe country
There will be standing ovations from his supporters, and strate-
cannot afford it. But the decision to pres-
gic smirks and scowls from his opponents. Along with wall-towall media coverage and cable news countdown clocks. But viewership is falling, with 20 million fewer people watching last year's State of the
ent the plan during Tuesday's s peech marks t h e start of a debate over taxes and the economy that will shape both Obama's legacy
WASHINGTON — B efore
tion for viewers when they de-
livered their annual State of the Union address. But, oh, how the
big night has changed. Sure, the pageantry and theatrics of the annual presi-
dential address will all be there when President Barack Obama stands before a joint session of
Union compared to Bill Clin-
ton's address at the same point in his presidency. Congress rarely follows through on the policy proposals the president unveils. And this year, the bat-
and the 2016 presidential campalgn. It is also the latest indication that the president, un-
tethered from political constraints after the midterm
losses, is moving aggressively to set the terms of that
tle lines between Obama and
discussion, even as he push-
the new Republican-led Congress will have alreadybeen set
es audacious moves in other areas, like immigration and
before the president arrives on
relations with Cuba.
Capitol Hill for the annual address to a joint session of Congress and a television audience of millions. The dwindling impact of the
The president's plan would raise $320billion over
big speech has sent the White
same period. The revenue
House searching for new ways to break t hrough. It's now thinking of the State of the
Union as an "organizing principle" rather than a single, communal event.
So instead of waiting until Tuesday night's address to announce new initiatives, Obama
has spent the past two weeks unveiling them in a series of speeches around the country and social media posts. The White House is aiming to get people who don't tune in to the address to catch up with at least parts of it later. And
the president's first big postspeech interview will go not to a big newspaper or TV network but to YouTube, in hopes of capturing the attention of some of those less likely to have
watchedthe actual speech. He'll also follow the speech with trips designed to spark regional media interest in his initiatives. On Wednesday he plans to appear at Boise State University in Idaho, then travel Thursday to the University of Kansas in Lawrence.
"The environment is so clut-
tered that if you don't spread out your initiatives and unveil
them in channels where people already are ... then they're just going to get lost in the discussion," said Dan Pfeiffer, Obama's senior adviser. The
impact of the speech isn't diminishing, "but the nature of the experience is different."
the next decade, while add-
ing new provisions cutting taxesby$175billion overthe
businesses but little about individual taxation, an area fraught
lion. Those companies would be assessed a fee based on the
withpartisan disagreements. amount of debt they hold. The proposal indudes some White House officials estielements that have previous- mated that the new $500 "secly drawn support from both ond-earner" tax credit would Republicans and Democrats, benefit 24 million households. including education and retire- The maximum credit would go ment savings proposals andthe to those earning up to $120,000, secondary earner credit. A tax and some creditwouldbe availon large banks was part of a able to those earning up to planproposed lastyearby for- $210,000. mer Rep. Dave Camp, R-Mich., Obama also wants to triple who retired as chairman of the the child-care tax credit, curWays and Means Committee. rently an average of $550, and Obama'sadviserscharacter- make it easier for middle-inized the plan as the next phase come earners to qualify, offerin the president's economic ing up to $3,000 for each child message, which he has been younger than 5. White House promoting over the past two officials said the plan would weeks with trips highlighting eliminate existing tax-advanthe nation's financial rebound. taged flexible spending acDuring the tour, Obama has
inmedical system By Emily Wax-Thibodeaux
shot to death by VA police. Vio-
The Washington Post
lent incidents took place about
once every 10 days and there shooting of a psychologist were nearly two disorderly inside an El Paso (Texas) conduct incidents every day Veterans Affairs clinic by across the Bay Hnes system, an Iraq war veteran, the accordingto records obtained VA's police force is renew- by The Tribune newspaper uning its long-running calls der the federal Freedom of Infor more staff, better train- formation Act. ing and increased resources Just days after the El Paso — from fixing broken radi- shooting, VA Secretary Robert os and cameras to installing McDonald vowed to "give emmetal detectors and devel- ployees whatever they need." oping clear procedures for A VA spokesperson said in how to deal with agitated a statement late Friday that After last week's fatal
patients. "No one with the VA Po-
"matters ofworkplace safety
ter. "These are the same is-
shortages" and installation of
are of the utmost importance," lice I know was surprised and that the agency will be to hear about the shooting announcing a new policy for becausesafety and security dealing with "active shooters," has been a systemic prob- in "the coming weeks." lem which has gone unOfficials also said that the addressed for years," said VA health system's chief of John Glidwell, former chief policeand office of emergenof police at the Cheyenne, cy management would be Wyoming, VA medical cen- "actively addressing staffing sues we have been scream- "standardized security and ing (begging) for help with surveillance system (i.e. cam-
LOOKING AHEAD:THE STATE OF THE UNION
Once dominant,
YA policebigbligbt securi lapses
the entire 10.5 years I have been with the VA Police."
eras,doors alarms, motion detectors and central monitoring
The problem has grown
stations," would be completed
even more urgent in recent
in "FY2015."
months, police activists say, But police say they have after veterans grew increas- been sounding the alarm for ingly frustrated with the VA when it came to light that
over a decade.
"Why has it taken this long to protect lives?" said Glidwell. patient wait times. It was a Glidwell has filed complaints scandal that cost then VA withthe VA's inspector general, secretary Eric Shinseki his U.S. attorney's office, and the job and caused promises of U.S. Office of Special Counsel, widespread reform. a small federal agency that in"We are dealing with a vestigates whistleblower comthe agency was lying about
population of Veterans that
plaints. He was removed from
sufferfrom assortedmental health issues, including PTSD," Glidwell said in an email. "Sometimes they have drugandalcoholprob-
his duties as chief of police at the Cheyenne VA medical cen-
more disgruntled. The VA is
port in 2013 titled Management
ter after posting what he calls
"critical expressions about leadership shirking duties and lems and when they feel that harming public trust" on his the VA is ignoring them, not private Facebook page. He has answering the phone, fail- been on paid leave since Sept. ing to return calls for assis- 25 pending reassignment withtance or there are long wait in VA. times, they get more and An inspector general's reripe for a mass killingbut no of Disruptive Patient Behavior one is listening to us." Media reports show there
at VA Medical Facilities found
tion's largest health care system with over 1,700 hos-
of clear instructions for dealing with disruptive patients. Another IG report in 2012 found serious problems with
problems ranging from "sighave been a string of shoot- nificant delays," sometimes as ings and violent incidents in m uch as100 days,to fl ag paVA medical centers across tient behavior that may pose the country, inside the na- an immediate threat to a lack pitals, dinics and medical centers.
Some of the violence has been committed by employees. Other times, they are carried out by veterans, who VA police point out are
theradio systems and aserious risk to patient and employee security in the Seattle VA med-
ical center, among other safety issues.
trained in weapons and tac-
tics, increasingthe risk. Most recently, there was a shooting last February at a VA medical center in Van-
couver, Washington, where a former financial auditor
shot the center's chief financial officer.
WILSONSof Redmond 541-548-2066
Adjustablg Beds
In November 2013, in Bay
Pines Florida, a veteran threatened the staff by tak-
ing out a knife and warning that he had a bomb. He was
IiV&TREss
G allery - B e n d 541-3$0-50$4
countsfor child care and rein-
pitched a range of initiatives to vest those resources in the tax generated would also cov- help the middle class, includ- credit. er an initiative Obama an- ing free community college In addition, the president is nounced this month, offer- and paidleave.Both Demo- proposing to streamline a juming some students two years crats and Republicans see mid- ble of educational tax credits of tuition-free community dle-dass voters as an import- and give students up to $2,500 college, which the White ant bloc for winning the White annually toward earning a House has said would cost House in 2016. collegedegree. Students who $60 billion over 10 years. The bulk of the financing for attend school less than half the The centerpiece of the the plan — $210billion — would time would also qualify for the plan, described by admin- come from a capital-gains tax first time, and more of the credi stration officials on t h e hike and a change in the way it, $1,500, would be available condition of anonymity in the tax code treats the appreci- regardless of whether an indiadvance of the president's ated value of inherited assets. vidual owed any taxes. speech, would e l i minate Under the proposal, inherited The president's proposal what Obama's advisers call assets would be taxed accord- would also increase access the "trust-fund loophole," ing to their value when they to tax-advantaged retirement a provision governing in- were purchased. That means savings plans by requiring herited assets that shields the capital gains on those as- most employers that do not ofhundreds of billions of dol- sets during a person's lifetime, fer such plans to automatically lars in inherited assets from now shielded from taxation, enroll their workers in an IRA. taxation eachyear. The plan would be subject to tax at the New tax credits wouldbe availwould also increase the top time of the bequest. able to businesses that ensure capital-gains tax rate, to 28 The proposal, which does their workers can save for repercentfrom 15percent,for not apply to charitable gifts, tirement, officials said. couples with incomes above would fall almost entirely on Obama has failed to find $500,000 annually. the top 1 percent of taxpay- common ground with RepubliThose changes and a ers, administration officials cans on fiscal matters, includnew fee on banks with as- said. It would apply to capi- ing during several attempts sets over $50 billion would tal gains of $200,000 or more to strike a "grand bargain" on be used to finance a set of per couple, with an additional the budget. The Treasury Detax breaks for middle-in- $500,000exemption forperson- partment proposed a detailed come earners, including a al residences. corporate-tax overhaul plan in $500 credit for families in The remaining $110 billion to 2012 that would have lowered which both spouses work; pay for Obama's new tax pro- the rateto 28 percent from 35 increased child care and ed- posals would be generated by a percent and given multinationucation credits; and incen- fee imposed on the largest and al corporations a one-time "tax tives to save for retirement. most highly leveraged financial holiday" to return billions of The initiative signals firms. That proposal, admin- dollars in profits parked overa turnabout for Obama, istration officials said, was de- seas, steering that revenue towho has spoken repeated- signed to make "risky activity" ward infrastructure spending. ly about the potential for a more costly for the roughly 100 But it went nowhere in the last deal with Republicans on such companies in the nation Congress. It is not clear that this an overhaul of taxes paid by with assets more than $50 bil- effort would fare any better.
y
>I
Ii
I
II
EN 1AM-2PM! Just or 00 points to uy in. Re-buy for the same price to try for a higher score. Tournament sessions 11AM and 12PM, re-buy rounds at 1PM, play-offs at 2PM. Must beat least 55anda BonusClub memberto participate. Limit onebrunchper guest per Monday.Managementhastheright to revise, review,or cancelthis promotionat anytime. Restrictionsapply:seeBonus Club for complete details.
l$3FREESLOTPLlLY M UPON LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS! Bendbusrunsthefirst Mondayof themonth
: :Call for reservations, location & times: 541.783.7529 ext.209 Valid for Bend, La Pine andRedmondguests only; local zipcodes do not apply. Limit onecouponper personper visit. Expires Feb.1,2015
34333HWY.97IIORTHCHIL OOUIII,OR97624 541.783.7529 IILNIOYACASIIIQ.COM
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A7
TODAY'S READ:WATER SCARCITY
eac in across esea or esa eo waer By Alex Rodrfguez
attaching those strands to the
Chicago Tribune
surface of a desalination filter. The strands are electrically charged both positively and negatively, and that combination repels bacteria. "No one really knows why," Tirrell said.
SAMAR, Israel — The Arava desert, a salty wasteland dotted with t u fts o f s c rub,
gets only about an inch of rain eachyear.And yetcows lazily low at dairy farms that collectively produce nearly 8 million gallons of milk annually. Orange bell peppers flourish in a long swath of greenhouses
"It's important to have widespread use of d esalination,
so it's important to bring the cost down," Tirrell said. "The potential of this research is to
that skirts the Jordanian border. Kibbutzim with vineyards
have very long-lasting mem-
somehow manage to churn out shiraz and sauvignon blanc, unfazed by the desert sun.
branes where the cost of the
membranes comes down by a factor of two." Ben-Gurion's role in Tirrell's
The clusters of farms and
wineries in the Arava are a
Brian Caeaella/Chicago Tribune
Date trees grow in the desert in the central Arava region of Israel. The country's water technology may be able to set a global example.
testament to Israel's acumen in water technology. One of the
most parched places on Earth has found a way to beat water woes once so severe that Isra-
el's national mood rose and fell with the changing level of the Sea of Galilee, one of their most critical water sources. That expertise helps explain why the University of Chicago sought out Israel's Ben-Gurion University to help tackle one
project is to find a way to ramp up the scale of production of the strand-covered filters. Tir-
But for Chicago, the partnership could provide a cornerstone in the city's bid to
siveincreasesinw aterfees. Water crises aren't limited to Asia and Africa. In Brazil's
dramatically ramp up its glob- largest city, Sao Paulo, more al profile. When Mayor Rahm than half o f r e sidents said Emanuel traveled to Israel in
last fall that they had been
June 2013 to announce the two universities' collaboration, he spoke of the partnership as a steppingstone to Chicago's
hit with water shortages, and more than t hree-fourths of those affected said their water
eventual evolution into a water
hours.
shut offs lasted more than six
Wherewater is mostscarce
rell's team can only make "on a good day, a square centimeter. (But) you have to make it in square meters. That's why Israel has been brought in."
TURKEY
Lack of sources for clean water is a growing problem. The United Nations projects that by 2030, nearly half of the world's population will be living in regions saddled with severe water stress.
At Ben-Gurion's Sede Boker
MED.
campus in the heart of the Negev desert, biological chemist C hristopher Arnusch is r e -
JO DAN
lying on an everyday office mainstay — the inkjet printer
EGY T
GLOBAL WATER SCARCITYLEVELS For2N3 Approaching • No economic P h y sical means for access to phys i cal adequate water w a t er limited llmltatioris
— to help improve water filtra-
I
Little or no limitations ie .
of the world's most worrisome technology hub. "He said he would like to see problems — water scarcity. In decades past, oil used to Chicago grow into a center for be the commodity that shaped water technology," said Moshe geopolitics, and at times, ignit- Gottlieb, Ben-Gurion's lead ed wars. In coming years, wa- scientist for the collaboration,
The drought currently gripping Western U.S. states has
Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti
the right mix of chemicals to
ter will be the commodity with
who joined Emanuel at the
that kind of clout.
signing ceremony marking
in October set a city goal of reducing water use by 20 percent
sheets of filters a meter wide. "When you get this slimy,
A growing problem
the collaboration. "I think this is a remarkable idea."
within the next two and a half
bacterial material on m em-
of violent confrontations over
according to the U.N. By 2025,
water issues has risen fourfold, according to the Pacific
the number of people living in areas without enough water
will rise to 1.8 billion people, think tank that studies global the U.N. states. Areas with water scarcity. annual water supplies below The University of Chicago 1,000 cubic meters per person is tackling water scarcity be- are regarded as water-scarce, Institute, a C alifornia-based
cause it believes it has a nov-
according to the U.N.
el approach to the problem — relying on engineering at
Water wars
breakthroughs. The university opened its Institute of Molecular Engineering in 2011, and within a year talk began of putting water scarcity at the top of the institute's agenda.
"There are shortages of
water from the First World to the Third World," said Steve Sibener, one of the University
of Chicago scientists leading
the research. "If you look at
California, it has been a particularly dry year, and you can see how the whole West
and Southwest can have boom and bust cycles that are likely to get worse. If you move onto the Middle East and Africa,
you understand that water is precious — it's like gold. "It's the issue of the day," Sibener said. "Hundreds of millions of people are at risk of (not) having enough water." In laboratories in Chicago
I
lion gallons of water. The crisis is severe enough that Los
b
the goal isn't met.
costs more energy to run the
The point man for the University of Chicago is Matthew
Tirrell ,a professorand foundTribune News Service /© 2014 ing director of the Institute for Source: United Nations Molecular Engineering, who in 2012 approached Gottlieb, Arava deserts. It ingrained decades ago, you were waita longtime friend at Ben-Guri- water conservation deep in ing for rain or digging a well. on, about collaborating on wa- the population's mindset — for Now that you can desalinate, ter research. Ben-Gurion was years, Israelis rationed their it's game-changing. You can a logical choice, Tirrell said, water use, and even as young produce efficient water from because of the Israeli univer- children, they were taught to the sea, which is important besity's reputation as a pioneer conserve. cause rivers can dry out, and "From the age of 3, we lakes and aquifers can dry in water purification and desalination techniques "that are learned to shut off the faucet out. This is what happened in now really changing the water while brushing our teeth," said Israel." landscapeofthe country." Udi Tirosh, business developThere are now more than From the start, the goal
breakthrough that allows scientists to economically affix
fective and reduces their shelf life," Arnusch said. "And it
Areas with no data
Solving the problem
has been to nurture breakThe quest to ensure reliable throughs that can be global in sources of drinking water has scale. "We need to look for things stoked discord among nations for millennia — and still does that are game-changers," Gottoday. tlieb said. "We want to attack In the Nile Valley, tension the issue at the molecular levhas ramped up over a dam the eL We want to take our experEthiopians are building that tise in nanotechnology, and would dramatically cut back put it to use in water-related the amount of water Egypt problems." gets from the Nile for irrigaIsrael is the ideal place to tion and drinking water pur- turn to for water research exposes. In South Asia, the Pa- pertise. Since its independence kistani government for years in 1948, Israel has had to find has accused India of building ways to build its society and hydroelectric dams in the In- economy in one of the most dus Valley that rob Pakistan of water-starved places on the water it needs for farm fields planet. Its game plan for surand human consumption. mounting water scarcity had Shortages can also spark several pillars. It built a waviolence. In the Bolivian city ter supply line known as the
ti-bacterial coatings to filters, a
branes, it makes them inef-
years, and has warned that Three quarters of the world water restrictions will follow if
Water scarcity is no longer a problem buried in think tank is covered by water, but less monographs. It's a crisis that than 3 percent is fresh water. has begun to have palpable, More than 3.4 million people disturbing implications for die each year of diseases remuch ofthe globe. By 2030, lated to lack of safe drinking nearly half of the world's pop- water such as diarrhea — 9 out ulation will be living in regions of 10ofthose deaths occur in saddled with s evere w ater developing countries. Water stress, the U.N. projects. Over scarcity affects at least 700 the last decade, the number million people in 43 countries,
a molecular level to produce
robbed that region of 63 tril-
tion. Arnusch has found a way to use the printers to apply an-
systems." Arnusch and Tirrell focus on water purification. Another Ben-Gurion scientist, Eilon Adar, has a very different mis-
sion — finding new sources of water.
With technology developed at Argonne National Laboratory outside Chicago, Adar and his team use naturally occurring radioactive isotopes to track the movement of
groundwater through aquifers as deep a mile below the surface, relying on a special laser device to detect the number of krypton isotopes in a wa-
ment director at IDE Technol-
17,000 desalination plants in
ogies, an Israeli corporation that builds and operates desalination plants in Israel and
ter sample. Krypton isotopes
around the world. "There was
150 countries, and expanded use of the technology could drastically ratchet up water supplies forwater-starved na-
big demand control in Israel."
tions. But desalination isn't
strata. The number of isotopes found tells scientists how long
problem-free. The bane of deImproving desalination salination plants is bio-foulThe most significant initia- ing, the buildup of microbes tive was Israel's embracing of on filter surfaces. It makes desalination technology. Israel an already costly approach to built its first plant at Ashkelon creating drinking water even on the Mediterranean coast in costlier. 2005 and now has five plants. A portion of the Ben-GuTogether, the plants produce rion/University of C hicago
are used because they begin to decay once they move from surface water to underground the water has been under-
ground. With that information, they can plot the oldest
to youngest samples on a map and determine the water's flow through the aquifer, and ultimately the aquifer's size and characteristics.
500 million cubic meters of
research targetsthe world's
water each year, about half of the country's drinking water
increasing reliance on desalination. The goal, Tirrell
an intriguing practical application — finding water in the
Adar says the research has
needs. In desalination, water
said, is to create new technol-
bedrock beneath the world's
is drawn out of the sea and ogy that solves the problem deserts. "You cannot sustain a growthen pumped through a series of bio-fouling, and in doing of filters to separate the brine so, make desalination more ing population with diminishand yield fresh water. Once practical across the globe. To ing amounts of water. So we desalinated, the water tastes that end, Tirrell and his Israe- move into arid and semi-arid
of Cochabamba in 2000, a
National Water Carrier that
17-year-old was killed and hundreds of people injured when the army stepped in to quell large protests over mas-
transported water from the like ordinary tap water. li counterparts are creating "Desalination gives you the new strandlike molecules less Sea of Galilee to the rest of the country, including the barren power to control your supply," than one-10,000th of the diwastelands of the Negev and Tirosh said. "Up until a few ameter ofa human hair, and
and the Israeli desert, scien-
basins.... And we all know
that, under deserts around the world, there are huge groundwater reservoirs," Adar says.
A Free Public Service
tists are crafting radical new approaches that may o ne day rejuvenate the w o rld's
water-starved regions. One project uses a common inkjet printer to apply layers of chemicals to a water filter to repel bacteria and keep the filter clog-free. Another turns
r adioactive i sotopes i n t o tracking devices to trace water
movement through aquifers, a development that could lead to the discovery of vast new strata of groundwater. Still anoth-
er effort strives to create filtering membranes that operate
on a molecular level, using electrically charged, cilialike hairs to repel filter-fouling microbes. The goal is to complete researchby the latter partof
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties
2015.
Every experiment has repr esentation fro m
b oth t h e
University of Chicago and Ben-Gurion. Th e
I
U n i versi-
ty of Chicago brings to the
I
collaboration its expertise in
molecular engineering, while Ben-Gurion brings its experesearch into real-life appli-
0 © Kggh
cations in nation.
o~
rience of transforming water a w a t er-starved
For both universities, the collaboration represents an
opportunity to parlay their top-shelf know-how into pot ential solutions for on e of
mankind's most priorities.
p r essing
~ i or use the
® gg ) service to be automatically
emailed of notices that match your needs.
®g]
i
,
, gg .
I
I
AS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
IN FOCUS:IRAQ'S JUDICIARY RF sar
U.S. lawmakers inCubafor a 3-day visit By Michael S. Schmidt and Susanne Craig New York Times News Service
v
Airman Oghanna I New York Times News Service
Sunni women wait for information about family members at Bagh-
dad's main judicial complex. Promises of judicial reforms have
gone largely unfulfilled, while practices adopted by the U.S. after the invasion in 2003 remain at the core of Sunni grievances.
Sunnis keptwaiting
for reforms,and word on lovedones By Tim Arango
dent whoisoverseeing the new
New York Times News Service
government's reconciliation programs.
BAGHDAD — U nder her black chador, Awatif al-Azawy
Late last year, for example,
clutched a few things for her when militias pushed the Isimprisoned husband: a can of lamic State out of Jurf-al-Sakr 7Up, two falafel sandwiches
southwest of Baghdad, hun-
and atube of skin cream. But even as she stood in a gardenoutsideBaghdad'sm ain judicial complex, off limits to the relatives of the accused, she
dreds of local men were summarily detained. "We don't
knew she was unlikely to see him.
who added that "a basic right of
here becauseIfeeldoserto my
arrested."
husband," she said. "If I stayed at home, I'd feel guilty." On any given day, Sunni women gather here in search of answersabouttheirm en,some of whom have been jailed for years. "The Iraqi army took my son
The scope of the problem is not precisely known, but officials and activists agreed that there were likely tens of thousands of Sunni men languishing in jails, having never seen the inside of a courtroom.
know where they are," said
encourage Cuban officials
ed to "seek clarity from Cu-
to addressissues of real concern to the American people
Cuba for Leahy in a month. normalization to look like, go- In December, he traveled ing beyond past rote respons- there with two congressmen es such as 'end the embargo.'" around the time Obama made The office said that the trip the surpriseannouncement would "help develop a sense about restoring d iplomatic of what Cuba and the United relations. States are prepared to do to On that trip, Leahy picked make a constructive relation- up Alan Gross, a former govship possible." e rnment c o ntractor f r o m The delegation is scheduled Marylandwho had been imto meet with Cuban govern- prisoned there for five years. ment officials, Cardinal Jai- Grosswas released aspartof me Lucas Ortega y Alamino the agreement between the
WASHINGTON — A del- and to their representatives in egation of American legisla- Congress." tors led by Sen. Patrick Leahy Gov. Andrew Cuomo of arrived in Cuba on Saturday New York, who has recentto discuss greater cooper- ly shown an interest in foration and remaining areas eign travel as a way to drum of disagreement, the first up business at home, is also congressional delegation to planning a trip to Cuba, his visit the island nation since office said Saturday. President Barack Obama anAccompanying Leahy on nounced last month that he his three-day trip are other was restoring full diplomatic Democratic members of Conties with it. gress: Sens. Richard Durbin "We are going this time of Illinois, Debbie Stabenow to discuss our expectations, of Michigan and Sheldon and the Cubans' expecta- Whitehouse of Rhode Island, tions, for the normalization and Reps. Chris Van Hollen of relations," Leahy, D-Vt., of Maryland and Peter Welch
to explore opportunities for
said in a statement. "We want
of Vermont. In the statement, Leahy's
greater cooperation, and to
office said the trip was intend-
I t is th e
second trip t o
bans on what they envision
and ambassadors to Cuba
United States and Cuba.
from Mexico, Spain, Norway Melissa DeRosa, a spokesand Colombia. The statement woman for Cuomo, said he said the delegation might planned to lead a trade mismeet with "representatives of sion to Cuba. "This is one of Cuba's civil society," a term several such trips promoting referring to those working for New York that he plans to reform within the communist take in the coming term," she political system. sard.
Now get what yoLj really want. iPhone 6. And the best plan ever. Get 4 lines and10GB of data for just '130 a month.
We'll even pay off your old contract.
Sheikh Qassim al-Janabi, a tribal leader from that area,
a democratic society is to know "I just like to spend my time where your son is when he is
Many were put there sole-
ly on the word of a secret inAbbas. "Until now, I don't know former, as Azawy said was in March of 2014," said Tawfika
where he is. Zero information." the case with her husband; Another w oman, E n tisar others because they confessed
Gannos, criedforherfoursons: to crimes after being tortured. one jailed since 2006, another since 2010, and the other two
since 2011, all without court hearings. Their grief, and the pain of not knowing what is happening to their loved ones, highlight
®>s
Even those proven innocent
must pay bribes to actually walk out the door — anywhere from $2,000to $50,000, said Shahlaa al-Awosy, a defense lawyer who represents detained Sunnis and who herself
has been arrested on terrorism Haider al-Abadi: reforming charges. Iraq's criminal justice system. Every Sunni family, it seems, W ell-documented abuses ofthe has a story about detentions. system, including long detenA man who gave his name a vital task for Prime Minister
tions without trial and confes-
as Abu Zaid, who lives in Ma-
sions obtained by torture, are daen, south of Baghdad, said the primary grievance of the that his brother was arrested country's Sunni minority.
in October, after al-Abadi took
The stakes are high, given the success that Islamic State jihadists have had in exploiting Sunni outrage at the government to help them take over large expanses of Iraq. Al-Abadi's ability to reconcile with the Sunnis will ultimately hinge on reforming the justice system.
office, and that after a painful search, he had found his body in a Baghdad hospital. He said his son had been sentenced to
"It is the most important thing Abadi can do to re-en-
death after being tortured and
confessing to setting off a car bomb, and he hopes the case will be reviewed. "There are thousands of stories similar to mine," he said. The resentments of the Sun-
franchise the Sunni popula- ni community have been largetion," said Erin Evers, the Iraq ly shaped by the actions and researcher for Human Rights Watch.
decisions of U.S. officials more
In seeking reforms, al-Abadi
than a decade ago. Many secret informers who
is facing not just the bitter sec-
were once on the payroll of the
munity are practices adopted by the United States after the
comes the basis for convictions.
tarian legacy of his predeces- Americans now are employed sor, Nouri al-Maliki, but also by Iraqi officials. All too often, a troubled vestige of the U.S. senior judicial officials admit, occupation. At the core of the the informers provide unreligrievances of the Sunni com- able information that still beinvasion in 2003: arbitrary arrests in the name of counterterrorism, the reliance on confidential informants rather than forensic evidence, and the
Inside the judiciary's headquarters, out of reach to the women in the garden, Judge Abdul Sattar al-Bayraktar, a judiciary spokesman, admitted that torture was a problem, but
exdusion of former Baath Par- largely dismissed the grievancty members — mostly Sunnis es of the women outside. — from public life. Referring to their stories of Al-Abadi took office in Sep- nighttime raids, he said: "So tember with a mandate to be a more indusive leader, and he
an old woman claims her son
dants who have already been
den until late afternoon before
was sleeping and he was arhas promised judicial reforms, rested. Yes, he was sleeping, including ordering officers to but what was he doing before carry out arrests only with a he was sleeping. Murders? judicial warrant, and judges Assassinations?" to speed the release of defenAzawy waited in the garlearning that her husband's court appearance had been al-Abadi's promises have been delayed until February. She wasn't allowed to give him the largely unfulfilled. dedared innocent but still sit
in prison. So far, on that issue, That reflects both deeply en-
. US.Cellular. Hello Better.
sandwiches or soda or oint-
trenched problems, including a reli ance on secretinformers
ment,which shesaidhe needed for a skin condition he had con-
and confessions ratherthan
tracted in prison.
forensic evidence, and the fact Even so, she remains hopeful that many of the armed groups that things will change. Before, on the government's side, such when al-Maliki would appear as Shiite militias, continue to on television, she would change carryout arbitrary arrestsand the channel, or turn off the TV. other abuses and are largely "But with Abadi it's different," beyond al-Abadi's reach. she said. "We want to hear "We know arrests are con- what he has to say." t inuing until n ow, an d w e
one
"Abadi is much better than
know torture is continuing," Maliki," she added. "We are all said Ayad Allawi, a vice presi- optimistic."
Things Ie wan t youto Imow:NewRslail InstallmentContracts, SharedConnect Planand$25 device act fserequired.Credit approval required. Regulatory Cost RecoveryFeeapplies(crirrsntly St82/line/month); this isnota taxorgvmt required charge.Add. fees,taxesandtermsapply andvary bysvc.andeqmt Offersvalid in-sloreat partlcipatlng locatlonsonly, maybefulfiled throughdirect fulfilmentandcannot be combined.Seesloreoruscellular.comfor details. $130PricePlanbased onS90/mo.,10GBSharedConnect Planplus 4 lineswith discounted S10 Device Connection Chargeseach. Retail InstallmentContract required to receivediscounts; otherwise, regular OsmceConnection Chargesapply. Olher discountsavailable for additionalSharedConnect Plans.limited-time offer. Genlract Payoff Promo: Offer valid onupto 6 consumer linesor25businesslines. Must port in currentnumber to U.S. Cellular andpurchasenewSmarlphoneortabletthroughaRetail InstalmentContractona SharedGonnect Planwith Device Protsction+. Enrollmentin Device Pmtection+ requiredin all marketsexceptNorth Carolina. The monthly chargefor Device Protection+ is S8.99for Smartphones. Adeductibleperapprovedclaimaqplies. Federal Warranty ServiceCorporalion is theProvider of theDevice Protection+ ESCbenefits, exceptin CAand OK. Submit final bill identifyingearlyterminalionfse (ETF) charged bycarrier within 60 daysof aciivation dateto www.iiscelliilar.com/contractpayoff orviamail to U.S.Gelluiar Contract PayoffProgramM91-61; POBox 752257; ElPaso, TX88575-2257. Customerwil bereimbursedfor theETFrsllected onfinal bil up to S350/line.Reimbursement in formof a US.Cellular prepaidCard is issuedbyMetaBarik,e MemberFDIC;additional offersarenotsponsoredorendorsedby MetaBank.This carddoes not have cash access and can bsusedat anymerchant locationthat accepts MasterCarde Oebit Cardswithin theU.S. only. Card valid throughexpirationdateshown orifront of card.Allow12-14 weeksfor processing.Tobeeligible, customermustregister for MyAccount. Ilelail Inslalmenl Coread: Retail InslalmentContract (Contract) andmonthly payments accordingto thePayment Schedulein theContractrequired. If youarein default or terminateyourContract, wemayrequire youto immediately paytheentire unpaidAmount Financedaswell asour collection costs,attorneys' feesandcourt costs relatedto enforcing yourobligatians underthe ContractUpgradeyour handset after12consecutive payments madeontheContract KansasCiislomers: Inareasin which U.S. Cellular receivessupport fromthe Federal Universal ServiceFund, all reasonable requestsforservicemust bemst. Unresolvedqiisslions concerningservices availability canbedirectedto theKansasCorparationCommissionOffice of Public AffairsandCansumer Protectionat1-800-662-0027. Limitedtime offer Trademarksandtradenames arethe property oftheir respectiveowners Addltional termsapply. Seestoreor iscellular comfordetails. ©2015US.Cellular1APRH/2015
Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
HOLIDAY CLOSURES • All public schools will be closed today, Martin Luther King Jr. Day. Central Oregon Community College and OSU-Cascadesalso will be closed today. • City offices in Bend, Sisters, Redmond, Madras and Prineville will be closed today. City of La Pine offices will be open. • County, state and federal offices will be closed today. • Most banks will be closed today. • Post offices will be closed today. Mail will not be delivered or sent. • Deschutes, Crook and Jefferson counties public libraries will be closed today. • Juniper Swim 8 Fitness Center will be open regular hours, but open recreation swim will not be available from 1-4 p.m. for kids out of school. • Wilderness Garbage andRecycling's Monday routes will run as usual, but the office and recycle center will close at noon. High Country Disposal, Bend Garbage & Recycling and CascadeDisposal's Monday routes will all run according to their normal schedules. • Liquor stores will be open regular hours.
ac o snow u ss iareas • Snowfall at 36 percentof average hindering Hoodoo,Wilamette's seasons By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Limited snowfall is ham-
pering operations at lower-elevation ski areas this year, with both Hoodoo Ski Area and Willamette Pass Resort
struggling to get their seasons started for the second straight year. Hoodoo, just west of Santiam Summit, opened on New Year's Eve, then shut down
after Jan. 12 because ofinsufficient snow. As of Saturday, the ski area was reporting a
base snowpack of just 9 inches. Oregon Department of Transportat ion roadcameras Saturday showed Santiam
Pass, at elevation 4,817, bare and wet, with limited patches of roadside snow. Shortly before4p.m. itwas45 degrees. Willamette Pass opened
showed bare and wet conditions with the temperature at
44 degrees. Last year, Willamette Pass
In 2012 and 2013, Mt. Bach-
elor's base depth pushed past 100 inches by mid- to late January, while last year, it was
had to use its grooming cats the same early February storm to push enough snow on to the that allowed Hoodoo to open main runs to open in mid-Jan- that put Mt. Bachelor past the uary. At Hoodoo, opening day century mark. finally came last year on Feb. National Weather Service 7, and the resort was open for forecasts were predicting 39 days all season. some new snow headed for the Even at Mt. Bachelor Ski Cascades late Saturday and Area, with its base at 5,700 today, but not nearly enough to feet, snow has been compara-
make a substantial difference
briefly in early January but has since shut down. Satur-
tively scant this year. Hoodoo's forskiareas.Mt.Bachelorw as base is at 4,668 feet, while Wil- forecast to pick up 4 to 8 inches
day,resort operatorswere
lamette Pass sits at 5,120. Mt.
late Saturday and another 1to
reporting 18 inches of snow at the base. The road camera along state Highway 58 at the pass, elevation 5,100, also
Bachelor claimed a base depth of 52 inches on Saturday, but
3 inches today, while forecasts
that's still well short of recent
Pass called for I to 2 inches. SeeSnowfall/B2
years.
for Hoodoo and Willamette
Greg lii/alden (R)................ Y Earl Biumenauer(D)..........N SuzanneBonamici (D).......N Peter DeEaz(o (D)...............N Kurt Schrader(D) ..............N
• The House also voted to end the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals Program, which allows certain immigrants who came tothe U.S. as children without documentation to legally stay. With all of the yes votes cast by Republicans, the Housevoted to curtail the program, which went into effect in 2012, by a218-209 margin. Twenty-six Republicans and183 Democrats voted against the amendment.
Bakercit
• Baker City:Major pile-up involving 50 vehicles on 1-84,B3
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-e17-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-e17-7831 Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347
D.c.......................202-ee2-745e Business............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................54t-383-0304 Public lands..........541-e17-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Sudmissiens • Lettersand opinions: Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickers Worth or In MyView
p.o. Boxe020
WASHINGTON-
U.S. HOUSEVOTE • The House of Representatives voted to defund President Obama's executive order on immigration this weekwhile passing a bill that would fund the Department of Homeland Security. Last year, even as it funded the rest of the government through theendof September, Congress onlyapproved funding for HomelandSecurity through the end ofnext month. This provided the new Congress, with Republican majorities in both chambers, the chance to pushback on Obama's executive order, which would allow unauthorized immigrants who are parents of a child who is a legal resident the ability to apply for relief from deportation. The House voted to disallow funds for the program by a 237-190 margin. All of the yes votes camefrom Republicans, while seven Republicans joined 183 Democrats in voting against the measure.
STATE NEWS
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
WASHINGTON WEEK
Greg Walden(R)................ Y Ean'Biumenauer(D)..........N SuzanneBonamici (D).......N Peter DePazio(D)...............N Kurt Schrader(D) ..............N
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Trumpet player Randy Brecker plays for the audience during s workshop Saturday morning at The Oxford Hotel in Bend.
• Musician Randy Breckerleadsaworkshop with localsfor theJazzat the Oxford series By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Ryan Pierce arrivedearly at The Oxford Hotel on Saturday
morning, findinga front row seatwithin arm's reach of the
stage.
urday for two hours of fielding questions from andplaying with local musicians interested in polishing their skills, before returningto the stage Saturday night for two more shows. Abattered trumpet case at
Atrumpeterwiththe Bend
his feet, Pierce saidhe expect-
HighSchooljazzband,Pierce,
ed Saturday to be better than workshops he'd attended at the
17, was one of dozens who
showedup at the downtown Bend hotel for a workshop with internationally acclaimed trum-
petplayer Randy Brecker. As part of the Jazz at the
Oxford series,Breckerplayed a Friday night show, got up Sat-
• The overall Department of HomelandSecurity funding bill, which included the twoamendments discussedabove, passed by a236-191 margin. TwoDemocrats joined 234 Republicans in supporting the bill, while10 Republicans and181 Democrats voted against it.
Oxford Hotel inyears past. "I'm just really excited because I've never been to one of these where they had a trumpet player," Pierce said. "I'm excited to hear abouthis experiences." See Jazz/B2
Greg 5'alden (R)................ Y Earl Biumenauer(D)..........N SuzanneBonamici (D).......N Peter DeEazro (D)...............N Kurt Schrader(D) ..............N
/ Jau musician George Bouhey, of Bend, workswith C.J. Neary, 8, front, Rylee McConnell, 14, st right, snd other local music students during a jazz workshop after a talk by internationally acclaimed
—AndrewClevenger, rhe Bulletin
trumpet player Randy Brecker as part of the Jazz at the Oxford series.
Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 54t-383-0358
VIRISEMEN
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name
and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
• Schoolnews andnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsof teens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunion info to bulletinObendbulletin.com. Contact: 54t-383-0358
• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Community events:
YESTERDAY
Men saythey dismvered gold deposits along the rivernearTerrebonne in 1915 Compiled by Don Hoiness
from archived copiesofThe Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Jan. 17, 1915
rabies situation, which made the ordinance necessary, led
against any outbreak of rabies
the council to declare that an
ordinance was prepared and passed.
emergencyexisted and topass the ordinance through its var-
here and as a result the new In Prineville stringent or-
ders have been made by the an additional precaution the city council to prevent dogs council directed the recorder from running at large and to request the county health citizens are warned not to go board to order dogs to be muz- into the country without guns zled in the county in general. with which to defend themAs yet no resident of Bend selves against attacks from has suffered from the bite dogs or coyotes. According to of any rabid animal known news reports, mad dogs, cats
Council order ismuule dogs
to have been seen in town
and cattle have died within
• Engagements,marriages, domestic partnerships, anniversaries, birthdays:
on the streets of Bend after
and several have been seen
next are to be shot according
in the Powell Butte country. Under all the circumstances
the city limits and numbers of dogs that belonged on ranches outside the city have been bitten by coyotes and are now roaming the country. SeeYesterday/B5
The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-e33-2u7
As a precaution against
12 o'clock, noon, on Monday
+LZ -:
,We would like to thank all our loyal customers, and friends for 25 years of continued support.
~ IIri.Jan16ih-Nion.Jan19th ~ *
iousstages atone session.As
Email events tocommunitylife© bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
the epidemic of rabies now prevalent in Central Oregon all unmuzzled dogs at large
i f IVERS2BY.
to an ordinance adopted by the city council at a meeting
it seemed desirable to the
yesterday afternoon. The
precautionary measures
council to take the necessary
STOREWIDE
Shoe lnn I
I '
I
I '
• HOURS • . Monday - Saturday 10 - 6 Sunday 11 - 5
541-385-7405 s gctudesVera Bradley, SASShoesand UGC. Doesnotapply roprior purchases.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Evxxr TODAY SYMPHONY SPOTLIGHTRECITAL: Featuring principal chair string
musicians playing Brahms,Mozart
and Matz; free; 2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend;
www.cosymphony.com, info© cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT I WORE":A play by Nora and Delia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. THE PEKING ACROBATS: The
Chineseacrobatic group performs;
$25-$40 plus fees; 3 and 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700.
ENm a by Garth Stein; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. RELAY FORLIFEOF REDMOND AND SISTERSKICKOFF CELEBRATION:Learnmoreabout Relay for Life and become part of the fight against cancer; 4:305:30 p.m.; Wild Ride Brewing Co., 332 SW Fifth St.; www.
ROLLED"AND "AMONG THE WILD":Featuring a showing of two fat-bike films; $5; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.Francis School,700 NW Bond
sociallywired.biz or 541-325-6182. OSU-CASCADESSCIENCE PUB: EBOLAANDBEYOND: Patrick Iversen, a senior research professor at OSU's College of Agricultural Sciences will discuss a drug developed for Ebola, economic and social impacts, finding treatment and more; free, registration required; 5:307:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St.,
pursuing careers in science,math,
Bend; www.osucascades.edu/ sciencepubs or 541-382-5174.
WEDNESDAY
"PATTERNS OFEVIDENCE: THE EXODUS":A showing of a documentary about historical findings surrounding the biblical story of the Exodus, featuring an exclusive panel discussion with scholars, theologians and more; $12.50; 7 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. THE HOLYBROKE: The Northwest indie-folk band performs, with Kent Ueland of Terrible Buttons; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
"IT'S JUST SAGEBRUSH: THE LIFEHISTORY OF THE GREAT SAGE GROUSE": Screeningofthe documentary by Steve Chindgren and a presentation by Garth Fuller of the Nature Conservancy about a new effort to restore sage grouse habitat; $3 for members, $5 for non-members, registration requested; 6:30 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www.highdesertmuseum. org or 541-382-4754. ENCORE OF"THE METROPOLITAN OPERA:THE MERRY WIDOW": A performance of Lehar's opera; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. SOPHISTAFUNK:The NewYork hip-hop and funk band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St.
LIBRARY BOOK CLUB: Read and discuss"Raven Stole the M oon"
St., Bend;www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
FRIDAY "BIG DREAM":Showing of the filmaboutsevenyoung women
redmondsistersrelay.org, randi©
MONDAY
TUESDAY
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Cast members, from left, Patricia West-Del Ruth, Judi Van Houweling,Susan Benson, Laura Lee Coffman and Dana Fykerud rehearse a scene from "Love, Loss, and What I Wore" at 2nd Street
Theater in Bend. See the showtoday at 3 p.m. Cost is $19 or $16 for students and seniors. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. TRIBAL SEEDS:The California reggae-rock group performs, with Hirie and Leilani Wolfgramm; $17 plus fees advance, $20 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. actiondeniroproductions.com or 541-408-4329. THE HARMEDBROTHERS: The Portland folk-rock band performs, with Small Houses; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
THURSDAY "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT I WORE":A play by Nora and
Delia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. PREVIEW NIGHTOF "THE GLASS MENAGERIE":Preview performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. JOSEPH:The Portland-based Americana vocal trio performs, with Parlour; $5; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. DOUBLEFEATURE: "COLD
computing and engineering; free; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "ALADDIN":A production of the Disney classic by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NW Clearwater Drive, Bend; www. tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. "BUFFALO SOLDIERS": Showing of the 1997 film about black members of the U.S. cavalry who protected Western territories in post-Civil War times; free; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT I WORE":A play by Nora and Delia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre,148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803.
SATURDAY "ALADDIN":A production of the Disney classic by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10for students18 and younger; 2 and 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. PURNIMA:Featuring a night of Bollywood food, music and more to benefit Central Oregon Locavore; $20, includes feast and music, $5 after 8 p.m., advance registration suggested; 6-8 p.m. Indian buffet, 8-10 p.m. cocktails and appetizers; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota, Bend;www.facebook. com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. CHERRYPOPPIN' DADDIES: The Eugene swing and ska group performs to benefit the Bend Surgery Center Foundation;
$39-$49 plus fees;6:30p.m.;
Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT I WORE":A play by Nora and Delia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of Tennessee Williams' autoblographlcal play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatncal.org or 541-389-0803. ORQUESTA MONTECALVO:AfroLatin dance music from Portland; $5; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
PUBLIc OFFIGIALs U.S. SENATE • Sen.JeffMetMey, D-Ore. 107 RussellSenateOffice Building Washington,D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.senate.gov BendoNce: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite 208 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-318-1298 • Sen. RenWyden,D-Ore. 223 DirksenSenateOffice Building Washington,D.C.20510 Phone:202-224-5244 W eb: http://wyden.senate.gov Bend office: 131 NWHawthorneAve., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-330-9142
L.S. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES • Rep.GregWalden, R-HoodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington,D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http://walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 NWBondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-389-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452 STATE OF OREGON • Gev.JohnKilzhaber,D
Jazz Continued from B1 A founding member of Blood, Sweat 8 Tears who's played with everyone from
160StateCapitol,900Court St. Salem,OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://govemor.oregon.gov • SeaelaryofSlaleKate Brown,D 136StateCapitol Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • Tisasurer Ted Wheeler, D 159OregonStateCapitol 900Court St.NE Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-378-4329 Email: oregon.treasurer@state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • ANomeyGeneralElenRosenblum,D 1162Court St. NE Salem,OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor CommissionerBradAvekian 800 NEOregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli STATE SENATE • Sert. TedFetrioli, R-DisltictII(Jefferson, partof Deschutes)
steen, Brecker, 69, did not
disappoint. Holding court for nearly two hours on the minutia of his playing style and practice regiment, describing the tongue and lip techniques he uses to get the most out of his instrument,
STATE HOUSE • Rep.KnuteBuehler, R-Disitict54(partof Deschutes) 900Court St.NE,H-477 Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1454 Email: rep.knutebuehler©state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/buehler • Rep. JohnHuffman, R-District59(parIof Jefferson) 900Court St.NE,H-476 Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1459 Email: rep.johnhuffman@state.or.us Welx www.leg.state.or.us/huffman
(Georges) Bouhey said jazz is the "one true American art form," and jazz musicians are extremely conscious of the need topass on
• Rep. MikeMcLane,R-Dislritt55(Crook, partof Deschutes) 900 Court St.NE,H-385 Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1455 Email: rep.mikemclane@state.or.us Welx www.leg.state.or.us/mclane • Rep.GeneWhimtnt, R-District53(patt of Deschutes) 900 Court St.NE,H-471 Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1453 Email: rep.genewhisnant@state.or.us Welx www.leg.state.or.us/whisnant
Fax: 541-416-3891 Email: administration©co.crook.or.us Web: co.crook.or.us
DESCHUTES COUNTY
JEFFERSON COUNTY 66SE D St., Madras,OR97741 Phone:541-475-2449 Fax 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.jefferson.or.us
DeschutesCounty Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bend Phone:541-388-6567 BmkTammyBeny@ndtmhulestxus • AlanUnger,D-Redmond Phone:541-388-6569 Email:Aian Unger©co.deschules.or.us • Tony DeBorte, R-LaPine Phone:541-388-6568 ErnaI:TonyDeBone@odeschuiesorus
Jefferson County Commission • MikeAhem,MaeHuston, WayneFording Phone:541-475-2449 Ematcommissione/Omjefletson.orus CITY OF BEND 710 NWWalSt. l Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-388-5505 Web: www.ci.bend.or.us
CITY OF CULVER 200 W.First St., Culver,OR97734 Phone:541-546-6494 Fax: 541-546-3624
CROOK COUNTY 300 NEThirdQ., Prinevile,OR97754 Phone: 541-447-6555
CITY OFREDMOND 716SWEvergreenAve. Redmond,OR97756
CITY OF METOUUS 636 JeffersonAve., Metolius, OR97741 Phone:541-546-5533
duets in the bathroom. "Now's the time to form
Snowfall
Saturday. Areas to the south and on
those band, those relation-
Contlnued from B1 the west slope of the CasA second straight year of cades are experiencing simlimited snowfall could pres- ilarly meager snowfall this ent challenges for irrigators winter, while t o t h e e a st,
1300 NWWalSt., l Bend,OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
ships," he said. "I'm still most
comfortable playing w i th those guys I came up with." Brecker n a me-dropped well over 100 musicians he's Brothers Parker and Lo- played with over the years, gan Lasala said they weren't recalling backing up Franksure what to e xpect fr om ie Avalon as a high school Brecker, but hoped to learn student, serving as a reserve something to improve their MG when he and Booker T of playing. Parker, a 15-year- Booker T and the MGs were old saxophonist, and Logan, both attending Indiana Unian 11-year-old trumpeter, versity, and the day he and said they're both solid play- vocalist Al Kooper angrily ers, but not as good as they quit Blood, Sweat & Tears. "You'll never make it withcouldbe. "I really want to get bet- out Al," Brecker recalled tellter at soloing, just getting ing his bandmates on the day used to the key changes, and they quit, adding that the folknowing what notes to play," low-up album made without Parker said. them went on to sell ll m i l Brecker told the young- lion copies. er attendees to find peers to The Oxford Hotel will host play with, as the musicians two more freemusic educathey meet today will inform tion workshops in February their playing style for the and March. In February, orrest of their lives. He fond- ganist Chester Thompson ly recalledplaying with the and Soul Vaccination will be other half o f t h e B r ecker featured, and in March, guiBrothers group, his brother tarist Diego Figueiredo and Michael, a clarinet player vocalist Cyrille Aimee will with whom h e d i scovered head the workshop. the superior acousticsthey — Reporter: 541-383-0387, could enjoy while playing shammers@bendbuIIetin.com
their love of the style to the next generation.
James Br own's t r o mbonist Fred Wesley to F r ank
Zappa and Bruce Spring-
900Court St.NE,S-323 Salem, OR 97301 Phone: 503-986-1950 Email: sen.tedferlioli@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/ferrioli • SBL TimKnopp, R-Disttfd27 (partof Deschutes) 900Court St.NE,S-423 Salem, OR 97301 Phone:503-986-1727 Email: sen.timknopp@state.or.us Welx www.leg.state.or.us/knopp • SerLDougWhisett, R-DisYict28 (Crook,partof Deschutes) 900Court St.NE,S-303 Salem,OR97301 Phone:503-986-1728 Email: sen.dougwhitsett@state.or.us Web: www.leg.state.or.us/whitsett
years, he's been impressed by how receptive musicians have been to his request they get up Saturday morning and take on the role of teacher. "In this music, it's easy.
I'venever heard a musician say, 'meh, no.' They want to
and demonstrating how a do it," Glickman said. few bars from a melody can Bend drummer and mube twisted into an expressive sic teacher Georges Bouhey solo. helps Glickman organize The jazz series at the Ox- the workshops, and served ford and the instructional as one-third of the backing seminars w i t h m u s i cians band put together to play were both launched by Mar- with Brecker on Saturday shall Glickman, a part-time morning. Bend resident and onetime Bouhey said jazz is the president of t h e P o r t land "one true A merican art Trail Blazers. A rabid jazz form," and jazz musicians fan, Glickman started the are extremely co nscious jazz seriesfive years ago of the need to pass on their and the workshops three love of the style to the next years ago as a way of ex- generation. "You know that something posing his now-15-year-old, piano-playing son to talented you really believe in isn't musicians. going to continue on if you Glickman said over the don't," Bouhey said.
Find It All Online bendbLIlletin.COm
this summer.
CITY OF SISTERS 520 E.CascadeAvenue, PO.Box39 Sisters, OR97759 Phone:541-549-6022 Fax: 541-549-0561 CITY OF LA PINE P.O.Box3055,16345Sixth St. La Pine,OR97739 Phone:541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462 CITY OF PRINEVILLE 387NEThird St.,Plineville, OR97754 Phone:541-447-5627 Fax: 541-447-5628 Email: cityhall©cityofprineville.com Web: www.cityofprineville.com CITY OF MADRAS 71 SEDStreet,Madras,OR97741 Phone:541-475-2344 Fax: 541-475-7061
snowfall is closer to normal.
Snowpack surveys per- No area of the state has seen formed by the United States more snow than average this Department of Agriculture to
gauge the availability of irrigation water indicate snow
year, but the Harney Basin
largely south of Burns is at
99 percent of the long-term D e s chutes-Crooked average. River Basin is at 36 percent — Reporter: 541-383-0387, in t h e
of thehistoric average as of
Find Your Dream Home In
Real
Estate •
•
•
shammers@bendbulletin.com
BART Labrador/Rottweiler mix Bart isabout 2-1/2 years old and weighs 64 pounds. He's big, strong, healthy and even a little pushy. He knows sit, stay, come and down. He is a treat to walk on a leash. Becausehis training was cut short somewhere along the way, Bart is probablynot ready to bearound children or intact maledogs.HedoesOK with cats.This is agreat dogwho needs some love and understanding. More at brightsideanimals.org/adoptable-dogs,or visit Tues.-Sat., 10-5.
@ Sponsored by @
BrightSide Animal Center
PRO-I~++
BRIGHTSIDE A N I MA L
C R N TE R
UTILITYTRAILERS cusroM woaa FULY BED • BUMPERS
TheBulletin
Crook County Court • Mike McCabe(CrookCountyjudge) Phone:541-447-6555 Email: mike.mccabe@ co.crook.or.us • KenFahlgren Phone:541-447-6555 Email: ken.fahlgren@co.crook.or.us • SethCrawford Phone:541-447-6555 Email: seth.crawford@co.crook.or.us
Phone:541-923-7710 Fax: 541-548-0706
Com p l e m e n t s
H o m e I n t er i or s
541.322.7337 •
•
w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE., REDMOND, OR
(541) 923-0882
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON AROUND THE STATE
in ure inmassive cras invovin v e i c eson-
Guilty Plea —An Oregon manhas pleaded guilty to incest for having a sexual relationship with his 25-year-old daughter. Eric Lee Gates, 49, entered the guilty plea in Lane County Circuit Court on Friday. He'sscheduledtobesentencedTuesdayandfacesupto five years in prison and$125,000 in fines. Prosecutor Chris Parosa told the judge that Gatesdid not know his daughter whenthey were introduced by amutual friend. Gates was in jail, and they begana pen-pal relationship. The prosecutor said they realized their genetic connection before the relationship turned sexual. Hesaid they began living together and had achild with significant mental and physical problems. Theyhavesincehadasecondchild.Thedaughteralso faces incest charges but hasnot beenarraigned.
The Associated Press BAKER CITY — Black ice
is believed to be the cause of a freeway pile-up involving more than a dozen tractor-trailers Saturday morning in eastern Oregon, police said. The pile-up left a l o ng
Medfnrd teaCherS —The Medford School District has paid teachers $345,000 to settle a labor complaint. The pay,doled out on Christmas Eve,amounted to about $650 before taxes for each of the more than 600affected teachers. Theteachers union filed its complaint in October 2013 after the district, facing a budget shortfall, cut the school year short. Whenfunding rose the following year, the teachers said the school district was required to adddays back. Oregon's Employment Relations Board ruled in August that the school district violated its agreement with the teachers union. Union President Cheryl Lashley said teachers arehappy to havethe dispute resolved.
x
stretch of Interstate 84 closed for most of the day as crews
worked to clean spilled diesel fuel and clear away 50 vehicles that were either damaged
or stranded. Four people were taken to hospitals with injuries ranging from minor to serious, but there were no fatalities, Oregon State Police Sgt. Kyle Hove said. The crash occurred shortlybefore 5 a.m. east of Baker City, about 130 miles
northwest of Boise, Idaho.
Photos submitted by DDOT
A pile-up of vehicles, including several semi-trucks, has closed Interstate 84 east of Baker City.
Hove arrived on the scene to find "a sheet of ice" on the
roadway. Troopers are still in- crews had to clean up diesel vestigating, but Hove said he from the trucks' fuel tanks. "We understand it's frusbelieves it was a chain-reaction crash. trating when the freeway is "A couple of
t h e t r u cks closed like this," said Tom
came upontheblack ice,and Srandberg, a spokesman for they jackknifed and crashed the Oregon Department of into each other. And it just Transportation. "Our primacontinued to escalate until we ry concern is safety, and (we) had a total of 50 vehicles in want to make sure everything one scene," Hove said over the is cleared by our hazmat phone. folks before we let any traffic There were several sepa- through the areas." rate collisions over a stretch
I nterstate 84
l i nks S alt
of about three-quarters of a Lake City with Portland and mile in the eastbound lanes, is the primary east-west highHove said. About 20 vehicles way through eastern Oregon. were damaged, many of them The eastbound lanes were tractor-trail ers, and several
closed from Pendleton to On-
spilled their loads, he said. tario, a stretch of more than Two trucks were trans- 150 miles. Westbound lanes ODOT had to remove nondisabled vehicles, then disabled ones porting hazardous materials. were closed near the crash along the interstate. Several tractor-tailors spilled the loads they Their cargo did not spill, but site. were carrying, but two hazardous loads did not spill.
ies or eacenee snew a ers By Samantha Swindler
two years ago. "Personally, I felt like I had
The Oregonian
Founded by four Washing-
a ccomplished what I
ton County women, the Pies
for Peace project began in 2003 as way to make a tangi-
ble — even if small — difference in the Middle East. "It's been 12 years, and most
of us are elderly folks, pushing 70, and we have these health issues," said f ounder L a rk
X'IZ8 Po PK+O All P r o c e e6s G 1Vlercy Cor
High COurt ruling SOught —The parties involved say they will ask the OregonSupremeCourt for a ruling in an ongoing battle over the competency of a man charged in the 2011 slaying of the Rainier police chief. A ColumbiaCounty judge last fall ordered OregonState Hospital to give Daniel Butts anti-psychotic medications. Thequestion is whether the 25-year-old manshould beforcibly medicated to make him mentally competent to assist his lawyers. However, the hospital has concluded that Butts is competent to stand trial and does not want to admit him for treatment. The hospital and the state attorney general's office haveappealedthejudge's order. A forensic psychiatrist hired by Butts' lawyers hadaskedJudge TedGrove to order the state to medicate Butts, saying the man isschizophrenic and has only childlike functional abilities. At a court hearing Friday, the parties said they'll ask the high court to decide. Butts is charged with aggravated murder in the shooting death of Chief Ralph Painter. MemOrial rOOm —TheOregon Department of Corrections has dedicated a conference room at its Salemheadquarters to slain prison director Michael Francke.The42-year-old Franckewas fatally stabbed outside headquarters in January1989, less than two years after he wasappointed by then-Gov. Neil Goldschmidt. Frank Gable was convicted of the killing and sentenced to life in prison. Doubts about his guilt have swirled since the conviction, and a federal public defender is trying to reopen thecase. Francke's older brother Patrick spoke at Friday's dedication ceremony, saying heandthe public defender hope to "reverse amiscarriage of justice and free amanwe feel was wrongly convicted." Besides the dedication of the conference room, a memorial monument andbench wereplaced outside the entrance to the DomeBuilding. Skier COma —An expert19-year-old skier from The Dalles is out of a comaandimproving after a NewYear's Eve skiing accident on Mount Hood. MayaBarnard-Davidson has improved to serious condition at OHSUHospital in Portland. She was rushed there by helicopter ambulance after suffering a serious brain injury. Shewas in a coma for several days but was movedfrom the hospital's intensive-care unit after reawakening andshowing progress. Barnard-Davidson was skiing down the Middle Reynolds Run atMount Hood Skibowl when she lost control and crashed at high speed. Shehad been teaching skiing through Timberline Lodge. Theyoung woman was injured on the sameevening that 37-year-old Brian Fletcher, of Medford, was killed in anaccident in the same area. The Oregon state medical examiner said his death wasdue to blunt-force head trauma.
w ant-
ed to accomplish. I felt really good for what had been done," she said. Both Mercy Corps and Pies for Peace would love for a new volunteer, or group of volunteers, to continue making pies. Brandt is willing to share recipes and tips with anyone who wants to continue the project. She's also considering creating a cookbook of pie recipes that could be published as a Mercy Corps fundraiser and also as a blueprint for anyone looking to hold a bake sale.
Cnr fnllnd —Police in Portland said Oregon State Police have recovered a vehicle earlier reported stolen by awoman armed with a full beer can. State police arrested a38-year-old woman for investigation of robbery, assault and unlawful use of amotor vehicle. She was arrested Friday on Interstate 205 in suburbanWest Linn. The69-yearold male victim has his 2007Ford Explorer back. Portland Sgt. Pete Simpson said the man told police he wascarjacked Friday afternoon by a womanwhojumped into his passenger seat andthrew a full beer can at him. Simpson said the victim reported that he got out of the car when that happened.Thevictim said the womanclimbed into the driver's seat and droveoff. Thevictim was not seriously hurt.
Brandt, 69, as she listed off the hand pains, knee surgeries and bad backs among the — From wire reports members. Benjamin Brink/The Oregonian file photo "We're just too old. It just Roger Nipp, left, and Dale Case pose for a photo at their "Pies for happens. So we decided that Peace" booth at the Forest Grove Farmers Market in Forest Grove Food, Home & Garden it was time to give it up be- lest May. The volunteer group, which started in 2003, donates the In fore we forgot to put the sug- money they make byselling pies, to Mercy Corps. Anyone interested in coniswhatyou getwhen EVERGREEN ar in a rhubarb pie again or tinuing Pies for Peace can manages your lovedone's medications something." contact Brandt via email at • • TheBulletin P ies for P eace wa s t h e boro Farmers Market, along bring the cash directly to Mer- mark — Iark@hotmail.com. brainchild of founding mem- with private functions. They cy Corps' Portland office. bers Brandt, Carol Woodford, were known as the Pie MamMercy Corpsestimates do2 locations inBend P atricia Keeney an d K i m mas, until a few men joined the nations from Pies for Peace at Main Center Monteleone. The women, who gl oup. about $40,000 over the years, 2150NE StudioRd,Suitet0 had memories from the VietWhen th e F o rest G r ove though Brandt's estimate of NWX EVERGREEN nam War, were distressed by Farmers Market began, it be- total fundraising is closer to In-Home Care Services 2863Northwest CrossingDr,suite iO the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in came the group's preferred $60,000. The ladies would time 541-389-0006 541-389-9252 bendbulletin.com 2003. After a few long, ranting selling spot. From about 9 a.m. their Mercy Corps donations www.evergreeninhome.com sylvan©bendbroadband.com phone calls, they decided they to noon on Wednesdays, vol- to offers of matching contribuneeded to do something posi- unteers would bake pies to sell tions, Brandt said, and would tive with their energy. at the market later that after- count the total — with match Brandt had some experi- noon. They'd make between — in their fundraising tally. ence with advocacy baking. 25 and 30 pies per market, and Pies for Peace also made She had held pie sales as part often sold out. smaller donations to other "We cannot thank Forest groups, but by far, most of of an effort to save Washington County's Imbrie Farm Grove enough," Brandt said. the pie-money went to Mercy from demolition. gn the end, "They are a wonderful lot and Corps activities in Iraq, PakiMcMenamins bought the area great pie eaters." stan and Afghanistan. and turned it into Cornelius As a way of celebrating One of Mercy Corps' major Pass Roadhouse.) Washington County's farm projects was providing food Coming off t h a t s uccess, economy, Piesfor Peace al- baskets for displaced popuIf so, you may be eligible for a clinical research study to find out if an Brandt suggested makingpies. ways used local fruits. They lations in the region. Mercy investigational medication may reduce the risk of cardiovascular events. Woodford suggested giving started with apple, but later Corps community giving offito Mercy Corps. Monteleone, expanded to blackberry, blue- cer Pax Bennett said each baswhose husband was the assis- berry, ("Not our best seller," ket, which can feed a family You may be eligible if you meet the following criteria: tant pastor at Forest Grove's Brandt says. "People are wide- of five for severalweeks, cost United Church of Christ, sug- ly divided on blueberry pie, it about $90. • 40 to 85 years of age That's about six pies. gested baking in the church's turns out.") pumpkin, rhubarb, • Diagnosed with heart attack or stroke in the past 5 years "There was even a little vidcommercial kitchen. strawberry rhubarb, and the top-selling Cherry N' BerPies for Peace was born. eo that (Mercy Corps) showed "I think we just felt really ry. All pies were made from us of a group of young Iraqis," There are other eligibility requirements that the study doctor will review with committed to t h e c oncept," scratch, using a mixture of Woodford recalled. "Because said Woodford. "What can you family and developed recipes. I'm the one who signs the you if you are interested in participating in this study. Onlythe study doctor do when the world seems to be Prices n ever c h anged checks, they said 'thank you, can determine whether you are eligible to participate in the study or not. determined to be at war most throughout the years: pies sold Carol'from across the seas, of the time? What small thing for $15 baked, $12 frozen, or $3 and I will never, ever forget can you do? We weren't chang- a slice. that." ing the world, but at least we And despite its longevity, Back in 2 0 03, Woodford To learn more and find out felt like we were doing what Pies for Peace never turned had planned to bake pies unwe could." into a formal entity: no 501(c) til fighting stopped in the reif you may qualify: At first, the ladies sold their (3) or even a website. The most gion. Now, she worries she pies at a number of events: formal things ever got was the won't see that day, but she is Bend Memorial Clinic ss. the old Blueberry Festival in creation of a bank account. at peace with her decision to research©bmctotalcare.com Cornelius, the Corn Roast in The ladies hadn't tracked their stop baking. Woodford, 72, Forest Grove and the Hills- early donations. They'd simply retired from the group about
ASSURANCE
AT HOME
Find It All
Online
HAVE YOU HAD A HEART ATTACK OR STROKE WITHIN THE PAST 5 YEARS?
(877) 692-8338
+Il'bm C
TotalCare
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
BITUARIES
DEATH NOTICES Thomas Hollibaugh, of Bend Dec. 10, 1947 - Jan. 11, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A private service will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701.
Helen H. (Varco) Brown, of Redmond Oct. 18, 1918 - Jan. 15, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the Brown family. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: A private family Graveside Services will be held. A Celebration of Life Memorial Service will be held at a later date this month. At The Community Presbyterian Church Redmond, Oregon. Contributions may be made to:
The youth group at The Community Presbyterian Church, 529 NW 19th Street, Redmond, Oregon 97756 or call 541-548-3367.
Douglas John Kane,of Redmond Mar. 12, 1962 - Jan. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place at a later date.
Richard "Dick" Elmer Marr, of Bend April 10, 1941 - Jan. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, February 7, 2015 10:30 A.M. Sisters Church of the Nazarene, 67130 Harrington Loop, Sisters, Oregon 97759. Contributions may be made to:
Samaritans Purse, P.O. Box 3000, Boone NC 28607 or The Shepherds House, 1854 N.E. Division Street, Bend, Oregon 977901.
Stephen Frank Laswell May1, 1948- Jaa. 13, 2015
Lillian Yolanda Ficco, of Bend Nov. 29, 1955 - Jan. 9, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: Services will be announced at a later date.
James a Jim u John Swift, of Crooked River Ranch July 1, 1946 - Jan. 11, 201 5 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A celebration of a life lived will take place at a later date.
Gerda "Babe" Juhl Culwell, of Bend Jan. 11, 1920 - Dec. 18, 2014 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home of Bend is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com
Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, April 25, at 11:00 AM at Mt. Carmel Lutheran Church, 1701 Fredericks Street in San Luis Obispo, California. Contributions may be made
S teve was b or n i n B u r bank, CA. The hospital was just across the street from t he old W al t D i s ney S t udios. Steve always said that to: was why he was sometimes Salinas Valley Art a little "Goofy". He graduAssociationNalley Art ated in 1966 in the top third Gallery, PO Box 4913, of his high school class. Salinas, CA 93912 or any Steve joined t h e U n i t ed charity benefitting S tates Ai r F o rc e i n F e b ., children. April 7,1938- Dac. 31,2014 1967. Steve took a position Bev was a long-time resi- w ith t h e f a m o u s "Skunk W orks" d i vision o f L o c k d ent of Bend. Sh e w il l b e r emembered most b y h e r heed's facility in P almdale, s mile. S h e w a s k in d a n d C A. H e w o r k e d o n s u ch always w a nted t o p l e a se programs as the U-2, F-117 and accommodate others, Stealth Fighter and the F-22 Dac. 10, 1$47- Jaa. 11, 2015 Raptor. H e r etired after 35 ask any of years with them. Tom passed suddenly afthose who In 1991 Steve met who he ter a short battle with canknew her. cer. Tom is survived by his B ev en - called the "love of his life". He always said Sue was a loving wife, Cheri, and they joyed w onderful l a d y ' s n am e . had just c e l ebrated t h eir many Steve met this LOVE while 37th a n n iversary i n Nothings but enjoying a beverage at his vember, something he was most of all h er c h i l - favorite pub. I t d i dn't take extremely proud of. Tom d ren a n d long for them to fall in love. proudly served in the U.S. They married Nov. 7, 1992. grandNavy, did two tours in VietBev Williams After Steve's retirement in children. nam, was a member of The Road Shakers m o t orcycle S he always w or e a s m i l e 2001, they moved to Bend, club of Bend and COSSA. and put everyone first, she Oregon in 2002. S ince 2 003, S t ev e h a d He was an avid g ardener, i s and a l w ays w i l l b e a n enthusiast, a ngel. Her m o tt o w a s " I f been a devoted member of motorcycle loved shooting his big bore y ou c a n ' t s a y a ny t h i n g Bend Moose Lodge, ¹ 384. istols and most of all, his n ice, then d o n't sa y a n y - Steve considered the many m embers as e x t ension o f ome. A 50 plus year Centhing at all". tral Oregon resident, Tom She will tr uly be missed. his family. H e spent many Bev i s s u r v i ve d b y he r h ours at t h e l o dge a s a n enjoyed his family, friends d aughter, M a u r e en , h e r l odge c o ul d t o h e l p al l and neighbors. t h e lo d g e He is survived by his wife, two sons, Steve and James, m embers o f c ommunity i n cluding c h i l C heri o f B en d ; m o t h e r , her granddaughters, AshJimie Hollibaugh o f E s t aley, India and Chancie, her dren and the elderly. Steve g randsons, S a under a n d was also an avid APA Pool cada; brothers, Karl of GaH e h ad r abaldi and Floyd of M o l M ichael a n d h e r g r e a t - L eague player . many friends in this league. lala; sisters, Patsy Singleton grandsons, Levi and Grays on. Bev w a n ted a s m a l l P laying pool w a s o n e o f o f P o r t l an d a n d L in d a f amily celebration o f l i f e , Steve's great l o v es ! He Charriere of Estacada; sisw hich w e di d , a n d s h e spent many hours playing ters-in-law, Ronda Hill and ( not wor king) t o i m p r ove Lynda McCully of Bend; loved it. h is game, a n d s p en t a s brother-in-law Robert Vogt much time as he could with of L a P i ne ; a n d se v e r al his many friends. nieces and nephews. He is survived by his wife, A p r ivate celebration o f Sue of 22 years; daughter, life will be h eld at a l a t er July1,1946- Janaary11, 2015 Jeannette an d s o n -in-law, date. M e m orial c o n t r ibuDavid of Bend; three grand- tions can be made to PartJames John 'Jim' Swift of sons, Christopher, Matthew n ers i n C a r e , w h o w e r e Crooked River Ranch, Ora nd J e f fery, a n d gr e a t - w onderful, r e spectful a n d egon, passed away peace- granddaughter, C a s sandra loving to both Tom and his fully at his home on Janu- all of Bend; a sister, Barbara w ife, Cheri, for w h ic h w e ary 11, 2015. He was 68. W eber and a b r o t her, E d are so extremely grateful. A celebration of h i s l i f e Comey, both of Texas. w ill t ak e o l ace at a l a t e r date. Jim w as b orn J u l y 1, 1946, in Lawrence, AItttr11 4, 1939 — Jatnuary 10, 201$ Massachusetts, Belovedhusband, father, grandpa and friend passedawayon Saturday, to Fl oJanuary 10th, 2015surrounded by his family after a beautiful walk on the rence and Mildred beach. (RobertDon was born in Rosebttrg, OR to Millard and Wilma Doyle. He gradJames Swift uated from Roseburg High School in 1957then attended Oregon State S wift. He p a d u a ted f r o m University graduating with a bachelor'sdegreein forestry in 1962.He was Tenney H i g h S c h o o l i n then drafted into the US Army from 1962-1964. He married Mary Attn on Methuen, MA. Valentine's Day in 1969. He spent 38 years working for the US Forest SerAfter graduating in 1964, vice. Hissuccessful careertook him and his family from Tiller to Grants Jim enlisted in the U.S. Air Force serving in V i etnam. Pass to Blue River, Roseburg, Prineville and then Bendwhere heretired in L ater, h e at t e n de d t h e 1998. Along the way hespent his time with his family volunteering with University o f M as s a chu4-H, traveling tohorse shows,and various sporting events.Upon retiring, setts, Lowell, graduating in he and his wife Mary Ann sold their home in Bendand movedto Red1977, with a bachelor's demondwherethey joined Juniper Golf Club. They becamesnowbirds and gree in biological science. began spending their wintersittwarmer climates and settling on Desert H e r e t i re d a s V . P . o f Center,California as their primary winter location. During retirement quality at B end Research. Don volunteered at the HighDesert Museum sharing his expertise of the Inc. outdoorsas well as marshaling at golf tournaments. He i s s u r v i ve d b y h i s wife, Linda Scarborough; a Don enjoyed hiking, golfing, camping, Itshing, canoeing, woodcarving, b rother, J o h n A . Sw i f t ; traveling to carshowswith his and Mary Ann's prize mustang, and spendgranddaughter, Laci Swift; ing time with family and friends. He wasincredibly proud of his family and a d aug h t e r -in-law, and enjoyed a large community of hiends from eachaspect of his life. Kim Meagher Swift. He is preceded in d e ath Dott was a dedicated family matt and is survived by his wife Mary Ann of by both parents; son, Sean; Redmond; his daughters Angie and Kim and theirspousesalong with 4 and granddaughter, Madigrandchi ldren,onebrotherGary,anieceandnephews. son. In lieu of Howers, the family wishes that donations be madeto a charity A utumn Fun e r a l s o f of one'schoice. A privateservicefor immediate family will be held at a R edmond h a s b e e n e n later date. trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. www.autumnfunerals.net
Beverly Renwick Williams
Thomas 'Tom'
Hollibaugh
james john Swift
Donajid H. DoyIe
FEATURED OBITUARY
William 'Bill' Schuyler Hodge May18,1936- January 9, 2015 W illiam S . 'Bill' Hodge assed away peacefully in i s sleep th e m o r n in g o f January 9, after a decadel ong struggle w it h A l z h eimers. He was 78. H e wa s b o r n i n L o n g Beach, CA, to Mills Schuyler a nd I r m a Jean
(Linn) Hodge.
Bill at tended Poly High 'Bill' Hodge School a nd UCLA . H e l o ved f l y i ng and o btained hi s p r i vate pilot's license — soloing on his 16th birthday. H e s e rved i n t h e U S Army f ro m 1 955 t o 1 958. He ow ne d a n d o p e r ated the Hodge Dental Laborat ory i n L o n g B e a c h f o r over 20 years. After several trips to Oregon, Bi ll an d w i fe , Norma, relocated to Eue ne in 1986. There B i l l ecame a commercial real e state broker an d w a s a founding partner in W e stern P r o perty I n v e stment C ompany. He wa s a n e n t husiastic D u c k f a n a n d was active i n t h e R o t ary Club of Eugene. M oving t o S u n r i ve r i n 1994, Bill helped establish t he Rotary Club o f S u n r i ver and s e rved a s P r esident. He was a member of the Duffers golf group and was active in the Sunriver O wner' s A ssoci a t i o n w here he a l s o s e rved a s President. After moving to B end in 2 0 01, h e c o n t inu ed to e n joy t r a v el, g o lf , music, f i n e di n i n g a nd
good wines.
He was preceded in death by his parents and a sister, Ann. B ill i s s u r v i ved b y h is wife, Norma, his daughter, Laura, and their families. I n accordance w i t h h i s w ishes, there w i l l b e n o service. Bill loved music throughout his life, and donations i n hi s m e m o r y m a y b e m ade to t h e C e n t ral O r -
egon Symphony Associa-
t ion, 1295 NW C i t y V i e w Dr., Bend, 97701
www.cosymphony.com
Online bendbulletin.com
By Elisabeth Malkin
which governed Mexico for more than 70 years through M EXICO CITY — J u l i o coercion, corruption and disScherer Garcia, a newspaper tribution of the spoils, includand magazineeditorwho cre- ing to owners of the more docated a school of critical jour- ile media. nalism that unmasked MexProceso published articles ico's political corruption and exposing the lavish homes helped lay the groundwork for built by Mexico City's brutal the country's democratic tran- police chief, Arturo Durazo New York Times News Service
sition, died Jan. 7. He was 88. His death was announced
Moreno, an emblematic figure
had beentreated for a gastro-
Lopez Portillo.
of corruption in the 1970s, and by the magazine Proceso, the luxurious Acapulco hidewhich he founded in 1976. He away of former President Jose intestinal illness for two years, The magazine's success emthe magazine's website said. boldened other publications Over seven decades, Scher- to become moreindependent, er defied Mexican presidents, contributing to the PRI's elecshook up the newspaper cul- toral defeat in 2000. Scherer ture by introducing political helped train a generation of rereporting and diverse opinion, porters who now work at Mexand interviewed some of the ico's top daily newspapers and world's most notable figures emulate his hard questioning. — including John F. Kennedy, Scherer was born on April Zhou Enlai, Fidel Castro and
7, 1926, in Mexico City. He
Pablo Picasso. But it was as the founder
studied law and philosophy at the National Autonomous Uni-
versity of Mexico, but dropped ceso, an investigative maga- out to work as a messenger at zine, that Scherer made his one of Mexico's main daily deepest mark. Its extensively newspapers. documented articles broke the Scherer's wife, Susana Ibarstranglehold on information ra Puga, died in 1989. He is imposed by the Institutional survived by nine children and Revolutionary Party, or PRI, a number of grandchildren. and editor of the weekly Pro-
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825
Mail: Obituaries
Email: obits©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
The family is very grateful to Partners In Care, and donations may be made to 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Find It All
Watchdog journalist unmaskedcorruption
P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
Keith Robert Lopaka Kasparovitch March 5, I950- Dec. I9, 20I4 Keith passed away peacefully, surrounded by friends and family on December l9, in Honolulu, Hawaii, after a lengthy battle withcancer. Longtimeowner of "Kasey's Texas Style Bar B Q", in Bend, he will berememberedfondly for his ribs, brisket, turkey stroganoff, andlove of baseball.
He is survived by his wife/best friend, Jan, their sons, Kasey and Korey, m and his sister Cathy and brother Cass.m' A Celebration of LifeServicewill be held at 10:00 a.m., January 25, at the Punahou School Chapel in Honolulu.
Majrorie Rouse June 10, 1925 — January 9, 2015 Marjorie (Marge) Leta McFadden Rouse was born in Terrebonne, OregonJuneio, 1925 to Leonard and Christine (Bollingerl McFadden. She passed onJanuary9, 2015 in
t
Redmond, Oregon from natural causes.
Marge (known as Leta to some of her friends) was raised in Redmond, attendedJessie Hill School and graduated from Redmond Union High School in1943. After high school, she attended Eastern Oregon Normal School in LaGrande and graduated from Deaconess School of Nursing in Spokane, WA as a registered nurse in1947. Marge began her nursing career at Medical Lake in Spokane. It was at this time that she met and began a life with Leonard A. Rouse. %ey were married May 7, 1949 at The Pilot Butte Inn. %eir first homewas a small trailer in North Richland, Washington where Marge worked at Kadlec Hospital as an operatingroomnurse. She celebrated her25th birthday with the birth of their only child, son Steven. She wasa loving mother every day of her life. She took pride attending Steven's music and theatrical events. Every bit the nervous cheerleader, she anguished in the stands at his athletic events while he was growing up and took great pride in his accomplishments during his adult life. In 1957 the family built a new home in West Richland. Marge took a new job as an industrial first aide nurse for HEHF on the Hanford Nudear Reservation. She applied her sktH and compassion to thousands of workers in all the reservation areas until her retirement. While working at Hanford, the family bought and moved to a farm in Grandview, Washington. Marge would often work a fuH day shift at Hanford and come home to move irrigation pipe and work with Leonard and Steven on the farm. She would be up again at 5 a.m. the next day to prepare lunches and travel the hour drive to her day job.
Afterthedeath ofher husband of50 years,Ma rgem oved back toher hom etown, Redmond, in2000. For the last 14 yearsshe led a rich and wonderful life, reconnecting with family and &iends in the area. She enjoyed attending school athletic, music and theatre events. She rarely missed aBuckaroo Breakfast where sheloved to visit with classmates and kiends. She enjoyedvisiting the Oregon Coast and liked to try her luck at the casinos. She was pretty lucky. Marge was a member of the Christ the King Catholic Church while in Richland and was a faithful member of St. 1homas Catholic Church in Redmond at the time ofher death. Marge was a wonderful wife, mother, sister, grandmother, aunt and friend. She was preceded in death by both of her parents, husband Leonard, and brother Gilbert McFadden. She is survived by her son, Steven (and Debra) of Alaska; granddaughter, Alice Renay Sage, and great-grandson, Ivan Sage of Barrow, Alaska; sister, Leona Osmundson of Bend, Oregon; sister, Doris Hassler of Redmond, Oregon; stepson, Richard Rouse of Camas, Washington; stepdaughter, Marrianne Petty of Green Bay, Wisconsin; and numerous nieces and nephews around the country.
Marge's family extends their sincere thanks and appreciation for the loving care and support Marge received 6om the Redmond health care community, St. Thomas Catholic Church and her Richland and Redmond friends. A funeral mass washeld at St. 1homas Catholic Church on January i3, and her remains are interred next to her husband in the Redmond Cemetery. In remembrance of Marge, donations can be made to 1he Building Fund, St.'Ihomas Catholic Church,
1720 NW 19th Street, Redmond, OR97756. Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored toserve the Rouse family. Pleasesign our online guest registry book at www.redmondmemorial.com
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
T HE
B5
ES T
Drou t continuin in Sout west
CALIFORNIA 'i
v,.'f
The Associated Press SACRAMENTO, Calif.
-
Federal agencies released a pair of forecasts showing dry conditions will persist in parts of the drought-stricken West, suggesting there won't be enough snow to boost water supplies. ,tr,,h
The U.S. Department of
Agriculture's National Water and Climate Center says the year has started off unusually
Kendrick Brinson/The New YorkTimes
dry in the Southwest. Separately, the National Oceanic
A gender-neutral public bathroom, as mandated by a new local ordinance, at Plummer Park in West Hollywood, California, on Friday.
and Atmospheric Administration's Climate Prediction
Businesses have 60days to comply by designating at least one
Center forecasts drought
the growing prominence andvisibility of transgender people.
restroom as gender-neutral, part of a wave of legislation reflecting
conditions to improve closer
to the Mexican border but not
Ordinancemandates neutral bathrooms
in northern California and Nevada.
Here's a look at the fore-
casts released Thursday:
California Drought conditions are expected to improve across typi-
cally arid Southern California with forecasts of above-normal rainfall. But dry conditions in the vast majority of the state will likely remain — even intensify — through the end of April, according to the Climate Prediction Center. Despite December storms,
By Noah Smith Rich Pedroncelli /The Associated Press
Houseboats sit in the drought lowered waters of Oroville Lake, near Oroville, California, in October. Storms in early December boosted water supplies enough to provide Southern California cities and farms 15 percent of their requested water, announced the Department of Water Resources,
Thursday. also started the year with un-
rainhas nearlyhaltedin Janu- usually dry conditions. The ary, which is usually the wet- Climate Prediction Center test month of the year. Warm- analysis shows drought coner weather has also held down ditions improving, or outright the snowpack needed to feed ending, in its outlook through streams and rivers. April.
New Mexico and Arizona New Mexico and Arizona
year off with drier conditions duced snowpack in the moun-
tern strengthens in the com-
tains to levels far below normal, according to the USDA.
ing months, it is expected to bring little relief to the West. El Nino rainfall would have a
El Nino
Pacific Northwest The region is starting the
a tropical weather pattern
despite above-average precip- over the Pacific Ocean that itation. A warm winter has re- brings rain. Unless the pat-
greater impact on Southwest-
Both forecasts call f or weak E l
ern states instead of the PacifN i n o c o nditions, ic Northwest.
Man accusedin Idaho 1 death in listeria outbreak killings fightsextradition tied to Yakimacheesefirm
WASHINGTON
ByNicholas K. Geranios The Associated Press
The Associated Press
Friday three listeria cases
YAKIMA, Wash. — The Washington state Department of Health said an out-
had been reported — one
each in King, Pierce and Yakima counties. One death
break of listeria that has was reported. killed one person originatHealth officials said peoed from a Yakima cheese ple who may have bought maker. three Queseria Bendita Washington state health brand cheeses — Queso Fresand agriculture officials are co, Panela, and Requeson working with federal offi- — should throw the product cials to contain the outbreak.
The products in question come from Yakima-based Queseria Bendita. The company has stopped producing cheese and is subject to a voluntary recall.
Health officials said as of
away and not eat it.
In a statement, the company said the cheese in question was distributed to Hispanic
COLFAX, Wash. — A man
suspected of fatally shooting three people — including his mother — before leading authorities on a high-speed chase is fighting extradition backto Idaho. John Lee's decision Fri-
ter will have to request extra-
held in a packed courtroom.
motive for the killings, Whit-
counts of first-degree murder
Lee shot his mother, land-
lord and an Arby's restau-
ton and Oregon and the firm
and onecount offirst-degree attempted murder in Idaho.
also sold products from its on-site store in Yakima.
arate locations in Moscow, shootings on Jan. 10, author- Idaho, authorities say.
grocery stores in Washing-
and stating that some arms
Gold at Terrebonne
had already reached Finland. For the week ending The Soviet note also pro- Jan. 17, 1965
tested the "unlimited camt h e d i scovery paign" against Russia car-
of gold and other minerals along the Deschutes Riv-
ried on in the Norwegian press and in circles allegedly er near T e r rebonne h ave close to the government. recently been made. AnThe Soviet note claimed nouncement of the discovery that th e N o r wegian p r ess was made by a number of had been agitating for war men from Portland and Ne- against Russia and for military aid to Finland.
richest gold deposits known The note also charged in the world will be out done Norway with permitting the in the Deschutes valley. Sev- press and private organizaeral residents of Redmond tions to make it popular for and Terrebonne have staked Norwegians to volunteer in out claims. the Finnish armies.
Gambling is reported to have been stopped
rant manager at three sep-
Lee, 29, carried out the
Continued from B1
75 YEARS AGO
ick said Friday. The short hearing was
dition from Washington Gov. man County Prosecutor DeJay Inslee. Lee faces three rus Tracy smd.
Norway w it h f a c ilitating shipment of arms to Finland
braska who assert that the
extradition at this time," defense attorney Steve Marton-
Lee, who remains on suicide watch, said little other than to plead not guilty to the eludday to not waive the formal ing charge, the result of the extradition process means chasethat occurred afterthe Idaho Gov. C.L. "Butch" Ot- slayings. Lee has offered no
Yesterday Claims of
ities say. "He's not going to waive
50 YEARS AGO
World shows its concern for Winnie Sir Winston Churchill's serious il lness i n
produced expressions of concernand affection around the world today. From his Texas ranch, President Johnson cabled that he was, "praying for a rapid and complete recovery." Queen Elizabeth II w as kept informed of the aging former prime minister's progress. In Manila, Dr. Carlos P,
Romulo, former president of the United Nations General
W ES T
and low-cost way to help enH O LLY W OO D , sure that facilities in the city
Calif. — This city was one of of West Hollywood are welthe first in the nation to pass coming and open to all people, a same-sex marriage law. It regardless of the way one preswas one of the first communi- ents or identifies their gender ties viewed as a haven for gay identity." people: When the city was inIn this case, the city was corporated in 1984, a majority not enti rely a groundbreaker: of the City Council members Washington, D.C., passed simwere openly gay, helping earn ilar legislation in 2006, and in West Hollywood the nick- the past two years several other name the "Gay Camelot." Even communities — including Philtoday, it has rainbow-colored adelphia; Austin, Texas; and crosswalks. Multnomah County,Oregon Now, West Hollywood has — have passed laws requiring joined the vanguard of places gender-neutral bathrooms. "It felt like, oh my goodness, that are taking steps to make transgenderpeople feelmore this is something that is imwelcome. Last week, an orportant to do, to be indusive dinance took effect that abol- and to also be a leader," said ished the traditional designa- Abbe Land, the city councilor tion of "men" or "women" on in West Hollywood who led single-stall public restrooms, a the effort. "We hope the rest of bow to the requests of the siz- the country will adopt similar able community of transgen- ordinances." der people. Before passing the ordiRestaurants and other plac- nance, city leaders consulted es with public restrooms will with business leaders who not have to make any changes expressed concern about the if the bathrooms have multiple costs the requirement could stalls, but all single-stall public place on restaurants. This level restroomshave to be labeled of cooperation stands in con"gender neutral." Businesses trast to the City Council's 2011 have 60 days to comply, but decision to ban sales of fur can do so by simply placing a clothing, which angered many gender-neutral sign on any sin- local retailers. "The chamber's concern gle-stall restroom. "Gender-speci fic restrooms was that it would not be onercan be unwelcoming and po- ous on businesses in terms of tentially unsafe for many peo- costly remodels," said Keith ple whose gender identity falls Kaplan, a vice chairman of the outside of traditional gender West Hollywood Chamber of norms," according to a news Commerce. "We worked with release issued by the govern- the city to develop plans that ment o f W e s t H o l lywood. provide safe and comfortable "Shifting from gender-specific facilities for the transgender single-stall restrooms to gen- community."
representing the government and the people of Japan, prays from the bottom of his
mean youhad your Commies and your Commie puppets and stooges on one side, and they heart that Sir W inston will were the bad guys, and they recover speedily," the Tokyo were the left wing. And on the message said. other side you had the good The British-owned South old U.S. of A and its freedom China Morning Post in Hong loving allies, and they were the Kong said Churchill was, "the good guys, and the good guys
L o n d on greatest prime minister of the
20th century." An aide of French President Charles de Gaulle telephoned London at his request for news of Churchill.
25 YEARS AGO
All was quiet on the vice
Assembly, praised Churchill and said his greatest contribution was, "victory during
down in Panama that just got
his butt kicked by our buddy, Georgie Ray Bush — he's a bad guy, right." "The pits," I agreed. "A drug smuggling, dictatorial, anti-democratic, voodoo-practic-
ing slimeball." "But he was a right-winger
days, who knows?"
wasn't he?" Buck persisted.
ry chimed in. "You can't hardly tell who's a good guy and who's a bad guy nowadays." "Well, I guess it has gotten more complicated," I agreed.
didn't he?" " That's t r ue," I adm i t ted. "He gave us some help
"He's right about that," Har-
"But it's not too confusing if
you keep track of what's going on." "Oh yeah?" Buck demanded. Times they are a stirring for "So how about this guy in Roleft-wing right-wingers, by mania — Cesspoolo or whatevFor the week ending Jan.17, 1990
H. Bruce Miller
what about old pineapple-face
were the right wing. But nowa-
er his name was ...
"Chow-SESS-koo," I said. M y friends Harry a n d and gambling front today, Buck dropped over the other "Nicolae Ceausescu." "Yea him," Buck said. "Now as Sheriff C. L. McCauley night. Lyle was down with a Scandinavians give reds i nterviewed pr oprietors o f World War II." bad case of the flu he picked he was abad guy right?" note "Horrible," I agreed. "A monthe city's amusement esIn Moscow, the official up while fishing in a typhoon Norway was disclosed to- tablishments and sought to Soviet news agency Tass is- on Chickahominy Reservoir ster. Count Dracula was like day to have sent note to So- enforce the Jan. 13 d eadsued a one sentence report on and we sat down to watch the Captain Kangaroo alongside viet Russia hinting that the line ban of card games, pin Churchill's illness but made evening news on TV for a few ofhim." "Right," Buck said. "So was government would permit ball machines, and other no comment. minutes while we waited for transport of arms across illegal devices, after a comBritish Foreign S ecre- "Wheel of Fortune" to come he left-wing or right-wing?" "Uh, left-wing, I guess you'd Norwegian t e r ritory to munication from Governor tary Patrick Gordon Walker on. There were pictures of Finland. Charles Sprague this week describe Churchill as, "the thousands of people marching have to say," I said "He was a The note, sent to Moscow to District Attorney Bert C. greatest man above all doubt and shouting and carrying communist, that's for sure." "Then what aboutold Goron Jan. 6, denied that arms Boylan. in this generation." signs in Romania or Lithuania had been transported across Governor Sprague's letThe B r i tish C o m munist or one of those other countries bachev i n R u s sia?" B u ck Norway in the past but that it ter informed Boylan that a Party newspaper Daily Work- that end in "ia." asked. "He's a Commie too, so "Isn't this amazing?" I com- that makes him a left-winger, was not considered that such complaint had been received er was the only London newswould be in violation of in- of gambling and prostitu- paper which did not make the mented. "I can tell you, we are but is he a monster?" "Oh, definitely not," I said. ternal law. tion i n D e schutes County, illness its main story. It pub- living in wonderful and stirThe statement was taken and requested that the law lished a front page story, but ring times. Aren't you excited "In fact, I'd classify him as a to mean in the future Nor- b e strictly enforced in t h i s the banner headline was de- to be witnessing all this?" good guy. That is, at least for "Oh, I dunno," Buck mused. now. As far as we know." way might permit countries regard. Boylan stated today voted to an increase in mort"I kind of miss the old days." "So in Europe we've got such as Britain and France to that the governor's instruc- gage rates. "What do yo u m ean?" I left-wingers who are Capsend arms through Norwe- tions were being carried out, The Japanese governgian territory. and to his knowledge no vi- ment senta cable expressing asked him. tain Kangaroos and other "Well you could tell the score left-wingers who are Count The note replied to the So- olations were occurring in "graveconcern" forChurchill. "Prime Minister Eisaku Sato, back then," Buck explained. "I Draculas," Buck said. "And viet note of Jan. 5, charging any Bend establishments. For the week ending Jan. 17, 1940
der-neutral ones is a simple
New York Times News Service
"And he used to be on our side,
against Daniel Ortega and the Sandinistas."
"Ortega — now there's an-
other strange dude," Buck said.
He's a left-winger and a bad guy, isn't he'?" "Makes good chilisauce, though," Harry interjected. "Yes, he's a bad guy," I said ignoring Harry. "At least, the United States doesn't like him." "So down in Central Ameri-
ca there' s Ortega and Noriega ... " Buck went on.
"Sounds like a Dezi Arnaz song," Harry remarked. "'When Yuba Plays the Rhumb a on H i s Cuba.'"
T uba D own i n
... and one's a left-winger, and the other's a right-winger and they're both bad guys?" Buck conduded. "Well, uh, yeah, I guess that "
sums it up, I said.
"So theywere sort of leftwing right-wingers, or rightwing Ieft-wingers'?" Buck said. "Isupposethatsaysit,"Iconceded. "Boy, you're right — it's more confusing than I thought. What do you think, Harry?" "I think 'Wheel of Fortune'
is gonna be on in 30 seconds," Harry said. "Who wants a beer?"
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts and graphics provided by ACCH Weather, lnc. ©2015
'
i
i
TODAY
I
TONIGHT
MONDAY
LOW ~ '
HIGH 48'
30'
v- v 4 3 '
~
Mostly cloudy with a couple
TUESDAY "'" 44'
25 '
~
P e r iods of clouds and
Partly sunny
TEMPERATURE Yesterday Normal Record High
54 34'
Low
41 25'
EAST:Cloudswill mix with sunshine today. A couple of showers can dampensouthem
60' i n 1920 areas. -12'in 1907
Seasid
/4
62/46
Cannon 53/46
Portland
/
lington 55/39 /36
i
Meac am Losti ne
• W co 45/30 Enteqrfse dl6t, 9 •44/3 he Dall • • 44ne • 53/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL:Partly andy • 53/39 Mc innvill Joseph 3/42 Govee n t • u p i • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday Trace sunny skies for most Condoli 2/33 Cam • 51 48 33 Record 1.24"in 1971 areas today, but afew Lincoln union 28 40/ Month to date (normal) 0.0 6" (0.94") showers candampen 63/46 Sale • pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.06 " (0.94") southern areas. 54/4 • 1/32 'Baker C Newpo 40/27 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 0" • 51/32 3/42 54/45 • Mitch ll 41/27 Camp Sh man Red n ' 4 7 /30 WEST:Mostly cloudy O IV R I 6 SUN ANDMOON eu Yaoh 45/31 • John and dampweather 53/42 64/46 • Prineville Day 2/25 Today Mon. tario today with occasional 50/32 • Pa lina 46/ 2 8 7:35 a.m. 7: 3 5 a.m. 28 rain for most areas. Floren e • Eugene • Re d Brothers 4427 4:56 p.m. 4: 5 7 p.m. Valee 54/44 Su ivere 46/36 5:35 a.m. 6 : 3 0 a.m. 42/28 Nyssa • 4 3 / 7 • La plne Ham ton 3:27 p.m. 4 : 3 4 p.m. 44/28 Juntura Grove Oakridge Co • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last 46/28 52/41 /36 56 • Fort Rock Riley 46/26 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 46/24 S w g 47/25 43/25 •
•
•
•
•
•
F eb3
Fe b 1 1
Touight's ulty:Lowwest, faint Mercury is moving away brilliant Venus.
High: 61' at North Bend Low: 19' atJoseph
Bandon
6/ Gold ach 56/
0' Source: JimTodd,OMSI
1 I~
2
I
0
The highertheAccuW eaffter.com tiy Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.
ROAD CONDITONS For webcameras of ourpasses, goto www.bendbulletin.com/weboams I-64 at Cabbage Hill: Astray shower today, but generally dry weather will be around. US 20 at SantiamPass:Acouple of showers will dampenthecommute today. US 26 atGov'tCamp:A few showerswil dampen roadsand reducevisibility today. US 26 atOohoooDivide:Aspotty shower today, but generally dryweather should beexpected. ORE 66 atWiuamette Pass:Showerswil
dampentravel in theareatoday,slowing travel and reducing visibility. ORE136 at Diamond Lake: Cloudswill mix with sunshinetoday.
SKI REPORT ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 1 49-4 9 0 11-11 Hoodoo SkiArea Mt. Ashland 0 16-2 6 1 52-6 2 Mt. Bachelor Mt. Hood Meadows 4 37-70 0 6-16 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl Timberline Lodge 2 26-4 2 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 29-50 Vail, CO 1 39-3 9 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 20-40 Squaw Valley,CA 0 16-3 6 ParkcityMountain,UT 2 51-51 Sun Valley, ID 4 46-7 3 Source: OnTheSnow.com
Medfo d em 52/
Yesterday Today Monday
Jordan V Hey
Frenchglen
42/26
46/27
• Burns Jun tion • 51/28 Rome 54/29 McDermi
5 0 / 25
Klamath
• Ashl nd • FaRS
56/
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ 1
Gra a
• Ch ristmas alley Silver 47/22 Lake 43/24 46/23 • Paisley Chiloquin •
Beaver Marsh
55/44
Bro ings
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
Roseburg
56/43
52/24
• Lakeview 50/26
49/28
Yesterday Today Monday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 57/39/2.16 53/42/r 51/37/c La Grande 39/ 3 2/0.14 48/33/c 43/23/pc 34/23/0.0341/27/c 36/22/pc La Pine 45/28/0.31 43/27/c 41/23/ pc Brookings 56/54/1.62 56/42/sh 56/41/s M e dford 53/4 2 /0.12 55/36/sh 52/31/pc Bums 39/26/0.17 46/26/c 41/19/pc Newport 5 5 /46/1.40 54/45/sh 53/40/pc Eugene 58/42/0.97 54/42/sh52/36/pc NorthBend 61/50/0.58 57/44/sh 56/40/pc Klamath Fags 52/36/0.0452/24/sh 47/21/s Ontario 35/32/0.08 43/28/sh 41/24/pc Lakeview 48/30/0.00 50/26/c 45/21/s Pendleton 49/33/0.29 53/38/pc48/31/pc
City Astoria Baker City
Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 46/3 9/1.0754/43/sh 50/36/ c Prinevige 55/ 28/0.0650/32/pc 41/28/pc Redmond 56/ 30/0.1051/32/pc 46/24/pc Roseburg 58/ 4 6/0.5455/44/sh 53/38/pc Salem 59/39/1.11 54/43/sh 52/37/ pc Sisters 53/28/0.23 49/31/sh 46/23/pc The Dages 4 0 /33/0.74 53/39/c 51/34/pc
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 1 08 ~
08
~ gs
~ 108
~ 208
~ 308
Calgs
NATIONAL
~ 408
~ 508
~ 608
Tim es of clouds and sun
Yesterday Today Monday
Tigamo •
J an20 J an26
29'
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. umatilla Hood 56/39 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
~
Sunny to partly cloudy
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
TH U RSDAY
29'
25'
I f ' I
ALMANAC
WEDNESDAY
~ 708
~ 608
~ 908
~ 10 0 8 ~ 11 0 8
'~5
* *
*
40
City Hi/Lo/Prec. HiRo/W Abilene 69/42/0.00 67/44/s Akron 44/1 8/0.00 40/27/sn Albany 19/-2/0.00 42/30/r Albuquerque 56/29/0.00 51/28/pc Anchorage 33/27/Tr 32/24/sf Atlanta 60/30/0.00 56/35/pc Atlantic City 32/19/0.00 51/35/r Austin 71/35/0.00 66/37/pc Baltimore 34/22/0.00 44/29/r Billings 46/29/0.00 46/34/c Birmingham 62/30/0.00 55/33/s Bismarck 42/28/0.00 37/30/pc Boise 43/29/0.03 46/30/sh Boston 22/9/0.00 49/36/r Bridgeport, CT 27/13/0.00 46/33/r Buffalo 39/1/0.00 39/26/sn Burlington, YT 15/-6/0.00 42/34/r Caribou, ME 3/-9/0.00 38/35/sf Charleston, SC 61/32/0.00 63/39/pc Charlotte 57/24/0.00 58/33/pc Chattanooga 58/26/0.00 53/32/pc Cheyenne 46/31/0.00 52/38/s Chicago 42/25/0.00 37/24/pc Cincinnati 53/26/0.00 42/27/sn Cleveland 44/1 7/0.00 39/25/sf ColoradoSprings 51/31/0.00 56/33/pc Columbia, Mo 54/37/0.00 54/30/s Columbia, SC 59/29/0.00 61/36/pc Columbus,GA 63/32/0.00 59/34/pc Columbus,OH 49/25/0.00 39/25/sn Concord, NH 20/2/0.00 40/34/r Corpus Christi 69/40/0.00 67/44/pc Dallas 68/39/0.00 66/43/s Dayton 50/24/0.00 39/25/sf Denver 54/37/0.00 57/32/c Des Moines 48/40/0.02 47/30/s Detroit 42/1 6/0.00 37/24/sf Duluth 33/1 8/0.09 32/17/pc El Paso 64/26/0.00 63/34/s Fairbanks 24/0/0.00 10/2/c Fargo 39/27/0.11 32/23/pc Flagstaff 50/25/0.00 56/24/s Grand Rapids 43/17/0.00 34/22/sf Green Bay 40/20/0.00 37/20/pc Greensboro 52/27/0.00 54/32/pc Harrisburg 33/1 6/0.00 42/30/i Harfford, CT 25/7/0.00 45/34/r Helena 38/25/0.00 43/29/sh Honolulu 80/65/0.07 81/67/s Houston 69/38/0.00 65/37/pc Huntsville 61/29/0.00 52/34/s Indianapolis 51/27/0.00 39/26/pc Jackson, MS 62/32/0.00 60/35/s Jacksonville 66/35/0.00 66/36/pc
Hi/Lo/W 69/41/s 34/24/c 35/17/sf 55/29/pc 30/21/pc 59/41/s 43/32/pc 68/43/pc 43/24/pc 41/23/sn 59/40/s 42/27/sf 39/25/pc 42/26/pc 41/25/pc 28/14/sf 36/10/sn 44/18/r 63/43/s 58/35/s 58/37/s 46/24/c 36/27/c 45/32/s 34/23/pc 53/21/pc 55/34/s 65/40/s 62/40/s 37/28/s 40/15/sf 71/48/pc 65/42/s 40/29/s 53/23/pc 52/34/pc 33/22/pc 28/23/sn 66/36/s 10/-2/sf 40/21/sf 56/24/s 32/23/pc 30/25/c 54/33/s 40/26/pc 38/21/pc 36/20/sn 82/67/s 67/50/pc 57/38/s 42/30/s 64/42/pc 65/37/s
'
*
*
Amsterdam Athens
39/30/c 62/52/pc 78/63/c 63/42/s 84/67/s 43/19/s 62/49/c 38/30/pc 66/43/sh 43/36/pc 82/59/t 81/59/pc 68/50/s 39/18/pc 80/68/s 38/33/pc 34/26/pc 42/31/c 83/59/1 67/57/s 54/47/pc 56/37/pc 77/56/1 81/69/s 53/45/s 38/29/pc 46/26/pc 86/73/pc
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W HiRo/W 45/38/0.79 43/37/r 42/38/r 54/39/0.00 55/29/s 56/35/s 45/17/0.00 36/22/sf 32/22/pc 65/41/0.00 67/43/pc 68/43/s 54/29/0.00 42/27/pc 48/32/s 53/37/Tr 53/28/s 57/33/pc Litlle Rock 66/33/0.00 63/41/s 62/41/s Los Angeles 78/50/0.00 74/53/pc 71/50/s Louisville 56/28/0.00 48/31/pc 51/34/s Madison, Wl 41/23/Tr 38/23/pc 36/28/c Memphis 60/34/0.00 59/40/s 61/41/s Miami 77/56/0.00 78/56/pc 75/62/s Milwaukee 42/28/Tr 37/26/pc 33/27/c Minneapolis 38/26/0.00 33/24/pc 36/26/c Nashville 59/28/0.00 54/35/s 58/39/s New Orleans 64/35/0.00 61/39/pc 65/48/pc New YorkCity 30/17/0.00 46/35/r 41/27/pc Newark, NJ 30/15/0.00 45/32/r 41/25/pc Norfolk, YA 44/33/0.00 56/36/r 51/33/s OklahomaCity 67/32/0.00 68/38/s 68/40/s Omaha 52/40/Tr 50/29/s 54/33/pc Orlando 74/48/0.00 71/43/pc 68/46/s Palm Springs 78/50/0.00 79/52/pc 81/53/s Peoria 49/34/0.00 42/25/s 43/32/s Philadelphia 33/18/0.00 45/33/r 42/28/pc Phoenix 73/47/0.00 76/50/s 77/49/s Pittsburgh 50/17/0.00 41/28/sn 36/23/sf Portland, ME 20/-2/Tr 46/40/r 44/20/r Providence 25/10/0.00 49/33/r 41/23/pc Raleigh 51/27/0.00 55/34/r 55/34/s Rapid City 48/34/Tr 51/35/pc 45/28/c Reno 57/35/0.00 63/32/c 55/29/s Richmond 44/28/0.00 54/33/r 51/31/s Rochester, NY 32/-4/0.00 41/28/sn 29/15/sf Sacramento 54/49/0.00 56/46/pc 61/42/c St. Louis 63/31/0.00 53/34/s 54/37/s Salt Lake City 48/26/Tr 46/32/c 43/24/sh San Antonio 71/39/0.00 67/41/pc 70/48/pc San Diego 70/51/0.00 72/53/pc 69/53/s San Francisco 58/51/0.00 61/50/c 61/48/s San Jose 61/47/0.00 62/49/c 63/44/s Santa Fe 53/26/0.00 48/25/c 52/26/s Savannah 62/34/0.00 64/38/pc 64/40/s Seattle 46/38/0.20 52/43/r 50/38/c Sioux Fags 41/22/0.00 36/27/s 42/30/c Spokane 32/24/0.09 44/33/r 41/27/c Springfield, Mo 60/35/0.00 58/34/s 59/37/s Tampa 75/46/0.00 69/46/pc 67/50/s Tucson 73/42/0.00 77/45/s 78/45/s Tulsa 67/30/0.00 67/36/s 64/39/s Washington, DC 40/28/0.00 48/34/r 46/31/s Wichita 61/26/0.00 64/33/s 65/37/s Yakima 36/24/0.15 51/33/pc 49/29/pc Yuma 76/49/0.00 78/51/s 80/53/s
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln
i
9/38
43/30/0.26 uosioh P 3 /24 59/36/0.00 at Riverside, CA , • " ' v44/ao 51/3 * Auckland 71/64/0.10 • National low: -23' 3 /2 « ~ Baghdad 57/41/0.00 s ol s at SaranacLake, NY Che n Bangkok 84/64/0.00 Precipitation: 2.16" 52/3 Beijing 38/13/0.01 Beirut 64/53/0.00 at Astoria, OR • Den Berlin 41/38/0.11 41/50 ' i 39/ Las V ss Pli Bogota 68/46/0.47 47/4 Kansas Ctty Si. u ' uls v ille Budapest 43/30/0.02 88/29 83/ BuenosAires 81/64/0.01 * * Chsl'i Los An lss Cabo San Lucas 79/64/0.15 Nashville k."* * • Cairo 63/51/0.00 Phoen * Anchorsge mbuque ue 0 lshoma Clty,< e • At Calgary 45/37/0.02 • 74/80 da 32/24 81/28 84/3 Cancun 81/68/0.13 Bir ingha 7 53 Juneau al Ps Dublin 39/34/0.00 55 3 d Dallas /3 Edinburgh 37/33/0.02 43/37 d d' z ee/43 Geneva 43/36/0.19 d d~ • rlsndo Harare 80/62/0.37 w Orleans 7 43 i ' d dG. xx x . • 8/37 Hong Kong 67/55/0.00 u CIHlufabuai i 4 ~ 41/39 Istanbul 46/36/0.00 '4'sm' X XXX i g Jerusalem 49/42/0.17 44/47 Johannesburg 82/60/0.02 Lima 78/68/0.00 Lisbon 54/41/0.80 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 45/30/0.03 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 48/28/0.00 Manila 81/72/0.01 *
37/32/r 60/52/pc 76/64/s 59/42/s 85/67/pc 45/19/pc 61/48/s 38/28/pc 67/46/sh 47/35/c 84/70/pc 80/64/pc 67/50/s 40/27/c 82/67/pc 41/27/pc 38/25/pc 39/23/c 78/61/1 68/55/s 51/45/pc 53/37/s 73/57/sh 80/68/pc 57/45/r 40/29/pc 39/34/sh 81/74/r
Yesterday Today Monday
City
8
I
Mecca Mexico City
84/64/0.00 72/50/0.00 Montreal 7/-9/0.00 Moscow 32/28/0.00 Nairobi 84/54/0.00 Nassau 77/66/0.00 New Delhi 70/45/0.00 Osaka 42/39/0.02 Oslo 34/31/0.00 Ottawa 4/-15/0.00 Paris 41/32/0.00 Rio de Janeiro 95/77/0.00 Rome 63/54/0.03 Santiago 86/57/0.00 Sao Paulo 95/72/0.00 Sapporo 26/21/0.27 Seoul 32/18/0.00 Shanghai 42/33/0.00 Singapore ssn5/0.00 Stockholm 37/35/0.35 Sydney 89/69/0.00 Taipei 61/55/0.01 Tel Aviv 59/45/0.14 Tokyo 47/41/0.00 Toronto 28/5/0.00 Vancouver 48/37/0.00 Vienna 51/32/0.20 Warsaw 48/32/0.14
81/60/s 70/44/pc 35/33/sf 35/25/c 88/60/pc 82/64/pc 66/42/pc 48/37/pc 34/27/pc 36/27/sf 42/33/c 96/79/s 55/39/c 86/56/s 9401/t 27/19/sn 38/29/r 51/36/pc 86P5/t 36/29/pc 83/67/pc 65/55/c 62/47/s 50/38/s 39/24/sf 51/41/r 42/32/sf 39/29/sf
86/62/s 72/45/pc 34/4/sf 30/22/c 91/60/pc 78/64/s 66/42/c 50/36/pc 34/32/sf 29/-4/sf 40/29/pc 97/79A 57/45/pc 85/57/s 94/71/t 28/22/sn 36/17/s 50/36/s 85/75/pc 33/27/sf 74/67/sh 63/56/c 63/49/pc 54/40/s 26/12/c 48/36/c 41/35/pc 37/31/pc
OREGON NEWS
Wi i e Sa ari auuse o mistreatin ee ants By Kate StlT'nger
America Hears HEARING AIDS. Helping 139eple Hear Better Established 1979
HEAR BETTER FOR LESS
The (Roseburg) News-Review
WINSTON — Wildlife Safari was named one of the worst
zoos for elephants this week by an animal rights activist group, In Defense of Animals.
The group, which has made its annual 10 Worst Zoos for Elephants list since 2004, called
out Wildlife Safari for its elephant car wash and the recent death of its elephant Alice. For Wildlife Safari Executive
Director Dan Van Slyke, the
B.E/9
worst accusation from IDA was 'saar.
suggesting the Safari's treatment of Alice led to her death at Michael Sullivan/The (Roseburg) News-Review age44. An elephant at Winaton'9 Wildlife Safari. Activist accused the zoo 'v '
"It's the ultimate exploita-
tion," Van Slyke said. "Here
-
.
,
c
x
~%%d'. '. • v~
~
- "V
.
X
+
• ~
WA
Of miStr9ating their elePhantS.
tli
* ~V
R'R%
a
we've got an elephant that the
staffliterally just loves." Van Slyke said the Safari was spending $22,000 a year on medications for Alice's health and joint issues. 'When she
died, our whole staff was down there and that was a very horrible time." Three elephantsremain as
residents of the Safari. IDA filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Agri-
phant toensure obedience." "It's called a guide," Van thebestplacetokeep ananimal in captivity. A sanctuary does Slyke said of the tool. "It's an mends elephant sanctuaries as
not allow for direct contact between the public and animals, nor the removal of an animal from an endosure for an exhibition. It also requires measures
extension of your arm, so if the
elephant moves left or right, you touch it on the shoulder. No-
bodybeats elephants withit." Frohoff said the IDA did not
toprevent breeding and a stntc- visit Wildlife Safari in 2014 betured education program for fore putting it on its "worst zoos VTSItOES. for elephants" list, stating that it Wildlife Safari first made had all the evidence it needed
culture in November, urging an IDA's list in 2010 because of the investigation into Alice's death. car washes Wildlife Safari's Van Slyke said the USDA did elephants have done for fundthe investigation and conclud- raisers. The car washes involve ed Wildlife Safari did nothing elephants spraying wateronthe wrong. cars and spongingthe windows IDA called Alice's death, as with their trunks.
suffer mistreatment in these zoos and their needs come sec-
ond tohuman entertainment. "IDA does oppose the primary objective of zoos, which is truly to exploit elephants to
•
MANUFACTURER DIRECT PRICING
fTOm VideOS. Frahoff Said Staff
members do sometimes visit
•
•
•
•
•
In a video of their elephant hooks, a rod with a metal hook and spike at one end. IDA used
•
•
•
•
•
"Just because somebody on
staff at IDA hasn't been there •
•
People for the Ethical Treat-
car wash,trainers carry bull-
•
zoosthey haven'tbeen to before puttingthemonthe list.
certainly doesn't negate the absolute documentation of everyer Wildlife Safari elephant Tiki, ment of Animals also took thing that we're saying," Froage 40, premature. issue with the car washes, call- hoff said."And second of all, the According to a 2 008 ¹ ing them a "gimmick that does burden of proof really needs to tional Geographic article, the nothing to foster respect for be on them at this point." median life span for an Afri- endangered species," in a letter Wildlife Safari is one of 228 can elephant in captivity is 17 sent to Van Slyke in2009. zoos accreditedby the Associacompared to those in the wild, However, Van Slyke said tton of Zoos attd Aquariums. whose median life span is 56. they do the elephant car wash Van Slyke defends its human Toni Frohoff, an elephant sci- because the elephants enjoy and animal encounters, saying entist for IDA, said elephants playing in the water. they can make a difference to well as the 2010 death of anoth-
• • ' s
Vl&ors.
"We had ablind lady come out. We're one of the few zoos that let you pet the trunk of an
this image to point out the abu- elephant. She just started crysive nature of the tool, stating in ing because she said this really entertain visitors," Frohoff said. its press release that it is used helps me see this animal," Van Instead, F r ohoff r e c om- to "jab, stab and strike the ele- Slyke said.
s •
•
• •
•
-
•
•
•
•
•
•
.
5 41-213-22 9 4 Monday through Friday9:00 am to 6:00 pm Saturday by appointment only 547 NE Bellevue Drive Suite 4105 • Bend, Oregon
www.americahears.com
•
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
x
„..., 'III
i
x
i
I
tr
'u
. i'
C
x
x
i,x
x
Courtesy Schweitzer Mountain Resort
From the summit of Schweitzer Mountain, Lake Pend Oreiiie may be seen stretching toward the southern horizon beyond the Idaho town of Sandpoint. The mountain was named for a Swiss-born hermit who lived near its foot in the late 19th century.
By John Gottberg Anderson«For the Bulletin
49 DegreesNorth
COEUR D'ALENE, Idaho-
I
orthwest skiers may get used to driving long distances to schuss downhill at a single
I
Che iah
an oint
resort. WA
Schweitzer Mountain
'
iQ A uo
I N G TON
MONTANA
While Central Oregonians are fortunate to have two nearby resorts — expansive Mt. Bachelor and the smaller Hoodoo Ski Area — where they can take turns all winter long, others in this corner of the country are not so lucky. Not including Mount Hood (which
WA
• Bend OREGON
I
MT
I
Nount Spokane
ID
lookout Pass
Po aiis Coeur d'Aiene
boasts three good-sized areas) and Snoqualmie Pass east of Seattle (four hills), ski areas
Spokane i
aren't so closely grouped.
Kellogg I
SilverNountain The exception is the "Inland Empire" north and
east of Spokane, Washington. Within 85 miles
(90 minutes' drive) are five worthy mountains. Two of the Idaho peaks are destination resorts: Schweitzer
and Silver mountains both
frastructure, but all three
have their own base villages with multiple lodging and dining options. Mount Spokane and 49 Degrees North (in Washington) and Lookout Pass (in Idaho) don't have the same in-
areas make fine day trips from Coeur d'Alene or Spokane. My own trip north in December came before the first substantial snowfall of the 2014-15 winter
~ Muiien,'
season, and my hoped-for onslaught upon five moun-
~
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
tains in five days was limited to intermediate runs on
NORTHWEST TRAVEL
only two of the resort hills. Snow was insufficient for
anything more. See Powder/C4
In 2 weeks:Las Vegas 2015
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Ben aut orcompiess ortstories g y . ! By David Jasper
he's amassed somewhere in
The Bulletin
the neighborhood of 1,000 stories "in various, scattered
Over the years, Guy J. Jackson, of Bend, has embarked on many projects involving the written word:
The Mountain View High
pages," he said. The length of the short sto-
forms," he said. "Some of them
ries he's written as an adult stems from his involvement in
are two sentences long."
open mics. "You have five
Later this month, Roundfire Books will
stage," he said. Storytelling became his vehicle for getting on stages. uI wasn't rehearsing for four weeks. I didn't have that boredom, but you do have the
minutes at an open mic to do your thing, so I had to
boredom of sitting through open mics, which are hard
the often surreal,
write stories that
spoken word events and host-
always compelling
were five minutes
chuckling. "No, but that's a great scene, and then you re-
ed a storytelling radio show on KPOV for four years. He
"Drink the Rest of That."
or less to read out loud. Which is
alize later that you learned a whole lot.n
even attended "America's Got Talent" auditions in Portland,
pretty short. It's only a couple of pages at most," he said. "So then
the film crew for a while, even, telling stories to people waiting in the holding area," the 37-year-old said of his
And, yes, some of the stories clock in at just a couple of sentences or paragraphs. Jackson said that as a young kid, he wrote novels under the influence of Stephen King. Even
audition. And when he wasn't in-
then, he tended to write short. uI was writing what I
As a younger man, he thought he might achieve a measure of fame through storytelling on stage. "It was this really dumb idea ... I always hoped that storytelling would be like (being) a rock star," Jackson said. "I was hoping I could achieve some
volved in those endeavors, he
thought were novels when I
high school, but uI didn't want
was writing very short fiction
was a little kid, even though
to rehearse for four weeks anymore (in order) to be on
School graduate has written
plays, participated in poetry slams and open mics, hosted
auditioning as a storyteller. uI got followed around by
To date, Jackson estimates,
publish Jackson's first short story collection,
s
0
they were probably only 10
Submitted photo
I Started gOing
to open mics like crazy, and churning out all these super short stories to do that."
He got involved in theater in
0l-
to take sometimes," he said,
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
• L
$100 OFF
Any Medical Spa Service Excludes neuromoduiators. Expires 2/28/15 May not be combined with any other offer.
rock star status. It will never
be that, as I've realized. You just don't have, like, music." See Bend writer/C6
ESTHETIXMD 115 SW Allen Road• Bend, OR 97702 • 541.330.5551 • EsthetixMD.com
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
A tle oan , a venturewit out eavin t e o t e By SamMcManis e The Sacramento Bee
CARLSBAD, Calif.
NNI NNI~
-
11 morning, rain did not just fall. No, it
I,, IIS
biblically lashed and pelted greater San
ril'i'
p
I'
Diego County, horizontally hammered the entire region, particularly the theme park dedicated to Denmark's most lucrative manufacturing export. Come early afternoon, though, the storm clouds parted, and the sun
The Legoland Hotel in Carlsbad, California, is only about 50 steps from the park itself. It's a quirky, though not cheap, place: Nightly
had reclaimed its rightful star billing, giving
rates run from $250 to $349, plus a fee.
the grounds at Legoland an alluring sheen, a
••e
•
a• ss .
glistening burst of festive primary colors. r.
By this time, though, the
the family's last in town, or
precipitation was a river of who knows what fury might children's tears. Legoland, be unleashed by his restless perhaps the only amusement brood. "They are in their element park based on a toy that improves fine motor skills, was right now," he said. "The rides Photosby Sam McManis/The Sacramento Bee closed and would remain so at thepark are really second- At the Miniland USA section of Legolsnd, a miniature rendering of the rest of the day. A single, ary. It's really anything Legos the Hollywood Bowl — along with other places, such as New York blue-and-yellow-uniformed for them. So, the hotel was a City and Las Vegas — is painstakingly assembled. worker stood at the shuttered good call." turnstiles, giving the b ad news. Kids' reactions ranged A pricey, yet are more practical, but things room, calling it "very cool and from l ip-quivering accep- wodhwhile stay n ot e ncountered a t mo s t decked out." tance to full Three Mile IsA good call, sure. But also hotels. A three-quarter's partition land meltdowns. Parents had a little pricey, mind you, startThe buffet table at Bricks is separatesthe sleeping areas that shell-shocked survivor's ing at $250 a night and run- 18 inches lower than standard in the average 350-squarelook, facing the daunting ning up to $349, plus a $25 size,and there are portholes foot room. It's a fun alcove for prospect of finding some- resort fee. But many parents cut into the restaurant's walls the kids, with bunk beds (plus thing, anything, to entertain said that what you get for your in case a child feels the urge a trundle bed), a flat-screen the brood and restore familial money, this full immersion in to climb in and eat his or her TV mounted to look like a equanimity. Lego lore, is more than worth pancakes there. Lego char- fireplace and theme-approIf they were smart — and, the expense. acters roam the dining room priate signs. Example from a of course, had the not-insigHang around the lobby during breakfast and lunch, "Kingdome" room: "Ye Olde nificant financial meansawhile during check-in time, posing for selfies with kids Adults Keep Out!" Parents, their answer was only about and observe the initial reac- and making balloon animals meanwhile, enjoy a modicum 50 paces away. tions of the kids as they pass for them. The pool is shallow- of privacy in their portion of under the hulking green drag- er than standard dimensions, the medieval castle (or pirate Head inside on, made of no fewer than and even the health club has ship, or safari hut). It, too, is The Legoland Hotel, not 400,000 Legos,at the front kid equipmentand Lego "ex- fully themed, right down to a merely a logistical extension entrance. They are, to a one, erciser" figures. Lego-constructedcask of ale of the park, is almost an at- transported to another realm. The in-room bathrooms sitting on the shelf above ye traction unto itself. Now, most Some are so initially over- are equipped with flip-down olde desk. •
kids can be entranced for a
stimulated that t hey
s pon- potty seats for those in train-
while by the novelty of sleep- taneously burst into tears; ing away from home, jumping others simply drop their bags on the bed with abandon and and sprint to the Lego pit. reveling in the wonders of the Their parents, too, sport goofy ice machine down the hall. grins, enchanted, perhaps, by But rare is the hotel built and how the cliches of an upscale geared almost exclusively for hotel (the "fountain," the "artchildren, from its exclusively work," the elegant sconces plastic brick artwork lining ringing the bar) are reprothe hallways to the room-door duced a la Legos. keyhole placed strategically at It really is another world. toddler height. From a distance, what looks In the chaotic welter of the like a pixelated Lichtenstein lobby on this rainy afternoon, pop-art piece behind the kids sprawled on the floor as check-in desk is a wall-scape if it were their living rooms, of 5,000 mini Lego figurines. scooping pieces from the pre- An animated bicycle slowly tend fountain and snapping pivots the length of the work, pieces into place on elaborate, its wheels serving as giant ever-morphing fantasy forts magnifying glasses showing, and (mostly the boys) weap- on closer inspection, intricateons of mass distraction. Par- ly built action figures. ents eitherhovered at a safe
That's o n e
ing and a wooden foot stool so Alwayssomething to do No one stays in the room Elaborate Lego sculptured long, though, because the hocreations meant to hew to the tel staff keeps things hopping themed floors — Kingdome, in the lobby. On the night of they can reach the sink faucet.
Pirate, Adventure — are the
only Legos that aren't handson. Most of the models can be
found in the 250 guest rooms, where cards explain the estimated valueon each "model"
at between $90 and $960 and warn that damaged or missing pieces "will result in a charge to your pre-authorized credit card." No worries, though: The hotel knows its clientele and provides a bucket of Legos for kids to create masterpieces. That's in addition to the
"treasure chest" (doubling as
o f , ac c ord- an in-room safe). Guests must
distance, discreetly checking their smartphones, or shed
ing to Legoland's crack PR staff,3,500 models placed
solve four clues in something of a scavenger hunt around
their shoes and got down on the carpet with the little ones
around the t h ree-story ho-
the lobby area to get the num-
and created. A literal river of Legos, under Lucite flooring, led from the lobby up to an adjoining
•
tel that takes up perhaps two bers for the combination lock. city blocks. There's a hu- Inside is a trove of goodiesman-scaled Lego concierge two packages of Lego Mini across from the Lego foun- Figures and chocolate gold tain, a miniature-scaled city with a skyline and detailed
coms.
.
;
•
,
t
At the Legoland Hotel, all rooms are themed, such as this "King-
dom" room.
Legoland
a mike drop and bounded off the stage. Not to gender-stereotype,
Yeah, no parental help there, right? By the end of the pajama party, near 10 o'clock, and the onset of "Quiet Time,"
Where: 1 Legoland Drive, Carlsbad, California; Legoland Hotel, 5885 The Crossings Drive, Carlsbad Winter hours: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. (closed Tuesdaysand Wednesdays) Cost: Legoland: $73-$83; Resort Hopper (including Sea Life Aquarium andWater Park): $97-$107 Information: california. legoland.com; (877) 534-
kids were strewn on the lobby
6526
but a good three-quarters of
the boys brandished "Christmas swords," while the girls favored snowmen and wom-
en. The winner, however, was a Frank Gehry-like castle by another boy n amed Ethan.
carpet as if cast by a sleeping spelL Parents scooped them
earn a driver's license. It's bed, hoping that the weath- very simple. The red pedal is t he rain-induced park c l o - er would hold and Legoland the stop and the green pedal is sure, the Castle Play Area itself would be open the next the go. There are traffic lights was SRO, with pajama-clad morning. and stop hghts." "Thank goodness," her kids running headlong into one another prepping for the In the park mother added, "it's not Model Building Competition, By 10 a.m., the rain that bumper cars. People don't go presided over by Princess had resumed at first light had crazy." Snowflake and Rosie the Elf. passed, the sun shone brightly That seems a theme at LeSchlichtling's daughter, Son- and the park was drying out. goland. It's a more laid-back ja, checked out the competi- Turnstiles twirled, and kids experience, perhaps because tion, while Mom mused that and parents gladly left behind it's smaller and less frenetic perhaps some families were the fun of the hotel for the fun than its theme park rival 80 unsure on the rule that parof the park. miles north on Interstate 5, ents cannot help their kids in There, the older kids (12 Disneyland. Legoland's lines construction. is about the upper range for were a l m os t n o n e xistent "I saw one man down here Lego-goers) gravitated to- during the off-peak season making the state flag of Colo- ward the rides or to Miniland (mid-December in this case), rado (out of Legos)," she said. USA, where I:20-scale mod- but even at the height of sum"He was having way more fun els of New York City, the Ve- mer, there aren't t w o-hour than his kids were." gas Strip and New Orleans, lines for two-minute rides. Fifty-three k i d s e n t ered among other locales,were Many of the attractions were their Lego creations, proud- on display alongside displays hands-on Lego-building inly displaying them on the from the various "Star Wars" volving children and parents. stage while being interviewed episodes. The main attraction by Rosie the Elf, whose job for the younger set was the description must i n c lude Junior Driving School, where up and whisked them off to
•
"The b est p a r t, " s a i d cat-herding,because she deftforts and a mazelike pirate domestic scenes inside apart- Schlichtling, the M ontana ly kept the kiddies in line and ship. Stray Legos lay strewn ments lining the walls of the mom, "is there's a new trea- in order of registration. One across the landscape like a Skyline Cafe (where five IPAs sure every morning (courtesy kid, holding a sword/candy Pollock canvas, while finished are on tap), elaborate models of the house cleaning staff). cane, cut in line and tried to objets d'art adorned every too numerous to mention in- That's a nice touch." make Rosie believe he was wall and countertop. Around side Bricks, the buffet-dining Another impressed mom the registered contestant, a happy hour — but, really, for restaurant, and even, next to was Brittney Allen, of Lake boy named Ethan. Rosie was kids, isn't that every hour? the elevators, planters made Elsinore, California. She said not fooled: "You're not Ethan! — as pajama-clad children solely out of the ubiquitous she liked that her two chil- We need to take our turns." participated in "Elf Games" plastic cubes. dren, ages 7 and 4, had what With that, the kid released his and prepped for the cutthroat On the first floor, in a corshe dubbed a room-within-a- sword like a comedian doing nightly Model Building Com- ner, is a painting of a Lego petition, many parents re- worker in f ul l h a zmat suit. -g ~ s t ojg...l i,-, special Thanks To our Partners,i t TrrAI::.~rrAr treated to the nearby Minis The dialogue bubble reads, Lounge to nurse a well-earned "Hey, was that you?" Below glj PRllfll.,';:;,4jerk ==.;--„.'=--/ craftbeer or glass or two of him is a circle painted on etin YourWay lf I I4: ) red wine and decompress the carpet with words every ~J~r ~f,t~if 'll „,~ fl from the day's prepubescent parent dreads (at least after .== dramas. repeated usage): "Whoopie Castle play area, replete with
:P Mker rt
•
kids can drive scaled-down electric cars through a city
neighborhood. "It's really fun," Sonja Schlichtling said. "You can
The Bulletin MI LESTONE G UI
INES
-
'
—
—
.
":::iiiei
"It's been fantastic," said
Cushion." Yes, when kids step
Melissa Schlichtling, of Hel-
on it, audible flatulence ensues, followed by a voice of the put-upon hazmat guy saying, and daughter Sonja, 7, put the "Oh, you stinky pig!" finishing touches on a tri-colIf that doesn't send the litored Lego "wand of dreams" tle ones into paroxysms of she figured had a good shot at mirth, wait until the arrival winning the model-building of the elevator, a prime exam-
ONE WORLD GALA
ena, Montana, as son Zane, 9, disappeared into the castle
contest. "I don't know what
International dinner, drinks & silent auction Live music with Latin band Chiringa
~I
f f )Il""
QIlI'I
AAA Travel
Awbrey Glen Golf Club
'ftf
w
ple of the kid-centric nature
of the place. When the doors open, you hear a Muzak version of "The Girl from Ipanema." Then the doors close. The light goes out, a disco ball overhead illuminates and Wayne from Littleton, Colo- the Bee Gee's "Stayin' Alive" rado, grasped a beer in each fills the space and envelopes hand, which is why he de- the senses. One middle-aged clined to give his last name. woman was so overcome, she With mussed hair and a thou- broke into full dance mode, sand-yard stare, Wayne con- single-finger arm thrusts, a fided that it had been a rough la Travolta, while her 'tween day having their Legoland ex- daughter tugged on her sleeve cursion aborted. But the kids, to please, Mom, for the love of and Wayne, too, rallied game- God, stop. ly. They found plenty to do, Wayne said, but the park had Fit for the kids better be open the next day, Other kid-friendly touches
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:
Bend Metro Park Sr Recreation District
The Bend Trolley
we would've done without (the hotel) today. I like that it's not just kid-friendly but actually made for the kids." A cross th e l o unge, a 30-something dad named
Bend Wedding & Format Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch Deschutes County Fair ttr Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events
A fundraiser to launch a K-8 public charter school on Bend's east side JOIN US JANUARY 31st 5:30-9:30 in the Marcoulier Ballroom •
•
•
at the Send Senior Center. Tickets are tax dmluchble. $40 for one and $32 for two or more.
go io www.bendinfernationalschool.org Call 503.332.8640 or email rheabrionOgmaikcom to sponsor, donate or be'involved
idas Cupcake Cafe Lake Creek Lodge
M. Jacobs McMensmins Old St. Francis School
Northwest Medi Spa Salon Je Danae SocaillyYours Taps Mobile Pub The Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
— e uest ta es ic i an artistaroun o e By Ellen Creager Detroit Free Press
u
Julie Dawson hears life in all its clanging, chiming, gonging, bonging charm. That's because she has spent decades tracking and findingbells all over the world. She has 15,000 photographs of bells and nearly as many stories.
s.
She has written one book about world bells that has 500 pictures in it, and has enough pictures to make another book just about bells in the U.S.
I
rl
"Every culture and country
throughout the world, through history, has used bells in the most extraordinary
w a ys,"
says Dawson, a Birmingham, Michigan, watercolor a r tist and avid traveler who just vis-
ited her 100th country, Turk-
'?
menistan, in October.
Dawson has found strange and quirky bells in all corners of dozens of countries: at a
hospital in Norway, a farm in Cambodia, even at the New
As an artist, Julie Dawson has used many of the photographs she's taken over the years to inspire her creative endeavors.
York Stock Exchange. She
has photographed cowbells, telephone bells, church bells, school bells, bells that hang around the necks of elephants and camels, bells on the lively legs of traditional British Morris dancers,bells made of splendid brass or carved crudely of wood, bells that
have rung in wars or greeted Photos courtesy Julie Dawson emperors, and bells rung by Julie Dawson has photographed bells around the world. trained swans pulling on a string to get treats. Once she visited a barn in rarelymade reservations and from the person's own life or Lithuania where an artist had did not go with a group. They company's mission. It is biogcollected bells that had been once showed up in India with raphy in art. stolen across the countryside hotel reservations for only two In her family room hangs by the Russians — and he nights, got kicked out because one painting about 3 feet in traded vodka to get them all Nelson Mandela was coming diameter. The k aleidoscope back. to visit — and ended up spend- is special, about her husband Bells are used differently in ing a month in India visiting Peter's life, and it is filled with the U.S. than in the rest of the not only classic sights but "the tiny race cars and images of world, she says. most backwater places, and it their travels. " Throughout t h e wo r l d , was just wonderful." He died nearly five years bells are more utilitarian, to By now a professional artist, ago. But in his final months, make life function," says Daw- Dawson shot photographs on during a short battle with canson, 77. "In the U.S., because her trips that could be used for cer amid its long waits and we are inventive and because later painting inspiration, of treatments, the couple took out we are affluent, we can use children and flowers mostly. every travel journal they had bells in creative, silly ways as Then one day in Detroit, she ever kept and reread every well as serious ways." met Susan Berry, an author- word. They walked through For all that, bells are not the ity on hand-bell ringing who their trips together again. "We had been to 97 counreason Dawson travels and owned a shop in Dearborn, not thereason she started or Michigan. Dawson started tries together, and in t hose keeps going with her work shooting photographs of bells four months, we relived most and art.
The travel bug
on her trips to make note cards
of our trips," she says. "It was
Berry could sell in her shop. on a clanging life of its own.
a lovely way to wrap up our lives together. We had forgotten — did a toad really jump
But meanwhile, the artist had
out of the toilet in N amib-
Soon, the bell quest took
She gives credit for the trajectory of her life to two influ-
ences: the Girl Scouts and her about 12 other things making ia? Things like that. It w as late husband, Peter. noise at the same time. fun. We were perfect travel Born in Highland Park, Ilcompanions." linois, Dawson made her first A woman of many talents After his death, however, "I trip abroad at age 17 when If you look around Daw- decided that my new job was she went to Switzerland with son's Birmingham home and to make the rest of my life the Girl Scouts. There she met talk to her long enough, her good, not just good, but wonnearly two dozen girls from accomplishments make lazier derful. That is not to say I don't seven countries, destined to
folks feel exhausted.
miss him. And it's not to say I
remain lifelong friends. After college at DePauw Univer-
The house is cheerful and serene, with her art on the
wouldn't give everything up
sity in Indiana and another
walls an d
if I could have him back, but I b r oad w i n dows can't. So I'm plowing ahead."
Girl Scout forum in Mexico, looking out on calm winter at 22, she traveled alone for woods and a river below. four months to Europe, visit-
But Dawson herself nev-
ing other girls she'd met at the er stops. She has had 87 scout conferences. one-woman art shows. She Eventually, she moved to
Detroit as a Girl Scout administrator. To try to meet new
people, she signed up for watercolor painting classes at the Birmingham-Bloomfield Art Center, and found she had a talent for it. She married Peter Dawson in 1966, a race car driver and
still works 60 hours a week in her home studio. In addition to
of parents think t heir children are better looking than
ber. Without children, they just went. When he retired,
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD O B O E
B I E N
S E A T T C L S P L E U A E M O V E A L E R C O R R G O C A R R N N E B Y E B C A N O X P A R K E G0 I S E A T T E R E
A N A H E X C H H IS L I S E E M G A I M T O N D 0 R I D E A R I N D O S D U U P T E T E A M C L O V S I E G E Y E U N N C L I O U T P L A C E S T C L E R C H S A P I
L A C E U P S
A L L M A L E
I N G L E
A N G E R
C L M A A L A I N A N N E
stays strong and maintains and travels." A line Dawson writes in
she says. That and the quirky one of her children's books — "Each hasa merry bellto aspect. "She is always interesting. keep each full heart light"She's always positive. She's reflects Dawson's own belief: been through a lot. She just that each of us has an obli-
gation to ring out clear and steady throughout life as best we can.
"There isn't anybody who doesn't have bells in their lives," she says, and like people, "bells can have every attitude."
S CIENCE. TECHNO L O G Y . ENGINEERING. MATH. MUSIC. SPANISH. AND THAT IS ALL BEFORE RECESS. KINDERGARTEN THROUGH STH GRADE SPACES AVAILABLE NOW!
The trip she just came back from, taking the Golden Ex-
press train on the Silk Road in Kazakhstan and Turkmen-
it had a nobility to it," Dawson SBld.
Her friend Susan Berry says Dawson is not a classic bell collector — in fact, most bells
commissions from f a milies,
weeks at a time" or as long as companies and organizations they felt like it. for kalei doscope watercolors But they traveled different- — huge, round paintings filled ly than most people did. They with tiny, puzzlelike images
C O T Y
it is is the spirit of the bells,"
son ($48, order through www. juliedawsonartist.com or on Amazon.com.) Five placeswith interesting bells: arthritis." • Marrakech, Morocco: For centuries, water menwho sell water JULIE DAWSOII'S TOP have walked around ringing TRAVEL SPOTS brass bells to attract customers. Most beautiful: Switzerland • India: Bells are often used Most spectacular scenery: around working elephants' Nepal necks. Most fascinating: India, China • Algarve, Portugal: Eventhe and Russia: "All are complex goats and sheepwear bells in and hard to figure out." this mountainous region. Bestanimals:Botswana,Tanza• Namibia: At a remote river nia, Kenya guests ring a big bell to Best state: "Every state is beau- hotel, let the innkeeper know they've tiful for its own reasons." arrived. WHERE TOSEE BELLS • Whitehorse, Yukon, Canada: Buy the book: The Whitehorse fire bell from "Seeing the World Through the 1900 has savedmany ahome Heart of Its Bells" by Julie Daw- from the flames.
New adventures
they are"). She also takes
"we could extend it to seven
were given to Dawson by others. "For Julie, I think what
just like we are," shesays. "We never felt in jeopardy anywhere in the world." •Gonow."Go beforeyouget
istan, took two weeks. She is the bells book, she creates and planning to go to Iceland soon. sells intricate paper cutouts. The only place she has had She writes poetry and has cre- trouble finding a bell was atedfour children'sbooks.She Antarctica. just did a holiday table design There was only one. It was for charity that featured near- on their cruise ship. She took ly200 tiny handmade penguin a picture of it while the ship cutouts that she designed and cruised along a bitterly cold made herself. She takes com- mountainous shoreline. "But
engineer at Chrysler, and later Ford. He shared her travel bug. missions to paint portraits of They'd save up his vacation people's pets (although not days so they could be gone for their children, because "lots a month at a time in Decem-
JULIEDAWSOII'S 5 TRAVEL TIPS • Don't always travel with a group. Traveling on your own lets youbemorespontaneous and is more fun. • Slow down. Spend more time in one place; don't spread yourself too thin. And don't have everything preplanned. "We usedthemap-on-the-lapand look-in-the-book method, where you decide spontaneously where to go andwhere to stop," she says. • Have a travel quest. For her, it is bells. But find something of your own that lets you seethe world more vividly on your travels and talk to local people. • Have no fear. "I think most people of the world are trying to make it through another day,
P I S L O Y O W N A S M E A S R B 0 EL C L I O D A R C O Q H A U MA E S X T H P O E S O C H B T E S Y
CROSSW ORD IS ON
U N M W E O T E P B O N K E E G R S L U D P Y E A N P Y C R A E W
Ce
L C E A A R S P H O L O A L W D P A I F L O L E
E R I E
R E N A
S D A K
C L I C K F A C T S T O T E R E E A T E L I N M I E D
K E N O
S T E N
I N H E R
N
A C M E
T H E N
E E D Y
1/18 /15
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 3 78 6 4 5 9 1 2 2 16 9 8 3 5 7 4 4 95 2 1 7 6 8 3 5 62 4 7 9 8 3 1 I
7 391 2 8 4 5 6 ) 8 1 6 9
41 87 23 54
3 5 8 7
5 6 9 3
6 4 1 2
2 3 7 1
9 2 4 6
7 9 5 I 8 !
SUDOKU IS ON C6
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
ZQ5984X
Morning Star Christian School offers a unique, innovative approach to education. We provide an advanced, academically rigorous program in a safe, nurturing environment. We are a unique Christian school where students can unleash their greatest potential, develop their creativity, and hone their language and music skills. We offer a curriculum that will challenge your child and quench their thirst for knowledge every day, all while having fun. We are Bend's only K-8th S.T.E.M. school, engaging students with handson Project Based Learning.
~.
M OWiM STAB.
Answer:
CHRISTIAtj SCHOOL
S PRING A F R AID F E W E S T SHREWD BUTANE E M BARK He decided to climb Mount Everest
because the world's tallest mountain-
"PEAKED" HIS INTEREST jUMBLE IS ON C6
541-382-5091
j
vtr t rtrtrv.mscsbend.org
19741 Baker Rd. 97702
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C5
.r'
- et'bM
John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
Snow-capped Mount Spokane rises abovefarmlands northeast of
,.~P II..
the bustling city of Spokane. Operating since the1930s within its namesake state park, Washington's largest, the small resort boasted the world's first double chairlift in the late1940s.
i
,etI I
s
sr"
ls
I :•I
rr
John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
The small town of Chewelah, a 45-minute drive north of Spokane via U.S. Highway 395, is the gateway to the 49 Degrees North Mountain Resort. A handful of motels and cafes serve skiers who prefer to overnight close to the ski area.
Expenses
& Visitors Bureau. 808 W.Main Road, Sandpoint, Idaho; 208Ave., Spokane, Wash.; 509-624- 263-9555, www.schweitzer. Gas, Bend to Coeur d'Alene 1341, 800-662-0084, www. com. Lunch and dinner. Mod(round trip), 537 miles at $2.50/ visitspokane.com erate gallon: $53.70 The Garnet Cafe. 315 E.Walnut LODGING Additional gas costs to ski reThe Coeur d'Alene.115 S. Sec- Ave., Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; 208sorts, 409 miles: $40.90 667-2729, www.garnetcafe. ond St., Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; Lodging (two nights), The 208-765-4000, www.cdaresort. com. Breakfast and lunch. BudCoeur d'Alene, Coeur d'Alene: get to moderate com. Rates from $149 $298 Mickduff's Brewing Company. Morning Star Lodge. Silver Lift ticket, Schweitzer Moun312 N. First Ave., Sandpoint, Mountain Resort, Kellogg, tain: $62 Idaho; 208-783-0202, 800-597- Idaho; 208-255-4351, www. Lodging (one night), Morning 9407, www.silvermt.com. Rates mickduffs.com. Lunch Friday Star Lodge, Kellogg: $139 to Sunday, dinner every day. from $139 Lift ticket, Silver Mountain: $65 Nordlig Motel. 101 W.Grant Moderate Lodging (two nights, with Ave., Chewelah,Washington; Moose CreekGrill. 12 Emerson breakfast), Red Lion at the Park, 509-935-6704, www.nordlig. Lane, Kellogg, Idaho; 509-783Spokane: $218 com. Rates from $53 2625, www.moosecreekgrill. All meals: $233 Red Lion Hotel at the Park. 303 com.DinnerW ednesdayto W. North River Drive, Spokane, Sunday. Moderate TOTAL: $1,109.60 Washington; 509-326-8000, Satellite Diner. 425 W.Sprague 855-347-0877, www.redlion. Ave., Spokane, Washington; com. Rates from $109 509-624-3925, www.satellitedINFORMATION The Selkirk Lodge. 10000 Schiner.com. Breakfast and lunch. North Idaho Tourism Alliance. weitzer Mountain Road, Sand- Budget Coeur d'Alene AreaChamber point, Idaho; 208-265-0257, 315 Martinis and Tapas. Greenof Commerce, 105 N.First St., brier Inn, 315 E.Wallace Ave., Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; 208-664- www.schweitzer.com. Rates from $160 Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; 208-6673194, 877-782-9232, www. coeurdalene.org or www.visit9660. Dinner only. Moderate DINING northidaho.com Chimney Rock Bar & Grill. Wild Sage Bistro. 916 W. SpokaneRegionalConvention 10000 Schweitzer Mountain Second Ave., Spokane,Wash-
If yougo
ington; 509-456-7575, www. wildsagebistro.com. Dinner only. Moderate to expensive
Courtesy Schweitzer Mountain Resort
A young skier shows off for her mother in a terrain park at the foot of Schweitzer Mountain Village. First opened in1963, the Idaho resort saw its facilities expanded in the late1990s after its purchase by the Seattle-based Harbor Resorts group.
SKIRESORTS Lookout Pass Ski & Recreation Area. Interstate 90, Exit 0, Mullan, Idaho; 208-744-1301, www.
skilookout.com. Full day adult lift tickets (weekend), $40 Mount Spokane Ski & Snowboard Park. 29500 N. Mount Spokane Park Drive, Mead, Washington; 509-238-2220, www.mtspokane.com. Full day adult lift tickets (weekend), $52 49 DegreesNorth Ski Resort. 3311 FloweryTrail Road, Chewelah, Washington;509-9356649, www.ski49n.com. Full day adult lift tickets (weekend), $54 Schweitzer Mountain Resort. 10000 Schweitzer Mountain Road, Sandpoint, Idaho; 208-
I
263-9555, 877-487-4643,
YaojfdtS, Oregan .
www.schweitzer.com. Full day adult lift tickets (weekend), $72 Silver Mountain Resort. Kellogg, Idaho; 800-204-6428, www.silvermt.com. Full day adult lift tickets (weekend), $65 online purchase
f
I
f
I
':Receive2,0% offroom rate when you bring tlis ad ahd ',
donate two cans of food for each night of your stay. '-Valid Sun-1'huns, Now - Feb ro, zor5.* e
", AF i r e S i d e
800-333-3P3
fi r esidemotel et&)
*,Offer is not valid with other'discounts.)
From previous page Corps, following its success Nearly half of the 73 named with O regon's Timberline trails plunge off 6,200-foot Lodge, completedthe conWardner M ountain, i m m e- struction of a lodge at Lookdiately to the west. Among out Pass in 1941. A lodge exthese is Sheer Bliss, a double pansion in2005 incorporated black-rated run accessed by a that original structure. Local slight uphill traverse from the mining companies financed top of Chair 4. the first chairlift to support employee recreation in 1980; a Lookout Pass new ownership group installed The smallest of the region's additional chairs in 1999 and
and holidays to visitors, who put their feet up on the hearth of the huge stone fireplace to enjoy hearty snacks and hot beverages.
five ski areas, but with the
installed on th e m ountain's
2007.Now, with Forest Service
greatest average annual snow- approval, Lookout is eyeing fall (more than 400 inches), is 2,000 acres of new growth onto Lookout Pass — 25 miles east apair of adjacent peaks. of Kell ogg,where l-90 crosses For now, there are 34 named the state line into Montana at runs featuring primarily inter4,700 feet elevation. mediate terrain, as well as sevLookout is a great place for eral powder caches frequented skiers who like the snow deep by expert skiers when fresh but the terrain not too steep. powder falls. With a 1,150-foot vertical and
540 acres of terrain served by four chairs, it's similar in size
Mount Spokane The nearest resort to Spo-
The Mount Spokane website reports that rope tows and
a ski-jumping venue were built by local ski enthusiasts in the mid-to-late 1930s. The world's
first double chairlift (Sun Valley had the first single) was south face in 1946, but it lasted for only three seasons. The
first permanent chair was built in 1955. Today there are plans to in-
crease the number from five to six, and at the same time, to expand Nordic ski terrain to
60 kilometers. Snowshoeing and snowmobiling are also encouraged within the park.
to Hoodoo (1,035-foot vertical, kane is the Mount Spokane 800 acres, five lifts). Runs ex- Ski & Snowboard Park, 32
49 Degrees North
tend into national forest lands
miles northeast of the city via state Route 206. The small re-
spend their on-slope time at the 49 Degrees North Mountain Resort, a 45-minute drive
straddle state borders.
Spokane State Park, Wash-
About the same time the Sun Valley resort was being
ington's largest state park
north of the city via U.S. Highway 395 to Chewelah, then east another 10 miles.
in both states, making it one of only three U.S. ski resorts to sort operates within Mount
Many Spokane-area skiers
built in south central Idaho,
with 13,919 acres. With 2,000 feet of vertical
the Idaho Ski Club was born here in 1936. A history pub-
and 1,425 acres of terrain, Flowery Trail Pass between Mount Spokane is l arger the communities of Chewelah
lished on the Lookout Pass
than Hoodoo but substantial-
website describes how pio-
ly smaller than Bachelor. The neer skiers harnessed a rope largely intermediate hill oftotheengine ofan abandoned fers night skiing on 16 of its 45 car to operate their first tow. runs, a huge attraction to SpoFour years later, club volun- kane skiers. teers began offering free ski The gra n i t e-and-timber lessons, as they continue to Vista House, constructed by do today. Over 74 years, they the CCC in 1933, stands above have taught skiing and snow- Chair l at the 5,889-foot sumboardingto more than 60,000 mit of Mount Spokane. Fully youngsters. renovated by the state park in The Civilian Conservation
2002, it is open on weekends
Located a to p
3 , 9 23-foot
and Usk, this remote resort
has plentiful terrain — 2,325 acres, with a vertical of 1,850 feet from a 5,774-foot summit.
It's served by six chairs, plus a surface lift. And a third of its runs are rated advanced or
expert. Nearby Chewelah Peak had a lodge and rope tow in the late
1930s, a double chair as early as 1951, according to the resort's website. But the ski area
closed in 1968, reopening four TOYOTA,-~ -
.
z
'I ,l'i
years later — two miles east of its previous location — with
,i
three new lifts and a day lodge.
TOURNAMENT 11AM-2PM! Just $5 or 100 points to buy in. Re-buy for the same price to try for a higher score. Tournament sessions 11AM and 12PM, re-buy rounds at 1PM, playoffsat 2PM. Must be atleast 55andaBonus Club memberto participate. Limit onebrunchperguest perMonday. Managementhasthe right to revise, review, or cancel this promotion at anytime. Restrictions apply: see BonusClub for complete details.
0
A fourth lift wa s added in
1980, and in 2006, a quad chair serving 20 new runs opened in the Sunrise Basin expansion area. Finally, in 2012,the An-
gelPeak chairextended theresort's reach to a second nearby
err •IessrslssrATlsecs
e
I
D
I e s l rsess e Ir lm esrI
*r r s r re"
s s rs
summit, induding additional runs and 170 acres of glades devoted to tree-skiing. For those who don't want to
return to lodging in Spokane, the 2,600 residents of the little John Gottberg Anderson / For The Bulletin
A trail map posted in the 49 Degrees North base area offers a quick look at the extensive terrain of this Washington resort. Located atop 3,923-foot Flowery Trail Pass, thehillfeatures 2,325 acres of terrain from a 1,850-foot summit.
town of Chewelah welcome overnight visitors. There are
LEAVETHEDRIVINGTOUS! Bend busruns thefirst Mondayof the month
Call for reservations,location 5.times: 541.783.7529 ext.209 Valid forBend,La Pine and Redmond guestsonly;localzip codes do notapply. Limit one coupon per person per visit. Expires Feb.1,2015
three motels here and a hand-
34333 HwY97H0RTHI GHIL0 0Ultt 0R97624I 541 763 7529I Ktttsovttcttsltto coM bendbulletift.com
C6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
SU D O K U
co mpletegri the d so
FR ~
TH AT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME by DevidL Reyt end JeffKnurek
Unscramble these six Jumbles one letter to each square, to lorm six ordinary words.
that every row, column and3x3 box contains every digit from1 to 9 inclusively.
86 21 6 9 9 56
~ss ~ EI ~
Sver elece I
GIRPNS
5
r rlgol0 llthnne CcntentAgency, UC Ae Rehts Reserved.
SDERWH
Ie
We'S do lt tegelhec
•ey r
A tour of Ireland's House
UNATBE SEWFET
E
HE PECIPEP TO CLIMB MOUNT ~ T BE C AUEE THE WOiaLPE TALLEET MOUNTAIN —-
RABKME
Now arrange the circled letters
to form the surprise answer, as
suggested by the above cartoon.
2I
PRINT YOUR ANSWER INTHE CIRCLES BELOW
e
DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
'e rr, Ier
The (Minneapoiis) Star Tribune
•• c c
of Waterford Crystal is a daz-
6! 97; 1 74 5
Re'sn
By Gail Rosenblum
FARDIA
7
Ta ea azzin touro t eHouseo Wate or
0
CEHHZ3 HX3
*
,c
Nine months later, I'm still marveling a t t h e c o n cept.
We're soaccustomed to recommended warranties, up-
JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
zling treat for the eye. No surprise there. The surprise came when our adept guide, walking us through 230 years of masterful crystal-making, offered a simple fact in passing. No seconds.
grades, scratch-and-dent, sec-
ondhand, good-as-new, the
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
sMRaay,JBRMBTy ts,2ots
Retaining options Tribune Content Agency C)
Cy the Cynic, who cracks the world's worst jokes, told me about an u ndertaker wh o s p e cialized i n burying criminals. He was asked to inter three brothers — professional burglars who h ad met their end together. To save money, the family wanted all three placed in the same coffin, but the undertaker refused: He wouldn't put all his yeggs in one casket. A good defender tries to retain his options. He is reluctant to adopt a line of defense that will leave no other chance if it fails. In today's deal, West led a heart against four spades, and South won in dummy and let the queen of trumps ride to West's king. To win f our defensive tricks, West wanted East to get in for a diamond shift. So West led a club, hoping to find East with the ace, but South won, drew trumps and ran the clubs. West put all his eggs in one leaky basket. He had no reason to lead a club at the third trick. If East had the ace, he would win a trick with it eventually. But to have a chance, West did need East to hold one good carcl. At Trick Three, West should lead the three of diamonds. When East turns up with the king, the defense takes three diamonds for down one. If East instead had the ace of clubs, giving South ahand such as A 10974,
A2, K J42, 6 2 , Eastcouldstilllead a diamond for down one when he took the ace of clubs. The correct defense would succeed even if South's hand were A 10 9 7 4, A2, KJ 84 2,2. Southcoulddiscard only two diamonds on dummy's high c lubs and w ould s til l l o s e t w o diamonds. South dealer N-S vulnerable
for the faint of heart. Our charming cutter, with
CLt CCt
CLt
LL CLt
9 Q1085 0 AQ1 03
9 J9 7 6 3 OK7
41083
4976
tOI
CLt
a5 C3
SOUTH 4A1097 4 cct
QA2 0 J84 2 4A2 South I 4k 2 0 4 4I
a5
We s t North Pass 24 Pass 3 4b AII P a s s
East Pass Pass
CLt CLt
C/)
Opening lead — 9 5
3
4
satisfaction? 4I Bolts 19 45 Dazzle 47 -CroaIIan 23 48 Warehouseitem 49 Sheikh Zayed 27
5
92 Right-angled flier 94 Nashville awards org. 95 "Live Young Forever" author Jack
eI Team leader ee Countson 25 Showy lily e2 Green Goblin 98 Lift 30 Trouble portrayer 99 WhenIo start 32 Dress length e4 CCIns driving? 34 Cote d'Azur e7 Dosage unit IOI Transp.group view es Account in the Loop 36 Devious golf 7I Go nowhere 102 Peter of reggae course feature? special 104 Radical 37 operandi 73 nI'd hateIo be 107 Under-one's38 Forecaster's shoes" skIn type 108 '40s film critic concern 74 High39 Explorer maintenance James Tasman 7e Slopeschallenge 109 BIg laugh 40 Reliable 78 PUI down 110 Soyuzletters 42 Mouse User's eo "Street Signs" 111 Kthru12 consideration? network 113 Opposite of 43 Game with ec 81 Novelist Selon bUCk balls e3 Word in aboast 114 Ceremonial 44 WWII weapon 84 Rapper pile 45 Rash cause, Fiasco 11e Oklahoma's "Wheat Capital" perhaps e7 parts of writers' 4e Author of queries 117 Crest n epislolas 89 sob & Carol & 118 "Well 48 Fireinspirers Ted & Alice" 12I CreaIor ol Q 51 Score notation Oscar nominee and M for Iwo singers Cannon 122 Crow cly a COP
S
9
Ig
lt
12
13 1 4
1 5 16
I7
18
22
when George and William
must pass six exacting checks,
or it is sent back to the furnace for remelting. Those meeting the mark move on to the cut-
ting department, which is not
36 years under his belt, handmanufacturing plant to pro- ed visitors a piece of marble, mous Book of Kells at Trinity duce flint glass in Waterford, the size of a palm. "Feel that College, Kilmainhem Gaol Ireland. They flourished for piece of stone," he said, "and (jail), the seven-story Guin- decades but, in 1825, a new how hard it is." He grabbed ness Brewery and a powerful duty on glass placed a heavy it back and placed it against two-person play at the Abbey burden on the company. The his whirring diamond-tipped Theatre. Later in the week, factory held on until 1851, wheel to show us how well we took a spectacular drive when it ceased production and the machine cut into it. Masaround a portion of the Ring many of its artisans headed to ter cutters like him learn over of Kerry and a heart-racing Belfast. years of trial and error just walk along the Cliffs of Moher After World War II, master how much pressure to exert. in County Clare, taking in the blowers and cutters from EuThe heart-stopping part massive vistas on a brooding, rope arrived in Waterford to came when he put his hand on gray day. train Irish apprentices. With the shrieking wheel to show We welcomed the sun at superiorfurnaces, Waterford us how he stops it, then invited soothing, earthy Newgrange, was reborn, continuing to daz- Patrick to do the same. I really didn't want to have to drive the stepping inside the 5,000-year- zle in bigger ways. old chamber of this Irish tomb. Today, the factory creates car, especially on the left side And, naturally, traveling more than 45,000 beautiful of the road, and fortunately didn't have to. Patrick, hand with my partly Irish boy- pieces annually. friend, Patrick (a very good Many people skip the tour unscathed, said the wheel felt name to have on t his t r ip, and head straight for the store like touching a fine luffa, "but aye, Paddy?), we made stops to see many of those pieces. Be- if you apply pressure, it will at many pubs to sample his lieve me, I was tempted, but I'm cut." Glad we didn't have to drink of choice: whiskey. so glad we didn't pass up the prove it. Penrose established the first
outstanding 90-minute walk
At last, it was time to shop.
throughnearly every aspectof Patrick and I found a simple traditional crystal production. candy dish, which an engravBy traditional, I mean hu- er madespecialforus,etching
house, the oldest operational
man. At
lighthouse in the world. It was
watched skilled artisans ex-
e very station, we our names and the year we visited. hard to pass up a chance to see hibit their talents. Hook Lighthouse closed so much pretty under one roof; We first entered the "Mould moments before we arrived. hard, at least, for one of us and Room," where molds and hand We parked, walked around the other was willing to pull tools shape the molten crystal. and ran comically through the
over for an afternoon.
The life span of molds, due spongy, boggy grounds.
We didn't have a reservation, but that wasn't a problem.
to the heat, is less than two weeks.
It would have been swell to
ment, we watched a crafts-
the view. But oh-so-carefully
We were greeted warmly by the staff at the international
have been able to walk to the In the noisy blowing depart- top of the lighthouse and enjoy
headquarters in W aterford City, about two hours south
man, dressed casually in a packed in our car's trunk was gray T-shirt and black shorts, a reminder of the wisdom of of Dublin. Th e s leek n ew balance a fiery orange ball at un-planning. headquarters opened in 2010 the end of his blowing tube, A perfect reminder.
Bend author Continued from C1 He credits his days of storytelling at open mics for his concise style.
"The ways my stories are condensed is all because they
str
all had to be less than five min-
utes. So the way I write is all because they all had to be less than five minutes," he said.
Jackson is not partial to the popular term "flash fiction,"
29
32
SS
up short pieces such as his. "I don't like it. They're just
26
25
28 31
super-short short stories," he sald.
34
Jackson was in Los Angeles 39 40
37 38
45 46
4 2 43
4I
44
47
50 56 5 7
52 58
64
68
59 6 0
69
Samanlha 72 Mythical eagle- 80 St lionhybrid 75 Supporting 86 WOtds 77 RImsky92 Korsakov's " d'Or" IOO 79 Chelsea's Square, fashionable 103 shoppIngarea 80 GIdeon Fell's 107 108 109 creator 82 Lootfrom a shamrockheist? lfg 85 Madre's milk
53
76
in Central Oregon. "I'm sort of dividing my
71
77
72
78 84
88
87
93
73 74
79
83
82
foment more film production
62
66 70
94 9 5
101
96
85
89
90 98 99
97
110 111
I 20
106 112
have this pie-in-the-sky dream of trying to get some film com-
113 114
12t
115
116 117 118
122
eestormdir.
I23
I24
t25
I26
87 Onslaught 88 Adams of
I27
I28
129
I30
'OCIOPUSSy"
Xwordeditor@SOI.COm
CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
©2015 Trlbune Content Agency,LLC.
Submitted photo
Bend's Guy J. Jackson pours his anxieties into his first short story collection, "Drink the Rest of That," being published Jan. 30 by Roundfire Books. R
I get hired by individuals to
do rewrites, treatments, synop-
Hollywood doesn't have to be sis, loglines (summaries), edits where Hollywood is,n he said, and polishes as well as write laughing. scriptsfrom scratch,"he said. At the m oment, he's inToward the end of the intervolved in writing a screenplay view, Jackson revealed that
Asked what theme most often recurs in his writing, Jack-
son replied with still another self-effacing laugh, "Just being worried. Worry and anxiety." Yet he hopes readers will find comfort in his stories.
"My fondest hope would be that's not my thing, really, tains all his stories that are ti- — this sounds so corny — but but (the producer) made me tled eitherbeginning with num- that people would read one a do it, n Jackson said. "Then I bers or the letter "A": "9 Min- day and it would be like a lithave another script that's been utes," "1980,n "A Good Dream," tle meditation, and they could optioned, a horror movie, so, "Actress," and so forth. have that little meditation and uSo next book will be the feel a little better, for no partichopefully that guy's going to make that this year." letter 'B,'n he said. Of course, ular reason," he said. "There's For his day job, Jackson that pattern would r equire nothing to put your finger on, works as a f reelance script him to write stories with titles because those stories are so reader, editor and consul- beginning with the letter X, he weird." tant both in Los Angeles and reasoned. That could prove a — Reporter: 541-383-0349, Bend. challenge. djasper@bendbuiletin.com for a noir thriller, "even though
I05
c"
time between Bend and LA. I panies out to Bend so that
I02
104
when he spoke to The Bulletin earlier this month. He's often down there as he attempts to launch a screenwriting career
and, more long term, seeks to
6t
65
75
1/f 8/15
The magic started in 1783,
was done.
which is often used to sum
55 Hand truck user 58 Pen In Patna? 49 e2 Rodentcontrol brand 55 es Olds models e5 "Beats me" 63 ee "The PathIo Love"author
chopra
18 11-Down 57 It's nol close neighbor: Abbr. 59 BriI's fireplace 24 Lacking heat,Io eo HCIstate
7
24
pres.
68 Taint 70 Actress
se Goof
20
Was IISfirSt
50 BraIR matter 52 Jostle 54 Like Chopin's Etude Op. I0, No. 3
6
53 Uncommon bloodtype, for short
In Dublin, we managed to squeeze in a visit to the fa-
But on Day Three, we realized that the House of Waterford was on the way to our next destination, Hook Light-
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Ie Iroquoian people I7 Soap actress Sofer
turned the piece until it solidified — a signal that his work
whom had visited Ireland numerous times.
Ct5
tOy
EAST 4b862
tal into a cast-iron mold. For many minutes, he blew and
CD
E ct5
WEST 4K5
250,000 visi tors from around
the world since. The building has a significant wow factor, including soaring ceilings, a cafe with scrumptious cakes,
Then it was on to quality inspection, where each piece
CD
4bQ J3 QK4 0 965 4KQJ54
smashed, the glass melted in
and has welcomed more than then place the molten crys-
process begins anew. and a massive and elegant reWe hadn't planned to stop tail store, housing the largest at the House of Waterford on collection of Waterford in the our trip to Ireland last spring. world,from picture frames to We had just seven days and a water pitchers, to well-known robust list of must-dos recom- Lismore champagne glasses mended by friends, many of and chandeliers.
ed by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols LeWIS
2
ations on display for visitors at Ireland's House of Waterford Crystal.
a fire again. The multifaceted
tOy
cty
NORTH
"CHLORINATION" 90 Knight In a 127 Revered By MERYL sitcom e Mother 91 "Toodles JACKSON 128 Straw sources 93 ReunIon 129 Bow raw ACROSS attendee material n 97 "OCIOPUSSy, I Clambaketrash 130 Sistine Chapel 5 Santa e.g. ceiling depiction 8 Blue stone, Ieo Body ofrules briefly 101 MoYIehouse DOWN 13 Gastric thatalways I Fragrance gIant maladies cutsIo the thatwent public 19 Awardthat'sa chase? in 2013 pronunciation of Ies Remove 2 Windwith a Ils initials 105 lams flared bell 20 Curse 3 "Tres competIIor 2I Solder, for one Iee Once named 4 Pugei Sound 22 Approached I S7 High-rent game city 23 nWhaIever property 5 Relaxed circus act floats I I2 Ancient fabulist response your boat"? 115 Bugged alol e Vintage pop 2e Yachtspot 119 Hard oneto 7 Turningpoint 27 I983title arguewith 8 High-tops,e.g. character who I20 How some 9 LIke some SIngs"Where Is defensive choirs II Written?" boxing matches IO Ramallah28 "... ain't quite as proceed? based gp. dumb as 123 TwoII Only statewith nHow Long"lyric 124 Monotonous a Iwo-Yowel 29 Now pIece postalcode 3I Pro 125 Historybook I2 Dict. entries 33 Island east of time I3 NCI realized Manila 12e pretender of a I4 Lab regulation? 35 Firstcentury SOrt 15 KInd of lane I
Nobody expects perfect anymore. Waterford demands nothing less. A tiny error at any
dD
LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD
Romanemperor 3e Assure
An exquisitely detailed horse and carriage is one of hundreds of cre-
moment in t h e c r eation of something beautiful to hold or behold, and the crystal is
By FRANK STEWART
Gail Rosenblum/The IMinneapolis) Star Tribune
next, next, next best thing.
"Drink the Rest of That" con-
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
How ueinex osinSanDie o,SanFranciscos a e t em Then there was the Isth-
By Christopher Reynolds
leased it and set about build-
Los Angeles Times
ing a temporary wonderland in grand Beaux-Arts style,
mus, a half-mile-long midway where visitors found the
years ago, San Francisco had with hundreds of statues and something to prove. faux travertine by the ton.
Temple of Mirth, the Sultan's
SAN DIEGO — A hundred Its leaders wanted the world
to know they had rebuilt since the earthquake and fires of
Harem, a Hawaiian village, a Chinatown and a 250-foot-
The San Francisco expo ran Feb. 20to Dec.4, 1915. The
long model of the Panama Canal. Opening day was Jan. 1,
expo's central landmark was
1906, and they wanted to woo the Tower of Jewels, a 435the travelers and commerce foot wonder encrusted with that would be headed west 102,000 cut-glass "jewels," surthrough the just-completed rounded by hidden lights. (The Panama Canal. So they decid- "Jewel City" theme had been ed to throw a global party. suggested in a newspaper's San Diego had something to naming contest by Virginia prove too. It had about 40,000 Stephens, a 12-year-old black residents — about a t e n th girl from Oakland.) of San Francisco's populaThere was the Palace of tion — but no cable cars, no Horticulture (with a g l ass Gold Rush glamour, no Mark dome larger than St. Peter's Twain quotes. And a Mexican Basilica in Rome), four 204civil war was simmering just foot towers, a 638-room hotel south in Tijuana. But San Di- (the Inside Inn), the Arch of ego wanted tourists and ship the Rising Sun, a 7,000-pipe traffic. Even after President organ, a sprawling midway W illiam H oward T af t
and
1915, about 50 days ahead of
San Francisco's. Two million people turned up in the first 12 months. Many San Franttt Ctlittg W@l@
cisco expo-goers made side trips to San Diego, including
't'iII
p,(ii
Roosevelt, Edison and Ford.
Afterthe San Francisco expo closed, San Diego's fair kept going. In fact, it got a commercial second wind by bringing in foreign exhibitors and concessionaires who were happy to delay their return to a warring Europe. I n September of t h e
Congress threw their support behind San Francisco, San
Canyon, a 5-acre working
Don Bartletti/ Los AngelesTimes
Diegans pressed ahead with plans for their own exposition. The result: competing expos, assembled as World War I was beginning to tear Europe
replica of the Panama Canal, a
Variable color floodlights illuminate the Botanical Building, built for the1915 Panama-California Expoaition, at the end of the reflecting pond in San Diego's Balboa Park.
apart. This had all the mak-
pop-up factory making Levi's jeans, a 15-foot-tall Underwood typewriter and a Ford
assembly line turning out 18 Model T's per day.
ings of a civic disaster. Maybe
The Great Scintillator, a
two. Yet both shows went on. In a state with fewer than 3.4
pier packed with 48 projector spotlights, stood near the fairgrounds for nine months, sending festive pastel-colored beams into the night sky and
million people, they together tallied 22 million visitors. The
city with the brighter lights fog. To coordinate these disand bigger crowds, howev- plays, the expo hired a direcer, isn't the one that ended up torofcolor,Jules Guerin,who with the larger architectural envisioned "a gigantic Persian legacy. rug of soft melting tones" and Once San Francisco had told participating artists what federal backing for its Pana- hues they could and couldn't ma-Pacific International Ex- use. position — defeating not only Despite many cancellations San Diego but also a vigorous as World War I deepened in New Orleans bid — the local Europe, 21 nations sent repinfighting began over where resentatives and materials for to put it. After flirting with the idea of Golden Gate Park, organizers decided to use 635
acres of lightly built marshland known as Harbor View,
creating a b ay-front playground just east of the Presidio and west of Van Ness Av-
pavilions, as did 28 states and
territories. (From Oregon: a Parthenon made of Douglas fir logs.) Neither Britain nor Germany put up pavilions, nor did Mexico. But Thomas Edison, Henry
Ford, Charlie Chaplin, Hel-
enue. Nowadays, it's known as en Keller and former Presithe Marina District. Except for a chunk of the Presidio and a bit of Fort Ma-
dent Theodore Roosevelt all
came. Laura Ingalls Wilder, future author of th e " L ittle
son, all this land was privately House" books, marveled at owned. The expo organizers a cow-milking machine. An-
ard Amero in "Balboa Park and the 1915 Exposition," Dr.
Harry Wegeforth was driving nearby when he heard the roar of a lion on display along the Isthmus. He turned
sel Adams, age 13, had a sea- must do some sleuthing — or saidIris Engstrand, a profes- to his brother Paul and said, son pass and wandered the visit during this year's centen- sor of history at the University "Wouldn't it be splendid if San Diego had a zoo?" Soon it did. grounds daily, shooting photos nial exhibitions. of San Diego and curator of By the time San Diego's with a Brownie box camera. On the one hand, said Lau- "San Diego Invites the World: In all, nearly 19 million ra Ackley, author of "San The 1915 Expo" at the San Di- expo closed on Jan. 1, 1917, visitors turned out, a civic triFrancisco's Jewel City: The ego History Center. "But then attendance had reached about umph for San Francisco by Panama-Pacific International they both realized they were 3.8 million over two y ears, just about every measure. On Exposition of 1915," the event both going to have a fair, and about a fifth of San Francisco's total. the last day alone, 459,022 made money, gilded the city's they'd better cooperate." San D iego o r ganizers But San Diego's key buildguests showed up. reputation and "changed the And then it all but vanished. standard for architectural illu- staked out a 640-acre chunk of ings had been built to lastBuildings were leveled, mate- mination worldwide." On the City Park, renamed it Balboa and on public land. Moreover, rials were salvaged and sold other, "it was so ephemeral. Park and chose a Spanish Co- as the decades passed, three forscrap.Real estate reverted And the San Diego one lives lonial design theme, allowing temporary structuresalong to its owners. And much was on." a wide berth for Baroque Mex- the Prado promenade (now scattered among new owners. In the beginning, things ican flourishes, Moorish tiles known as the Casa del PraThe plaster sculpture "End of didn't look good for San Di- and stark mission arches. do, the Casa de Balboa and Pa n ama-California The centerpiece would be the House of Charm) were the Trail," by James Earle Fra- ego's ser, a bowed depiction of a Na- Exposition. Organizers had the California Building with saved and eventually rebuilt tive American on horseback far less money to spend, no a soaring tower and a tiled nearthe remodeled House of that once stood in the expo's federal blessing and plenty of dome designed by New York Hospitality. architect Bertram Goodhue. It Thanks to that fair, EngCourt of Palms, now graces discord. the National Cowboy & WestNationally acclaimed land- would be permanent, as would strand said, "San Diego beern Heritage Museum in Okla- scape architects John Olm- a new bridge, an organ pavil- came a little more popular, alhoma City. sted and Frederick Olmsted ion and a vast wooden botan- though it has never achieved, Among th e s i g nificant Jr. signed on, then quit. So ical building neighbored by a even today, the status of San Francisco." structures, only one survived did a rising architectural star pond. An Indian village, complete Meanwhile, she a dded, in its original location: the la- named Irving Gill. goon-adjacent rotunda and Under the terms of a truce with a facsimile of New Mexi- Spanish Colonial architecture colonnades of the Palace of with San Francisco, San Di- co's Taos Pueblo, filled several gained popularity in the West. Fine Arts, which wa s b olego had to leave the word "in- acres. Seven U.S. states put up In the course of their hoststered by reconstruction in the ternational" out of the name of buildings. Five buildings held ing chores, local leaders also exhibits from the counties of forged ties that helped the city 1960s. To see more of the 1915 its expo. "At first, it was a rivalry," California. emerge as a Navy town. expo in San Francisco, you
ns
0
o
000,000
PN gRNISHING$ 5if
pgf
I
ORl'q ~~ISSg
EICENSEQ
4 SQIIDED
0
REE illUiRY'
f'V
+ 5599 Minimum Purchase
— S]Nca Olive Garden
Still The Oldest & Largest Furniture Store in Central Oregon!
Apply on line for Credit at-:
,, e mon
'
ex-
po's second year, noted Rich-
known as the Joy Zone, a 6-acre replica of the Grand
- 8- 0 ~
I
• g
I
G alle r y - B e n d 3 8
Iii i y ) 8'll ' - ,
-3
CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
o in in mazon'S TV SPOTLIGHT
through violence. The setting slaves (so, you know, he's not a is gorgeous, an inspirationally terrible guy). crazy villain appears and the Meanwhile, the plantation, series stars Ben Chaplin, Minamed Point of Honor, is realchael Imperioli, Romany Mal- ly run by a bunch of "strong" co and Steve Zahn, so there is women who get to wear hoop some reason to hope it would skirts while speaking to one getbetter. another as if they walked off "Cocked" has a s i milar the set of "Pretty Little Liars." I theme of male malaise and its miss cheesy historical minise-
4.
By Mary McNamara
"f
Los Angeles Times
Amazon is riding high with
/ L
its righteous Golden Globe
i neu
wins for its comedy series "Transparent" and a new deal with Woody Allen. And far be it from me to be a downer, but
let's all tryto keep our heads.
antidote. This time, the modern
ries as much as the nextperson,
guy is Richard Paxson ("True Blood's" Sam Trammell). The younger and estranged son of a gun-manufacturing dynasty, Matt Sayles/The Associated Press he's drawn back into contact Alexa Davalos stars in Amazon's "The Man in the High Castle," one with his crazy older brother of several shows in the its new TV lineup. (Jason Lee) and almost equally crazy father (Brian Dennehy) for reasons that make little or Japan;a swath ofborderstates cohabitation with Japan must nosense. serves as a"neutral zone." end, even if it means nukingthe Richard fights the good fight, It's an upsetting, if provoca- West Coast. but with a cartoonish boss and tive premise, smartly adapted Although director David a labradoodle, he is ripe for by "The X-Files'" Frank Spot- Semel gives the pilot a dream- embracing his gun-slinging, nitz and one made glorious by like quality, the implications of law-breaking true self. Any sets and cinematography wor- this alternate history are dis- points that Samuel Baum and thy of a Scott production. In turbing, often to the point of Sam Shaw's story gets for dethe East, we follow the travails distraction. But in a landscape mo-targeting (gun owners do of Joe Blake (Luke Kleintank), obsessed with post-apocalyptic not, it must be said, get a lot of who joins the resistance and is tales, it does raise the question: TV love) and solid casting are tasked with driving a myste- How real will we let ourselves lost in deductions for predictrious package across country. get? ability and making the great In the West, we meet Juliana The five other drama and Dennehy urinate in dose-up. Crain (Alexa Davalos) a young comedy pilots are equally am- 7ttvice. martial arts expert thrust into bitious but seem much more Carlton Cuse goes historic in the underground by her sister trouble than they're worth. the bodice-busting Civil War and her degenerate-artist lover In Cris Cole's "Mad Dogs," a drama "Point of Honor," which Frank(Rupert Evans). group of "modern" men gath- attempts to have it both ways As bad as things are, they're er at the Belize compound of on every level. A Virginia famabout to get worse. Hitler is their mutual and far more suc- ily has male members on both suffering from Parkinson's, cessful friend to learn that the sides of the conflict, but even and the only thing his poten- only male life worth living in- the Confederate marks the firtial successors agree on is that volves establishing dominance ing on Ft. Sumter by freeing his
As exciting as television's
age of exploration continues to be, Amazon's fourth pilot season proves good TV, like good anything, is difficult to makeeven fordeep-pocketed online commerce companies with a
devermarketingidea. Where "Transparent" was one of three pilots that stood out
among the five adult dramas and comedies made available to Amazon prime membership
aroundthistimelastyear("Mozart in the Jungle" and "Bosch"
were the others), only one of six debuting Thursday holds similar promise. That would be "The Man in
the High Castle,"the long-awaited adaptation of the Philip Dick novel of the same name, championed by Ridley Scott. As did the book, "The Man in
the High Castle" imagines the United States just after World War II has been won, this time
by the Axis powers. With Germany apparently the only country in possession of atomic fire-
power, the eastern half of the country is ruled by the Third Reich, the western by Imperial
us an can't or eto crus
but in a word: No. The two comedies are not much better, especially compared w it h t h ei r A m a zon
predecessors, "Transparent" and "Alpha House." In "Salem
Rogers," Leslie Bibb stars as a selfobsessed supermodel who, after being kicked out of a Malibu rehab facility, latches on to her former assistant (Rachel Dratch), now a timid self-help guru. Bulimia jokes are a high point. The LA bashing continues
with "Down Dog," in which a handsome but dense yoga instructor decides to take over
the studio where he works. Seriously. That's what it's about.
And the voice-over narrating his early life lasts almost as long as the action.
All of which adds up to a big 'Welcome to the world of television, A mazon." T h ere
will be hits and awards, breakthroughs and victories of consciousness. But mostly it involves mak-
ing a bunch of shows that don't turn out quite the way you
hoped they would.
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby:I'm a happily mar-
or hers. We live in different states.
ried man with a great family that's
Even if there is a spark there, I'm
mostly grown.
not sure we could sustain a rela-
In high school, I was infatuated
ing is that an emotional affair may
do more damage than an in-person one. While I thought I had a great tionship. But how do I get her off marriage, she was thinking about my mind? I'm tortured by the mem- what might have been with her
with a girl, "Stacy," who was the center of attention, especially from oriesofthe dance and the hug. the guys. As seniors we were close, — Romantic Texan but we never dated. Dear Romantic: When I left for colLet common sense lege, we lost track. prevail again and DFP,R I „'„Il,g,lb„ , ' quit playing with fire ABBY i nvolved w i t h th e before someone gets
first love. She wouldn't end the re-
lationship and finally we divorced. That was three years ago. He separated from his wife, and they lived together until she found out
he wasn't the same person in real life that he was online or how she
n ext
thought she remembered him from
become my w i f e. letter may offer you Before our wedding, I was at a some insight: friend's wedding, and Stacy and I Dear Abby:My ex-wife of more danced several dances. Our chem- than 30 years reconnected with istry was electric. I nearly broke up an old love from college through
their youth. It didn't last, and he went back to his wife. My ex was
woman who w ould
with my fiancee to see if Stacy and
b urned. Th e
a social website. I was OK with it
I could get together, but common until I noticed she was getting obsense prevailed. sessed with his chats. She kept sayAt our 25th reunion, I saw Stacy ing they were just old friends and I again. She looked as good as ever. should trust her. She is also happily married with a It went on for months, until one family. She gave me a hug that last- day she forgot to close her chat sesed a little too long, but was every sion. It was obvious she regretted bit as electric as our dance back not marrying him and was relivthen. Now I'm wondering what I ing her past. We discussed it and I have missed. Was the hug a signal kept hearing, "Trust me, we're only or just the affectionate embrace of
Youcouldbecome verycautiousabout what you focusonbecauseofa tendency to manifest what you want to happen. If
youaresingle,youcouldmeetsomeone significant to your life's history after July, but you'll have a Stsfs showthe idsd great time getting of tisyyoo 0 hsvs there. If you are at** * * * D ynamlc tached, you might ** * * p osltlve need to become
*** Average ** So-so * Difficult
more awareof
your sweetie and his or her needs. CAPRICORNis difficult to get to
know, evenfor you. ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * You could feel pressured by a responsibility to the point that you might be grumbling under your breath. Tap into your creativity, and you will discover an unusual but effective solution. Think of accepting less responsibility in the future. Tonight: A must appearance.
I'm now married to a wonderful woman I trust completely. My ex lost all she had except her memo-
ries of the 30 happy years we had together. People need to understand how
dangerous an emotional affair can be. The grass isn't always greener on the other side of the fence. Old
flames change from who they were in their youth, and an online fling
can be disastrous. — R.B. in Massachusetts there. We went through marriage — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
won't be relevant, as long as you keep
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, unusual creativity and vitality. Your magnetism speaks to others and often draws results that you might not expect.
was too late.
fantasizing." It went downhill from
a good friend'? I'm afraid to contact her because counseling, but nothing changed. I don't want to ruin my reputation What I learned through counsel-
JAN. 18, 2015:This yearyou exhibit
sorry for what happened and wanted a second chance with me, but it
YOURHOROSCOPE
your eye onyour objective. Someonewil
By Jacqueline Bigar
orshecomesacrossasbeingcombative
lier, and they won't carry such negative power. Tonight: Out late.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * I f you don't claim your power, you will feel like a puppet with someone else orchestrating your moves. Your willingness to give a lot can cause others to sense that you care more than they do. Let go of a need to be in control. Tonight: You decide whether or notyou want to participate.
LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Deciding to vanish might be a
good change ofpacefor thesocial Lion.
You'll recharge and have some thinking time when your social schedule is not so active. Revisit your priorities, as they could be changing. Be willing to acknowledge that fact. Tonight: Not to be found.
VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22)
be delighted to hear from you, even if he or difficult. Honor a change of pace. Tonight: Let the party begin!
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * Y ou might want to push a key project to the finish line. Your finances could be involved, and your budget will require some time and thought. An issue with your home is likely to demand also your attention. Tonight: Call someone whom youhave notseen in awhile.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
I
I
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11:35 a.m., 2:40, 6:30, 9:45 • AMERICAN SNIPER IMAX (R) 12:10, 3:10, 7:10, 10:15 • ANNIE(PG)11:55 a.m., 2:55 • BLACKHAT (R) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:35, 9:50 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6, 9:15 • THEHUNGER GAMES: MOGKINGJAY — PART1 (PG-13) I2:15, 3:20, 6:20, 9:20 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 12:55, 4, 7:05, 10:05 • INHERENTVICE(R) 1 I:30, 2:50, 6:15, 9:35 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13) 5:55, 9:30 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) l2:40, 4:05, 7:20, 10:10 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PG) 11:45 a.m., 2:10, 4:40, 7:15, 9:40 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:40a.m., 2, 4:20, 6:40, 9:10 • SELMA(PG-13) 12:30, 3:40, 7, 9:55 • TAKEN3(PG-l3) 1220,315,730,10: IO • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 12:05, 3:30, 6:50, 10 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 12:45, 4:30, 7:45, l0:20 • WILD(R) 12:50,3:50, 6:45, 9:30 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
7 p.m. on10, "Mulaney"Ever wonder about the thought that goes into how mean to be — ornot to be — ifyou're one of the "roasters" at a celebrity roast? John (John Mulaney) has that quandary in the new episode "French Roast," as he's invited to help give Lou (Martin Short) such a grilling. Oscar and Jane (Elliott Gould, Nasim Pedrad) go the"My Fair Lady" route as he teaches her the finer points of femininity. Seaton Smith and Zack Pearlman also star. 7 p.m. on 7, "The Great British BakingShow" — "Desserts" not only are on the menu, they're the entire menu in this new episode, and there's no question there's a British flavor to them
in every sense.Saucypuds
— cakes that have something special inside them, frequently
sauce-based —are amongthe edibles the remaining contestants are challenged to create. So is Baked Alaska, always a test for a chef ... even outside a competition. Sue Perkins and Mel Giedroyc are the hosts. 8 p.m. on 2 9, "Galavant" —If
there everwasaplace for song parodist Weird Al Yankovic in a saga of ancient times, this series is the likeliest spot. He guest stars in the first half of the new hour"Completely Mad ... Alenai Dungeons and Dragon Lady," playing a monk who leads others who have taken their vows in
constant singing. Madalena (Mallory Jansen)gives upon
King Richard (Timothy Omund-
son) andmakesher own plans. The second episode features Ricky Gervais and Rutger Hauer.
9 p.m.on10, "FamilyGuy"Brian (voice of Seth MacFarlane) is a newmanphysically, thanks to plastic surgery, and he tries to match that with a fresh career in "Brian the Closer." He begins work asa real estate agent, but it doesn't take long for the job to put him in conflict with Quagmire (also voiced by MacFarlane). Alex Borstein, Seth GreenandMila Kunis also are in thevoice cast. 9 p.m.on FOOD, "Worst Cooks in America" — The new episode "Spice Up Your Life" challenges the recruits to try their hand at experimenting with flavor combinations while making crepes, then they are tasked with creating their own international tacos. Anne Burrell and Tyler Florence are mentors and team leaders. © Zap2it
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • DUMB ANDDUMBER TO (PG-13)9:30 • EXODUS:GODS AND KINGS (PG-13)6 • TheNFLfootballgamescreensatt2:05p.m.(doorsopen at t1 a.m.). • Younger than 21 may attend all screeningsif accompanied t/y a legalguardian.
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FORCEMAJEURE(R) 8 • THE GREAT INVISIBLE (PG-13) 4 • THE SUBLIMEANDBEAUTIFUL (no MPAArating) 6 • THETALEOF PRINCESS KAGUYA(PG) I I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) noon, 3, 6:05, 9 • BLACKHAT (R) 12:45, 3:30, 6:30, 9:15 • TAKEN 3(PG-13) noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7, 9:20 • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 12:15, 3:15, 6:15, 9:15 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 1, 3:45, 6:30 • PADDINGTON (PG) 1:15, 3:30, 5:45 • SELMA(PG-13) 1, 3:30,6 • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 1:30 • WILD(R) 4: I5, 6:45
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18)
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 12:40, 3:35, 6:30, 9:20 • BLACKHAT (R) 1:10, 4:05, 7, 9:45 • PADDINGTON (PG) 12:10, 2:20, 4:35, 6:50, 9 • TAKEN 3(PG-13) noon, 2:20, 4:40, 7:10, 9:40 • WEDDINGRINGER(R) 12:30, 2:50, 5:10, 7:20,9:30 •
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • AMERICANSNIPER (R) 1, 4, 7 • TAKEN 3(Upstairs — PG-13) 1:15,4:15, 7:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GB! Magazine
•
Louie
Louie is a handsome six attd a halfyear old oat who was brought to the shelter because ttis owners are moving attd cannot find a new home that allows cats. He has not been around people too much but ertloys hunting and bringing "presents" to his owtter's doorsteps. If L o uie sounds like the perfect oat for your house,come on down to the shelter to meet Louie todayl
I
** * * * Y ou seem to be feeling much better than you have in a while. You know what you want, and you know how to get there. Honor a change of pace, and make a long-awaited decision. Bring a loved one into your plans; this person loves being with you. Tonight: You are on a roll.
** * Make it OK to vanish and be un** * * You could be on top of a problem available. You generally make a big effort that is gaining steam without you even to accommodate others. Why not do the knowing it. A creative endeavor or love same for yourself? You might need some interest might demand your time. Be less time to review a situation that has cost TAURUS (April 20-May20) you a lot. A loved one might not agree ** * * * Y ou'll break right past a hassle judgmental and more lighthearted, and you'll be happier as a result. Tonight: En- with your assessment. Tonight: Screen by detaching and seeing the situation your calls. from an outsider's perspective. Your po- joy life with the ones you love. sition will become more compassionate LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) as you gain a better understanding of ** * You could feel pressured by a ** * * Zero in on whatyou want to do, what motivates others. Tonight: Follow situation or a commitment involving your which might involve bringing friends the music. Celebrate! family. Honor your word, and do what together for a fun happening. You seem is necessary here. You can evaluate the to have a lot of energy right now. If you GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * You suddenly might catch yourself commitment at a later point when every- don't use it properly, you will find that you'll become short-tempered quickly. snapping at a friend, or vice versa. One of thingcalms down. Takea m uch-needed you seems tohavebeencarrying a griev- nap. Tonight: Order in. Be careful! Tonight: Zero in on what you ance that has been building up for some want. SCORPIO (Bct. 23-Nov.21) time. Learn to express your feelings ear** * * * W ho initiates a conversation © King Features Syndicate
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
HUMFtNf SOCICTV OF CalTRALOR(GON/SPCA r117D5 r. rrthrt., rrrD~H (541) 38R-3557
5
Little ad
BIG
savings!
Advanced Technology
25% to 45/o OFF MSRP
stsssee t- II),
Beltone Serving Central Oregon for over22 years!
541-389-9690 141 SE 3rfI • Bend We bill insurances
Scoreboard, D2 G o lf, D3 Sports in brief, D2 Preps, D5 NHL, D3 Swimming, D5
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
NATIONAL FOOTBALLLEAGUE PLAYOFFS
COLLEGE ATHLETICS
TOII conferences allow more ald OXON HILL,Md. — In a milestone Saturday, the five most prominent conferences in college sports voted to increase scholarships to cover athletes' full cost of attendance, which is typically several thousand dollars more thanthey currently provide. The vote was79-1, with the sole opposing vote coming from Boston College, amember of the Atlantic Coast Conference. The conferences, acting for the first time under autonomy theywere granted by theNCAA in August, also passed a concussion safety policy, prohibited colleges from withdrawing athletic scholarships for solely athletic reasons and granted athletes the ability to borrow against future earnings to buy loss-of-value insurance, which reimburses athletes if playing in college ends up harming their future earning power in professional sports. The resolutions are binding on the 65colleges in the BigFiveconferences, which include the ACC,the Big Ten,the Big 12, the Pac-12and the Southeastern. Cost of attendance in particular was seenas aforegone conclusion after the autonomyvote last year. Saturday wasalso the first instance in the NCAA's modern erain which students hada substantial say. Three athletes from eachconference, andonefootball player amongeachset of three, accounted for15
Brady, BelichickNFL's successful oddcouple By Paul Doyle The Hartford (Conn.) Courant
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — The quarterback and the
coach were brought together when the New England Patriots were still residing in a rickety old stadium, a
out of Michigan and considered little more than a depth player. It took two seasons for Belichick and Brady to
Nextup
NFC CHAMPIONSHIPGAME Green Bay atSeattle When:12:05 p.m. today TV:Fox Radio: KRCO-AM 690,FM-96.9
Is this Lynch'slast game in Seattle? efore the trade dead-
line of this wild Seattle B Pete Carroll was actually
NFL — upside down. The
ly-season tumult, including
franchise still defined more
franchise won its first Super Bowl after the 2001 season,
said, smirking, that late Oc-
the Percy Harvin trade. It sounds like the silliest
by folly than glory.
led by Brady's improbable
In 2000, Bill Belichick was trying to resurrect his
rise from backup to star. There would be three titles
coaching career as he was handed the keys to the team Tom Brady was an anonymous sixth-round draft pick
in four years, a new stadium in 2002, and the label as the
NFL's model franchise. See Patriots/D6
"Go ahead," the coach
AFC CHAMPIONSHIPGAME Indianapolis at NewEngland When:3:40 p.m. today TV:CBS
Inside • Conference title breakdowns,D6
tober day. "You can go with that." Breaking news: Seattle's
indispensable running back won't be dispensed. It was a laughable thought even then, amid all the ear-
break out By Christopher Clarey New York TimesNews Service
As another tennis sea-
son begins in earnest with this week's Australian
Open, the cards may or may not have been reshuffled, but the support staffs
definitely have been. This year, for a change, the women are leading the
way, and success in 2014 was no hmpedkment to
Photos by Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Saviano, whose technical
on Saturday at the Deschutes County Fair & ExpoCenter in Redmond. Espelend pinned Murray in 3 minutes, 50 seconds.
acumen and tough-love approach helped her make a surprisingly quick transition from junior success
• Culver, CrookCountywin titles at the state's biggest dual meettournament photos O© Seeadditional on The Bulletin's website:
The Bulletin
REDMOND — The out-
bendhnlletin.com/sports
come had already been decided. But the roars continued to
Inside
grow Saturday, amplifying with each pin and peaking
• Lava Bears boys, girls win Rumbaugh meet in Corvallis. Prep roundup,DS
with the penultimate match. Devin Krasznavolsi sauntered onto the mat for the
220-pound matchup. As a freshman two years ago, Culver coach J.D. Alley said afterward, Krasznavolsi may not have won a single match
Comedack falls short for Blazers
all season. Yet there was
Portland got within two
Sanchez late in the first period
the Trail Blazers cameup short in a102-98 loss. NBA roundup,D3
MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL Beavs pull away from Cougars Langston Morris-Walker sets career highs with 22 points and11 rebounds in a 62-47 win over Washington State,D4
More collegehoops • In the first Pac-12
game betweentop-10 teams in nearly seven years, No. 10Arizona rolls past No. 8 Utah 69-51. Roundup,D4
firing and hiring. The two newcomers who made the biggest impacts at the top level — Eugenie Bouchard of Canada and Simona Halep of RoIhsido mania • A look at the both split with their to p men's coaches. an d women's Bouchco n tenders at Melbourne ard separated Park ,D4 from Nick
Culver's Johnny Espelnnd tries to drive Monroe's Tielar Murray to the mat during the145-pound match in the Oregon Wrestling Classic
ByGrnnt Lucas
ing by18at halftime, but
SeeLynch/D6
coaches readyto
seasonforOklahoma's football team, said in an interview.
points of Memphis in the fourth quarter after trail-
season of his career.
Newstars,
started at center this
Portland's Wesley Matthews shoots over Memphis' Tony Allen.
thing ever now, with the Seahawks back in the NFC championshipgame and Lynch having led them with perhaps the best all-around
TENNIS: AUSTRALIAN OPEN
PREP WRESTLING:OREGON WRESTLING CLASSIC
the other 65 consisted of a representative from each university in the Big Five. "What we showed here today was,we're not here symbolically," Ty Darlington, who
NBA
BREWER
asked to confirm that Marshawn Lynch would not be dealt.
turn the Patriots — and the
votes of the total of 80;
— New YorfrTimes News Service
JERRY
Seahawks season,
the junior Bulldog wrestler, sprawled over Monroe's Dani
es. It helped the Bulldogs se-
Crook County's Collbrnn Meeker, right, fights for position with Tillemook's Drew Owens during their 156-pound match.
while the referee slapped the mat to signal the fall. The Culver contingent
erupted, and Krasznavolsi bore a smile that offered on-
lookers a view of all 32 of his
work with a fellow Roma-
Krasznavolsi possessed more than two thumbs to extend
hired Victor Ionita. Bouchard and Saviano have yet
toward the sky, as he did after the win, he would have used
to fill in much of the back story to their unexpected
them all.
split. But Saviano will still
"Best feeling ever," the ju-
unimpeding his words. "Ten at Deschutes County Fair
French opens and the final of Wimbledon. Halep dismissed Wim Fissette, the Belgian who helped her reach the final of the French Open and the WTA Championships and rise as high as No. 2 in the rankings. Halep said she wanted to
cure a 10th straight title at the dual meet tournament, and if
nior said, that 32-teeth smile
teeth. The Bulldogs defeated Monroe 63-18 in the Class 2A/IA championship of the Oregon Wrestling Classic
to the top 10 in 2014, when she reached the semifinals of the Australian and
times in a row — that's amaz-
& Expo Center. The pin by
ing. Not everybody can do
Krasznavolsi was Culver's eighth in a stretch of 10 match-
that."
SeeWrestling/D5
nian for a change and soon
be in Australia, coaching Sloane Stephens, the American whose game he also has helped shape and who had a difficult season in 2014. SeeAustralian /D4
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
As gamesdrag on,timelessnessbecomes lessthan sacred By Tyler Kepner New York Times News Service
Every five games during the baseball season, Jerry How-
arth gets to travelback in time. Howarth settles in behind his microphone in the Toronto
Blue Jays'radio booth and watches Mark Buehrle move briskly through the innings,
the way the old guys did. "He told me the last time he
shook off his catcher was 11 years ago, and someone lined a shot off his shoulder," Howarth said. "So it's, 'Give me the ball, let me see the sign, and I'll throw the pitch.'"
Baseball would never need to consider pitch docks if
everyone played as crisply as Buehrle, a veteran left-hander. But games are takinglonger
the minors this season — or,
in the box for the duration of
at least, the rules will finally be enforced, with a digital
the countdown, or pitchers can
than ever, and owners are
reminder ticking down to each
eager to quicken the pace
pitch. Double-A and Triple-A ballparks will include countdown docks, with pitchers required to deliver within the specifie dtim eorbecharged
As Commissioner Bud Selig leaves office next weekend, to be succeeded by Rob Manfred, pace of play is a serious concern in an industry of relative
for a generation that hates to
wait for anything. Buehrle's approachistheexception,not the rule.
The rules are changing in
with aball. Hitters must stay
toss a free strike.
calm. See Baseball/D5
D2 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY SOCCER England, West HamUnited vs. Hull City England, Manchester City vs. Arsenal CONCACAFU-20championship, Jamaica vs United States
5:30 a.m. NBCSN 8 a.m. NBCSN 5 p.m.
FS2
GOLF
Latin America Amateur Championship PGA Tour, SonyOpen PGA Tour, SonyOpen
8 a.m. E SPN2 1 p.m. NBC 3 p.m. Golf
BASKETBALL
Women'scollege,GeorgeMason atRichmond 9 a.m. E SPNU Women's college, Villanova atXavier 9 a.m. FS1 Men's college, Indiana at lllinois 10 a.m. Big Ten Women's college, South Florida at UConn 10 a.m. ESPN2 Women's college, Miami at Duke 1 0 a.m. R o ot Women's college,KentuckyatLSU 11 a.m. ESPNU Women's college, Colorado at Utah 11 a.m. Pac-12 Men's college, St. John's at DePaul 1 1:30 a.m. F S 1 Men's college, Saint Joseph's at St. Bonaventure 11:30a.m. NBCSN Women's college, Indiana at Minnesota noon B i g Ten Women's college, lowa at Michigan St. noon E S P N2 Women's college, Virginia at Louisville noon Root Women's college, Missouri at Arkansas noon SEC Men's college, Missouri St. at N. Iowa 1p.m. E SPNU Women's college, Arizona atCalifornia 1 p.m. P a c-12 Women's college, Washington St. at Oregon 1 p.m. Pac-12(0re.j Women's college, Mississippi at TexasA&M 2 p.m. SEC Women's college, Dayton at St. Bonaventure 2 p.m. NBCSN Men's college, Virginia Tech atNorth Carolina 3:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's college, Oregon atWashington 5:30p.m. ESPNU, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Women's college, Southern Cal atUCLA
7:30 p.m. Pac-12
HOCKEY
9:30 a.m. NBC 5 p.m. NBCSN
NHL, N.Y.Rangers at Pittsburgh NHL, Buffalo at Detroit FOOTBALL
NFL, NFC championship, Green Bayat Seattle
noon
Fox,
KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
NFL, AFC championship, Indianapolis at NewEngland
3:30 p.m. CBS
TENNIS
Australian Open, first round Australian Open, first round
4 p.m.
E SPN2
midnight ESPN2
MONDAY BASKETBALL
High school, Bishop (Calif.) vs. Wheeler (Ga.) High school, OakHill (Va.) vs. Villa Angela (Ohioj NBA, Detroit at Atlanta High school, Bishop (Nev.j vs. Montverde (Fla.j Women's college, OklahomaSt. at Oklahoma High school, Chaminade(Mo.) vs. Paul Vl (Va.) Women's college, Arizona St. at Stanford Women's college, Texas atBaylor Women's college, Purdue atNebraska Men's college, Pittsburgh at Duke Women's college, Tennesseeat Notre Dame Men's college, Texas atTexas Christian Women's college, South Carolina at Florida NBA, Chicago atCleveland Women's college, Washington at OregonSt. Men's college,Oklahoma atKansas Men's college, Florida St. at Clemson Men's college, Villanova atGeorgetown NBA, Sacramento at Portland
8 a.m. ESPNU 10a.m. ESPNU 11:30a.m. ESPN noon ESPNU 1:30 p.m. FS1 2 p.m. ESPNU Pac-12 3 p.m. 3:30 p.m. FS1 4 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. SEC 4:30 p.m. TNT 5 p.m. Pac-12 8 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. FS1 7 p.m. CSNNW,
KBND-AM 1110, FM-100.1; KRCO-AM 690,FM-96.9 7 p.m. TNT
NBA, L.A. Lakers at Phoenix SOCCER England, Everton vs. West Bromwich Albion CONCACAFU-20Championship, El Salvador vs Mexico
noon
N B CSN
2 :30 p.m. F S 2
TENNIS
Australian Open, first round Australian Open, first round Australian Open, first round HOCKEY NHL, Colorado at St. Louis
4 p.m. 8 p.m.
T e nnis E SPN2
midnight ESPN2
5 p.m. NBCSN
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF WINTER SPORTS Neureuther WinSWOrld CRPSlalOm — Felix Neureuther won a World Cupslalom on Saturday in Wengen,Switzerland, to retake the discipline standings lead from Marcel Hirscher of Austria, who skied out of the event for the first time in three seasons. Germany's Neureuther rose from fifth after the first run to beat Stefano Gross of Italy by 0.20 seconds. Olympic bronzemedalist Henrik Kristoffersen of Norway was third, trailing 0.44 behind Neureuther's combined time of 1 minute, 46.93 seconds.
TENNIS Britain'S WatSOn WinSHobart InternatiOnal — Britain's Heather Watson defeatedAmerican Madison Brengle 6-3, 6-4 on Saturday in Hobart, Australia, to win the Hobart International title without dropping a set.
Troicki WIRS1St ATP final With 2 qualifierS — Viktor Troicki of Serbia beat Kazakhstan's Mikhail Kukushkin 6-2, 6-3 Saturday to win the Sydney International title in the first ATPfinal between two qualifiers. VOSely takeS title IR ARCklaRd —Jeri Vesely of the Czech Republic beat Adrian Mannarino of France to claim theHeinekenOpen title in Auckland, NewZealand, on Saturday.
BOXING Wilder WinSPieCe Of heaVyWeight title OVer StiVerne
— Deontay Wilder becamethe first American to win a piece of the heavyweight title in nearly a decadeSaturday night in Las Vegas, staggering BermaneStiverne early on his way to a12-round unanimous decision that kept him unbeaten in 33 fights. Going deepinto a fight for the first time in his career, Wilder controlled the fight with a big left jab, often followed by right hands upthe middle as hepiled up points early on his way to the biggest win of his career. — From wire reports
ON DECK Monday Girls basketball: Trinity Lutheranvs. Alseaat McKenzieHigh, 6p.m. Tuesday Boys basketball:Bendat Mountain View,7 p.m.; Ridge viewatRedmond,7pmuSweetHomeatSisters, 5:45p.m.; Madrasat Estacada, 7p.m.; Crook Countyat Gladstone,7p.mc Coquile at LaPine, 6:30 p.m.; Summit JVat Culver, 6:30p.m. Girls basketball:MountainViewat Bend, 7 p.m.; Ridge view atRedmond,5:15 p.m.;SweetHome at Sisters,7:15p.mcEstacadaat Madras,7 p.m.; Gladstone at CrookCounty, 7p.m4Coquiffe at La Pine,5 p.m.;Summit JVatCulver,5 p.m. Wednesday Wrestling: CrookCountyat Redmond,6 p.m. Thursday Wrestling:MountainViewat Ridgeview,6 p.m.; Summiat t Bend; SistersatCotageGrove,6p.m. Swimming: Redmond, Ridgeview, Madrasat CascadeSwimCenter,3 p.m. Friday Boysbasketball:RedmondatBend,7p.m.;Mountain View atSummit, 7p.muJunction Cityat Sisters, 5:45 p.m.; Gladstoneat Madras,7 p.mcMolalla atCrookCounty, 7p.m.; LaPineat Harrisburg, 7:30 p.m.;Stanfieldat Culver,6 p.m.; Gilchrist at Paisley, 6 p.m. Girls basketball:Bendat Redmond, 7 p.m.; Summit at MountainView,7 p,mcJunction City at Sisters, 7:15p.mcMadras at Gladstone, 7 p.m.; CrookCountyat Molala,7p.mcLaPineatHarrisburg, 6p.m4Stanfield at Culver,4:30 p.m.;Trinity Lutheran at NorthLake,4p.mc Gilchrist atPaisley, 4:30 p.m. Wrestling: Redmond,CrookCountyat Reser Tournament ofChampions,9a.m. Saturday Boysbasketball: Heppnerat Culver,4 p.m.; Prospect atCentral Christian,4p.m.; HosannaChristian at Gilchrist,4:30p.m. Girls basketball:Culverat Heppner, 4 p.m.; Prospect atCentral Christian,2:30p.m.; RogueValley Adventist at Trinity Lutheran, 6 p.m.;Hosanna ChristianatGilchrist, 3 p.m. Wrestling:Redmond,CrookCountyat ReserTournament ofChampions, 9a.m.; Bend,MountainView, Sisters, La Pineat MadrasInyite,10a.m. Swimming: Sisters at PreDistrict Spring Meetin Albany,8a.m. Alpineskiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor, slalom,10 a.m. Nordic skiing:OISRA,OHS NOXC Oregon High SchoolInvitationalatMt. Bachelor,11:30 a.m.
TENNIS ATP Apia International Saturdayat Sydney Championship Viktor Troicki,Serbia,def. Mikhail Kukushkin,Kazakhstan,6-2,6-3.
HeinekenOpen SaturdayatAuckland, NewZealand Championship Jiri VeselyCz , echRepublic, def.AdrianMannarino, France,6-3,6-2.
WTA Hobarl International Saturday at Hobart, Australia Championship HeatherWatson,Britain, def. Madison Brengle, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4.
Australian Open Seeds At Melbourne Park Melbourne,Australia Jan. 19-Feb.1
Men
1. NovakDjokovic, Serbia;2. Roger Federer, Switzerland; 3. RafaelNadal, Spain; 4. StanWawrinka, Switzerland;5. KeiNishikori, Japan;6. AndyMurray, Britain; 7.Toma s Berdych, CzechRepublic; 8. Milos Raonic, Canada;9. DavidFerrer,Spain; 10. Grigor Dimitrov,Bulgaria. 11. ErnestsGulbis, Latvia; 12. FelicianoLopez, Spain; 13.RobertoBautista Agut, Spain; 14. Keyin Anderson,SouthAfrica;15. Tomm y Robredo, Spain; 16. FabioFognini,Italy; 17.GaelMonfils, France;18. Gilles Simon,France;19. John Isner, UnitedStates; 20. DavidGofin, Belgium. 21. AlexandrDolgopolov, Ukraine;22. Philipp Kohlschreiber,Germany; 23. Ivo Karlovic, Croatia; 24. RichardGasquet, France;25.Julien Benneteau, France;26. LeonardoMayer, Argentina; 27. Pablo Cuevas,Uruguay;28.LukasRosol, CzechRepublic; 29. JeremyChardy,France;30. SantiagoGiraldo, Colombia31. ; FernandoVerdasco, Spain; 32.Martin Klizan,Slovakia.
Saturday'sGames
Top 26 No. 1Kentucky70, Alabama48 No. 2Virginia66, Boston College 51 No.3Gonzaga72,LoyolaMarymount55 No.4Duke63,No.6Louisville52 No. 5Vilanova62,Pennsylvania47 No. 10Arizona69,No.8Utah51 No. 9Kansasvs. No.11lowaState No.12NotreDame75, Miami(Fla.) 70 No.13WichitaState61,Evansville 41 No. 14Maryland75,MichiganState59 No. 20Texas77,West Virginia 50 No.17VCU70, Duquesne64 No.18Oklahoma82,No.24OklahomaState65 No.19 Arkansas vs. Mississippi Kansas State63,Baylor 61 No. 25Wyoming70, FresnoState65(3OT) EAST American U.78, Lafayette 76 Bryant70,CCSU54 Buckneff81,Army75 Buffalo77,Mram>(Oh>o) 68 Colgate65,Navy53 Columbi48, a Cornell 45 Dartmouth 62, NJIT53 Drexel66,Delaware62
George Washington63 GeorgeMason53 Georgetown 61, Butler 59 Hartford68,Mass.-Lowell 62,OT La Salle60,Fordham49 Lehigh69,HolyCross64 MountSt. Mary's61, LIUBrooklyn54 NewHampshire73,Binghamton66,OT Northeastern 69,Col. of Charleston67 Pittsburgh70,Georgia Tech65 Purdue84,PennSt. 77, OT StonyBrook82, Maine39 UMass60, RhodeIsland56 UNCWilmington79 Hofstra74 VCU70, Duquesne64 Vermont71, UMBC54 Viffanova 62, Penn47
Virginia66,BostonCollege51 Wagner 82,Fairleigh Dickinson68 William &Mary85,Towson72 Yale80,Brown62 SOUTH Alabama St.59, AlabamaA&M56 Alcorn St. 87,MVSU67 AppalachiaSt n.74, GeorgiaSt. 69 Women Auburn 71,SouthCarolina68 1. SerenaWilliams, United States; 2. Maria Belmont 89, Austi n Peay83 Shara pova,Russia;3.Simona Halep,Romania;4. ethu ne-Cookman58,CoppinSt.53 Petra Kvitova,CzechRepublic; 5. Ana Ivanovic, B eston Southern 73, Presbyterian65 Serbia; 6.AgnieszkaRadwanska, Poland; 7. Eugenie Charl lemson66,Syracuse53 Bouchard,Canada; 8. Caroline Wozniacki, Denmark; C FOOTBALL D elaware St. 60, SCState49 9. AngeliqueKerber, Germany; 10.Ekaterina MakaroDuke63, Louisville 52 va, Russia. 65,Morehead St.62 NFL playoffs 11. DominikaCibulkova,Slovakia; 12. FlaviaPen- E. Illinois Kentucky 78,SIU-Edwardsville 62 netta, Italy;13.AndreaPetkovic, Germany; 14. Sara E. AH TimesPST FAU 76, Marshal Errani, Italy; 15.JelenaJankovic, Serbia;16. Lucie FloridaGulfCoastl 62 79,Jacksonville 50 Safarova,CzechRepublic; 17.CarlaSuarezNavarro, Furman ConferenceChampionships 74,TheCitadel 62 Today'sGames Spain; 18.VenusWiliams, UnitedStates; 19.Alize Gardner-W e bb 82, Coastal Carolina 67 Cornet,France;20.SamStosur,Australia. Green Bayat Seattle,12:05 p.m. a 73, Florida61 21. PengShuai, China;22. KarolinaPliskova, Georgi IndianapolisatNewEngland,3;40p.m. amesMadison75,Elon72 CzechRepublic;23. Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova, J entucky70,Alabama48 Russia;24. GarbineMuguruza, Spain;25. Barbora K InjuryReport Lipscomb 91,KennesawSt. 77 ZahlavovaStrycova, CzechRepublic; 26.ElinaSviINDIANAPOLISCOLTS at NEW ENGLAND Longwood 85, Liberty71 PATRIOTS — COLTS:QUESTIONABLE:CBVontae tolina, Ukraine;27. SvetlanaKuznetsova, Russia; Louis aTech75,MiddleTennessee68 acqua, Louisiiaanna-Monroe Davis (knee),CBGregToler (groin). PROBABLE: LB 28.SabineLisicki,Germany;29.CaseyDeff 64,UALR52 Erik Walden (knee). PA TRIOTS: OUT: CBryanStork Australia; 30. VarvaraLepchenko,United States; Maryland75,Michig anSt. 59 (knee).PROBABLE: QBTomBrady(ankle), CBBran- 31. ZarinaDiyas,Kazakhstan; 32. BelindaBencic, Md.-Eastern Sh ore 87, SavannahSt. 57 don Browner (knee), LBDont'a Hightower(shoulder), Switzerland. Memphis99,UCF79 DT ChriJones s (elbow),WRBrandonLaFell (shoulder, Mercer80,Samford 56 ShowCourtSchedules toe). MississippiSt.57,Vanderbilt 54 Monday GREENBAYPACKERS at SEATLE SEAMorganSt.75, Florida A&M65 At Melbourne Park HAWKS —PACKERS: PROBABLE: DTJosh Boyd MurraySt.91,TennesseeSt. 72 Melbourne,Australia ankle), RBEddie Lacy(knee),),QBAaron Rodgers N. Kentucky 66, SC-Upstate65 calf), G JoshSitton (toe). SEAHA WKS: QUES- Play beginsonall courtsat4 p.m. PSTToday NC A&T64,Hampton 61 Rod LaverArena TIONABLE: TJustin Britt (knee), SJeronJohnson NC Central 60, NorfolkSt.56 KarinKnapp,Italy, vs.SimonaHalep(3), Romania (elbow).PROBABLE: DEMichael Bennett(not injury State 72, FloridaSt. 63 AnaIvanovic(5),Serbia,vs.LucieHradecka,Czech NC related), RBMarshawn Lynch (not injury related), NorthFlorida80,Stetson65 DT TonyMcDaniel (shoulder), TETony Moeaki Republic orthwesternSt.96, Lamar 84 Not before7 p.m. Sunday: Mikhail Youzhny, Rus- N (calf), CBTharoldSimon(illness), C MaxUnger Old Dominion61,North Texas50 sia, vs.RafaelNadal (3), Spain (ankle). Radford85,Winthrop 77 NightSession(midnightPSTMonday) Rice73,Charlotte 68, OT yen-hsunLu,Taiwan, vs.Roger Federer (2), SwitRichmond 89, Davidson 63 America's Line zerland a89, Louisiana-Lafayette82 Petra Martic, Croatia,vs. MariaSharapova(2), SouthAlabam Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog Russi Southern U. 70, Ark.-PineBluff60 a HometeamsinCAPS TexasA8M67, LSU64 MargaretCourlArena A&M-CC69,NichollsSt.66 JarmilaGajdosova,Australia, vs.AlexandraDul- Texas NFL Troy75,GeorgiaSouthern71 gheru,Romania Today Tulsa 75,SouthFlorida 58 Murray(6),Britain,vs.YukiBhambri, India SEAHA WKS 7 7 H 4 6 H Pa ckers Andy elia Begu, Romania, vs. AngeliqueKerber UAB63,SouthernMiss.56 P ATRIOTS 7 6 H 54 Col ts Irina-Cam UNC Asheville 69,Campbell 65 (9), Germ any UT-Martin55,Jacksonville St.52 NightSession(midnightPSTMonday) V MI 85,ETSU79 GOLF EugenieBouchard (7), Cana da, vs. Anna-Lena W.Kentucky 65, FIU58 Friedsam, Germany a 43 FedericoDelbonis, Argentina,vs. Nick Kyrgios, Wofford62,W.CarolinMIDWEST PGA Tour Australia Akron 82, Ce nt. Mi c hi g an76 SonyOpen HisenseArena Green58, Ball St. 46 Satur day Julia Goerges,Germany, vs. BelindaBencic (32), Bowling Cincinnati84,Temple 53 At Waialae Coun try ClubCourse Switzerland and St.74,YoungstownSt.61 Hono lulu SabineLisicki (28),Germany, vs. Kristina Mlade- Clevel Dayton 61, Saint Louis45 6million Purse:SB. novic, France 84,IndianaSt.78 yardage:7,044; Par:70 TobiasKamke, Germany, vs. BernardTomic, Aus- Drake E. Michigan 54, N.Illinois 46 Third R otrrrrl tralia Green Bay70,Detroit 64 66-66-62—194 JimmyWalker Not before10p.m.PSTSunday: SamGroth, Aus- f linois St. 82, Bradley72 65-63-68—196 Matt Kuchar tralia, vs.Filip Krajinovic,Serbia lowa76,OhioSt. 67 66-67-64—197 BrianHarm an ShowCourl2 St. 86,Kansas81 66-64-67—197 TroyMerritt DustinBrown,Germany, vs. Grigor Dimitrov(10), lowa Kansas St.63, Baylor 61 65-65-68—198 Bulgaria Tim Clark Kent St.69,Ohio59 67-61-70—198 JustinThomas CarolineGarcia, France,vs. Svetlana Kuznetsova Michigan 56,Northwestern 54 69-67-63—199 (27), Russia MaxHom a 89, Rutgers80 JasonKokrak 67-69-64—200 Tomas Berdych(7), CzechRepublic, vs.Alejandro Minnesota N . Col o rado 88,North Dakota78, OT Shawn Stefani 69-66-65—200 Faff a,Colombia Notre Dam e 75, Miami70 HarrisEnglish 66-69-65—200 MonicaPuig, PuertoRico, vs. ArinaRodionova, Providence 74, Creighton65 68-67-65—200 Australia K.J. Choi S. Dakota St.71,SouthDakota57 GaryWoodland 70-65-65—200 ShowCourl3 S E Mi s souri 65,TennesseeTech61 ScottPiercy 67-67-66—200 Alexnader Kudryavtsev,Russia,vs. MarinkoMatosTennessee 59,Missouri 51 CamiloViffegas 63-70-67—200 evic, Australia UMKC 64,ChicagoSt.62 DanielSummerhays 66-67-67—200 yaninaWickmayer, Belgium, vs.Anastasia PavlyValparaiso 66,Wright St.56 RusselKnox l 66-65-69—200 uchenkova (23), Russia W . Mi c higan81,Toledo 78,OT Hyung-Sung Kim 69-69-62—200 An-SophieMestach, Belgium,vs. Ekaterina MaWichita St. 61,Evansville 41 WebbSimpson 62-66-72—200 karova (10), Russia JohnPeterson 65-70-66—201 Notbefore 2 a.m.EST Monday:ThanasiKok- Xavier62,Marquette 58 SOUTHWE ST BrianDavis 66-70-65—201 kinakis,Australia,vs.Ernests Gulbis(11), Latvia Arkansas St.78, TexasSt. 73,OT ZacBlair 71-66-64—201 H ouston Ba pt i s t 74, Ne w O rle ans 73 RyanPalmer 69-63-69—201 BASKETBALL Mississippi96,Arkansas82 PaulCasey 62-70-69—201 Oklah oma82,OklahomaSt.65 RobertStreb 63-69-69—201 Oral Roberts62, IPFW58 CharlesHowell RI 69-66-67—202 Men's college Prairie View70, JacksonSt.55 NicholasThompson 69-67-66—202 Pac-12 SE Louisiana108, IncarnateWord98, 20T JerryKelly 73-62-67—202 A H Times PS T SMU77,East Carolina54 DanielBerger 68-66-68—202 SamHoustonSt.69,McNeeseSt.60 ChezReavie 67-67-68—202 Conference Overall Stephen F.Austin 82,Abilene Christian 64 65-69-68—202 JasonDay W L PcL W L PeL TCU62,TexasTech42 69-64-69—202 James Hahn Arizona 4 1 .800 16 2 .888 Texas 77,West Virginia 50 J.J. Henry 65-67-70—202 4 1 .800 14 3 .823 Texas Southern 60,Grambling St. 51 72-64-67—203 Ulah RusselHenl l ey Stanford 4 1 .800 13 4 .764 Tulane 68, Houston65 70-66-67—203 Andrew Svoboda Oregon St . 3 2 .600 12 5 .705 UTEP73, UTSA55 70-66-67—203 TomJohnson UCLA 3 2 .600 1 1 7 .611 71-63-69—203 Scott Pinckney 2 2 .500 12 5 .705 69-65-69—203 Oregon ChadCollins 2 3 .400 9 8 . 5 29 Women's college 69-69-65—203 Colorado StewartCink 2 3 .400 9 8 . 5 29 70-62-71—203 WashingtonSt MarcLeishman Saturday'sGames Washi n gton 1 3 .250 12 4 .750 67-68-69—204 TOP 25 Francesco Molinari 1 4 .200 11 7 .611 68-68-68—204 California Jhonattan Vegas N o. 3 Bayl o r 71, Kansas63 S outhern Ca l 1 4 .200 9 8 . 5 29 67-68-69—204 Jeff Overton St. 1 4 .200 9 9 . 5 00 No. 4Texas55, TexasTech44 68-69-67—204 Arizona KennyPerry WestVirginia61, No.21OklahomaState49 LukeDonald 68-69-67—204 Saturday'sGames StuartAppleby 68-69-67—204 EAST St.78, Colorado72 68-66-70—204 Arizona MarkHubbard American U.63, Lafayette 44 Arizona69, Utah51 KevinNa 66-67-71—204 Stanford72, Connecticut 59 Buffalo53, Ball St.43 Colt Knost 70-68-66—204 CCSU 70,Bryant 59 ngtonSt.47 ZachJohnson 68-69-68—205 OregonSt.62,Washi Cornell59,Columbia39 T oday's Ga m e Pat Perez 67-68-70—205 Fairleigh Dickinson72,Wagner 70 Steven Bowditch 70-64-71—205 OregonatWashington, 5:30p.m. Harlford67,Mass.-Lowell 56 Wednesday'sGame MorganHoffmann 70-67-68—205 Lehigh 66, HolyCross60 Scott Langley 70-68-67—205 WashingtonStateatUtah,6p.m. Loyola(Md.)63,Boston U.53 T hursday' s Gam es Spencer Levin 69-69-67—205 Maine58,StonyBrook55 atStanford, 6p.m. RorySabbatini 64-67-74—205 Arizona MountSt. Mary's76,LIUBrooklyn69 BlayneBarber 66-69-71—206 UCLAat OregonState, 6p.m. Navy65,Colgate63 RogerSloan 70-67-69—206 WashingtonatColorado, 6:30p.m. NewHampshire73,Binghamton68 Southern Cal at O re gon,8 p. m . BooWeekley 69-65-72—206 RobertMorris67,St.Francis (NY)64 Arizona St a te at C al i f orni a , 8 p. m . BenMartin 71-67-68—206 Sacred Heart101, St. Francis(Pa.) 90 NickTaylor 70-68-68—206 Temple72,UCF57 Saturday'sSummary WC Liang 68-68-71—207 UMBC 68,Vermont 61 Matt Jones 68-67-72—207 SOUTH JustinLeonard 70-65-72—207 Oregon St. 62, WashingtonSt. 47 AlabamaA&M59,AlabamaSt. 50 Sang-MoonBae 67-70-70—207 AlcornSt. 52,MVSU47 DerekFathauer 68-66-73—207 Belmont 79,Murray St.68 OREGON ST.(12-5) 66-71-70—207 ne-Cookman61,CoppinSt.58 MichaelPutnam Gomis2-32-2 6, Schaftenaar 3-50-08, Payton II Bethu KevinStreelman 72-66-69—207 5-11 2-413,Duvivier3-110-0 6, Morris-Walker5-7 Campbel65, l Radford 62,OT 69-69-69—207 9-10 22,N'diaye1-20-0 2, Reid2-4 1-25, Livesay Chattanooga 83,W.Carolina 52 Brendon Todd Chris Kirk 66-67-74—207 0-00-00.Totals21-4314-18 62. CoastalCarolina81, Winthrop62 67-71-69—207 ETSU 87, UNC-Greensboro65 DavidHearn WASHINGTO NST. (9-8) Made cutdid not finish Hawkinson3-8 5-611, Railey1-41-1 3, Iroegbu FloridaGulf Coast 60,Jacksonville 37 68-68-72—208 1-4 0-0 2, Reddi n g 0-2 2-2 2, Lacy 4-8 6-8 16, KerGeorgi a St.76,AppalachianSt. 71 WilliamMcGirt 71-64-73—208 nich-Drew1-70-03, Dunbar 0-10-00, Longrus0-0 Hampton54, NCA&T48 TomHoge 71-66-71—208 0-0 0,Johnson FabianGomez 1-40-0 2, Boese3-10 0-08. Totals Lamar82,NorthwesternSt.72 69-68-71—208 14-4814-1747. Liberty86,Charleston Southern 51 MarkWilson 71-67-70—208 George McNeil Halftime —Oregon St. 25-16.3-Point Goals—Or- Lipscomb 79,KennesawSt. 61 70-66-73—209 egon St.6-12(Morris-Walker3-4, Schaftenaar2-3, LucasGlover Louisiana-Lafayette65,SouthAlabama58 69-69-71—209 Payton 0 1-3, Duvivier0-2), WashingtonSt. 5-25 Marshall66,FAU59 KyleSuppa 70-66-74—210 (Lacy2-4, Boese2-9, Kernich-Drew1-4, Dunbar0-1, Md.-Eastern Shore61, SavannahSt. 50 Jim Herma n JohnHuh 69-68-73—210 Redding0-1, Iroegbu0-2, Hawkinson 0-2, Johnson Mercer80,Wofford 51 72-66-72—210 0-2). HidekiMatsuyama FouledOut— None.Rebounds— OregonSt.37 Morehead St. 67,E.Illinois 62 70-68-72—210 (Payton013), WashingtonSt. 22(Hawkinson9). As- MorganSt.57, Florida A&M50 Martin Flores JonathanRandolph 65-73-72—210 sists — Oregon St.6 (Duvivier 3), WashingtonSt. 10 N. Kentucky 77, SC-Upstate74 JohnSenden 70-68-73—211 (Lacy3). Total Fouls—OregonSt. 16,WashingtonSt. NorfolkSt. 82,NCCentral58 KevinKisner 70-67-75—212 15. A—5,116. Presbyterian53, Longwood48 LukeGuthrie 68-70-75—213 SC State 65, DeiawareSt.60
SIU-Edwardsville71,E.Kentucky61 Samford76,Furman65 SouthernU.69,Ark.-PineBluff 42 Stetson67, North Florida 38 Tennessee St. 81,Austin Pea y78, OT Texas A&M-CC75,Nichoff sSt.59 Troy84,GeorgiaSouthern74 Tulane60,SMU58 UAB62, Southern Miss. 49 UALR 79, Louisiana-Monroe41 UNCAsheville 64, Gardner-Webb55 UT-Martin67,Jacksonville St.47 W. Kentucky 81, FIU42 MIDWEST
Akron65,Miami(Ohio) 47 Baylor71,Kansas63 Cleveland St. 71,Detroit 65 E. Michigan64,Bowling Green52 Green Bay63,Mil waukee37 Ill.-chicago 75, Oakland60 Michigan73, Northwestern 66 N. DakotaSt.81, IPFW60 N. Illinois66,KentSt.49 Nebra ska-Omaha66,IUPUI49 Ohio 71,Cent.Michigan51 SE Missouri68,TennesseeTech66, OT South Dakota82,S.DakotaSt.78 Toled o65,W.Michigan46 UMKC 65, ChicagoSt.59 WrightSt. 80,Valparaiso62 SOUTHWE ST Arkansas St. 68,TexasSt. 48 Charlotte62, Rice59 HoustonBaptist 63,NewOrleans45 Incarnate Word 82,SELouisiana70 McNeese St.79,Sam HoustonSt.74 Oklahoma97,TCU81 Old Dominion54, North Texas44 Oral Roberts76,W.Illinois 73 PrairieView82,JacksonSt.65 StephenF.Austin 71,AbileneChristian 69, OT Texas55,TexasTech44 TexasSouthern 74,Grambling St.33 Texas-Pan American77, CSBakersfield 60 Tulsa74,Houston52 UTSA55, UTEP53 WestVirginia61,OklahomaSt. 49 FARWES T Boise St.86,New Mexico65 Cal Poly63,CSNorthridge54 ColoradoSt.77, SanJoseSt.59 Fresn oSt.66,Wyoming65 Gonzag a76,LoyolaMarymount62 Idaho77,PortlandSt.49 IdahoSt.69, N.Arizona68 LongBeachSt. 81,UCSantaBarbara44 Montan a62,MontanaSt.48 NewMexicoSt. 76,Seatle 66 NorthDakota68, N.Colorado 58 Portland80,Pepperdine61 Sacramento St. 73,E.Washington67 SaintMary's(Cal)61,BYU51 SanDiego56, Pacific 52 SanFrancisco62,SantaClara45 UC Davis64, CalSt.-Fufferton59 UNLV64,SanDiegoSt. 47 UtahSt.69,Air Force53 UtahValley52,GrandCanyon50 WeberSt. 60,S.Utah 39
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPST
EaslernConference AtlanticDivision Tampa Bay Montreal Detroit Boston Florida Toronto Ottawa Buffalo
GP W L OT 47 29 14 4 44 28 13 3 45 25 11 9 46 24 16 6 43 20 13 10 46 22 21 3 44 18 18 8 46 14 29 3
Pls GF GA 62 152 126 59 121 105 59 128 111 54 121 117 50 106 120 47 138 142 44 120 122 31 85 161
MetropolitanDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.y.lslanders 45 30 14 1 61 144 125 Pittsburgh 43 26 11 6 58 132 106 Washington 45 24 13 8 56 133 115 N.y.Rangers 42 25 13 4 54 126 102 Philadelphia 46 18 21 7 43 123 137 Columbus 43 19 21 3 41 110 137 NewJersey 46 16 22 8 40 102 132 C arolina 4 5 1 5 2 5 5 35 94 119 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Nashville 44 30 10 4 64 136 102 45 28 13 4 60 145 110 St. Louis Chicago 44 28 14 2 58 136 99 Winnipeg 46 24 14 8 56 127 114 Colorado 46 19 17 10 48 121 132 Dallas 44 20 17 7 47 137 145 Minnesota 44 20 19 5 45 123 129 PacificDivision GP W L OT Pls GF GA A naheim 4 6 3 0 10 6 66 133 121 S anJose 4 6 2 4 16 6 54 125 125 Vancouver 43 25 15 3 53 121 109 C algary 45 2 4 1 8 3 51 131 118 Los Angeles 45 20 14 11 51 126 120 A rizona 44 1 6 2 4 4 36 101 146 Edmonton 46 11 26 9 31 104 154 Saturday'sGames Tampa Bay3, Colorado2, SO Edmonton 3, Florida2, SO Anaheim3, LosAngeles 2,SO Columbus 3, Boston1 Philadelphia4,Buffalo3 Montreal6, N.Y.Islanders4 Carolina3, Otawa2 Detroit 5,Nashville 2 St. Louis3, Toronto 0 Dallas 5,Washington4 Minnesota3,Arizona1 Calgary4,San Jose3,0T Today'sGames N.y. Rang ersat Pitsburgh,9:30a.m. Dallasat Chicago,3 p.m. ArizonaatWinnipeg,4p.m. BuffaloatDetroit 5 p m Monday'sGames PhiladelphiaatNy. Islanders
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L
AmericanLeague BALTIMOREORIOLES— AssignedC RyanLavarnwayoutrightto Norfolk (IL). NEWYORKYANKEES— DesignatedOFEuryPerez forassignment. SEATTLEMARINERS — Assigned LHPAnthony Fernandez outright to Tacoma(PCL). NationalLeague ARIZONA DIAMONDBACKS— Agreedto terms with RHP YoanLopezonaminor leaguecontract. ATLANTA BRAVES—AssignedINFTyler PastornickyoutrighttoGwinnett (IL). BASKETB ALL NationalBasketballAssociation NEWYORKKNICKS— SignedGLangstonGalloway to se acondconsecutive10-day contract. FOOTBAL L NationalFootballLeague NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— ReleasedTESteve Maneri. SignedDLJoe Vellanofrom the practice
squad.
HOCKEY NationalHockeyLeague DALLAS STARS— Recaled FCurtis McKenzie and DJyrki Jokipakkafrom Texas(AHL). PlacedF Brett Richie oninjuredreserve,retroactive to Dec. 15.
NASHVILL EPREDATORS— RecalledDAnthony BitettofromMilwaukee(AHL). OTTAWASENATORS — RecalledFJakubCulek fromEvansvile(ECHL)to Binghamton(AHL). WASHINGTON CAPITALS— AssignedGBrandon Anderson to Tulsa(ECHL). SOCCER MajorLeagueSoccer NEWYORKREDBULLS— SignedM LeoStolz. COLLEG E MICHIGAN — Named Tyrone Wheatley running backscoach. NOTREDAME — NamedJim McLaughlinvolleyball coach.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NBA ROUNDUP
D3
NHL ROUNDUP
F amescontinue to
cruise on t e roa, eat Sharks inOT
s:
(%
The Associated Press line to help Detroit snap SAN JOSE, Calif. — Sean Nashville's five-game winMonahan scored 24 seconds ning streak. into overtime to help the CalFlyers 4, Sabres 3: BUFgary Flames win their fourth FALO, NY. — Chris Vandestraight road game, 4-3 over Velde scored a third-period the San Jose Sharks on Sat- breakaway goal to help Philurday night. adelphia snap a six-game D ennis W i deman, J o e road losing streak and send Colborne, Jiri Hudler also Buffalo to its 10th straight scored for the Flames, who regulation defeat. have their longest road winBlue Jackets 3, Bruins 1: ning streak since taking six BOSTON — M att C alvert straight from Feb. 12-March scored the go-ahead goal
tIN
~y
5
P J ri t
I/
I
5,2009.
I~
»V .
I
with 3:03 left in the third and
Joni Ortio made 19 saves added an empty-netter in the and has all three wins to final minute as Columbus start a c r u cial f i ve-game ended a four-game losing road trip that will end at the streak. All-Star break next week. Canadiens 6, Islanders Logan
Co u t ure , Joe
4: MONTREAL — T omas
Thornton and Melker Karls- Plekanec scored two goals son scored for the Sharks, and added two assists to lead who have lost four of their
Montreal past the New York
past five home games. Antti Brandon Dill /The Associated Press
Portland guard Damian Lillard (0) shoots against Memphis forward TonyAllen (9) and center Marc Gasol during the first half of Saturday's game inMemphis, Tennessee. The Grizzlies won102-98.
8
1 SS 0
OF
BZB FS
Islanders. Oilers 3, Panthers 2:SUNThe winning playcame RISE, Fla. — Nail Yakupov off a faceoff on the opening scored the winning goal in shift of o vertime. Monah- the shootout to lift Edmonton an won the draw from Joe past Florida. Pavelski and went straight Hurricanes 3, Senators 2: Niemi made 19 saves.
to the net. Mark Girodano
Monahan then beat Justin
The Associated Press
his 22-footer.
close to playoff intensity as you can get in "I was pleased with our effort in the MEMPHIS, Tenn. — With all of the game 40,"Memphis coach Dave Joerger Memphis Grizzlies' firepower, it was re- second half," Portland coach Terry Stotts sard. serve point guard Beno Udrih who came said. "Beno made two jumpers that obviAlso on Saturday: up with not one, but two key baskets to ouslymadeadifference. Weputourselves Hawks 107, Bulls 99:CHICAGO — Kyle preserve a win. in a position to win a game on the road Korver made a season-high seven 3-pointUdrih's second basket with 8.7 seconds against a good team and just fell a little ers on his way to 24 points, and Atlanta left helped Memphis hold off a Portland shortinthesecondhalf." beat Chicago for its 12th straight victory.
Braun to the rebound for the game-winner. Also on Saturday: Lightning 3, Avalanche 2: TAMPA, Fla. — Ryan Callahan scored in regulation and got the decisive goal in the shootout to lift Tampa Bay
rally, and the Grizzlies won their fourth
to a victory over Colorado,
L aM a r c us Aldridge led Portland with
straight 102-98 over the Trail Blazers on 32 points, 18 in the second half, while Saturday night. Wesley Matthews finished with "I looked at the clock and it 25 points. Lillard, who struggled was a low clock," Udrih said of through three quarters, scored the final basket. "I didn't want to put somebody else in a position
23, including 10 in the fourth as
Portland made its comeback.
to shoot a desperate shot, so I just got to my spot. I was feeling pret- I • ty good the whole game, so I just >>IXI ~N knocked it down." Sacramento The 22-footer completed a at pcrtland perfect 7-for-7 night shooting for illfhea.7 p m' Udrih, who was playing for in- Mozday jured starter Mike Conley. Zach Randolph had 20 points Ty CSgNW . and 15 rebounds, Jeff Green and RadioKBND '
"
Courtney Lee matched Udrih's
17 points and Marc Gasol finished with 15 points, eight re-
The loss gave Portland its first
three-game losing streak this season. "If I knew the answer, I would
Warriors 131, Rockets 106: HOUSTON
Stars 5, Capitals 4:DALLAS — A n t oine R oussel and Jamie Benn scored 16
seconds apart in the third period, and Dallas recovered for the win after losing a 3-0
lead. Wild 3, Coyotes 1: ST. PAUL, Minn. — Devan Dub-
moving the Lightning back nyk stopped 25 shots against into first place in the Eastern his former team, and Jason
used a huge third quarter to roll past Houston. Wizards 99, Nets 90: NEW YORKNene scored20 points, three other Wash-
Conference.
ington big men were in double figures, and the Wizards beat Brooklyn to split
Ducks 3, Kings 2: LOS 28th of his career as St. Lou- ANGELES — Jakob Silfveris topped slumping Toronto. berg scored in the second Red Wings 5, Predators 2: round of the shootout, and DETROIT — Tomas Tatar Frederik Andersen stopped
theirhome-and-home series. Pistons 107, 76ers 89 : A U BURN HILLS, Mich. — Kyle Singler scored 20
Zucker and Zach Parise both
Blues 3, Maple Leafs 0: scored their 16th goal of the ST. LOUIS — Brian Elliott season to lead Minnesota stopped 27 shots for his third shutout of the season and
past Arizona.
scored twice, and H enrik
all three Los A ngeles at-
Zetterberg added a clever tally from behind the goal
tempts in Anaheim's victory over the Kings.
and Charlotte defeated Indiana in over-
time despite playing without its top two
of the first three quarters. That
bounds, six assists and three blocks for the Grizzlies.
Ottawa.
— Stephen Curry and Klay Thompson scored27 points each,and Golden State
fix it," Aldridge said when asked about execution. "So, I d o n't points, Greg Monroe had a double-double know. I think we've got to look and Detroit routed Philadelphia. in the mirror and see what we're Hornets 80, Pacers 71:CHARLOTTE, doing." N.C. — Gerald Henderson had 20 points Portland only c o nverted a third of its shots through much
O TTAWA, Ontario — N a -
got the puck at the point and than Gerbe and Justin Faulk sent a backhand shot that each had a goal and an asNiemi struggled to control. sist to lead Carolina over
scorers. allowed Memphis to extend its Timberwolves 113, Nuggets 105: DENa d v antage to 20. The Trail Blazers were VER — Andrew Wiggins scored a ca-
GOLF ROUNDUP
able to trim the Memphis lead to 78-70 af- reer-high 31 points and Robbie Hummel Memphis led by as many as 20 in the terthree. had two big tip-in baskets in the fourth second half, but saw that dwindle to 95-93 Mat t h ews and Aldridge keyed a 12-2 quarter, helping Minnesota hold off when Portland's Damian Lillard connect- rally in the middle of the fourth. Aldridge Denver. ed on a 3-pointer with 1:06 left. Udrih's b a cked down whatever defender the Griz- Clippers 117, Kings 108:SACRAMEN20-footer as the shot clock expired on the z l i es rotated to him. TO, Calif. — Blake Griffin scored 18 of his next possession helped Memphis mainPo r t land got no closer than three points30 points in the second half, Matt Barnes tain the lead. in the final minute thanks to Udrih's bas- had 26 points and the Los Angeles ClipLillard connected on another 3-pointer k e t s — both coming late in the shot clock. pers pulled away in the third quarter to "I thought the fourth quarter was as beat Sacramento. with 27 seconds left, but then Udrih made
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
Summaries
All TimesPST
EaslernConference d-Atlanta
Washington d-Toronto d-Chicago Milwaukee Cleveland Miami Brooklyn Charlotte Detroit Indiana Orlando Boston Philadelphia NewYork
W L 33 8 28 13 26 13 27 15 21 19 21 20 18 22 17 24 16 25 16 25 15 27 15 28 13 25 8 32 5 36
Pst GB 805 683 5 667 6 643 s/t
W L 32 6 30 11 29 11 28 13 28 13 27 14 25 16 24 18 19 20 19 20 18 22 16 24 14 26 12 29 7 32
Pst GB 842
WesternConference
d-Golden State d-Portlattd
d-Memphis Houston Dallas LA. Clippers SanAntonio Phoenix NewOrleans Oklahoma City Denver
Sacrame nto Ian LA. Lakers Minnesota d-divisionleader
Grizzlies102, Blazers98
Saturday'sGames Charlotte80,Indiana71,OT Detroit107,Philadelphia89 Atlanta107, Chicago99 GoldenState131, Houston 106
Washington 99, Brooklyn 90 Minnesota113,Denver105 Memphis102,Portland98 LA. Clippers117,Sacramento108 Today'sGames NewOrleansatToronto, 12:30p.m. Oklahoma City at Orlando,3 p.m. Utah atSanAntonio,4 p.m. Monday'sGames Philadelphia at Washington,11 a.m. Minnesota at Charlotte,11 a.m. Detroit atAtlanta,u:30a.m. BostonatLA.Clippers,12:30p.m. DenveratGoldenState, 1p.m. Dallas atMemphis, 2 p.m. Indiana at Houston, 2:30p.m. NeWOrleanSatNeW YO/k,2:30P.m.
Chicago at Cleveland,4:30 p.m. TorontoatMilwaukee,5 p.m. Sacramento at Portland, 7p.m. LA. Lakers atPhoenix, 7p.m.
525 11'Iz
512 12 450 14'A 415 16 390 17 390 17 357 18'A 349 19 342 18'Iz 200 24'/z
122 28
732 3'/r 725 4 683 5'/r 683 5'/z 659 6'/r 610 8'/z
571 10 487 13'/z 487 13'/r
450 15 400 17 350 19
293 21'/r 179 25'/z
PORTLAND (98) Batum1-60 03, Aldridge0-229-1032, Kam an 2-90-04, Lillard9-262-323, Matthews9-180-025, McCollum 0-0 0-00, Leonard 1-40-0 2,Wright 0-2 0-00,Blake2-40-05,Robinson1-22-24.Totals 36-9313-15 98. MEMPHIS(102) Allen1-4 0-0 2,Randolph6-13 8-1020,Gasol 7-141-215, Udrih r-r3-417,Lee6-131-217, Green6-142-2 17, Calathes1-3 0-0 2, Koufos 3-4 0-0 6, Carter 2-5 1-4 6. Totals39-77 1624 102.
Portland 23 19 28 28 — 98 Memphis 30 30 18 24 — 102 3-PointGoals—Portland 13-36 (Matthews7-14, Lillard 3-10, Aldridge1-1, Batttm 1-3, Blake1-3, Wright 0-2, Leonard0-3), Mem phis 8-15 (Lee4-6, Green3-5,Carter1-3, Allen0-1). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —Portland 46 (Kamatt 11j, Memphis59 (Randolph15).Assists—Portland20(Blake8V ,Me mphis 21(Gasol 6I. Total Fouls—Portland22,Memphis 18.A — 18,09(t8,09).
Warriors131, Rockets106 GOLDEN STATE(131) Barnes 4-7 0-010, Green3-64-6 0, Bogut1-2 0-0 2, Curry9-187-8 27,Thompson9-15 6-9 27, Speights6-123-415, Iguodala4-5 0-1 9, Holiday 2-4 0-0 4, Lee8-132-518, Livingston0-5 0-0 0, Barbosa 3-3 0-0 6, Rush1-1 0-0 Z Totals 50-91 22-33 131. HOUSTON (106) Ariza 2-52-2 7, Motieltlnas4-8 5-514, Howard 9-15 5-7 23, 6everley4-131-1 u, Harden4-15 4-712, Brewer3-9 2-2 9, Terry0-3 2-2 2, Smith 5-10 3-414, Papanikolaou2-5 0-0 5, Dorsey2-2 0-3 4, Shved2-3 1-1 5. Totals 37-88 25-34 106. Goldenstate 31 33 38 29— 131 Houston 31 28 21 26 — 106
Wizards99, Nets90 WASHIaGTON (99)
Pierce 2-9 1-2 7, Nene8-12 4-8 20, Gortat 5-6 0-210, Wall 5-15 1-211, Beal5-125-6 17, Butler 4-8 0-2 9, Humphries6-7 t-t 13, Porter 0-1 0-0 0, Miller 0-00-0 0, Seraphin5-7 2-412, Blair 0-0 0-0 0,Temple0-0 0-0 0. Totals 40-77 14-27 99.
BROOK LYN(90) Johnson6-172-215, Garnett4-8 0-0 8, Plumlee 4-73-411,Jack10-18 2-222,Bogdanovic 3-6 1-1 8, Lopez5-13 5-615, Anderson2-41-3 6, Morris O-t 0-0 0,Teletovic2-7 0-0 5, Brown0-0 0-0 0, Jefferson0-1 0-0 0.Totals 36-82 14-18 90. Washington 23 27 27 22 — 99 Brooklyn 26 25 19 20 — 90
Hawks107, Bulls99
Clippers117, Kings108
ATULNTA (107) Carroll1-51-24,Milsap6-144-616, Horford11-14 0-022,Teague5-166-817, Korver7-103-324, Brand 3-50-06 ,Sefolosha2-6H4, Mack1-20-02,Scott2-7 1-1 6,Bazemore2-51-1 6. Totals 40-8416-21 107. CHICAGO (99) Butler 6112 215,Gibson37 3 49, Gasol 918 4-522, Rose 8-223-523, Hinrich3-60-08, Moore 2-4 0-0 4, Brooks5-82-213, Mirotic1-42-2 5.Totals 37-8016-20 99. Atlanta 24 24 28 31 — 107 Chicago 16 23 28 32 — 99
LA. CLIPPERS (117) Barnes10-152-2 26,Griffin11-16 8-0 30, Jordan 3-62-8 8,Paul4-134-412, Redick7-140-018, Crawford5-15 2-213, Rivers0-3 1-21, Hawes2-5 0-04, Jones 0-20-00, Davis2-31-25. Totals 4492 20-31 117. SACRAM ENTO(108) Williams5-103-4 13,Thompson9-15 5-6 23, Hollins 1-50-22, Collison7-15 0-017, McLemore 6-12 2-214,Casspi0-10-0 0, Evans3-5 2-28, Gay 6-168-8 22,McCallum4-7 0-0 8, Miler 0-31-2 t Totals 41-8921-26108. LA. Clippers 28 2 4 31 34 — 117 Sacramento 28 2 4 26 30 — 108
Pistons107, 76ers89 PHIULDE LPHIA(89) MbahaMoute5-80-011, Covington3-91-1 9, Noel 3-71-27,CarterWilliams6-122-215,McDaienls2-10 0-04, Grant2-70-05,Sims5-62-212,Thompson3-7 0-0 7, Drew II 3-70-06, sampson4-5 0-09,Aldemir 1-2002, Thomas1-20OZ Totals38826789. DETROIT (107) Sittgler7-120-020,Monroe4-114-412,Drummond 4-15H8,Jennings3-92-210, Caldwell-Pope6-112-2 17, Jerebko 1-200 3,Meeks48 6615, AugustIn 36 0 06, Butler 0 2000, Tolliver61025 16, Martin01 0 00 Anthony0-1 H0. Totals38-8816-19107. Philadelphia 21 1 6 25 27 — 89 Detroit 31 25 25 26 — 107
Hornets 80, Pacers 71(OT) INDIANA (71) S.Hill 0-1 0-0 0,West9-171-2 19, Hibbert6-13 0-212,Watson2-63-48,Stuckey3-82-28,Miles 2-131-1 5,Mahinmi1-50-02, Scola0-50-00, Sloan 5-8 2-213,Rudez2-6 0-04, Copeland0-20-00. Totals 30-84 9-1371.
CHARLolTE (80)
Kidd-Gilchrist 4-131-3 9, Zeller3-8 0-0 6, Biyombo37268, Roberts2-12226, Henderson619 8-920, Stephenson 5-122-313, Wiliams4-110-09, Msxiell 0-30-00, Hairstott 0-5 0-00, Neal4-0 1-2 9.Totals31-101 16-2580. Indiana 21 19 11 17 3 — 71 Charlotle 17 20 13 1812 — 80
Timberwolve s113, Nuggets105 MINNESOT A(113) Httmmel6-12 2-215, Young9-17 4-422, Dieng 4-84-4 12,Wiliams5-122-2 13,Wiggins11-175-6 31, Btldittger2-41-1 6, Bennett3-61-27, Lavitte 3-4
0-07. Totals43-8019-21 113. DENVER (105) Chandler616 01 14,Faried3 5 00 6,Nurkic1-7 224, Lawson 7156722, Afflalo4-1422 13,Hickson 4-10 6-614,Arthur4-80-08, Foye0-3 0-0 0, Nelson 7-100-016,Gse2-43-48. Totals 38-9219-22105. Minnesota 37 19 29 28 — 113 Denver 25 34 24 22 — 105
Leaders ThroughFriday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Harden,HOU 40 331 313 1080 27.0 James,CLE 32 290 194 832 26.0 Davis,NOR 37 348 198 894 24.2 Cousins,SAC 28 237 196 671 24.0 Anthony,NYK 31 277 145 742 23.9 Aldridge,PO R 36 336 149 839 23.3 Curry,GO L 37 304 135 857 23.2 Griffin, LAC 40 352 202 914 2z9 Bryant,LAL 34 260 195 768 2z6 Wade,MIA 30 255 139 664 2z1 Lillard,POR 40 299 175 882 2z1 Bosh,MIA 32 250 142 691 21.6 Thompson, GOL 36 219 111 177 21.6 Irving,CLE 38 290 158 804 21.2 Butler,CHI 38 253 241 787 20.7 36 261 173 733 20.4 Gay,SAC Ellis, DAL
Lowry,TOR Gasol,MEM Hayward,UTA
41 323 39 270 39 277 40 256
134 828 20.2 170 784 20.1 195 751 19.3 189 167 19.2
Rebounds G OFF DEF TOT AVG Jordan,LAC 40 169 373 542 13.6 Drummond,DET 40 195 318 513 1z8 Cousins,SAC 28 84 263 347 1z4 Chandler,DAL 39 157 320 477 1z2 Randolph,MEM 30 09 232 351 0.1 Gasol,CHI 38 105 325 430 11.3 VucevIc,ORL 37 01 300 40 11.1 Howard,HOU 28 84 226 310 u .1 Aldridge,PO R 36 98 279 377 10.5 Davis,NOR 37 97 289 386 10.4 Assists G AST AVG Lawson,DEN 38 385 10.1 Wall, WAS 40 403 10.1 Rondo,DAL 35 342 9.8 Paul, LAC 40 389 9.7 Curry,GO L 37 293 7.9 Lowry,TOR 39 303 7.8 James,CLE 32 238 7.4 Teague,ATL 36 261 7.3 Carter-Williams,PHL 31 224 7.2
Hugh Gentry/The Associated Press
Jimmy Walker tees off on the 17th hole during the third round of the Sony Open Saturday in Honolulu.
With 62, Walker takes control at SonyOpen The Associated Press HONOLULU — D efend-
Walker was at 16-under
194, and he knows as well as
ing champion Jimmy Walker one-putted his last 11 holes Saturday on his way to an 8-under 62, giving him a two-shot lead in the Sony
anyone that this tournament
Open and a chance to be-
going to come from," Walker said. "So you've got to go out
come the first back-to-back winner since 2004. On a day in which six players had at least a share of the lead at some point, Walker began his surge with a wedge to 5 feet on the eighth hole. He twice saved par, escaped with a bogey after two shots from a plugged lie in a bunker on the 17th and made birdie everywhere else. It was reminiscent of his final round at Waialae a year
ago when he raced past a crowded field with key putts. That gave him a victory. This only gavehim a chance to become the first repeat winner of the Sony Open since Ernie Els. Matt Kuchar, one of three players tied for the lead at the start of Saturday, birdied two
is just getting started. "Somebody is shooting a low round every day, and you never know where it's with the expectation you've
got to shoot a good score tomorrow." Without the strong wind
typical of this tournament, there has been a score of at least 62 every round. That
led Kuchar to say that anyone within six shots of the lead is still a threat.
Also on Saturday: Kaymer up six strokes in Abu Dhabi: ABU D H A B I, United Arab E m irates Three-time winner Martin
Kaymer shot a 7-under 65 to open a six-stroke lead in the Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf
Championship. Kaymer the U.S. Open champion who won the Abu Dhabi event in 2008, 2010 and 2011, had a 20-under 196 totaL Belgium's
of his last three holes for a 68 Thomas Pieters was second and was two shots behind.
after a 70.
D4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL
Beavsre oun rom oss, eat ou s
Australian
players outside the top 100.
Continued from 01 "It's been a merry-go-
ticularly if he is healthy, still seems foolhardy in light of his internal drive and body of
round," said TracyAustin, the
But counting out Nadal, par-
Langston Mor r i s-Walker recorded career highs of 22 points and 11 rebounds in a 62-47 victory over Washing-
former U.S. Open champion work. "He's obviously started the who is that increasingly rare former No. 1 who has yet to season slow, losing to Berrer, take a coaching job on tour. but I wouldn't put it past him The trend leapt from the winning the Aussie Open," men's game to the women's said Jim Courier, a former game this offseason, with Australian Open champion Lindsay Davenport agreeing and world No. 1. "Best-ofto help the young and — for five sets gives Rafa time to now — erratic A merican problem solve, and if he's
ton State on Saturday night.
Madison Keys; and Martina
not the best problem solver,
Gary Payton I I a d d ed 13 points and 13 rebounds for Oregon State (12-5, 3-2 Pac-12). DaVonte Lacy, playing on
perennial Grand Slam con-
Novak, my favorite. Give him
tender from Poland who has one or two matches and he's yet to break through for a off to the races."
By Howie Stalwiok The Associated Press
P ULLMAN,
Wa s h .
Navratilova agreeing to help he's among them. Rafa, if the Agnieszka Radwanska, the guy's healthy, is, other than
a sore right knee that limited him to 10 minutes in the first
title. "I think the reason Lindsay and Martina take it on is because it's exciting to see
half, scored all of his teamhigh 16 points in the second half for Washington State (98, 3-2). Josh Hawkinson had
someone who has the talent and youfeelyou could make a real difference," said Austin, who is close to Davenport. "Someday I would love to do it and help someone, but not right now. My kids are still a big-time job."
11 points and nine rebounds
for the Cougars. The Beavers led 25-16 at the half after holding WSU to
25 percent shooting from the field. In the first half of their 108-99 overtime win over Or-
Washington State wound up shooting 29.2 percent against Oregon State. The Beavers shot 48.8 percent, outrebounded th e C o ugars 37-22 and had a 24-12 advan-
tage in points in the paint. The Cougars drew a season-high crowd of 5,116, but the Beavers silenced WSU fans by scoring the first six points of the first half and the first eight points of the second half. The Cougars Gary Breedlove 1 The Associated Press trailed from th e opening Washington State guard NyRedding beats Oregon State guard Gary Payton II for a loose ball during basket. the second half of Saturday night's game in Pullman, Washington. Oregon State won 62-47.
46-39 with 4:57 left, but Mor-
ris-Walker quickly responded with his third 3-pointer, tying his career high for 3s in a game. Payton, a 6-foot-3 guard,
Nextup uCLaat Oregon State When:6 p.m., Thursday TV:Pac-12 Radio:KICE 940-AM
leads the Beavers with 11.8
Courier said. "Because once
a back patient, always a back patient. Other than Novak,
Dani Vallverdu, and fitness trainer, Jez Green. Vallverdu is no w w o r k-
better." Federer, at the end of a re-
suade Lendl to come work for
to default before the final
surgent season in 2014, had ing for Tomas Berdych, the his chronic back problems Czech with so much easy resurface at the ATP World power who has yet to per- Tour Finals, where he had
him andwho remains one of against Djokovic. But he rethe best players in the men's covered quickly enough to game not to win a G r and clinch Switzerland's first DaSlam title. vis Cup victory only a week After years of t r ophy later.
game without sixth man Vic-
since a four-game run from
tor Robbins. He's serving a 10-game suspension for a vi-
1999-2001.
2014.
ly turned him into a star in
Washington State:The Cougars have already tied their conference wins total from a year ago, and they're just one shy of last season's overall vic-
Stan Wawrinka broke up the cartel by winning the Australian Open and Marin Cilic kept the proletarian revolt going by winning the U.S. Open, beating Berdych, Federer and Kei Nishikori along the way without losing
his native Australia last year when he upset Nadal at Wim-
The Beavers, already short
on depth and scholarship players, played their second
olation of athletic department
policy. Robbins is Oregon State's third-leading scorer at 10.3.
points, 8.5 rebounds and second in N C A A D i v i sion 2.9 steals per game. The ju- I through Friday with 2.8 Tip-ins nior college transfer ranked steals. Oregon State:The Beavers
have won four consecutive games against W ashington State for the f irst time
tory total. WSU finished 10-21
last season, including 3-15 in the Pac-12.
a set.
In Nadal's last six official events, stretching back to last
No.10 Arizona dominatesNo. 8Utah The Associated Press
ig
TUCSON, Ariz. — Arizona coach Sean
Miller called his team a home underdog with a top 10 opponent visiting the
44
McKale Center.
ROUNDUP
10 Arizona turned its Pac-12 showdown
of his 18 points in the second half, Amile
that a team like that brought out the best
PHILADELPHIA — Daniel Ochefu had 21 points and 10 rebounds to lead Villanova over Pennsylvania.
Jefferson added 19 and Duke dominated
Louisville. No. 5 Villanova 62, Pennsylvania 47:
No. 11 lowa State 86, No. 9 Kansas 81:
shaky at both ends in the Pac-12's first
game between top 10 teams in nearly sevenyears.
AMES, Iowa — Naz L ong scored 20
points and Iowa State held off Kansas, recording back-to-back wins over the Jayhawks for the first time in 14 years. No. 12 Notre Dame 75, Miami 70:
Pass-first point guard T.J. McConnell
showed a rare display of offensive aggression to rally the Wildcats, creating his own shots while still setting up team-
Rick Scuteri/The Associated Press
SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Jerian Grant
mates and playing his usual not-give-an- Arizona forward Brandon Ashley (21) dunks scored23 points and Notre Dame overinch defense. The senior finished with over Utah center Dailin Bachynski during came a 12-point deficit in the second half 16 points, six assists and helped Arizona the second half of Saturday's game in to beat Miami. slow Utah's Delon Wright after he scored Tucson, Arizona. No. 13 Wichita State 61, Evansville 41: seven quick points. EVANSVILLE, Ind. — Darius Carter and Freshman Stanley Johnson played like Ron Baker scored 18 points apiece to lead a freshman in the first half, a non-factor at home against the up-in-your-face Utes. Wichita State past Evansville. with two fouls and no other stats of note. Though not entirely true — Arizona No. 14 Maryland 75, Michigan State 59: He played more like one of the nation's was a six-point favorite — Utah was not COLLEGE PARK, Md. — Freshman Melo most talented players in the second half, going to be an easy mountain to climb for Trimble scored 21 of his 24 points in the getting all 18 of his points and all nine re- the sometimes-inconsistent Wildcats. first half and Maryland breezed past bounds to keep Utah at bay. Utah entered McKale Center with a Michigan State to take sole possession of Brandon Ashley was at his assertive higher ranking and leading the Pac-12 first place in the Big Ten. best, finishing with 14 points, eight re- after winning seven straight games. The No. 20 Texas 77, No. 16West Virginia 50: bounds and one emphatic second-half Utes also were among the national lead- AUSTIN, Texas — Cam Ridley scored 19 block that sailed into the stands. ers in defensive scoring and shooting points and set the tone with a thunderous As a whole, the Wildcats played per- percentage, and have the dynamic duo of early dunk as Texas snapped a two-game haps their best game, shooting 49 per- Delon Wright and Loveridge. skid with a bruising victory over West cent against one of the nation's toughAlso on Saturday: Virginia. est defensive teams while hounding the No. 17 VCU 70, Duquesne 64:PITTSUtes into one difficult shot after another.
Pac-12
They were particularly effective against
Arizona St. 78, Colorado 72: TEMPE, Ariz. — Bo Barnes sank three 3-pointers in a three-minute span late in the game
who reached the U.S. Open final last year, and Kyrgios, still just 19, whose live arm and lively personality quick-
bledon. He will be watched
closely next week, even if he, too, is not 100percent healthy. "I would say the thing I'm looking forward to the most in the men's games is to see what Kyrgios did with his time off," Courier said. "Because he didn't really play af-
year's grass-court event in ter the U.S. Open. Other than Halle, Germany, he has been team tennis, he didn't play at beaten by D u stin B r own, all, so I'm curious to see if he's Nick Kyrgios, Martin Klizan, made some stridesforward
Feliciano Lopez, Borna Coric and developed some consisand Michael Berrer. tency. Because his high level That is quite a list, pep- last year sure looked as good pered with teenagers and as anybody's."
scored 17 points and Gonzaga pulled
with No. 8 Utah into a rout, overcoming a sluggish start to roll over the eighthranked Utes 69-51 on Saturday. "Maybe what we recognized today is in us," Miller said. Arizona (16-2, 4-1 Pac-12) came out
There are other young threats, including Nishikori,
55: LOS ANGELES — G ary B ell J r. away in the second half to beat Loyola Marymount for its 11th straight win over the Lions. No. 6Louisvile l 63,No .4 Duke 52: LO UISVILLE, Ky. — Jahlil Okafor scored 14
The way the Wildcats dominated, he may not be able to do that again. Aggressive and crisp at both ends, No.
BURGH — JeQuan Lewis scored a sea-
son-high 16 points and Virginia Commonwealth beat Duquesne for its 10th initial flurry. straight victory. Arizona also outworked the Pac-12's and Arizona State pulled away from ColNo. 18Oklahoma 82,No. 24 Oklahoma best rebounding team, grabbing 21 more orado to win its first Pac-12 game of the St. 65: NORMAN, Okla. — Buddy Hield than the Utes (14-3, 4-1), including 17 season. scored 27 points on 10-for-10 shooting to on the offensive glass that led to 18 secStanford 72, UConn 59: STANFORD, help Oklahoma beat Oklahoma State. ond-chance points. Calif. — Chasson Randle scored 23 points, Mississippi 96, No. 19 Arkansas 82: So much for underdogs. Rosco Allen added a career-high 13 re- FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. — Stefan Moody "Coach Sean Miller joked about trying bounds and Stanford beat Connecticut. had 18 points as Mississippi shot a seato figure out a way to upset us and that son-high 56.4percent in a win over was like being in the middle of a dream," Top 25 Arkansas. Utah coach Larry K r y stkowiak said. No. 1 Kentucky 70, Alabama 48:TUSKansas State 63, No. 22 Bayior 61: "Coming in here, we knew we didn't have CALOOSA, Ala. — Devin Booker scored MANHATTAN, Kan. — Nino Williams to pitch a perfect game, but we had to be a 13 points and Kentucky coasted to its sec- had 18 points to lead a big second-half lot tighter in some areas. Looking at the ond straight lopsided Southeastern Con- rally, and Kansas State forced Baylor's rebounds, that's an indication that we still ference victory. Kenny Chery to miss a layup at the have some work to do." No. 2 Virginia 66, Boston College 51: buzzer. Brandon Taylor had 12 points and Jor- BOSTON — Malcolm Brogdon scored 20 No. 25Wyoming 70, Fresno State 65: dan Loveridge scored all of his 11 points points, Anthony Gill had 11 points and FRESNO, Calif. — Larry Nance Jr. scored in the second half for Utah. 10 rebounds and Virginia pulled away to 21 points and Josh Adams added 16 to Coming off a win over Colorado, Miller beat Boston College. help Wyoming survive a triple-overtime did say the Wildcats would be underdogs No. 3Gonzaga 72,Loyola Marymount thriller against Fresno State. Wright, who had three points after his
"I think the specter of back injury that hangs over three of the top four guys, the big four, that's always present now on a go-forward basis,"
hoarding by Roger Federer, Rafael Nadal and Novak Djokovic, and with Murray playing a less consistent role, theGrand Slam club expanded surprisingly quickly in
Morris-Walker scored 19
gars pulled within seven at
challenges the establishment.
the other three guys have all er former women's No. 1, con- sufferedsome back problems tinues to coach Andy Murray that have been at times seriafter replacing the departed ous. That makes them more Ivan Lendl last year. But Mur- vulnerable, and the younger ray has continued to tinker guys not facing those issues with his staff, splitting with are gaining in confidence his longtime assistant coach, and their games are getting
72.4 percent.
control of the game. The Cou-
when the younger generation
Amelie Mauresmo, anoth-
egon on Thursday, the Cougars scored 57 points and shot
points in the second half to help the Beavers maintain
But Courier also senses that this could be the year
Top eontenders Nen's
Women's
IIIO. 1 IIIOVAKDJOKOVIC Major Titles:7 — Australian ('08, '11, '12, '13) Wimbledon ('11, '14), U.S. ('11), Last 5Australian Opens:
iiiO. 1 SERENAWILLIAMS Major Titles:18 —Australian ('03, '05, '07, '09, '10), French ('02, '13), Wimbledon ('02, '03, '09, '10, '12),
'14-QF, '13-Won, '12-Won '11-Won, '10-QF
Tepspin:Finished No. 1 for the third time in four years, winning a tour-high seven
U.S. ('99, '02, '08, '12, '13,
'14) Last 5Australian Opens:
'14-4th, '13-QF, '12-4th, '11DNP, '10-W
Tepspin:Her18 Grand Slam singles titles havehereven IIIO. 2 ROGERFEDERER with Chris Evert and Martina Major Titles:17 —AustraNavratilova and behind Steffi lian ('04, '06, '07, '10), French Graf's 22 in the OpenEra. ('09), Wimbledon ('03, '04, '05, '06, '07, '09, '12), U.S. NO. 2 MARIA SHARAPOVA ('04, '05, '06, '07, '08) Major Titles:5— French Last 5Australian Opens: '14-SF, '13-SF, '12-SF, '11-SF, ('12, '14), Wimbledon ('04), U.S. ('06), Australian ('08) '10-Won. Last 5Australian Opens: Tepspin:Recorded his '14-4tI1, '13-SF, '12-F, 11-4tI1, 1,000th match win on the professional tour, becoming '10-1st Tepspin:Backhealthy after only third man to reachthe milestone, with victory over a series of shoulder injuries, Sharapova hadone of her Miios Raonic in the final of the Brisbane International in three best seasons ontour in 2014, finishing with a his first tournament of the year-end No. 2 ranking after season. achieving the same in2006 IIio. 3 RAFAELNADAL and 2012. Major Titles:14— Australian (2009), French ('05, '06, iiiO. 3 SIMOIIIA HALEP '07, '08, '10, '11, '12, '13, '14), Major titles:0. Best: — F, French ('14). Wimbledon ('08, '10), U.S. ('10, '13). Last 5Australian Opens: '14-QF, '13-1 st, '12-1 st, 11Last 5Australian Opens: titles.
'14-F, '13-DNP, '12-F, 11-QF, '10-QF.
3rd, '10-DNP
Tepspin:Haswonat least one major in10 consecutive seasons, a record, and is tied at No. 2 with PeteSampras
Tepspin:Got2015 off to a good start by winning the Shenzen Open,beating Timea Bacsinszky in straight sets in the final.
on the all-time list with14
i io. 4 PETRAKVITOVA
majors. NO. 4STAN WAWRINKA Major Titles:1— Australian
('14) Last 5Australian Opens: '14-W,'13-4th,'12-3rd,'11QF,'10-3rd.
Tepspin:Hewarmed up for the last Australian Openwith a title in Chennai.
Major Titles:2 — Wimble-
don ('11, 14) Last 5Australian Opens:
'14-1st;'13-2nd,'12-SF,'11QF, '10-2nd
Tepspin:Surprise first-round loser at Melbourne Park last year to Luksika Kumkhumof Thailand in three sets. — The Associated Press
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Lynch
Natchinlup theSeahawks andPackers
Continued from D1 Yet as ludicrous as a mid-
season Lynch trade would have been, there is nothing funny about hi s
u n certain
future. The Seahawks have answered many questions about the franchise's direc-
tion this season, but there is still no guarantee Lynch will be back, even if the Seahawks
win a second straight Super Bowl.
Today could be Lynch's last game at CenturyLink Field as a Seahawk. And to that notion, it is to-
tally appropriate to respond by shouting like they do at college games when a young star is considering turning pro: One more year! One more year! Or perhaps a "Pay the
hnA
Beast!" chant would be more
accurate. The Lynch-Seahawks relationship has gone from a perfect marriage to a complicated coexistence that isn't expected to last much longer.
John Froschauer/The Associated Press
Seattle running back Marshawn Lynch runs through tackles last Sunday against Carolina. Today's
NFC championship gameagainst Green Bay could be Lynch's last home game inSeattle. reason to extend the Beast
If the Seahawks had hit a wall as a team, it would be a
Months ago, the national me- Mode era in Seattle. dia started declaring Lynch General Manager John would not return to the SeSchneider should balk only if a hawks n ex t s e ason. H e Lynch's demands are outrastill has one year left on his geous, or his desire is gone, or contract, but it is unlikely he there is some major problem would play out that final year. that only the organization Lynch staged a training knows. Barring those circumc amp holdout, and h e r e - stances, itm akes sense to see turned upon receiving a $1.5 how much longer Father Time million pay bump in a re- has allotted for Lynch to play worked deal. If he plays out in the NFL. his contract, the final year Lynch has earned it with of his contract is $7 million. his production: four straight His salary cap number would seasons of at least 1,200 rushbe $8.5 million (includes a ing yards, and 56 touchdowns $1.5 million prorated signing in 75 regular-season games. bonus). He still influences winning: The Seahawks could save The Seahawks thrived after $7 million against the cap by the Harvintrade because they cutting Lynch. Or they could streamlined the offense, feasign Lynch to a new, multi- tured Lynch and rebuilt the year contract, which is a risk passing game to get the most for a running back who turns out of teams trying to stop the 29 in April. Or Beast Mode could retire, which he report-
were his 37 receptions and
367 receiving yards. The fear good time to move on and try of the aging running back is something different. But they legitimate. But can he at least are two victories from a re- limp before we give him a peat. And if they do so, they walker? will be set up to chase a historBefore the Seahawks tradic third straight championship. ed for Lynch in October 2010, As much as we condition the running back thought he ourselves for NFL business was headed to Green Bay. He and talk about teams needing entertained the idea, digging to be dispassionate and cold- the chance to reunite with his hearted, they also must be former California teammate, sensible. It would be perfect Aaron Rodgers, and figuring if the Seahawks could release his powerful running style Lynch, or any other player, just would add a dimension to the when his production starts to Packers'pass-happy offense. wane. But the Seahawks can't Anything outside of Buffalo anticipate Lynch will fall off would suffice, but the deeper when thereis ample evidence
that there is more left in his rugged body. He has played in 75 of a possible76 regular-season games in Seattle, including 58 in a row. Add the playoffs, and it is 66 in a row. He has missed
And the Seahawks aren't
edly considered after last sea- ready to move on just yet. son's Super Bowl run. Backup Robert Turbin contin-
time in games with bouts of
the Bills went into trade discussions with several teams, the more Lynch realized two
things Green Bay wasn't: I) A West Coast location close
in Buffalo.
Patriots
The Patriots are one win
away from their sixth Super
/
f 4~
lichick-Brady era. They are already the most successf ul NFL history, reaching more Super Bowls than other combinations that advanced to four
(Tom Landry and Roger Staubach in Dallas, Chuck Noll and Terry Bradshaw in Pittsburgh, Marv Levy and Jim Kelly in Buffalo). They have won an NFL-best
19 postseason games together. Their 160 regular-season wins
Charles Krupa1 rhe Associated Press
is the most of the Super Bowl
New England coach Bill Belichick, left, and quarterback TomBrady cross paths during a news confer-
era, well ahead of Miami's
ence Wednesday.The duo has won an NFL-best19 postseason games together.
Don Shula and Dan Marino
(116). They have won six AFC
saw something in Belichick during his year in New Englandand he broughthim back much has changed for the fu- to replace Pete Carroll. Fifteen East titles in a row and 11 in 12 seasons. After all these years, not ture Hall of Famers. As differ-
years later, Belichick has not
ent as they appear when addressing the media — Brady is perpetually smiling, Belichick is visibly dour — they share some core traits. They're both
deviated from his coaching style, whether it's a Sunday in October or the AFC champion-
ship game. "I think he's kind of the
c o nsistent, same," receiver Julian Edel-
attacking each opponent with the same approach. "Coach hasn't c hanged much," Brady said of Belichick. "I think he's so consistent and I
man said. "He brings in the same approach every day. You know what you're going to get with what he presents that day — his keys and all of his stuff.
think we as players know what we can count on with him and
He tries to keep it even keel and
that's one of the reasons why he always talks about consis- each and every week we ignore tent, dependable players and everything outside of our litwe have the most consistent, tle office and just worry about dependable coach." what we have to do and it usually prepares us for the games." Belichick's amazing focus But playing for Belichick Belichick, 62, is something is not easy. Players say they of a football savant, the son know what to expect and Beliof a college coach. He played chick'sdemonstrated success the game at Wesleyan before goes a long way with players, embarking on a career in the but they also understand the NFL. He began as a low-paid demands.
By 1979, he landed a job with the Giants and eventual-
ly coached under Bill Parcells. His first head coaching job was a disaster (36-42 in five seasons in Cleveland) and he rejoined Parcells with the Patriots in
1996 before following him to the Jets ayear later. Patriots owner Robert Kraft
Both Seattle's PeteCarroll and GreenBay's Mike McCarthy pulled off one of their best coaching jobs this season. Carroll saw his team suffering from a SuperBowl hangover early in the schedule andnot only got the Seahawks to snapout of it, but reach peak form down thestretch. His energy is contagious; his top assistants, DanQuinn on defense, Darrell Bevell on offense, are masterful game planners. INTANGIBLES Green Bayhas beenmediocre on the road (4-4), with only one truly well-rounded performance, atChicago. But the Packers have somekeyveteranswhohavebeenthroughsuchtoughchallenges before. Noteam hasbeentosuccessiveSuperBowlssinceNew England10 years ago.Seattle is primed to do it. — The Associated Press
It was absolutely the best about identity — how the Seathing that could've happened hawks lost theirs, then found to the Seahawks. Lynch be-
it, then believed in it like never
came the inspiration of their relentless style of play.
before. So much of that identity is tied to Beast Mode.
He remains the inspiration
of their relentless style of play. This entire season has been
This can't be the end. Jerry Brewer is a columnist with The Seattle Times.
WHENTHEPATRIOTS HAVETHEBALL
coach and quarterback duo in
staffer with the Baltimore Colts in 1975before the Detroit Lions hired him as a special teams assistant.
COACHING
WHEN THECOLTSHAVETHE BALL AndrewLuckledtheNFLinTD passeswith40,and hehasproven himself as areal force in his three pro seasons. Except, that is, against NewEngland. Luck stands 0-3 vs. the Patriots — the only team he' splayedmorethanonceand notbeaten.TheColtshave beenoutscored144-66 inthosegames.RunningbackBoom Herron has been find a andthe Colts needsome early production from him to avoid getting one-dimensional. Eventually, though, Indy has to win some of thematchups in thepassing game.
/
Bowl appearance in the Be-
competitive an d
GreenBay'sMasonCrosbyandSeattle'sSteven Hauschkaare solid placekickers, reliable in the clutch. GreenBay's Micah Hyde ran back two punts for TDs, but Seattle's Jon Ryan isone of the league's most dependable punters.
Natchingupthe Patriots andColts
Continued from 01 And the faces of the football than a decade later, nothing has changed.
SPECIALTEAMS
to his hometown, Oakland; 2) A city big enough for him to avoid standing out like he did
back tightness and stomach By the end, Lynch was hopY ou n ever k n o w wh a t ues to improve, but Christine aches, but that is impressive ing Seattle would trade for Lynch will do. He is as un- Michael still is not dependable, durability for a running back. him. "It was probably the best predictable as his hair is long. and it is questionable whether This season, Lynch ran for It's on the Seahawks to make the Seahawks' next bell-cow 1,306 yards, the second-most thing that could've happened a shrewd decision, and they running back is available in in his career. His 17 touch- to him," Delisa Lynch, his should do everything within this NFL draft. downs were a career high, as mother, once said of the trade.
renaissance were the coach and the quarterback. More
WHEN THEPACKERSHAVETHE BALL Pretty simple, really: balance. With a healthy quarterback Aaron Rodgers and running backEddie Lacy, that usually is not a problem for the Packers. But Rodgers hasbeen bothered by acalf injury and wasparticularly hobbled in the second half last week vs. Dallas. Still, he threw for two second-half touchdowns. Running against Seattle is about aseasy as hearing each other at CenturyLink Field for a visiting team. Led bydynamic LBBobby Wagner and a stout defensive line featuring Michael Bennett, the Seahawks rarely allow anopponent to control the clock on the ground. Establishing any sort of rushing attack is a major challenge for GreenBay's line, particularly rookie center Corey Linsley and guards T.J. Langand Pro Bowler Josh Sitton. Then there's the equally difficult chore of completing throws against All-Pros Richard Shermanand Earl Thomas, plus Kam Chancellor, who is coming off a dominant performanceagainst Carolina. Rodgers should feel comforted that his two outstanding main targets, Jordy Nelson andRandall Cobbare complemented bytheemerging DavanteAdams andAndrew Quarless. WHEN THESEAHAWKS HAVETHE BALL Also relatively simple, and thesameformula that worked on the way to last season's championship: Seattle must feed theBeast, Marshawn Lynch, andgive Russell Wilson the freedom to create. Lynch, like Lacy, hasthe power, speed and determination to ruin a defense's day.Theway DeMarco Murray maraudedthrough Green Bay's defense last week isworrisome. And Lynchgets better as the gameprogresses, with defenders tiring. The Packers will needoutstanding showings by anunderrated defensive line, which comesoff a strong gameagainst Dallas, and more from star linebacker ClayMatthews. If Lynch gets through the first wave, the Packwill be in trouble becausethe secondary lacks good tacklers.
"I just have to say it's an hon-
he preaches the same gosout dwelling on the last game, pel — diligence, consistency, he dismisses superficiality and accountability. he is happy to talk about the And Brady is competitive. minutiae of the sport he loves. Maybe the most competitive There's no room for celebrat- guy in the locker room. "He is so competitive," said ing or basking in the success, not with the next opponent defensive lineman Vince Willooming. fork, a teammate since 2004. Asked this week about lead- "That's the first thing I always ing a team to his ninth confer- see. And everybody always ence championship and how asks me, 'How is Tom'?' I don't that experience helps, Beli- think there's anybody else in chick appearedpained. this locker room that is more "Well, it's obvious," he said. competitive than Tom. I mean, "You need to play well at this I don't care if it's a conversatime. Every team is good. The tion, I don't care if it's practice, talk about the next game with-
Colts are a great team. We're
I don't care if it's seven-on-sev-
going to have to play our best en, I don't care if it's game day, game. That's what I've learned. I don't care if it's in the film But right now, I don't really
Tom Brady hashadbetter corps of targets in his15 seasons, but the one unmatchable weapon isAll-Pro Rob Gronkowski. Gronk is more than asecurity blanket for Brady, he's a game breaker, and theColts will be hard-pressed to find anyone to slow him. The best way to slow Gronkowski and the other receivers is to make Brady hurry his throws. That meansproducing a pass rush, which will fall on avariety of defenders: rookie defensive end Jonathan Newsome,veteran linebackers Erik Waldenand D'Qwell JacksonanddefensiveendCory Redding. New England's blockers havebeeninconsistent, one reason the Patriots ranked 11th in offense. Theonus on protecting Brady falls mostly on tackles Sebastian Vollmer (76) andNate Solder (77). SPECIAL TEAMS A slight edge inIndianapolis' favor is here,wherethe Colts have All-Pros in placekickerAdamVinatieri and punter PatMcAfee. Vinatieri won threeSuper Bowls asa Patriot and oneasa Colt. He wil break Jerry Rice's record for most postseasongamesplayed when he competes inNo.30today. Vinatieri also can breaka tie with Tony Fritsch for most consecutive postseasongameswith a field goal.
COACHING Bill Belichick keeps things fresh by finding newways to exploit the opposition. Last week, it was at times putting eligible receivers at ineligible positions, perfectly legal if devious. His staff's bestcoachingworkthisseasonhasbeendoneonbothlines. Chuck Pagano's Colts havegone11-5 in each of his three seasons in Indy. His squadshavebeenmarked bytheir offense and excellent special teams. In amatchup with Belichick, Pagano is not likely to get cute. INTANGIBLES The Patriots are tired of hearing they haven't won atitle in a decade after taking three SuperBowls in four seasons (2001-04). They also get reminded they lost their last two trips against an underdog. NewEngland is 8-0 in homegames that meant anything, and has that 42-20 romp at Indianapolis in its pocket. — The Associated Pess
room. He wants to be at his
care about any of the other best." games — last week, last year, On the field, that competitive 10 years ago, whatever it was. All our focus is on the Colts,
nature manifests itself through
and we've got to do a good job with our preparation for Indianapolis."
appear demonstrati ve, screaming at teammates. He celebrates
M ore than a pretty boy
emotional outburst. Brady can touchdowns like a kid who's never been in the end zone
before. "He's very emotional," reThe easy sketch of Brady? He's the style to Belichick's ceiver Danny Amendola said.
or to play for an organization like this," said guard Dan Con- substance. He does advertisenolly, who joined the Patriots ments for trendy Ugg boots; Bein 2008 after two years with lichick lives in a hoodie. Brady Jacksonville. "Coach Belichick is married to an international is my coach. He asks a lot of supermodel and is a jet-setter us, and we come to work every and a celebrity, a contrast to day and prepare to work hard. Belichick's f i l m -room-coach It's a good organization to play persona. for." Except, Brady and BeliBelichick also keeps a con- chick are football soul mates. sistent public persona. He will Maybe it's because Brady has praise his opponent, he will played only for Belichick, but
"He has a great ability to lift
ple by being on time and carrying himself with poise. "He wants everybody else around him to be at his best, so as a teammate it's easy to see my top leader coming to work, smiling, having fun and being at his best in the practice,"
and he certainly sounds more
Wilfork said. "It's easy for me
work knowing what to expect
pleasant than his coach, but
he's often parroting Belichick's message.But the quarterback seems aware of that and is almost proud to be an extension
of his coach. "Every day we show up to
to go to work to see that guy do and he expects a high level of the players around him to their it. And he demands the same concentration from us," Brady best. He's our leader and we thing out of us, so I think a lot said. "He wants us to go out love playing for him." of the things he does he doesn't thereand perform atour best Not playing with him, but realize how it affects everyone every day and when we don't playing for him. There's no around him. He doesn't have he lets us know. He motivates question Brady is the leader of to say much. When he's here us in different ways and he's althe Patriots, but teammates say in this building, he's working. ways trying to get the best out his greatest talent might be his When he's home, he's working." of us. He holds everybody acBrady's demeanor when he countable, certainly holds himability to extract the best from his teammates. addresses the media might self accountable and I'm very That means setting an exam- be — in his words — mellow, fortunate to play for him."
Market Recap, E4-5 Sunday Driver, E6
© www.bendbuiietin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Tech isn't
making life more
or ers ee ousin crunc • A lack of affordable options makes Bend atough place to liveandwork, manysay
stressful,
By Joseph Ditzler
study says
Medical Center are having a hard time finding a place to
The Bulletin
New hires at St. Charles live in Bend.
By Claire Cain Miller
"It's definitely an issue, at all levels of hiring," said St.
New Yorh Times News Service
Charles spokeswoman Lisa
Among New Year's resolutions shared on Twitter,
unplugging digitally came right after losing weight and quitting smoking. People are flocking to digital detoxes, screen-free bedrooms and apps that nudge you off your phone. It is all in response to the notion that digital technology — like round-the-clock email and friends' envy-inducing Instagram photos
Goodman. "Prospective employees are finding housing in Bend more expensive than
in Portland. If they're coming from out of the area, a lot of
people are renting sight unseen. If something is available and affordable, they are quick to jump on that." A dearth of housing at prices that many working people can afford, along with a rental vacancy rate in the cellar, means not only work-
clude economic development
Standerwick, a real estate
and building and selling homes. The reasons they give sound familiar: escalating home prices driven up by demand and a diminishing
broker with Harcourts The Garner Group Real Estate, in Bend, and a former executive
with Home Federal and Wells Fargo banks. "Absolutely," Standerwick
amount of land on which to
said Wednesday. "When you
build; too few affordable rent-
have a rental vacancy of less than 1 percent, you'll have a
al units available for students,
young families and singles starting out in life; high fees and restrictive building codes; and market compe-
ing-class people but also mid- tition from retirees with the dle managers and executives, money to pay the price for too, are finding Bend a tough Bend real estate. place to both live and work, The housing situation in say people whose jobs inBend is in a crisis, said Kerri
Howtax
inversions became a big deal
house come on the market
By KenWells,Jonathan Allen and Richard Rubin
and there will be 25 or 30
Bloomberg News
applicants for that house in one day. There are numerous
did the previously obscure
NEW YORK — So how
stories of renters not being renewed at the tenants' lease
term tax inversions be-
rates because rates have increased so high." SeeHousing/E5
parlance, fodder for the
come part of Washington next presidential campaign and the issue that helped derail a U.S. Treasury nominee'? Thank, or blame, depending on your perspective, cutting-edge tax lawyers, populist Democrats, a banana seller, a drugmaker, a hamburger chain, the 35 percent U.S. corporate
— is stressing us out and
tax rate and a Wall Street
making us unhealthy. But a new study by re-
banker named Antonio Weiss.
searchers at Pew Research
There is also the pros-
Center and Rutgers University found the opposite:
pect that inversions could
Frequent Internet and
to $33.6 billion in lost revenue over the next decade, according to the congres-
cost the U.S. Treasury up
social media users do not have higher stress levels than those who use tech-
sional Joint Committee on Taxation. Inversions are the name given to transactions in which U.S. multinational corporations shift their
nology less often. And for women, using certain digital tools decreases stress. "The fear of missing out and jealousy of high-living
addresses abroad to more tax-friendly shores, often by merging with a smaller overseas company. This is the story of
friends with better vaca-
tions and happier kids than everybody else turned out to be not true," said Lee Rainie, director of Internet,
science and technology research at Pew and an author of the study.
how they've become a
front-burner issue — all the more astonishing consid-
The exception was when
ering that little more than
Facebook users saw news ofclose friends going
a year ago almost no one in Washington was paying
through stressful events
attention to them.
like unemployment or illness. Then why do we keep hearing that technology is harmful? Fear of technology is nothing new. Telephones, watches and televisions were similar-
r
f
Well, almost no one — except then-Senator •
Max Baucus, a Montana Joe Burbank/Orlando (Fla.) Sentinel
Sanford Homebrew co-owner Aaron Libera stocks an immersion chiller at the in Sanford, Florida. The store has grown significantly over the last three years as the craft beer scene takes off.
30, 2013, less than two weeks after exhausted
Tapping into the
people's lives and pressure them to be more productive. In some ways
lawmakers had ended a government shutdown and staved off a default on
they did, but the benefits
the debt.
offset the stressors. New
Itsfocus: the proposed
technology is making our lives different, but not
inversion of Applied Materials Inc., a California semiconductorcompany that was planning to merge with a Japanese competitor
necessarilymore stressful than they would have been
otherwise.
"It's yet another example of how we overestimate the
and locate the combined
company's tax address in the Netherlands. Baucus knew Applied Materials
effect these technologies are having in our lives," said Keith Hampton, a sociologist at Rutgers and an
well. It maintains a re-
search facility in Kalispell,
author of the study.
iety and impatience and
decrease the ability to focus, learn and remember. Others have found that
it increases trust, social support and close relationships. Most likely it does both, depending on how people use it. The Pew and Rutgers re-
searchers measured stress levels in a representative
group of people by using a standard stress scale that ranks people's responses to questions about their lives. Then they measured their frequency of digital technology use. SeeStress/E5
Baucus delivered a speech
on the Senate floor Oct.
ly believed to interrupt
Researchers are in the early stages of determining the effects of technology use on our brains. Some say it can increase anx-
Democrat. As chairman of the Finance Committee,
Montana.
Anti-inversion efforts Baucus was plenty faBy MartinE. Comas eOrlando (Fla.) Sentinel
SANFORD, Fla.— When Gary HOlmeS and AarOn Libera OPened their hOmebrewing buSineSS here nearly three years ago, their shop was tucked in the back corner of a German delicatessen and consisted of a few shelves stacked with malts, containers and starter kits for people looking to
miliar with inversions, too. The senator, now the
U.S. ambassador to China, had been the top Democrat on the Finance Com-
mittee since 2001 and had been involved in the most successful anti-inversion
make their own beer. and ask, 'Wow, can I brew something surging popularity in homebrewing. like this at home?'" Holmes said. "And that's where we help them." And as the availability of craft beer has exploded inrecent years, so have the The growing taste for craft beers nanumber of hobbyists willing to take a tionally has also caused changes in the shot at creating their own brews in their beer market. In the past year, overall stainless steel brewing pots, hoses and kitchens or garages. beer sales have dropped by 2 percent, "What's happened is that more restau- whilecraftbeer sales grew 18percent other equipment. The shop also offers classes for first-time brewers. rants are now offering craft beers — be- by volume, according to the national Holmes and Libera will quickly tell sides the Budweisers and the Miller Lites Brewers Association. you that their shop's success is tied to — and people will taste these craft beers See Homebrew/E3 The Sanford Homebrew Shop has
the growing taste for craft beers and
since moved out of that tiny space, and today the pair oversees a larger store. Fifty pound bags of malt are stacked waist-high near the front door. The shelves are stocked with a variety of
effort in Congress. In 2002, he joined with Republican Charles Grassley of Iowa to issue a stern warning to companies: Stop inversions now, be-
cause we're going to pass a retroactive law curbing them.
That worked, stemming the tide of so-called naked inversions in which
companies used a paper transaction to move their
tax address to Bermuda and the Cayman Islands, steeply cutting their U.S.
Candy stores compete for the grown-up sweet tooth By Shan Li Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — First
came fancy cupcakes, then macarons, the Frenchified
sandwich cookies. Improbably, gourmet doughnuts hit
upstartcompanies arelaunching sweet shops for grown-ups with a taste for luxury and bank accounts to match.
marshmallows, chili-laced truffles or champagne-flavored gummy bears. One con-
billion was spent on candy in the U.S., up 9.8 percent from 2010, according to
fectioner has specialized in
the National Confectioners
Some chains offer the kind
adults-only treats with bawdy names. Such changes could drive expansion in the candy industry, which has recently enjoyed steady growth. Last year, an estimated $33.6
Association.
Nowthe upscaling of once-simple pleasures has
of refined packaging and elegant decor more befitting Tiffany's than a taffy joint. Instead of bins of M&Ms or Jolly Ranchers, they offer pretty
spread to a new frontier: candy.
boxes of Guinness-infused
the scene.
Candy firms have tradition-
ally targeted children ages 14 and younger. But growing awareness of childhood obesity — combined with a rising number of households without
young ones — has sweets peddlers rushing to win over adults with extra pocket change. "Adults were basically untapped until a few years ago," said Amal Ahmad, an industry analyst with IBISWorld. "There is a lot of room for innovation."
SeeCandy/E3
tax bills. Their stance
— and a public outcry — helped persuade companies such as Stanley Works not to make the move. The Baucus-Grass-
ley law passed Congress in 2004, retroactive to March 2003.
As the Treasury Department plugged away on regulations, tax lawyers started coming up with clever ways to circumvent the 2004 law.
SeeTax inversions/E3
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
B USINESS TUESDAY SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute oneon-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.;
www.scorecentraloregon.org.
Search Engine Strategies: The "do's and don'ts" of search engine optimizations, class runs through Jan. 27; $99, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270, ceinfoococc.edu or www. cocc.edu/conti nuinged.
WEDNESDAY Online Marketing with Facebook: UsingFacebook to marketand advertise a business, class runs through Jan. 28; $79, registration required; 9 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend;541-3837270, ceinfoococc.edu or www. cocc.edu/conti nuinged.
END A R
Bend Cultural Tourism Fund Commission Meeting: Public meeting discussing the letters of intent, budget, communication
plans and grant review process; free; 2-4 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7050, shannono planchonconsulting.com or www. visitbend.culturegrants.org.
CreateCustom Designed Logo: Learn the fundamentals of lllustrator, class runs through Feb. 11; $139, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270, ceinfoococc.edu or www. cocc.edu/continuinged. Enhance Visuals for Websites: Learn techniques to increase thespeed ofwe b page loading, class runs through Feb. 4; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfoo
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
through Feb. 4; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-383-7270,
ceinfoococc.edu or www.cocc.
edu/continuinged. Security 8 Certification Prep: Preparation to pass the Comp TIA Security 8 Exam, 8 week class; $699, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfoo
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.
THURSDAY Keys to Supervisor Success, Supervisor Basics 101: Presented by Katherine Tank, of Tank Law and Trygve Bolken of Bend Research; $50, registration required by Jan. 19; 8 a.m.-12:15 p.m.;The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-382-3221 or
sandyobendchamber.org.
continuinged.
InDesign, Beginning: Learn Adobe InDesign, design and layout program, class runs
January AdBite: Advertising Federation Central Oregon hosts Anna Sawyer of San Francisco's guidebook: The Whole Beast:
Nose-to-Tail Content Marketing; $25 memberand students,$45 non-members; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend Center for Health and Learning, 2500 NE Neff Road; 541-385-1992, directoroadfedco. org or www.adfedco.starcahpter.
com.
EDCO's January Pub Talk: Economic Development for Central Oregon provides a forum where business leaders, investors, entrepreneurs and advisers can network; $20 EDCOmembers, $30 non-members, registration required; 5-7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-388-3236,
eventsoedcoinfo.com or www.
edcoinfo.com/events. MTA Security Fundamentals: Preparation to pass the MTA exam in security, class runs through Feb. 12; $189, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541, ceinfoo cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.
FRIDAY Construction Contractors Board
DEEDS Crook County • Signature Homebuilders LLC to James andKarrah Savage, Ironhorse 1 Phase1, Lot 66, $199,000 •BrasadaRanch DevelopmentLLCto Tod and Heidi Hardin, BrasadaRanch 8, Lot 596, $195,000 • Marcia G. Claypool, trustee of the Marcia G.Claypool Trust, to Gordon A. and Katharine H.Fahlgren, Meadow Lake Estates Phase1, Lot 5, $217000 • William H. andJudith G. Lindley to Richard L. Neifert, Prineville Lake Acres Unit 2, Lot 4, Block 22, $169,500 • Elaine M. Schweitzer, trustee of the Elaine M. Schweitzer Family Trust, to Charles M. andViveca T.McCord, Sinclair-Davis Tract No. 2, Lot12 and 13, $475,000 • Signature HomeBuilders LLC to Todd Best, Ironhorse1, Phase1, Lot 67, $170,000 • Jim Hensley, sheriff of Crook County, toGMAC MortgageLLC,Longhorn Ridge Phase 2,Lot 94, $315,403 • Dean 0. andTeresa L. Davisto Mark and CaseyMcKinnon, Township14, Range16, Section17along with Partition Plat No. 1990-23, $850,000 • Hanson Gheen IVand Glenda Gheen to Nathaniel J. andCourtney M. Moon, Partition Plat No. 1996-46, Parcel No. 1, $325,000 • Dennis J. and HelenS.LaBare to Randy W.Winders andJennifer A. Pedersen, TheHighlands Subdivision Unit 2, Lot12, Block 5, $325,000 • Michael E. andPatricia M. Rueto Bryan P.andTawni L. Smith, Brasada Ranch1, Lot120, $153,000 • Irvin E. and Lillian N. Olson to Kim and AlanJohnston, Northridge Subdivision Phase 4,Lot171, $174,500 • Jimmie E. English to David 0. and Elizabeth A. Gaylor, High Desert Estates Subdivision Phase 2,Lot 37, $157,750 • Travis G. andBelinda Helligso to Gregory W.andCharlotte M. Cromwell, Township14, Range15, Section 2, $412,000 • Velma I. Sanders to Clinton J. and Patricia L. Larsen, Prineville Lake Acres Unit 2, Lot 2, Block 39, $155,000 • Larry A. and Starla J. Sprague to Kenneth L. Sherman, Partition Plat No. 2004-22, Parcel 2, $420,000 • Jim Hensley, sheriff of Crook County to CitiMortgage Inc., Buckaroo Acres, Lot17, $175,000 • Jim Hensley, sheriff of Crook County to Wells Fargo Bank,Township14, Range16, Section 32, $175,432.97 • Brasada RanchDevelopment LLC to Tim and JeanneArcuri, Brasada Ranch 8, Lot 608, $183,000 • Beth Felix, trustee of the 2004 Robert L. Carson RevocableTrust, to Carol L. Evoniuk, Juniper Hills Division 2, Lot 5, $165,000 Jefferson County • Michael R. and Betty K. Boiler to Wayne M. and CatherineJ.Stevens, Township13, Range12, Section15, $365,000 • Thomas P.and Kelly M. Tussing to Freedom Christian Fellowship, doing business asMadrasGospel Mission, Strawberry Heights Subdivision Phase 2, Lot 69, $575,000 • Phillip R. Morrow to GaryG.and Mary E. Gomes,trustees of the Gary G.and Mary E.GomesFamily Trust, Township 11, Range13,Section12, $235,000 • Paul A. and Sharon A. Brown to Andy and Janice L. Bayless, Township10, Range14, Section 31, $314,500 • David A. Hoffman and Wiliam B. Hoffman Jr., trustees of the William B. Hoffman Sr. Family Trust, to Steven L. and Tracy A.Harris, Partition Plat No. 2005-11, Parcel 2, $165,000 • Gerald L. Chapman to Kathy B. Knight, Township13, Range12, Section 22, $210,000 • Harold Klann andBrad Klann, trustee of the Harold KlannTrust, to Seth R. andSall y L Klann,Township9,Range 13, Section 21 and22, $553,400 • Dorthy Thomas to Leroy C. and Janice T.Fessler, Township11, Range 14, Section 7, $280,000 • Michael T. andNancy Mennis to Philip D. andVirginia W. Lang, Crooked River RanchNo. 8, Lot 9, $180,000 •PennyMacHoldings LLC toCameron C. Henderson, CrookedRiver Ranch No. 7, Lot194, $179,900 •DuaneBalcom and SondraBalcom
to Arco Construction Inc., Jefferson Heights, Lot 4-6, $383,000 • Ted L. Brammerto Will J. Rautsaw and Beth A. Hoffman, Township13, Range12, Section15, $367,000 • Edward and Susan Webber to Richard and Kirstin Hinkle, Partition Plat No. 1995-10, Parcel 2, $155,000 • David J. and Sherryll D. Nelson to Evan K. andAmy M.Brown, Madras Ranchos Subdivision No. 2, Lot1, Block 6, $293,000 • Anthony L. Cooper to Brenna K. Glass, Township13, Range12, Section 27, $180,000 •DuaneBalcom andSondraBalcom to Arco Construction Co. Inc., Jefferson Heights, Lot1-3, $383,000 • Jack B. Ely, who tooktitle as Jack Brown, andWendy M. Elyto Jon T. and Linda Marshall, Township13, Range12, Section 22, $218,000 • Ruby V. Rollinsto lantha J. Hallauer, Crooked River RanchNo.10, Lot 9, $158,100 • Paul J. and Constance J. Stuber to Claude C.Ferris Jr. and Marjorie A. Myers, Township13, Range12, Section 25, $210,000 Deschutes County • Michael F. andMary A. Lantz to Philip and SamanthaBlakeley, Parkway Addition, Lot 8, Block1, $300,000 • Karen L. Campbell to Lorita McCleary andMartin Kravik, Squaw Creek CanyonRecreational Estates First Addition, Lot15, Block18, $375,000 • Dennis W. Balzer, trustee of the Dennis W. BalzerRevocableTrust, to Ameracle Development LLC,Partition Plat 2002-56, $1,130,000 • Mark D. andChelseaL. Ramsey to Richard D. andHolly A. Morton, Bella Sera, Lot13, $174,928.51 • Mel McDougalFamily Foundation to Patrick D.andLindaV. Burk, Township 17, Range12,Section16, $422,900 •PamelaA.McCulloughto James L.Thompson andJaniceMcCarthy, trustees of the Liska Family Survivors Trust, Crosswater Phase 3,Lot 77, $200,000 • Elwood J. and PeggyA. Lindquist to Teresa andDenys Middleton, Antler Ridge Phase 2,Lot 88, $183,550 • Shaun R. andDiane M.Hannay to Scott D.and Deborah Lutz, Glenn Meadow Phase1, Lot 40, $384,000 • U.S. Bank to Forrest Reinhardt and Nathan Styffe, Yardley Estates Phase 1, Lot 28, $298,950 • Eugene B. Michaels to Camila Clawson, Wiestoria, Lot13, Block15, $244,000 • DZ Properties LLC to Lawrence A. Prill, Awbrey Court, Lot17, $575,900 • West Bend Property Co. LLC to Buettner Land GroupLLC, NorthWest Crossing Phase24, Lot 883, $180,000 • Gorilla Capital CO4 LLC to Roger J. Lee and Kristen K.Warner, Township I6, Range11, Section 26, $650,000
• JKC LLC to Robert W. andChristine E. Keller, Scott's Landing, Lot4, $290,340 • Chris and Michelle Lathe to Jonathan L. Phelan, Heritage Ranch, Lot 9, $240,000 • Teresa A. Kerneento TW. and Judith L. Martin, Alpenview Estates Phase1, Lot 6, $262,500 • Vernon B. Frostto SydneyDelunaand Katherine Flood,ParkAddition to Bend, Lot11 and12, Block18, $255,000 •JodyL.and Rashelle M.Johnsonto Karen Terwilliger, Indian FordRanch Homes Plat No. 1,Lot 2, Block 3, $ I90,000 • Rivers Northwest Enterprises Inc. to JohnH.J.andMargaretM.Morone, trustees of the MoroneFamily Trust, NorthWest Crossing Phases20-22, Lot 813, $514,900 • Paul and Rory Quagliata, now known as Rory O'Brien, trustees of the Quagliata Trust, to Paul E.Quagliata and Rory O'Brien, Partition Plat 200510, Parcel 2, $1,200,000 • Paule E. Quagliata and Rory O'Brien toJames M. and Jeannette M.Beeger, trustees of the James M. 8 Jeannette M. Beeger Trust, Partition Plat 200510, Parcel 2, $1,200,000 •JaniceF.McMeento EveL.Brown, Westbrook Village Phase 1,Lot 44, $220,000 • Sara J. Spencer, who acquired title as June M.Spencer, to Brian Barks, Hunters Circle, Lot15, Block4, $159,000 • Michele and Bradley Briggman to Chester R. Davis, Township16, Range 11, Section 27,$730,000 • Ronald H. Doke to James L. and Jody H. Rusconi, trustees of the Rusconi Family 2007 Trust, Boulevard Addition to Bend, Lot15, Block15, $410,000 • Robert J. and AmyL. Keller, trustees of the Robert & AmyKeller Revocable Family Trust, to Douglas W.and Margaret A. Smith, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 7, Block 20, $419,000 • S.D.M. Investments LLCto Redland Group LLC,Partition Plat 2007-57, Parcel1, $750,000 • Jerome M. Demarco, trustee of the Sterling Trust, to Michael C. and Robyn H.Knoell, Awbrey Butte Homesites Phase29, Lot 20, $264,000 • Levi Miller Corp. to Shain R. and Kacy L Logeais, Ponderous Pines, Lot 2, $316,000 • Paul T. andChrista G. Kollerer, trustees of the Paul 8 Christa Kollerer Family Trust, to AdamD.W.and Sydney M. Richards, Shevlin Ridge Phase 2, Lot 2, $625,000 • Linda K. Pierce, trustee of the Under the Pierce Living Trust, to StevenD. and Mary K. Kramer, Riverrim P.U.D Phase 1, Lot10, $265,000 • Zachary Stockwell and CodiKramer to Gil and AimeeE.C.Semana, West Canyon Estates Phase 2,Lot 28, $217,500 • Christopher and Katherine Patterson
to Antony C.and LuanaA. Navarro, Northwest Townsite Co'sSecond Addition to Bend, Lot 6, Block 21, $370,000 • Christopher Barca, agent for JeanClare Plebani, trustee of the BrendaH. Barca Trust, to Dannette andSteven Coats, Tri-Peaks 3, Lot10, $270,000 • Ronald W. andKathleen A. Hedin to David L. andScotti L. Booth, Ridgeat Eagle Crest18, Lot 39, $419,000 • Charles L. and Alice J. Kastl to Cynthia K. Huss,Tall Pines Fifth Addition, Lot16, Block 29, $238,000 • Robert G. andNancy Austin to Shaun R. and Diane M.Hannay, Summit Crest Phase1, Lot19, $279,950 • R. Scott and Margo J. Pipher, trustees of the Pipher Living Trust, to James C.and Ann M.Parrish, Mountain Village East 3, Lot 4, Block 17, $359,000 • Stephen A. Taylor to Stephen R. Sickler, Staats Addition to Bend, Lot 11, Block13, $293,000 • Rodolfo A. Camachoto Gladys A. Christie, trustee of theDavid E. Spencer Credit Shelter Trust, created in the David E.Christie & Gladys A. Christie RevocableTrust, andSpencer D. Christie, StageStop MeadowsThird Addition, Lot 28, $250,000 • Helen E. Santa Rosa,who acquired title as Helen E.Gordon, to Cindy L. Quezada, Sisters ViewEstates, Lot 7, Block 1, $157,900 • Gerald D. Brockto Hamilton S. Gillespie IV andKim E.Gilespie, Ridge at Eagle Crest18, Lot 41, $390,000 •R&M Develo persLLCto PaulN.and Ellen E. Mandel, Seventh Mountain Golf Village, Lot 2, $165,000 • Roy L. Carver to Gyles andDonna Webster, Township16, Range11, Section13, $422,500 •James J.LoviscoandShelly Garroutte to Patrice J. andBarbara A. Calmels, Sagewood, Lot27,$395,000 • Triad Homes Inc. to Pacwest II LLC, Sundance Meadows, Lot 8, 9, 32,and 37, $252,000 • Albert B. and Linda M. Fitter to Macon R. Luhning andJessica E.Buer, Tollgate Sixth Addition, Homesite 324, $290,000 • Tara L. Farstvedt and Daniel D. Potts to Keith A. Pranghofer, AwbreyRoad Heights Phase1-3, Lot 41, $548,000 • Robert W. andSandra K. Smith and Duane andNaomi E.Klaus, Parks at Broken TopPhase5, Lot 202, $453,500 • Ronald P. and Cheryl A. Karcher to Landon E.andKami R. Rogers, Parkway Village Phase1-3, Lot 22, $215,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Jeffery J. Seberand Richard DeYoung,Deer Crossing Phase1, Lot 88, $220,450 • Matthew E. Greento Robert G. and Gail M. Olsen, trustees of the Robert G. Olsen &Gail M. OlsenJoint Trust, Autumn GlenPhase1, Lot4, Block1, $183,000
'Test Preparation': Two-day live course taught by instructor ML Vidas. Approved by the CCB and satisfies the educational requirement to take the test to become a licensed contractor in Oregon; $359, registration required; 8:30 a.m.-7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus, 2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541-3837290, ccbococc.edu or www. cocc.edu/ccb. ManagingOutlook2013: Make Outlook work for you; $79, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Chandler Lab, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837270, ceinfoococc.edu or www. cocc.edu/conti nuinged.
WordPress, Beginning II: For those who already have a WordPress website and need to learn how to use it; $199, registration required; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Redmond campus,2030 SE College Loop, Redmond; 541383-7270, ceinfoococc.edu or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. Budding Complications, How
should employers navigate the changes in state marijuana laws?: Learn about coming changes in workplace culture, safety concerns, customer base and more in this seminar; $35, registration required by Jan. 19; noon-1 p.m., check-in at 11:45 a.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; 503-2280500, anelsonobarran.com or www.j.mp/barronseminar.
SATURDAY OuickBooks Pro 2014, Intermediate: Explore advanced features of QuickBooks; $99, registration required; 9 a.m.-2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfoo
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/
continuinged. Creating a Blueprint for Retirement: Retirement planning workshop presented by Stephanie Costello and Susan Butler; $25, $30 for couple, register by Jan. 21; 1-5 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 NE Ninth St., Bend; 541-382-4401.
Airfares likely tostay high as fuelsavings flow to shareholders By Mary Schlangenstein and Michael Sasso
accelerate debt payments,
Bloomberg News
Denardi, at S t i fel F i nancial and Andrew Davis at
D ALLAS — A i r l ine i n vestors are poised to reap
big benefits from falling fuel bills that helped the U.S. industry rack up record profits last year.Consumers, not so much. Fliers might hope to see some relief in the form of lower ticket prices, but airlines will probably use the windfall to reward shareholders first while demand for travel remains high and planes are flying with record numbersof seatssold.
said analysts including Joe T. Rowe Price Group, both in Baltimore. An d D e lta, American A i r lines Group
and Southwest A i rlines each will boost quarterly dividends this year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. None of the airlines would
comment ahead ofupcoming earnings releases. Delta said in its Dec. 11 investor day it will return at least $1.5 billion in 2015 to
There's "no reason" to
shareholders. In April, the board will consider renew-
trim prices in that envi-
als of its dividend and share
r onment, said Fred L o w rance, an Avondale Part-
buybacks, the
ners analyst in Nashville,
Fuel has been the largest expense for airlines, accounting for as much as
Tennessee. D omestic t r avelers a r e
c o mpany
said.
confronting fares that, at the one-third of total operating end of the second quarter, costs. The six largest U.S. were the highest they'd been carriers spent $32 billion in 11years according to the on fuel during the first nine U.S. Bureau of Transporta- months of 2014,according to tion Statistics. Airline prof-
its meanwhile are forecast to have risen 65 percent in the fourth quarter to $2.72
data from the companies. Even with je t k e rosene
down 50 percent since the end of 2013, strong travel
billion, according to analyst
demand means fares aren't likely to drop significantly, "With all the money flow- accordingto a Bloomberg ing in the door with lower survey of s i x a n alysts. jet fuel prices, how much of Wolfe Research's Hunter that are these airlines going Keay projects that fuel stayto hang onto?" Lowrance ing at less than $2 a gallon said. Wall Street wants "to would save U.S. carriers $14 hear a commitment from billion this year. "Fares are never a cost the airlines that the cash flow is going to be put to- pass-through," said Savanward shareholder-friendly thi Syth, a Raymond James things." Financial Inc. analyst in St. Executives may start lay- Petersburg, Florida. "When ing out plans of what to do fuel prices were going up a with the excess cashon Jan. lot in 2008, airlines weren't 20, when Delta Ai r L i n es able to capture those inInc. leads off quarterly earn- creases because demand wasn't there. It's the same ings reports. Airlines may use the fuel here. At the end of the day windfall to expandor add to demand will d i ctate what share buyback programs or pricing does." estimates.
As the community leader in hospice care, we've most likdy supported one of your neighbors or a hiend. Central Oregon patients and their families have chosen Partners In Care for
hospice services for the past 35 years. If you need support with end-of-life care, choose Partners In Care.
(541) 382-5882
P a r t n ersbend.org
Hospice j Home Health j Hospice House Transitions j Palliative Care
Partners In Care HOSPICE
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Candy
Homebrew
Continued from E1 Dylan's C andy
Continued from E1
Brewer has nearly three d ozen clients around t h e
Even President B arack Obama has gotten into the
state who are in the process of selling their own brews.
B ar,
co-founded in 2001 by retail
mogul Ralph Lauren's daughter Dylan, was among the
1
1)
brewing craze. In December, he was honored with a
nI
first to create a sweets empire
geared for hip grown-ups. Over the years, Dylan's has turned
•
•
tfIr" ~
into a brand that also sells jew-
elry, clothing and gadgets. But these new entries are
aiming for a different crowd with more mature tastes in
sugar and fat. The candy industry has grown stale and needs a re-
'r'
r
invention, some food experts
say. Increasingly discerning palates and a growing interest in gourmet foods have led
to demand for specialty candy stores. "In most stores, you get a
/
Wi'j„~' f "I,
shovel, and you are shovelAnthony Souffle / Chicago Tribune ing candy into a bag. It's very Zach Gasior and Kylie Miller peruse the selection of candy at Dylan's Candy Bar in Chicago. Upstart much a c o m m odity," said companies are beginning to launchsweet shops targeted for adults. Rosie O'Neill, who founded Sugarfina in Beverly Hills with her f i ance, Josh Res- for 16 pieces). Two-thirds of its he stops by Sugarfina at least San Francisco chain. nick. "We wanted to make the products can't be found any- once a month to pick up someOther candy purveyors are whole candy process much where else in the U.S., O'Neill thing for his sweet tooth. The using R-rated humor to sell to 31-year-old human resources adults. more upscale." sald. "We approach the process m anager said "We don't sell a bag of For Sugarfina, upgradeach trip costs ing how candy is displayed, of tasting like a s ommelier at least $50, but he's glad to gourmet chocolate-covered packaged and sold was just as will taste wine," O'Neill said. have an alternative to the Twix gummy bears — we sell choccrucial as selecting the right "We look at the appearance, bars and M&Ms he used to olate-covered Dingle Bearies," products. we smell it before eating, and buy at the supermarket. said Jeff Rubin, founder and "The prices match the ele- chief executive of It'Sugar. Its stores are white, with when we taste, we assess splashes of pale blue, inspired what's the main t aste and gance for sure, but it's worth Other r i b ald b e st-sellers by artist David Hockney's pool aftertaste." it for the quality," Kahele said. include a line of sweets cre"If you are going to indulge "When I saw the store the first ated with late-night comedy paintings. Candies are displayed in Lucite boxes stacked in the calories, it's worth pay- time, I didn't even realize it staple "Saturday Night Live": neatly on white shelves. Gift ing a little extra for the best," was a candy store." Schweddy Balls (salty chocosets resembling jewelry boxes she added. Another small chain, Lolli late), the Ladies Man Bar (dark are displayed on tables. Sales Last year, revenue was ex- and Pops, designed its stores chocolate) and Debbie Downclerks stroll around offering pected to triple to $3 million to resemble old-world Euro- er mints. samples on cream-and-gold from 2013, O'Neill said. The pean sweet shops, with wood Rubin, an industry veteran china trays. company's second store made paneling and signs hand-let- who co-founded Dylan's CanThat luxe atmosphere ex- its debut in June. It is looking tered in chalk. One location, dy Bar, said he started It'Sugar tends to the sweets, which for another permanent store which opened in April, offers after realizing that adults have are sourcedfrom alloverthe and is opening a pop-up shop an old-fashioned soda foun- just as big of a sweet tooth as world. Popular items include later t hi s m o n th . U p scale tain serving up malts, egg children. "Thereare a lotm ore people champagne gummy bears shops, including Nordstrom, creamsand rootbeerfloats. "We don't cater to children between the ages of 15 and 85 from Germany ($8 for 3.3 also carry its products. ounces) and marshmallows Brandon Kahele, a self-de- at all," said Bear Silber, vice than there are 10 and under," dipped in 24-karat gold ($24 scribed "candy freak," said president of marketing for the Rubin said.
Tax inversions
these companies are navigating a loophole in America's broken and dysfunctional tax code. And while their share-
Continued from E1 With Applied Materials' proposed inversion, Baucus holders may secure a tempowas trying to ring the alarm rary win, workers, taxpaybells. He noted that other U.S. ers and this country all lose. companies that aren't house-
A merica's tax base erodes at a
hold names yet big enough
cost of hundreds of millions of dollars in revenue, increasing the burden on other compasuing inversions, in both cases nies and individuals."
to matter — Eaton Corp. and Actavis Inc. — were also purto Ireland and its 12.5 percent corporate tax rate.
Baucus wasn't having much luck in Congress. Lawmakers — consumed by the fi-
nancial crisis, the recession, the fiscal cliff and constant partisan clashes — just didn't
haveinversions on theirradar screen. And, anyway, Baucus was aiming higher. He wanted legislation curbing inversions to be tied to a comprehensive revamp of the tax code that
would give U.S. companies incentives to keep their addresses at home.
Baucus, who in April 2013 announced he would r etire from the Senate, had been
working on tax-code changes with his House counterpart,
Rep. Dave Camp, a Michigan Republican. Soon, though, Obama nominated Baucus to
be ambassador to China and he left Congress before his term ended. Camp released a
draft tax-revamp plan in February 2014 that landed with a thud. It never came to a vote
in Congress, not even in his committee. I n March, Obama in h i s
More than a dozen inver-
Astrazeneca inversion — only because the U.K. company rejected its offer. It was clear the
company was still looking to
ing to it," Josten said.
Within days both Lew and O bama had backed off t h e traitor talk — though it was
clear that inversions had risen Others suddenly were pay- way up the political ladder. ing attention — including The business lobby had its aides to Obama. They were own counter-argument: Abtaken by surprise when name- sent a revamp, the tax code brand U.S. companies began not only unfairly punishes to invert. They saw it as a U.S. companies, it makes challenge and an opportunity, them vulnerable. "The principal concern that according to a former White House official involved in dis- we and ourdomestic compacussions about how to address nies have is that the longer this the issue. goes on, the greater likelihood you are going to see of foreign invert.
sions had been completed in the period he mentioned. Wyden, too, was playing the Baucus pragmatist. He wrote that curbing the breaks should Big-name inversions m ultinationals t a king o v e r be pairedwith a tax-code overIn June and July came a U.S. multinationals," Josten haul cutting the corporate rate fresh wave of high-profile said in a November interview. to 24percentfrom 35percent. announcements: M e d tronic "As long as we do nothing, the Still, he told reporters later Inc., the medical-device mak- risk is more InBevs taking that he wanted to send a mes- er, said it would buy Covidien over more Budweisers." sage by warning that legis- Plc in a $43 billion deal and lation was coming. The goal, move its tax address to Ire- Taking action he said, was "freezing the land. Drugstore giant WalBy August, Lew had delinebackers" so companies green Co. acknowledged that cided that Treasury wasn't wouldn't act while they were it was considering an inver- entirely powerless to act on uncertain what C o ngress sion as part of its purchase inversions without Congress. would do. of a British drugstore chain. Treasury officials, leaking They didn't freeze — the po- Auxilium P h armaceuticals word to the press, said they litical environment was mark- Inc. said it planned to invert were looking at a wide range edly different from 2002. by buying a small Canadian of options by which Lew could And unlike in 2002, when company. Drugmaker Abb- deter inversions using the exBaucus and Grassley had Vie announced its inversion isting tax code. the backdrop of the Sept. 11 plan through a merger with Though details were scarce, attacks and th e E nron acIrish company Shire that the message was clear. Corcounting scandal, Wyden was would eclipse the size of the porations should be wary of working against a dysfunc- Medtronic deal. proceeding with inversions tional Congress that couldn't Even American hamburg- because restrictions could be even agree to stay open. er makers were heading out. imposed retroactively — curbNext up w ere th e L evin Burger King Worldwide Inc., ing benefits of many of the brothers from Michiganhome of the Whopper,had proposed deals. Lew said as Carl, a Democratic senator, agreed to buy Tim Hortons much in a Sept. 9 interview on and Sander, a D e mocratic Inc. and move its tax address Bloomberg Television. TreaHouse member. Now in their
to Canada.
annual budget plan included 80s and given to wearing rumThe Obama administration, for the first time a proposal pled suits, the brothers have which had been largely silent that would make i t a l most m ade careers out of populist at least publicly on inversions impossible for U.S. corpora- causes and tax wonkery. On since the president's budget tions to complete inversions inversions, both men quickly plan wasreleased in March, by purchasing smaller foreign put their staffs to work. jumped back into the fray. In companies. In early May, not long after July, Treasury Secretary JaA nd then came tw o b i g the Pfizer announcement, they cob Lew penned a letter to announcements. Chi q u i ta independently came to the Congress seeking urgent acBrands International in March same conclusion — grab the tion to halt inversions. said it would move its tax ad- Obama administration's budOn July 24 in a speech, dress to Ireland. In late April, get proposal and turn it into Obama stepped into the ring pharmaceutical giant Pfizer legislation that would severely with a r oundhouse punch. Inc. roared to the inversions restrict inversions for compa- Companies gaming tax-code forefront with a dramatic plan nies that would keep at least 25 loopholes to undertake inverto acquire U.K.-based Astra- percentof sales,employees or sions were "corporate desertZeneca Plc and become a U.K. assets in the U.S. post-deal. ers who renounce their citicompany, potentially saving Some influential Republi- zenship to shield profits," he about $1 billion a year in U.S. cans and business lobbying sard. taxes. groups were taking a differThe speech may have fired ent view. Their case: Inver- up the Democrats' populist 'Freezing the linebackers' sions symbolized a failure of base though it played poorly Democrats in C o ngress the tax code, not the greed of at the Chamber of Commerce, started getting involved. On U.S. corporations. Companies whose offices are just across May 8, Sen. Ron Wyden, the were merely doing what their Lafayette Square from the Oregon Democrat who had tax lawyers said they could do White House. Josten, the lobreplaced Baucus as head of under the arcane laws. Utah's byist, said the group warned the Finance Committee, tried Senator Orrin Hatch, then the Obama's economic aides that to fire up the issue with an top Republican on the Finance if they were going to demonize op-ed piece in The Wall Street Committee, made that point in U.S. businesses, the chamber JournaL a May 8 floor speech. would start swinging too. "We made some offline calls Citing the inversions comAs the political jousting bepleted in the past two years, gan to take shape and sum- across the street suggesting Wyden wrote ofthe compa- mer neared, inversions stayed that if the rhetoric continues" nies, "While they may not be in the headlines. Pfizer an- the chamber would be "very breaking U.S. laws, many of nouncedithad given up on the overtly and directly respond-
sury, he insisted, can "take a lot of v alue out of t hese
That's not unusuaL Many
homebrewers become so enthralled with cooking up
The co-owners answered up trying to sell their brewed his questions. They also exconcoctions. plained that their shop offers But that's when it g e ts hands-on classes in which complicated under Flori- participants take home a sixda and national laws, said pack of the beer they brew. "Some of the best beer Trevor Brewer, an attorney who devotes a part of his law I've had was from homepractice toward helping craft brewers," Holmes said. "And brewers navigate through peopleare realizing you can the legalities in trying to sell createa greatbrew athome."
ty of Southern California, told
on Wall Street veterans to fill
Bloomberg News that Treasury "has taken a very hard
key regulatory posts. Warren was joined in opposition by
line on these transactions." He
Democratic Sens. Joe Man-
cited the government's "very chin of West Virginia, Jeanne broad reading of its regulato- Shaheen of New Hampshire ry authority to address inver-
sion deals involving accessing
and Al Franken of Minnesota. Warren won. On Jan. 12 the
offshore cash" as well as "not
White House said Weiss had
grandfathering deals that are announced but not closed." The move dismayed some Republicans,including Camp. "We've been down this rab-
asked them to withdraw the nomination because he didn't want to become a distraction. He instead accepted a low-
about tax reform, we are going to keep losing good companies and jobs to countries that have or are actively reforming their tax laws," Camp said in a
sions aren't going away. More companies continue to
13 nominated Antonio Weiss
tax reform. Until then, inver-
forthe post ofundersecretary sions will remain a hot topic in of domestic finance. In any oth- Washington. "This is bad for jobs and iner year, Weiss, a Lazard Ltd.
Washington.
such transactions qualify for favorable tax treatment.
D emocrats, led b y S e n . Elizabeth Warren of Massa-
"This action will signifi- chusetts, seized on Weiss' incantly diminish the ability of version history to lay out an inverted companies to escape argument that the Obama adU.S. taxation," Lew said on a ministration relies too much conference call that day. "For
some companiesconsidering deals, today's action will mean
law professor at the Universi-
~~~~coolsculpting LE F
FEL
CE N T E W
CO!
C
R *8
Darr' t settleforarryorre
brrt a p!asrr'rrrrrgeon far Coolsculpring'
www.leffelcenter.com '541-388-3006
announce plans to invert; the
latest to do so include Civeo Corp., which runs camps for statement. "I fear this adminis- oilfield workers, and Wright tration is only interested in do- Medical Group Inc., which ing the bare minimum — just makes screws to repair broken enough to say they care." ankles. Undeterred by the new Still, Treasury's stated inrules, Medtronic is on track to tention to act and its notice to complete its shift to Ireland by change the rules appeared to the end of the month. have had the desired effect on The issue of i nversions some proposed deals. In Au- "won't go away easily" and gust, Walgreen said it decided is likely to keep cropping up, against pursuing its inversion. especially in today's more In September, so did Auxil- "populist" political era, said ium, choosing instead to be Douglas Holtz-Eakin, a former acquired by a foreign compa- chief economist on President ny. And AbbVie, specifically George W. Bush's Council of citing the new Treasury rules, Economic Advisers who is canceled a planned inversion. nowpresident of the American Action Forum policy group. Att ideological clash The only way to truly fix the And i n r e ality, inversion problem, he said, is for Confever may have been dying gress and the White House to down — until Obama on Nov. pass comprehensive corporate
the finance industry's clout in
E dward Kleinbard, a t a x
er-profil e role as a counselor
bit hole before, and until the to Lew. What's clear is that inverWhite House gets s erious
companies can use to make
l o n ger
L ibera, How easy is i t t o brew beer? How much will it cost?
their owns suds that they end
new curbs on a ctions that
make economic sense." Some tax experts agreed.
"Almost all of them start-
ed out as homebrewers," he
lifetime membership to the said. "People tell them, rYou American Homebrewers As- have a really good product.' sociation after purchasing a Or they decide they are restarter kit in 2011 and creat- ally good at their craft, and ing a honey ale with the help they want to open up their of his personal chef, Sam own brewery." It's a costly endeavorKass. "The hobby is getting big- at least $100,000 to launch a ger all the time," said Mike small brewery. The biggest Urban,amember ofthe Cen- expense is purchasing the tral Florida Home Brewers, equipment. a group made up of brewing Luke Scott, a co-owner of enthusiasts that has seen its H eartsHomeBrew.com, a n membership numbers swell Orlando beer-making supply in recent years. store, said homebrewing was A s an example, his club's popular years ago, but then annual b re w c o mpetition the enthusiasm waned. gets about 7 0 0 e n t r ies. "But it has seen a resurWhereas "we would have gence" within the past deabout 400 or 500 entries four cade, he said. The main reaor five years ago," Urban sons,Scottsaid,arethe large said. varieties of specialty beers Urban, 65, started brewing and the ease of purchasing beer regularly about 12 years startup kits through the ago. He became interested Internet. "But when people dive into in the hobby after returning home from Germany, where (homebrewing) they soon he appreciated that country's realize how complex it can distinctive beer flavors over become," Scott said. "It's like the American beers sold in a science project." supermarkets. On a r e cent afternoon, Today, he cooks up a batch Ronnie Saltzer walked into of beerabout once a month the S a n ford Ho m ebrew and says if he were 30 years Shop and looked around younger he would probably at the bags of malt and the take a stab at becoming a equipment. professional craftbrewer. He asked Holmes and
inversions." investment banker with solid On Sept. 22, Treasury made Democratic Party credentials, good on its intentions, issuing might have cruised through. a notice that it proposed to Yet Weiss had a big "I" isadopt rules that would, among sue — as in inversions, having other things, stiffen the tests consulted on the Burger King for inversions. These included deal and participated in ara prohibition on "hopscotch" ranging other inversions. He loans that let companies ac- found himself at the center cess foreign cash without pay- of an ideological fight withing U.S. taxes, and imposed in the Democratic Party over
that i n versions n o
their own beer and wine.
N QRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aaeard-urinning neighborhood on Bend's cuestside. Aa
www.northwestcrossing.com
vestment in the United States,"
he said. "It may be good politics but it is bad substantively. The real-world consequences
continue to rise."
Beltone
TRIAL of our newest most advanced hearing aids Call Today
'Beltone 541-389-9690
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Housing
try-level housing, homes that working peoplecan afford. Continued from E1 This is housing for first-year Standerwick is set to appear teachers, bank tellers and as a panelist Feb. 3 at the next nurses, forexample,he said. What's Brewing, Bend's Town "This is actually the housing Hall, sponsored by the Bend you want in a neighborhood," Chamber of Commerce at the High said. Deschutes Brewery 8 Public While Bend residents who House, 1044 NW Bond St. The responded to a fallsurvey topic will be affordable hous- by the nonprofit Bend 2030 ing. Other panelists include agreed that affordable housRegional Economist Damon ing is a critical need, most inRunberg of the Oregon Em- dicated they would rather see ployment Department; Jim it built in neighborhoods other Long, city of Bend affordable than their own, High said. "You're not talking about housing manager; Scott Ramsay, former Bend city council- putting slums up," he said. The or and local businessman; and question, High said, comes Andy High, vice president of down to: "Who are we leaving the Central Oregon Builders out as a community?" Association.
Instead of the term affordable housing, Standerwick prefers to use "housing options." Bend, a city in which single-family homes dominate the real estate market, needs
more options. "We have a more diverse
population of residents looking for a different style of housing," she said. She suggested that building more cottages, for example, would satisfy the 65-and-older
Service economy Runberg, who c r unches data on employment in Cen-
tral Oregon, said he's combing through recently available wage data to compose a picture of the labor force in time for the February town hall. But the fact that Bend has a
sizable service sector, consisting of relatively low-paying jobs, is well known. Most cit-
iesrely on a large service sector, Runberg said, but because
market, freeing up single-fam- Bend is a tourist destination, ily homes for younger fami- its service sector is larger than lies, who would then free up most cities its size. rental homes and apartments Nearly two-thirds of service for lower wage earners. jobs in Deschutes County pay High, chairman of the Bend less than $15 an hour; nearly Affordable Housing Advisory half of all jobs in the county Committee, of which Stand- pay $15 or less, Runberg said.
jobs, and in health care have
grown steadily since 2007.
housing demands. He hears rentals and their impact on little complaint about a lack
the wage spectrum may be could take them up in April. priced entirely out of the hous- The proposal to reduce SDCs ing market, but those on the is set for discussion by city higher end may be pinched, as officials and the Bend Park 5 well, he said. Recreation District directors Standerwick agreed. A fam- at a work session Feb. 17, Long ily of four earning the county's said Thursday. "I do hear from folks who median income, $62,400 last year,may have trouble afford- are getting hired here and ing the median home price in can't find anyplace to live," Bend, Standerwick said. The he said. "That's not atypical. median reached $325,000 That's pretty common." in July before dipping to Ramsay, who lost his bid for $290,000 in December, accord- re-election in November, said
around a common area, and
of homes or apartments for the lift operators, ski instruc-
ment at Mt. Bachelor, which employs about 800 — said the
ski area's seasonal staff has developed a network and culture that helps them cope with
ors (the joy of missing out, off- ticed in positive relationships. or taken advantage of by men," setting the fear of missing out.) The children who talked to the report said. Others warn that technology their mothers showed deSocial media, particularly is no substitute for human in- creased stress and increased Facebook, increased stress in teraction in stressful situations. positive feelings, while those one way: by making people It is more effective when it is who instant-messaged remore aware of trauma in the used to amplify healthy social mained stressed. "Most of us think i t's all lives of close friends. This ef- engagement, said Susan Pinkfect was strongest for women. er, a developmental psycholo- about the information," PinkThe finding bolsters the notion gist and author of "The Village er said, "but it's probably more that stress can be contagious, Effect: How Face-to-Face Con- about the nonverbal communithe Pew and Rutgers research- tact Can Make Us Healthier, cation: the little pats, the tone of ers said. Happier and Smarter." voice that signals in your body But when such users of soFor instance, one study at that someone is there foryou." cial media were exposed to the University of Wisconsin, Just as the telephone made stressful events in the lives Madison, compared children it easier to maintain in-person of people who were not close who talked and instant-mes- relationships but neither refriends, the usersreported low- saged with their mothers after placed nor ruined them, this er stress levels. Researchers a stressful situation. The re- recent research suggests that said that was perhaps attribut- searchers measured cortisol, digital technology can become able to gratitude for their own known as the stress hormone, a tool to augment the relationlives being free of these stress- and oxytocin, a hormone no- ships humans already have. anism that is not experienced
Continued from E1 They controlled for demo-
graphic factors like marital and education status. They found no effect on
stress levels among technology users overall. And women who frequently use Twitter,
email and photo-sharing apps scored 21 percent lower on the stress scale than those who did not.
That could b e b ecause sharing life events enhances well-being, social scientists say, and women tend to do it more than men both online
and off. Technology seems to provide "a low-demand and easily accessible coping mech-
375 SW Wilson (Just west of the Wilson/Bond roundabout) +I- 47,480 SF Mixed Use Zone Perfectfor yournew office development! Near restaurants, shopping, financial and title Call Dan Steelhammer, Broker
541-389-4212 5 4 1-585-2446 dan@colmcommercial.com
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS COMPANY
livability.
Meanwhile, the city is bracing for an eventual influx of tors and others who flock to students, faculty, staff and adthe mountain for ski season. ministrators associated with They seem to cope somehow, the creation of a brand new he said. west-side campus for Oregon The story is different, he State University-Cascades. said, when it comes to hiring The plan is stalled for now, for higher-paying, permanent under a challenge by oppoadministrative positions, how- nents at the state Land Use ever. He voiced the same con- Board of Appeals. Ramsay cern that Goodman from St. said that unless circumstancCharles expressed. es change, the campus will "We were lucky this year present significant housing that we didn't have an open problems. "It's going to be very diffiing to The Beacon Report. he knows firsthand the trouposition," Elliott said ThursSaid Runberg: " The di - ble some have finding a place day. "When you hire someone cult to accommodate those inrection we're going to find is to live. Six young employ- of that caliber, they're bring- dividuals," Ramsay said. housing is perhaps a greater ees of his family's business, ing a family or they're used to He said his family, for exshare of an individual's in- Sun Mountain Fun Center, in having their own home." ample, withdrew plans to come (in Bend) than in other Bend, left town between July build a 40-unit studio apartHousinghurdles places." and December for lack of livment project near OSU-Casing space. Young people that Ramsay said he expects a cades' proposed campus site Potential solutions move here become discour- fight at the city council over due to higher-than-expected Three proposals put before aged by the lack of housing or lowering SDCs. After taking costs. SDCs added $540,000 to the Bend City Council last fall the fact that their earnings are up the density and cottage the project, $230,000 of which by the Affordable Housing gobbled up in rent, he said. code questions, the city's pro- went to the park district, he Advisory Committee would The same applies to high- posed expansion of its Urban sard. "That put it out of the runease city regulations on hous- er-paying jobs. Prospective G rowth B o u ndary, w h i c h ing density and reduce system employees who want to live could make land available ning," Ramsay said. "It made developmentcharges — the in Bend may think twice with for development, is the next a very risky project become an fees paid by developers to off- real estate at a premium, Ram- hurdle, and at least two years impossible project." set thecost of infrastructure say said. away. Another committee — Reporter: 541-617-7815, "They would love to live in is studying vacation home such as streets and parks — to jditzler@bendbulletin.com encourage constructionof af- Bend, but what's going to hapfordable housing. pen when (they) get here. If Proposed changes would (they) have to live in Redmond introduce a cottage code that to work in Bend, why move?" allows wider construction Jordan Elliott — director of of clusters of small homes staff resources and developWorkers on the low end of
a higher density of homes on erwick is a member, said he On the other end of the scale, lots designated for affordable hopes the panel discussion jobs in professional services, housing by qualified builders. helps clarify the need for en- or traditional white-collar Those proposals are going
Stress
through a planning review, said Long, the affordable housing manager. The council
E5
T ICKER
Pharmacyclics PCYC GoldcorpInc GG Hologic H OLX ContlResources C LR Newmont Mining NEM Alkermes PLC A LKS lululemon athletica LU L U S ilver Wheaton Corp SL W Celgene Inc C ELG ActivisionBlizzard ATV I Barrick Gold ABX Mohawk Inds MHK Cdn Nat Res C NQ Hlth Care REIT H CN BioMarin Pharma B M R N
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
FRIDAY C LOS E
$CHG %CHG %CHG 1W K 1W K 1MO
1 4 5 .51
21.31
1 72
10.7
23.81
3.10
1 5. 0
30.3
29. 0 3
2.27
8.5
7.8
39.6 0
3.06
8.4
2.5
22. 2 9
15 .7
76
16.6
70 0 0
4.86
75
18.9
63.00 23.31 1 2 1 .8 1 20.25 11.7 5 168 .4 5 29. 66 84. 31 99. 45
4.37 1.61 8.14 1.35 07 .6 10. 1 0 1.72 4.82 5. 67
75 74 72 7.1 6 .9 6.4 6.2 6 .1 6. 0
Globalmarkets
% RTN 1YR CO M P A N Y
17.8 14.0 4.0 0.0 8.5 8.7 -6.3 10.2 6.0
INDEX
$CHG %CHG %CHG % RTN 1WK 1WK 1MO 1YR
TICKER
FRIDAY C L OS E
TKMR
24.20
8.50
54.1
81. 7
ZIOP
8.11
2.73
50.7
69.0
74.0
CRRC
19.62
5.08
34.9
38.2
-15.8
5.2 Tekmira Pharm 5.0 ZiopharmOncology 28.9 CourierCorp -32.0 Bebe Stores lnc -7.8 Intra-Cellular Thea 37.8 Tilly'sInc 25.9 Bulld-A-Bear 6.9 Advaxis Inc 43.1 Emulex Corp 7.8 Intersect ENT Inc -35.9 Allied Nev Gold 8.9 E2open Inc -14.3 Neovasc Inc 55.4 Forest City B 36.3 Argos Therapeutics
BEBE
3.09
0.72
30.4
13.6
-41.9
ITCI
21.45
4.49
26.5
28.2
7.0
TLYS
14.15
2.59
22.4
52.2
22.44
3.81
20.5
19.7
ADXS
13.51
2.21
19.6
140 . 8
ELX XENT
6.94
1.13
19.4
22.2 12. 0
22.95
3.67
19.0
ANV
1.25
0.20
19.0
35. 9
EOPN
6.72
1.07
18.9
-27.9
NVCN
8.25
1.25
FCE/B ARGS
24.67
3.62
172
15.9
7.57
1.06
16.3
-20.5
1 7.9
22. 4
sanniskcorporation Freeport McMoRan
S NDK
78. 9 3
-18.12
-18.7
-21.1
FCX
19.24
-3.90
-16.9
-17.8
Ally Financial Tiffany & Co Micron Tech Prec Castparts Magna lntl Marathon Petroleum Phillips 66 Bank of America
A LLY
20.4 0
-3.48
-14.6
-12.3
TIF
88.40
-15.05
-14.5
-14.6
MU
28.99
-4.54
-13.5
-15.9
P CP
199 . 63
-29.92
-13.0
-15.8
M GA
93.2 5
-13.53
-12.7
-12.6
MPC
7 7.56
-10.93
-12.4
-11.1
P SX
60.8 3
-6.48
-9.6
-15.3
B AC
15.3 8
-1.60
-9.4
-12.7
9.8 ChannelAdvisor Corp ECOM -46.5 eHealth Inc EHTH 0.0 Rex Energy Corp REXX -1.4 NeuroDerm Ltd NDRM 25.6 Mid-Con Energy Ptrs MCEP -19.2 FXCM Inc FXCM 9.7 AK SteelHold AKS -9.2 Halcon Resources HK -1 9.3 Arrowhead Research ARWR -10.7 BreltBurn Energy BBEP
Fast times IA 0
I F tL ook
Cars for average Joe? Forget it! The Detroit show featured blg-bucks luxuryand performance cars like the 600-horsepower FordGT and the $150,000Acura NSX, impractical vehicles that areout of reach for most. Exceptfor the Toyota Tacoma small pickup, no blg-selling mainstream
4
4
V
V T V
L
L
4
+ 2.00' /
L
L
4
t 2 530/
L T
V V
V T
V
V
T
-1.36% T
T
V
-1.43%
-1.14% T -0.60% V -0.29% V
X V X
V V V
-1.92% 2 04% -1.82% 4 38%
saoPaoloBovespa 4 9 0 16.52 +990.21 + 2 .06% X V 430 9 .41 + 267.59 + 1 . 91% V -9.6 /AFRICA 0.0 EUROPE TorontoS &P/TSX 1
-73.7 Amsterdam -76.8 Brussels Madrid 109.0 Zurich 30.0 Milan 0.0 Johannesburg Stockholm
432.98 +7.66 3368.38 +49.63 1014.11 +5.81 7899.59 -501.02 19254.54 +41 0.02 48458.25 -66.00 1468.90 +11.54
-56.9
-57.3
-78.5
9.68
-12.40
-56.2
-64.8
-84.7
2.67
-1.01
-27.4
-58.7
11.01
-3.95
-26.4
89.8
4.38
-1.57
-26.4
-32.7
SeoulComposite 1888.13 SingaporeStraits Times 3300.68 -86.1 Sydney All Ordinaries 5 2 78.80 0.0 Taipei Taiex 91 38.29 -71.4 Shanghai Composite 3376.50
12.63
-4.41
-25.9
-25.6
-24.2
4.06
-1.34
-24.8
-35.0
-48.2
1.20
-0.39
-24.5
-45.0
-59.9
6.86
-2.20
-24.3
7.4
-49.5
4.87
-1.56
-24.3
-37.7
-67.0
+1.80% +I 50'/ +0.58% -5.96% +2.18% -0.14% +0.79%
T
+0.93% -4.04%
-2.21%
-2.72% -12.06% +1. 2 8% -2.64% +0.30%
ASIA
-12.37
Deals on the way Most analystsexpect U.S. new car sales to hlt around 17 million this year, close to the 2000record of 17.3 million. But they'llrIse only 1or 2 percent annually for thenext few years. As growth slows, somecompanies willwant a bigger slice of theple, says Jeff Schuster, senIor vlce presidentof forecasting for consulting firm LMCAutomotive. That meansthey'll try to steal from othersby uslng blg dIscounts. "Thereare a lot of new product
FRI. CHG WK MO QTR YTD +1.34% -1.92% I 35% L L 3 69% -0.24% +0 79% -1.02% +2.11% +1.31% L +2. 5 0% -1.43% -3.36%
135.8
9.38
vehicles were unveiled,says Karl Brauer, Kelley BlueBooksenior analyst. "That's interestingthat you could have anentire showdedIcated to klnd of fun, specialized niche vehicles.That wouldn't be possibleif car companies were concerned about their bottom line,"he sald.
FRI. CHG +26.75 +135.16 +51.49 -247.39 +56.42 -244.54
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
Note:Stocks classified by marketcapitalization, the product of thecurrent stock price andtotal shares outstanding. Rangesare $100 milion to $1billion (small); $1 billion to $8 billion (mid); greater than $8bilion Ilarge).
The goodtlmes rolled at the Detroit auto show this week, with carcompanies from across the gl obe showingoff high-performance sportscars, hefty new trucksand electric vehicles and hybrids evenin atime of $2 per gallon gasoline. Inslderat the North Amerlcan Intematlonal AutoShow, which opens to thepublic Saturday, offered comments aboutthe show and the state of the U.S. auto industry:
LAST 2019.42 10167.77 6550.27 24103.52 4379.62 16864.16
8 658.96 +185.75 + 2 .19%4 20.6 Buenos Aires Merval Mexico Ci t y Bo l sa 41402.01 +403.24 +0.98% V V 134.0
BBW
10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
10 WORST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
103.1
s&p 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100 Hong KongHangseng Paris CAC-40 Tokyo Mikkei 225
-26.01 -38.16 -31.80 -26.80 +40.04
+1.20%
Quotable "There is little inflation pressure in the United States or almost anywhereelse for that matter." —Jennifer Lee,senior economist at BMOCapital Markets, commentingas consumer prices declined 0.4 percent in December, the biggest one-month drop since December 2008
launches In2015 and 2016. You combinethat with a slowing overall top line,and that's where thecompetitive pressureIs.Consumers are golng to benefit from that," Shuster says.
Greenvehicles go backstage Withgasoline around$2.09 per gallon nationwide, electricandhybrid vehicles wereshoved aslde bytrucks and performanceand luxury vehicles. Green vehicles just aren't selling well. "Twodollars per gallon Is really a problemfor hybrids and electrics," says Mike Jackson, CEO ofAutoNation, the country'sbiggest dealership chaln. "Alter a decadeof innovation and every manufacturer spending billions, hybrids andelectrics comblnedare less than 4 percentof the market. With these
gasoline prIces It couldgo back down under 3 percent."
Fat and happy? The U.S.auto industry has a history of mishandlingprosperity. Automakers in the pastadded employeesand factories and gave blg pay raises. Butln the next downturn,they hadto discount and even sell cars at a lossto keep factories running.The problems nearly brought down General Motorsand Chrysler in 2009. ButBrauer doesn't see a repeat on thehorizon. With growthslowing, there's a risk thatautomakersvying for more market sharecould pull the discount lever and others willhave to follow. By Tom Krisher AP
Indexclosing and weekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, January16, 2015
+
I7,51t57
Nasoaa ~ 4,634.38
696 9
+
S&P500 2,019.42
RUSSELL20DO I,176.65
WILSHIRE5000
+
21,244.68
252 44
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
UNDAY D
R
i SaCOm i
- a u e l t ic as e a
on sca enee s imme iate action
By G. Chambers Williams lll Fort Worth (Texas) Star-Telegram
Now in its third year since
a complete redesign, the 2015 Acura RDX compact crossover continues as an upscale
family hauler that's not much more expensive than some nonpremium competitors. Acura aimed the RDX at
By Brad Bergholdt
the latest information.
Tribune News Service
young professional couples
• I have a question re• garding my daughter's 2006 Ford Escape. She noticed the gas pedal getting
Had this been a case of occasional stalling or rough idle I'd be tempted to talk you through a do-it-yourself cleaning procedure. But your daughter's symptom is serious, and a thorough pro-
Q
with no kids, and also at emp-
ty-nester baby boomers looking to downsize a bit from the bigger SUVs
stuck, and in order to fix the
REVIEW they n ee ded
problem, she pressed the gas pedal hard to make it
when all the kids were at home.
release. I took the car to my
For 2015, RDX prices begin at $34,895 (plus $895 freight)
trusted auto mechanic. He looked into the problem and changed the right and left rear wheel speed sensors in July 2014. He said this should resolve the problem. My daughter has complained that the problem is still there,
for the front-wheel-drive ver-
sion, and $36,295 with allwheel drive. With the Technol-
Submitted photo
ogy package, the front-drive The 2015 Acura RDX offers a number of upscale touches at a competitive price. model is $38,595, and the allwheel-drive $39,995. The RDX is in the entry-preeveryone. mium SUV segment, comWe enjoyed the various stor- system with CD player and Base price:$34,895peting against vehicles such age spaces included in the car, XM satellite radio, as well as $39,995, plus $895 freIght as the Audi Q5, BMW X3, Inespecially the compartment at an auxiliary input jack and As tested:$40,890, Includfiniti QX50, Mercedes-Benz the front of the center console, USB port (supporting iPods ing freight (all-wheel drive GLK350, Volkswagen Tiguan with a sliding cover, perfect and iPhones); and Bluetooth model with Technology and Volvo XC60. for tucking away phones and phone and audio streaming, Package) Even with gasoline prices iPods. It even includes two 12- with iPod support. Type: Premium, compact, down dramatically in recent volt power outlets and a USB The power door locks infive-passenger, front- or weeks, sales of these compact port, keeping charging cords clude keyless access, and all-wheel-drive crossover crossovers, including premiand such tucked away. The lid pushbutton start is standard. utility vehicle um models, are still climbing can be closed to keep the de- The rear seatback has a 60/40 as consumers look for smallvices out of view when the car split-folding feature to allow Engine:3.5-liter V-6 er vehicles with better fuel is parked. for expansion of the cargo Mileage:20 mpg city, 28 economy. Buyers in this class Among the RDX safety fea- area, which has 26.1 cubic feet mpg highway; 19mpgcity, are looking for more of everytures is H onda's Advanced of space with the rear seat in 27 mpg highway (all-wheel thing, including fuel economy, Compatibility Engineeringplace. drive) ACE — body and frame strucluxury and performanceThose front seats are quite but in smaller packages. ture, which helps protect occu- comfortable, and even the rear Introduced originally for pants and other motorists (and seat offered plenty of legroom, 2007, the five-passenger RDX ual-shift feature, activated by even pedestrians) involved in although the center position, is based on the architecture of paddles behind each side of an accident with the RDX. as in most vehicles, probably Honda's popular CR-V com- the steering wheel. S tandard a re fr on t should be left to smaller peopact crossover, which got its This RDX has a much more seat-mounted side air b ags, ple or a child safety seat. own slight makeover for 2015. luxurious interior than that of front and rear roof-mounted A f old-down a r mrest i s The RDX's biggest differ- the CR-V, with standard leath- side-curtain air bags, driver provided in the middle of the ence from the CR-V is under er upholstery and other ame- and front-passenger knee bol- rear seat for use when no one the hood. While the Honda nities that clearly put the vehi- sters, four-wheel antilock disc is sitting there, and it has two comes with a f o u r-cylinder cle in the premium class. The brakes, and electronic stability cupholders. engine, the RDX is offered cabin also is much quieter than control with traction control. The RDX's r ide i s s o f tonly with a pleasingly peppy before, thanks to better insulaer than that of the previous V-6. Gone is the previous mod- tion and Active Noise Control Riding in comfort model, but the trade-off is el's turbocharged four-cyl- technology — similar to those Both front bucket seats are that this one doesn't handle inder, but fuel economy was noise-cancelling headphones heated and have perforated as crisply. It's meant more for increased from the previous people wear on airplanes. leather surfaces. The leath- comfort than performance, generation. The vehicle also has larger er-wrapped steering wheel has which is what most buyers For 2015, the f r ont-drive door openings, more passen- tilt and telescopic adjustments. probably are looking for in model has EPA ratings of 20 ger and cargo space, and new Dash gauges are backlit this class. mpg city,28 highway and features such as an option- with LEDs, and there is a drivStill, it's a very good vehicle 23 mpg combined; with all- al power-operated tailgate, er-information display in the that does what it's intended wheel drive,the numbers are which makes it much easier instrument panel. A rearview to do: haul people and kids 19/27/22. to open and close when your camera system is standard, around in comfort, in a smallThe 3.5-liter engine is rat- hands are full. with three viewing modes. er, more-fuel-efficient packed at 273 horsepower and 251 As with most vehicles HonAlso included are dual-zone age that's easy to negotiate foot-pounds of torque, and is da aims at families, the RDX automatic c l i mate c o ntrol; through traffic and crowded paired with a six-speed auto- has lots of interior convenienc- p ower moon r o of ; a s e v - mall parking lots. matic transmission with man- es that make trips easy on en-speaker premium audio
2015AcuraRDX
DETROIT — Jake Fisher
knows cars. As the automotive test director for Consumer Reports, he evaluates nearly
every new vehicle in everyday driving and on the magazine's test track in Connecticut.
Fisher goes to the North American International Auto Show in Detroit every year to
get an advance look at what's headed for the U.S. market and learn about advances in
technology and design. We caught up with Fisher at the Ford Motor Co. stand and
asked him to name his three favorite vehicles of the showand also the biggest dud. Here are his picks: The Ford GT supercar:"It is exciting and drop-dead gorgeous. Most importantly, it looks better than the original. I like the way Ford has done
things with advanced materials that couldn't be done be-
More newsfromtheshow DriverleSS CarS —Google announced that it is engineering and buildIng drIverless cars in partnership with metro DetroIt suppliers in a marriage ofCalifornia tech andMotown know-how. Pod-like prototypes for testing are beingdevelopedandassembled andwill undergo testing at Googlefacilities in California in the spring. The goal is to havedriverless cars available onthe market within five years, said Chris Urmson, director of Self-Driving Cars for Google.
LOng-range eleCtriC —General Motors unveiled its battery-powered Chevrolet Bolt, challenging Tesla in the raceto produce anaffordable electric car. Theall-electric Bolt boasts a groundbreaking combination of low price and long driving range. It will sell in the low $30,000s, after government incentives, and travel up to 200 miles on abattery charge, Mark Reuss, GM's executive vice president for global product development, said in an interview with the LosAngeles Times."The Bolt breaks the barrier on range anxiety," Reusssaid. TeSla grawth —Silicon Valley automaker Tesla Motors will be making "a few mIllion cars" by 2025, enigmatic CEO Elon Musk said in Detroit on Tuesday.That would makethe company about the size of BMWtoday. Muskalso left the door open to eventually establishing franchised dealerships. Theautomaker in 2014 made about 33,000 units of the Model Sluxury electric car, its only vehicle, and expects 50 percent growth this year. — From wire reports
fore, and how the GT showcas-
es Ford's 3.5-liter V-Ecoboost engine." The Volvo XC90 seven-seat sport utility vehicle:"The new owners of Volvo are really working out. They are giving Volvo the cash it needs to develop really good products. The XC90 has a really great interior and the whole vehicle looks top notch." The Buick Avenir concept car: "Buick surprised us all with a striking concept that
could be the new face of Buick. Long, low and distinctive — it is another signal that Detroit
are going to stick to trucks." Fisher said he was struck by
the fact that none of the major is back and ready to compete automakersintroduced core with the best."
Besides a c a r b on-choked throttle it's possible the air
control could be dirty and sticking, the throttle cable
may be binding or a fault exists in the pedal assembly or
and I would like to know if
you can suggest any other solution to this problem. My
cruise control mechanism.
The Escape may have needed new wheel speed sensors
daughter is scared of what
would happen if this occurs for another reason, but I on the freeway. Your help can't grasp how they're relatwill be appreciated. ed to this symptom. • This sounds serious • and requires imme• The passenger side
A
Q
diate action. Four-cylinder
• s trut o n
my
2009
Escapes built through 2007, Honda is bent slightly and along with other vehicles, can barely be brought, just are known to sometimes ex- barely, into alignment spechibit this symptom. It may be ification. The mechanic recpretty easy to fix. The throt- ommended replacement. If tle i s m e chanically/cable I replace this strut should I operated and incorporates replace the driver's side strut an idle air control device to at the same time'? The car maintain desired idle speed.
has about 40,000 miles and
Many vehicles employing the driver's side is aligned multiport fuel injection are perfectly. prone to a buildup of carbon • Hmmm. If the strut is deposits in the throttle body, • bent, replacement is ceras it meters just air, rather tainly a good idea. Perhaps
A
than air and fuel — a great
you encountered a California
cleaner, back in Dad's day. size pothole or curb interacThese sticky deposits are tion at some time previously? largely the result of positive Being at the outer edge of the crankcase ventilation vapors rather-generous alignment and/or exhaust gas recircu- specification range in camlation soot. The usual symp- ber (how much the tire/wheel toms are occasional stalling tilts in or out at the top) can or shuddering during a sud- be a contributor to tire edge den stop or quick U-turn, dif- wear or pulling to one side. ficult starts, and/or binding Incorrect caster (similar to a of the throttle upon opening bicyde's forkangle) can cause (more so when cold). Some- pulling. Toe, the most critical times deposits can formto an tire wear angle, can be adjustobjectionable level in as few ed properly in spite of a minor as 10,000 miles, but they are strut bend. If its camber that's easily removed. Six-cylinder at the edge of spec or pulling Escapes are also known for
is noticed I'd recommend re-
some issues with their elec- newing both struts, as the tronically controlled throt- shock absorbers within are tles resulting in erratic oper-
nearing the end of their useful life.
ation. Consult the dealer for
Calendar and
ConsumerReports' director of testing pickshisfavorites Los Angeles Times
throttle body, idle air control, throttle control cable and gas pedal mechanism should be performed to play it safe.
Mark Your
NORTH AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL AUTO SHOW
By Jerry Hirsch
fessional inspection of the
Plan to Attend! Thursday January 29» 2015
GUEST SPEAKER MIKE SORRENTINO •
•
•
•
CHIEF PORTFOLIO STRATEGIST FOR GLOBAL FINANCIAL PRIVATE CAPITAL As Chief Strategist, Mr. Sorrenfino supports the development and implementation of investment strategies for our clients. He works closely with the CIO to determine target allocations to various investment vehicles and sectors given the direction of the global economy and market activity. At this I hour event, you'll hear a recap and review of 2014: Where are we at now? How did we get here? What's been driving the markets and where are we headed in 2015?
' •
I
•
•
•
•
Prior to joining Global Financial Private Capital, Mr. Sorrentino was a Vice President at Barclays Capital working on a wide range of investment strategies. Mr. Sorrentino received his MBA from the University of Chicago and his B.E. in Electrical Engineering and Mathematics from Vanderbilt University. He holds the Chartered Financial Analyst designation and carries his Series 7, 65 and 63 licenses.
•
•
•
s
• •
•
•
Come meet, listen, learn, and ask Mike questions. He will speak for around an hour with time for questions. Refreshments served.
•
•
e-
•
•
'
•
products at the show. There
•
Therewereafewvehidesthat were no mainstream sedans did not impress Fisher. Hyund- or small crossovers. But there ai's Santa Cruz crossover-truck
were exoticsports cars, large,
conceptvehide toppedthe list.
luxury SUVs, convertibles and
"Other a utomakers h ave tried this before," Fisher said. "People didn't want it then, they won't want it now. Consumers
the oddball Santa Cruz. "This was a show of dreams
and desires," Fisher said, "not of needs."
GLOEAL
Fl N A e CI * t.
Private Capital
•
•
•
•
e •
pete Mendell & Ryan sanford are Investment Advisor Representat'veswith Advisory services offered through Global Financial private capital. uc. On sEc Registered Investment Advser.
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
NICHOLAS KRISTOF
Islam needs support, free speech s one group of Islamic militants was waging war in Paris, another was slaughtering vast numbers of civilians in Baga in northern Nigeria — as many as 2,000, according to Amnesty International; "only" 150, according to the Nigerian government. Meanwhile, al-Qaida has blown up scores of people in Yemen, and the Pakistan Taliban murdered 150
people at a school. Libyan extremists blew up a Foreign Ministry building last month because an official wished
people "Merry Christmas." These spasms of terrorism cry out for a conversation among Muslims
about faith and tolerance. Islamic reformers could point out that the Quran prescribes no punishment at all for blasphemers other than telling others to keep their distance from them. The holy book that decrees
death for blasphemy is the Bible (Leviticus 24:16). Fortunately, a Saudi liberal, Raif
Badawi, has kick-started a public discussion about Islam and modernity
on his blog. Good for Saudi Arabia for promoting this kind of debate! Well, no. Actually, our Saudi al-
• Societal norms try to dictate stages of grief, but our emotions don't always listen, leaving individuals to find their ownbalance By Patrick O'Malley ~The New York Times
y the time Mary came to see me, six months after losing her daughter to sudden infant death syndrome, she had hired and fired two other therapists. She was trying to get her grief right.
lies sentenced Badawi to 10 years in prison and 1,000 lashes for "insulting Islam." The first 50 lashes were
delivered in a public flogging Friday, and Badawi is scheduled to receive 50 more every Friday until he reaches 1,000.
There is a difference between murdering cartoonists and flogging bloggers. But still! Saudi Arabia could play a leadership role in Islam. Yet since then Sau-
di elites have retreated, sipping whiskey at private parties while deferring publicly to the traditionalists. Saudi
Arabia does not allow Christian churches and sometimes has confiscated Bibles. The kingdom oppresses Shiites, funds extremist Wahhabi madrassas across the Islamic world and last month referred two women to its anti-terrorism courts — for driv-
ing cars. To be blunt, Saudi Arabia legitimizes Islamic fundamentalism and intolerance.
Pakistani officials play a similar game. Pakistan was once a tolerant country whose first foreign minister
was a member of the Ahmadi sect. Now Ahmadis are persecuted, and a Christian woman, Asia Bibi, is on
death row in a preposterous blasphemy case after drinking water said to be for Muslims only. (Bravo to Dawn, a Pakistani newspaper, for daring to publish online an article this week by Arafat Mazhar
Mary was a successful accountant, a driv-
icine helping? What were her specific symptoms? Knowing the answers might suggest why weighed down by sorrow. She was also well she was stuck. Or I would have reviewed the versedinthe stages ofgrief:denial,anger,bar- stages of grief, as she had, looking for one in gaining, depression and acceptance.To herand which the work remained incomplete. so many others in our culture, that meant grief But I had begun to operate differently by the would be temporary and somewhat predictable, time Mary showed up, which was 10 years after even with the enormity of her loss. She expected my own loss. My firstborn child had also died to be able to put it behind her and get on with before he was a year old. It was why Mary had her life. chosen me. To look at her, she already had done so. The In our first session I put Mary's depression mask she wore for the world was carefully con- aside. I asked her to tell me the story of her baby structed and effective. She seemed to epitomize rather than describe the symptoms of her grief. what many people would call "doing really Though she was resistant, she eventually startwell," meaning someone who had experienced ed to talk. a loss but looked as if she was finished grieving. Like most other things in Mary's life, the Within a few days of the death of her daughter baby, whom she named Stephanie,was she was back at work and seemed to function planned. Mary was delighted with her pregnanlargely as before. cy and had wonderful dreams for her daughter. The truth of her life was something else. Six After a routine delivery, Mary stayed home with months after her baby's death, she remained in Stephanie for the first three months. Returning deep despair. She was exhausted from acting to work had been difficult, but Mary was combetter than she felt around co-workers, friends fortable with the child-care arrangement and and family. As is so often the case, she had diag- managed tobalance motherhood with her busy nosed her condition as being "stuck" in grief, be- professi onalschedule. lieving that a stubborn depression was preventThen Mary told me about the Saturday when ingher from achieving acceptance and closure. she went to check on her napping daughter and Was she in denial'? she wondered. She also found that Stephanie wasn't breathing. She bewondered if she was appropriately angry. The gan CPR as her husband called 911. There were bottom line was that she knew she was de- moments of surreal focus as she and her huspressed — a psychiatrist had prescribed an an- band tried to save their baby. Then this woman, tidepressant — and that is what she wanted me so accustomed to being in control, had to surto treat. render her daughter to an emergency crew. Her Earlier in my practice, I would have zeroed in husband drove as they followed the ambulance on that depression. Was there a family history'? to the hospital. Had she been depressed before? Was the medSeeGrief /F4 en person who was unaccustomed to being
using Islamic legal reasoning to protest the sentence against Asia Bibi. That's exactly what we need more of.) One risk is that the West will re-
spond to Islamic terror with Islamophobia and intolerance that aggravates religious tensions. The French nationalist Marine Le Pen has gained ground, and we've seen suggestions from Rupert Murdoch and others that all 1.6 billion Muslims are somehow to blame for Islamic terrorism. After I wrote last week that the world
should resist that impulse to smear all Muslims, I was denounced by Bill O'Reilly and Sean Hannity on Fox News and called an "ink-stained
coward" by The Weekly Standard. Maybe if these "journalists" left their bubble and actually talked to
more Muslims, they wouldn't spew nonsense. Let's resist simplistic narratives
on our side, for they've already done enough damage in the Islamic world, and in truth Islam is as complex and
diverse as, say, "journalism." Muslims include the terrorist who murdered Jews in Paris and the Malian worker who risked his life to save
seven Jews. In the past our overreaction to
Islamism has s ometimes been counterproductive. Republicans have been hounding President Barack Obama for not sending a top official to Paris. They're right. But let's support the moderates
in the Islamic world who are pushing for change — and, sometimes, being flogged for it. By our "allies." — Nicholas Kristof is a columnist for The New York Times. John Costa's column will return. Carli Krueger/The Bulletin
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
e n- a i n e S Oll cee rae IS
C » i
Vl 0
soI II,RL
~ SUI
HAR
t's been official for only a week. Bend has the first full public International Baccalaureate middle years program in Oregon outside the Portland metropolitan area. That's good news for the 700 youngsters who now attend the eastside middle school and especially good news for the district, which continues to strive for "world class" status. It has taken 3'/2 years to earn the certification, a period of planning and rigorous training. The district had to commit to allow teachers and others the time to take the required training, and it had to spend the money needed for that training. What students get is a program based on and measured by international standards. Every youngster at Pilot Butte will take a foreign language,art and a design class that incorporates technology and problem solving. Students will also be required to work on community service projects of their own. Pilot Butte's is one of only four public middle school programs in Oregon, and as such it's likely to be in demand. Luckily for parents of would-be participants, the school has room toabsorb about 200 students from outside its attendance area. Parents must fill out an attendance area change request form, which is available at schools or on the district's website. It must be re-
turnedby March 1. Outside students will be admitted on a first-come, first-served basis. In the end, what's best about IB is that it asks students to think critically and creatively, to remember that the world extends beyond the city limits of Bend and that the standards are world-class. While the middle school program is being taught to all students at Pilot Butte, the diploma program at Bend High is open to students interestedinparticipating. Inthe 201213 school year, some 44 percent of juniors and seniors took at least one IB class, and 82 percent of students who took the full diploma program earned the IB diploma. The international average is 79 percent. It may be that Bend-La Pine Schools is still working to achieve world-class status across the board. When it comes to Pilot Butte Middle School, however, it's already reached the mark.
Lessons from AOL-Time Warner By Katie Benner
media companies. Vox Media is re- shrink further when media compaportedly worth about $380 million, nies have huge overhead and legacy very special date came and BuzzFeed $850 million and Vice expenses, such as printed newspawent last weekend: the 15th $2.5 billion. (BuzzFeed, in fact, is a pers, that eat up profits. nniversary of the AOL-Time "full stack startup.") By contrast, the As for A OL-Time Warner, the Warner merger. When the deal was New York Times has a $1.8 billion main lesson that bears rememberannounced, thecombined compa- market cap. Some old school media ing is that cheap distribution doesn't niesboasted a market cap of $350 players are trying to remake them- automatically create value for the billion. Now, split once again, AOL is selves as tech players, too, presum- content producers. When Time worth $3.6 billion and Time Warner ably to boost their perceived growth Inc.'s print products were distrib$68.9 billion. The most notable AOL- potential. For example, Fortune now uted cheaply online across AOL's Time Warner synergy was probably describes Disney as a tech power- network, they decreased in value: the $99 billion loss it posted in 2003. house, even though the bulk of the The new distribution model hurt deSurelyno one company couldman- company's revenue comes from con- mand for high-cost print ads. age that on its own. The marriage tent such as movies and sports. Today, streaming music services is considered one of the worst in the With real money being showered get music to listeners more cheaply annals of business. on this tech-and-media intersection, than ever before, but they haven't As a former Time Warner employ- now might actually be the perfect made it more profitable for labels Bloomberg News
time to reflect on the AOL-Time Warner deal. One can't help but
and musicians to produce music.
getting venture backing and grow- scale it without significantly increasing more valuable than traditional ing head count and costs. Margins
— Katie Benner is a tech columnist with Bloomberg.
ee, it seemed apropos to commem-
Consider cutting taxes his legislative session, expect the spending spigot and the program spigot to be jammed in the "on" position. There's already a bundle of bills introduced to raise taxes so government canhave more money tohand out. And the churn never stops in creatingnewgovernmentprograms. During the campaign for governor, Gov. John Kitzhaber put a different idea on the table that should also get a place on the legislative agenda. He wants the stateto consider atax cut on capital gains. The reflexive answer for many is "no." Opponents to the idea are suspicious of tax cuts. Capital gains taxes have the added complication that they are mostly paid by people who are comfortable financially. Oregon's State Economist Mark McMullen told us in an email that 80 percent of taxable capital gains are paid by filers with adjusted gross incomes greater than $250,000. So, propose a cut in capital gains and there will be the obligatory chorus accusing legislators of creating a taxloophole for the rich. Economics, though, is not that simple. John Maynard Keynes was
the intellectual godfather of much liberal economic theory. He argued, for instance, that government stimulus and increasing government debt could be vital to righting a strug-
glingeconomy. Do you know what else Keynes said? "The weakness of the inducement to invest has been at all times the keyto the economicproblem." In other words, look at capital investment. And what makes capital investment less risky and less costly? Lower capital gains taxes. Corporate profits are already taxed. Taxing capital gains is then a double tax on income. Doesn'tOregon want to encourage savings and investment? Go out and buy a Ferrari, diam onds or a yacht.Oregonians don't pay sales tax on that. Invest, though, and the state comes after your money. Oregon's Legislative Revenue Officer Paul Warner told us one capital gains proposal considered in the past by the Legislature was to lower the rate on gains from the sale of assets held in Oregon for an extended period. The concept has complications, but it's a great start.
orate the date by burning as much money asIcould getmy hands on, firing all my friends, and axing my Time Warner Cable and magazine subscriptions. Those ideas might sound destructive and unnecessary
in hindsight, but I assure you that they sounded great at the time.
The press, however, largely ignoredthe anniversary,possibly because it's such a downer. Reporters
instead are hearing from executives that the potential for growth and innovation at the intersection of tech-
nology and media is still huge. Venture capitalists invested hundreds of millions in content creators last year.
Deal makers are enthusiastic about the potential for industry consolidation, too.
As the startup economy soars, media companies that present themselves as tech-media hybrids are
BuzzFeed et al pay very little to wonder: Is it ever a good idea to val- get content in front of readers and ue media companies the same way viewers, but online ads alone aren't we value software companies? Is it enough to support their growing evera good idea fortech companies newsrooms. That's why they're exto acquire media properties, espe- perimenting with things like native cially legacy companies with a lot of advertising. costs? Just what sorts of synergies The idea is that native ads (once can generate enough revenue to sup- called advertorials or paid content) port big valuations? should bring in more money than The world has changed alotsince a typical display ad. BuzzFeed is the height of the dot-com bubble, but building out an in-house creative tech and media still have very differ- agency to help advertisers, which ent value propositions. Software is couldhelp them generate more reva relatively high-margin business. enue. But we're far from knowing Once the upfront costs to design it whether one can build a sustainable have been paid, most of the revenue business on top of native ads. flows to the bottom line. It's easy to Much of the innovation in media scale without increasing costs at the is fascinating, but the convergence same rate. Content is more expen- between it and the tech sector isn't sive to produce because you need an automatic recipe for fast-growa sea of humans to create it from ing revenue when those two worlds scratch again and again. You can't collide.
Letters policy
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: lelters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
Ghosts of the Great Society still haunt Congress t
n the history of the American wel-
farestate,no eventwas more consequential than the convening of
the 89th Congress on Jan. 3, 1965, in which Democrats enjoyed huge majorities in both houses.
Followed 17 days later by the swearing-in of another Democrat as president, Lyndon B. Johnson, the seating
of these lawmakers heralded one of the most productive legislative sessions in U.S. history, whose major acts
CHARLES LANE
Congress, led by Mitch McConnell and John Boehner, has taken over on
social policy. That would neither be bureaucratically feasible nor desirable
ture and innovation. Yet U.S. health indicators are no better than those of
Moynihan wrote that the true "test of a program ... is not input but output. It
it remains hostage to the demands
societies that spend far less. SSDI may reduce incentives to work. Higher ed tuition costs keep going up despite federal aid — or perhaps because of it, given universities' ability
is interesting, and at times important,
of the GOP's right wing and those of the Democratic left, which tends to
to know how much money is spent on
demonize even modest tweaks to the
in substantive terms.
Nor is it politically realistic. Most Americans do not want such a radical change, as they have made abundantout of cash by fiscal2017. and wide public acceptance. It made ly clear many times since electing the Capitol Hill — facing a national agenMeanwhile, evidence mounts that senseto assume thatsocialprogress 89th Congress in 1964, as part of a da defined in large part by the legacy the great acts of 1965 nowyield dimin- could result from the sheer application landslide repudiation of Barry Goldof the 89th. ishing returns or, in some cases, have of federal resources. water's ultra-small government vision. Transformative a n d be n eficial actuallyturned counterproductive. Even in those optimistic earlyyears, When, or if, reform comes, it won't though they were, and still are, the M edicare and Medicaidhave helped though, skeptics worried about un- be through 1965-style one-party domGreat Society programs minted 50 countless elderly and poor Americans realistic goals and unintended con- ination but through bipartisan comyears ago have mutated into sources and subsidized medical infrastruc- sequences. In 1970, Daniel Patrick promise, which means, of course, that (
continue to set the terms of federal healthcare,education and laborforce policy today: Medicare, Medicaid, the of new and intractable problems, the Higher Education Act, the Elementa- most important of which is their unry and Secondary Education Act and, anticipated, enormous cost — which less famously but no less consequen- not only increases the national debt tially, expanded eligibility for Social but also crowds out spending on other Security disability insurance (SSDI). critical public needs, from national deSo theremay be some cosmic his- fense to research. torical cyclicality revealed in the fact Spending onMedicare,Medicaid, that, half a century later, almost to the day, a Republican-dominated 114th
lars Washington spent after interest terest groups that depend on existing payments. Future health care costs, fundingpriorities. slated to grow in part due to MedicIn 1965, huge unmet needs festered aid'sexpansion under Obamacare, across America, and the notion of addrive projected future federal deficits; dressing them via Big Government SSDI's trust fund is on course to run still retained both a certain novelty
schools in a particular neighborhood Great Society. or city. But the crucial question is how Most Americans aren't beholden much do the children learn." ideologically to either party's extreme, to capture the subsidies. Federal K-12 Moynihan's admonition remains and they aren't stupid. Who knows? the two education laws and SSDI hit legislation has not eliminated racial pertinent today. Notwithstanding tea One day, the majority might even back nearly $1 trillion in fiscal 2013, ac- achievement gaps. Reauthorization of party rhetoric, the task before Con- aparty that treats themthatway. cording to the Congressional Budget the measureremains bogged down in gress is not to oust the federal gov— Charles Lane is a member Office, or roughly 3 out of every 10 dol- bitter policy fights, fueled partly by in- ernment from health, education and of The Washington Post's editorial board.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
e n erso w
e
estern civilization's creed
is free thought and expression, the lubricant of everythingfrom democracy to human rights. Even a simpleton in the West ac-
VICTOR
DAVIS HANSON
cepts that protecting free expres-
sion is not the easy task of ensuring recently made a series of silly statethe right to read Homer's "Iliad" or ments about the terrorist attack in do the New York Times crossword Paris. The gist was that the slain puzzle. It entails instead the un- Charlie Hebdo staffers were nearly pleasant duty of allowing offensive as much to blame for their deaths as expression. were their killers, given their gratuWesterners fight against pornog- itous blasphemy against the Islamic raphy, blasphemy or hate speech in religion. the arena of ideas by writing and Does Donohue believe that satspeaking out against such foul ex- irists who poke fun at Buddhism, pression. They are free to sue, pick- Christianity, Hinduism and Judaism et,boycott and pressure sponsors of — and there are many, including the unwelcome speech. But Westerners editors of Charlie Hebdo — are in cannot return to the Middle Ages to similar mortal danger worldwide? murder those whose ideas they don't Would Donohue wish such crass like. artists and writers to be? Do atheists "Parody" and "satire" are, respec- find Donohue's wink-and-nod apoltively, Greek and Latin words. In ogy for the radical Islamic killers antiquity the non-Western tradition offensive to the ideals of the secular simply did not produce authors quite Enlightenment? If so, should they aslike the vicious Aristophanes, Petro- sault Donohue for his de facto attack nius and Juvenal, who unapologet- on unfettered free speech? ically trashed the society around Cowardice also explains the failure them. If the French satirical maga- to defend Western free expression. zine Charlie Hebdo loses the millen- The New York Daily News recently nia-old right to ridicule Islam from ran a photo of editor Stephane Charwithin a democracy, then there is no bonnier, who was killed in the attack, longer a West, at least as we know it. holding an issue of Charlie Hebdo, Unfortunately, when we look to but with the obnoxious cover-page prominent defenders of the Western cartoon caricaturing Islam pixelated faith in free speech, we find too often out. offenders. Would the Daily News — usually Start with Bill Donohue, the pres- proud of its often lurid and graphic ident of the Catholic League. He tabloid covers — extend such an ex-
es e r n a i
emption to Mormons' displeasure over the Broadway play "The Book of Mormon," which trashed their religion? Is it careful not to repeat blasphemies against Christianity or Buddhism'? Of course not. The editors assume that aggrieved Mormons will not
Islamic derics to speak out against terrorist violence in their midst and to inculcate greater tolerance among
Muslims. In Obama's own2009 Cairo speech, he invited the illiberal Muslim Brotherhoodto attend in orderto hear
mostly half-true claims about the historical glories of Islam, while Obama assault weapons. The Western media cited Western colonialism, globalizaloudlyproclaims its courage in taking tion and the Cold War as understandon everyone from the Tea Party to able incitements to Muslims. gun owners, but it goes silent when After the September 2012 attack on the offended have a bad habit of lop- the American consulate in Benghazi, ping off heads rather than just argu- Obama wrongly blamed filmmaker ingback. Nakoula Nakoula for sparking the viWe expect the president of the olence by posting an anti-Islamic vidUnited States to be the foremost de- eo. Obama chose to gobefore the Unitfender of the Western faith of free ed Nations to attack Nakoula (who expression. Unfortunately, Barack was conveniently jailed by a federal Obama — who has a habit of weigh- judge for a minor probation violation): ing in on everything from his own "The future must not belong to those resemblance to Trayvon Martinto the who slander the Prophet of Islam." likely Final Four — has been utterly Actually, Mr. President, the future confused about free speech. belongs to civilized men and womIn 2009, during the Iranian Green en who do not murder satirists who Revolution, Obama kept quiet when choose while in the West to ridicule millions of Iranians hit the streets to any religion they please. Islam wins demand freedom from theocracy. no special exemption. Obama, who once made a last-minute The issue is not whether the late edtrip to Denmark to lobby for Chica- itors and cartoonists at Charlie Hebgo to host the Olympics, was the sole do wereobnoxious or clever,self-demajor Western leader absent from structive or courageous — but only a huge rally in Paris to reiterate the whether Westerners reserve the right West's commitment to free expres- on their own soil to express themsion. Sports are one thing; defending selves as they please. free speech from radical Islam is quite Too bad so many of our leaders do another. not understand that. So far Obama has remained mum — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist of Egyptian President Abdel Fattah
FRIEDMAN
al-Sisi, who called on imams and
storm their Manhattan offices with
about the remarkable Cairo speech
THOMAS
and historian at the HooverInstitution, Stanford University.
Muslims need to protest
p
resident Barack Obamawas criticized for failing to attend the giant anti-terrorism march in Par-
is on Sunday. That criticism was right. But it is typical of Americanpolitics today that we focus on this and not what
would have really made the world feel the jihadist threat was finally being seriously confronted. And that would
not be a march that our president helps to lead, but one in which he's not involved at all. That would be a mil-
lion-person march ~ the j i hadists across the Arab-Muslim world, organized by Arabs and Muslims for Arabs and Muslims, without anyone in the West asking for it — not just because of what happened in Paris but
because of the scores of Muslims recently murdered by jihadists in Pakistan, Yemen, Iraq, Libya, Nigeria and Syria. Abdul Rahman al-Rashed,one of the most respected Arab journalists,
wrote Monday in his column in AlSharq Al-Awsat: "Protests against the recent terrorist attacks in France
should have been held in Muslim capitals, rather than Paris, because, in this case, it is Muslims who are involved in
this crisis and stand accused.... What
Perks to separate presidential libraries By Davld Cross Special to The Washington Post
w
hen Jonathan
Z i m mer-
man suggests that a single "Center fo r
P r e sidential
Research" take the place of our presidential libraries, he echoes arguments that were made by Rep. Hamilton Fish III, R-N.Y., as he spear-
H4jL-bK-4hK . EVCLYS~
T H I NKC
D
THK'f aR'THK FIRP' OHK m 4SC.WHaQ
WMb KKPIEIT:
"tLISsfdH ~O h l P41SHEg7 RAGHT sOlT
Roosevelt's plan to create a reposito-
writers, students, and those who do
researchwork willhave to spend thousands of dollars to go from one
SHOCK 'N'AWE CltM~ +
~p
community, where there is a deep
me to look at a president in a new light. When I l e arned how Rea-
gan's "Evil Empire" speech gave hope to Natan Sharansky and other imprisoned Soviet dissidents, I saw that moment from a vantage
what had not been taught to me in college. The Truman library offered cogent criticisms of the decision to use the atomic bomb against Japan.
a II
Fish was right about that. I should know. I got in my car and took one not confront us with uncomfortable long trip to visit all 13 presidential facts, telling us only what we want libraries, driving from Squedunk to to hear.
years. The libraries, critics say, are expensive, ego-driven monuments that serve only as puff pieces for their presidents. They are derided as "theme parks," as if suggesting a danger that children might actually enjoy visiting them. They do
dential Research." There were several occasions
prompted me to read severaleconomic texts on the subject to learn
BGW
a e I AL C~ ~
hadist phenomenon in the Arab-Mus-
point I missed in my myopic youth. The Hoover library's discussion of the causes of the Great Depression
g~ggE, 4
little town to another."
Podunk, as it were, to find out if they were worthwhile. Z immerman's c r iticisms h a v e been leveled repeatedly in recent
o~
When I got into my car to take
my trip, I was perfectly willing to believe all of this. And there is some truth to the arguments. At the Rea-
gan library, one cannot tour Air Force One, have a beer at "Reagan's Pub" and shoot down unnecessary regulations in a library video game and not feel that history, perhaps, is being cheapened. But all the criticism does not take
into account the tremendous benThese libraries do not pretend to efits of studying a historical figure offer exclusive, omniscient, objecin a place that was important to him tive history. There is no such thing. or her. As I went from one library History, as Pieter Geyl said, is "an to another, I developed a deeper argument without end." And these understanding of each president. libraries, many of them exhibiting Seeing Hyde Park and the driveway some quirky personalities of their FDR traversed with his crutches, presidents, enter into the argument the mountains that Ronald Reagan with gusto. They are a first step, not so loved in Simi Valley, Harry Tru- a final one, toward understanding man's home town ofIndependence, our history. Missouri, and the house that Rich- — David Cross is the author of "Chasing ard Nixon's father built made the History: One Man's Road Trip Through documents I was reading come alive
Islamic extremismingeneral." (Translation by Memri.org.) The truth is there is a huge amount of ambivalence toward this whole ji-
in a way that could not have happened had I been working at some all-encompassing "Center for Presiwhen the museums I visited caused
headed opposition to Franklin D. ry for his papers at Hyde Park. Said Fish: "If these presidential papers are taken away from Washington and scattered in the future all over America, in Squedunk and Podunk,
D
is required here is for Muslim communities to disown the Paris crime and
the Presidential Libraries."
lim world, Europe and America. This ambivalence starts in the Muslim cleavage over what constitutes authentic Islam today. We fool ourselves when we tell Muslims what "real Is-
lam" is. Because Islam has no Vatican, no single source of religious authority, there are many Islams today. The puritanical Wahhabi/Salafi/jihadist strain is one of them. Ambivalence runs through Europe today on the question of what a country should demand of new Muslim
immigrants by way of adopting its values. Is Stratfor's George Friedman right when he argues that Europeans adopted multiculturalismpreciselybecause they didn't reallywant to absorb their Muslim immigrants, and many of those Muslim immigrants, who went to Europe to find a job, not a new identity, didn't want to be absorbed? If
so, that spells trouble. Ambivalence runs through Washington's ties with Saudi Arabia. Ever
since jihadists took over Islam's holiest shrine in Mecca in 1979, Saudi Arabia has redoubled its commitment to Wahhabi or Salafist Islam — the
most puritanical, anti-pluralistic and anti-women version of that faith. This
Saudi right turn — combined with oil revenues used to build Wahhabi-inspired mosques, websites and madras-
The catechism of the Keystone XL pipeline ot since the multiplication of
N
the loaves and fishes near the Sea of Galilee has there
been creativity as miraculous as that of the Keystone XL pipeline. It
GEORGE WILL
has not yet been built but already is perhaps the most constructive
a world market price for oil, so he said, correctly, that Keystone would
never tell the truth to their pushers. The Saudi government opposes the
current administration process."
said that ATMs and airport ticket
Leave aside the question of how much of t h i s p r ocess-that-pro-
jihadists. Unfortunately, though, it's a
ceeds-nowhere Coons
to the violent jihadism practiced by the Islamic State group. The French ter-
kiosks cost jobs. He does not understand that, outside of govern-
c onsiders
enough. And ignore the peculiarirespects, all jobs are "temporary." ty of a legislator dismayed that the John Tamny, editor of RealClear- legislative branch might actually Markets and an editor of Forbes, set national policy. But note the notes thatBorders had 10,700 emfollowing, not because Coons is ployees and 399 bookstores until it eccentric but because he is reprehad none of either, thanks in part sentative of Democratic reasoning: to Amazon, whose 150,000 em- "Keystone means unlocking the ployees have probably participated Canadian tar sands, some of the in enough creative destruction to dirtiest sources of energy on the know that permanence is a chime- planet and allowing those tar sands ra. Blockbuster — remember that? to go across our American Midwest remember latefees? — had 60,000 and then reach the international employees and more than 9,000 economy and ourenvironment." stores until rivals such as Netflix No jury would convict Coons appeared. of sincerity. Anyone intelligent To oppose the pipeline is to fa- enough to express that nonsense vor more oil being transported by i s too i n t elligent t o b e l ieve i t . trains, which have significant car- Coons cannot believe that, absent bon footprints, and accidents. To do Keystone, Canada will leave vast ment, which is all that he knows or
wealth — the world's third-largest
proven crude oil reserve, larger ca has more than 2 million miles of than Iran's — untapped. The Caas closed as an unshucked oyster. natural gas pipelines and approxi- nadian oil is going into the interAmerica built the Empire State h ave a "nominal" impact on o i l mately 175,000 miles of pipelines national market, and much of it Building, then the world's tallest prices, but then went on to dispar- carrying hazardous liquids, yet we into internal combustion engines office building, in 410 days during age job creation by Keystone. He are exhorted to be frightened about around the world, even if this disthe Depression. We built the Penta- said it would create "a couple thou- 1,179 miles of Keystone? pleases Democratic senators who Or about the oil itself? Appear- have demonstrated a willingness gon, still the world's largest low-rise sand" jobs (the State Department office building, in 16 months while study says approximately 42,100 ing on "Fox News Sunday," Sen. to look ludicrous rather than deviwaging a war across two oceans. "direct, indirect, and induced") and Chris Coons, D-Del., objected that ate from an especially silly comKeystone has been studied for more said, unintelligibly, "those are tem- if Congress authorizes construc- ponent of t oday's environmental than six years. And Obama consid- porary jobs until the construction tion of Keystone this "would take catechism. ers this insufficient? actually happens." Well. consideration out of the hands of — George Will is a columnist Actually, there no longer is any Obama revealed his economic the administration," and "out of the for The Washington Post. had explained to him that there is
our oil addiction. As I've said, addicts
sophistication years ago when he
infrastructure project since the In- reason to think he has ever reaterstate Highway System. It has ac- soned about this. He said he would complished an astonishing trifecta: not make up his mind until the It has made mincemeat of Barack Nebraska court ruled. It ruled to Obama's pose of thoughtfulness. permit construction, so he promptIt has demonstrated that he lacks ly vowed to veto authorization of even a rudimentary understanding construction. of the most basic economic realities. The more he has talked about It has dramatized environmental- Keystone,the less economic underism's descent into infantilism. standing he has demonstrated. On Obama entered the presidency Nov. 14, he said Keystone is meretrailing clouds of intellectual self-re- ly about "providing the ability of gard. His carefully cultivated perso- Canada to pump their oil, send it na was of a uniquely thoughtful, ju- through our land, down to the Gulf, dicious, deliberative, evidence-driv- where it will be sold everywhere en man comfortable with complex- else. That doesn't have an impact ity. The protracted consideration on U.S. gas prices." By Dec. 19, of Keystone supposedly displayed someone with remarkable patience this in the name of environmental these virtues. Now, however, it is clear that his mind has always been
sas across the Muslim world — has tilted the entire Sunni community to the right. But U.S. presidents never confront Saudi Arabia about this because of
fastidiousness is hilarious. Ameri-
very short step from Wahhabi Islam rorists were born in France but were marinated in Wahhabi-Salafi thought
through the Web and local mosques — not Voltaire. Also, the other civil war in Islam
has led many mainstream Sunni charities, mosques and regimes to support jihadist groups because they're ferocious fighters against Shiites. Finally — yet more ambivalence — for 60 years there was a tacit alliancebetween Arab dictators andtheir
Sunni religious dergy. The regimes funded these uninspired Muslim cler-
ics, and these clergy blessed the uninspired dictators — and both stifled the emergence of any authentic, inspired, reformist Islam that could take on
Wahhabism-Salafism. "Muslims need to 'upgrade their software,'" Egyptian i n tellectual Mamoun Fandy wrote in Al-Sharq Al-Awsat. (Also translated by Memri. org.) "There is no choice but to dismantle this system and rebuild it in a way that is compatible with human
culhm and values." In short, jihadist zeal is easy to condemn, but will require multiple revo-
lutions that will require a lot of people in the Arab-Muslim world and West to shed their ambivalence. — Thomas Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Sunday,Jan.11. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "All the Light We Cannot
See" by Anthony Doerr (Scribner) 2."Gray Mountain"byJohn Grisham (Doubleday) 3. "Insatiable Appetites" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) 4. "The Third Target" by Joel C. Rosenberg (Tyndale) 5. "Hope to Die" by James Patterson (Little, Brown) 6. "The Escape" byDavid Baldacci (GrandCentral) 7. "As ChimneySweepers Come to Dust" byAlan Bradley (Delacorte) 8. "Trust No One" byJayne Ann Krentz (Putnam) 9. "Agenda 21: Into the Shadows" by GlennBeck 10. "Tom Clancy: Full Force and Effect" by Mark Greaney (Putnam) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil
McGraw (Bird Street) 2. "Killing Patton" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 3. "Zero Belly Diet" by David Zinczenko (Ballantine) 4. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 5. "Money: Master the Game" by Tony Robbins(Simon 8 Schuster) 6. "Yes Please" byAmy Poehler (HarperCollins/Dey Street) 7. "Make It Ahead" by Ina Garten (Clarkson Potter) 8. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 9."Thug Kitchen" by Thug Kitchen (Rodale) 10. "The Skinnytaste Cookbook" by GinaHomolka (Clarkson Potter)
Amazon executive
hoping for peace
a in ui r "The First Bad Man" by MirandaJuly (Scribner,276 pages) By Michiko Kakutani New York Times News Service
The first novel by the filmm aker an d
a r t ist M i r an-
da July is like one of those strange mythological creatures that are part one thing,
part another — a griffin or a chimera, perhaps, or a sphinx. The novel starts off tentative-
ly, veers into derivative and willfully sensational theaterof-the-absurd drama — part Pinter, part Genet — and then
mutates, miraculously, into an immensely moving portrait of motherhood and what it means to take care of a child. Cheryl Glickman, the nar-
'
rator of "The First Bad Man," initially comes across as an e xtreme version of on e o f
those sad-sack middle-aged Anne Tyler characters who
have fallen into a funk of low expectations and lower energy. "Let's say a person is down in the dumps, or maybe just lazy," Cheryl says, "and they stop doing the dishes. Soon the dishes are piled sky-high and it seems impossible to
even clean a fork. So the person starts eating with dirty forks out of dirty dishes and
this makes the person feel like a homeless person. So they stop bathing. Which makes it hard to leave the house. The person begins to throw trash anywhere and
pee in cups because they're closer to the bed." The solution, Cheryl insists,
is what she calls her "system" — getting rid of things (dishes "can't pile up if you don't have them") and conserving energy ("can't you read the book s tanding right n ext t o
the
shelf with your finger holding the spot you'll put it back into? Or better yet: don't read it.")
<-. sa
The Associated Press
—
The
overseer of Amazon.com's Kindle e-book and publishing divisions is preaching peace. With a mon t hslong standoff between Amazon
and Hachette Book Group over e-book revenues settled and a multiyear agreement in place, Amazon senior vice president Russ Grandinetti said Wednes-
day that he looks forward to an era of "focusing on growing the business." He said such disputes, which led to Amazon re-
,
Elizabeth Weinberg i The New YorkTimes
Miranda July, the artist, playwright, film-maker and novelist, at home in Los Angeles. July's debut novel, "The First Bad Man," has a promotional website that's as much art project as marketing stunt, selling 50 specific items that appear in the novel: a broken
•
self in the role of
felt emotion and
Phillip (who has rejected her for a younger woman) s e d ucing Clee. Confusing? No doubt
power. Talking t o C l ee's
l ittle
boy, clinging to life in the hospital and connected to all sorts
it's meant to be, to m i r r or
ofbeeping machines, she tries Cheryl's confusions about her to explain to him how human vase, bubble gum-flavored popcorn, mystery envelopes andmore. identity and her increasingly beings exist in time: "That's convoluted thinking. what living is; you're doing it T hese developments ar e right now as much as anyone. Such pr on o u ncements sand lifetimes. Caveman and described in deliberately gro- I could tell he was deciding. are ridiculous, of course, but cavewoman." This relation- tesque, even repellent terms, He was feeling it out and had seem meant to underscore ship exists only in Cheryl's as though July — w hose come to no conclusions yet. just how depressed — and head, but she tells herself that films (one of which featured a The warm, dark place he had delusional — Cheryl really everything could "change in talking cat) have drawn criti- come from versus this bright, is. We learn that she's been an instant" if she called him cism for being whimsical and beepy, dry world." twee — wanted to counter "Try not to base your deworking for years at an orga- or ran into him. nization called Open Palm, What jolts Cheryl out of her accusations of preciousness cision on this room, it isn't which started as a repur- fantasy world is the arrival by being as gross as possible. representative of the w hole posed dojo that taught women at her home of an unwanted Many of these passages sim- world," she goes on. "Someself-defense, then began sell- guest: Clee, the 20-year-old ply come across as gratuitous where the sun is hot on a rubing instructional and fitness daughter of her employers, and contrived: a therapist bery leaf, clouds are making DVDs. who say that Clee needs a who keeps her urine in Chi- shapes and reshaping and Cheryl has long had a crush place to stay in Los Angeles nese takeout boxes instead reshaping, a spiderweb is on Phillip, an older board until she finds a job and an of bothering to use the bath- broken but still works. And member — whenever she sees apartment. Clee has "a blond, room; Clee' sfeetdescribed as in case he wasn't into nature, him, she says, she has to "re- tan largenessof scale" and reeking of "pungent foot fun- I added: And it's a really wild sist the urge to go to him like terrible manners. She com- gus, which hit two seconds time in terms of technology. a wife, as if we'd already been mandeers the living room, after she passed by"; and 100 You'll probably have a robot a couple for a hundred thou- makes a mess of the kitchen mail-delivered snails crawl- and that will be normal."
Why youshould befollowing J.IC.Rowling on Twitter By Carolyn Kellogg
NEW Y OR K
and declines to bathe, there- ing all over Cheryl's house. by smelling up the place. She What helps drive the naralso radiates a sort of dumb- rative over such annoying blond version of Pinter-esque scenes is the subtext dealing menace: she's bossy and sar- with Cheryl's radical lonelicastic, and she begins to phys- ness and groping efforts to ically knock Cheryl around communicate. It is only when with a "thuggy swagger." Cheryl transcends her own self-absorption and defenAt this point July's novel takes an even weirder siveness (which cause her to swerve, into Genet territo- look upon relationships as ry. Cheryl reacts to Clee's "games" or simulations rather a ggressive behavior w i t h than human exchanges) that self-defense moves learned she begins to achieve some from Open Palm's DVDs and sort of genuine connection. encourages Clee I n t h e l as t to follow along third of the book, in the DVDs' ficQ July also wrigtional scenarios gles free from role-playing the se l f -conthat b e c omes sciousness that both an exercise hobbles earlier • s in power and a portions of the b izarrely s e x book, writing of ual e nterprise, Cheryl's discovas Cheryl starts ery of maternal imagining herlove with heart-
Murdoch tweeted T hurs-
day: "Maybe most Moslems J.K. Rowling is famous- peaceful, but until they recogly media shy, but on Dwitter, nize and destroy their growing she's forthcoming, witty and jihadist cancer they must be opinionated. held responsible." Take her recent contretemps Rowling's response: "I was with Rupert Murdoch, which born Christian. If that makes showed the " H arry P otter" Rupert Murdoch my responauthor's sly humor and public sibility, I'll auto-excommunifearlessness. cate." She included a link to Rowling got into it with the a Guardian story about MurLos Angeles Times
By Hillel Italie
o a w o e n ew eve
media mogul over his tweets
in the wake of last week's terrorist attacks in France. Seventeen people died in attacks that
included the siege of the offices of satire publication Charlie Hebdo, where shooters were
said to be shouting "Allahu akbar" ("God is Great" in Arabic).
scored25,000 retweets to Mur-
doch's 6,200. But taking on media moguls is only one of Rowling's Twitter tricks. She jokes around
tweeted in December. She also takes to Twitter from time to time to answer
material that s he's w r itten and posted to the online world Pottermore.
readerquestions, Reddit Ask And s o metimes s h e's Me Anything-style. In Decem- just trying to set the record about her authorial alter-ego, ber, that conversation revealed straight. In a series of tweets Robert Galbraith, the pseud- there was a Jewish student at in October, Rowling wrote: onym under which she writes Hogwarts. And to the question "There's a story in today's Mail mystery novels. She recently "What would you like to be if that I was in a London bar on tweeted about him: "We of- you weren't a writer?" she re- Monday 'celebrat ing' handten take tea breaks together" plied, "An otter weigher," with ing in a 'romantic novel' to my and "My friend RGalbraith's an adorable picture of an otter publishers... I) I haven't handdoch's tweet. first novel is going to be a TV on a scale (being weighed by ed in ANY kind of novel to my She might have tried to con- drama on BBCOne. He's very an otter weigher). publishers. I'm only half way vince Murdoch he was wrong- excited, but expressing it with With more than 4 million through my current book. 2) It headed, but in not using the characteristic silence." followers, it's clear that some isn't a 'romantic' novel... And Twitter reply function, RowlOn Twitter, she sometimes of herfans have learned that 3) (brace yourselves) I someing made her statement more reveals how she feels. "I've when there is Harry Potter times have a drink even when of a public rejoinder. had a very good Writing Day, news to share, Rowling will I haven't finished a book. Yes, The numbers show it was which always affects me like a share it on Dwitter. Often it's that's how rock and roll I really a clear win for Rowling. She couple of strong cocktails," she there that she announces new am.
moving "Pre-order" buttons from some Hachette books and reducing discounts, rarely become so
public and the company's goal is to "keep it rare." Grandinetti wa s
i n ter-
viewed on stage during Digital Book World, a three-daygatheringinmidtown M anhattan. H arsh
words were exchanged last year between Amazon and Hachette officials, but Grandinetti said Wednesday that the interests of
Amazon and publishers were "highly aligned." Publishers, writers and editors h a v e c r i t i cized Amazon, by far the coun-
try's biggest bookseller, for everything from setting e-book prices too low to publishing their own books and competing with its suppliers. Writers published by Amazon have complained that the Kindle Unlimited subscription
program was costing them royalties.
Gnef Continued from F1 She described the waiting room in great detail, down to the color of the furniture.
When the hospital chaplain walked in with the doctor, she knew her baby was gone. She and her husband were taken into a room where they held the baby for the last time. At this point in her story
Mary finally began to weep, intensely. She seemed sur-
prised by the waves of emotion that washed over her. It was the first time since the
death that the sadness had poured forth in that way. She said she had never told the
story of her daughter from c onception to death in o n e
sitting. "What is wrong with me?" she asked as she cried. "It has been almost seven months."
" More a p proaches t o
Very gently, using simple, nonclinical words, I suggest-
publishing I think is pretty
ed to Mary t hat there was
healthy: The more competition there is, the more
nothing wrong with her. She
choices there are for au-
or wrong. She was just very sad, consumed by sorrow, but not because she was grieving
thors, the more we figure
out what succeeds," he said.
was not depressed or stuck
incorrectly. The depth of her sadness was simply a measure of the love she had for her daughter.
those early days was that my grief training was not helping either my patients or me. When I was trained, in the
late 1970s, the stages of grief were the standard by which a grieving person's progress muscles in her face relaxed. I was assessed. watched as months of pent-up That model is still deeply emotions were released. She and rigidly embedded in our had spent most of her energy culturalconsciousness and trying to figure out why she psychological language. It was behind in her grieving. inspires much self-diagnosis She had buried her feelings and self-criticism among the and vowed to be strong be- aggrieved. This is compoundcause that's how a person was ed by the often subtle and well-meaning judgment of supposed to be. Now, in my office, stages, the surrounding community. self-diagnoses and societal A person is to grieve for only expectations didn't m a tter. so long and with so much She was free to surrender to intensity. her sorrow. As she did, the To be sure, some people deep bond with her little girl who come to see me exhibit was rekindled. Her loss was serious, diagnosable sympA transformation occurred
when she heard this. She continued to weep, but the
loss has three "chapters." Chapter I has to do with attachment: the strength of the
ily, friends and herself that she was on the fast track to
closure. This was exhausting. What she really needed was
bond with the person who has to let herself sink into her sadbeen lost. Understanding the ness, accept it. relationship between degree When I suggested a supof attachment and intensity port group, Mary rejected of grief brings great relief for the idea. But I insisted. She most patients. I often tell them later described the relief she that the size of their grief cor- felt in the presence of other responds to the depth of their bereaved parents, in a place love. where no acting was reChapter 2 i s t h e death quired. It was a place where event itself. This is often the people understood that they moment when the person didn't really want to achieve experiencing the loss begins c losure after all. To d o s o to question his sanity, parwould be to lose a piece of a ticularly when the death is sacred bond. "All sorrows can be borne if premature a n d tr a u matic. Mary had prided herself on you put them in a story or tell her ability to stay in control in a story about them," said the difficult times. The profound
writer Isak Dinesen. When
unique as a fingerprint, conforms to no timetable or soci-
emotional chaos of her baby's loss is a story, there is no right death made her feel crazy. As or wrong way to grieve. There soon as she was able, she re- is no pressure to move on. sisted the craziness and shut There is no shame in intensity down the natural pain and or duration. Sadness, regret, suffering. confusion, yearning and all Chapter 3 is the long road the experiences of grief bethat begins after the last come part of the narrative of casserole dish is picked up love for the one who died.
etal expectation.
— when the outside world
Based on my own and my patients' experiences, I now
stops grieving with you. Mary
now part of her story, one to
toms that require treatment.
claim and cherish, not a painful event to try to put in the past. I had gone through the same processafter the loss of my son. I was in my second year of practice when he died, and I subsequently had many grieving patients re-
Many, however, seek help only because they and the people around them believe that time is up on their grief.
ferred to me. The problem in
like to say that the story of
The truth is that grief is as
wanted toreassure her fam-
— Patrick O'Malley is a psychotherapist inFort Worth, Texas.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F5
In 'SuspendedSentences 'SOphia'iS the faSCinating StOry Parislsa lostcltyhaunted O f 8prineeSS turnedreYolutiona nl by criminalsand Nazis "Suspended Sentences" by Patrick Modiano (Yale
University Press, 213 pages) By Dwight Gamer New Yorh Times News Service
There are many adjectives you can use to describe the fiction of French novelist Pat-
rick Modiano, winner of the 2014 Nobel Prize in L iterature. "Elusive" is often among
them. "Timely" rarely is. Yet after the terrorist attacks in Paris last week it's
"Sophia: Princess, Suffragette, Revolutionary"
submit to. They are wittier than you
might imagine. Jansen, the Magnum photographer, is given to grumpy, gnomic utterances like "Goddamn spring." These become a kind ofcomedy. They put me in mind of two lines from a Donald Barthelme short story: "See the moon? It hates
us. Modiano ha s
t ies t o
F rance's music
a n d fi l m
worlds. He's written song impossible to read "Suspend- lyrics for Franqoise Hardy. ed Sentences," a collection With Louis Malle, he did the of three novellas issued in screenplay for Malle's film E nglish for t h e f i r s t t i m e, "Lacombe, Lucien" (1974), without comprehending one and he's written a book with primal aspect of Modiano's C atherine D eneuve. H i s work: the way he pays com- mother had a role in Godard's plicated, elegiac and almost 1964 movie "Band of Outsidghostly tribute to his native ers." In one novella here, the city. narrator recalls about certain "Suspended Sentences" is,
movies, "It seems to me that
among other things, as its
the clouds, sun, and shadows P o lizzotti, of my 20th year miraculously
translator, Mark writes in h i s i n t r oduction, live on in those films." "a three-part love song to a I mention the author's inParis that no longer exists, terest in film because, if the
bestowing him with a comfortable annual a l lowance that later would prove to be
by Anita Anand
(Bloomsbury,432 pages)
not enough. Duleep Singh did well in England at first, a By Carolyn Kellogg bon vivant and popular host Los Angeles Times at a gr and country house most vibrantly when Born in England and a fa- remodeled Indian-style. But she's traveling voredgoddaughterof Queen he went through his fortune, Victoria, Princess Sophia i n dulgin g in gambling and through India. Duleep Singh was t hor- w o men,and began decades oughly British. Yet she was of appeals to England's India also Indian — her father had Office for more funds. The ily life chronologically but signed his kingdom over to m ore he heard no, the more sometimes sticks a little too the British Empire — and h e agitated publicly that he close to her subject. We learn t hat left Sophia caught be- w a s o w ed more, saying the what the newspapers wrote tween identities, something it Punjab h ad been taken from about her dog breeding but would take her half a lifetime him. not what it might have been to understand. It wa s not easy for his like in her social world. How Once she did, she went f a mily. Duleep Singh had many other women of colfrom being m arried t h e or were allowed to debut a self-induls helt e r e d in London during the late gent socialite daughter of 1800s? Was Sophia the only to a p olitia G e rman one at these fancy parties? cal a c tivist. In "Sophia: P rin c e s s ,
m er c h a n t and his Ethi-
Suffragette, Revolutiona ry," A n i t a Anand trac-
es the life of
or that most people's eyes do first and last pieces in this not see." After a rainstorm, collection are Bergman-esone character walks through que to a greater or lesser de-
the princess,
a fascinating small player
PHtÃcf c'c,
"a city sluiced out and laden with promise." These novel-
in revolution-
R F I0I V TI0 Y** V
gree, the title novella, the best
of the three, recalls Fellini's las are haunted by old build- "Amarcord" (1974), an episodings, old songs, forgotten ic, carnivalesque and ribald neighborhoods, vanished lov- portrait of a boy's life in a ers, lost friends. seaside town. "SuspendI n thi s n o ed Sentences" vella, the narfurther rerator is 10. His m inds us, i n mother "was these fretful acting in her days, of Mop lay so m e diano's c l o se interest in an-
where in North
ti-Semitism in
h is f ather i s "in Brazzaville
Africa" while
France, and in
the l ingering aftershocks o f the
or Bangui, or s ome w h e r e farther s t i l l ." He a n d his b rother h a v e
Na z i
occupation. M odi a n o
l ikes to s a y that he is always writing the same book. His fiction is
been left with his p a r ents' an friends.
The excellent details pile
cal, and each of the novellas in "Suspended Sentences"
up. The grave, and perhaps the former house, of J oseph-Ignace Guillotin i s
the life of his father, who was Jewish, and who was arrest-
nearby. The narrator asks,
ed afterrefusing to wear the yellow star in occupied Par-
doctor didn't actually invent the guillotine, "Was it where
is. He was sent to the transit many who were destined for Auschwitz. Modiano's father
he'dperfected his device for severing heads?" The narrator is often referred to, by his guardians, as "blissful idiot."
was an amoral black-market
He and his brother get into
camp at Drancy, a layover for
neglecting the fact that this
scrapes. They love how one tions; he managed to escape of the women they live with racketeer with Nazi connec-
that fate. The novellas in "Suspend-
s candalized
ary
S llITNAGKTl l .
m o ve-
A x r a' ~x A v A N 0
England and
turn of the 20th century. she often fell into depression, Sophia was the grand- a n dshew as quiet and shy. daughter of Maharajah RanTh i s m ade Victoria all the jit Singh, the Sikh leader who more fond of her. Sophia was united competing regions i nvited to debut at court and and religions into one mas- after, p erhaps emboldened sive kingdom of the Punjab. by the royal support, she emAfter a bloody power strug- braced t he role of socialite. gle, his youngest wife and T h e gossip pages delighted their son briefly held power, in writin g about the Indian but shewas imprisoned and, princess, with her fashionat age 11, the boy signed over able address, newfangled bithe kingdom to Victoria. cycle and dresses fresh from Maharajah Duleep Singh Paris, converted t o
Ch r i stianit y
t h ei r
tow n ' s
• From weight loss to finances,these books will usher ina brand-newyou
es with boots, blouses with
By Nedra Rhone
France, initially, they were published separately. Yet they cohere in tone, and inter-
puffy sleeves drawn tight at the wrists, black ski pants, or
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
twine in manners both physiIn each, the narrator is a writer. All three are tone po-
ed with mother-of-pearl." One of these women has green eyes. Modiano has a thing about eyes. In this
ems of a sort; all three are about memory. In the first,
b ook, when t he y a r e n o t green they are "transparent"
even a bolerojacket encrust-
n a r r ator or "limpid" or "periwinkle" or searches for the truth about some other scintillating tint. "Afterimage," th e
It's enough to make one's ordinary brown eyes blue. named Jansen who pulls a This novella slides back slow fade from his own exisa M agnum p hotographer
It's a new year and as always, everyone is looking for a little self-improvement.
Sometimes, the best way to get help is to help yourself. Maybe that explains the growth of the multibillion-dollar self-help industry and the volume of books hitting shelves now through spring that offer advice on improving everything from your relationships to your
and forth in time. Its narra-
finances.
tor, grown older, recalls old buildings, power outages, Laurel and Hardy movies, Christmaspresents wrapped in silver paper. Modiano rarely dabbles in mere nostalgia. He is obsessed with what we
However you may be ailing or failing, help is on the way.
The second, "Suspended Sentences," is a jouncing series of childhood memories, about a boy who, while his parents are away for many months, is raised by a gaggle of free spirits, one a former take away from our pasts and circus performer. The third, what we leave behind. And "Flowers of Ruin," is about a perhaps most important, with prewar murder mystery, and what we only think we've left also about th e b e w ildered behind. Few American r eaders narrator's pursuit of a man who, like Jansen (and like the were familiar w it h M o d ianarrator's father) appears to no's fiction when he won the Nobel. He was a blip on alhave simply dematerialized. Modiano writes clear, lan- most no one's radar screen guid and urbane sentences in in the United States, save the Polizzotti's agile translation, publisher David R. Godine, yet his fiction has a distant which had issued several of quality, as if you were hear- his books. Most of Modiaing about its incidents from no's roughly 30 works (novone room over. On a single els, plays, children's books) page, you will find phrases have yet to be t ranslated like "vague reference points," into English. This is rapidly "hazy silhouettes" and "lost changing. Those who pick up "Sustheir consistency." Memory here is a stock made from pended Sentences" will discover an author who fremingled old bones. "Suspended Se n t ences" quently seems a f l a neur does not strike me as a ma- of consciousness, strolling jor work, nor the best place purposefully through Paris' to fling oneself into Modia- cache of memories as well as no's oeuvre. (That place, for his own. It was no surprise to learn English readers, is probably "Missing Person," from 1978, that, when hi s d a ughter called to tell him he had won
detective with memory loss.) the Nobel Prize, he was walkBut these novellas have a
social connections to raise funds and her social stand-
ing to raise awareness, lessons she took to the suffragette fight for women's right to vote.
Sophia was present at that movement's m os t c r i t i cal moments; in 1914, when suf-
fragette radicals were known for breaking windows and setting fires, she was the single-biggest individual donor to the Women's Social
and Political Union. Sophia walked with leader Emmeline Pankhurst on Nov. 18,
1910, Black Friday, the day hundreds of s u ffragettes were beaten by police outside
Parliament. She once made the papers after throwing herself at the car of Prime Minister Herbert Henry As-
quith while holding a banner reading, "Give women the vote!" Yet for
a l l h e r p a ssion
rejected, they were told they should visit another time,
about women's rights, Sophia comes to life in this biography most vibrantly when she's traveling through
and the three sisters took that as sanction.
India. It's there that her diaries an d c o r respondence
quest for tickets. While it was
Sophia stayed in I ndia
have complaints and jokes. She seems to find her voice return and return again. The and personality and purpose country was a revelation. all at once. "Sophia had seen poverty Anand has done a yeoand depravation on a scale man's job of pulling togeththat had overwhelmed her. er Sophia's fascinating biAlso, for the first time, she ographical history. Yet she had come face to face with hews so closely to the source all that her family had lost. material that it's only when Never would she find life as her subjectreveals herself a socialite fulfilling again," through her own w riting nine months, and she would
Anand writes. On her trips to India, So-
that the book is at its most
compelling.
What ailSyOLI,mentally an PhySiCally
between 1988 and 1993. In
an existential noir about a
treated. That project taught her that she could use her
2015'sspateo se — ep oo swi cure
bourgeois sensibilities by appearing in "riding breech-
tence, like a Polaroid left in the sun.
A n and, a television pre-
and moved to England in his senter in England, ably teens. Victoria adored him, m o v e s th rough Sophia's fam-
ed Sentences" were written
cal and metaphysical.
have a sense of otherness-
opian slave not until she visited the counm ist r e s s ; try of her father. she had six Britain had forbidden the c hildren i n family from returning to In10 years and dia, fearing its appearance was prone to might foment dissent against depression. the Raj. In 1902, a window Sophia, born opened: An enormous celin 1876, was ebration was planned near the youngest Delhi for the coronation of o f th e f i v e Edward VII, and Sophia and who sur - her two sist ers made a rev ived. L i k e her m other,
I ndia at t h e
If so, she didn't appear to
phia met and aided some of the key players in the fight for self-rule. Meanwhile, back in England, she began doing good, establishing housing for lascars, Indian sailors who were often mal-
wild, bohemi-
often loosely autobiographitouches upon details from
Yesfor all her passion about women's rights, Sophia comes to life in this biography
ing down a street. "I was a bit
mood. They cast a spell, one surprised," Modiano said, "so I continued walking." that I was mostly happy to
Paths to happy "The Purpose Principles: How to Draw More Meaning Into Your Life," by JakeDucey (Tarcher/Penguin)
"The Next Happy," by Tracey Cleantis
(Hazelden Publishing, availablein March) Dreams do not always come true and well-meaning phrases that suggest otherwise may hurt you, Cleantis says. This book is all about living after your dreams die. Cleantis tells you how to let go, how to live with the emo-
tions involved in giving up and how to set goals that will move you forward to a new
version of happiness. "Mindfulness ls Better Than Chocolate," by David Michie
consumerism with an illus- percent of the time. Devote trated take on how to become the rest of your time to learna conscious shopper. ing to use food as fuel, exercising and living mindfully
A helping ofhealthy
"The Weight Escape: How to Stop Dieting and Start Living," by Joseph Ciarrochi, Ann Bailey and Russ Harris
to achieve a total rock star transformation.
Revive yourrelationships "Women Are Scary," by Melanie Dale (Zondervan,
(Shambhala) available inMarch) Instead of meal plans, the Mean girls grow up and authors offer up a diet for the become mean moms. Dale mind that can also change teaches you how to manage your body. Use the principles mom monsters while findof Acceptance and Commit- ing, keeping, rekindling and ment Therapy (ACT) to set sometimes ending relationgoals, lose destructive habits, ships with other women who manage cravings and master also happen to be parents.
(TheExperiment) We are happiest when our minds are not wandering,
the art of self-acceptance.
and the ways we can learn
how to eat foods that support
to free our minds by staying focused.
your digestive system and in turn lead to good overall
"Deeper Dating," by KenPage (Shambhala) Michie says. And meditation Stop playing games and is the training ground for start getting real about findmindfulness. Michie tells us Adler is a nutritionist who inglove.Beginby uncovering the benefits of paying atten- was malnourished the first your core gifts (what hurts tion — mental clarity, more two decadesofherlife."Pas- or fills your heart the most?) self-es teem, less stresssionate Nutrition" shows you and use them as your guide "Passionate Nutrition," by Jennifer Adler with Jess Thomson(Sasquatch Books)
to understanding attraction
and improving dates. Micro meditation exercises help you health. Recipes are includ- actively combat dating chalFine-tune your finances ed (roast chicken with a full lenges while inspiring stories Millennial moti v a tionstick of butter, anyone?). Cal- keep you engaged. "Picture Your Prosperity: al speaker Ducey starts by orie counting is not required. "The Boomer Guide to Findquoting a good friend's late Smart Money Moves to Turn "20 Pounds Younger," father, who suggests the path YourVision Into Reality," ing True Love Online," to happiness is paved with by EllenRogin 4 Lisa Kueng by Michele Promaulayko by KenSolin (21st Century passion. The TEDx speaker (Portfolio/Penguin) (Rodale) Lion Books) uses celebrity case studies Financial planning can Mindful eating, self-love Bye-bye, May-December and gives exercises that help be a drag, so we avoid it. and learning how hormones romance. This is all about you decide what you want, But money pros Rogin and can mess up your eating boomers connecting with face failure, set goals and Kueng want you to view mon- are among the lessons you each other — online and in stay persistent and consistent ey as a tool to achieving your will learn to help you drop real life. Solin helps boomwhile creating the life you unique vision of prosperity 20 pounds and feel younger. ers navigate the murky digdesire. — whether that is the abili- With input from an all-star ital dating scene with tips ty to buy whatever you want panel ofexperts, you get a on everything from posting "Vital Signs: The Nature and or the need to feel secure. In checklist that makes nutri- the right photo to getting a Nurture of Passion," seven steps, you learn to cre- tious eating easier, strategies second date. If you're over by Gregg Levoy ate and support your vision to exercise self-control and the age of 50 and single, this (Tarcher/Penguin) by making a plan, boosting relieve stress, and tips on ex- could be your dating bible. If passion is the key to hap- your financial happiness and ercise and beauty. "The Sweet Spot: piness, this book is 450-plus becoming more financially "The Rockstar Remedy," pages of pure joy. Levoy ex- resilient. How to Find Your Groove at plores the struggle between by Dr. Gabrielle Francis with Home and Work," "A Bunch of Pretty Things I our attempts to live passionStacy Baker Masand by Christine Carter ately and maintain a sense of Did Not Buy," (Harper Wave) (Ballantine Books) security. Chapter by chapter, by Sarah Lazarovic Since rock stars tend to Exit the treadmill of modyou learn to explore your (Penguin) live extreme lifestyles, we ern life w it h s t rategies to passion and sustain it over Blogger and i l lustrator can probably learn from their help you create order, lose time, since losing it will leave Lazarovic declared war on mistakes (and successes). mental and physical clutter you in a cycle of lackluster shopping. Twice. Now she Francis, doctor to the rock and learn to accept a certain living. shares her wisdom on how to stars, offers a 90/10 planamount of discomfort on the survive this age of rampant d o whatever you w ant 1 0 road to a less-stressful life.
F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015
Presentingour2015calendar at aglancewith all of our scheduledspecialty publications. ••
Sun
Mon
T ues
Wed
Thu r s
Fri
Sat
Sun
1
2
3
Mon 1
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
15
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
22
25
26
27
28
29
t •
Sun
Mon
J•
Tue s
J •
Wed
Thu r s
Fri
Sat
Sun
2
3
4
5
6
9
10
11
12
13
16
17
18
19
20
21
24
25
26
27
28
Mon
Tu e s
7
31
Wed
Th urs
3
4
5
9
10
11
12
15
16
17
18
22
23
24
25
29
30
31
Fri
Sat
6
7
i
14
19
20
21
26
27
28
~
•
Tues
Wed
Thu r s
Fri
Sat
1
2
3
8
9
10
16
17 24
5
6
7
12
13
14
19
20
21
22
23
26
27
28
29
30
Sun
Mon
Tue s
Wed
Thu r s
Fri
Sat
Sun
1
10
Mon
2
Tu e s
Th urs
Fri
Sat
1
2
3
4
5
s
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
18
'
20
25
26
27
3
4
5
6
7
8
On
11
12
13
14
15
16
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
21
22
23
25
26
27
28
29
30
28
29
30
24
Wed
24
31
• S on
Mon
Tue s
Wed T hurs
Fri
S on
Sat
1
2
3
8
9
10
11
6
7
12
13
14
1
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
Son
Mon
I l
To e s
'
Toe s
4
9
10
11
16
17
18
23
24
5
Fri
Sat
Son
Mon
To e s
3
1
2
3
10
8
9
10
15
16
17 24
6
7
8
9
11
12
13
14
15
16
18
19
20
21
25
26
27
28
29
23
24
22
23
30
31
29
30
'
I
2
5
Mon
T oes
• 17 P i cture Your Home 24 Ageless • 30 T he Book of Love
February • • • •
14 P i cture Your Home 14 U Magazine 16 H igh Desert Pulse 23 M o ney Matters
March
April
June
• 11 U Magazine
4 3D
• 11
P i cture Your Home
• 6 • 15 R e dmond Magazine • 13 e 17 Summer Activity Guide • 17 • 25 H ome & Garden Show • 19 • TBA112 Ways toDisawsr C.O. • 26 • 27 • TBA Bid N Buy
•2 CO Sportsmen's Show •7 Ce n tral Oregon Living • • 14 P i cture Your Home • 14 Ageless • • 13 Under TheSun • 27 S i sters Magazine • • TBA 541 Clip It!
9
Pi c t ure Your Home
10 11
G olf Preview H igh Desert Pulse
16 Ageless 22 S i sters Magazine
Fri
Sat
2
3
7
8
9
10
11
12
14
15
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
28
29
27
28
29
30
I
Wed
I
Th urs
Fri
12
13
10
19
20
25
26
27
Sat
Sun
14
28
Mon
•
Toe s
August
• 11 P i cture Your Home • 15 T our of Homes™ 0J 22 Desch. County Fair & Rodeo 25 Ageless
•
Wed
Thu r s
Fri
Sat
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
*PUBuCATIO NDATESARESUBJECTTOCHANGE.
e s c h. County Fair & • Rodeo Premium Book • U M a g azine • P i cture Your Home R e dmond Magazine • • U n der The Sun S i sters Magazine • C entral Oregon Living •
July
May
Thu r s
1
2015: SPEC IAL PUBLICATIONSBYMONTH" January
Wed
13
25
1 4
Sun
Sat
6
19
I
Th urs
Fri
I
31
I
W ed
Wed T hurs
3
30
I
Mon
•
7
Be n d Brewfest
8
Pi c t ure Your Home
10 12
H igh Desert Pulse S c hool Directory
21
S i sters Magazine
October
November
26 27
R e dmond Magazine • 9 F o otball Preview • 11 September • 13 • 5
U M a g azine
• 12 P i cture Your Home 19 Ageless • TBA112 Ways toDisawsr C.O. • TBA 541 Clip It!
December
•3 Ce n tral Oregon Living • • 10 P i cture Your Home • • • 17 U Magazine • • 22 A uto Preview • Hi g h Desert Pulse R e dmond Magazine S i sters Magazine
• 14 P i cture Your Home 14 Ageless • 20 U nder The Sun • 21 T h e Key • TBA Bid N Buy
5 Ce n tral Oregon Living 12 P i cture Your Home 12 U Magazine 25 C o nnections TBA 541 Clip It!
You'll also receive grocery inserts every Tuesday; our arts and entertainment section, GO! Magazine, every Friday; and a wide variety of shopping inserts every other day. You'll also enjoy the national magazine, PARADE, which highlights the world of entertainment, games and comics every Sunday.
WHO READS THE BULLETINi
JEFFERSON
CROOK
• 65,000adultsreadTheBulletin onanaverageday• 66%of Deschutes County adults18+ havereadThe Bulletin in thepast 7days• 53%of Central Oregonadults18+ havereadTheBulletin in the past 7days. Source: AOR and Quantcast2013
DESCHUTES
r,i h
MEET THE WRITERS. GREATLOCAL STORIES.QUALITY WRITING.20DEDICATED FREELANCERS.
The Bulletin'sSpecial Projectsteamof 20freelancers arededicated to bringingyouthe local stories andentertaining tidbits that you have come to knowandlove in thewidearray of publications that print eachyear. Ourlocal freelancingteamcomesfrom all across Central Oregon —from Sisters Country toBend'sbustling city streets; fromthe resort townof Sunriverto theranchesof Prinevile, to Redmond'shiddentreasures. Thefreelancers knowthe areabackward andforward, whichmakeseachpublication a testament to the communitiesandevents that bringthis regionto life.
To subscribe, call 541-385-5800.
ON PAGE 2: NYT CROSSWORD M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • •
i
•
i
• J
J
•l•
,gegglg
ut'0
-n .'i] ii
contact us:
hours:
Place an ad: 541-385-5809
Fax an ad: 541-322-7253
Business hours:
Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the
Includeyour name, phone number and address
Monday - Friday
businesshours of8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Subscriber services: 541-385-5800
7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
Classified telephone hours:
Subscribe or manage your subscription
Monday - Friday 7:30 a.m. - 5 p.m.
24-hour message line: 541-383-2371 Place, cancel or extend an ad
On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
T h e • Qu I I e t i n :
i 7 7 7~
. w .
C h a np
202
Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jeweliy. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006 208
Pets & Supplies
208
210
Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Donate deposit bottles/ cans to local all vol., non-profit rescue, for feral cat spay/neuter. T railer a t Jak e ' s D iner, Hwy 2 0 E ; Petco in Redmond; donate M-F at Smith Sign, 1515 NE 2nd, Bend; or CRAFT in Tumalo. Can pick up large amts, 389-8420. www.craftcats.org German Shepherd puppies, adorable! $500. Call 541-620-0946 King Charles Spaniel AKC female, 1 year old. $ 1 00 0 obo 541-8'I 5-4116
82 nx43nx29
The Bulletin recom- Labradors AKC, Yellow& Drexel mends extra caution Black M's, 9 wks, 1st Woodbridge when purc has- shots, wormed, healthy/ pecan coffee table ing products or ser- hip guar. 541-536-5385 and two pecan end vices from out of the www.welcomelabs.com tables. End tables area. Sending cash, have pull-out shelf. checks, or credit inf ormation may b e $300 set. subjected to fraud. P eople giving p e ts 503-317-9668 away are advised to For more informabe selective about the tion about an advernew owners. For the Fridge/freezer, GE, tiser, you may call protection of the ani- Side x side, $ 1 75. the O r egon State mal, a personal visit to 541-923-1615 Attorney General's Office C o nsumer the home is recom- G ENERATE SOM E mended. Protection hotline at EXCITEIIIIENT in your 1-877-877-9392. Plan a The Bulletin neighborhood! Serving Central Oregon sinceSgco garage sale and don't The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sinceSgge Pomeranian male, small, forget to advertise in brwn long-hair, trained. classified! 541-385-5809. $200. 541-923-4173 Adopt a rescued cat or Kirby vacuum with carkitten! Altered, vacci- POODLE or POMAPOO pet cleaner, extras. nated, ID chip, tested, puppies, toy. Adorable! New used few times, 541-475-3889 more! CRAFT, 65480 Pd. $1600, sell $800. 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, QueensfandHeelers 541-382-1658 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 Standard & Mini, $150 www.craftcats.org Kitchen table 8 4 8 up. 541-280-1537 www.rightwayranch.wor chairs, brand new, $230 obo. 541-647-6214. dpress.com TURN THE PAGE NEED TO CANCEL For More Ads YOUR AD? The Bulletin The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line BLACK LAB 2 yrs old, Call 541-383-2371 neutered, fr i endly, 24 hrs. to cancel good watchdog, to Shih Tzu mix, tiny & cute! your ad! good home. $75 obo 1st shots, dewormed, 541-280-0955 $250. 541-771-0956 Comfort Twin pups AKC baby Sleep Chocolate Labrador YorkieShots, XL adjustable bed potty trained, with AKC reg. puppies, $800, dolls! vibrator, with or guar., ready now! $300 dep. b. 12/16 ready health without mattress 8 to go 2/1. 541-408-8880 $600& up. 541-777-7743 foundation, clean, needs new air pump. 210 $775. Furniture 8 Appliances 541-382-7072 or 541-410-5165 A1 Washers8 Dryers Advertise your car! $150 ea. Full warAdd APrcturei ranty. Free Del. Also Dachshundsminilongwanted, used W/D's Reach thousands of readers! haired AKC. $500 & up Call 541-385-5809 541-280-7355 541-598-7417 The Bulletin Classilieds
9 7 7 0 2
• O r e gg n
243
246
248
255
257
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Health 8 Beauty Items
Computers
Musical Instruments
l caution when pur-l products or • I chasing services from out of I l the area. Sending l ' cash, checks, o r '
l credit i n f ormationl
Downhill 2 pce SKEA
classic, olive M-L. $39 obo. 541-330-9070 245
CHECK VOURAD
may be subjected to
about an c I information advertiser, you may I l call t h e ' State
Ore g onl Atto r ney ' on the first day it runs l General's O f f i ce to make sure it is corConsumer Protec- • rect. nSpellcheckn and t ion ho t l in e at I human errors do oci 1-877-877-9392. cur. If this happens to ad, please conl TheBulletin l your tact us ASAP so that Serving Cenrrnc Oregon sincerggg corrections and any adjustments can be 212 made to your ad. 541-385-5809 Antiques 8 The Bulletin Classified Collectibles
l
I
Antiques Wanted: Tools, furniture, pre-'80s John Deere toys, pre-'40s B/W photography, beer cans. 541-389-1578
The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
The Bulletin
Servlng Cencrel Oregon sinceSggg
Longarm Quilting Computerized pantograph, .015 cents per sq. in., thread & batting extra. Scott, 541-233-9899 Bend e
Ponshers • Saws Repalr 8'cSupplles s
241
Bicycles & Accessories
N EW M a rin
Argenta Nev er ridden 2010 m o del Shimano 105 thruo ut. 6 0 6 1 al u m . triple- butted Hydro Edge Road main frame with carbon s eat-stay and E 4 anti-flex chain-stay. Fits 5'8n- 6'1n $750 ($825 if you want PD 5 700 B lack S h i mano 105 pedals) 541-480-2483
Eik%REAT
R U T ! NEW Cleveland Irons!
877-649-6195.
(PNDC) • New, never fired Weatherby Van251 guardS2, synthetic Hot Tubs & Spas stock, cal 30-06.$550. • New, never fired person hot tub, nice Howa,wood stock, cal 2looking, you move. $100 .300 Win Mag.$725 cash firm. 541-389-1574 Must pass background check. Please 253 call 541.389.3694, leave message. TV, Stereo & Video DISH T V
plastic,$350!
(in Redmond) 246
Guns, Hunting & Fishing 300 Weatherby magnum Mark V German made, with Leupold 3x9x50 scope. $1600 obo.
Scotty Downrigger accessories - retail $275; sell $140. 541-548-8913 Smith & Wesson M&P15-22 with 4x1 6x44 BSA Cats Eye scope, Fieldline Tactical carrying case. Excellent condition, was used in National Finals Rodeo for target competition. Comes with original sights and 25-round magazine. $850 obo. 541-410-0841
Traditions 5 0 cal. Hawkens percussion, very clean, like new, Bend local pays CASH!! has sling, scabbard, possibles bag, All acfor all firearms 8 cessories i n cluded. ammo. 541-526-0617 $350. 541-410-9851 CASH!! Wanted: Collector seeks For Guns, Ammo & quality fishing items Reloading Supplies. high 8 upscale bamboo fly 541-408-6900. rods. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 Colt H/bar A-2 Sporter, $700; Grizzly Mark 1 .45 Win mag $900; M artini 1 88 6 $ 4 0 0; Stevens mdl C20A 12 a. $250; Russian KBI 541-480-9430
H43 dbl 20" bbl 2/4, $350; Enfield Mark IV ¹1 303, $450. 541-550-7189
ION'MIS THIS DO YOU HAVE SOMETHING TO SELL FOR $500 OR LESS? Non-commercial
advertisers may place an ad with our "QUICK CASH SPECIAL" 1 week 3 lines 12
Ret a i ler.
Starting ai $19.99/month (for 12 mos.) 8 High Speed I nternet starting a t $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Installation! CALL Now!
Remington1100 semi- auto 12 ga., 3" shells. Purchased in 1980s. Present condition is like new. Asking $750. 541-410-4066
4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in
951-454-2561
T HE B ULLETIN
Lowest P r ices on Health & Dental Insurance. We have the best rates from top companies! Call Now!
Golf Equipment
l FRAUD. For morel
240
end-grain walnut and alder. 6 chairs FREE! Reduced to $895. 541-312-2393
• Bg n d
Ski Equipment
Crafts & Hobbies
Dining Table Custom made, n
A v e
210
The Bulletin recommends extra '
264- Snow Removal Equipment 265 - BuildingMaterials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270- Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales NorlhwestBend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Norlheast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292 - Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment andMachinery 316- Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry,RabbitsandSupplies 341 - Horses andEquipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375 - Meat andAnimal Processing 383- Produce andFood
r
Furniture & Appliances
a ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210 -Furniture & Appliances 211- Children's Items 212 -Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 -Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Huntingand Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- HealthandBeauty Items 249 - Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253 - TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256 - Photography 257 - Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259 - Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - Medical Equipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
l~
requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to dis- Yamaha E-flat Alto Sax, close the name of the 1977, excellent cond, business or the term only played senior year in "dealer" in their ads. college, $1300 obo. AND Private party adver!isers are defined as those who sell one computer.
Get your business
e ROW I N G
King Trombone, 1941 HN White, 7-1/2n bell, $750, obo. Call 541-388-2045 or 541-280-1 912 evenings
with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
260
Misc. Items
Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfiled tax returns, payroll is257 sues, & resolve tax 1-800-308-1563 debt FAST. Seen on Musical Instruments (PNDC) CNN. A B BB. Call 1-800-989-1278. Get The Big Deal from (PNDC) DirecTV! Act N o w$19.99/mo. Free Look at: 3-Months of HBO, Bendhomes.com starz, SHOWTIME & for Complete Listings of CINEMAX. FRE E GENIE HD/DVR UpArea Real Estate for Sale 1981 Yamaha g rade! 2 01 4 N F L Console Piano Board games (PictionSunday Ticket. I nwith bench, ary, Trivial) like new. cluded with S elect 1 owner, rich tone, $29/ea. 541-330-9070 Packages. New Cusexcellent condition, tomers Only. IV SupBuylng Dlamonds currently tuned port Holdings LLC- An /Gofd for Cash by Jana. authorized D i recTV Saxon's Fine Jewelers Dealer. Some exclu541-389-6655 $1700 obo. sions apply - Call for 541-389-1966 details BUYING 1-800-410-2572 Lionel/American Flyer Drum Kits (PNDC) trains, accessories. Specializing in High 541-408-219'I. Quality Used Drum Sets! What are you Call Kevin,541-420-2323 BUYING & SE LLING The Drum Shop All gold jewelry, silver looking for? gold coins, bars, Soprano Uke, 1 year old, and You'll find it in rounc/si wedding sets, excellent condition, $43. class rings, sterling silThe Bulletin Classifieds 541-389-8745 ver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental Stand for Violin/fiddle, gold. Bill Fl e ming, folding like new, $39 541-385-5809 541-382-9419. obo. 541-330-9070
S ell you r s t u f f f ast . In print and online with The Bulletin's Classifieds
S ell your st u f f f aster w i t h c o l o r .
oi'
D EA L SANTACRUZ SOLO MTN.RACING BIKE,
med., full-suspension, good cond, brand new tires, must sell, $2000. 541-480-2652 242
~ee eke en ! Ad must include price of
i l e ee n~
oi gsoo
or less, or multiple items whosetotal does not exceed $500. Call Classifieds at 541-385-5809
www.bendbulletin.com
Exercise Equipment GUN SHOW: E Albany Lions, Linn C ounty F airqrounds, E x p o Buildinq. Jan. 17th & 19th. Sat. 9-5, Sun. 9-4, Admission $5. Like new h i gh-end Info - 541-928-7710 quality Solo F80 motorized treadmill, 3.0 Where can you find a H P motor. Wi d e , helping hand? quiet deck. LED disFrom contractors to plays include speed, adj. incline, fan, dis- yard care, it's all here tance and more. Easy in The Bulletin's folding an d li f ting "Call A Service d eck. $ 9 50 . C a l l Professional" Directory 541-410-8849
AFTER
SEFORE
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough VB engine will get the job done on the ranch!
FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and a tough VB engine will get the job done on the ranch!
assi je s
www.bendbulletin.com
To place your photo ad, visit Usonline at ww w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m or call with questions,
5 41 -38 5 - 5 8 0 9
G2 SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
T HE N E W
YO R K TIMES CR O S SW O R D
PERSONAL STATEMENTS
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
r1
ro
12
13
14
15
r6
17
18
49
5O
75
77
BY PETER A. COLLINS / EDITED BY WILL SHORTZ 19
54 Doll house? 97 C. S. Lewis's lion I "Aladdin" antagonist 56 One might be made $$ At Thanksgiving 6" over a beer the Indians were God of hosts, impressed with h ear my prayer" 5 7Dawn goddess the Pilgrims and 11 Beam splitter 58 Allen's successor on their earth-toned late-night TV 16 Face an ace platters, especially 2008 Obarna 19 Historic time catchword 20 People of Kenya 104 Quarry, e.g. Break up, as 21 Powerball, for one 105 Hundred Acre concrete 22 Uganda's Arnin Wood denizen Opa, Fla. 23 The makeup 108 Backdrop for Early Mexican affected the many Bond films Headed up appearance of 109 More recent all the cast of 67 The bartender 111 Wows "Casino," including poured beers 113 Market initials in a for all the action red oval rnovie stars, 25 Guilty including 114 Justice Kagan 26 Bit of evasive I.M. sent to a 116 While trading maneuvering construction site? barbs during 27 Singer Nina the filming of Co-founder of the 28 "Think different," "M'A'S'H," no one Black Panthers e.g. was able to match 74 "Star Trek" crew 30 Mentored one rnember 32 Op118 Garne of logic 75 Bedouin 33 Court figs. 119 With fullforce 78 Lee, singer 120 Form a secret 35 After the 1946 with the 2011 ¹I World Series, the union? album "Mission dugout was filled Bell" 121 Battier of the with the Cardinals "And giving N.B.A. and their happy up the chirnney he 122 Cookie-selling sounds, including rose" org. 81 French bloom 123 Showed some 37 Wash disapproval 82 Complete 39 Card a 72, maybe 124 Like a neutron star 83 SAT needs 40 Son of Isaac 125 Radioer's "T" 85 The members of 43 Ice dam sites the Metropolitan 46 Grade school subj. Opera were DOWN hit with a host 47 Whimpers 1 Eisenberg of "The of problems, 51 She said that when Social Network" including it comes to '60s 2 Ladybug's prey Cause for an teen idols, all you 3 Gets a head? insurer's denial, need to know is one rnaybe 4 "-phobia" start thing: 89 It's east of S.A. 5 Title woman in a Online subscriptions: Beach Boys hit $1 Schwarzenegger, Today's puzzle and more informally 6 Meditation sounds than 4,000 past puzzles, 92 "Enough, I get it!" 7 Back muscles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). 93 Prior listings? briefly ACROSS
20
21
22
25
26
8"
Mio" 23 9 Went long 10 Painters Rivera 27 28 and Velazquez 11 Expects 32 34 33 35 12 Children's author 37 38 Asquith 13 1994 film based on 40 4 r 42 43 44 45 an "S.N.L." skit 14 Provoke 51 52 15 Challenge for a 56 57 playboy 16 "Carmen" 61 62 63 composer 17 "Better safe than 67 68 sorry," e.g. 18 Al Kaline, for his 71 72 73 entire career 24 Best at an 78 79 8O inspection,say 83 84 85 29 Pale 31 Do sorne farmwork 88 89 90 34 World leader in 1979 headlines 93 94 95 36 Record 99 1 0 0 101 37 What toastersoften hold 108 roo 38 Work night for Santa 113 114 115 40 Pulls back 41 It's found in cakes 118 rro 42 Scrapes 122 123 44 Put up 45 Cig 48 Half of half-and-half 59 Old orchard spray 79 Like sports games 49 Run easily and musical works 62 Is biased 50 Ran 63 City in Los Lobos? 82 Bit of cosmetic 52 Cheerleaders' surgery 65 Steers, as a ship practice 84 Really bothered 68 Osso buco need 53 Generally 85 Dutch treaty city 69 Hindu deity 54 Original narne of 86 Cell component, for Motown Records 70 Idea short 71 John ' s 55 Hershiser who 87 Have trouble with once pitched 72 Part of FEMA: sass? 59 consecutive Abbr. 89 mome n t scoreless innings 76 Woody off shoot? 90 Marshy region 58 High-minded sort? 77 News station
29
30
31
36 39
46
48
53
Ss 59
60 65
66
69
70 75
74
81
82 86
1 02 1 0 3
87
104
1 05 10 6
116
1r 2
111
110
107
117
120
121
124
125
94 Source of the quote 103 Long-legged fisher in 6-Across 105 Martin's partner 95 Run out of gear? of old TV 96 Like nobles 106 Gasket variety $8"Finallyf" 107 Bone: Prefix 99 Hosting, informally 110 Gym count 100 Sorne rneditation 112 Workplace welfare teachers org. 101 Cousin of a carnel 115 Never, in Neuss 102 Nicked 117 Tick (off)
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9
•
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place 8photo inyour private party od for only $15.00 perweek.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
260
Misc. Items
Misc. Items
260
•
262
Mis c . ltems
Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures DID YOU KNOW 7 IN SOCIAL S E C URITY 10 Americans or 158 L enox China 8 - 5 D ISABILITY BEN setting. piece million U.S. A dults EFITS. Unable i o Charleston pattern. r ead content f r om work? Denied benn ewspaper m e d ia Perfect condition. efits? We Can Help! Call each week? Discover $350. WIN or Pay Nothing! the Power of the Pa- 920-321-4324 Contact Bill Gordon & cific Northwest NewsAssociates at 5-drawer Hon to paper Advertising. For People Look for Information 1-800-879-3312 Industries a free brochure call start your application About Products and commercial file 91 6-288-601 f or today! (PNDC) Services Every Daythrough cabinet, email The Bulletin Offers 43" wide, 66" high. The Bvlletin Classirreds cecelia@cnpa.com Free Private Party Ads (PNDC) Originally $1000; lines - 3 days asking$450. Little Green carpet sham- •• 3Private Party Only perfect for apt/RV, • Total of items 541-948-1024 How to avoid scam pooer, adver$49 obo. 541-330-9070 and fraud attempts tised must equal $200 265 or Less PBe aware of internaFOR DETAILS or to Building Materials tional fraud. Deal loPLACE AN AD, cally whenever posCall 541-305-5009 Bend Habitat sible. Fax 541-385-5802 RESTORE sf Watch for buyers Building Supply Resale who offer more than Call The Bulletin At Quality at LOW your asking price and Olhaunsen regula541-385-5809 PRICES who ask to have tion size pool table 740 NE 1st Place Your Ad Or E-Mail money wired or in very good shape 541-312-6709 handed back to them. with cues, balls, AI: www.bendbullelin.com Open to the public. Fake cashier checks misc. accessories. Wantedpaying cash and money orders $1000. for Hi-fi audio & stuare common. Call a Pro 541-389-1272 or v'Nevergive out perdio equip. Mclntosh, 541 -480-4695 Whether you need a JBL, Marantz, Dysonal financial inforfence fixed, hedges naco, Heathkit, Sanmation. Reduce Your Past Tax sui, Carver, NAD, etc. av'Trustyour instincts trimmed or a house Bill by as much as 75 Call 541-261-1808 and be wary of built, you'll find Percent. Stop Levies, someone using an professional help in 251 Liens and Wage Garescrow service or nishments. Call The • Medical Equipment The Bulletin's "Call a agent to pick up your Tax DR Now to see if merchandise. Qualify Large Quantum power Service Professional" you Directory 1 -800-791-2099. The Bulletin c hair, $ 2 50 . C a l l servrne cenvar oregonsince ssos (PNDC) 542 -385-5809 541-548-6598
266
267
267
270
286
Heating & Stoves
Fuel & Wood
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
Sales Northeast Bend
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud,
Pine tts Juniper Split REIIIIEIIIIBER:If you
Garage Sale Kit
NOTICE TO
ADVERTISER
Since September 29, 1991, advertising for
** FREE **
PROMPT DELIVERY have lost an animal, Place an ad in The 541-389-9663 used woodstoves has don't forget to check Bulletin for your gaThe Bulletin been limited to modThe Humane Society rage sale and repayels which have been recommends 269 Bend ment for Firewood ceive a Garage Sale certified by the Or541-382-3537 Kit FREE! only upon delivery Gardening Supplies egon Department of Redmond and inspection. & Equipment Environmental Qual- • A KIT INCLUDES: cord is 128 cu. ft. 541-923-0882 ity (DEQ) and the fed- 4' x 4' x 8' • 4 Garage Sale Signs Madras eral E n v ironmental • $2.00 Off Coupon To 541-475-6889 should BarkTurfSoil.com Protection A g e ncy • Receipts use Toward Your Prineville include name, Next Ad (EPA) as having met 541 -447-7178 price and • 10 Tips For "Garage smoke emission stan- phone, PROMPT DELIVERY or Craft Cats kind of wood Sale Success!" dards. A cer t ified purchased. 542-389-9663 541-389-8420. w oodstove may b e • Firewood ads identified by its certifiComplete hydroponic MUST include PICK UP YOUR cation label, which is growing set, 400W 8 species & cost per GARAGE SALE Kn at Have an item to permanently attached 1 000W system. $1 000 cord to better serve 1777 SW Chandler to the stove. The Bulvalue, like new, $500. sell quick? our customers. Ave., Bend, OR 97702 letin will not know541-420-2026 If it's under ingly accept advertisBulletin The Bulletin Garden Shelf, 3 t i er, '500you can place it in The ing for the sale of serving central oregon sincessas Sarvina Central Cveeensince Saie reen pwdr coat, new, uncertified The Bulletin 39. 541-330-9070 woodstoves. Afl Year Dependable Classifieds for: Firewood: Seasoned; For newspaper Lodgopolo, split, del, delivery, call the '10 - 3 lines, 7 days Garage Sales B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 Circulation Dept. at or 2 cords for $365. '16- 3 lines, 14 days 541-385-5800 Garage Sales Multi-cord discounts! To place an ad, call (Private Party ads only) 541-420-3484. 54f -385-5809 Garage Sales or email The Bulletin clessified@bendbullesin.com Find them To Subscribe call 280 54f -385-5800 or go to The Bulletin in 316 Estate Sales www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Irrigation Equipment Moving/Estate Sale, Dry, split Juniper, Prompt Delivery Classifieds Sund™ay only 1/1 8 2.5 acres water rights $21 0/cord. Multi-cord Rock, Sand 8 Gravel 9am-3pm,at3f36 on the Arnold District discounts available. Multiple Colors, Sizes Umatilla 541-385-5809 Ave., Redmond main canal for sale. Instant Landscaping Co. Immediate delivery! $2000. 541-410-0366 541-408-6193 54t -389-9663
•
•
*Ad runs until SOLD or up to 8 weeks (whichever comes first!)
Includes up Item Priced at: to 40 Words • Under $500 ----. Of teXt,2" in length, • $SOO tO $ege .... With bOrder,full COIOrPhoto, • $1000 to $2499
Your Total AdCostonl:
$29 $39 $49
$59 ARCTICSLEO
bold headline and price. • $2500 and over
The Bulletin 541- 5 - 5
9
• The Bulletin, • ce n t i'al or e g on Marketplace • The central oregon Nickel Ads ® bendbulletin.com 'Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, moforcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.
wreckedSled.Alter m@ketmotoruogmde. Ven FastandFUn. e all Service recoms Iiloving terces s I 1
32000oeo 54f-000 opp
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
I:: ~vUPFS IJNj~~MJLB JM
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Caregivers
FoodServices Coordinator
PARKS & OPEN SPACE SPECIALIST NEEDED
J E S S E
Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 -Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans and Mortgages 543 - Stocks and Bonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - Business Opportunities
326
Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters ALFALFA HAY 2nd cutting, 3x3 bales, no rain, no weeds. Madras Oreqon. Call 541-221-2358 Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 or 541-948-7010. Quality orchard mixed grass hay, $190-$235 ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 betwn Bend/Redmond Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulietin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Ciassifieds Get Results! Call 541-385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulietin.com
Immediate openings for ASSISTANT MANAGERS • Work/life balance you won't find anywhere else in Retail Management.
• 100% Employee Owned Company • Head quartered in Eugene, OR, giving our managers access to local support staff. Must be willing to relocate as your career progresses.
View the fill posting at www.bimart.com/employment To apply: email resume to careers O bimart.com EOE Drug Free Work Place NEWSPAPER
Part-time
Prep Sports Assistant The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journalist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps assistant. This position is ideal for a journalism student with interest in a broad range of sports. Duties include taking phone and email information from sources and generating accurate, concise accounts of local high school sports events. Hours vary; most work shifts are weeknights and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and professional-level writing ability are essential, as are a sports background and a working knowledge of traditional high school sports. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screen required.
To apply, please emailresume and any relevant writing samples to: s ortsassistant@bendbulletin.com
341
No phone inquiries please.
Horses & Equipment
' • ., • 8, 3-horse Silverado 2001 29'xs' 5th wheel trailer. Deluxe showman/semi living quarters,lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277 Gelded Quarter Horse, 15 hands, 7-yrs old, $1500. Broke, tame, gentle, 541-589-4948 harneyhayfield Ogmail .com
0
0
' I0 0 421
Schools & Training HTR Truck School REDNOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU 476
Employment Opportunities CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportun/ties" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer H otline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
The Bulletin
5erving Central Orer/on since 1903
General
CROOK COUNTY EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
Crook CountyRoad Department Road laster $60,357. 77-$65,282.96 Full time wibenefits Closes: Openuntil filled Crook County is seeking a full time Road M aster with a m i n imum ten y ears o f experience in road repair and maintenance and a minimum five years of experience in a supervisory role. A minimum of a High School Diploma is r equired with a Ba c helor's degree i n Engineering preferred. This position oversees and is responsible for the management of the Crook C o u nty tr a nsportation s y s tem infrastructure for maintenance, preservation, capital improvements and fleet services and ensures that all laws and regulations are followed fo r a c t ivities a ssociated w i th transportation projects.
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Buiietin's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Serving CentralOregon since 1%8
AVON - Earn extra income with a new career! Sell from home, w ork, o n line. $ 1 5 startup. For informacall: tion, 877-751-0285
(PNDC)
our caring
AssociatePlanner The City of Sisters currently has an opening for a full-time Associate Planner position. The Associate Planner position requires professional planning work of r outine to moderate difficulty. Under general supervision, the Associate Planner conducts reviews on current development applications and sign permits; works on long-range land-use plans; writes findings, notices and reports; and conducts weed abatement. The Associate Planner will have frequent and direct interaction with the City Council and Planning Commission and other advisory groups and the general public. The Associate Planner is expectedto possess knowledge ofplanning specialties such as Oregon Statutes and land use laws, current and long-range planning practices, economic development and/or environmental planning. Compensation starts at $20.83/hour depending on experience for this fully benefited position. Please submit a City employment application, cover letter, resume, and three references to Human ResourcesP.O. Box 39, Sisters, OR 97759. Closing date is January 30, 2015 at 5 p.m. or until filled. An application and detailed job description are available at City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave or o n t h e C ity's website www.ci.sisters.or.us. The City of Sisters is an equal opportunity employer.
General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpositions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stacking product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred@bendbulletin.com). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
serviny Central Oregon sincet903
R H O N D A
O L O R M A S A N S T O N E S L O A S E N T H E E A V E S S H E R IIII T E O L O C K V E S T E E A L E A N O D L S B A F R P S H E E S T A N D A R L A L E N A M A I N S K E D
D P R I L O E A S G A N O S S L S H O O E N G A N S P A A O L R S T A U H U R L I S E V E R A R N T A I S H T T E R L O R E E L O P D E N S
I T S P A T
S T I R U P
M O N O G A M O Y R E C L O N E N Y S E L A I T F L T A S T
B I Z T E H T R E W S H H O L N E O M T I I L O K N R O O S W H A A N
A D A G E
T I G E R
T he Oregon D epartment of C orrections' D e e r Current full time job Ridge Correctional opening at theCity of I nstitution in M a E L S Madras within the d ras, Oregon i s Parks Department. B Y T O P seeking to fill their Great benefits. Food Services CoPositioncloses on B E A P E ordinator position. 1/23/2015. S L M E D To qualify, you must Visit www.madras have a high school recruitmentcenter.com L L diploma, GED certo submit an applicaplease call t ificate, o r ot h e r tion or call Sara at P S A A D 541-385-4717 proof of education at 541-325-0303. A R E same or higher level and three years of P I L L S Cleaning service, Mon. experience i n a - Fri., off by 5 p . m. c ommercial f o o A N I O K weekends & holidays, service facility; OR d free. N o n-smoking. an Associate's deA S chasing products or I 541-815-0015 gree in Food Serservices from out of I M S P O O vice Management, f the area. Sending DID Y O U KNO W C W R S Foods and Hospitalc ash, checks, o r Newspaper-generity Service, or a dif credit i n f ormation I E T I T a ted content is s o field. ~ may be subjected to ~ valuable it's taken and rectly-related N A E N E obtain a Food FRAUD. repeated, condensed, Must Pe r m it For more informabroadcast, t weeted, Handlers G T E G O 30 days of tion about an adver- ~ discussed, p o sted, within hire. To view the full f tiser, you may call copied, edited, and job announcement PUZZLE IS ON PAGE G2 the Oregon State emailed c o u ntless and how to apply, I Attorney General's times throughout the 476 476 our website at s Office C o n s umer s day by others? Dis- visit Employment Employment www.odocjobs.com, RBEI(DSS I Protection hotline at I cover the Power of Job I 1-877-877-9392. Opportunities Opportunities Newspaper Advertis- DOC15-0798OC. ing in SIX STATES LThe Bulletin g nnouncement i s with just one phone A Welder/Fabricator Looking for your next to close call. For free Pacific scheduled employee? t 11:59 p m o n Truck Driver Northwest Newspa- a KEITH Mfg. Co. has Place a Bulletin help 20, 2015. per Association Net- January FedEx Ground the following openwanted ad today and work brochures call EOE. Line Haul Driver ing: reach over 60,000 916-288-6011 or Requirements: Current Welder/Fabricator readers each week. email Class A CDL with 1 yr •Responsible for setYour classified ad 626 cecelia©cnpa.com K inzua H i l l s Gol f experience; medical ting up and operatwill also appear on (PNDC) card, doubles experiLoans & Mortgages Course is looking for a ing manual or semibendbulletin.com qualified gro u nds- ence preferred. Must automatic welding which currently WARNING keeper. Will consider pass drug test, back- machines, welds cyreceives over 1.5 Want to impress the ground check, have lindrical or irregular any and all applica million page views The Bulletin recomrelatives? Remodel mends you use cautions. Salary starts at clean driving record. parts that may be every month at your home with the $1500. Space avail. Night run, full time. clamped or otherno extra cost. tion when you prohelp of a professional vide personal for trailer or m otor If interested please wise positioned Bulletin Classifieds contact Perry at home at no cost. Send •Proficient in using Get Results! information to compafrom The Bulletin's 541-420-9863. nies offering loans or r esume to P O B o x Press Brake, Shear, Call 385-5809 "Call A Service and Grinders or place credit, especially Professional" Directory 227, Fossil, OR 97830 Truck driver needed for •Saws Minimum of 3 years those asking for adyour ad on-line at local haul CDL with previous experience. bendbulletin.com vance loan fees or doubles endorsement companies from out of HEALTHCARE required. Truck will Apply at state. If you have Mission-driven nonprofit medical clinic seeks a load, leave Madras concerns or queskeithwalkingfloor Chief Operating Officer and return to Madras .comlkeith/about/ tions, we suggest you to be responsible for the smooth and efficient op- on a daily basis. Find exactly what consult your attorney eration of our Community Health Centers. This pocareers Please contact you are looking for in the or call CONSUMER sition provides direct and indirect oversight of day 541-419-1125 or HOTLINE, to day operations of the organization as well as re541-546-6489 CLASSIFIEDS 1-877-877-9392. sponsibility for financial performance. The COO also provides leadership in mentoring and developing direct reports and employees in a manner General Jefferson Count Job 0 o r t unities with emphasis on the importance of teamwork, collaboration and upholding the organization's ser~SEs o Deputy District Attorney I - $3,941.00 to vice standards. O~ 8 Requires a Bachelor's Degree in Healthcare Man$4,570.00 PER MONTH - DOQ 4 DE SCHIITES COUNTY agement or related field, Master's Degree preFirst Review Date — February 6th, 2015 ' CAREER OPPORTUNITIES ferred. Proven progressive experience and leadership roles in healthcare management. For complete job description and application Excellent salary and benefits which include a form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Hu401(k) Plan with company match, generous per- man Resources, then Job Opportunities; or ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, Propsonal leave, and comprehensive health, life and call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson erty and Facilities (2015-00004). disability insurances. County Application forms to Jefferson County For additlonalinformation, contactColleen Hazel, Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY, Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, HR Generalist at 509.764.6105or Madras, OR 97741. 01/25/2015. chazel@mlchc.or vrr o e s site: w~ ww.mIahe.or JeffersonCountyis an ADMINISTRATIVE SUPERVISOR II, Equal EmploymentOpportunity Employer Sherjff's Office (2035-00003). Full-
memory care community. All shifts available. Must be reliable. Also needed part time chef. For more information, or any questions,
r.=.-"-,.— .v I
f f
I
f f
¹
Central Oregon Community College has openings li s te d bel o w . Go to https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details 8 apply online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. COCC is an AA/EO employer.
End UserSupport Coordinator Serve as lead technician for EUS team. Responsible for project planning, implementation, troubleshooting, installations, train and assist campus technologyusers.Associates + 2-yrs A full job description and application can be exp. A+, MCDST and MCSA Certifications. found at w w w.co.crook.or.us. Candidates $3,285-$3813/mo. Closes Feb 6. should attach a resume and cover letter to their application. Part-TimeInformation SystemsSpecialist Provide database support for all facets of the All application information must be remitted to: student module information system. Resolve Crook County Treasurer's/Tax office at 200 NE processing questions and issues, strong 2nd St., Prineville, OR 97754. phone support, and maintain user documentation for processes and workflow. Associates + For additional information contact Human 2 -yrs t e chnical e x p . $14.47-$17.23/hr. Resources at 541-416-3802. EEO 20hrs/wk. Closes Feb 8
The Bulletin 541-385-5809
wanted to join
AF A PO C H A R I MO D S B S A U O B B A R B P A L S Y E I M O S EN C R S O R Y L E O L D GA I M S A
AssistantProfessor l, Licensed ildassage Therapy Provide classroom instruction and program leadership. Provide student advising and assistance. Associates degree or higher + 3-yrs practical exp. and 3-yrs teaching exp. Must have current Massage Therapy License or Professional License i n re l ated f i eld. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 20.
AssistantProfessor l, Culinary Arts Provide lecture and lab mediums in the discipline of Culinary Arts and restaurant operations. Associates + 3-yrs culinary instruction and 5-yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 21. Assistant Professor 1,Speech Provide instruction in introductory courses in communication. Provide student advising and assistance. Master's degree + teaching exp. in higher education. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 23.
AssistantProfessor l, Sociology Provide classroom instruction in Sociology. Provide student advising and assistance. Master's degree + college-level teaching exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 26. AssistantProfessor l, Health Information Technology Provide classroom and lab instruction in the HIT Program. Provide student advising and assistance. Bachelor Degree + 2-yrs exp. in HIT profession. Certified RHIT or RHIA required. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 27.
Assistant Professor l, ForestryResources Technology Provide instruction in Forest Resources Tech program. Provide student advising and assistance. Bachelor degree in Forestry + 3-yrs field exp. + 1-yr post-secondary teaching exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Feb 2. Assistant Professor 1, Afanufacturing Technology Provide instruction in Manufacturing Technology on theRedmond Campus. Associates + 5-yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Feb 9.
Assistant Professor l, Nondestructive Testing Provide classroom and lab instruction and program leadership in the NDT Program, on the Redmond Campus. AAS + Level II Certification in RT and PT + 5-yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Open Until Filled. Part-Time Instructor Positions NEW!Business, Speech Looking for talented individuals to teach part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks.
® Rhmlhrsm
I
Financial Planner Valentine Ventures, a fee-only investment adviser, is hiring a Financial Planner, responsible for creating, delivering, and updating financial plans, providing personal finance advice, and overall client servicing Requirements: •CFP® designation •Minimum three years experience creating and delivering financial plans •Experience with financial planning software •Bachelor's degree •Strong interpersonal skills •Ability to work autonomously •Exceptional attention to detail Ideal candidates have: •Expertise with Money Guide Pro •Passed the Series 65 •CFA designation •Experience in sales •Leadership skills and prior experience managing employees Compensationincludes salary, HSA, 401(k). Send resumeto: resume@valentineventures.com
Exciting opportunities for full-time positions at the library! Supervisors (Bend St Redmond Libraries) Supervisor in each location is a key leader of a cohesive team providing progressive services. Supervisor needs proven efFectiveness mth diverse customer service situations and successful leadership and management skills. Deadline: 2:oo on Thursday, January zz. eServices Content Developer (Administration, Bend) eServices Content Developer uses creativity to assist with the design, development and maintenance of the library's public and internal websites. Also trains and interacts with staff and the public. Deadline: 2:oo on Tuesday, January 27. Network Technician (Administration, Bend) Network Technician assists with monitoring, troubleshooting, and repair of networks and related equipment. Technician works closely with the Network Administrator and a cohesive team of IT specialists. See website for more details. Deadline: 2:oo on Wednesday, January 28. http://www.deschuteslibrary.org/ employment for more details, application, and supplemental questionnaire. Or call (54t) 3tz-toz4 for assistance. EOE
D ESC H U T E S
PUBLI C
L I B RA R Y
time position. Deadline: THURSDAY, 01/22/2015. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
Bridge Program (2014-00310). Fulltime position. Deadline EXTENDED: MOMDAY,02/02fl5. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
Older Adult (2014-00119). Full-time position. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
SBHC (2014-00127). Part-time posjtjon. Deadline:SUNDAY,01/18/15. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
Child 8 Family Program (2015-00001), Part-time. OPEN UMTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
Access Team, Child 8 Family Program (2014-00126) Full-time, limited duratjon. OPEM UNTIL FILLED. DEPUTY SHERIFF AIIDCORRECTIONS
DEPUTY, (201 5-00005) Deadline: THURSDAY, 02/12/15. FIELD ULW ENFORCEMENT TECHIIII-
CIAN, Shsrjff's Office (2015-00009) Deadline:THURSDAY,02/12/15. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE I OR II (PHNII) (201 4-00040). Will consider fUll or parttime equiValent, tWO POSitiOnS aVailable. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER
(201 4-00001). Will consider fUll or parttime equiValent, tWO POSitiOnS aVailable. Deadline:OPEN UNTIL FILLED.
PSYCHIATRIST(201 4-00101). Full-time position. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. RESERVE
D E PUTY
SHE RIFF,
(201 5-00008) Deadline: THURSDAY, 02/12/15. VOLUNTEER OPPORTUNITY EXTERIII-LAWSTUDENT(2014-00120).
Volunteer position no benefits. Deadline:OPENUIIITII. FILLED. DESCHUTESCOUNTY ONLYACCEPTS APPLICATIONS ONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTED POSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OijR WEBSITE AT www.
deschutes.org/jods.All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed and applications have been reviewed. NOtifiCatiOnS to
candidates are sent vja emailonly. If you need aSSiSt anCe, PleaSe COntaCt
the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, (541) 617-4772. Deschutes County e n courages qualified persons with disabilities to participate in jts programs and aCtivitieS. To
r equeSt infOrmatiOn
jn an alternate format, please call (541) 617-4747, fax to (541) 385-3202 or send email to a ccessjbjljty@ deschutes.org. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER
Women, minorities, and the disabled are encouraged to apply.
G4 SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
)
e
I
fe
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
e
750
860
880
881
882
Redmond Homes
Motorcycles & Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Fifth Wheels
o 00
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel HD Softtail Deuce 2002, trailer. 2 slides Evbroken back forces RENTALS 682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage erything goes, all sale, only 200 mi. on 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 603 - Rental Alternatives kitchen ware, linens new motor from Haretc. Hitch, sway 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent 604 - Storage Rentals Snowbird Special! ley, new trans case bars, water 8 sewer Open Road 36' 2005 908 605- RoommateWanted REALESTATE and p arts, s p o ke Beaver Marquis, hoses. List price 1993 model is like new wheels, new brakes, Aircraft, Parts 616- Want ToRent 705 - Real Estate Services $34,500 - asking w/3 slides!! King n early all o f b i k e 40-ft, Brunswick 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 713 - Real Estate Wanted & Service $26,800 Loaded. bed, hide-a-bed, floor plan. Many brand new. Has proof 630- Rooms for Rent 719 -Real Estate Trades Must see to appreciglass shower, 10 gal. extras, well mainof all work done. Reate. Redmond, OR. water heater, 10 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 726- Timeshares for Sale movable windshield, tained, fire sup541-604-5993 cu.ft. fridge, central 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 730 - NewListings T-bags, black and all pression behind vac, satellite dish, chromed out with a 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732- Commercial Properties for Sale refrig, Stow Master 27" TV /stereo syswilly skeleton theme 5000 tow bar, 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 738 - MultiplexesforSale tem, front power levon all caps and cov$21,995. 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale eling jacks & scisers. Lots o f w o rk, 541-383-3503 (q sor stabilizer jacks, 1/3interest in 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744- Open Houses heart and love went 16' awning. 2005 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745- Homes for Sale Columbia 400, into all aspects. All model is like new! Financing available. done at professional 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746-Northwest Bend Homes $25,995 Heartland P rowler shops, call for info. $125,000 648- Houses for RentGeneral 747 - Southwest BendHomes 541-419-0566 775 2012, 29 PRKS, 33', Must sell quickly due (located O Bend) 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 748-Northeast Bend Homes like new, 2 slides-livto m e d ical bi l l s, 541-266-3333 Manufactured/ 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 749- Southeast BendHomes i ng area & la r g e $8250. Call Jack at Mobile Homes closet. Large enough 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750- RedmondHomes 54'I -279-9538. Need help fixing stuff? Fleetwood D i scovery to live in, but easy to 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 753 - Sisters Homes 40' 2003, diesel, w/all tow! 15' power awCall A Service Professional List Your Home 870 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes JandMHomes.com Boats & Accessories options - 3 slide outs, ning, power hitch & Looking for local music find the help you need. 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 756- Jefferson County Homes We Have Buyers CD called Falling in www.bendbulletin.com satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, stabilizers, full size Get Top Dollar Love by Connie 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 757- Crook CountyHomes etc., 32,000 miles. queen bed , l a r ge Financing Available. Wintered in h e ated shower, porcelain sink Cyrus. I fell in love 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 762- Homes with Acreage 541-546-5511 with my w i f e-to-be shop. $79,995 obo. & toilet. 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 541-447-6664 $26,500. 541-999-2571 listening to it but canNEW Marlette Special 663- Houses for Rent Madras 764- Farms andRanches not find it anyplace. If 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 771 - Lots you have a copy or a rch shingles, d bl know where to find it, 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages dormer, 9 lite door, 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 1/3 interest in wellcall 541-771-6567. Wakeboard Boat 675 - RVParking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes glamour bath, appliequipped IFR Beech BoI/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, nanza A36, new 10-550/ 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land ance pkg, $69,900 tons of extras, low hrs. Meet singles right now! finished on site prop, located KBDN. Full wakeboard tower, No paid operators, PRICE GUARANTEED $65,000. 541-419-9510 528 632 light bars, Polk audio Freightliner 1994 just real people like www. N4972M.com TILL MARCH Keystone Laredo31' a. P Loans & Nlortgages Apt JMultiplex General speakers throughout, Custom you. Browse greet- HANGAR FOR SALE. R Y 2006 with 1 2 ' JandMHomes.com completely wired for ings, exchange mesMotorhome slide-out. Sleeps 6, 541-548-55'I 1 ~a ~ h 30x40 end unit T BANK TURNED YOU CHECK YOUR AD amps/subwoofers, unsages and connect Will haul small SUV queen walk-around DOWN'? Private party hanger in Prineville. deiwater lights, fish live. Tiy it free. Call bed w/storage underor toys, and pull a Dry walled, insulated, will loan on real esfinder, 2 batteries cusnow: 877-955-5505. neath. Tub &g shower. trailer! Powered by tate equity. Credit, no tom black paint job. and painted. $23,500. (PNDC) 2 swivel rockers. TV. 8.3 Cummins with 6 problem, good equity $12,500 541-815-2523 Tom, 541.788.5546 Air cond. Gas stove & speed Allison auto is all you need. Call refrigerator/freezer. trans, 2nd owner. Oregon Land Mort- on the first day it runs Microwave. Awning. Very nice! $53,000. gage 541-388-4200. 738 Outside sho w er. to make sure it is cor541-350-4077 Slide-through storrect. "Spellcheck" and Multiplexes for Salel LOCAL MONEY:Webuy a ge. E as y Li f t . secured trust deeds & human errors do oc$29,000 new; Asknote,some hard money cur. If this happens to loans. Call Pat Kellev ing $13,600 your ad, please con850 541-447-4805 C all 54 /-385-580 9 541-382-3099 ext.18. tact us ASAP so that Snowmobiles 2007 Bennfngton to r omOte Our ServiCe corrections and any Pontoon Boat adjustments can be Tick, Tock 2000 Yamaha 700 3 2275 GL, 150hp made to your ad. Looking for your Landscaping/Yard Care HOLIDAY RAMBLER cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Honda VTEC, less 541-385-5809 DUPLEX BY OWNER Adoption next employee? Tick, Tock... The Bulletin Classified $219,900 2 bdrm, 1.5 Polaris Fusion 9 00, VACATIONER 2003 than 110 hours, Place a Bulletin help 8.1L V6 Gas, 340 hp, NOTICE: Oregon Land788 mi., new miroriginal owner, lots ...don't let time get bath ea., 2 story, ga- only CON scape Contractors Law workhorse, Allison 1000 wanted ad today and PREGNANT? Senior Apartmentrors, covers, custom of extras; Tennesrages,14yrs old. Bend. SIDERING AD O P reach over 60,000 5 speed trans., 39K, (ORS 671) requires all away. Hire a Independent Living n e w rid e -on see tandem axle karenmichellenOhot- skis, TION? Call us first. businesses that adNEyI/ TIRES, 2 slides, readers each week. ALL-INCLUSIVE r ide-off t r ailer w i t h trailer. Excellent professional out mail.com 541-815-7707 Living exp e nses, Your classified ad Onan 5.5w gen., ABS vertise t o pe r form spare, + much more. with 3 meals daily condition,$23,500 will also appear on housing, medical, and Landscape Construcbrakes, steel cage cockof The Bulletin's $ 6,995. Call for d e Month-to-month lease, 503-646-1804 continued support af bendbulletin.com pit, washer/dryer, firetion which includes: tails. 541-536-3889. check it out! "Call A Service which currently reterwards. Ch o o se p lanting, lace, mw/conv. oven, deck s , Call 541-233-9914 a doptive family o f fences, Professional" ree standing dinette, ceives over 1.5 milAds published in the arbors, FIND IT! lion page views evyour choice. Call 24/7. water-features, and in"Boats" classification was $121,060 new; now, Directory today! 855-970-2106 Open 12-3 ery month at no stallation, repair of irBUY IT! include: Speed, fish- $35,900. 541-536-1008 extra cost. Bulletin (PNDC) rigation systems to be 20939 Miramar Dr. ing, drift, canoe, 573 SELL IT! Country Charm Classifieds Get Rel icensed w it h th e house and sail boats. The Bulletin Classifieds Business Opportunities Building/Contracting sults! Call 385-5609 Landscape ContracCity Convenience For all other types of 4-place enclosed Intertors Board. This 4-digit CarolDonohoe, or place your ad 634 please go WARNING The Bulletin state snowmobile trailer watercraft, NOTICE: Oregon state number is to be inon-line at Broker to Class 875. recommends that you AptJMultiplex NE Bend w/ Rocky Mountain pkg, law requires anyone cluded in all adver541-410-1773 bendbulletin.com 541-365-5809 i nvestigate eve r y $6500. 54'I-379-3530 who con t racts for tisements which indiTheGarnerGroup.com Call for Specials! phase of investment RV PACKAGE-2006 construction work to cate the business has 860 opportunities, espe- Limited numbers avail. Serv>n Central Ore on since 1903 Monaco Monarch, 31', 882 be licensed with the a bond, insurance and c ially t h ose f r o m 1,28 3bdrms Ford V10, 28,900 miles, Motorcycles & Accessories Construction Contrac- workers c ompensaFifth Wheels Bayliner 185 2006 out-of-state or offered w/d hookups, auto-level, 2 slides, tors Board (CCB). An tion for their employopen bow. 2nd owner queen bed & hide-a-bed by a p erson doing patios or decks. active license ees. For your protec— low engine hrs. Mountain Glen sofa, 4k gen, conv mimeans the contractor tion call 503-378-5909 business out of a lo— fuel injected V6 crowave, 2 TV's, tow cal motel or hotel. In541-383-9313 Open 12-3 is bonded & insured. or use our website: — Radio 8 Tower. package,$66,000. Verify the contractor's www.lcb.state.or.us to vestment o f f eringsProfessionally managed by 61081 Ruby Peak Great family boat OPTION - 2003 Jeep CCB l i c ense at check license status must be r e gistered Norris & Stevens, Inc. Ln. Priced to sell. Wrangler tow car, 64K www.hirealicensedbefore contracting with with the Oregon DeNew Craftsman 648 $11,590. miles, hard & soft top, 5 contractor.com partment of Finance. the business. Persons in Hidden Hills Alpenlite 28 ft. 541-548-0345. Houses for Harley Davidson speed manual, $1 1,000 or call 503-378-4621. doing lan d scape We suggest you conShelley Griffin, 1987, New stove, 2001 FXSTD, twin 541-815-6319 The Bulletin recommaintenance do not sult your attorney or Rent General Broker fridge. Good fur875 cam 88, fuel injected, mends checking with r equire an LC B l i call CON S UMER 541-280-3804 nace, AC. Stereo, Vance & Hines short Watercraft the CCB prior to con- cense. HOTLINE, PUBLISHER'S T/ieearnereroup.com DVD player. Queen shot exhaust, Stage I tracting with anyone. 1-503-378-4320, NOTICE bed WITH bedding. with Vance & Hines ds published in "Wa • Pyg Some other t rades Painting/Wall Covering 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. All real estate adver20 ft. awning. fuel management tercraft" include: Kay — /vv — ~ also req u ire additising in this newspaGood shape. $4500 system, custom parts, DID YOU KNOW that per is subject to the tional licenses and aks, rafts and motor 541-977-5587 extra seat. not only does news- F air H o using A c t Ized certifications. personal $10 500OBO paper media reach a which makes it illegal Winnebago 22' All American watercrafts. Fo Open 12-3 Call Today Debris Removal HUGE Audience, they to a d vertise "any "boats" please se 2002 - $28,500 CHECKYOUR AD Painting 541-516-8684 also reach an EN- preference, limitation 67282 Imbler Dr. Class 670. Chevy 454, heavy Shevlin Pines • Interior andExterior GAGED AUDIENCE. or duty chassis, new 541-385-5609 disc r imination Discover the Power of based on race, color, Brilliant New Home batteries & tires, cab • Family.Owned Phyllis Nfageau, Newspaper Advertis- religion, sex, handi8 roof A/C, tow hitch Harjey Davidson • Residential & Servin Central Oregon since 1903 Broker ing in six states - AK, cap, familial status, w /brake, 21k m i ., 883 Sportster Commercial 541-948-0447 ID, MT, OR, UT, WA. marital status or namore! 541-280-3251 1998, 20,200 miles, 880 on the first day it runs • 40 years experience TheGarnereroup.com For a free rate bro- tional origin, or an inexc. cond., to make sure it is cor- Will Haul Away Motorhomes • Senior Discounts chure call tention to make any rect. "Spellcheck" and $3,500. 916-288-6011 or such » • 5.year Warranties pre f erence, 541-548-2872. human errors do ocFREE 4 • -'p ey email limitation or discrimicur. If this happens to /tskabout our For Salvage b' . cecelia@cnpa.com nation." Familial sta• 8 sm • ' your ad, please conHOLBMY SPECMX,l (PNDC) Any Location ' tus includes children tact us ASAP so that Harle Fat Bo 2002 Call 541.337.6149 ..:4 Removal under the age of 16 Free Products. corrections and any CCBr193960 Ready to make memories! Freee-book.Salesstaff living with parents or adjustments can be Also Cleanups g,, Top-selling Winnebago does all presenting and legal cus t odians, made to your ad. A& Cleanouts' ~~ 31J, original owners, nondata entry for your pregnant women, and NOTICE 2007 Winnebago 541-385-5809 smokers, garaged, only Good classified adstell MLM business. people securing cus- All real estate adverOutlook Class "C" 18,800 miles, auto-level- The Bulletin Classified the essential facts in an Call 541-726-1945 for tody of children under tised here in is sub31', solar panel, ing jacks, (2) slides, upinteresting Manner.Write product delivery & e-book 16. This newspaper ject to th e F ederal 14k orig. miles.. Excatalytic heater, graded queen bed, bunk from the readers view -not will not knowingly ac- Fair Housing A ct, excellent condition, /~ 0 v . cellent cond. Vance & beds, micro, (3) TVs, the seller's. Convert the cept any advertising which makes it illegal more extras. Domestic Services Hines exhaust, 5 sleeps 10! Lots of storfor real estate which is to advertise any preffacts into benefits. Show Asking$55K. spoke HD rims, wind age, maintained, very '-Lw erence, limitation or in violation of the law. Ph. 541-447-9268 vest, 12" rise handle Home is Where the the reader howthe item will clean!Only$67,995! ExO ur r e aders a r e discrimination based bars, detachable lugtended warranty and/or fi- Keystone Everest 5th Dirt is! 10 yrs exp. in help them in someway. hereby informed that on race, color, reliThis gage rack w/ back nancing avail to qualified housecleaning. Ref. & Wheel, 2004 all dwellings adver- gion, sex, handicap, rest, hwy pegs & many Find It in advertising tip buyers!541-388-7179 rates to fit your needs. Model 323P - 3 slides, tised in this newspa- familial status or na- chrome accents. Must The Bulletin Classifiedsl Hovana 541-726-1800 brought toyou by rear island-kitchen, per are available on tional origin, or intensee to appreciate! 881 541-385-5809 fireplace, 2 TV's, an equal opportunity tion to make any such $10,500. In CRRarea The Bulletin Handyman Travel Trailers Semng Cenl al0 ~n since 19t8 CD/DVRNCR/Tuner basis. To complain of preferences, l i mitacall 530-957-1865 w/surround sound, A/C, 627 tions or discrimination. d iscrimination ca l l custom bed, ceiling fan, HUD t o l l-free at We will not knowingly Vacation Rentals W/D ready, many extras. I DO THAT! 1-600-877-0246. The accept any advertis- HD Fat Bo 1996 & Exchanges New awning & tires. toll f ree t e lephone ing for real estate Excellent condition. number for the hear- which is in violation of $18,900.More pics :) Oceanfront house ing im p aired is this law. All persons Allegro 32' 2007, like 2007 Jayco Jay Flight available. 541-923-6408 beach walk from town, 1-600-927-9275. are hereby informed new, only 12,600 miles. European 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, that all dwellings adChev 6.1L with Allison 60 29 FBS with slide out & 661 fireplace, BBQ. $95 vertised are available Laredo 2006 31' Professional transmission, dual ex- awning - Turn-key ready Handyman/Remodeling per night, 3 night Min. Houses for Rent on an equal opportuless than 50 toFully S/C Completely haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- to use, Residential/Commercial Gift? 208-369-3144 nity basis. The Bulledays used by current Painter Prineville one slide-out. Rebuilt/Customized eling system, 5kw gen, tal owner. Never smoked in, tin Classified Small Jobs to power mirrors w/defrost, Awning. Like new, 2012/2013 Award 630 Repaint Enlire RoomRemodels 2 slide-outs with aw- no indoor pets, excellent 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, Your New HomeAwaits! Winner hardly used. cond., very clean. Lots of Rooms for Rent Garage or a anrxatioe Specialist! 1550 sq ft 2-story, double Showroom Cond. nings, rear c a mera, Must sell $20,000 Move-in Ready, features; many car garage, AC, forced trailer hitch, driver door bonus Home Irispectron Repairs Many Extras or take over payNew Appliances, Oregon License Furn. room in quiet air heat, gas fireplace, w/power window, cruise, have never been used. Quality, Honest Work Low Miles. ments. Call 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq. ft Asking $18,000. C a l l ¹166147 LLC home, no drugs, alcohol refrig, washer/dryer. No exhaust brake, central $15,000 541-410-5649 FSBO - $205K. Dennis 541-317.9788 or smokinq. $450/mo. pets or smkg. $1200 & vac, satellite sys. Asking Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r 541-548-4807 541-279-8783 ccen51573Bonded/Insgred 541-815-2888 1st & last. 541-406-0846 $1200 dep. 858-922-8623 $67,500. 503-781-8812 more info / more photos. •
•
•
•
•
Looking for your next emp/oyee'? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 365-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
•
00
MI:8 W+
•
•
%0~0 ~
•
•
g a~-
The Bulletin
Q l22glg
The Bulletin
-
I
-
"
I®a
MARTIN JAMES
•
e' I SAT - SUN 12PM - 3PM
I
I I
I I
I
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
I ed
Homes starting in the Iow
This brand new Pahlisch Home in SE Bend features 1865 SF, 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, open greatroom and a large loft. Home has 61237 Brock IaneLot 14 laminate f!ooring, quartz Directions: From 3rd, head east counters, a built-in desk onBadgerRoad, turn righionto and a cozy gas fireplace. Brock Lane.
Hosted 6 Listed by:
RHIANNA KUNKLER
$265,000
Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend cf walking trails. Tour a DirectiooriFrom theparkuay, eu/ variety of single level and on Reed/ riarket,southon 15th,then 2 story plans. follonr slgris.
Hosted 6 Listed by: TEAM DELAY
Broker
Principal Broker
541-306-0939
EDIE DELAY
541-420-2cy50
Homes Starting Mid-$200s
Recently finished Pahlisch Home in NE Bend on beautiful Iot w/Boyd Park on one side and mature trees aII around. This home is 1810 SF w/ 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a 20698 NEComet Ct, pocket den with buut-ins Home feat uresquartz counters, Directions:North on Boyd Acres, laminate flooring, large covered right on Sierra, le ft on B/ack Powder,
$200,000s. Brand new homes m Bend with the quahty pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with
deck and aII the quality left on Cometlane lookfor signs. pahlisch Homes is known for.
given io allow for tons of right on Sierra, left on B/ack Powder, natural light and much more. righton Cometlane.Lookforsigns. Came by the model home far Now Selling PhaseTwo more information and plans. Statting in the low
Now selling Phase Two - stop by for more information.
$535,000
Hosted 6 Listed by: RHIAN)VA KUNKLER Broker
54$ $06 09$$ P a lllfschHomes
Q
20781 NE Comet I,ane
undermount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention DirectiossiNorth on Boyd Acres,
Hosted & Listed by: RHIANNA KUNKLER
$2QQ QQQs
Broker
5 41-3Q6-Q93cy Pahlis&Homes,, „„.. . ,
G6 SUNDAY, JANUARY 18, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Time to declutter? Need some extra cash?
11 I
1 1 '»t
II II
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 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.