Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
THURSDAY March 19,2015
BILL IN THE LEGISLATURE• 01 R
R
H
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C p~ COMINGFRIDAYIN SPORTS: PREVIEWSOFUo MENAND OSUWOMEN IN THENCAA TOURNEYS
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD Starducks coffee cup COntrOVerSy —The chain tries to address race, with embarrassing results.C6
Plus: Health denefitsIn a reversal, scientists now saythatcupofjoecanbegood for you — in moderation.D1
• Groups suing over the project want environmental concessions
to properlyinvestigate how fish and water levels would be
were to divert water, the iconic cascade at Tumalo Falls could
By Tyler Leeds
utary of Tumalo Creek, in the
affected.
foothills of the Cascades. Central Oregon LandWatch and
Outside of court, LandWatch has said a climate change analysis points to the possibility that flows couldbe so low in the summer that if the city
dry up. The litigants have argued the city should rely more on groundwater, which the city alreadyuses for about half its water supply.
ment certain environmental
The Bulletin
protections. Opponents of the city's $24 The dispute concerns the million water pipe project have city's work to replace an aging offered to end their lawsuit pipe that diverts drinking waif the city agrees to impleter from Bridge Creek, atrib-
WaterWatch of Oregon filed
the lawsuit in 2013, arguing the U.S. Forest Service failed
See Settlement/A5
WARM SPRINGS
Ih Selem —State House passes ban onhunting with drones and bill allowing kids to have sunscreen atschool. B3
Feds confirm financial inquiry
Sacredreck disputeTwo tribes claim it aspart of their tradition. One climbs it, but the other wants themoff. A6
And a Wed exclusiveCasino-bar chain takes on its rivals on the LasVegas Strip — with a homeyatmosphere. bentibulletin.cem/extras
By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
The U.S. Department of Interior's Of-
fice of the Inspector General confirmed Wednesday morning
EDITOR'5CHOICE
that it is conducting
an investigation into alleged financial mismanagement of federal funds involv-
Did Texas forget the Alamo?
ing the Confederated
Tribes of Warm Springs. The Bulletin filed
n
a Freedom of Information Act request
— ~p
with the Department of the Interior on
By Lauren Etter
Tuesday. According
Bloomberg News
to Cristal Garcia, a
t
government informa-
AUSTIN — Limestone
is missing from the facade, tree roots push up through sidewalks and windowsills
tion specialist with
<g
are rotting on the only
the inspector general, that request was
,"c.
building generations of
denied because it
s
involves an ongoing investigation. SeeInquiry/A4
u.r
Texans have been told never
'i.
to forget. "We want people to think about the Alamo again," Rebecca Bridges Dinnin, its director, said in her San Antonio office, sittingbeneath
the red, white and green flag of the Texas Revolution. While Texans are no strangers to tattered public
works, with billions of dollars needed for roads, parks and state buildings, the Alamo's decay is goading business leaders and public officials to act. They're seeking millions to revive the fort, which has been the
state's symbolicheart since a bloody 1836 defeat there rallied Texans to wrest inde-
pendencefrom Mexico. On March 12, Texas fired the Daughters of the
Republic of Texas, aprivate organization that has managed the site, after waning gift-shop sales and allega-
Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
RalphMcNulty,85, taIks about the hats he knits for newborn babies, sitting in his Tumalo ranch home Tuesday morning. In the backgfound, 88 baby hats are laid out on McNulty's couch — just some of the more than 2,000 he's made over the past eight years.
• The formerrodeoannouncernow makesanddonates beaniesfor babies By Keiley Fisicero The Bulletin
TUMALO — Even though
Deschutes County rodeo-goers might recognize his voice
By John M. Glionna
from the34 years he spent
Los Angeles Times
announcing, not as many people might recognize Ralph McNulty's delicate
CARSON CITY, Nev.— So your dog is literally on its last
handiwork. A former rancher, McNulty
legs. The end is near and Fido has stopped
built a name for himself in the
eating. You want to
Bend farmingand rodeo community for years alongside his
bring an end to his pain.
late wife, Dee. But after his first heart attack in June 2007, McNulty wasn't up for the hard ranch
Ralph McNulty knits a hat on his circle loom.
work. He needed something to keep himbusy, so Dee gave him a small circle loom to make hats. Since then,
Becausehe isleft-handed, and his wife was right-handed,
McNulty, 85, has hand-woven more than 2,000 yarn hats for
McNulty had to teach himself how to weave. His first hat, he
babies.
estimates, took seven hours to
McNulty admits that he wasn't excited about the loom
complete; now each one takes about three hours, so he can
fundraising for the state's most famous monument.
right away. It took a while
make a couple a day.
before he really sat down
"Almost all Texans look at San Antonio as a second
with it and began working.
When it's warmer out, McNulty still likes to head
tions of mismanagement. State Sen. Jose Menendez,
a Democrat, wants to ask voters to approve spending as much as $250millionto restore the complex. A new endowment board, which
indudes billionaire Red McCombs, met this month to consider ways to boost
Nevada eyes pot for pets
What to do? Under
outside and enjoy his 12-acre ranchette in Tumalo. In the colder months, McNulty stays
inside by the fire weaving more hats, and before he
McNulty donates baby hats to facilities like Bend fire stations.
a bill proposed this week in Nevada, you can get him medical marijuana.
See a videoabout McNulty's abrupt transition from ranching to crocheting at bemibulletin.cem/babyhats
duced in the state Senate onTuesday
knows it, they start to pile up.
fire stations carry the warm
That is why over the years McNulty has approached dif-
hats in the ambulance pediatric kits for newborns. AirLink
ferent facilities to donate the
carries the hats as well.
baby hats. Most of the Bend
Legislation introwould allow pets to
use pot under a veterinarian's supervision. Democratic Sen.
Tick Segerblom, the sponsor of SB 372, says there are guidelines, even for Fido.
SeeRancher/A5
See Pot /A4
home and that's because of the Alamo," said McCombs,
87, the auto dealership founder who helped start the Clear Channel Communications radio-station
chain. SeeAlamo /A5
TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy High 66, Low 34 Page B6
The Bulletin
INDEX Business Calendar Classified
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AnIndependent
Q I/I/e userecyclednewsprint
Vol. 113, No. 7B
C
D6
5 sections
0
88 267 0 23 29
A2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
The Bulletin
NATION Ee ORLD
How to reachus
BalanCing the dudget — Makinggoodon last fall's campaign commitments, Republicans advancedconservative budgets in both houses of Congress onWednesday,setting up aveto struggle over the fate of the health care lawandpromising a whopping $5 trillion in spending cuts to erasedeficits by the end of the coming decade. The possibility of billions more for the Pentagonand anoverhaul of the tax code also emerged asRepublican priorities, although there were significant differences betweenthe day-old proposal in the House and theoneunveiled during the day by Senate Republicans. Defense spending aside, Medicare waschief among them. Senate Republicans, already eyeing the 2016elections, balked at a politically sensitive Houseplan to turn health care coveragefor seniors into a voucher-like program for those whoenroll beginning in 2024.
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the White House quickly reaf-
The Associated Press
was still evaluating options, they suggested the U.S. could
thorized to speak by name of two independent nations about internal deliberations living side by side, a central and commented only oncontenet of p eace negotiations dition of anonymity. led by presidents from both Most Republican presidenU.S. political parties. And the tial hopefuls welcomed NeWhite House sharply chas- tanyahu's victory, but they tised Netanyahu's party for were notably silent about using anti-Arab rhetoric in the whether they backed Palestinlead-up to the election. ian statehood. Only Wisconsin "Rhetoric that seeks to mar- Gov. Scott Walker weighed in, ginalize one segment of their saying the U.S. goal "must repopulation is deeply concern- main a two-state solution." ing and it is divisive," Obama Former Republican Presispokesman Josh Earnest said. dent GeorgeW. Bush made a Frustrated by both I srael two-state solution a corner-
ease its staunch opposition to
and the U.S., Palestinian Au-
WASHINGTON
-
The officials were not au-
firmed its support for the idea
The
Obama administration signaled Wednesday it could take a tougher stance toward
Benjamin Netanyahu following his decisive Israeli election victory and campaign tack to the right, saying there will be consequences for his sudden reversal on the idea of an independent Palestinian state.
While senior American officials said the administration
Palestinians turning to the UN thority President Mahmoud Security Council to create a Abbas has become increasstate. ingly aggressive in efforts "There are policy ramifi- to secure a Palestinian state cations for what he said," one through other means, includofficial said of Netanyahu's ing the UN Security Council. campaign rhetoric rejecting The U.S. has veto power on the creation of a Palestinian the council and has repeatedly state. "This is a position of warned Abbas it would block record." his efforts to use that avenue. If Netanyahu holds firm to But on Wednesday, a senior resolution to the Mideast con-
ADMINISTRATION
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By Julia Pace
his opposition to a two-state
Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ Managing Editor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356
•
PhOeniX Sheetillg — A gunman killed oneperson and wounded five others Wednesday in arampage that included a motel shooting, a carjacking and ahome invasion and ended with his arrest at a nearby apartment in suburban Phoenix. Thesuspect was taken into custody after officers spotted him on anapartment balcony and shocked him with a stun gun. Numerous officers led the handcuffed man to atruck parked outside anapartment complex. Police later identified the man as Ryan Giroux, a41-year-old ex-convict who has served three stints in state prison since 1994. DurSt CaSe — The whispered words of Robert Durst recorded in an unguarded moment in abathroom could come back to haunt him — or help him — as hefaces a murder charge. A possible move by prosecutors to introduce the incriminating material from a six-part documentary on his strange life andconnection to three killings could backfire as interview footage did in the Michael Jackson molestation trial and the Robert Blakemurder case. In both cases, the defense was allowed under the "doctrine of completeness" to provide segments of interviews that presented their clients favorably without subjecting them to tough cross-examination.
stone of his efforts to secure
peace between Israelis and Palestinians. Obama also has pursued P alestinian
s t ate-
hood, most aggressively in a months-long push for peace
AdertiOIIlaW —The American Civil Liberties Union on Wednesday asked a federal judge to block anAlabama law that allows a fetus to be represented in court when aminor is seeking judicial permission for an abortion. While abortion opponents have rolled out avariety of new restrictions on abortion in recentyears — including new requirements on clinics and doctors — ACLU staff attorney Andrew Beck said the Alabamalaw was unique. "This particular law is one of a kind," Beck said.
that ultimately collapsed last
year. Hillary R odham C l inton, the Democratic front-runner if
she enters the 2016 campaign, did not comment on the Israe-
administration official s a id li elections. As Obama's first only that the administration secretaryofstate,she worked
flict, it could force whoever sits in the Oval Office — now and in the next administrationto choose between the prime
was evaluating its options on Security Council action and
closely with Netanyahu and championed an independent
other possible responses, no-
Palestinian state.
minister and a longstanding U.S. policy with bipartisan support. Hours after the Israeli election results were finalized,
istration threats to block the Palestinians. A second official
White HOuSedrOne CraSh —TheJustice Department said Wednesday that it would not criminally charge a federal employee who was operating a hobbyist's drone that crashed onthe South Lawn of the White House inJanuary. The Federal Aviation Administration, however, hasbegun aninvestigation of the incident to determine whether the man,ShawnUsman, should be fined, the Justice Department said. It is against federal regulations to fly a drone in Washington. The crash of the DJIPhantom drone, a 2-foot-by-2-foot quadcopter, generated concern among lawenforcement officials, who said it exposed a vulnerability in White House security.
tably not repeating admin-
Secretary of State John Kerry spoke with Netanyahu on Wednesday. The White House confirmed the U.S. could de- said Obama would speak with cide not to veto Security Coun- the prime minister in the comcil action. ing days.
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EX-gOVerner headed tO jail, again — OnWednesday, ade-
ANTI-AUSTERITYPROTESTS IN GERMANY
cade to the dayafter former Gov.John Rowland of Connecticut was sentenced to serve a year and aday in prison for corrupt political acts, Rowland wasagain sentenced, this time to 30 months, after being convicted of engaging in the samecrime. JudgeJanet Bond Arterton of U.S. District Court also ordered Rowland to pay $35,000 a fine. Rowland wasfound guilty in September onseven counts that included obstructing justice, conspiracy, falsifying documents relied on by federal regulators and other violations of campaign finance laws. The former governor's lawyer said hewould appeal.
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SWediShShOOting —Several people were shot inside a restaurant in the city of Goteborg late Wednesdayand at least two of them have died, Swedish police said. Police said in astatement that an automatic weapon is believed to havebeenused in the shooting. Theyhadnodetailsonanysuspectsbutsaidseveralpeoplehadbeen brought in for questioning. Theshooting happened in the Biskopsgarden suburb of Goteborg, Sweden's second largest city. The neighborhood has ahistory of gang violence, said police spokeswoman Ulla Brehm. Shesaid it was too early to speculate on the motive but said there were indications that the shooting wasgang-related. "There is absolutely nothing that indicates terrorism," Brehmsaid.
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.
— From wire reports
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on violence were aminority among the thousands who gathe redWednesdaytopeacefullydenounce government austerity policies. TheECB ceremony went ahead,with ECB President Mario Draghi saying the newbuilding was"a symbol of what Europe canachieve together." The ECB is the monetary authority for the 19 countries that have joined to share the euro currency.
•
•
•3
Terror attack is ablow to Tunisia'sdemocratic shift By David D. Kirkpatrick New York Times News Service
CAIRO — Gunmen in mili-
well as two 'ltrnisians, one of whom had been a member of the security forces, were killed
tary uniforms killed 19 people in the attack. At least 22 others Wednesday in a midday attack were wounded. on a museum in downtown Essid urged national unity, 7trnis, dealing a new blow to calling the attack "the first opthe tourist industry that is vieration of its kind ever to occur tal to Tunisia as it struggles to in 'Drnisia" because it struck consolidate the only transition the crucial tourist economy. to democracy after the Arab "We will show no compassion Spring revolts. and nomercy in defending our Tunisian officials had ini- country," he said. tially said that the attackers The two gunmen killed took 10 hostages and killed were believed to be Tunisians, nine people, including seven he said. Yet their identities and foreign visitors and two Tuni- motivations were not immedisians. When security forces ately clear, and there was no retook the museum about four claim of responsibility. hourslater,however,the death Tunisia is the Arab world's toll more than doubled, rais-
most successful democracy,
ing questions about how and when the hostages had died.
and it recently completed its
Prime Minister Habib Essid said in a news conference that
and a peaceful rotation of political power. But its security forces have also struggled to quash occasional attacks by Islamist extremists, especially
security forces killed two gunmen inside the building, the National Bardo Museum, but
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first free presidential elections
that two or three accomplices in its mountains, and Tunisia might still be at large. He said has emerged as one of the bigthat 17 foreign visitors — ingest sources of foreign fighters cluding Polish, Italian, Span- joining the Islamic State in ish and German tourists — as Syria and Iraq.
SlNCE 1980
ClassifIeds
Michael Probst/The AssociatedPress
A police car burns after clashes betweendemonstrators and police Wednesday in Frankfurt, Germany. Protesters torched police cars and threw stones at officers during anti-austerity protests aheadof the inauguration ceremony for the EuropeanCentral Bank's new headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany. Police detained 350 people but said those intent
TOUCHMARK
' l l
' I
•
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, March 19, the 78th day of 2015. Thereare 287 days left in the year.
Bigfoot's cousin:Yeti
TRENDING
HAPPENINGS
probably not abear
OII —Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, will convene ahearing to discuss a bill to repeal a 40-year-old ban onexporting U.S. oil.
HISTORY Highlight:In1945, during World War II, 724 peoplewere killed when aJapanese dive bomber attacked the carrier USS Franklin off Japan; the ship, however, wassaved. Adolf Hitler ordered the destruction of Germanfacilities that could fall into Allied hands
in his so-called "Nero Decree," which was largely disregarded. In1687, French explorer Rene-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle — the first European to navigate the length of the Mississippi River — was murdered by mutineers in present-day Texas. In1863,the Confederate cruiser Georgiana, onits maiden voyage,was scuttled off Charleston, South Carolina, to prevent it from falling into Union hands. In1918, Congress approved daylight saving time. In1920,the Senate rejected, for a second time, theTreaty of Versailles by avote of 49 in favor, 35 against, falling short of the two-thirds majority needed for approval. In1931, NevadaGov.Fred Balzar signed ameasurelegalizing casino gambling. In1965,the wreck of the Confederate cruiser Georgianawas discovered by E.LeeSpence, 102 years to the dayafter it had been scuttled. In1979,the U.S. Houseof Representatives begantelevising its floor proceedings; the live feed wascarried by C-SPAN(Cable-Satellite Public Affairs Network), inits debut. In1987,televangelist Jim Bakker resigned aschairman of his PTL ministry organization amidasexand moneyscandal involving Jessica Hahn, aformer church secretary. In1993, SupremeCourt Justice Byron White announced plans to retire. (White's departure paved thewayfor Ruth Bader Ginsburg to becomethe court's second female justice.) In2003, President George W. Bush ordered the start of war against Iraq. (Because of the time difference, it was early March 20 in Iraq.) Ten years age:Police in Citrus County, Florida, found the body of 9-year-old Jessica Lunsford, more than three weeks after she'd disappeared from her bedroom. (Convicted sex offender JohnEvander Couey was later sentenced to death for kidnapping, raping and burying Jessica alive; he died of natural causes in September 2009.) Five years age:TheWhite House released anonline video of President Barack Obama making a fresh appeal directly to the people of Iran, saying a U.S. offer of diplomatic dialogue still stood, but that the Tehran government had chosen isolation. One year age:In her first news conference asFederal Reserve chair, Janet Yellen said with the job market still weak, the Fed intended to keepshort-term rates near zero for a "considerable" time andwould raise them only gradually. Toyota agreed to pay$1.2 billion to settle an investigation by the U.S. government, admitting that it had hidden information
about defects that caused Toyota andLexusvehiclesto accelerate unexpectedly, resulting in injuries and deaths.
BIRTHDAYS Theologian HansKung is 87. Jazz musician Ornette Coleman is 85. Author Philip Roth is 82. Actress Ursula Andress is 79. Singer Ruth Pointer (The Pointer Sisters) is 69. Actress Glenn Close is 68. Film producer HarveyWeinstein is 63. Actor Bruce Willis is 60. Actress-comedian Mary Scheer is 52. Actor Connor Trinneer is 46. Actress Abby Brammell is 36. — From wire reports
By Rachel Feltman
a living specimen where DNA degradation is no longer a Sorry, yeti fans: Re- concern." searchers have published Now a new paper in the jourfurther confirmation that nal ZooKeys takes another yetis are not, in fact, some step in solving this mysterious The Washington Post
As people turn away from artificial ingredients and become more healthconscious, makers of popular candy are scrambling to evolve. Here's a look at
unknown and ancient speWhat'?
By Drew Harweg The Washington Post
It started with the candy: a
chocolaty, chewy, toffeelike morsel styled after the pet name of the inventor's daughter: Tootsie Roll. But nearly 119
years after America's first bite, the future of one of the world's
In case you missed it, in mysterious bear. Eliecer Guti2013, a group of researchers errez,currentl y a postdoctorsequenced the genomes of al fellow at the Smithsonian
company of Chicago is under pressure to change after 10 years of
hair attributed to mysteri-
share. Mark Gail/The WashingtonPost
cash-register candy purchase, once such a reliable impulse buy, is under assault by online shopping. The world's biggest candymakers grappling with these threats are rushing to experiment and adapt. Nestle USA said earlier this year that it
would remove artificial flavors
don waved off retirement to
the past. Now, with its spiritless
sales and slipping profits, the $2 billion confectioner is facing what analysts call a hard truth for the modern sweets
industries: Candymakers must evolve or die.
Tootsie Roll's plateauing demand and changes in leadership have heated up pressure on the candy giant. Investors' calls for a takeoverhave mounted into a roar, with some saying thetraditionalist firmhas failed to adapt to today's hyper-competitive candy climate.
Within days of chief executive Melvin Gordon's death, in lateJanuary atage 95,the com-
pany's stock soared 13 percent,
ty Institute & Natural History
snowman. Hair of the "yeti" turned out to have a fairly tantalizing genome, according to their findings: Their dosest genetic match was
Museum at the University of Kansas, found that the genetic
to a paleolithic polar bear.
from either (or both) species.
The researchers theorized
overlap between brown bears
and polar bears makes iteasy to say that the sample came "What motivated us was that
holders, the Gordons noted the " intense competition" in t h e
claimed that
candy industry, but gave little hint of a change in corporate
ic analysis was in error. The hair samples actually matched a rare sub-group of brown bear found in the Himalayas. This bear is still
evidence really has to back up your daims.
probably related to the yeti
looked at," he said. "There's a
10 percent within five years to
keep leading his burgeoning win over more label-conscious 2,000-employeeempire.Gor- eaters. d on, who married into t h e
business in 1950, personally interviewed every worker from the foreman up and deeply involved himself in Tootsie Roll's increasingly complicated candy machine. "We have our own sugar refinery and our own ad agency," Gordon told the Chicago Tribune in 1990. "We make our own lollipop sticks. We even have our own trucking company, the Tootsie Roll Express."
chocolate bars, including its Stagnation Baby Ruth and Butterfinger, to But in recent years, analysts grab ingredient-watching can- said, the candymaker seemed dy consumers. to do less to develop its cash cows. The company made Stuckin the past fewer of the acquisitions, inBut Tootsie Roll, which has
yeti, aka the abominable
the original paper basically a living hybrid between this daimed that an undiscovered ancient bear and another bear species was lurking in species, one strange enough the Himalayas, and when we to inspire myths in the lo- read the paper we thought it cals who spotted it. was interesting that such a tiny If that sounds a little fishy piece of DNA was beingused to to you, pat yourself on the make this claim so confidentback: It's so fishy that it's ly," Gutierrez said. It's true that nowbeen debunked twice. new species — even large ones, In D e cember, a n oth- such as bears — are discovered er group of researchers all the time. But when all you've
Charms Blow Pop, Charleston maker of Oreo cookies and Chew, Dubble Bubble and Ju- Cadbury Creme Eggs, said last nior Mints. year it would reduce its snacks' Even into his 90s, Gor- sodium and saturated fat by
and colors from more than 250
tradedon itsname fordecades, has remained deeply stuck in
Institution, and Ronald Pine,
ous creatures, such as the affiliated with the Biodiversi-
that this might mean it was
annual revenue has flatlined or sunk. And with the recent
sumer marketplace. Even the
can pretend it's an unknown,
The119-yearold family-run Tootsie Roll
sliding market
most ic onic candymakers suddenlylooks doudierthan ever. The family-run Chicago confectioner's market share has slid for 10 straight years. Its death of its longtime patriarch, the legendary company looks more and more rudderless amid the bitter rivalries of America's $31 billion chocolate and sweets industries. Candy land is in chaos, shaken by slowing demand from health-conscious buyers and an increasingly global con-
genetic flub. Just because the
cies of bear that's running "yeti" isn't an unknown, mystearound the Himalayas. rious primate doesn't mean we
how Tootsie Roll's secretive empire began to melt.
In a letter last year to share-
tone."Our iconic brands evolve
in response to these shifting market conditions," they wrote, "yet remain pure and satisfying to the sweet tooth of the many
long-term consumers who enjoy them." Unlike most public companies, Tootsie Roll releases few financial details, routinely
dodges media interviews and ignores the expected niceties of corporate affairs, such as
regular calls with investment analysts. The candymaker is also vestments and strategic moves tight-lipped about a plan of sucthat marked its early days, and cession, which analysts said itsleadership appeared more unnerved institutional invesstagnant, piloted by a board tors for whom predictability in of directors that averaged old- leadership is a must. er than retirement age. Sales Ellen Gordon and other execgrowth slowed and profit mar- utives, through their assistants, gins slipped, from 50 percent in declined repeated requests to 2000to 35percent lastyear. talk. A Tootsie Roll represenOnce on equal footing with tative said, "If and when we do its rivals, Tootsie Roll gradually interviews, we will keep you in became overshadowed. Some mlIld. candy empires grew explosiveBut the Gordons have ally, including Hershey, the $22 ways been dear about their billion chocolate giant. Others insistence for the company's changed the industry through independence. "Tootsie Roll massive consolidations, includ- is not for sale," Ellen Gordon, ing Mars' purchase of gum whose family had then owned maker William Wrigley Jr. in the company for more than 2008, and food giant Kraft's 60 years, told Crain's Chicago buy of chocolate giant Cadbury Business in a rare 1995 intertwoyears later. view. "We are acquirers, we are But rather than defend the
t h e g e net- got is a tuft of hair, the DNA "The short answer is that there's a wide variation in that
segment of DNA that they
myth because of its rarity large variation within brown and size, but it's nothing so bears that overlaps with the exotic as an undiscovered
variation k nown
relic of bears long past.
bears, so actually you can't even tell the two species apart
When that study came out, the authors of the yeti paper admitted that their results
had probably been an error. But what really mattered
f o r p o l ar
based on that little species of DNA."
Butbecause brownbears are common in that region, there's
wasthat the"yeti"was some no reasonto sayit's apolarbear — and there's nothing indicatkind of bear, they said. "Importantly, f o r th e ing it's some unknown species. thrustof the paper as a In other words, it's a really whole, the conclusion that these Himalayan 'yeti' sam-
short fragment of DNA, and there's nothing that wouldn't
ples were certainly not from fit into the genome of a known a hitherto unknown primate species. is unaffected," they said in a statement. "We stressed in the original paper that DOES
the true identity of this in-
triguing animal needs to be refined, preferably by sequence data from fresh tissuesamples derived from
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not sellers."
company's independence, TootGiant investment funds, inyears. sie Roll leaders remained as cluding the world's largest asYet the long-redusive candy- quiet and secluded as ever. set manager BlackRock, own "At Tootsie Roll, they won't large stakes in the company, maker now helmed by Gordon's 83-year-old widow, Ellen, grant anyone an audience. but their influence has been whose family has owned the They're not available by tele- capped by the candymaker's company for generations, has phone, or in person. They don't fortifiedpower structure. kept its next moves secret, leav- appearatconferences,atsem Although the Gordons own ing analysts to question how inars, even at the door to greet just shy of 50 percent of the long the company will survive. any major fund managers," company's shares, a special "For a while the margins Schlang said. stock arrangement that gives "Ellen is terrific for being in their shares extra voting power were such and the brand name was such ... that we thought it her mid-80s, and Mel was ter- has left them with virtually unhad to beconsidered one ofthe rific in his early 90s, but they assailable corporate control. best companies we could find," were no longer 20 years old and Tootsie Roll's latest disapsaid Elliott Schlang, the found- entrepreneurial ... and there pointing financial results have er of the Great Lakes Review, was a level of complacency and only intensified takeover talk. "The buyer who ends up with an investment research firm, self-satisfaction," he added. "I one of the sharpest climbs in
don't know another company like that."
this," Nestle investor Tom Rus-
cover Tootsie Roll. "Butthe company got more lethargic. There was no visibility, no transparency ... and I don't know that they kept up
A rapidly changingindustry
with the times. In today's vi-
America, flummoxing many
do believe can be exploited far m ore broadly and deliver far more delight in far more ways." But some are happy to keep
ciously competitive world, I'm not sure that is adequate." Made famous through classic commercials like the "How
traditional brands. Nearly all
Tootsie Roll's business at a slow,
the growth in the confectionery business has gone to splashy
steady pace. Mario Gabelli, Tootsie Roll's biggest indepen-
product launches or rebrand-
dent shareholder and the bil-
and one of the last analysts to
M eanwhile, d emand f o r candy has flattened in North
this SUHDAY
so told Bloomberg in January, ''will end up with an icon that I
ed candy lines, leaving dassic lionaire founder behind asset sweets behind. m anager Gamco Investors,said name with a place in candy Hershey plans this year to he doesn'texpect the brand to history. The first penny candy launch Kit Kat White Minis, be groundbreaking, just stable to be individually wrapped, it Hershey's Caramels and Cool enough to profit from an occaproved a popular treat during Blasts spearmint "chews" for sional American craving. "I believe in the brand. If she the Great Depression and was people who don't want to spit later tucked into rations for outgum but,asa company ex- (Gordon) sells it, she sells it. She American troops in World War ecutive said, "don't have the pa- knows how to count marbles," II. The company says the 64 tience to totally work through a Gabelli said. "If she doesn't, our million oblong penny candies it mint." clients willbe content to still get makes every day are based on Mondelez Int e r national, a little more everyyear." many licks?" cartoons, Tootsie Roll became a household
the same 1896 recipe.
Led for more than 50 years by Gordon, who became one of the oldest leaders of a pub-
lic U.S. company, Tootsie Roll flourished through gobbling up a series of simple, old-fashioned candy brands, induding
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Breaking Bad Habits The author of The Happiness Project tells us how to tap into our own personality traits to stop oversleeping, oversharing, overeating and more.
A4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
Scientists' campaign onwarming The invisible primary means now has amorepersonal touch no campaign ads for now By Lisa Song InsideClimate News
When Hurricane Floyd hit New Jersey in September 1999, 12-year-old Erika
Navarro dashed out to her driveway to experience the
"I've alwaysaccepted (that) as a scientist ... I have an obligation to reach out to the public."
eos is the scientists' concern for the future of their children.
Guillaume Mauger, a UW postdoctoral researcher who
studies climate adaptation, appeared in a clip while sitting next to his wife and two
daughters. "One of the things minutes she stood in the wind — Eilka Navarro, Ph.D. candidate that really makes this topic and pelting rain, watching the at the University of Washington important to me is thinking lake across the street flood its about this longer-term future," banks. he said, as his 8-month-old "It was just completely in- warped and misrepresented babbled away and his 3-yearcredible," she recalled. "I had by various agendas, he said, old walked along the couch. never seen that much rain adding that the public needs "It's really when these two falling from the sky, and nev- accurate information about (kids) come to their retirement er seen that much destruction climate change. Scientists age that the choices we make have "a lot to say and ulti- today start to matter a lot.... from one event." The hurricane cemented a mately it comes down to their T hat really brings it t o t h e lifelong fascination with natu- work," he said. present for me." raldisasters,and led Navarro Most of the videos on the site Many of the scientists, ininto her current career as a were recordedby Michelman's cluding Navarro, urged viewPh.D. candidate at the Univer- team andfeature researchers ers to take action by discusssity of Washington, where she from UW, the Massachusetts ing climate change with their studies hurricane forecasting Institute of Technology and friends and neighbors, or to and how solar radiation affects Harvard University. Now that contact their elected officials. the strength ofhurricanes. the site has launched, MichelThe scientists aren't advoWhen a professor in her man said, he encourages all cating for specific policies or department recently asked climate scientists to submit politics, Michelman said. Instorm firsthand. For at least 10
Navarro to add her voice to More Than Scientists, a cli-
mate change public outreach project, Navarro leaped at the chance.
"I've always accepted (that) as a scientist ... I have an obligation to reach out to the pub-
lic," she said. More Than Scientists officially launched Monday with the release of more than 200 video clips featuring some
their own videos.
stead, they're talking about
The project has some sim- the need for society to solve ilarities to Is This How You the climate problem. Feel'?, another outreach proj"Just as we are focused on ect launched last year where making sure that political canclimate scientists wrote letters didates talk about education describing their feelings about or crime (or) health care, we global warming. need to not accept silence on In More Than Scientists, the issue of climate change M ichelman wanted th e
re-
anymore," MIT atmospheric
searchers to speak from their
scientist David McGee said in a video clip. "We need to ask
personal experience "as com-
munity members, as fellow elected officials to talk about parents,concerned citi zens solutions, to talk about what they're going to do." researchers like Navarro dis- and neighbors." "Now is the time to act," Nacuss their motivations, hopes Navarro said that relatabiliand fears for the future. They ty is important for public trust. varro said in another video. address scientific misconcep- "The best teachers and the "Because if we wait 20 years, tions and tell personal stories best coaches are able to per- it's just going to be 20 more about how their work con- sonalize what they're doing" years piled up on top of what's nects with the wider world. and why they're doing it, she already done." In one video, University of sald. Navarro said she's aware Washington oceanography Climate change has always that some older scientists professor LuAnne Thompson been personal for N avarro, might urge young researchers described visiting her family but hurricanes made it even like herself to avoid controverfarm in Kansas and watching more personal. Thirteen years sy and avert any possibility of farmers struggle with drought after Hurricane Floyd, Super- being seen as advocates until — the kind of natural disaster storm Sandy "completely de- they have established careers. that will be exacerbated by molished everywhere where I But she has no regrets about global warming. grew up," including the beach- speaking out. In another clip, UW Ph.D. es and boardwalk where NaWe need to act now, so that student Bryce Harrop, a home varro spent so much time with 20 years from now when "I brewer, worried about how cli- her family, she said in one of am an established scientist, m ate change could affect the the videos. "Hurricanes will there's actually a world to live future of food — and beer. get stronger in the future" as in," Navarro said. " It's coming t o t h e t i m e Eric Michelman, the Se- climate change drives stronattle-based climate a ctivist ger storms, she concluded. where we can't be afraid behind the campaign, said he "I study this because I care, to speak," she said. "If I'm started the project to get more because I don't want that to talking about my planet and climate scientists' voices into keep happening, and I want my future and securing lives, public conversations about people to know that this is a I don't know if I can be too global warming. possibility." much of an advocate for things 20 scientists. In these videos,
Much of the discussion is
Inquiry Continued fromA1 "Your request ... applies to
records of information compiled for law enforcement purposes," Garcia wrote in an
email, "the release of which could reasonably be expected to interfere with enforcement
proceedings." Late last month, the Warm
Springs Tribal Council voted to contact the inspector general in regard to multiple accusations of mismanaged funds.
A common theme in the vid-
like that."
Warm Springs' secretary-trea- questions could be asked. surerJake Suppah esti mated The Confederated Tribes of the tribes have overspent more Warm Springs are a sovereign than $100 million the past 10 nation — Oregon laws have years, leaving the tribes in no jurisdiction on the reservanear financial ruin. Suppah tion — but the tribes do accept has been on paid administra- federal money in the form of tive leave since Feb. 10, a move grants, giving the inspector he alleges was made in retali- general authority to i nvestiation for uncovering financial gate those funds. The tribes irregularities within the tribe. are similar to a state in that Eugene "Austin" Greene, the tribal members pay federal Warm Springs Tribal Council taxes and are subject to federal chairman, would not comment laws and regulations. when reached by phone and — Reporter: 541-617-7829; hung up before any follow-up beastes@bendbulletin.com.
Pot
ing the kitchen sink," he said. wise-acrecomments on the "There are a lot of things in bill. Continued fromA1 it, but this is the one addition Wrote one prankster: "It's Officials would be able to that people seem to be fixat- for my koi and gerbils. Officer, issue a pet medical marijua- ing on." I swear!" And: "Who's the pet food na card only if the animal's Segerblom said he'd give owner is a Nevada resident pot to his own pets "if a veteri- lobbyist in Carson'? Are they and a vet certifies the creature narian says it's OK." behind this? Pets get the has an illness that might be The state senator said he munchies." And: "And thus was born helped by marijuana. And the has recei ved callsfrom people illness need not be fatal. with a question: If they have the term that the (Nevada Segerblom told the L os a medical marijuana card, Legislature) often m o ves Angeles Times that the idea can they then give the drug to slower than a stoned sloth." isn't as far-fetched as it might their pets'? And finally: "How exactly seem. The answer is, ahem, no: does a dog hold a doobie? Just "People these days believe Fido would need his own card curious." (Answer: They don't that marijuana can cure ev- to be legal. inhale. It's added to food.) "That will change if we get erything under the sun," he In fact, a company called said, "from the inability to a law passed forrecreation- Canna Companion produces eat if you're terminally ill to al marijuana use," Segerb- a medical tincture for dogs problems with your nervous lom said. "And it's going to and cats that it says provides system. So if your dog has a happen. We've already got the benefits of the cannabis nerve diseaseor uncontrolla- 100,000 signatures to get the plant while "minimizing the 'high-inducing' ble tremors, this might be able issue on the ballot next year." concentrato help it." Still, the idea of giving pot tions of THC." Segerblom said the animal to animals has its skeptics, According to the company's pot-use provision is part of a like state Sen. Mark Manendo. website, the product is legal "I've never even heard of because it "is not intended for bill that makes some corrections to the state's medical this," he told the Los Ange- human consumption, it meets marijuana statute. He said les Times. "Are there vets out the current definition of hemp he was looking for ways to there who would even know if supplements under United strengthen the former legis- this works on animals? There States federal law." The comlation when he heard from are lots of questions." pany says that in higher connumerous constituents who Segerblom said he knew of centrations, some compounds wanted to know wh y
t h eir
no other U.S. state that has
pet couldn't benefit from the passed such a law. "This could be a whole new pain-assisting benefits of pot as welL industry," he said. "This was an omnibus bill; By Tuesday afternoon, soit includes everything includ- cial media were alight with
in pot "can be toxic to dogs and
cats. That is one reason we do not advocate blowing marijuana smoke in your pet's face or
administering human medical grade Cannabis to pets."
By Derek Willis New York Times News Service
There's a reason the early part of the presidential nomination contest is called the
invisible primary: There are no television ads yet. Voters in key states should enjoy the lull while it lasts, which
could be until summer or maybe even longer. Four years ago, the first Republican p r esidential campaign ad appeared July 5. That's when Tim Pawlen-
ty, the former Minnesota governor, aired his first commercial for Iowa voters, according to broadcast advertising data tracked by Kantar Media and compiled by Deep Root Analytics, a
Jeb Bushspeaks atacampaigneventWednesday in MyrtleBeach,
Republican television adver-
eventual Republican nominee,
Jason Lee/The Sun News (Myrtle Beach, S.C) via TheAssociated Press
South Carolina.
tisingtargetingcompany.
did not start raising money Michele Bachmann and until April of that year) This Ron Paul followed soon year, none of the higher-proafter, but most of the field file politicians have even filed waited much longer. Mitt a statement of candidacy with Romney, who eventuall y the Federal Election Commiswon the nomination, didn't sion, let alone formally created air his campaign's first TV a campaign committee. aduntilNov. 22,2011, agood
six weeks before the Iowa caucuses kicked off the for-
mal primary season. (The data do not indude cable or satellite TV advertising,
which are not reported to the Federal Communications Commission.) Political ads might not start running until later in this election cycle. The main
reason the candidates may wait is simple: super PACs. Most of the early ads four
years ago came from the campaigns, not from affiliated political action com-
mittees. Only a few of the 2012 candidates had affiliated super PACs; now most
serious candidates will. Because super PACs can
raise any amount of money from donors while contributions to campaign committees are capped at $2,700 per person for the primary election, it can be easier to
raise the money to pay for expensive TV ads via the super PACs. A round of TV
advertisingcouldbepaid for by a few donors, leaving the candidate's campaign free to spend its money on other activities — or to bank as
Charleston and Columbia. The sheer number of advertisements devoted to those
statesdwarfed those of larger markets in Florida and other states that held nominat-
ing votes early in the process. There were nearly 8,000 broadcast TV ads in the Des Moines
T he t imeline c ould s t i l l market during the Republican shrink. In the 2012 race, most primary; the Tampa market
super PAC spending financed negative messages about other candidates. A significant amount of money will be spent when there is a clear leader
saw 5,400. (Owing to Romney's popularity in New Hampshire, that state's media markets were
not among the top targets for the 2012 Republican primary,
to attack, but the Republicans but that could change this time don't have that yet. The Dem- around.) ocrats appear to have only one Although you may not see strong candidate so far: Hillary the ads on television, you might Clinton. It's more likely that well see the ads online. In this some Republican super PACs current period of TV silence, will air ads opposing Clinton. campaign organizations are The lack of competition on the building an email list that can Democratic side could mean a be usedto raise money and tarlonger wait for ads from Clin- get voters. ton, too. Acommittee formedby Scott The need for money to re- Walker, the Wisconsin goverspond on television to attacks nor, has placed display ads on is part of what is driving fund- the websites of Fox News, The raising for super PACs and oth- Daily Caller and other conserer affiliated groups long before vative outlets directing users to candidates actually register of- apage that asks for their name, ficial committees. This part of emailand address,according the invisible primary — when to Adomic, a California comcandidates are as likely to ap- pany that tracks digital ads. pear before donors as voters The leadership PAC of Chris — has two goals: gaining large Christie, the New Jersey govdonations and commitments to ernor, has also been buying ads raise more. on sites such as the Drudge ReOf course, you may never port. Potential candidates like even see these ads. When the Rand Paul, the Kentucky senTV commercials do begin, ator, and Jeb Bush, the former even well-funded operations Florida governor, are posting are likely to concentrate their messages to social media to messages on the states that help increase their reach and to hold their nominating con- identify supporters.
much of the money as possible until later in the year. tests first, particularly Iowa That might mean earlier ads and South Carolina. The Iowa will come from super PACs, media markets of Des Moines, while candidate ads happen Cedar Rapids and Sioux City later. were the top three during the This is a big change from Republican primary in 2012, the last fully open presiden- followed by the South Cartial contest eight years ago, olina markets of Greenville,
CRATCH
E1YT
before super PACs existed.
By the end of March 2007, Barack Obama had raised more than $25 million for his campaign, while Romney had raised almost $21 million. (John McCain, the
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THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Bridge Creekwater pipeline project
Settlement Continued from A1 In December, U.S. District
Judge Ann Aiken ruled against
Upper Tumaio Creek tiyatershed Mupicipai watershed
NATIONAL F0 R E S T
Ooe+ 40.r
+
tal impact of the project. Aiken
Ettistine pip«»t ''
Tt/malo Falls
saidthe new projectoff ers environmental benefits over the
• e~ •"
symbolic heart since
wr
~Bend city water intake
.
- Mount Bach or
ed to throw out these ideas in
good faith, to show what we could agree to. We're open to
ey on the appeaL" Nonetheless, he is encouraged the current City Coun-
negotiations."
cil with three new members
Dewey is hoping the city will he hopes the city and Forest agree to maintain a certain Service will agree to join in flow level in the creek, meaning L a n dWatch, said
Ma r y W i n t ers, that if the water level dipped,
letter to the council outlining
conditions he would accept in lieu of stopping the project. Dewey did not share the letter,
and the city denied a request for a copy. "Unless (the City Council) tells me otherwise and wants a public discussion, the City believes that once a party has re-
independence from Mexico.
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
fered the parties a mediator as
the city attorney, said the City Council met in a dosed session Wednesday night to discuss the offer. On March 3, Dewey sent a
to wrest
Cascade LakesHtghway
Court of Appeals, which of-
mediation.
Texans n
Proposed pipeline
6
case to the U.S. 9th Circuit
rector of
an1836defeat there rallied
tssr'
Ori/dg Creek
current pipe, as the new sys-
a means of avoiding a trial. Paul Dewey, executive di-
stand In front of theAlamo in San Antonio, the state's
f
DESCHUTES
followed the lawin its approach to evaluating the environmen-
tem will be able to control how much water is diverted, while having its maximum diversion capped at the current level. The litigants appealed the
Security guards
Opponents of the city's $24 million Bridge Creekwater pipe project have offered to end their lawsuit if the city agrees to implement certain environmental protections.
LandWatch, writing in her decision that the Forest Service
"seems more interested in the creek than past councils."
Dewey noted he's not attemptingto have the Forest Ser-
the city would respond by di- vice reopen its environmental verting less or cutting off its analysis, which would potendiversion until levels rose to the tially open the door to new lawagreed upon level. To help in suits. Dewey emphasized his this effort, Dewey said he'd like
A5
organization isn't interested in
to see more gauges in the river. additional legal action focusing Currently there is no way to on the pipe. track the amount flowing from However, the 'wild card," acthe springs that feed Bridge cording to Dewey, is how much Creek and Tumalo Creek, Dew- water will be flowing out of the spring system in future years. eysaid. He also hopes the city's con- A significant drop, Dewey construction crews can preserve tends, could render the project trees by the 'Ibmalo Falls park- useless. "According to the dimate ing lot, including a grove of
quested the mediation process, mature Cottonwoods. Another change study, in as little as 10 the communications are con- area of concern is the place- years the flows could begin fidential unless it is clear that ment of a pipe section that will dropping," Dewey said. "It's mediation is not going to oc- cross Tumalo Creek The cur- possible if we went to court we cur," Winters wrote in an email rent plan calls for it to be bur- could win, and the 9th Circuit Wednesday afternoon. ied under water, while Dewey could regulate the flows. But In an interview, Dewey de- hopes to see it ride along a either way, the flows will be scribed the conditions Land- bridge over the water. regulated, whether by the 9th Watch hopes the city will agree So far, Dewey said there has or dimate change." In addition to the $24 million to. "We're not asking them been"silence" from the city two for the pipe replacement, the to stop construction, so there weeks since sending his letter. won't be any delays, which the "The lack of a response has city has allocated $33 million city has said would cost them got us scratching our heads," for a new water treatment plant a lot of money," Dewey said he said. "We can't figure out and $14.5 million on related enWednesday morning. "There's the downside for the city, gineering costs. also the cost of l itigation, there's no delay and the up— Reporter: 541-633-2160, which they'd avoid. We want- side is it could save us all montleeds@bendbulletin.com
5 w
Q. l
Ty Wnght/ Bloomberg News
Alamo
Dinnin, the Alamo's director. "Texans need to see some
i n t e rnal
disagreements" at the site. Continued from A1 of these things," Dinnin said. The Daughters of the RepubDuring a tour, Richard Ori g i nally called San An- lic's contract was canceled Bruce Winders, the Alato n i o de Valero Mission, the last week. mo's curator, pointed t o A la m o w a s b uilt i n t h e 1700s Ellen McCaffrey, president the eroding foundations b y S p a nish m i ssionaries of the Daughters of the Reof the chapel, the mai n s e e k i ng toconvertthenatives public, said it's being unfairly attraction. A s t u d y r e - to C a tholicism. blamed. leased in February by reIt w a s later turned into a "The state legislature and searchers at Texas A8tM mi l i t ary garrison. In 1836, it the governor and all the offiUniversity revealed that b ecame the site of a 13-day cials of the state for decades water damage has erod- siege during an attack by paid no attention to the Alaed almost three M exican tr oo p s mo," she said. "They ignored i nches of t h e led by Gen. Anto- it." l imestone f a - "The AlamO nio Lopez de Santa McCombs, the billionaire cade since 1960. pyey gjme QgS A n n a. The defeat on the endowment board, " What h a p inspired s o ldiers said he and other supporters I-i pens here, down t ecOm ~ w h o went on to win want to restore the Alamo at the bottom Ie t d Oyt/'A fOf' vict o ry o ver Mex- complex to reflect its origilevel, is when it p e p p le " ico with the battle nal scale. That would require "Remember San Antonio to turn over a rains real hard cry, — GaryForeman, the A l amo." Texas plaza that covers much of the the rain splashes up and hits Ala m o historian joined the U.S. in Alamo's 4.2-acre footprint. here," he s aid,
1845.
"A lot of the downtown ar-
pointing to arThe m a n age- ea's gonna have to be blown eas where the rock had m ent of the site was given in down in my opinion," said worn away. "It takes years 1 9 05 to the Daughters of the McCombs. and years for that to hap- Republic, a genealogical soLori Houston, who helps pen, but it does happen." c i e t y limited to women whooversee development forSan The T e x a s Ge n era l c a n t race their roots to Texas' Antonio, said it's premature Land Office, run by Com- independence. to discuss any changes. missioner George P. Bush, T h e g r oup came under Today a busy street runs son of former Florida Gov. scrutiny as upkeep lapsed. through the plaza, where Jeb Bush, is asking the B ecauseofaslideingift-shop shops hawk trolley rides, legislature for $1.5 million sales, which almost entirely T-shirts and coonskin hats. "The Alamo over time has for the Alamo's two-year s u s tained the Alamo for debudget and an additional c ades, it had a $225,000 defi- become a big letdown for peo$5 million for preservation cit in 2011. ple," said Gary Foreman, an projects such as replacing Th a t y ear, the legislature Alamo historian who's been rotting beams, upgrad- v oted to give control to the pushing to restore the site to ing storm drains, caulk- L and O ffice, which over- its 1836 battleground image. ing windows and adding sees oil royalties, education "Instead of asking 'Why are wireless Internet service. funds and public beaches. you here?' and 'How can we That's up from a total of T h e Daughters of the Repub- make it more rewarding?' we $1.5 million during the pri- lic continued to oversee daily just say 'What are we gonna or two years. managementthrough a con- sell 'em while they're here?'" The request would use t ract with the state. $620,000 to pay for tem -
In 201 2 , T exas A t torney
porary storage of former General Greg Abbott, who Genesis drummer Phil b e came governor in January, Collins' collection of Ala-
i s s ued a r e p or t c r i t icizing
mo memorabilia and arti- "organizational dysfunction, facts, which includes Jim f ailures to prioritize historic Bowie's knife and one of
wit"
preservation, an d
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Davy Crockett's rifles. The British musician, who was
made an honorary Texan by the legislature, agreed u //
t l l j ('
to donate the collection as long as the Aiamo builds a
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Donys e tr/eforanyose br t ap / arrirsr rgean for
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Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Dr. Ginny Murtaugh, of Murtaugh Dentistry, from left, thanks Ralph McNulty, 85, for a basket fined with hats he made for patients' babies. His daughter, Lori Mills, is the office manager.
Rancher
and Lori Mills of Bend and
Continued from A1 McNulty said he heard a recentstory from an emergency vehicle operator of a baby crying until the hat was placed
a family affair. Dee was always talented at crafts, Mills explained. She showed her
Vicki Van Cleave of Burns. To a degree, the hats are
daughters how to sew, knit,
McNulty is the temptation to deliver the hats himself. He
explained that even though he likes to, his daughters worry about him leaving the house
with his oxygen tank in tow. "I have to sneak off because
crochet and cook, and even the girls don't want me to go," baby felt warm and secure, he taught a k n i t ting c l ass at said McNulty, smiling. His said. McNulty has also given Central Oregon Community busy nature isn't new to him dozens of hats to the Ronald College at the Redmond ex- later in life. McDonald House of Central tension, according to McNulty. He and Dee were always Oregon since 2008, where ex- While Dee originally intro- highly involved in the comecutive director Kristy Krugh duced him to the loom, Cole munity's ranch and farming says the donations have made and Van Cleave add the tassels culture. For McNulty, born in a difference. to each of the hat tops, and Cozad, Nebraska, and raised on his head. After that the
"Our guest families love the
variety of hats that Ralph provides," Krugh said. "They truly enjoy picking that 'special hat' for their child." Most of the hats are similar in design, with some thicker than others, depending on the yarn. Each has a brim and tas-
Mills takes the hats into work to share them.
financial concerns,householdchores, spiritual support andmore.
on a farm there, that culture
runs deep. He and his wife
Now available in Deschtltes County, St. Charles Hospice has
been providingcomfort anddignity for patients - andsupport for Central Oregonfamilies - for 25 years.As part of St, Charles Health System,otlr well-trained, compassionatecaregivers can easily provide aseamless continuumof care to patients.
"You know, Dad, we have the Deschutes County rodeo, a lot o f p r egnant mothers McNulty also served as Decoming in," Mills remembers schutes County Fair Associa-
tion president for nine years and on the fair board for 33.
that after Dee died recent-
You're notalone.Let us help,
He and Dee were inducted into the 4-H Hall of Fame and
became honorary members
St, CharlesHospice,A promise of comfort.
of FutureFarmers of America for their dedication to both the
programs. Additionally, the Ralph McNulty
P r oduction
Scholarship has been given out to 4-H and FFA students since 1978. McNulty remains
involved in the scholarship, gathering the sponsors to donate each year, and enjoying seeing the kids who truly care about farming and raising livestock.
The hats are just something ly, McNulty briefly doubted McNulty "weaved" in to the "I'm very particular about whether he could go on mak- rest of the work he has done it," McNulty said. "I want it to ing the hats. But his daughters for the community. "This is something he'll albe sanitary." encouraged him to continue, This fa t h erl y in s t i n ct and he realized that he should. ways do," Mills said. "He'll "He has a real passion for McNulty shows was honed never stop." from years spent raising his it," Mills said. — Reporter: 541-383-0325, three daughters, Nancy Cole The only o b stacle for kfisicaroibendbulletin.com touch the hats.
- otlr dedicated team canalso provide assistance with practical and
As office manager at Mur- moved to Oregon in December taugh Dental in Bend, Mills re- 1949. They never moved out of alized her dad's hats could be Deschutes County. put to use by clients. Aside from a nnouncing
sel top. McNulty uses yarns of telling her father a few years all different colors from pink back, so he started donating to blue to red, even creating them there, too. Now, she said, hats in the team colors of Or- she gives out about one hat a egon Division I schools. When day, either to expectant moms it comes to Beavers versus or family members. Basically, Ducks, McNulty doesn't dis- she explained, anybody who criminate— he makes caps knows of a baby that could use in orange and black as well as a warm hat grabs one. "Usually their f i rst r eacyellow and green. To make sure the hats are tion is, 'oh these are so cool, well-made, McNulty is picky how much do they cost?'" about the type of yarn he Mills said. She then explains uses, he says, even though he to them that they are free, a is happy to get donations of heartfelt donation from her yarn from friends and family. dad. "He enjoys it and it keeps He wants the yarn to be thick, warm and clean and tries to him busy," said Mills, adding limit the number of hands that
Hospice,Theword triggers manyresponsesbtlt one thing youshould not feel is alone.St. Charles Hospicecan help, in moreways than yotl may realize.Hospice ismuchmorethan medical care inyour home
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Hospice 541-706-$700 StGharlesHealthCare.org/HospiceSCi
A6 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
TODAY'S READ: A TRIBAL CLASH
New fund to help countries defend anti-smoking laws
o cim asacre sieorno. By Amanda CovarrubiassLos Angeles Times
MORRO BAY, Calif.— Craggy, dome-shaped Morro Rock rises 576 feet above the shore, an attractive By Sabrina Tavernise
in a statement Wednesday Chan is participating in a Bloomberg Philanthropies conference on tobacco use
site for climbers and a sacred one for two Native American tribes.
New York Times News Service
And that's the essence of a
dispute between the tribes that
right to climb the rock. In the back-and-forth on the
has simmered for more than a
issue, Collins also has been
decade. The Salinan Indians say the
asked by the commission to
and the Bill 8z Melinda Gates in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Foundation anno u n ced Emirates. She added, "We
Wednesday they had started a global fund to help lowand middle-i ncome countries fight legal challenges to their smoking laws by the tobacco industry. The fund is modest, at
prove his heritage, and the tribal council is seeking any documents from the agency that may have questioned his ancestry.
dominant landmark on Cali-
fornia's Central Coast may be climbed on datesprescribed by the heavens. The Northern preciatedfrom afar.
Native American would be required to prove their heritage,"
The feud entered the legal arenalastDecember,w hen the
the document states, adding that the council "believes its
tiny Northern Chumash Trib-
members were being singled
al Council filed a document in civil court arguing that the
M o nterey Morro Rock is reflected on the wet sand in Morro Bay, California. and San Luis Obispo counties It's a sacred site at the center of a dispute between two tribes-
Salinans have no claim on the
should not be allowed to "desecrate a registered Chumash
the historic boundary between the two tribes rests some 40
Salinan Tribe o f
sacred site, the Chumash say
the Saiinan, who believe it should be climbed, and the Northern
Chumash,who sayitshould neverbetread upon.
Nation sacred site" and seeking proof of the Salinans' right
miles to the north at Ragged
sonable requests for religious Three 15-year-old boys had to In the folklore of the Chu- practices to take place on state be rescued last month while mash, the rock was called Lis- park property," Joe Mette, they were trying to scale the amu, positioned at the mouth then district superintendent east face, and 10 days later, of a magnificent estuary in for the California Department another climber was rescued the heart of tribal lands that of Parks and Recreation, said after he got stuck part of the encompassed a large fishing in 2002. "He made some fairly wayup. village. compelling arguments." As for Burch, he declined to "Lisamu is alive with li fe In 2006, the Salinan Indicomment further, saying he that needs to be protected and ans, state parks and the Native wanted to wait until the Native honored, not trampled upon," American Heritage Commis- American Heritage Commisthe tribal council wrote in a sion, a state agency responsi- sion weighs in. "There's a process in place position paper unrelated to the ble for helping protect Native court filing. American culturalresources, at this time, and we'll wait to In the traditions of the Sa- formalized an agreement al- see what the findings are at the linan tribe, it was called Les- lowing the tribe to climb the end of the process," he said. amo, where the Falcon of an- rock forreligious ceremonies The Northern Chumash cient legend killed the serpent twice a year during the sum- Tribal Council maintains that Teleekatapelta. mer and winter solstices. it was never consulted about On a recent gray morning, Burch told the Los Angeles the arrangement but should Fred Collins, an elder with Times in 2002 that he climbed have beenbecause its 35 memthe Northern Chumash Tribal Morro Rock to p ractice rit- bers were directly affected by Council, stood at the base of uals handed down through the action, said Dennis Balsathe rock and looked skyward the ages. He sat alone at the mo, an attorney for the tribal as a peregrine falcon glided top in blackness and starlight council. over the jagged peaks. and entered an altered state, Under state law, the state "This is a rookery for unbe- asking for spiritual guidance, parks department is required lievable birds," Collins said. he said. He finished the night to consult with Native Amer"And it's a migratory path for of prayer feeling as if he was ican tribes when their sacred so many. Aside from the sa- "floating on air." sites or cultural institutions are cred issues, why would you Burch said recently that five affectedbyprojects or policies. want to interfere with that?" of his tribe's 371 members asTerre Robinson, an attorney Today, hiking Morro Rock cend the rock, the maximum for the Native American Her— a state historic landmark n umber allowed under t h e itage Commission, declined and peregrine falcon preserve most recent five-year agree- to comment, citing possible since 1968 — is prohibited for ment that expires in 2 019. pending litigation. most of the public. But the Sa- Photographs of past climbs In a petition filed in San linans have been climbing it on show tribal members carrying Luis Obispo County Superior and offsince about 2000, when backpacks as they scramble Court, the Northern Chumash elder John Burch sought a per- up brush-covered boulders to Tribal Council — a separate mit to conduct rituals atop the forge a trail along the jagged entity from the Santa Ynez volcanic mass formed more incline. Another photo from Band of C humash Indians, than 20 million years ago. The 2003 shows Burch standing which owns the Chumash Capermit was approved. alone at the top of the peak. sino in Santa Barbara County "It's broadly the policy of The rock's rugged land- — is seeking documentation the department to allow rea- scape makes for a tough climb. proving the Salinans have a to climb it.
Point in Monterey County, citing research by anthropologist Robert Gibson.
"There is no historic or reli-
gious connection between the ancient Salinan People and
Morro Rock," Balsamo wrote. The Chumash don't mind
if other tribes gather for ceremonies at the base of the rock, Collins said, but climbing it goes too far. "Morro Rock has such a great presence along our coast," Collins said. "Fishermen and people of old times
here, let's start it.'"
have fallen and tobacco com-
co, which issued some of
The fund was set up to counter what health experts
always viewed Morro Rock as a landmark in the ocean with
special energies. It's a magical place." The peak is one of the Nine Sisters, a row of v olcanic
the warnings in Africa, did not respond to requests for
say has been a strategy by tobacco companies to block smoking laws i n p o orer countries through l egal means. In a number ofcases, companies have challenged laws in development or after passage, warning govern-
comment. Philip Morris International said in a statement, "Governments can and should honor their in-
ments that they violate an ex-
panding number of trade and
to do so." Tobacco
investment treaties that the countries are party to, and
more than doubled in the developing world from 1970
mounds stretching a d ozen
miles from San Luis Obispo to the sea. Others are larger, but
ternational obligations when enacting tobacco control measures, and this fund can
provide them with resources con s umption
Morro Rock rests at the wa-
raising the prospect of long, t o 2000, according to t h e expensive legalbattles. United Nations. Much of the
Juan Cabrillo named it in 1542
areonly afew casesofactive litigation and that giving a legal opinion to governments is routine for major players
there has also been substantial growth in Africa, where
whose interests would be
three-quartersofthew orld's smokers live in the develop-
isn't resolved by the time the
affected by a proposed law. But tobacco opponents and officials say the specter of litigation has had a chilling effect for countries that lack
summer solstice rolls around
the financial resources to de-
in June, Balsamo said, the
fend themselves.
than from A I DS, malaria and tuberculosis combined,
ter's edge. The Portuguese explorer
Companies say that there
for a word meaning "round hill." Quarrying in the first half of the 20th century removed
about a third of the rock's surface, and the material was used to build breakwaters in
the harbor of Morro Bay. If the climbing controversy
tribe may be forced seek a court order to stop the ascent.
"In an ominous trend, in some countries the battle between tobacco and health
"We hope we can come to a resolution on this issue in
increase was in China, but smoking rates have traditionally been low. More than
ing world. Every year, more than 5 million people die of smoking-related causes, more according to
t h e W o rld
Health Organization. The organization said in a state-
has moved into the courts," ment Wednesday that new Dr. Margaret Chan, the di- figures show a declining rate rector general of the World of tobacco use around the Health Organization, said world.
a positive way," Collins said. "But we're willing to stand up
and not get kicked around."
O.
e
health experts say, as smoking rates in rich countries
panies have sought to maintain access to fast-growing markets in developing ties. But Michael Bloomberg, countries. founder o f Blo o mberg In Africa, at l east four Philanthropies and the fi- countries — Namibia, Ganancial data and news com- bon, Togo and Ugandapany Bloomberg LP, said in a have received warnings that conference call with report- their laws run afoul of interers that the investment was national treaties, according more like an initial marker to the Campaign for Tobaccoand that it was expected to Free Kids, an a dvocacy grow as more donors joined group that will administer the effort. the new fund. In Uruguay, "The fact that there is a Bloomberg's charity is also fund dedicated to taking on helping the government dethe tobacco companies in fend itself in court. courtsends a message that Wealthier countries have they are not going to get a also been targets, including freeride, " Bloomberg said. Australia, which is in court "If they say that's not a lot with an a f filiate of Philip of money — yes, well, take a Morris I nternational over look at who's behind it." rules on packaging, and He added, "We just picked Norway. $4 million just to say, 'OK, British American Tobac-
out for harassment." As further evidence that the
Ricardo DeAratanha/Los Angeles Times
momentum in recent years,
least so far, with a total of $4 million from the two chari-
"It is unheard of that any
Chumash believe it should never be tread upon, only ap-
will push back hard." The strategy has gained
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
BRIEFING
BEND
ma es ea olnew al
Phish comingto Bend in July The jam bandPhish will kick off its summer tour July21 and 22at Les SchwabAmphitheater in Bend,the band announcedWednesday. Tickets go onsale at 10 a.m. April 2 at the Ticket Mill in the Old Mill
District or at www.bendconcerts.com. "Tickets will go really quickly," said Marney Smith, director of the Les Schwab Amphitheater. Members of the Phish fan club canenter a ticket lottery that started Wednesday, Smithsaid. For everyoneelse, she recommendscomingto the Ticket Mill the morn-
ing they go onsale.A handful of tickets will be available for cashonly. All tickets cost $65 plus fees, and while Smith expects a limit of two tickets per person, the agency managingthe band won't announcethe ticket limit until April. The shows start at 6 p.m. both nights, and doors open at 4p.m. The band plans to playtwo sets with a 25-minute intermission. Thevenue has seating that complies with the Americans
MIRROR POND
• The park site will comprise37acresin southeast Bend,which neededa large park
gory that includes places like Juniper Park and Ponderosa
Park and is expected to attractvisitorsfrom acrossthe city. Like those parks, it is
By Scott Hammers
ber 2012. The bond measure,
The Bulletin
which is also funding the Simpson Pavilion ice rink
larger-scale park in southeast
likely to include turf play areas, picnic shelters, restrooms and playgrounds. The district plans to launch an outreach process in July or shortly afterward to gauge public support for various possible amenities that could
Bend.
be built on the site.
$3.6 million to the JL Ward
"It's probably our most Along with the park site, under-served area in Bend, so the deal includes a trail ease-
Company for the property on
this will not only allow us to
ment along SE 15th Street
The Bend Park & Recreation District on Wednesday
inked a deal for a new park site in southeast Bend, buying a 37-acre piece of property currently expected to be developed in 2018. The district agreed to pay
project, the Colorado Avenue
dam safe passage projectand other park district improvements, identified a need for a
serve the people living there now, but other homes that are going to be developed in that area," Horton said. come from the $29 million The prospective park is park district bond measure designated a "community approved by voters in Novem- park" by the district, a cateSE 15th Street, said park district executive director Don Horton. Funds for the purchase
across Ward-owned land, al-
Southeastpark The Bend Park 8 Recreation District is closing with the Ward family on roughly 37 acres in southeast Bend for a future park. I
Cil
CO
Existing ', canal trail
Proposedpark
Proposed Murphy Road extension
SeePark IB5
Power will be out briefly Friday Pacific Power has announced south Bend residents will have a brief electricity outage early Friday. To complete substation upgrade work, about 6,400 Pacific Power customers will have their electricity off from 3 to 5 a.m. Street lights will also be off. The boundaries of the affected areaare Powers Road onthe north, the Deschutes River on the west, Baker Roadto the south to ChinaHat Road and back to U.S. Highway 97. Although outside of the main area, the Mountain Sky subdivision also will be affected during the outage. For questions, customers can call Pacific
Deschutes National Forest firefighters plan to burn a 5-acre patch of woods today 3 miles south of Bend. The small patch of forestto be burned south of Woodside Ranch is set to beused next week in afire investigation class, according to the national forest. See Local briefing /B2
A vocal group of a few dozen dissenters gathered as the Bend City Council met Wednesday night to vote on a plan to rehabilitate Mirror Pond, replace
vehemently criticized the
2,000 Carli Krueger The Bulletin
Source: Bend Park & Recreation District
city for what they characterized as damaging the health ofthe Deschutes
River and sellingoffthe city's most scenic land. The council's vote was
not final by press time.
A FINE DAY FOR FLYFISHING
A vote in favor does not mean the vision will be re-
alized, but instead lends the city's support to exploring the feasibility of the project. The proposal calls for the removal of the 100-year-old Mirror Pond
dam and the addition of a natural-looking structure that will maintain the current water level while
providing fish passage and a path for kayakers. The floor of the pond would be partly dredged to speed the passing of water and deter the accumulation of sediment.
PacifiCorp, which operates the dam, would relocate its nearby substation to a to-be-determined
location. The site where the substation now sits and
adjacent properties owned by PacifiCorp would be transferred to the city, Bend Park & Recreation
District or an independent agency to be sold for redevelopment. A portion of the property near the dam would beJoe Kline/The Bulletin
Dustin Davey, of Bend, fly fishes while wading in the Deschutes River near the Big Eddy area west of Bend on Wednesday afternoon. Davey and several other anglers took advantage of the mild day to fish along the Upper Deschutes River.
come a public plaza, while the historic brick power-
house would be preserved. The park district approved the plan Tuesday night, which it helped create with representatives of the city and public. SeeMirror Pond/B5
OSU-CASCADES
Trustees ear pans or egree programs By Abby Spegman The Bulletin
CORVALLIS — What would benefit Central Ore-
gon, and what would bring in the students? That's the line administra-
tors at OSU-Cascades are trying to walk as they consider what degrees to offer when
the four-year campus opens this fall. OSU-Cascades Vice Presi-
Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin file photo
Marc Rubin, the first full-time computer scientist at OSU-Cascades, was hired to lead development of a four-year computer
science program. The university is considering what degree programs it might add as it becomes afour-year campus this fall.
dent Becky Johnson presented plans to OSU trustees in Corvallis on Wednesday. She said the Bend campus currently offers broad interdisciplinary degrees — liberal studies, American studies — as well as programs that consistently draw students in
Corvallis, including psychology and biology. The program with the highest enrollment is human
development and family sciences, which prepares students to go into teaching, social work and counseling. Recent additions have been
in response to input from the local business community, Johnson said, including tourism and outdoor leadership, hospitality management and energysystems engineering. A computer science degree was meant to bring students to Central Oregon to develop
a tech workforce that may otherwise move to hubs like Silicon Valley. SeeOSU-Cascades/B5
Injured tuber sues Hoodoo for $2.7M The Associated Press EUGENE — A $2.7 million lawsuit alleging negligence has been filed on behalf of a man injured two years ago at Hoodoo Ski Area.
The suit filed in Eugene this week says 47-year-old Michael Dearth of Antioch, California, suffered
spinal fractures and other injuries when an inner tube hita bump, veered
off course and struck a metal storage container.
Power at1-888-2217070.
Controlled durn planned for today
The Bulletin
erside property. The group of opponents
with Disabilities Act,
Smith said. Food anddrink vendors will be inside the amphitheater. Because it's private property, the venuehas banned "ShakedownStreet," the unofficial parking lot street fair selling anything from hempnecklaces to grilled cheese sandwiches. Chairs, blankets, strollers and pets will not bepermitted into the venue. Les SchwabAmphitheater hasbooked a wide variety of other summer concerts, including TheDecemberists on May22, Ryan Adams andJenny Lewis on May 23,Robert Plant on May 25, theDoobie Brothers on June16, Willie NelsonandAlison Krauss on June25, Death Cabfor Cutie 8 Built To Spill on July 9, Lyle Lovett 8 His Large Band on July12, Weird Al Yankovic onSept. 4 and BenHarper 8 The Innocent Criminals on Sept.6.
By Tyler Leeds
its dam and redevelop riv-
lowing a connection between the park and a nearby trail
running alongside a Central Oregon Irrigation District canal.
Uproar at Bend City Council over plan
His attorney, Melinda
DeschutesCounty requests$1.2M for transit By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
About $1.2 million in feder-
safe barrier at the side of the hill and didn't make
through fiscal year 2017.
match about 10 percent of the
sure the container was
East Transit for service that
The funds are for about 1,200 transit riders through-
requested amount.
taken away after its contents were removed.
committee Wednesday.
routes.
The federal money will be funneled through the Oregon
Deschutes County commissioners arescheduled tovote
Department of Transportation to cities and Deschutes
on the funding requests next
Oregon Department of Trans-
properly groom the tubing hill, failed to maintain a
ward transportation services
lic transit was requested by a Deschutes County advisory
County once approved by the
at Santiam Pass failed to
portation. The funding is used to contract with Cascades primarily serves seniors and disabled residents who are unable to access fixed transit
al funds for door-to-door pub-
Brown, says the ski area
Wednesday before ODOT issues its final approval. The federal funds would go to-
out Deschutes County and are allocated through a Federal Transit Administration
program. Redmond is requesting $393,160 from the agency. La Pine is requesting $87,371, Sistersisrequesting $57,665 and Bend has requested $276,084.
The cities will have to
About $352,000 is also being requested by CET from the FTA program to purchase
Ski area general manag-
two vehicles and maintain its
er Matthew McFarland did not immediately return a
existing fleet, bringing the
call seeking comment.
total local and federal allocat-
The lawsuit seeks $700,000 for Dearth's
ed dollars to more than $1.2 million. — Reporter: 541-617-782o, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
medical bills and $2 million in noneconomic
damages.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vpvpvp.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tim Palmer, author of "Field Guide to Oregon Rivers," will speak; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SW Sixth St., Redmond or 541-549-0866. AN EVENINGOF GRACE: Classical musicians perform to benefit Patricia
Moore, asingle motherwhosuffers
from a threatening medical condition;
6 p.m.; $10plusfees inadvance, $12 at the door, donations accepted; Grace Bible Church of Bend, 63945 Old Bend Redmond Highway, Bend; 541-419-0549. THE JUNEBUGS: The pop folk trio performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NWBond St.,
Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. THE ROYALBALLET:"SWAN LAKE":A showing of the classic Tchaikovsky ballet; 7 p.m.; $18, $15 for seniors and children; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents.com or 541-312-2901. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. GEORGE CLINTON& PARLIAMENTFUNKADELIC:Thelegendary funk pioneers perform; 8 p.m.;
$30 plus fees inadvance, $35 at the door; Midtown Ballroom, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.randompresents.com or 541-408-4329. VOODOO HORSESHOE: The Montana jam-rock band performs; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. "A SURVEYOFOPENSPACE": A film about two people on a 4,000-mile bicycle trip; 9 p.m.; $5; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www. mcmenamins.comor541-382-5174.
FRIDAY NATALIECLARK:TheScottish singer-songwriter performs; 5 p.m.; free; Crux Fermentation
Jillian Mitchell/The New York Times file photo
Mexican guitar duo Rodrigo y Gabrielawill perform at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Tower Theatre. Project, 50 SWDivision St., Bend; www.cruxfermentation.com or 541-385-3333. HONG KONGBANANA:ThePortland garage-soul band performs, with HELGA; 6 p.m.; free; Crow's Feet Commons,875 NW BrooksSt., Bend; www.crowsfeetcommons. com. AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Tim Palmer, author of "Field Guide to Oregon Rivers," will speak; 6 p.m.; $5;PaulinaSpringsBooks,252W . Hood St., Sisters or 541-549-0866. MONSTER XTOUR:Featuring monster trucks battling, motocross, demolition derbies and more; not recommended for children under 2; 6 p.m.; $19, $10 for children ages 3-12, $5 for pit party, $25 for VIP; Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.monsterxtour.com or 480-773-6822. "FOLLOW THATRABBIT": A musical version of "Alice in Wonderland," starring 30 local children, ages 2 to16, proudly presented by TheSunriver Stars Community Theater; 6:30 p.m.;
passenger, afemalejuvenile, at the Juniper Grove RVPark, both uninContinued from Bf jured. They issuedWard acitation for failure to perform the duties of Smoke may bevisible from the fire, but officials do not expect any a driver and careless driving. The sheriff's office found speedwas a roads to be impacted. factor in the accident.
LOCAL BRIEFING
Driver cited in Crook County crash
Crook County Sheriff's Office deputies responded to acall Tuesday of a crashedvehicle that had flipped upside down. Upon arriving at the sceneat 12:57 p.m., sheriff's deputies found a 2008 HondaCivic crashed into a custom fencealong the Longhorn subdivision on Davis Loop. They found thevehicle lockedand unoccupied.Deputies then received information the driver was possibly at a location nearbyon Davis Loop. Deputies found the driver, Kaysha Ward,18, of Prineville and her
Jefferson Countywill inspect doats The Jefferson County Sheriff's Office will do boat inspections April18. As the boating seasonapproaches, the sheriff's office asks boaters to makesurethey haveall required equipment to stay safe on the water. Deputies will inspect boats and issue 2015safety decals to those whopass inspection from10a.m. to 4 p.m. April18 on the north side of the Bi-Mart parking lot in Madras and atthe Crooked River RanchFire Department west side.
$10, $8 forchildren12 or younger; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center (SHARC), 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-2212. "THE LANGUAGE ARCHIVE": A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: The Central4 Piano Quartet performs works by Mozartand Brahms, with the Spotlight Chamber Players; 7:30 p.m.; $35, $10 for students and children; The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; 541-306-3988. "WHAT'SEATING GILBERT GRAPE":A showing of the 1993 film about a small-town man; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras or 541-475-3551. JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring Diego Figueiredoandthe Cyrille Aimee Quintet; 8 p.m. SOLDOUT;
All state residents must now possess a boaters education card to legally operate amotorboat with an engine of10 horsepower or more. The test to get the card will be available online andthrough a proctored classroom course. Deputies teach the two-hour classroom course, which includes astudysessionandtest.Those who pass the course aregiven a completion certificate they can send to the OregonState Marine Board that then issues the boaters education cards. Upcomingcoursesincludeone at the Jefferson County Sheriff's Office10 a.m. to noonMay 9and one at the CrookedRiver Ranch Fire Department from 10a.m. to noon May16. Questions should be directed to Jefferson County Sheriff's Capt. Marc Heckathorn or Deputy Melo-
The Oxford Hotel, 10 NWMinnesota Ave., Bend; www.oxfordhotelbend. com or 541-382-8436. THE OUICK &EASYBOYS: The Portland rocktrio performs, with Jive Coulis; 8 p.m.; $10; TheBelfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. TEASE:BURLESIlUEREVUE:The Portland burlesque group performs; 9 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
SATURDAY SPAY ITFORWARD:Featuring a group of talented professionals offering facials and Shiatsu and Swedish massage to benefit Bend Spay and Neuter Project; $50 donation suggested, registration suggested; Synergy Health and Wellness, 244 NEFranklin Ave., Bend; www.bendsnip.org or 541-508-6554. JAZZ ATTHE OXFORD: Featuring Diego Figueiredo and the Cyrille
Aimee Quintet; 5 and 8:15 p.m. SOLD OUT;The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave.,Bend; www.oxfordhotelbend.com or 541-382-8436. MONSTER X TOUR: Featuring monster trucks battling, motocross, demolition derbies and more; not recommended for children under 2; 6 p.m.; $19, $10 for children ages 3-12, $5 for pit party, $25 for VIP; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.monsterxtour.com or 480-773-6822. "FOLLOW THATRABBIT": A musical version of Alice in Wonderland, starring 30 local children, ages 2 to16, proudly presented by TheSunriver Stars Community Theater; 6:30 p.m.; $10, $8for children12oryounger; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC), 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-2212. MICHAELMANDRELLANDRUTH BECK:Featuring the guitar and harp duo; 7 p.m.; $10-$20; Unitarian Universalists of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; www.uufco.org or 541-385-3908. "THE LANGUAGEARCHIVE":A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend;
www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. RADIO BIKINI:The punk band from Holland performs, with Dirty Protest, RAID and TheKronk Men; 8 p.m.; $3; Reed PubCompany,1141 SE Centennial Court, Suite1, Bend; 541-312-2800. RODRIGO Y GABRIELA: The instrumental acoustic-rock duo performs; 8 p.m.; $58.50-$73.50 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheater. org or 212-422-4280. DEREKMICHAELMARCBAND: Blues; 8:30 p.m.; free; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. THE DESOLATE: Themetal band performs, with Existential Depression, Death Agendaand Gravewitch; 9 p.m.; free; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.
SUNDAY "REAR WINDOW": A showing of the 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film; 2 and7 p.m.; $12.50; RegalOld Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. "FOLLOW THATRABBIT": A musical version of "Alice in Wonderland," starring 30 local children, ages 2to 16, proudly presented byTheSunriver Stars Community Theater; 2 p.m.; $10 $8 for children12 or younger. Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center (SHARC), 57250 Overlook Road,Sunriver; 541-588-2212.
MONDAY "LIZIN SEPTEMBER":A showingof the 2014film aboutayoung woman celebrating her birthday, presented bytheLGBT Starsand Rainbows;7 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70SW Century Drive, Bend;541-323-1881. "FOUR BLOODMOONS: SOMETHINGISABOUTTO CHANGE":Afilmbased on the book by Pastor John Hagee about the supernatural connection of certain celestial events to biblical prophecy; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; RegalOld Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;www. fathomevents. com or844-462-7342.
TUESDAY INTERNATIONALFLY-FISHING FILM FESTIVAL: Featuring short and feature-length films produced by professional filmmakers from all corners of the globe that showcase the lifestyle and culture of fly-fishing; 7 p.m.; $15 plusfees in advance,$17at the door; TowerTheatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. METALACHI:The LosAngeles band plays a combination of heavy metal and mariachi music; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 atthe door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
WEDNESDAY "REAR WINDOW": A showing of the 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film; 2 and7 p.m.; $12.50; RegalOld Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342.
Enj™oy You~rNext l> <Advle~ntu~re j/N S~tyglle~
I
I
dy Zistel at 541-475-6520. — Bulletin staff reports
NEWS OF RECORD the 900 block of SEThird Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:16a.m. March The Bulletin will update items in the 16, in the1000 block of NERoss Road. Police Log whensuch arequest Unlawful entry —Avehicle was is received. Anynewinformation, reported entered at10:44 a.m. March such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more 16, in the 61100block of Sydney Harbor Drive. information, call 541-383-0358. DUII —Randal Charles Harpe, 54, was arrested on suspicion of driving under BEND POLICE the influence of intoxicants at11:45 a.m. March 16, in the area of SE27th DEPARTMEMT Street and Copperfield Avenue. DUII —Stephanie Nicole Lippe, 33, Theft —A theft was reported at 4:26 was arrested on suspicion of driving p.m. March16, in the100 block of NW under the influence of intoxicants at Greeley Avenue. 2:25 a.m. March15, in the 61300 block Theft —Atheft was reported and an of U.S. Highway97. arrest madeat8:10 p.m. March16, in DUII —Mark Anthony Navarro, 35, the 61300 block of S.U.S. Highway 97. was arrested on suspicion of driving Theft — A theft was reported at 6:38 under the influence of intoxicants at a.m. March17, in the1700 block of 10:36 a.m. March15, in the 300 block SW Forest RidgeAvenue. of NE GreenwoodAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:06 Theft —Atheft was reported and an a.m. March17, in the1300 block of arrest made at4:28 a.m. March16, in NW 18th Street.
POLICE LOG
Theft —Atheft was reported at11:53 a.m. March17, in the 400 block of NW Flagline Drive. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:09 p.m. March17, in the 2700 block of NE 27th Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at1:37 p.m. March17, in the 61300 block of Elkhorn Street. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:14 p.m. March17, in the1900 block of NW Second Street.
jj
II
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at 9:54 a.m. March17, in the area of NW Fifth Street.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN B 3
REGON
a owin SLll1SCI'eel1LlSe IA SC OO S By Sheila V Kumar
The issue came to light when a donor wanted SALEM — The Oregon to contribute sunscreen to a high school House unanimously passed legislation Wednesday al- sporting event in order to protect students lowing students to apply sun- from getting sunburned, but because Oregon's screen or wear sun-protective statutes are unclear on sunscreen use, school clothing during school hours and a t sc h ool-sponsoredadministrators declined the gift. The Associated Press
events.
Proponents say O regon schools allow only specific
during a hearing on the bill
o ver-the-counter d r ug s
that because sunscreen con-
on
their campuses, such as topical steroid creams or antihistamines, and sunscreen was not on that list.
Nikki Steinsiek, a medical student at Oregon Health
& Science University, said
to protect students from getting sunburned, but because Oregon's statutes are unclear
on sunscreen use, school administrators declined the gift, she said. The measure also allows school personnel to help students apply sunblock without risk of liability. Rep. Alissa Keny-Guyer,
widely across Oregon because D-Portland, noted that Oreit is unclear whether students gon has the fifth-highest rate tains several active ingre- are allowed to bring and ap- of melanoma in the country. "Childhood o v e rexposure dients, it i s c o nsidered an ply their own sunscreen at o ver-the-counter drug b y school," Steinsiek said. to ultraviolet radiation is a the federal Food and Drug The issue came to light leadingcause of skin cancer," Administration. when a donor wanted to con- Keny-Guyer said. "Currently, school policies tribute sunscreen to a high The bill now goes to the concerning sunscreen vary school sporting event in order Senate.
ALSO IN SALEM
House unanimous a
I'oves I
o ut awin u n tin w i t By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Lawmakers in
track, harass or scout fish and wildlife. It passed in a 59-0 The Humane Society of the
mously Wednesday to outlaw
United States says Oregon would join Colorado, Montana and Alaska in prohibiting
While there's no evidence
85-year-Old WOman attaCked — Police inMedford said an 85-year-old womanvisiting at an adult foster care homewas smashed in the facewith a brick and choked before apasserby intervened to help her. Police arrested a65-year-old man who lives at the home. Lt. Mike Budreausaid the woman is recovering at a hospital from significant facial injuries. Hecalls it "a very bizarre" and unprovoked attack. Budreausaid the womandoesn't live at the home but visits often. Shewas outside gardening when shewas attacked Wednesday. A 25-year-oldwoman who wasdrivingbystoppedand intervened. That womancalled 911 and helped the victim until aid arrived. Police said JamesCharles Lowmanwas booked into jail for investigation of attempted murder, second-degreeassault and strangulation, with bail set at $2 million. Budreausaid the victim and the arrested manare not well-known to eachother.
SWAT teamStunS60-year-Old — Authorities in LaneCounty said a 60-year-old manhasbeentaken to a hospital for evaluation and faces several charges after barricading himself in his Cascade Range cabin and firing shots from it. Nobody washit. Police said the man told officers he might havebeenhaving a mental health crisis. The State Police said aSWATteam used astun gun on David Shoptaw of Blue River in the McKenzieRiver drainage east of Eugene. A standoff began about 2 p.m.Tuesdayand ended eight hours later. Police said Shoptawwas accused of unlawful use of aweapon and other offenses.
Driver charged in collision that hit 3 — A 23-year-old Oregon driver involved in acollision that injured three students in a Gresham crosswalk hasbeenindicted on several charges and arrested.Policesaidasearchofthewoman'scellphoneshowed shewas recording a video at the time. Greshampolice Lt. Claudio Grandjean said Wednesdaythat Elizabeth Rachel Dove of Greshamwas arrested earlier this month and then released. She isaccused of third-degree assault, reckless endangering and reckless driving. The crash took place Jan. 15 in front of Centennial High School. Thethree freshman girls who were struck survived the crash.
Pimp of murdered prostitute pleads guilty to trafficking — The boyfriend and pimp of aPortland woman murdered by aMarine in Hawaii two years agohaspleaded guilty to a humantrafficking charge. Mark Miles Jr. admitted to a federal judgeWednesday in Portland that he transported Ivanice "Ivy" Harris across state lines to engage in prostitution. The prosecutor and defenseattorney will jointly recommend athree-year sentence when Miles returns to court in June. Harris was aday shy of her 29th birthday whenshewas killed. Marine Master Sgt. Nathaniel Cosbywas convicted of the murder. — From wire reports
vote, sending it to the Senate.
the state House voted unanithe use of drones for hunting or fishing in Oregon.
AROUND THE STATE
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drones for hunting. Similar
that Oregon hunters or an- prohibitions have also been glers have been using drones, proposed in Vermont, New the bill's proponents said it's Hampshire, New Mexico, New happened elsewhere. York and Illinois, according to "Drones have no place in the organization. sport hunting, fishing or trapDrones would give hunters ping," said Rep. Brad Witt, a an unfair advantage over the Democrat from Clatskanie animals they target, said Scott who sponsored the bill. "They Beckstead, the Humane Soare simply antithetical to the ciety's Oregon director. The principle of fair chase and fair bill's supporters say wildlife catch." populations might dwindle The bill orders the Oregon if drones are widely used to Department of Fish and Wild- scout or kill game. "You're using technology to life to adopt a rule banning the use of unmanned vehicles to locate game rather than en-
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Proponents of the bill argue that drones give hunters an unfair advantage over the animals they target.
ASSURANCE gaging in sort of the fair chase hunters adhere to," Beckstead and the traditional stalking said of the prospect ofhunting methods that most responsible with drones.
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••
g )
•
By Mead Gruver The Associated Press
C HEYENNE,
Wyo.
Hunting of greater sage grouse could continue in eight states even if the U.S. Fish and Wild-
life Service were to determine in the months ahead that the
ground-dwelling birds deserve protection as a threatened or endangered species, an agency spokesman said. The reason: The birds are set to remain under state control because Congress voted
in December to withhold any funding to list the birds as threatened or endangered. "If we determinedthat it was still warranted for protection,
Dave Showalter/ Colorado Parks and Wildlife via The Associated Press file photo
Wildlife officials will determine in the months ahead whether the
Ben 's est e at c u offers more for members...
sage grouse should ba listed as an endangered or threatened species, but hunting them could still be legal in eight Western states.
we would be precluded from taking the next step to try and evaluate whether or not a threatened or an endangered
and Wyoming — allow hunting of greater sage grouse.
what for now.
Meanwhile, hunting sage grouse indirectly helps the species as one of the better ways of gathering information about grouse was "warranted but the birds, according to Wyopreduded" by the more urgent ming Game and Fish officials. need to protect more imperLast year, the state ageniled species. Now, Fish and cy was able to determine by Wildlife faces a court-ordered studying wings donated by Sept. 30 deadline to decide if sage grouse hunters that the the greater sage grouse needs birds had one of their better federal protection. years for reproduction. Each The agency could decide hen produced an average of 1.7 that efforts since 2010 have chicks, accordingto the data. been sufficient to protect the As was the rule last year, greater sage grouse and feder- this fall the Wyoming Game al protection isn't needed. and Fish Department proposes Or, Fish and Wildlife could a daily take limit of two sage decide federal protection still is grouse and totalpossession needed. In that case, Stein said, limit of four sage grouse. "the situation will be essentialIn all eight states where ly status quo in that it would re- greater sage grouse hunting is main a candidate species." allowed, the hunting seasons The cattle ranching, pe- are short and each hunter may troleum and wind energy take only a small number of industries a n xiously a w a it birds, Stein said. "The Fish and Wildlife Serwhat Fish and Wildlife will decide. Federal protection for vice recognizes that hunting is the greater sage grouse could a sourceof mortality forsage restrict development on sig- grouse. But we do not think it nificant expanses of Western is a significant source of morland, though the vote by Con- tality at the species level," he gress lessens the stakes some- sard.
listing would be appropriate," In 2010, Fish and Wildlife Fish and Wildlife spokesman determined that federal proTheo Stein said'Iltesday. tection of the greater sage At least one state — Wyoming, home to more of the birds than any other state by
far — already is planning to allow sage grouse hunting again this fall.
"We're just sticking to our
state management at this point
and moving forward with planning for a September hunting season," said Scott Smith,
Wyoming Game and Fish Department W i l dlife
D i v ision
deputy chief. "I guess we're all waiting to see what the federal government comes up with as far as a listing decision." The greater sage grouse is a chicken-sized bird that inhabits the
s agebrush-cov-
eredexpanses ofthe West. Its numbers have declined from perhaps well over a million in pre-settlement time to no more than 500,000 in ll states from California to the Dakotas.
Eight of those states — California, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, Oregon, Utah
I
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
on' com e wor ers oma e union ack in 2013, former Gov. John Kitzhaber was able
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to quiet conflict in three battles that set neighbor against neighbor. All three, it seems, are back. One would allow the state's public employees the right to reject union membership and avoid making whatare known as fair-share payments when doing so. It's what is called a right-to-work proposal. It's a good idea. Others would drive up taxes on business and, perhaps, on upper-income Oregonians.The tax measures are sponsored by Our Oregon, which r epresents the views of a coalition of unions and other left-of-center groups in the state. The right-t o-work proposal belongs to Jill Gibson, a Washington County lawyer. Gibson was the driving force behind the 2013 proposal, but this one is different. It makes changesaimed at addressing one complaint about such laws. Public employees are not required to j oin u nions now, of course. Some agencies are not unionized, for one thing, and, in fact, less than 60 percent of Oregon's public workers belong to unions, according to unionstats. com's compilation of U.S. Census Bureau figures. But employees who choose not
to join a union in a unionized office — about 3percent of represented public employees — still must pay "fair share" fees aimed at covering a portion of the union's cost of negotiating contracts that also apply to nonunion workers. Gibson would c hange that, however, and make the need for fair-share payments go away at the same time. Her proposal would make clear that nonunion members are not represented by a union in labor negotiations; rather those workers would negotiate directly with their employers. Our Oregon and others say G ibson's plan won't w ork, a l though supporters of the idea say they believe the difficulties can be addressed. Meanwhile, in a state where new business can be hard to come by, the shift could make Oregon more attractive to new business. That's important i n a s t a te whose economic growth and employment rates have lagged for years. It's especially important as more and more — now, fully half — of states join the right-to-work trend.
Tax-exempt hospitals must prove their worth ax-exempt status should be earned. Organizations that get tax-exempt status need to do t hings that demonstrate they deserve it. St. Charles Health System is doing just that. It provides free care for patients who are at or below 250 percent of the federal poverty level as long as the care is medically necessary. Many hospitals are benefiting now that more people are insured. In Oregon, the percentage of uninsured residents dropped from 14 percent before the Affordable Care Act to 5 percent after, according to The Associated Press. It means hospitals don't have to spend asmuch on charity care.Oregon Health Authority data show the amount of median patient revenue spent on charity care has declined. It was 4.4percent in the first quarter of 2010. In the first quarter of 2014, it was 2.3 percent. The OregonAssociation ofHospitals is calling on its members to
T
keep up their commitment to charity care nonetheless. Many hospitals are committing to provide free care to patients with incomes of less than 200 percent of the federal poverty level. That would be up to about $23,500 annually for an individual. St. Charles does slightly better, at $29,400 for an individual. Compliance for Oregon's 58 hospitals is not mandatory. It's voluntary. But nearly all of them are expected to participate. Both at the federal level and in the state, lawmakers have questioned tax-exempt status for hospitals and other charities. We don't think it's a good idea to do away with tax-exempt status as some have suggested. As others have said, it's a lifeline, not a loophole. N onprofit o r ganizations d o have tohave a community benefit to keep tax-exempt status. But if enough doing good isn't being done, it would be time to strip away the exemptions.
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M 1Vickel's Worth Taxstudded tires
while you stare off across the water or chat away on your cellphone, Regarding the editorial 'W hy oblivious to your doggy's duties. Bend may choose a gas tax," it seems Keep your eye on your dog at all
draw all ages for family fun, hockey teams, etc. So why is it Bend and its
metropolitan area are so short-sighted as to only build an outdoor rink
that conversations about funding
times please! It's not fun to get back
road maintenance always overlook a most obvious issue and source of funding. Studdedtiresare responsiblefora bigpercentage ofourroad damage. The grooves and subsequent potholes we see are not found in states where studded tires are disallowed
into your car and drive off only to
that will have very minimal usage, especially with our i ncreasingly
smell that someone has brought back
warm winters?
because of that damage.
an unwanted souvenir on the soles Millions of dollars are being of their shoes or paws. And it's not poured, literally, into moving the Dejust the poo problem that's prevalent; schutes River for "safe passage," of on numerous occasions I witnessed which, when finished, will be used dogs getting bullied by other dogs only by a select few of our residents while their owner stares off into the sunset.
Oregonians are unlikely to give up their studded tires, but the sellers and users should pay the full price of their tires rather than leave the problem and the cost with other taxpay-
Keep your eyes on your pooch, people, for their safety and everyone's sanitation. Grab a bag on your way in. I have gotten so discouraged by this constant disgusting lack of ers. The obvious fix: a substantial tax responsibility and pride that we have on sale of those tires. stopped frequenting doggy parks. William Raleigh Which is a shame for my pooch and Bend a shame for Bend. Tajah "TJ" Neubo
Dog owners need to behave
a nd tourists and only during, a t best, six months of the year, with no
income generated. An indoor rink would draw many more of our permanent residents and tourists alike,
plus hockey teams and bring in a tremendous amount of income.
I appealto those concerned and involved citizens and developers to address this greatly needed addition to the list of our Central Oregon recreation attractions.
Batty Marshall
Bend
Bend boasts one of the highest rates of dog ownership per capita inthe U.S. Having moved here recently, I was looking forward to frequenting the seven doggy parks that Bend has laboriously created. But Bend, you should be ashamed of yourself, not just because of your underbelly negative opinion of newbies, but because of your conduct in the dog parks. Reading comments submitted to various publications expressing dis-
Area needs apermanent
indooricerink
What a shame and embarrassment that the Central Oregon population (over 130,000) cannot claim an indoor ice rink on its vast list of recreational opportunities and facilities. This area brags of having almost limitless recreational activities and
draws so many tourists for both winter and summer sports, yet park and other administrators cannot en-
Redmond
Off-leash dogs
shouldget space I really enjoyed the letter written by Bruce Johnson from DogPAC. We have experienced very responsible dog owners and never had a problem in Shevlin. The back part is perfect for off-leash use. Everyone we have encountered has been so respectful.
If you designate certain areas for vision a year-round ice rink. Much off leash, it would be used well and like of "outsiders," one gets the im- smaller communities, e.g., McCall, I am certain people would follow pression that Bend has an attitude Idaho, (population 2,900), Ketchum/ those areas. That area is made for it. of entitlement. Which leads me to Hailey/Sun Valley, Idaho, (popu- Please consider it seriously. It would condude that this is why some seem lation 12,000), Gillette, Wyoming, make many,many people very hapto treat the doggy parks like a day (population 2,500) and Shoreline, py, myself included! care. Just drop off your little one and Washington, (population 54,000) all Cindy Murphy someone else will entertain them
have successful indoor rinks which
Bend
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Identifying the skills people need in today's world S everal years ago, Doug Lemov began studying videos of excellent teachers. He focused not on
their big strategies but on their microgestures: How long they waited
People with social courage are ex-
troverted in issuing invitations but
DAVID
BROOKS
before calling on students to answer
a question (to give the less confident students time to get their hands up); rhythm between lecturing and class when they paced about the classroom
participation, varies the emotional
and when they stood still (while issuing instructions, to emphasize the importance of what's being said); how theymoved around the room toward a student whose mind might be wandering. In an excellent piece on Lemov for The Guardian, Ian Leslie emphasizes
tone. This is a performance skill that surely is relevant beyond education. This raises an important point.
As the economy changes, the skills required to thrive in it change, too, and it takes a while before these new
skills are defined and acknowledged. For example, in today's loosely that these subtle skills are often not networked world, people with social recognized or even discussedbythose courage have amazing value. Every-
Since it is easier to think deductive-
Opposability: F. Scott Fitzgerald
ly, most people try to turn cloud problems into clock problems, but a few
wrote, "The test of a first-rate intel-
introverted in conversation — willing to listen 70 percent of the time. They people are able to look at a complex build not just contacts but actual situation, grasp the gist and clarify it friendships by engaging people on by naming what is going on. multiple levels. If you're interested in a Such people tend to possess negnew field, they can reel off the names ative capacity, the ability to live with of 10 people you should know. They ambiguity and not leap to premadevelop large, informal networks of ture conclusions. They can absorb a contacts that transcend their organi- stream of disparate data and rest in zation and give them an independent it until they can synthesize it into one power base. They are discriminating trend, pattern or generalization. in their personal recommendations, We can all think of many other since character judgment is their pri- skills that are especially valuable mary currency. rightnow: Similarly, people who can capture Making nonhuman things intuitive amorphous trends with a clarifying to humans: This is what Steve Jobs
ligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function." For some reason I am continually
running across people who believe this is the ability their employees and bosses need right now. Cross-class expertise: In a world dividing along class, ethic and economic grounds some people are culturally multilingual. They can operate in an insular social niche while seeing it from the vantage point of an outsider.
One gets the im pression we're confronted by a giant cultural lag. The economy emphasizes a new generalabel also have enormous worth. Karl Clld. tion of skills, but our vocabulary dewho talk about education policy, or one goes to conferences and meets Popperobserved thatthere are clock Purpose provision: Many people go scribesthesetrequired 30yearsago. even by those who evaluate teachers. Lord, if somebody could just idenpeople, but some people invite six problems and cloud problems. Clock through life overwhelmed by options, In part, Lemov is talking about people to lunch afterward and follow problems can be divided into parts, afraid of closing off opportunities. tify the skills it takes to give a good the skill of herding cats. The master up with four carefully tended friend- but cloud problems are indivisible, But a few have fully cultivated moral briefing these days, that feat alone of cat herding senses when attention shipsforevermore. Then they spend emergent systems. A culture problem passions and can help others choose would deserve the Nobel Prize. is about to wander, knows how fast their lives connecting people across is a cloud — so is a personality, an era the one thing they should dedicate — David Brooks is a columnist to move a diversegroup, senses the networks. and a social environment. themselves to. for The New York Times.
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Mirror Pond
BITUARIES
Continued from B1 The proposal is presented as a compromise between those who wish to return the
FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTIt ES Baird "BJ" Johnson, of Bend
Eiden B. Mattern, of Prineviiie
Dec. 3, 1932 - Mar. 10, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: BJ requested that no services be held. Contributions may be made
Jan. 4, 1928 - Mar. 16, 2015 Arrangements: Juniper Ridge Funeral Home, 541-362-5606 Services: A memorial service will be held at the Crook County High School March 21, 2015 at 3:OOPM.
to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Donald Lucas, of Prineviiie May 31, 1948 - Dec. 29, 2014
Arrangements: Juniper Ridge Funeral Home, 541-362-5606 Services: A celebration of life and pot luck will be held at the American Legion in Cashmere, Washington at 12:00.
Donald Duanne Myhre, of Redmond April 25, 1926 - Mar. 16, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net
Services: A public visitation will take
place Saturday, March
21, 2015 at 8:00-10:00 AM at Redmond Memorial Chapel, located at717SW6th St., in Redmond, Oregon. Funeral Services will be held at 10:00 AM, also at Redmond Memorial Chapel, immediately
followed by a graveside
service at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, located at 3545 South Canal Blvd., Redmond. Contributions may bemade to:
Alzheimer's Association P.O. Box 96011 Washington, DC 20090-6011 www.alz.org
Eleanor Joan Hartman, of Bend July 10, 1936 - Mar. 13, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A celebration of her life will be held at a later date.
Giadys M. Kabatow,of La Pine Jan. 7, 1920 - Mar. 8, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592
www.deschutesmemorialchapetcom
Services:
No services are planned. Contributionsmay be made to: St. Charles Hospice, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend, OR 97701
Juanita Edwards, of Prineville/Redmond Mar. 14, 1920 - Mar. 13, 2015
Arrangements: Redmond Memorial
chapel is honored to serve the family. Please
sign our guest book at
www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: Graveside Services will be held at Redmond Memorial Cemetery, Friday, March 20, 2014 at 2:00 P.M., 3545 South Canal Blvd., Redmond,
Oregon
Contributionsmay be made to: Child Evangelism Fellowship CEF of Oregon, 1966 McCoy Ave. NE, Salem, OR 97303, 503-364-6499.
Anthony Dennis Guiio, of Redmond Aug. 24, 1947 - Mar. 13, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to handle the arrangements. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: Direct burial will be held at Redmond Memorial Cemetery Monday, March 23, 2015 at 2:00 P.M., 3545 South Canal Blvd., Redmond, Oregon. Contributionsmay be made to:
BrightSide Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond, OR 97756, (541) 923-0882.
Naomi E. Crofoot, of Bend Oct. 31, 1922 - Mar. 17, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.nlswonger-reynolds.com
Services: A Memorial Service will be held at a later date.
Ramon Rogers,of Kenai, Alaska
Toto bassist Porcaro played with his brothers
L. Glenn Hays
those who wish to preserve Mirror Pond as a placid, slow-moving body of water. Allegra Briggs vocalized one thread of criticism, arguingtheredevelopment represented gentrification meant to serve the rich. "Do you want people to be displaced?" she asked, questioning who would reap the rewards of new buildings. Melinda Sweet took up another thread, arguing the city should protect the envi-
ronmental health of the river by removingthe dam and
By Steve Chawkins
returning Mirror Pond to its
Los Angeles Times
natural state.
L OS ANGELES — M i k e
"It saddens me the city is
Porcaro, a bass player who performed along with his two brothers in the rock group
looking at an option which ensures future d redging.
Toto, died Sunday at his Los
Angeles home. He was 59. Porcaro had a myotrop h i c lateral sclerosis, a degenerative neuromuscular
Dec. 20, 1939 - Mar. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Juniper Ridge Funeral Home, 541-362-5606 Services: A Celebration of Life will be held at a later date.
river to its natural state and
d isorder P orcaro
al so
know n a s L o u
Gehrig's disease. His death was announced in a Facebook post by his brother Steve,a former key-
boardist for the Grammy-winning band. A third
t h e c onstruction
of multistory buildings with commercial businesses on the ground floor and residences on the upper levels. The bill would allow the city
Planning Commission also weighed in with a modified list of suggestions. The City Council is sched- to tax the commercial busiuled to have a hearing about nesses as usual while offering the policies March 30 and tax abatements for the housto vote on the new rules two ing above to encourage the days later. While the presen- creation of affordable units. tation Wednesday was inAnother bill seeks to give tended to be informational, Deschutes County a larger some councilors offered an share of money from a stateearly look at their opinions, wide affordable housing including Doug Knight, who fund. The fund's revenue is questioned the use of a con- generated by a fee for recordtact number for rental own- ing or filing certain housing
posed policies to regulate
happen if the rental owner
vacation home rentals, the
didn't answer the phone and
presence of which has rapidly expanded over the past two years, especially in the
suggested those who fail to answer should be punished. As a discussion began, River West and Old Bend Mayor Jim Clinton urged neighborhoods. An appoint- council members to reserve ed citizen task force created voicing their opinions until a list of proposals to limit the hearing. the impact of vacation rentEarlier in the meeting, the al homes, while the city's city's Salem lobbyist, Erik
High School in Van Nuys and honed their skills in a garage
toldtrustees there is aproposal process to vet new degrees
their family had transformed
and the demand for them.
into a rehearsal and recording
formed in the pit orchestra as his sons collected their music
She said some faculty are pushing to invest in existing programs, but she'd like to see the campus create more degrees to meet local needs — possibly mechanical engineering,bioscience, nursing and an MBA program. As a brewing capital, what about a degree in fermentation science, she asked, a degree which is already offered in Corvallis. These additions would come with challenges, including the cost of adding faculty and student services
industry honors. B orn Ma y 2 9 , 1 9 55, i n
and the demands of accreditation, Johnson said.
studio.
Jeff, Steve and four other musicians formed Toto in 1978. Mike joined after David
Hungate, the group's original bass player, left in 1982. In 1983, Toto won a best album Grammy for "Toto
IV," a best song Grammy for "Rosanna" and several other
Grammy awards. On that February evening in the Shrine Auditorium, Joe Porcaro per-
South Windsor, Connecticut, Michael Joseph Porcaro perHe was a m a ster t eacher formed with Seals and Crofts, and a successful coach. His b est w r e stlin g t e a m , a t Boz Scaggs and other groups before signing on with Toto. Burns, finished second in When he was 50, he noticed the state in 1962. a puzzling weakness in his He was preceded in death b y his w i f e , w h o d i e d i n hands and fingers. Doctors 1993. Survivors include his diagnosed him with ALS in high schools (1963-1976).
s on, Rev. V ance H ay s o f 2006, and he retired the folPortland, OR ; h i s d a u gh- lowing year. ter, Dixie H ays Sexton of Toto went on hiatus in 2008 Bend, OR; five g r andchilbut returned two years later, dren and two great-grandstaging a summer tour to benchildren. D isposition wa s b y c r e - efit Porcaro and draw attenm ation. A m e m o r ia l s e r - tion to ALS. vice will be held Saturday, M arch 28 , 2 0 0 p m . , a t Parklane C h r i s t ia n Ref ormed C h u rc h i n Po r t land. Memories and cond olences may b e s en t t o Death Notices are freeand vancehays@juno.com.
Obituary policy
willbe runfor one day,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact
five times more than it gets
back. The bill, which is sponsored by members of Central Oregon's delegation, would aim to distribute the money proportionally to the areas which generate it.
Kancler said the prospects of the bill passing are "very s lim," but said th e b il l
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
dtscusston. — Reporter: 541-633-2160, tleeds@bendbulletin.com
So what to add'? Johnson
seeing such high demand that Bend could take the
building troubles. Plans to add academic buildings, a 300-bed residence hall and overflow. And she said an important part of OSU-Cas- a dining hall in west Bend cades' branding is that it of- were delayed afteragroup of fers the same diploma as the residents appealed the city's Corvallis campus, with class- approval. The case is now es taught by tenured faculty before the state's Land Use and programsaccredited the Board of Appeals, which is same as Corvallis. expected to rule next month, Becomingafour-yearcam- though Johnson warned the pus, she said, will also help case could wind up before the attract faculty to OSU-Cas- state Supreme Court. cades, which started in 2001. Back then, she said, "It was
Recently, O SU-Cascades
announced that it t apped public relations firm Gallatin
almost like, who from Corvallis is willing to go over and Public Affairs to help make teach at this new campus'?" thecase forthe new campus she told trustees. to the community. Johnson The so-called capstone told trustees that OSU-Casmodel that the Bend campus cades has one full-time comstarted under, offering up- munications staffer. Rather per-level and graduate cours- than hiring another, officials es, can be a tricky sell. "It's a opted to bring the firm in on a model that we have to explain temporary basis.
Trustees asked about plans to every recruit, faculty recruit to differentiate the campuses so that they aren't "cannibal-
izing" each other. Johnson
that we bring in and convince
The trustees are set to meet
again today to vote on tuition
them that theyhave a future at for 2015-16 and hear from OSU-Cascades," she said.
OSU-Cascades students. — Reporter: 541-617-7837, aspegman@bendbullet in.com
departments in Corvallis are
Johnson also briefly addressed the Bend campus'
Park
less binding than an ease- park site and neighborhoods
Continued from B1 As part of the deal, the
have to b e r e negotiated lington Northern-Santa Fe if and when the property railroad line is also in the
p ark district w il l
is brought into the u rban
responded that some OSU
ment would be,and would a lso r e-
ceive a license to use a trail on aseparatepiece ofWardowned land between China
Hat Road and U.S. Highway 97, Horton said. The trail tra-
g rowth b o undary a n d developed. Though the area around the park site is not heavily developed, a sewer line
verses the area occupied by u nder c o n struction w i l l the former front nine holes provide the sewer capacity of the Mountain High golf needed for the area to develcourse built by Ward in the op. The line is expected to be late 1980s. completed in 2017. Horton said the license is A connection between the
to the west across the Burworks.
The city is planning for an eventual extension of
Murphy Road from its current terminus near Jewell Elementary School to 15th Street. The extended Mur-
phy Road would connect to 15th Street just north of the
park site. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers®bendbulletin.com
' REIJEFI I I I I I
Email: obiis@bendbullelin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
' I I
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CALLNOW1-800-364-1023
I
I• • II
I'
Phone: 541-617-7825
The B l e tin
is
nonetheless "creating a lot of
541-617-7825.
Weekly Arts 0 Entertainment ••
allow for
Knight asked what would
Continued from B1
v iving Evelyn i s h e r h u s band, De l M i l l er ; d a u ghters, Candis Z u sin, T e rry S ummers, Cindy R a b u r n ; and sons, David Smith and Mitch Miller. S h e has numerous grand an d g r e atgrandchildren. A memorial service w i l l b e held a t R e stlawn M e morial Gardens in S alem, Oregon, Friday, March 20, 2015 at 2:30 p.m.
more affordable housing. One bill being considered would
heard a presentation on pro-
percussionist Jo e P o r caro, the brothers attended Grant
(Bend, Oregon). Also sur-
help the City Council create
ty currently puts in about
OSU-Cascades
g i r l s i n C r o sby,
Kancler discussed bills before the Legislature that may
P orcaro brother,
died of a heart attack at his
N orth D a k o ta , r a i sed t n B end, g r a d u a te d fr om Bend High School, retired from P a c i fi c N or t h w e st Bell. She loved to camp, knit , d ance a n d go t o th e Casino. E velyn w a s a l o n g t i m e member of the First Lutheran C h u r ch , T e l e phone Pioneers and Eagles Club. Preceding her tn death is her mother and father, Bertha and Ray Anderson; sisters, Arlene, Phyllis and Beverly. Surviving sisters, Delores Stills (Cuiver, Ore gon) a n d P a m Gi b s o n
— Melinda Sweet
to the city of Bend.
water quality," she said. In other business, the city
Los Angeles home in 1992. The sons of studio session
of six
impaired water quality."
LandWatch,offered an update on legislation of interest
documents. Deschutes Coun-
L . G l en n H a y s , f o r m e r English teacher and wrest ling coach at B en d H i g h School, d i e d M ar c h 3 , 2015, in Aurora, Colorado, of natural causes. He was 92 years old. Glenn was born D e cember 28, 1922, in L ongdale, O klahoma, t h e son of Hobart and Pearl (McCormick) H a ys. A f t e r e n l i sti ng i n t h e U . S . A r m y i n 1 941, he took p ar t i n t h e D-Day invasion of Europe, t hen r eturned h o m e a n d finished h i g h s c h o o l i n H ennessey, Ok l ah o m a . T here h e m e t h is w i f e , Beverly Baines. They were married in 1947. A fter g r a d u atin g fr o m Oklahoma A R M C o l l ege (now Oklahoma State Univ ersity), h e a n d B e v e r l y m oved t o O r e gon, w h e r e he taught and coached at Nehalem, Scappoose, Beav erton, B u rn s a n d B e n d
Former longtime Bend r esident, Evelyn J. M i l l er , died early March 14, 2015, a t he r h o m e i n Sa n d y , Oregon. She was 84 years old. Evelyn was born the first
which means future
Kancler, a former executive director of Central Oregon
ers. The number is intended
Jeff, was Toto's drummer. He
Evelyn J. Miller
cityis looking at an option which ensures future dredging,
to be used by neighbors who have a complaint, such as about a loud party.
which means future impaired
Dec. 28, 1922- March 3, 2015
July 7, 1930- March14, 2015
"lt saddens me the
B5
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B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
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TODAY
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TONIGHT
LGW ~ -"'"-
HIGH 66' I f '
Thickening clouds
ALMANAC
SATURDAY
SUNDAY
gk<Jg
-" "
64 34'
34'
Partl ysunnyand mild
I
FRIDAY
64
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28'
34'
Partly sunny, ashower or two; cooler
Some sun,then turning cloudy
b
Mild with somesun
Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows. umatiga Hood 71/39 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
EAST:Sunshine and patchy clouds today with a comfortable afternoon. Clear to partly cloudy tonight.
Clo udy and cooler with a couple of showers
i
Yesterday Today Friday Cily Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 68/49/0.07 77/49/c 60/49/sh Juneau 45/37/0.30 47/31/sh 45/32/sh Cannon /41 High 55 52 82' in 1 9 18 Iington 70/37 Portland ~4 Akron 46/21/0.00 47/34/pc 49/36/sn Kansas Ci t y 42/37/0.20 49/35/r 67/42/pc Meac am Losti ne 58/49 28' 28' Low 8'in 1917 7/41 Albany 33/23/0.00 33/1 8/s 33/27/sn Lansing 48/23/0.00 46/30/pc 50/39/pc • W co7 /41 64/35 Enterprise dl te 83/3 e 6 • he Daa Albuquerque 67/44/0.01 62/43/sh 61/41/sh Las Vsgas 78/65/0.00 79/54/pc 80/55/pc • 8 2/32 Tigamo • 69/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Sunshine andy • Anchorage 42/31/0.00 45/27/c 42/27/s Lexington 47/26/Tr 52/44/r 55/40/c 70/40 62/46 Mc innviu 7/43 J«eph Aganfa 73/56/0.00 56/47/r 68/52/c Lincoln 54/27/0.00 60/30/c 71/35/s • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" most of today with a Gove nt • upi Condon 7/35 Atlantic City 44/29/0.00 39/32/pc 41/35/r Little Rock 52/49/0.44 60/53/r 63/50/pc Cam • 67 ee34 Record 0.52" in 1907 pleasant afternoon. Lincoln union Austin 78/60/0.42 76/61/c 70/56/r Los Angeles 75/64/0.00 74/57/c 76/59/pc 59/ Month to date (normal) 0.3 0" (0.45") Patchy clouds tonight. 59/48 Sale Baltimore 48/28/0.00 49/33/pc 39/33/sn Louisville 49/32/0.02 55/47/r 59/42/pc • pmy Granite Year to date(normal) 1.41 " (3.07") Partly sunny tomor87/4 • /43 Billings 58/35/0.02 61/41/s 66/38/c Madison, Wf 50/24/0.00 51/33/pc 58/36/s 'Baker C ttewpo BO/33 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 19" row. Birmingham 76/55/0.00 71/56/sh 71/50/sh Memphis 64/48/0.02 63/52/r 61/46/sh 42 58/47 • Mitch H 83/29 Bismarck 38/32/0.04 50/29/pc 54/22/pc Miami 87/66/0.00 86/67/pc 8790/s Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Patchy fog 85/37 R SUN ANDMOON • u Boise 59/38/0.00 64/40/s 72/48/s Milwaukee 50/32/0.00 46/36/pc 56/38/pc Yach ee/33 • John early; otherwise, 68/42 Boston 30/23/0.00 33/19/s 35/29/sn Minneapolis 46/30/0.00 53/37/c 58/29/s 59/47 • Prineville Day /30 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 38/28/Tr 38/25/s 34/30/sn Nashville times of clouds and 53/42/0.00 55/51/sh 62/43/c 88/32 • Pa lina 65 / 3 8 Sunrise 7:11 a.m. 7: 0 9 a.m. 34 Buffalo 35/22/Tr 36/26/s 39/32/sn New Orleans 81/67/0.01 79/64/sh 80/64/c sunshine in the north Floren e • Eugene • Re d B rothers 6335 Sunset 7:18 p.m. 7: 1 7 p.m. and mostly sunny in 80/48 Valee Burlington, VT 24/15/Tr 27/1 2/pc 36/26/pc New York Ci t y 39/30/0.00 41/30/s 37/31/sn 33 Su iVero 66/34 Moonrise 8:4 1 a.m. 7:1 7 a.m. 65/39 Caribou, ME 13/9/Tr 21/4/sf 34/18/pc Newark, NJ 44/29/0.00 44129/s 37/31/sn the south today. Nyssa • 8 4/ Ham on C e Charleston, SC 66/58/0.00 63/56/sh 74/55/c Norfolk, VA 52/38/0.00 49/40/c 51/39/I' Moonset 8:5 1 p.m. 8:0 7 p.m. • I8 plne J untura 68/ 3 4 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 61/47/0.00 53/44/r 66/47/c Oklahoma Ci t y 63/50/0.04 63/46/sh 68/49/pc $ Co • Burns OREGON EXTREME New F i r s t Full Last 65/36 68/42 39 Chattanooga 62/49/0.00 55/49/r 62/46/c Omaha 53/31/0.00 58/32/pc 69/37/s 81 5 • Fort Rock Riley 64/27 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 65/3O Cheyenne 60/31/0.00 52/29/c 64/36/s Orlando 88/66/0.00 85/66/pc 86/64/s S w d 64/27 63/31 Chicago 50/28/0.00 50/36/pc 56/41/pc Palm Spdi n gs 86/64/0.00 85/61/c 88/61/pc High: GG' Bandon Ro seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 48/30/0.00 52/42/r 54/39/pc Peoria 48/32/0.00 50/38/pc 59/42/pc Jordan V gey Mar 20 Mar 26 A pr 4 A p r 11 at Brookings BO/47 Beaver Silver 65/29 Frenchglen 71/44 Cleveland 45/23/0.00 42/32/pc 45/36/pc Philadelphia 45/32/0.00 46/31/pc 39/33/sn Low: 22' 81/41 Marsh Lake 64/38 ColoradoSprings 63/32/Tr 49/32/sh 62/36/pc Phoenix 81/70/Tr 78/62/sh 83/62/pc Tonight'8 sky:OnFriday, total solar eclipse 63/3O at Redmond 65/31 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, MO 45/39/0.11 47/37/r 64/43/pc Pittsburgh 44/23/0.00 47/34/pc 48/38/sn • Paisley 61/ visible along a remotepath from the North Columbia, SC 70/57/0.00 59/48/r 71/52/c Portland, ME 28/19/0.00 31/15/s 35/26/pc • 65/30 • Chiloquin 66/30 1 MedfO d '65/so Columbus,GA 77/56/0.00 71/54/sh 76/56/c Providence 34/25/0.00 34/20/s 33/28/sn Atlantic to Arctic oceans. Gold ach Rorne 0' Columbus,OH 48/25/0.00 53/38/c 52/38/pc Raleigh 60/39/0.00 54/41/r 58/42/r 67/31 Klamath Concord, NH 25/19/0.00 29/9/s 34/21/sn Rapid City 54/22/Tr 58/31/s 70/31/s Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 74/62/1.86 74/64/c 74/64/1 Reno 65/37/0.00 71/37/s 71/43/s Bro ings 66/35 59/ 65/29 65/28 64/36 Dallas 66/55/0.03 75/57/sh 64/56/sh Richmond 57/30/0.00 54/38/c 48/36/r Dayton 48/25/0.00 52/38/c 53/40/pc Rochester, NY 35/24/Tr 36/25/s 41/32/sn Denver 67/38/0.00 53/35/sh 69/38/s Sacramento 77/47/0.00 79/48/s 75/50/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p.m. Yesterday Today Frlday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 51/36/pc 66/40/s St. Louis 47/39/0.04 49/41/r 61/46/pc 55/38/0.00 2 I~ 5 ~ 5 I 2 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 50/26/0.00 44/30/pc 51/40/pc Salt Lake City 62/45/0.00 61/39/s 69/44/s The highertheAccuWealher.rxrm liy index number, Astoria 59/42/0.02 61/48/c 61/46/r La Grande 55/43/0.00 66/34/s 67/44/pc Portland 63/4 9/Tr 68/44/pc 67/48/ c Duluth 45/24/0.00 50/34/c 47/19/pc San Antonio 74/62/0.21 78/63/c 72/59/1 the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 56/28/0.00 63/29/s 66/42/pc L a Pine 61/24/0.0163/32/pc 60/35/pc Prinevigs 56/ 2 7/0.0068/32/pc60/37/ pc El Paso 67/48/0.06 69/48/c 70/50/sh San Diego 68/63/0.01 73/60/c 73/60/pc 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 69/43/0.00 59/46/pc 57/48/r Me d ford 68/3 8 /0.00 71141/pc 67/43/pc Redmond 59/ 22/0.0069/31/pc 66/35/pc Fairbanks 42/9/0.00 38/1 6/s 39/10/s San Francisco 69/51/0.00 68/52/s 67/55/pc Bums 56/26/0.00 64/27/s 67/35/pc N ewport 55/4 3/0.02 58/47/c 59/47/r Roseburg 67 / 43/0.00 71/44/pc 68/46/c Fargo 46/27/0.00 53/32/pc 43/19/pc San Jose 72/47/0.00 75/48/s 72/51/pc Eugene 64/41/0.04 67/41/pc 66/44/c N o rth Bend 61 / 43/0.00 61/46/pc 62/49/r Salem 64/45/0.00 67/42/pc 67/46/c Flagstaff 57/39/0.00 49/27/sh 57/25/c Santa re 68/36/Tr 61/36/sh 55/33/sh Klamath Fags 58/25/0.00 65/29/s 60/36/pc Ontari o 63/40/Tr 65/34/s 70/44/pc Sisters 61/24/0.00 68/30/pc64/37/ c Grand Rapids 48/25/0.00 47/31/pc 49/37/pc Savannah 71/61/0.00 68/58/sh 77/57/c ror web camerasof ourpasses, goto Lakeview 57/28/0.00 65/28/s 62/35/pc P endleton 5 9/ 4 2/0.00 69/40/s 68/46/pc The Dages 6 6 /42/0.00 70/40/pc 67/43/ c Green Bay 48/30/0.00 49/33/c 55/33/pc Seattle 60/45/0.00 61/49/c 63/50/c www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams Greensboro 59/41/0.00 50/42/r 57/44/c Sioux Fags 48/36/0.00 58/31/pc 67/29/s Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday I-84 at Cabbage Hill: Goodtravel today with Harrisburg 45/29/0.00 46/30/pc 37/29/sn Spokane 55/39/0.01 60/39/pc 64/44/pc sunshine. Partly cloudyanddrytonight. Harfford, CT 33/26/0.00 36/18/s 34/27/sn Springfield, Mo 44/42/0.14 55/39/r 65/43/pc Helena 51/38/0.08 62/39/pc 68/41/pc Tampa 84/69/0.00 84/67/pc 83/67/s US 20 at SantiamPass:Drypavementtoday Honolulu 83/66/0.00 81/67/pc 80/69/pc Tucson 72/65/0.14 71/53/sh 74/53/pc and tonight with partly cloudyskies. ~ ga ~ f ea ~ 208 ~ 308 ~ 408 ~ 508 ~ ega ~708 ~ 8 0 8 ~ 9 0 8 ~ fgga ~ff Oa Houston ~ 108 ~ g a 82/65/0.11 77/63/c 78/63/1 Tulsa 55/49/0.30 61145/r 69/47/pc US 28 atGov'tCamp:Drytravel today with dd Huntsville 72/52/Tr 62/53/sh 64/46/c Washington, DC 53/36/0.00 53/35/pc 43/37/sn NATIONAL 'dd dd dd d Csles clouds andsunshine.Stayingdry tonight. *,** . Q ue c indianapolis 46/27/0.00 52/39/r 54/41/pc Wichita 47/43/0.01 55/35/r 72/41/pc 52/30 d • i nfpee Q 21/4 Jackson, MS 79/59/0.13 74/60/sh 76/59/sh Yskima 66/33/0.00 70/37/pc 68/42/pc EXTREMES US28atOchoco Divide:Dry pavementand ' d1/49 48 1 Jacksonville 74/59/0.00 77/59/sh 82/60/c Yuma 83/66/0.00 81/62/pc 85/61/s good travel todayandtonight. YESTERDAY (for the h Bay slifsx ai'smsryfn "* " * P0ri i I 27 /17 l ORE 58 atWiuamette Pass:Drytravel today 48 contiguousstates) ao/29 3 5 ea/44 • Billings 's and tonight with partly cloudyskies. Rainis e Amsterdam 45/35/0.00 54/36/pc 50/39/c Mecca 92/74/0.00 90/68/1 88/67/t National high: 93 Bois 4 1/41 p Boston possible late tomorrow. 5 /37 Athens 54/45/0.00 56/45/s 55/42/sh Mexico City 77/55/0.02 74/52/pc 75/51/pc at Death Valley,CA • 64/40 • Mi s ee n& 58/3 /19 ~f Auckland 65/57/0.10 69/54/pc 70/56/pc Montreal 23/10/Tr 26/13/s 35/28/pc ORE138 at Diamond Lake: Goodtravel and National low: 4 46/ 4 Baghdad 81/55/0.00 81/54/sh 73/51/s Moscow 55/25/0.00 48/29/pc 48/31/s dry pavementtodayandtonight. s ol s at Greenville, ME 1/30 Che n Bangkok 98/82/0.00 98/81/s 99/82/s Nairobi 82/58/0.01 85/59/s 84/61/pc 51/3d Chi go Precipitation: 2.51" ilsdelphis Beijing 58/38/0.00 68/40/pc 66/41/pc Nassau 84/71/0'.00 64/71/pc 84/71/s 0 Col mb asu Laks •8 /31 Beirut 68/57/0.00 65/58/sh 63/55/pc New Delhi 77/56/0.00 81/60/pc 84/65/s atAlice TX an snciico Omah Berlin 57/40/0.00 53/32/s 53/40/c Osaka 70/52/1.47 66/51/r 63/44/pc ln inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday ea/52 ra ix93/3 LssV ss. . i i x x x x x x x x x x x x x 4 v s / e Bogota 64/46/0.53 62/48/r 62/47/sh Oslo 41/28/0.12 50/42/pc 46/36/r Ski resort New snow Base ' x x x x x x x x x x x x f ea/4 79/5 osnss tvx x x x x Budapest 52/37/0.00 51/30/pc 52/31/s Ottawa 25/12/0.00 29/13/s 37/28/pc d J~i g AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.openingTBA Buenos Ai r es 88P2/0.00 85/68/s 88/55/pc Paris 61/43/0.00 51/40/c 59/38/pc u ii e 5 Los An lss Rio de Janeiro 84/74/0.20 86/74/1 87/74/t ehvrhrt 8 Cabo San Lucas 82/61/0.00 80/58/s 79/58/s HoodooSkiArea: est. openingTBA ea/43 i Cairo 70/51/0.00 72/53/s 73/55/s Rome 63/48/0.00 62/45/s 61/44/pc Phoen Mt. Ashland: est. opening TBA Anchorage 's Calgary 52/27/0.00 52/30/pc 40/28/c Santiago 91/59/0.00 89/56/s 94/59/s • 78/42 0 41-8 5 Mt. Bachelor * 4 5/2 II 0 Cancun 86/66/0.00 86/68/s 87/68/s Sao Paulo 75/66/0.04 76/66/1 79/66/1 Mt. HoodMeadows 0 28-88 7 /eo Juneau Dublin 50/27/0.00 50/37/pc 52/36/c Sapporo 47/40/0.00 47/35/pc 44/34/c Mt. HoodSki Bowl: est. opening TBA Edinburgh 50/37/0.00 52/40/pc 51/34/c Seoul 55/41/0.13 65/38/s 66/37/pc 47/31 FJ Geneva 64/34/0.00 61/39/pc 61/40/c Shanghai 61/59/0.66 61/48/c 59/49/r Timberline Lodge 0 28-4 5 Harare NKV W N & i 83/62/0.00 84/60/s 85/58/pc Singapore ssng/0.05 89/77/1 90/78/pc Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA w Orleans 7/ea Prfs Hong Kong 79/71/0.02 79/68/pc 78/68/pc Stockholm 55/34/0.00 54/34/pc 41/28/sn Honolulu o ~ . 79/44 Cfufurrrhqrs s /ee Istanbul 45/37/0.00 48/39/s 46/39/c Sydney 80/67/0.00 83/68/s 83/67/pc Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 42-72 81/d7 Mismi 7ai48< k k < Jerusalem 66/46/0.00 57/43/s 56/41/s Taipei 85/73/0.00 86/68/pc 83/67/pc Momo y Vail, CO 0 49-4 9 eeirrr- '~ • 79/43 Johannesburg 78/56/0.37 71/56/1 79/58/s Tel Aviv 71/46/0.00 66/55/pc 65/54/pc Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 24-80 Lima 87/73/0.15 85/72/c 84/71/c Tokyo 61/54/0.37 63/49/r 57/47/c Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-4 0 Lisbon 57/46/0.00 63/51/c 66/53/pc Toronto 36/21/0.00 35/27/s 39/34/pc Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. ParkcityMountain,UT 0 54-54 London 52/38/0.00 49/38/pc 55/40/pc Vancouver 57/43/0.00 51/46/r 55/46/r T-storms Rain Showers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Cold Front Sun Valley, ID 0 27-5 7 Madrid 46/41/0.45 58/45/sh 62/44/sh Vienna 54/36/0.00 50/31/s 52/34/s Manila 90/70/0.00 91/74/s gom/pc Warsaw 54/32/0.00 48/29/s 49/33/s Source: OnTheSnow.com
TEMPERATURE
Yesterday Normal Record
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LOOK FOR IT COMING YOUR WAY In The Bulletin • March 29th In The Redmond Spokesman • April 1st In The Nickel • April 2nd In The Central Oregon Marketplace • March 31st Online at • www.bendbulletin.com Direct Mailed Magazine • March 30th 8c 31st
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 Preps, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 NBA, C3 College basketball, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
IDITAROD
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
PREP GIRLS GOLF
GOLF
Seavey gets third win in fouryears NOME, Alaska — If ever there wasuncertainty about the outcome of the world's most famous sled dog race, it was this year. Warm weather and a lack of snow in muchof Alaska forced organizers of the Iditarod Trail Sled Dog Race to forge an untested route, utilizing the state's extensive system of frozen rivers. Many wondered: Would the newtrail make the racefaster or easier? Would it benefit mushers more accustomed to racing on ice? Or would warm temperatures create new hazards on the rivers? Dallas Seaveyproved the short answer to all of those questions was no Wednesdaywhen he won the racefor the third time in four years. The Alaska musher crossed the finish line in the Bering Seacoastal town of Nome at4:13 a.m., completing the route in eight days, 8 hours, 13 minutes and 6 seconds. That's about five hours longer than the record he set in winning the 2014 race. "Obviously going into this race, the big hubbub was all about the new trail, right?" Seavey told a packedconvention hall. Concerns were about the "warm, warm, warm winter" and conditions on the Yukon River, he said. In fact, a snowmobile sank on thin ice onpart of the route mushers were about to take. Some were considering buying rain gear. But then winter came back to Alaska, andthe trails becamemuch more like onewould expect for the Iditarod. "We saw alot of 40-, 50-below zero, snow," said Seavey, of Willow. "This was avery tough race. It was not the easy run that a lot of people had anticipated for the Yukon River." Seavey's father, Mitch, finished in second place Wednesday. Veteran musherAaron Burmeister was third, arriving in Nome at9:47 a.m., followed byJessie Royer in fourth place at 11:51 a.m. — The Associated Press
atlr
Grandson of Palmer backat
"
/
Bay Hill By Doug Ferguson The Associated Press
ORLANDO, Fla. — He
is known in golfing circles simply as "The King," though one player at the Arnold Palmer Invitational still calls the tournament host
"Dumpy." s'
Saunders, a PGA Tour on to explain that his older Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Summit golfer Madison Odiorne tees off on the13th hole while competing at the Crooked River Invitational at Crooked River Ranch Golf Course Wednesday afternoon.
Moments later, they were together on a stage posing for a dozen photographers, Palmer with a smile wider than it has been all week.
SeePalmer/C4
• State champ Summit claimsCrooked River Invitational by 56strokesover Bend CROOKED RIVER RANCH — The target on Summit's back has continued
to grow over the past nine years. The Stormhavewon eight girls golf state championships in that span, including each of the past six Class 5A
'5"
Ridgeview's Tianna Brown tees off on the14th hole as Bend High's Holly Froelich, center, and Summit's Madison Odiorne watch on Wednesday.
Arnold Palmer, left, poses with
River Ranch Golf Course, Summit, led by three-time
whose team score of 307 bested runner-up Bend High
his grandson, SamSaunders,
state winner Madison Odi-
by 56 strokes.
orne, began its quest toward
during the pro-am for the Arnold Palmer Invitational in Orlando, Florida, Wednesday.
and was the most valuable player for the Blue Jays during his final two seasons. He served two stints as an from 1995 to 2001 and 2006-07 and in
between wasthe head coach atUniversity of Nebraska-Omaha from 2002 to 2005. See Duck/C4
Nextup Oregon vs. Oklahoma State When:3:50 p.m. Friday TV:TBS
Radio:KBND1110-AM, 100.1-FM
CORRECTION
Could Odenmakeanothercomeback? By Antonio Gonzalez
where Ohio State is preparing to face
The Associated Press
Virginia Commonwealth in the NCAA tournament's round of 64. This is the same city where the NBA's Trail Blazers selected Oden with the top pick in 2007,
PORTLAND — Ohio State men's
basketball coach Thad Matta says former Buckeyes star Greg Oden has been training on campus and could attempt another NBA comeback. Matta spoke Wednesday in Portland,
New Yorh Times News Service
EAST REGIONAL Villanova (32-2) vs. Lafayette (20-12), 3:50 p.m. N.C. State (20-13)vs. LSU (22-10), 6:20 p.m.
be a bit disappointed. The tournament, which begins in earnest today, is still a three-week
John Locher /The Associated Press file
Oregon coach DanaAltman.
but the 7-foot center was constantly sidelined with knee injuries. SeeOden/C4
By Marc Tracy
Today'sGames
lowa St. (25-8) vs. UAB (19-15), 9:40 a.m. SMU (27-6) vs. UCLA(20-13), 12:10 p.m. Utah (24-8) vs. StephenF. Austin (29-4), 4:27 p.m. Georgetown (21-10) vs. E. Washington (26-8), 6:57 p.m.
Jays with a 327-176 record.
assistant at Creighton under Altman
The headline for an item on page C1of Wednesday's Bulletin misidentified the winner of Tuesday's Mississippi-BYU NCAAmen's basketball tournament First Four game. Mississippi won the game. The Bulletin regrets the error.
SeeStorm/C3
SOUTH REGIONAL
at Creighton University before being hired at Oregon in 2010. He is the allAssistant coach Kevin McKenna played at Creighton from 1977 to 1981
No.16 Robert Morris 81 No.16North Florida 77
Phelan M.Ebenhack/The Associated Press
sap MarchMadness
p.m. PDT. Altman spent 16 seasons in Omaha
Robert Morris, Dayton enter NCAAtourney's field of 64,C4
No. 11 Boise State 55
Crooked River Invitational four represented the Storm,
• Several of the Oregon staff haveroots in Omaha
time winningest coach for the Blue
5
yet another state crown in dominant fashion. Only four golfers at the
Duck coachesat home Low scores,slowgames
First Four ends
No.11 Day on
• Track and field begins with MV Icebreaker,C3 • Prep scoreboard,C3
carded an 80 or better. All
tournament's round
Games
I
titles. On Wednesday, at Crooked
NOTEBOOK of 64 Friday at 3:50
Wednesday's
~
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT
Wednesday.
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
y
Inside
Bulletin staff report
The trip to Omaha, Nebraska, will be ahomecoming forOregon men's basketball coach Dana Altman and a few members of his staff. Altman's eighth-seeded Ducks (25-9) will be in Omaha to face ninth-seeded Oklahoma State (18-13) in the NCAA
Dallas Seavey in Nome, Alaska, on
sister tried to say "Grampy" as a toddler and it came out sounding like "Dumpy." The name stuck, and Saunders said Palmer has learned to tolerate it over the years.
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
- "eci~
Wednesday at Bay Hill, with a hint of hesitation. rookie and the 27-year-old grandson of Palmer, went
By Steve Mims
4~.
nYou haven't heard that story?" Sam Saunders said
MIDWEST REGIONAL Notre Dame(29-5) vs. Northeastern (23-11), 9:15a.m. Butler (22-10) vs. Texas (20-13), 11:45 a.m. Cincinnati (22-10) vs. Purdue (21-12), 4:10 p.m. Kentucky (34-0) vs. Hampton, 6:40 p.m. WEST REGIONAL Baylor (24-9) vs. Georgia State (24-9), 10:40 a.m. Arizona (31-3) vs.Texas Southern (22-12), 11:10a.m. Xavier (21-13) vs. Mississippi, 1:10 p.m. VCU (26-9) vs. Ohio St. (23-10), 1:40 p.m. North Carolina (24-11) vs. Harvard (22-7), 4:20 p.m. Arkansas (26-8) vs. Wofford (28-6), 6:50 p.m.
A word of caution to those excited for the NCAA tournament: Prepare to
dopamine rushofbuzzer-beaters
and school pride. There is an overwhelming favorite (Kentucky), and inevitably a sleeper will emerge and put its university on the map with an unlikely upset or a deep run. Millions of fans will fill out brackets, staking
their pride — and probably a little something else — on out-predicting their friends and co-workers.
But in many ways, Division I men's basketball has never been less appealing. Scoring is down: Teams averaged67.6pointsagame through February, according to the NCAA. If that average holds through the end of the tournament, it will be the second-lowest average since 1952 and
part of a trend in which scoring has generally fallen from a peak of 76.7 points per team, per game, in 1990-91. The game is as slow as it has ever been: Teams are averaging fewer than 65 possessions per 40 minutes, according to the statistics site Ken-
Pom.com. That is easily the lowest since 2002, and probably the lowest since at least the 1940s.
"When the balance between of-
fense and defense gets out of whack
and the defense has more of an advantage than the offense, then I think the game's not in the right
place," said Dan Gavitt, the NCAA's vice president for men's basketball championships. SeeMadness/C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Rafiie NCAAtournament, Northeasternvs. Notre Dame9 a.m. CBS NCAA tournament, UABvs. Iowa State 9:30 a.m. TruTV NCAA tournament, Georgia State vs. Baylor 10:30 a.m. TBS NCAA tournament, TexasSouthern vs. Arizona 11 a.m. TN T NCAA tournament, Texasvs. Butler 11:30 a.m. CBS NCAA tournament, UCLA vs. SMU n oon Tru T V NCAA tournament, TBAvs. Xavier 1 p.m. TBS NCAA tournament, Ohio State vs. VCU 1 :30 p.m. T NT NCAA tournament, Lafayette vs. Villanova 3 :45 p.m. T BS NCAA tournament, Purduevs. Cincinnati 4 p.m. CBS NCAAtournament, Harvard vs. North Carolina 4 :15 p.m. T NT NCAA tournament, SF Austin vs. Utah 4:15 p.m. TruTV NCAAtournament, LSUvs. North Carolina State 6 :15 p.m. T B S NCAA tour nament,Hampton vs.Kentucky 6:30 p.m. CBS NCAA tournament, Wofford vs. Arkansas 6:45 p.m. T NT NCAA tournament, E.Washington vs. Georgetown 6:45 p.m. TruTV BASKETBALL
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, NewYork Mets at St. Louis MLB preseason, SanFrancisco at Milwaukee MLB preseason,Philadelphia atNewYork Yankees College, LSU atArkansas MLB preseason, Cleveland atSeattle
1 0 a.m. ML B 1 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. ES P N 4 p.m. SEC 7 p.m. MLB, Root
ON DECK Today Baseball: MountaiVi newatSisters,4p.m.; Hilsboro at Ridgeview, 4:30 p.m.;Redmondat Willamete, 5 p.m.; La Pineat Summit JV,4 p.mcGrant Unionat Culver, 2p.m. SoflbaN:MountainViewat Sisters, 4 p.m.; Crook Count yatCascade,4:30p.mcGrantUnion/Dayville/PrairieCityat Culver(DH),2p.m. Boys tennis:TheDalles atMadras,4p.m.;Sistersat CrookCounty. 3:30p.m. Girls tennis: Sisters atCrookCounty, 3:30 p.m.; Madrasat TheDages, 4p.m. Track and field: Summit,CrookCounty,Madras, La Pine,Culverat BreakingtheIce-Ice Breakerin Prineville,3:30p.m. Boyslacrosse:RidgeviewatWestAlbany,8p.m. Girls lacrosse: Sisters atCrescent Valley,6p.m.
11 a.m. 3 p.m.
Saturday Baseball:Bendat TheDalles (DH), noon;Crook County atTreasureValley Invitational in Ontario, TBD;EaglePoint atSummit (DH),1 p.m. Soflball: TheDallesat Bend(DH), noon;Sisters at Cascade, noon; West Salemat Redmond (DH),11 a.m.;Summitat EaglePoint (DH),noon
ATP,BNP ParibasOpen,men's,women'squarters11 a.m. ATP,BNP ParibasOpen,men's,women'squarters5 p.m. SOCCER Europa, DynamoKyiv vs Everton 11 a.m. Europa, Roma vsFiorentina 11 a.m. Europa, Round of16, Internazionale Milano vsWolfsburg 1 p.m. Europa, Sevilla vs Villarreal 1 p.m.
ESPN2 ESPN2 FS1 FS2 FS1
FS2
HOCKEY
College, Big Ten tournament, Ohio State vs. PennState College, Big Ten tournament, Michigan vs. Wisconsin NHL, Columbus atVancouver
1:30 p.m. Big Ten 5 p.m. 7 p.m.
Big Ten CSNNW
FRIDAY BASKETBALL
NCAAtournament, New MexicoStatevs.Kansas 9 a.m. CBS Women's college, NCAA tournament, teams TBA 9 a.m. ESPN2 NCAA tournament, Georgia vs. Michigan State 9:30 a.m. TruTV NCAA tournament, Wyoming vs. Northern lowa 10:30 a.m. TBS NCAA tournament, Buffalo vs. WestVirginia 11 a.m. TNT NCAA tournament, Indiana vs. Wichita State 11:30 a.m. CBS Women's college, NCAA Tournament, teams TBA 11:30a.m. ESPN2 NCAA tournament, Belmont vs. Virginia noon TruTV NCAA tournament, UCIrvine vs. Louisville 1 p.m. TBS NCAA tournament, Valparaiso vs. Maryland 1:30 p.m. TNT Women's college, NCAA tournament, Oregon State vs. South Dakota State 2 p.m. ESPN2 NCAA tournament, OklahomaState vs. Oregon 3:45 p.m. TBS NCAAtournament, Robert Morrisvs. Duke 4 p.m. CBS 4 p.m. CSNNW NBA, Portland at Orlando NCAA tournament, Davidson vs. Iowa 4:15 p.m. TNT NCAA tour nament,Albanyvs.Oklahoma 4:15 p.m. TruTV Women's college, NCAA tournament, Gonzaga vs.GeorgeWashington 4:30 p.m. ESPN2 NCAA tournament, Coastal Carolina vs.Wisconsin 6:15 p.m. TBS NCAA tournament, St. John's vs. SanDiegoState 6:30 p.m. CBS Men's college, NIT,second round: teamsTBD 6:30 p.m. ESPNU NCAA tournament, North DakotaState vs. Gonzaga 6:45 p.m. TNT NCAA tournament, Providencevs. Dayton 6:45 p.m. TruTV BASEBALL
MLB preseason, W ashingtonatHouston MLB preseason, Chicago Cubs atChicagoWhite Sox MLB preseason, Cincinnati at SanFrancisco College, LSU atArkansas College, Arizona atStanford
10a.m. 1 p.m. 6 p.m. 6 p.m. 7 p.m.
MLB MLB MLB
SEC Pac-12
GOLF
PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup AUTORACiNG NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Fontana400, practice NASCAR,XFINITY, Fontana, practice NASCAR,XFINITY, Fontana, practice NASCAR,Sprint Cup, Fontana400, qualifying
11 a.m. 3 p.m.
Golf Golf
noon 1:30 p.m. 3 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
FS1
FS1 FS1 FS1
TENNiS
ATP, BNP Paribas Open, men's third quarterfinal ATP, BNP Paribas Open,quarterfinal Women's college, California at UCLA WTA, BNPParibas Open,semifinal ATP, BNP Paribas Open,women's semifinal
noon 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m.
ESPN
Tennis Pac-12 Tennis ESPN2
HOCKEY
College, Big Ten tournament, Minnesota vs. TBA 1:30 p.m. Big Ten College, HockeyEast Championship, UMass-Lowell vs. Vermont 2 p.m. NBCSN College, BigTentournament, Michigan St. vs. TBA 5 p.m. BIG10 College, HockeyEast Championship, Boston University vs. NewHampshire 5 p.m. NBCSN WHL, Everett at Victoria 7 p.m. Root SOCCER Australian, Adelaide United vs. Melbourne 1 :30 a.m. FS 2 BOXING
Alfonso Gomezvs. Yoshihiro Kamegai
8 p.m.
FS1
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechanges madeby TI/or radio stations.
BNPParibasOpen Wednesdayat Indian Wells, Calif. Men Fourth Round FelicianoLopez(12), Spain, def. KeiNishikori (5), Japan,6-4, 7-6(2). AndyMurray(4), Britain, def.AdrianMannarino, France,6-3,6-3. TomasBerdych (9),Czech Republic,def.Lukas Rosol(27),CzechRepublic,6-2,4-6,6-4. Milos Raonic(6), Cana da, def. Tomm y Robredo (17), Spain6-3, , 6-2. RafaelNadal(3), Spain,def. GigesSimon(13), France,6-2,6-4. RogerFederer(2), Switzerland,def.JackSock, UnitedStates,6-3,6-2. BernardTomic(32), Australia, def.Thanasi Kokkinakis,Australia,6-4,4-6, 6-4. NovakDjokovic (1),Serbia,def.JohnIsner (18), UnitedStates,6-4, 7-6(5).
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers
Women Quarlerlinals SimonaHalep(3), Romania, def. Carla SuarezNavarro(12),Spain,5-7, 6-1,6-1. SerenaWiliams (1), UnitedStates, def.TimeaBacsinszky(27), Switzerland, 7-5, 6-3.
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HOCKEY
Golf Golf
TENNiS
Professional
Friday Baseball: Madrasat Mountain View,4 p.mcCrook County atTreasure Valey Invitational in Ontario, TBD;HiddenValley atSisters,4 p.m. SoflbalhMountainViewat Madras, 4 p.mc Ridgevie watReynolds,4:30p.m. Boyslacrosse:GlencoeatSummit,8p.mcMountain View atGrant, 8p.mcLiberty atSisters, 7p.m.
GOLF
PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup
TENNIS
IN THE BLEACHERS
~ IE.L.P
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT
EasternConference Montreal TampaBay Detroit Boston Ottawa Florida Toronto Buffalo
Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 71 44 20 7 95 187 159 71 43 21 7 93 230 184 68 38 19 11 87 200 183 70 36 23 11 69 34 24 11 70 31 25 14 71 27 38 6 70 20 43 7
83 185177 79 196 181 76 172 195 60 188 226 47 134 235
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y. Rangers 69 44 18 7 95 207 159 N.Y.lslanders 72 43 25 4 90 222 203 Pittsburgh 70 39 21 10 88 196 175 Washington 71 38 23 10 86 209 175 Philadelphia 72 29 28 15 73 187 206 NewJersey 70 30 29 11 71 160 179 Columbus 70 31 35 4 66 184 221 C arolina 6 9 2 6 3 4 9 61 162 189 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 70 45 20 5 95 218 170 72 43 21 8 70 43 21 6 70 39 24 7 70 35 23 12 69 32 26 11 70 32 28 10
94 205 176 92 203 158 85 199 175 82 196 188 75 184 193 74 218 229
Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA 72 45 20 7 97 211 197 69 40 25 4 84 197 185
Anaheim Vancouver Los Angeles 70 34 22 14 82 188 175 Calgary 70 38 27 5 81 205 185 SanJose 70 34 28 8 76 195 198 Edmonton 71 19 39 13 51 167 243 Arizona 70 21 41 8 50 145 231 Wednesday'sGames Columbus 4,Edmonton3,SD Chicago1,N.Y.Rangers0 Anaheim 3, LosAngeles2, OT Today'sGames SanJoseatToronto, 4:30p.m. CarolinaatMontreal, 4:30p.m. Bostonat Ottawa,4:30 p.m. Detroit atFlorida,4:30 p.m. Washingtonat Minnesota,5 p.m. St. LouisatWinnipeg, 5p.m. PittsburghatDalas, 5:30p.m. Philadelphiaat Calgary, 6p.m. Columbus atVancouver,7p.m. Coloradoat Arizona,7p.m. Friday's Games NewJerseyatBuff alo,4p.m. Detroit atTampaBay,4:30 p.m. Coloradoat Anaheim, 7p.m.
BASEBALL MLB preseason MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL All TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGames
Miami 5,Washington4
Baltimore 3, Minnesota(ss) 2 Boston 3, Minnesota(ss) 2 TampaBay9,Toronto3 Chicago WhiteSox9, Cincinnati 4 Chicago Cubs7, L.A.Dodgers5 Seattle 4,Oakland0 Milwaukee 8, KansasCity 4 SanDiego10,Colorado3
Pittsburgh8, Detroit 6 N.Y.Yankees12,Atlanta 5 Arizona 6, Colorado2 Today'sGames Pittsburghvs. Baltimoreat Sarasota,Fla., 10:05 a.m. N.Y. Mets(ss)vs. St. Louis atJupiter, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Minnesota vs. TampaBayat Port Charlotte, Fla.,10:05 a.m. Detroitvs.WashingtonatViera,Fla.,10;05 a.m. Miamivs.Atlantaat Kissimmee,Fla.,10:05a.m. Bostonvs.Torontoat Dunedin, Fla., 10:07a.m. Houstonvs. N.Y.Mets (ss) at PortSt. Lucie, Fla., 10:10a.m. L.A. Angelsvs. LA.Dodgersat Glendale,Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Colorado vs.KansasCity at Surprise, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Texasvs.Cincinnati atGoodyear,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. SanFranciscovs. MilwaukeeatPhoenix,1:05 p.m. Phil adelphiavs.N. Y.YankeesatTampa,Fla.,4:05p.m. ChicagoCubsvs. Arizonaat Scottsdale,Ariz., 6:40 p.m. Cleveland vs.Seattleat Peoria, Ariz.,7:05p.m. Friday's Games Washingtonvs. Houstonat Kissimmee, Fla., 10:05 a.m. Philadelphiavs. Pittsburgh(ss) at Bradenton,Fla., 10;05a.m. Torontovs. TampaBayat Port Charlotte, Fla., 10:05 a.m. N.Y.Yankeesvs. Detroit atLakeland, Fla.,10:05a.m. Baltimore vs. Bostonat Fort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. Pittsburgh(ss) vs. Minnesotaat Fort Myers,Fla., 10:05a.m. St. Louisvs.N.Y.Metsat Port St. Lucie,Fla.,10:10 a.m. L.A. Dodgers vs. Oakland(ss)at Mesa,Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Arizonavs. Milwaukeeat Phoenix,1:05 p.m. Seattlevs.Texasat Surprise, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. ChicagoCubsvs. ChicagoWhite Soxat Glendale, Ariz.,1:05p.m. Oakland(ss) vs. Coloradoat Scottsdale, Ariz., 1:10 p.m. Atlantavs.MiamiatJupiter, Fla., 4:05p.m. L.A. Dodgersvs.TexasatSanAntonio,5:05p.m. Cincinnativs. SanFranciscoat Scotsdale, Ariz., 6;05 p.m. KansasCityvs. SanDiegoatPeoria, Ariz., 7:05p.m. L.A. Angelsvs. Clevelandat Goodyear, Ariz., 7:05 p.m.
BASKETBALL Men's college NCAAtournament All TimesPDT First round Wednesday'sGames
RobertMorris81,NorthFlorida77 Dayton56,BoiseState55 EASTREG IONAL SecondRound
Today'sGames Villanova (32-2)vs.Lafayette (20-12), 3:50p.m. N.C.State(20-13) vs.LSU(22-10), 6:20p.m. Friday's Games MichiganSt. (23-11)vs.Georgia(21-11), 9:40a.m. Northernlowa(30-3) vs.Wyoming(25-9), 10:40a.m. Virginia(29-3)vs.Belmont(22-10),12:10 p.m. Louisville(24-8)vs.UCIrvine(21-12),1:10 p.m. Oklahoma (22-10) vs.Albany(24-8),4:27 p.m. Providence (22-11) vs. Dayton, 6:57p.m. BOUTHREGI0NAL SecondRound Today'sGames lowaSt.(25-8)vs.UAB(19-15), 9:40a.m. SMU(276)vs.UCLA(2013),1210pm. Utah(24-8)vs.StephenF.Austin (29-4), 4:27p.m. Georgetonw(21-10)ys.E. Washington(26-8),6:57p.m. Friday's Games Duke(29-4) vs.Robert Morris,410 pm. lowa(21-11)vs.Davidson (24-7), 4:20p.m. SanDiegoSt. (26-8)vs.St.John's (21-11), 6:40p.m. Gonzaga(32-2) vs.N.DakotaSt. (23-9), 9:50p.m. MIDWESTREGIONAL SecondRound Today'sGames NotreDame(29-5) vs.Northeastern(23-11),9:15a.m. Butler(22-10)vs.Texas(20-13),11:45 a.m. Cincinnati(22-10)vs.Purdue(21-12),410 pm. Kentu cky(34-0)vs.Hampton,6:40p.m. Friday's Games Kansas(26-8) vs.NewMexico St.(23-10), 9:15a.m. WestVirginia(23-9)vs.Buffalo(23-9),11:10 a.m. WichitaSt.(28-4) vs.Indiana(20-13),11:45 a.m. Maryland (27-6) vs.Valparaiso (28-5),1:50 p.m. WEST REGI ONAL SecondRound Today'sGames Baylor(24-9)vs.GeorgiaState(24-9),10:40a.m. Arizona(31-3) vs. TexasSouthern (22-12), 11;10 a.m. Xavier(21-13)vs.Mississippi,1:10 p.m. VCU(26-9)vs.OhioSt.(23-10),1:40 p.m. NorthCarolina(24-11)vs.Harvard(22-7), 4:20p.m. Arkansas(26-8)vs.Wofford(28-6), 6:50p.m. Friday's Games Oregon(25-9)vs.OklahomaSt. (18-13),3:50 p.m. Wisconsin(31-3)vs.Coastal Carolina(24-9), 6:20p.m. National Invitation Tournament All Times PDT First Round Today'sGames ArizonaState68, Uconn61 Templ73, e Buckneg67 Old Dominion 65, CharlestonSouthern 56 Richmond 84,St. Francis (NY)74 lllinoisState69,GreenBay56 Vanderbil75, t Saint Mary's(Cal) 64 SouthDakotaState86, ColoradoState76
College Basketball Invitational All Times PDT First Round Wednesday'sGames Loyola,Chicago62, Rider59 Wednesday, March18 Mercer72,StonyBrook70 Vermont85, Hofstra 81 Louisiana-Monroe 71, EasternMichigan67 Oral Roberts91,UCSanta Barbara 87 Radford78,DelawareState57 Colorado87,Gardner-Webb78 Seattle62,Pepperdine 45
Collegelnsider.comTournament All TimesPDT First Round Today'sGames HighPoint70, Maryland-Eastern Shore64
Canisius87, Dartmouth 72 Texas A&M-CorpusChristi 75,FloridaGulf Coast 69 ClevelandState86,WesternMichigan57
KentState68,MiddleTennessee56 SamHoustonState87, UNCWilmington 71 Evansville82,IPFW77 NorthernArizona75,GrandCanyon70 Sacramento State73,Portland66
Wo m e n's college NCAAtournament All TimesPDT ALBANYREGIONAL
First Round Friday's Games Dayton(25-6)vs.IowaState(18-12), 9a.m. Kentucky(23-9)vs. Tennessee St. (18-12), 11:30 a.m. Texas(22-10)vs.WesternKentucky(30-4), 2p.m. California(23-9)vs.WichitaState(29-4), 4:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Louisville(25-6)vs.BYU(23-9),1 p.m. SouthFlorida(26-7) vs.LSU(17-13), 3:30p.m. Rutgers(22-9) vs.Seton Hall (28-5),3:30p.m. Connecticut (32-1) vs. Francis(N.Y) (15-18), 6 p.m.
SPOKANEREGIONAL First Round
Friday's Games Duke(21-10)vs.Albany(NY)(24-8), 9a.m. MississippiSt.(26-6)vs.Tulane(22-10),11:30a.m. OregonSt. (26-4)vs.SouthDakotaSt. (24-8), 2p.m. GeorgeWashington(29-3) vs. Gonzaga(24-7), 4:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames Princeton(30-0)vs.Green Bay(28-4), 8a.m. Chattanooga(29-3) vs.Pittsburgh(19-11), 8a.m. Maryland(302)vs.NewMexicoSt. (227),1030am. Tennessee (27-5) vs. BoiseState (22-10), 1030am. OKLAHOMACITYREGIONAL First Round Frlday's Games Washington(23-9) vs.Miami(19-12), 9a.m. Northwestern (23-8) vs.Arkansas(17-13),9a m. lowa(24-7)vs.American(24-8),11:30a.m. Baylor(30-3)vs.Northwestern St.(19-14),11:30 a.m. Minnesota(23-9)vs.DePaul(26-7), 2p.m. NotreDam e(31-2) vs.Montana(24-8), 4:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Oklahoma (20-11)vs.Quinnipiac (31-3), 4p.m. Stanford(24-9)vs.CSNorthridge (23-9), 6:30p.m. GREENSB OROREGIONAL
First Round Friday's Games SouthCarolina(30-2) vs.SavannahSt.(21-10), 2 p.m. Syracuse (21-9) vs.Nebraska(21-10),4:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames NorthCarolina(24-8) vs.Liberty(26-6), 8a.m. FGCU (30-2) vs.OklahomaSt.(20-11), 8a.m. OhioSt.(23-10)vs.JamesMadison(29-3),10 30am. FloridaSt.(29-4)vs.AlabamaSt. (17-14),10:30a.m. Texas A&M(23-9) vs.Ark.-Little Rock(28-4),1 p.m. ArizonaState(27-5) vs.Ohio (27-4),3:30 p.m. Women'sNational Invitation Tournament AH TimesPDT First Round Wednesday'sGames
Michigan72,ClevelandState50 EastCarolina74, Radford 52 Mississippi80,Tenn.-Martin 70 Arkansas State61, WesternMichigan49 EasternWashington67,Washington State65
Today'sGames Virginia(17-13)at OldDominion(20-12), 4 p.m. Army(23-7)atSt.John's(21-10),4 p.m. CentralConne cticut St. (19-12) at Fordham(20-11), 4 p.m. Hampton(18-12)at Drexel (20-10), 4 p.m. Buffalo(1912)atWest Virginia (18-14),4p m. NC State (16-14) at ETSU(21-11),4 p.m. Hofstra(20-12)atPenn(20-8), 4p.m. Temple(16-16)atMarist (21-11),4p.m. Duquesne (21-10) atYoungstownState (21-10), 4:05 p.m. Elon(19-12)atGeorgiaTech(18-14), 4:05p.m. Creighton(17-13)atSouth Dakota(257), 5pm. Akron(22-8)at KansasState(18-13), 5p.m. Missouri(17-13)atNorthernlowa(17-14), 5p.m. TexasSouthern(19-10)at SouthernMississippi (2210),5 p.m. StephenF.Austin (23-7) atTCU(17-13), 5p.m. Ball State(17-13)atMiddleTennessee(21-9), 5p.m. N. Colorado(20-12) atColoradoState(23-7), 6p.m. LongBeachState(22-9) atSanDiego(24-6), 6p.m. CS Bakersfield(23-8) atUCLA(13-18), 7p.m. Sacramento State(16-15) at Pacific (21-9), 7p.m. SanFrancisco(19-13)at FresnoState(22-9), 7p.m. Friday's Games WrightState(25-8) at Toledo(18-13),4 p.m. Maine(23-8)atVilanova(19-13), 4p.m. Rlchmond(18-13) atStetson(23-7), 4 pm. Tulsa(17-13)atMissouri State(18-14),5 p.m. EasternMichigan(22-12) at Drake(20-10), 5:05p.m. Hawaii(23-8)at St.Mary's (Cal) (20-10),6 p.m.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER All Times PDT
EasternConference W L T Pts NewYorkcityFC 1 0 1 4 OrlandoCit y 1 0 1 4 Columbus 1 1 0 3 D.C. United 1 0 0 3 TorontoFC 1 1 0 3 Philadelphia 0 0 2 2 NewYork 0 0 1 1 Montreal 0 1 0 0 Chicago 0 2 0 0 NewEngland 0 2 0 0 WesternConference W L T Pts FC Daga s 2 0 0 6 Los Angeles 1 0 1 4 Seattle 1 1 0 3 SanJose 1 1 0 3 Houston 1 1 0 3 Vancouver 1 1 0 3 RealSaltLake 0 0 2 2 Portland 0 0 2 2 Colorado 0 0 1 1 SportingKansasCity 0 1 1 1
Friday's Game FC Dallaat s Philadelphia, 4p.m. Saturday'sGames MontrealatNewEngland, noon NewYorkCity Fcat Colorado,1 p.m. Vancouver atOrlandoCity, 4:30 p.m. Portlandat Sporting KansasCity,5:30p.m. Housto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m.
GF GA 3 1 2 1 2 1 3
1 0 3
0 0
1 3
3 1 0 GF 4 4 5 3 1 2 3 2 0 2
3 1 5 GA 1 2 3 3 1 3 3 2 0 4
ATPmoneyleaders Through March8 Player 1. Novak Djokovic 2. AndyMurray 3. StanWawrinka 4. DavidFerrer 5. Tomas Berdych 6. RogerFederer 7. KeiNishikori 8. RafaelNadal 9. FabioFognini 10. MilosRaonic 11. Simone Boleli 12. KevinAnderson 13. GilesSimon 14. GuilermoGarcia-Lopez 15. Andreas Seppi 16. NickKyrgios 17. FelicianoLopez 18. RichardGasquet 19. GilesMuller 20. Bernard Tomic 21. IvoKarlovic 22. ViktorTroicki 23. IvanDodig 24. SergiyStakhovsky 25. GrigorDimitrov
YTD Money $2,818,190 $1,366,842 $1,033,685 $1,024,727 $927,208 $669,011 $569,607 $488,062 $455,747 $421,156 $394,539 $309,797 $305,729 $302,655 $302,299 $289,854 $255,938 $255,388 $253,018 $252,187 $249,529 $235,642 $234,917 $225,606 $209,319
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
MAJORLEAGUE BASEBALL — Promoted KathleenTorresto executive vicepresident-finance, Mike Megis toexecutive vicepresidentand general counsel, Lara PitaroWischto seniorvice president-business and legalaffairs for MLBAdvancedMedia, Steven
Gonzaleto z senior vicepresidentanddeputy general counsel-laborandhumanresources and Bernadete McDonald to senior vice president-broadca sting. NamedChris Parksenior vicepresident-growthand strategy. AmericanLeague BOSTONREDSOX— DptionedINFsTravisShaw and Sean Coyle to Pawtucket(IL). ReassignedRHPs MiguelCelestino,Keith Couchand NoeRamirez and 1B/DFBryanLaHair to minorleaguecamp.
CHICAGO WHITESDX—Dptioned INFsMatt DavidsonandTyler Saladino, CsAdrianNieto andKevan SmithandOFTrayceto Charlotte (IL) andRHPsRaul Fernandez andMichaelYnoatoBirmingham(SL). Reassigned RHPJ.D. Martin andTyler Danish, DFJared Mitchell andINFsDanBlack, AndyLaRocheandTim Ander sontommorleaguecamp. DETROITT IGERS— AssignedRHPLukePutkonen and LHPsOmar Duran andJoe Mantiply to minor league camp. KANSASCITY RDYALS — Optioned RHPAaron Brooks,INFOrlandoCalixte andDFsLaneAdamsand JorgeBonifackoto Omaha (PCL). ReassignedRHPs BrianBroderick and Casey Coleman,LHPs Buddy BaumannandJoePaterson,DFBubbaStarling and INFsHunterDozier, Matt FieldsandRaul Mondesi to minorleaguecamp. TEXASRANGERS— ReleasedLHPScottCousins from aminorleaguecontract. National League LOSANGELES DODGERS— DptionedOFScott Schebler toOklahoma City (PCL). Reassigned INFs BuckBrittonandCoreySeager, INF/OFDarnell Sweeney, Cs ShawnZarragaand Chris OB ' riento their minor league camp. MIAMIMARLINS—Optioned RH PAndreRienzo, CJ.T.Realmuto andINFs DerekDietrich, JustinBour and MiguelRojasto NewOrleans(PCL). Reassigned LHPChrisNarvesonto minorleaguecamp. WASHING TONNATIONALS—Optioned RHPA.J. Cole toSyracuse(IL). BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association MIAMIHEA T—SignedFMichael Beasleyfor the remainder oftheseason. FOOTBAL L National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS— Re-signed DEKroy Biermann. BALTIMOR ERAVENS—Agreedto termswith DEs Chris CantyandLawrenceGuyontwo-yearcontracts. Released RBBernard Pierce. BUFFALOBILLS— SignedWRPercyHarvin. CHICAGOBEARS— SignedLSThomasGaff ordto aone-yearcontract. DALLAS COWBOYS— Agreed to termswith DE GregHardy. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— Signedteam presidentMarkLampingaveto afive-year contract extension. NEWENGLANDPATRIOTS— Re-signedDLAlan Branch.SignedCBs Bradley FletcherandRobert McClain. NEW YORKGIANTS—SignedDTKenrick Ellis. SANDIEGOCHARGERS— SignedDLMitchUnrein to atwo-yearcontract. SAN FRANCI SCO 49ERS— Signed RB Reggie Bushtoaone-yearcontract. HOCKEY National HockeyLeague NHL —Suspended Toronto FNazemKadri four games for anilegal checkto theheadof Edmonton FMattFraser. CAROLINAHURRICANES — Recalled D Danny BiegafromCharlotte (AHL). COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS — Reassigned G Joonas Korpisalo to Springfield (AHL). DALLAS STARS—RecalledGHenri Kiviahofrom Idaho(ECHL)to Texas (AHL). DETROITRED WINGS — Assigned D Alexey Marchenko to GrandRapids (AHL). MONTREAL CANADIENS— ReassignedFStefan FournierfromWheeling (ECHL) to Hamilton (AHL). VANCOUVERCANUCKS — RecalledD Jeremie Blain fromKalamazoo (ECHL) to Utica(AHL). TENNIS ITF— BannedAmericanWayneDdesnik15years for a second dopingviolation. COLLEGE FORDHA M— Firedmen's basketball coachTom Pecora. MARQUETTE — AnnouncedFSteveTaylorJr.is leavingthemen'sbasketball teamandwil transfer. ST.JOHN'S(MINN.) —Announcedthe retirement of men'sbasketball coachJimSmith. SYRACUSE — Announcedmen' sbasketballcoach Jim Boeheim wil retire inthreeyears.Announcedthe resignationof athletic directorDaryl Gross. UALR — Firedmen's basketball coachSteve Shields. YOUNGSTOWNSTATE— NamedCarlPelinidefensive linecoach.
SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL
WINTER SPORTS
Syracuse coach Boehelmto retire In 3 years —syracuseUnl-
Vonn WinSWOrld CBPdOWnhill title ahead Of Fennlnger
versity officials say coachJim Boeheimwill retire in three years andathletic director Daryl Grosshasresignedfollowing punishment from the NCAA for violations that lasted morethan adecade. Chancellor Kent Syverud said Wednesdaythat Boeheim, aHall of Famerand headcoachfor 39 years, decided to make the announcement to "bring certainty to the teamand program in thecomingyears" and to allow for a smooth transition.
JanSrud WinS OVerall WOrld CHPdOWnhill title — Kjetil Jan-
srud clinched theWorld Cupdownhill overall title in style by winning the last race at the season-ending finals onWednesday in Maribel, France. — Lindsey Vonn clinched theWorld Cupdownhill title for the seventh The Norwegian entered the racewith a 20-point cushion over Hannes time by winning the last race in the discipline at the season-ending finals Reichelt of Austria, but did not need it as heattacked the Roc deFer on Wednesday in Maribel, France. TheAmerican finished 0.24 seconds course aggressively to beat Swiss veteran Didier Defago's time by 0.24 clear of Elisabeth Goergl and.30 ahead of Nicole Hosp. Both areAusseconds. Austrian Georg Streitberger was third quickest,.31 behind Jantrian. Austrian racer AnnaFenninger finished second in the downhill srud, who already wontheoverall super-G title. — From wire reports standings.
THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
PREP ROUNDUP
C3
PREP SCOREBOARD Girls golf
ees awa ce rea er Bulletin staff report Kicking off the track and
Redmond's A l an i T r o ut- Steen Johnson led Sisters man was second in the 110 with a score of 103. He was field season, Mountain View hurdles and third in the high followed by A ustin L ake boasted seven i n dividual jump, Sisters' Jordan Pollard (107), Kade Owen (108), Ben girls winners in its own MV placed fourth in the 3,000, Saba (115) and Devin RobillIcebreaker on W ednesday and Gilchrist's James Wible ard (120). afternoon. finished fourth i n t h e shot Softball From Kristen Place in the put. 100-meter dash to A l i jah Also on Wednesday: Summit 15, Madras 4: The Rudolph in the triple jump, visiting White Buffaloes enthe Cougars won eight of 17 Boysgolf tered the bottom of the fourth events. Team scores were not Summit rolls at Brasada: inning with a 3-1 lead, but the accumulated. P OWELL BUTTE — S u m - Storm sent 13 batters to the Meagan Bakker won the mit's Jack Loberg fired an plate in the frame, knocking 300 hurdles and placed sec- even-par 72 to earn medalist 10 hits — two of them home ond in the 100 hurdles for honors, leading the Storm runs — and scoring 12 runs Bend High, while Ali Laborin to victory in a six-team sea- before Summit pitcher Hailey took first in the javelin and son-opening tournament at Nelson retook the mound. Auwas runner-up in the discus. Brasada Canyons Golf Club. brey Clemans hit a grand slam Redmond High's Andrea Summit shot a team-total 305 in the fourth inning, while Broyles won the 3,000, and to prevail by 29 strokes over Haley Joyner belted out a twoRidgeview's Hosanna Wild- runner-up Bend High, which run homer. Joyner hit another er (high jump) and Saman- was led by Mac McGee (79). two-run home run in the fifth tha Tullis (pole vault) each M ountain V i ew's 350 w a s inning to put the Storm up c laimed wins. Sisters' M i good for third place; the Cou- 15-4 and end the game via the chaela Miller was second in gars were led by Mason Krieg- 10-run rule. both the javelin and the 300 er, whose 77 tied with Sumhurdles, while Gilchrist's Si- mit's Cooper Donohue for Baseball erra Shuey finished fourth in third place in the individual Summit 15, Madras 1: the javelin. results. Crook County, paced MADRAS — J ason Garcia For the boys, Ridgeview's by Mayson Tibbs' 35-38 —73, smacked a grand slam in the Brent Yeakey won the discus tied with Ridgeview for fourth top of the sixth inning, helpand the javelin and was run- place at 369. Redmond round- ing the Storm polish off a ner-up in the shot put, finish- ed out the field at 405. season-opening victory in six ing behind teammate Chris Outlaws open at Tokatee: innings. Garcia was 3-for-3 Steffey. BLUE RIVER — Sisters finfor Summit, driving in five Chris Adamo placed first ished back in the pack in an runs and scoring three times. in both the 100 meters and l l-team tournament at T o Alex Bailey and Dylan Althe triple jump for Mountain katee Golf Club. The Out- bertazzi each had two hits for View, while Caleb Hoffmann laws posted a team score of the Storm. Madras' Parker (300 hurdles) and Max Meade 433. Oakridge was the team Dominguez accounted for two (high jump) won their respec- champion; complete team of the White Buffaloes' four tive events for Bend. scores were not available. hits.
Bend 12, Henley 2: Elliot Willy logged two hits and four
Storm
round of 84. Abby Papke led Crook County with a 94. Mountain View's Shelby Til-
ors, Sarah Heinly and Rachel Drgastin each had a 79, and Alyssa Kerry posted an 80 for
For Bend, Maddy Mode carded an 87, and Holly Froelich Continued from C1 logged a 90. Ridgeview, which Odiorne fired a 2-under-par Summit, which sank 12 birdies was third as a team with a 385, 69 to daim top individual hon- asateam. was paced by Tianna Brown's
CrookedRiverInvitational At CrookedRiver RanchGolf Course Par 71 Teamscores— Summit307,Bend363,Ridgeview 385. Medalist —MadisonDdiorne69. Summit (307) —MadisonDdiorne69, Sarah Heinly79,Rachel Drgastin 79,Alyssa Kerry 80,Josephine Fraser93. Bend(363) — MaddyMode87, Holly Froelich 90, AschaKelleher92, HaleyNichols 94,Aleyah Ruiz102. Ridgeview (388) —TiannaBrown84,Raelyn Lambert92,Emalee Kandle102, KaylaHeath107, MeganLau109. CrookCounty(408) —Abby Papke94,Macy Goehring100,CoraWhite104, MichaelaMcGrew 110, MaddieKasberger 111. Mountain View — ShelbyTiler 90, Katie Mahr99,HannahWolf103. Sisters —EmilyChristen112.
RBIs to lead the Lava Bears
to a season-opening victory. Jacob Parsons smacked two
doubles for Bend, while Cameron Hines and Kota Carter e ach contributed with t w o hits.
Girls lacrosse S ummit 17, T h urston 1 : T HURSTON — Cayley A l -
GIRLS Top threeplacers
400-meter relay — 1,Bend,52.31. 2, RidBoys golf geview,52.93.3, Sisters, 53.04.1500 —1, Sarah At Brasada Canyons, Powell Butte Perkins, Bend,5:15.09. 2, Aria Blumm,Sisters, Par 72 5:21.26. 3,SageHassel, MountainView,5:25.05. Team score s — Summit305,Bend 334, 3,000 —1, AndreaBroyles, Redmond, 12:48.80. MountainView350, Ridgeview369, CrookCounty 2,JimenaPineda,Redmond,13:10.54.3,Mary 369, Redm ond405. Letham, Burns,13:23.79.100 —1, KristenPlace, Medalist — Jack Loberg, Summit, 35- MountainView,13.01. 2, CharityWagner, Bend, 37 —72. 13.14. 3,ErynnRicker, Sisters, 13.25.400 — 1, Summit (308) — JackLoberg35-37—72, HilaryWygie,MountainView,1:06.42. 2,Cheyenne CooperDonohue40-37—77, Cole Chrisman38- Vankomen, Ridgeview,1:06.52.3,MorganLoving, 40— 78,MaxHiglin38-40— 78,BenWasserman Ridgeview,1:08.34. 100h — 1, Callan Brick, 42-37—79. MountainView,17.31. 2, MeaganBakker, Bend, Bend(334)— MaxMcGee43-36— 79,Rhett 17.45. 3,SierraRambo, Bend, 17.53. 800 — 1, Pedersen39-43—82, Matt Klar41-45—86, Jack CiaraJones,MountainView,2:29.77. 2,SarahPerkins, Bend,2:31.54. 3,Tia Haton, MountainView, Klar 46-41 —87, Conner Hayes50-41—91. Mountain View (350) — MasonKrieger 2:32.36.200—1, BrianaBolster, MountainView, 36-41 —77, ColeRupert 44-45M9, Payton Cole 27.26. 2, ErynnRicker, Sisters, 28.05. 3, Mandi 45-44 — 89,TaylorSmith 49-46— 95,Dawson Calavan,Sisters,28.13.300h—1, Meagan BakMagidson 55-53—108. ker, Bend, 49.53. 2,MichaelaMiler, Sisters,50.09. Ridgeview (369) — JacobKinzer39-453, SabrinaReifschneider,Sisters, 56.07.1,600 84,ZackNelson47-45—92, John Spinelli49- relay — 1,Bend,4:24.69. 2, Redmond,4:25.71. 47—96,LukeBuerger 48-49—97, DerrickBrown 3, Ridgeview,4:32.20. HJ — 1, Hosanna Wilder, Ridgeview,5-0. 2, 50-49—99. CrookCounty(369) — MaysonTibbs35- TrewFarnworth, Bend,5-0. T3, CambreeScott, 38—73,CabeGoehring 42-43—85, TaranOugh Bend, 4-10.T3, MadieChoffel, Mountain View, 54-49—103,Daniel Ego51-57—108, ChadDes- 4-10. Discas — 1, KaylaRambo, Bend, 93-8. Iardins62-64—126. 2, Ali Laborin,Bend,91-10. 3, CassidyHughes, Redmond (405) — AndrewDavis 48- MountainView,87-5. PV— 1, SamanthaTullis, 47 — 95, JordanChristiansen54-46—100, Mitch Ridgeview,9-0. 2, SidneyDoyle, Mountain View, 0'Hern, Sisters, 8-6. Shot — 1, Jeffords53-50—103, Bailey Fisher 54-53—107, 8-6. 3, Tessa Cassid y Hughes,MountainView,32-5.2,Tracy HaydenPerry 58-60—118. Ely, Bend,31-0. 3, BrennaPinkerton, Ridgeview, 30-10. Javelin — 1, Ali Laborin,Bend,100-9. Track and field 2, MichaelaMiler, Sisters,100-0.3, KayleaFreidrichsen,Burns,99-7. TJ — 1, Ali)ahRandolph, MV Icebreaker MountainView,31-9. 2, SarahCurran, Bend, 31At Mountain ViewHighSchool 5.75. 3,OliviaSchneider,Bend,29-6.5. LJ — 1, BOYS CambreeScott, Bend,18-10.2, Gabrielle Crouch, Top threeplacers 400-meter relay —1, Ridgeview,44.74. 2, Ridgeview,16-0.3, MadieChoffel, MountainView, Redmond, 45.67.3,MountainView,46.10.1600 15-11.5. — 1, DakotaThornton, MountainView,4:15. 2, Merle Nye, Bend,4:29.73. 3, Trey Recanzone, Baseball Burns, 4:30.36.3r000 — 1, BrennanBuckley-Noonan, Ridgeview,10:01.37. 2, Travis Martin, Nonconterence MountainView,10:07.57. 3, Daniel Letham,Burns, (6 innings) 10:09.76.100—1, ChrisAdamo,MountainView, Summit 340 038- 15 12 2 11.14. 2, TannerStevens, Ridgeview,11.54. 3, Madras 100 0001 4 1 Cooper Shaw,Ridgeview, 11.56.400 — 1, Lo0 00 000 2 — 2 3 3 ganBlake,Bend,51.24.2,CalebHoff mann,Bend, Henley 020 334 x — 12 14 1 51.59. 3,Colton Mortenson,Redmond,54.99. Bend 110h — 1, Jeff Davies,Burns,16.51. 2, Alani Troutman,Redmond, 16.85. 3, Samuel Archer, Softball Bend, 17.63.800 — 1,GabeWyfi e,Mountain View, 2:04.86.2, TreyRecanzone, Burns, 2:12.18. Nonconterence 3, ScottDavies,Burns,2:12.90. 200—1, Daniel Madras 0 02 11 — 4 4 1 Bazan,Bend,22.97. 2,JacobyMcNamara, Red- Summit 100 12 2— 16 18 6
lan scored five goals and dished out an assist, helping the Storm open the Oregon Girls Lacrosse Association
season with a c onvincing South League victory. Fiona Dolan and Julia Stites each
had three goals for Summit, while Lauren Gallivan and Kalie McGrew each posted
two goals and an assist. Kyra Hajovsky scored twice for the Storm, and Kelsey Norby was credited with three saves. Marist 11, Bend 10: Bend girls lacrosse, a combined team of Bend High and Mountain View players, fell just s hort against Marist i n
mond, 23.06.3,TannerStevens,Ridgeview,23.61. 300h —1,Caleb Hofmann,Bend,40.91.2,Jeff Davies,Burns,44.25.3, IsaakBurum,Bend,45.87. 1,600 relay — 1, MountainView,3:32.89. 2, Bend,3:34.01.3,Ridgeview,3:36.88. HJ — 1, MaxMeade,Bend,6-2.2,JeffDavies, Burns,5-10. 3,AlaniTroutman, Redmond, 5-10. Discus — 1,BrentYeakey, Ridgeview, 142-0. 2, Chris Steffey,Ridgeview,131-5. 3,LoganJohnson, Bend, 112-2.PV— 1, KeatonFitton, Mountain View,126.2,TristanScott, Mountain View,120. 3, NathanMock, Bend,10-0. Shot —1,Chris Stefey, Ridgeview, 45-9. 2, BrentYeakey, Ridgeview,44-1. 3, JakobLarsen,Bend, 39-8. Javelin — 1, Brent Yeakey,Ridgeview,144-3. 2, JacobBlackburn, Burns, 144-0. 3,ChrisSteffey,Ridgeview,135-2. TJ — 1,ChrisAdamo, Mountain View,40-5.5. 2, MaxMeade,Bend,39-0. 3,BenMilandin, Mountain View,38-10. LJ—1,Garrett Price, MountainView, 19-1. 2, KeatonFitton, MountainView,18-6.5. 3, Jeff Davies,Burns,18-4.5.
its
season opener. Natalie Hand scored six goals for Bend, while Joren Fettig and Remy Ogden both chipped in with two. Allie Rockett had the only two assists on the night, and
goalie Ally Hand registered ll saves. Bend found itself tied with five minutes remaining
in the second half, but a late Marist goal was the difference.
ler finished with a 90, while Sis-
ters'Emily Christen shot 112.
NBA ROUNDUP
NHL ROUNDUP
Wade leadsHeat rally in victory over Blazers
Ducks overtake I(ings in overtime
The Associated Press Wade leads the NBA in fourth-quarMIAMI — Dwyane Wade grabbed ter scoring this season, averaging 7.3 the last rebound along the baseline points. Miami trailed by ll in the secand threw the ball skyward as time ex- ond half, but rallied and moved up to pired, a scene eerily reminiscent of the the No. 7 spot in the Eastern Conferfinal play of his first NBA Finals. ence playoff race. "He just understands the moment
No, this isn't 2006.
But Wade is unquestionably turning right now," Heat coach Erik Spoelstra back the clock. said. "We don't have to talk about it. Here's the ball — make the play for the Wade scored 15 of his 32 points in the fourth quarter, including a jumper team." with 13.6 seconds left to break a tie and LaMarcus Aldridge led Portland help the Miami Heat beat the Portland
with 34 points and 12 rebounds. Dami-
Trail Blazers 108-104 on Wednesday an Lillard scored 17 and Arron Afflalo night. added 15 for the Trail Blazers, who fell "This is what I love to do," Wade ahalf-gamebehind Houstonin the race said. "This is the fun part of this game. for third in the Western Conference. I mean, obviously the last couple years Also on Wednesday: I had to do what I had to do for that
team. But now for this team I get tobe a little bit back to my usual self, having
the ball. I'm not going to do it right every time, but I like my chances most nights."
meltdown, beating lowly Orlando for its third straight win since an embar36 points to help Oklahoma City snap rassing home loss to Cleveland. Boston's five-game winning streak. 76ers 94, Pistons 83: PHILADELRaptors 105, Timberwolves 100: PHIA — Ish Smith scored 15 points to TORONTO — J o na s V a lanciunas pace abalanced offense,and Philadelhad 15 points and 15 rebounds, De- phia snapped a four-game skid with a Thunder 122, Celtics 118:OKLAHOMA CITY — Russell Westbrook scored
Mar DeRozan scored 21 and Toronto
won its 11th straight home game over short-handed Minnesota. Spurs 114, Bucks 103: MILWAUKEE
Summaries
All TimesPDT
EaslernConference x-Atlanta d-Cleveland
d-Toronto Chicago Washington Milwaukee Miami Boston Indiana Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W L 53 15 44 26 41 27 41 28 40 28 34 34 31 36 30 37 30 37 29 37 27 39 24 44 21 49 16 52 14 53
WesternConference
x-GoldenState d-Memphis Houston d-Portland LA. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio Oklahoma City NewOrleans Phoenix Utah Denver Sacramen to L.A. Lakers Minnesota d-rTIvfsfonleader x-clinchedplayoffspot
W L 54 13 47 21 45 22 44 22 44 25 44 25 42 25 38 30 37 30 35 33 30 37 26 42 22 45 17 49 14 53
Heat108, Blazers104 Pct GB
.779 .629 10 .603 12 594 12r/z .588 13 .500 19 .463 21'/z .448 22'/z ,448 22'/z .439 23 .409 25 .353 29 .300 33 .235 37 .209 38'/~
Pct GB .806 691 7'/a
PORTLAND (104) Batum 3-61-2 8, Aldridge15-243-734, Lopez2-5 2-26,Ligard7-131-317,Afflalo5-131-215,Wright1-4 H 3, McCogu m25004,Kaman451-29,Blake1-2 0 03, Leonard1-43-35.Totals 41-8112-21104.
MIAMI (108) Deng9-13 2-4 24,Haslem 3-4 0-0 7,Whiteside 6-110-112,G.Dragic9-161-220,Wade13-266-632, Chalmers 2-5 0-15, Beasley 3-70-06, Andersen1-1 0-02,Johnson 0-40-00. Totals46-879-14108. Portland 32 26 24 23 — 104 Miami 27 21 31 29 — 108 3-PointGoals—Portland 10-26 (Afflalo 4-6, Ligard 24, Blake1-2, Aldridge1-2, Batum1-3, Wright1-4, Leonard0-1, McC ogum0-3), Miami7-10(Deng 4-4, Haslem 1-1, Chalmers1-1, G.Dragic 1-2, Johnson0-1, Wade0-1).Rebounds—Portland53(Kaman13), Miami 42(Whiteside10).Assf~odfand22(Batum, Blake6), Miami21(G.Dragic11). Total Fouls—Portland15, Miami 18.Technicals—Lopez, Haslem.A—19,621(19,600).
.672 9 .667 9'lz Maveric ks107,Magic102 .638 11 .638 11 ORLANDO (102) .627 12 Harkless8-150018, Frye480-011,Vucevic4-94 4 559 16'/z 1 2, Payl o n 6-10 2-2 15, O a l di p o 7-20 5-6 19,A.Gordon .552 17 ,BGordon26H5,Ridnour2-4H4,0'Quinn .515 19'/~ 2-52-26 Nicholson2-50-05.Totats404IT13.14102. .448 24 3-50-07, DALLAS (107) .382 28'4 Parsons 3-80-08, Nowitzki9-152-225, Chandler .328 32 .258 36'/z 1-21-23, Rondo4-71-29, Ellis 9-172-421,Viffanueva4-70-010, D.Harris3-83-412, Stoudem ire 3-8 .209 40 2-48, Barea2-40-04,Aminu1-45-67,Jeff erson0-0 0-00. Totals 39-8016-24107. Orlando 23 26 22 32 — 102 Dallas 31 34 21 21 — 107 Wednesday'sGames Philadelphia94,Detroit 83 Cleveland117,Brooklyn92 Thunder122, Celtlcs118
Toronto105, Minnesota100 Miami108,Portland104 Chicago103,Indiana86 Oklahoma City122, Boston118 Dallas107,Orlando102 SanAntonio114,Milwaukee103 L.A. Clippers116,Sacramento105 GoldenState114,Atlanta95 Washin gton88,Utah84 Today'sGames Minnesota at NewYork, 4:30p.m. DenveratHouston, 5 p.m. NewOrleansatPhoenix, 7p.m. Utah atL.A.Lakers, 7:30p.m.
A NAHEIM,
C alif.
Ryan Kesler scored 45 seconds into overtime, and
Tim Duncan added 19 points and seven
the Anaheim Ducks ral-
cruised past Atlanta in a matchup of
assists as San Antonio beat Milwaukee. the NBA's top two teams. Bulls 103, Pacers 86: CHICAGOWizards 88, Jazz 84: SALT LAKE Rookie forward Nikola Mirotic scored 20 of his 25 points in the second half,
Mike Dunleavy added 21 points and
and Dallas withstood a fourth-quarter
CITY — John Wall scored 24 points
as Washington extended its winning streak to five games with a victory over Utah.
Clippers 116, Kings 105: SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Chris Paul had 30 points and ll assists for the Los An-
geles Clippers, who defeated slumping Sacramento.
lied from another third-period deficit for a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Kings o n We d nesday night in the final Freeway Faceoff meeting of the regular season. P atrick
M a r oo n a n d
Jakob Silfverberg scored third-period goals for the Ducks, who took four of five in this lively rivalry. John Gibson made 29 saves as Anaheim took sole possession of the overall NHL
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings
The Associated Press
points, Andre Iguodala added 21 points — Danny Green scored 20 points and and six assists, and Golden State
Cavaliers 117, Nets 92: CL E VE- Pau Gasol had 19 points and 12 reLAND — J .R. Smith and T imofey bounds to lead short-handed Chicago Mozgov scored 17 points apiece, Kyrie over Indiana. Irving had 10 assists and Cleveland Mavericks 107, Magic 102:DALLAS shook off a slow start to win its 14th — Dirk Nowitzki scored 25 points
straight home game.
victory over Detroit. Warriors 114, Hawks 95: OAKLAND, Calif. — Harrison Barnes had 25
lead with 97 points after rallying for its NHL-best 12th comeback
v i c tory
Spurs 114, Bucks103
Bulls103, Pacers 86
Wlzards 88, Jazz84
when trailing after two pe-
SANANTO NIO(114) Duncan 9-161-219, Leonard3-86-814, Splitter 2-2 2-5 6,T.Parker6-7 2-2 15, Green7-164-4 20, Diaw5-8 8-818, Belinelli 2-9 5-511, Ayres1-1 2-4 4, Mills 1-3 0-0 3,Bonner0-0 0-0 0, Wiliams2-3 0-0 4, Joseph 0-20-00, Anderson0-10-00. Totals 38-76 30-38114.
INDIANA (86) S.Hill 5-102-213, West2-102-3 6, Hibbert 4-8 4-412, G.Hill 4-92-410,Miles4-100-010, Stuckey 4-11 2-411,Mahinmi1-30-0 2,Scola3-9 4-410, Rudez1-20-02,Watson3-80-08, Copeland0-00-0 0, Allen 1-10-02, Sloan0-0 0-0 0. Totals 32-81 16-21 86.
WASHING TON(88) Pierce6-102-218, Nene3-7 2-68, Gortat2-43-5 7, Wall 9-136-724, Beal4-101-1 9,Gooden4-10 0 09, Butler1-3002, Sessions2-32 27,Seraphin 2-3 0-0 4, Porter0-00-00, Murry0-0 0-00. Totals 33-63 16-2388. UTAH (84) Hayward 9-197-9 26,Favors 8-180-216, Gobert 3-53-89, Exum 0-60-00, Hood4-90-1 8, Booker 3-71-27,Miffsap0-3 0-00, Burke5-81-214, Ingle s2-70-04,Cooley0-00-00.Totals34-82 12-24 84. Washington 26 16 28 21 — 88 utah 21 19 21 23 — 84
riods this season. Justin Williams scored
MILWAUKE E(103) CHICAGO (103) Antetokounmpo 8-16 3-3 19, ffyasova7-14 1-3 Dunleavy 7-14 2-2 21, Gasol 7-13 4-4 19, 17, Pachulia4-72-410, Carter-Wiliams3-95-611, Noah 2-72-4 6, Brooks3-10 7-713, Snell 5-11 Middl eton5-84-415,Bayless4-82-212,Henson2-3 2-214,Mohammed 0-2 0-0 0,Hinrich2-40-05, 1-25,En nis2-70-04,Johnson2-40-06,Plumlee2-4 Mirotic 8-158-9 25, Moore0-3 0-0 0, McDermott 0-30-00,Bairstow0-00-00.Totals34-82280-04,O'Bryant0-00-00.Totals39-8018-24103. SanAntonio 27 3 6 28 23 — 11428 103. Milwaukee 28 26 26 23 — 103 Indiana 22 19 27 18 — 86 Chicago 24 27 26 27 — 103
Cavallers117, Nets 92
Clippers 116, Kings105 Raptors105, Timberwolves100
BROOK LYN(92) Johnson3-90-06, Young4-8 0-09, Lopez4-10 MINNESOT A(100) 2-2 10, Williams7-15 5-5 20,Brown4-9 1-2 10, Wiggin s6-93-415,Payne4-80-08,Dieng2-9 Bogdanovic5-9 0-0 12,Jack4-103-411, Plumlee 2-46, Rubio1-40-02,Martin14-284-437,Buding3-34-810,Anderson0-10-00, Jefferson2-20-04, er 9-180-1 19,LaVine2-61-2 5, Brown4-5 0-08. Morris 0-3 0-0 0,Jordan0-1 0-0 0. Totals 36-80 Totals 42-8710-16100. 15-21 92. TORONTO (106) CLEVELAND (117) Ross 6-9 0-0 15, A.Johnson4-6 0-0 8, VaJames5-13 4-6 16, Love4-9 2-3 10, Mozgov lanciunas7-9 1-2 15,Lowry2-7 4-4 9, DeRozan 7-8 3-517, Irving5-101-212, Smith6-13 0-017, 4-14 12-12 21, Patterson5-9 1-2 14, Williams Thompson 4-4 2-410, Shumpert 4-80-010, Della- 2-12 3-5 8, Vasquez4-10 0-0 11, Hansbrough vedova 3-5 0-08, Jones2-3 0-06, Perkins2-4 0-0 1-2 2-2 4, J.Johnson0-1 0-0 0. Totals 36-79 4, Marion 2-30-04, Miffer1-20-03, Totals46-82 23-27 106. 12-20117. Minnesota 32 22 21 26 — 100 Brooklyn 26 21 26 19 — 92 Toronto 31 23 28 23 — 105 Cleveland 23 36 38 23 — 117
76ers 94, Pistons 83
DETROIT (83) Butler 3-8 0-0 7, Tolliver 3-5 1-2 9, Drummond 3-8 3-3 9, Jackson4-17 2-2 11, CaldBOSTON (118) well-Pope 7-16 5-6 20, Anthony 2-4 2-2 6, Bradley 6-130-1 13,Bass8-113-320, Zeger 680-0 Dinwiddie 2-11 2-2 7, Prince3-7 0-0 6, Meeks 12, Smart 8-14 2-425,Turner 3-62-48, Crowder 5-9 2-12 2-2 8, Williams 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 29-88 1-211, Olynyk 7-13 3-820, Datome0-1 0-00, Pressey 17-19 83. 0-62-22,Jerebko1-34-47.Totals44-8417-28118. PHILADELP HIA(94) OKLAHOM ACITY(122) Sampson3-80-0 6,MbahaMoute1-81-24, Roberson1-20-0 2, Kanter10-13 2-222, Adams Noel 5-101-2 11,Smith6-123-415, Richardson 5-9 4-714,Westbrook8-2619-2236, Waiters 4-14 4-7 3-414,Covington1-60-03, Thompson3-5 0-0 0-0 8, Morrow7-11 2-220, Collison1-3 2-2 4, Mc- 8, Canaan 2-10 3-49, Grant4-7 0-210, Robinson Gary2-20 04,Augustin3-54-410, Novak1-30-02. 6-9 0-012, Aldemi1-2 r 0-0 2. Totals 36-84 11Totals 42-8833-39122. 18 84. Boston 24 33 24 37 — 118 Detroit 21 18 26 18 — 83 Oklahoma Cii y 2 8 2 8 40 29 — 122 Philadelphia 24 2 6 19 26 — 94
Warriors 114, Hawks95
L.A. CLIPPERS (116) Turkoglu7-120-019, Griffin7-165-619, Jordan 3-7 0-1 6,Paul13-200-0 30,Redick 9-162-2 27, Rivers1-4 0-23, Hawes1-4 0-0 2,Jones1-2 0-02, Davis142-24,Robinson2-30-04.Totals48-88 9-13116.
SACRAME NTO(106) Gay6-1911-1123, Thompson5-10 2-412, Hollins 4-4 1-2 9,McCallum 4-80-0 8, McLemore0-5 0-0 0, Evans 2-54-68, Stauskas4-64-413, Casspi 2-5 0-05, Miller 8-11 0-016, Wiliams3-64-511. Totals 38-7926-32106. LA. Clippers 28 2 3 29 36 — 116 Sacramento 24 2 5 24 32 — 105
Leaders ThroughTuesday Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Westbrook,DKC 52 480 411 1429 27.5 Harden,HO U 66 521 558 1765 26.7 James,CLE 58 536 333 1507 26.0 Davis,NOR 55 526 300 1353 24.6 Cousins,SAC 52 426 377 1231 23.7 Curry,GOL 64 518 253 1505 23.5 Aldridge,PDR 58 533 257 1351 23.3 Griffin, LAC 53 460 251 1179 22.2 Irving,CLE 64 502 278 1418 22.2 Thompson, GDL 64 506 193 1404 21.9
ATUINTA (95) Carroll 5-123-416, Millsap6-142-216, Horford 4-180-0 8,Teague4-8 4-612, Bazemore1-6 3-4 5, Antic0-13-3 3, Schroder1-125-6 8, Mack 4-8 2-2 10, Jenkins3-3 2-2 9, Brand0-0 0-0 0, Muscala2-31-1 5, Daye1-2 0-03. Totals31-87 26-30 96. GOLDEN STATE(114) Barnes11-131-2 25,Green6-11 1-4 18,Bogut 0-3 0-0 0, Curry 4-11 6-6 16, Holiday1-6 3-4 5, Iguodala9-12 1-2 21, Barbosa5-12 0-0 Wade,MIA 13,Speights 4-8 0-0 8,McAdoo 0-3 0-0 0,Liv- Lillard,PDR ingston 3-30-2 6,Ezeli 1-20-0 2. Totals 44-84 Gay,SAC 12-20 114. Butler,CHI Atlanta 24 23 17 31 — 96 Hayward,UT A GoldenState 28 3 1 24 31 — 114 Vucevic,DR L Ellis, DAL
48 398 221 1038 21.6 65 470 284 1383 21.3 60 446 279 1240 20.7 55 361 329 1110 20.2 65 426 312 1271 19.6 61 520 144 1186 19.4 68 515 197 1304 19.2
the tying goal with 4:18 left for the Kings, who still
took sole possession of third place in the Pacific Division. The defending Stanley Cup champions have earned points in seven of eight games down the stretch.
Jeff Carter scored his 25th goal on a first-period power play, and Jonathan Quick stopped 23 shots as the Kings improved their hold on a playoff spot despite losing another hardfought matchup with their
local rivals. Also on Wednesday: Blackhawks 1, Rangers 0 : NEW YORK —
B r ad
Richards broke a scoreless deadlock 7:19 into the third period, and Chicago cooled off goalie Cam Talbot and the surging New York Rangers. Blue Jackets 4, Oilers 3: EDMONTON, Alberta
— Alexander Wennberg scored the shootout winner for Columbus. David Savard, Ryan
J ohansen
and Mark Letestu scored in regulation for the Blue Jackets (31-35-4), who have won four of their past five.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
NCAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP
Oden
Boise tate a es, a stoDa on The Associated Press
Marks had 23 points on 10of-21 shooting. Marks wasn't even close on The Broncos had already Boise State's final shot at the snapped San Diego State's DAYTON, Ohio — Derrick
big NCAA Tournament upset.
Kendall Pollard scored 17 this season, and came up just points on Wednesday night, short of another big road win. and Dayton — cheered on by The Broncos missed seven of the home crowd — went on their last eight shots. " They hi t a few sh o t s a closingrun fora 56-55 win over Boise State in the First
Four. Marks' leaning shot at the buzzer was well off the mark.
said of the crowd. "I don't
coach Leon Rice said.
The Flyers (26-8) will play
It was the first time since
Duck
played two seasons at Nebraska-Omaha
as an NCAA suspension. Chandler said
and began his coaching career as a stu- he thoughtabout how he could match up dent-assistant there in 1994-95. against those opposing centers last week. Altman and his staff will see plenty of
"Most definitely," Chandler said. "I
friends and family this week at Centu- think about it all the time." ryLink Center. Altman's wife, Reva, is from Stanton, Nebraska.
callhisformer star' s career
titude is off the charts. He
over just yet.
ing a key free throw, Rodney Pryor had 20 and Marcquise
at Greg's life, how difficult things have been. I know
Reed 19 to lead Robert Mor-
that he is a kid that never wanted to let people down.
ris back from a 14-point second-half deficit to beat North
1987 that a school has played Florida in the First Four.
cruited 6-foot-10 junior from Northwest Florida State, has played only 101 minContinued from C1 utes this season because of a knee injury Oregon assistant Tony Stubblefield that has bothered him all season as well
Chandler had not been made available by Oregon to the media all season, but ev-
"It's getting a lot better," Chandler said.
"I'm trying to keep improving, make sure it gets a lot stronger. I've gone through full practices lately, trying to get back in the best shape. That's really it." Chandler has scored 42 points, grabbed 26 rebounds and shot14 of 28 from the
field and 14 of 20 from the foul line this year. His potential was seen most in his first
eryplayerisrequiredto speakto thepress
game, against Cal State Northridge on Dec. 17, when the Ducks kept going to him
at the Pac-12 and NCAA tournaments,
on offense and he finished with 13 points
so he spoke publicly for the first time all he has in previous years," Altman said. season after last Thursday's victory over "Reva's parents will be able to see us Colorado.
in seven minutes. He played 16 minutes in
"My dad didn't get to travel as much this year, he was out for a couple series, but he did not see us play as much has
play and her brothers and sisters. Per-
Chandler has battled a knee injury
his second game against Delaware State
and had five points and four rebounds, but he has not played more than nine min-
sonally, I have a lot of family there. I got 60 texts from people wanting tickets."
since he arrived at Oregon and sat out the utes in a game since that time. first nine games of the season to heal his Chandler has spent most of the seaOklahoma State is about a six-hour knee while serving an NCAA suspension son cheering on the Ducks as they made drive to Omaha, but Altman saidhe hopes for accepting extra benefits during high a strong second-half surge to reach the Oregon fans make the trip from Eugene school in 2011. Chandler said he has tried NCAA tournament. "That really excites me because I love as well. to stay upbeat while playing in 19 of 26 "I hope we get some Ducks fans to games for which he was eligible, logging my teammates," Chandler said. "I know make the flight," Altman said. "At least I an average of 5.3 minutes. how hard they work and it's fun watching "It's been kind of tough, but I try to stay them play." will have my family cheering for us, and Reva's family. It will be a great situation. I positive and keep pushing and do all I can Chandler is hoping he will be ready to am so excited for the guys." to make it better," Chandler said. play more next season. "I think it's getting close," Chandler Chandlerplayed atotal of three minutes Tall Duck short onminutes in two games at the Pac-12 tournament. said. "I think next year I should be good "I'm not thinking about it," he said to go." Altman noted that Oregon played "the three biggest teams in the league" when asked what it has been like to watch last week during the Pac-12 Conference mostly from the bench. "Whatever oppor- Bonus check tournament. tunity I can get, I try to make the most of Altman has already earned a couple of The Ducks were not able to play their
it."
Oden played one season
77: DAYTON, Ohio — Lucky Jones scored 21 points, includ-
on its home court, an anomaly resulting from Dayton hosting the opening games. Also on Wednesday: Robert Morris 81, N. Florida
think we would have won that back-breakers," Boise State game without them."
Heat last season.
O d en , 2 7 ,
State," Matta said. "His at-
an NCAA Tournament game
down the stretch that were
M atta s ai d
at Ohio State. He led the
Friday in Columbus, Ohio. And they recognized that do with the place they were leaving. "They were electrifying," senior guard Jordan Sibert
Continued from C1 has been doing "high-level training" the past six months with coaches at Ohio State and w eighs about 280 pounds. "Quite honestly, I haven't seen Greg look this good since when he played for us back in the day at Ohio
sixth-seeded Providence on
their 80-mile trip to the mid29-game home-court streak dle of the state had a lot to
December 2009 and played 23 games for the Miami
postseason bonuses in his contract.
biggest player for many meaningful minAltman has mentioned this season that He pocketed $10,000 for beating Utah utes during those games when Oregon Chandler had a hard time getting in con- in the semifinals of the Pac-12 tournafaced Colorado's 6-foot-10 Josh Scott and dition to stay on the floor for extended ment and $25,000 for reaching the NCAA 7-footers Jakob Poeltl of Utah and Kaleb minutesas he recovered from the knee tournament. Tarczewski of Arizona. injury. For most of the season, Chandler He would earn an additional $25,000 Center Michael Chandler, a highly re- could not even get through a full practice. for any win in Omaha.
went through a lot. You look
The injuries, you know,
Buckeyes to the 2007 national championship game, in which they lost to defending champion Florida, then entered the NBA draft.
While Oden has struggled to stay healthy, Matta said it would be wrong to
"I think he's right now trying to gauge how the b ody f eels," M a tt a
s aid.
"There is a possibility he may make another run at it. He looks great."
More than anything, Matnone of u s c a n p r e vent ta said, he is thrilled that those. I know there's part of him that wishes that stuff Oden is enjoying life again. "I don't know, quite honcouldn't have happened.
I still swear he was going to be one of the greatest to ever play in the NBA just from the year I wa s w i th him."
estly, if I've ever seen Greg as happy as he is right now in terms of everything is going great in his life," Matta said. "He's made a lot of
O den played just 8 2 personal commitments to games — the equivalent of change. Having him around one full NBA regular sea- literally every single day son — in five seasons for and spending time with Portland. He last appeared him, there's no greater feelin a game for the Blazers in ing. I'm excited for him."
Palmer
when Palmer gave him the reassurance he needed.
"He told me what I needContinued from C1 The rookie is eminently ed to do, but he also said to proud of what his grandfa- me, "If I were you, I would ther means to the game and be doing the exact thing the respect he commands. you're doing as far as movThe grandfather is equally ing somewhere else, getting proud of the player and per- married, starting your own son Saunders has become. life.' And that meant a lot to "Sam is a v ery polite me that he supported the deyoung man. That's one thing cisions that I had made and I'm proud of," Palmer said. that I had gone out and done "He has conducted himself my own thing." very well through this early A year l ater, Saunders stage of professional golf, made it to the bigleagues. He and it isn't easy. It isn't easy went seven straight events for him to be my grandson without making the cut, but and to carry on the way he there was no panic. Saunhas to do the things that he's ders felt like he was heading
well."
done. He's done them very
in the right direction, and he showed it in Puerto Rico two
It has not been a smooth ride.
weeks ago by getting into a five-man playoff. Alex Cejka
Saunders toiled for five won with a birdie on the first years before he finally made extra hole. it to the PGA Tour. He first
Saunders is back at Bay
played Bay Hill as an unre- Hill, and this time he felt stricted sponsor's exemp- like he earned it. He still tion when he was 18, and
Madness
which is the dominant net-
work during college basketball's regular season, said its Continued from C1 "I would argue personally flagship network's ratings that right now, we're not in were slightly down after three the right place. The balance is straightrecord-breaking seatoo much toward the defensive sons (ESPN2's and ESPNU's side of the ball," Gavitt added. were up slightly). Basketball is an unapologetBut Bilas added: "The tourically frantic and offense-first nament will bail us out. We sport. Although stout defenses will make the same amount of can be beautiful and, as the money, and people will think saying goes, win champion- it's OK." M en's basketball is t h e ships, fans like buckets, and players like to score them. NCAA's lifeblood. The tournaRules changes — the shot ment is responsible for a vast
vors defense.
independent contractors, with • A s h o rter 3-point line, less accountability and lower narrower lane and s maller expectations than NBA referrestricted area (a semicircle ees, who are full-time, salaried under the basket in which de- professionals. fenders cannot take charges) Last year, the NCAA crediscourage spacing on offense. ated a Division I Council and,
football fans have shown a preference for high-scoring games, basketball fans, in general, seem to like seeing the ball go through the hoop a lot. In an exhaustive examination
of the sport's ills, Seth Davis of Sports Illustrated recently
concluded: "College basketball is facing a crisis. It's time for an extreme makeover."
Jay Bilas, an ESPN college basketball analyst, warned of complacency. "People are starting to vote with their feet," he said. Average attendance at Di-
administration of the game." Conversations with nearly
two dozen current and former coaches, administrators, an-
alysts and closely connected observers yielded many explanations for the low-scoring, slow-playing trends. They include the following: • Top players depart after one season for the professional ranks,draining rosters of talent and experience. (On the other hand, before the NBA required players to be one yearremoved from high school before they could be drafted, Kobe Bryant, LeBron
vision I men's games has de- James and others refrained clined for the seventh straight from playing in college.) • Technology has enabled season, the S portsBusiness Journal r eported. E SPN, superior scouting, which fa-
120-man field his first three
seasons as a struggling pro. Being the grandson of the King has its privileges, sure, but it went beyond playing a prime tour event. Palmer won seven majors
tour rookies, not an unrestricted one.
"It's a spot that technically
I've earned in some way, and that feels a lot different for
me," Saunders said. Perhaps it
h e lped t h at
• College coaches enjoy under it, a Men's Basketball more job security than their Oversight Committee, "to be NBA counterparts, encourag- more responsive and much ing tactical conservatism. more nimble," said Dan GuerMany also bemoan the rero, UCLA's athletic director length of games, extended by and the oversight committee's
Saunders does not share the same surname as his the masses. But there were grandfather. "The plenty of struggles, and he Nicklaus b oys, I'm sure it was tougher for has passed those along.
10 team timeouts and nine me-
probably like nobody else can and we get along pretty
chairman. dia timeouts and the endless But Guerrero's committee
endgames — in which trailclock, the 3-point l ine, the majority of the association's ing teams deliberately foul in banning of certain defensive overall revenue, thanks in no an effort to get the ball back, tactics — are almost always small part to a 14-year, $10.8 making the final minute last intended to boost scoring. b illion television deal w i t h well beyond 60 seconds. Bobby Hurley, a former CBS and 'Ibrner BroadcastThe most easily fingered Duke point guard, said his ing. (For the most part, reve- culprit for elongated possesplaying days shaped how he nue from the top tier of college sions and low final scores is coacheshisfast-paced Buffalo football goes to schools and the 35-second shot clock. A team. conferences, not the NCAA.) 24-second clock is used in "I like playing in an up-temThat revenue trickles down the NBA an d i n ternational po style," he said. "I grew up to the NCAA's three divisions, men'splay,while 30 seconds on the playgrounds." serving as an essential unifi- is used in women's Division College bask e tball's er for an association that has I. (This season's National parched state of play has led never seemed more at risk of Invitation Tournament — a to what is widely considered fraying. Its amateur model consolation tournament for ugly basketball. Virginia's is under siege, and internal teams spurned by the NCAA opponents averaged a little reform is underway that re- tournament — will employ more than 50 points this sea- wards the most valuable con- a 30-second shot clock as an son. Last month, the score at ferences and sports. experiment.) "For all the challenges we've halftime of Utah and Oregon Even P r esident B a r ack State was 16-14. In late Decem- had, in terms of the diversity Obama, speaking on ESPN ber,Loyola Marymount and in Division I and getting ev- while filling out his bracket Nebraska headed to overtime erybody pulling in the same on Tuesday night, said he fatied at 35-35. direction," said Jamie Zani- vored a 30-second shot clock "Some people like Rem- novich, the Pacific-12 Confer- to boost scoring. brandt, and some like Picas- ence's deputy commissioner, Kentucky coach John Caliso," Paul Brazeau, the Atlantic "basketball's the one thing pari said, "If you want more Coast Conference's head of that's been the sinew." scoring, you've got to loosen men's basketball operations, And yet that sinew has also up the game." He added, "If said while defending sixth- been a harness, restraining there's body-to-body contact ranked Virginia's style of play, the enactment of popular pro- that's not obviously created by which is to smother oppo- posed changes. the offense, call a foul every "It's systemic," said Bilas, single time." nents with stingy defense and shorten the game with its own who is also an outspoken critic Bilas, among others, said it slothlike offense. of the amateur model. "It's the did not help that referees were But just as baseball and
needed an exemption, but
he was offered a spot in the it came from a category of
can onlyrecommend, for example, shortening the shot clock. The change must be enacted by the rules committee and then approved by the Playing Rules Oversight Panel. Byrd said the rules committee was set to convene in May and consider several areas for
potential change. The rules committee included coaches and administrators
from all three divisions. Out of 12 members, it currently has only one from a so-called power conference. "The rules committee is now populated by Division I, II and III coaches," Gavitt
said. "Is it appropriate to look at the reorganization of rules
committees?" To Bilas — who r ecently noted on Twitter that current
rules committee members hailed from Erskine College, Caldwell University and State University of New York-Cobleskill — top college basketball is too good to be governed by committee. Explaining why the NBA has superior rules, he said: "That's their business. We re-
and is more famous for how he made golf appealing to
" I'm able to talk to h i m
well," Saunders said. "We
keep in touch and I try to make a phone call to him at least once every other week and let him know how I'm
them," Saunders said. Gary Nicklaus, the third
son of Jack Nicklaus — the "Golden Bear" — made it to the PGA Tour in 2000 and
lost in a playoff to Phil Mickelson at the BellSouth Classic that was shortened to 54
doing, and he's always there holesbecause of rain.Gary to help if needed but he also Nicklaus once made the covunderstands that I need to er of Sports Illustrated as the do my own thing and he's heir to the Bear. very good about letting me Even so, everyone knows just follow my own path." Saunders a s Pa l m er's S aunders was at a l o w grandson. There is no hidpoint at the end of 2013. He ing from it, and Saunders was married and had moved away from Florida to Fort Collins, Colorado. His wife
was due with her second
would not want that. The
way he talks at Bay Hill makes him sound like a future tournament host when
he explains why the greens as a "need-to-go" situation, are not in the best shape, he went to Pennsylvania to and when he talks about be with his grandfather. his frustration over players "I was up in Latrobe when skipping the Arnold Palmer I was really struggling af- Invitational or the Memorial ter 2013," Saunders said. "I (hosted by Nicklaus) despite lost my Web.com status. My what those legends have wife was about to give birth done for golf. child. In what he described
to our second child. And I
didn't have a job, and I had to go back to Q-school and I was seriously considering doing something else be-
And while he has shown
progress, Saunders is not satisfied. He wants to win, the sooner the better. His
fuse to admit that we are sell-
grandfather is 85. "I wouldn't say there is a was going to make a living." sense of urgency," Saunders Saunders said they were said. "But would it mean a on the back on the practice lot to me'? Yes. And I'm sure
ing it."
range, just the two of them,
YOIlil'f H
cause I didn't know how I
it would mean a lot to him."
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10-YRT-NOTE 1.92%
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Economic barometer
2,060 "
A measure of the U.S. economy's future health is expected to have notched a smaller gain last month Economists anticipate that the Conference Board will report today that its index of leading indicators edged up 0.2 percent in February after rising 0.3 percent a month earlier. The index, derived from data that for the most part have already been reported individually, is designed to anticipate economic conditions three to six months out.
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StocksRecap Vol. (In mil.) 4,063 1,945 Pvs. Volume 3,152 1,680 Advanced 2584 1685 Declined 571 1026 New Highs 2 16 1 7 9 New Lows 68 57
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'14 I '15 Source: Factaet
Fit results? Wall Street predicts Nike's latest quarterly earnings improved from a year ago. The athletic footwear and apparel maker has benefited from strong sales growth and improved margins. In December, the company noted that its worldwide futures orders, an indicator of demand,jumped 7 percent. However, the numbers dropped in Japan and emerging markets. Nike reports fiscal third-quarter financial results today.
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HIGH LOW CLOSE CHG. 18097.12 17697.52 18076.19 +227.11 DOW Trans. 9141.61 8997.07 9118.95 +32.59 DOW Util. 600.23 579.99 596.84 +1 5.46 NYSE Comp. 11055.01 10826.04 11019.72 +157.29 NASDAQ 5001.57 4907.72 4982.83 +45.39 S&P 500 2106.85 2061.23 2099.50 +25.22 S&P 400 1532.12 1505.40 1526.76 +1 6.13 Wilshire 5000 22290.40 21840.25 22216.60 +252.66 Russell 2000 1255.68 1235.49 1252.14 +9.91
DOW
D
%CHG. t1.27% t0.36% t2.66% t1.45% t0.92% t1.22% t1.07% t1.15%
+0.80%
PRCL FedEx FDX Close: $44.13%1.26 or 2.9% Close:$173.307-2.41 or -1.4% J F M The software company reported The package delivery company remixed fiscal third-quarter profit and ported a boost in fiscal third-quarter revenue results but said its cloud profit, but its revenue results and WK MO QTR YTD services business grew. outlook fell short. L L L +1 .42% $50 $190 -0.23% L L 180 V -3.44% 45 +1.66% 170 L L L +5 . 21% 60 D +1.97% D J F M J F M L L L +5 . 12% 52-week range 52-week range L L L +2 . 52% $35.82~ $4 6.71 $133.64~ $ 183 .5 1 L L +3.94% Vol.:37.9m (2.6x avg.) PE: 18.4 Vol.:4.2m (2.6x avg.) P E: 21.9 Mkt. Cap:$193.79b Yi eld: 1.1% Mkt. Cap:$49.1b Yiel d : 0 .5%
Rite Aid
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 6 7. 9 7 -.83 -1.2 L L L + 13. 7 +5 1 .3 1 233 15 0 .80f
NAME
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp A VA 29.37 ~ 38.34 33.9 3 +. 9 5 +2 .9 L V Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 5. 9 8 -.11 -0.7 w w Barrett Business BB S I 1 8 .25 ~ 64.50 43 . 5 1 +1.08 +2.5 L Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 15 5.73 +1.22 +0.8 L L Cascade Baacorp CA C B 4 . 11~ 5.82 4.84 -.01 -0.2 T T L ColumbiaBokg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 29.01 - .02 -0.1 L Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o 58.77 59.14 + . 67 +1.1 L L CostcoWholesale CO ST 110.36 ~ 1 56 .85160.93 +.90 $.0.6L L Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 17.89 13. 3 7 +. 3 9 + 3.0 L L FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 1. 5 1 -.43 -1.3 L W Hewlett PacKard H PQ 29 . 23 ~ 41.10 33.0 3 +. 6 0 +1.9 L W Intel Corp I NTC 24.49 ~ 37.90 30.8 9 +. 3 0 t 1 . 0 V W Keycorp KEY 11.55 — 0 14.70 14 .47 -.14 -1.0 V L Kroger Co K R 4 3 .02 ~ 77.62 7 5. 8 0 -.20 -0.3 V L Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ 9.19 6.86 +. 0 7 + 1.0 L L LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 17.76 1 5. 8 3 -.11 -0.7 v w MDU Resources MDU 20 . 01 o — 36.0 5 21. 58 + . 5 4 +2.6 L V MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 23.76 -.05 -0.2 W W Microsoft Corp M SFT 3 7 .79 ~ 50.05 42. 5 0 +. 8 1 +1.9 L W Nike Ioc 8 N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 97. 5 1 +. 9 7 +1.0 L L Nordstrom Ioc JWN 59.97 — 0 81.78 80 .49 + . 2 8 +0.3 L L Nwst Nat Gas N WN 41.81 ~ 52.57 47.4 1 + 1.34 +2.9 L W PaccarIoc P CAR 55.34 ~ 71.15 63.7 4 + 1.17 +1.9 L W Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6 .00 +.06 $ .1.0 L W Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 42.9 5 +. 7 4 +1 .8 L W Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 21 1.59 +3.43 +1.6 L L Schoitzer Steel SCHN 1 5 .38 o — 30.0 4 16. 37 + . 7 4 +4.7 L V Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 ~ 291. 2 7 28 2.80 -3.25 -1.1 v w StaocorpFocl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 8. 0 7 -.67 -1.0 L L StarbocksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 94.8 3 95. 8 4 + 1.46+1.5 L L umpqaaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 9.6 0 17.30 -.06 -0.3 L L US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 8 5 -.10 -0.2 L L WashingtonFedl WA F D 19.52 ~ 2 4.5 3 21.90 -.09 -0.4 L L WellsFargo & Co WFC 46.44 — o 55.98 56 .17 + . 2 6 +0.5 L L Weyerhaeaser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 37.04 34.1 2 +. 6 6 +2 .0 L W
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w -10.7
The Labor Department releases its weekly tally of unemployment benefit applications today. DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenct included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last 12 months. f - Current Weekly applications for annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent unemployment aid dropped to a dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend p— Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared cr paid in preceding 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash seasonally adjusted 289,000 two announcement. value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months. weeks ago, nearly reversing a large increase from last month, which likely occurred because of cold weather and snowstorms. Economists anticipate that General Motors says it will slash The move will lead to $600 million in unemployment benefit applications production in Russia and pull its Opel special charges. edged higher last week. brand due to plummeting sales in the The pullback is designed to preserve GM's strong cash position. GM was economically troubled country. Initial jobless claims GM brandshave been among the sitting on $25.2 billion in cash at the seasonally adjusted biggest losers in Russia's shrinking end of last year, but recently agreed to 340 thousand auto market. Opel sales fell 86 percent a $5 billion stock buyback. It also faces 325 in the past year and the brand will leave cash drains later this year from a the Russian market by December. GM's potential civil penalty for concealing a 313 factory in St. Petersburg will halt deadly ignition switch problem and a 304 est. production by the middle of this year. 300 potential union contract settlement.
l::";;""GMcuts production in Russia
325 290
General Motors (GM) W 52-WEEK RANGE
260
39
$29 2 /6 2/13 2/20 2/27
3/ 6 3 / 1 3
AP
Week ending Source: Factset
AmdFocus
AP
ednes day's close: $38.50 T
otal return 1- y r
3 -yr*
2037753 936251 935901 901229 850897 786695 Apple Inc s 634908 8 iPVixST 569955 Alcoa 552911 Petrobras 544906
210.46 +2.50 2.20 + .28 40.17 +.96 8.02 +.14 15.98 -.11 18.84 +.91 128.47 +1.43 26.13 -1.17 13.28 +.22 5.66 + .27
WasatchCoreGr d VALUE
WGROX B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
LAST VitesseS 5.34 Retrophin 20.17 SwftEog 2.54 Novogen h 3.88 VestnRMII 4.41 ApldDNA n 3.61 NewConcEn 2.21 Capricor 10.25 Quiksilvr 2.02 Corcept 5.22
CHG +1.45 +5.41 +.53 +.80 +.82 +.66 +.40 +1.65 +.32 +.82
Losers
%CHG + 37.3 + 3 6.7 o45 + 2 6.4 53 + 2 6.0 + 2 2.8 co + 2 2.4 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 2 2.2 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 9.2 Q + 1 8.8 average of stock holdings + 1 8.6 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
CATEGORY Small Growth C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * f r -2.79 -50.9 Willbros DirGMBear -3.39 -22.3 ASSETS $999 million -2.45 -20.7 500.com 9.36 EXP RATIO 1.18% SocQ&M 18.65 -3.45 -15.6 MANAGER J.B. Taylor -1.19 -15.6 ColumLabs 6.43 SINCE 2000-12-31 RETURNS3-MO +7.8 Foreign Markets YTD +7.5 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +14.0 Paris 5,033.42 +4.49 + . 09 3-YR ANNL +16.7 London 6,945.20 +1 07.59 +1.57 5-YR-ANNL +17.4 -58.08 -.48 Frankfurt 11,922.77 Hong Kong24,120.08 + 218.59 + . 91 TOP 5HOLDINGS Mexico 44,360.87 +599.51 +1.37 Copart Inc Milan 22,565.19 -1 57.87 -.69 Tokyo 19,544.48 +1 07.48 +.55 Allegiant Travel CoLLC Stockholm 1,703.96 +28.08 +1.68 Cimpress NV -3.00 -.05 Spirit Airlines Inc Sydney 5,808.00 Zurich 9,256.24 + 57.73 + . 63 Cornerstone OoDemaod Inc NAME
L AST 2.69 11.78
$9
Herbalife HLF Close:$38.76 A4.33 or 12.6% The weight-loss and nutritional products maker won the dismissal of a lawsuit that accused it of being a pyramid scheme. $40 35 30
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52-week range $4.42~
$8 .62
Vol.:90.2m (3.9x avg.)
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52-week range 827.68~
$69.69
PE: 2 5.0 Vol.:6.8m (3.0x avg.) PE:1 1 .4 Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$3.57 b Yie l d : 3.1%
Mkt. Cap:$7.87 b
Adobe Systems
ADBE Close:$76.89 V-2.77 or -3.5% The software company reported better-than-expected fiscal first-quarter financial results, but it provided a weak outlook. $80
Vitesse Semi.
VTSS Close:$5.34L1A5 or 37.3% The semiconductor products maker agreed to a potential cash tender sale of the company to Microsemi valued at $389 million.
$6
75
70
D
J
F
M
D
52-week range $57.75~
$80 .38
Vol.:10.5m (4.6x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$38.52b
J
F
M
52-week range
$2.70
$5.35 PE: . . . Yie ld: ...
PE : 1 45.7 Vol.:17.0m (33.4x avg.) Yield:... Mkt.Cap:$368.34 m
Retrophin
RTRX Nektar Therapeutics N KT R Close:$20.17%5.41 or 36.7% Close:$12.51 V-1.62 or -11.5% The drug developer will exercise its The drug developer's experimental option to buy worldwide rights to the NKTR-102 failed to meet its main FDA-approved Cholbam from Askle- goal in a late-stage study focusing pion Pharmaceuticals. on advanced breast cancer. $25 $16 20
14 D
J F 52-week range
$7.85~
$24 .25
Vol.:5.4m (12.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $534.24 m
M
D
J F 52-week range
$8.81 ~
M $ 17.53
P E: . .
Vol.:5.7m (5.2x avg.) Yie ld: ..Mkt. Cap:$1.64 b
P E: .. . Yield: ...
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury tumbled to 1.92 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -month T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 5 .0 5 . 1 4 .14
52-wk T-bill
.25
L
L
.05
L
L
L
.07
L
L
L
.11
-0.11 V
T
W
.35
-0.16 w
T
w 1.5 5
-0.13 V
T
V 2.67
-0.09 V
V
w 3.62
.25
2-year T-note . 5 6 .6 7 5-year T-note 1.39 1.55 10-year T-oote 1.92 2.05 30-year T-bond 2.51 2.60
BONDS
L
...
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclay s LongT-Bdldx 2.41 2.50 -0.09 W W
Bond BuyerMuni Idx 4.23 4.25 -0.02 w w 13 30/ Price-earnings ratio: 23 Barclays USAggregate 2.21 2.22 -0.01 w w PRIME FED Barcl (Base d on Past 12-month results) Div yield • 3 1% Dividend • $1 20 aysUS HighYield 6.35 6.28 +0.07 L L RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.67 3.70 -0.03 w w *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.74 1.86 -0.12 w w 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.06 3.06 ... L W 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualFunds
Wasatch Core Growth recently had its silver-medal analyst rating FAMILY Marhetsummary from Morningstar reaffirmed; American Funds Most Active Morningstar referred to the fund NAME VOL (00s) LAST CHG as "a pick worth holding on to." S&P500ETF CSVLgCrde iShEMkts RiteAid BkofAm MktVGold
RAD Close:$8.02%0.14 or 1.8% American Express is preparing to launch a customer loyalty program at several select businesses, including the drugstore operator.
15
Eye onunemployment
282
+.0144
1.0744
Stocks rose sharply Wednesday after the Federal Reserve suggested it was in no hurry to raise interest rates. Many investors had been expectin g a hike as soon as June,buta statement issued by Fed after a two-day policy meeting suggested the central bank may wait for the economy to strengthen more. The Fed said that it believes the unemployment rate can fall further without spurring inflation. It also cut its forecast for economic growth through 2017. Investors also bought up government bonds, driving down yields sharply. Oil prices rose on the news, too. All 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor's 500 index rose, led by energy stocks.
NorthwestStocks 0.0
+
+1.20 '
StoryStocks
"
est.
0.2
+
.
1 1840"S.'" " p
seasonally adjusted percent change
$44.66
Dowjonesindustrials .... Close: 18,076.19 Change: 227.11 (1.3%)
"
"
$15.53
17,000 "
1,920 "
NYSE NASD
0.4
"
+ -.03
+3.10
2,000
Leading indicators 0.6%
+
$1,151.40
i o DA Y G
i79oo" 17,600"
GOLD
13
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmBalA m 25 . 08 +.25+2.1 +9.8 +12.5+11.7 A A A CaplncBuA m 60.05 +.97 +1.6 +7.4 +9.8 +9.0 A A A CpWldGrlA m 47.79 +.83 +4.1 +6.9 +12.9 +9.9 C 8 C EurPacGrA m 50.39+1.08 +6.9 +4.6 +9.5 +7.1 8 8 C FnlnvA m 53. 1 8 +.65+3.6 +12.1 +15.9+13.4 C C C GrthAmA m 44.90 +.56 +5.2 +11.6 +17.5+13.8 C 8 D IncAmerA m 21.85 +.28 +2.0 +8.5 +11.6+11.0 8 A A InvCoAmA m 37.36 +.48 +1.9 +12.1 +16.3+13.0 C C D NewPerspA m38.64 +.66 +6.2 +9.0 +13.9+11.4 A A B WAMutlnvA m41.83 +.61 +2.1 +12.1 +16.0+14.5 8 8 A Dodge &Cox Income 13.92 +.05 +1.0 +4 .2 +4.1+4.9 D 8 8 IntlStk 44.29+1.06 +5.2 +5 .0 +12.1 +8.3A A A Stock 182.22+1.91 +0.7 + 9.8 +18.7+14.3 D A A Fidelity Contra 102. 6 0+1.00+5.6 +11.6 +16.6+15.3 C 8 8 ContraK 102 . 44+1.00+5.7 +11.7 +16.7+15.4 C 8 8 LowPriStk d 51.67 +.65 +2.8 + 9 .4 +15.6+14.5 D D C Fideli S artao 500 l dxAdvtg 74.62 +.89 +2.4 +14.4 +16.8+14.8 8 8 A FraakTemp-Franklio Income C m 2. 39 . . . -0.5 +0.2 +8.0 +8.2 IncomeA m 2. 3 7 ... 0.0 +1. 1 + 8 .6 +8.8 Oakmarb Intl I 25.10 +.43 +7.5 + 2 .6 +12.4+10.4 8 A A Oppeoheimer RisDivA m 20 . 31 +.24+1.6 +11.2 +13.2+12.6 D E D RisDiv8 m 17 . 93 +.20+1.4 +10.3 +12.2+11.6 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 81 +.21+1.4 +10.4 +12.4+11.7 D E E SmMidValA m50.37 +.58 +3.5 +11.5 +16.2+12.6 8 C E SmMidValB m42.35 +.48 +3.3 +10.7 +15.3+11.7 C D E T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.90 + .42 +0.3 + 7 .7 +13.8+12.1 E D D GrowStk 55.9 0 + .68+7.6 +13.2 +18.2+16.8 C A A HealthSci 79.0 1 +.71+16.2 +36.0 +38.3+29.4 A A A Newlncome 9. 6 8 +.06+ 1.5 + 5.2 + 3.3 +4.3 8 C C Vanguard 500Adml 194.51+2.34 +2.4 +14.4 +16.8+14.8 A 8 A 500lnv 194.46+2.34 +2.4 +14.3 +16.6+14.7 8 8 8 CapOp 55.89 +.39 +6.0 +16.4 +24.3+16.1 A A A Eqlnc 31.48 +.44 +0.9 +11.7 +15.4+15.1 8 C A IntlStkldxAdm 27.31 +.69 +5.0 +1.6 +6.5 NA C D StratgcEq 34.02 +.42 +5.7 +14.2 +20.9+18.3 A A A TgtRe2020 29.27 +.33 +2.8 +8.4 +9.9 +9.4 A A A TgtRe2035 18.42 +.24 +3.3 +9.1 +12.1+11.0 A 8 8 Tgtet2025 17.02 +.20 +3.0 +8.6 +10.6+10.0 A 8 8 TotBdAdml 10.98 +.07 +1.5 +5.4 +3.1 +4.3 A D D Totlntl 16.33 +.35 +5.0 +1.6 +6.4 +5.1 C D D TotStlAdm 53.17 +.62 +3.0 +13.3 +17.0+15.1 8 8 A TotStldx 53.14 +.62 +3.0 +13.2 +16.8+15.0 C 8 A USGro 31.67 +.31 +5.9 +15.5 +17.7+15.6 8 A 8
PCT 4.2 3.79 3.41 Fund Footnotes: tt - Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 3.19 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 3.03 redemption fee. Source: ittorntngstar.
Commodities
FUELS
Oil came close in morning trading to falling below $42 per barrel for the first time since March 2009, but it reversed course in the afternoon to notch its first gain in seven days.
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)
Foreign Exchange The dollar sank against the euro,Japanese yen and other major currencies after the Federal Reserve signaled that it
may move slowly in raising interest rates
h5Q HS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. 44.66 43.46 1.47 1.43 1.77 1.69 2.92 2.86 1.80 1.73
W 3 .42
w 4. 7 8 2.36 W 5.35 w 4. 4 1 w 1. 7 9 W 3.1 1
%CH. %YTD +2.76 -1 6.2 -9.7 +0.98 +4.64 -4.0 + 2.28 + 1.1 +3.99 +25.4
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.8 1151.40 1148.30 +0.27 15.53 15.56 -0.24 -0.3 -9.6 1092.60 1093.70 -0.10 2.59 2.64 -2.06 -8.9 764.30 761.80 +0.33 -4.3 CLOSE
PVS.
1.57 1.54 Coffee (Ib) 1.36 1.34 Corn (bu) 3.75 3.71 Cotton (Ib) 0.62 0.60 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 278.70 273.10 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.13 1.12 Soybeans (bu) 9.65 9.55 Wheat(bu) 5.11 5.04
%CH. %YTD +1.95 +1.72 +1.01 + 3.77 +2.05 +0.31 +1.10 +1.44
-5.5 -1 8.2 -5.6 + 3.7 -1 5.8 -1 9.6 -5.3 -1 3.4 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4863 +.0109 +.73% 1.6587 Canadian Dollar 1.2 6 71 -.0104 -.82% 1.1143 USD per Euro 1.0744 +.0144 +1.34% 1.3930 -.70 -.58% 101.54 JapaneseYen 120.69 Mexican Peso 15. 1985 -.1914 -1.26% 13.1531 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9967 -.0089 -.22% 3.4594 Norwegian Krone 8 . 2462 -.0550 -.67% 5.9549 South African Rand 12.1838 -.1772 -1.45% 10.7542 Swedish Krona 8.6 7 3 3 + .0011 +.01% 6.3311 Swiss Franc .9887 -.0179 -1.81% . 8 737 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2947 -.0165 -1.27% 1.0958 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2263 -.0216 -.35% 6.1929 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7576 -.0054 -.07% 7.7667 Indian Rupee 62.405 -.268 -.43% 61.100 Singapore Dollar 1.3845 -.0042 -.30% 1.2637 South KoreanWon 1119.73 -10.47 -.94% 1069.48 -.15 -.48% 3 0.46 Taiwan Dollar 31.36
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
BRIEFING Tourism grows nationwide Real spending on tourism accelerated nationally in the final quarter of 2014,even as overall GDP growth decelerated, according to data from theBureau of Economic Analysis. Tourism increased by4.5 percent over that period, compared to 2.5percent for the yearoverall. Thomas Dail, spokesman for the BEA,saidthe uptick was dueprimarily to a rise in passenger air transportation and "recreation andentertainment." Dail addedthat prices for goodsand services related to tourism dropped during thesame period, with the most significant drop coming from gasoline prices. Overall, transportation commodities, other than passenger air transport, decreased byalmost 20 percent during the fourth quarter of 2014. Dail said that employment in the travel and tourism industries accelerated aswell, growing by 2.7 percent in the fourth quarter, up from 2 percent in thequarter before. Overall, 7.8 million Americans wereemployed in tourism-related fields in the fourth quarter of 2014, andthose fields generated$1.6 trillion during that time. — Bulletin staff report
PERMITS City of Bend • Greg WelchConstruction Inc., 2251 NWLemhi Pass Drive, $399,056 • Greg WelchConstruction Inc., 2419 NWFort Mandan Way, $331,838 • DKS LLC,63155 Dakota Drive, $278,274 • 2003 Christi Stinebiser Trust, 780 SE Peiton Place, $239,770 • PacWest II LLC,63321 NE Boyd AcresRoad,$197,055 • Evelyn Lerner,1631 SE Riviera Drive, $300,000 • Nordic Construction, 2391 NWDrouillard Ave. $318,680 • SolaireHomesInc. 1151 NE JonesRoad,$220,824 • Triad HomesInc., 21323 Livingston Drive, $201,063 • Westerly II BendLLC, 20228 NWBrumby Lane, $270,975 • James Fuilarton,3341 NW FairwayHeights Drive, $322,429 • KD Construction, 2819NW Shields Drive, $279,473 • Tyee Dev.Inc., 2439 NW Drouillard Ave.,$103,880 • Pahlisch Homes,61080SE ManhaeLoop,$330,932 • FC FundLLC,604 SE GlenedenPlace,$134,877 City of Redmond • HaydenHomesLLC, 3276 SWEvergreenAve., $147,959 •PL Redmond USA Limited Partnership,31708W28th St., $258,922 • Dunlap FineHomes Inc.,934SW25th Lane, $108,810 • Denis J. andCandaceJ. Williams 2418 SW 29th St., $149,022 • Erik Berkey,1350 NW Canal Blvd., $2,890,000 • Buggsi Inc., 2630 SW17th Place, $300,000 • First Bank N.A.,737SW CascadeAve., $350,200 • Gernhart Redmond LLC, 2747SWSixth St., $180,000 • Utility Trailer-Redmond LLC, 825 NE Hemlock Ave., $254,564 • Kiaus Kreuznerand Janeile Walsh, 2558 SE 43rd Court, $480,000 •PL Redmond USA Limited Partnership,31408W28th St. $258,120 • Hayden HomesLLC,4757 SW Umatilia Ave.,$262,802 • Jeraid E. andPamaiaJ. Boysen, 4153SWSalmon Place, $360,908 •DunlapFineHomesInc., 2511 SWIndian Lane, $110,600 •DunlapFineHomesInc., 3050 NWCanyonDrive, $254,347 •DunlapFineHomesInc., 3070 NWCanyon Drive, $262,534
en i r m COnneC S l nV|'S OI'S 0
I'1 CB
• Founder andCEOKeith Wright hasdeeproots in the continent
u over race conversations By Sydney Ember New York Times News Service
Scrawled on Starbucks cups,
the words"Race Together" were intended to stimulate conversations about race re-
lations in America, beginning just days before the company's annual shareholders meeting Wednesday. But the coffee company's campaign has instead unleashed widespread h
/
w~~elts-
vitriol and derision. The company effort, which began this week, lit up social media, drawing criticism and skepticism. The attacks grew
relati ons campaign accompanied by the stagecraft of African-American guest speakers such as Academy Award winnerCommon and ending with Jennifer Hudson's rousing rendition of "Hallelujah" at the dose of the presentation.
"Race is an unorthodox
and even uncomfortable topic
for an annual meeting," he acknowledged. "Where others see costs, risks, excuses and
hopelessness, we seeand create pathways of opportunity — that is the role and respon-
so hostile that Corey duBrowa,
sibility of a for-profit, public company." The company has said in
the senior vice president for global communications at Star- statements that the"Race Tobucks, temporarily deleted his gether" initiative stems from Twitter account Monday.
a meeting that Schultz called
attacked in a cascade of nega-
in December at the company's headquarters in Seattle to
tivity," duBrowa wrote Tuesday
discuss racial tension. Police
in a post on Medium. The fury and confusion
shootings involvingthe deaths of African-Americans had
boiled down to a simple ques-
turned race relations into a na-
tion: What was Starbucks thinking?
tional conversation, and he said he wanted the gatheringto pro-
"Last night I felt personally
Andy Tuiiis/The Bulletin
Thrive Global founder and CEO Keith Wright, standing in his Bend office, advises clients on business opportunities available in Africa.
By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin
Keith Wright spent 11
years living and working in Nairobi, Kenya, with a charitable organization, Food for
the Hungry, before moving with his family to Bend in 2014.
"The growth rates get people's attention. Either six or seven of the fastest-growing economies on the planet are in sub-Saharan Africa. To be sure, that sort of masks the reality that these aren't huge economies." — Keith Wright
Central Oregon is a little bit disconnected from the rest of the world, he said, but that hasn't hindered his
continent. The downside is,
creating an advisory firm
Economic growth in sub-Saharan Africa is ex-
with an international reach, Thrive Global LLC. The firm
aims to find business opportunities in Africa and steer
investment capital there. "I would say that my kind
it's tiny."
pected to increase by 5.2
percent in the coming year, up from 4.6percent last year, according to The World Bank. By contrast, the U.S.
gy Systems, a Whitefish, Montana-based firm and a Thrive Global client. "My job is to get them in there in some scale, as kind of the new player in the energy storage space," Wright said.
economy grew by 2.4 percent
makes storage batteries the
necting good people, good capital, good ideas with
in 2014, according to the U.S. Commerce Department. The
the African marketplace,"
numbers conceal significant
Wright said recently, "not running guns, not selling cigarettes. There are a number of ways to make a buck
differences.
in Africa."
the fastest-growing economies on the planet are in
sizeofrailcarsbasedon zinc/iron chemistry. The units are good for storing power generated by renewable sources like solar and wind, said ViZn Energy Systems Vice President Del Allison. Wright said he sees practical applications for the technology in Africa in offthe-grid rural areas and in urban areas where electrical
As president of Food for the Hungry, Wright sat atop
said. "Either six or seven of sub-Saharan Africa. To be
a Christian organization with a $120 million budget,
sure, that sort of masks the reality that these aren't huge
about 200 employees and a
economies."
presence in 20 countries. His
Obstacles to progress exist at every level, starting
wife, Heidi Wright, has family in Central Oregon, which
with extreme poverty. While
drew them and their four children to Bend.
economicgrowth picked up moderately in 2014, it did so
In Africa, Wright spent much of his time in places
likeUganda, Mozambique, Kenya and Rwanda. For peo-
power is intermittent. ViZn
Energy Systems could replace costly diesel generators with a clean source of power,
despite miners' strikes in
he said. The firm has a "strong
South Africa, oil shortages in Angola and the Ebola
relationship" with Thrive Global, Allison said.
outbreak in West Africa, The
ple who tend to see Africa as
World Bank reported. For-
one big country, Wright is there to make distinctions. "Kenya is a good prospect. It has an incredible human resources base, incredibly sharp folks," he said. "Rwanda has, by miles, the best business climate on the
eign direct investment also declined, the bank reported. However, investment in public infrastructure such as
ports, roadways and capacity for generating electricity increased. That's an encour-
"These guys are a top-quality organization, is how I would describe it. Having Keith on the street
and being aware of the cultural and business nuances in each specific country is critical to success." — Reporter: 541-617-7815,
aging sign for ViZn Ener-
jditzler@bendbulletin.com
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • Labor tit Human Resources: Agricultural business workshop; learn where to makechanges to increase efficiencies and prioritize needs; $10, registration requested; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. SUNDAY • Nest Caravans launch party: The Tumaio company plans to celebrate the launching of its prototype travel trailer; 5 p.m. The Cube, atCement Elegance, 50 SE Scott St., Bend; info©nestcaravans. com. TUESDAY • SCORE free business counseling: Business counselors conductfree 30-minuteone-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor;
5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. MARCH 26 • EDCO March Pubtalk: Several speakers and company pitches; $20 members, $30 nonmembers; 5 p.m.7:30 p.m.; McMenamins, 700 NW BondSt., Bend; 541-388-3236 x. 3; www. edcoinfo.com/events. • Summer Jobs Fair: Job opportunities include pool and tennis attendants, lifeguards, summer camp counselors, food and beverage,retail and customer service positions; 9 a.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver or 541-585-5000. MARCH 31 • Word for Beginners: Introduction to Microsoft Word. Learn to navigate menus, get help feature, type and edit text and save and open adocument.
some hostile online attacks aimed at corporate executives.
Others pleaded foramore traditional relationship with the
vide an outlet for discussion.
Schultz defended the campaign in closingout the shareholders meeting Wednesday, contendingthat the company should take a leadership role on such social issues.
The companybegan introducingtheeffortM onday,en-
businesses they patronize.
Gwen Ifill, the co-anchor of "PBS NewsHour," wrote in a tweet'Itiesday: "Honest to God,
couraging its baristas to write
if you start to engage me in a race conversationbefore I've had my morning coffee, it will
to hand out stickers withthat
"Race Together" on customers' coffeecups andpushingthem slogan.
not end well."
Starbucks said it would sup-
At the Wednesday gathering in Seattle, Howard Schultz, the
chief executive of Starbucks, addressed the nascent public
port employees who engaged with customers on the issue, though it is not directly asking employees to do so.
ViZn Energy Systems
of personal mission is con-
"The growth rates get people's attention," Wright
Reactions have ranged from video parodies of customer interactions withbaristas to
scorecentraioregon.org. APRIL 2 • HiDEC April Event, Transforming your company's culture: A session that combines real-life examples, OI Q. stories and solutions APRIL1 for various challenges • Introduction to Visio: around company culture; Learn fundamental skills $55 members; $95 nonwhile creating several members, registration types of basic diagrams required; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; including workflows, Bend Park & Recreation fiowcharts, organizational District Office, 799 SW charts, directional maps, Columbia St.; 541-388networkand floor plans; 3236 or lessi@edcoinfo. registration required; com. • Managing Diversity in class runs through June 3; Wednesdays; $360; the Workplace: Part of the 12:45 p.m.-3:05 p.m., Leadership Series; develop Central Oregon Community strategies to capitalize College BendCampus, on diversity as an asset 2600 NWCollegeW ay, in your work group. Registration required; $95; Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ 8a.m.-noon; COCCBend continuinged. Campus, 2600 NW College • SCORE free business Way, Bend; 541-383workshop: Managing your 7270 or www/cocc/edu/ operations; registration continuinged. required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public • For the complete calendar, Library, 601 NWWall St.; pick up Sunday'sBulletin or 541-617-7080 or www. visit bendbulletin.com/bizcal
RetailersurgeCongressto protect from data breaches By Shan Li Los Ange(es Times
The world's largest retail
trade group urged Congress to tighten consumer protections for data breaches that have
plagued retailers and other companies in recent years. In testimony before a con-
gressional subcommittee on technology, David French of the National Retail Federation
on Wednesday said the government should expand liability protection for people using debit cards, pass a nationwide
with simply determining what to do after a data breach occurs," said French, the group's seniorvicepresidentforgovernment relations. The push by the National Re-
tail Federation comes at atime when many corporationsincluding Target, Home Depot and Neiman Marcus — have been targeted by hackers plundering customer information. As a safeguard, some U.S. retailers have said they will
sensitive data in the event of a
adopt debit and credit cards with embedded microchips, already used in many other countries, in place of cards with magnetic strips that
breach and boost the prosecu-
store personal information,
tion of cybercriminals.
which canbe more easily counterfeited.
notification law that will
inform all parties handling
"We should not be satisfied
••
f •
•
Prerequisites: Computers for Beginners; free; registration required; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7085 or www.deschuteslibrary.
Ind u s t r i a l 80hoy 1.9 acres M-1 Zoning Ochoco Creek frontage - rough shape
- $1 1 $ , 0 0 0 I I
I
••/•
•
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Money, D2 Medicine, D3
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
Oregon price transparencyproposals Two bills introduced in the Oregon Senate seek to increase price transparency in health care procedures, but would do it in different
SENATE BILL 891 What information would be provided?
SENATE BILL 900
Science hasdecided
coffee isgoodfor you
Contracted charges to insurers for top 100 most common inpatient procedures and 100 most common outpatient procedures
Median prices paid by insurers for 50 most common inpatient procedures and 100 most common outpatient procedures
By David Templeton
Who would post the information?
Licensed health care facilities (not including long-term care facilities and most individual practitioner clinics)
Department of Consumer and Business Services
caused a stir over health
Where would consumers find the information?
On individual providers' websites and in facilities or directly, if requested by patient
Aggregated onto a consumer-friendly website operated by the Oregon Health Authority
impacts, good or bad, with many people resigned to accept it as a guilty pleasure. But in a full turnabout
Where would the information come from?
Contracts between health care providers and insurers
Insurance providers, both commercial and government
Upfront cost estimates for patients?
Required in bill; nullifies contract provisions that prevent disclosure
Hospitals and health systems have voluntarily agreed to provide cost estimates
Source: Oregon Legislative Assembly, 2015 regular session
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
For centuries, coffee has
generally healthful drink and kick-start for adults,
in healthy adults," the report
with cautions for pregnant
states in awarding coffee a "strong" grade. "It's long overdue
since the 1980s, science now extols its virtues as a
women and those with caffeine sensitiv-
ity and sleeping disorders.
NUT RITION for them," according to the author of "Uncommon Grounds: the
The U.S. Department of
Transformed Our World." eYou can't study people as
erate consumption "can be
you do rats," said Mark Pend-
incorporated into a healthy
ergrast, a Harvard-educated
lifestyle." The recently released
independent scholar. "There have been many mistakes in confusing causality with
visory Committee, avail-
ularly for those who don't
health." As it turns out, the beanlike seeds inside the coffee
add cream and sugar and limit daily consumption to
plant's red and purpleberries can reduce the risk of type 2
three to five cups and no
diabetes by 36 percent with
more than 400 milligrams of caffeine.
protective effects against liver and endometrial cancers.
referencesto coffee,m ost of them favorable, partic-
It'sthe firsttime the
Slight benefits were noted
committee has addressed the health effects of
forother cancers the report didn't identify. See Coffee/D4
coffee and caffeine. Ev-
providersbe expected to do the same? That's a question posed by Jesse Ellis O'Brien, a health care advocate with the Oregon State Public Interest Research Group, or OSPIRG, Foundation, a Portland-based consumer advocacy group.
correlation. But, in general,
it seems that coffee now is getting a pretty clean bill of
able online, includes 209
prices on the products that line its aisle, so why can't health care
History of Coffee and How It
its dark history and mod-
2015 Scientific Report of the Dietary Guidelines Ad-
o one argues it would be too burdensome for Wal-Mart to post
sumption of coffee within the
moderate range ... is not associated with increased risk of major chronic diseases, such as cardiovascular disease and cancer and premature death
Agriculture now agrees thatcoffeedoesn'tdeserve
By Tara Bannowe The Bulletin
ery five years, the USDA uses the report to establish science-based dietary guidelines. "Strong and consistent evidence shows that con-
s technoogyinterfering with your workout? By Nora Krug Over the past 20-plus years, I've developed an
music had become a crutch. Did I really need them to get thro ugh my workout — to ma k e it count? The only way
unhealthy relationship
to fi n d out was to get rid of
The Washington Post
with my workout gadgets. my devices. No music, no It started with a Walkapps, no watch. I'd run the
"I don't see that it's fundamentally all that different," he said.
man, then escalated to
same 5K route and check
a jumpy Discman, just
only t he kitchen clock when
about every version of
I l eft a n d when I returned. At
surers onto a single website. h o s pital could see those pricesnearly 19 percent of the cost Aspatients are saddled post e dinadvance, theymight of the test, according to an with higher deductibles and re a l ize they can get a much August 2014 article in Health co-pays on their insurance bet t er deal by just driving for a Affairs. policies, transparency adhalf an hour or whatever it is," The problem is, the cost of vocates say knowing what a h e said. health care can be tremenprocedure willcostahead of M e m bers of the Senate's dously complex, making price time isbecomingincreasingly healthcarecommitteewill transparency far from simple. important. That's debate both bills at a Polling by the Oregon especially true given M O NEY Mar c h 25 hearing. Association of Hospitals and the dramatic variation Some research has Health Systems has shown in cost depending on where sh o wn that increasing price thatmost importantly, those you'relocatedandwhichpro- transparencycancuthealth with health insurance — now
the iPod and finally an the g ym, I'd leave the headiPhone with music synced phones at home and turn to the Nike+ app. As songs off the data screen. And the blasted through my head- r est of my weekly workouts phones, I pushed myself wou l d include outdoor swims for the inspirational and yoga. In other mile-markercallFITN E S S w o rds,theunplugged outs and drove workout. myself harder to hear Given the array of fitness Olympic stars like Sanya t e c hnology now available Richard Ross congratuto h elp make exercise more late me: "Great job getting e ntertaining, efficient and out there!" I compared my
i nf o r mative — smartphone
about 95percent ofO regonians — want to knowwhat
weekly pace charts, de-
app s , activity trackers,
lature, Senate Bill900, also aimed at price transparency.
vider you choose. An OSPIRG c a re waste, which the Instianalysis, for example, found t ut e of Medicine estimates that ahospitalinthe McMinna m o u nts to $105billion an-
vised playlists that would motivate me on hills
tr ic k e d-out watches like the
This one, however, would take adiff erentapproach:Rather than having providers post the information, state officials would aggregate data from in-
ville area charged for some nua l ly. Patients in 2012 who services four times that of hos- were given price estimates pitals inthe Portlandmetro, be f ore choosingwhere to Ellis O'Brien said. receive mammograms saved "If the people going to that a n average of $220 per test, or
pocket after their insurance
(yes, they almost always included "Born to Run") and faithfully analyzed the digital record of my
OSPIRG is advocating for a
proposal in the Oregon Legislature, Senate Bill 891, that would require licensed health
care providers inthe state to post on their websites and in their facilities charges for their
most common health care services. Upon request, they would also have to provide
cost estimates toprospective patients. The measure is very similar to anotherbefore the legis-
they're goingto pay out of
carrier picks up its portion of the bill, said OAHHS CEO Andy Davidson. See Transparency/D2
As patients are saddled with higher deductibles and co-pays on their insurance policies, transparency advocates say knowing what a procedure will cost ahead of time is becoming increasingly important.
Then my app crashed. At first I was upset, but in
new Apple Watch, which gi v es you "credit" for the sim p le act of standing up fro m your chair and moving — some people might question the value of going retro. (What's next for me, eating l i k e a cavewoman?) But also
my frantic efforts to fix
I wond e r : Have we all gotten
achievements.
the problem, I came face- a bit too dependent on tech to-face with an uncomfee d back? fortable truth: Data and See Technology /D4
Volunteers in Medicine provides students unique training • Bend free clinic is a popular rotation spot for OHSU students By Tara Bannow
ent cultural interaction with
The Bulletin
health," she said. "It's nice to understand that a little bit
Cydney Heims' patients at Volunteers in Medicine in Bend are much different
from those at Bend Memorial Clinic or St. Charles Health
System. For one, most don't haveinsurance and allarelow income — requirements of the
clinic. Many are Hispanic and speak Spanish, which gives Heims, a third-year medical
student at Oregon Health and Science University, a chance to use the language she learned growing up in Portland.
"There is kind of a differ-
at Volunteers in Medicine, so they're more receptive to talking to students and shar-
ing their stories with them." only free clinic on the roster. Students who perform rotaPeg g y O'Neill, the medical tions at small clinics like Volbetter." student education administra- unteers in Medicine also tend Heims is working at the tor i n OHSU's family medicine to get more hands-on expericlinic as part of her rotation, depa r t ment, said she wishes ence with patients compared or clerkship, in famstudents had more to those who do so at OHSU ily medicine. In their M ED I C IN E o pportunities to learn or other academic medical third year of medical about treating diverse centers. In those settings, school, doctors in training and l ow-income populations, there are residents, medical try their hands at different but t h ere aren't many clinics school graduates receiving specialties — things like that accept students, an agree- supervised training, who have emergency medicine, obment that requires the clinics' seniority over third-year medstetrics and gynecology and d o c tors to serve as mentors. ical students. "The patient population "A lot of times you're eipediatrics — to decide which one they'll ultimately choose. h as a tendency to be a little ther shadowing or you're not Students fulfill their family mor e receptive to students," working as closely with the medicine rotations at dozens sh e said. "They're grateful for patients," Heims said. of clinics across the state, but t h e medical care they receive See Med students/D3 Volu n t eers in Medicine is the
4'4
aM~
,
~
s
t
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Cydney Heime, a medical student from Oregon Health and Science University in Portland, discusses a prescription with Maria Terrazae Jimenez following an appointment at Volunteers in Medicine in Bend on March10.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
MONEY
Teeme icineo ersess expensivean convenient optionsor octors, patients
HEALTH EVENTS
TODAY NO PAIN — LIFE GAIN:Managing Stress: Learn to manage your brain-pain experience with simple stress reduction techniques; 5:30 p.m.; Healing Bridge Physical Therapy, 404 NE Penn Ave., Bend; 541-318-7041. UNDERSTANDINGTHEABC'S AND D'S OF MEDICARE:Learn more about who is eligible for Medicare, what is covered, what is not covered and the enrollment timelines; 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, 1386 NE Cushing
Drive, Bend;www.midoregon.com or 541-382-1795.
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110,
Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or
Shockney, RN, BS,MAS, will speak on "Finding Humor where you least expect it: A Nurse's personal journey with Breast
Cancer"; 8 a.m.; $15for general public, $65 for professionals seeking CEU's; St. Charles Bend, 2500 NE Neff Road, Bend; www. stcharleshealthcare.org or 541-706-7743.
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 11 a.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
TUESDAY
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; noon; Sunriver Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
800-RED-CROSS.
SATURDAY 2015 REGIONALBREAST CANCER ISSUES CONFERENCE:Lillie
proximately $1 billion in 2016
The Seattle Times
to $6 billion by 2020.
S EATTLE — O n
MONDAY
800-RED-CROSS. CAREGIVER TRAINING: Understanding Medicines: Learn about understanding medicines in older adults; 9 a.m.; free, registration required; Red Lion Hotel, 1415 NE Third St., Bend or 800-930-6851. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; noon; First Baptist Church, 450 SE Fairview Drive, Prineville; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
By Patrick Marshall New
In Washington state, for ex-
Year's Eve, singer Kim Archer was scheduled to perform at a party. The problem was she had an asthma attack early in the day and didn't have any medicine. She searchedthe Internet for quick help and found
ample, Premera Blue Cross, the state's largest insurer, began offering its telemedicine services this year. "The industry is moving toward offering people access to care at a place and time that is convenient to them," said Rich
Franciscan Urgent Virtual
Maturi, senior vice president of Premera's Health Care Deliv-
the next 30 to 40 minutes. About 20 minutes later I got
Matt Levi, director of virtual health services at CHI Francis-
providers," said Carena CEO build it right into their plans," Ralph Derrickson. "That visit Derrickson said. "With generis going to last about 20 min-
al insurance with third-party
utes and when it is done, if you need a prescription, it will be phoned in to a pharmacy." The first thing Carena care providers do during a virtual
payers, it varies." According t o Ch e lene Whiteaker, policy director of the Washington State Hospital
visit is to determine whether
the consumer's issue is appro-
about insurance coverage for telemedicine has slowed its
priate for virtual care.
adoption.
isn't an option and that they
"Hospitals and health systems
Association, the uncertainty
"We have clinical software "Our hospital members said Care. and decision-support software to us that they would really "I dialed the number and ery System. that we've developed that is like to explore providing sergot a person on the phone CHI Franciscan Health has rules-based," Derrickson said. vices via telemedicine, but that who was very helpful," Ar- helped pioneer telemedicine "We start that visit with an as- they were running into signifcher said. "They told me in Washington state, offering sessment. If we can't help that icant barriers from insurance we could either connect virtual health services since patient, we're goingto tell them plans not wanting to pay for by Skype or telephone in October 2013. right upfront that virtual care the services," Whiteaker said. need to be seen." a call, so the wait was hard- can Health, said his company's The University of Washingly anything." Virtual Urgent Care program ton School of Medicine has Archer says the physician — which allows consumers to also turned to Carena for a took the time to "really get receive care 24/7 via phone or telemedicine service. Starting to know my situation." After video chat on smartphone, tab- in January, it began offering 20 minutes, the physician let or PC — has been a win-win virtual visits via webcams on wrote a prescription, which for both the hospital system computers, tablets and smartwas phoned in to a pharma- and consumers. p hones. Consultations c a n cy. By 9 that night, she was usually take place within a half-hour of the initial call and on the stage. "And the show Savingtime andmoney "We put the cost of this at cost $40. was great," she said. Just as important, Ar$35, thinking that was very cher says, the virtual visit similar to the coinsurance a lot Easier atxess cost only $35. of patients pay at a normal priDerrickson says a number mary-care office," said Levi. of factors have given a critical Growing interest "And for us, without having boost to telemedicine. First, Increasingly, health care the bricks and mortar, and all rapid growth in bandwidth providers are turning to of the additional staff that go and availability of devices with telehealth — physician ser- along with the visit, it's cer- built-in video have made the vices provided over a video tainly a lower-cost alternative service feasibleforconsumers. or telephone connectionto emergency-room visits." Second, changes under the to save dollars and deliver Telemedicine has dramati- Affordable Care Act have procare toremote areas or to cally decreased the number of vided incentives for consumpatients who may have dif- times patients page Francis- ers. With more people having ficulty getting to medical can Health's on-call providers, health insurance that often facilities. Levi said, adding that there's has higher deductibles than in
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; St. Thomas Catholic Church, 1720 NW 19th St., Redmond;
www.redcrossblood.org or
WEDNESDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
The American Medical
been a 50percent reduction in
the past, many consumers are
the number of times Franciscan doctors are awakened by and delivery of services at calls in the middle of the night. "Right now (it) takes on avits annual meeting in June
responsible for the full amount of a doctor's visit instead of just paying a $20 to $25 co-payment, Derrickson said. Still, telemedicine services may not be covered by a consumer's insurance p lans. "Many sel f-insured companies
Association endorsed the use of remote monitoring
How to submit Events:Email eventinformation to healthevents©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before thedesired date ofpublication. Ongoing class listings must beupdatedmonthly and will appear online at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend
2014. At the same time, the organization noted that the
market for telemedicine is expected to grow from ap-
erage about 12 minutes from the time you tell us that you want to visit to the time you're on the phone with one of our
are not making investments from this technology because of the payment uncertainty."
Whiteaker said her organization has pushed for legislation in the past two legislatures
requiring insurers to cover procedures delivered via telemedicine that were already
covered for regular visits. State Sen. Randi Becker introduced such legislation in
January as Senate Bill 5175. At Franciscan's Virtual Ur-
gent Care, the results have so far been positive, said Levi, the director of virtual health.
"We have gotten a 96 percent satisfaction rate from our patients, which is really high even for our on-site dinic," he sald. Levi sees telemedicine not
only as a convenience, but also as a way to extend care to those who may not be within
reachofadoctor'soffice. Whiteaker added that the Affordable Care Act will like-
ly increase the need for telemedicine. "We are going to be seeing more people with insurance coverage and in some rural areas we know that they're
not going to be enough specialists," Whiteaker said.
bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
basis, collectively, with Transparency untary broad support from the indusContinued from 01 To that end, his organization, which represents
PEOPLE • Dr. Allson Little,M.D., M.P.H., has joined PacificSource Community Solutions as the medical director for Medicaid programs. Little previously served as senior medical director for the Center for Evidence-based Policyat Oregon Health andScience University. Little received her Bachelor of Science degree from Pacific University in Forest Grove and her master's degree from the University of Washington, and her
M.D. from the Medical College of Wisconsin. Little is a board-certified family physician. • Jennlfer Welanderhas been named as chief financial officer for St. Charles Health System. Welander has worked for St. Charles since 2009, and is a certified public accountant with a bachelor's degree in accounting and a master's degree inbusiness administration from the University of ES Oregon.
most hospitals and health
systems in Oregon, supports Senate Bill 9 00, which would require the
Oregon Health Authority to organize existing data insurers contribute to Ore-
gon's All Payer All Claims database, onto a new, consumer-friendly
w eb s ite.
That database currently includes all claims paid by health insurers, but does
FITNESS EVENTS
TODAY EQUINOX CELEBRATION:Explore the fusion of the ancient practices
ofyogaand shamanism.Spaceis limited, reserve your spot; 6 p.m.; $30, registration suggested; Sol Alchemy, 568 NE Savannah Drive, ¹2, Bend; www.solalchemy.com or 541-285-4972.
FRIDAY EQUINOX CELEBRATION: "Merging with the Medicine Wheel" Journey (Sacred Sound 8 Shamanic Ceremony): Explore the fusion of sacred sound and ancient shamanism. Space is
not publicly contain information about i n d ividual providers. Th e m e asure
limited, RSVP required; 6:30 p.m.; $30; Sunburst Retreat Center, 67155 Sunburst St., Bend; www. solalchemy.comor541-285-4972.
calls for the information to be broken down by provider, Davidson said. F or those without i n surance, Davidson s a id OAHHS members h ave
SATURDAY WOMEN'S EQUINOX CELEBRATION:Featuring a hike, meditation and some yoga and create connections with other women; 1 p.m.; free; Smith Rock State Park, Terrebonne; 541-285-4972.
committed to voluntarily providing good-faith estimates ofwhat procedures are going to cost, outside of the legislation. "We felt that it was far better to do that on a vol-
tion released last month found point,both measures reprein some cases, post-procedure sent "ideal" scenarios, Kohlertry, than it is to have folks cre- costs, such as rehabilitation, iter-Perelman said. Catalyst ate a mandate to do that," he can cost as much as 30 percent for Payment Reform prefers sard. of the total cost. Providing an centralized websites, howevSenate Bill 891, by contrast, accurate cost estimate requires er, which make comparison would call upon l icensed providers to look at other costs shopping simpler, she said. It health care facilities to post c ommonly a ssociated w i t h also supports the use of APAC online and in-house their con- procedures, Kohleri ter-Perel- datain price transparency eftractedrates forcommon pro- man sald. forts because it shows what in"It's about being thoughtful surers actually paid compared cedures with about 10 commercial health insurers plus upfront and giving the con- with what hospitals charge, Medicare, Medicaid and state- sumer as much information as which is less meaningful. run public plans. The mea- possible about the care they're In Davidson's mind, Senate sure would apply to hospitals, likely to need for that condi- Bill 891 is far too burdensome health systems and commu- tion so that they can really get for p r oviders an d d o esn't nity clinics, but not long-term a full picture," she said. display information in a concare facilities or, in most cases, Oftentimes, contracts be- sumer-friendly fashion. But individual doctor's offices, El- tween insurers and providers Ellis O'Brien said it's importlis O'Brien said. They would contain provisions that pre- ant that the information come also have to provide upfront ventrates from being shared, from providers themselves, cost estimates to patients who but Senate Bill 891 contains a because it will keep the conasked for them, including fa- provision that would nullify versation between providers cility fees and physician fees. those. and patients. "We think it w il l actually Even cost estimates from Such provisions, called providers don't always reflect nondisclosure clauses, have strengthen the doctor-patient what patients will pay, said Ni- proven to be significant barri- relationship," he said, "and encole Kohleriter-Perelman, di- ers to price transparency na- able consumers to start having rector of communications and tionwide, Kohleriter-Perelman more meaningful, frank, upspecial projects for the Catalyst said. front conversations with their "If Oregon could do that, I for Payment Reform, a nonhealth care providers about profit that works to improve the would say that would be very cost and value." payment system for health ser- impressive," she said. — Reporter: 541-383-0304, vices. A report her organizaFrom the consumer standtbannow@bendbuifetin.com
DISPATCHES • The Centerhas announced that its orthopedic physicians will begin seeing patients at a new clinic starting April15. The clinic is located inside the Bend Memorial Clinic in the Old Mill District located at 815 SWBond St. in Bend.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D3
MEDICINE
Some parents go to extremes to keep Tetanusshot mayaid their kids away from unvauinated brain cancertreatment By Emily Foxhall Los Angeles Times
By Malcolm Ritter
injections of their own cells,
The Associated Press
spaced two weeks apart. Then they were random-
NEW YORK — Can a teta-
book page where parents could arrange play dates for
nus shot help treat brain can- ly divided into two groups. cer? A small study hints that One group got a second, tiny it might. dose of the tetanus-diphtheA dose of tetanus vaccine ria vaccine at the place in the
their children with other vac-
let patients live longer when
cinated youngsters. Another mom advocates socially isolating the unvaccinated by asking parents if their child is inoculated before accepting a birthday invitation, or even using the swings at the playground. And a Los Angeles mom says she now asks about vaccine records when she buys used baby clothing.
added to an
LOS ANGELES — A Bay Area mother formed a Face-
The f i erce
treatment to work better in
childhood vaccines is prompting some parents to take extreme measures to make sure
o
their children are segregated from the unvaccinated.
the Duke University Medical
-A'~ae"a" e
Some who got the tetanus
point?" said Heather PeterBob Chamberlin/LosAngeles Times
Retno Sulstrijo, left, holds Soraya Wallitsch, 2, as she and Dillan Handman, 3, along with instructor Benny Harnish, play at the piano and learn music at Toddle Tunes in Los Angeles. The business offers
music enrichment for kids and has recently banned anyone who is not vaccinated, unless it is for
medical reasons, from attending class. Some say its the first place they finally feel safe taking their w o r r i some v accine kids after the measles outbreak.
record. The current measles outbreak has heightened the concern. Pasadena mother A r i el Loop took all the precautions
she felt necessary to protect her newborn son, getting shots during her pregnancy and keeping him housebound until he was about 2 months old. Loop and her husband waited until their son Mobius received the vaccine for diph-
Mumps Meet ups," where before paying tuition and parents could easily arrange agreeing to do even munplay dates with other vacci- dane things that might put a nated children. child at risk, such as sharing "You want to feel safe tak- swings, attending parties or ing your kids out to play," holding elevator doors. It's unfair, she said, for parsaid Hybiske, who has since moved to Seattle and started ents to be pushed into isolaa similar group there. tion because others refuse or L.A. mother Rachel Deutsch are slow to have their chilsaid she now asks about vac- dren vaccinated. "We shouldn't be skipping cination before buying or accepting used baby clothing or birthday parties," she said. gear from other parents and "We shouldn't be afraid to go balks at taking her infant son to school." to events where there could be Some parents have found a crowd — though she couldn't refuge at private institutions
theria, pertussis and tetanus before finally taking him to Disneyland, she said. But two weeks after a January visit to the theme park, resist taking him recently to a a red rash appeared on their new playground that opened son. nearby. "There's just no way," Loop "You can't totally live in a said she thought. "No way." bubble," Deutsch said. "I don't Mobius' fever h o vered want to be a paranoid, crazy below 102 degrees. Loop, a person." nurse, gave him Tylenol and Deutsch has s upported a cool bath, but his tempera- pending state legislation that ture raged. So they went to would restrict vaccine exthe emergency room that emptions to medical needs afternoon, calling ahead to and views tougher laws as a ensure they could bypass the way to keep children out of harm's way. waiting area. Days later they received Leah Russin, a Palo Alto, the diagnosis: measles. C alifornia, m o ther, s a i d The fear of having a child she's also jumped aboard the contract a contagious child- movement to tighten laws on hood disease has grown in vaccine exemptions. "I see this as hand in hand recent years, prompting some parents to r ethink choic- with raising my son," said es and activities that once Russin, who spoke from the seemed innocuous. perspectiveof a w orried par"It's still scary bringing ent at the news conference inhim out, but there's only so troducing the proposed legal paranoid you can be," Loop changes.
safe bringing my family," she wrote.
Wegner and her husband had delayed some shots during their son's first year because of health reasons. After months of keeping h im mostly a t
h ome and
avoiding m o m my-and-me groups and even trips to the grocery store, Wegner en-
enrichment program for infants and children.
The West Los A ngeles business announced last
Med students
in more complex cases. The medical directors, both doc-
Continued from 01 icine, Heims meets with pa-
ter for patients who got the
the results. A follow-up study
them lived almost five years
small, and said bigger stud- mini-shot of tetanus. Four ies are needed to confirm surpassed two years. One of has already been planned and another nearly six years. but isn't recruiting patients Still another is approaching nine years and counting. yet, Batich said. Brain cancer experts un- She is Sandy Hillburn, 68, of c onnected with t h e w o r k
Fort Lee, New Jersey.
were impressed. The results are "very exciting," said Dr. Nader Sanai of the Barrow Neurological
New York in April 2006, "I was told I had two to three months to live," she recalled
W hen
d i agnosed i n
up with excitement.
mended for c h ildren and
There is a "happy medium" between sealing kids in their rooms and endangering them, said David Ziring, a Toddle 'Ibnes parent and associateprofessor ofpediat-
adults.
rics at UCLA's David Geffen
School of Medicine. Ziring and his wife pulled
month that only vaccinated children, or those with medi-
ising but noted the study was
thankful for a clean space, a strict sick policy and a program that made his face light
rolled him in Toddle Tunes,
with stricter vaccine policies such as Toddle Tunes, a music
about 3'/z years. Still, overall
shot lived years longer than results for this group indicatthose who didn't. ed a small benefit from the Dr. John Sampson of cell injections alone, Batich Duke, senior author of the re- said. The results were far betport, called the results prom-
in a telephone interview. he agreed more work is reBut her family flew her quired, "what you have so to Duke in North Carolina far, it's a very positive story." because of its reputation for Tetanus i s oth e r w i se glioblastoma care, and she known as lockjaw. Vaccines was offered a slot in the exfor it are routinely recom- perimental study.
cal reasons for not being vac- their daughter out of a precinated, would be permitted school after another child in class. contracted whooping cough. "We feel it's our duty to They plan to keep her in a priprotectthem as much as we vate school program where can," said Lisa Mueller, Tod- vaccines are required. dle Tunes owner and chief fiAnd as a pediatric gastronancial officer. enterologist, Ziring sometimes When the measles out- wears a mask when seeing break began, some of the an unvaccinated patient. The youngest students stopped next child he sees could be a coming to class. But after transplant patient who may the policy change, parents not have been able to stay of most of their 700 students up to date on vaccines. Plus, praised the decision, sent his 2-year-old is not yet old in vaccination records and enough to be fully immunized. Every time he walks into a breathed "huge sighs of reroom with an unvaccinated lief," Mueller said. said of her now 5-month-old Jenna Karvunidis, a mothOne mother, Beth Wegn- child, Ziring says, his responson. "What am I going to do, er of t hree who recently er, joined dozens of others sibility to protect his daughnot take him to the market?" moved to L .A . a n d w r i t es in expressing thanks on the ter comes to mind. "It's not necessarily about Bay Area mother Joce- about feminism and social company's Facebook page: lyn Hybiske helped form a issues, urged other parents to "Toddle Tunes is now official- personal liberty as much as it Facebook group called "No ask about vaccination rates ly the first public place I feel is about public health."
But at Volunteers in Med-
monthly until brain scans
Center. showed tumors growing. In a pa p e r r e leased For the six patients who Wednesday by the journal got the dummy shot, only Nature, she and others de- one was still alive two years scribe a study of 12 patients. after diagnosis, surviving for
"If you can't keep your kids healthy, then what's the
had a
more excited about what's to
attacking the disease, said come," Sampson said. researcher Kristen Batich of Cell injections continued
,ri ss,-':4 f
d ebate o v er
son, who applied to a new preschool after learning that the second-language French and Spanish i m mersion school her daughter attends
skin where the cells would
e xperimen- be injected the next day. The tal treatment for the most othergroup got a dummy common and deadly kind dose. of brain tumor, researchers The idea behind the tetareport. nus mini-shot was that the It "put the immune system immune system "gets revved on high alert," paving the up in this particular area" way for the experimental so that "the body will be
Institute in Phoenix. While
"I was very
p ositive it
would help," Hillburn said. The new study focused on "I said, 'Sure, thank you.' I'm glioblastoma, which killed still saying thank you." Massachusetts Sen. Edward In the years since then, she Kennedy in 2009. Even after has attended her son's wedsurgery toremove the tu- ding and gained five more mor, it usually grows back g randchildren. Now s h e and kills. The few drugs to plays soccer with six grandtreat these tumors have lit-
sons in Ohio and Boston.
"I look forward to seeing the wonderful people they're becoming," she said. ample of a l ong-standing She continues to visit
tle effect. Half of patients die within about 15 months. The new work is an ex-
e ffort to h a rness the i m -
Duke once a month for more
mune system to fight cancer, an approach called immunotherapy. The specific strategy it used is called a dendritic-cell
cell injections. Sampson said it's not clear why she has lived so long.
vaccine. D octors
Hillburn credits the treat-
ment and her medical care
r e move at Duke. She also cited the
particular blood cells from a example of her father, who is patient and equip them with a 97-year-old survivor of two a chemical target found in the tumor. Then they return
kinds of cancer. "He just went about his
the cells to the patient's body, life, and so I did the same where they train the immune thing," Hillburn said. system togo afterthecancer. The study was funded in The 12 patients in the part bya government grant new study were treated with
to a business venture that
surgery, radiation and che- is licensing the technology. motherapy. All patients got Some of the authors have an ordinary t etanus-diph-
filed patents related to the
theria shot and then three
tetanus strategy.
around."
Charles hospitals and BMC,
tors, also sign off on patients'
Volunteers in Medicine has been taking on medical stu-
w hich t r ai n m e d ical s t u - price." dents in a number of different — Reporter: 541-383-0304,
prescriptions.
dents for about the past six
specialties.
"I think a lot of times we treat them more like doctors
years. In that time, Ritzen-
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
50 earsa er o twarnin,smo in war ersists By Barbara Sadick Chicago Tribune
More than 50 years after the
was banned from television and radio. Since then, accord-
o rganizations k n o w wh a t needs to be done to reduce
ing to the surgeon general's of-
the number of smokers and prevent kids from starting
first U.S. surgeon general's re- fice, adult smoking rates have port on its dangers, smoking been cut in half. remains the leading cause of Those who continue to preventable disease and death smoke may subject themselves in the United States. A nd almost three out of
to at least 11 kinds of cancer,
The good news is that be-
been active smokers, but 2.5
numerous other diseases and four of those in this coun- a lower quality of life. Since try who still smoke say they 1964, more than 20 million want to quit, so they know the Americans have died as a reconsequences. sult of smoking. Most have cause so many did quit, smok- million were nonsmokers who ing, at least in the United died from diseases caused by States, has been in decline. secondhand smoke, according Robert Proctor, professor tofederalstatistics. of the history of science at Although a smaller percentStanford University, said cig- age of Americans smoke now, arette smoking continued to those who do have a greater grow throughout the 1960s risk of developing lung canand 1970s, reaching a peak of cer than did smokers 50 years about 630 billion cigarettes, ago. That'sbecause,according or more than 31 billion packs, to the surgeon general's office, smoked annually in the Unit- changes in the composition of ed States before the start of its cigarettes have increased the
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Despite various efforts to decrease smoking, the American Lung Association says more than 43 million Americans still smoke.
ing $300 billion a year. Of that, depicts smoking as glamor$130 billion is direct medical ous, accounting for about onecosts, and $150 billion is lost third of new smokers. productivity. The tobacco industry, acEven though the costs are cording to Proctor, clearly high, smokers today are more knew by the mid-1950s that decline in 1982. risk of adenocarcinoma, the hidden due to laws that pro- cigarettes were dangerous, and most common kind of lung hibit smoking in public places, the surgeon general' s office Work still to be done cancer. Ventilated filters also Brandt said, and because of charged that it deliberately misThe 1964 surgeon general's have allowed for more vigor- the stigma attached to smok- led the public about the risks. report set off one of the most ous inhalation that draws tox- ing. Smokers no longer are the The evolvingtobacco marpowerful public health efforts ins more deeply into the lung social puffers who used to be ket offers little comfort. A ever, dramatically cutting tissue. seen at bars, restaurants and spokesman for the MD Anderthe number of smokers. But parties. son Cancer Center in Houston tobacco products still pose A hefty price to pay Erika Sward, of the Amer- confirmed that al l t o bacco significant risks to the health Even with smoking rates ican Lung Association, said products, including e-cigaof Americans, and while the far below what they were in that those who are most likely rettes and hookahs, contain number of smokers in the U.S. 1964, the American Lung As- to smoke today generally are highly addictive levels of the has significantly declined, for sociation says that more than the lesseducated ofa lower so- chemical nicotine. Thus the toevery American smoker who 43 million Americans, or 1 in 5 cioeconomic status. Targets of bacco habit hangs on. has quit, the global rate of people in the U.S., still smoke. aggressive tobacco company smoking has increased, said Compared with those who marketing campaigns are the Methodsforchange Allan Brandt, a professor at have never smoked, smokers poor, the needy, the impaired, If smoking c ontinues at Harvard Medical School. have more disabilities and the vulnerable, those who are the current level, 5.6 million Within months of the 1964 health problems and lose an unable to quit and children, Americans who are younger report, th e F e deral T r a de average of more than 10 years she added. than 16 today will die prema"People who still smoke," turely from smoking-related Commission ordered ciga- of life. The surgeon general's rette companies to put warn- office adds that the costs as- Proctor said, "are those who causes. Clearly there still is a ing labels on packaging, and sociated with smoking and ex- have lost the freedom not to." lot of work to do. in 1969, cigarette advertising posure to tobacco is approach- He added that Hollywood still Public health and medical
Coffee
the role of coffee in preventing Sweden prior to his assassinaother health outcomes in such tion in 1792, considered coffee Continued from D1 groups remains understudied." a poisonous detriment to public "Moreover, moderate eviCoffee with its devilish color health. He tested this idea by dence shows a protective asso- and bitter, acidic taste has held requiring one criminal twin ciation between coffee/caffeine ground as one of the most pop- to consume three daily pots of intake and risk of Parkinson's ular beverages over the centu- coffee and the other to drink disease," the report states. ries, despite concerns and bad three pots of tea. Both outlived Overall, research found re- publicity about its effect on officials monitoring the experductions in mortality among health. Several decades ago, it iment and the assassinated regularcoffee drinkers.Stud- wrongly was blamed for pan- king. The tea drinker died first ies not cited in the report creaticcancer, breast lumps, at 83. showed benefits in preventing birth defects and heart disease. Grain moguls CW. Post and depression and Alzheimer's It has long been condemned the Kellogg brothers developed disease, among other neurode- as an addictive drug that ener- grain-based drinks with margenerative conditions. gizes some people and makes keting campaigns warning that "coff ee drunkards" faced The report even says de- others jittery. That's why P endergrast multiple health effects indudcaffeinated coffee reduces the risk of diabetes and possibly opens his book with these ing heart disease. lung cancer. While some ad- words: "Throughout coffee's Such claims persisted until vantages are attributable to history, critics have accused the 1980s, when"coffee was ascaffeine, the 1,000 constituent the drink of causing horren- sociated with over 100 diseases compounds in coffee, including dous health problems, while and disorders and, though submany healthful antioxidants those who love the brew have sequent studies threw every known as polyphenols, may espoused its almost miracu- negative finding into question, explain the positive health lous curative powers. This ex- the implanted fears led more outcomes. treme devotionand condemnaconsumers to decaffeinated al"Strong evidence supports tion continues today." ternatives or away from coffee a protective effect of moderate Coffeehouses t h r oughout completely," the Pendergrast coffee consumption on chronic Europe became popular cen- book states. disease risk in healthy adults, turies ago with the preference, On its website, the Mayo but its association among those noted by a 17th-century writer, Clinic also says coffee studies with existing d iseases has for coffee as a more "wakeful failed to differentiate between been less studied," the report and civil drink" instead of beer heavy coffee consumption states. "Given that a substan- each morning, earning coffee and habits often associated tial number of people suffer credit for bringing sobriety to with coffee drinking, includfrom thesechronic diseases, England. Gustav III, the king of ing smoking and physical
Technology Continued from D1 Perhaps, says r esearch psychologist Larry R osen. "Workout technology can be valuable," says Rosen, author
awarenessoftraffic,dogs and other potential dangers. Even taking your eyes off the road to check your watch means
you're not paying attention to the present, and that increases risk. of the book "iDisorder: UnThose little app rewards derstanding our Obsession "might also tempt people With Technology and Over- to push too hard when they coming Its Hold on Us," but if should be listening to their you are constantly checking body and not their iPhone," your stats, "then that is going says Jo Zimmerman, a trainer to create anxiety — and that's and instructor of kinesiology the last thing you want to do at the University of Maryland. when exercising." Exercise is Exercise tech, she says "is a supposed to produce endor- double-edged sword. For some phins and dopamine, chemi- people, technology is the excals that make you feel good, actreason to getoffthe couch not anxiety neurotransmitters and for others it's what makes like cortisol. "Why would you them too competitive." want to be stressed when you Even running guru Hal are trying to do something Higdon, who has worked with that is supposed to be good for developers to create training you?" he asks. apps, says that while technolEven more potentially dam- ogy can help the goal-orientaging, says Rosen, a professor ed or first-time runner, it can at California State University also "destroy our workouts, at Dominguez Hills, is the so- taking us out of our bodies." cial media component of some When he was researching the apps — posting your run on effects of running on the body Facebook, for example, and re- for his book "Marathon: The lying on your friends to cheer Ultimate Training Guide," he for you virtually. Making your says he used a heart monitor personal workout public sets for feedback on his runs near you up for disappointment, he Lake Michigan in Indiana. says: "What if you posted your When the book was done, run and nobody liked it? Does however, he "cast away" the that mean you got nothing out device, he said, "because I of it?" would rather focus on the Working out wired can also beauty of the park and listen posesafety hazards. Wearing to the lapping of waves on the headphones decreases your shore."
inactivity.
tempt each year, but only 6
percent of smokers succeed. Quitting cigarettes will be one of the hardest things a smoker will ever do. Ask any-
to smoke, Sward said. Policy
changes are needed, she add- one who has quit. And it can ed, but politicians are afraid be a lonely battle as the quitter to challenge the tobacco indeals with inevitable cravings dustry's strong political influ- and ever-present temptations. ence. She listed these steps: But there is help: I ncreased t a x ation w o u l d S moking-cessation p r o price buyers out of the market, grams are numerous, but three smoke-free laws that prohibit of the most current are the smoking in certain areas need Quitter in You (quitterinyou. to be enacted in all states and org), Freedom From Smoking Medicaid must do more to help (ffsonline.org) and the EX prosmokers quit.More preven- gram (becomeanex.org). tion programs and pressure • Quitter in You, sponsored on the federal government to by the American Lung Assoenhancetobacco regulationby ciation and funded by the inthe Food and Drug Adminis- surance company WellPoint, tration would hasten the pro- recognizes that past attempts cess, she added. at quitting smoking are not A l ittle-known provision failuresand encourages more of The Affordable Care Act attempts. Participants can of 2010 mandates that health join online or attend in-person insurers cover the total cost programs. • Freedom From Smoking, o f t o b acco-cessation p r o grams. It allows for payment also an American Lung Asof the cost of prescription or sociation initiative for adults, over-the-counter tobacco-ces- guides smokers through an s t ep-by-step sation medications and two eight-session, quit attempts a year. A quit plan designed to help them attempt includes four 10-min- control behavior. A Legacy ute counseling sessions either initiative, the E X p r o gram in a group, privately or on the helps young smokers learn to phone. Thus far, Sward said, cope with smoking triggers many insurance companies and addiction. • The FDA public service have yet to comply with this part of the law, which many campaign The Real Cost (theexperts agree doesn't offer realcost.betobaccofree.hhs. enough. gov targets youth in ads on TV, Robin Koval, president of radio, print and online. Tips Legacy, a nonprofit organiza- From Former Smokers (cdc. tion that focuses on youth to- gov/tobacco/campaign/tips), bacco prevention, said that on the Centers for Disease Conaverage, smokers make up to trol and Prevention's first ever 11 attempts to quit before they media campaign, launched stop for good. Seventy percent in 2012, profiles ex-smokers of U.S. smokers say they want living with serious long-term to quit, and half make an at- health effects from smoking.
these caloric additions," the relesterol levels, the Mayo Clinic port says.
with mild elevations in cho-
It says coffee actually improves cognitive function and lowers therisk of depression;
Pendergrast adds that coffee drinkers are less likely to
states. Other studies found that
And w h il e
t h e a r t i ficial
two or more cups of coffee a sweetener aspartame is conday can increase the risk of sidered safe,the report notes heart disease in people with a
some uncertainty "about in-
specific — and fairly common creased risk of hematopoietic a cultural shift," he said, "and — genetic mutation that slows (blood) cancer in men, indiyou are right to focus on it. It's the breakdown of caffeine in cating, again, a need for more a big deal." the body. "So, how quiddy you research." But the b attle continues. metabolize coffee may affect Pendergrast's book says huThe Royal Society of Chemis- your health risk," the d i nic mans tend to demonize or glotry, an international group of says. rify things upon which they chemical scientists based in The committee report also depend. For that reason, he the U.K., says two of the 1,000 says "individuals who do not expects arguments between compounds in coffee are car- consume caffeinated coffee those who consider coffee to cinogens whose levels depend should not start to consume it be a "black, thick, nasty, bitter, on what coffee beans are used for health benefits alone." Pen- stinking, nauseous puddle waand how they are roasted. The dergrastsays the government ter" (as a petition of 17th-cendarker it is the better. But cof- is reluctant to recommend any- tury English women comfee has yet to be linked with thing that's addictive. plained) and those who regard cancer. But the chief concern isn't it as a "beverage of the friends High consumption of unfil- the coffee but such additives as of God" (to quote a 16th-centeredcoff ee (boiled or espres- cream, milk and sugars. "Care tury Arabic poet) to continue so) also has been associated should be taken to minimize into the indefinite future. commit suicide. "There's been
•
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Others prefer the sound of a companion's voice. Deborah Brooks, the chapter leader of Moms Run This Town in
•II •
McLean, Virginia, says that "when we run together as a
group, I enjoy the company of friends and don't feel like I
need music to push me." Brian Beary, a journalist in Washington, says that he gave up running with music four years ago and now typically uses only a stopwatch (with a phone in his pocket for emergencies). Last month, he says, "I reached a goal I set myself
Our surgeons live here. Drs. Ida Alul and Patricia Buehler are the on/y LASIK surgeons who live and practice in Central Oregon.
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ning with gadgets: running a marathon in u nder three
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Bladeless LASIK is now at Infocus. Infocus is the first to offer Bladeless LASIK in Central Oregonthe very best LASIK technology available anywhere.
getting out there that first day
without my phone was hard. (Even harder was the elliptical without music.) But now that
I've been up those hills a few times — humming "Born to Run" to myself — I'm beginning to miss the technology less and less. I can hear my breath and the sound of my
feet. I am more aware of how my body is moving and of the cars and dogs along the path. Birds provide the music. And
There is a difference in LASIK
Intocus
eye care
cataract
•
Iasik
•
vision
justbecause I don'trecord my
workouts for posterity doesn't mean they don't count. In fact, they matter even more.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
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QUEsTIDN: I f I need surgery, how do I choose a surgeon? ANswER: Meet with th e surgeon and
have a consultation to make sure you
r
are comfortable. The first question to
ask is whether the surgery is necessary JnnaVnnAmburg, and What O ther O pt iOnS yOu h a Ve. Have the surgeon give you a thorough a nd understandable explanation o f
the surgery. If you choose surgery as a course of treatment, you have a choice as to which surgeon
you will see. Ask the surgeon how many times in their carer they have performed the particular surgery and how t h e n u m ber com pares to o t h er surgeons. Ask t h e s u r g eon w h a t t h e i r s u c cess,
complication and failure rates are for the particular surgery. Find out i f t h e surgeon is board certified
by contacting the American Board of Surgery at 215-568-4000 or check online at www.absurgery.org. Surgeons must pass written and oral exams and they must be accepted by their peers to become board certified.
•
CoolSculpting? ANswER: CoolSculpting is FDA approved in the United States to treat the abdomen, hips and love handles, muffin top region, and thi@s. Upper arms are also treated. DualSculpting, treating two areas simultaneously with CoolSculpting is now available at The Leffel Center. Dr. Leffel i s successfully using Di Linda J DualSculpting to freeze twice the fat in half the Leffel time. DualSculpting successfully treats twice the fat, inhalf the time. The procedure is FDAcleared, safe and effective with permanent results. CoolSculpting uses controlled cooling and freezing to permanently destroy unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. Over I million CoolSculpting treatments have been safely performed worldwide. If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon or surgeon who had completed a residency in cosmetic surgery and body contouring. Before any office procedure you should have a consultation and exam by the treating physician, to thoroughly assess your general health and if you are a candidate for the procedure. CoolSculpting is a medical treatment and should be performed in a doctors offtce. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results. For more information or questions please call our office 541-388-3006 or visit www.LeffelCenter.com.
Your Health Your Choice Our Expertise
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S 2275 NE DoctorsDr., Bend OR97701 541-323-2790 www.vanamburgsurgery.com
G O S M E T I G , B R EA S T A N D L A SE R SU R G E R Y
Dr. Linda J. Leffel, MD 1715 SWChandler Ave. ¹100 Bend, OR 97702 541-388-3008 www.teffelcenter.com
// j QUEsTIoN:I am a healthy man and am losing my hair. I have tried a toupee and even black spray paint! /My wife gives me disquieting looks and I am feeling self-conscious and have stopped swimming. Is theve a simple pvoceduve? I would like to have my own haiv back Adnm PAng'I" and look my age. g
Licensed Dentnrist
1. An all acrylic partial that has either clear or a metal clasps that aid in retention to the remaining teeth 2. A flexible partial that is light weight and provides c omfort an d d u r ability w i t h c l a sps t o a i d i n retention. 3. A metal frame partial that provides a more rigid and closer fit to the remaining teeth with metal clasps and m e ta l r e s t s eats p r oviding b e tter retention.
F aith P i n k e r t o n , L . D . H IGHDEsERT Hig h D e s e r t M o b i l e D e n t u r e s
trtclyjja
dentureS
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f QUEsrioN:Lately I have been anxious and I think it is starting to affect my sleep. Is there something natural I can do to help? ANswER:There are many natural approaches
to eliminating anxiety and helping with sleep. I always start with an analysis of the types of foods and drinks you consume. There Azure Karli, are obviouschanges like decreasing caff eine and alcohol and then some not so obvious ones like eating more almonds and lean meats (see http:// bendnaturopath.com/articles/thirteen-best-foods-for-moodsupport). Staying hydrated (half your body weight in ounces daily) is the most important step for all other changes to be the most effective. Good sleep hygiene should be in place. Examples are no screen time at least 45 minutes before you lay down, a cup of hot tea thirty minutes after dinner and in bed by 10. If further help is needed, you should consider targeted amino acid support based on analysis by your practitioner or testing. Amino acids are the building blocks of proteins and all of the neurotransmitters such as serotonin and GABA which contribute strongly to mood, appetite and sleep. It is also important not to forget the need for support from your community. Don't be afraid to pick up the phone to call a friend, family member, counselor, or your medical provider. This can sometimes be the most powerful medicine accessible to us. In health, Dr. Azure Karli
M.D.
p i I' s
Faith Pinkerton
Answer: If a f i xed appliance is not s omething you can do o r a ff or d a t this time t h ere are t h ree types of r emovable appliances that m a y f i t your needs. They are as follows:
Call for a free consultation to see which partial fits your needs.
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V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e
QUEsTIDN: I only have a few missing t eeth an d c a n' t af ford a fi x e d appliance. 8'hat cost effective options are available?
QUEsrioN: What areas can be treated with
ANswER: Men frequently have male pattern baldness due to their genetics
and biochemistry. We have found success with single follicular unit extraction (FUE) unlike the old days of unnatural 'plugs' and taking a strip from the back of the head. Each individual hair follicle, which contains one to f ou r h a irs, is transplanted independently for a natural look. You can be active
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2400NE Neff Rd., Suite B • Bend, OR 97701 541-749-2282 www.bendprs.com • info@bendprs.com
D . A*
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D r. Azure K a r i i , N . D . Bend Naturopathic Clinic www.bendnaturopath.com 541-389-9750
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Ask one of our Health Professionals on the following
categories:
Dentistry • Urology • Eye Care • Plastic Surgery • General and Specialty Surgery Dermatology • Holistic Medicine • Physical Therapy • Pain Management Chiropractic • Health & Beauty Send your questions to: Ask AHealth Pro fessional The Bulletin By fax: 541-385-5802 • Email: kclark@bendbulletin.com Mail:P.O. Box 6020, Bend, Oregon 97708 My question is:
D5
D6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
sicoms ro ucec uc esa es TV SPOTLIGHT
out there may warm to her, but
"One Big Happy" 9:30 p.m. Tuesdays,NBC The Washington Post
In "OneBig Happy,"another malfunctioning NBC sitcom that premiered Tuesday night, Elisha Cuthbert (of the late, great "Happy Endings" or, if you prefer, eternally Kim Bauer of "24") stars as an uptight lesbian named Lizzy who has decided to make a baby with Eric McCandless I CourtesyhtBCvia The Washington Post
The premise of "One Big Happy," starring Elishs Cuthbert as Lizzy
and Nick Zano asLuke, seems to bereaching to material from the past TV successes, but falls flat upon delivery.
— A guy and a lesbian having a baby! A woman getting marher visa set to expire sooner ried because she needs a green than a viewer will remain incard! — is too rote to elicit terested in "One Big Happy," m uch curios ity;assuch,everyNick and Prudence need to get thing about this show feels like married, or she'll have to go it's 15 steps back in TV history. back to England. Watching "One Big Happy" is Lizzy, who prides herself on like discovering the crusts that organization and considers remain in a box from "Two the weekly farmers market to Guys, a Girl and a Pizza Place" be the epitome of fun, doesn't and trying to eat them. approve of this development, Would this have anything especially after the first morning, when we see that Pru-
That's not to say there aren't a few chuckles in each
episode.(Of course there are; creator-writer Li z
F e ldman,
whose work includes CBS' "2 Broke Girls," did hire writers, who wrote jokes.) Cuthbert's time on "Happy Endings" serves her well enough, and Zano amiably keeps up his end of the garden variety rata-tat-tat dialogue. The extreme laughter — canned or studio,
who can tell anymore'? — is Ellen DeGeneres is billed as well out of proportion to the at all to do with the fact that
dence likes to parade around an executive producer and
material that's been written,
but we've come to expect that. I kept freezing the frame premises of the late '90s ("Will The show is pleasantly and — not for a better look at her, & Grace," "Ellen") are precise- forgettably mediocre for the but to see whether the kitch- ly her idea of chortle-riffic TV? few minutes before Brook en calendar said "1998." The It's hard to say. There's very bounces in, delivering each of unconventionality that serves little here to dissect or think her lines in a way that is only as the show's principal hook about or, least of all, laugh at. ever grating. A few viewers the house in the nude.
casting. Perhaps even more galling
to the sensation of knowing
is the fact that no one on "Un-
dateable" is exceptionally talisodes they make, something ented, and yet even this works here is just never going to click to their advantage. Playing the with a certain character. It's exact same arch-eyebrowed the sort of misstep in casting dude heplayed on "Whitney," that is often remediedbetween comedian Chris D'Elia stars pilot season and an airdate; as Danny, the alpha male alas, it wasn't fixed here. among a bunch of losers who Other than to serve as a hang out in a struggling Define example of why Tina Fey troit pub. Another comedian, might have been so eager to Brent Morin, plays the pub's leave network sitcom life be- owner, Justin, who tends to self-sabotage when it comes to hind and take her new NBC series, "Unbreakable Kimmy dating or even just hooking up that, no matter how many ep-
By Hank Stuever
her best friend and roommate, a hunky-dory straight guy named Luke (Nick Zano). Just as fertilization occurs, Nick announces his quickyengagement to Prudence (Kelly Brook), a free-spirited British bird he just met in a bar. With
certainly all viewers can relate
that the socially outre sitcom
Schmidt," to Netflix instead,
with available women. It's up
"One Big Happy" becomes an to Danny to school Justin in excellent case study in failed modern manliness. The other chemistry lessons, especial- bar customers — more comely when paired with creators dians, including Ron Funches Bill Lawrence and Adam Sz- as Shelly — provide a surplus tykiel's "Undateable," which of humorous distractions and returned for a second season riffy asides. 'Itresday, right before "One Big There's nothing new going Happy." on here, either (people sitA reader recently asked me ting around in a bar insulting how a show like "Undateable," one another is as at least as which had a relatively success- old as "Cheers," if not much ful run last summer, can still older), but in "Undateable's" be around when measurably case, it makes for accidental better (or at least possibly bet- perfection. ter) NBC comedies like "A to Again, it's all about the Z" and "Bad Judge" couldn't mix. Where the trio on "One Big Happy" look like they're catch a break last fall. I think I replied with my getting too many notes from standard that's-how-the-cook- producers and trying five ie-crumbles answer, but on times too hard, the lackadaisifurther scrutiny, "Undateable" cal gang on "Undateable" acts has two solid qualities going like it's over the moon about for it: The writing is decep- getting a C on the test. One of tively sharp, and the show these shows is attempting to lucked out when it comes the be "funny"; the other one actuuncertain science of ensemble ally is a little funny.
Ignore man wants toreturn avor
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
Dear Abby:I am the youngest of wanting to include me, but I althree boys. When I was growing ready have other plans." No one up, my brothers didn't have much can argue with that. I do, however, to do with me. At times they were suggest you choose ONE holiday a cruel, mocked my interests and year to spend with your "family" made fun of my friends. At 19, I as a way of maintaining minimal moved into the dorms, even though
I was attending college locally. My p r ofessional life took me away from my hometown
DFP,R
ABBY
for 25 years. Both
brothers pretty much ignored me, except for calls on my birthday that were filled with awk-
ward silence because we didn't know each otherwell enough to talk about anything. I lived abroad for long periods, and even though I sent emails and postcards, I nev-
er heard anything from them in reply. Now I live back in my hometown
and I am expected to participate in holiday and family events because "it's family." Please give me the words to use to refuse invitations I do not want, from a family who made it clear that they had no use
for me for so long. — Wary in Wisconsin
Dear Wary: Give the following standard refusal: "Thank you for
you sometimes opt to face difficult challenges. Remember that it is you who chooses to go rafting in life's white waters. Your friendships might be transforming, especially as you might be more prone to taking risks. Still, remain grounded when it comes to making financial decisions. If
you are single,you
Medical Center want to learn more about the i mpact that c aregiv-
ing has on family members and friends of people who have been contact. That way they can't ac- diagnosed with schizophrenia or cuse you of snubbing schizoaffective disorder. them. Because family members and Dear Abby:Three friends of individuals with mental widowed friends of illness play a large part in providmine still have their ing care — while also balancing late husbands' voices jobs and other life responsibilities on their answering — the physicians and research scimachines. I think it's spooky and entists at Tufts are asking you to in really bad taste. share the impact caregiving has Is there any way to gently sug- on different aspects of your life, gest to them that they change their including your ability to work and greeting to one in their own voices your health and well-being. This or an anonymous one? I'm a wid- information will be used to imow, too, and I wouldn't think of prove services to caregivers and leaving my greeting that way. the people they support. — Flabbergasted in Florida If you are interested in participatDear Flab:Different strokes for ing in this study, please visit tinyurl. different folks. Has it not occurred comfltrftsCaregiver. Participation to you that these ladies not only do in this study is voluntary and innot find the sound of their late hus- volves completing an anonymous bands' voices the least bit spooky, survey. but that they might call their own Dear Abby readers are the most numbers in order to hear it'? They generous and caring folks in the may also feel safer having a male world, and I hope some of you are voice answer their phone. Because willing to help with this project. you find it upsetting, consider tex— Write to Dear Abbyat dearabbycom ting or emailing them instead. or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, MARCH19, 2015:Thisyear
Dear Readers:The departments of psychiatry and medicine at Tufts
SCORPIO (Oct.23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE
** * * * You don't need to restrain your imagination, butyou also don't need to By Jacqueline Bigar verbalize everything you think. People might wonder about that twinkle in your forming right in front of your eyes. Consid- eye. A discussion could draw a great deal er initiating a long-overdue conversation. of intensity. Tonight: Heal a relationship by Tonight: Let the party begin. giving it some quality time.
CANCER (June21-July22)
** * * You might have a different 8tsfs sho'g the klntt will attract a more approach to an issue that will intrigue a of dsy yos'I hsvs offbeat Personality. partner. You could encounter someone ** * * * D ynamic Come fall, possibil- who thinks very differently from howyou ** * * p ositive iti es for meeting a do. Attempt to understand this person's *** Average sp ecial person be-thought process, and open up to his or her ** So-so come more likely. ideas. Tonight: Do something just for you. * Difficult If you are attached, you need to remain LEO (July23-Aug. 22) ** * * You care a lot, and a partner open if you want to start exploring new ideas. PISCES isveryemotional, butalso knows that. However, when you try to resolve an issue, you could discover that very caring. youseem to begiving up too m uch.Step ARIES (March21-April 19) back, and remember your boundaries. A ** * Someone seems to bewatching loved one might be full of unusual ideas. you more closely than you realize. You Tonight: Buy a treat on the way home. couldbe unusually quietand have an attitude that might have others wondering VIRGO (Aug.23-Sspt. 22) what you are up to. Let their imaginations ** * * Others seem to come to you with rockandroll, whileyou go offand do what a lot to do and very little time to do it. You you want. Tonight:Think"weekend." could throw yourself right in and help clear up the problem. Make apoint of presentTAURUS (April 20-May20) ** * * Evaluate the costs of proceeding ing your suggestions in amorecreative way. Tonight: A surprise will lead to a fun as youhavebeen.Some ofyoum ight screech to a stop and need to regroup. You happening. probably don't need to change direction, LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct.22) but some of the bells and whistles might ** * Stay on top of what is happening, have to go. A family member could have and you will find yourself feeling quite some good news. Tonight: Order in. shocked by the sudden changes that emerge. A difficult matter surrounding GEMINI (May 21-Juns28) ** * Take charge if you want to get your home life might create a lot of tension. Resolving the issue could be harder through a project or meeting quickly. A conversation will illuminate how someone than you realize. Tonight: Schedule a else feels. A relationship could be transmassage.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Oec. 21) *** * Express your concernabout an intense situation involving your family or domestic life. Since you have only one voice, resolving the issue will take some diplomatic skill. Sooner or later, you'll need to handle this matter; it isn't going away. Tonight: Love the moment.
GAPRICORN (Oec.22-Jan.19) ** * * Others respect your opinions. Oneon-one relating points to a newdirection and different possibilities. Open up towhat could happen if you decide to give others therespectand spacethey need.Youcould
see evidenceof apositive changealmost immediately. Tonight: Out late.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) ** * Your finances come to the forefront. At this point, you seem to be forced to handle more responsibility than you would like. Could this be because you refused to deal with such matters in the past, as money held so little importance to you? Tonight: Pay bills, then decide.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * * You'll beam, and others will be much more in touch with what they think and feel about an important matter that's close to your heart. A simple conversation with several people will put all of you on the same page, which will increase your effectiveness. Tonight: Make itspecial. © King Features Syndicate
I
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:35 a.m., 2:50, 6:15, 9:15 • CHAPPIE (R) 12:05, 3:05 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:30 a.m., 12:25, 2:30, 3:30, 6:55, 9:40 • CINDERELLA IMAX (PG)noon, 2:45 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES DOUBLE FEATURE IMAX (PG13) 5:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 8, 10 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-O (PG-13) 8:30, 10:30 • DO YO!j BELIEVE? (PG-13) 7:10, 10 • THE DUFF (PG-13) 12:40, 3:40 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY (R) 11:55 a.m., 2:55, 7, 9:55 • FOCUS (R) 12:30, 3:10, 6:30, 9:05 • THE GUNMAN (R) 7,9:45 • JUPITER ASCENDIN(PG-13) G 3:20 • JUPITER ASCENDIN3-D G (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 6:35 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)1,3:55,7:25, 10:30 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) 12:50, 3:15, 7:45, 10:10 • MCFARLANO, USA(PG)12:10, 3:25, 6:25 • THE ROYALBALLET:SWAN LAKE (no MPAA rating)7 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 12:15, 3:15, 7:30, 10:30 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:45 a.m., 3:45, 6:40, 9:35 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:50 a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUTOF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:45 • UNFINISHED BUSINESS(R) 12:55, 4 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies. •
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • A SURVEYOF OPEN SPACE (no MPAA rating)9 • INTO THE WOODS(PG) 6 • Younger than 2t may attend aiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FOXCATCHER (R) 5:30 • WHIPLASH (R) 8:15 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA (PG)4, 5: I5, 6:30, 7:45 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-l3) 8 • MCFARLANO, USA(PG) 4:15 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 4:30, 7
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on 2, 9, "Grey's Anatomy" —Richard (James
Pickens Jr.) has personal recollections sparked by a patient's struggles with Alzheimer's disease in the new episode, "Don't Dream It's Over." April and
Jackson(Sarah Drew,Jesse
Williams) try to return to some semblance of normalcy. Arizo-
na (Jessica Capshaw)comesto a tough realization about Callie (Sara Ramirez). Meredith (Ellen Pompeo) attempts to deal with
her main concerns about Derek (Patrick Dempsey). Justin Chambers also stars. 8:15p.m. on SHO, Movie: "The Life and Mind of Mark DeFriest" — Filmmaker Gabriel London blends live action and animation in this fascinating 2014 documentary, which
examines the case ofMark
DeFriest, who has spent much of his life since 1979 in prison, often in solitary confinement. Here's the weird, almost comical thing: His criminal deeds ordinarily would not merit serving hard time. It's just that DeFriest — sometimes called "The Houdini of Florida" — is just really, really good at escaping his incarceration. 9 p.m. on TRAV, "Expedition Unknown" —In a new episode, Josh Gates journeys to southern Peru to talk to explorers who are attempting to crack the origins — and the code, if one exists — behind the so-called Nazca Lines found on the floor of the country's deserts. Were these lines an attempt by the ancient Nazca culture to communicate with their gods, or perhaps extraterrestrials? What became of this civilization, which apparently was somewhat technologically sophisticated? 10 p.m. on HIST, "Vikings" — In the new episode, "The Usurper," the fleet finds tragic circumstances awaiting them in Kattegat, where Lagertha (Katheryn Winnick) learns that her earldom has been usurped. She convinces Ragnar (Travis
Fimmel) to accompanyherto Hederby, where she hopes to reclaim her title. Meanwhile, Ragnar surprises everyone when he announces the next raid, and the Seer (John Kavanagh) prophesies interesting things for Rollo (Clive Standen). © zap2it
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aa4tard-aeinning
neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
Pure. &rrc/6 t"o.
aj. B~ du Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
SUN FoREsT Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG)6:15 • MCFARLANO, USA(PG) 6:30 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG)6 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 6:30 i ) ~ i
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CINDERELLA (PG)4:30, 7 • FOCUS (R) 4:50 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) 7:10 • MCFARLANO, USA(PG)4, 6:50 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 4:45, 7:15 • UNFINISHED BUSINESS(R) 5:10, 7:20 •
CoNSTRUcTION
DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL PAINT
803 Sw Industrial way, Bend, OR
•
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (PG)6:30 • FOCUS (Upstairs — R) 6:15 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n t s h o m e . c o m
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
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C h a n d l e r
The Bulletin local pays CASH! I recommends extra ' Bend for firearms & ammo. i caution when pur541-526-0617 chasing products or • services from out of I CASH!! I the area. Sending I For Guns, Ammo 8
i
I
' cash, checks, o r ' i credit i n f ormation may be subjected to
Reloading Supplies.
541-408-6900. i i FRAVD. For morei Christiansen Arms 300 about an I RUM, L H , VX 3 I information advertiser, you may I Leopold Scope 4x14, B &C Reticle. N ew
I
Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville.
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
LOST TABBY CAT, "Wally". Brookswood and Sweetbrier. Recent surgery scar on back. See pics www.craigslist.com
Orchard grass hay clean, barn stored, no weeds, no rain, 75¹ bales, $250 ton. 541-416-0106
541-805-9244
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal,
Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st 8 2nd cutting. Del.
don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond
e Atto r ney ' $5500, asking $3300. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 541-815-2505. or 541-948-7010. i General's O f f i ce Consumer Protec- • SA 1911 .45 Mil Spec Wheat Straw for Sale. tion h o t line a t i Like new, original case Also, weaner pigs. 541-923-0882 Call 541-447-7820 i 1-877-877-9392. $500. 541-316-0302 541-546-6171 Madras 541-475-6889 I TheBulletin I Savage 17HMR BBSS Hovv to avoidscam 341 Serving Centret Oregon sinceSggg Prineville thumb stock with BSA and fraud attempts Horses & Equipment 541-447-7'I 78 t actical 6-24, n e w YBe aware of interna212 or Craft Cats $450. 541-447-1340 The Bulletin tional fraud. Deal loServing Centra/ Oregon sinceSggg Black ba y M o r gan 541-389-8420. Antiques & Wanted: Collector seeks cally whenever posmare, flashy, 13-yr-old Collectibles high quality fishing items sible. show, trail 8 harness, All year Dependable Subaru car key a nd i ntermediate & upscale fly rods. er, Y Watch for buyers Firewood: Seasoned; Thule rack key on Mt. granddaughter in rid C hina cabinet, o a k; 541-678-5753, or colwho offer more than Washington Dr., Tues. Lodgepole, split, del, 503-351-2746 trunk; 2 chairs, oak, lege. $500 best offer or your asking price and B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 3/17. 541-647-2514. upholstery no arms; trade. 541-546-7909 who ask to have or 2 cords for $365. 251 small drop front desk, money wired or Multi-cord discounts! oak; redwood b u rl Hot Tubs & Spas handed back to them. 541-420-3484. table 4x/g'x3/g'; round •0 Fake cashier checks end table; bookcase Marquis 2005 S ilver and money orders Plne 8g Junlper Spflt mahogany.Must See! Anniv. Hot Tub, gray are common. 541-388-3532 and black, 6-8 person VNever give out perseating, new circuit PROMPT DELIVERY sonal financial inforOld Gas Pumps /Soda Deluxe showman board. Delivery avail- mation. 542-389-9663 Vending Machines 3-horse trailer Sil$2500. s/Trust your instincts WANTED! Will pay cash. able, verado 2001 29'x8' 206 208 541-815-2505 Kyle, 541-504-1050 and be wary of 5th wheel with semi 269 Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies someone using an living quarters, lots of The Bulletin reserves 253 Gardening Supplies 316 escrow service or extras. Beautiful cong the right to publish all TV, Stereo & Video & Equipment Adopt a rescued cat or agent to pick up your Irrigation Equipment dition. $21,900. OBO ads from The Bulletin kitten! Altered, vacci541-420-3277 newspaper onto The Panasonic 55" plasma merchandise. COW MANURE - aged, nated, ID chip, tested, FOR SALE Bulletin Internet web- TV, 2 yrs old, like new, The Bulletin 150 cu.ft. truckload more! CRAFT, 65480 Tumalo Irrigation Serving Central Oregon srnce iggg site. Garage Sales was $1000 new), selling d elivered, $150 . 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Water or $350. 541-550-7189 Wanted- paying cash 541-420-6235 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 $5,000/acre Bulletin Garage Sales Whoodle Pups, 8 weeks, The www.craftcats.org Sengng Central Oregon sinceSgte for Hi-fi audio & stu255 Husqvarna hedge trim- Call 541-419-4440 1st shots 8 dewormed. dio equip. Mclntosh, 202 Garage Sales Just bought a new boat? Hypoallergenic/no shed, 215 mer comm. grade. Computers JBL, Marantz, Dy325 Sell your old one in the 1 female, $1200; 6 males Want to Buy or Rent used 1 t i me. New Coins & Stamps naco, Heathkit, San- $459, asking, $200. Find them classifieds! Ask about our Hay, Grain & Feed @ $1000 ea. Health T HE B ULLETIN r e sui, Carver, NAD, etc. 541-410-1483 Super Seller rates! Wanted: $Cash paid for guarantee. 541-410-1581 Private collector buying quires computer ad- Call 541-261-1808 in 541-385-5809 vintage costume jewFirst Quality, 2nd cutting postagestamp albums & vertisers with multiple The Bulletin elry. Top dollar paid for Bichon Frise AKC reg'd Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, collections, world-wide ad schedules or those WHEN YOU SEE THIS People Lookfor Information grass hay, no rain, 1F, adorable, UDT About Products and Gold/Silver.l buy by the puppies, 3 females. barn stored, $225/ton. Classifieds U.S. 573-286-4343 selling multiple sysshots, health guar., pix, and Estate, Honest Artist Call 541-549-3831 Services Every Daythrough 541-953-0755 or (local, cell phone). tems/ software, to dis$500/up. 541-777-7743 Elizabeth,541-633-7006 541-912-1905. close the name of the The Bulletin Classifiurfs Patterson Ranch, Sisters 541-385-5809 240 business or the term On a classified ad WANTEDwood dressCrafts & Hobbies "dealer" in their ads. Get your go to ers; dead washers. Private party advertisbusiness 541-420-5640 Doll clothes: fit Cab- ers are defined as www.bendbulletin.com to view additional bage Patch, Flower those who sell one photos of the item. 203 Kids. '80s. Orig. pkg. computer. Ig-. gg~ o ROWI N G $5 ea. 54'I -419-6408 263 Holiday Bazaar Boston Terrier Puppies. 257 Shots, ve t c h e ck, 241 Tools & Craft Shows with an ad in Musical Instruments puppy package. $750. Bicycles & The Bulletin's (2)Tool boxes w/profesArtistic Talent Search! chrisandcyndi@yaAccessories American Tribute electric s lonal tools $ 7 0 0 "Call A Service Grlzzly Rldge Upcycle hoo.com. 260 266 292 guitar, amp, stand, case, 541-279-3588. obo 541 280'7608 is currently accepting Professional" New Diamondback hy- etc. $225. 541-306-0166 Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sales Other Areas applications for cre265 deposit bottles/ Directory brid bike, Shimano gears, ative, artistic people Donate to local all vol., lots of upgrades, selling Drum Kits:Specializing SHOP SALE Fri. 8 Sat. Seasonal Building Materials ESTATE SALE who want to sell their cans in High Quahty New & cat rescue at $225. 541 -306-0166 Garage Sale! 210 Vintage pine china & 9-4. 64516 Boonesborcreations in our new non-profit Used Drum Sets! trailer: Jake's Diner, Ildarch 19-20-21, 8 to 4 o ugh Dr. off D e s Bend Habitat corner cabinets, anc onsignment s t o r e Hwy 20 E & Petco in Furniture & Appliances 242 Kevin, 541-420-2323 chutes Mkt. to Dale. Antiques & collectibles, RESTORE tique quilts, lots of anopening soon in Sis- Redmond; donate at The Drum Shop Exercise Equipment Building Supply Resale tiques of al l k i nds Automotive tools, cabi- Valentines, St. Patricks t ers, Oregon. T h e leaded glass 8 oak and Easter, linens Sign, 1515 NE 2end 541-312-6709 farm relics glassware nets, misc. shop items. handmade ideal candidate will be Smith tables, matching BioForce weight macrafts, glass Bend; or CRAFT For Sale: 224 NE Thurston Ave. & pottery, plus house- Some girl stuff also! an out - of-the-box 2nd, coffee t able $ 1 7 5.chine,used 5 tim es,new ware, artwork, lots of in Tumalo. Can pick Piano Technician Open to the public. hold furniture, kitchen, thinker, able to create up Ig. amts, 389-8420. 541-678-5605 condition. Cost $1250 old and new furniture, tools & supplies, tools, yard & outdoor, upcycled m e rchannew. Full body workout, with rolls of piano Sisters Habitat ReStore lots misc! Fri & Sat, USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! floral and garden decor. A1 Washersa Dryers easy to transport/reset. dise that is beautiful, www.craftcats.org No clothes, no junk. string, $725. Building Supply Resale 9-4, numbers Fri 8 am Door-to-door selling with Full warranty, FREE Tools, manual, DVD & clever, unique or even Labrador pups,black, 4504 SW Minson Rd., Quality items. 2200 NE Hwy 20 ¹37 comical. Space is is Bwks,3malesleft, $400 delivery! Also, used complete i n structions. Callin971-219-9122 fast results! It's the easiest Powell Butte. Redmond LOW PRICES! washers/dryers wanted. $500. 541-416-0106 limited, so only the Rock Arbor Villa, in way in the world to sell. ea. 541-408-8880 Sue, 541-416-8222, or 150 N. Fir. 541-280-7355 best merchandise will Ben, behind Jake's Georgia, 541-548-0927 541-549-1621 b e a ccepted. F o r POODLE or POMAPOO 260 Diner 541-350-6822 The Bulletin Classified Power Plate Open to the public. www.atticestatesanmore info. go to: pupplestoy Stud also Couch, 7', b ought 6 w k s machine Misc. Items NOTICE 541-385-5809 ago, new cond. $200. 541 475 3889 dappraisals.com grizzlyridgeupcycle. 266 Vibrational exerRemember to remove 541-706-9383 com or email: cises for muscleBuylng Diamonds Heating & Stoves 266 your Garage Sale signs 292 grizzlyridgeupcycle Purebred Lab p ups, Electric bed twin size, strengthening, /Gold for Cash (nads, staples, etc.) champ bloodlines. Sales Northeast Bend Ogmail.com Sales Other Areas good cond., $300. stretching, massage Saxon's Fine Jewelers NOTICE TO after your Sale event 7F, 1M, blacks & yel541-385-6168 & relaxation, $500. 541-389-6655 ADVERTISER is over! THANKS! lows. Avail. in May. Huge we're not dead 206 541-504-3869 Since September 29, From The Bulletin Come meet your new G ENERATE ** FREE ** yet estate sale! See SOM E and your local utility Pets & Supplies companionl S isters EXCITEMENT in Need to get an 1991, advertising for your craigslist ad for items. used woodstoves has Garage Sale Kit companies. (503) 459-1580 245 ad in ASAP? Fri&Sat 8-5, Sun 8-12. neighborhood! Plan a been limited to mod- Place an ad in The Golf Equipment 1296 N E O c h oco The Bulletin recomQueensland Heelers garage sale and don't You can place it Bulletin for your gaThe Bulletin els which have been gerving Centrel Ongon sinceSggg Ave., Prineville. rage sale and remends extra caution Standard 8 Mini, $150 forget to advertise in certified by the O ronline at: CHECKYOUR AD classified! when purc h as& up. 541-280-1537 ceive a Garage Sale www.bendbulletln.com Department of MOVING/GARAGE www.bendbulletin.com egon ing products or ser- www.rightwayranch.wor 541-385-5809. Environmental Qual- Kit FREE! SALE. furn., garage, vices from out of the dpress.com ity (DEQ) and the fedMarch 21 & 22, 9-3 BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS Oak rocking chair, KIT INCLUDES: 541-385-5809 area. Sending cash, eral E n v ironmental • 4 Garage Sale Slgns 637 East A St., Culver. $50; 541-678-5605 Search the area's most checks, or credit inProtection A g e ncy • $2.00 Off Coupon To comprehensive listing of f ormation may be BUYING MOVING SALE 30 + (EPA) as having met Use Toward Your Queen bed, incl. spread on the first day it runs Lionel/American Flyer subjected to fraud. smoke emission stan- Next Ad years accumulation, classified advertising... and sheets. $ 195. trains, accessories. For more informato make sure it is cordards. A cer t ified • 10 Tips For "Garage Tools, tack, cookware, real estate to automotive, 541-389-1510. 541-408-2191. tion about an advernSpellcheck n and rect. w oodstove may b e furniture, wo m ens merchandise to sporting Sale Success!" tiser, you may call human errors do ocidentified by its certificlothing, doz. canning goods. Bulletin Classifieds SAINT BERNARDS BUYING 8s SELLING the O r egon State Refrigerator cur. If this happens to cation label, which is jars and accessories, Brandy & Bruno's beauAll gold jewelry, silver Attorney General's Frigidaire brand your ad, please conPICK UP YOUR lawn & garden, large appear every day in the full-mask puppiesand gold coins, bars, permanently attached print or on line. Office C o n sumer 2tiful new side-by-side tact us ASAP so that hay tarps, books, and fem. left! Born Jan. 11; rounds, wedding sets, to the stove. The Bul- GARAGE SALE KIT at Protection hotline at with icemaker. corrections and any letin will not know1777 SW Chandler misc. antiques. Lots Call 541-385-5809 ready now (photo taken class rings, sterling sil1-877-877-9392. Paid $1200 adjustments can be more! 3/20-22 and www.bendbulletin.com 2/27). Dew claws rever, coin collect, vin- ingly accept advertis- Ave., Bend, OR 97702 made to your ad. 27-29, 9-5. Please no moved, 1st shots. $500. selling for $850. tage watches, dental ing for the sale of The Bulletin The Bulletin 541 -385-5809 For appointment, call 541-410-5956 gold. Bill Fl e ming, uncertified earlybirds. 1238 SW gerving Centrel Ongon sinceSggg Serving Centrei Oregon sinceSggg Serving Central Oregon since fgtg 541-546-3520 The Bulletin Classified 541-382-9419. woodstoves. Dover Lane, Madras. e call the O r e gon ' State
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The Bulletin
E2 THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri • Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Speclal
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
*ftlfust state prices in ad
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
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PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour 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 of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
/I
00 421
Schools & Training IITR Truck School REDMOND CAMPUS OurGrads Get Jobs! 1-868-436-2235 WWW.I1TR.EDU
Check out the classifieds online www.ttendbulletin.com Updated daily 454
Looking for Employment Woman willing to do errands for the elderly for s l ight f e e in Bend/Redmond. 541-280-0892 ACCOUNTING
476
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476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bu//et/n's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website. Caregiver Prineville Senior care home looking for fulltime Caregiver. Must pass criminal background check. Call 541-362-5137
Caregivers w anted t o
our
join
caring
memory car e c ommunity. A l l shifts a v ailable. Must be reliable. Also needed part t ime c hef. F o r more in f o rmation, or a ny questions, please call 541-385-4717
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
Where can you find a helping hand? Look at: From contractors to Bendhomes.com Call The Bulletin At yard care, it's all here for Complete Listings of 541 -385-sses in The Bulletin's Area Real Estate for Sale Place Your Ad Or E-Mail "Call A Service At: www.bendbulletin.com Professional" Directory CUSTOMER SERVICE REPRESENTATIVE
Staff Accountant The Staff Accountant is responsible for maintaining multiple aspects of the general ledger to ensure accurate and timely reporting. This position will be responsible for the preparation of monthly financials, journal entries, balance sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and month end accruals. We seek a motivated individual that will bring a fresh perspective to our systems and procedures. An ideal candidate will learn current procedures, while taking a proactive approach to find efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with financial analysis. The position requires a detail-oriented individual with strong general accounting, organizational, communication, and time management skills. We seek a positive individual that enjoys working in a fast-paced team environment in beautiful Bend, OR. Essential job functions & responsibilities • General ledger maintenance: detailed understanding of each account and proper posting • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and balance sheet reconciliations • Fixed Asset additions, disposals & depreciation • Cost reporting and forecasting Experience & skills • General ledger accounting required • 4-year degree in Accounting • Advanced Excel and data entry skills • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus • Newspaper experience preferred To apply, please submit both a cover letter and resume to hwrightOwescompapers.com or by mail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi Wright,PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Western Communications, lnc. is a drug free workplace and EOE.Pre-employment drug testing is required.
Accounting
t Ni INsgggigg Inventory Accounting Analyst
Immediate opening in our
Classified Advertising department
for an entry level Customer Service Representative who will assist the public with placement of classified ads, either over the phone or in person at The Bulletin office in SW Bend. Must be able to function comfortably in a fast-paced, performance-based customer service environment. Accurate typing, phone skills and computer entry experience. Strong communication skills and the ability to multi-task is a must. Positive attitude, strong service/ team oriented, and problem solving skills are a plus. This is a Full-time, Mon-Fri., 8-5 position. Pre-employment drug testing is required. Please send resume to: jbrandt@bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Serving Cenrrar Qregnn since tgcg
EOE/Drug free workplace
EPIC AIRCRAFT CAREER NiGHT
~Z = Thursday,March 19th -5:00 PM — 7:00 PM 22550 Nelson Road by the Bend Airport EPIC AIRCRAFT IS SEEKING CANDIDATES WHO ARE... • Highly Motivated • Quality Focused «Team Oriented • Mechanically Proficient
.Dependable & Reliable eStrong Problem Solvers eOrganized 8 Professional Aviation Experienced
FOR THE FOLLOWING POSITIONS: (taLEASE BRING YOUR RESUME)
BONDING TECHNICIAN
Performs structural assembly of b onded carbon and composite parts, including surface prep, fit, trim 8 drill; bonding of major and minor assemblies, mechanical fit, and assembly of flight controls, wing tips, and windshields. Job Requirements: • 1-2 years of experience working with composite materials • Experience operating mechanical hand tools FINAL ASSEMBLY TECHNICIAN
Assembles and installs aircraft systems and Les Schwab is looking for an I nventory components, including engine, propeller, Accounting Analyst to work closely with store landing gear, flight controls, hydraulic systems, management t o id e ntify a n d a n a lyze control systems, and electrical harnesses. variances within their inventory and gross Repositions aircraft, understands build manumargin results. Th e Inventory Accounting als & instructions. Analyst performs month-end financial close Job Requirements: duties including account reconciliations and • Experience operating mechanical hand tools journal e ntries a n d pr e pares m o nthly • Experience working with build manuals and inventory reports. This position also provides instructions assistance to store personnel on their daily SUB ASSEMBLY TECHNICIAN responsibilities such a s p o sting/receiving Assembles aircraft components to drawing purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, specifications using hand tools, bench tools, and analyzing and correcting certain system and adhesives, in accordance with build transactions. manuals & instructions. Job Requirements: Qualifications: • Ability to read and understand basic • Ability to both work independently and engineering drawings and procedures contribute to overall team performance • Experience with hand/air tools and working • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft with adhesives, including epoxy resins and Excel silicones • Prior accounting coursework or experience Preferred: CAD (Computer Aided Design) TECHNICIAN • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, Prepares layouts and component drawings and business administration or equivalent designs according to engineering specifica• Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP tions. Analyzes, designs and confers with systems engineering to address unresolved details. • Experience working in teams that Performs routine calculations and inspects implemented new accounting systems incoming parts to verify conformance with component drawings. Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent Job Requirements: customer service, with over 450 stores and • Strong computer skills 8 basic CAD experi7,000 employees in the western United States. ence and/or coursework We offer competitive pay, excellent benefits, • Highly prefer proficiency with AutoCAD & retirement and cash bonus. Please go to Microsoft Office Suite software www.lesschwab.comtoapply.No phone calls • Able to lift materials weighing up to 25 Ibs please. For moreinformation, visit Les Schwab is proud to be an www.epicaircraft.comor equal opportunity employer. email kellys@epicaircraft.com.
476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
:> Qfy J~;QJljI~~ Can be found on these pages:
Circulation Night Dock Assistant The Bulletin is looking for a motivated, responsible individual to join our Circulation Depaltment team and fill a vital position working within our circulation Dock crew.
Person is responsible for all dock issues: sorting, distribution, and loading all WesCom products to haulers and carriers. Knowledge of packaging, transportation and d istribution methods, as well as inventory skills and customer service skills a plus. May drive company vehicles to transport various WesCom products from time to time (such as post office, etc.). Interacts with Home Delivery Advisors, Carriers, Customer Service Representatives, and all management at The Bulletin. Ability to lift 50 pounds, work night shift. Approximately 24 hours per week shift to start. Wage DOE. All hiring is contingent on passing drug and DMV screening.
Please apply by delivering a letter of Interest and resume, 8-5, Mon. through Fri. to The Bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave. or apply via email to mewingObendbulletin.com with a letter of Interest, resume, and with the job title in the subject line.
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregnn since1903
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic 6 In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486 - IndependentPositions
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
476
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Maintenance
Whispering Winds Retirement
is seeking a full-time maintenance tech. Wages DOE. Must have some basic electrical, plumbing, carpentry and painting experience. Apply in person at 2920 NE Conners Ave., Bend., Pre-employment drug test required.
Marketing Sales Manager Experience in the health care field preferred, but not required. Must be outgoing and pers onable. Mus t have reli a ble transportation. For more i nform ation, o r a n y questions, please call 541-385-4717
EOE Drug Free Workplace
Pressman
The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 /2 tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at
anelson©wescom a ers.com
with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.
The Bulletin
Serving Cenrral Oregen since190S
Circulation The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy elements within that district. Work schedule will be Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires good communication skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, sales and problem solving skills. Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. Send resume to: mewingObendbulletin.com Applications are available at the front desk. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 No phone inquiries please.
Human Resources Assistant The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of pre-employment drug testing, preparing paperwork for newly hired employees, orientation; benefit enrollment and helping employees keep t h eir p e rsonnel an d b e nefit information current. Maintains personnel files and records for the purpose of providing up-to-date reference and audit trail compliance. Assist with payroll processing as the back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides advice to employees on matters in designated human resources areas. Establish and maintain favorable working relationships within all WesCom departments to assist in effectively achieving department objectives, while responding to requests for reports, records and information in a professional and timely manner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to support employee actions such as promotions, transfers, hires and terminations while maintaining the highest level of data integrity. Other duties include, processing paperwork for unemploymentand worker's compensation as well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the Reception desk when necessary.
Minimum two years human resources experience (payroll and benefits knowledge preferred) in a support capacity. General knowledge of applicable state and federal laws. California experience a plus. Working knowledge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong computer skills with the ability to proficiently use Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. Strong interpersonal skills. Must be able to maintain highest degree of confidentiality, discretion and tact. For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE/Drug Free workplace
If interested please submit resume and salary expectations to hrresumes@wescom a ers.com No phoneca//s p/ease.
The Bulletin
Health Department Manager Grant County Public Health in John Day, Oregon is seeking a full-time Health Department Manager. Requires O r egon registered nurse censure, degree in nursing from an accredited university, and p r ogressively responsible experience in a p u blic health agency. Salary ra n g e is $60-$90,000/yr. DOE. Exc e l lent benefits. For more details, go to http://www.work-
sourceoregon.org,
Job L i s ting ID: 1335732. If i n t er-
e sted, plea s e download an application at www.communitycounselingsolutions.org, forward it with cover letter and resume to ladawn.fronapelOgo bhi.net. EOE.
Medical Billing Supervisor We are a busy Medical Clinic with multiple providers looking to welcome a Billing Supervisor to our team. S t rong billing background with exceptional organizational an d customer s e r vice s kills required. I n addition to oversight of our billing team you will be responsible for monthly reporting / analyzing process; p o l icies and pr o cedures; e valuate and i m prove met h ods. Positive communication and leaders hip skills are a must. We offer a full benefit package. If you are interested in being a part of our positive team o r iented w o r kplace, please send your resume to medpracbend Ogmail.com
TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin
5erving Central Oregon since fct03
The Bulletin
Serving Cencrai Oregnn since lgca
Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace
Newsroom Assistant
The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and self-motivated full-time employee to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred. Organization, flexibility, and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. Ability to work for long periods doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.
To apply, please send a resume and any writing samples to: nolson Obendbulletin.com. No phone inquiries please.
The Bulletin
Call54i 385 5809tsprcmgteyourservice• Advertise for 28dap stortingattl4I fffasfreca t~ate'rs aateerteffein earrntetel
Building/Contracting LandscapingNard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Landlaw requires anyone scape Contractors Law who con t racts for (ORS 871) requires all Zuoez gaalkp construction work to businesses that adbe licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Za~<0a e/,. Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucFull Service tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: Landscape active license p lanting, deck s , means the contractor Management fences, arbors, is bonded & insured. water-features, and inVerify the contractor's Spring Clean Up stallation, repair of irCCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be •Leaves www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e •Cones contractor.com Landscape Contrac•Needles or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit • Debris Hauling The Bulletin recomnumber is to be inmends checking with cluded in all adverWeedFree Bark the CCB prior to contisements which indi& Flower Beds tracting with anyone. cate the business has Some other t rades Lawn Renovation a bond, insurance and also re q uire addi-Aeration - Dethatching workers compensational licenses and tion for their employOverseed certifications. ees. For your protecCompost tion call 503-378-5909 Top Dressing or use our website: Computer/Cabling Install www.lcblstate.or.us to Landscape check license status Computer training, set before contracting with Maintenance up 8 repair from the the business. Persons comfort of your own Full or Partial Service • Mowing eEdging doing lan d scape home. Dirk (541) 647maintenance do not •Pruning eWeeding 1341 or 619-997-8291 r equire an LC B l i Water Management
Serving Central Oregon since i903
Debris Removal
Digital Advertising Sales Manager
JUNK BE GONE I Haul Away FREE
The Bulletin is s eeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral.
Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-plafform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Management experi ence a plus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skills level of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required. Please email your resume to: jbrandtObendbulletin.com No phone calls please.
The Bulletin Serving Central Oregon sincer903
The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer
For Salvage. Also Cleanups 8 Cleanouts Mel, 541-369-6107
Courier Service We will distribute locally in C.O. or do line hauls between C.O. and PDX area Looking for loads for our 26' Freiqhtliner Box truck (26,000 GVW) with 4K l ift ate. Lic. 8 Bonded. ontact Bill at wsdahlObendbroadband.com. ~statrtrslde Cea eea
Fertilizer included with monthly program Weekly,monthly or one time service.
Managing Central Oregon Landscapes Since 2006 Senior Discounts
541-390-1466 Same Day Response
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541-385-5809 Aerate / Thatching Weekly Service and Spring Clean-ups!
Serving Central Oregon Since 2003 Residental/Commercial
Freeestimates! COLLINS Lawn Maint. Ca/l 541-480-9714
Sprinkler Activation/Repair Back Flow Testing Maintenance
CPR LANDSCAPING Weekly maintenance, cleanups. Lawn repairs. Quality at an a ffordable pric e .
eThatch & Aerate
Domestic Services
cense.
• Spring Clean up .Weekly Mowing & Edging •Bi-Monthly 8 Monthly Maintenance •Bark, Rock, Etc.
HOUSE CLEANING Cleaning homes in Bend for 18 years. ~Leneeee in Hourly rate, call Rosie •Landscape Construction 541-385-0367. eWater Feature Installation/Maint. Handyman •Pavers •Renovations I DO THAT! •Irrigations Installation Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Senior Discounts Honest, guaranteed Bonded & Insured work. CCB¹151573 541-615-4456 Dennis 541-317-9766 LCB¹8759
978-413-2487
Free Aeration! Aerate /Thatching. Free Estimates on Weekly Service! (541) 383-1997 abovealllawnservice.com
Painting/Wall Covering
KC WHITE PAINTING LLC Interior and Exterior Family-owned Residential 8 Commercial 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts 5-vear warranties SPRING SPECIAL! Call 541-337-6149 CCB ¹20491 8
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MAR 19, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MAR 19, 2015
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
DAILY BRIDGE CLUB Thursday ,March 19,2015
NEW YQRK TIME5 CRQ55WQRD will sIIPrtz
Staying in practice
ACROSS 1Takesthe fifth, perhaps 7 Like a spanker'8
54 Complete 56 Progress 29Absorb 58 California'8 30Writingon a Valley position on a 36-Across 59 Lit ship 33 British P.M. 60 Where the wild 10Turquoise, e.g. during the Seven things are? Years' War 14Triesto punch 61 B3 15Bow attachment 35 1998 BP 63 Nudge acquisition 16Topicof 64 Verb with "thou" 36 Where one might elementary 65 Part of a singing find a date ... education? family with a hint to this 17Braid, e.g. puzzle'8 theme 66Antediluvian 18 N ov a 40 Part of 67 Fed. (music style) Rimbaud'8 management grp. oeuvre 19 c ak e 68 Part of many a (rich dessert) 41 -glace(rich country singer's sauce) outfit 20 Keen 43 Something 21Edit, in a way found behind a DOWN 23 Big name in 36-Across jewelry 1 World Heritage 48"Holycow!," in a Site that's more 24 Cable channel text than 4,000 years that has 50 She-bear: Sp. old "Idiotest," for 2 Apple type short 51 Go 3 Neighbor of 25 Most slush pile 52 Dot, to Ditto, in Ventnor on e responses "Hi and Lois" Monopoly board 26 Cardinals' home, 533x, in 4 Hurdle for an on scoreboards prescriptions aspiring "Esq." 5 It's filled with eau ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE T OD D C A T T C A U S E 6Trample A RE A WH OA H U R T S 7 Not wide open N CA R T H E B E E T L E S 8 Second Amendment G AF F E R OD EO subject L UD I C R O U S L U V 9 Cable inits. I TE R A T E C E L I N E for sports and T AO M E D I C S A N D S comedy H I PS M A C AW S C O T 10 Ritzy shindig A WAS H R E D I D O N E 11 Latin list ender C AR T E D E N A B L E D 12Takeup new A ND B OY S T OM E N residence in A RR A Y S A P P Y 13 Foundation M O T L E Y C R EW S A R I worker A L L OW H I H 0 T R A P 22 Muttonhead P AC E S T A S E S K Y S 23 Letter numbers
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency I expect most doctors practice medicine as th e s ervice-oriented profession it was meant to be. (Now it's big business also.) But my little d aughter c a m e up wi th an observation I liked: 'They practice until they get it right." Dummy play is something players must study and practice until they get it right. At today's five clubs, you duck West's queen of diamonds and win the next diamond. You must get rid of dummy's diamonds, hence you lead a trump to your ace and take the A-K of hearts for diamond discards. What next?
and he rebids two hearts. What do you say? ANSWER: A better contract than two hearts may be available, but you can't afford to look for it. A bid of three of a minor would be forcing, a bid of 2N T w o ul d suggest more strength and a two-spade rebid might not improve matters. Pass. When the deal is a misfit, just stop bidding to avoid a disaster. West dealer Neither side vulnerable
NORTH 4 9Q8 7 6 5 Q None
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The actual South ruffed a heart in dummy and led a spade.East won and led his last trump, and South was doomed. He couldruff another heart with dummy's last trump but had a diamond loser. To get it right, South must set up the spades. He leads a spade at Trick Six and ducks in dummy. If E ast r eturns a t r u mp, S outh w i n s i n dummy, ruffs a spade, ruffs a heart and ruffsa spade. He ruffs a heartand discards a diamond on the high queen of spades.
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Op e ning Iead — 0 Q
0 A 9 7 3 4 Q 1 0 5 2. Your parmer opens one heart, you bid one spade ( C ) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
28 'Vlhatam yOU?
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PUZZLE BY JULES P. MARKEY
25 Certain dragster 27Top card? 31Has it in one's heart? 32 "Watch your young man!" 34 Imbibe 37 t ide 38 Montezuma and others 39 Means of communication using dots and dashes
42 George Harrison'8 49 Part of many a autobiography mill 43 Standard of
55 Suffix with companson kitchen 44Adriatic peninsula
shared by Italy, Slovenia and Croatia 45 Kind of call
58 Laplander
46 Beginning of the 60Turn back Constitution? 47 Note holder, of 62 Relative of sorts -esque
Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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ZITS HOW WASIrOLII4'
ACROSS 1 Dancing shoe item 4 Initially
37 "Sweet as apple cider" girl of song 38 Extinct emu relative 39 1985 sci-fi classic 48 "Argo" setting 49 Flying Cloud, for one
breakdowns 7 Result of many a bite 8 Deserve 9 Storm output 10 Hawaiian root 11 Took marriage
39 Bridge column datum 40 Decorator'8 recommendation 41 Nymph in Homer's
"Odyssey"
1
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THAT SCRAMBLEO WORD GAME Iy David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek
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63 Pipe turn 64 Commuter'8 choice 65 Backs out 66 "The Murders in the M o r gue" 67 Star quality 68 Ballpark officials 69 Old atlas abbr.
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bordered logo 61 P r ofiled penny prez
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: B A C H
N O R T U N A R J U J U N A S O Z A C V U Z E L A I N N O D S M U U M A T O F I S A N L U J E R E M A C E Y E N P U P U P L A T E L E M I P E S L E P T E N xwordeditor@aol.com 5
O L A Y
W A T E R U V VA U P LO A R
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E R E H A B M E R A S E B E F R U I T E M U L A H RO S S A SPI L E L L A M A S U U S MC S M E T E G A L U L E MO N Y E G0 S H A R K S T E R I ON E V E A K A D E R L O X 03/19/15
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57 "Hi s ," per Ambrose Bierce 58 Juice you can't drink: Abbr. 59 Att o rney general after Barr 60 Gas company with a green-
53 Oklahoma tribe 54 Playful fish-eater
VOWS
12 Top-ten tune 13 Latin trio word 21 Unit of speed 22 Had too much 26 Dorm figs. 29 Words of woe 30 Idle, with "off' 33 Fired 34 Potpourri quality 35 "The Great" boy detective 36 Greek consonant
50 "... is given": Isaiah 51 Sub builder 52 It may be pitched 55 High-level predator 56 Hamlet's satisfied comment about the starts of 20-, 32- and 39Across? 61 Dadaism founder 62 Virgin America'8
42 Baby bootee, often 43 "Wait, there's more" 44 Ticker 45 Loan sharks 46 Eponymous city founder 47 Co-dependency
59
By Ed Sessa ©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
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03/19/15
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 19 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
)
s
I •
•
•
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605- RoommateWanted 616- Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648- Houses for RentGeneral 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for RentSunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663- Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space
•
fe
BMP Mc88
s
~0 ~ [ ]g •
682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 -Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730 - NewListings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - MultiplexesforSale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746-Northwest Bend Homes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749- Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson County Homes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
QoP o
•
732
Commercia!/Investment Properties for Sale HIGH PROFILE LOCATION IN DOWNTOWN REDMOND This commercial building offers ex-
cellent exposure along desirable NW 6th Street. Currently housing The Redmond Spokesman newspaper offices, the 2,748 sq. ft. space is perfect for owner/user. Two private offices and generous open spaces. Three parking places in back+ street parking. $259,000. 541-383-2444
COMPASS Commercial 738
Multiplexes for Sale
® Ãmlijjlm
SALES
. 0 0
RESTAURANT
Seniors and all others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30-8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour.
CHECK YOUR AD
Pastfni Pastaria in theOld Mill District is hiring talented
Line Cooks
and Server/Hosts to join the team. Apply online at www. astini.com/careers or stop by between 2pm-4pm daily.
Need help fixing stuff? Call A Service Professional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com
DUPLEX by owner SE Bend. 2 bdrm, 1.5 bath ea., 14yrs old. Great cond. $219,900 .karenmichellen@hotmail.com. 541-815- 7707 Duplex - NE Bend, Single level - 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 8 2 bdrm, 2 bath. Fenced yards and 2 car tandem ga-
rages. www.johnlscott.com /4402
Kellie Cook, Broker
Motorhomes
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
Looking foryour next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
541-408-0463
HD Fat Bo 1996
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000 541-548-4807 865
ATVs
2010 Polaris Sportsman 850XP EPS, fully loaded, $6950. 541-318-0210
870 2278 sq. ft. home with work shops on 5.41 Boats & Accessories acres. $24 9 ,900. 151628 Hackamore, La Pine. High Lakes Realty 8 Pr o perty Management 54'I -536-0117 771
17.5' Seaswirl 2002 Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for
Lots
173 Highland Meadow Lp. Eagle Crest Resort. 2 s outheasterly Smith Rock views! .30 a cre lot b acks t o common area, gently amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish sloped lot. $99,500 finder, 2 batteries cusLynn Johns, Princ, black paint jcb. Broker, 541-408-2944, tcm Wes Johns, Broker $12,500 541-81 5-2523 541-408-2945, Central Oregon Resort Realty 5 2764 a n d 5277 8 Bridge. $4 2 5,000. Gorgeous 6.49 Riverf ront a c res. H i g h Lakes Realty & Prop- 2007 Bennington erty Ma n agement Pontoon Boat 541-536-0117 2275 GL, 150hp Honda VTEC, less 8.54 acres, with well, than 110 hours, cleared sites. $59,900 original owner lots 15002 Robert Rd, La of extras; TennesPine. High Lakes Resee tandem axle alty & Property Mantrailer. Excellent agement condition, $23,500 541-536-0117 503-646-1804 773
Acreages
Hard-to-find 5-acre flat buildable corner lot located in Lake Park Homes for Sale Estates with mature 26 a cres B o rdering landscaping. M L S¹ 201406959 BLM with Timber - 4 bdrm, 2 bath, 2464 sq $135,500. Call Pam ft home with 4-car ga- Lester, Principal Brorage. $415 , 000. ker, Century 21 Gold Country Realty, Inc. MLS201208278 541-504-1338 Call Duke Warner Realty Dayville at 775 541-987-2363 Manufactured/ Mobile Homes Take care of 745
List Your Home Jandfi/IHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available. 541-548-5511
:00 850
Snowmobiles
•
GarageSales
GarageSales
GarageSales Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds!
541-385-5809
All real estate advertised here in is subject to th e F ederal Fair Housing A c t, which makes it illegal to advertise any pref- 4-place enclosed Intererence, limitation or state snowmobile trailer discrimination based w/ RockyMountain pkg, on race, color, reli- $8500. 541-379-3530 gion, sex, handicap, familial status or na- YAMAHA 700 2000 cyl.i 2300 mi.; 2006 tional origin, or inten- 3Polaris Fusion 900, tion to make any such only mi., new mirpreferences, l i mita- rors,788 covers, custom tions or discrimination. n e w rid e -on We will not knowingly skis, r ide-off t r ailer w i t h accept any advertis- spare, + much more. ing for real estate 6,995. Call for d e which is in violation of $ this law. All persons tails. 541-420-6215 are hereby informed 860 that all dwellings ad- Motorcycles & Accessories vertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ...
• e~ 2007 Winnebago Outlook Class "C" 31', clean, nonsmoking exc. cond. More info.$49,900 541-447-9268
You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
RV PACKAGE-2006 Monaco Monarch, 31 ', Ford V10, 28,900 miles,
auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed 8 hide-a-bed BIG COUNTRY RV sofa, 4k gen, conv miBend: 541-330-2495 crowave, 2 TV's, tow Redmond: package,$66,000. 541-548-5254 OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 FIND ITr speed manual,$1 1,000 B IIT IT i 541-815-6319 SELL IT! 24' Mercedes Benz Prism, 2015 Model G, Want to impress the The Bulletin Classifieds Mercedes Diesel engine, relatives? Remodel 18+ mpg, auto trans, Looking for your your home with the fully loaded with next employee? double-expando, help of a professional Place a Bulletin help and only 5200 miles. from The Bulletin's wanted ad today and Perfect condition "Call A Service reach over 60,000 only $92K. readers each week. Professional" Directory Call 541-526-1201 Your classified ad or see at: will also appear on 3404 Dogwood Ave., bendbulletin.com in Redmond. Tioga 24' Class C which currently reBought new in 2000, ceives over 1.5 milcurrently under 21K lion page views evmiles, exc. shape, ery month at no new tires, profesextra cost. Bulletin sionally winterized Classifieds Get Reevery year, cut-off to b attery, sults! Call 385-5809 Allegro 32' 2007, like switch or place your ad new RV batnew, only 12,600 miles. plus on-line at t eries. Oven, h o t Chev 8.1L with Allison 60 water heater & air bendbulletin.com transmission, dual exhaust. Loaded! Auto-lev- cond., seldom used; add water and eling system, 5kw gen, just 882 r eady to g o ! power mirrors w/defrost, it's Fifth Wheels $22,000 obo. Seri2 slide-outs with awnings, rear c a mera, ous inquiries, only. CHECK YOUR AD Stored in T errebtrailer hitch, driver door w/power window, cruise, onne. 541-548-5174 exhaust brake, central vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812
Ready to makememories! Top-selling Winnebago J, original owners, nonFleetwood D i scovery 31 smokers, garaged, only 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 18,800 miles, auto-leveloptions - 3 slide outs, ing jacks, (2) slides, upsatellite, 2 TV's, W/D, graded queen bed, bunk etc., 34,000 m i les. beds, micro, (3) TVs, Wintered in h e ated sleeps 10! Lots of storshop. $78,995 obo. age, maintained, very 541-447-8664 clean!Only $67,995! Extended warranty and/or fi~ „ pl nancing avail to qualified Ads published in the buyers!541-388-7179 "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishIS~Q 881 ing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. Travel Trailers For all other types of Four Winds 32' watercraft, please go Dutchman Denali 2010 to Class 875. 32' 2011 travel Triton V-10 with 541-385-5809 trailer. 2 slides Ev13,000 miles. Large erything goes, all slide, Sleeps 7. Lots Servin Central Ore on since 1903 kitchen ware, linens of storage. 5000lb etc. Hitch, sway hitch. Like new. Bayliner 185 2006 bars, water 8 sewer $51,900 open bow. 2nd owner hoses. List price 541-325-6813 — low engine hrs. $34,500 - asking — fuel injected V6 $26,800Loaded. — Radio & Tower. Must see to appreciGreat family boat ate. Redmond, OR. Priced to sell. 541-604-5993 $11,590.
Qpy
The Bulletin
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning 8 tires. Excellent condition. $19,750.More pics available. 541-923-6408 Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new, hardly used. Must sell $20,000
541-548-0345.
KAYAKS Two Wilderness Pongo kayaks, 12' and 10', like new + 2 Werner paddies Retail $1808, now $950. 541-306-4181
Say "goodbuy" to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
NOTICE
General sq. ft. shop and The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur- 4700 2500 sq. ft. office on day night shift and other shifts as needed. We 1.53 acres for lease currently have openings all nights of the week. in NW Bend, quiet Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts area, excellent constart between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and struction, perfect for end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoelectronic assembly sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. plant. Lots of parkStarting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a ing. Was auto shop. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Call 702-526-0353. are short (1 t:30 - 1:30). The work consists of Shop can be leased loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackseparate from office ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup space. and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment.
Serv ny Central Oreyonsince f9D3
881
Motorcycles & Accessories
John L. Scott Real Estate, Bend johnlscottbend.com
If interested please contact Perry at 541-420-9863.
The Bulletin
880
Redmond Homes
762
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and Truck Driver human errors do occur. If this happens to FedEx Ground your ad, please conLine Haul Driver tact us ASAP so that Bank owned 3 bdrm, 2 Requirements: C u rbath, 1090 sq. ft., tile corrections and any rent Class A CDL entry, kitchen pantry, adjustments can be with 1 yr experience; oak cabinets, fenced made to your ad. medical yard. Move-in ready. card, 541-385-5809 MLS doubles experience The Bulletin Classified $59,900. 201410945 Call Pam preferred. Must pass The Bulletin Lester, Princ. Broker, drug t est , b a c kC entury 2 1 Gol d To Subscribe call ground check, have Country Realty, Inc. clean driving record. 541-385-5800 or go to 541-504-1338 Night run, full time. www.bendbulletin.com
Please submit a completed application attention Kevin Eldred. Applications are available at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred ©bendbulletin.com ). No phone calls please. Only completed applications will be considered for this position. No resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
880
Homes with Acreage
your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Call 541-382-8672
860
Call Graham Dent
Rmx!SS
Nledfcal Certified Freight Broker/ Coder Logistics Manager We are a busy Medi- A well-established 3PL cal Clinic with mulcompany is seeking tiple providers lookqualified candidates 528 ing to welcome a for t his f a st-paced Certified Coder to transportation sales Loans & Mortgages our team. S t rong position. Responsibilibilling background, ties include develop- BANK TURNED YOU exceptional organiing new and existing DOWN? Private party zational and combusiness to arranging will loan on real esmunication skills acfor the transportation tate equity. Credit, no c ompanied wit h of customers' freight problem, good equity detail and accuracy shipments. This posi- is all you need. Call orientation. You will tion offers unlimited Oregon Land Mortbe responsible for commission-based in- gage 541-388-4200. coding Ho s p ital, come for a committed ASC and c l inical individual with a pas- LOCAL NIONEYrWe buy secured trust deeds & charges; w o rking sion to succeed. note,some hard money with providers re- To apply please call loans. Call Pat Kellev g arding cod i n g Bend WorkSource at 541-382-3099 ext.13. challenges and im5 41-388-6070 an d provements; monthly reference J L ID analyzing and r e1330418. porting of c o ding BBK6cjk trends. We offer a TELEFUNDRAISING full benefit package. If you are interested in being a part of our Tele-funding for positive team ori• Meals On Wheels ented w o rkplace, •Defeat Diabetes please send your reFoundation sume to 632 •Veterans (OPVA) medpracbend AptiMultiplex General Ogmail.com
750
541-385-5809 875
Freightliner 1994 Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd o wner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077 PINNACLE 1990
30', clean. Rear walk-around bed. No smokers, no mildew, no leaks. $8500. 541-306-7268
Watercraft
'
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
L
16' Cata Raft 2 Outfitter oars, 2 Cataract oars, 3 NRS 8" Ouffitter blades and
l ots of gear, all i n "very good to exc." condition plus custom camp/river tables and bags, more!. $2,700
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
541-410-5649
Heartland P rowler 2012, 29 PRKS, 33',
like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r g e closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch 8 stabilizers, full s ize queen bed , l a r ge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571
Jayco Eagle 1995, 230 SL, 23 foot, like new hardly used $4,500. Call 541-475-1249.
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work, You Keep the Cash! On-site credit
approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254 885
Pe~asus 27' 2005 FQS, 14 slide, lots of extras
and plenty of storage inside & out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated garage when not in use. $15,750. 541-526-1361
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Sell an Item
Redmond: 541-548-5254
541 318 1322. Good classified adstell Additional information and photos on the essential facts in sn request, too! interesting Manner.Write the readers view- nct Ads published in "Wa from the sellefs. Convert the tercraft" include: Kay 748 facts into benefits. Show aks, rafts and motor Northeast Bend Homes personal the reader hcw the itemwill Harley Dyna Wide Glide Ized help them in somewsy. watercrafts. Fo Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 2003 custom paint, "boats" please se This 1692 sq.ft., RV parkextras, 13,000 orig advertising tip i ng, m t n vie w s , miles, like new, health Class 870. brought toyouby 541-385-5809 $259,900. P r incipal forces sale. Sacrifice B roker O J o h n L $10,000 obo. The Bulletin Scott, 541-480-3393. 541-633-7856. Serving Central Oregon since 1903
The Bulletin
or take over payments. Call
FAST! If it's under$500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
$10 • 3 lines, 7 days $16-3 tines, 14 days
(Pnvate Party ads only)
Canopies & Campers Adventurer 2013 86 FB truck c amper, $18,800. 2205 dly weight, 44 gallons f resh water. 3 1 0 watts rooftop solar, 2 deep cycle batteries, LED lights, full size queen bed. n i ce floorplan. Also available 2010 C hevy Silverado HD, $15,000. 360-774-2747 No text messages!
Just too many collectibles? Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds
5 41 385 580 9
Your auto, RV, motorcycle, boat, or airplane
acI runs until it sells or up to 12 months
FOR ONCY
(whichever comes first!)
00+
Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000.
«j yA""' bt(pfEE<
"Little Red Corvette"
• Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households.
P
NionacoDynasty 2004-L~ ADED! solid Faturesinclude 4-dr s counter, su surface deconvectionmicro, built-inwasher/drye, ramictilefloor,TV,DUD, satellitedish,airleveling, storage ass-through dk ingsizebed tray,ana' -Al!foronly $149,000 541-000-000
ygppf p
g<fLL>f ~
ypfCtAL
rvette Converti oupe 132 mffes -24mpg Ad script!ona„ ' teresfingfa o howmuch culd ha in a c
$12 5PO 541 pfj0
• Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
For more information call 541-385-5809.
E6 THURSDAY MARCH 19 2015 • THE BULLETIN I
• I ~ I
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Suowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles Aod Accessories 885 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies aod Campers 890- RVs for Rent 0 0 0
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
935
940
975
975
975
975
Sport Utility Vehicles
Vans
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
GN/C Yukon XL 1500 SLT 2013, 4WD, 5.3L V-8 cyl. VIN ¹213994. $35,998.
HondaOdyssey LX Van 1998,
Dodge Avenger2013,
Scion XB2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
Subaru Legacy 3.0R Limited 2008,
(Photo for illustration only)
I
AUTOS8ETRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts aod Service 915 - Trucks aud Heavy Equipmeut 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 - Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique aud Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles 932
933
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
2.3L 1-4 cyl VIN ¹005636.
$3,995.
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.com
541-548-1448
smolichmotors.com 975
(exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹535474
Stock ¹83015
$ 2000 down 84 m o $ 2000 down 72 mo $21,979 or $259/mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - 4 .49% APR o n ap - $3600 down, 84 mo., proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in and title included in proved credit. License payment. and title i ncluded in payment. payment.
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s u a A RU DUDCNUODDUUD.UDU
908
1965 Mustang
Automobiles
Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition.$12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
1/3interestin
2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932
$19,977 ROBBERSON i LINCOL N ~
~
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
Columbia400,
Financing available.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock...
$125,000
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today!
Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for: '10 -3 lines, 7 days
'16 - 3 lines, 14 days 1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bo(Private Party ads only) nanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. CALL ct $85,000. 541-41 9-95i0 www.N4972M.com TODAYW Chevy Pickup 1978, HANGAR FOR SALE. long bed, 4x4, frame 30x40 end unit T up restoration. 500 hanger in Prineville. eng i ne, Dry walled, insulated, Mercedes 380SL 1982 Cadillac and painted. $23,500. Roadster, black on black, fresh R4 transmisTom, 541.788.5546 soft & hard top, excellent sion w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom condition, always ga- interior and carpet, raged. 155 K m i les, n ew wheels a n d $11,500. 541-549-6407 tires, You must see it! $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3889 or Save money. Learn 541-420-6215. to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 1950 Mercury 150 HP, low time, 4-dr Sedan full panel. $21,000 Ground-up obo. Contact Paul at restoration, beautiful! 541-447-5184. Ford F-350 Truck Crew Call for details. Cab 1999, $35,500 T-Hangar for rent [Photo forillustration only) or best offer. at Bend airport. 4x4, 6.8L V-10 cyl. Call 541-382-8998. VIN ¹A37789. 541-892-3789 $9,888 925
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
$13,999 or $175/mo.,
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j
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-382'I Dlr ¹0354
www.aaaoregonautosource.com
fi/fercury Mariner .t: ="
Lw
F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. caILi pacity, 26' long, 8'6 wide, ideal for hauling CONV. 1 9 78 hay, materials, cars, VW $8999 -1600cc, fuel exc.cond. $2800. injected, classic 1978 541-420-3788 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with 931 a black convertible Automotive Parts, top, cream colored Service & Accessories interior 8 black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and SubaruwheelsH14 turns heads wherever set of 4, $100. it goes. Mi: 131,902. 541-385-6168. Phone 541-382-0023
LINcoLN ~
S IVIOLIC H V Q LV Q
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541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com
© s un mu
LINcoLN ~
sleso e
Need to get an ad in ASAP?
Buick LeSabre 2005 custom, exc. cond., tires 40%, 3600 Series II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., 2nd owner. $7700 obo 541-430-7400 or 541-815-8487
1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$4,977
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
541-548-1448
Bargain Corral price $4,998 ROBBERSON U
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Add A Picture!
Chrysler200 LX 2012, (exp. 3/22/1 5) VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹83014
Ni
n A l tim 2 7
Fully restored
Reach thousands ot readers!
Vin ¹359402
Call 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classifieds
$5,977 ROBBERSON i Ieama
U
~
Toyota Corolla2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
Subaru lmpreza 2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹027174 Stock ¹83205
$15,979 or $199 mo.,
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in
payment. $2800 down, 84 mo., S UBA R U . 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. and title i ncluded in 877-266-3821 payment. Dlr ¹0354
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WHEN YOU SEE THIS
541-749-2156
smolichvolvo.com
VWBUG 1971
Advertise your car!
Mini Cooper Clubman S UBA RU NIDLDUUDDUUD.UDU Base Wagon2008, 1.6L 1-4 cyl. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 VIN ¹J46869. $8,995. (exp. 3/22/15) DLR ¹366 Dlr ¹0354
SMOLICH V Q L V Q 4x4 and ready for fun! Vin ¹J28963
S UBA R U
~
541-312-3986
$20,358 or $249/mo.,
(Photo for illustration only)
smolichmotors.com
payment.
®
The Bulletin Classifieds
~s0000aI
www.robberson.com
Mountaineer 1999
s u a A RU
Fax it to 541-322-7253
Buick LeSabre Limited Sedan 2000, 3.8L V-6 cyl VIN ¹166929. $2,688.
Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
541-749-2156 smolichvolvo.com
Dlr¹0354
Honda Accord LX
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
541%12-3986
V Q LV Q
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
www.robberson.com 2010.Only 56k m i.. Vin ¹J20929 15,977 ROBBERSON
©
SMOLICH
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather SubaruForester 2012, Subaru Legacy heated lumbar seats, (exp. 3/22/1 5) LL Bean2006, 3rd row seat, moonVIN ¹466408 (exp. 3/22/1 5) roof, new tires, alStock ¹83037 Vin ¹203053 ways garaged, all $18,399 or $225/mo., Stock ¹82770 maintenance up to $2500 down, 84 mo., $16,977 or $199/mo., date, excellent cond. 4 .49% APR o n a p - $2600 down 84 mo at A STEAL AT$13,900. proved credit. License 4 .49% APR o n a p 541-223-2218 and title included in proved credit. License payment. and title included in
541-312-3986
MoreP ixatBendbuletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
Volvo XC60T6 2011, AWD, 3.0L 1-6 cyl VIN ¹178453.$28,977.
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 03/31/1 5
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
SMOLICH
V Q LV Q 541-749-2156
Find It in The Bulletin ClassiBeds! 541 N385 N5809
smolichvolvo.com
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
~mazaa
541-312-3986
U
smolichmotors.com
ROBBERSON y
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Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5 541-548-1448
UUDONUUDDDUD.UDU
ROBBERSON
www.robberson.com
Utility Trailers
¹018628 $11,977
HONDA CR-V 2011 EXL 33,634 mi. ¹031805 • $21,995
541-598-3750
Lc
Gorgeous and Priced to se//!
BMW328i XDrive
(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
S UBA R U
S UBA R U
(exp. 3/22/15) DLR ¹368
HondaAccord 2005
$2900 down, 72 mo., 2011, 4 .49% APR o n a p 3.0L 1-6 cyl. proved credit. License and title i ncluded in VIN ¹N81801. $24,995.
payment.
©
Volvo V60T5 Premier Wagon2015, 2.5L 1-5 cyl. VIN ¹202096. $34,995.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
Honda CRV 2007, (exp. 3/22/15) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Vin ¹207281 Stock ¹82547
$13,979 or $195/mo., $15,979 or $199/mo.,
Chev Silverado
00
(exp. 3/22/1 5)
Toyota Highlander
$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License Looks & runs great! Vin¹ 178487 and title included in payment. $6,977
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
oncorde 2002
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ROBBERSON LINCOLN~
s 0 000a l
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/15
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
c ommunity g a t e , 36 CFR 218. The draft near Culver, OR. EA will have a 30-day The [GC] firm that is public comment peWhat are you F ord Ranger X L T selected will be proriod (36 CFR 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, looking for? viding services dur218.24(4)). The tow pkg, runs great, ing the construction 30-day public comsell the p ersonal You'll find it in ROBBERSON A Lot of car for $5200. 541-385-4790. phases o f the ment period will beproperty described L INcoLN ~ Eaaa a a $6,977! project. It is the ingan on the date of the The Bulletin Classifieds below to enforce a 932 935 Vin¹133699 tent of L ake Chipublication of a legal lien imposed on said 541-312-3986 Antique & Sport Utility Vehicles nook Fire and Resnotice in The Bulletin 933 property under the www.robberson.com ROBBERSON Classic Autos 541-385-5809 cue to enter into a (Bend), the newspaOregon S e lf-StorPickups Dlr ¹0205. Price nsaoa c ontract with t h e per of record. Comage Facilities Act. good thru 03/31/15 ~ ~ m ents s h ould b e The u n d ersigned selected [GC] firm, 541-312-3986 which will include a within the scope of the will sell a t p u blic www.robberson.com stipulated fee perproposed action, have auction on the 27th Dlr ¹0205. Good thru centage and guara direct relationship to Tribeca 2009 AWD da of March 2015 3/31/15 anteed m a ximum the proposed action, at 10:00 a.m. on the BMW X3 35i 2010 I• and must i n c lude p remises w h e r e price (GMP) for the Exc cond., 65K entire scope of the supporting reasonsfor A Private Collection Scion TCcoupe 2007, said property has Chevrolet Silverado miles w/100K mile work. Proposal may the responsible offi1956 Ford pickup (exp. 3/22/1 5) been stored a nd 1500 2004, transferable warbe obtained after cial to consider (36 1932 DeSoto 2dr Vin ¹198120 which are located at Extended Cab ranty. Very clean; 5 :00 p m Ma r c h CFR 218.2). 1930 Ford A Coupe Stock ¹44193B NORTH E M P IRE 6.0L V-8 cyl. loaded cold This is a nice one! 1 7th, 2015, f r o m 1929 Ford A Coupe S TORAGE C E NVIN ¹199459. $10,379 or $149/mo., weather pkg, preVin¹401035 Lake Chinook Fire & The draft EA can be 1923 Ford T Run. $2800 down, 60 mo., T ER 6 3 048 N E $20,998 mium pkg8 tech$12,977 Rescue o r by found at the following All good to excellent. 4 .49% APR o n a p - Lower Meadow Dr. Dodge Dart SXT 2013, (exp. 3/22/15) DLR ¹366 nology pkg. Keyless emailing URL address: > proved credit. License Inside heated shop 2.0L 1-4 cyl. B end Ore o n ROBBERSON access, sunroof, and title included in BEND 541-382-8038 VIN ¹106645.$14,995. C ount o f D e s - donOlakechinooknavigation, satellite L INcoLN ~ Eaaa a a payment. fireandrescue.org http://data.ecosystem(exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366 c hutes State o f radio, extra snow with a request for management.org/nethe follow541-312-3986 SMOLICH © s u a A RU Orecron, tires. (Car top carthe RFP. Proposals paweb/nepa project ing: Kyle, L aree www.robberson.com rier not included.) are due by 5:00 pm exp.php? project=4373 V Q L V Q 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. Doescher Unit 541-548-1448 Dlr ¹0205. Good thru $22,500. on April 2nd, 2015. 3 541-749-2156 877-266-3821 ¹1247, David Fel3/31/1 5 smolichmotors.com 541-915-9170 Late submissions or t on U n i t ¹ 407 , smolichvolvo.com Dlr ¹0354 submissions f r om If you would like a Bryan V a nAlstine Chev Silverado 1500 Ford Explorer XLT 2013 firms no t r e p re- hard copy of the draft Unit ¹33. Items to Buick Electra 225 2008 crew cab 4x4 moon, Ithr, 25,888 mi. sented a t the EA, please contact be auction include 1964 Classic cruiser v8-auto, canopy. ¹C87495 $30,988 pre-proposal meetthe district office at but are not limited to with rare 401CI V8. ¹102786 $17,995 ing will not be acthe address s how the following: tools, Runs good, needs cepted. below. furniture, electroninterior work, 168K ics, Children's toys, miles. $9,995. LEGAL NOTICE S ubmit your c o msporting equipment Donated to Equine 541-598-3750 541-598-3750 aaaore8 misc. household USDA - Forest Service ments to Indian Ford Outreach. Call Gary www.aaaoregonautoDeschutes National Aquatic R estoration 541-480-6'I 30 gonautosource.com goods. Purchases source.com Forest Project, District must be paid for at Sisters Ranger Ranger, Kristie Miller, t he time o f p u r District Post Offic e Box 249, chase in cash only. OR Indian Ford Aquatic S isters, Oreg o n YOUR /EOWILL RECEIVECLOSE TO 2,000,000 All purchased items Restoration Project 97759; FA X ( 5 4 1) OIINitijitedl EXPOSURESFOR ONLYt2SO! sold are as is where Draft Environmental 5 49-7746. E-m a i l is and must be re4VII!itiSiIIgl 0 0 Cl r a A I N I II N I I UU INII I • I v ll ~ I Assessment comments shouldbe moved at the time of Heekof March 16, 2015 sent to sale. Sale subject to T he I n dian F o r d comments-pacificcancellation in the Aquatic R estoration northwest-deschutesevent of settlement Project draft environ- sistersOfs.fed.us. between owner and Serving Central Oregon since 1903 mental a ssessment Those sub m itting o bligated par t y . 541-385-5809 (EA) is available for electronic comments Dated This 11th and p ublic r eview a n d must do so only to the 19th day of March comment. The Sis- e-mail address listed 2015. ters Ranger District above, must put the LEGAL NOTICE proposes to restore project name in the DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes REQUEST FOR aspen stands, wet subject line, and must PROPOSALS meadows, fish pas- either submit comAdd a PhOtO to yOur Bulletin ClaSSified ad G ENERAL C O N Children, CUStody, SuPPOrt, PrOPerty and billS disage, and Riparian ments as part of the for just $15 per week. T RACTOR FOR Habitat Conservation e-mail message or as N EW LAKE C H IAreas on about 454 an attachment only in ViSiOn. NO COurt aPPearanCeS. DiVOrCed in 1- 5 V isit w w w . b e n d b u l l e t i n . c o m , NOOK FIRE AND acres along Indian one of the following RESCUE FIRE Ford Creek. Indian t hree formats: M i weeks possible. 503-772-5295. Www.paralec lick o n " P L A C E A N A D " STATION [GC]. Ford Creek is an im- crosoft Word, rich text New Lake Chinook portant tributary of format (rtf), or Adobe galalternativeS.Com legalalt©mSn.Com a nd follow the e a s y s t e p s . Fire and R escue Whychus Creek. The Portable D ocument Fire Station - APproposed action (Al- Format (pdf). For furAll adS aPPear in both Print and Online. P ARATUS BA Y . ternative 2) would re- ther information about Date of Advertisemove the bridge at the the project, the comPlease allow 24 hours for photo processing ment: March 18th, Pine Street crossing ment process, or a MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train before your ad appears in print and online. 2015. Closing Time to improve fish pas- copy of the draft EA, and Date: April 2nd, sage in addition to the please contact at hOme to PrOCeSS MediCal Billing 8 InSuranCe 2015 O5:00 pm. I. above activities; AlMichael Keown, EnviPUBLISHED NOternative 3 would inronmental CoordinaClaims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! Online trainTICE - Lake Chistall a ford, culvert, or tor, Sisters Ranger nook Fire and Resbridge to allow for fish District, Post Office ing at Bryan UniVerSity!! HS DiPIOma/GED 8 cue i s see k ing passage and contin- Box 249, Sisters, Orued public access in egon 97759 ( 541) www.bendbulletin.com proposals from exComputer/Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880 perienced General addition to the above 549-7735. Contractors [GC] to activities. The project To place your photo ad, visit us online at construct a new fire area is located about w w w .b e n d b u ll et i n. c o m station - Apparatus five air miles northCheCkOutthe Bay on a 3.23 acre e ast of the c ity o f RN'S UP to$45/hr; LPN'S UP to $37.50/hr; CNA'S or call with questions, site located at SW Sisters, Oregon. ClaSSifiedS Online 11700 SW Graham UP to $22.50/hr.Free gaSiweekly Pay $2,000 boThis draft EA is sub- WW9/bendbuletifI.Com Road, in Jefferson County, just west of j ect t o n o tice a n d nus. AACO Nursing Agency 800-656-4414. Updated daily the Three R ivers comment pursuant to 0
The Bulletin
LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE IS H EREBY GI V E N that t h e un d e rsigned intends to
2008 Sport, 3rd row, lots more! ¹024803 $19,977
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