Serving Central Oregon since1903 75 $
MONDAY February18,2013
c eer or ecia m ians Muddydash SPORTS• 81
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
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Oregon doubles its geothermal info online
Mapping the drain —The Obama administration is plan-
ning a decade-long effort, with hopes to better understand diseases like Alzheimer's.A3
NASCAR —Danica Patrick makes newhistory at Daytona.
• Those living amid the emptyspacesayit's not all bad; some evenprefer it, and building is scheduled to begin on aquarter of Bend's vacant lots by June
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Wal' TV —Two newprograms from sources you would not expect provide a graphic look at the horrors of combat.B7
By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
The Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral Industriesrecently upgraded its online geothermal data with in-depth information about wells, hot springs and other resources across the state. Released last month, the Geothermal Information Layer for Oregon doubles the amount of information previously available, identifying more geothermal sites and details on an interactive Web-based map, said Clark
Niewendorp, the geology department's geothermal resources evaluator. "This is 100 percent increase in the amount of data," Niewendorp said. "All the information behind the scenes is available now. If you touch a dot (on the
ln national news — A county challenges the Voting Rights Act to the Supreme
Court as a relic of a bygone South.A2
map), then you get it."
And a Wed exclusive-
Information displayed with the map shows the locations and temperatures of 1,019 geothermal prospect wells drilled for exploration, 66 wells drilled for the production of geothermal resources and 690 thermal
Scientists on the lookout for
killer objects from space, long mocked as Chicken Littles,
hope to receive more respect and funds following Friday's meteor strike.
benddulletin.com/extras
springs. SeeGeothermal/A7
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
EDITOR'5 CHOICE
In leaked documents, a fractured Vatican
Michael Pennington, 65, bought a home in 2009 in a subdivision on Southeast Lois Way in Bend. He has one neighbor, but the bulk of the subdivision remains empty, which is what Pennington prefers. "I like having space, not having houses around," he says. "I knew it would be empty, and I enjoy that." By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin
It's one of the most obvious signs of the real estate market crash that crushed Central Oregon. Perfectly paved streets, lined with untouched curbs. Mailbox clusters ready to hold the packages and letters of the homeowners. Water, electricity, sewer lines all set up and ready to go.
By Jenny Anderson
Just one problem: There are hardly any houses on the lots.
New York Times News Service
By Jason Horowitz The Washington Post
VATICAN CITYGuests at the going-away party for Carlo Maria Vigano couldn't understand why the archbishop looked so forlorn. Pope Benedict XVI had appointed Vigano ambassador to the United States, a plum post. "We just couldn't figure out, us outsiders and nonItalians, what was going on," said one former ambassador to the Vatican. There was no such confusion within Vatican walls. Benedict had installed Vigano to enact a series of reforms within the Vatican. But some of Rome's highest-ranking cardinals undercut the efforts and hastened Vigano's exile. Vigano's plight and other unflattering machinations would soon become public in an unprecedented leak of the pontiff's personal correspondence. Much of the media — and the Vatican — focused on the source of the shocking security breach. Largely lost were the revelations contained in the letters themselves.
All over Bend, tucked among established neighborhoods and especially on the edges of the urban growth boundary, are undeveloped subdivisions, taken over by vegetation, lots marked by PVC pipes sticking out of the hard
ground. And on many of those roads leading nowhere, there is just one house, or two. Sometimes there's a cluster around a cul-de-sac. Michael Pennington, 65, lives in one of those houses. "I like having space, not having houses around," he said. "I knew it would be
empty, and I enjoy that." It's a common sentiment for people living in otherwise nearly empty subdivisions. And there are plenty of empty lots around Bend, as well as the rest of Central Oregon. Mel Oberst, the community development director for the city of Bend, said the city conducted a search to find out how many vacant buildable lots it had on hand. The answer? Currently, about 2,800. But Oberst said the city is on track to get building under way on 700 lots by June, leaving about 2,100 lots
and owned by a company called Bailey Estates Bend LLC, which is based in Salem. Pennington said the owner likely is in no hurry to sell the lots or build on them. And that's one of the main reasons he bought where he did. Plus, he said, it's convenient to the highway, shopping and restaurants. The real estate agent he used, Pennington said, urged him to buy in one of the more established neighborhoods on the west side. "This serves my purposes," he said. SeeSubdivisions /A4
When the New York City Education Department announced that it was changing part of its admissions exam for its gifted and talented programs last year, in part to combat the influence of test preparation companies, one ofthose companies posted the news with links to guides and practice tests for the new assessment. The day that Pearson, a company that designs assessments, announced that it was changing an exam used by many New York City private schools, another test prep company attempted to decipher the coming changes on its blog. SeeTesting/A3
WOMEN IN COMBAT
Marine test an arduouscourse By James Dao New York Times News Service
The next pope may bring with him an invigorating connection to the Southern Hemisphere, a media magnetism or better leadership skills than the shy and cerebral Benedict. But whoever he may be, the 266th pope will inherit a gerontocracy obsessed with turf and Italian politics, uninterested in basicmanagement practices and hostile to reforms. SeeVatican /A4
platted and available. Between 2000 and 2009, 333 subdivisions were platted in Bend. But that has slowed to a trickle. "In the meantime, we haven't really processed any new subdivisions to createnew lotsof any substance" in some time, Oberst said. Pennington bought his two-bedroom home on Southeast Lois Way in February 2009. He lives next door to the contractor who built the two homes that stand on the street. The subdivision, Bailey Estates, is largely empty
Schoolsask: gifted or prepared?
New York Times News Service file photo
A Marine goes through an obstacle course during the Marine Corps' Infantry Officer Course. Gen. James Amos, the Marine Corps commandant, plans to use the course to study the performance of potential female infantry officers.
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although strength is essential. One of the women — the first to enter the course — was dropped on the first day, with about two dozen men, during a notoriously strenuous endurance test. But the second woman lasted deep into the second week, when a stress fracture in her leg forced her to quit. SeeMarines/A2
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In the fall, two freshly minted female lieutenants joined about 100 men in Quantico, Va., for one of the most grueling experiences that soldiers not in war can experience: the Marine Corps' Infantry Officer Course. At the 86-day course, can-
didates haul heavy packs and even heavier weapons up and down steep hills, execute ambushes and endure bitter cold, hunger and exhaustion. Uncertainty abounds: they do not know their next task, or even how long they will have to perform it. At IOC, calm leadership under duress is more important than physical strength,
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immigratinn plan —A plan by President Barack Obamafor an overhaul of the immigration system would put illegal immigrants on a path to citizenship that could begin after about eightyears and would require them to go to the back of the line behind legal applicants,
according to a draft of the legislation that the White Househas circuBy Adam Liptak New Yorh Times News Service
EVERGREEN, Ala. — Jerome Gray, a 74-year-old black man, has voted in every election since 1974 in this verdant little outpost of some 4,000 people halfway between Mobile and Montgomery. Casting a ballot, he said, is a way to honor the legacy of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, a civil rights landmark born from a bloody confrontation 70 miles north of here, in Selma. The franchise remains fragile in Evergreen, Gray said. Last summer, he was kicked off the voting rolls by a clerk who had improperly culled the list based on utility records. A three-judge federal court in Mobile barred the city from using the new voting list, invoking Section 5 of the Voting Rights Act, w hich r equires many state and local governments, mostly in the South, to o btain permission from t h e Justice Department or from a federal court in Washington before making changes that affect voting. That provision is also at the
heart of one of the marquee cases of the Supreme Court's term, Shelby County v. Holder, No. 12-96, which will be argued on Feb. 27. It was brought by Shelby County, near Birmingham, and it contends that the provision has outlived its purpose of protecting minority voters in an era when a black man has been re-elected to the
presidency. The Voting Rights Act was a triumphof the civilrightsmovement. It was a response, the Supreme Court said in upholding it in 1966, to "an insidious and pervasive evil which had been perpetuated in certain parts of our country through unremitting and ingenious defiance of the Constitution." Congress was entitled, the court went on, "to limit its attention to the geographic areas where immediate action seemed necessary." Lawmakers chose the areas to be covered based on a formula that considered whether they had used devices to discourage voting, like literacy tests, and data from the 1964 election.
The court i n M o bile this month said the case before it, concerning Evergreen, was simple: Because the city had not o b tained p r eclearance from federal authoriti es, it could not revise its voting list using utility records. Nor could it use a municipal redistricting plan enacted by the City Council that had concentrated blacks voters, who are in the majority, into just two of the five districts, limiting black voting power. It is not clear when the municipal e l ection, o r i ginally scheduled for August 2012, will be held. A l awyer fo r E v ergreen, James Anderson,said the ruling was justified. "The way the voter list was recomposed was improper," he said. He added that the redistricting plan "could possibly be adopted by the Justice Department, but we need to tweak it a little bit." In a court filing on Feb. 11, the city announced that it would create a third majority-black district "to have a total black population in the vicinity of 65 percent."
lated within the administration. The White House on Wednesday sent copies of the draft to officials in government agencies that deal with
immigration and border security, said anadministration official who agreed to discuss the details only on the condition of anonymity.
McCready death —Mindy McCready, who hit the top of the country charts before personal problems sidetracked her career, died Sunday. Shewas 37. Anewsrelease from the CleburneCounty Sheriff's Office says that McCready,37,was found deadSunday afternoon with what appears to be a single, self-inflicted wound.
SIIeZ Canal prnteStS —Thousands of demonstrators shut down the administrative buildings of the Suez Canal terminal in the city of Port Said on Sunday, as part of a general strike protesting the death
sentences handeddownthree weeksago to 21 local soccer fans for their roles in a deadly riot last year. The administrative facilities were emptied as the protesters approached, residents said, and a military
guard protected the port from disruption. DefenSe SeCretary nOminatiOn —Republican opponents of former Sen. ChuckHagel's stalled bid to becomedefensesecretary said Sunday that they'll probably allow his Senate confirmation vote
to proceed unless material more damaging to the nominee —and, by extension, the Obamaadministration — surfaces in the coming week. Critics said the decorated Vietnam combat veteran is a "radical" unqualified to lead the U.S. military.
Nigeria kidnapping —Gunmenattacked a campfor a construction company in rural northern Nigeria, killing a guard and kidnapping
seven foreign workers from Britain, Greece, Italy, Lebanonandthe Philippines, authorities said Sunday, in the biggest kidnapping yet in a region under attack by Islamic extremists. The attack Saturday night
happened in Jama'are, atown in Bauchi state. Maker'S Mark tO keep alCOhOI —After backlash from customers, the producer of Maker's Mark bourbon is reversing a decision to cut the amount of alcohol in bottles of its famous whiskey.
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the amount to 42 percent, or 84 proof, because of a supply shortage.
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ISrael trial —Israel's tough-talking former foreign minister, Avigdor Lieberman, pleadednot guilty on Sunday to charges of fraud and
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short court appearance ashis trial opened. CypruS tO haVe runaff VOte —Cyprus heads into a runoff presidential election next weekend, with voters called on to select
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who will lead the country through a severe financial crisis after no candidate won an outright majority in Sunday's vote. Nicos Anas-
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Supporters of President Rafael Correa of Ecuador gather Sunday to celebrate after presidential elections in Quito.
Correa, a fiery-tongued leftist who hasendeared himself to the lower classes by expanding Ecuador's welfare state but drawn wide rebukefor intolerance of dissent, breezed to asecond re-election on Sunday. The U.S.-educated economist won 56.9 percent of the vote against 23.8 percent for his closest challenger, former banker Guillermo Lasso, with 57 percent of the vote counted.
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Correa, 48, called the outcome avictory for his "citizens' revolution" and promised to further reduce poverty, which the United Nations says has dropped nearly five percentage points to 32.4 percent since he first took office in 2007. — The Associated Press
Marines
enlisted infantry Marines. In March, two Naval AcadContinued from A1 emy graduates will become "She was tough," Gen. James the second set of women to Amos, the Marine Corps com- enter the course. Over the mandant, said of the woman, coming years, Amos is countwho is now at flight school. ing on dozens more female "She wasn't going to quit." volunteers to provide him with Amos hopes the experienc- enough information to decide es of those women, and others whether women can make it to come, will provide crucial in the infantry. The outcome, clues about the future of wom- he says, is far from certain. "I think there is absolutely en in the infantry, a possibility allowed by the recent lifting of n o reason to think ou r f e the 1994 ban on women in di- males can't be tankers, or be rect combat units. amtrackers, or b e a r t i llery For the Marine Corps, prob- Marines," he said, referring ably more than any other mili- to tracked amphibious astary service,gender integra- sault vehicles. "The infantry is tion is a difficult affair. Not different." only is the corps the most male Indeed, Amos said, if too of the services, with women few women are able, or willmaking up only about 7 pering, to join the infantry, he cent of its ranks, but it is also a or his successor may ask the bastion of the infantry. Nearly defensesecretary to keep the I in 5 Marines are "grunts," infantry closed to women. The proud of their iconic history deadline for that request is of bloody ground battles, from January 2016. "You could reach the point Belleau Wood to Iwo Jima to Chosin Reservoir to Fallujah. where you say, 'It's not worth Not surprisingly, the idea of it,'" Amos said. "The numbers women in the infantry draws are so infinitesimally small, it's not worth it." sharp questions from many active-duty Marines and vetA dvocates for w omen i n erans, who express concerns the military w o uld a l most that standards will be diluted certainly protest any effort for women. to keep the Marines infantry male-only. Those advocates In an interview, Amos acknowledged hearing t h o se acknowledge the harshness of worries, and insisted that the infantry life: carrying heavy corps would not lower its stan- loads on foot for long distancdards. To guarantee that, he es and enduring spartan enplans touse the course, which vironments are requisite. But M arines consider th e g o ld they say that properly trained standard of infantry training, women will make it through to study the performance of IOC and, eventually, whatever potential female infantry ofprogram thecorps creates for ficers, and then use that data screening and training enlistto develop requirements for ed infantrywomen.
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART It's Monday, Feb. 18, the 49th day of 2013. There are 316 days left in the year.
HAPPENINGS HOliday —It's Presidents Day, andmanygovernmentoffices are closed.AS
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RESEARCH
Project seeks to build
map of humanbrain
That's Right...No Co-Pay! No Exam Fee! No Adjustment Fee!
By John Markoff New Yorh Times News Service
Pakistan —Shiite leaders call for a strike in Karachi following a bomb attack over
the weekend targeting a Shiite ethnic minority.
WikiLeaks —Founder Julian Assangespeaks to a news website about his bid to
become anAustralian senator.
HISTORY Highlight:In 1913, Mexican President Francisco Madero
and Vice President Jose Maria Pino Suarezwerearrested during a military coup (both resigned their positions the next day, and both were shot to death on Feb. 22). In1735, the first opera pre-
sented in America, "Flora, or Hob in the Well," was
performed in present-day Charleston, S.C. In1861, Jefferson Davis was
sworn in as provisional president of the Confederate States
of America in Montgomery, Ala. In1885, Mark Twain's "Adventures of Huckleberry Finn" was published in the U.S. for the first time.
In1930,photographic evidence of Pluto (now designated a "dwarf planet") was discovered by ClydeTombaugh at Lowell Observatory in Flagstaff, Ariz. In1943, Madame Chiang Kaishek, the wife of the Chinese
leader, addressed members
of the Senate and then the House, becoming the first Chinese national to address both houses of the U.S. Con-
gress. In 1953, "Bwana Devil," the movie that heralded the 3-D fad of the1950s, had its New
York opening. In1960, the 8th Winter
Olympic Gameswere formally opened in SquawValley, Calif., by Vice President Richard Nixon. In1970, the "Chicago Seven" defendants were found not
The Obama administration is planning a decade-long scientific effort to examine the workings of the human brain and build a comprehensive map of its activity, seeking to do for the brain what the Human Genome Project did for genetics. The project, which the administration has been looking to unveil as early as March, will include federal agencies, private foundations and teams of neuroscientists and nanoscientists in a concertedeff ort to advance the knowledge of the brain's billions of neurons and gain greater insights into perception, actions and, ultimately, consciousness. Scientists with the highest hopes for the project also see it as a way to develop the technology essential to understanding diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's, as well as to find new therapies for a variety of mentalillnesses. Moreover, the project holds the potential of p aving t he way for advances in artificial intelligence. The project, which could ultimately cost billions of dollars, is expected to be part of the president's budget proposal next month. And, four scientists and representati ves of research institutions said they had participated in planning for what is being called the Brain Activity
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(those convictions were later reversed). In1977, the space shuttle Enterprise, sitting atop a Boeing 747, went on its debut "flight" above the Mojave Desert. In1983,13 people were shot
to death at a gambling club in Seattle's Chinatown in what
became known astheWah Mee Massacre. (Two men were convicted of the killings
and are serving life sentences; a third was found guilty of robbery and assault.) In1988, Anthony Kennedy
was sworn in as anassociate justice of the U.S.Supreme Court.
In2001, auto racing star Dale Earnhardt Sr. died in a crash at the Daytona 500; he was 49.
Ten years age: Declaring that America's security should not be dictated by protest-
ers, President GeorgeW. Bush said he wouldnot be swayed from compelling Iraqi President Saddam Hussein to
disarm. Five yearsago:The Pakistan People's Party of assassinated ex-prime minister Benazir Bhutto won the most seats in
parliamentary elections. One year age:A funeral service was held for pop star Whitney Houston at New Hope
Baptist Church in Newark, N.J., a week after her death at
age 48.
BIRTHDAYS Author Toni Morrison is 82.
Singer YokoOno is80. Actress Cybill Shepherd is 63. Actor John Travolta is 59. Game show host Vanna White is 56. Rapper Dr. Dre is 48. Actress Molly Ringwald is 45. Actor
Tyrone Burton is 34. Actress Maiara Walsh is 25. — From wire reports
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spoken language, socioeconomic background and culture — that we changed the assessment," Adina Lopatin, a deputy chief academic officer in the Education Department, said. And yet test prep companies leapt to action, printing new books tailored to the new test and organizing classes. Natalie Viderman, 4, spent an hour and a half each week for six months at Bright Kids NYC, a t u t oring c ompany, working on skills like spatial visualization and serial reasoning, which are part of the Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test, or NNAT2, the new gifted and talentedtest.She and her mother, Victoria Preys, also worked every night on general learning, test prep and workbooks, some provided by Bright Kids. "It is my philosophy that if you can get more help, why not?" Preys said. She prepared her son the same way and he benefited, she said, scoring in the 98th percentile, qualifying him for a seat. She interpreted the Education Department's decision to change the test and "raisethe standards," she said, as a message that it expected parents to do more. "We are increasing the standards, so you have to work with your kids m ore, to prep more," she said. "Every t im e t h ese t ests c hange, there's a lot o f d e mand," Bige Doruk, founder of Bright Kids, said. She said she did not accept the argument that admissions tests had been invalidated by test prep. "It is not a validity issue, it's a competitive issue," she said. "Parents will always do what they can for their children." And not all children who take preparationcourses do well, she said. The test requires that 4-year-olds sit with a stranger for nearly an hour — skills that extend beyond the scope of IQ or school readiness.
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year."
Continued from A1 Assessing students has always been a fraught process, especially 4-year-olds, a mercurial and unpredictable lot by nature, who are vying for increasingly precious seats in kindergarten gifted programs. In New York, it has now become an endlesscontest in which administrators seeking authentic measures of intelligence are barely able to keep ahead of companies whose aim is to bring out the genius in evThe city's leading private schools are even considering doing away with the test they have used for decades, popularly known as the ERB, after the Educational Records Bureau, the organization that administers the exam, which is written by Pearson. "It's something the schools know has been corrupted," said Samuel Meisels, an early-childhood education expert who gave a presentation in the fall to private school officials, encouraging them to abandon the test. Excessive test preparation, he said, "invalidates inferences that can be drawn" about children's "learning potential and intellect and achievement." Last year, the Education Department said it would change one of the tests used for admission to public school gifted kindergarten and firstgrade classesin order to focus more on cognitive ability and less on school readiness, which favors children who have more access to preschool and tutoring. Scores had been soaring. For the 2012-13 school year, nearly 5,000 children qualified for gifted and talented kindergarten seats in New York City public schools. That was more than double the number five years ago. "We were concerned enough about our definition of giftedness being affected by
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materials to make batteries 10 times more powerful. Now is notthetimeto gutthesejob-creatinginvestments in science and innovation." Story Landis, the director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke, said that w hen sh e h eard Obama's speech, she thought he was referring to an existing National Institutes of Health project to map the static human brain. "But he wasn't," she said. "He was referring to a new project to map the active human brain that the NIH hopes to fund next
test prep — as we were prior school experience, primary
ery young child.
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damaged organs, devising new
riots at the 1968 Democratic the Anti-Riot Act of 1968
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developingdrugs to regenerate
Testing
financing.
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In his State of the Union address, President Barack Obama cited brain research as an example of how the government should "invest in the best ideas." "Every dollar we i nvested to map thehuman genome returned $140 to our economy — every dollar," he said. "Today our scientists are mapping the human brain to unlock the answers to Alzheimer's. They're
The details are not final, and it is not clear how much federal money would be proposed or approved for the project in a time of fiscal constraint or how far the research would be able to get without significant federal
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Thinkstock
Indeed, after th e s peech, Francis Collins, the director of the National Institutes of Health, may have inadvertently confirmed the plan when he wrote in a Twitter message: "Obama mentions the ¹NIH Brain Activity Map in¹SOTU." A spokesman for the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy declined to comment about the project. The initiative, if s u ccessful, could provide a lift for the economy. "The Human Genome Project was on the order of about $300 million a year for a decade," said George Church, a Harvard University molecular biologist who helped create that project and said he was helping to plan the Brain Activity Map project.
Map project.
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Some scientists see e planned government project as a way to help understand diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's.
guilty of conspiring to incite national convention; five were convicted of violating
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013
Vatican
"wasn't a co m m unications wrote, "would provoke much crisis. It was a management disorientation an d d i s courContinued from A1 crlsls. agement in those who have VatiLeaks, as the scandal believed it w a s p ossible to came to be known, dragged 'Situations of corruption' clean up so many situations the fusty institution into the The leak came from within of corruption and abuse of wild WikiLeaks era. It exposed the pope's inner sanctum. On power that have been rooted the church bureaucracy's en- most mornings, the p ope's in the management of so many trenched opposition to Bene- butler, Paolo Gabriele, left departments." dict's fledgling effort to carve his apartment, just inside the In another, he d escribed out a legacy as a reformer Vatican walls, before 7 a.m. He more "situations of c orrupagainst the backdrop of a glob- walked past the plumed Swiss tion" in which the same firms al child sex abuse scandal and Guards and into the Apostolic habitually won contracts at althe continued dwindling of his Palace, where he worked in the most "double the cost" charged flock. third-floor papal apartments. outside the Vatican. Vigano It showed how Benedict, a The official duties for the cited savings from cutting the weak manager who may most married father of t h ree inamount spent on the annual be remembered for the way cluded laying out Benedict's Nativity scene in St. Peter's in which he left office, was no whitevestments and red shoes, Square from 550,000 euros in match for a culturethat rejected serving his decaf coffee and 2009 to 300,000 euros in 2010. even a modicum of transpar- riding with the pontiff in the Vigano's efforts failed, and ency and preferred a damage- popemobile. Unofficial chores he was soon dispatched to control campaign that diverted included absconding with cop- Washington. Bertone and Viattention from the institution's ies ofthe pope's personal cor- gano declined to comment. fundamental problems. Inter- respondence, including letters If the intention of the leaks views in Rome with dozens of from Vigano, whose grievanc- was to force the Bertone's oustchurch officials, Vatican insid- es Gabriele found especially er, the effort failed. ers and foreign government compelling. While Benedict was the pubofficials close to the church, The butler read letters flesh- lic face of the universal church, many of whom spoke on the ing out how Vigano, an ambi- Bertone, for now, remains the condition of anonymity for fear tious enforcer of Benedict' s private power broker who runs of retribution, mapped out that good government reforms, had the Vatican on a daily basis. In hermetic universe. earned powerful enemies. In 2006, Benedictappointed Ber"We can reveal the face of early 2011, a series of hostile tone, his longtime doctrinal the church and how this face is, anonymous articles attacking sidekick, to secretary of state at times, disfigured," Benedict Vigano began appearing in the — the second-most-powerful said in his final homily on Ash Italian media. Under duress, position in the Vatican. Wednesday. "I am thinking in Vigano appealed to the pope's An amiable soccer aficioparticular of the sins against powerful second in command, nado who shares the pope's the unity of the church, of the Secretary of State Tarcisio Ber- passionfor cats,Bertone, 78, divisions in the body of the tone. Bertone was not sympa- had little international experichurch." He called for his min- thetic and instead echoed the ence. This prompted concern istry to overcome "individual- articles' complaints about his among the church's elite diploism" and "rivalry," saying they rough management style and matic corps, which interpreted were only for those "who have removed Vigano from his post. his appointment as a threat to distanced themselves from the This set in motion a blizzard the traditional Vatican career faith." of letters that passed through track. A radical transformation of the office G abriele shared Bertone bore out their fears, the culture is unlikely. "We're with the pope's personal sec- essentially doing away with talking about people who have retary. In one missive, Vigano papal audiences for returning given their life to this institu- wrote to Bertone accusing him ambassadors. He ensured that tion, but at the same time the of getting in the way of the many of the newly elevated institution has become their pope'sreform mission;he also cardinals were Italian loyalists, life," said one senior Vatican charged Bertone with break- and he adopted a wide-ranging official. "Unlike parish priests, ing his promise to elevate him travel schedule that many conwho have the personal rewards to cardinal. Vigano sent a copy sidered an overreach. that come with everyday con- of this letter to the pope. In a tact, their lot is not as human. separate letter to the pontiff, Read the full, 4,000-word It's bureaucratic, but it becomes Vigano dropped the Vatican's version of this story online at "C word": corruption. all-consuming." denddulletin.com/extras "My transfer right now," he The entire debacle, he said,
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Continued from A1
Cleaning up the neighborhood Penningtonisa retired farmer, so he doesn't mind having a little space around him. But there was a n i n i tial downside to moving into what was an essentially abandoned property. For three months, Pennington walked the lots and the areas surrounding his
edge of the empty subdivision, there's still some sense of community. "It's not a bad thing," White sald.
Signs of life
Andy High, vice president of government affairs for the Central Oregon Builders Association, said it was discouraging to drive around town over the past five years and see empty subdivisions languishing. But, he said, things are looking up. "Most of those subdivisions house, cleaning up garbage, including, he said, used needles have been purchased; they and condoms. have plans to be starting here For the first few months he or they may have already startlived there, people would drive ed building," he said. "I think into the empty area looking for they'll start seeing neighbors a little privacy. move in soon." "I would walk up to the car High said that while demand and knock on the window and for high-end homes remains say, 'I'm with neighborhood low, homes at the $350,000 watch.' I'm not, of course," Pen- price point are starting to get nington said. "They would re- built again. "I don't think anyone quite ally get angry." But afterhe made his pres- expected it would just be themence known inthe empty neigh- selves in a s u bdivision for borhood, people stopped dump- awhile," High said. "But most ing garbage and loitering. Now, of those subdivisions have been he said, people walk their dogs bought up." through the undeveloped lots, Cleaning up the empty lots and mothers bring their kids and making sure they're up to down the abandoned streets. city code may delay construc"Itchanged by me being tion. More likely, High said, present," he said. "It turned into it's financing that will keep a nice place." construction f r o m s t a r ting On the opposite end of town, full bore. And High believes in a small neighborhood off if and when new subdivisions O.B. Riley Road, the Westerly are platted in the city, developsubdivision sits half-built. Five ers will likely handle things homes are tucked along a street differently. "I believe a lot of developers corner, and a few others are scattered around the rest of the have changed their mentality in neighborhood. the sense that we won't see 100 At the edge of the cluster, lots (with vegetation) torn down 38-year-old Garth White lives and opened up," High said. "I with his wife and two children. think it will be slower; we won't The family built the home on get quite to the speed we were Brumby Lane and moved in seeing in 2004 and 2005." about four years ago. In the Mirada subdivision off "It was just at the cusp (be- Eagle Road in northeast Bend, tween the peak and the re- two houses sit side by side, with cession)," he said. "We knew severalothers on opposite ends (construction) was going to be of the planned neighborhood. really slow." The subdivision's 97 empty lots For that, White said, he and were purchased by Long Term his family are grateful. Bend Investors, a c ompany "We have so much space," owned by a group from Southhe said, even though they're in ern California, most notably the city and close to the conve- U.S. Rep. Gary Miller, R-Calif. niences of city life. The company has bought up White said he's not worried nearly 400 lots in seven Bend about the construction that will subdivisions, spending more eventually limit that space, or than $6 million. knowing that houses will evenColin Gustafson, 32, lives tually be built all around him. with his wife and daughter in "It's just our life in Bend," one of the five homes in the MiWhite said. "Other people live rada subdivision. There is one in super-packed suburbs. Here house directly next door, and I can park my truck on the another across the street. 0thstreet. We have liberties that erwise, they're surrounded by we wouldn't have if this place dozens of undeveloped lots. was packed." The family moved into what And White noted that be- Gustafson believes was the cause his family lives in the model home two years ago. The small cluster of homes at the home was in short sale when
the family bought it. "It was bare bones. I've tried to do as much as I can with it," he said. Gustafson owns a painting company, so he knew how little construction was happening in the area when he bought the house. He expects the lots surrounding his house to stay empty for a while.
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A few more houses inthe subdivision would b e n i c e, though. Gustafson noted that the Bend Park 8 Recreation District purchased a 4 -acre parcel within the subdivision. That's a project he wouldn't mind seeing completed. "It'd help property values," he said. But for the family, it's a decent starter home, a long-term investment until they can move somewhere outside town with space around them. Gustafson said the area, despite being empty, is safe. "We get stuff dumped out on the periphery,and there is some horsing around, probably kids from Mountain View," he said. "But there's no crime. The transients don't even take my beer bottles." K itty-corner f r o m Gu s tafson'shouse is Debi Swartz's home, where she has lived since 2008. Swartz, 59, and her l ate husband were checking out the Tour of Homes when they came acrossthethree-bedroom house in Mirada. "They were trying to dump the houses and so it had a really low price," she said. "They made us an offer we couldn't refuse." Swartz said that because they bought right as the recession picked up, she knew it was unlikely they'd have many neighbors, or any new construction getting under way. She said she had mixed feelings about the lack of neighbors. "Before we moved in,I had plenty of nightmares," she said, laughing. She called her fears "girl stuff." What if someone broke in? There were few neighbors to hear hercriesforhelp. But her fears haven't borne out. "It's been very quiet," she said. "We haven't had a bit of trouble." She knows that eventually developers will build out the subdivision. "It probably will be annoying, the noise factor and the dust factor," she said. "But I don't give that much thought."
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AS
LOCAL 4 T A TE GAO REPORT
BRIEFING
ima ec an e'sris
Don't put awayyour wInter coat just yet A cold front is moving into
Central Oregon today, wiping away
financial risks for the federal govern- perstorm Sandy. "The federal government, which owns extensive infrastruc- ment is not well organized to address WASHINGTON — W i t h s t orms, ture,insures property through federal the fiscal exposure presented by climate floods and droughts getting worse and flood and crop insurance programs, change, partlybecause of the inherently worse, climate change now poses a provides technical assistance to state complicated, crosscutting nature of the significant financial risk to the federal and local governments, and provides issue," the GAO report states. government, the Government Account- emergency aidin response to natural In recentweeks, President Barack ability Office announced last week. disasters," the report states. Obama has taken an aggressive stance Since 1990, the GAO has published a As major weather events have be- on climate change, mentioning it promlist of government operations it consid- come more frequent,presidents have inently in both his inaugural address ers high risk every two years, gener- signed more disaster declarations. Be- and State of the Union speech. "It's true that no single event makes ally coinciding with the start of a new tween 2004 and 2011, presidents signed term of Congress. The latest version, 539 disasterdeclarations, compared a trend. But the fact is, the 12 hottest published last week, included climate with 429 over the previous eight years, years on record have allcome in the change as a major risk for the first time. an increase of 26 percent. last 15," Obama told the joint session of As once-rareweather-related disasBetween 2004 and 2011, the Federal Congress. "We can choose tobelieve ters become more common and intense, Emergency Management Agency com- that Superstorm Sandy and the most the impact and costliness will increase, mitted more than $80 billion in recovery severe drought in decades and the according to the newly released report. funding, and that doesn't include $60 worst wildfires some states have ever "These impacts pose significant billion allocated for aid following Su- seen were all just a freak coincidence.
By AndrewClevenger The Bulletin
recent springlike weather and bringing the possibility of snow
O r we can choose to believe in the overwhelming judgment of science and act before it's too late." Obama called on Congress to pass a "bipartisan, market-based solution" like the series of Climate Stewardship Acts proposed by Sens. John McCain, R-Ariz.,and Joe Lieberman, I-Conn., during the last decade that would have capped carbon greenhouse gas emissions. Like those proposals, cap and trade legislation in 2009 failed to make it to the president's desk. If Congress fails to act, Obama threatened to take executive actions "to reduce pollution, prepare our communities for the consequences of climate change and speed the transition to m ore sustainable sources ofenergy." See Climate /A7
in Bend. Last week was marked by
sunny days andhighs around 50 degrees. "It is going to be a week of the
opposite," said RobBrooks, a forecaster for the National Weather Service in Pendleton. As the cold front moves in from the southwest, it is expected to bring moisture from the Pacific Ocean, he said. That moisture
could fall in Bend asrain or snow. There is a 30percent chance of rain in town today, increasing to a 60 percent tonight when the rain could give way to snow,according to the weather service. Snow is
possible Tuesday in Bend. In all, an inch or two of snow could accumulate in Bend late
todayandTuesday,alongwith 2 to 4 inches in La Pine, Brooks said. The snow level will be around 3,500 feet. Bend is at 3,623 feet. Highs this week should be
around 40 degreesand lows Runners splash through a huge puddle at the start of the Snow Warriors Dash on Sunday during WinterFest in Bend's Old Mill District. The 5K race featured obstacles including fire, snow and barbed wire.
4
W,:Ito 4
.
lowed for relatively warm days over the weekend, they also brought chilly nights with lows
dipping into the teens. — Bulletin staff report
CLOSURES
Jee Kline/The Bulletin
In observance ofPresidents Day, most city, county, state andfederal
•
"Things are just even
U
'e
should be in the 20s, Brooks said. While mostly clear skies al-
offices will be closed. Banks will be closed. Post offices will be closed, and mail will not be picked up or deliv-
more fun when you are dressed upin a costume. We give out style points."
ered. All Central Oregon schools will
be closed. Libraries in Deschutes,Jefferson and Crookcounties will beclosed.
•
i'i! .
— Victoria Odinet, student government activities
nt (
coordinator at race co-sponsor
Central Oregon liquor stores will
OSU-Cascades t
have normal hours.
n
THE
e
t
LIQr CALI MJARKETf
IV
AT By Dylan J. Darling
See video coverage on The Bulletin's
The Butletin
ore than 200 runners tackled a footrace around the Old Mill District on Sunday that was much more than just a 5K. The Snow Warriors Dash: Fire and Ice Edition featured a dozen obstacles. Runners had to crawl under barbed wire,leap over fire and scramble up a
snowy slope. "What we are really trying to do is let the participants have a great time while they are getting some exercise, naturally," said Victoria Odinet, student government activities coordinator at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus and a volunteer at the event. OSU-Cascades and The North Face werethe main sponsors for the race held by Bend-based Lay It Out Events. The Snow Warriors race was in its second year and had about twice as many obstacles as last year, Odinet said. The race was part of the last day
website: O denddnlletin.com/snowwarriors
of WinterFest. While the obstacles offered a challenge, the race was anything but serious for many of the runners, some of whom competed in costume. "Things are just even more fun when you are dressed up in a costume," Odinet said. "We give out style points." Costumes seen on the course included a boatload of Vikings (the event's logo featured a Viking helmet, perhaps the inspiration), Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles and a whoopee cushion. For some runners, the outfits added to the difficulty of the race. Decked out as Papa Smurf, Greg Shortreed, 40, of Portland, said he had costume complications.. "I inhaled about half my beard," he said. "It's in my lungs right now." Along with a fake white beard, his
costume included a fuzzy red hat and shiny red tights — and a thick coating of blue face paint. He ran the race with Mindy Weimer, 35, also of Portland, who dressedas Smurfette. Sean Hansen, 24, of Bend, said it was hard to keep her mock American Indian headdress on as she squeezed through an inner tube obstacle and her cape nearly caught on barbed wire as she tried to shimmy underneath. "I had to stay real low," she said. Hansen and her friend Kourtney Parks, 23, of Bend, were dressed as a pair of "purple randoms," she said. Hansen's costume centered around a faded purple Minnesota Vikings jersey. She was among the winners in the best-dressed category. Shortreed and Weimer,the Smurfs, earned best costume duo honors. Race organizers also passed out prizebags for the most dirt-covered, most ferocious and best half-dressed, along with other categories. SeeRace/A7
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In mid- January, Emma Clifford left the chilly Central Oregon winter behind and took a 10-day trip to the Bahamas. But she wasn't there to enjoy the sunshine, palm trees, surf and sand like most vacationers onthe island. Instead, Clifford was there to fight: battling ticks, fleas,mange, parvovirus and the overpopulation of dogs on the islands. "When a dogwould come in, we would try and do as much as we could because it was a once-in-a-lifetime trip to the vet for them," Clifford said. "We'd treat them, trim their nails, cut off the mats from their furanything we could do to help." Clifford, the executive director of local animal spay and neutergroup Animal Balance, recently returned from one of
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planning on Clifford's part. "Like a lot of islands around the world, many dogs live in the street there and the mortality rate is quite high," Clifford said. "Most of them won't ever see a veterinarian in their lifetime." She said stray dogs, known locally as "potcakes," are a huge problem in the Bahamas. See Dogs/A7
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profit Animal Balance.
the largest dog sterilization events to ever take place in New Providence, the most populous island in the Bahamas. Over 150 people from around the globe participated in Animal Balance's "Operation Potcake" event, which sterilized and vaccinated 2,315 street dogs. The 10-day event, which began Jan. 11, was the result of IN years of
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A7
NEWS OF RECORD 13CV0210 —JPMorgan ChaseBank N.A. successor in interest by purchase from the Fedreal Deposit Insurance 13CV0208 — JPMorganChaseBank Corporation as receiver of Washington N.A. successor in interest by purchase Mutual Bank fkaWashington Mutual from the Federal Deposit Insurance Bank F.A. v.Mary W.Seiersen Corporation as receiver of Washington andOspreyPointe CondoOwners Mutual Bankv.PaulJ.Canevaro, Association, complaint, $675,159.15 PennyM. CaneveroandW ashington 13CV0211 —Wells Fargo Bank N.A. Federal successor in interest of South as trustee for WAMUmortgage passValley Bank andTrust, complaint, through certificates series 2006-PR1 $122,332.2 I Trust v. Jonathan R.Magee,Kristen 13CV0209 —Adriana Hernandez M. Anderson aka Kristen M. Magee v. Robert Kennedy III, complaint, and JPMorganChaseBank N.A., $279,258.07 complaint, $157,273.62 complaint, $150,082.44
CIVIL SUITS
Filed Feb. 12
Filed Feb. 11 13CV0200 — Bank ofAmerica N.A. v. Janet L. Bowen, Robert A. Bowen and Discover Bank, complaint, $149,867.59 13CV0201 — TheBank of NewYork Mellon fka TheBank of NewYork as trustee for the certificate holders of the Cwalt lnc. alternative loan trust 2006-0C5 mortgage pass-through certificates series 2006-0C5 v. Brenda L. LynchandTony D. Lynch,
Central Oregongeothermal resources The Oregon Department of Geology and Mineral lndustries has released new information showing geothermal wells and hot springs. For a look at geothermal resources statewide, visit www.oregongeology.com/gtilo.
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Email events at least 10days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
MONDAY NO EVENTSLISTED
TUESDAY "PUBLISHINGYOUR WORK ON THEINTERNET": Bend Genealogical Society presents a program by George Larson; free; 10 a.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-317-9553 or www. orgenweb.org/deschutes/bendgs. THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Will in the World" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; East Bend Public Library, 62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3764 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. SCIENCEPUB: Learn about new research at Oregon State Universi ty-CascadesCampus, titled "Alternative Transportation Fuels: What About Natural Gas?"; registration requested; free; 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com.
WEDNESDAY LUNCH ANDLECTURE: Learn about northern spotted owls in Oregon; bring a sack lunch; included in the price of
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Geothermal Continued from A1 It also includes other details such as well ownership, the depth of the wells, materials found, how they were drilled and when, and who drilled them. The Oregon information will be combined with data from about 45 other states in the National GeothermalData System, hosted by the U.S. Department of Energy. The project, funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, attempts to reduce the cost and risk of exploratory drilling, according to the Energy Department. Along with other forms of renewable energy, geothermal power generation continues to grow in the U.S. and worldwide, according to in dustry and government officials. Oregon's first utility-scale geothermal power plant began generating commercial electricity in September. Backed by a nearly $100 million federal loan guarantee, U.S. Geothermal's Neal Hot Springs plant west of Vale produces
Dogs Continued from A5 Because the dogs are not fixed, they continually repopulate. Many of them suffer from parvovirus, mange, parasites and other diseases dueto poor nutrition and the warm tropical climate. Clifford visited the island three times leading up to the event and, with the help of locals, was able to determine the areas with the highest density of stray dogs. She used that information to set up five sterilization clinics for the event. "It was like organizing the Olympics of spay and neuter," Clifford said. "It was such a huge campaign." Volunteers in the program were assignedto different tasks depending on their skills. Megan Wellinghoff, the executive director of Bend Spay and Neuter, helped dogs who had been fixedrecover from the surgery. "To see all these people come from around the world to help
Climate
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thermal Technologies Office. While the research hopesto increase geothermal energy, To view Oregongeothermal Oregon's improved data should data resources onan make it easier for companiesto interactive map, visit the analyze the state's geothermal Departmentof Geologyand potential, Niewendorp said. Mineral lndustries at www. It should help them zero in on oregongeology.com/gtilo. sites with the highest potential for generating power. Despite the efforts, geoenough electricity to p ower thermal provides less than 1 more than 22,000 homes. percent of Oregon's total elecThe f ederal g o vernment tricity, according to the state also helps fund research to Department of Energy. Wind find new ways to access geo- generates about 4 percent, and thermal energy. A project that hydropower, the largest conresearchers have deemed one tributor, about 39 percent. of the most promising in the The portion produced by renation is under way about five newable energy will continue miles from La Pine. to increase, however. Oregon's Just west of Paulina Lake, renewableenergy portfolio reAltaRock Energy has been quires the state's largest utiliworking to prove that a geo- ties to generate 25 percent of thermal reservoircan be cre- their electricity from renewated underground. The U.S. ables by 2025. "Geothermal power could Energy Department will pay about half the $42 million cost become an important part of of AltaRock's enhanced geo- the state's renewable mix as a thermal systems demonstra- firm, dependable supply of election project. The government's tric power," according to the geportion represents the largest ology department's website. c ost-sharing project for t h e — Reporter: 541-617-7818, Energy Department's GeorreesC<bendbulletin.com
On theWed
these dogs was just amazing," Wellinghoff said. "I think it made a huge impact there." The days were g r ueling. Though volunteers received free boarding at local resorts, they didn't have much time to enjoy it. They started their days around 5:30 a.m., and didn't stop collecting, spaying or neutering, vaccinating and caring for dogs until past 5 p.m. Bend veterinarian Dr.Byron Maas was one of a handful of vets on the trip who spent the days performing surgeries, fixing 50 to 70 dogs a day. "Any animal that we saw went home in better shape than when they had come in," Maas said. After the dogs were fixed a nd vaccinated, they w e re given food, water and a night's sleep in a makeshift"dog hotel." Though many ofthem would end upback on the streets,they had a better chance of survival after being treated. Maas has been participating in similar volunteer trips in the
neededto reduce the federal fiscal exposure to climate change, Continued from A5 maximize investments, achieve But to add r e ss c l i mate efficiencies and better position change'srisks,the federalgov- the government forsuccess," ernment must develop a stra- according to the report. tegic approach that applies to And even then, the plan has every agency and level of gov- to incorporate state and local efernment,according to the GAO forts as well. "The challenge is report. to develop a cohesive approach "While individual agency at the federal level that also inactions are necessary, a cen- forms action at the state and lotralized strategy driven by a cal levels," the report states. government-wide plan is also To make the high-risk list,
admission; $12adults, $10ages 65 and older, $7 ages 5-12, free ages 4 and younger; noon-1 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754 or www.highdesertmuseum.org. CHEW ON THIS: FOOD FACTS AND CONSIDERATIONS: Apresentation by health and human performance professor Owen Murphy covering various aspects of food production and consumption; free; 4-5 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 N.W. College Way,Bend; 541-383-7786 or http://www.cocc.edu/. ARUN GANDHIPRESENTATION: ThegrandsonofMohandas Gandhi presents "Nonviolence and Social Justice: Lessons I Learned from my Grandfather"; followed by a private reception that is sold out; free; 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7257 or www. cocc.edu. "LEGALLY BLONDE:THE MUSICAL": The Redmond High School drama department presents the musical about sorority girl Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law School to win back her ex-boyfriend; $10-$15; 7 p.m.; Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541923-4800 or www.redmond.k12. or.us/rhs/site/default.asp. DEAD WINTERCARPENTERS: The California-based roots-rock band performs; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W.
Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins.com. OTT 5 THEALL-SEEING I: The dubstep act performs, with KiloWatts and G.A.M.M.A; $10 plus fees in advance, $13 at the door; 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. slipmatscience.com.
THURSDAY THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "The Swerve" by Stephen Greenblatt; free; noon; La Pine Public Library,16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. KNOW CLUE: CENTRAL OREGON CSI: Learn how real-life crime scene investigation is done with Bend Police Officer Canyon Davis; free; 3 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. JOHN FAWCETTAND AARONPETIT RECITAL: Violinist John Fawcett and pianist Aaron Petit perform classical works; free; 5:30 p.m.; Broken Top Club, 61999 Broken TopDrive, Bend; 541-647-6875.
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Race Continued from A5 Many of the runners were just happy to finish, such as friends Hailey Roberts and Briauna Laman, both 13 and from Las Vegas. "This was their first 5K," said Grace Laman, 35,of Astoria, B r iauna's aunt. The trio raced in matching aprons, and L a man s aid they w e r e "angry housewives." A veteran of the Spartan Race and Tough Mudder events — races with longer distances and more demanding obstacles — Allen Heinly, 39, of Bend, said the Snow Warriors event wasn't nearly as intense as those races. But it was still a challenge to top a wooden wall after trompingthrough mud, puddles and sand. "It was just hard to get up and over once you were tired and cold," said Heinly, who ran the race in a sombrero. — Reporter:541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbufletin.com
EVERGREEN
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— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com
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Cook Islands and the Galapagos since 1995, but says this latest was the largest in which he's ever participated. Maas saidthe Bahamian government even took notice of the impact the effort had, and the prime minister is considering making it an annual event. Clifford, who has been organizing trips like this since 2002, said one of the most important aspects of the event was educating locals and representatives from local humane societies about dog care. She said that shortly after the event ended, she received an email from a Bahama Humane Societyvolunteer about the significant impact Operation Potcake had. "She wrote 'I promise you, we'll find dog number 2,316, and sterilize him,"' Clifford said. "That's when I realized that they got it. They understand that it's something that needs to continue."
the GAO looks for problems that are inherent, as when a program is susceptible to waste or fraud, or systematic, as when policies and procedures are ineffective and create weaknesses. The agency also considers whether theproblem poses a potential threat to public health, service delivery, national security, economic growth or individuals' rights.
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE, TV (0 WEATHER > Scoreboard, B2 College basketball, B2 Golf, B3 NHL, B3
Community Sports, B5
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013
A rundown of games and events to watch for locally, regionally and beyond from the world of sports:
Tuesday
Thursday
Friday
Friday-Saturday Sunday
NBA, Portland Trail Blazers
College basketball,
High schoolCivil War
vs. PhoenixSuns, 7p.m. (Comcast SportsNet Northwest) —TheBlazers come out of the All-Star break
California at Oregon (6 p.m.) andStanford at OregonState (8 p.m.)-
Class 6A, 5A, 4A, 3A
looking to end a five-game losing streak when they host the Suns, who own the worst record in the Western
a doubleheader Thursday
basketball —Bend at Mountain View boys, 7 p.m.; Mountain View at Bend girls, 7 p.m.— Bend's two oldest high schools finish the regular season with their boys and
(21-5, 10-3 Pac-12) is set to host California (15-9,
girls teams playing oneanother
Conference. Portland currently is ninth in the conference
7-5 Pac-12), followed by Oregon State (13-13, 3-10
season. TheMountainView boyshavedefeatedBendtwice
standings, and only the top eight teams advance to the
Pac-12)taking on Stanford (15-11, 6-7 Pac-12)in the
this year, while the Cougar and Lava Bear girls have split their
playoffs.
nightcap.
two meetings.
ESPNU is set to broadcast night as No. 23 Oregon
for a third and final time this
PREP SPORTS
L ~
i
and 2A/1A wrestling state championshipsat
Daytona 500, 10 a.m. PST (Fox) —The 55th running of "The
Memorial Coliseum in Portland —Wrestlers
Great American Race" takes placeat
from throughout Central
Daytona lnternational
Oregon conclude their
Speedway in Florida,
seasons looking for
as the NASCAR season opens with the
state titles. Culver aims for its seventh consecutive 2A/1A
crown, while Crook County is hoping to top the field in 4A.
a 'j hlr
eaa
circuit's biggest race of the year. Two-time winner Matt Kenseth is the defending
champion.
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Terry Renna/The Associated Press
NASCAR driver Danica Patrick will start in the pole position for Sunday's Daytona 500 (story below).
COMMUNITY SPORTS
NBA
West beats East in Aii-Star game
BEAU EASTES
HOUSTON — Chris Paul, Blake Griffin and Kobe Bryant turned this
o
All-Star game into L.A.
n
Wrestler
story. Paul had 20 points,
l
15 assists and won MVP honors, Bryant blocked LeBron James'
goes from
comebackattempt,and the Western Conference beat the East143-138
novice to master in
on Sunday night. Kevin Durant scored 30 points and Griffin fin-
ished with19, joining his Clippers teammate, Paul,
in creating LobCitydeep in the heart of Texas.
one season
"You just want to play fast. I like to throw the
lob. I like to seeguys hit 3s," Paul said. "When we're out on the court with all that firepower, why wouldn't you want
L
e s Combs r e adily a d m it s h e laughed out loud when he first heard that senior Chad Bach, a standout lineman for the Mountain View football team, was planning to turn out for wrestling for the first time. "I've had hundreds of kids tell me-
especially football players — 'I'm going to come out,' " says Combs, the Cougars' longtime wrestling coach. "They tell me, 'I'm coming out, I'm coming out,' and then it's, 'Ahhhhh, I'm not gonna.' "If he (Bach) actually gave it a try," Combs adds, "I thought he'd be in here — at best — two weeks." Combs clearly had not yet really gotten to know Chad Bach. Now, four months after first putting on a wrestling singlet, Bach is preparing for the Class 5A state championship tournament. Dumping his pride in the back seat following a standout senior football season, Bach took his lumps early in wrestling before going 2-2 and finishing fourth in the heavyweight division at last week's Special District 4 regional meet in Eugene. "Not only was he embarrassed, but he was embarrassed a l o t," Combs says about Bach's initial matches. "But the biggest thing is, he was willing to challenge himself. Wrestling usually has a stigma. The ... guys in spandex stuff.... He had none of that. Zero." An athletic 6-foot-4, 270-pound lineman for the Cougars last fall — he received all-state honors as an offensive tackle and defensive end — Bach decided to take up wrestling late last summer after he committed to play football at Portland State. "I figured if I was going to be tough enough at the college level, I needed something to push me," Bach says of his decision to join the wrestling squad. "From what I'd heard, wrestling was definitely a sport that would do that." Was it ever. A d ominant force for Mountain V i ew's s t ate-title f o otball squad in 2011 and for the Cougars' state quarterfinal team this past fall, Bach did not wi n a w r e stling match until January. SeeWrestler /B5
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Bend High School Unified Cheer team member Celia Grijalva teaches the squad the hand movements of a cheer during practice on Wednesday afternoon at Bend High School.
seven of 18. Carmelo Anthony led the East with 26 points and12
rebounds. Portland forward
LaMarcus Aldridge was zero for two with no
• The BendHighSchool Unified CheerSquadis looking to hit thecourt CC
t
"T-R-U!" "T-R-U-C-K! Keep on truckin' all the way!" Pretty much anyone who has gone to a high school football or basketball game has likely heard the cheerleaders standing on the sidelines try to galvanize their team and the crowd with this encouragement. This past Wednesday, the eight girls who make up the Bend High School Unified Cheer squad were w orking o n t h a t c h eer a t t h e i r weekly practice for just the second time. The team is unusual — maybe even one of a kind. The girls' coach, Heather Lueck, believes that her squad is the first Special Olympics •
See additional photos from areaprep sports this past week: bendbulletin.com/preppics
AMANDA MILES Unified Sports cheer team in t he nation. After weeks of practice, the g irls are approaching one of t h e most significant events of their year, when, on March 2, they will cheer at the Special Olympics Oregon Winter Regional Games for basketball in
Springfield.
"I think the greatest thing about this ... is taking the 'dis' out of disability, because everyone has an ability, and everyone has a disability, whether we admit it or not," said Lueck, a life skills educational assistant for Bend High, about her cheer team. "So I always am like, 'There's always ability, just look at the ability.' " T he cheer squad is now i n i t s third year of existence. Before that,
Lueck was already involved in Special Olympics, coaching other Bend High-based Unified teams in sports such as basketball and soccer. But, she noticed, none of those teams were supported by c h eerleaders, as are many sports at a variety of levels — even peewee football and basketball. "I just felt like, 'They need cheerleaders, too, and let's incorporate this,' " Lueck recalled after practice on Wednesday. Special Olympics is an international organization that provides sports and competitive activities for individuals with intellectual disabilities. The organization's Unified Sports branch provides an avenue for those without intellectual disabilities to participate together on the same team alongside the Special Olympians — on Lueck's cheer team, she refersto them as "partners" and "athletes." SeeSupport/B5
points. — The Associated Press
CORRECTION A story headlined "Storm girls repeat in 1-2 finish with Lava Bears in Class 5A state finals" that ran Sunday on Page D1 contained
incorrect information. Bend High senior Brooke Miller swam on the Lava Bears'200-
yard freestyle relay team that won the 5A state championship. Additionally, the Mountain View girls team placed sixth overall. The Bulletin regrets the errors.
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
~<'"""<~ ST. PATR iCK'S DAY
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MOTOR SPORTS
P a
Patrick winspole for Daytona have good people around me. Idon't think any of it would have been possible DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. — Danica without that. "For those reasons, I've been lucky Patrick has made history before — as a woman and a racer, in Indianapolis and enough to make history, be the first Japan. woman to do many things. I realThe spotlight is nothing new. ly just hope that I don't stop doing But never has it been this bright that. We have a lot more history before. to make. We are excited to do it." Patrick won the Daytona 500 Her latest stamp in the history pole Sunday, becoming the first books came with a lap at 196.434 woman to secure the top spot for Pa t rick mph around Daytona Internaany race in NASCAR's premier tional Speedway. Patrick went circuit. It's by far the biggest achieve- out eighth in the qualifying session, then ment ofher stock-car career. had to wait about two hours as 37 fellow "I was brought up to be the fastest drivers tried to take her spot. Only four-time Cup champion Jeff driver, not the fastest girl," she said. "That was instilled in me from very Gordon evencame closeto knocking her young, from the beginning. Then I feel off. Gordon was the only other driver like thriving in those moments, where who topped 196 mph in qualifying. He the pressure's on, has also been a help locked up the other guaranteed spot in for me. I also feel like I've been lucky next week's season-opening Daytona in my career to be with good teams and 500. The Associated Press
Joe Kline /The Bulletin
Blake, Kobe on the wing.
There's nothing like it." James scored19 points but shot only
By Mark Long
Mountain View senior and first-year wrestler Chad Bach has qualified for the state tournament in the heavyweight class.
to make passes?You've got KD filling one of the lanes, you've got
t/t
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TH E BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY BASKETBALL 1:30p.m.:W omen'scollege, Norfolk State at Hampton, ESPNU.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Notre
TUESDAY BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Men's college, Indiana at Michigan, ESPN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Florida
Dame at Pittsburgh, ESPN.
State at North Carolina State, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Women's college,
4 p.m.:Men'scollege,LSU at
Kentucky at Texas A8 M, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Norfolk State at Hampton, ESPNU.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Hofstra at Drexel, NBCSN.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Bucknell at Lehigh, CBSSN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, West Virginia at Kansas State, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Women's college, Baylor
Tennessee, ESPNU.
4 p.m.:Women's college, Rutgers at Syracuse, CBSSN. 6 p.m.: Men's college, Florida at Missouri, ESPN. 6 p.m.: Men's college, Virginia at Miami, ESPNU.
6 p.m.:Women's college, Arizona State at Arizona, Pac-12
6 p.m.:Women's college, Washington at OregonState,
Network. 6 p.m.:Men's college,VCU at Saints Louis, CBSSN. 7 p.m.: NBA, Phoenix Suns at Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
Pac-12 Network.
8 p.m.:Women's college, UCLA
at Connecticut, ESPN2.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Rutgers at Villanova, ESPNU.
6 p.m.:Women's college, Duquesne atDayton, CBSSN. VOLLEYBALL 8 p.m.:Women's college, UCLA
at USC, Pac-12 Network.
HOGKEY 5 p.m.: NHL, San Jose Sharks at St. Louis Blues, NBCSN.
at USC, Pac-12 Network.
ON THE AIR:RADIO TODAY BASEBALL 8:30a.m.:College,Oregon State vs. UC Riverside, KICE-AM 940.
TUESDAY BASKETBALL 7 p.m.: NBA, Phoenix Suns at Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM 1110, KRCD-AM 690.
Listings are the mostaccurateavailable. The Bulletinis not responsible for late changes made by Tll or radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASEBALL
Milos Raonic won his third con-
Beavers roll over ljC Riv-
secutiv eSAPOpenonSundayin San Jose, Calif., beating Tommy
erSide —For the second consecutive game, theOregonState baseball team sent10 batters to the plate and scored six runs in
Haas 6-4, 6-3 for the title in the
final year of the BayAreatournament. Raonic hasnever lost in 12 matches in this event and be-
an in ning.DnSunday,thosesix runs came in the first inning and
came the first player in theOpen era that began in1968 to win
helped support first-time starter Andrew Moore in the Beavers'
14-3 win over UCRiverside at
this tournament three straight times and first overall since Tony Trabert did it from1953-55.
Palm Springs Stadium. The Beavers finished with just four hits
Azarenka takesQatar
in the inning, butalso took ad-
OPen title —Defending
vantage of three walks amongst the team's first four batters en
champion Victoria Azarenka
route to the early advantage.
2-6, 6-3 to win the Qatar Open
The win pushed Oregon State to 3-0. The Beavers will finish the
on Sunday in Doha,Qatar, earn-
tournament today against UC
10-match losing streak against
Riverside at 8:30 a.m.
the American. Azarenka will give up the No. 1 ranking to Williams
beat SerenaWilliams 7-6 (6), ing her16th title and ending a
Ducks take series over
today, but extended hercurrent HaWaii —Ryon Healy and winning streakto14 matches, Aaron Paynehad four hits apiece including her secondAustralian and lefthander Cole lrvin pitched Open title. seven solid innings in his col-
legiate debut to paceOregon to
Nadal WinS in BraZil —Ra-
a 9-5 win over host Hawaii at Les Murakami Stadium Sunday afternoon in Honolulu. With the
fael Nadal beat David Nalbandian 6-2, 6-3 in the Brazil Open final
victory, the Ducks (3-Oj stayed
on SundayinSaoPaulo,winning his first title since returning from
unbeaten on theseason while
a seven-month layoff to treat his
keeping the Rainbows (0-3) win- left knee. It was Nadal's first title less, and guaranteed themselves since winning the FrenchOpen a series' win in the four-game set. The Ducks beat Hawaii Sat-
urday night 5-4. Oregon closes the series today against the Rainbows with first pitch sched-
uled for 3:05 p.m. (PDT).
for the seventh time last June.
Del Potro takesABN
AMRO title —Juan Martin Del Potro beat Julien Benneteau
7-6 (2), 6-3 on Sunday in Rotterdam, Netherlands, to win the ABN AMRD World Tennis
WINTER SPORTS Hirscherwinsworlds
Tournament, going onebetter
SlalOm —Overall World Cup
the runner-up in Rotterdam last year.
champion Marcel Hirscher won the men's slalom title on the last
than his runner-up spot last year. The 2009 U.S. Open winner was
day of the skiing world championships in Schladming, Austria, for his first individual gold at a major
event. Hirscher heldonto his first-
SPORT Force winsNHRAFunny
run lead to finish in a combined time of1 minute, 51.03 seconds.
victory in Funny Car at the NHRA
Car —Courtney Force raced to
Felix Neureuther ofGermanywas 0.41 secondsback insecond. Ma-
Winternationals in Pomona,Ca-
rio Matt of Austria took third, 0.65
champion Antron Brownwalked away from a fiery crash with only minor injuries on Sunday. Shawn Langdon (TopFuel) and Vincent Nobile (Pro Stock) were
behind. Three-time championTed Ligety of the United States skied out in the first run.
lif., and defending Top Fuel world
also winners at the Drag Racing
TENNIS Raonic winsSAPOpen-
COREBOARD
Series season opener atAuto Club Raceway atPomona.
— From wire reports
ON DECK Tuesday Boysbasketball:Redmond atBend,7 p.m.;Ridgevlew at CrookCounty,7 p.m.; Madrasat Estacada 7p.m; SummitatMountainView,7p.m. Girls basketball: BendatRedmond,7 pmuMountain View at Summit, 7p.mJCrookCounty at Ridgeview ,7p.m.;EstacadaatMadras,7p.m.
HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST
Eastern Conference Atlantic Oivision GP W L Pittsburgh 16 1 1 5 NewJersey 15 9 3 N.Y.Rangers 14 8 5 N.Y. Islanders 14 6 7 Philadelphia 16 6 9
OT 0 3 1 1 1
PtsGF GA 22 52 38 21 41 36 17 38 35 13 45 47 13 38 49
GP W L 13 9 2 14 9 4 15 9 6 15 7 6 16 6 9
OT 2 1 0 2 1
PtsGF GA 20 37 31 19 40 34 18 43 36 16 35 30 13 46 54
Northeast Division
Men's college Sunday'sGames East AmericanU.64,Holy Cross61, OT BostonU.68, NewHampshire 56 JamesMadison72,Delaware71 Niagara60, Manhattan56 Rider 67Marist63
South AppalachianSt.76, UNCGreensboro 68 Louisville 59,SouthFlorida41 Miami45,Clemson43 Midwest ClevelandSt.88,Milwaukee67 GreenBay71,Youngstown St.54 Rlinois 62,Northwestern41 lowa72,Minnesota51 Michigan79, PennSt. 71 WichitaSt.68, RlinoisSt. 67 Wisconsin71,OhioSt.49 Far West Arizona68 Utah64 California76,SouthernCal68 Pacific-12 Conference All Times PST
Conference Oregon Arizona
Western Conference Central Division
UCLA California ArizonaSt. Colorado SouthernCal Stanford Washington
GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 1 5 1 2 0 3 27 51 31 Nashville 1 5 7 3 5 19 30 29 St. Louis 1 5 9 5 1 19 52 48 Detroit 15 7 6 2 16 40 44 Columbus 15 4 9 2 10 34 48 Northwest Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Vancouver 14 8 3 3 19 41 33 Minnesota 15 7 6 2 16 33 38 Edmonton 14 6 5 3 15 35 38 Calgary 1 3 5 5 3 13 39 47 Colorado 1 3 5 7 1 11 31 38 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 1 4 1 1 2 1 23 50 37 Dallas 16 8 7 1 17 41 43 San Jose 1 4 7 4 3 17 37 33 Phoenix 1 5 7 6 2 16 40 41 Los Angeles 13 5 6 2 12 30 36
72-71-68-74 285 75-66-70-74 285 FredCouples(23), $18,295 68-72-73-73—286 Martin Flores(23), $18,295 74-70-69-73—286 73-71-68-74—286 Scott Harrington,$18,295 67-74-71-74—286 DavidLynn(23), $18,295 70-71-73-72 286 Brendan Steele(23), $18,295 HarrisEnglish(17), $15,444 73-67-72-75—287 BrianHarman(17), $15,444 76-67-70-74—287 JesperParnevik(17), $15,444 70-70-74-73—287 68-73-76-70—287 Pat Perez(17)$15444 75-68-73-71 287 Vijay Singh (17), $15,444 Johnson Wagner (17), $15,444 73-71-73-70—287 Casey Wittenberg(17), $15,444 71-73-71-72—287 68-72-72-76—288 BenCurtis(12),$14,652 68-74-70-76—288 Tim Herron (12), $14,652 JohnMaffinger(12),$14,652 71-66-78-73—288 67-74-75-73—289 James Hahn(7), $13,992 72-69-76-72 —289 J.J. Henry(7),$13,992 Ryo Ishikawa(7),$13,992 71-73-71-74—289 66-75-74-74—289 BrandtJobe(7),$13,992 MarcLeishman(7), $13,992 69-75-68-77—289 72-71-72-74—289 Scott Piercy(7), $13,992 71-72-70-76—289 MarkWilson(7), $13,992 StuartAppleby(2), $13,332 73-69-71-77—290 70-73-72-75—290 Matt Every(2),$13,332 CharleyHoffman(2), $13,332 73-70-72-75—290 AndresRomero(1), $13,002 71-71-74-75 291 70-72-75-74—291 Y.E.Yang(1), $13,002 MichaelBradley(I), $12,804 73-71-73-79—296
Jeremia hWooding,$23,760
Southeast Division
GP W L OT PtsGF GA Carolina 13 8 4 1 17 41 37 TampaBay 14 7 6 1 15 55 45 Florida 14 4 6 4 12 35 53 Washington 15 5 9 1 11 41 51 Winnipeg 14 5 8 1 11 35 46
KevinStadler(28), $23,760
Stars14. — A 16,101(18,023).
OregonSt. Utah WashingtonSt.
W 10 9 9 8 7 7 7 6 5 3 3 2
L 3 4 4 5 5 5 6 7 7 9 10 11
Sunday's Games Arizona68, Utah64 Califomia76,SouthernCal68 Wednesday'sGames WashingtonStateatArizonaState, 7p.m. WashingtonatArizona 8 pm Thursday's Games Califomia atOregon,6 p.m. Utah atColorado,7p.m. Stanford atOregonState, 8 p.m.
Overall W L 21 5 21 4 19 7 16 9 18 7 17 7 12 14 15 11
13 12 13 12 11 14
11 15
Women's college
Sunday'sGames East Albany(NY)69, Hartford 55 JamesMadison68, Hofstra 60 Marist 66,Manhattan47 NOTE: Twopoints ior a win, onepoint for overtime Rider56,Loyola(Md.)41 loss Saint Joseph' s49,Temple41,OT Sunday's Games Siena59, Niagara43 St. Louis4,Vancouver 3,SO St. John's75,Cinclnnati 46 Pittsburgh4 Buffalo3 South Chicago 3, LosAngeles2 Auburn70,Alabama53 Boston 3,Winnipeg2 Charlotte68,GeorgeWashington 56 Calgary4, Dallas3 Clemson51, Virginia Tech46 Mlnnesota 3, Detrolt 2 Delaware66,Wiliam8 Mary44 N.Y.Rangers2,Washington1 Duke81,Wake Forest 70 Today'sGames EastCarolina82,SouthernMiss.60 OttawaatNewJersey,10a.m FloridaSt.80, NorthCarolina73 Philadelphia at N.Y.Islanders,10 a.m. Georgia62,Florida57 Nashville atColorado,noon GeorgiaTech79 NCState70 CarolinaatMontreal, 4 30p.m Houston71, Tulane70, 2OT TorontoatFlorida, 4:30p.m. LSU63,Mississippi St 41 CalgaryatPhoenix, 6p.m. Louisville 81,DeP aul 55 ColumbusatAnaheim,7p.m. Maryland73,Virginia44 Miami79,BostonCollege54 Old Dominion70, Northeastern67 BASKETBALL Richmond81, UMass63 SMU74,Memphis 67 NBA SouthCarolina62,Mississippi 47 Tennessee 83, Vanderbilt 64 NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION Towson53,GeorgeMason51 ConferenceGlance UAB61,Marshall 43 All Times PST UCF76,UTEP69, OT EasternConference W L Pct GB VCU69,l.a Salle50 Midwest d-Miami 36 14 720 Butler 64,St.Bonaventure 46 d-NewYork 32 18 640 4 61, Saint Louis 56 d-Indiana 32 21 604 5'/z Fordham Brooklyn 31 22 585 6r/z lowa72,Purdue52 Kansas81, Oklahoma71 Chicago 30 22 577 7 Atlanta 29 22 569 P/z Northwestern70,Minnesota63 NotreDame87,Marquette49 Boston 28 24 538 9 Milwaukee 26 25 51 0 t 0'/z WestVirginia68, lowaSt.66 Philadelphia 22 29 431 14'Iz Xavier59, RhodeIsland 40 Southwest Toronto 21 32 396 I 6'/z Arkansas 61 Missouri40 Detroit 21 33 389 17 T exas Tech 69 T e xa s 62 Cleveland 16 37 302 2ti/~ Washington 15 36 294 zt'/z Tulsa49, Rice45 Orlando 15 37 288 22 Far West Arizona61, Utah52 Charlotte 12 40 231 25 California 72, Southern Cal64 Western Conference W L Pct GB Colorado71,ArizonaSt 63 d-SanAntonio Oregon65,Washington St.60 42 12 778 d-Oklahoma City 39 14 736 2'Iz San DiegoSt. 86,UNLV50 d-L.A. Clippers Stanford68, UCLA57 39 17 696 4 Memphis 33 18 647 7'Iz Denver 33 21 611 9 GOLF GoldenState 30 22 577 11
LPGA Tour Australian Women'sOpen Sunday At Royal CanberraGolf Club Canberra, Australia Purse: $1.2 million Yardage: 6,680; Par:73 a-amateur Final Jiyai Shin,SouthKorea 65-67-70 -72—274 68-71-71-66—276 YaniTseng,Taiwan a-LydiaKo,NewZealand 63-69-70-76—278 MoriyaJutanugarn,Thailand 70-70-70-69—279 68-69-71-71—279 BeatrizRecari,Spain CarlotaCiganda,Spain 7 1 -70-69-70 —280 GwladysNocera,France 7 4-71-65-70—280 ThidapaSuwannapura, Thailand 71-72-71-67—281
CatrionaMatthew,Scotland 69-75-70-67—281 KatherineHull-Kirk, Australia 68-73-71-69—281 MariajoUribe,Colombia 64-67-79-71—281 FlorentynaParker,England 71-71-72-68—282 AnnaNordqvist, Sweden 72-70-69-71—282 D. ClaireSchreeiel, Netherlands70-72-69-72—283 ChristelBoeljon,Netherlands 72-68-74-70—284 StacyLewis, UnitedStates 69-74-69-72—284 SarahJaneSmith, Australia 68-70-73-73—284 JessicaKorda,UnitedStates 70-69-77-69—285 RebeccaLee-Bentham,Canada 66-74-76-69—285 JenniferSong,UnitedStates 71-74-69-71—285 JennyShin,SouthKorea 71-69-73-72—285 BrittanyLincicome,UnitedStates71-70-72-72—285 67-72-73-73 285 Giulia Sergas, Italy RebeccaArtls, Australia 7 2 -67-73-73 —285 GerinaPiler, UnitedStates 72-67-73-73—285 WhitneyHilier, Australia 7 4 -69-69-73 —285 S.Prammanasudh,UnitedStates70-71-70-74— 285 CindyLacrosse,UnitedStates 71-71-74 70—286 a-Su-HyunOh,Australi a 7 5 -70-71-70 —286 StaceyKeating, Australia 7 4 -71-71-70—286 Lee-Anne Pace, SouthAfrica 74-71-70-71—286 AngelaStanford, UnitedStates 68-75-71-72—286 Austin Ernst, UnitedStates 69-74 70-73 286 Be enMozo,Spain 71-71-71-73—286 AshleeDewhurst, Australia 73-70-69-74—286 Line Vedel Hansen, Denmark 73-72-74-68 —287 CourtneyMassey,Australia 70-74-73-70—287 LizetteSalas,UnitedStates 69-73-74-71 287 BethAllen,UnitedStates 70-74-72-71—287 PornanongPhatlum, Thailand 71-73-71-72—287 KarrieWebb,Australia 71- 74-69-73 287 — Kristie Smith,Australia 68 - 68-77-74 287— Chega Choi, SouthKorea 74-69-70-74 287 Lexi Thompson,UnitedStates 72-71-70-74—287 Paola Moreno,Colombla 74-71-68-74— 287 Vicky Hurst,UnitedStates 69-72-70-76—287 RheeLee,South Korea 7 3 -69-69-76 —287 a-YanJing,China 72-70-77-69—288 JanePark,UnitedStates 7 0-74-73-71—288 SarahKemp,Australi a 72- 72-72-72 288 — Ji Eun-hee,South Korea 7 0-72-73-73—288 Holly Aitchison,England 7 0-68-75-75—288 AyakoUehara,Japan 66-73-74-75 288 DanielleKang,United States 71-71-70-76—288 StephanieSherlock, Canada 74-71-75-69—289 CarolineHedwall, Sweden 72-71-74-72 —289 BeckyMorgan,Wales 72-72-72-73—289 JulietaGranada,Paraguay 71-70-74-74 —289 Kathleen Ekey, United States 71-70-74-74 289 RyuSo-yeon,SouthKorea 72-72-71-74 —289 Brooke Pancake,UnitedStates 73-68-73-75— 289 KarineIcher, France 72-71-71-75—289 a-MinjeeLee,Australi a 70 - 71-72-76 —289 Nikki CampbellAustralia , 7 1-70-76-73—290 AlisonWalshe,UnitedStates 71-73-74-72—290 Hur Mi-jung,SouthKorea 71-73-72-74 —290 HannahBurke, England 7 2 -72-72-74 290— Maria Hjorth,Sweden 73-71-72-74—290 JenniferRosales,Philippines 74-69-69-78—290 Becky Brewerton,Wale s 6 9 -75-74-73 291 AmyHung,Taiwan 72-72-72-75 —291 Cheyenn eWoods,UnitedStates 71-73-75-73— 292 LauraDavies,England 71 - 74-72-75 —292 ChristinaKim,UnitedStates 72-72-73-75—292 Jessic aSpeechley,Australia 72-73-72 75 292 BreeArthur,Australia 73-71-72-76 —292 VeronicaFelibert, Venezuela 71-71-76-75 —293 MarianneSkarpnord, Norway 72-70-73-78—293 Lee Mi-hyang,SouthKorea 66-77-73-78—294 Kris Tamulis,UnitedStates 73-72-76-75 296 NicoleSmith,UnitedStates 72-72-73-79—296 CharlotteEllis, England 7 5 -70-81-73 299—
DavidPeoples(0), $11,589 DuffyWaldorf(0), $11,589 BradBryant(0), $8,832 SteveJones(0),$8,832 StevePate(0),$8,832 Esteban Toledo(0), $8,832 D.A.Weibring(0),$8,832 MichaelAllen(0), $7,200 JohnHarris(0), $7,200 GeneJones(0), $7,200 Larry Miz(0), e $7,200 JoeySindelar(0),$7,200 DanForsman(0), $5,600 GaryKoch(0), $5,600 LarryNelson(0), $5,600 LorenRoberts (0), $5,600 Scott Simpson (0), $5,600 SteveLowery(0), $4,480 TomPurtzer(0), $4,480 BobbyClampett (0), $3,520 BobGilder(0), $3,520 TomKite(0), $3,520 WayneLevi(0), $3,520 SandyLyle(0), $3,520 Hal Sutton(0), $3520 Willie Wood(0), $3,520 PeterSenior(0), $2,800 BobbyWadkins (0), $2,800 MarkBrooks(0), $2,320 Morris Hatalsky (0),$2,320 Jeff Sluman (0), $2,320 BobTway(0), $2,320 DavidEger(0), $1,696 Jim Gallagher,Jr. (0), $1,696 MikeHulbert(0), $1,696 Jim Thorpe(0), $1,696 Fuzzy Zoeller (0),$1,408 CraigStadler(0),$1,312 DanaQuigley(0), $1,216 Allen Doyle(0), $1,120 Joe Dale(0), y $1,056 DonnieHammond(0), $992 Chie-Hsiang Lin(0), $928 Hale Irwin(0), $864 Jay Sigel(0), $800 BenCrenshaw(0),
TENNIS Professional SAP Open Sunday
At HP Pavilion
San Jose,Calif. Purse: $623,730(WT250) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship Milos Raonic(I), Canada,dei. Tomm y Haas (4), Germany, 6-4, 6-3. Brazil Open Sunday At Ginasio doIbirapuera Sao Paulo Purse: $519,775(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles Championship Rafael Nadal(1), Spain, def. David Nalbandian, Argentina,6-2,6-3 ABN AMRO World Tennis Tournament
Sunday
At Ahoy' Stadium Rotterdam, Netherlands Purse: $1.34 million (WT500) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Championship Juan Martin delPotro(2), Argentina, def. Julien Benneteau, France,7-6(2), 6-3.
Qatar Open Sunday At The Khalifa TennisComplex Ooha, Qatar Purse: $2.369million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Championship VictoriaAzarenka(I), Belarus,dei.SerenaWilliams (2), UnitedStates, 7-6(6),2-6, 6-3.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR
Sprint Cup Daytona500Lineup After Sundaypualifying; race Sunday,Feb. 24 At DaytonaInternational Speedway DaytonaBeach, Fla. Lap length: 2.5 miles (Car number inparentheses) 1. (10)DanicaPairick, Chevrolet,196434mph. 2. (24)Jeff Gordon,Chevrolet,196.292. 3. (21)TrevorBayne,Ford,195.976. 4. (39)RyanNewman, Chevrolet,195.946. 5. (14)TonyStewart, Chevrolet,195.925. 6. (5) Kasey Kahne,Chevrolet,195.852. Utah 30 24 556 12 7. (11)DennyHamlin, Toyota,195.771. Houston 29 26 527 13'/z PGA Tour 8. (18) Ky eBusch, Toyota,195.767. Portland 25 28 472 1 6'/z 9. (22)JoeyLogano,Ford, 195.767. Northern TrustOpen L.A. Lakers 25 29 463 17 10 (20) Matt Kenseth Toyota195725 Sunday Dallas 23 29 442 18 11. (88)DaleEarnhardt, Jr., Chevrolet,195584. At Riviera Country Club Course Minnesota 19 31 380 21 12. (17)RlckyStenhouse,Jr., Ford,195.537. Los Angeles NewOrleans 19 34 358 22'/z 13. (42)JuanPablo Montoya, Chevrolet,195.508. Purse: $6.6 million Sacramento 19 35 352 23 14. (27)PaulMenard, Chevrolet,195.503. Yardage:7,349; Par: 71 Phoenix 17 36 321 24'/~ 15. (13)CaseyMears, Ford, 195.495. (x-won on second pl a yoff hole) d-divisionleader 16. (33)Austin Dilon, Chevrolet,195.385. Final 17. (99)Carl Edwards,Ford,195.240. x-JohnMerrick(500), $1,188,00068-66-70-69—273 Senday'sGame 18.(15) ClintBowyer,Toyota,195.228. Champions Tour CharlieBeljan(300),$712,800 67-71-68-67—273 Aff-StarGame:West143, East138 I9.(56) MartinTruex,Jr.,Toyota,I95.207. Bill Haas (145), $343,200 70-67-64-73 — 27 4 ACE Group Cl a ssi c Today's Games 20.(31)JeffBurton,Chevrolet, 195.156. FredrikJacobson(145), $343,20068-65-72-69—274 Sunday No games scheduled 21.(48)JimmieJohnson,Chevrolet, 195.084 Charl Schwartzel(145), $343,20069-67-68-70—274 At TwinEaglesGolf Club(TalonCourse) Tuesday'sGames 22 (1)JamieMcMurray Chevrolet 195042 WebbSlmpson(95),$229,350 70-66-68-71—275 Naples, Fla. CharlotteatOrlando,4 p.m. 23.(2) BradKeselowski,Ford, 194.961. JoshTeater(95),$229,350 70-68-68-69—275 Purse: $1.6 million TorontoatWashington, 4p.m. 24.(9) Marcos Ambrose, Ford, 194.793. Sang-Moon Bae(83),$198,000 68-65-76-67—276 Yardage: 7,193; Par:72 Milwaukee at Brooklyn, 4:30 p.m. 25.(29) KevinHarvick,Chevrolet,I94.742. HunterMahan(83),$198,000 70-69-68-69—276 Final MemphisatDetroit, 4:30p.m. 26.(43) AricAlmirola,Ford, 194.742. GregChalmers(70),$165,000 69-69-73-67—278 Charles SchwabCuppoints in parentheses Chicagoat NewOrleans, 5p.m. Biffle, Ford,194.729. TedPotter,Jr.(70),$165,000 71-67-71-69—278 BernhardLanger(240), $240000 62-70-72—204 27.(16) Greg Bostonat Denver, 6p.m. 28.(55) MarkMartin,Toyota, 194683. Adam Scott(70),$165,000 71-67-70-70—278 J ay Don Bl a ke (141), $140,800 66-71-68 — 205 GoldenStateatUtah,6 p.m. EmieEls(58), $127,600 7 0-68-73-68—279 John Cook(105),$105,200 7 1-68-68 —207 29. (38)DavidGililand, Ford,194.654. PhoenixatPortland, 7p.m. Jim Furyk(58),$127,600 68-72-69-70—279 TomPerniceJr. (105),$105,200 66-69-72—207 30. (34)DavidRagan, Ford,194.616. SanAntonioatSacramento, 7p.m. SergioGarcia(58), $127,600 65-73-69-72—279 DavidFrost(70), $70,000 68 - 72-68 208— 31. (26)MichaelWaltrip, Toyota,194.313 K eegan Bradl e y (53), $99,000 71-70-69-70 — 28 0 R occo Me di a te (70), $70,000 72-67-69 — 208 32. (35)JoshWise,Ford,194.254. Senday's Summary LukeDonald(53), $99,000 69-66-70-75—280 Jeff Freeman (51), $51,200 6 8 -70-71 —209 33. (78)KurtBusch,Chevrolet,193.657. Seung-YulNoh(53), $99,000 70-70-71-69—280 MarkMouland(51), $51,200 70-71-68 —209 34. (98)MichaelMcDoweff, Ford,193.544. West143, Easl138 John Roffins (53), $99,000 69-65-77-69—280 MarkO'Meara(51), $51,200 67-69-73 —209 35. (95)Scott Speed,Ford, 193.540. JimmyWalker (53), $99,000 70-70-71-69—280 Bill Glasson(37), $36,800 7 1 -69-70 210— 36. (32)TerryLabonte,Ford,193.515. EASTALL-STARS(138) GrahamDeLaet(48), $66,000 72-68-69-72—281 John Huston (37), $36,800 6 6 -71-73 —210 37. (51)ReganSmith Chevrolet 193096 James7-182 419,Bosh3-9006,Garnett0 20- LukeGuthrie(48), $66,000 69-71-71-70—281 ChienSoonLu(37), $36,800 67-68-75 —210 38. (7)DaveBlaney,Chevrolet,192 996. 00, Wade10-130-021,Anthony8-147-926, Chan- Phil Mickelson(48),$66,000 71-67-72-71—281 KennyPerry(37),$36,800 6 8 - 7369 21039. (47)BobbyLabonte, Toyota, 192.563. 40. (36)JJYeley, Chevrolet,192.094. dler 2-53-37, Irving6-110-015, Deng4-101-1 10, BryceMolder(48), $66000 74-65-74-68—281 Bart Bryant (0), $28,000 72-70-69 —211 George7-130-017, Noah4-7 0-0 8, Holiday3-60-0 CameronTringale(48),$66,000 73-69-71-68—281 Mike Goodes (0), $28,000 6 8 -73-70 211— 41. (83)DavidReutimann,Toyota,190.339. 6, Lopez0-13-43. Totals 54-10916-21138. LeeWestwood(48),$66,000 68-68-74-71 281 GeneSauers(0), $28,000 71 - 67-73 211— 42. (93)TravisKvapil, Toyota,190.142. WESTALL-STARS(143) StewartCink(42),$45,870 71-72-67-72—282 MarkWiebe(0), $28,000 67- 70-74211 — 43. (87)JoeNemechek, Toyota, owner points. Failed to pualify Durant13-241-1 30, Griifin 9-111-2 19,Howard BrianDavis(42),$45,870 70-69-73-70—282 FredFunk(0),$23200 67-71-74 212 460-09, Paul7-102-320,Bryant4 91-29, Duncan Bob Estes(42),$45,870 6 8-72-72-70—282 PeterJacobsen(0),$23,200 7 1-70-71 —212 44. (19)MikeBliss, Toyota, ownerpoints. 1-4 0-0 2, Parker5-10 2-2 13, Harden6-130-0 15, RyanMoore(42),$45,870 70-67-71-74—282 Olin Browne (0), $18,267 69 - 73-71 213— 45. (52)BrianKeselowski,Toyota, ownerpoints. Randolph 3-60-06, Westbrook 7-13 0-014, Aldridge GregOwen(42),$45,870 69-71-70-72—282 RogerChapman(0),$18,267 68-73-72—213 0-2 0-0 0,Lee3-40-0 6 Totals 62-112 7-10143. KevinStreelman(42),$45,870 73-69-72-68—282 RussCochran(0),$18,267 7 2 -71-70—213 DEALS EastAII-Stars 26 3 9 39 34 — 138 AngelCabrera(36),$35,640 69-72-71-71 283 Jim Rutledge (0), $18,267 7 1 - 73-69 213— West All-Stars 31 3 8 39 35 — 143 K.J. Choi(36),$35,640 7 1 -70-72-70—283SteveElkington(0), $18,267 69-70-74 —213 Transactions 3-PointGoals—East All-Stars14-39 (George3-6 Chris Kirk(36), $35,640 7 3-68-73-69—283 Scott Hoch (0), $18267 73-68-72 —213 Irvi ng3-6,Anthony3-7,James3-7,Wade1-2,Deng GeorgeMcNeil (36),$35,640 71-70-72-70—283 TomLehman(0), $14560 73 - 72-69 214— HOCKEY 1-5, Lopez 0-1, Holiday0-2, Bosh0-3), West All-Stars Charlie Wi(36),$35,640 7 5-66-71-71—283 AndrewMagee(0), $14560 7 1 -71-72 —214 NationalHockeyLeague 12-32 (Paul4-5, Harden3-8, Durant 3-8, Howard 1- RossFisher(32),$29,040 72-71-68-73—284 Gil Morgan (0), $14,560 68-73-73 —214 COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— Recailed LW Sean BradFaxon(0), $11,589 68-75-72—215 Collins fromSpringfield (AHL).Assigned DCodyGo1, Parker 1-3, Duncan0-1, Westbrook0-3, Bryant TrevorImmelman(32) $29,040 70-69-72-73—284 0-3). Foul ed Out None.Rebounds EastAff -Stars Jerry Kelly(32), $29,040 71-73-71-69—284 loubef toSpringfield. ReassignedRWTrent VogelhuTommyArmour III (0), $11,589 74-69-72—215 Jay Haas (0), $11,589 72-72-71 —215 ber fromEvansvile (ECHL) to Springfield (AHL). 61 (Anthony12),WestAl-Stars 52 (Howard 7). As- Matt Kuchar(32), $29,040 64-73-74-73—284 sists — East Aff-Stars 33 (Wade7), West Aff-Stars 39 BlayneBarber,$23,760 6 9 - 70-72-74 285— GaryHallberg(0), $11,589 7 3 -72-70 —215 MONTREALCANADIENS— Assigned G Robert MarkMcNulty(0),$11,589 7 1 -74-70 —215 Mayerto Hamilton (AHL). (Paul 15).Total Fouls—East Aff-Stars 10, West AllJustin Leonard (28), $23,760 70-73-68-74—285
No. 3 Miami staysundefeated in ACCafter holding off Clemson The Associated Press CLEMSON, S.C. — Kenny Kadji scored 12 points, including the g o-ahead 3-pointer with 36 seconds left to keep No. 3 Miami perfect in Atlantic Coast Conference play after a 45-43 victory over Clemson on
Sunday night. The Hurricanes (21-3, 120) finished with their fewest points of the season, and their
high-scoring guard duo of Du-
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP
rand Scott and Shane Larkin were a combined three-of-16 a layup and K.J. McDaniels shooting for 10points. Still, Mi- failed on a tip. ami pulled out its 13th straight Also on Sunday: victory on Kadji's wide-open 3. N o. 4 Michigan ..... . . . . . . . . 79 Clemson (13-12, 5-8) had P enn State..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 1 three chances to answer back, ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Trey but Rod Hall was called for an Burke scored a season-high offensive foul on one trip and, 29 points and freshman Glen after Trey McKinney Jones Robinson III matched a career made a foul shot, Hall missed high with 21 to help Michigan
bounce back from an embarrassing defeat with a victory over Penn State. N o. 9 Arizona...... . . . . . . . . . 6 8 U tah..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 4 SALT LAKE CITY — Mark Lyons scored 18 points, freshman Brandon Ashley added 10 in a reserve role and Arizona defeated Utah to snap a
two-game skid. N o. 12 Louisville..... . . . . . . . 59 S outh Florida ..... . . . . . . . . . 4 1 TAMPA, Fla. — Russ Smith scored 15 points and Louisville stayed within a game of first place in the Big East with a lopsided victory over South Florida. No. 20 Wisconsin..... . . . . . . 71 N o. 13 Ohio State..... . . . . . . 49 MADISON, Wis. — Ben
Brust and J ared B erggren each scored 15 points as Wisconsin routed Ohio State. C alifornia.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 76 U SC..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 8 BERKELEY, Calif. — Allen Crabbe had 23 points and 10 rebounds, Justin Cobbs added 22 points and California came back from 15 points down in the second half to beat Southern California.
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN B 3
GOLF ROUNDUP
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John Merrick drives on the second tee in the final round of the Northern Trust Open at Riviera Country Club in the Pacific Palisades area of Los Angeles, Sunday. Merrick won the tournament in a playoff.
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erric ets win at ome The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — John M errick never allowed himself to think about winning at Riviera. Not when he was a kid attending his local PGA Tour event. Not when he was at UCLA and could play the fabled course. And certainly not late Sunday afternoon in a playoff when he faced a daunting 3-iron shot under a row of eucalyptus trees, and his opponent was in the middle of the fairway with a wedge in his hand. No wonder Merrick was at a loss for words when he won the Northern Trust Open. "Yeah, you dream," Merrick said, his eyes still glossy. "When you're alone sometimes, you think about different scenarios of winning tournaments. It was fun. We would always play here atUCLA and have great games out here. To be able to play the tournament was a dream of mine. But to win? I can't describe it. It's so much fun." Merrick hit the perfect shot under the trees on the 18th to escape with par, and he followed with another flawless shot to a skinny section of the 10th green on the second playoff hole to 18 feet. He made another par,and won when Charlie Beljan missed a 5-foot par putt. It was the second straight year the Northern Trust Open was decided in a playoff on the 10th, a diabolical par 4 at 315 yards that requires skill and strategy, a hole where players are happy to walk off with par. Beljan made bogey twice on the 10th, once in a regulation and then when the tournament was on the line. He went long and left both times, and in the playoff, his chip didn't quite reach the green and he took three putts from 70 feet. "I think you could play here 10,000 times and still not know how to play No. 10," he said. "Eighteen is a great golf hole. I just find it tough that we go to No. 10 to play a playoff hole. I think it's a great hole, don't get me wrong. I'm not knocking it. But it's just a tough hole to have a playoff on. We might as well go and put a windmill out
there and hit some putts." Beljan, famous for having an anxiety attack when he won at Disney late last year, holed an 18-foot birdie putt on the 18th hole, similar to the theatrics provided last year by Phil Mickelson and Keegan Bradley, to close with a 4-under 67 and wind up in a playoff. Merrick, who grew up in Long Beach, had a number of big breaks on the back nine. None was bigger than his second shot on the par-5 17th headed toward the trees, only to find that
he had just enough of a gap to go for the green and make par. He had a 69 and finished 11-under 273. He also hit the trees with his tee shot on the 15th, and while it left him a hybrid to reach the green, it could have gone anywhere. In other events on Sunday: Shin wins Australian Women's Open CANBERRA, Australia — South Korea's Jiyai Shin won the Australian Women's Golf Open by two shots, finishing with a I-under 72 to beat world No. I Yani Tseng after being tied for the overnight lead with teenage star Lydia Ko. Shin mixed three birdies with two bogeys in a final round battle with Ko and Tseng of Taiwan, and added the Australian title to her two British Opens among 37 professional victories.
Excellent care does nat have to
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Langer wins ACE Group Classic NAPLES, Fla. — Bernhard Langer shot a final-round 72 and won his second ACE Group Classic title in three years by one stroke. Langer two-putted from 50 feet on the 18th for par to finish at 12-under 204, ahead of Jay Don Blake at TwinEagles Club's Talon Course. Fichardt takes Africa Open by two strokes EAST LONDON, South Africa — Darren Fichardt shot a 71 in the final round of the Africa Open to claim a two-stroke victory over Gergory Bourdy andJaco Van Zyl at the East London Golf Club. Fichardt and Zyl were tied heading into the final round, but Zyl shot a 73 on Sunday allowing Fichardt to claim the victory.
NHL ROUNDUP
Blues beat Canucks in shootout The Associated Press
his team-leading eighth goal
R angers......... . . . . . . . . . . . 2
V ANCOUVER, Br it i s h Columbia — T.J. Oshie and Andy McDonald each scored in regulation and in the shootout to lead the St. Louis Blues to a 4-3 victory over the Vancouver Canucks on Sunday night. Patrik Berglund also scored for St. Louis, which swept its three-game road swing after losing five straight games. Blues r o okie g o a ltender Jake Allen made 28 saves and stopped the Canucks' Ryan Kesler and Alex Burrows in the shootout. Kesler and Henrik Sedin h ad their first goals of t h e season and Mason Raymond also scored in regulation for Vancouver, which has lost two straight after winning six in a row. The Canucks looked destined to l ose i n r e gulation a fter the Blues took a 3 - 2 lead early in the third period, but Raymond tied the game on a power play w it h 1:47 remaining. A point shot took an errant bounce and landed on Raymond's stick at the left hash marks, and he buried his fifth of the season. Burrows had a chance to win it with a breakaway in overtime, but his backhand move was thwarted when Allen gloved the puck. Oshie's shootout goal froze Roberto Luongo, who stood motionless as Oshie skated in slowly and then whipped a shot between the goalie's
of the season, who gave the Blues a 3-2 lead at the eight minute mark of the third. St. Louis center Vladimir Sobotka wheeled around Vancouver's goal and into the slot and whipped a shortside wrist shot that Berglund deflected in. Sobotka was o r iginally credited with the goal. Also on Sunday: B lackhawks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Kings 2 CHICAGO — Brent Seabrook and Jonathan Toews each scored a goal and added an assist to help lead Chicago over Los A n geles, extending its season-opening points streak to 15 games.
1 Capitals NEW YORK — Derek Ste-
legs. The Canucks dominated the third frame, outshooting the Blues 15-3. But it was Berglund, with
P enguins......... . . . . . . . . . . 4 . ... . . . . . . . 3 Sabres BUFFALO, N.Y. — Defenseman Paul Martin scored with 2:04 left and Pascal Dupuis had two goals and an assist to lift Pittsburgh to a victory over Buffalo.
pan's power-play goal early in the third period snapped a tie and completed New York's rally past Washington. Wild. 3 R ed Wings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 ST. PAUL, Minn. — Dany Heatley, Jason Zucker and Torrey Mitchell all scored in the second period to rally Minnesota over Detroit. Bruins 3 Jets. 2 W INNIPEG, Man i t o ba — Brad Marchand scored 36 seconds into the third period to lift Boston to a win over Winnipeg. F lames ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . ... . . . . . . . . 3 Stars DALLAS — Steve Begin, Matt Stajan and Roman Horak each scored their first goals of the season in the third period and Calgary overcame a twogoal deficit to beat Dallas.
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
O M M U N IT Y
Email events at least 10days before publication to sportsCbendbulletin. com or click on "Submit an Event"at www bendbulletin com. For a more complete calendar, visit www.bendbulletin.comlcomsportscal.
P OR TS
Central Oregon Trail Alliance; prizes from Pine Mountain register at FootZone; footzonebend.com. Sports and Aspect Board Shop; $5, cash only; age 21 and older; 541-385-8080; pinemountainsports.com. ADULTBASEBALLLEAGUE:Teamsare nowforming for ICE CRIT: Thursday, Feb. 28; 7 p.m., registration begins SNOW SPORTS the 2013 season of theDeschutes National Adult Baseball at 6 p.m.; Wanoga Sno-park; all bikes and participants Association; competitive wood bat league for players18and SKI WAXCLINICS:Tuesdays, Feb. 19 and March 5 and welcome; podium and costume prizes; $10; Cog Wild; older; season runs from Junethrough August; teams for 19; 7:30 p.m.; Pine Mountain Sports, Bend; clinics will facebook.com/events/414531755292276. ages 40 andover will also beformed if adequate numbers cover the basics on tuning and waxing skis; participants are available; teammanagers needed inboth divisions; do not need to bring own equipment; free; call 541-385Michael McLain, 541-410-2265, trailrun50@gmail.com. 8080 to sign up (required). MISCELLANEOUS SUN CUP:Alpine ski races; Tuesday-Sunday; Mt. Bachelor ski area; $43 per event and $39 lift pass per COURAGE FOR KIDS: Thur sday; 6 p. m . ; Tower BASKETBALL day; 541-388-0002; mbsef@mbsef.org; mbsef.org. Theatre, Bend; fundraiser for Kids in the Game COBO BASKETBALLCAMP: Boys and girls in grades nonprofit organization; two Bend men will share their ADAPTIVE SKIING:Saturday; 8:30 a.m., onthe ultramarathon and mountain climbing experiences three through five; today; 9 a.m.-noon; Pilot Butte mountain 9:30 a.m.-2:30 p.m.; meet at RAPRDActivity undertaken to raise awareness and funds for children in Center, Redmond; for individuals age 5 and older with Middle School, Bend; directed by Mountain View need; $45; towertheatre.org. a disability; includes lift ticket, needed equipment, High School coach Craig Reid and his staff; $23-$31; transportation to Mt. Bachelor ski area and individual bendparksandrec.org. instruction; $90; 541-548-7275; raprd.org. SISTERSSHOOTOUT SERIES:Saturday and Sunday; RUNNING W AFFLE FEED: Saturday;10:30 a.m.;M eissner Sisters; for boys and girls teams in grades five through Shelter at Virginia Meissner Sno-park; family event; eight; four-game guarantee; $250-$275 per team; NUTRITIONALTHERAPY WORKSHOP: enjoy waffles cooked in the shelter's wood stove; jerry@sistersrecreation.com; sistersshootout.com. Wednesday;7 p.m.;FootZone,downtown Bend; meissnernordic.org. with family practice physician Lisa Uri of High FULL MOON XCSKI: Saturday; 5:45 p.m.; carpool from Lakes Health Care; free; sign up at footzonebend. store at 6 p.m. for Swampy Lakes Sno-park or Virginia CYCLING com/events/nutritional-therapy-workshop. Meissner Sno-park and return at 8:30 p.m.; dress M OVIE NIGHT AT MCMENAMINS: Thursday;9 p.m.; FOAM ROLLER CLINIC: Saturday; 8:45 a.m.; FootZone, warmly, and take food, water, a headlamp and afew McMenamin's Old St. Francis School, Bend; "Bike Car," downtown Bend; taught by Ashleigh Mitchell, CPT; dollars for grooming donation box; demo skis available about three professional snowboarders who pedal a "bike learn basic myofacial release with a foam roller; bring on first-come, first-served basis (must provide credit car" through three Northwest states while looking for yoga mat and foam roller if you own them; foam rollers card and drivers license); free; call 541-385-8080 to available for purchase; limited to15 participants; $5; register; pinemountainsports.com. snow, includes a stop at Mount Bachelor; fundraiser for
BASEBALL
Support Continued from B1 As with many teams, the girls have grown close through shared experiences. This school year, they have been practicing once a week since not long after school started, and they will continue to do so until late May or early June. "I enjoy just being with my friends and with my posse," said Sara Rietmann, 18, one of the team's athletes. Kara Lueck, one of t w o d aughters Heather Lueck has on the squad, has observed that being part of th e team has been a confidence-builder for the athletes. "A lot of them used to be really shy and didn't really know each other and kind of kept to themselves," Kara Lueck, 16, said afterpractice on Wednesday. "And now,
"It shows you that there really aren't any limitations, and basically our kids can do the same thing that any other student here at n
Bend High Can dO.
— Bend High School Unified Cheer assistant coach Wendy Contreras
white uniforms. One teammate at a time stepped to the front and faced the group to lead. During the "trucking" cheer, the girls were not completely in sync as they jumped sideways aspart of their choreography, some of them bumping into one another. But their voices could be heard they're all really loud and love hanging clear across the gym. "It shows you that there really aren't out and they're all best friends now." "Now they can't keep quiet sometimes," any limitations, and basically our kids Perla Felix, also 16 and a partner on the can do the same thing that any other stuteam, observed. dent here at Bend High can do," assistant On Wednesday, the girls all lined up coach Wendy Contreras explained about in a row as they practiced their cheers the team. "It's just really inspiring to see i n matching navy b l ue, y ellow a n d how each individual student here on our
Basketball
Haynes Team,5-6. 5, MoneyGang, 2-9. 6, rs Deli, 1-10.
Scores — Furnish/ZenithAuto93, rs Deli 68; TumaloStore69, MoneyGang 53; KnIghtryderz64, BradleyHaynesTeam62. Men's 8 standings 1, tn Threads,9-2. 2, Athletic Club of Bend,9-2. 3, BendbroadbasdBus, 9-2. 4, Jim's Rats, 8-3. 5, OneEyed Shooting Mafia,7-4. 6, Widgi Creek6-5. 7,BlueCollar Ballers, 5-6. 8, Nthe Zone, 5-6. 9, Rigobertos,4-7. 10,Peoples Insurance, 3-8. 11, Sciestilic, 1-10.12,Ravens, 0-11. Scores — 541Threads81, OneEyed Shooting Mafia57;Jim's Rats103, RigobeIto's62; Scientitic56, Ravens 53; Athletic Club oi Bend74, NtheZone70;
Blue CollarBallers72, PeoplesInsurance48; Bend BroadbandBus85, Widgi Creek48.
Bowling League highscores Rimrock Lanes, Prineville Week18 Friday Night specials —split It, 762;TheGray Mayers, 2,382;MarcTurner,246; BuckBuck, 656; Chris Gray,206;Julie Mayers, 591. Week 21 Rimrock — StrykersproShop,892; TheGrayMayers ,2,823,Jim Gregory,258;RyanWadell,209; Chris Gray,202;Ari Mayers,559. Week 23
50+ or -— Its A U Turn,658; SNAFU,1,907; Matt Hawes,254;Ctlby Hawes,636;StellaOja,182; BrendaMurphy, 482. Week 24 Grizzly Mountain Men's — No Boundaries, 991; CougarCuts, 2,942; Larry Gerke,255;Kevin Turner,719.
SOCCER SPRING SOCCER: For kids in pre-kindergarten through grade four; April 6-May11; practices once or twice per week, games on Saturdays at High Desert Sports Complex, Redmond; shirts provided, players must supply shin guards and socks; $49; registration deadline is Friday; 541-548-7275; raprd.org.
SOFTBALL HIGH DESERT FASTPITCH: High Desert Fastpitch (formerly CascadeAlliance) and Summit High School are teaming up to hold winter pitching and catching practice at the Summit High Gym inBend;Sundays, Feb. 24 and March 3 and17; girls12 and younger, 4 pm.-5 pm.; older girls, 5 p.m.-6 p.m.; pitchers must bring their own catchers and own "softie" softball; tennis shoes appropriate for gym use are required; highdesertfastpitch.org.
SWIMMING BEND WAVESWATER POLO CLUB: Forboysand girls ages12-18;season begins Monday, Feb.25 and continues into August; practices scheduled for Mondays and Wednesdays, 7:30-8:30 p.m .(conditioning),and Tuesdays and Thursdays, 6:30 p.m.-8:30 p.m. (pool time); all experience levels welcome; $125 per month or $600 for season (10 percent discount for second child); bendwaves.com.
COMMUNITY SPORTS IN BRIEF
cheer squad has the confidence and the courage to stand up and model the cheer in front of the other ones." On March 2, the girls will don their uniforms again, this time in Springfield for the basketball competition. Unlike at practice last week, the team will cheer in front of spectators and players — and encourage both their team and their opponent.
RUNNING
10U teams, which will be guaran-
cheer for them," Heather Lueck said. "And it's fun, because there's a lot of parents there that have never seen that, and so these families that see this for the first time, it is so powerful." Lueck said t hat S pecial Olympics teams made up only of athletes do exist, and that Sutherlin High School has a Unified team in the works. But for now, Bend High Unified Cheer may be unique. In other ways, though, it is a team just like many others. When asked what she enjoys about being part of her team, Rietmann said: "It's all about patience and how you get along with each other and how we connect."
Sunriver, and two Bend run-
14, chris cheng,Bend,zn29. 15 Nate pederses, Bend, 2n5L 16, Bryan Reichert, Bend,2I:52 17, Jerry Nance,McMinnvile, 22:05. 18, Daxl-lerrera, Bend, 22:07.19,RodThompson, Bend,22:55. 20, Rick Stinson,Cresent, 23:01. 21, Morgan Parker, McMinnvile, 23:01.22, Jeffrey Keyes, Bend,23:05.23,PunkThissell,LaPine,23:09. 24, Robertscherman,Bend, 23:18. 25, cully Desmond, McMinville, 23:24.26,JohnBaker, sunriver,
tournament is full. All teams must
participants finished the third annual Run for Chocolate 5-
kilometer race onSaturday in
Running
is $350 per squad, andregistration will remain openuntil the
late — More than 320
"Whoever's playing, they're going to
Run for Chocolate Saturday, Sunriver 5 kilometers Men (top 30) — 1,RickFloyd Bend,17:09.2, Jason Gulley,Bellisgham,Wash., 18:09. 3, Kenny Thisseu, Hillsboro,18:39. 4,RobRussell, 18:4L 5, WesleyWarriner,Redmond, Wash., 18:42. 6, Jason Townsend,Bend,19:03. 7, BrennanBuckley-Noonas, Redmond, 19:03.8,RigoRamirez,Redmond,19ne 9, James Blanchard, Prinevile,19:45.10,GregSabin, Bend,20:58. 11, BrandonBrasher, Prinevile, 21.00.12,Joseph chesg,Bend,21:11.13,MatthewWood, Bend,21:14
teed five games. Registration fee
Hundreds runfor choco-
complete and turn in atournament roster before playing their first game. For more information or to register, contact Jeremy Puckett
ners earned top honors. Rick Floyd finished first overall in
at 541-325-3689 or at jeremy©
17 minutes, 9 seconds, while Statia Smith was the first-
highdesertyellowjackets.com.
place female in 20:47.Jason Gulley, of Bellingham, Wash., took second behind Floyd in
TRACK AND FIELD 18:09, while Hillsboro's Kenny Central Oregon tracksters COmPete in 1daho — Pole
Thisseu was third in 18:39. Natalia Martin and Colleen
vaulter Annie Sidor posted the
Sullivan made it a cleansweep
top performance among agroup
by Bend participants in the
of Central Oregon Track Klub
Redmond'sRigo Ramirez
staged Thursday through Saturday in Pocatello, Idaho. Sidor
women's top three, finishing in (CORK) members competing in 22:13 and 22:16, respectively. the Simplot Games indoor meet, was the top male masters runner, eight overall, in19:10,
— Reporter: 541-383-0393, amiles@bendbulletin.com.
tied for secondin the girls pole
while Sullivan was the fastest
vault with a clearance of11 feet, 3 inches. CORK's Michael Wilson
masters participant among women. Results of the top 30 men and top 30 womenare
made the finals of the boys 400 meters, finishing 16th in 51.12 seconds. And the CORK girls relay
available in Community Sports
COMMUNITY SPORTS SCOREBOARD Bend Park &Recreation District Adult League standings andscores Week11 Men's A Standings — 1, Furnish/zenithAuto, 10-1. 2, TumaloStore, 9-2. 3, Knightryderz,6-5. 4, Bradley
BS
Scoreboard, left. Complete results can be found at racecenter.com.
23:56. 27,Aidan Desmond,McMinville,24:05.28, Btit twehrman,Bend,24:06.29,Randyolano,Bend, 24n3. 30,SteveGiss, North Bend, 24:20.
women (top30)—1,statia smith,Bend,20:47.
team of Alexa Thomas, Sammy Hignell-Stark, Hannah Cochran and Miranda Brown took ninth
place in the finals of the girls 800 relay. Complete results are available at simplotgames.com.
SOFTBALL Tournament registration
2, Natalia Martin,Bend,22:13. 3, Colleen Sullivan,
Bend, 22n6.4,stephanieRobins,salem,22:33.5, EvelynThissell, LaPine, 22:45.6, Katie Nyberg, Bend, 22:50. 7, StacIEskesen, portland, 23n1. 8, vicky Conner , Spokane,Wash.,23:41.9,Julia Fecteas, Bend,24:00.10,Dagny Donohue, Bend,24 08. 11, Angel Heaera, Bend, 24:10. 12, Chasses Johnson,Bend,24n1. 13, AnneTrapanese, Lapine, 24:14. 14,Teresawymetaek, seaverton,24:15. 15, LauraGulley,Bellingham,Wash., 24:23.16, KathyFecteau,Bend,24:54.17,CharlenePaulson, OregonCity, 25:00. 18,Krista Dowding,Bend25:05. 19. Maribel Eames, Bend,25:09.20,MelissaByrd,LaPine,25:21. 21. HollyJewkes,Lapine,25:zz 22,LasrieDutkiewicz,Medford,25:38.23,ErinRsark, Hilsboro,26:04. 24,DebbieBaker, Sustiver, 26:10. 25,NinaKemsleyChurch, Samm amish, wash., 26:28. 26, Makenzie Huddl st eos,Bend,26:32.27,StacyTrapaIIese,Bend, 26:38 28,ElisaCarroll, Bend,ze:39 29,SaraMurrell, Bend,26:49. 30,Juliet Robinette,LaPine,26:54.
— Bulletin staff report
availadle —Registration is now being accepted for the ASA girls fast-pitch High Desert Invitational, scheduled for
3 NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
April13-14 in Redmond.The tournament is open to12U and
A14iard-ceinning
neighborhood on Bend's westside.
Central Oregon
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Derm a tology Mark Hall, Mo
www.northwestcrossing.com •
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Wrestler Continued from B1 "It was definitely an eyeopener," Bach says of his introduction to wrestling. "You
can go from being prestigious in one sport, thinking you're 'all that,' to going against kids you'd never even think about in football, guys who would never faze you, and they're kicking your tail and letting you have it. "The whole thing is tough," he adds. "The easiest thing for me was working from a standup position. It's what you do in football. I'm still getting used to the ground work. Once you t ake someone down to t h e ground in football, they normally don't get up." But Bach is a grinder. Nicknamed "Texas" by his teammates — he was born near Dallas — Bach showed a Lone Star State-sized work ethic in the wrestling room and gradually got better. He notched his first victory at the Bend High Invitational in the middle of January and tied for third place in his 285p ound weight class with a 4-1 record. Soon thereafter he helped Mountain View to dual-meet wins o ver B e nd High and Summit with a pair of pins and rolled into the postseason with a respectable 9-9 overall record.Then atthe regional meet, Bach won his first match, lost to eventual regional runner-up Jacob Breitling of Redmond in the semi-
LOOKINGBAGK Athlete of the week:Trinity Lutheran's Katie Murphy scored 30 points and grabbed12 rebounds for the Saints on Tuesday in a Mountain Valley League girls basketball victory over North Lake. The league contest was a must-win game for Trinity Lutheran, which is battling for the MVL's third and final Class1A state playoff berth. Contest of the week:Culver earned its12th straight district
wrestling championship on Saturday, racking up 382points to best Central Linn's 218.5 while qualifying 13 wrestlers for the state championships to be held this Friday and Saturday in Portland. Seven Bulldogs won individual titles, highlighted by 120-pounder Jared Kasch, a three-time state champion who won his fourth consecutive district crown.
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morial Coliseum this weekend — Bach views himself more as a football player who went
looking for a challenge in the offseason. "Wrestling is a sport where you learn how to dominate another person," Bach says. "You're learning to make another person look like a complete idiot.... I don't think anyone can stick out a wrestling season and not become a better athlete. "That's the physical aspect I need for college,"he adds."I'm
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glad I (wrestled), and hopefully it helps me up there." — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastesC<bendbulletin.com.
LOOKINGAHEAD TUESDAY Redmond atBend High boys basketball,7 p.m.:Longtim e rivals face off for the third and final time in the regular season. The
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FRIDAY, SATURDAY
Oregon Interscholastic Ski RacingAssociation nordic state meet at Willamette Pass:TheMountain View boys and girls teams look to repeat as state champs after both squads finished
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atop the regular-season standings. finals, and then pinned Bend's Drue Bernstein in the consolation semifinals to secure a berth at state. Maybe just as telling as his regional wins was a close 2-1 defeat to W i llamette senior Zakery Julian in the consolation-bracket finaL When the two had met earlier this season, Julian pinned Bach in the first period. "I never thought this was
possible, especially after the first few matches," Bach says about being bound for state. "Going into districts, I j u st wanted to do the best I could do. I wasn't expecting state.... The hard work paid off." Despite being one of just six Mountain View wrestlers to advance to state — and one of a total of only 10 wrestlers from Bend's three high schools who will compete at Portland's Me-
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MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B7
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT AWARDS
ra icremin erso reai ieso war TV SPOTLIGHT "InsideCombat Rescue" 10 p.m.Mondays, National Geographic Channel
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"Glory Hounds" 8 p.m. Thursday, Animal Planet
By Neil Genzlinger New Yorh Times News Service
It's awfully late in the cycle of embedded and ride-along war journalism, the conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan having been covered by news organizations and documentarians to the point, some might say, of oversaturation. And the Pentagon is certainly adept at using its gatekeeper ability on such coverage to whip up support for troops and the budgets that support them. Those caveats duly noted, two programs this week about the war in Afghanistan, both turning up where you wouldn't expect to find them, are harrowing reminders that whatever you think of that war, the jeopardy of combat is frighten-
ingly real. Tonight, a s ix-part series called"Inside Combat Rescue" begins on the National Geographic Channel, an outlet that can't seem to decide whether it wants to be known for trash television ("Doomsday Prep-
American and A f ghan soldiers, andintonight's premiere, everyone is on edge because of pt what the military calls greenon-blue attacks: incidents in „1 which Afghan soldiers turn on ,l~ Pt' 'j ,.';., r their American counterparts. M@j4 During one tense rescue of z a wounded Afghan, a friend Animal Planet via The Associated Press of his tries to board the heliMarine Cpl. Jonathan Eckert, of Oak Lawn, III., rests with Bee, his copter, and the crew has a near improvised explosive device-sniffing dog, while on patrol in Afriot on its hands as it tries to ghanistan during the filming of "Glory Hounds." The series stars push him out while tending to the military working dogs that serve beside their human partners the injured man. It's a chilling in Iraq and Afghanistan. moment, and the camera work makes it viscerally real. The series is not shy about pers," "American Gypsies") blunt, bloody detail. showing serious injury and or mild workplace reality fare Interspersed among the death, and neither is a similarly ("Wicked Tuna") or halfway combat footage are quieter constructedspecial Thursday decent docudramas ( eKilling moments with the crew mem- night on Animal Planet called Lincoln"). bers, who talk movingly about "Glory Hounds." The program follows Air missions they have flown and Its focus is on the combat Force crews who treat and their reactions to them. dogs used i n A f g h anistan eMy first call, G.S.W. to the to sniff out buried explosive evacuate the wounded from battle zones via helicopter. chest, and he ended up pass- devices. The program has a I t is f i lmed in p ar t w i t h ing away," one crewman says, fair amount of feel-good filler cameras mounted on soldiers' using the shorthand for gun- about the bond between the helmets and on the rescue he- shot wound. "I can tell you dogs and their handlers, but licopters, jittery imagery that what he looked like, how tall when it c omes to showing makes the heartrace. What he was, how much he probably these pairs at work, it is blunt those cameras capture can be weighed. I'll never forget it." and disturbing. horrific, and it is shown here in The crews r e scue b oth Though these dogs have
Jealousymaypush'dancepartner' away Dear Abby:My boyfriend of one
Dear Abby: Our two c h ildren
(ages 4 and I year) have hyphen-
the wedding of a w a itress who works at a restaurant/bar he frequents. I was not invited. Eddie doesn't dance and has slow danced with me only once. When DEAR Itold him I would not ABBY appreciate him slow dancing with anyone there, we had a heated argument. Eddie told me I have no right to tell him what to do and that I'm trying to control him. I have run this by many people and they all say it's inappropriate to slow dance with anyone but your significant other, especially when she's not present. I feel Eddie has little regard for my feelings. If he really cared for me, he wouldn't want to dance with anyone else. I am interested in your thoughts. — His Only Dance Partner Dear His Only: If you would like to "graduate" from girlfriend to fiancee, you will stop trying to control him and tell him you hope he has a good time at the wedding. Insecurity is not an attractive trait, so calm down and recognize that a dance is only a dance. From your description of Eddie's lack of ability, I seriously doubt he will be a sought-after partner on any dance floor.
ated last names. It works well and the names sound elegant together. My husband and I have made this known in the family and have discussed it when asked about it by various family members. However, o ver the l ast f o ur years, our choice has been ignored by two relatives from separate sides of our family. They persist in using only my husband's last name for correspondence and gifts. He has suggested returning the mail as "addressee unknown," which I think might come across as rude. Is there any way of having our children addressed correctlyby relatives who seem to want to ignore their real names? — New York Mommy Dear Mommy: Before doing it your husband's way, try this: Have another chat with the noncompliant relatives, who may come from a different generation. Explain that
you gave your children hyphenated last names for a reason — that you want to be equally represented — and the omission of "your" name hurts your feelings. If that doesn't work, then go to back to plan A, because you don't want your children
MONDAY, FEB. 18, 2013:This year you have a unique opportunity to expand your horizons. Your creativity soars, and Lady Luck seems to be riding on your shoulder. Still, Stars showthe kind don't take anything of dayyou'll have for granted, and be ** * * * Dy"amicsure to use good ** * * P ositive sense. If you are ** * " e 'age single, you could ** So-so meet someone * Difficult very special and significant to your life history. The process of getting to know each other will prove to be unusually rewarding. If you are attached, the two of you start acting like new lovers. Romance blooms, and a new addition to the family becomes a possibility. GEMINI helps you lighten up andlaugh.
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
lead. You might feel the need to start over, even if you don't want to lose the work, as you continue to see problems arise with this project. Tonight: To the wee hours.
CANCER (Jone21-Joly 22) ** * S t op, and try to take in what is going on behind the scenes. Your fatigue is apparent, and you know when you havehadenough. You mightwantto ask someone to fill in for you. Be reasonable in how you handle an unruly child or loved one. Tonight: Head home early.
LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * * Focus on long-term
outcomes, especially if you are experiencing a lot of back-and-forth in your daily life. Financial matters come ARIES (March21-April19) to the forefront. Make sure that you ** * If you don't accomplish what you want to do early on, you might find that it straighten out a hassle that has been affecting your domestic life. Tonight: becomes more difficult as the day goes Where the crowds are. on. Others seem to interfere with your VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) normal routine. View an obstacle that ** * You could feel pressured and appears on your path as a sign to think carefully before continuing. Tonight: Talk become tenser as a result of a certain situation. Key people in your life are to a friend. optimistic; however, you mightfeel TAURUS (April 20-May20) anxiouswhen hearing thesame news ** * * E mphasize the role that others and information. Communication could play in your life in order to manifest a goal. become muddled. Tonight:Choosea The additional responsibility you have stressbuster. shouldered in the past few weeks seems to pay off. If you're wondering which way to go with a present situation, listen to feedback. Tonight: Balance your budget.
GEMINI (May 21-Jone20) ** * * * Y ou'll head into work feeling sure of yourself. If you want something done your way, you'll have to take the
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22)
** * Your playfulness might become tempered by the realization of how much you need to do. Detach and prioritize, and you'll get more done than you thought possible. Recognize what is happening with an important relationship, and try to be more nurturing. Tonight: Make it easy.
"Zero Dark Thirty" have won top screenplay honors from the Writers Guild of America.
to be confused. Dear Abby:My wife and I will be married 25 years and have three children. In my f amily, my dad was the boss. I always was, too, but never was involved very much with the kids. My wife never really complained about it. She just wanted to keep the family together. Now that the kids are gone, I realize I should have been a better husband. She mostly ignores me and spends her time with the kids and going places. I feel left out. She doesn't even want to celebrate our upcoming 25th. Should we? I know my dad drank a lot, and now I find myself thinking often about how it must havebeen for my mom back then. — Regret ting in Illinois
Dear Regretting:Ask your wife why she doesn't think that 25 years of marriage is something to celebrate,because it should be. She may spend her time with the kids and going places because that is what she HAS been doing for all these years. There is still time for you to mend this marriage, provided you are both willing to work on it. However, it may take the services of a marriage counselorto break the ice. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles,CA 90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.20) ** * Your communication style seems to be transforming. You might not like everything that is being revealed right now. Use your ingenuity to solve these issues and more. Do not rush through the process for an answer. Take news with a grain of salt. Tonight: Easy works.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
The guild's adapted screenplay award Sunday went to Chris Terrio for "Argo," director Ben Affleck's tale of the CIA's dar-
ing masquerade of six U.S. diplomats as aHollywood film crew to rescue themfrom
been credited w it h s a ving many lives, the scariest scene involves an improvised explosive that does its job despite the presence of one of the animals. In the resulting chaos, a cameraman for the program, who was just a few feet away, turns into a medic briefly. Both programs may havethe odd effect on viewers of being pro-troop but anti-war. Neither
Iran during the hostage crisis. Mark Boal won the prize for
original screenplay for "Zero Dark Thirty," director Kathryn Bigelow's chronicle of the CIA's
manhunt for al-Qaida leader Osama bin Laden. See a list of all winners at
www.wga.org. Source: The Associated Press
does a good job of conveying
TV TODAY
what purpose is being served by the injuries documented. "Glory Hounds" in particular makes the missions seem like a pointless, deadly game of hide-and-seek-the-explosives, showing soldiers and d ogs going on patrol for no apparent reason other than to walk through known minefields. No one watching these programs will doubt the bravery of the soldiers — and, yes, the dogs — involved. But most everyone will be relieved at President Barack O b ama's announcement last week that 34,000 troops will be pulled out of Afghanistan in the coming year.
8 p.m.on C3, "Bones" — Brennan and Booth (Emily Deschanel, David Boreanaz)andtheir colleagues investigate the mysterious death of a15-year-old boy. Hewas perceived as a socially awkward kid, but the investigation reveals that he was involved in illegal activity and hadattended a party where drugs were present in the new episode "TheFriend in Need." 9 p.m. on E9,"The Following" — After Claire (Natalie Zea) gets a phone call that could lead her to her son (Kyle Catlett), Hardy (Kevin Bacon) and the FBI prepares to maketheir next move. Carroll (James Purefoy) calls on a lawyer (ReneeElise Goldsberry) tosenda deadly message in the new episode "The Siege."
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
9 p.m. on TNT,"Dallas" — Ryland (Mitch Pileggi) exposes old secrets in his effort to destroy Ann (Brenda Strong). John Ross' (Josh Henderson) plan to take over Ewing Energies takes shape. Christopher (Jesse Metcalfe) tries a different tactic with Pamela (Julie Gonzalo). An old enemy resurfaces in the new episode "Trial and Error."
• There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. •
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • BEAUTIFULCREATURES(PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:50, 9:50 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 12:50,4:25, 8 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH(PG)3:25, 9:25 • ESCAPEFROMPLANET EARTH3-0 (PG) 1:05, 7:05 • A GOOD DAYTO DIE HARDIMAX (R) 12:15, 2:35, 4:55, 7:15, 9:45 • AGOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)Noon,2:20,4:40,7,9:40 • HANSEL 5GRETEL:WITCHHUNTERS(R) 3, 9:15 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY3-0 (PG-13)6 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)I:45, 9:40 • IDENTITYTHIEF(R) I2:05, h10, 3:55, 6:IO,7:10, 9:55 Sat: h10, 3:55, 6:10, 7:10, 9:55 • LIFEOFPI(PG) I2:20 • LIFE OF PI 3-D (PG)3:20, 6:25, 9:20 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:20, 9:35 • MAMAiPG-13) 1:35, 4:05, 7:40, 10:10 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 12:40, 3:45, 6:40, 9:35 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 1:20, 3:50, 7:25, 10:05 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 12:55, 3:35, 6:05, 9:25 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 1'I:45 a.m., 3:10, 6:35, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. • Today'sOscarMarathonscheduleincludes"Django Llnchained"(1215pm), "SilverLiningsPlaybook"(320 p.m), "Zero DarkThirty" (545 p.m) and "Argo" (845 p.m). Only one-day or two-day passes areavailable. Check ttrttrttr. bendbulletin.comloscars for moreinformation. f
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10 p.m. on TNT,"Monday Mornings" — Sung (Keong Sim) is called on the carpet for refusing to apologize to the wife of a patient who died. Ty and Michelle (Jamie Bamber, Emily Swallow) have a homeless patient who needs surgery, but his schizophrenia makes him unable to give consent. Sydney and Lieberman (Sarayu Rao, Jonathan Silverman) go on a dateinthe new episode "Who's Sorry Now?" Valerie Mahaffey guest stars. ©zap2it
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Bend Redmond
Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • AMOURiPG-13) Noon, 3, 6 • ARGO (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) 12:15, 6: l5 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 1, 4:15 • QUARTET(PG-13) 1:15, 4, 7 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • STAND UP GUYS(R) 3: I5 I
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR
— The CIA thrillers "Argo" and
Two programs this week about the warin Afghanistan ... are harrowing reminders that whatever you think of that war, thejeopardy of combat is frighteningly real.
i~f,,
year, "Eddie," has been invited to
Writers Guild Awards
John Day Burns Lakeview
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • RISE OF THEGUARDIANS (PG)11:30a.m. • SKYFALL (PG-13) 5:30 • THISIS40(R)9:15 •THE TWILIGHT SAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART 2 (PG-13) 2:30 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21 and older only. Younger than 21 may attend screenings before 7 p m. ifaccompanied bya legal guardian.
E LEVATIO N Elevation Capital Strategies 400 sw BluA Drive suite lol Bend Main: 541-728-0321
** * * * Ap proach a recurring situation differently. You might choose to be less verbal. Find out what the root of the problem is, and then work with others to fix it. As a result, you will have less to worry about. Tonight: Your optimism makes a big difference in your dealings.
Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • A ROYAL AFFAIR (R) 8:30
www.elevationcapitstl.biz
I
AN N NN. Dishwasher
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
54 I -548-8777
** * * * R ealize what is happening within your immediate circle. Try to do something differently. What has not worked in the past suddenly will. Rethink a situation, brainstorm with others and approach it in a new way. Tonight: Live it up. Enjoy catching up on a friend's news.
• BEAUTIFULCREATURES(PG-13) 4:15, 6:45 • AGOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)4:30,6:45 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4, 6:30 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 4 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 7
AauARiuS (Jan.2O-Fed.18) ** * You have been a bundle of energy as of late. Suddenly, the need to slow down hits you. How you deal with a situation could change radically because of your needs. Make no definitive statement just yet. Your finances could factor into your thinking. Tonight: Do a little shopping.
PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * * Your way of dealing with a problem could change radically. You'll observe others and seedifferent ways of handling pressure and communication issues. If you like someone else's style, you might want to consider adapting certain elements of it. Tonight: As you like it. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road,
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Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH(PG)3:45, 6 •A GOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)4,6:30 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 3:30, 6 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 3:45, 6: I5 r/• r
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4/ APPLIANCE
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Madras Cinema 5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH3-0 (PG) 12:50, 3, 5:05, 7:10 • AGOOD DAY TO DIE HARD (R)12:40,2:50,5,7:20 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 2, 4:25, 6:50 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 2:30, 4:45, 7 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) I, 3:10, 5:20, 7:25
WILSONSof Redmond
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • ESCAPE FROMPLANET EARTH(PG) 6 • SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOK(UPSTAIRS — R) 6:15 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
MXtTREss
541-548-2066 Adjustable
G allery- B e n d 541-330-5084
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THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 'I8, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013. • •
I
gs
4•
Chance of snow flur-
Tonight: Chance of snow flurries. CHANNE
LOW
Kttxi«OM
44 Umatilla
5easjde«t xk x
x x x x x x k k x x fIOOckxx .Cannon Beachx'. Nx xxxx x 4 p 34 tx' The . i x ' , k k x x x x +IVef '
46/30
D ll
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• Hermis«n 46R9
gg s
47/32 •
Tillamook«ii g
8 ' «xx x san dy x 8 x w x 45/3$ 'g ~;McMi/Lnviilq « > < >
46/37
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5I
Yachatsi~
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46I40
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c' «
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4V24
44 /36
•
• Paulina 37/27
Roseburg
$•
La Pine 4U21
3 9/1 9
•
+
•
Chemult
50/38
• Beach 50/38
39/22
Medferd
Juntura
• BurnS
48/31
3 9/22
Yesterday's state extremes
Jordan Valley
43/24
39/26
Frenchglen 45/27
Rome
45/27
• 54 0 Medford
48/28
Paisley
Chiloquin
•
Riley
I.ake 46/30
45'26
Ashland
• 18'
Fields•
• Lakeview 45R6
aIIs 49/34 ~
46/33 ~
McDermitt
44737
47/30 ~
Bend
~
o www m 'Wancouver
'C~lg~~y Saskatoon
43/37
•
~x Seattle
(in the 48 contiguous states):
Quebec 18/7
Winnipe " "'.
P
Thunder Bay „ 30/10
Halifax 30/25 «ortland 29/15 ton Itgl 30/23 Buffalo I 3S/33 8 e w York 37/31 •
xt
I'
Bismarck10S4 W Xt
qrtland M6/34
• 83'
Green Ba , 38/19
33/2 j
El Centro, Calif. • -22 0 Antigo, Wis.
/31
IRapid City P l. Q 32/10
2ps
Q
4
- ,
•
Detroit «~
Des Moines « ' ' 38/37
• 0.41 w Chatham, Mass. '
Vegas
37/22
', 64747 ~
L osAngelesx 58/49
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L 'uon »s,s S JL 55/36 Ft + + v + . / ti t Oklahoma City . t 6 t .rt Na shville ~ t + +tt ' 60/32 • 61/41 • Bos,'.'« «B:<>k I, 'Atlanta Dallas '66e/,6 B irmingham 57/43 49/23
'
uquerque
72
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-
-
Tijuana S9/38
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Mlsvluep~
Kansas City
42/22
Phoen
Honolulu ~ 81/68
,
-
-
•
•
3/3
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I 63/47 ' ' Neuretleans
BQ
totr' t t 71/58 •
•
Chihuahua
lando 7/51
75748
- 20s -
Qs -Bs
Anchorag 21/6 ~
• Miami 71/63
Bos
Monterrey 82/60 Juneau 37/25
2
44 26
OALASKA
Mazatlan • 8 2/68
86/63 •
CONDITIONS
FRONTS Cold
First
• Pll •
Moonrise today...11:23 a.m Moonsettoday .... 1:50 a.m Feb. 25 Mar. 4 Mar. 1I Mar.19
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:30 a.m...... 7:14 p.m. Venus......6:43 a.m...... 4:48 p.m. Mars.......7:33 a.m...... 6:43 p.m. Jupiter.....10 56 a,m...... 1:59 a,m. Satum.....lI:31 p.m...... 9:58 a.m. Uranus.....8:20 a.m...... 8:40 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low..............43/18 2 4hoursendmg4pm*. .000" Recordhigh........69m1930 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow.......... 2 in1956 Average monthtodate... 0.69" Average high.............. 45 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low .............. 24 Average year to date..... 2.22"
Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.05 Record24 hours ...0.39 in 2004 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
SKI REPORT
Yesterday Monday Tuesday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
for solar at noon.
Astoria ........48/38/0.05....46/36/sh.....47/35/pc Baker City......41/27/0.00....39/24/pc.....36/23/sn Brookings......53/42/0.00....49/38/sh.....48/38/sh Burns..........38/20/0.00.....40/22/c.....36/19/sn Eugene........ 51 /31/0.00....45/35/sh.....45/33/sh Klamath Falls .. 42/18/000 ...49/34/pc ...38/23/sn Lakeview....... 39/1 9/0.00 ...45/26/sn.....37/1 8/sn La Pine........44/19/0.00....41/21/rs.....37/17/sn Medford.......54/29/0.01 ....51/34/pc.....48/32/sh Newport.......46/36/0.04....44/37/sh.....46/37/sh North Bend......52/39/NA....44/40/sh.....44/35/sh Ontario........50/32/0.00....50/31/pc..... 39/29/rs Pendleton......48/32/0.00....48/32/pc.....47/28/sh Portland .......46/38/0.00....46/34/sh.....46/34/sh Prinevige.......42/21/0.00....41/26/sh..... 43/22lrs Redmond.......45/20/0.00.... 43/25/rs.....43/22/sn
Snow accumulation in inches
2 LOW MEDIUM HIGH 0
2
4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . .64-66 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 71 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .68-1 07 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .96-111 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . 93 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......54-57 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . 124
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ........ . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .42-92
Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .28-34 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 0.0... . .88-180 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .47-61 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.. . . . .23-92 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-48 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Roseburg.......52/35/0.00....50/38/sh.....48/35/sh Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .48 55 Salem ....... 47/35/0 00 .46/34/sh ...47/34/sh Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 38 Sisters.........47/21/0.00....42/24/sh.....36/20/sn For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: The Dages......50/38/0.00.....47/32/c.....47/31/sh www.tripcheck.com or call 511 www.skicentral.com/oregon.html Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
Yesterday's extremes
HIGH LOW
43 23
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
45/26
•
Chr i stmas ValleY
Sllv e r
5
• 51/34•
Brookings
HIGH LOW
46 21
EAST
Nyssa
'Ham ton
•
•
~
HIGH LOW
43 2 2
OREGON CITIES
50/31
Vale«
3471 5
' P.hbdo o
42/26 49/30
Crescent« • Crescent • Fort Rock 42R3 •• Lake xW m• 39/20
45D9 •
Pgandon '
Unity
I~ • Brothers 41/21
45/ 3 5 CC <
ii
•John
cloudy.
HIGH LOW
of rain or snow showers late.
Partly to mostly cloudy and seantano sonably cool.
39/24
• Prineville 47I2ij
•
Redmond 44I25 Sundlver • Bend
c x x x x x' x x ~ Grove Coos Bayii
Baker Ci
• Mitcheg43R7
42/24
CENTRAL Slight chance
35/20
«7pray 47iza
45/28
Sisters
~
6»;Eugenehx' F lorence«xx 9 4N40
4V28
,
C p 5herman
38/23
41/30 Union
46/29
r3
Joseph
Granite
„
,COrValliS' "
Enterprisq • 38/21
La Grande•
• „
•
38/23
Willowdale
R
ewpo,,'
• Meacham
43/29
47/27
ii 46 /34«'~~ ~ C CC •
36/24
48/32
Ruggs
Maupin
45/35 x ~>~; 6 ~ Governmentv
t'
Lmcoln City h, 8
• Pendleton
47 42/28
x
I/ ll
Partly cloudy.
Party
ries.
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE WEST Mostly cloudy with Sunrisetoday...... 6:59 a.m Moon phases today...,,, 5 39 p,m a chance of show- Sunset F ull L ast New Sunnsetomorrow 6 58 a m ers later in the day. Sunset tomorrow... 5:41 p.m
Astor i a . xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
xx v 4 6/36%%'t t xx x x x x s
' 45/39
Partly cloudy.
BEND ALMANAC
IFORECAST:5TATE I
gs
• ++tQ
.++++ '
84
4>
* *
* * *
* *
***+*
xt + +
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday Yesterday Monday Tuesday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......72/46/0 00...67/34/s. 64742lpc GrandRapids.....23/4/0.00..43727lsh. 29/16/sn RapidCity.......56/22/000..32/I0/pc. 24/I2/pc Savannah.......50/28/0 00...58/45/s. 69/46/sh Akron ..........21/11/001..41/35/pc..36/18/rs GreenBay.......I7/ 9/0 00..38/I9/sn.. 21/6/sn Reno...........52/23/0.00..56/28/pc. 34/22/sn Seattle......... 49/40/trace..45/36/sh. 47/35/sh Albany..........25/14/0.00...28/20/s. 41/25/sh Greensboro......38/23/0 00...52/35/s. 53/29/sh Richmond.......35/27/000... 47/32/s. 55/32/sh Sioux Falls...... A4/22/000.... 27/I/c....9/5/s Albuquerque.....59/25/000...54/28/s. 60/33/pc Harnsburg.......31/24/000...38/27/s..45/25/rs Rochester NY....22/12/007..31/31/pc..40/22/rs Spokane....... 43/28/trace...42/31/c..40/26/rs Anchorage......25/19/0.05....21/6/s.. 24/19/c Hartford,CT.....28/20/0.00...30/21/s. 45/26/sh Sacramento......66/37/000 ..61/41/pc. 53/35/sh Springfield, MO ..62/30/000... 54/25/t .. 42/24/s Atlanta.........47/25/000... 57/43/s. 58/32/sh Helena..........40/30/001 ..35/20/pc.. 39/20lc St. Louis.........49/22/000... 56/27/t .. 39/19/s Tampa..........55/40/000...67753/s. 75/59/pc Atlantic City.....33/26/000...39/30/5. 50/32/sh Honolulu........81/71/0 00... 81/68/s .. 80/68/s Salt Lake City....35/22/000 ..37/22/pc.. 40/28/c Tucson..........74/43/000... 70742/s.71I42/pc Austin..........71/32/000 ..76/47/pc. 69/50/pc Houston ........72/36/0.00...74754lt.67/52/pc SanAntonio.....72/35/000..77749lpc.70/55lpc Tulsa...........70/29/000..61/29/pc.. 51/30/s Baltimore .......32/25/000...39/30/s. 50/29/sh Huntsville.......49/21/0.00 ..60/46/pc. 53/28/sh SanDiego.......60/50/0.00... 59/49/c. 56/49/sh Washington,DC.34/27/0.00... 41/32/s. 53/31/sh Billings........ 44/34/000 .. 33/14/sf. 30/15/pc Indianapolis.....32/11/0.00... 50/30/t. 33/17/pcSanFrancisc0....59/48/000... 54/44/c. 52/43/sh Wichita.........69/25/000..Sti24/pc. 50/27/pc Birmingham.....50/21/000 ..63/47/pc. 57/32/sh Jackson,MS.... 60/26/000. 65/46/pc 61/38/pc SanJose........63/43/000..59/42/pc. 52/37/sh Yakima.........54/26/000 43/29/c. 45/26/sh Bismarck........45/25/000 ..19/9/pc..-1/13/s Jacksonvile......52/26/000...61/42/s. 75/45/pc SantaFe........56/20/000..48/21/pc.53/27/pc Yuma...........78/45/000...75/50/s.69/46/pc Boise.......... 44/29/000..45/31/pc. 39/25/sn Juneau..........34/32/002 .. 37/25/rs.. 37/31/c INTERNATIONAL Boston..........31/19/002 .. 30/23/w. 47/32/sh Kansas City......57/25/0.00 ..49/23/pc.. 37/18/s Bndgeport,CT....31/22/000...34/26/s. 44/27/sh Lansing.........26/10/0.00...43/30/c. 30/16/sn Amsterdam......45/34/000 41/30/pc 36/28/rs Mecca..........91/72/000 .93770ls..91/70/s Buffalo.........21/12/001 ..35/33/pc ..40/20/rs Las Vegas.......71/41/000... 64/47/s .. 61/37/c Athens..........46/44/0.25 ..51/45/sh. 56/48/sh MexicoCity......73/39/0.00... 76747ls.. 77/49/s Burlington, VT....I7/10/000...21/13/s...38/26/1 Lexington.......36/16/0 00..54/41/pc. 41/22/sh Auckland........73/63/000 ..75/65/sh. 71/60lsh Montreal.........18/7/000 ..I9/I4/pc. 28/21/sn Caribou,ME.....22/15/010...1978/w.. 31/22/c Lincoln..........62/20/000..41/16lpc..31712ls Baghdad........69/58/0.00... 73/56/s .. 73/54/s Moscow........21/16/0.00... 20/14/c .. 18/11/c Charleston, SC...48/28/0.00... 58/45/s. 66/45/sh Little Rock.......64/34/0.00... 66/36/t .. 55/32/s Bangkok........97/79/027 ..98/79/pc. 97/79/pc Nairobi.........86/61/000... 83/56/s .. 82/55/s Charlotte........42/21/000... 53/37/s. 56/31/sh LosAngeles......65/50/0 00...58749/c. 56/47/sh Beifng..........43/25/000 ..31/20/pc .. 30/25/s Nassau.........70/63/000 ..70/66/pc. 75/70/pc Chattanooga.....47/21/000 ..61/41/pc. 54/30/sh Louisvile........40/20/0.00..55/36/pc.. 42/23/s Beirut..........63/55/069 ..59/50/sh.60/50/pc New Delh/.......64/55/000...71 /53ls.74/57/pc Cheyenne.......53/27/000 ..33/11/pc. 41/16/pc MadisonWl..... 26/ I/0 00..42/16/sh.. 19/3/pc Berlin...........36/32/000...33/30/c ..32/28/sf Osaka..........41/27/000 ..45/36lsh. 40/31/sh Chicago..........30/9/000..46/22/sh. 26/13/pc Memphis....... 56/32/000 64/38/t.. 54/32/s Bogota .........64/48/000... 79/50/t...82/52/t Oslo............32/28/000...36/23lc. 21/10/pc Cincinnati.......32/14/000 ..54/38/pc..39/23/rs Miami..........59/47/0 00 ..71l63/pc. 80/66/pc Budapest........37/27/000...36/29/c.. 34/25/c Ottawa.........12/4/000...18714/s.31/20/sn Cleveland.......22/17/000 ..41/35/pc..37/20/rs Milwaukee.......24/8/0 00 ..44/21/sh. 23/10/pc BuenosAires.....84/68/001... 77/61/t...69/59/t Paris............43/30/000 ..44/30/pc. 46/32/pc ColoradoSpnngs.62/24/000..33/18/pc. 44/23lpc Minneapolis......32/9/000...33/2/sn...7/6/pc CaboSanLucas ..77/54/0.00... 81/59/s .. 84/61/s Rio deJaneiro....95/82/0.00... 89/75/t...89/74/t Columbia,M0...56/28/000... 54/24/1.. 37/I7/s Nashville........48/I9/0 00..61/41/pc. 49/25/pc Cairo...........66/50/000... 68/49/s .. 69/51/s Rome...........54/34/000 ..51/37/pc .. 53/42/s Columbia,SC....48/27/000...59/41/s. 60/38/sh NewOrleans.....60/37/000..71/58/pc. 70/51/sh Calgary.........30/28/001 .. 21/18/sf... 14/4/c Santiago........77/61/000 ..76/58/pc.. 82/64/s Columbus, GA....51/28/0.00... 61/44/s...62/35/t New York.......32/22/0.00... 37/31/s. 45/30/sh Cancun...........75//000..78/71/pc.81/74/sh Sao Paulo.......84/70/000... 83/69/t...81/67/t Columbus, OH....26/15/000 ..48/37/pc...37/20/r Newark, Nl......34/23/000... 38/29/s...46/30lr Dublin..........48/43/000... 44/34/s. 47/35/pc Sapporo ........27/16/0 51 .. 32/19/sn..30/11/sf Concord,NH.....24/16/003 .. 29/12/w. 42/23/sh Norfolk VA......36/30/000...45/32/s. 58/36/sh Edinburgh.......50/28/000... 42/31/s. 46/35/pc Seoul...........43/27/000... 34/20/c .. 25/18/s Corpus Christi....74/397000..77/55/pc.. 68/62/c OklahomaCity...71/32/0 00..60/32/pc.. 54/36/5 Geneva.........39/32/000 ..39/27/pc .. 35/26/c Shangha/........54/46/001 ..46/36/sh. 38/37/sn DallasFtWorth...72/37/000... 73/41/t. 62/43/pc Omaha.........54/23/000 ..3il5/pc .. 26/10/s Harare..........79763/000 ..82/55/sh...84/55/t Singapore.......79/75/003... 87/77/t...88/76/t Dayton .........28/12/000 ..49/34/pc...35/19/r Orlando.........55/36/000...67/51/s. 79/58/pc Hong Kong......72/63/000..76/60/pc. 75764lsh Stockholm.......34/32/000..30/26lsn..29/23/sf Denver....... 63/26/0.00..42/22/pc.47/28/pc PalmSprings.... 80/48/0.00...73/48/s. 61/46/sh Istanbul.........45/39/0.00...44/34/c ..48743/c Sydney..........79/68/0.00... 79/66/t...79/66/t DesMoines......49/21/000..45/16/pc... 25/7/s Peoria..........38/13/000...50/20/t.28/12/pc lerusalem.......56/46I0.03... 56/43/s. 56/43/pc Taipei...........81/64/0.00 ..74/54/pc. 62/55/sh Detroit..........25/10/001..38/37/pc..38/18/rs Philadelphia.....32/27/000...37/31/s. 50/30/sh Johanneshurg....84/66/000..81/62/Fc...84/66/t TelAviv.........64/52/000...65/51/s. 65/50/pc Duluth.......... 25/ I/O00...31/7/sn...ll/5/c Phoenix.........76/50/000... 72/49/s. 71/45/pc Lima...........81/70/0.00... 75/70/c .. 76/70lc Tokyo...........45/32/0.00 .. 54/37/sh. 43/32/sh El Paso..........69/27/000...65/42/s .. 69/45/s Pittsburgh.......23/15/0 01 ..43/35/pc ..40/19/rs Lisbon..........57/48/000 57/50/r 59/47/sh Toronto......... 12/3/025 32/32/pc..34/19/rs Fairbanks....... -3/-10/000...-8/-31/c.-10/-20/s Portland,ME.....28/20/0.03 .. 29/15/w. 41/26/sh London.........50/32/000..45/30/pc.48/32/pc Vancouver.......45/39/000..43/37/sh. 46/34/sh Fargo...........30/14/001 .. 22/-6/sn ..0/-14/pc Providence......30/19/0.12 .. 33/23/w. 48/30/sh Madrid .........52/34/0.00 .. 52/41/sh.. 56/39/c Vienna..........37/30/0.00..35726/pc..34/21/rs Flagstaff........48/17/000...48/18/s.45726/pc Raleigh.........37/26/000...52/35/s. 53/32/sh Manila..........90/77/000 ..87/75/pc...88/73/t Warsaw.........27/23/000...2I27/c. 32/24/sn
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DRMO SKIIS (Last years inventory)
CELEBRATEPRESIDENTS' DAY! BLJY ONE PIECE OFSTICICLEYAT 40' OFF, *
NOW THROUGH FEBRUARY 20 ONLY
DMAN
Prices not applicable to prior sales
1020 NW Wall St • Bend, OR ph 541-617-9799
fine furniture
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DOWNTOWN BEND
Mon-Saf, 10am-5Pm,closed Sunday edmanfurniture.com xut 0 0 R i ze o
STICKLEY. O EA L E R
3I ] SW CENTURY DR., BEND 541-389-6234
Discount is oil suggested retail Limit one pei household Noi io be used with any other offer oi previous purchase
ON PAGES 3&4. COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
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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 - ExerciseEquipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health andBeautyItems 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, StereoandVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 -Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Labrador Pups, AKC Chocolate/Yeliow/White Divorce Liquidation Hips OFA guaranteed. Autographed guitar col$300-$400. 264-Snow RemovalEquipment lection: Clapton, McCart1-541-954-1727 265 - Building Materials ney, Eagles, others. ValMiKi/Chihuahua pups ued over $2500 each; 266- Heating and Stoves 1st shorts, $250 ea. asking $475 each, with 267- Fuel and Wood authenticity 8 appraisal. 541-447-0210 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers Call cell, 561-880-7352. Pet barrier for car, blksteel 269- GardeningSupplies & Equipment The Bulletin reserves adjusts to fit most cars, 270 - Lost and Found $50 obo. 541-504-8399 the right to publish all GARAGE SALES ads from The Bulletin Pitbull Blue Fawn pups. 275 - Auction Sales $250 F;$200 M. Both newspaper onto The Internet web280 - Estate Sales p arents o n s ite . Bulletin site. 541-571-9623 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend Queensfand Heelers 284- Sales Southwest Bend standard 8 mini,$150 8
The Bulletin
O r e g o n
Prineville Habitat ReStore Ruger Mini 14 ranch rifle .223 w/4-16x scope, 150 Building Supply Resale rds ammo. E x cellent! 1427 NW Murphy Ct. $1150. 541-771-5648
Stack-Ongun safe,holds 15 rifles, excellent cond, $175. 541-815-1523
Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items. Call 541-678-5753, or 503-351-2746 Weatherby, Remington rifles, ammo, lots of reload. 541-401-8989
Q7~
QOIlOIl
541-447-6934
Open to the public. Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft.
Hay, Grain & Feed5
Lo oking for Fmployment
1st quality grass hay, love to do child 70- Ib bales, barn stored, Would care or in-home adult $250/ ton. Also big bales! c are, p a r t tim e . Patterson Ranch, 541-383-2851 Sisters, 541-549-3831
People Look for Information USE THE CLASSIFIEDSI About Products and Services Every Daythrough Door-to-door selling with The Bulletin Classifieds fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
Winchester 22LR ammo, 286- Sales Northeast Bend 215 high velocity, 500-rd box, rightwayranch.word288- Sales Southeast Bend $45. 541-647-8931 Coins 8 Stamps press.com 4' x 4' x 8' 290- Sales RedmondArea Rodent control experts Private collector buying Wolf 7 .62x39 A K -47 • Receipts should 292- Sales Other Areas Looking for your 240 rds, $200. include name, (barn cats) seek work in p ostage stamp a l - ammo, next employee? FARM MARKET exchange for safe shel- bums 8 c o llections, 541-647-8931 phone, price and Place a Bulletin 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery ter, basic care. Fixed, world-wide and U.S. kind of wood pur247 help wanted ad shots. W e del i ver! 573-286-4343 (local, 316 - Irrigation Equipment chased. Sporting Goods 541-389-8420. today and • Firewood ads cell ¹) 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Misc. reach over MUST include speS cottish Terrier A K C 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 240 60,000 readers cies and cost per male, 1st shots, wormed, 341 - Horses and Equipment Crafts & Hobbies Hiking boots, L O WA cord to better serve each week. 10 wks, ready to go now! 345-Livestockand Equipment Gortex wm's 11, worn 541-317-5624 our customers. Your classified ad 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals once, retail $179; sell will also Siberian Husky female, Empty brown home $75. 541-815-2737 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers appear on AKC, 15 mos, beautiful! brew bottles, 22 oz Serv>ng Central Oregonstnce 1903 358- Farmer's Column bendbulletin.com 255 $400. 541-977-7019 each, 5 cases in all, 375- Meat and Animal Processing which currently $60. 541-504-5982 Computers Only 2 1 cord dry, split Juniper, 383 - Produce andFood receives over left!! $190/cord. Multi-cord 1.5 million page T HE B U L LETIN r e 246 discounts, & ~/2 cords views every quires computer adavailable. Immediate 208 Guns, Hunting vertisers with multiple month at no delivery! 541-408-6193 & Fishing ad schedules or those extra cost. Pets 8 Supplies selling multiple sys- AH Year Dependable SpringerSpaniel Pups Bulletin 0 Ready to go now! Bend local pays CASH!! tems/ software, to disAlaskan Malamute AKC Donate deposit bottles/ Classifieds Firewood: Seasoned Champion lines, $400. for all firearms & close the name of the cans to local all volunp ups, ready to g o . Get Results! Lodgepole, Split, Del. 541-604-6232 ammo. 541-526-0617 business or the term F irst shots & d e w - teer, non-profit rescue, to Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 Call 541-385-5809 "dealer" in their ads. ormed. $ 7 00-$800.help with cat spay/neuter Yorkies! Everlasting love for $335. Cash, Check or place your ad CASH!! vet bills. Cans for Cats just in time for ValenPrivate party advertis- or Credit Card OK. 541-410-7563. For Guns, Ammo & on-line at trailer at Sheriff's parking ers are d efined as 541-420-3484. tines, 3 puppies left. Reloading Supplies. bendbulletin.com Alaskan Malamute lot, Hwy, 20 W, 2/11-22, those who sell one 541-777-7743 541-408-6900. pups, 2M 3F, $400 PetSmart 2/23-25. DoTamarack seasoned 2 computer. each. 541-771-9255. nate M-F O Smith Signs, 210 years, $225 cord. Tactical 260 Items for Free 541-977-2040 A merican Eskimo, 5 1515 NE 2nd; or at Tu- Furniture & Appliances Colfax Farmers Column • 80% AR-15 lower. mo. old male, pure malo sanctuary anytime. Misc. Items Info: 5413 89-8420; No F.F.L. required. King s i z e Me m o ry white, AKC/UKC reg., 10X20 STORAGE $350. 541-693-4160 A1 Washers&Dryers Foam, mattress/box $800. 541-610-2286 www.craftcats.org. Buying Diamonds Gardening Supplies BUILDINGS $150 ea. Full warspring set 5 yrs old . /Gotd for Cash for protecting hay, • & E q uipment Australian Shepherd ranty. Free Del. Also 541-647-4031 DO YOU HAVE Saxon's Fine Jewelers firewood, livestock DON'T MISSIHIS AKC Reg'd puppies, red wanted, used W/D's SOMETHING TO 541-389-6655 etc. $1496 Installed. 8 blue merle, red tri, 541-280-7355 SELL For newspaper 541-617-1133. ready to go! $700/up. BUYING FOR $500 OR delivery, call the 541-420-1580 or CCB ¹173684. Pets & Supplies DO YOU HAVE Lionel/American Flyer COMPUTER DESK www highdesertaussies.com LESS? Circulation Dept. at kfjbuilders I ykwc.net SOMETHING TO trains, accessories. L-shaped, $40. 541-385-5800 SELL 541-408-2191. She p herd Non-commercial 541-633-7017 The Bulletin recom- Australian advertisers may To place an ad, call FOR $500 OR minis, purebred, no paCall a Pro BUYING & SE L LING place an ad with 541-385-5809 mends extra caution pers, 1 blue female, 1 red GENERATE SOME exLESS? OUI' All gold jewelry, silver when purc h as- male. 541-604-6060 citement i n your or email Whether you need a Non-commercial and gold coins, bars, classifiedObendbullexn.com "QUICK CASH ing products or serneighborhood! Plan a advertisers may fence fixed, hedges rounds, wedding sets, vices from out of the Just bought a new boat? SPECIAL" garage sale and don't place an ad class rings, sterling siltrimmed or a house Sell your old one in the 1 week 3 lines 12 area. Sending cash, forget to advertise in ServtngCentral Oregon stnce 1903 with our ver, coin collect, vinchecks, or credit in- classifieds! Ask about our 2~ k 2 0! classified! built, you'll find "QUICK CASH Super Seller rates! tage watches, dental Ad must include 541-385-5809. f ormation may b e SPECIAL" professional help in 541-385-5809 gold. Bill Fl e ming, SUPER TOP SOIL subjected to fraud. price of single item 1 week 3 lines 12 www.hershe soilandbark.com Microwave: over the 541-382-9419. The Bulletin's "Call a of $500 or less, or For more i nforma- Automatic cat litter box, or Screened, soil & comrange, Maytag, white, tion about an adver- lightly used, very good multiple items Commercial sewing ma- post k 2 0! m i x ed , no Service Professional" ~2 $30. 541-633-7017 whose total does tiser, you may call cond, $50. 541-815-2737 chine, Tacsew T111-155 rocks/clods. High huAd must Directory the O r egon State notexceed $500. Refrigerator F r igidaire include price of w/table & m otor, as- mus level, exc. f or 541-385-5809 26 cu ft side x side with sembled, walking foot, Attorney General's flower beds, lawns, it f $5 0 0 Call Classifieds at water 8 ice, $250 obo. clutch motor installed, 45 gardens, Office Co n s umer or less, or multiple straight 541-385-5809 541-923-8006 min. use on machine, reProtection hotline at s creened to p s o i l . Rafter L F Ranch & items whose total www.bendbulletln.com cently svc'd, qreat cond! 1-877-877-9392. Farm Svcs. - Custom Bark. Clean fill. DeW hirlpool washer & does not exceed $2000 obo. Call or text liver/you Haying 8 Field Work haul. dryer pair, good cond, $500. 541-777-0972 Call Lee Fischer, Cavalier Kinq Charles Found Dog 2/8 n e ar $350. 541-389-1086 541-548-3949. Serving CentralOregons nce 1%U 541-410-4495 Spaniel - $1500 Call Classifieds at Garmin Street Pilot GPS, 12th 8 G r eenwood, 541-385-5809 6 week old male. I'm all Bend. Call to identify, The Bulletin barely used, works from 375 www.bendbulletin.com h ome or a u to, $ 9 0. Adopt a nice CRAFT cat snuggles & kisses. Crate 541-419-4201 recommends extra Lost 8 Found 541-504-5863 Meat & Animal Processing or kitten from Tumalo trained 8 b e ing potty ~ • p . sanctuary, Pet Smart, or trained. 541-382-7614 FREE Male Black Lab chasing products or • FOUND: Child's Fidelis Arms CAR-15 POULAN RIDER Oregon ranchPetco! Fixed, shots, ID http://www.companion (9 yrs) 8 Male Chiwe- services from out of I M-4 5.56 w/mag. New 42"cut 18/2 hp, $650 scooter, Obsidian & Eastern cavaliers.com chip, tested, more! 389nee (6 yrs) both neu- y the area. Sending y $1200. 541-633-7017 27th i n Re d m ond.raised, grain-fed quality obo. 541-389-9268. 8 420. P h otos, in f o : Chihuahuas, 8 wks, long tered, current shots. • c ash, c h ecks, o r • P ossibly fell out o f beef, I/4, /2 or whole, for GUN SHOW www.craftcats.org & like hair female 8 male, $250 Moving 8 can't take l credit i n f o rmation Wanted- paying cash truck. 541-848-9180. Summer 2013 delivery. Feb. 23rd 8 24th, 2013 $3.25/Ib hanging wt + us on Facebook. with us 541-233-3534 for Hi-fi audio 8 stuea, cash. 541-876-1028 may be subjected to Deschutes Fairgrounds dio equip. Mclntosh, Found large set of keys processing. For more info l FRAUD. For more Buy! Sell! Trade! German Shepherds, AKC information about an g SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 Adult companion cats J BL, Marantz, D y on ring, Indoor Swap call Ed, 541-701-1492. www.sherman-ranch.us FREE to seniors, disnaco, Heathkit, San- Meet parking lot, 2/9. advertiser, you may I $8 Admission, 541-281-6829 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS abled 8 veterans! Tame, sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Call 541-317-4847 12 & under free! / call t h e Or e gon / altered, shots, ID chip, Search the area's most Call 541-261-1808 ' State Att or n ey ' OREGON TRAIL GUN Japanese Chin pups Found: Mini Mag Light, comprehensive listing of more. Will always take SHOWS, 541-347-2120 l General's O f f i c e 1M 1F 7 wks, 1st 263 back for any reason. Dachshund mini, AKC on trail of f J a guar classified advertising... or 541-404-1890 Consumer Protec- • shots, $250 ea. 5 41-389- 8 4 20 . V i s it Tools Ave., South of Red- real estate to automotive, t ion ho t l in e at I HUNTER EDUCATION 541-447-0210. photos' Choc longhaired F. Shots mond. Call merchandise to sporting l 1-877-877-9392. info: www.craftcats.org. done, saving new owner classes at Bend High 176 sheets of 9"x11" 541-548-5674 goods. Bulletin Classifieds $120!$600. 541-598-7417 K ittens/cats a vail. a t beginning Feb. 25th. appear every day in the sandpaper, 40C ea or PetSmart (nr Target) thru Lost little black dog, 25¹ BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELPI Sign up online at print or on line. $75 all. 541-410-4596 several rescue groups, mini Schnauzer, male, dfw.state.or.us The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Feb 23 8 24, 11am-4pm. Call 541-385-5809 24 pcs 2y~" rubberized Call www.bendbulletin.com still over 2,000 folks in our community without Tame, shots, altered, ID Leupold scope 3x9x40 Cratex wheels, $3 ea; Sunriver. 503-327-1531 or permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift chip, more. Info/photos, Rifleman, new in box, $65 all. 541-410-4596 Antiques & 541-410-0308. camps, getting by as best they can. 541-389-8420; or visit $200. 541-647-8931 SemmgCenlrai Oregon t nce l903 Collectibles The following items are badly needed to www.craftcats.org 265 R EMEMBER: If you Remington 270 Model help them get through the winter: Building Materials have lost an animal, Grain-fed beef $2.88/lb. 770 b olt-action r i fle, Lab, black male (9) & don't forget to check hanging weight half @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ $200. 541-647-8931 male Chiwenee (6) both La Pine Habitat The Humane Society or whole to be proNew or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. neutered, current shots. Remington700 - 7mag, RESTORE in Bend 541-382-3537 cessed m i d-march. Moving; free to g o od 8 WARM CLOTHING: 3 x 9 s c ope, 300+ Building Supply Resale Redmond, $500 deposit. homes. 541-233-3534 rounds ammo. $675 Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. Quality at 541-923-0882 Half Hog Sale, $190 inobo. 541-419-5060 PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT LOW PRICES Prineville, cludes cutting wrapLabrador, AKC b lack Beer "Pump",1900s, THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER 52684 Hwy 97 541-447-7178; made in England by Ruger Mini 14, .223, with ping and cure. puppies, family raised, 541-536-3234 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. parents on site. $300 Gaskell 8 Chambers, 1000 rnds o f a m mo, OR Craft Cats, WHILE THEY LAST! PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. each. 541-508-0429 $450. 541-408-4613 Open to the public . 541-389-8420. 541-573-2677 $1800. 541-280-2815 up. 541-280-1537
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541-385-5809 476
Employment Opportunities CAUTION READERS: Ads published in "Employment Opportunit ies" i n clude e m and ployee i ndependent po s i tions. Ads for positions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independent job opportunity, p l e ase investigate thoroughly.
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 caution when r esponding to A N Y online e m p loyment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity L aws: Oregon B u reau of Labor & Industry, C i vil Rights Division, 971-673-0764
If you have any questions, concerns or comments, contact: Classified Department The Bulletin 541-385-5809
The Bulletin ADMINISTRATIVE
Supportive Services Specialist COVO (Bend, Oregon) Candidate will provide support and administrative assistance, serve as a central point of contact, conduct eligibility screening, interviews, intake process, record keeping and case notes. Attention to detail and followup is essential. Degree or equivalent e xperience; business administration and/or social services. P ositive attitude i s a must. 28 hours per week. Compensation is $14.75 per hour. Veteran status is preferred, although not a requirement. Central Oregon Veterans Outreach (COVO) is
a 501 (c) (3) non-profit which advocates for veterans of all eras. Applicants e-mail a cover letter and current resume to nch.zebrowskiOcovo-us.org
Applications a c cepted until Feb. 22, 2013, 5:00 pm. No phone calls or walk-ins accepted.
C2 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013• THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9 693
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AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 • pm Fri •
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Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • N oon Wed. Fr i d ay . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • • .. 3:00 pm Fri. • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Sunday. • • • •
616
Want To Rent
Starting at 3 lines
Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*Must state prices in ad
630
Rooms for Rent Studios & Kitchenettes Furnished room, TV w/ cable, micro & fridge. Utils & l inens. New owners. $145-$165/wk 541-382-1885 634
8 GREATWINTER 8
DEAL! 2 bdrm, 1 bath, $530 & $540 w/lease. Carports included! FOX HOLLOW APTS.
(541) 383-31 52
Cascade Rental Management. Co. 636
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
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EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
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Employment Opportunities
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Employment Opportunities
Small studio close to library, all util. pd. $550, $525 dep. No pets/ smoking. 541-3309769 or 541-480-7870 Apt./Multiplex SE Bend
PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies oi these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
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Apt./Multiplex NW Bend
638
bendbuiletin.com
PÃERESS
A STUNNING 2 BDRM/$615 61545 Parrell Road Classy new exterior, small, quiet complex,
lots of upgrades,
beautiful new kitchen, with slab granite countertops, large master with 3 closets. private fenced patio, laundry on site, Includes w/s/g. No smoking/no pets. Call or text 541-633-0663
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Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recom-
mends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE,
623 NW Hill St. 850 sq.ft., classic 1913 vintage office, exc. off RENTALS street p a r king in 603- Rental Alternatives downtown l o c ation. 604 - Storage Rentals $ 800/mo. Cal l P a t 605 - RoommateWanted Kelley 541-382-3099 •
30-yr old male seeks a room; pay up to $250 + share utils. 541-647-9714
Apt./Multiplex NE Bend
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
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Office/Retail Space for Rent
648
Houses for Rent General
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616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636- Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659- Houses for Rent Sunriver 660- Houses for Rent La Pine 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville 662- Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675- RV Parking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
5'QpD p 745
Homes for Sale BANK OWNED HOMES! FREE List w/Pics!
www.BendRepos.com
bend and beyond real estate 20967 yeoman, bend or
NOTICE
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The Bulletin
$8000 all. 541-536-8130
• Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1750. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1250.
• Zieman 4-place trailer SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
All real estate advertised here in is subject to t h e F e deral F air H o using A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or na670 tional origin, or intenBoats & Accessories tion to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for r eal e state which is in violation of this law. All persons 22' Custom Weld Jet, are hereby informed 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 that all dwellings adhrs, garaged, loaded. Sn o wmobiles vertised are available • 541-923-0854. on an equal opportu2007 Ski-Doo Renegade nity basis. The BulleAds published in the5 600 w/513 mi, like new, tin Classified "Boats" classification now reduced to $4500. include: Speed, fishCall 541-221-5221 ing, drift, canoe, • Tick, Tock house and sail boats. Check out the For all other types of classifieds online Tick, Tock... watercraft, please see www.bendbuffetin.com Class 875. ...don't let time get Updated daily 541-385-5809 away. Hire a ( 2) 2000 A rctic C a t professional out Serving Central Oregon srnce 1903 Z L580's EFI with n e w of The Bulletin's covers, electric start w/ GENERATE SOME exreverse, low miles, both "Call A Service excellent; with new 2009 citement in your neigProfessional" Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, borhood. Plan a gadrive off/on w/double tilt, rage sale and don't Directory today! lots of accys. Selling due forget to advertise in to m e dical r e asons. classified! 385-5809.
PUBLISHER'S NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspa750 per is subject to the F air H o using A c t Redmond Homes which makes it illegal to a d v ertise "any Looking for your next preference, limitation emp/oyee? or disc r imination a Bulletin help based on race, color, Place ad today and religion, sex, handi- wanted reach over 60,000 cap, familial status, readers each week. marital status or naYour classified ad tional origin, or an inwill also appear on tention to make any bendbulletin.com such pre f e rence, which currently relimitation or discrimiceives over nation." Familial sta1.5 million page tus includes children views every month under the age of 18 at no extra cost. living with parents or Classifieds legal cus t o dians, Bulletin Get Results! pregnant women, and Call 385-5809 or
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Motorhomes
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2003 Fleetwood Discovery 40' diesel motorhome w/all options-3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, e tc.32,000 mile s . Wintered i n h e ated shop. $89,900 O.B.O. 541-447-8664
WOW! 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, no slide-out, Triton eng, all amenities, 1 owner, perfect, only 17K miles, $21,500. 541-504-3253
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon smce 1903
Used out-drive parts - Mercury OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995.
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HEALTHCARE Driver - Delivery Automotive Techni- CDL required, must be Case Manager Econoline RV 1 989, c ian Neede d . willing t o w o r k in Nurse Liaison for fully loaded, exc. cond, Mopar exp. desired. stone yard as well as 541-389-0435 35K m i. , R e duced Central Oregon Chrysler c e r tified d eliveries. Fork l i f t $15,250. 541-546-6133 Facilities Have an item to and ASE certificaexp. a plus. Must be The case manager will t ion are a ma j o r able to lift 50+ lbs. sell quick'? Four Winds Class p lus. V er y b u s y Drug free work envi- serve as a liaison beWatercraft A 3 2 ' Hurricane If it's under the healthcare deshop. Hard worker r onment. A pply i n tween 2007. CAN'T BEAT livery teams within the and attention to dep erson a t 6326 5 Regency Pacific skilled '500 you can place it in THIS! Look before tail. Will be reqarded 2007 SeaDoo Jamison Rd., Bend. nursing and assisted livyou buy, b e l ow The Bulletin 2004 Waverunner, with top pay. 1-877-877-9392. market value! Size ing facilities throughout FINANCIAL excellent condition, Send replies to: Classifieds for: & mileage DOES PO Box 6676 Sr. Business Lender Central Oregon. The key BANK TURNED YOU people securing cusLOW hours. Double matter! 12,500 mi, functions are as follows: Bend, OR trailer, lots of extras. Bend, OR 97708 DOWN? Private party tody of children under place your ad on-line '10 - 3 lines, 7 days all amenities, Ford Craft3 is a n o n-profit• Act as triage and coorat $10,000 will loan on real es- 18. This newspaper dinate appropriate care V10, Ithr, c h erry, '16 - 3 lines, 14 days Community D e v elopbendbulletin.com 541-719-8444 tate equity. Credit, no will not knowingly acslides, like new! New Caregiver for AFH, 24-hr ment Financial Institution transitions for residents (Private Party ads only) problem, good equity cept any advertising low price, $54,900. wknd shift. Must have 2 (CDFI) with a mission to at risk in care partner asis all you need. Call 541-548-5216 sisted living and home for real estate which is yrs exp with dementia/ strengthen e c onomic, 773 Call The Bulletin At A lzheimer's 8 pas s ecological and family re- health now. Oregon Land in violation of the law. 860 541-385-5809 Acreages Mortgage 388-4200. criminal check. Salary silience in Pacific North- • Assist with discharge O ur r e a ders ar e Motorcycles & Accessories Place Your Ad Or E-Mail Gulfstream Scenic nego. 541-382-1284 hereby informed that west communities. We planning at hospitals by Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, 51366 Riverland, Au www.bendbulletin.com all dwellings adverdo this by providing loans providing timely admisGood classified ads tell Cummins 330 hp dieHarley Davidson SoftLa Pine. 1 acre, Caregiver tised in this newspaand assistance to entre- sions decisions and fathe essential facts in an Tail De luxe 2 0 0 7, eWasel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 garage, w/ non livAds published in Prineville Senior care preneurs, non-profits, in- cilitate a smooth admisper are available on interesting Manner. Write white/cobalt, w / pasin. kitchen slide out, able trailer. $28,000. tercraft" include Kay h ome l o oking f o r dividuals and others, in- sions process. an equal opportunity from the readers view - not senger kit, Vance & new tires,under cover, 541-659-1416 aks, rafts and motorCaregiver for multiple cluding those who don't • Ability to make sales basis. To complain of Hines muffler system lzed the seller's. Convert the personal hwy. miles only,4 door s hifts, p a rt-time t o normally have access to calls, spending 80% of discrimination cal l & kit, 1045 mi., exc. fridge/freezer icefacts into benefits. Show time in the marketplace. watercrafts. For full-time. Pass financing. HUD t o l l -free at maker, W/D combo, c ond, $16,9 9 9 , " boats" please s e e • Must have 3 years of the reader how the item will 1-800-877-0246. The CHECK YOUR AD criminal background a~os@o a ose 541-389-9188. Interbath tub 8 help them in someway. Class 870. check. 541-447-5773. Responsible for gener- sales and marketing extoll f re e t e l ephone Please check your ad shower, 50 amp proThis on the first day it runs 541-385-5809 ating and underwriting perience, preferably in a number for the hearHarley Heritage pane gen 8 more! make sure it is cornew business loans and healthcare setting. advertising tip ing im p aired is to Softail, 2003 Find exactly what Nursing Licensure $45,000. rect. Sometimes inservicing a loan portfolio brought to you by 1-800-927-9275. $5,000+ in extras, gervmg Central Oregon t nce 1903 required. 541-948-2310 you are looking for in the that meets Craft3's miss tructions over t h e $2000 paint job, 675 The Bulletin sion, financial and risk Please send resume to: phone are misunderCLASSIFIEDS 30K mi. 1 owner, tht i e goals. The primary lendstood and a n e r ror For more information RV Parking re enc - acific.com ing focus targets micro, can occurin your ad. please call LOCALMONEY: We buy RV space for rent TuCaregiverssmall and medium busiIf this happens to your 541-385-8090 secured trust deeds & Experienced nesses in central and ad, please contact us or 209-605-5537 malo. 30 amp + water Get your note,some hard money & sewer. Gravel lot. the first day your ad Part-time 8 24 - hour eastern Oregon, specifiloans. Call Pat Kelley caregivers. Home In- cally those owned by mibusiness Avail. 3/1. $350 mo. appears and we will HD Screaming Eagle 541-382-3099 ext.13. Electra Glide 2005, stead Senior Care is norities, women, immi541-419-5060 be happy to fix it as C a/I 54 /-385-580 9 c urrently seek i ng grants, and low-income. s oon a s w e ca n . 103" motor, two tone to r o m ot e o u r service candy teal, new tires, Caregivers to provide Located in our new Bend, 4 :ROWI N G Deadlines are: WeekIndependent Contractor position in-home care to our Oregon office, this posidays 11:00 noon for 23K miles, CD player, will also p rovide Daytime inside sales. hydraulic clutch, ex- Building/Contracting Handyman seniors. Candidates tion next day, Sat. 11:00 with an ad in marketing assistance in cellent condition. must be able to lift, a.m. for Sunday and the eastside Oregon area The Bulletin's Highest offer takes it. transfer, provide perMid-South Sales Promotions is seeking to hire NOTICE: Oregon state Margo Construction Monday. be responsible for "Call A Service 541-480-8080. law req u ires anyLLC Since 1992 sonal care 8 assist in and two sales people to work from The Bulletin 541-385-5809 branding efforts. one who co n t racts • Pavers• Carpentry various home duties. Craft3 circulation offices as Independent Contractors Thank you! Professional" To learn about Craft3, for construction work • Remodeling • Decks Alzheimer/ Dementia/ visit www.craft3.org to secure sponsorships for the Newspaper in The Bulletin Classified • Directory • Window/Door A LS experience i s Complete the application; Education program. This is not selling subATVs to be licensed with the C onstruction Con - Replacement • Int/Ext needed. Must have htt s://hometeease.ad . scriptions or advertising, but involves having tractors Board (CCB). ability to pass back- com/recruit/?id=3970901 local businesses support The Bulletin's Paint • CCB 176121 Housekeepers Garage Sales A n active lice n se 541 -480-31 79 ground checks & have Hirinq decision is sched- E xperienced Newspaper in Education program. hou s e valid DL 8 insurance. uled for 3/13. means the contractor k eepers needed i n Garage Sales i s bonded an d i n Training provided. Call Craft3is an equal Sunriver. P a r t-time This is a relaxed environment and approach 541-330-6400, or fax opportunity emp/oyer; involving business to business sales. s ured. Ve r ify t h e USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! only, must be flexible Garage Sales contractor's CCB resume to: Mid-South offers a brief paid training program women and minorities and be able to work Door-to-door selling with Yamaha Banshee 2001, c ense through t h e 541-330-7362. are encouragedto app/y. weekends. Must have but the ideal candidates will possess business Find them custom built 350 motor, CCB Cons u m er fast results! It's the easiest to business sales experience. own t r a nsportation. race-ready, lots of extras, Website way in the world to sell. in Court Operations Food Service For more information $5500/obo 541-647-8931 www.hirealicensedcontractor. Meadow Lakes Golf call 541-593-1827. Average salesperson earns between Supervisor The Bulletin com The Bulletin Classified $400 -$700 for less than 30 hours weekly. State of Oregon Judicial Course is looking for 870 or call 503-378-4621. Classifieds The dress code is relaxed and casual. 541-385-5809 Department, Jefferson a w ait s t af f e m - Plumber, Journeymen The Bulletin recomBoats 8 Accessories County, Madras, Oregon. ployee. Good work needed for new conThis is not ad or subscription sales, however mends checking with 541-385-5809 if you have previous experience in advertising Court Operations Super- ethic and excellent struction, local 8 valley the CCB prior to con- Landscaping/Yard Carel visor 3 & Mediation Co- customer sales, I will give you priority consideration. se r v iceareas. Start immediately! 17' 1984 Chris Craft tracting with anyone. ordinator. Provides su- skills are essential. Call Gary, 541-410-1655 775 - Scorpion, 140 HP Some other t r ades N OTICE: O RE G O N pervision and training of Must be 21 or over I'm seeking motivated, energetic and articulate inboard/outboard, 2 also req u ire addi- Landscape ContracManufactured/ court staff, and coordi- as you will be ex- Remember.... people with excellent communication skills. depth finders, trolltional licenses and tors Law (ORS 671) nates the District's meMobile Homes Please call Melanie at 541-383-0399. A dd your we b a d ing motor, full cover, certifications r equires a l l bus i d iation program. R e - pected to be able to dress to your ad and EZ L oad t railer, quires associate's degree tend bar periodically. readers on nesses that advertise FACTORY SPECIAL The OBO. Debris Removal $3500 and 3 years supervisory H ours ma y v a r y . Independent Contractor New Home, 3 bdrm, to p e rform L a n d541-382-3728. experience (or education Pays minimum wage Bulletin' s web site $46,500 finished scape C o n struction will be able to click JUNK BE GONE and experience equiva- and tips. Apply onon your site. which inclu d es: lent to 4 years). Salary: line at w w w.cityof- through automatically J and M Homes I Haul Away FREE * Supplement Your Income* p lanting, dec k s , 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, to your site. $3801-$6188/mo. p l us prineville.com 541-548-5511 For Salvage. Also fences, arbors, 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 benefits. For complete Cleanups & Cleanouts w ater-features, and hp Bowrider w/depth announcement and apMel, 541-389-8107 installation, repair of FIND YOUR FUTURE Clerical/Office finder, radio/CD player, plication visit irrigation systems to rod holders, full canHOME INTHE BULLETIN www.courts.ore on. ov/ We are looking for a full-time employee that is Excavating be licensed with the vas, EZ Loader trailer, ~OJD/ obs resourceful and self-motivated to assist a Landscape ContracYour future is just a page exclnt cond, $14,500. or call 541-447-6541, Levi's Dirt Works large staff and write daily clerical reports. This t ors B o a rd . Th i s away. Whether you're looking 707-484-3518 (Bend) x 102. Closes March 13, for all your dirt & excava- 4-digit number is to be person should like working in a fast-paced for a hat or a place to hangit, 2013 I 11:59 pm tion needs. Concrete, environment and be able to meet tight deadincluded in all adverThe Bulletin Classified is Driveway Gradinglines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial tisements which indiyour best source. Customer Service & Low cost! ccb¹ 194077 experience preferred. cate the business has sales exp. needed. 541-639-5282 Every day thousandsof a bond, insurance and Masonry, landscape 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Organization, flexibility and a high level of buyers and sellers of goods workers compensaknowledge, fork lift & Handyman computer proficiency are essential. A solid and services do business in 205 Run About, 220 tion for their employheavy lifting required. HP, V8, open bow, knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typthese pages. They know ees. For your protecMust have good comI DO THAT! We are looking for independent conexc. cond., very fast ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. you can't beat The Bul l etin tion call 503-378-5909 puter skills. Apply in Home/Rental repairs tractors to service home delivery w/very low hours, Classified Section for or use our website: Small jobs to remodels p erson a t 6326 5 lots of extras incl. Ability to work for long periods of time doing selection and convenience routes in: www.lcb.state.or.us to Jamison Rd., Bend. Honest, guaranteed tower, Bimini & detail-oriented work is necessary. This per- every item isjust a phone check license status work. CCB¹151573 custom trailer, son must understand the importance of accall away. before co n t racting Dennis 541-317-9768 $19,500. curacy and thoroughness in all duties. with th e b u s iness. DO YOU NEED Must be available 7 days a week, early mornThe Classified Section is 541-389-1413 ERIC REEVE HANDY Persons doing landA GREAT ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. easy to use. Every item Excellent customer service and interpersonal SERVICES. Home 8 scape m a intenance EMPLOYEE is categorized andevery skills are required. Must enjoy working with Commercial Repairs, do not require a LCB RIGHT NOW? cartegory is indexed onthe Please call 541.385.5800 or the public. College degree or previous office Carpentry-Painting, license. Call The Bulletin section's front page. experience preferred. Pre-employment drug 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or Pressure-washing, before 11 a.m. and screening is required prior to hiring. Whether youare lookingfor apply via email at Honey Do's. On-time SPRING CLEAN-UP! 20.5' Seaswirl Spyget an ad in to puba home orneed aservice, promise. Senior Aeration/Dethatching online © bendbulletin.com der 1989 H.O. 302, lish the next day! To apply, please send a resume to: your future is in the pagesof Discount. Work guar- Weekly/one-time service 541-385-5809. 285 hrs., exc. cond., Box 20281649, c/o The Bulletin, The Bulletin Classified. anteed. 541-389-3361 avail. Bonded, insured. stored indoors for VIEW the PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708 or 541-771-4463 Free Estimates! life $11,900 OBO. Classifieds at: EOE Bonded & Insured COLLINS Lawn Maint. The Bulletin 541-379-3530 www.bendbulletin.com CCB¹181595 Ca/i 541-480-9714 •
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C4 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 2013• THE BULLETIN
DA I L Y
B R ID G E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD wiII shor t2
Mo nday,February 18,2013
Risks in the auction
ACROSS
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
Today'sSouth hoped for a peaceful auction starting with a INT opening. Instead, he had to cope with West's preempt. In such a position, a player must assume that his partner has a few points. I m ight not have had the courage to bid 3NT as South did; his hand had few winners. If the North and East hands had been reversed, South mighthave been down a ton. West led the ten of clubs (not best but normal), and South took the queen. What should he lead next?
doubles. What do you say? ANSWER: You might leap to four hearts. If your partner played there, he might make it. If he went down, the opponents might have made a partscore or game at spades. But many pairs use "fit-showing jumps" in competition; they might bid three diamonds to show diamond values and heart support, helping partner judge a competitive auction. West dealer Both sides vulnerable
If South had started the diamonds at Trick Two, he would have lost three diamonds and two spades. But S outh saw the danger: He led a spade(!) to break the defenders' communication. West won with the jack but had no winning continuation. If West cashed his ace, South's king would win his ninth trick. If instead West shifted to diamonds, South would lose three diamonds and one spade; his eight of diamonds would eventually score. I suppose if you play the dummy well, you can afford risks in the auction.
DAILY QUESTION
WEST 4 A Q J 9 5 43 98 O73 4 10 9 7
EAST 46 Q 9754 2 0 AQ 106 4864
SOUTH 4K87 ivf A K 3
O8542 4AQ5 West 34 All Pass
Nor th Pass
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Youhold: 4 6 9 9 7 5 4 2 Opening lead — 4 10 0 A Q 106 A 8 64 . Y our partner opens one heart. The next player (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
N T W I N
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
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fertilization 32 O nce w hil e 34 Wick holder 3s Perfect diving score
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:
A C H K D L I N S A L E D O W A board E B L 23 Taj Mahal city T S WE E 24 Come across as 28 Competed in a E L I S E 10K R E N T 29 Back in style M I N E D C 30 Altar vow BA D A T M O 31 Pants seam O R E L B T E problem U T A D O W N 35 Not shut, in verse 36 Just Dut Df the box G I L B E R T 37 Comedian H A L F C A F Margaret S L Y F O X 38 "Sons and xwordeditorfeaol.com Lovers" novelist
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By Dan Schoenholz (c)2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
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02/18/13
THE BULLETIN• MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18 2013 C5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
975
• s
v
•
Pickups
Spo r t Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles
•
Vans
Automobiles
•
Automobi l e s
4
Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 Chevy Astro Toyota Camnry: 1971 new trans, 2 Cargo I/an 2001, 1984, $1200 obo; new t i r es , new pw, pdl, great cond., 1985 SOLD; BOATS & RVs AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION brakes, 2nd owner, business car, well 1986 parts car, 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service r uns/drives g o o d . 805 - Misc. Items maint'd, regular oil $500. Make good w o od GMC Envoy 2005, 4x4, Nissan Armada 2007, changes, $4500. 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment M 850 - Snowmobiles My Little Red Corvette" Call for details, truck. $2395 O BO Please call running boards, tinted 4x4, tow pkg., pw, pl. 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 925 - Utility Trailers 1996 coupe. 132K, 541-350-2859 541-548-6592 541-633-5149 window. Vin¹ 260943. V in¹ 7 0 0432. N o w 927 - Automotive Trades 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. 865 - ATVs $13,988. Now $12,688. 929 Automotive Wanted $12,500 541-923-1781 870 - Boats & Accessories Just bought a new boat? Chevy Sil v erado 931 - Automotive Parts, Service Toyota Corolla 2004, S UBA R U . S UB A R U . 875 - Watercraft Sell your old one in the 2000, 1/2 ton, V-S, auto., loaded, 204k and Accessories classifieds! Ask about our 880 - Motorhomes 8' box, bed liner, std 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend miles orig owner non 932- Antique and Classic Autos Super Seller rates! cab, auto, 4x4, 54k 881 - Travel Trailers 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 smoker, exc. c ond. 541-385-5809 933 - Pickups m i., e x c . co n d ., Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 $6500 Prin e ville 882 - Fifth Wheels 935- Sport Utility Vehicles $9000. Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 503-358-8241 885 - Canopies and Campers 940 - Vans 541-977-6653 7 -pass. v a n wit h Toyota 4Ru n ner p ower c h a i r lif t , Ford Taurus wagon 2004, 890- RVsfor Rent 975 - Automobiles 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , $1500; 1989 Dodge very nice, pwr everything, Where can you find a Chevy Silverado 2010 4WD, V6, 5 speed, FWD, good tires, 882 helping hand? HD 2500 Diesel CrewTurbo Van 7 - pass.120K, t ow pkg., plus 4 $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 Cab. Red w/ Blk Lthr. has new motor and Motorhomes Fifth Wheels From contractors to studs tires on rims, 11,800 miles. $46,000. t rans., $1500. I f i n g reat. W a s yard care, it's all here 541-593-0204 call Ja y Kia Optima EX 2004 GMC Yu kon D e n ali $r uns 5500, no w o n l y terested 503-269-1057. in The Bulletin's 2 005, loaded, v e r y $4000.541-659-1416 2.7L V6, all power clean. Vin¹ 1 69789. "Call A Service options, moonroof, Now $15,477 spoiler, leather, Professional" Directory Automobiles Infinity AM/FM/CD, S UB ARU. alloys, Michelin & BUBARUOPBENDCOM Monaco Dynasty 2004, MONTANA 3585 2008, studded tires, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend loaded, 3 slides, dieexc. cond., 3 slides, 1966 GMC, 2nd owner Ford 250 XLT 1990, Looking for your meticulously main877-266-3821 sel, Reduced - now king bed, Irg LR, too many extras to list 6 yd. dump bed, next employee? tained, $5500. Dlr ¹0354 $119,000, 5 4 1 -923- Arctic insulation, all $8500 obo. Serious buy Place a Bulletin help 139k, Auto, $5500. Bend, 760-715-9123 8572 or 541-749-0037 options $37,500. ers only. 541-536-0123 541-410-9997 Toyota L a n d cruiser wanted ad today and 541-420-3250 2000, A u to , 4x4, BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. reach over 60,000 leather. Vin¹ 214783 readers each week. I i iI L Nuyya 297LK H i tchowner, exc. c o n d. Now $18,788. Your classified ad Hiker 2007,3 slides, 101k miles, new tires, will also appear on 32' touring coach, left I loaded, sunroof. i SU B A R U . bendbulletin com ® kitchen, rear lounge, $8900. 541-706-1897 which currently remany extras, beautiful Honda CRV 2004, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Oo Southwind 35.5' Triton, ~ ceives over 1.5 milc ond. inside & o u t , Chevy C-20 Pickup $10,495. 877-266-3821 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du- $32,900 OBO, Prinev- 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; Ford F350 Super Duty Call 541-610-6150 or see Nissan Sentra 2012, M orePixatBendbulletin,com lion page views Dlr ¹0354 King Ranch 20 0 4, http://bend.craigslist.org pont UV coat, 7500 mi. 12,610 mi, full warranty, ille. 541-447-5502 days auto 4-spd, 396, model every month at Deisel, loaded. Vin¹ ' Buick Lucerne CXL Bought new at PS, PB, AC, & more! & 541-447-1641 eves. no extra cost. Bulle/cto/3617273265.html taai rM? CST /all options, orig. A34788. 2009, $12,500, low $16 000 541-788-0427 $132,913; tin Classifieds owner, $22,000, Now $23,788. low miles; 2003 Leasking $93,500. 541-923-6049 Get Results! Call Sabre, $4000. You'll Call 541-419-4212 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! S UB A R U . 385-5809 or place i 55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn not find nicer Buicks your ad on-line at One look's worth a P ROJECT car, 3 5 0 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Door-to-door selling with bendbulletin.com thousand words. Call small block w/Weiand 877-266-3821 fast results! It's the easiest Toyota Tacoma 2011, Bob, 541-318-9999. dual quad tunnel ram Dlr ¹0354 way in the world to sell. Pilgrim 27', 2007 5t h 4x4, lift, very clean. for an appt. and take a with 450 Holleys. T-10 wheel, 1 s lide, AC, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, FORD RANGER XLT V in¹ 0 1 5638. N o w drive in a 30 mpg car! The Bulletin Classified Scion XB 2006, 5 dr., The Bulletin recoml TV,full awning, excel- Weld Prostar whls, 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 $26,988. mends extra caution I Winnebago 30A Sight- lent shape, $23,900. extra rolling chassis + speed, with car alarm, Chevy C obalt 2 0 0 5, FWD, tinted windows, 541-385-5809 pu r c hasing i S UB A R U . white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K Clean. Vin¹ 060269. when seer 2012, 31 ft., all 541-350-8629 CD player, extra tires extras. $6000 for all. i products or services options, 2 sli d es, on rims. Runs good. miles, over 35mpg, auto Now $9688. 541-389-7669. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend from out of the area. trans, AC, CD player, 362HP V10, 10K mi., Need help fixing stuff? Clean. 92,000 miles 877-266-3821 cas h , dual airbags, manual S UBA R U . i Sending mint cond., $105,900. Call A Service Professional on m o tor. $ 2 6 00 Dlr ¹0354 checks, or credit inlocks 8 windows, good 541-330-5516 find the help you need. OBO. 541-771-6511. NE Hwy 20 • Bend formation may be I cond in/out, runs/drives 2060877-266-3821 www.bendbunetin.com Look at: 940 great, non-smkr, always i subject toFRAUD. Dlr ¹0354 For more informaBendhomes.com maintained. $4950. Vans Jeep Wrangler UnlimCall 541-350-9938 i tion about an adverfor Complete Listings of I nternational Fla t Chevy Wagon 1957, tiser, you may call ited 2008, Hard top, Area Real Estate for Sale Bed Pickup 1963, 1 4-dr., complete, 96 Ford Windstar & I the Oregon State I lift, S weet ! V in¹ kYo~ Ler! t on dually, 4 s p d. 2000 Nissan Quest, $7,000 OBO, trades. 572535. Now i Attorney General's I sl l trans., great MPG, Please call both 7-passenger Office C o n sumer $23,988. Pilgrim In t e rnational could be exc. wood 541-389-6998 vans, 160K miles, Subaru Loyale Chrysler Sebring Coni Protection hotline at 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, hauler, runs great, 4ket SUBARU. low prices, $1200 & vertible, 2004, beautiful 1991, 4x4, 5-spd, 1-877-877-9392. Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe new brakes, $1950. $2900, and worth condition, dark g r ay/ 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend $1950. Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' Fall price $ 2 1,865. 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, 541-41 9-5480. brown w/tan leather inteevery cent! 877-266-3821 ENPPrng Central Oregan SinCe 1903 auto. trans, ps, air, 541-420-3277 2004, onry 34K, loaded, 541-312-4466 541-318-9999 rior, 84K miles, $5995. Dlr ¹0354 frame on rebuild, retoo much to list, ext'd 541-350-5373 painted original blue, warr. thru 2014, $54,900 original blue interior, Dennis, 541-589-3243 original hub caps, exc. 881 D 0 , I chrome, asking $9000 or make offer. Travel Trailers •
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The Bulletin
541-385-9350
23' Wanderer, 1997, excellent condition, f u ll bath, roll-out awning. $5800. 541-546-9395
hemiV8, hd, auto, cruise, am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-420-3634 /390-1285 908
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495
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Aircraft, Parts & Service
Chrysler SD 4-Door Need to get an 1930, CD S Royal 1000 ad in ASAP? Standard, S-cylinder, Legal Notices body is good, needs You can place it some r e s toration, online at: runs, taking bids, LEGAL NOTICE 541-383-3888, www.bendbulletin.com DESCHUTES COUNTY 541-815-3318
541-385-5809
9
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ROAD DEPARTMENT BEND, OREGON
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Legal Notices
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BID FOR ONE (1) NEW CUR R E NT MODEL CHIP SPREADER" and the name and address of the bidder.
1/3 interest i n w e l lINVITATION TO BID N o bid will b e r e equipped IFR Beech BoToyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, 2013 ceived or considered nanza A36, new 10-550/ 1983, 8000-Ib Warn FOR THE by Deschutes County prop, located KBDN. winch, 2 sets of tire MANUFACTURE AND unless the bid con$65,000. 541-419-9510 FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, chains, canopy, 22R DELIVERY OF tains a statement by door panels w/flowers motor, 5-spd transONE (1) NEW t he bidder that t h e & hummingbirds, mission, $2495 obo. CURRENT MODEL p rovisions of O R S white soft top & hard 541-350-2859 CHIP SPREADER 2 79C.840 are to be top. Just reduced to M Springdale 2005 27', 4' complied with. Each $3,750. 541-317-9319 935 slide in dining/living area, Sealed bids will be re- bid must contain a or 541-647-8483 sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 Sport Utility Vehicles ceived at th e Des- statement as to obo. 541-408-3811 chutes County Road whether the bidder is 1/5th interest in 1973 Department, 6 1 1 50 a resident bidder, as Cessna 150 LLC 9 SE 27th Street, Bend, defined in ORS 150hp conversion, low Oregon 97702, until 279A.120 (1) (b). Ortime on air frame and but not a fter, 2 00 egon law requires the engine, hangared in p.m. on February 26, contract be awarded Bend. Excellent per- Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 2013 at which time all to the lowest responformance & afford2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Buick Enclave 2008 CXL bids for the above-enSpringdale 29' 2 0 07, able flying! $6,500. 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 AWD, V-6, black, clean, titled p ublic w o r ks sive bidder who proslide,Bunkhouse style, recycled materi541-382-6752 y sound, 82k project will be publicly vides radio (orig),541-419-4989 mechanicall sleeps 7-8, excellent als ins t ea d of miles. $20,995. o pened a n d re a d non-recycled matericondition, $ 1 6 ,900, Location, Location, The Bulletin Call 541-815-1216 aloud. 541-390-2504 als pursuant to ORS Location! To Subscribe call Buick Enclave CXL 279A.125. Executive Hangar 541-385-5800 or go to The proposed work 2009, 36,822 mi., at Bend Airport (KBDN) c onsists of th e f o l¹119491. $29,995 60' wide x 50' d eep, www.bendbulletin.com The award of the conlowing: The M anu- tract and purchase of w/55' wide x 17' high bi- Ford Mustang Coupe facture and Delivery this equipment unit is fold dr. Natural gas heat, 1966, original owner, Of One (1) New Cur- subject to approval of offc, bathroom. Adjacent V8, automatic, great Oregon r ent M o del, C h i p Frontage Rd; great the 2012/2013 Fiscal ArrtnSource Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 to $9000 OBO. Spreader. visibility for aviation busi- shape, Year Budget by the 541-598-3750 29', weatherized, like 530-515-8199 ness. 541-948-2126 or Deschutes C o u nty aaaoregonautosource.com n ew, f u rnished & email 1jetjockoq.com Specifications and Board o f C o m misready to go, incl Wineother bid documents Ford Ranchero s ioners. Subject t o ard S a t ellite dish, Piper A rcher 1 9 80, may be inspected and budget approval, the 1979 26,995. 541-420-9964 based in Madras, alobtained at the Des- contract with 351 Cleveland wi l l be ways hangared since chutes County Road awarded at a r e gumodified engine. new. New annual, auto D epartment, 6 1 1 50 Body is in larly scheduled meetpilot, IFR, one piece S.E. 2 7 t h St r e et, ing of the Board of condition, windshield. Fastest Ar- excellent Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, Bend, Oregon 97702 County Commission$2500 obo. cher around. 1750 tomost options, new paint or t h e De s c hutes ers. 541-420-4677 & tires, 159K mi., $4250. County webs i t e, Weekend Warrior Toy tal t i me . $6 8 ,500. Call 541-233-8944 Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, 541-475-6947, ask for www.deschutes.org. Deschutes C o u nty Inquiries pertaining to may reject any bid not fuel station, exc cond. Rob Berg. sleeps 8, black/gray T-Hangar for rent these s p ecifications in compliance with all shall be directed to i nterior, u se d 3X , at Bend airport. prescribed bi d d ing -. i'. I Randy McC u lley, procedures and re$24,999. Call 541-382-8998. 541-389-9188 Equipment Manager, quirements, and may Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 916 telephone (541) reject for good cause eng, power everything, 604-6917. Looking for your Trucks & any or all bids upon a new paint, 54K original Dodge Durango 2004, next employee? finding of Deschutes miles, runs great, ex- Limited, leather, tow Heavy Equipment I MPORTANT: Pr o Place a Bulletin help cellent condition in & C ounty it i s i n t h e pkg. V in ¹ 1 4 2 655. s pective bidd e r s wanted ad today and out. Asking $8,500. Now $9988 public interest to do downloading/accessreach over 60,000 541-480-3179 so. The protest peing w e b site-posted readers each week. riod for this procureS UBA RU. BUBARUOPBRND COM project specifications ment is seven (7) calYour classified ad 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend and other bid docu- endar days. will also appear on m ents MUST c o m877-266-3821 bendbulletin.com piete and submit the Dlr ¹0354 which currently reCHRIS DOTY Diamond Reo Dump Contact I n formation Department Director ceives over 1.5 milTruck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 Form provided on the lion page views evyard box, runs good, GMC V~ton 1971, Only website, or c o ntact ery month at no PUBLISHED: $6900, 541-548-6812 $19,700! Original low the Road Department DAILY JOURNAL OF extra cost. Bulletin mile, exceptional, 3rd by telephone at (541) Classifieds Get ReCOMMERCE: owner. 951-699-7171 ExK E A T 388-6581, to provide February 11, 2013 and sults! Call 385-5809 contact information, to or place your ad February 18,2013 F ord E x p lorer X L T receive fol l o w-upTHE BEND BULLETIN: on-line at 2 006, 4x4 , cl e a n . Hyster H25E, runs documents (addenda, bendbulletin.com February 11, 2013 and V in¹ A 1 8448. N o w c larifications, well, 2982 Hours, etc ) . February 18, 2013 $7,988. F ailure t o rovi d e $3500,call 541-749-0724 contact information to LEGAL NOTICE Jeep Comanche, 1990, S UB ARU. Fifth Wheels the Road De artment IN T H E CIR C U IT original owner, 167K, BUBARUOPBRND COM THE 4WD, 5-spd, tags good 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend will result in ro oser COURT O F dis ualification. Onl STATE OF OREGON till 9/2015, $3900 obo. 877-266-3821 541-633-7761 those re uestin FOR THE COUNTY Dlr ¹0354 ro ect s ecifications OF DES C H UTES F ord F reestyle S E L directl from the Road Probate Department, 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, De artment and those In the Matter of the Peterbilt 359 p o table front & side airbags, 25 n otif in t h e Ro a d Estate of DORIS E. water t ruck, 1 9 90, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 mpg, 3rd row seating, De artment w ebsite B ROOKSHIRE, D e 3200 gal. tank, 5hp by Carriage, 4 slide9 pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, access to the ro ect c eased, Case N o . p ump, 4 - 3 hoses, outs, inverter, sateltraction control, new tires s ecifications will re13PB0011. NOTICE camlocks, $ 2 5,000. Plymouth lite sys, fireplace, 2 B a r racuda& brks, maintained ex- ceive follow-u docu- TO INT E RESTED 541-820-3724 flat screen TVs. 1966, original car! 300 t remely well, runs & ments addenda PERSONS. NOTICE hp, 360 V8, centerdrives exlnt,148K hwy mi, $60,000. 932 N v t IS HEREBY GIVEN 541-480-3923 lines, (Original 273 $7200. 541-604-4166 that the undersigned Antique & eng & wheels incl.) Bids shall be made on has been appointed 541-593-2597 Classic Autos the forms furnished by personal representathe County, incorpo- tive. An persons havPROJECT CARS: Chevy rating a l l co n t ract ing claims against the 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & ad- estate are required to documents, Chevy Coupe 1950 dressed and mailed or p resent them, w i th rolling chassis's $1750 1921 Model T d elivered t o Ch r i s vouchers attached, to Laredo 2009 30' with 2 ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, GMC Envoy 2002 4WD Delivery Truck slides, TV, A/C, table complete car, $ 1949; $6,450. Loaded, Doty, Department Di- the undersigned per8 c h airs, s a tellite, Restored 8 Runs Leather, Heated rector, 61150 SE 27th sonal representative Cadillac Series 61 1950, seats, Bose sound Street, Bend, Oregon at 747 SW Mill View Arctic pkg., p o wer 2 dr. hard top, complete $9000. awning, Exc. cond! w/spare f r on t cl i p ., system. Ext. roof rack 97702 in a sealed en- Way, Bend, Oregon 541-389-8963 $3950, 541-382-7391 velope plainly marked 9 7702, w i thin f o u r $28,000. 541-419-3301 (218) 478-4469 Redmond: 541-548-5254
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Leg a l Notices
Legal Notices
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Legal Notices
of first publication of p ossession of c o nthis notice, as stated trolled su b stances below, to the under(ORS Chapter 475). signed at the below IN THE MATTER OF: address, or they may U.S. Currency in the be barred. Additional amount of $2,165.60, i nformation may b e Case No. o btained f ro m t h e 12-03-00245 s e ized c ourt r ecords, t h e 1/10/2012 from John Administrator, or the Tyler Ryan, Zachary R yan a n d Di a n a attorney for the Administrator. Dated and Chambers. first published Februpersonal representa- ary 4, 2013. DAVID E. LEGAL NOTICE PETERSEN, OSB PURSUANT tive, DANIEL C. RE. TO Dated and first pub- ¹82104, Attorney for ORS 87: Notice is lished on February 11, Administrator, Merrill hereby given that 2013. MICH E L LE O'Sullivan, LLP, 805 t he f ollowing v e STEWARD, Personal SW Industnal Way, hicle will be sold, for representative. S uite 5, B e nd, O r - cash to the highest egon 97702. bidder, on 2/19/13. LEGAL NOTICE The sale will be held LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R C UIT at 10:00 a m by COURT O F THE NOTICE OF SEIZURE Custom Ex h a ust FOR CIVIL STATE OF OREGON Specialties 1064 SE FORFEITURE TO ALL FOR THE COUNTY Paiute Way. Bend, POTENTIAL OF DES C H UTES OR. 2006 H o nda PROBATE DEPART- CLAIMANTS AND TO Odyssey VIN: ALL UNKNOWN MENT. E s t at e of 5FNRL38866B0993 HOWARD F. PERSONS READ THIS 77. Amount due on CAREFULLY BOVERS, Deceased. lien $4972 00 ReCase No. 13PB0014. puted own e r(s): If you have any interNOTICE TO INTERM ark & Dian e est i n t h e s e i zed ESTED P E RSONS. Schultz/American NOTICE IS HEREBY property d e s cribed Honda Finance. below, you must claim G IVEN that the u ndersigned has been that interest or you will PUBLIC NOTICE appointed P e rsonal automatically lose that The Bend Park & RecR epresentative. A l l interest. If you do not reation District Board persons having claims file a c laim for t he of Directors will meet against the Estate are property, the property in a work session and may be forfeited even required to p r esent regular busi n ess them, with vouchers if you are not conmeeting on Tuesday, victed of any crime. February 19, 2013, at attached, to the undersigned P e rsonal To claim an interest, the District Office, 799 you must file a written SW Columbia, Bend, R epresentative, c / o claim with the forfei- O regon. The w o r k Thomas J. Sayeg at Karnopp P e t ersen ture counsel named session will begin at below, Th e w r i tten 5:00 p.m. a t w h ich LLP, 1201 NW Wall S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , claim must be signed time the b oard w ill Oregon by you, sworn to unBend, hear p r e sentations 9 7701-1957, wi t h i n der penalty of perjury and interview candibefore a notary public, d ates interested i n four months after the date of first publica- and state: (a) Your serving on the board true name; (b) The to fill a c urrent vation of this notice, or address at which you cancy. The board will the claims may be barred. All p e r sons will a c cept f u t u re also dis c us s a m ailings f ro m t h e self-assessment prowhose rights may be court and f orfeiture cess and receive an affected by the proceedings may obtain counsel; and (3) A update on the O utadditional information s tatement that y o u door Children's Forhave an interest in the e st I n i tiative. T h e from the records of t he court, the P e r- seized property. Your board will conduct a sonal Representative deadline for filing the regular busi n ess claim document with or the attorneys for meeting beginning at forfeiture cou n sel the Personal Repre7:00 p.m. to consider s entative, wh o a r e n amed below is 2 1 appointing a new Karnopp P e t ersen days from the last day board member, apof publication of this LLP, 1201 NW Wall point o n e Bu d g et S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , notice. Where to file Committee member, Bend, Oregon 97701- a claim and for more and award contracts Da i n a for Big Sky access 1 957. DATED a n d i nformation: first published Febru- Vitolins, Crook County improvements and the District Attorney Ofary 11, 2013. Kay J. Mirror Pond consultWight, Personal Rep- fice, 300 N E T h i rd ant. The board will Street, Prineville, OR resentative. meet i n ex e c utive 97754. session immediately LEGAL NOTICE Notice of reasons for following th e b u s iIN T H E CIR C U IT Forfeiture: The propness session pursuCOURT O F THE erty described below ant to ORS STATE OF OREGON was seized for forfei192.660(2)(h) for the FOR THE COUNTY ture because it: (1) purpose of consulting OF DES C HUTES, Constitutes the pro- with legal counsel reProbate Department. ceeds of the violation garding current litigaIn the Matter of the of, solicitation to viotion or litigation likely Estate of CON- late, attempt to vioto be filed, and ORS STANCE R. SEVERS, late, or conspiracy to 192.660(i) for the purDeceased. Case No. violates, the criminal pose of c o nducting 12 PB 0073. NOTICE laws of the State of performance evaluaTO INT E RESTED Oregon regarding the tions of public officers PERSONS. Bonnie A. manufacture, distribu- and employees. The Burman has been ap- tion, or possession of February 19, 2 0 13, pointed as Adminis- controlled substances agenda and meeting trator of the Estate of (ORS C hapter475); report is posted on the Constance R. Severs, and/or (2) Was used District's web s i te: deceased, by the Cir- or intended for use in www.bendparksancuit Court of the State committing or f acili- drec.org. For m o re of Oregon fro Destating the violation of, information call c hutes County. A l l solicitation to violate, 541-389-7275. persons having claims attempt to violate, or against the estate are conspiracy to violate Just bought a new boat? required to p r esent the criminal laws of Sell your old one in the the same with proper the State of Oregon classifieds! Ask about our vouchers, within four regarding the manuSuper Seller ratesi months after the date facture, distribution or 541-385-5809 months after the date of first publication of t his notice, o r t h e claims may be barred. All persons w hose r ights may b e a f f ected by t h e p r oceedings may obtain additional information from the records of the court, the p e rsonal representative, or the lawyers for the
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
C6 MONDAY FEBRUARY 18 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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U MAG A Z I N E CENTRAL OREGON'S WOMEN'S MAGAZINE • • I
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