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IN COUPONS INSIDE
BUSINESS • E1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
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HOStage CriSiS — The fourday standoff in Algeria has a
dramatic and bloody end.A2
Odituary — stan "The Man" Musial,
one of baseball's most prolific hitters and a model of
good sportsmanship during his Hall of Fame career with the St. Louis Cardinals, has died. D1
ln other sports newsCrook County andCulver are champions at the Oregon
The prospect of guns in schools already exists locally, in the hands of police
Wrestling Classic. D1 And No.21 Oregonbeats No. 24
And officids want more officers, with crime prevention as their top priority.
WASHINGTON — In November, just after winning re-election, President Barack Obama identified dealing with climate change as one of the top three priorities for his second term, which begins today. "I am a firm believer that climate change is real, that it is impacted by human behavior and carbon emissions. And as a consequence, I think we've got an obligation to future generations to do something about it," he said at a Nov. 14 news conference. Tackling the issue will involve making some tough political choices, he said, because climate change will affect different parts of the country in different ways. "I don't know what either Democrats or Republicans are prepared to do at this point, because this is one of those issues that's not just a partisan issue; I also think there are regional differences," he said. Since Obama's comments, a handful of reports have bolstered his claim that "what we do know is the temperature around the globe is increasing faster than was predicted even 10 years ago." Taken together, they also provide a glimpse into what a hotter future could mean for the Pacific Northwest. In December, the U.S. Forest Service published "Future of America's Forest and Rangelands," the resources-planning assessment the agency compiles every 10 years. See Northwest/A5
Biofuel vs. human foodAs demand grows for bioethanol and other renewables in the U.S., so do
hungerpangsin the developing world. A7
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Graph SearCh — It's Facebook's new sharing tool, it's an answer to Google — and it's
raising privacy concerns. AS Flu — Four misconceptions. A3
And a Webexclusive-
Join "Alligator Ron" and others Florida's "Python Challenge."
CR
bemfbulletin.com/extras
EDITOR'SCHOICE
A man'sgift to a future president By Karen Tumulty The Washington Post
AUSTIN, Texas — One February morning in 2008 found Barack Obama decidedly out of sorts. He was locked in one battle with Hillary Clinton for the Democratic nomination that showed no signs of ending, and another with a vicious cold that felt the same way. As he rode the service elevator in the backway of a convention hotel here, the snowyhaired African-American operati ng it turned Smi t h suddenly. He held out a black-and-gold bit of fabric embroidered with a screaming eagle. "SenatorObama, Ihave something I want to give you," Earl Smith said. "I've carried this military patch w ith meevery day for40 years, and I want you to carry it, and it will keep
you safe in your journey." Obama tried to refuse, but the older man persisted. Two American stories intersected that morning in that elevator. The more fam ous, of course, is the one that begins its next chapter on Monday, as the nation's first black president publicly takes the oath of office for a second term. But the other story also tells a lot about where this country has been and how far it has come. See Veteran /A6
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
UCLA inmen'sbasketball. D3
as they hunt for giant snakes in the Everglades as part of
a news orre ion
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
"School resource officers aren't walking the halls in hopes that we catch someone and make the arrest," says Amy Ward, the Bend Police officer at Bend High. "... We're really here for prevention and stopping things, whether it be a theft or a fight or harassment or truancy."
2012: Hottest onrecord The National OceanicandAtmospheric Administration declared lastyear the hottest ever for the continental U.S., registering 3.25 degrees
By Ben Botkin • The Bulletin
School Resource Officer Amy Ward stood along a hallway in Bend
above the 20th-century average.Oregoneast of the Cascadessawtemperatures above orfar above normal, while only one region in the contiguous
High School during a recent school day as students streamed by on their
48 states, a sliver along theOregon Coast, witnessed tempsbelow normal.
way to class. A familiar sight in uniform, Ward exchanged greetings with
Source: NOAA/NASA 2012 report on global temperatures
teachers and students as they passed. One of three Bend Police officers working in the schools, Ward's responsibilities range from walking the school perimeter to building relationships with the students to keeping an ear poised for potential threats to student safety. Ward has been aschool resource officer since 2008, a year before the current crop of seniors were freshmen. "Schoolresource officers aren't walking the halls in hopes that we catch someone and make the arrest," Ward said. "If something
like that comes up, we'll investigate it and do what we need to do, but we're really here for prevention and stopping things, whether it be a theft or a fight or harassment or truancy.... I put extreme value on the prevention piece." In the national conversationsince the massacre of 20 elementary schoolchildren Dec. 14 in Newtown, Conn., by a lone gunman who also killed six school staff members and then himself, schoolresource officers have barely rated a mention.
The National Rifle Association, for example, suggested armed guards in schools. A principal in Butler, Pa., hired a retired state trooper to patrol the high school. Teachers in Utah filled a class on firearms training. But school resource officers already patrol schools throughout the nation. As full-fledged police officers, they're armed and trained to meet the threat posed by anyone intent on doing harm to the children in their
charge. See Schools iA4
The president's gunproposals President Barack Obama's initiative to reduce gun violence, announced last week, introduced proposals that
require congressional approval, mostly for directing agencies to do abetter iob of sharing data on guns, but also for restricting the sale of certain firearms. Also included in the plan were executive orders that, among other things, focused on school security. In his executive actions, signed immediately, Obama authorized: • Giving local communities incentives to hire up to 1,000 new police officers, counselors and psychologists
— with a $150million request to Congress tofinance such aprogram. • Developing model emergency response plans for schools, colleges and housesof worship, tied to a legislative request for $30 million in grants to states to help develop such plans. • Providing training for state andlocal lawenforcement, first responders andschool officials on howto handle active-shooter situations. Sources: The Associated Press, New York Times News Service
TODAY'S WEATHER Sunny High 46, Low 22
Page B6
New CIA paybook, bLIt drones not in it By Greg Miller, Ellen Nakashima and Karen Deyoung The Washington Post
WASHINGTON — The Obama administration is nearing completion of a detailed counterterrorism manual that is designed to establish clear rules for targeted killing operations but leaves open a major exemption for the CIA's campaign of drone strikes in Pakistan, U.S. officials said. The carve-out would allow the CIA to continue pounding al-Qaida and Taliban targets for a year or morebefore the agency isforced to comply with more stringent rules spelled out in a classified document that officials have described as a counterterrorism "playbook." The document, which is expected to be submitted to President Barack Obama for final approval within weeks, marks the culmination of a yearlong effort by the White House to codify its counterterrorism policies and create a guide for lethal operations through Obama's second term. A senior U.S. official involved in drafting the document said that a few issues remain unresolved but described them as minor. The senior U.S. official said the playbook "will be done shortly." The adoption of a formal guide to targeted killing marks a significant, and to some uncomfortable, milestone: The institutionalization of a practice that would have seemed anathema to many before 9/11. See Drones iA5
INDEX
The Bulletin
Business/Stocks E1-6 CommunityLife Ct-8 Milestones C2 Pu zzles C6 D1-6 Calendar B2 Crosswords C6, G2 Obituaries B 4 - 5 S ports Classified G 1 - 6L ocal 8 State Bt-6 Opinion/Books F1-6 TV/Movies C8
Vol. 110, No. 20, 46 pages,
AnIndependent Newspaper
7 sections
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
The
NATION 4% ORLD
Bulletin How to reach us
RallieS againSt gun reStriCtiOnS —Thousands of gun advocates gathered peacefully Saturday at state capitals around the U.S.
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to rally against stricter limits on firearms, with demonstrators carrying rifles and pistols in some places while those elsewhere settled
for waving hand-scrawled signs or screaming themselves hoarse. The size of crowds at eachlocation varied — from dozens of people in South Dakota to 2,000 in New York. Large crowds also turned out
GENERAL INFORMATION
in Connecticut, TennesseeandTexas; somedemonstrators in the Oregon and Washington state capitals came with holstered handguns or rifles on their backs. Capitol rallies also took place in Arizona, Colo-
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rado, Kansas, Maine, Michigan, Missouri, Montana, NewMexico,
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North Carolina, Ohio, Utah, Vermont and Wisconsin, among other states. Activists promoted the "Guns Across America" rallies primar-
The four-day hostage crisis in the Sahara reached a bloody conclusion
ily through social media.
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Saturday as the Algerian army carried out a final assault on the gas field
Mailing
industry is pushing backagainst the Washington power players and others who have put the squeeze on "Zero Dark Thirty," the movie about the Osama bin Laden manhunt. Christopher Dodd, the president
the total of hostages killed to at least 23.
of the Motion Picture Association of Americaand former Democratic senator, raised a warning Friday for those who are calling for investigations into the film and its depictions of torture. "There could, in my
A four-day standoff in eastern Algeria Sonatrach, the Algerian state oil company running a remote natural gas complex in the Sahara along with BP and Norway's Statoil, said the entire refinery had been mined with explosives, and that the process of clearing it out is under way. A total
of 685 Algerian and 107 foreign workers were freed over the course of the hostage crisis at Ain Amenas. The government of Algeria says the kidnappers consisted of32 men of various nationalities. The military said it confiscated heavy machine guns, rocket launchers, missiles and grenades attached to suicide belts.
OUR ADDRESS Street
Hollywood pushes back on 'Zero Dark Thirty' —Themovie
taken over by Islamist militants, killing all 32 militants involved and raising
view, be a chilling effect if, in the end of all this, you have ascreenwriter or a director called before an investigating committee," Dodd said. Three U.S. senators publicly criticized the film and have asked that the
~Ajn Amenas
CIA provide information about its contact with the filmmakers.
(
WhiSky baCk On iCe —Three bottles of rare,19th-century Scotch found beneath the floor boards of Antarctic explorer Ernest
MALI
Shackelton's abandoned expedition base were returned to the polar continent Saturday after a distiller flew them to Scotland to re-cre-
t
177 7 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Po. Box 6020 Bend, OR97708
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ate the long-lost recipe. NewZealand's Prime Minister John Key
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personally returned the whisky to Antarctic Heritage Trust officials at a ceremony at New Zealand's Antarctic base on Ross Island. The
I ' el
bottles will be transferred by March from Ross Island to the desolate hut at Cape Royds, where they had been forgotten for102 years. Shackelton's stash was discovered frozen in ice by conservationists
Cdldidd0dvL
pimppop App.
in 2010; Antarctica's minus-22-degree temperature wasnot enough to freeze the liquor. "I think we're all tempted to crack it open and have a little drink ourselves now," Key said at the base.
paciiiiii pa
OutreaCh in Syria? —Syria's foreign minister, Walid al-Moallem,
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
on state television Saturday invited the country's rebels to lay down
fr
their weaponsandtake part in anational dialogue, saying everyone who participates will be included in a new Cabinet with wide executive powers. But the regime reacted with outrage Saturday to a petition
from 58 countries asking that it be investigated for war crimes,evenas evidence of new atrocities — 100 killed in a village on Tuesday — surfaced a day after the United Nations'top human rights official called
AP
Source:GeoEye EyeQ imagery
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forcefully for the case to bereferred to the International Criminal Court. Bulletin wire reports With few details emerging from the remote site in eastern Algeria, it was unclear whether anyone was r escued in Saturday's final operation, but the number of hostages killed Saturday — seven — was how many the militants had said that morning they still had. The government described the toll as provisional and some foreigners remained unaccounted for. Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who appeared at a news conference in London, said he did not yet have reliable information about the fate of Americans at the facility, although a senior Algerian official said two had been found "safe and sound." What l i t t l e in f o rmation trickled out was as harrowing as what had come in the days before, when some hostages who managed to escape told of workers being forced to wear explosives, at least one summary execution and some dying in the military's initial rescue attempt. On Saturday, an Algerian official reported that some bodies found by troops
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Oregon Lottery results Aa listed at www.oregoniottery.org
POWERBALL The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
©
. News reports said that . House Speaker John Boehner killed the o riginal Superstorm Sandy aid package because of all the pork it contained. What were some of these projects and what they would have cost? • Boehner called off a vote • on a $60 billion Sandy aid package because it was packed with other projects. Those included $150 million for fisheriesacross the country, $100 million t o r e pair Head Start facilities, $8 million for cars for the Homeland Security and Justice departments and $2 million to repair the roof at the Smithsonian, among other projects.
A
nomic ties with North Korea as well as its ancient claims on Korean land, could attempt to "conceivably block" an eventual unification
between the two Koreas, if ever the Kimfamily falls from power in Pyongyang. The report was released last month with little fanfare,
but North Koreawatchers say it gives voice to an increasingly popular but sensitive sentiment: that China will ultimately try to prevent the South from absorbing the North. Such a situation is well down the road, experts say, but it resonates at a time when China is playing an
Death toll
The siege at Ain A menas transfixed the world after radical Islamists linked to al-Qaida stormed the complex, which contained hundreds of plant workers from all over the world, then held them hostage surrounded by the Algerian military and its attack helicopters for four tense days that were punctuated with gun battles and dramatictalesofescape. Algeria's response to the crisis was typical of its history in confronting terrorists, favoring military action over negotiation, which caused an international outcry from countries worried about their citizens. Algerian military forces twice assaultedthe two areas where the hostageswere being held with minimal apparent mediation — first on Thursday, then on Saturday. Immediately after the as-
While the Algerian government has only admitted to 23 hostages dead so far, the militants claimed through the Mauritanian n ew s w e bsite ANI that the helicopter attack alone killed 35 hostages. One American, a Texan — Frederick Buttaccio, of Katy — was among the dead. Six of the dead probably were Britons and five Norwegian, according to European leaders. In a s t atement Saturday, President Barack Obama said the U.S. stood ready to provide whatever assistance was needed in the wake of the attack. According to a U.S. official not authorized to speak, a U.S. military C-130 transport plane flew some people, including an undisclosed number of former hostages, from Algeria to a location in Europe.
aggressive role elsewhere in the region, staking claim to much of the South China Sea and to islands administered by Japan.
New file-sharing site — Indicted Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom launched a new file-sharing website this weekend, promis-
ing users amped-up privacy levels in adefiant move against the U.S. prosecutors who accuse him of facilitating massive online piracy. He unveiled the "Mega" site ahead of a lavish gala at his New Zealand mansion tonight, the anniversary of his arrest on racketeering
charges related to Megaupload, one of the most popular sites on the Web until U.S. prosecutors shut it down. U.S. authorities are trying to extradite the German-born Internet tycoon.
COrruptiOn in Spain —Spain's governing Popular Party was drawn deeper into a web of corruption scandals last week, after the
Swiss authorities informed the Spanish judiciary that the party's former treasurer hadamassed asmuch as 22 million euros, or $29 million, in Swiss bankaccounts. The treasurer, Luis Barcenas, resigned from his job in 2009 after being indicted in the early stages of acontinuing investigation into a scheme of kickbacks and illegal payments said to involve other Popular Party politicians. Barcenas has said that
he is innocent and that the Swiss accounts were held onbehalf of investors. The Popular Party, too, denied any link to the money. — From wire reports
P RIYACY AND G R A N D E U R O N A CO N T RY LA N E
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Algeria's response
RepOrt On KOrean reunifiCatiOn —A report by U.S. Senate Republican staffers warns that China, because of its deepening eco-
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sault,French President Francois Hohande, who i s c onducting a military operation against al-Qaida-backed rebels in neighboring Mali, gave his backing to Algeria's tough tactics, saying they were "the most adapted response to the crisis."
NEWS Q&A
Q eQzeQ 29Q 34Q ae The numbers drawn Saturday night are:
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MART TODAY
A3
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Sunday, Jan. 20, the 20th day of 2013. There are 345 days left in the year.
PRIVACY
NEED TO KNOW
HAPPENINGS Inauguratian —President Barack Obamatakes the oath for his second term in private, on the day the Constitution
requires. (The public inaugural ceremony is Monday.)A6
Gun debate —It's the weekend in which firearms
take center stage: Churches and congregations across the country are organizing "Gun Violence Prevention Sabbath" events today to focus attention
on urban gun violence, aday after advocates for gun rights took to state capitals.A2
HISTORY Highlight:On Jan. 20, 1953, Dwight D. Eisenhower took the
oath of office as president of the United States. In 1265, England's first representative Parliament, which included officials from districts, cities and boroughs, met for the first time. In1649, King Charles I of
England went on trial, accused of high treason (hewasfound guilty and executed by month's
end). In1887, the U.S. Senate ap-
proved an agreement to lease Pearl Harbor in Hawaii as a
navalbase. In 1936, Britain's King George V died; he was succeeded by Edward Vlll. In1942, Nazi officials held the
notorious Wannseeconference, during which they arrived at their "final solution" that called for exterminating Jews. In1957, President Dwight D. Eisenhower and Vice President Richard Nixon were sworn in
for their second terms of office in a private Sundayceremony (a public ceremony washeld the next dayl. In1961, John F. Kennedy was inaugurated as the 35th president of the United States. In 1981, Iran released 52 Americans it had held hostage for 444
days, minutes after the presidencyhadpassedfrom Jimmy Carter to RonaldReagan. In1986, the United States observed the first federal holiday in honor of slain civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr. In1993, Bill Clinton was sworn in as the 42nd president. Ac-
tress Audrey Hepburn died in Switzerland at age 63. In 2001, George W. Bush became America's 43rd president after one of the most turbulent elections in U.S. history.
In2009, Barack Obamawas sworn in as the nation's 44th, as well as first African-Ameri-
can, president. Ten yearsago:Secretary of State Colin Powell, faced with stiff resistance and calls for caution, bluntly told the Security Council that the U.N. "must not shrink" from its responsibil-
ity to disarm SaddamHussein's Iraq. Caricaturist Al Hirschfeld died in New York at 99. Pollster
Burns W. "Bud" Roperdied on Cape Cod, Mass., at 77.
Fiveyearsago:The New England Patriots defeated the
San DiegoChargers intheAFC championship game,pulling out a 21-12 victory that sent them back to the Super Bowl for the
fourth time insevenseasons. The New York Giants won a 23-
20 overtime victory overGreen Bay in theNFCchampionship. One yearago: Six U.S. Marines were killed in a helicopter crash in Afghanistan's southern prov-
ince of Helmand. SingerEtta James, 73, died in California.
BIRTHDAYS Country singer Slim Whitman is 89. Comedian Arte Johnson is 84. Former astronaut Buzz
Aldrin is 83. Movie director David Lynch is 67. Country-rock
musician GeorgeGrantham (Pocoj is 66. Rockmusician Paul Stanley (KISS) is61. Comedian Bill Maher is 57.
Actor LorenzoLamas is55. Sophie, CountessofW essex, is 48. Actor Rainn Wilson is
47. Singer EdwinMcCain is43. Actor Skeet Ulrich is 43. Rap
musician?uestlove (questlove) (The Roots) is 42.Country singer Brantley Gilbert is 28. — From wire reports
If your
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genome
is public,
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The rapid onset of the flu season this year has led to absenteeism, hospitalizations and death. It has also led to misinformation about influenza and the government's pandemic policies. Here's a healthy
thenso
dose of reality on how bad this year's flu is, how to avoid it, and how to dispel four myths about it.
are you
By Tevi Troy
By Eryn Brown Los Angeles Times
LOS ANGELES — Scouring information availableto anyone with an Internet connection, a team of genetic sleuths deduced the names of dozens of suppos-
edly anonymous people who had their DNA analyzed for scientific and medical research. The snooping feat, which took advantage of g e nealogy websites that let people compare their DNA to search for relatives, was in full compliance with federal privacy regulations. Experts said it underscored a stark reality about genetic privacy in the age of social media: Don't count on it. "Nobody can promise privacy," said Mildred Cho, of Stanford University's Center for Integration of Research on Genetics and Ethics, who wasn't involved with the study. Whitehead Institute geneticist Yaniv Erlich and his team, w ho described their w o r k Thursday in the journal Science, didn't provide a complete recipe that would help others ferret out the identities of research volunteers. Nor did they divulge the names of the people they were able to unmask. Since the first draft of the human genome was published in 2000, scientists have scrutinized its 3 billion pairs of DNA letters to try to find variants that cause disease, to understand human physiology, and to unravel the evolutionary history of our species. Toward thatend, academic efforts like the 1000 Genomes Project post complete genomes online for public use. The idea is that providing free access to the data will allow scientists to compare DNA from many people and help them discover connections between genes and traits, eventually leading to the development of personalized, targeted treatments for a wide range of disorders. Keeping genomic data private has been a concern all along. Worries that h ealth insurers or employers might use information about genetic health risks to drop benefits or discriminate against workers inspired the 2008 Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act, which provides protection against abuse. Last year, the Presidential Commission for the Study of Bioethical Issues recommended a variety of additional measures to further secure genetic data. Potentially com p l icating these efforts are the legions of amateur geneticists who want to learn their risk for diseases or gain clues about their ancestry. As sequencing costs have dropped, these enthusiasts have sent DNA samples to private sequencing companies. Often, they post their test results online. Erlich has been interested in privacy since he worked as a professional hacker — breaking into corporate networks as a "vulnerability researcher" for a computersecurity company — to help support himself in college. He started planning the current research after hearing about a 15-year-old who had part of his genome sequenced in 2005 in order to find his biological father, a sperm donor. To Laura Lyman Rodriguez, a policy specialist at the National Human Genome Research Institute in Bethesda, Md., the bottom line is that research subjects should be told that their genomic data could be breached. "It's important to be clear," said Lyman Rodriguez, who co-wrote a commentary that accompanied the report in Science.
after v a ccination. V accine naysayers, beware: You are missing out on your best possible protection.
Special to The Washington Post
This season, the flu is
1• deadlier than ever.
The influenza virus is one of theleading causes of death by infectious disease in the United States. It killed an average of 36,000 A mericans a n nually i n the 1990s. Approximately 675,000 Americans died in the great influenza of 19181919, and 70,000 perished in the Asian flu outbreak of 1957-1958. To put these numbers in perspective, about 400,000 Americans died in World War II. That said, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) do not know exactly how many people die from seasonal flu each year. States do not have to report flu deaths a mong adults, an d t h e cause of death for people with complications or secondary infections from the flu is not always clear. We will not know the estimated number of flu deaths this year for some time. What we do know is that the flu has peaked quickly this year. The CDC found 22,048 cases of flu in the last three months of 2012, c ompared wit h 8 4 9 f l u cases inthe same period in 2011. We also know that 20 children have already died from this flu; 34 died during the 2011-2012 flu season, while 282 children died during the swine flu/ H1N1 outbreak of 20092010. These figures suggest that this flu season will be w o rse than l ast year's but not as bad as the one three years ago.
People should stay away
4 • from enclosed spaces
during flu season.
During the swine flu outbreak in2009, Vice President Joe Biden said on NBC's "Today" show that he "wouldn't
go anywherein confined plac-
Mark Boster /Los Angeles Times
A nurse administers the flu vaccine recently in Downey, Calif. The flu has peaked quickly this year, and there are many misconceptions about it, and about vaccinating against it. ting the flu — and it's unsafe,
the flu shot puts a live virus in your arm. Such rumors The flu vaccine is about contribute to an unfortunate 62 percent effective in prephenomenon: "vaccine hesiventing the flu — obviously tancy." R espiratory-disease not perfect. Still, v accines e xpert Frank Esper of U H are matched to t hi s y ear's Case Medical Center in Ohio flu strains, particularly the t old FoxNews.com that f l u virulent H3N2 causing the shots have "absolutely no live worst problems, and are the virus.... You cannot get the best way to prevent infection flu from the shot because it should you be exposed. doesn't contain all the parts Vaccines are a l s o s a f e. of the flu v i rus." The CDC Anti-vaccine advocates such confirms this on its website. as HBO talk-show host Bill Still, v a ccine h e sitancy Maher — who said on Twitter gives people an excuse not in 2009 that people who got to get a shot or to get one too swine-flu shots were "idiots" late, as it t akes about two — have falsely suggested that weeks to develop immunity
anyway.
es now."The statement caused an uproar and threatened to drive people away from air travel and public transportation. White House press secretary Robert Gibbs had to apologize for Biden's remarks, which show how careful government officials must be in making p u blic p r o nouncements. Not causing panic is more important than Purell in any flu-response plan. While I w o u ldn't r ecomm ended jumping into a p i t filled with flu patients, simple prevention goes a long way. The best way to fight the virus is to apply lessons learned in kindergarten: Wash your
hands often and well (sing " Happy Birthday" t w ice to make sure you've scrubbed
long enough); cough into your sleeve and not into other people's food or faces (and wash that shirt a f t erward); and stay home if you are feeling sick or running a fever.
Drug companies de2 . serve blame for vaccine shortages. When producing v accines each season, there's no easy way for drug companies to know that they've made enough.Manufacturers made about 135 million doses ofvaccine this season, of which 128 million have been distributed. Flu vaccine takes about nine months to m a ke, w hich means that m anufacturers have to start developing a vaccine well before flu season begins. Even though there have been some isolated shortages, particularly in the Northeast, drugmakers cannot easily adjust the number of doses once production is underway. Manufacturersare more n imble than t h e y o n c e were and have reduced the time it takes to make an annual batch. Technological improvements, such as cell-based vaccines, could make the production cycle even shorter. (Cell-based vaccines are grown in cell cultures, unlike most flu vaccines, which are made inside fertilized chicken eggs, a slower technique that dates to the 1930s.) In fact, l ast N o vember, t he Food and Drug A d ministration approved the first cell-based seasonal flu vaccine in the United States. Though fo r n o w w e are largely stuck with the number of vaccine doses we already have, manufacturers base production targets on how many shots were used i n p r e v ious years. Therefore, the best way to make sure we have more vaccinenext year is to go out there and get that flu shot. The vaccine won't
3 • keep you from get-
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
ANALYSIS: OVERSEAS ADOPTION
Schools
Waiting for a baby, once easy, isnow a lengthy nightmare
Continued from A1 "Yes, it includes that element," said Bend Police Chief Jeff Sale. "That is the l aw enforcement presence inthe school." That p r esence includes a number of goals, but in a crisis, the school resource officer is there and expected to respond, he said. Providing schools with more resourceofficersisone ofPresident Barack Obama's proposals to Congress announced W ednesday and intended toreduce gun violence and increase school safety. His plan calls for adding up to 1,000 more school resourceofficers and counselors in American schools. Also under the plan, the U.S. Department of Justice, through an executive order, will show a preference toward grant applications from police agencies seeking federal money to hire schoolresource officers. Working with tight budgets, school officials say they would benefit from more school resource officers if they could afford them. The school districts split the staffing costs with the law enforcement agencies. "We're so lucky to have the SROs. They're able to be in the building and build r elationships with the students and our faculty," said Sal Cassaro, Bend-La Pine Schools director of secondary programs. But, he added, "because of the budget, they're spread pretty thin." Police officers also patrol schools in Sisters, Redmond, Crook County and Jefferson County. Duane Yecha, Crook County School District superintendent, said his d istrict's school resource officer contributes to a safe environment. "If we could afford it, I would increasethe number," he said. For schoolresource officers, the job is about providing a presence inschools and building relationships with students, parents and staff. Like other police officers, they investigate cases and make arrests, but that's just one part of their work. They help resolve conflicts — ideally before situations escalate. They visit classrooms and teach students about law enforcement topics like search and seizure procedures. In Bend-La Pine, a school resource officeris based at Bend High, Mountain View High and Summit High. A Deschutes County s h eriff's deputy works the schools outside city limits, including in La Pine and Sunriver. The officers don't limit their work to just one school. Ward, for example, makes trips to Pilot Butte Middle School and the alternative Marshall High School. Like other school districts, Bend-La Pine r eviewed its safety and security measures in response to the Connecticut shooting. "We really took the opportunity to look at what we're doing," Cassaro said. He said the district made no significant changes to its procedures and feels confident with school resource officers in place. Yecha said the school district is seeking bids on security camera systems for buildings without them and researchingcosts.
By Tara Bahrampour The Washington Post
Russia update-
For years, the common wisdom for Americans who w anted to a dopt a b a b y quickly and easily was to go abroad. Rather than wrestle with the red tape and long waits associated with adopting in the United States, they could fly to countries where the process tookjust weeksor even days — and involved little more than showing up
Russia hasannounced
and paying some money.
that U.S. citizens in the final stages of adopting
children would beallowed to take custody and return tothe U.S., providing some
clarity after more thantwo weeks of confusion over a new lawbanning adoptions by U.S. citizens. A federal official said Ameri-
cans whoseadoptions have beenapproved by a
But sometimes, the quick trips took on sinister undertones, with some birth countries becoming a sort of Wild West for adoptions. Babies were sometimes made available under suspicious circumstances, such as through
court would be allowed
kidnappings or buying them
not have acourt approval
from their birth mothers. Aiming to curb such practices, governments stepped in, and now the pendulum has swung far in the other direction. Even before the recent ban in Russia on adoptions by Americans, the annual number of international adoptions has plunged to 40 percent of what it was in the mid-2000s, and the process can grind on for years. "In 1984, I had people yelling at me because it took six weeks instead of four. Today, it takes about five years to adopt a healthy child from China," said Janice Goldwater,founder and executive directorofAdoptions Together, a Silver Spring, Md.-based adoption agency that used to facilitate nearly 100 international adoptions a year and now does fewer than 10. "The landscape isso different today than it was four years ago, or e ven t h ree years ago, when we were out recruiting for p a rents for all these kids, and now there aren't all these kids available."
in hand seem likely to be disappointed.
to complete the process. But State Department officials have estimated that
there are asmany as500 families somewherein the middle of the process. Many of those who do
adopted by people in the U.S. The pool shrank further in December: Russia, which in 2004 sent 5,862 children to the United States, passed legislation banning adoptions by Americans. Americans aren't the only ones facingdifficulty in adopting abroad. After reaching a peak of 50,000 in 2005, the worldwide rate of intercountry adoptions has slipped to about 15,000 a year, said Tom DiFilipo, president and chief executive of the Joint Council on International Children's Services, an Alexandria, Va.based nonprofit organization. Some countries have shut down international adoption altogether. Others have dramatically increased the scrutiny of potential adopters as well as the children they want to adopt — to a point where many Americans find themselves shut out from applying. The U.S. also imposes its own requirements, including criminal checks, fingerprint'Huge supply of orphans' ing and medical reports, as A mericans' i n terest i n well as proof that the child is adoption rose in the 1990s truly considered an orphan. and early 2000s after the Across the board, the waitintroduction and augmenta- ing time has stretched out, tion of adoption tax credits and many governments reand legislation limiting how quire two or more visits to the long children could spend in country by the prospective foster care. At the same time, parents, increasing the cost a large number of countries and lengthening the process. opened fo r i n t e rnational Sometimes, all the waiting adoption — including Eastern and the money is fruitless. Europe, Russia and China. Lorenda Naylor began try"All of a sudden, there was ing to adopt internationally this huge supply of orphans in 2005. After the paperwork overseas who were avail- was completed, "they said, able for American families 'OK, in six months you will to adopt," Goldwater said. have a baby girl, so go home The rise in interest coincided and get your nursery ready." with an increase in infertilBut the availability of chility rates, as well as celebrity dren in China waned, and international adoptions and the baby never materialized. television shows depicting Naylor and her husband next mixed-race families. tried Vietnam: They were In 1999, the State Depart- seventh on the list before the ment counted15,719overseas program there shut down. adoptions b y A m e r icans; After trying for five years and that number had soared to spending $45,000, they gave nearly 23,000 a year by mid- up on international adoption. decade. But in 2011, the most In 2009, they became foster recent year for which the de- parents to two American todpartment has statistics, just dlers. After 15 months, they 9,319 children overseas were were able to adopt them.
Safe School Alliance Oregon experienced one of the first mass-casualty school shootings in 1998, when Kip Kinkel, a student at Thurston High School in Springfield,
Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
Amy Ward, Bend High's school resource officer, talks with students during lunch Thursday. "Here at the school, I'm Officer Amy. (People here) know me and I know them." Ward also makes trips to other schools in the district. killed two and injured another 25 people at the school. He had already killed his parents. In 1999, two students killed 13 people in a mass shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., before both committed suicide. Eight years later, 32 people were killed in a school shooting at Virginia Tech. Not long before the Springfield shooting, Mike Dugan, at the time the Deschutes County district attorney, had attended a national conference on juvenile law. That event sparked the idea for an effort to improve safetyand reduce crime by aligning professionals at schools, mental health services, juvenile justice and police agencies. "The shooting gave it a lot more urgency," Dugan said. The end result was the Safe School Alliance, which exists today in Central Oregon. The group meets each month, with representativesof law enforcement agencies, schools and other agencies like Deschutes County Mental Health and Deschutes County J uvenile Community Justice. By putting all the agencies on the same page, Dugan said, stronger practices developed. For example, students involved i n as s ault-related crimes undergo mental health evaluations that look at t he risk of re-offending. Students arrested on an assault-related charge are transported to jail automatically,
Dugan said. That was a shift away from a practice of writing citations and sending students home. The group's topics are wideranging, said Jayel Hayden, facilitator of the Safe School Alliance and human resources director of the High Desert Education Service D i strict. Examples include education for youth who i ntentionally start fires, and more common challenges like bullying prevention. Sale agrees the key lies in prevention. "If you go back in history and look at the vast majority of these shootings, a social autopsy of the individual, key things throughout that person's life will start sending them on a path," he said. "From bullying to mental health to whatever, these people have shown up on everybody's radar at some point in time."
ent people each day. For school resource officers,there's already a connection. "Here at the school, I'm Officer Amy," said Ward, a Bend police officer since 2000. "They know me and I know them." Redmond Police O f f icer Leland Gilbert, the school resource officerfor Redmond School District, is assigned to Ridgeview High School but like other resource officers visits other schools. The district is getting a second officer later this year. Having a presence on school grounds is crucial in building trust between students and police officers, Gilbert said. Crime prevention is a big part of the job. For example, if he hears about students arguing via social media, Gilbert will work with them to resolve the conflict before it worsens. "We want to intervene before the fight happens," he said. Sheriff's D e p ut y M ike Quick, assigned to Bend-La Pine Schools outside Bend city limits, said the work entails looking at a student's intent and evaluating factors like whether a student has a plan or access to weapons. "We catch it before it gets out of hand," he said. For students — whether they are in trouble with the law or not — school resource officers are there to lend an ear. Prineville P olice O f f icer Jeffrey Coffman, the school resource officer for Crook County School District, said he counsels students on topics such as getting a job, interacting positively with p arents, and dealing with boyfriend or
girlfriend problems. That work has benefits outside school, when students interact with other officers, said Bend Police Lt . P a ul Kansky, who supervises his department'sschool resource officers. "They have a better understanding that we're real people in uniform," he said.
Steady work At Bend High, Ward carries a cellphone and a police radio, the former so school staff can reach her, the latter so dispatchers can contact her. The job has its similarities with — and differences from — the work of patrol officers. No two days are alike for either, but street patrol officers tend to deal with differ-
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
UPDATE: 'HONOR' ATTACK
Drones
Memorygone,scarsare
Continued from A1 Among the subjects covered in the playbook are the process for adding names to kill lists, the legal principles that govern when U.S. citizens can be targeted overseas and the sequence of approvals required when the CIA or U.S. military conduct drone strikes outside war zones. U.S. officials said the effort to draft the playbook was nearly derailed late last year by disagreements between the State Department, the CIA and the Pentagon on the criteria for lethal strikes and other issues. Granting the CIA a temporary exemption for its Pakistan operations was described as a compromise that allowed officials to move forward with other parts of the playbook.
Afghan victim's testimony By Alissa J. Rubin New York Times News Service
KABUL, A f ghanistan The stitches and bandages are gone, but scars streak across one side of th e g i rl's face, across her cheek and behind her ear: stark testimony to the brutal attack she barely survived three months ago. When the girl, Gul Meena, is with other people, even those whom she knows at the shelter where she now lives, she pulls a veilacross the damaged side New York Times News Service of her face, often touching it Gul Meena, who was struck gingerly and sucking in her by an ax — reportedly in an "honor killing" attempt by her breath. "It hurts," she said softly. brother — covers her scars The man who swung an ax with a veil at a shelter in Kabul, over and over into her face Afghanistan. and neck was her brother, according to the Afghan police and her neighbors. His rea- she was brought to a hospital son, as best it can be pieced in eastern Afghanistan at the t ogether from p e ople w h o end of September thought she know the family, was that Gul would survive,much less reMeena had dishonored their gain the ability to walk, wash family by running away with herself, eat and speak. a man to whom she was not She does remember where married. her family comes from, and What made her perceived talks about it all the time. She crime worse— and, in the eyes says she cannot recall, howevof some, what made the "honor er, what led to the attack. "We had her see a counselkilling" necessary — was that she, barely past childhood, or, but we don't want to push was married, said relatives her," said Manizha Naderi, the and people in her village. executive director of Women When talking to people she for Afghan Women, a human sometimes sounds confused, rights group that runs the sheleven surprised at her situation, ter that is caring for her. like a person who wakes up Asked what she wants to do for the first time in a new place now, Gul Meena says that all and cannot remember getting she wants is to return to her there. "I don't know how this family. "I will go as soon as happened to me," she said as you will take me," she said to she traced the scars' raised Naderi. welts with her index finger. For a woman in AfghaniNeither the doctors nor hos- stan who has broken every pital orderlies who saw her in taboo, however, there is no gothe days and even weeks after inghome.
Northwest
lier, according to the National Climate Assessment DevelContinued from A1 opment Advisory Committee The report noted that steep report'schapter on the Pacife levation gradients i n t h e ic Northwest, which included I ntermountain West — l i k e Mote as one of two conventhose found in Central Oregon ing lead authors. Eventually, — will be some of the areas in the amount of hydroelectric the country most exposed to power the region produces habitat stress caused by cli- — currently enough to exmate change. port up to 6 m i l l ion mega"For example, a l though watt-hours a month — will go wildfires are a natural process down as more water has to that structures ecosystems, re- be diverted to accommodate cent analyses suggest that cli- salmon and steelhead, the remate is altering historical fire port projects. dynamics and may alter the By changing the times of patterns beyond that to which year when rivers and streams the (region's plants and ani- are running at their fullest, mals are) adapted," the report climate change puts strain states. "(They) will thus be af- on various parts of the ecofected directly by the changes system, said Stephen Fitzgerin climate and indirectly by ald, a professor at Oregon changes to n a tural d i stur- State University's College of bances such as fire, insect out- Forestry. "It warms up sooner in the breaks, and disease." Not only will th e size of spring, which means you have t he forests shrink, but t h e a longer growing season. So composition of trees will also you're using more water over change, according to a draft the year, and perhaps there's report by th e National Cliless water for streams," he mate Assessment Develop- said. This means less water ment Advisory C ommittee, is available for irrigation and an interagency government fish habitat, he said. panel of scientists published Forests and resources earlier this month. Within 70 years, subalpine The makeup o f C e n tral forests will v i r tually disap- Oregon's forests could gradupear from the region, the re- ally change, Fitzgerald said. port projects. Ponderosa pine may m o ve By the 2080s, the median upslope, crowding out mixed a nnual area burned in t h e c onifer f o rests a t hi g h er Northwest would project to elevations. 2 million acres, a 400 percent With less moisture in the increase from the 1916-2007 ground and atmosphere, trees period, and the probability of compete andbecome stressed. a very large fire year would in- Bark beetleshone in on trees crease from I in 20 to 1 in 2. under stress, he said. And last week, the National But we can stave off some Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad- of these changes in the forest ministration declared 2012 the by thinning them a little wider hottest year on record for the and creating more space becontinental U.S., 3.25 degrees tween trees, he said. "Thinhotter than the average tem- ning does triple duty," he said: peratureduring the 20th cen- It reduces competition and tury. Worldwide, 2012 was the helpskeep bark beetles atbay; 10th-warmest year recorded it frees up more water; and it since 1880. All 12 years of the reduces fuel for fires. 21st century rank in the top Climate change is going to 14 hottest, and only one year play amajor role in resources in the 20th century (1998) was planning f o r t h e fo r eseehotter than 2012. able future, Fitzgerald said. "There's a lot of research goSnow and water ing on right now. As we move "A lot of the consequences forward, I think there will be of climate change are con- more information available nected to the fact that much of to help us tweak our managethe water we use in the North- ment style in the face of cliwest is snowmelt," said Phil mate change." Mote, director of the Oregon Foresters are already conClimate Change Research In- sidering what species to plant stitute and a professor at Ore- now based on the likely future gon State University's College conditions, Mote added. "We're changing our enviof Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences. "It trickles ronment, and we need to figthrough a lot of aspects of life ure out how to live with those in the Northwest." changes," Mote said. By 2050, the snowmelt will — Reporter: 202-662-7456, come three to four weeks earaclevenger@bendbulletin.com
Wars winding down The decision to allow the CIA strikes to continue was driven in part by concern that the window for weakening alQaida and the Taliban in Pakistan is beginning to close, with plans to pull most U.S. troops out of neighboring Afghanistan over the next two years. CIA drones are flown out of bases in Afghanistan. "There's a sense that you put the pedal to the metal now, especially given the impending" withdrawal, said a former U.S. official involved in discussions of the playbook. The CIA exception is expected to be in effect for "less than two years but more than one," the former official said, although he noted that any decision to close the carve-out "will undoubtedly be predicated on facts on the ground." T he former official a n d other currentand former off icials interviewed for t h i s article spoke on condition of anonymity. Obama's national security team agreed to the CIA compromise in l at e D ecember during a meeting of the "principals committee," comprised of top national security officials, that was led by White House counterterrorism adviser John Brennan, who has sincebeen nominated toserve as CIA director. White House officials said
the committee will r eview the document again before it is presented to the president. They stressed that it is not in force until Obama has signed off. The CIA declined requestsforcomment. The outcome reflects the administration's struggle to resolve a fundamental conflict in it s counterterrorism approach. Senior administration officials have expressed unease with the scale and autonomy of the CIA's lethal mission in Pakistan. But they have been reluctant to alter the rules because of the drone campaign's results. The effort to create a playbook was disclosed last year. Brennan's aim in developing it, officials said at the time, was to impose more consistent and rigorous controls on counterterrorism p r ograms that were largely ad-hoc in the aftermath of the Sept. 11 attacks. Critics see the manual as a symbol of the extent to which the targeted killing program has become institutionalized, part of an apparatus being assembled by t h e O b ama administration to sustain a seemingly permanent war. The playbook is "a step in exactly the wrong direction, a further bureacratization of the CIA's paramilitary killing program" over the legal and moral objections of civil liberties groups, said Hina Shamsi, director of the American Civil Liberty Union's national security project.
Spreading drone campaign Some administration officials have also voiced concern about the duration of the drone campaign, which has spread from Pakistan to Yemen and Somalia where it involves both CIA and military strikes. In a r ecent speech before he stepped down as Pentagon general c ounsel, Jeh Johnson warned that "we must not accept the current conflict, and all that it entails, as the 'new normal.'" The discussions surrounding the development of the playbook were centered on practical considerations, officials said. One of the main points of contention, they said, was the issue of "signature strikes."
"There's a sense that you put the pedal to the metal now, especially given the impending (withdrawal from Afghanistan)." — Former U.S. counterterrorism official
The term r efers t o t h e the involvement of multiple C IA's practice of approving a gencies — including the State s trikes in Pakistan based on D epartment — in nominating patternsof suspicious behav- ne w names for kill lists. ior — moving stockpiles of None of those rules applies weapons, for example — even t o the CIA drone campaign in w hen the agency does not P akistan, which began under h ave clear intelligence about P resident George W. Bush. the identities of the targets. The agency is expected to C IA officials have credited g i ve the U.S. ambassador to t he approach with decimating P akistan advance notice on al-Qaida'supper ranks there, str ikes. But in practice, ofp aradoxically accounting for f i cials said, the agency exert he deaths of more senior ter- c i ses near complete control r orist operatives than strikes o ver the names on its target c arried out when the agency l i st and decisions on strikes. knew the identity and locaImposing t h e p l a ybook tion of a target in advance. standards on the CIA camS ignature strikes contrib- p aign in Pakistan would likeu ted to a surge in the drone l y lead to a sharp reduction c ampaign in 2010, when the i n the number of strikes at a agency carried out a time when Obama is record 117 strikes in preparing to announce P akistan. Th e p a c e a drawdown of U .S. had tapered off over forces from Afghanithe past two years bestan that could leave as fore quickening again few as 2,500 troops in in recent weeks. Brennan place after 2014. Despite CIA asserOfficials said cont ions about the effectiveness c e rns about the CIA carveo f signature strikes, Obama o ut were allayed to some exh as not granted similar au- t e nt by Obama's decision to thority to the CIA o r m i li - nominate Brennan, the print ary in Yemen, Somalia or ci pal author of the playbook, o ther countries patrolled by t orun the CIA. armed U.S. drones. The reBrennan spent 25 years at s traint has not mollified some t h e agency before serving as critics, who say the secrecy ch ief counterterrorism adsurrounding the strikes i n vi ser to Obama for the past Y emen and Somalia means f our years. During his White t here is no way to assess who H o use tenure, he led efforts to is being killed. impose more rigorous review I n Yemen, officials said, o f targeted killing operations. s trikes have only been per- B ut he also presided over a m itted in cases where intel- major expansion in the numl igence indicates a specific b er of strikes. threat to A m ericans. That CIA officials are likely to be could i nclude "individuals "quite willing, quite eager to w ho are personally involved e mbrace" the playbook develi n trying to kill Americans," a o p ed by their presumed future s enior administration official d irector, the former adminiss aid, or "intelligence that ... t r ation official said. "It's his ( for example) a truck has been h a ndiwork." Brennan's conc onfigured in order to go after f i r m ation hearing before the our embassy in Sanaa." Senate Intelligence Committee is scheduled for Feb. 7.
More stringent rules
The playbook has adopted that tighter standard and imposes other more stringent rules. Among them are requirements for White House approval on drone strikes and
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
Veteran Continued from A1 Later that day, Obama and hisaidesdiscussed the encounter. The future president pulled the patch from hi s p ocket, along with about a dozen other items people had pressed upon him. "This is why I do this," he said. "Because people have their hopes and dreams about what we can do together." But no one in Obama's small party that day n oticed the man's name tag. If anyone did, the fact that it said Earl Smith was quickly forgotten. No one knew how much of Smith's life had been woven into a patch that, over four decades, found its way from the shoulder of an Army private to the pocket of a future commander-in-chief. It was the only shred of cloth he had saved from the uniform of a nightmarish year in Vietnam. Smith fired artillery with a brigade that suffered 10,041 casualties during the course of the war.The brigade's soldiers received 1 3 C o n gressional Medals of Honor. The patch was waiting among his possessions when Smith was pardoned by the state of Georgia in 1977 after spending three years in prison for a crime he claimed wasself-defense. Smith kept it close as his lucky charm while he rebuilt his life and hi s r eputation, starting with a job vacuuming hallways and changing sheets in an Atlanta Marriott. He carried it with him as he traveled halfway around th e w o r ld again, to positions in hotels far from home, Riyadh in Saudi Arabia and Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates. Along the way, as he tended totravelers and made sure VIP gatherings w ent s m oothly, he met three U.S. presidents. His instincts told him Obama would make it four. In that short ride between hotel floors, Smith, now 68, did not have the time or the words to "say a lot of the things that I wanted to say." So he offered a gift and a wish — that the badge of his resilience might lend its protection to another generation's young president. "I thought he might put it on his desk, and every once in a while, he would look at it," Smith added. "And if he got in a situation where he was not feeling well, or some troubled t imes, I w anted him t o b e able to look at that patch and see we,the American people — we're here." Obama carried the patch in his pocket until the end of the campaign, said his close friend and top adviser Valerie Jarrett. He had an almost-spiritual regard for the totems and trinkets that people pressed on him as he made his way to the White House. When Time correspondent Jay Newton-Small asked Obama late in the 2008 campaign to show her the contents of his pockets, they included a memorial bracelet for a son fallen in Iraq, a gambler's chit,a silver charm engraved in Braille, a tiny Hindu monkey god, a Madonna medal. Jarrett first told this reporter the story of the patch a few days before that election, in an interview aboard Obama's campaign plane. As the second inauguration neared, I wondered what had become of the generous stranger. Had the reality of the Obama presidency matched his hopes for it? The chances seemed great that the man had long since retired or moved on. Jarrett said she had never known who he was and had no idea where he might be. Through rec o n structing Obama's schedule from five years ago, aides offered one possibility where the encounter m ight have happened, and Iput in a call to the human resources office of the Hyatt Regency in Austin on Jan. 4. Yvonne Moore answered the phone. She never had heard the story, but 90 minutes later, she sent an email: "I am so excited to tell you that it is our very own Earl Smith / Director of Security.... It took a bit of convincing to get him to consider calling you, but he promises he will." I forwarded the news to Jarrett, and she sent an emotional letter to Smith that day. She told him she thinks of him every time she drives through the White House gates. Jarrett has often cited him in commencement addresses and political speeches. "Of course, the president remembers you too," she added. "... He asked me to invite you to Washington so that he can thank you fo r b elieving in him. Please let me know if you would like to come. It would be
Smith's life outside of work came together nicely as well. After a brief early marriage fell ration ceremony, he'll already be 24 hours into his second term. apart, he wed Claudia Howard. He's first taking the oath in private today, Jan. 20, the date the ConThey have been married 32 stitution says onepresidential term endsand another begins. The years and have two grown chilsecond oath is show business, with theatrical props that include a dren, a daughter and a son. The stack of two Bibles: one used by Abraham Lincoln and the other by Obama years have been good Martin Luther King Jr. Remarkably, for a manelected to only two to his family, Smith said. Clauterms, Obama's recitation Monday will mark the fourth time he's dia is retired from teaching. His sworn the oath — and he's not the only man who has had to repeat kids are working. But he is disit. Find out more about the presidential oath and its constitutional appointed with politics. "It's not quirks in a Web exclusive atbendbulletin.com/extras. like it used to be," Smith said. "Now you've got red states, blue states. I'm a Democrat; I'm a scribes a robbery and assault. tality industry — turned out to Republican. We're Americans." In Smith's version, it was an suit him. And he suited it. There are two ways to meaargument with acquaintances His job as a "floor house- sure how the country relates man" at the Marriott led to one to its president. One is polling. Submitted family photo at an apartment complex that Pfc. Earl Smith poses for a portrait in full uniform in 1967. The drew in a neighbor who hap- as an attendant cleaning 16 to The other is a bond forged one patch located on Smith's left arm denoting the101st Airborne pened tobe an off-duty cop. 18 rooms a day. Sorting dirty American at a time. — the "Screaming Eagles" — was given to Barack Obama while he " He comes back w it h a sheets and towels set him up One measure of that conwas campaigning in the Democratic primary in 2008. gun, and he puts the gun to for his first management po- nection is how many Amerimy head, and he says, 'Boy, sition, as a laundry manager cans feel compelled, as Smith I'm going to kill you,'" Smith with a Marriott in Chicago. did, to give a president a tansuch a thrill to see you again!" any other American military recalled, then spelling out the Eventually, he became what gible piece of themselves. The To Obama and the others unit since the Revolutionary notorious N-word he would Marriott called a director of 13 presidential libraries have who had been on the elevator War, said Guy Nasuti, an innot bring himself to say. services, supervising a range cataloged n e arl y 60 0 ,000 that day, the patch retained a formation specialist at the U.S. They struggled. Smith got of operations from the laundry such "artifacts," said Diane special significance. Army War College's military the gun but not before he was to the health club. LeBlanc, a spokeswoman for But they never learned the history institute. More than shot in the hip and leg. One job that he could never the National Archives and Re"I took the gun. I left the story that went with it. 1,600 members of the herd did do, however, was the front cords Administration, which not make it back alive. scene, and I went to a service desk. Not with his hearing be- oversees the libraries. Smith's story Smith declined to talk much station," Smith said. "I said, ing what it was. Among them arethe badge Willie Earl Smith Jr. traces about what it was like in the 'Look, I've got this gun. I want There was the stint in the of a Port Authority officer who his Texas roots to the black war, though he said it gave him you to call the police.'" Middle East. "Abu Dhabi was fell on 9/11, given by his mothcowboys who rode the Chis- nightmares for 15 years. His It was the word of a young just the sticks. Now it's not that er to George W. Bush. Herbert holm trail after slavery ended. exposure to artillery fire also black man against that of a po- anymore," he said. Smith met Hoover's library displays hunHis forebears scraped together cost him part of his hearing. lice officer. Among the lesser Gerald R. Ford and George dreds ofdecorated flour sacks enough money tobuy land at Smith has moved on from of five counts against Smith H.W. Bush while he was work- sent to him by Belgians gratethe bottom tip of the state, only Vietnam in some ways; in oth- was stealing the Smith & Wes- ing in Atlanta, and then-Gov. ful for shipments of food he to lose it when times got bad. ers, he hasn't. He is a private son 38 that shot him. George W. Bush in Austin. had organized during World He was a veterinarian's as- man, who bears witness — to Sentenced tofive years for At the Hyatt, which hired War I,before he was president. sistant when the draft caught the war and the difficulties that aggravated assault, Smith be- him in 1998, Smith has made With Obama, there also is up with him in 1965. His or- followed — in a private way. gan writing letters, to lawyers, fans a m o n g le s s -famous the thrill that Americans of "I never went to Washing- right up to Gov. Jimmy Carter. guests, such as Canadian busi- all colors have felt at the proof d ers were to r eport t o t h e "I felt bitter," he said. "Com- nessman James Thomas."Earl that a person doesn't have to 101st Airborne in Phan Rang, ton, to the wall, the Vietnam which is what earned him the (memorial)," he said. "I never ing from V i etnam, coming Smith at Austin Hyatt rocks!" be white to sit in that office. As screaming eagle patch. When wanted to go, purposely, be- from a combat zone, you Thomas tweeted on March 1. Smith put it: "There's a person he arrived in Vietnam in 1966, causeI' d rather remember the think, 'You know, I deserve a When a bleary-eyed Thom- who is one of us, even though he got a new assignment. guys that didn't make it back little better than this.'" as accidentally dropped off his he's well-educated — gone to Fresh troops were needed in my own way. I thought that Somehow, his plight caught credit card instead of his room Harvard, gone to Columbia to replenish the ravaged 173rd if I went to the monument, it the attention of Mamie Reese, key at a pre-dawn checkout University. And I had that feelAirborne Brigade. It had been would be too overpowering. the first A f r ican A merican last year, Smith was dogged in ing. That's what motivated me. " I think I ha v e enough woman named to the Georgia his efforts to get the card back ... I've always had this feeling created in March 1963 specifically for jungle fighting. The strength to go now." Board of Pardons and Paroles. to its owner. you always want to protect "There's something about your president." brigade members' official milA different k in d o f h e l l When Reese, then the board's itary nickname was "sky sol- awaited Smith when he re- chairman, submitted Smith him that restores your faith Obama keeps the patch in diers,"but the 3,000 or so men turned to the United States, af- for a pardon under a special in humanity," Thomas, the what a White House official of the 173rd called themselves ter hewas discharged at Fort program for f irst offenders, marketing vice president at described as a "safe place" in "the herd." Campbell, Ky., and found his he won it, two years before his recruiting software firm Tal- his Chicago home. All told, the 173rd fought 14 way to Atlanta. scheduled release. ent Technology, said in an inAs for Smith, he still rides campaigns in Vietnam and reThe court record of what The hotel business — which terview. "I don't know where that service elevator almost mained in combat longer than happened on Aug. 16, 1973, de- Smith prefers to call the hospi- people like him come from." every day.
Obama'S SWearing-in —When President Barack Obamaraises his hand to takethe oath of office Monday in amajestic inaugu-
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
A7
TODAY'S READ: FUELING THE MODERN WORLD
• Land once devoted to food now grows crops for refineries
palma, the local industry association, said that Guatemalan palm is c u rrently exported for cooking oil, the high prices that it commands reflect heightened global demand for a crop also used in biofuel. It is exported in a raw form that could be distilled into biofuel in the receiving country, and Siekavizza said there was "interest" in manufacturing fuel in Guatemala in the future. Production of sugar cane, long a mainstay Guatemalan crop, has also skyrocketed as biofuels opened new market opportunities. Pantaleon Sugar Holdings, which once exported only food products, now uses 13 percent of its production for fuel. Local sugar prices have doubled.
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By Elisabeth Rosenthal New York Times News Service
GUATEMALA CITY — In the tiny tortillerias of this city, people complain ceaselessly about the high price of corn. Just three years ago, one quetzal — about 15 cents — bought eight tortillas; today it buys only four. And eggs have tripled inprice because chickens eat corn feed. Meanwhile, in rural areas, subsistence farmers struggle to find a place to sow their seeds. On a recent morning, Jose Antonio Alvarado was harvesting his corn crop on the narrow median of Highway 2 as trucks zoomed by. "We're farming here b ecause there is no other land, and I have to feed my family," said Alvarado, pointing to his sons Alejandro and Jose, who are 4 and 6 but appear to be much younger, a sign of chronic malnutrition. Recent laws in the United States and Europe that mandate the increasing use of biofuel in cars have had far-flung ripple effects, economists say, as land once devoted to growing food for humans is now sometimes more p r o fitably used forchurning out vehicle fuel. In a globalized world, the expansion of the biofuels industry has contributed to spikes in food prices and a shortage of land for food-based agriculture in poor corners of Asia, Africa and Latin America because the raw m aterial i s g r own wherever it is cheapest. Nowhere, perhaps, is that squeeze more obvious than in Guatemala, which is "getting hit from both sides of the Atlantic," in its fields and at its markets, said Timothy Wise, a Tufts University development expert who is studying the problem globally with Actionaid, a policy group based in Washington that focuses on poverty. With its corn-based diet and proximity to the United States, C entral A m erica ha s l o n g been vulnerable to economic riptides related to the United States' corn policy. Now that the United States is using 40 percent of its crop to make biofuel, it is not surprising that tortilla prices have doubled in Guatemala, which imports nearly half of its corn. At the same time, Guatemala's lush land, owned by a handful o f f a m ilies, has proved ideal for p r oducing raw materials for b i ofuels. S uchitepequez province, a major corn-producing region fiveyears ago, isnow carpeted with sugar cane and African palm. The field Alvarado used to rentfor his personal corn crop now grows sugar cane for a company that exports bioethanol to Europe. In a country where most families must spend about two thirds of their income on food, "the average Guatemalan is now hungrier because of biofuel development," said Katja Winkler, a researcher at Idear, a Guatemalan nonprofit organization that studies rural issues. Roughly 50 percent of the nation's child ren are c h r onically m a l nourished, the fourth-highest rate in the world, according to
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Jose Antonio Alvarado stands behInd hIs family as they harvest corn near a hIghway In the SuchItepeqez province of Guatemala. They farm so close to the road because "there is no other land, and I have to feed my family," Alvarado saId.
For G uatemala's l a rgest landowners,long-term leases with large biofuel companies are more profitable and easier to manage than cattle ranching or renting to subsistence farmers. In small towns l ike San Basilio, representatives of one palm company are pressing farmers tolease their fields. "I'm trying not to because I need that land to grow corn," said on e f a r mer, G i lberto Galindo Morales, 46. But he added that farming has become difficult as nearby plantations divert a n d d e plete rivers to feed industrial-scale irrigation systems. Ash from burning cane fields after harvest also damages his corn
Biofuelmandates The U.S. renewable fuel
standard mandates that an increasing volumeof biofuel be blended into
the nation's vehicle fuel supply each year to reduce carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuels and to bolster the nation's energy security. Similarly, by 2020,
transportation fuels in Europe will have to contain 10 percent biofuel.
A cut sugar cane field near Cuyotenango, Guatemala. RegIons that had once been major corn producers are now devoted to bIofuel crops like sugar cane.
the United Nations.
established in 2007 by Congress, can be waived by the Growth industry Environmental Pr o t e ction L arge c o m p anies l ik e Agency, but, according to law, Pantaleon Sugar H o ldings, such adjustments focus on Guatemala's leading s ugar domestic issues like cases in producer, are profiting from which biofuel "requirements that new demand, with recent would severely harm the econannual growth of more than omy of a state, a region or the 30 percent. The Inter-AmeriUnited States," the agency said can Development Bank says in an email when asked for the new industry could bring comment. an infusion of cash and jobs to Competing for corn Guatemala's rural economy if developed properly. For now, Once nearly self-sufficient the sugar industry d i rectly in corn production, Guatemap rovides 60,000 j ob s a n d la became more dependenton the palm industry 17,000, al- imports in the 1990s as a surthough the plantations are not plus of subsidized U.S. corn labor-intensive. flowed south. G u atemalan But many worry that Guate- farmers could not compete, mala'spoor are already suffer- and corn production dropped ing from the diversion of food roughly 30percent per capita to fuel. from 1995 to 2005, Wise said. "There are pros and cons to But cheap imports disapbiofuel, but not here," said Mi- peared once the United States sael Gonzales of CUC, a labor started using corn to fulfill its union for Guatemala's farm2007 biofuels standards. "The use of maize to make ers. "These people don't have enough to eat. They need food. biofuel has led to these crazy They need land. They can't eat prices," said Guy Gauvreau, biofuel, and they don't drive head of the U.N. World Food cars." Program in Guatemala. It "is In 2011, corn prices would not ethically acceptable," he have been 17 percent lower if added. the United States did not subIn part because the agency's sidize and give incentives for primary food supplement is biofuel production with its re- a mix of corn and soy, it cannewable fuel policies, accord- not afford to help all of the ing to an analysis by Bruce Guatemalan children in need, Babcock, an agricultural econ- Gauvreau said; it is agency omist at Iowa State University. policy to buy corn locally, but The World Bank has suggest- there is no extra corn grown ed that biofuel mandates in here anymore. And Guatemathe developed world should be lans cannot go backto the land adjusted when food is short or because so much of it is being prices are inordinately high. devoted to growing crops for C oncerned about th e e f - biofuel. (Almost no biofuel is fects of its biofuel mandate on used domestically.) world hunger, the European The southwestern village of C ommission r e cently p r o - La Ayuda is now an island of posed amending its policy so rickety dwellings in the middle that only half of its 2020 target of a giant African palm plancould be met by using biofuels tation. Felix Perez, 51, used to made from food crops or those grow corn, beans and fruit begrown on land previously de- hind his home. He now walks voted to food crops. about three miles to a cheap The current U.S. mandate, hillside plot that he rents for
four months of the year. "Every day it's more difficult to survive since we live off the land and there's less and less," he said. A lthough A f r i can p a l m was practically nonexistent in Guatemala two decades ago, palm oil is now the country's third-largest export, after sugar and bananas, with exports rising by more than a third in 2011, according to U.N. trade statistics. Although Susana Siekavizza, executivedirector of Gre-
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crop and irritates his children's lungs, he said. With s o metimes v i olent confrontations over land and labor, plantation gates are secured with armed guards. Still, Siekavizza of the trade group contends that the belief that palm cultivation is robbing people of food is "more myth than reality" since much of Guatemala's terrain and soil composition "is not well suited to growing corn." In the remote Mayan villages in the north of the country, the incursion of plantations has brought a few good jobs and some training, but many complain of low wages and the backbreaking nature of the work, which mostly involves picking the small red fruits from African palm trees or off the ground. "We sold our land, so now we have to work, but I think it's better when you grow your own," said Juana Paula Tec Choc, in the village of El Cancellero. "At least then you have some security."
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An IrrIgatIon system feeds water from a rIver to an African palm tee plantation surroundIng the village of La Ayuda, Guatemala. The AfrIcan palm was a rare tree In Guatemala two decades ago. Now palm oil is the country's third-largest export.
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A8
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
IN FOCUS:SOCIAL MEDIA
nsearc oo, ace oo e sons arin By Somini Sengupta
What isgraphsearch?
and Claire Cain Miller New York Times News Service
SAN FRANCISCO — Facebook's greatest triumph has been to persuade a seventh of the world's population to share personal lives online. Now the s ocial n etwork is taking o n i t s a r c hrival, Google, with a search tool to mine that personal information, just as people are growing more cautious about sharing on the Internet and even occasionally removing what they have already put up. Whether Facebook's more than I billion users will continue to divulge even more private details will determine whether s o - c alled s o c i al search is the next step in how we navigate the online world. It will also determine whether Facebook has found a business model that will make it a lot of money. "There's a big potential upside for both Facebook and users, but getting people to change theirbehaviors in relation to what they share will not be easy," said Andrew Stephen, who teaches marketing at the U niversity of Pittsburgh and studies consumer behavior on online social networks. Last week, Facebook unveiled its search tool, which it calls "graph search," a reference to the network of friends its users have created. The c ompany's algorithms w i l l filtersearch results for each person, ranking the friends and brands that it thinks a user would trust the most. At first, it will mine users' interests, photos, check-ins and "likes," but later it will search through other i n f ormation, including status updates. "While the usefulness of graph search i ncreases as people share m o r e a b o ut their f a v orite r e staurants, music and o t her i n terests, the product doesn't hinge on this," a Facebook spokesman, Jonathan Thaw, said.
Last week, Facebook unveiled its search tool, which it calls "graph
search." Users will be able to look upsuch information as "friends who live in my city," "photos I like" or "Indian restaurants liked by my friends in lndia" and get the results instantly. Results are
based on friends' activity within Facebook. Microsoft, which holds a small stake in Facebook, will serve up answers from the
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Advisor to small startups like Hunch have all tried to make search more social, byproviding personal answers from people you know and not just links to websites, in an effort to bring word-of-mouth recommendations online. B ing, which has a p a r t nership with Facebook, ann ounced this week t hat i t would add more social recommendations to s t andard Stuart Isett I New York Times News Service Web links in search queries. Jane Uyeda, a photographer and social media consultant, is skeptical of Facebook's graph search. "I But no company has tried love my friends, but sometimes their taste in restaurants is terrible," she said. social search on Facebook's scale. "This is a watershed moNevertheless, the company know." a lso found that m any h a d ment," said Oren Etzioni, a engineers who created the Stocky offered these ex- deleted or blocked contacts computerscience professor at tool — f ormer Google emamples of how more infor- from seeing t h eir p r o f iles the University of Washington ployees — say that the project mation may be desirable: A and nearly t w o-thirds had and a co-founder of the price will not reach its full potential single man may want to be untagged themselves from a comparison site Decide.com. "There have been other atif Facebook data is "sparse," discovered when a friend of a photo, post or check-in. "These behavioral patterns tempts at social search, but as they call it. friend is searching for eligible it's the scale at which FaceBut the company is confibachelors in San Francisco or seem to suggest that many dent people will share more a restaurant that stays open young adults are less keen on book o p erates, e specially data, be it the movies they late may want to be found by sharing at least certain deonce they fully index everywatch, the dentists they trust a night owl. tails about their lives rather thing we've said or say or " People have shared a l l or the meals that make their than more," said Eszter Harlike." mouths water. this great stuff on Facebook," gittai, an associate professor Facebook's social search The things people declare Stocky said. "It's latent value. of communication studies at is also a step forward in a o n Facebook w il l b e u s e - We wanted a way tounlock N orthwestern, who led t h e new type of Web search, one ful, when someone searches that." yet unpublished study among in which Google has made for those interests, said Tom men and women aged 21 and great strides. Engineers call Stocky,one of the creators of Cautious users 22. it st ructured o r s e m antic Facebook search, in an interIndependent studies sugAlso last year, th e Pew search, which means search view this week. Conversely, gest that Facebook users are Internet Center found t h at engines that understand how by liking m ore t h i ngs, he becoming more careful about social network users, includpeople, places and things resaid, people w i l l b e c ome how much they reveal on- ing those on Facebook, were late to one another, and not more useful in th e eyes of line, especially since educa- more aggressively pruning just key words. their friends. tors and employers typically their profiles — u n tagging Graph search holds great "You might be inclined to scour Facebook profiles. photos, removing friends and value foradvertisers seeking 'like' what you like so when A Northwestern University deleting comments. to target more precise audiyour friends search, they'll survey of 500 young adults in ences — like mothers in their find it," he said. "I probably the summer of 2012 found that 'A watershed moment' 30s who listen to hip-hop and would never have liked my a majority avoided posting Graph search is something run marathons — and adverdentist on Facebook before, status updates because they of a coming-of-age moment tising r e mains F acebook's but now I do because it's a were concerned about who for socialsearch. Companies principal source o f p r o f it. way of l e t ting m y f r i ends would see them. The study from Google to Yelp to TripAdditionally, the more data ss
people share and search for, the longer they are glued to the site.
Privacy concerns But the company is aware of concerns about privacy. When announcing the tool, it took pains to point out that it would respect users' privacy. If people do not want an embarrassing photograph to be ferreted out by a potential employer, for instance, they can make it visible only to those who have been w i nnowed down as "close friends." Users have been encouraged to check their privacy settings in order to fine-tune whom they w ish t o s h a re with. At the same time, Facebook eliminated a longstanding option that users enjoyed: If someone is searching for them, they will no longer be able toremain obscure. Still, some Facebook users may be skeptical.Jana Uyeda, 35, a p hotographer and social m e di a c o nsultant in Seattle, said, "I love my friends, but sometimes their taste in restaurants is terrible." L ike the subjects of t h e Northwestern study, Uyeda said she was not so sure she wanted to reveal more. "I'm slowly trying to close down the doors on Facebook, instead of o p ening m yself up," she said. Uyeda a dded, "There would have to be a lot of other incentives, and I don't even know what that would be, in order for me to add more information about myself and be more open."
Monday through Thursday Anthony's is family owned and dedicated to providing the ultimate Northwest dining experience. A special purchase has been made by our
own seafood company allowing us to bring you these delicious lobster tails. Just $19.95.
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B4-5
Weather, B6
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
MLK DAY
Holiday closures There will be several
closures Mondayin observance of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
• Federal, state, county and city officesareclosed. • Mail will not be picked
un in emer en ca centers who sits on the finance • Legislature faces las, and revenue committee, said himself. further consolidation he's"It'sreadying ugly," Boquist said, of 911 dispatchers "Everyone gets wrapped
up or delivered. • Banks are closed.
By Lauren Dake
• All schools, including
SALEM — State lawmakers are gearing up for another session where the future of 911 call centers and how to fund them will likely be at the heart of heated discussions. Sen. Brian Boquist, R-Dal-
Central OregonCommunity College, areclosed. • All libraries in Crook,
Deschutes andJefferson counties are closed. • Juniper Swim 8 Fitness will be open. • Most liquor stores will
www.bendbulletin.com/local
The Bulletin
around the axle and gets emotional." There will likely be discussion about how to consolidate the state's 49 emergency call centers. This move, Boquist said, is akin to "putting prisoners of five opposing armies in the same cell."
Another heated debate, which surfaced last session, is what to do about taxing prepaid cellphones. Right now, prepaidcellphone users don't pay a tax that users of land lines and regular cellphones pay to help fund 911 service. There are some proposals on the table to tax pre-paid cellphones at the point of purchase. Finally, the tax on land lines and regular cellphones, which funds the centers, is set
to expire and there is a push to extend the sunset. "There are a host of issues," Boquist said, many stemming from the fact that 911 call centers are financially
struggling. April Stream was with the Jefferson County 911 center until it consolidated with Gilliam, Sherman and Wheeler counties. Now, she's the manager for the Frontier Regional 911 center.
See Emergency /B3
WASHINGTON WEEK WASHINGTON — Af-
ter members from New York and NewJersey blasted House leader-
ship for failing to authorize funds for Hurricane
Sandy recovery before the end of the last term,
the House of Representatives passed $50 bil-
lion in aid onTuesday. The 241-180 vote was highly contentious,
as members from New York and NewJersey berated members from
be open.
districts that had previ-
Volunteering opportunities
ously received relief funds after disasters
More than a dozen
such as Hurricane Ka-
opportunities await Central Oregon residents
trina who voted against the bill. One Democrat
who want to help local
and 179 Republicans
organizations as part of Volunteer Connect's
voted against the measure, and192 Demo-
fourth annual Martin Luther King Jr. Dayof
crats and 49 Republicans voted for it.
Service on Monday.
See Week/B3
Volunteers will work on their projects from 9
a.m. to noon thengather for a luncheon held in the city — Bend, La Pine,
Well shot!
Madras, Prineville or Sis-
reader photos
ters — where they work that will feature a reflective look at Martin Luther King Jr., his legacy and the value of serving
• We want to see your best photos capturing peaks in winter for another special version
one's community. The projects, someof
of Well shot! that will run in the Outdoors section. Submit your best work at www. bendbulletin.com/ wellshot/winterpeaks, and we'll pick the best for publication.
which have age restric-
tions, available for the Day of Service event include:
• Clearing the clutter:Volunteers In Action Of Central
Oregon will send teams to help senior citizens and disabled adults
clean their homes. St.
Joe Khne/The Bulletin
Kelly Farrington, of Sunriver, holds his 2-year-old son, Kyle, up to get a look at the sun through a telescope with a viewing filter on Saturday at the Sunriver Observatory.
Vincentde Paulneeds
help cleaning equipment at its food bankand
ves s ar azers e sun ose OO
social services facility in Redmond; the Central
Oregon Veterans Organization is taking winter clothing donations for
homeless veterans; the Prineville Habitat for Humanity Restore will
make racks for sinks; the administrators of Bend's KIDS Center
need help recycling medical charts.
Building andpainting:Saving Grace is tearing down astorage shed in Madras; Bend Area Habitat For Humanity needs help building a house; the La Pine
Community Kitchen and Grandma's Houseneed help painting in La Pine and Bend. Quilts andcrafts: Volunteer with The
Bloom Project collecting, processing and arranging flowers for bouquets the organization gives to hospice patients; After School Bud-
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
SUNRIVER — The first rule Jeannie Schwarz has for anyone who drops by the Sunriver Nature Center to get a look at the sun through one of the observatory's telescopes is one that really shouldn't be necessary. Don't look directly into the sun. But, after peeking through telescopes fitted with powerful optical filters to dial down the brightness and bring out sunspots, solar flares, and the mottled detail of the sun's surface, it seems less blinding, Schwarz said, and visitors often absent-mindedly risk an unprotected look. With more than a dozen telescopes and more on order, the Oregon Observatory at the Sunriver Nature Center advertises itself as the largest public astronomical viewing facility in the United States.
Observatory manager Bob Grossfeld said though winter is the slow season at the observatory, with the cold keeping many would-be viewers away, the viewing can be exceptional. The 40- to 50-degreetemperature swings seen on many summer days create atmospheric interference, he said, resulting in a loss of crispness for objects viewed through a telescope. Looking through a scope outfitted with a red filter to accentuate the light cast off by hydrogen, the primary component of the sun, the same phenomenon can be seen. Though the edges of the sun seem to ripple, suggesting violent turmoil on its surface, Schwarz said the activity is just an illusion. "It's the same as a star twinkling," Schwarz said. "It's not actually twinkling, it's just that we have a lot of stuff up in our atmosphere."
Winter viewing allows a chance to see planets and constellations that are not visible in summer, when people tend to spend more time outside at night. Summer or winter, the constellations spotted during public viewing at the observatory often lead to discussions of astrology, Grossfeld said, affording him an opportunity to correct some common misconceptions. "People think because I'm a Taurus, I should be able to walk outside on my birthday and see Taurus — not true, it's where the sun is," he said. On Saturday, the last day of the Capricorn cycle in the Western astrological system, the constellation Capricornus was on the opposite side of the sun from the Earth and effectively invisible nearly all night. SeeSun/B3
Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when andwhere you took it, and any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and phonenumber.Photos m ustbe high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
Have a story idea or sudmission? Contact us! The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................ 541-617-7829 Redmond........541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver.........541-383-0348 Deschutes ...... 541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184 Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456
Business ........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects ..........541-617-7831
Lily Raff McCaulou's column will return.
diesneedshelpmaking quilts for children at the KIDS Center of Bend; the Bend Habitat for Humanity Restore
needs creative types to help it make homedecor pieces of out"cheap, old stuff."
Spreading theword: The Environmental
Center of Bendneeds volunteers to hang posters advertising its "Rethink Waste
Project"; Healthy Beginnings needs people in Bend, La Pine, Madras,
Prineville, Redmond, Sisters and Sunriver to hand out fliers advertis-
ing its children's health screenings. Other opportunities: Bend' Westside Village Middle School and the Brightside Animal Cen-
ter in Redmondeachoffer a range of volunteer opportunities. To learn moreor signup:Visit Volunteer
Connect's website at www.volunteerconnect now.org or call the Bend office at 541-385-8977.
Central Oregon'scavesplanned as evacuation shelters in 1963 /
Compiled by Don Hoiness from archived copies of The Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
100 YEARS AGO For the week ending Jan. 19, 1913
School growth continues With 101 primary pupils enrolled under two teachers, Bend's growing school confronts another problem which the board proposed to solve by employing another teacher and getting an additional room for the new class. By having a third teacher, the 101 children can be divided into three classes of about equal number, thus ensuring
YESTERDAY a far better instruction and personal supervision than can be given under the existing circumstances. Where the new classroom will be, or who is to be the new teacher, has not been definitely decidedas yet.The teachers now handling the two big primary classesare Miss Sidner and Miss Dolsen, the former
having 60 pupils.
Power plant is rushed Work upon Bend's new power plant is being pushed vigorously and the excavation for foundation, done under contract with Tom Murphy, is nearing completion. Monday night J.C. Bogle, one of Kemp-
ster B. Miller's Chicago force, arrived. Mr. Bogle, who is an engineer, will assist T.H. Foley, the local manager of the B W.L. 8t P. Co., and will have general supervision of the construction of the plant. The building that is being erected now will be 40by 61 feet, of which the superstructure visible above water will be 27by 39 feet, the remainder being submerged. The completed building will house four units each containing a turbine that will generate 350 kilowatts. The first unit that is being installed now will contain a 250-kilowatt turbine and generator. The turbine is being shipped from York Pa., and the generator from Schenectady, N.Y. See Yesterday/B2
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C HAN T E R E L L E P RON G H O R N
Valentin e's Day becomes an enti re weekend at
Pronghorn. Join us for a Pri x F ixe d i n n e r i n C hanterelle, available February?4 - t 7 , and make it extra special by staying overnight. Extended stays and Romance Packages are available.
P RO N G H O R N A n A ub erge R esort
6s6oo Pronghorn club Dr. I 5 4 ,I-693-5300 I www.pronghornclub.com
Reservations Required. Pleasecall 54t —693 — 5300.
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
E VENT
AL E N D A R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylife@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vttvttw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
TODAY KNOW MONEY:THE THRIFTY TRAVELER:Travel and dining reporter John Gottberg Anderson shares tips and techniques for traveling cheaply and well; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public • I ,Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary. e org/calendar. i,.i, /' ' X "ANNIE JR.":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in .5'.Ifr", ' I:, 1930s New York City; $15, $10 ages 18andyounger; 3 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541419-5558 or www.beattickets.org. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. Iaf- ' RUM REBELLION:The Portlandbased folk punk band performs, with Wild Eye Revolvers, the Joe Khne /The Bulletin Kronkmen and High Desert Mike Nowak, playing Bobby, and Vanessa Farnsworth, playing Tess, rehearse a scene from "Couple Hooligans; $5; 7 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Dating," which will be presented at 2nd Street Theater in Bend. Bend; 541-788-2989. THE DARES: The Los AngelesThe reggae act www.belfryevents.com. SOPHISTAFUNK:The NewYorkbased alternative rock act performs, ANTHONY B: with Falling Awake; $5 in advance, performs, with Strive Roots, Jagga based funk act performs; free; $10 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open Culture, Serious De Witness and 9 p.m.;Liquid Lounge,70 N.W . at 6:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden, MC Mystic; $17 in advance plus WEDNESDAY Newport Ave., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.liquidclub.net. 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541fees, $20 at the door; 9 p.m.; 633-6804orwww.bendticket.com. Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. LES TROYENS":Starring Deborah Voigt, Susan Graham and Bryan brownpapertickets.com. THURSDAY Hymel in an encore performance MONDAY of Berlioz's masterpiece; opera CONVERSATIONS ONBOOKS performance transmitted in high AND CULTURE:Read and discuss GALA ATTHERIVERHOUSE: TUESDAY definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old "The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Featuring a meal, silent auction Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. GOOD GRAVY:The Colorado-based Collins; followed by a discussion; and a presentation by former bluegrass fusion band performs; Powerhouse Drive,Bend;541-382- free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon NBA basketball player A.C. Green; free; 6 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 6347. Community College, Campus registration requested; proceeds 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, benefit the Boys & Girls Clubs of RED WANTINGBLUE:The Ohio728-0749 or www.p44p.biz. Bend; 541-383-7412. Central Oregon; $125; 5:30 p.m.; based indie-rock group performs; CHICAGO:The ChicagoKNOW MONEY:JUNK IN YOUR The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention BIRDS OF free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. based Americana act performs; Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond DRAWERS, CASH INYOUR Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway POCKET:Learn about selling and 97, Bend; 541-617-7174 or www. $12; 7 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www. mcmenamins.com. investing in coins, metals and other riverhouse.com/gala. Ave., Sisters; 541-815-9122 or .
Yesterday Continued from B1 The structural steel will be secured on the coast. Everything that can be purchasedlo-
cally is being bought here.
75 YEARS AGO For the week ending Jan. 19, 1938
Skyliners ski jump will be tried Sunday Bend Skyliners today completed plans for the first ski jumping exhibition on the new jump at their playground, one of the finest ski hills in the Pacific Northwest. Two feet of snow blanketed the playground today as storms swept over the Cascades. Providing the new jump can be put in shape, Olaf Skjersaa and Ole Amoth, Skyliners representatives in northwest ski meets, will initiate the hill next Sunday. All available skiers have been asked to help pack the snow on the jump Saturday and Sunday. Skjersaa and Amoth will be there to direct the work. Plans for the dedication of the big jump were outlined at the Skyliner conference that was held last night. Downhill and slalom races between members of the club have been arranged for the next six Sundays. This competition will be open to men, women and girls and boys. The men's race will be over the new course, from the highest point of Swede Ridge, just above the jump. Elimination contests will be heldeach Sunday, the winning contestant not to be eligible for the first award on the follow-
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Portland holdsslot machines will be stocked in the near Booked as defendants today before Municipal Judge Julius Cohn were 121 slot machines, named in proceedingsstarted by Jack Seabrook, deputy city attorney, who charged the devices were "inherently dangerous to the morals of the city." If the machines are found "guilty," they will be subject to destruction under a city ordinance. They were confiscated in Portland warehouses in a
future. Storage of supplies at caves without custodians presents a problem. S keleton Cave, about 12 miles south of Bend, is a lava tunnel nearly a mile long, described as being wide enough that two railroad trains could run side by side along the floor, Its capacity is estimated at 1,300 persons, Redmond Caves are about half a mile south of Redmond, vice campaign engineered and easily accessible. They by City C ommissioner J.E. have three parts, with capaciBennett. ties of 164, 220 and 66, for a total of 450. The other caves jantzen Beachreports death are all east of Bend, within of swan from Bend six miles of the city center. Lela, once proud co-ruler of The largest, Horse Cave, has the Mirror Pond, is dead and a capacityof 56 5 persons, plus her mate, Clyde, is very lone- storage. some. Harvey Wells,president The others are Lewis cave, of the Jantzen Beach amuse- capacity 375; Wilson Cave, cament park in Portland, has no- pacity 146 and Stevens Cave, tified Ward H. Coble. 245. Capacities of the buildWells would like to seewhat ings to be used in Bend are as can be done to secure a com- follows; Courthouse, 610; St. panion for Clyde, but he would Charles Memorial H ospital, like to have people of Bend 565; Bend Junior High, 515; and know that Lela died through Post Office, 245. A few of the no fault of the park manage- cavesare infested mth bats and ment. The two old swans were rodents. James said. The Health given to Portland last May by Department i s i n vestigating the city of Bend. and making recommendations Recently Lela was f ound for pest eradication practices. dead one morning under her shelter in the park pond. No ev25 YEARS AGO idence could be found indicating that the big bird met with For the week ending foul play. The poisoning theory Jan. 19, 1988 was also discounted.
Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3180588. HOT BUTTERED RUM:Theacoustic string band peforms; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com.
windows and illuminated the names of dozens of young actors and actresses scrawled on the walls behind the stage. "This is a sad thing that has happened, but we think this building is retrievable," said Olsen. The Bend Amateur Athletic Club, which was formed in 1910 with 500 members, raised money for th e construction of the building. It was built from 1917 to 1918 at a cost of $50,000.Even before the building was officially opened to the public in May 1918, it was pressed into service as an auxiliary hospital during a flu outbreak in Bend. The building had its own heating plant, auditorium, stage, dressing room and box seatsin the balconies. The seating capacity was 1,200 people. The building hummed with enthusiasm and activity during its heyday, according to historians. It included a four-lane bowling alley, the community's first indoor swimming pool, club rooms with fireplaces, reading rooms, a small library and a
padded wrestling room. Bend School District purchased the building in 1925
FRIDAY "ANNIE JR.":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in 1930s New York City; $15, $10 ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beattickets.org. STAFFORDBIRTHDAY CELEBRATION:Celebrate the life and poetry of William Stafford, with poetry readings and more; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center 8 Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT": Openingnight of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of Shakespeare's comedyaboutmistaken identities and merry rogues; with a champagne and dessert reception; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org/. "THE BIG LEBOWSKI":A screening of the R-rated1998 film, with a costume parade; $10 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org.
for use as a high school gymnasium. High school plays and commencement ce r emonies were held onthe stage for a number of years. Engineers examined the building in the mid-1970s and came to the conclusion that it w ould be costly for the school district to bring the building up to safety standards. Note toreaders:In lateryears the building was saved and now serves as the Bend Boys and Girls Club.
E LEVATIO N Klevation Capital Strategies 400 SW BluA Drive Suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
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Will this building besaved?
50 YEARS AGO For the week ending Jan. 19, 1963
Marking of shelter sites is underway
The Civil Defense marking program startedyesterday in The final race will be be- Deschutes County. Within the tween the h i ghest ranking next day or two, 11shelter sites contestants. Jere Gillis, former will be designated. There are president of the Skyliners, will four buildings and six caves be in charge. Entrants can reg- in the Bend area, with a total ister with Leonard Standifer capacity of 7,646 persons, and at the Buster Brown store or in the north end of the county, with Bert Hagen, Viola Avery Redmond Caves, with a capacor Norman Symons. Skjersaa ity of 450. and Amoth are to be sent to the Jim Brovtm from the Corps of various northwest meets, and Engineers, Portland, is directin turn other clubs will enter ing the program, assisted by contestants in the Skyliner's William C. James, Deschutes meet here on March 6. County Civil Defense director. Symons last night told of the Yesterday signs were put on growing interest of skating in the courthouse, Bend Junior Bend and reported that 500 High and St. Charles Memorial skaters used the Tumalo hatch- Hospital, and near the entrance ery rink during the few nights of Horse Caves. To be marked it was available. Symons sug- today were the Bend post office gested that the Skyliner's next building, and Wilson, Lewis, major project be the construc- Stevens, Skeleton and Lava tion of a rink near the Skyliner River Caves. Lava River Cave, lodge grounds. It is believed south of Bend near Lava Butte, that a rink can be successfully is a state park. Its capacity is operated in the higher country listed at 3,270 persons. three months out of the year. Each site must also provide A site only 100 yards from the one cubicfoot of storage space lodge, has already been select- per person. Emergency rations ed. A covered rink has been and other supplies are at Troutproposed. dale, and at least the buildings
ing Sunday.
tures were demolished after being allowed to wither for years. The park district foundation is interested in the building, but it is waiting to seeif private business is ready to tackle the project, said Bill Olsen, a Bend banker who is chairman of the foundation board. "There is something here of value that this community could never replace," said Olsen. "This is the kind of building that we should be saving for future generations." Olsen, a Bend native who spent a lot of time in the athletic building in the 1960s, toured the building this week with a report. He was saddened by what he saw. Rainwater seeping into the building has curled the h ardwood g y m nasium floor that once stood up to basketball games, foot-stomping community dances and crowded town hall meetings. Dead pigeons littered the box seats where fans sat to watch wrestling and boxing matches on the gymnasium floor below. Sunlight streaked through cracks in boarded-up
collectibles; free; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. FROGTOWN:A live multimedia show teaching the values of cultural diversity, with singing and dancing; geared toward elementary-school children; $12, $8 children12 and younger, plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626 or www.2ndstreettheater. com. "THE BEST OFRIFFTRAX LIVE: 'MANOS' THEHANDSOF FATE": A screening of the PG-13 film, with commentary by the comedians of "Mystery Science Theater 3000"; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Preview night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. org/. CHELSEAGRIN: The metal act performs, with I Declare War, At The Skylines, Upon This Dawning, American Me and Vereh Falls; $10 plus fees in advance, $13 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www.brownpapertickets.com. FABRIC CHECK:Live fashion by Rescue,541 Threads, Rise Up lnternational and more, plus musical performances by Aceyalone, J-Natural, Pat Maine and more; free; 8:30 p.m.; The
The shouts of boxing fans have long since died away in the Bend Amateur Athletic Club building on Wall Street. So has the loud applause of theater patrons, the booming speeches oftovtm leaders and the raucousdance music of the 1950s and '60s. The only sounds inside the three-story brick building today are the cooing of pigeons
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and the "plop, plop, plop" of r aindrops dripping o n t h e floors. It is hard to believe that this cold, dank place is the same building that played host to most of the social and athletic events in Bend for more than half a century. The Bend Amateur Athletic Club building was used as a junior high school gymnasium as recently as 1978, when it was abandoned for the new Cascade Junior High built on Century Drive. The building's sad state of disrepair today — only a decade since it was in daily use — is testimony to how quickly a community
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landmark can be damaged by neglect. There are indications, however, that someone will step in to save the building before it is too late and the structure goes the way of the Pilot Butte Inn and the Shevlin-Hixon mill buildings. Those historic struc-
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Bi aimsats are wi i recosts
AROUND THE STATE Bridge ou the move —Scores of onlookers spent a sunny, but cold Saturday watching the 87-year-old southeast Portland Sellwood
Bridge move afew yards to aid the construction of its replacement. By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
G RANTS PASS — F o r years,Oregon's major timberland owners have felt they were paying too much of the cost of fighting wildfires, especially in years when blazes stayed relatively small. A bill i n G ov. John K itzhaber's budget would allocate $3.6 million over the next two years to change the payment formula, so the state picks up a biggershare of the costs in years whenfires don'trage out of control. The proposal also would pay up to $6 million to keep two air tankers on call and otherresources to keep minor wildfires from getting big and expensive. "Landowners since 1993 have paid 82 percent of the cost" of putting out large fires, said Kristin McNitt, executive director of the Oregon Forest Industry Council, which represents the timber industry. "And it's killing us." The governor also wants to use $4 million in lotterybacked bonds to help the U.S. ForestService turn out more timber sales from federal lands in the dry forests east of the Cascades. Natural Resources adviser Richard Whitman said the governor sees the two proposals as vital to maintaining the struggling timber industry in central and eastern Oregon, both as a source of jobs and as a neces-
PUBLIC OFFICIALS For TheBulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletirL
comlofficials.
CONGRESS U.S. Senate • Sett.Jeff Merkley, D-Ore. 107 Russell SenateOffice Building Washington, D.c. 20510 Phone:202-224-3753 Web: http://merkley.seftate.gov Bend office: 131 N.w. Hawthorne Ave., Suite 20e Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-318-1298 • Sen. Rott Wydett, D-Ore. 223 Dirksett Senate Office Building Washington, D.c. 20510 Phone: 202-224-5244 Web: http:I/wydett.senate.gov Bend office: 131 N.W. Hawthorne Ave., Suite107 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-330-9142
U.S. House ofRepresentatives • Rep. Greg Waldett, R-HoodRiver 2182 RayburnHouseOffice Building Washington, D.C.20515 Phone:202-225-6730 W eb: http:I/walden.house.gov Bend office: 1051 N.W. BondSt., Suite 400 Bend, OR97701 Phone:541-3e9-4408 Fax: 541-389-4452
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. JohnKitzhaber, 0 160 State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-45e2 Fax:503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary OfState Kate Brown, 0 136 State Capitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-9ee-1616 Fax: 503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • TreasurerTedWheeler, D 159 Oregon StateCapitol 900 court st. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-37e-4329 Email: oregon.treastfrer@state.or.tts Web: www.ost.state.or.us • AttorneyGeneral Ellen Rosenblum, 0 1162 Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone:503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor CommissionerBradAvakian 800 N.E. Oregon St., Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone:971-673-0761 Fax:971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail©state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press file photo
Firefighters train near Jewell in 2006. A bill in Gov. John Kitzhaber's budget would allocate $3.6 million over the next two years to change the payment formula, so the state picks up a bigger share of the costs in years when fires are small. sary part of the infrastructure for logging that will improve forest health and reduce wild-
and helicopters is a waste, because there is no data to show that they are effective tools for
fire danger.
keeping fires from getting out
The region almost lost one of the half-dozen surviving mills lastyear, for lack of timber from national forests, Whitman said. "If there is any further decline, it will be very hard to get back," he said. A wildfire policy watchdog group, however, sees the funding change as a "scam" on taxpayers that benefits the timber industry — but not the public. Andy Stahl, director of Forest Service Employees for Environmental Ethics said any money spent on air tankers
of control. "At a time when we are struggling to fund schools and fund health care, why we w ould want to divert those dollars to some of Oregon'slargest corporations is a bit mystifying," said Stahl. "Historic data shows no correlation between the amount of retardant dumped on a (forest) and the success rate of keeping fires small." The timber industryhas been trying for years to change the wildfire funding formula, and last year the state Board of For-
Sun
precisely, Grossfeld said the "motion" of the stars tracks Continued from B1 along the same 365Y~ day cyWhile the Earth and the cle as the Earth's movement other planets rotate around around the sun. the sun, the position of the Saturday afternoon, only sun and other stars are essen- a handful of visitors trickled tially fixed, Grossfeld said, at in and out of the observatory, least from the perspective of though Grossfeld said he exan observer on the Earth. pected alarger crowd forthe Over thecourse ofthe year, night viewing. the 12 constellations repreKelly Farrington and his senting the 12 astrological 2-year-old son, Kyle, stopped signs appear to move across by the observatory for a look t he night sky in an a r c on Saturday. Kyle squirmed though in fact, it's the Earth as his father tried to hoist him that's moving — roughly fol- up to the eyepiece, planting lowing the same path as the it first in his ear, then in the sun during the day. While the middle of his forehead. "Look with your eye, not dates found in a horoscope column and the dates when with your nose," Farrington the c onstellations a ppear instructed. and disappear do not line up Kyle eventually got it right,
estry appointed a committee representing forest landowners, government agencies and the governor's office, which came up with the Wildfire Protection Act. Under the current funding formula, private landowners, whether large timber companies or homeowners with a few acresoftrees,payataxto cover the costs of the Oregon Department of Forestry's firefighting efforts. The tax ranges from 80 centsper acre on the wetter west side of the state, to $1.70 on the drier east side. The first $10 million of the cost of fighting large fires is covered by private landowners. The next $15 million comes from the state general fund. After that, a special insurance policy kicks in $25 million up to a total of $50 million. In recent years, the cost of fighting large fires has averaged $8 million, so landowners have covered it alone. The bill calls for sharing the costs evenly from the start, up to a total of $20 million. The amount the state pays would increase gradually over six years, so that at the end the cost would be split 50-50, up to $20 million. Despite the lower deductible, the cost of the insurance policy would remain at $1 million, due to increased firefighting resources,said Travis Medema, deputy chief of fire protection for the Oregon Department of Forestry.
and let out a low moan of recognition as the sun came into view. Farrington said it didn't appear much had changed on the sun since he last visited the observatory a few years
ago. "It doesn't seem to age too much," he said. The observatory is open primarily on holiday weekends during t h e w i n t er, though private viewing parties can be arranged at any time. Starting in March, the observatory will be open Tuesdays through Saturdays, with daily operations beginning in June. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammers~bendbulletin.com
The bridge weighs almost 7 million pounds and is nearly11,000 feet long. It will be moved about 66 feet on the west end and 33 feet on
the east end onto temporary supports. Crews said everything remains on schedule for the bridge to reopen by Jan. 24. It will then be used until the new Sellwood Bridge opens, scheduled for mid-2015.
2 mOre arreStS in dug-negleCt CaSe — Marion County authorities have arrested two more women in their investigation of ani-
mal neglect at adog-rescue facility north of Salem. Sheriff's spokesman DonThomson said Saturday evening thatMerissa Noonan contacted an attorney and surrendered at the county jail after seeing news
reports that shewaswanted. Thearrest came lessthan 24 hours after a deputy negotiated the surrender of Amanda Oakley. Oakley was a board member and secretary of Willamette Valley Animal Rescue
until she resignedJan. 10, three days before investigators executed a search warrant of the facility for hard-to-place dogs and seized about 150 animals, Thomson said. Alicia Inglish, the rescue facility's presi-
dent, was arraigned Mondayon120 counts of animal neglect and one count of evidence tampering. Thomson said additional witnesses were
being contacted andmore arrests are possible. Eugene nuiSanCe hOme —Under alaw aimed at cleaning up properties that have become havens for criminals, Eugene officials in
a rare moveareasking acourt to order a manto vacate the househe owns and leave itempty for ayear. Acomplaint and supporting documents filed in Lane County Circuit Court allege that the home in west
Eugenehasbecome ahangoutfordrugusers.AccordingtoEugene police, officers havemadenumerous arrests at or nearthe houseand have gone there nearly100 times in the last four years. Under a state
nuisance abatement law, local governments canseekcourt orders closing residences orbuildings that are being usedfor drug crimes, gambling or prostitution after notifying the owners of ongoing prob-
lems and giving them achanceto remedythem. If granted, such orders effectively require that the building be vacated and locked for a year.
t.ehmau Hot Springs sold — Thetroubled LehmanHot Springs resort is back with the family that owned it for much of the previous century. Umatilla County records show Fee Stubblefield of McMinn-
ville bought the 242-acre site near Ukiah last year for $1.25 million. His grandfather bought the property in1925 and the family owned it on-and-off until 1988. The resort has been closed since mid-2009,
when a judge ordered former owner JohnPatrick Lucas to ceaseoperati onsbecauseofunsafesewagelagoons. — From wire reports
Emergency Continued from B1 Stream said the move was "strictly financial" as it was becoming harder to fund the Jefferson County center.
situation has actually "worked out pretty well." Now, her biggest concern is if the tax levied on land lines isn't renewed. "That would cripple every 911 center in the state of Oregon," Stream said.
"They drug me, kicking
and screaming, because I believe each (center) should be in i t s o w n c o u nty," Stream said. She worried about what would happen when a caller described his location as "behind the judge's house." When the operators were in JeffersonCounty, she said, they might respond with, "which judge?" Now that the office is located in Condon, Stream said, "that's
— Reporter, 541-554-1162 Idahe@bendbulletin.com
Gents Blue Tigereye &Sapphire
like a foreign language."
Sisters
B ut, Stream said, t h e
Week
finalized, Rep. Mick Mulvaney,
187 Democrats and 71 Republi-
R-S.C., proposed anamendment
Continued from B1
that would have required cuts from entitlement programs to offset $17 billion in funding (the initial amount of the Sandy relief before it was later increased to
cans joined to kill the measure. U.S. HOUSEVOTE
ij.s. HOUSE vOTE • Hurricane Sandy relief
1Valden (R).............................. N Blumenauer (0) ...................... Y Bonamici (0)...........................Y OeFazio (D)..............................Y Schrader(D) ...........................Y
$50 billion). Mulvaney's amendment failed by a162-258 vote,
again splitting Republicans. Five Democrats — including Rep. Kurt Schrader, D-Canby — and 157 Republicans voted for it, but
Before the Sandy relief bill was
8
• Amendment to offset spending
for Sandy aid with cuts Walden (R)...............................Y Blumenauer (D)....................... N Sonamici (D)............................N OeFazio (D)...............................N Schrader (D) ............,...,....,...„.Y — Andrew Cletrenger, The Bulletin
541-549-9388
Heartlaqd Paiqtiqg "Quality Painting Inside and Out"
4
Painting in Central Oregon forover 18 years
p ® Insured Bonded and Licensed¹156152 18633 Riverwoods Drive
= Phone: 541-383-2927 EmaiL heartlandffc@msn.com
Bend, OR97702 Inquire about trading goods for services.
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DESCHUTES COUNTY •
1300 N.W.Wall St., Bend, OR97701 Web: www.deschutes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692
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County Commission • TammyBaney, R-Bettd Phone: 541-38e-6567 Email: Tammy Baney©co.deschtttes .or.Us • Alan Unger, D-Redmottd Phone:541-388-6569 Email: Alan Unger@co.deschutes .Or.US
• Tony DeBone,R-LaPine Phone:541-388-6568 Email: Tony Deeone©co.deschutes .Qr.Us
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Physical Therapy
Outpatient Physical Therapist
B4 T H E BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
BITUARIES Portland State U n i v ersity w ith a B a c h elor o f A r t s d egree and w o r ke d a s a her sons, Patrick and (Dotranslator. Berniece Pauline Ronald "Ron" Delu, of rey) Cooley, of H i nes, OrShe was an a vi d h o r seSiewert, of Redmond Bend Dct. 9, 1929- Jae. 12, 2013 e gon, T e rr y a n d ( C a r o l ) b ack r i d e r a n d p ar t i c i Jan. 3, 1930 - Jan. 9, 2013 Mar. 4, 1937 - Jan. 14, 2013 V irginia p a s se d aw a y M artin, a n d Ni ck a nd Sept. 2, 1948 - Dec. 30, 2012 pated i n t he eq u e strian Arrangements: Arrangements: peacefully, at the age of 83, ( Anne) M a r ti n o f Ben d , c ommunity i n b o t h P o r t Louise Christine SennevAutumn FuneralsBaird Memorial Chapel, after a s h or t i l l n ess. She O regon; her b r o t her, J i m land and Sisters. She also ille Van Vactor of Sisters, took pride in he r k n i t t i ng Redmond (541-504-9485) La Pine, OR w as a n a t i v e o f San t a Clark of Lakeside, Oregon, O regon, passed away o n and was an active member www.autumnfunerals.net 541-536-5104 Cruz, Ca l i f o r n ia , an d and Jim's children, Vickie December 30, 2012, after moved to Bend, Oregon, in and Sandy; six g r andchilServices: of th e Si s t er s K n i t t i n g www.bairdmortuaries.com an eight-year valiant fight t he 6 0 ' s , dren, Stephanie, Vi ctoria, A memorial service will be Group. Services: with cancer. She was 64. a fter h e r Morgan, Justin, Alicia, and held 12noon-4pm; Jan. Louise is survived by her No services will be held, A private Celebration of marriage Z ach, a n d t h r e e gr e a t 27, 2013 at the Comitoloving husband, Samuel A. per Ron's request. a Life lived will take place Van Vactor; a son, Samuel to Bo b grandchildren, S a mantha, Siewert Residence. Contributions may be made at a later date. Cooley, a Alec and Cody. She is also Contributions may be made K . Va n V a c t or ; a n d a to: Louise was born Septem- d aughter, to: s tate p o - s urvived b y h er fo r m e r S t e p h ani e L . Humane Society of Partners In Care, 2075 liceman. d aughter-in-law , A nn ber 2 , 194 8 , i n L ac Van V a c t or- Tiggs. O t h er Central Oregon, 61170 Saint- Jean, Q uebec, t o survivors NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Virginia's Gladden, who was her cari ncl u d e h er SE 27th St., Bend, OR Claremont an d M ar y brothers, Daniel and RobOR 97701. early egiver t he l ast th r ee 97702; 541-382-3537. (Gauthier) Senneville. She ert Senneville. months of her life. years were V irgini a enj o y e d h er met her hu sband, Samuel L ouise w i l l b e f or e v e r Virginia CooleY s ent A . Va n V a c to r i n P a r i s , missed b y h e r h u s b a nd, in children, grand and greatCharles J. "Chuck" France, and on August 14, Santa Cruz, then northern r andchildren. Sh e l o v e d s on a n d d a u g h t er ; s h e Neff, of La Pine 1976, they were married in California as a teen, where er flowers, the ocean, and b rought l o ve , l i f e , h o n o r (Formerly of Bend) she graduated from Hoopa b eaches o f th e O r e g o n Quebec. Louise, along with and style to their lives and Dec. 27, 1923 - Jan. 17, 2013 May 26, 1961- Dec. 20, 2012 High School i n 1 947. She C oast. S h e w as d ea r l y h er husband l i ved i n t h e will not be forgotten. Portland area for 23 years, loved and w i l l b e m i s sed Arrangements: Autumn Funerals Bend is J ohn R o b er t Bl a y l o c k , and her first husband, Linbefore moving t o S i sters, h onored to ser ve th e coln Martin had two sons, by her family. Baird Memorial Chapel, age 51, died December 20, Oregon, in 2003. Virginia was preceded in N ick, an d T e r r y M a r t i n . La Pine, 541-536-5104 family, (541) 3 1 8 -0842, 2012 in Bend, OR. She gr a d u a te d f r om www.autumnfunerals.net. www.bairdmortuaries.com J ohn wa s b o r n i n Sa n Virginia met an d m a r r i ed death by her husband, Bob Cooley, her parents, Alice Services: J ose, CA , a n d s p en t h i s Bob Cooley and moved to C orvallis i n 1 9 63, then a M erritt , an d W i n for d A Memorial Service will early years near San Jose short time later, to Bend. C lark, a n d f o r m e r h u s be held in the Spring. before Bob and Virginia had one band, Lincoln Martin. Details to be published in moving to son together, Pat C o oley, At V i r g i n i a' s r eq u e st, a full-length obituary at a Redmond, later date. O R w i t h who lives wit h h i s f a m i ly there will b e n o s e r vices. near Burns, Oregon. I nterment w il l be at Contributions may be made his family V irginia i s s u r v i ved b y Greenwood Cemetery. to: in 197 0 . Partners In Care Hospice, He graduFUNERALsl BURIALs l cREMATIQN l PRE-PLANNING 2075 NE Wyatt Ct., Bend, ated from MQNUMENTsl AIR HEARsE OR 97701, Redmond 541-382-5882. High S chool i n J ohn Blaylock 1 9 79, a n d l ater at - Nov.10,1952- Dec.20,2012 Gertrude "Trudy" t ended C e n t r a l Or e g o n Hubbell (Edwards) Community College. David "Bruce" Goodman c onversation an d a g r e a t 717 SW6TH STREET ' REDMOND Albee, of Bend J ohn worked most of hi s was born in Salem, OR, to p arty. H e t o u c hed m a n y Dec. 13, 1921 - Jan. 16, 2013 S41. S48.3219 a dult l i f e a s a co n c r e t e B arbara R . H e n r y S c o t t lives everywhere he w e nt f inisher. H e h a s l i ved i n G oodman o f E u g ene. H e with his incredible sense of www.redmondmemorial.com Arrangements: L a Pine f o r t h e p a s t 1 0 a ttended h i g h s c h oo l a t humor, fr iendliness, intelBaird Funeral Home South Euligence, a nd i n fe c t i o us (541) 382-0903 years, after having lived in Nevada, California, gene High s mile a n d l a u g h t er . O n www.bairdmortuaries.com A laska, an d f o r a b r i e f School 12/20/12 we suddenly l o st Services: t ime r e c ently , i n N or t h a nd t h e n one of the best people we A Memorial Service will Dakota. went on to w ill e ve r h a v e t h e p l e a be planned for a later John met Vicki Schwartz j oin t he s ure to kn ow . B r u c e h a d date in Atlanta, Georgia. in California and they enUSMC. just turned 60, watched his Contributions may be made joyed a loving relationship He was a daughter turn 28, and celto: for more than 20 years. He pr'oud e brated hi s 3 1 -year w e d Partners In Care, 2075 was like a father to Vicki's Marine d ing anniversary o n A u NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Visit our website to view obituaries and leave condolence daughter, Keeley Forbes. w ho w a s gust 1st. Bruce is preceded Oregon 97701, messages on our guestbook. David "Bruce" John loved the outdoors, m death b y h i s p a r e nts, www.partnersbend.org or Goodman a nd t r ou t f i s h in g w a s a a bly d i s Barbara Bissell & G i l b ert St. Joseph's Indian p astime h e t h or o u g h l y charged B issell; b r ot h e r , N oel School, 1301 N. Main St., e njoyed. He a lso l i ked t o a fter s e r v in g i n H aw a i i G oodman a n d n ep h e w , LOCALLY FAMILY OWNED 6L OPERATED Chamberlain, South We honor all pre-arranged plans including Neptune Society. s ki a t M t . B a c h elor. H e d uring th e V i e tnam W a r . A dam Cooper. He i s s u r Dakota 57325, touched many people in In 1980, he met the love of vived by hi s w i f e , C h risti www.stjo.org h is l i fe , r e a ching o u t t o h is life, Christi, and t h ey Goodman; daughter, Alehelp his friends and neigh- w ere m a r r i e d i n 198 1 . s ha Goo d m an ; si s t e r , b ors. H e m a d e f r i e n d s They b r o u gh t o n l y one Penny Cooper; and brothwherever he went, and will child i n t o t h e w o r l d i n ers, Brad Bissell and Scott be remembered for his 1 984, a d au g h t e r th e y G oodman; as w e l l a s 1 1 smile. named Alesha. The family nieces and nephews. J ohn is s u r vived b y h i s m oved to B en d f r o m E u A Celebration of Life will May I6, I929-January 3, 20I3 l oving spo u s e , V i ck i gene in t h e m i d -80's and be held at the D&D Bar 5 "Oh I Have Slipped S chwartz o f L a P i n e ; h i s has been here ever since. G rill i n D o w n t ow n B e n d Dec. 25, 1939- Jan. 11, 2013 mother a n d st e p - f ather, Bruce spent the majority of o n Saturday F e bruary 9 , The Surly Sonds of Earth... Patricia was born in Napa, Nancy and Albert Roberts his life as a General Con2013, from 2:30-7:00 p.m. Put OutMy Hand CA, where she l ived until o f B e n d ; h is d au g h t er , tractor specializing in cusIn lieu of flowers, contriAnd Touehed the Face of god " 1 976 when s h e a n d h e r Amber L u ck e o f G r i d l ey, t om h o m es , d e c ks , a n d b utions may b e m a d e t o family moved to Selma, OR. CA; two brothers and their r emodeling. I n t h e m o r e any US Bank Br anch to a Alice Lucille Kovenz (Smith) was born in S he lived t h ere w i t h h e r w ives, T o m and L o l e s r ecent p a st , h e s p e n t 6 special d o n ation a c c ount Coquille, Oregonon May I 6, I929 and h usband, L e s , a n d fou r B laylock o f M ar i n a de l p roud years at U - H aul a s s et up u nd er Ch r is t i passedaway peacefully ofnaturalcauses children, Terry, Tena, Walt R ey, CA , a n d T e r r y a n d their Hitch Pro. Bruce was G oodman, t o he l p w it h on January 3, 20I3 in Redmond, Oregon at a nd Becky, until sh e a n d Jane Blaylock of Bend. a dedicated f a m il y m a n , Bruce's final expenses. the age of 83. She was raised the youngest L es r e t i red, a n d b e g a n H e i s a l s o s u r v ived b y e njoyed spending his f r ee Condolences may be left of seven children in Coos Bay, Oregon many happy y ears t r avel- V icki's d aughter an d h e r time with his close friends, online a t h tt p : //www.auand graduated in l947 from Marshfield i ng around the country i n husband, Keeley and Gary and loved watching OSU t umnfunerals.netl u n de r High School inCoos Bay. She attended their RV. They also served F orbes o f L a Pi n e ; a n d B eaver F o otball. H e e n - the guestbook for his name Linfield College, graduating with a teaching degree in English. She as camp hosts for several numerous a u n ts , u n c l es, joyed the g r eat o u t doors, on the Obituaries page. would later complete her graduate studies work at the University years at Wickiup Reservoir. cousins, nieces, and nephlaughing, good food, hard Rest In Peace, Our Dear of Oregon, where she earned her masters degree in English and She and Les r ecently celews. John was preceded in work, common sense, good Bruce. ebrated their 52nd wedding d eath b y his fat he r , Counseling. She was teaching at Roosevelt School in North Bend, a nniversary. Pat r i c i a i s D onald F r e d eric k Bl a y Oregon when she met the love of her life and future husband John. survived by h e r h u s band, lock. They were married inCoos Bay on January 23, l954 and spent the her children, 7 g r a ndchilA Celebration of Life will next 59 years happily together until her passing. dren and 7 great-grandchil- be held Saturday, January She and John moved to Medford, Oregon in I957 after being hired dren. He r f i nal days were 2 6, from 4-7 p .m. at P i n e 5 at Medford High School. Alice's teaching and counseling career was spent in Kingman, AZ, with Forest Grange, 63214 Boyd JJ extensive. She served the Medford School District for 24 years. At her son Walt and his fam- A cres Road, Bend. F o o d i ly. Services wil l b e h e l d would be welcome. Please Medford High, she taught English and was an advisor for several June Zl, 1923 - January 6, 2013 later in the spring. call 541-306-1079 for more clubs and classes. When the high school split in I967,she went to information. Medford Mid-High as a counselor and Dean of Girls. After several Our mother's life began in Portland years there, she then moved to Hedrick Jr. High as the Counselor as the daughter of Hiram & Elizabeth and Dean of Girls, and then to McLoughlin Jr. High. At McLoughlin, Mousseau. In 1 9 44 , sh e m a r ried she was also a counselor, and it was here that she finished her teaching career back in the classroom tutoring and helping students Master Sgt. Grady Edgar. Their Army who struggled with academics. She then substitute taught for a life travels took them to Japan, Texas, Washington, precouple of years and decided to retire in I988, to spend more time at state Alaska, and California. His sudden death in 1965, December 3 I, I 9I 9 - January 6, 20I 3 home with her family andyoung grandchildren. left her with four children to raise alone. So, at age 41, Jack Grimm, 93, passedaway peacefully During the seventies, she took some years off to spend time at home Mom received her degree in nursing and began working on Sunday, January 6 at Partners In Care with her two daughters, Kristin and Karin, who both survive. She at Salem General Hospital. Hospice House. He was born December 3l, was very active in their school activities at Sacred Heart Elementary In 1979, she was introduced and married to Otto Creston School and St. Mary's High School. She volunteered as a room l9I9, in Sacramento, Calif. to Homer and "Crete" Close of Bend. She continued her nursing career mother, chaperoned field trips, helped transport to sporting events Anna Grimm. He graduated from Sacramento at St. Charles until her retirement. Working almost and after-school activities and was a leader of the 4-H club, the Junior College, where he played baseball. In Sewing Saints. She served alsoon school advisory committees and exclusively on the medical floor, she touched the lives of I94I, he enlisted in the Army Air Corps and was a member of the school boards of both Sacred Heart Elementary many, many CO patients and families. trained in a P-40 fighter plane. He was sent and St. Mary's High School. to Hawaii several weeks before the attack on Pearl Harbor. Her second love, Crete, died December 12, 2010. Prior to moving to Redmond, Oregon in 2008, she was an active Grimm married Irene Ryan on July 23, I944. He made a career of the She loved to travel, dance, and laugh at gatherings with member of Sacred Heart Catholic Church for 50 plus years. She was Air Force, serving in Germany, Philippine Islands, Massachusetts, and her family and close friends. Her caring, commitment, a member of the St. Anne's Altar Society serving several times as the President. Her Catholic faith was a strong point in her life, and she Japan. During this time he flew many aircraft including his favorite, and love will be so missed by all of us. attended mass every Sunday and religious Catholic holidays. the F I04. He was a recipient of the Distinguished Flying Cross and She will be buried with Crete, later other flying awards. He retired in I96I as a Lt. Colonel. The family She was preceded in death by her parents; two sisters, Loretta and this year in McCall, Idaho. then moved to Bend. He had trained pilots at Redmond Air Field Genevieve; two brothers, Ed and Walt, and oneson. She is survived She will always be remembered by her loving husband of 59 years, John, of Redmond, Oregon; and had enjoyed the recreational opportunities of Central Oregon. daughter, Karin Kovenz-Coombe and husband Kevin,ofRedmond; Grimm was an avid hunter, fisherman, and mushroom hunter. He by he r g r a t eful c h i l d ren: daughter Kristin Kovenz-Wilkinson and her husband Jack, of Lincoln was a memberof the Bend Elks Lodge. Afterthe death ofhis wife, in Terry &. Joyce Edgar, Cheryl City, Oregon; and two special lights of her life, her grandchildren I992, he moved to Gearhart where he enjoyed deep sea fishing and &. Don Spagnolini, Robin John and Kelsey Wilkinson, both of Lincoln City. She also leaves clamming. He was very proud to be a member of the War Birds, a Edgar, Jay R. Toni Edgar; one older brother, Pat Smith of Oregon City, Oregon, and an older retired World War II Veterans organization. He met Barbara Wilson, g randchildren: Troy 4 K a r i sister Margaret Perkins ofCoosBay, Oregon and numerous nieces a longtime partner. She preceded him in death. He returned to Bend Edgar, Polly 4 Todd Hendrix, and nephews. in 20l I. Tracey Traverso, Jordan &. In lieu of flowers, the family wishes that memorial donations be Ashley Edgar, Anessa &. Chris made to Partners In Care HospiceHouse, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Grimm leaves a brother, Ross, of Ocean Shores, Wa., daughter, Kelly; and great-grandchildren: Bend, Oregon 9770 I. www.partnersbend.org. Patricia Nelson, of Bend, two grandsons, Charlie of Port Hueneme, Grady, Kayla, Tyler, Reece, Faith, Ca., Chris (Lindsay) of Bend, and five grandchildren, Olivia, Madison, A rosary and service celebrating her life will be held Saturday, Grace, and Jack. Natalie, Austin, and Charley. A private family memorial is planned. January 26, 20I3 at St. Thomas Catholic Church in Redmond. The Thank you for being such a uronderful Mother. rosary will be at I2:30 and the service will be at I:00 p.m. The family wishes to thank Dr. Mary Manfredi, St. Charles Medical Center, and Partners In Care Hospice for Jack's loving care and We urilt ahuays love you! Baird Funeral Home was honored to serve the family. comfort during his final illness. (541)382-0903. www.bairdmortuaries.com
DEATH NOTICES
Virginia Gloria Cooley
Louise Christine Senneville Van Vactor
john Robert Blaylock
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
David "Bruce" Goodman
REDMOND
MEMQRIAL CHAPEL
Patricia Ann Collins Meneley Rauch
Alice Lueille Kouenz
Lt. Colonel Jack A. Grimm
â&#x20AC;˘I
SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
NORTHWEST NEWS
Environrnentalistsseek listing of whitebarkpine
BITUARIES Marchelle Dinette Maloney Jan. 22,1964- Jan.14, 2013 M archelle D i n e tt e M a l oney, 48, o f T e r r ebonne, OR, passed a wa y i n L a G rande, OR, o n M o n d ay , January 14, 2013. Marchelle w as bo r n on Janu' a a ry 22, 1964 in Redmond, O R. In her youth, s he p a r ticipated Marche9e ~laleneywee d eo and w a s i n v o lved i n rodeo throughout her life. M archell e gr adu a t e d from Redm o n d Hi g h S chool w i t h h o n o r s a n d w as heavily i m m ersed i n s ports a nd th e ch ee r squad. She then a t tended Portland State Un iversity, Oregon S t at e U n i v e r sity and UC Davis, obtaining a d egree in S o ciology w i t h an emphasis i n A d m i n i strative J u stice. M a r chelle w ent to w or k i n t h e C a l i f ornia Justice System f o r five years, after which she moved back to Central Oregon to work in Deschutes County as a parole officer. M archelle's g r eatest p a ssion was her two children, Calum and Rachael. D espite s t r uggling w i t h c ongestive h e ar t f a i l u r e , Marchelle f o un d c r e ative ways to be an encouragem ent to others, who w e r e working through their own struggles of l i f e , t h r o u gh F acebook. A s o n e F a c e book friend stated: "Marchelle and I never met i n person. I t a l k ed t o her on h e re, she s h o wed me how to be positive and always look at the brighter side of life. I have enjoyed the many months of dialogue th at sh e h a d w i t h friends tha t l o ved her s o and th e wa y tha t sh e would p o st p o s it ive l i t t l e quips on m y comm e n t s that made me laugh and look at l i f e a l i t t l e d if ferent. I recently thanked her for showing me t ha t no matter w ha t h a p pens determination and positivity will see m e t h r o u gh t h e rough ti m e s a n d I j ust hope she did r e a lize h o w much I did appreciate her. I also don't know h er kids but they are in my prayers tonight and will be forever I think t hey lost an a ngel today. To M a rch e l l e 's f riends and f a m i ly: t h a n k you f or s h a r ing h er w i t h me at th e t i m e I n e e d ed someone po s itive i n my
life."
No o n e' s l i f e c a n b e summed up on just a single p age, an d d e f i n itely n o t M archelle D i n e tt e M al oney. Sh e w a s t a l e nted, a thletic, beautiful, q u i r k y , ornery, kind, compassiona te, f un , l o v i n g , c a r i n g , and humane. She accomplished much in a life that was far too short. She will b e missed, m ourned a n d celebrated b y al l w h o loved her. Marchelle is survived by her children, Rachael and Calum; and many immedia te an d e x t e nded f a m i l y members. It was M a r chelle's w i sh to have her body d onated to Oregon Health and Science U n i v ersity f o r r esearch. Memorial contributions in her name can be m ade to: A n a t omical R e search Fund, OHSU, or the charity of your choice. A m emorial s e rvice i s b eing planned fo r a l a t e r time.
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around theworld: Jesus "Chucho" Castiiio, 68: Mexican bantamweight champion celebrated in Los Angeles for four epictitle fights between 1968 and 1971. Died Tuesday at a Mexico City hospital.
Prospero Gaiiinari, 62: Member of terrorist group the Red Brigades who was convicted in the kidnapping and assassination in 1978 of Italian prime m inister A ld o M o ro . D i e d Monday. Yang Baibing, 93: Chinese military strongman who carried out the violent suppression of student-led protests in Tiananmen Square in 1989 and was later purged because of fears that he was accruing too much power. Died Tuesday. — From wire reports
FEATURED OBITUARY
ames oo inte rate n iversi o a a m a By Adam Bernstein The Washington Post
On a scorching June day in 1963, James Hood and Vivian Malone became the first two black students to enroll successfully at the University of Alabama, defying Gov. George Wallace Jr.'s symbolic — and vitriolic — "stand in the schoolhouse door." Along with the high school students known as the Little Rock Nine in 1957 and James Meredith's integration of the University of M i ssissippi in 1962, Malone and Hood became national symbols of the struggle to break down educational barriers during the civil rights era. Wallace and other political opportunists stoked their constituents with rage. Hood, who died Thursday at 70, endured physical threats and the coarsest of verbal intimidation. He was a g r egarious Alabama native, 20 years old, and a provocative target of a governor who had vowed in his inaugural address: "Segregation now, segregation tomorrow and segregation forever." In 1956, Autherine Lucy had been the first black student to register at the University of Alabama. But the college suspended her after three days, purportedly because it could not ensure her safety following violent mobs on and around campus. On the day of his registration in Tuscaloosa — June 11, 1963 — Hood was surrounded by federal guards. He described himself as a virtual prisoner in a government sedan as he sweated in a four-button suit and a hat with a red feather. According to histories of the showdown, which was captured on national television, President John F. Kennedy and his Justice Department team had worked out the details in advance with Wallace's staff. The governor would protest federal intrusion on state sovereignty but then yield to the students. In the end, Kennedy was forced to federalize the Alabama national guard, and Wallace gave way only under threat of arrest in front of a towering nationalguard commander. "It is my sad duty to inform youthat the National Guard has been federalized," Brig. Gen. Henry Graham told Wallace before saluting. "Please stand aside so that the order of the court may be accomplished." That evening, Kennedymade a televised national address to
The Associated Press file photo
Vivian Malone and James Hood stand in the doorway of Foster Auditorium where they hold what they called their "first and final news conference" after the two students registered at the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa. Earlier, Gov. George Wallace had barred their way from the same doorway. Hood died Thursday. frame his actions as a "moral issue ... as old as the scriptures and as clear as the American Constitution." A t h ir d b lack student subsequently — and quietly — registered at the University of Alabama campus in Huntsville. As much as Hood tried to merge into campus life after his enrollment, he faced grim and often-vicious reminders of opposition to his presence. A dead black cat was mailed to him. Harassing phone calls arrived at all hours. On June 12, Medgar Evers, who had helped o verturn segregation at t h e University of Mississippi as a field secretary of the NAACP, was assassinated by bullet in his front yard in Jackson, Miss. In a sad denouement to his enrollment, Hood w i thdrew from school that August "to avoid a complete mental and physical breakdown" and prevent his possible expulsion. He had become entangled in several politically charged battles, including a commentary he wrote for a student publication that appeared to criticize civil rights protests. "I think it has become a matter of excitement rather than convictionfor most Negroes," he wrote. Hood later said the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., who had been an architect of his enrollment, was wounded by the editorial. H ood had g iven a n i m promptu speech in his home town that school officials saw as sowing hostility on campus. In addition, Hood later said, he felt guilt over how his national profile was affecting his family in the northeastern Alabama town of Gadsden. His father, he added, had cancer.
Hood, who completed his educationelsewhere, became a deputy police chief under Mayor Coleman Young of Detroit in the 1970s. He retired in 2002 as an administrator of police science at the Madison Area Technical College in Wisconsin. He returned to the University of Alabama in 1995 and received a doctorate in interdisciplinary studies in 1997. James Alexander Hood was born Nov. 10, 1942, in Gadsden, where his father was a tractor operator at a Goodyear tire factory. J immy Hood, as h e w a s known, was a standout athlete and student body leader at Gadsden's Carver High School. The summer he was 17, he was a manager at the town's allblack swimming pool and decided to help friends integrate a white swimming pool. Everyone but Hood was arrested. "They didn't want to arrest me because then the black pool would close and they'd have a problem on their hands," he told The Post in 1995. He won a s cholarship to study at Clark College in Atlanta and was active in King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Hood said he was persuaded by civil rights leaders to apply for admission into the University of Alabama. Where the form asked for his race, he wrote: "Negro, American Negro." He was denied a place at the collegebecause ofhis race,and eventually a federal judge orderedhisadmission. He subsequently graduated from Wayne State University in Detroit and received a master'sdegree in criminal justice from Michigan State University in 1972.
June 2, 1918 - January 15, 2013 JackHil lpeaceablypassedawayonTuesday,JanUary15, 2013, surrounded by his wife and family, at St. Charles Medical Center. A member of the 'Greatest Generation', Jack was born in Phoenix, OR, where he was a star athlete at Medford High School. He attended college prior to enlisting in the Oregon Army National Guard in the fall of 1940. After being selected for pilot training, he was awarded his pilot wings and commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the US Army Air Forces (USAAF) in December of 1941, just as the US entered into WWII. As the war progressed, he was a B-17 instructor Pilot and the Operations Officer at Las Vegas Army Airfield in NV, and that was where he met his wife, Madelon, where she was also stationed as a Woman's Airforce Service Pilot (WASP). They were married on September 15, 1944, just before he left for combat duty in the Pacific Theater as a B-29 aircraft commander bomber pilot. They have been married for nearly 69 years. Following his return from the war, he graduated from Oregon State University with a degree in Forestry and Business Administration. They settled in Tigard, where they started their family, and he worked in Portland in the lumber industry. Having enjoyed living part time in the Bend/ Sunriver area since 1976, they relocated permanently to Bend in May of 2004, living in Stone Lodge. In early 2007, they moved in with their youngest daughter, Nancy. Jack and Madelon had four children and together in-grained in them their core values of responsibility, respect, hard work and service.
Jack's oldest son, Marty, is a US Air Force Academy graduate and F-15fighter pilot and is nowa commercial airline pilot; his second son, Tom, graduated from the LIS Naval Academy and was a F-14 fighter pilot and now runs his own defense contracting company; his oldest
daughter, Margaret (Betsyj, married an Air Force Academy graduate and fighter pilot and she is currently a CMA at Bend Memorial Clinic
in Bend,OR; and his youngestdaughter,Nancy,has been a science teacher at Mountain View High School in Bend for 29 years. His love and g Uidance ensured the success of all his children as they followed in his footsteps. In addition to his wife and four children, five grandchildren and six great grandchildren survive him. Throughout his life he enjoyed golf, fishing in ail of Oregon's lakes and rivers, and attending his children's sporting events. He will be greatly missed by all of his family but their sorrow is buoyed by remembering him as a loving and faithful husband and father, someone always full of good humor, with Unwavering support for his family. At present, no service is scheduled, and it is requested donations be forwarded to the Oregon Veterans' Home.
Please sign our online gUestbook at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
The Associated Press MISSOULA, Mont. — Two Montana-basedenvironmental groups have filed a lawsuit seeking to force the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service to protect a high-elevation pine tree whose nuts are an important food source for some threatenedgrizzlybears and other wildlife. In 2011, the federal agency determined whitebark pine warranted listing under the E ndangered Species A c t , but it said other species were considered to be higher prio rities. That f i n ding w a s made after a 2010 lawsuit filed by the Natural Resources Defense Council. The Helena-based Alliance for the Wild Rockies and t h e Mis s oula-based WildWest Institute filed a lawsuit in Missoula on Tues-
their radar, as far as the commitment it's going to take to maintain or recover it," said Steve Kelly, a board member of the Alliance for the Wild Rockies. Whitebark pine trees can live up to 1,000 years and thrive i n c o n ditions considered too harsh for most trees. Whitebark pine nuts are an important food for threatened grizzly bears in and around Yellowstone National Park. However, the trees have b een devastated b y th e mountain pine beetle, and a fungus known as blister rust, while warmer temperatures are allowing o t her t r e es to take root i n t r aditional whitebark pine habitat in the West. Whitebark pine are found in M o n t ana, W y o m i ng, day asking a federal judge to Idaho, California, Oregon, set aside the wildlife agen- Washington an d w e stern cy's decision or order it to set Canada. Authorities in Cana date by which it would pro- ada determined the tree was pose the trees for listing as endangered there in 2010. a threatened or endangered The U.S. Fish and Wildlife species. Servicedid not have a com"Whitebark pine isn't on ment on the lawsuit.
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Our mother lived a country style life, raised in Prineville, OR with five brothers who adored her. She milked cows, rode her horse, Dagger to school and bakedcakesinthe oldwood stove. She had lived in Medford the past 36 years and was a member of the First Baptist Church, Medford. Catherine celebrated her 100th birthday December 28, 2012 in Portland joined by over 130 of her close family and friends. Her dear friend Luis Palau, opened her party with Psalms 92 and a prayer. The love of Christ compelled her to live each day as if it were her last, knowinghertrue home was in Heaven.She setan example by being loving, kind, caring, funny, patient, and compassionate. Her sense of humor was contagious and laughter always filled her home. She will never be forgotten, this wonderful mother of ours.... Catherine Coshow Hoover went to be with Jesus January 10, 2013 from her home at Rogue Valley Manor, her daughters by her side. Catherine loved her hometown of Prineville, OR and visited there often. Her parents were Elmo Price and Esley Coshow. Her childhood was spent on a ranch below Old Grizzly Mountain eight miles from town. Catherine loved acting in all the school plays and was on the debate team. She played the drums, violin, piano, and sang during her high school years. Catherine and two other girls had a band called The Sage Brush Syncopators, and they played for local grange hall dances. In 1931, she graduated from Crook County High. Catherine was honored with the Loving Cup that year which represented excellence in leadership, scholarship, service, and character. She was an outstanding athlete and loved sports, playing basketball, baseball and once winning five medals in one track meet. Catherine attended Oregon State University the next three years with a vocal music scholarship. Singing was always a part of her life and she sang at her 100th birthday celebration. She joined Sigma Kappa sorority and was lifelong friends with her sorority sister, Phyllis Norton. Catherine's favorite summer job was singing and waiting tables at the Oregon Caves. She met the love of her life in Bend, OR while waiting tables at the Trailways bus depot cafe. Myrl founded Mt. Hood Stages in the 1920s which then became Pacific Trailways bus line. Catherine married Myrl P. Hoover in 1942 spending 11 years in Portland, OR before moving to Los Altos Hills, CA They raised a family of four girls and two boys: Cal and Lorie Hoover, Bend, OR, Kathi and John Ehrlich, Medford, OR, Roberta and Ron Muggerud, Bellingham, WA, Mary Jane and Charley Culver, Lake Oswego, OR, Connie C. Otero, Kapaa, Hawaii, Maurie Hoover (deceasedj; and former daughter-in-law, Maxine. Myrl and Catherine began Allied Christian Foundation in 1962 which continues today, and supports worldwide Christian ministries. Our Mother Catherine, Nana, adored her 16 grandchildren and delighted in being with them year-round especially during the summer at the cabin in Camp Sherman or Sunriver. What a joy when 25 greatgrandchildren began to arrive, and she became a Great Nana. We have celebrated five generations with13 great-greats, who refer to her as their Greatest Nana. She was blessed and so are we. Mom was a one-of-a-kind woman. We honor her wish to be laid to rest beside her husband, Myrl, and son, Maurie, in Bend. Her grandson, Chad Muggerud, is by her side and together they are happily visiting and singing with angels. A private family burial at Pilot Butte Cemetery in Bend, OR., was held Saturday, January19, 2013. Memorial contributions may be made to Allied Christian Foundation, 2408 Heritage Way, Medford, OR 97504.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013.
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35/21 Union
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FRONTS
O A L A SKA
Cold
Yesterday Sunday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
PLANET WATCH
TEMPERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:53 a.m...... 5:05 p.m. Venus......6:40 a.m...... 3:37 p.m. Mars.......8:34 a.m...... 6:37 p.m. Jupiter... 1249pm......350a.m. Satum......l:26 a.m..... I 1:49 a.m. Uranus....10:12 a.m.....10:27 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 52/21 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........63m1994 Monthtodate.......... 0.70" Recordlow......... -2 in1963 Average monthtodate... 1.03" Average high.............. 41 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low .............. 25 Average year to date..... 1.03" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.28 Record 24 hours ...0.90 in1953 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
SKI REPORT
M onday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
for solar at noon.
Snow accumulation in inches
2
Astoria ........50/31/0.00.....50/31/s......50/31/s Baker City...... 21/-3/0.00.....22/5/pc.......27/9ls Brookings......59/34/0.00....56/38/pc......54/39/s Burns.......... 28/-8/0.00......23/olf.......2573ls Eugene........34/30/0.00.....37/30ls.....37/30/pc Klamath Falls .. 34/-2/000 .... 32/6/s ... 35/10/s Lakeview...... 28/-11/0.00 .....27/3/s.......29/7/s La Pine.........51/6/0.00.....43/18/s......45/14/s Medford.......48/21/0.00.....43/25/s.....45/26/pc Newport.......45/32/0.00.....57/38/s......55/38/s North Bend......45/30/NA.....57/35/s......57/37/s Ontario......... 9/-4/0.00......14/2/f.......19/5/s Pendleton......28/22/0.00....31/27/pc......31/27/c Portland .......37/25/0.00.....43/29/s......42/29/s Prineville.......52/25/0.00....43/23/pc......45/23/s Redmond....... 56/1 3/0.00.....47/1 8/s......48/23/s Roseburg.......47/29/0.00.....44/31/f.....41/33lpc Salem ....... 31/27/0 00 ..38/29/s ...39/29/pc Sisters......... 50/1 5/0.00....44/21/pc......47/23/s The Dages......32/30/0.00.....37/26/s......34/27/c
LOW MEDIUM HIGH 0
2
4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 58 Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .66-70 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .71-1 07 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .83-104 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 85 Mt. HoodSkiBowl...........0.0......50-52 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 102
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Willamette Pass ....... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .40-84
Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .20-23 Mammoth Mtn., California..... 00. . . . .91-192 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .36-51 Squaw Valley, California..... . .0.0.... M9-115 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-51 Hwy. 58 at Willamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .33 45 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 21 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:W-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,c-clouds,h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snowflurries, snsnow, i-ice,rs-rain-snowmix, w-wind,f-fog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
• 83'
46 22
Moonsettoday .... 2:1 0a.m
CENTRAL
La Grande•
vP
• Madras
Camp Sherman
52/44
30/23
31/19
Yachats• ~
55/38
HIGH LOW
47 24
• Pl
380 8
•
Warm Springs•
•
31/27
Ruggs
Maupin
Jm
Wallowa • Enterpris • Meacham 38/20
• PendletOn
35/27
29/25
Government Camp 43/si hg
•
• ' uWasco
48/26
Fiorence•
HIGH LOW
48 2 6
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE WEST Sunrisetoday...... 7:34 a.m Moon phases Freezing fog in today...,,, 5 00 p,m valleys and passes; Sunset F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:33 a.m otherwise, mostly Sunset tomorrow... 5:01 p.m l• sunny. Moonrisetoday...12:04 p.m Jan. 26 Feb. 3 Feb. 9 reb. 17
Umatilla
Hood
50/42 •
Tigamook•
HIGH LOW
38 17 BEND ALMANAC
As t oria
Seasidea
HIGH LOW
63/39a
CONDITIONS 8 4
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W ar m Stationary Showers T storms Ram
Flurries S now
Ice
Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday Yesterday Sunday Monday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene,TX ......70/43/0 00...68/31/s.. 49/32/s GrandRapids....45/39/0.00...22/I2/c.. I5/7/sn RapidCity...... 44/30/0.00...19/3/pc .. 21/11/c Savannah.......63/37/0.00...67/42ls .. 63/35/s Akron ..........51/33/000..27/I5/sn.. 20/5/sn Green Bay.......43/30/001..I2/4/pc...5/ 7/pc Reno...........38/I5/000... 38/18/s .. 39/18/s Seattle..........34/31/000... 41/32/s .. 41/31/s Albany..........42/24/000..35/13/pc. 24/10/sn Greensboro......49/25/000...55/31/s.. 51/22/5 Richmond.......53/28/0.00...55/31/s. 46/21/pc SiouxFalls.......42/16/0.00..11/-9/sn...2/-5/pc Albuquerque.....53/20/000...54/22/s.. 51/24/s Harusburg.......55/26/000..43/23/pc. 36/I6/sn Rochester, NY....48/32/000 .. 26/17/sn. 19/I3/sn Spokane........30/10/000 ..31/14/pc.. 30/19/c Anchorage ......22/14/0 00..32/24/sn. 31/25/pc Hartford,CT.....45/25/0.00..43/21/pc. 29/16/sn Sacrameuto......62/27/000... 61/33/s .. 61/34/s Springfield, MO ..63/36/000 ..46/16/pc.. 26/13/s Atlauta .........57/33/000...62/38/s.. 51/25/s Helena..........44/25/0.00...I9/8/pc.35/15/pc St.Louis.........66/42/000..35/15/pc.19711/pc Tampa..........75/54/000..75/57/sh.74/52lpc Atlantic City.....51/28/0 00..49/29/pc.. 41/24/c Honolulu........81/60/0 00...76/65/s.. 78/66/s Salt Lake City.....21/4/000 ..22/12/pc. 23717/pc Tucson..........75/39/000... 75/44/s .. 75/45/s Austin..........69/30/0.00...68/43/s.. 59/35/s Houston ........68/34/0.00...66/46/s.. 63/41/s San Antonio.....68/36/000... 68/45/s. 63/39/pc Tulsa...........65/44/000... 59/24/s.. 37/23/s Baltimore .......54/28/000 ..49/29/pc.. 38/25/c Huntsville.......56/30/000...52/25/s .. 44/lis SanDiego.......76/47/000...73/47/s .. 74/44/s Washington, OC..54/33/000 ..50/2ipc.. 38/24/c Billings.........45/29/000...19/8/sn. 32/20/pc Indianapolis.....53/37/0.00 ..27/lopc .. 17/4/pc SanFrancisco....60/39/000...62/44/s .. 63/45/s Wichita.........65/28/000... 49/18/s. 34/19/pc Birmingham.....57/30/000...54/32/s .. 47/21/s Jackson, MS.... 61/29/000. 61/37/s .. 53/26/s SanJose........64/35/000.. 68/40/s.. 70/41/s Yakima.........29/26/000...32/24ls.. 32/25/c Bismarck.........37/2/000 .. 0/19/sn.-2/-1vpc Jacksonvile......64/43/000..70/51/pc. 68/42/pc SantaFe........50/18/0.00... 48/21/s .. 45/21/s Yuma...........74/50/0.00... 75/52/s .. 7451/s Boise...........17/ I/O00...20/7/pc .. 26/12/s Juneau..........32/27/0 00 ..37733/sh...42/32/r INTERNATIONAL Boston..........49/25/000..48/21/pc.. 31/16/c KansasC/ty......62/38/000...35/8/pc.19/11/pc Budgeport,CT....46/31/000 ..43/21/pc. 34/17/sn Lansing.........45/36/0.00...23/12/c .. 16/6/sn Amsterdam......28/23/000..24/23/sn .. 31/25/c Mecca..........90/77/000 . 91/69/s .. 90/69/s Buffalo........ 44/33/000 ..26/I8/sn. 21/13/sn LasVegas.......61/35/000... 62/36/s .. 63/37/5 Athens..........59/49/000..63/54/pc. 60/49/pc MexicoCity .....70/41/000 . 63/44/c. 54/44/sh Burliugton,VT....40/20/0.01 .. 35/-3/sn...9/-6/pc Lexiagton.......54/32/0.00...38/21/s.. 27/9/pc Auckland........72/57/000..70/61/pc.70/60/pc Montreal........32/19/041 ... 34/0/sf..-7/-19/c Caribou,ME..... 20/-5/001 .. 32/-8/sn..0/-20/pc Lincoln..........54/23/0.00...30/3/pc. 18/11/pc Baghdad........64/42/000 ..68/51/pc.. 66/51/s Moscow........12/ 4/001 ...18/8/pc...9/2/sn CharlestonSC...65/36/000...66/43/s .. 61/35/s Little Rock.......62/28/000... 56/33/s .. 42/24/s Bangkok........86/72/0.00... 92/75/s .. 95/78/s Nairobi.........79/57/0.0079/54/pc .. .. 78/SIc Charlotte........54/23/000...57/34/s .. 51/26/s LosAngeles......79/51/000...74/50/s .. 74/51/s Beiyng..........37/14/000 ..29/I7/sn. 41/18/pc Nassau.........79/68/000 ..78/69/sh. 77/70/pc Chattanooga.....55/26/000...56/31/s.. 45/20/s Louisville........57/40/000 ..39/23/pc. 25/13/pc Be/rut..........st/54/000..70/61/pc. 81/59/pc New Delh/.......64/46/000...66/45ls .. 66/47/s Cheyenne.......50/27/000..37/15/pc.45/31/pc MadisonWl.....45/34/000...14/1/pc...5/6/pc Berli0...........23/16/000 ..24/20/pc. 22/20/sa Osaka..........48/28/000 ..46/39/pc. 50/36/sh Chicago.........47/37/000...21/8/pc.. 12/3/pc Memphis....... 58/31/000 ..54/32/s .. 40/21/s Bogota.........68/41IO00... 72/52/t. 68/48/pc Oslo............10/ 6/000...22/1Olc... 5/4/pc Cincinnati.......55/36/000..34/21/pc.. 25/7/pc Miami..........76/61/021 ..78/67/pc.79/65/pc Budapest........28/27/000...32/29/i.35/33/sh Ottawa.........37/19/029... 34/5/sf..-8/18/c Cleveland.......51/36/000 ..29/19/sn.. 21/9/pc Milwaukee......44/38/0.00...16/6/pc... 9/0/pc BuenosAires.....79/64/043 ..77/62/pc. 80/65/pc Paris............30/28/018 .. 34/23/sn..36/30/rs Coloradospnngs.55/28/000..51/18/pc.50/27lpc Minneapolis.....39/10/0.00.. 5/-10/s0.-3/-13/pc CaboSanLucas ..82/61/0.00... 86/61/s .. 81/61/s Rio deJaneiro....86/75/0.00... 81/69/t...86/6it Columbia,M0...59/40/000 ..37/11/pc.. 18/I0/s Nashv/118........57/28/0 00...49/25/s. 37/16/pc Cairo...........70/50/0.00... 71/53/s .. 77/57/s Rome...........54/30/0.00... 58/52/r. 52/47/sh Columbia,SC....61/27/000...65/37/s.. 57/28/s NewOrleans.....65/39/000...65/48/s.. 61/43/s Calgary.........28/19/000..21/I9/pc. 31/I6/pc Santiago........84/61/000... 87/64ls .. 87/65/s Columbus GA....63/35/000...64/37/5.. 58/26/s NewYork.......51/30/000..45/26/pc. 36/21/sn Cancun.........77/61/0.00.. 78/68/pc.80/71/pc SaoPaulo.......79/66/0.00... 70/62/t .. 74/62/c Columbus OH....53/33/000...30/20/c .. 23/6/pc Newark, NJ......52/28/0 00..44/25/pc. 35/20/sn Dublin..........39/34/072 .. 33/32/sf. 33/30/pc Sapporo ........30/25/011 .. 30/17/sf .. 29/I7/c Concord, NH.....42/17/000...40/6/pc... 22/5/c Norfolk VA......56/26/000...57/35/s. 47/25/pc Edinburgh.......37/25/000 ..33/30/sn..34/32/rs Seoul...........39/23/000... 26/21/c. 32/21/sn Corpus Christi....74/45/000...65/50/s. 67/46/pc OklahomaCity...64/35/0 00... 58/25/s .. 43/24/s Geneva.........32/25/038..36/27/sh..36/21/sf Shangha/........52/30/000...54/42/c. 53/33/sh DallasFtWorth...67/40/000...64/39/5.. 51/34/s Omaha.........54/28/000...25/2/pc... 148/c Harare..........81/64/051 ..81/62/sh...81/63/t 5/ngapore.......77/73/5 31... 77/78/t...85/77/t Dayton .........52/35/000..30/18/pc..22/5/pc Orlando.........76/56/000..75/58lsh.76/54/pc Hong Kong......64755/000..67/59/pc.72/61/pc Stockholm.......10/6/000..27/18/pc.. 25/10/c Denver..........57/32/000..46/17/pc.46/24/pc Palmsprings.....77/47/000...75/44/s.. 76/45/s Istanbul.........54/46/1.26 54/52/sh .. .. 59/52/c Sydney..........72/68/000 ..82/70/sh...84/70/t OesMoines......54/37/000...21/I/pc .. 10/2/pc Peoria..........52/32/000...25/7/pc .. 11/2/pc lerusalem.......61/45/0.00... 60/49/s .. 65/54/s Taipei...........72/52/0.00... 69/61/s. 68/57/pc Detroit..........48/36/000...26/14/c... 19/9/c Philadelphia.....52/30/0 00..46/27/pc .. 3I23/c Johannesburg....70/59/1.84... 73/61/t...81/55/t Tel Aviv.........66/50/0.00...75/57ls.. 77/52/s Duluth...........29/3/001 ..-I/14/sf.-4/17/pc Phoeuix.........75/44/000...75/45/s.. 77/46/s Lima...........77/66/000..78/67lpc. 79/67/pc Tokyo...........48/30/000 ..37/34/pc.37/29/sh EIP850..........62/29/000...61/36/s.. 59/37/s Pittsburgh.......51/33/000...35/18/c. 25/10/sn Lisbon..........61/48/000 ..58/48/sh54/47/pc Toronto.........45/34/000 25/10/sf ..14/olsf Fairbanks........ 0/25/000... 3/6/sn....8/ 8/c Portland,ME.....42/I8/0 00...43/9/pc. 24/16/pc London.........34/30/0.03 .. 36/28/sn.. 36/23/c Vancouver.......39/30/0.00... 40/32/s.43/42/pc Fargo............36/1/000.:4/-23/sn..-9/-21/s Providence......49/23/0.00..46/19/pc..31/16/c Madrid .........52/43/045 ..44/36/sh. 45/29/pc Vienna..........25/23/000...35/29/c..34/31/rs Flagstaff.........43/5/000...45/14/s .. 47/14/s Raleigh.........54/26/0 00... 58/32/s .. 5472 4/s Manila..........84/73/000..83/70/pc. 85/72/pc Warsaw.........18/14/010...21/12/c..18/17/c
NORTHWEST NEWS
Lan or 'se ortto an ot in a artmentsstarts e ate
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By Bob Young The Seattle Times
SEATTLE — A Mercer Island, Wash., landlord is trying to ban marijuana in an apartment building, raising questions about w hat's allowed under Washington's medical marijuana law and the state's recent legalization of the drug. Abode Management sent notices to tenants in 171 apartments saying that marijuana, in all forms, would be strictly prohibited and g rounds for eviction. What's more,the company required tenants to report on others suspected of using marijuana. And it wanted all tenants to sign an amendment to their leases saying they would comply with the new edict. At least one tenant, medical marijuana patient Alex Aversano — who uses a liquid form of marijuana for pain reliefbalked. That's led the company to backpedal. On Thursday, Abode said its intention is to ban smoking of any substances. The company acknowledged it can't force tenants to sign the ban mid-lease, only when they're renewing or signing a new lease. A company spokeswoman left the matter of liquid or edible marijuana cloudy. "This is a cutting-edge issue that plays into several areas of law: medical marijuana, Initiative 502, landlord-tenant law, and privacy matters," said Hilary Bricken, an attorney who has offeredto represent Aversano pro bono. At the center of the legal thicket is the conflict between federal law, which considers all forms of marijuana illegal, and more liberal state laws. This much is clear: Landlords can ban smoking — including marijuana smoking — in their properties, despite I-502. State law allows that. And there is no exception for medical marijuana patients. An Iraq War veteran, Aversano, 31, came home from his college classes last week to find a notice on his door saying he had to sign a lease amendment
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Cascade, Flora, Flora Nouveau, Lago, Terra, The 81 Offer does Not aPf 7 I> ro flJe OMI Dtlo.
Alan Berner/The Seattle Times
Alexander Aversano legally uses medical marijuana tinctures for his chronic back and kidney pain. He and other tenants in his Mercer Island, Washington complex have been warned no marijuana use is tolerated. which, among other things, required him to tattle on neighbors. uTo spend $1,600 on rent and be told we can't use something that we're told is legal is un-Washingtonian,u Aversano satcL Aversano uses a marijuana tincture for chronic pain and to ease his PTSD symptoms. He and his girlfriend, Alyssa Berg, 27, say they've never smelled any kind of smoke in their building and never heard a smoke or fire alarm. "I don't know what would prompt the notice other than pre-emptive action" against the new law, which allows social Users over 21 to possess up to an ounce of marijuana, Berg salcL The state's i n door-smoking ban is meant to protect nonsmokers. To carve out a smoking exception for medical marijuana, advocates would need to show scientifically that secondhand marijuana smoke is substantively different from tobacco smoke, said A lison Holcomb, drug-policy director for the ACLU of Washington. "I'm not aware of that case being made," Holcomb said. But there is another option forpatients, she said.They can vaporize their marijuana, using devices that heat marijuana and release key chemicals without
igniting dried plant matter. Instead ofcreating smoke, users inhale vapors. Holcomb says vaporizing is as effective as smoking and healthier, not to mention legal. "The law is silent on vaporization,u she said. "The clean-indoor-air act prohibits acts of smoking, and vaporization is not smoking." Doug Hiatt, a criminal-defense attorney and medical marijuana advocate, said he doesn't see ho w l a n dlords could ban edible or liquid forms of marijuana. He called the Abode Management strategy "an incredibly misguided effort; there's no way they can properly police it.u "What would they do,u Hiatt said, "search everybody's chocolate chip cookies? It's reefer madness all over." Spokeswoman Talvinder Sahota said Abode Management would consult an attorney if tenants wanted to recreationally use nonsmokable forms of marijuana. Landlords can try to rely on federal law, several attorneys said, which maintains marijuana is an illegal substance. And, indeed, the state's largest association of landlords is telling rental property owners they can use the federal law to ban marijuana.
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IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Milestones, C2
Travel, C4-5 Puzzles, C6
© www.bendbulletin.com/community
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
SPOTLIGHT
Nomineessought for free paint job Community members are invited to nominate families or nonprofit organizations that are
inneed of free painting services. Webfoot Painting will
provide $5,000 worth of free paint, labor and
materials to a deserving recipient in the Bendor Redmond area. Last year the company selected two recipi-
zrr a
ents, who received full
exterior painting jobs. The local company is
~ttQ
collecting stories about potential recipients at its website, www.webfoot painting.com or via
email at gavin©webfoot painting.com or via mail
~>f ester
at 20585 Brinson Blvd. No. 4, Bend, OR 97701. Individuals should submit stories as well as
photos and supporting information by Feb.28.
Volunteer expo at Bend library
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Local individuals who are interested in finding
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a volunteer opportunity may want to check out an upcoming volunteer
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expo at the Downtown
Bend Public Library on
Photo courteaty Barb Gonzalez
Jan. 27. The event, Know
Ashland's Winchester Inn is located only a couple of blocks from the campus ofthe Oregon Shakespeare Festival.Owned and operated by Michael and Laurie Gibbs, it has 18 guest rooms and a full-service restaurant and wine bar. "Most B&Bs may have only three rooms, up to six or seven," Michael Gibbs said "But we're more like a full-service East Coast inn with a restaurant. We consider ourselves a boutique inn."
Volunteers — Volunteer Expo, will take place
from noon to 3 p.m. It will feature 20 local
agencies who arelooking for volunteers. The representatives will be able to answer
• Oregon innsoffer aninviting changeof pace — often with thebonusof memorablemeals
questions from potential volunteers. Groups include Habitat for Humanity and the Central
Oregon Council on Aging and manymore. The event is openthe public and free. It will
FeaturedOregon
bed & Jsleakfasts
take place in the Brooks Room at the library, located at 601 N.W. Wall St., Bend. Contact: 541-6177080.
World BookNight needs helpers Readers who would like to help share books with others are
invited to participate in World Book Night 2013 through the Deschutes
Public Library system. The worldwide event distributes more than 2
million books annually to inspire others to read. Locally, the Downtown
Bend Public Library is participating as a distribution center and
is seeking volunteers to help hand out books to the public on April 23.
How it works, according to the World Book Night website, is
each year 30 booksare
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r Portland
+~~ Nrltong McMinn~vill ~ ' By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
ASHLAND — Operating a bed-and-breakfast inn, say Michael and Laurie Gibbs, requires creativity, flexibility and tenacity.
of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival, and it's a very short walk from the shops and restaurants of Ashland's main street. But it takes more than location to
NORTHWEST TRAVEL
helps if your success. "Many establishks: McCall, Idaho mentislarge bed and enoughto breakfast have a reliable team of emowners suffer," Laurie Gibbs ployees who can help you acknowledged. "That's esavoid the burn-out syndrome. pecially true when a couple For nearly 30 years — since get into the B&B business July 1983 — the Gibbses have as a second career, and they been the proprietors of the haven't done their homework Winchester Inn. That's a long to see what a demanding catime in this category of the reer it is." "It's like having your hospitality industry. They have succeeded in relatives come to visit and part because of location. never go home," her husband Their inn is only a couple added. "But when you are of blocks from the theaters paying, the expectations are
a lot different than a dinner
party."
'A different beast' Michael Gibbs said he and Laurie, who had previous experience in the restaurant business in Carmel, Calif., bought the Winchester with another couple. "We were so naive," he lamented. "This was the only place on the West Coast that offered what we wanted. But we were the eighth inn to open in Ashland, and we were worried there might be too much competition." When their partners became "disenchanted" with the business, he said, "we bought them out and started looking at expansion concepts. That meant growing the inn's initial seven rooms
to nine, then doubling the number to 18 with the purchase of a second house next door to the first. They will soon add a two-bedroom, two-bath family suite in an adjacent cottage. "We're a different beast," Michael Gibbs said. "Most BazBs may have only three rooms, up to six or seven. But we're more like a full-service East Coast inn with a restaurant.We consider ourselves a boutique inn. In our high periods, we have 35 employees." Among them is their son, Drew. Now 28, he grew up in the family business, as did his sister, Cate, who now lives in Seattle. Today he is a trained sommelier as well as the general manager of the Winchester Inn. See B&B/C4
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selected. The authors waive their royalties and
the publishers pay the costs of producing special World Book Night
editions. Then bookstores and
libraries give 20 copies of a particular book in their communities. The deadline to
sign up to volunteer is Wednesday. Sign-up is taking place at the website below. Contact: www. us.worldbooknight.org.
Gontact us with your ideas • Community events: Email event information to events©bendbulletin
.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www. bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of publication. Contact: 541-383-0351. • Story ideas: Email
communitylife©bendbulletin.com. — From staff reports
Theater troupe takes 'Annie jr.' to COCC stage By David Jasper The Bulletin
This weekend, Bend Experimental Art Theatre is in the midst of its production of "Annie Jr." an ever-soslightly pruned version of the Broadway musical "Annie," about a young orphan and her adventures in New York City. And much l ike th e p rotagonist singing the musical's most famous number, BEAT is looking forward to tomorrow — or at least next week. The independent theater company for young actors has entered into a new collaborative partnership with Central Oregon Community College's drama club, known as the COCC Theater Troupe, and has plans to stage "Annie Jr." and future productions at COCC's Pinckney Center for the Arts. After this afternoon's performance, the last in a short run at Bend High School that began on Thursday, BEAT will move the production up the hill to
Ifyou go What:"Annie Jr." Details: •3 p.m. today atBend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St., Bend
rt
• 7 p.m. Friday, 2 and 7p.m. Saturday, 2 p.m. Jan. 27, at Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend Cost:$15 for adults, $10for students
ages 5-18,available inadvance
f h
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A
www.beattickets.org or at the door Gontact:www.beatonline.org or call 541-419-5558.
the Pinckney Center for another week-
end of shows (see "If you go") — and what it hopes will be a fruitful future bringing thespians at Central Oregon Community College into the mix. SeeAnnie/C3
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Miya Corpstein, 10, playing Annie, and a fellow actor sing while practicing a scene last week for their show "Annie Jr." at Bend High School.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 20'l3
M II ESTONE~
Formsforengagemeni weddinganniversaryorbirtitdayannouncementsareavaiiabieatTheBugetin i777sw c h andierAve.,send orby emailing milestones@bendbulletin.com. Forms andphotos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-383-0358.
MARRIAGES
ANNIVERSARY
W ent e a tiest e not By Lori Borgman
long exclusive faithfulness. It is m i ldly n erve-wracking knowing that the model The baby i s g etting of marriage your offspring married. knows best is your very own. The husband has been Did she see that marriage is copying photographs, put- the most important relationting together a video for ship she will ever nurture? the reception.He made a Did she see that the cornerwonderful pairing of two stone of marriage is courtesy? photographs. In the picture Tone of voice, dear. Ask, don't on the left, she is 10-years- tell. Suggest, don't demand. old wearing my mother's The world outside is rough, old wedding gown playing so be tender. dress-up and I am adjustI hope she heard me say ing her veil. In the picture at least once that women do on the right, she is stand- not have to be first responding in her r eal wedding ers. Often it's better not to gown and I am kneeling say the first thing that comes on the floor pinning where into your mind. Or even the f asteners will go for t h e second. bustle. I hope she knows I marA quarter inch of space ried her father because he's a is all t hat s eparates 16 good man. She's marrying a years. The time went ex- good man, too. Respect him actly that fast. by speaking well of him, both She's about to take the to him and to others. plunge. Every m a r r iage I hope she saw the power has an element of jump- of the mundane — that the ing off a cliff. You know s hared laughs, small s u r the other person as well as prises, kitchen disasters and you can, that he loathes to- everyday routine and monotmatoes and you like them. ony are what cement you as You do t h e p r e -marital a couple. Even the crises and counseling, read the com- catastrophes become part of munication books, t h en the memories that build your close your eyes and leap. history. The act ofmarriage takes Our daughter and her fi grit and courage. ance will be glowing on their M arrying someone i s w edding day. I p r a y t h e y not the same as living with enjoy every moment of the someone. Living together day. I also pray that they will i s test-driving t h e c a r . weather all th e seasons of M arriage is h a ving t h e marriage, and that one day guts to buy the car know- in the distant future they find ing it is still yours even af- themselves with a few extra ter the 5-year/ 50,000 mile pounds, salt and pepper hair, warranty has expired. a thousand inside jokes and M arriage i s a p u b l i c still enjoying one another. commitment, a legal conR obert Browning said i t t ract a n d c o v enant o f well: "Grow old along with faith, in which a bride and me. The best is yet to be — the groom vowbefore God and last of life for which the first witnesses to uphold a life- was made." MCClatchy-Tribune News Service
Allison Hamstreet and William Stafford Dawn and Chuck Malley
Hamstreet —Stafford
computer programming. She works asan assistant teacher A llison H a m street, o f of American Sign Language Phoenix, and William Staf- in Phoenix. ford, of S cottsdale, Ariz., The groom is the son of the were married Aug. 4 at Eagle late William Stafford, Sr., and Crest in Redmond with a re- Goldie and Robert Feller, of ception following in the High Scottsdale. He is a 1957 gradDesert room. uate of Pomona High School The bride is the daughter in Pomona, Calif., and a gradof the late Larry Hamstreet uate of Nazarene College in a nd R i chard a n d Ma r y Azusa, Calif., where he studRead, of Redmond. She is ied business. He is the coa 1982 graduate of Oregon owner of Flexground Safety School for the Deaf, attend- Surfacing in Scottsdale. ed Chemeketa Community The couple plan to honCollege and graduated from eymoon on a tropical cruise American River College in this winter. Sacramento, Calif. w h ere They w i l l set t l e in she studied business and Scottsdale.
Malley
Matthew) Smith, of Bend, and Michael, of Shoreline, Wash.; Chuck and Dawn Malley, and one grandchild. of Bend, will celebrate their Mr. Malley is a counselor 35th wedding a n n iversary at BestCare Treatment SerJan. 21. vices in Bend. Mrs. Malley The couple were married works for C e ntral O r egon Jan. 21, 1978, at the Hitching Radiology. Post chapel in Las Vegas. They They have lived in Central have two children, Cheri (and Oregon for 11 years.
ENGAGEMENT
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Nicole Salmina and Jordan Keesee
Salmina —Keesee
Cathy Rion and Heather Starr
Rion —Starr Cathy Rion and the Rev. Heather Starr, formerly of Bend, were married Dec. 15 at their home in the Brookland neighborhood of northeast Washington, D.C. They had a reception May 5, 2012, at the First Unitarian Church of Portland. Ms. Rion is the daughter of Michael and Nancy Rion, of West Hartford, Conn. She is a 1995 graduate of Conard High School in West Hartford and a 1999 graduate of Stanford University, where she studied m athematics.
She works asa mi nister. Ms. Starr is the daughter of Jerry Zelada, of Portland, and Jan Marie Fortier-Calbaum, of Kelso, Wash. She is a 1993 graduate of Lincoln High School in Portland and a 1996 graduate of Barnard College of Columbia University, where she studied English and community organizing. She served as minister of the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Central Oregon from 2006-2012. The couple honeymooned in South Beach, Florida. They will settle in Washington, D.C.
Calif, and is studying nursing at Pacific Union College of Nicole Salmina, of Ukiah, Northern California. Calif., and Jordan Keesee, of T he future groom is t h e Bend, plan to marry in the fall grandson of Mike and Jane in the Caribbean. Keesee, of Bend, and the son Thefuturebrideisthedaugh- of Deana Bier, of Roseville, ter of Jim and Susan Salmina, Calif. He is a 2006 graduate of Lower Lake, Calif. She is a of Summit High School. He 2007 graduate of Kelseyville works as a firefighter for Cal High School in K elseyville, Fire of Northern California.
Porter —Lang
By Olivia Hubert-Allen The Baltimore Sun
B ALTIMORE — A n d s o the wedding planning process
gargantuan one.
Margaret Porter, of Bend, and John Lang, of Medford, were married Dec. 24 on the patio of the Stratford Inn in
Ashland. The couple honeymooned at the Union Creek Lodge in Union Creek. They will settle in the upper Rogue River Valley.
CONTINUES!!
bendbulletin.com
STEAM VACS
Booking awedding venue isn't as simpleasit sounds I told myself I'd wait until after the holidays to really start thinking about it. "I want to savor my engagement," I replied to anyone who asked about a date and location. And for a while, that worked. B ut when I t a l ked w i t h friends, it felt like I was in an echo chamber ofanxiety. avenuesbook up so fast!" "You better set a budget!" "How many people do you plan on?" All the questions stressed me out and turned this seemingly-manageable task into a
John Lang and Margaret Porter
YEAR-END CLEARANCE
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Find It All Online
I only know of one way to put my mind at ease when I get stressed, and that is to get to work. So I've been spending my free time recently doing some extensive online research on venues. The only
thing I've learned so far? Sam and I are a lot pickier than we like to pretend. On the wish list: • S omewhere with a n i c e ceremony space or in close proximity to the church I've been attending. • Tents are OK, but we'd prefer the reception be indoors so weather isn't a factor. • The place can't feel like a wedding factory. • Wanted: unexpected, modern or scenic spaces. Not wanted: Anything that feels cliche. • Reasonably priced. It's a lot to navigate, espe-
cially considering many venues don't list prices on their website. And to make things even more tricky, there is a wide range of what comes included in the bottom-line price. Linens? Chairs? Food? A wedding coordinator? A tent? My only piece of advice so far: learn to love Microsoft Excel.
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The Bulletin Mn.Es ToNE G UI
I'N E S
If you would like to receive forms to announce your engagement, wedding, or anniversary, plus helpful information to plan the perfect Central Oregon wedding, pick up your Book of Love at The Bulletin (1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend) or from any of these valued advertisers: AAA Travel Awbrey Glen Golf Club Bend Metro Park 8 Recreation District The Bend Trolley Bend Wedding &Formal Black Butte Ranch Central Oregon Event Professionals Assoc.
Cuppa Yo
BIRTHS boy, JamesLeeseWorley, 8 Thomas Kinsey, 3 pounds, 12 pounds, 10.7 ounces, Dec. 31. ounces, Dec. 13. KeVin aiId LetiCia IVerSOn,a Delivered girl, Ashley RaeIverson, 8 at St. Charles Bend pounds, Dec. 15. Alyna Nicole Booth, 7 pounds, JosephTerry and Alexandria Matthew andShari Ferguson, 15 ounces, Dec. 5. Gerardo, a boy,Daniel a boy, Josiah Matthew Timothy Halseyand Shaneel Thomas Terry, 6 pounds, 3 Ferguson, 9 pounds, Dec. 31. DeWhitt, a girl, Sona Lynn ounces, Dec. 23. Grant Carson andKelsey Halsey, 5 pounds, 15ounces, Hogni and Audrey Kelley Carson, a boy, Buck JaII. 6. Gudmundsson, a girl, Brynja Kelley Carson, 7 pounds, 10 Morgan andJeanette Troxel, Marie Gudmundsson, 7 ounces, Dec. 31. abay, RiggiiI J. TroXel,6 pounds, 7 ounces, Dec. 22. Steve and Hannah Lippke, a pounds, 10.5 ounces, Jan. 7. Kyle Kinsey andJessica boy, Porter ReedLippke, 9 Cory and PearlenaWorley, a ShaWII-ThomaS, a boy, KydiiI pounds, 2 ounces, Dec. 30. Delivered at St. Charles Redmond Heather Booth, a girl, Kaya
Michael White aIId Michelle
Norris, a boy, Bentley Taner White, 8 pounds, 3 ounces, Dec. 29. Scott and Robin Sanderson, a boy, Wyatt LeeSanderson, 8 pounds, 8 ounces, Jan. 2. AndyandMelinda Rigney,a boy, GageLawrence Rigney, 8 pounds, 13 ounces, Jan. 5. Scott and Jody Johnson, a boy, Tucker JamesJohnson, 7 pounds, 10 ounces, Jan. 4. Ronnie JonesandJamie Cary, a boy, Cutler JamesJones, 7
pounds, 3 ounces, Jan. 4. Franklin PaiICoaSt and
Michelle Courtney, aboy, Franklin JaymesPancoast II, 8 pounds, Jan. 5. Christopher Dublisky and Samantha Parker, a girl, Remington Elizabeth Dublisky, 5 pounds, 5 ounces, Dec. 31. ShaneandMe lissa Henning, a boy, MaddenGrant HeIIning, 10 POundS, 2 ouIICeS, JaiI. 9.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
McClatchy-Tribune News Service With the start of the New Year, you're bound to be making resolutions and trying to change patterns. Didn't travel much last year? Didn't take a vacation at all? Make a positive
change right now by planning
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a trip in the next few months! With must-see spots for the next three months in mind, the members and editors of Virtual Tourist.com were polled, and here are their "5 Spots to Hit in the Next 3 Months."
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Located along San Sebastian Street in Old San Juan, the s treet becomes filled w i t h stalls selling a variety of local foods and rum drinks, in addition to music, arts and crafts shows, and crowds of f un-lovers. For t h ose w h o love to watch athletics, the Puerto Rico Open is held the first week of March; it's the only official PGA stop in the C aribbean. For t h ose w h o will miss the event, you can try the Trump International course yourself at the Gran Melia.
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or lessto herself for a whole hour. Visits to these sites are usuallycrammed and stressful, so the word "blissful" is proof enough this is a great time to visit! From November 1 to March 31, the site is opens at the same time, 8:30 a.m., but closes two hours earlier than during the summer months, at 5 p.m.
• Sri Lanka
Located just off the coast of India, the island of Sri Lanka .gt has been a fly-over country • See the northern lights for most travelers, due to its in Norway extensive history of civil un• Rome and Pompeii, Italy s NASA has predicted that rest. However, the country t he winter s eason i n t h e / a . Members also mentioned has been stable for the last Northern Hemisphere (Octothat this period of the year is a four years, and has become a ber 2012-April 2013) will have great time to visit landmarks popular destination for budthe brightest northern lights that are typically swarmed get-conscious travelers. display in 50 years. Aurora with tourists in the summer For travelers looking for a borealis, the scientific term months. Few destinations in safariexperience, Sri Lanka for the northern lights, occurs the world see as many visi- offers just as m uch amazwhen energetic particles are McClatchy-Tribune News Service tors as Rome and Pompeii, so ing wildlife as Africa, but is flung out from the sun and Leopards at Yala National Park are just one of the species you can see in Sri Lanka's14 national parks. it makes sense this "off-sea- m ore budget-friendly. W i l d son" is an ideal time to visit elephants, leopards, and spothit the magnetic field around Earth, and this year's condithese p opular l a n dmarks. ted deer are just a sample of tions suggest some of the best along th e P a c ifi c O c ean, recting power lines that will Since it's a U.S. territory, visWith average temperatures in the mammals you can see in sightings since 1958. As the Chile's length and range of cause the longest clear-cut in iting Puerto Rico does not re- January around 50 degrees, one of the island's fourteen it's still quite temperate and national parks. Along with the phenomena's name suggests, latitudes (from subtropical to history. Since both the Presi- quire a passport for U.S. citithe display is most commonly subantarctic) create incred- dent and Chilean Supreme zens or a change of currency. great for walking and explor- ecological diversity and lush seen in a zone within a cer- ible biodiversity and a variety Court have approved the deci- While Havana may be at the ing Rome's sights. If visiting landscape, the country also tain radius of the North Pole, of natural settings to see and sion, it seems inevitable that top of some travel lists, San the Vatican Museums and has six archaeological UNESin an area including Iceland, enjoy. The next three months the building will commence Juan offers similar colonial Sistine Chapel are on your CO World Heritage Sites. northern Scandinavia, north- are Chile's summer, so the and large areas of Patagonian architecture, colorful buildagenda, VirtualTourist memThe capital of Colombo is ern Canada, Alaska, and some climate is the most temperate forest area will be flooded for ing facades, and cobblestoned bers strongly suggest getting an interesting mix of colonial parts of Siberia. Tromsg and it will be all year — the aver- the operation of the dams. In streets, but a much cleaner your timed tickets online be- a rchitecture, Buddhist a n d Finnmark in Norway are lo- age high in Valapariso is 71 addition to seeing the nation's and more modernized at- fore your trip, which allows Hindu temples, and friendly cated above the Arctic Circle, degrees in January. It is also Southern regions while they mosphere. In addition to the you to go straight to the secu- locals. Colombo is a g r e at with relatively mild w inters the best time of the year to remain intact, in the Patago- balmy weather and beaches, rity check line. Another tip: spot to visit in the next three and long winter nights, so both visit Chilean Patagonia, with nian region, the Teatro del there ar e m a n y a c t ivities the Vatican website also offers months, as the city hosts some are ideal locations for viewing Torres del P a ine N a tional Lago in Frutillar, the largest for visitors in the next few tours, and m any m embers unique upcoming festivals. the northern lights. However, Park in splendid form and theater in the country, will be months. First, the Christmas recommend this for first-time Duruthu Perahera, the Buda lack of storms does not mean the region's famous winds the hosting its "Festivales Musi- season extends much longer visitors, since the numerous dhist event celebrating the day you should pack light — the most manageable they will cales"from Jan. 27 through in Puerto Rico than in other one-way routes through the the Buddha visited Sri Lanka, averagetemperature in Trombe all year. While the obviFeb. 5. countries - many house- museum can be f r ustrating will be a great day in January s0 in January is 24 degrees, so ous motivation to visit Chile holds don't exchange pres- and confusing. to witness rituals and celebra• San Juan, Puerto Rico remember your gloves or mit- in the next few months is its ents until Three Kings Day, or Further to the south, Pom- tions at the Buddhist temples tens. Also, make sure to avoid mild season, there are more For those members trying Jan. 6 — so there are parades peii is a site that must be seen in Colombo. the full moon and places with pressing reasons for visiting to escape the season's cold and festivals celebrating the to be believed, but is accordIn March, theSri Lankan lots of lights, as these will in- its natural setting as soon as weather, San Juan, Puerto holidays long into January. ingly filled with visitors dur- Balloon Festival draws parterfere with your viewing. you can. Due to Chile's energy Rico, is hot on their list. With The Fiestas de la Calle San ing the summer months. In ticipants from all around the needs, the country has apall the sun of the Caribbean, Sebastian, occurring a week our poll, one VirtualTourist world to fly hot-air balloons • Valapariso, Chile L Chilean proved projects to build and but none of the hassle, Puerto after Three Kings Day in the member recalled her "blissful" around C olombo, c r eating Patagonia operate five dams in Chilean Rico is only two hours and third week of January, is of- visit to Pompeii in February, a great spectacle and f u n S tretching 2 , 65 3 mi l e s Patagonia, as well as resur- thirty minutes from Miami. ten compared to Mardi Gras. when she had the ruins more festivities. a
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Annie Continued from C1 About five students from the college are already involved behind the scenes with "Annie Jr.," says BEAT's Howard Schor. Even more will be on hand when "The Pirates of P enzance, Jr." will open i n April and be staged entirely at Pinckney Center. That production will be directed by Jimena Shepherd, current musical director of "Annie Jr," and a student at the
college. "That's coincidental, b u t what we said to our board, is 'Wow, we're getting involved with college kids.' It's this neat arc that we would never have
imagined eight years ago," when founding thecompany, Schorsays. Except for special occasions and sporadic productions such as last summer's "1776," the
ANSWER TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
BIQ5LRHE X Answer: CREAMY S H RINK I MPAIR S Q U A R E
RO D ENT OD D EST
The magician didn't answer because he didn't like these-
TRICK QUESTIONS JUMBLE IS ON C6
Pinckney Center has b een mostly dark since Magic Circle Theatre, COCC's theater program, was gutted along with other artsprograms nearly 10
Price says. The college offers two acting courses, but otherwise "right now, there's not too much going on," Price says. The stuyears ago. dent club has a roster that var"They're trying t o r e vive ies from year to year, but Price that theater," Schor says. "I says there's generally a core think the Pinckney is like the group of about 10 involved any best-kept secret in Bend. If you given year. didn't live here more than five "Annie Jr." presented"a good years ago, you've never even time to throw it out there and heard of it." see what kind of responses we G ordon Price, directorofstu- get, and see who comes, you dent life for COCC, confirms know, just opening that space that aspect of the relationship, up again," Price says. "Right which evolved "just talking now, our students have a small with Howard. We've just kind part in the production, helping of developed a mutual love for with the stage management the theater and what we could do as a collaboration." " Howard and I c a m e u p with it to invigorate our students an d i n v igorate t h at space. That space is dark a lot of the time, and we don't have a lot of events going on in the Pinckney Center for the Arts,"
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 6 9 2 3 8 5 4 1 7 -' 8 73 1 4 6 2 9 5 4 51 7 2 9 8 3 6 3 6 4 8 5 1 7 2 9 '; 9 87 4 6 2 1 5 3 1 2 5 9 3 7 6 8 4 ': 2 36 5 1 4 9 7 8 l 7 1 8 6 9 3 5 4 2 ;. 5 4 9 2 7 8 3 6 1 .' SUDOKU IS ON C6
ANSWER TO TODAY'S LAT CROSSWORD G O T B Y
A R P E I P LO E T
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H O E N D P G U S A T A R U F S P E T O Y Y R E K A P I R A N S B T S A E I L R PO O T A R S E L
B L O W S L I L A C O L I S H T V A I P E T S L E M E E C H S P O U S S O L E S P A R N S S I I T S F 0 E E S E A G L E D O O M L W I I N T S B E Y R Y A P T E A L O U D N E S T S
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P RO R T O N E A T E D H U E RO B X U P S E B L E G L E S A E S S I T E T G I N O M M A C A I GH T N E R S E R 0 V M A E V I S R E U T E M I
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and such, but as we move forward, my hope is that the students will get more involved." "That's the whole goal, to get our college students involved with it so they can get active, not just acting in plays, but the production side, lighting and sound, the whole gamut of theater," Price says. The collaboration could even be "a recruiting tool," he adds. "When they see ... COCC does have an active theater community, they may say that's a place they want to come to. That's the long-term goal." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
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ELDERLAW
WILLS/PROBATE/ESTATE
I am named as my mother's Health Care Representative on her Advance Directive. When I recently called her doctor to discuss some recentlyprescribed rndiicatien, her doctor told me he could not discuss my mother's medical information with me. Why is this?
For 2013, I understand that the federal estate tax exclusionamount wassupposedtcbereduced from $5 million tc $1 million and the tax rate increased tc 55%. Did that cccurr N c. Congress extended thepreviousfederalestate tax exclusion cf $5 million. Therefore, after adjustment for inilaticn, the federal exclusion for 2013 will be $5,250,000. For estates greater than $5,250,000, Melissa P. Lande the tax rate is capped at 40%, rather than the previous 35%. Attorney at Law This amount is unified with the gift tax and may be used at BRYANT, LOVLIENdeath er during lifetime. Any amounts gifted during life will & JARVIS, P.C. be subtracted from the amount remaining for use at death. ATTORNEYS ATLAW The gift tax annual exclusion was increa~ed from $13,000 tc 591 S.W. Mill view Way $14,000in 2013.However, since O regen's Ballot Measure Bend, Oregon 97702 ii4 was unsuccessful, the Oregon estate tax exemption 541-382-4331 remains at S i million with maximum tax rate ef 16%.
REAL ESTATE Has Congress done anything te extend the law that exempts homeowners from paying tax en the portion cf their mortgage loan that is forgiven as part ef a short sale, foreclosure, er loan modification'? •
YES!! As part er the tax rate changes passed en January I te avoid going over the fiscal cliff, Congress extended this law through the end er 2013. If and when your bank agrees te cancel part ef your Craig Edwards debt in a short sale, loan modification, cr foreclosure, it Attorney rrr Larv will report te the IRS that yeu received "income" in the EDWARDS LAW amount ef debt it cancelled. Under the extended law, this "income" will net be taxed IF yeu borrowed the money OFFICES PC 225 N.W. Franklin Ave. te buy, build, er improve your principal residence, er te refinance that debt. Tc claim this exemption you'll have te Suite 2 Bend, Oregon 97701 include IRS Form 982 with your tax return for the year in which the debt was forgiven. 541-318-0061
Lisa Bertalan Artorney ar Larv
Hendrix, Brinch R Bertalatt, L.L.P ATTORNEYS ATLAiN
716 NW Harriman St Bend, OR 97701 541-382-4980
The Advance Directive only allows you to direct your mother's medical care and discuss the same with her doctors if your mother is incapacitated and unable to direct her own health care. Otherwise, such information is protected under HIPPA (rhe Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Actt. If your mother chooses, she can sign a H IPPA Authorization Form that will give you access to such information in the future. Such authorization, however, must
be periodically renewed.
EMPLOYMENT We're a small, family-owned business — most all cur employees are folks we knew from church. Our new stock person showed up in what looks like a religious ~ head dress. Ca n we have them take it cfft Probably not. State and federal laws prohibit discrimination against employees er prospective employees based on their religion, and Oregcn*s law apptres to the smallest cf businesses (thcse with just one cr more employees). Th e 2009 Oregon legislature also expanded the Kurt Barker duty tc "reasonably accommodate" an emplcyee's religious Attorney at Law practrces, including clothing and time away for worship. Karnopp Unlessthere's a true "undue hardship" cn your business Petersen LLP from this stockroom wardrobe choice (which seems 1201 N.W.Wall Street unlikely here) and assuming it is a religious practice, yeu Suite 200 likely need to accommodate it. Beware of hiring preferences Bend, Oregon 97701 based on religious aftiliaticn, tcc the exceptions where 541-382-3011 that's allowed (thmk: a church hrring s minister) are few and www.karnepp.cem far between.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
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Continued from C1 As such, he i s o v erseeing the redevelopment of the p roperty's r e staurant a n d wine bar. The soon-to-open A lchemy Restaurant & B a r — its tagline is "cuisine transformed" — will feature the farm-to-fork culinary slants of chef Billy Buscher. L You have to reinvent yourself every so often," said Michael Gibbs. "Ashland locals tend to think of us as either a lodging or a restaurant, but not often both. We want to establish an identity that will draw locals to dine with us, not just place their out-of-town guests here." Striving to build upon their own success continues t o drive the Gibbs family. "In three decades, the trav-
cupies a 1906 Queen Annestyle mansion listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Labeled a "Victorian Bed & Breakfast Inn," the home includes eight guest rooms
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Courtesy Newport Belle
eling public has changed," The Newport Belle Bed & Breakfast occupies a riverboat moored in a marina near Newport's historic Michael acknowledged."The Yaquina Bay Bridge. Guests stay in five staterooms filled with nautical decor; a buffet breakfast is old ideas aren't acceptable servedeach morning,andone room even welcomes dogs. any more. Travelers are more sophisticated in the food and amenities they expect. Tastes c hange in t h e d e cor t h a t makes guests comfortable." To that end, said Laurie Gibbs, "I have started to redo each room, one at a time, from flowery wallpaper to relaxing colors. Each room is unique, b ut we're t r y ing t o m a k e them a little more sleek and contemporary."
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Change of pace I enjoy bed-and-breakfast stays as a change of pace from hotels and motels in m any towns and cities around the state. Few have a full-service restaurant, but every one serves a breakfast that is often memorable. Although I have occasionallybeen presented a continental breakfast worthy of a Days Inn, more often they are of the variety served at the Winchester. At this Ashland inn, guests have a morning choice of three different meals — for example, eggs Winchester, a Benedict served upon spinach and artichoke and topped with bearnaise sauce; French toast flavored with rum and coconut, stuffed with f r esh mango and semi-sweet chocolate; and crepes filled with pear and mascarpone cheese, then glazed with vanilla-bean champagne a n d ha z e lnut brittle. During my most recent stay at the Winchester, I stayed in a second-story studio suite with a p r ivate entrance. In addition to a s eparate bedroom with a full queen-sized bed, my spacious room had a working desk and a cozy sofa positioned to watch a 50-inch flat-screen television. Suites are th e e xception rather than the rule in B&Bs. So, too, are private entries; most often guests share a front-door entry, climb stairs to their i n d ividual r o oms, and gather together at shared breakfast tables or, sometimes, for late-afternoon wine tastings. If you haven't yet experienced a b e d -and-breakfast stay, a good starting point is the Oregon Bed and Breakf ast Guild w e bsite, w w w . obbg.org. While this reference does not feature a complete listing of B&Bs around the state, it offers a taste of what is available. In all, there are more than 200 B&B inns in Oregon. The largest number are in Portland (nearly 30) and Ashland (more than 20), but coastal towns ( e specially L i n c oln City, Newport, Astoria, Cannon Beach and Seaside) total more than 40 as a group. The Oregon wine country (Newberg, Carlton, McMinnville, Dundee) isn't far behind.
Courtesy Youngberg Hill Courtesy Winchester Inn
A serving of breakfast chilaquiles await consumption at the Winchester Inn in Ashland. The restaurant and wine bar has just undergone renovation; now known as the Alchemy Restaurant, its farm-to-table cuisine is still prepared by veteran chef Billy Buscher.
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noir and p i not-gris grapes planted in 1989 when the B&B was established. Four k i ng suites and four rooms with queen beds, all of them beautifully appointed, feature covThese are some of my faered decks from which guests vorite bed-and-breakfast inns may beholda panoramic view around the state of Oregon: that stretches across the wine country from M o unt H o od Portland and wine country to the Coast Range. In-suite Located within walking dis- baths offer private relaxation; tance of shopping at the Lloyd guests who choose to mingle Center in northeast Portland's enjoy a library, lounge and Irvington H i storic D i strict, large dining room on the first Portland's White House is a floor. Greek Revival-style mansion that does, indeed, bear some The Willamette Valley resemblance to the home of Built in 1865 in the heart the AmericanPresident.Four- of the historic French Prairie, teen Ionic columns overlook a the Feller House has been recirculardrive before a struc- stored and converted into a ture that lumber baron Robert two-room bed-and-breakfast Lytle built in 1911 as a sum- inn. Surrounded b y f i e l ds mer residence.Today the lav- of commercial hops and adishly decorated inn has eight joined by an extensive come legant rooms and a m a i n munity vegetable garden, it is floor whose adornments ina short drive from Champoeg clude a grand piano and 18th- State Heritage Area, which and 19th-century European preservesthe first (1843) seat porcelains. of government i n O r egon. Only a few b locks away, Rooms are tastefully decothe Lion and the Rose, which rated with antiques and handdubs itself a "Victorian Bed made quilts. & Breakfast Inn," occupies a S even blocks f r o m t h e 1906 Queen Anne-style man- State Capitol is the Century sion listed on th e N ational House of Salem, a house not Register of H i storic Places. coincidentally about 100 years Eight unique guest rooms, all old; it was built in 1912. With with private baths, are imjustthree rooms, owner Jean peccably furnished in period Brougher is able to pay spestyle — yet each one has cable cial attention to guests' reTV, high-speed Wi-Fi and air quests — including preparing conditioning. full traditional, vegetarian or In the nearby wine couneven ethnic breakfasts. I like try, the Carlton Inn is a farm- the ground-floor East Room, house-style home located just which has a private entrance a few blocks' walk from the through a backyard garden. impressive Carlton WinemakThe Pfeiffer Cottage Inn is ers Studio. Built in 1915 by the a 1908 craftsman bungalow in owner of an area lumber mill, downtown Albany's Monteith and a B&B since 2005, it still Historic District, a short walk features the original fir floors, from one of Oregon's best resdecorative crown molding and taurants, Matt Bennett's Sybbutler's pantry true to the time aris. Its two guest rooms inof its origin. American and clude the Sisters Suite (sleepEuropean antiques, many of ing four guests, with a private them family heirlooms, adorn bath) and the Mount Bachelor the four rooms and the dining Room (with a queen bed and and living areas. a European-style bath across The inn at Youngberg Hill the hall). The Pfeiffer has be-
River Bicycling Trail. Eugene's Campbell House Inn has much in common with Ashland's Winchester Inn, as both are larger boutique properties with in-house fine-dining restaurants. Built in 1892 and fully restored, the Campbell House sits on a full acre of landscaped grounds on the side of Skinners Butte, above the Fifth Street Market.
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Portland's White House is a Greek Revival-stylemansion with a prominent location in northeast Portland's Irvington Historic District.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
OFB FO
OF SBVIIl S II1 — transportation, food, arts, lodging — and save on the rest. You've masteredthe art You don't need to fly business of modern travel savings: class, stay atthe Four Seasons, your airfare alerts are set up sit in the front row on Broadon Kayak; you fli t around way and have the 27-course Europe on cheap carriers tasting menu at Chez Truffle. like EasyJetand Ryanair You'll be surprised what a thrill (with vacu u m -packed it is to ride a crowded public clothing in a carry-on to bus to a Michelin-starred resavoid baggage fees). You taurant, or step out of a Vienna stay in apartments rented youth hostel gussied up for the t hrough A i r b n b w he n Opera Ball. you're not bunking w ith locals through CouchSurf- • Pick up the local paper ing, bidding on Priceline No listings are more upor snapping up last-minute t o-the-minute t h a n F r i d ay rooms o n H o t elTonight. arts supplements, alternative From the remotestcorners weeklies or the local editions of the earth, you stay in of Time Out magazine (now touch with your significant free in London, by the way). other over Gchat and your Get 'em on actual paper while folks over Skype — when they last. You'll not only find Grandma will let you off the nontouristy (read: cheaper) FaceTime, that is. scene laid out for you in one You could probably shave handy package,but often come a few more cents off travel across coupons or specials you costs by downloading five certainly won't find on Yelp. new apps and bookmark• No More SIM swaps ing 10 new sites. But in 2013, the real savings will Cellphones aren't exactly come to those who go retro old-school, but here's what is: — not by sending postcards attempting th e c o mplicated with actual stamps (that's dance of swapping out SIM what the Postagram app is cards as you cross borders or By Seth Kugel
New York Times News Service
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Courtesy Elan Guest Suites
Jacksonville's Elan Guest Suites and Gallery boasts three modern and luxurious suites that feature the latest in technology, from stereo systems to flat-screen TVs. The suites sit atop a contemporary fineart gallery and a private parking garage on its ground-floor level.
From previous page It has 13 main-house rooms, restored in V i ctorian style, and a ha l f -dozen e legant suites (with f i r eplaces and whirlpool tubs) in its Carriage House. Guests who enjoy a full gourmet breakfast often return for an evening meal that may be served tapas style or as full entrees.
Around the state
Lakeside Room for romance: It features a secluded balcony with a hot tub built for two, where couples can enjoy marvelous sunset views. The Sisters-sized town of Joseph, in the heart of Wallowa mountain country, is as far as you can get from the coast and still be in Oregon. S yd Montgomery and L i sa Allen have geared Chandlers' Inn as a great staging area for adventurers — before and after rafting trips through nearby Hells Canyon or pack trips into the lofty Wallowas. There are 10 rooms; six have private baths,four others share, and all can enjoy a beautiful sun deck and home-cooked breakfasts. My baker's dozen list of favorite Oregon B8 Bs concludes in Southern Oregon — in the historic gold-rush village of Jacksonville, fewer than 20 miles northwest of Ashland. The Elan Guest Suites and Gallery boaststhree modern and luxurious suites balanced atop a c o ntemporary f i neart gallery, whose select oil paintings hang in each guest room. Each suite features the latest in technology, from an iPod-adapted stereo system w ith ceiling speakers to a flat-screen television, a fully equipped kitchen to a private
tracting what they save by not being home. Surely you would have gone out for dinner and a movie one night, at least, so knock off $100. Add in gas, groceries, electricity, etc., and you've got at least another $50. Your weekend now cost $850.
• Use a guidebook — your owll I still carry a Moon or Lonely Planet or Frommer's travel guide around when I t r avel — as backup, if nothing else. But those books are pricey, and there's so much free information online that, with a
little copying and pasting (and printing out), you can come pretty close to matching them with your own bespoke travel guide. So, in a retro twist, no Wi-Fi needed. Even better, turn it into a PDF file (easily done through programs l i k e M ic r o soft Word) and send it to your tablet device. I'll admit that some additional technology can make things even easier: Stay.com helps you create a guide with maps that can be printed or retrieved on your mobile device, and TripAdvisor's new City
Guides allows you to download 60 cities' worth of maps, information and user reviews to be used offline, free.
• Buy direct There was a time not so long ago when we bought airline tickets by calling airlines instead of logging onto sites like Travelocity and Expedia. Southwest long ago opted out of those online travel agencies, but other airlines are edging away from them as well. In other words, buying direct is coming back, only nowa-
days in online form. George Hobica, founder of A i r f are Watchdog, has been seeing more and more airlines offer special fares that show up only on their own websites, or restrict certain features (like seat selection or discounts on
checked luggage) to those who book directly through them.
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A few years back, I had the opportunity to enjoy July 4 fireworks bursting over Newport's Yaquina Bay B r idge from the deck of an old riverboat. That boat, the Newport Belle, remains moored in the marina nearthe Oregon State University H atfield M a r i ne Science Center. A f l o ating b ed-and-breakfast that w i l l reopen in mid-February after a three-month winter break, it offers lodging in five staterooms filled w i t h n a u tical decor. They all have private baths and free Wi-Fi; a buffet breakfastis served each morning, and one room will even welcome your dog. A couple of m i les north of Lincoln City o n b e autiful Devil's Lake, the L a ke House offers lodging in two intimate rooms (which can be combined as a suite) and a lakeside cottage. The spacious cedar home has a private deck parking garage with a luggage with views across the lake, elevator. where guests may swim and Reporter:janderson® fish. Few lodgings can top the bendbulletin.com
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from the screen, or using it differently, to find old-fashioned tactics that can save you big. Here are some oldschool tips for getting the most out of your travel buck this year.
options for international SIM cards. In 2012, though, most big American cellular providers came out with reasonably priced international overseas data and texting plans. I once used SIM cards from around the world; my c ollection is • Pick up the phone now gathering (tiny amounts We think w e c a n g et of) dust atop my bureau now e verything d on e o n l i ne that I'm a happy customer of these days, but sometimes AT&T's international package. a simple phone call is your Actual phone calls are still best bet for saving money. expensive, though, so be sure Speak with an innkeeper you've got money in your Skyand learn of potential dis- pe or Google Voice accounts counts on extended stays to call f o r t h a t r e staurant or information on how to reservation. get there from the airport by public transit. Contact • Adjust your mental budget the specific location where Appalled that a r o mantic you'll pick up your rental weekend getaway for two will car and reserve a compact cost you $1,000? Don't worry; to avoid getting "upgraded" it won't. For some reason, to a bigger vehicle that will people always assume that increase (sometimes even the alternative to travel is to double) your gas costs. Call stay home and spend nothing. travel agencies that strike Instead, you should be subspecial deals with airlines to get you prices below any-
Best friends welcome.
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thing you'll find online.
If yougo
• Choose cheapcountries
0268, www.thefellerhouse.
com. Rates from $115
Goodbye Norway, hello Bolivia. Or as Gary Arndt of the Everything Everywhere blog put it, "Cheapest dorm bed in Zurich = nice room in Bangkok." Extrapolate that to tour guides, museum entries, food and more, and the savings start to add up. Of course, keep in mind how much it will cost you to get there in the first place. Luckily, a lot of the cheaper countries are also cheap to fly to; Matthew Kepnes, the blogger known as Nomadic Matt, put together a list of 10 "Cheap Places to Travel on the U.S. Dollar," which includes Costa Rica, Nicaragua, Peru, Hungary and Romania. Another option: put together the 10 places you'd most like to go and price out the basics — a task most easily done by browsing guides in the travel section of your local bookstore.
INFORMATION • Oregon Bed 8 Breakfast
• The Lake House. 2165 N.E. East Devil's Lake Road, Otis; Guild. PO. Box12702, Salem, 541-996-8938, 888-996OR 97309; 800-944-6196, 8938, www.lakehousebb.com. www.obbg.org Rates from $95 • Oregon Tourism • Lion and the Rose. 1810 N.E. Commission. 670 Hawthorne 15th Ave., Portland; 503-287Ave.S.E.,Suite 240,Salem; 9245, www.lionrose.com. 503-378-8850, 800-547-7842, Rates from $125 www.traveloregon.com • Newport Belle. 2126 S.E. LODGING OSU Drive, Newport; 541-867• The Campbell House lnn. 252 6290, www.newportbelle.com. Pearl St., Eugene; 541-343Rates from $150. 1119, 800-264-2519, www. • The Pfeiffer Cottage Inn. campbell house.com. Rates 530 Ferry St. S.W., Albany. from $129 54 i-97 i-9557, www. • The Carlton lnn. 648 W. Main thepfeiffercottageinn.com. St., Carlton; 503-852-7506, Rates from $145 www.thecarltoninn.com. Rates • Portland's White House. from $139 1914 N.E. 22nd Ave., Portland; • The Century House. 29217th 503-287-7131, 800-272-7131, St. S.E., Salem; 503-884-7062, www.portlandswhitehouse.
www.centuryhouseofsalem bandb.com.Ratesfrom $95 • Chandlers' Inn. 700 S. Main St., Joseph; 541-432-9765, www.josephbedandbreakfast.
com. Rates from $125
• The Winchester Inn. 35 S. Second St., Ashland; 541-4881113, 800-972-4991, www.
winchesterinn.com. Rates from $79 low season, $195 • Elan Guest Suites and Gallery. high season.
• Splurge whenit matters
com. Rates from $80
245 W. Main St., Jacksonville; 541-899-8000, 877-789-1952,
www.elanguestsuites.com. Rates from $180 • Feller House. 21625 BLttteville Road N.E., Aurora. 503-678-
~ • i
•
Most travelers will never be across-the-board cheapskates. Street food, nosebleed theater seats andbunk beds are not for everyone. But you don't have to be a purist. For each trip, decide on a themed splurge or two
• Youngberg Hill. 10660 S.W. Youngberg Hill Road, McMinnville; 503-4722727, 888-657-8668, www. youngberghill.com. Rates from
$180
shom off your little bundle of joy for all the teorld to see in our special edition of...
2013
Do you know a beautiful baby born between
January 1, 2012tSt. December 31, 2012? S end us a photo to i n clude in o u r
Baby Book, which will be published Wednesday, February 6, 2 0 1 3 i n The Bulletin. Just bring in o r m a i l y o u r b a b y ' s photo along with the i n formation
requested below and a $20, $30 or $40 fee to cover the cost of the baby photo size you choose
by We dnesday, January 2 3 r d . Photos will be r e t urned only i f accompanied by a self-addressed, stamped envelope.
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PLEASE TYPE OR PRINT CLEARLY ONLY THE INFORMATION BELOW:
sed either hortzontally or verttca y
YOUR CHOICE OF 3 BABY PHOTO SIZES!
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Please do not add additional relatives.
I Baby's Name: Date of Birtit; Parents' Names; Grandparents:
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JOURNEYS P EAK T R A V E L
644 NE GreenwoodAve, Bend 97701
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My wife and I have about • a seven-hour stopover in Seattle this June. What do you recommend that we do'? We'd like to have an enjoyable meal. . Check out P ik e Place . Market for sure. Go to the Space Needle if you must, but I skipped it with no regrets. Not to be missed, though, is the adjacent Chihuly Garden and Glass, which is spectacular. And you really ought to do the Theo Chocolate tour. There's a lot of great food in Seattle, but two places we enjoyed were Serious Pie and Chan. friend and I, both in Q •• My our 60s, have decided
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• My local Volvo dealer is • pushing the idea of picking up a new car in Sweden. They'll pick up the plane tickets — for two — and one night in ahotel. Is this agood deal? It sounds like an adven• ture in the making, so if a Volvo is the car you want, I'd consider it. It could be really fun. I was initially a little skeptical about whether it's a good "deal," thinking that the manufacturer must have figured out a way to make this worth its while. It may be figuring it into the price of the car, for instance. But an article by MSN Autos would indicate that this is generally a pretty good deal and that people who've taken these trips seem happy. There are a few cons, though: It can take a couple of months between the time you order the car and pick it up in Europe, and then many weeks before it gets delivered to you in the States.
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My mom wants us to . take a trip together to Montreal and Quebec. I'm trying to figure out what would be easiest and most budgetfriendly: fly to Montreal and take the train to Quebec; fly to Vermont and rent a car; fly into Montreal then back from Quebec; something else? She would love to stay at the Fairmont Le Chateau Frontenac in Quebec if we could find a deal. • Look into flying to Bur• lington, Vt., and renting a car. The drive is lovely, with lots of cute places to stop between Burlington and Montreal and lots to see on the drive to Quebec. Onthe Chateau Frontenac, you're in luck; they're running a 120th-anniversary deal. Rooms start at 189.30
CAD (about $192) through June, in honor of the hotel's 1893 inauguration.
spring, my famQ . .ilyIn isthetraveling to Costa
though, a bit of cash and some identification. Also, jot down all emergency numbers for your credit cards (so you can cancel them should they be
stolen) and make a copy of your passports. We're hoping to v i sit
Q . Yellowstone and Mount Rushmore. We don't mind fly-
ing into a major city that's a day's drive away. Which one has the best airfares and rental car prices? • I would fly into Salt Lake • City. It's a 6'/2-hour drive, but it takes you through some of the most beautiful country on Earth. We were there last year and can't wait to go back. • We're researching travel • to Germany this summer for our family of four. How do we find special deals'? Flights to Europe have . become expensive again, and that's not likely to change anytime soon. Try us-
A.
ing an aggregator like Kayak, which lists the fares of multiple airlines, from cheapest to more expensive. Also sign up for some farealertsfrom various airlines — Lufthansa, American, Icelandair— and maybe you'll hit pay dirt. that it's cheapQ •• Itestseems to fly to Europe from JFK this summer. Are there reasonable drive-park-fly options near JFK? . There are lots of park/fly . options near JFK. Another option is park/sleep/fly, which can be even cheaper and more convenient if you have an early flight. You stay at a hotel
for a night, and parking is included in the rate — even if you leave your car for, say, a week — and much moreaffordable. • What's your opinion of • the promo cards that European cities market via their tourist boards'? They offer free public transport and discounts to museums, restaurants, etc. Are they a good value? . This question will have . a differentanswer for every person and every destination. Compare the prices on the card versus what you'd pay for each attraction. Are there things you really don't care about seeing? Then it might not be worth it. I'm a l i ttle more inclined toward free public transport options. When you're abroad and fumbling with foreign currency, that's a
Rica. I know that we shouldn't leave our passports and wallets in our hotel rooms, but carrying them with us may be impossible given the ziplining, swimming, surfing, etc., we'll be doing. Should we just leave the documents in the hotel safes? • Yes, the safe is the, er, • safest place for your valuables. If you don't have an in-room safe, the front desk should provide one for your belongings. Keep on h a nd, bigplus.
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• We're taking my moth• e r-in-law to F o rt M y ers, Fla., for her 80th birthday over Martin Luther King Jr. Day weekend. She's reasonablyactiveforhe rag e and can walk around, but long hikes are out. We'll be at a nice place with a pool, but I doubt that the weather will be that warm. Do you have suggestions for activities to do or sites to see within a two-hour drive? • There's actually q u i te • a bit in Fort Myers: The winter homes of Henry Ford and Thomas Edison are big attractions there and worth a visit. Another historic mansion is the Murphy-Burroughs House, the former home of a cattlerancher. The downtown is a historic district and pretty to walk around in. In nearby Naples,there'sthe Naples Zoo, plus terrific shopping. Farther afield, you're within two hours of Big Cypress National Preserve and the Corkscrew S wamp Sanctuary, with i t s 2.25-mile boardwalk.
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to finally make a dream happen — a week in Paris. We've never traveled internationally before and wonder whether we should seek a hoteVair package, work with a travel agent or do it ourselves. • You could conceivably . dothis onyour own, but if it were my first time traveling outside the country, I might go to a travel agent for help in finding the best rates for both flight and hotel. A travel agent can also advise you about which part of the city to stay in and recommend restaurants, tours, etc. Plus, an agent will be oncalland can help outduring your trip in case anything should go awry.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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When darkness spans most of the clock and the temperature hovers around freezing in Reykjavic's winter, Icelanders turn their backs on hibernation and luxuriate in an eclectic night life.
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By Liz Alderman
Downstairs there was an actual laundromat, where people talked over cappuccinos at a stout wooden table near a toddlers' playroom as their clothes
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pointed to the puffin and mink whale appetizers, Icelandic delThe sky above Reykjavik icacies. The puffin (harvested was as dark as black ice, save locally, the waitress promised) for a handful of diamond stars. was sliced thin, its gaminess As a cutting wind whipped off spun dry. muted with litchi and fig. The the frigid sea and blew down I celanders, w e quic k l y mink whale, also finely carved, the narrow streets lined with learned, are efficient and di- tasted like beef tenderloin with brightly painted storefronts, rect, especially in conversation. a faint metallic finish; it was sashivering pedestrians tight- Ask if the northern lights have vory and delicate when paired ened their scarves and scurried been brighter this year and you with an airy wasabi cream. into cozy bars and restaurants get a terse yes — followed by to find warmth. silence.Waiters answer ques- Staying out late It was only 4:30 on a late tions about the menu w ith Our meal at Fish Market November afternoon, but the monosyllabic precision, as was was no less remarkable. We Nordic night had already set in. the case at Laundromat. finished with a pungent chocoAnd at this time of year it was But with a little banter peo- late gateau with hand-creamed set to stretch on for another plebecome warm and eager to peanut sauce. When we left 20 hours or so. My cellphone chat about their country — es- there around midnight, the sky buzzed, and I reached for it pecially the nation's lingering was blacker, and the streets with chilled fingers. economic crisis, a theme that were empty. Life seemed to "Why on earth are you va- poked its way into almost every have petered out, but in fact, cationing in Iceland?" a friend discussion. Since 2009, when a it was now bubbling inside texted. financial crash was followed a score of mod cafes. As we For people looking to escape by a plunge in its currency, Ice- neared Reykjavik's oldest, a the cold of winter, heading to land has been on sale for tour- 1950s throwback called Prikid, an Arctic city where evening ists. But the weak krona is still on Bankastraeti, the sound spans most of the clock and hobbling spending power for of a booming bass thumped the temperature hovers around Icelanders, as one young wait- through th e w o oden d oor. freezing may not seem an ob- er at Laundromat grumbled, Inside, a DJ with dreadlocks vious choice. But this is Reyk- adding that headlines suggest- spun LPs and white lights from ing that the nation has entered a mirrored ball overhead skitjavik, where Icelanders turn their backs on hibernation and a miraculous recovery don't teredacrossthe room. Patrons luxuriate in a drawn-out night entirely ring true. in stylish knit hoodies swayed life that revs up as the sun goes Get an Icelander started on to the rhythm of a saxophone. down. Indeed, with every step the ruggedness of the land, and The bar turns into a soothing I took in this cosmopolitan city more tales pour forth about refuge for all-night partyers of just over 120,000 people, a how winter's constant darkaround 8 a.m., when a "Hanglitany of surprising experienc- ness and the summer's mid- over Killer" breakfast is served es would soon unfold, hidden night sun forge the national — a french fry-laden sandwich behind closed doors in warm character. Eventually, someone and vanilla milkshake dosed interiors or laid bare under the will whisper that the island's with Jack Daniels — complete frigid majesty of the volcanic snowcapped mountains are with a side of two Treo painlandscape. protected by trolls and elves, killer tablets. A friend and I had come here m ystical creatures that, i t At about 12:30, up the street to sample Iceland's natural turns out, many Icelanders still at Kaffe Koffin on Laugavegur, wonders: thundering geysers, firmly believe exist today. One it was a d i fferent scene. A powerful waterfalls and the loquacious guide on a tour out- coterie of t w enty-something therapeutic waters of the Blue side the city told us of a fairway blond women drank coffee Lagoon, a vast thermal lake on the outskirts of Reykjavik and nibbled on dessert cakes. half an hour south of Reyk- that was diverted around a pair Young men in scarves hovered javik with a turquoise hue so of large boulders believed to be over laptops on large couches impossibly bright that it looks the homestead of a troll who strewn with patchworkpillows, Photoshopped. We wanted to did not want his habitat dis- basking in the warm glow of spot the glowing green ribbons turbed by modernity. orange candles. A highchair of the aurora borealis, which signaled that toddlers were were reported to be especially Fashion andfood welcome. luminescent this year because Our hands duly de-iced, we Farther on, the din of laugho f sunspots casting a w i d e bundled up again and left Laun- ter was fl oating outside of spectralaura over the North dromat to prowl the lengthen- Olstofa, a watering hole on Pole. But it wasn't just Iceland's ing evening, pausing on the Nautholsvegur Street where natural splendors that lured us: animated shopping streets of writers, journalists, artists and We also wanted to get a taste Bankastraeti, Laugavegur and other locals were cozied up in of the rollicking midnight club Skolavordustigur in the heart wooden booths drinking beer. scene that Reykjavik has been of tot/tm. Clutches of red, green Peoplecame inasteady stream, known for since Bjork put it on and white wooden storefronts some climbing off bikes. "It's like this every night," rethe map. edgedthe sidewalks, andyoung What we stumbled upon in- people dressed in designer par- marked themanager, Steinthor stead was another slice of noc- kas and fur hats lingered over Matthiasson, a trim man in a turnal, urban Iceland: a diverse eyebrow-arching price tags. jaunty wool cap and a thick milieu of funky cafes, cuttingT here are n o H 8 M s o r brown sweater who pulled on a edge restaurantsand Icelan- Zara's here; instead, charming cigarette in the frosty air. dic-chic bars, all catering to a boutiques displayed streamA nother 10 0 y a r d s u p cozy chat society that hummed lined Icelandic fashions made Laugavegur, Boston was a dark late into the infinite night. by local designers. At KronK- room adorned with gold floral ron, on L augavegur, Marie wallpaper and stylized paintLaundry and conversation Antoinette shoes on steroids ings of cattle skulls. A young I slipped the phone into lined a w i ndow, with f r i lly man strutted out th e d o or my pocket — an answer to leather and punctured suede wearing an o versize blackmy friend would have to wait atop m u l ticolored s t acked and-white I celandic d esign — and ducked into the Laun- heels. They were expensive at jacket, Jay-Z style, and headed dromat Cafe on Austurstraeti up to 65,000 kronur ($514) a in the direction of Hverfisgata Street,one of several offbeat pop, and hardly seemed func- Street. There the uber-vogue cafes where locals kick off tional, but they would look bar at 101 Hotel caters to a wellthe evening in front of a row fabulous on the streets of New heeled crowd under a glass of beers. Here, tourists find York or Paris. ceiling with high walls. refuge after the brief window The wind was picking up, It was late, our heads were of daylight that allows them so we headed for an early din- spinning, and we weren't ready to explore t h e a s tounding ner at Fish Market, an upscale to face the crowds at Faktory panoramas of black lava and Icelandic-Asian fusion restau- or Kaffibarinn, two of Reykjacrystalline mountains outside rant on Adalstraeti near the vik's more high-wattage clubs Reykjavik. waterfront. Bamboo flourished — at least not on this night. In The polished wooden bar against a dark wall, and the a few hours we would need to was lined with shelves con- tableswere carved from hunks get up for a spectacular day taining hundreds of used nov- of Norwegian oak . B eside tour of waterfalls, snowcapped els and a clutch of red leather us, there were only two other m ountains and l u na r l a v a high-backed stools. Several couples. landscapes, although when we "It's very cold outside," ob- awoke, it would still be dark. suited banker-types had already quit the business district served the waitress, scanning I took off my gloves to text and were hovering over wine the emptyroom. my friend, who had been pingand smoked salmon, while And besides, she added, with ing me for an answer from the twenty-somethings in b o ots the crisis, fewer Icelanders warmth of a sunnier clime. "Why Iceland?" I t e x ted and expensive sweaters nursed could afford fine dining. juices and nibbled on cakes. We studied the menu and back. "Where do I begin?" New York Times News Service
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
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TV SPOTLIGHT
of the moment, so you're always writing a big moment for By Craig Tomashoff the act break, and God forbid if New York Times News Service the audiencedoesn'tcome back Television, long the home of after it. That's a luxury shows monstrous behavior, has never have on HBO or Showtime, but seemed like the ideal medium I haven't had on a network." for actual monsters. TV has For Williamson less gore on tried to generate chills over the TV means more suspense: "Everyone keeps asking me about years,but forevery occasional success like "The Twilight the scary, the scary." His show Zone" or "The X-Files," there has been cited in the post-Newwas a "Kolchak: The Night town debate about violence Stalker" or "666 Park Avenue" in entertainment. "But all I'm that was quickly killed off. If thinking about when writing you're looking for legitimate, is the love story, the love story. I don't try to add murders for the jump-from-your-chair scares, the conventional wisdom goes, Gene Page/AMC via The Washington Post sake ofmurders, because that "The Walking Dead" has figured out how to keep audiences on the you're usually better off in a can take away their meaning." theater. edge of their seats despite TV's regular commercial breaks: by makTo Schulner seeing a monLately, though, horror has ing death a real possibility for all characters, even the main ones. ster leap out or a head chopped stormed th e s m all s c reen, off is "the release of tension" winning over viewers in large rather than the cause of it. numbers by rewriting the rules doubt that TV can be as fright- side while watching something That's why he has paid attenspecifically for the medium. ening as feature films," said designed to frighten you is the tion to making his Hyde "sexy, "The Walking Dead,"which David Schulner, executive pro- scariest thing." devious and dangerous." When returns Feb. 10 to AMC, is al- ducer of "Do No Harm," which Just as characters in horror the character seduces a woman ready one of television's most follows a kindly Philadelphia films must deal with the fre- in a hotel room, he creates the popular dramas, and "Ameri- doctor by day who becomes a quent appearance of unwanted longer-lasting feeling of suscan Horror Story" is finishing violent psychopath by night. entities, so too must horror pense than just a quick chill. That's not an easy accom- shows confront s o mething up its second season on FX In most horror movies audiwith a third on the way. Fox plishment. At the cineplex the equally unreal that makes their ences usually have no history has a serial killer series, "The setting seems more ideal: a job more difficult. with the characters, so there's "My frustration is with the a legitimate sense that anyone Following," starting its body dark room filled with strangcount onMonday, and coming ers. At home, however, the thingthat keeps networktelevi- could die at any time. With TV soon are the Jekyll and Hyde- lights are on, and you're sitting sion alive: the advertisements," series,however, it's harder to i nspired "Do No H a rm" on in the same place where you said Kevin Williamson, an ex- believe anything bad will hapNBC and "Cult" on CW. Meanlaughed at last week's "Modern ecutive producer of "The Fol- pen to the stars. If you aren't while "The Vampire Diaries" Family." lowing," which he created, and concerned that these people But Schulner argued there's "The Vampire Diaries," and might actually die, you'll endup (CW), "Grimm" (NBC), "True Blood" (HBO), "Supernatu- actually "no place scarier" for a the screenwriter of "Scream." with "a toothless scare because "It's very difficult to create any you're not saying to yourself, 'I ral" (CW) and "Being Human" frightfest. "When I'm home, everything suspense if you're riding into a hope this person I've come to (Syfy) continue to scare up decent ratings. I love is near me," he said. "So commercial break every few care about doesn't get hurt,'" "Now there shouldn't be any the slightest creak or noise out- minutes. The ads take you out said Schulner.
ran ma's' e o ma e o Dear Abby:I'm two months pregnant with my second child. Our first child is a boy. My problem is my mother. She loves her grandson dearly, bu tshe's desperate for a granddaughter. Recently, the subject of names came u p. A l t hough w e DEAR have already decided on a name if the child is a boy, we had not discussed girls names at length. When Mother asked me what the girl's name would be, I said I had always liked "Melody," and that if I had my way, that is what I'd name a girL M y m o ther i mmediately started knitting an afghan with the name Melody on it. A week later, my husband said that while he didn't mind the name Melody, he thought we should decide on a name together. I tried to tell Mom that Melody might not be the name we choose. Her response was, "Well, my granddaughter will always be Melody to me." Mom and I are very close, but she can be extremely stubborn. What's the best way to tell her we have decided on another name'? — What's in a Name in Canada
Dear What's: Tell her in p l ain English, and do it before the afghan has to be unraveled and redone. If she insists on completing the blanket with the wrong name, accept it graciously and quietly donate it to charity. Dear Abby: I was a busy wife, mother and gr a n dmother who had always been active and involved in my church and community.When my beloved husband died three yearsago, everything changed. I became so consumed by grief, all my regular activities suddenly meant nothing to me. My children and grandchildren were busy with their own families and careers. Im issed having someone to talk to and began feeling deeplylonely,even in a crowd. Then something remarkable happened: I learned I have an incurable cancer. I was so scared and worried, I couldn't eat or sleep. One of my sons took me to a world-famous cancercenter.Everyone Imet there was loving and kind, and radiated positive feelings. Once again, I felt surrounded by love — and it changed my outlook. I was able to return to my home-
ABBY Q
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JAN. 20, 2013:This yearyou become more stubborn than you have been in thepast.Onceyou become entrenched in a certain way of thinking, you have a difficult time seeing any other path. Work on being Stars showthe kind nonreactive, and of dayyou'll have m ake it a point ** * * * D ynamic not to act on your ** * * P ositive an ger. You will be ** * A verage lea r ning to claim ** So-so your power. If you * Difficult are single, you could fall into a volatile relationship. Be careful, as it is unlikely to mellow out. If you are attached, work on new ways of expressing your frustration and anger with each other. TAURUS can push you hard.
ARIES (March21-April19)
town for further treatment in a cancer center here, and I return to the largercenter for follow-ups. Now I have the best of two worlds — a w orld-famouscancer center a plane ride away, and the ability to sleep in my own bed at night. I also have people in two centers who treat me with love and respect. Community and church members are rallying around me to show their support. I feel blessed and content, and the best part is I am no longer afraid. Abby, what do you think about my change in attitude'? Am I in denial orexperiencing some new stage of grief? I don't want to have cancer. I don't want to leave everyone behind. But I am not afraid to die. —Loving Every Day Without Fear Dear Loving: What you h ave experienced could be called an epiphany. In your case, it may be the simple, striking and illuminating discovery that once you felt again surrounded by love, respect and security, leaving this world and joining your husband in the next no longer held terror, but gave you
peace. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
SCORPIO (OCT.23-NOV. 21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
very assertive friend at a distance. A conversation might not conclude on a satisfactory note, but it won't be because of a lack of effort. Tonight: Take in unexpected news.
CANCER(JUNE21-JULY 22) ** * * A c cept an invitation. Catch up on others' news. Someone who senses your vulnerability might express some hostile feelings. Just because this person is angry, it does not mean that you are the source of his or her woes. Tonight: Don't worry about tomorrow.
LEO (JULY23-AUG. 22j
** * * B e clear about your ** * * Y our restrained energy emerges, expectations, should you decide to take which makes you seem hyperactive.You the lead. You will not fly solo — a partner could get angry easily when working on or friend wants to be with you. Make plans a project. You have achoice to make: If accordingly. Tonight: To the wee hours. you feel frustration building up, perhaps a conversation — not an argument — is in VIRGO(AUG.23-SEPT.22) ** * * R each out to someone at a order. Tonight: Treat a loved one. distance. You know what is going on TAURUS (APRIL20-MAY 20) behind the scenes, because you detach. ** * * You differ in opinion from Working through anger or helping someone in authority. This person often someone discuss his or her frustration could be angry or bossy. Do you value could be important. Tonight: Relax. the relationship? If so, what is the most LIBRA (SEPT.23-OCT. 22) effective manner to handle his or her ** * * * T o getherness marks your bullying type of behavior? Tonight: Think plans, though you mightfind thatyou pull "tomorrow." Plan an adventure. in close to several different people. Have a GEMINI (MAY21-JUNE20) discussion with a friend, make time for an * ** You have many thoughtsbouncing interaction with a child and focus on that around in your mind. You might not special person in your life. Tonight: Get be exactly sure how best to handle a into a creative project.
** * * T here are times when everyone needs to say "enough." A disgruntled member of your household is determined to let you know about his or her grievance. You coul dchooseto letsomeone demanding run the show. Tonight: Detach.
SAGITTARIUS (NOV.22-DEC. 21) ** * You'll be easygoing today. You might encounter someone on the warpath. It could be a simple matter like road rage. Stay mellow, and try to be less adventuresome and a little more traditional. Tonight: Dance up astorm.
CAPRICORN(DEC. 22-JAN. 19) ** * * Y our imagination fills in any loopholes in your plans. You might decide to go off and spend money in a frivolous manner. Some of you might opt for a day at the casino, while others will want to go on a fun shopping spree. Tonight: Treat your sweetie.
AQUARIUS (JAN. 20-FEB. 18) ** * * L i sten to your inner voice, but do not act immediately. If you are feeling anger, wait until you are a little less upset to initiate a conversation. Do not hide your feelings. Home really is your castle, and you are happiest there. Tonight: Order a pizza.
PISCES (FEB.19-MARCH20) ** * You might find yourself feeling angry, and you're not sure why. Your feelings don't seem appropriate for the situation that triggered them. Keep communication flowing, and know that there is more behind your strong emotional reaction. Tonight: Join family for dinner. ©20t3 by King Features Syndicate
That connectionmay make it tougher to buy that characters are in jeopardy, but it also provides an opportunity. "Movies can thrill people with d ead-meat characters, the ones you don't care about, so they can be killed in outrageous ways," said Gale Anne Hurd, an executive producer of "The Walking Dead"and a producer on the film "Aliens." "It's referred to as horror porn, and there's a whole industry based on that. But I've discovered in TV, when audiences are inviting you into their homes on a weekly basis, they develop a huge investment in the people they are watching. They see the characters as real people." Once that happens, it doesn't matter if the monsters aren't as elaborate as those in a film or if a beer ad breaks the momentum every 10 minutes. Kill off a main character occasionally, and the fear of what might happen next becomes genuine. No show has proved more adept at this than "The Walking Dead," which has regularly dispatched lead characters. "Viewers know they can't fall back on the 'They're never going to get rid of that person' excuse," Hurd explained. "The paradigm for what can be done is shifting, because nobody is safe. And that's how you get people jumping out of t heir seats, which is a reaction I've even seen people have even watching 'Walking Dead' in the back of an airplane."
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may beanadditional feefor 3-0 and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • BROKEN CITY (R) 12:40, 3:20, 6:05, 9:10 • DJANGOUNCHAINED (R) I2:50,4:30,8:05 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 12:35, 3:15, 6:10, 9:15 • THE GUILTTRIP (PG-13) I:30 • A HAUNTED HOUSE(R) 1:40, 4:40, 7:55, IO: IO • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)7 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY IMAX (PG-13) I2:25, 4:05, 7:45 • JACK REACHER (PG-13) 3:55, 6:55, 10 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 12:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:20 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:05, 6:30, 9:55 • LIFEOFPI(PG)Noon • LIFEOFPI3-0 (PG) 3:45,7:20,IO: I5 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30, 9:50 • MAMA(PG-I3) 1:05, 3:40, 7:10, 9:40 • MONSTERS, INC. 3-0(G) 1:20 • PARENTAL GUIDANCE(PG) 1:45, 4:20 • SKYFALL (PG- I3) 3:35, 6:40, 9:50 • THIS IS 40(R) 12:05, 3:30, 6:35, 9:35 • WRECK-IT RALPH (PG)11:45 a.m., 2:25, 5 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:25, 6:50, 8, 10:15 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. f
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12 p.m. onlI~3, "NFL Football" — The NFL postseason is down to the final four teams as the conference championship games today decide who will play in Super Bowl XLVII in two weeks in New Orleans. Fox airs the NFC championship game here,between the homestanding Atlanta Falcons and the SanFrancisco 49ers followed by the AFC title game,inwhich the New England Patriots host the Baltimore Ravens, on CBS. 8 p.m. onH C), "Once Upon a Time" — As Dr. Whale (David Anders) prepares to treat Hook (Colin O'Donoghue) and the injured car-crash victim, some of the townspeople think the stranger should be left to die becausehe mighthavewitnessed magic, which could expose their true identities. Mr. Gold (Robert Carlyle) seeks a reunion with Belle (Emilie de Ravin), while Cora (Barbara Hershey) wants to see Regina (Lana Parrilla) again in the new episode "In the Name of the Brother." 9 p.m. onH g), "Revenge" — Emily (Emily VanCamp) is by Daniel's (Josh Bowman) side as he goes up against Jason Prosser (Dylan Walsh), his most formidable business rival, in pursuit of a deal that Victoria (Madeleine Stowe) is trying to block. Aiden's (Barry Sloane) behavior takes a dark turn. Conrad (Henry Czerny) holds Jack and Amanda's (Nick Wechsler, Margarita Levieva) future in his hands in the new episode "Collusion." 9 p.m. on HBO,"Girls" — Hannah (Lena Dunham) gets some unsolicited attention from Adam (Adam Driver) and criticism of her writing from Sandy (Donald Glover) in this new episode. Marnie (Allison Williams) needs to make a compromise in her career plans, while Elijah (Andrew Rannells) questions his sexuality and Jessa (Jemima Kirke) thoroughly enjoys her new life as a married woman. Zosia Mamet also stars in "I Get Ideas." 9:30 p.m. on HBO,"Enlightened" — Jeff (Dermot Mulroney) meets with Amy andTyler (Laura Dern, Mike White) and tells them he's working on a story about Abaddonn and needs proof that bribery has taken place. Tyler tries to find a solution to the security breach that won't implicate him or Amy, while Dougie (Timm Sharp) vows to crack the case. Krista (Sarah Burns) suffers a pregnancy complication in the new episode "Revenge Play." ©Zap2it
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • ARGO (R) 12:15, 3, 6 • HYDE PARK ONHUDSON(R) I:15, 7 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) I2:45, 4 • PROMISED LAND(R) 4:15 • RUST AND BONES(R) I, 3:45, 6:30 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) Noon, 3:15, 6:45 I
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CHASINGMAVERICKS(PG) 6 • FLIGHT (R) 9 • WRECK-IT RALPH (PG)Noon, 3 • After 7 p.m., shows are2f andolder only. Younger than 2f mayatt endscreeningsbefore 7pm.ifaccompaniedbya legal guardian. t
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271 • CHASING ICE(PG-13) 4, 6, 8:30 I
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a~e~aCtjtSSIC COVERINGS Also see usfor
Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies
(541) 388-4418
Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 54 I -548-8777 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6:15, 9:30 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 11 tl5 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • THE HOBBIT:ANUNEXPECTEDJOURNEY(PG-13) I1 a.m., 2:30, 6:05, 9:30 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 11:45 a.m., 2, 4:15, 6:30, 8:45 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • GANGSTERSQUAD (R)4:I5,6:45 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 1 • LIFE OF PI (PG)1, 3:45, 6:30 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 1, 3:45, 6:30 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 2, 5:30 Madras Cinema 5,1101 S.W.U.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505
• CIRQUEDU SOLEIL:WORLDS AWAY3-0 (PG)4:25,9:35 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 2:10, 4:35, 7, 9:25 • A HAUNTED HOUSE(R) 1:20, 3:15, 5:10, 7: IO,9:10 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 2:40, 5, 7:20, 9:40 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 1:15, 6:30 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 1:45, 4:15, 6:50, 9:15 •
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Pine Theater, 214 N. Main St., 541-416-1014
• LES MISERABLES (UPSTAIRS — PG-13) 12:10, 3:45, 7:15 • LINCOLN (PG-13) Noon, 3:20, 7 • Theupstairs screeningroomhaslimited accessibility.
PAULElTE
Pnvlette is n shV 3 Venr old domestic short hoked kittV looking For her fur-ever home. She wos brought in to the shelter nfter being n long time stnaV. Since she hod been n long time stroV we do not know if she gets nlong with other cnts or dogs but with most cots, given enough time nnd spnce, theV will lenrn to get olong. Ir Vour home is rendV for on ndult cot, come to the shelter nnd get to know Pnulette.
HUMRN(SOCICTVOF CENTAALOREGON/SPCA n170 S.L nth St. BEND (141i I.3137
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Scoreboard, D2 NBA, D4 College basketball, D3 Tennis, D5 Golf, D3 Prep sports, D5 NHL, D3 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
O» www.bendbulletin.com/sports
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
NFL PLAYOFFS
Patriots' Brady stands in way of Lewis' last ride with Ravens By Barry Wilner The Associated Press
Oregon center Tony Woods (55) drives against UCLA forward Travis Wear during Saturday's game.
Ducks stay hot in Los Angeles No. 21 Oregonbeats No. 24 UCLA, 76-67,D3
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
Report: Helfrich next UDcoach Oregon offensive
FOXBOROUGH, Mass. — You again! Ray versus Tom. Tom versus Ray. Oh yeah, the Ravens and Patriots, along for the ride. Ray Lewis' last ride, one Tom Brady hopes to cut short today in the AFC championship
game. A year after a brutal lastminute loss in Foxborough, Baltimore is back, looking for a reversal of fortune and a spot in the Super Bowl for the first time since winning it in 2001. If the Ravens fall again, Lewis' superb 17-year career as the NFL's best linebacker
Niners and Falcons: Two teams with different perspectives
AFCChampionship Baltimore Ravens at New England Patriots • When:Today, 3:30 p.m.
• Tv:CBS • Radio:KRCO-AM 690, KRCO-FM 96.9
of his era will end as he retires. Brady, the most successful quarterback .y of his time, has no I thoughts of retire ment — or of faili ng to make his sixth Super Bowl in the past dozen seasons. SeeAFC/D6
By Paul Newberry The Associated Press
ATLANTA — The Falcons are well aware of just how desperate this city is for its first Super Bowl championship. Mike Peterson sees and hears it everywhere he Ii,,II)iII goes.
"The city is hungry,"
the Atlanta linebacker said. "You can feel it when you're in the grocery store. Everybody is saying, 'Go Falcons.' Everyone is wearing red and black. The city is painted red and black." The Falcons will be playing in the NFC champion-
NFCChampionship San Francisco 49ers at Atlanta Falcons
• When:Today, noon • TV:Fox • Radio:KRCO-AM 690, KRCO-FM 96.9
ship game for only the third time when they host the San Francisco 49ers today, a matchup of teams that come into this game from very different historical perspectives. For the 49ers, this is a chance to rekindle the fran-
chise's glorious legacy. SeeNFC/D6
coordinator Mark Helfrich will be promoted
to head coach today, according to a report
PREP WRESTLING: OREGON WRESTLING CLASSIC
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
at CBSSports.com late Saturday night. Helfrich
would replace Chip
Musial, one of game's
Kelly, who took the head coaching position with
the Philadelphia Eagles.
Te'o provides some answers
best hitters,
NEW YORK — Manti Te'o tried to put one of
dies at age of 92
the strangest sports stories in memory behind him, insisting he was the
targetofan elaborate online hoax in which he
fell for a fakewomancreated by pranksters, then
By Richard Goldstein New York Times News Service
admitting his own lies made the bizarre ordeal
Stan Musial, one of baseball's greatest hitters and a revered figure in the storied history of the St. Louis Cardinals — the player they called Stan the Man — died Saturday. He • Former was 92. T he CarOriol e s manager dinals announced the Earl
worse. Whether his offcamera interview with
ESPNwasenough to demonstrate that the Notre Dame star
linebacker was a victim in the scheme instead of a participant is still
an open question. In a 2~/2-hour interview was conducted late Friday
news, saying Musial died
night, ESPNreporter Jeremy Schaap said that the 21-year-old Te'o an-
swered all his questions in a calm voice, and tried
to clear up themysteries andinconsistencies of the case. Among the highlights:
• Te'o denied being in
on the hoax. "No. Never," he said. "I wasn't faking it. I wasn't part of this."
• Te'o provided a
timeline and details of
his relationship with Lennay Kekua, his virtual sweetheart, who went
through anarray of medical calamities be-
fore "dying" of leukemia in September.
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Crook County's Aaron Swindle works to pin Sweet Home's Nate Melcher during their170-pound match in the final of the Class 4A division of the Oregon Wrestling Classic on Saturday night at the Deschtues County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond. Swindle pinned Melcher and won his match as Crook County took the team title.
— The Associated Press
SKIING
Vonn takesWorld Cup downhill CORTINA D'AMPEZZO, Italy-
Lindsey Vonnshowed she's back in form
Saturday, winning a World Cup downhill for her first victory in more than five weeks
Saturday in aWorld Cup downhill, beating overall leader Tina Maze by
nearly half a second. Vonn, who recently took27 days off to re-
gain her strength from an intestinal illness, clocked1 minute, 38.25
seconds down the sundrenched Olympia delle
Tofane course. Maze finished second, 0.43 seconds behind, and Vonn's American teammate LeanneSmith was third, 0.89 back. Bend's
Laurenne Rossfinished in 27th place in1:41.31. — The Associated Press
• The COWb OySand BulldOgs PreVail in their diViSiOnSat the 80-team RedmOndeVent By Beau Eastes The Bulletin
REDMOND — Dean Smith sparked Crook County early and Jared Kasch sealed the win for Culver with a late victory as both wrestlers made sure their senior seasons included an Oregon Wrestling Classic championship. Smith and the Cowboys held off Sweet Home 43-33 in the Class 4A final at the 80-team tournament held at the Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, while Kasch and the Bulldogs rallied past Lowell 45-36 in the 2A/lA championship match for their eighth consecutive Classic title. "You always want to stay hungry," said Crook County coach Jake Huffman, explaining the importance of tournament wins leading up to the state tournament. "You have to have goals to shoot for during the regular season and this was one of ours. It's good to practice winning in different situations."
Joe Knne /The Bulletin
Culver's Mitch Adams works to pin Lowell's Noah Casarez during their 195-pound match in the Class 2A/1A final on Saturday. The Bulldogs went on to win the dual and the team title.
With his team trailing 9-6 afterthe firstthree matches of the 4A final, Smith put the Cowboys ahead 12-9 with a third-period pin at 160 pounds over the Huskies' Brian Malloy. Crook County won its next two matches after Smith's victory and led the
rest of the dual. "I knew I needed to pound it there," said Smith, whose team had just lost back-toback matches, one a 5-4 decision and the other a late win by fall. "This is awesome for us three seniors to go out with a win at the Classic our
senior year." Sophomore Trayton Libolt also came up big for the Cowboys, pinning Sweet Home's Justin Nicholson in 3 minutes, 23 seconds at 113 pounds to extend Crook County's lead to 36-27. Nicholson was ranked third in 4A at 113 pounds by the Oregon Wrestling Forum entering the match, but Libolt, 4A's top-ranked 106-pound wrestler, easily handled the Husky junior, recording a pair of takedowns before winning by fall with 37 seconds left in the second period. Grayson Munn clinched the tournament win for the Cowboys two matches later with a nearlyflawless performance against Dylan Elder at 126 pounds. The Crook County junior won 9-0, recording a takedown in each period. Munn's win in the second-tolast match of the dual put the Cowboys ahead 43-27, giving Crook County its fourth tournament victory of the season. SeeWrestling /D5
Weaver pas s es
a t his home in awa y , 04 Ladue, Mo., surrounded by family. A signature Musial image endures: He waits for a pitch in a left-handed crouch, his knees bent and close together his body leaning to the left as he peers over his right shoulder, the red No. 6 on his back. The stance was likened to a corkscrew or, as White Sox pitcher and Dodger coach Ted Lyons once described it, "a kid peeking around the corner to see if the cops are
coming." Swinging from that stance, Musial won seven batting championships, hit 475 home runs and amassed 3,630hits.H is brilliance lay in his consistency. He had 1,815 hits at home and 1,815 on the road. He drove in 1,951 runs and scored 1,949 runs. And his power could be explosive: he set a major league record, equaled only once, when he hit five home runs in a doubleheader. SeeMusial /D4
The Associated Press file
St. Loius Cardinals Hall of Famer Stan Musial poses for a photo in 1952. He died Saturday at the age of 92.
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 20'l3
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY
COREBOARD
RODEO 11 a.m.: Bull riding, Winston-
Salem Invitational (taped), CBS. TENNIS Midnight: Australian Open, round of16, ESPN2.
6 p.m.:Australian Open,round
WINTER SPORTS Noon:Skiing, U.S. Freestyle Cup (taped), NBC. FOOTBALL
of16, ESPN2.
GOLF 1 a.m.:EuropeanTour, Abu Dhabi HSBC Golf Championship, final round, Golf Channel. Noon:PGA Tour, Humana
Challenge, final round, Golf Channel. 4:30 p.m.:Champions Tour, Mitsubishi Electric Championship, final round, Golf
Channel. BASKETBALL 9 a.m.: Women'scollege,St. John's at Notre Dame, ESPNL).
Noon:NFL, NFC Championship,
San Francisco 49ers atAtlanta Falcons, Fox. 3:30 p.m.:NFL, AFC
Championship, Baltimore Ravens at New England Patriots, CBS.
MONDAY TENNIS 12:30 a.m.:Australian Open, round of16, ESPN2.
6 p.m.:Australian Open, quarterfinals, ESPN2.
9 a.m.: Men'scollege,Navyat
BASKETBALL
Army, CBSSN.
9 a.m.: Boys high school,
10 a.m.:Women's college, lowa
Archbishop Mitty (Calif.) vs. Lone Peak(Utah), ESPNU.
State at Oklahoma State, Root Sports.
11 a.m.:Boys high school, Montrose Christian (Md.) vs. St. Benedict's (N.J.), ESPNU. 11 a.m.: Women's college,
10 a.m.: NBA, Indiana Pacers at Memphis Grizzlies, ESPN.
Butler at La Salle, CBSSN.
11 a.m.: Boyshighschool,Oak Hill Academy (Va.) vs. Simeon (111.),ESPNU. 12:30 p.m.:Men's college,
Noon: W omen'scollege, Maryland at GeorgiaTech,
Cincinnati at Syracuse, ESPN. 1 p.m.:Boys high school,Findlay
ESPN2.
Prep (Nev.) vs. Montverde (Fla.),
Noon: W omen'scollege,
ESPNU.
Alabama-Birmingham at Texas EI-Paso, Root Sports.
2:30 p.m.:Men's college,
12:30p.m.:W omen'scollege,
3 p.m.:Boys high school, DeMatha Catholic (Md.) vs. Hudson Catholic (N.J.), ESPNU. 4 p.m.:Women's college, Duke
UCLA at Cal, ESPNU.
1 p.m.:Women's college, Colorado State at UNLV, CBSSN.
2 p.m.:Boys high school, Huntington Prep (WVa.) vs. New Hampton (N.H.), ESPN. 2 p.m.: Women'scollege,Texas AB M at Georgia, ESPN2.
2 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon at OregonState, Pac-12 Network.
3 p.m.:Men's college, Clemson at North Carolina State, ESPNU.
Oklahoma State at Baylor, ESPN.
at UConn, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:NBA, SanAntonio Spurs at Philadelphia 76ers, TNT.
4:30 p.m.:Men's college, Georgetown at Notre Dame, ESPN.
4:30 p.m.:Men's college, Bethune-Cookman atSavannah State, ESPNU. 6:30 p.m.:NBA, Los Angeles
Stanford, Pac-12 Network.
Lakers at ChicagoBulls, TNT. 6:30 p.m.:Men's college, Texas
5 p.m.:Men's college, lllinois
at Oklahoma,ESPN.
State at Southern lllinois, ESPNL).
6:30 p.m.:Men's college,
4 p.m.: Women'scollege,USC at
11 p.m.: Women's college, Washington at Washington
State (same-day tape), Pac-12 Network.
Southern at Alabama AB M, ESPNU. 7 p.m.: NBA, Washington
Wizards at Portland Trail Blazers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest.
HOCKEY 9:30 a.m.:NHL, Philadelphia
Flyers at Buffalo Sabres, NBC. 7 p.m.:NHL, Chicago Blackhawks atPhoenixCoyotes, NBCSN.
SOCCER 2 p.m.:English Premier League,Tottenham Hotspurvs.
Manchester United (taped), Root Sports. HOCKEY
MOTOR SPORTS 10 a.m.:AMA Supercross World
Championship (taped), CBS.
4:30 p.m.:NHL, Detroit Red Wings at Columbus Blue Jackets, NBCSN.
ON THE AIR: RADIO TODAY
MONDAY
FOOTBALL
BASKETBALL
Noon:NFL, NFC Championship, 7 p.m.:Washington Wizards at San Francisco 49ers at Atlanta Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM Falcons, KRCO-AM 690,KRCO1110, KRCO-AM 690. FM 96.9. 3:30 p.m.:NFL, AFC Listings are themostaccurate available. The Bulletinis not Championship, Baltimore Ravens responsible for late changesmade at New England Patriots, KRCOby TV orradio stations. AM 690, KRCO-FM 96.9.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL
of Directors has approved a set of proposals considered
GoltS hire Stanfard
the first step toward trying to
COOrdinatOr —New India-
simplify and deregulate the
napolis Colts offensive coordi-
organization's often complex
nator Pep Hamilton is eager to
and sometimes unenforceable rules. On the final day of the
get started. Just minutes after Indianapolis made the hiring official Saturday, Hamilton told re-
NCAA convention in Grapevine, Texas, the board Saturday ap-
porters he waseager to reunite
proved 25 proposals. Among the
with three of his former pupils at Stanford — quarterback Andrew
intriguing changes to take effect Aug.1 will be the elimination of
Luck, tight end CobyFleenerand
some rulesabout howandhow often coachescancommunicate
receiver Griff Whalen. Hamilton
replaces BruceArians, who was hired as Arizona's headcoach Thursday.
with recruits outside of some
no-contact periods that will remain in place.
49ers' Cradtree queStianed —San Francisco 49ers wide receiver Michael
SKIING
Crabtree hasvoluntarily met
Innerhofer WinS — Christof
with police in their investigation
Innerhofer of Italy won the classic Lauberhorn downhill on Sat-
into an alleged sexual assault in a hotel after the team's playoff
urday in Wengen,Switzerland, victory over the Green Bay Pack- and Johan Clarey of Franceset a ers last weekend, his attorney
World Cup speed record of100.6
said Saturday. "Michael fully co-
mph. Innerhofer timed 2 min-
operated with the inspectors and will continue to do so throughout this investigation," the attorney, Joshua Bentley, said in a brief statement emailed to The Asso-
utes, 29.82 seconds down the 2.74-mile course, the longest on
the World Cupprogram. Klaus
ciated Press.
Another Austrian, Hannes
Kroell of Austria was second, 0.30 seconds behind Innerhofer. Reichelt, was 0.76 back in third. Clarey, who placed fifth, clocked
COLLEGES NGAAmaking changes — The NCAA Division I Board
the fastest speedrecorded in competition in the 46-year history of the World Cup. — From wire reports
ON DECK Tuesday Boys basketball: Bend at Ridgeview, 7 p.m.; MountainViewat Crook County, 7 p.m.; LaSalle at Madras, 7p.m.; CottageGroveat Sisters, 5:45 p.m.; LaPineat Junction City,5.45p.m.; Central Christian atDufur,7:30p.mxRedmondat Summit, 7p.m.;CulveratCentral Linn,6:30p.m. Girls basketball: RidgeviewatBend,7 p.m.; Mountain View at CrookCounty, 5:15p.m.; Madrasat La Salle, 7 p.m.; LaPineat Junction City,715 p.m.; Central Christian atDufur, 6p.mc CottageGrove at Sisters,7:15p.m.;Summit at Redmond,7 p.m., Culver atCentral Linn,5p.m. Wrestling: Culverat Central LinnDualin Halsey,6
Nevada 68,FresnoSt. 61 NewMexicoSt.70,SanJoseSt. 53 Oregon76,UCLA67 Pacific 74,CSNorthridge62
SaintMary's(Cal) 60, Portland38 SanFrancisco62,LoyolaMarymount53 SantaClara83,Pepperdine 76 SouthernCal69,OregonSt. 68 Stanford69, California 59 UC Riverside68,UCIrvine58 UC SantaBarbara83,CaPoly 81,20T Utah 74,Washington65 WeberSt.65,SacramentoSt. 56 Wyoming58,SanDiegoSt. 45 Pacific-12 Conference All TimesPST
p.m.
Conference
Wednesday
Wrestling: Bend atRedmond, 7p.m.; MadrasatGladstone, 6p.m.; Ridgeview,LaPine at CrookCounty, 5:30 p.m.
FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE All TimesPST
Playoff Glance ConferenceChampionships Today'sGames SanFranciscoatAtlanta, noon(Fox) BaltimoreatNewEngland,3:30 p.m.(CBS)
Betting line
Oregon
UCLA Arizona Washington ArizonaSt. SouthernCal
Califomia Stanford
Colorado WashingtonSt. Utah OregonSt.
W 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 2 1 1 0
L 0 1 1 1 2 3 3 3 4 4 5 5
Saturday'sGames Arizona71,ArizonaState54 Oregon76,UCLA67 Stanford69,California 59 USC69,OregonState68 Colorado58,Washington State49 Utah 74,Washington65
Overall W 16 15 16 12 14 8 10
L 2 4 1 6 4 11 7
11 7
12 10 9 10
6 8 9 8
NFL Wednesday'sGames (Hometeamsin Caps) WashingtonStateat Oregon,6:30p.m. Favorite Open Current Underdog Washington at OregonState,8:30p.m. Today Thursday'sGames 49ers 3.5 4 FALC ONS CaliforniaatUtah,5:30p.m. PATRIO TS 9 .5 7 . 5 Ravens UCLAatArizona 6p.m. StanlordatCoorado,7p.m. USCatArizonaState, 7:30p.m. BASKETBALL Saturday,Jan.26 UCLAatArizonaState,1 p.m. Men's college WashingtonStateat OregonState,2 p.m. USCatArizona,4p.m. Saturday'sGames Washingtonat Oregon,4p.m. EAST Sunday,Jan.27 Albany(NY)56,Hartford 46 CaliforniaatColorado,12:30 p.m. Bingha mton57,Maine56 StanfordatUtah,6p.m. BostonU.69,NewHampshire59 Brown65,Yale 51 Saturday'sSummaries Bryant82,Wagner 59 Buckneg 66,Lafayette 51 Buffalo68,Bowling Green65 No. 21 Oregon 76, Canisius76,Siena44 No. 24 UCLA 67 Columbia67,Corneg58 GeorgWa e shington79,UMass76 OREGON (16-2) Holy Cross79,AmericanU.60 Singl er3-82-29,Emory3-72-29,Woods8-92-3 LIU Brooklyn75,Monmouth(NJ) 65 18 Artis 5-10 2-214, Dotson 2-115-611, Loyd0-3 Lehigh60 Colgate45 0-3 0, Kazemi5-7 2-312, Austin1-31-1 3,Carter0-2 Marist59,St. Peter's48 0-0 0.Totals 27-6016-22 76. Mount St.Mary' s80,CCSU 75 UCLA(15-4) Nebraska 68,PennSt.64 T. Wear8-140-017,Adams0-6 7-7 7,Poweg5-6 Niagara 64 Manhattan60 0-0 11, Anderson 4-10 2-3 10, DrewII 4-90-1 8, D. Northeastern74,Delaware70 Wear 2-4 0-04,Muhammad 4-91-210,Parker0-0 Pittsburgh69,Uconn61 0-0 0. Totals 27-5810-1367. Providence69,Viganova66 Halftime —UCLA40-37. 3-Point Goals—Oregon RobertMorris87,Quinnipiac 75 6-13 (Dotson2-3,Artis 2-3, Singler1-3, Emory1-3, SacredHeart 75,St.Franms(Pa.) 72 Loyd 0-1),UCLA3-11 (Poweg1-1, T. Wear 1-1, Mu SaintJoseph's79,Penn59 hammad1-3,Anderson0-1, D.Wear0-1, Adams0-4). St. Bonavnteure81,Temple78 Foule d Out— None.Rebounds— Oregon40 (Kazemi St Franci(NY) s 70, Fairleigh Dickinson51 11), UCLA31 (Anderson11). Assists—Oregon 17 Towson73,JamesMadison47 (Artis 6),UCLA17(Drew0 8). Total Fouls Oregon VCU90,Duquesne63 14, UCLA19 A —12,254. SOUTH Alabama 50,TexasA&M49 AlcornSt.69,AlabamaA&M59 Belmon t78,TennesseeSt.66 Southern Cal 69, OregonSI. 68 Bethune-Cooma k n60, SCState52 Campbel63, l Winthrop59 OREGON ST. (10-8) Charleston Southern83,HighPoint 75 Burton 7-122-6 16, Reld1-40-0 2, Colier 7-13 CoastalCarolina72,VMI49 2-416, Starks0-10-00, Nelson7-1510-1026, RobDavidson 77,Col. of Charleston 68 bins 0-00-00, Barton 0-30-0 0, Morris-Walker0-3 Drexel59,Wiliam8 Mary48 2-2 2, Moreland1-3 1-2 3, Schaftenaar 1-20-0 3. E. Illinois77,Austin Peay67 Totals 24-6617-24 68. E. Kentucky 73,Jacksonville St.62 SOUTHERN CAL (8-11) ETSU70,KennesawSt. 60 Wise 7-124-818, Oraby1-20-02, Fontan2-2 Elon68,Wofford61 2 2 8,Terreg4-131-1 11,Wesley 7-135-619, StewFIU 61,Troy55 art 1-4 0-0 2,Bryan0-1 0-0 0, Dedmon2-3 1-15, Florida83,Missouri 52 Fuller 1-20-0 2, Blasczyk1-1 0-02. Totals 26-53 FloridaGulfCoast73,N.Kentucky54 13-18 69. George Mason57,Hofstra46 Halftime —Southern Cal 39-31. 3-Point GoalsGeorgia67, LSU58 OregonSt. 3-11 (Nelson2-5, Schaftenaar1-2, MorGeorgiSt. a 69, OldDominion 54 ns-Walker0-1, Barton0-1, Starks0-1, Moreand0-1), JacksonSt.57,Grambling St.46 SouthernCal4-15 (Fontan2-2, Terreg2-7, Wesley Kentucky 75,Auburn53 0-2, Wise0-2, Stewart0-2). FouledOut—Dedmon. Louisiana Tech 78,Seattle 71 Rebounds OregonSt. 32 (Cogier, Moreland 8), MVSU73,Prairie View64 SouthernCal30 (Terrell, Wise5). Assists—Oregon Marshal77, l EastCarolina 56 St. 15 (Starks4), SouthernCal12 (Wesley 3). Total McNeeseSt. 74,Lamar 50 Fouls—OregonSt. 15,SouthernCal20.A—3,963. Md.-Eastern Shore58 DelawareSt. 53 Memphis60,Harvard50 Wom en's college Mercer82,SC-Upstate74 MiddleTennessee82,Louisiana-Lafayette60 Saturday'sGames Mississippi76,Arkansas64 EAST Morehead St. 88, LIT-Martin 74 Albany(NY)55,Hartford 48,OT MorganSt.80, Hampton78 AmericanU.67, Holy Cross62 MurraySt.70,SIU-Edwardsvige61 Boston U55,NewHampshire53 NC ABT61,Howard37 Brown68,Yale67 NorfolkSt.75, Coppin St.68 Buckneg50,Lafayette49 NorthCarolina62,Maryland52 CCSU82,Wagner 53 NorthTexas61,FAU59,OT Cornell68,Columbia54 NorthwesternSt.103, SELouisiana 68 Georgetown 70,SetonHal 50 Presbyteria68, n Liberty 60 Lehigh70,Colgate62 Radford52, Gardner-Webb51 Marquette74,Pittsburgh65 Richmond 81,Charlotte 61 Monmouth(NJ)63,LIUBrooklyn62 Samford72,AppalachianSt. 68 MountSt.Mary's86, Bryant84, OT Savanna hSt.57,FloridaA8M 55 SacredHearl 71,St. Francis(Pa.) 50 SouthFlorida61, Georgetown58 St. Bonaven ture 61,UMass49 SouthernMiss.74,UAB59 St. Francis(NY)64,Fairleigh Dickinson56 Southern U.79,AlabamaSt. 67 StonyBrook68,Vermont53 Stet son85,Lipscomb69 Uconn87,Syracuse62 Syracuse 70,Louisville 68 Viganova 52,SouthFlorida 49 Tennessee 72, Mississippi St.57 SOUTH TheCitadel70,GeorgiaSouthem55 Alabama A8M64,AlcornSt. 44 Tulane75,Tulsa72 Belmon6t6,TennesseeSt.54 UALR 59,W.Kentucky54 CoppinSt.56,Norfolk St.51 UNCAsheville 68,Longwood65 DelawareSt.72,Md.-EastemShore63 Vanderbil58, t SouthCarolina51 E. Illinois68,Austin Peay43 Virginia56, FloridaSt.36 E. Kentucky 69,Jacksonville St.51 VirginiaTech66,WakeForest 65 ETSU61, KennesawSt.59 W.Carolina90, Chattanooga81 FAU79,NorthTexas67 MIDWEST Akron71,KentSt. 67
Bradley69,Missouri St.66 But er64, Gonzaga63 Cent.Michigan71,Ball St.57 ChicagoSt.81, HoustonBaptist 56 Cincinnati71, Marquette 69,OT Detroit98,Rl.-chlcago47 E. Michigan 65,Miami(Ohio) 58 GreenBay77, ClevelandSt. 50
Indiana St 72, Evansville 62 lowa70,Wisconsin66 Kansas St.69,Oklahoma60 MichiganSt.59,OhioSt. 56 NorthDakota85, PortlandSt.76 NotreDam e69,Rutgers66 Ohio76,Toledo67 Purdue 79,West Virginia 52 RhodeIsland82, Saint Louis80,OT S. DakotaSt. 80,IUPUI65 SE Missouri74,TennesseeTech62 SouthDakota97,Oakand78 St. John's71,DePaul 62 UMKC63, IPFW59 Valparaiso 69,Wright St.63 W. 8inois 50,N.DakotaSt. 42 W. Michigan 71,N.Illinois 34 WichitaSt.67,Creighton64 Xavier70,LaSale 63 Youngstown St. 75,Milwaukee72 SOUTHWE ST Ark.-PineBluff66,TexasSouthem63 Arkansas St.63,Louislana-Monroe39 Baylor107,Hardin-Simmons38
Cent.Arkansas76,TexasA8M-CC67 Idaho77,Texas-Ar ington64
lowaSt.63,TCU50 Kansas64,Texas59 Oklahoma St. 79,TexasTech45 OralRoberts65,SamHoustonSt. 61,OT Rice95,NewOrleans71 Stephen F Austin 72,NichollsSt.49 TexasSt.81,UTSA78,OT Texas -PanAmerican62,UtahValley60 UCF79,Houston75,OT UTEP63,SMU54 FARWEST Air Force 91,BoiseSt. 80 Arizona 71,ArizonaSt. 54 BYU74, SanDiego57 CS Bakersfied84,Nebraska-Omaha79 Colorado58,Washington St.49 ColoradoSt.66,UNLV61 Denver68,UtahSt.57 LongBeachSt.81, CalSt.-Fugerton71 Montana76,MontanaSt. 71, OT N. Arizona 60,IdahoSt. 55 N.Colorado72,E.Washington56
FIU 82,Troy76 FlorldaA&M59,SavannahSt. 49 FloridaGulfCoast 79,N.Kentucky50 Gardner-Webb 58, UNCAshevile 45 Hampton 66 MorganSt60 Howard44,NCA8T42 JacksonSt.61,Grambling St.54 Lamar57,McNeeseSt. 53 Liberty65,Campbell 58 Longwood 77,Coastal Carolina 63 MVSU65,Prairie View57 Mercer72,SC-Upstate55
MiddleTennessee72, Louisiana-Lafayette 36 MurraySt 81,SIU-Edwardsvige68 NorthFlorida66,Jacksonville 63 NorthwesternSt.64 SELouisiana55 Radford71,CharlestonSouthern60 SC State58,Bethune-Cookman39 SouthernU.57,AlabamaSt.44 UT-Mart in75,MoreheadSt.56 Winthrop78,Presbyterian 50 MIDWEST Bag St59,KentSt 44 Cent.Michigan83,N.Illinois 56 ChicagoSt.58, NJIT57
DePaul79,Providence67 Evansville55,IndianaSt.54 GreenBay59,youngstownSt.41 IUPUI57,S.Dakota St.56
Ill.-chicago82,Valparaiso 75
l linois St89,S.Illinois 41 Milwaukee 63,ClevelandSt.60 MissouriSt.80,Drake77 Nebra ska-Omaha83,lndianaDabney39 SouthDakota64,Oakland49 Toled o59,Buff alo44 UMKC77,IPFW59 W. Illinois85, N.DakotaSt. 83 W. Mi chigan84 Akron77 WichitaSt.67,Creighton45 WrightSt.67,Loyolaof Chicago56 SOUTHWES T Baylor76,West Virginia58 Cent.Arkansas 55,TexasA8M-CC40 KansasSt.57, TCU54 Oklahoma 69,Texas56 SamHoustonSt. 54,Oral Roberts 47 Stephen F.Austin 74,Nicholls St.66 TexasSouthem65, Ark.-Pine8uff61 TexasTech70,Kansas63 Texas-Pan American71,HoustonBaptist 45 UTSA56,TexasSt. 46 FAR WEST BoiseSt.66,Air Force65 CS Bakersfield67,UtahValley 65
Cal Poly66, UCSantaBarbara47 E.Washington63,N Colorado38 FresnoSt.74,Nevada56
KevinChappeg BrendondeJonge DougLaBelle0 TomGigis
68q-69n-67p —204 69q-69n-66p —204 64n-70p-70q —204 69p-66q69n 204 68p-66q-70n—204 WilliamMcGirt 65n-72p-67q—204 Jeff Maggert Martin Laird 69n-69p-66q—204 73q-67n-64p—204 LukeGuthrie GregOwen 72q-65n-68p—205 GeoffOgilvy 70q-65n-70p—205 DA Points 67q-69n-69p—205 BradFritsch 69q 65n-71p 205 Matt Jones 68n-68p-69q—205 D.J. Trahan 69p-68q-68n—205 BudCauley 70n-63p-72q—205 Jerry Kelly 65n-71p-69q—205 CamiloVilegas 71q-67n-67p—205 Bob Estes 69q-69n-67p—205 Phil Mickelson 72q-67n-66p—205 TENNIS 67q-70n-68p 205 StuartAppleby 71p-69q-65n—205 LucasGlover Professional 70n-66p-69q—205 LukeList 68q-67n-71p—206 BooWeekey Australian Open 68q-67n-71p—206 Colt Knost At MelbournePark 69p-71q-66n—206 Jeff Overton Melbourne, Australia 72p-66q-68n—206 JohnSenden Purse: $31.608million (GrandSlam) 65n-69p-72q—206 MichaelBradley Surface: Hard-Outdoor JasonBohn 70n-69p-67q 206 Singles Charlie Wi 72q-64n-70p—206 Men G raham D eLa et 71p-70q-65n—206 Saturday DavidToms 75p-67q-64n—206 Third Round 70q-66n-70p—206 Milos Raonic(13), Canada, def. PhilippKohlsch- DavidMathis Brendan St e el e 72p-70q-64n 206 reiber(17),Germany, 7-6(4), 6-3,6-4. Shawn St e f a ni 68q-69n-69p—206 RogerFederer(2), Switzerland,def.BemardTomic, TagRidings 67n-71p-68q—206 Australia,6-4,7-6 (5),6-1. 74q-65n-67p—206 Gilles Simon (14), France,def. Gael Monfils, RossFisher D.H. Lee 70q-66n-70p—206 France,6-4, 6-4,4-6, 1-6,8-6. Failed to pualify Today 69p-71q-67n—207 John Merrick Fourth Round 68n-68p-71q—207 David Ferrer(4), Spain, def. KeiNishikori (16), BrianDavis 73q-64n-70p 207 TrevorImmelman Japan,6-2,6-1,6-4. 69n-70p-68q—207 Steve Mari n o NicolasAlmagro(10), Spain,def.JankoTipsarevic 68q-69n-70p—207 Jeff Klauk (8), Serbia6-2, , 5-1retired. 69n-70p-68q—207 DerekErnst 69n-70p-68q—207 JoeySnyderRI Women 70q-67n-70p—207 Scott Langl e y Saturday Pat Perez 68q-69n-70p—207 Third Round 71q-66n-70p—207 CarolineWozniacki (10), Denmark, def. LeslaTsu- Tim Clark HenrikNorlander 70p-71q66n 207 renko,Ukraine,6-4,6-3. Davis Love gl 71p-70q-67n—208 SloaneStephens(29), UnitedStates,def. Laura GaryWoodland 71n-66p-71q—208 Robson, Britain,7-5, 6-3. 73p-70q-65n—208 Bojana Jovanovski, Serbia, def. Kimiko Date- WebbSimpson RobertAgenby 68n-72p-68q—208 Krumm,Japan, 6-2,7-6(3). Josh Teat e r 73q-65n-70p 208 Today TroyMatteson 70p-70q-68n—208 Fourth Round 67q-67n-74p—208 EkaterinaMakarova(19), Russiadef. Angelique Erik Compton PatrickCantlay 65n-72p-71q—208 Kerber(5), Germany,7-5, 6-4. Robert Karl s son 71n-69p-69q—209 MariaSharapova(2), Russia, def. KirstenFlipkens, 71n-69p-69q—209 Belgium,6-1,6-0. Joe Ogilvie 69p-66q-74n—209 Chris Stroud 70p-70q-69n—209 Eric Meierdierks HOCKEY 71n-66p-72q 209 DavidHearn 77q-66n-66p—209 MarkWilson 67q-75n-67p—209 MikeWeir NHL 70n-68p-71q—209 Bill Haas NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE 69p-69q-71n—209 Matt Every All Times PST 67n-73p-69q—209 JesperParnevik KevinNa 69p-70q-70n—209 EASTERNCONFERENCE CameronPercy 72p-68q-69n—209 Atlantic Division SteveJones 74p-67q-69n 210 GPW L DT Pts GF GA DickyPride 69n-70p-71q—210 NewJersey 1 1 0 0 2 2 1 Jhonattan Vegas 68n-69p-73q—210 Pittsburgh 1 1 0 0 2 3 I Jeff Gove 73p-69q-68n—210 N.Y.Islanders 1 0 1 0 0 1 2 BenCrane 71n-68p-71q—210 N.Y.Rangers 1 0 1 0 0 1 3 PatrickReed 74q-68n-68p—210 Philadelphia I 0 1 0 0 I 3 Casey Wi t tenberg 69q-69n-72p—210 Norlheast Division Justin Bogi 71p-70q-69n—210 GPW L DT Pts GF GA WesShort, Jr. 70n-71p-69q 210 Boston I 1 0 0 2 3 1 72q-65n-73p—210 KenDuke Ottawa 1 1 0 0 2 4 1 68p-71q-71n—210 Chris Kirk Toronto 1 1 0 0 2 2 1 67n-74p-69q—210 Andrew Svoboda Buffalo 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Seung-YulNoh 72q-68n-71p—211 Montreal I 0 1 0 0 I 2 66n-73p-72q 211 BobbyGates southeast Division 70q-67n-75p—212 Scott Gardi n er GPW L DT Pts GF GA 72q-70n-70p—212 AaronWa tkins Florida 1 1 0 0 2 5 1 72p-67q-73n—212 MorganHofmann TampaBay 1 1 0 0 2 6 3 Scott Verplank 69q-72n-71p—212 Carolina 1 0 1 0 0 1 5 Kyle Stanl e y 67n-75p-70q—212 Washington 1 0 1 0 0 3 6 B rian Harm an 77p-66q-69n—212 Winnipeg 1 0 1 0 0 1 4 Martin Flores 74n-72p-66q—212 WESTERN CONFERENCE Paul Hale8 y 67n-72p-73q 212 Central Division Bart Bryant 72p-71q-70n—213 GPW L OT Pts GF GA Will Claxton 69q-70n-74p—213 Chicago I I 0 0 2 5 2 BlakeAdams 70p-75q-68n—213 Columbus 1 1 0 0 2 3 2 JamesDriscoll 70p-73q-70n—213 St. Louis 1 1 0 0 2 6 0 LeeJanzen 73n-72p-68q—213 Nashville 1 0 0 I 1 2 3 Ryo Ishi k awa 70p-72q-71n—213 Detroit 1 0 I 0 0 0 6 RorySabbatini 69n-75p-69q—213 Northwest Division 72n-72p-70q 214 GPW L DT Pts GF GA SteveLeBrun 72n-68p-74q—214 Brett Quigley Minnesota I I 0 0 2 4 2 74p-67q-73n—214 Chad Ca m pb el l Calgary 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 70q-71n-74p—215 SeanO'Hair Colorado 1 0 1 0 0 2 4 76q-71n-68p—215 JohnMaginger Edmonton 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 73p-74q-68n—215 Jin Park Vancouver I 0 I 0 0 3 7 73p-72q-70n—215 A ndres Go n z al e s Pacific Division 69n-71p-76q—216 GPW L OT Pts GF GA DavidLynn TroyKelly 73p-73q-70n—216 Anaheim I I 0 0 2 7 3 TommyGainey 74q-71n-72p—217 Dallas 1 1 0 0 2 4 3 Scott Mccarron 68q-72n-78p—218 Los Angeles 1 0 1 0 0 2 5 Chris Starkj o hann 68p-81q-70n—219 Phoenix 1 0 1 0 0 3 4 CharlieBeljan 78q-73n-69p—220 San Jose 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Letzig 74p-77q-73n 224 NOTE.Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime Michael Mark Brooks 79n-74p-74q—227 loss. Saturday'sGames Columbus 3,Nashviile 2, SO Champions Tour Pittsburgh3,Philadelphia1 Mitsubishi Electric Championship Ottawa 4,Winnipeg1 Saturday Chicago 5, LosAngeles 2 At Hualalai Golf Course Boston3, N.Y.Rangers1 Kaupulehu-Kona,Hawaii Toronto2,Montreal1 Purse: $1.8million NewJersey2,N.Y. Islanders1 yardage:7,107; Par72 Tampa Bay6,Washington 3 SecondRound Florida 5,Carolina1 65-65 — I30 DavidFrost St. I.ouis 6,Detroit 0 JohnCook 66-66—132 Dallas 4,Phoenix 3 Kirk Triplett 66-68 — I34 Minnesota 4, Colorado2 66-69—135 FredCouples Anaheim 7, Vancouver3 TomKite 66-69 — 135 Today's Games BernhardLanger 68-68—136 Philadelphiaat Buffalo, 9:30a.m. Jay Haas 68-69—137 PittsburghatN.Y.Rangers, 4p.m. SteveElkington 68-69 — 137 SanJoseat Calgary, 4p.m. Russ Cochran 67-70—137 Dallas atMinnesota,5p.m. TomLehman 66-71—137 EdmontonatVancouver,6 p.m. Hale Irwln 70-68—138 Chicag oatPhoenix,7 p.m. Fred Funk 69-69—138 Willie Wood 66-72 138 GOLF LarryNelson 69-70 — I39 68-71—139 CoreyPavin Kenny Perry 67-72 — 139 PGA Tour 70-70 — 140 MarkO'Meara HumanaChallenge 72-69 — 141 LorenRoberts Saturday 71-70 — 141 MarkCalcavecchia La Ouinta, Calif. 7 0-71 — 141 CraigStadler Purse: $6.6 million 69-72 141 Jeff Sluman p-PGAWest, Arnold Palmer Private Course 69-72 — I41 Joe Daley (6,950 yards, par72) 67-75 — 142 JohnHuston n-PGAWest, JackNicklaus Private Course Mike Reid 73-70 — 143 (6,961 yards, par72) Jay DonBlake 71-72 — 143 q-La GuintaCountryClub(7,060 yards, par MarkWiebe 70-73—143 72) RogerChapman 70-73—143 Third Round TomWatson 69-74 — 143 Scott Stallings 66p-65q-63n—194 Curtis Strange 69-74 143 RobertoCastro 63n-67p-69q —I99 Bob Gilder 75-69 — I44 StewartCink 66q-67n-66p —199 Olin Browne 73-71 — 144 CharlesHowell IR 67q-65n-67p 199 Jim Thorpe 71-73 — 144 John Rollins 70p-65q-64n—199 D.A.Weihring 71-73 — 144 CharleyHoffman 65n-67p-67q —199 BruceVaughan 73-72 145 Sang-MoonBae 67p-69q-64n—200 69-76—145 BradFaxon 69n-65p-66q —200 KevinStreelman DanForsman 73-73 — 146 71p-67q-62n—200 BrianStuard 73-73 — 146 66q-66n-68p—200 EduardoRomero KevinStadler 71-75 — 146 David Eger BrianGay 67q-66n-67p 200 70-80 — 150 65p-69q-66n—200 MichaelAllen RyanPamer 78-74—152 BenCrenshaw 67n-68p-65q —200 Billy Horschel 67q-65n-68p —200 Lee Wiliams 63q-69n-69p—201 JasonKokrak DEALS 68q-64n-69p —201 David Lingmerth 69q-66n-66p —201 NicholasThompson Transactions 66n-65p-70q —201 RichardH. Lee 65n-68p-69q —202 BASKETBALL DanielSummerhays 66p-66q-70n—202 National Basketball Association ZachJohnson NBA —Fined Dallas Mavericks F ShawnMarion JamesHahn 63p-67q-72n—202 RickyBames 65q-68n-69p 202 $25,000forpublic criticism ofofficiating. FOOTBALL RobertGarrigus 66p-67q-69n—202 National Football League JimmyWalker 66p-70q-66n—202 BUFFALO BILLS Named PatMorris offensive Bo Van Pelt 66n-68p-68q —202 BrandtSnedeker 67q-68n-67p—202 line coach. BryceMolder 66p-68q-68n—202 CHICAGO BEARS — Retained defensive backs AaronBaddeley 64p-68q-70n—202 coach JonHokeanddefensivelinecoachMikePhair. BenKohles 68p 68q66n 202 Announced the retirement of RustyJonesdirector of Justin Leonard 67p-69q-67n—203 Physicaldevelopment. DarronStiles 66p-65q-72n—203 JACKSONVI LLE JAGUARS — NamedJedd Fisch GregChalmers 64n-68p-71 q—203 offensivecoordinator andBobBabich defensive coCameron Tringae 65n-72p-66q —203 ordinator. Harris English 67n-69p-67q—203 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — SignedDL Marcus StephenAmes 67p-68q-68n—203 Forstonfromthepractice squad. FabianGomez 69q-67n-67p 203 HOCKEY Justln Hicks 69p-69q-65n—203 NationalHockeyLeague Matt Kuchar 70q-64n-69p—203 BUFFALOSABRES — Signed general manag er JohnsonWagner 66n-70p-67q—203 DarcyRegier toacontract extension. Carl Pettersson 68n-66p-69q —203 NEW JERSEYDEVILS — Assigned RW Bobby Alistair Presneg 68p-70q-65n—203 Butler toAlbany(AHL) RecalledLWMattias Tedenby 71n-65p-67q —203 from Albany StevenBowditch RobertStreb 67n-69p-68q 204 ST. LOUIS BLUES—Assigned FChris Porterto 64n-69p-71q—204 Peoria(AHL). RusseIHeney
Gonzaga 62,SanDiego50 Hawaii71, UCDavis63 Idaho70,Texas-Arlington52 IdahoSt.52,N.Arizona48 LongBeachSt. 45,CalSt.-Fugerton39 Montan aSt.58,Montana49 Pacific60,CSNorthridge 51 Portland63,Loyola Marymount 59 PortlandSt.73,North Dakota66 Sacramento St.103 Weber St. 60 SaintMary's(Cal) 72,Pepperdine61 SanDiegoSt.66 Wyoming 43 SanJoseSt. 51, NewMexico St 50 SantaClara61,SanFrancisco 48 Seattle64,LouisianaTech47 UC Riverside 68,UCIrvine67 UtahSt.85,Denver 69
SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
uc s ea
0. The Associated Press
0.
f
' 18! .. . .
LOS ANGELES — No. 21 Oregon and No. 24 UCLA came into Saturday's game c hasing f i r st place in the Pac-12. The Ducks played better defense in the second half and came away with the top spot. Tony Woods scored 18 points while missing just one shot, Dominic Artis added 14 points, and Arsaian Kazemi had 12 points and 11 rebounds in Oregon's 76-67 victory that improved the Ducks to 5-0 in league play for the first time in 39
r uins (16-3, 5-1 Brg Ten). Deshaun Thomas scored a career Big Ten-high 28 points, including six 3-pointers for
the Buckeyes (D-4, 3-2). Wichita State...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67 No. 12 Creighton ...... . . . . . . . . . . 64 WICHITA, Kan. — Carl Hall had 17 points and 13 rebounds and Malcolm Armstead hit two k ey free throws in the closing seconds for Wichita State (17-2, 6-1 Missouri Valley Conference) in handing the Bluejays their second loss.
Wyoming........... . . . . . . . . . . ..58
No. 15 San Diego State...... . . . . .45 LARAMIE, Wyo. — Leonard "We knew we had to get better Washington had 14 points and 14 defensively," Kazemi said. "Our rebounds to help Wyoming (15-2, 2game plan was to attack them off 2 Mountain West) beat cold shootthe dribble and just in general be ing San Diego State (14-4, 2-2). more aggressiveon the defensive No. 16 Kansas State..... . . . . . . . .69 end." Oklahoma.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 60 The Ducks (16-2, 5-0 Pac-12) Reed Saxon /TheAssociated Press MANHATTAN, Kan. — Rodney shot 60 percent in the second half Oregon center Tony Woods dunks against UCLA in the first half of SaturMcGruder scored 20 points and and controlled the boards 40-31, day'sgame inLos Angeles. Oregon won 76-67. Will Spradling added 15 for Kanincluding a 13-7 edge on the offensas State (15-2, 4-0 Big 12). sive glass. They pulled away with No. 20 Notre Dame ...... . . . . . . . .69 "They really did a good job slow- Rutgers ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 66 a 15-6 run that gave them the lead for good. ing the tempo down in the second SOUTH BEND, Ind. — Jack Travis Wear scored 17 points to half and we didn't handle that Cooley had 19 points, 10 rebounds lead the Bruins, whose 10-game really well," UCLA c oach Ben and blocked a shot with two secwinning streak — including eight INDIANAPOLIS — Roosevelt Howland said. onds left to help Notre Dame hang straight at home — equaled their Jones stole an inbound pass Muhammad didn't start as pun- on for a win over Rutgers, ending longest since 2008-09. Norman with 3.5 seconds left and hit a ishment for being late to practice a two-game losing streak for the Powell added 11 points starting floater from just inside the foul on Friday and he sat the first 5 Fighting Irish (15-3, 3-2 Big East). in placeof Shabazz Muhammad, line right before the buzzer to minutes.The freshman scored 10 No. 22 VCU ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .90 who finished with 10 points, as did help No.13 Butler upset No. 8 of UCLA's final 12 points to put Duquesne........... . . . . . . . . . ..63 Kyle Anderson. Gonzaga 64-63 on Saturday them ahead 40-37 at halftime. PITTSBURGH — Rob Branden"We just can't get too big-headed night. Also on Saturday: berg scored 22 points and VCU about our win streak and think Jones finished with 20 points No. 6 Syracuse.......... . . . . . . .70 (16-3, 4-0 Atlantic 10) dominated in this team is just going to lay over and the Bulldogs have now No. 1 Louisville...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 68 winning its 13th consecutive game, and give us the win," Powell said. won13 in a row including two LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Brandon beating Duquesne. "We just needed to come out hardstraight without their top scorer, Triche scored 23 pointsand Mi- Cincinnati ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 er in the second half." Rotnei Clarke. It's the first time chael Carter-Williams scored the No. 25 Marquette..... . . . . . . . . . . . 69 That's when UCLA shot 38 perButler (16-2, 3-0 Atlantic 10j final four points as Syracuse (17-1, CINCINNATI — Sean Kilpatrick cent while contending with a mix has ever beaten three top10 5-0) rallied to upset Louisville in a scored seven of his career-high 36 of full -court and zone defense. teamsinoneseason.Theyalso showdown of unbeaten Big East points in overtime, and Cincinnati "They did a great job changing defeated No. 9 North Carolina in Conference teams. Russ Smith's (16-3, 4-2 Big East) blew a 16-point up looks and keeping us uncomNovember and No.1 Indiana in 25 points led Louisville (16-2, 4-1), lead before rallying to a victory fortable," Wear said. "They're a December. which had its 11-game winning over Marquette (13-4, 4-1), endreally, really g ood r ebounding Gonzaga (17-2, 4-0 West streak stopped. ing the Bearcats' streak of three team. We got to box out and go Coast Conference) was ledby No. 4 Kansas...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64 straight home losses. seek the ball rather than just boxSaw Dower and Elias Harris, Texas...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 Utah...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 ing out and hoping someone else is who each had 20 points. The A USTIN, T e xas Ben Washington...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65 going to grab it. Go get it." lossendedtheZags'eight-game McLemore scored 16 points and SEATTLE — Jason Washburn The Bruins (15-4,5-1) ledbythree winning streak. Kansas (16-1, 4-0 Big 12) stormed scored 14 of his 18 points in the —The Associated Press points at halftime after shooting 55 back from a late double-digit deficit first half, Brandon Taylor added a percent in getting out on the break. for its 15th straight win. career-high 19 off the bench and They were up by five early in the No.7Arizona ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71 Utah (9-9, 1-5 Pac-12) won its first second half and tied the game at lost their next game to then-No. I Arizona State ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 54 Pac-12 road game in two seasons. 52-allbefore the Ducks' defense UCLA at Pauley Pavilion. TEMPE, Ariz. — Mark Lyons Andrew Andrews led Washington "We knew it would be a battle scored 24 points and Nick Johnson (12-6, 4-1) with 17 points. stepped up and sent UCLA's shooting into a tailspin. and we're very happy to win a pair added 19 as Arizona (16-1, 4-1 Pac- Colorado........... . . . . . . . . . ...58 "They got to run on us way too in L.A.," Kazemi said. 12) pulled away in the second half. Washington State..... . . . . . . . . . . 49 much in the first half," Oregon Down by five, the Ducks ran Jahii Carson had 22 points for AriPULLMAN, Wash. — Spencer coach Dana Altman said. "We off eight straight points to take a zona State (14-4, 3-2). Dinwiddie scored 16 points and had talked about doing a better job on 49-46 lead while the Bruins went No.10 Florida..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 83 eight rebounds as Colorado (12-6, defense. We depend heavily on 5:17 without scoring. They tied No. 17 Missouri...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 52 2-4 Pac-12) came up with a great young players and we got off to a the game at 52-all on a jumper GAINESVILLE, Fla. — Scottie defensive performance. Brock Moslow start this year, but we are a to- by Wear. From there, the Ducks Wilbekin had 13 points and 10 as- tum and Mike Ladd had 13 points tally different team than we were slowly built a 62-56 lead, capped sists, his first career double-double, for Washington State (10-8, 1-4). earlier in the year when we had by Kazemi's layup off his own of- for Florida (14-2, 4-0 SEC). Jabari Stanford..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 69 two seniors out with injuries." fensive rebound. Brown led the Tigers (13-4, 2-2) California ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 59 After barely getting by Southern Powell hit a 3-pointer and An- with 16 points. STANFORD, Calif. — Dwight California 76-74 on Thursday, the derson made two freethrows to No.18 Michigan State...... . . . . . .59 Powell scored 17 points to lead Ducks won their seventh straight pull the Bruins within one with No.11 Ohio State...... . . . . . . . . . .56 Stanford (11-7, 2-3 Pac-12). Allen and 11th in their past 12. They are 3:30 to play, but they came no closEAST LANSING, Mich. — Keith Crabbe and David Kravish each 5-0 in league play for the first time er in front of 12,254, the second- Appling made two f ree throws scored 14 points to lead the Bears since 1973-74 when the conference largest crowd of the season at the with 7.9 seconds left and finished (10-7, 2-3 Pac-12), who have lost had eight teams. Back then, they newly renovated arena. with 15 points for Michigan State four of their past six.
years.
No. 13Butler shocks No. 8 Gonzagalate
GOLF ROUNDUP
Oregon Statestill winless in PaÃ2 after loss to USC By Lee Barnathan The Associated Press
LOS ANGELES — The week couldn't end fast enough for USC. When it did, the result was a hard-fought victory. Aaron Fuller's only basket, a layup with 4.8 seconds remaining, gave USC a 6968 victory over Oregon State on Saturday night. The lead changed hands eight times in the final 2:52. Eric Moreland fed Joe Burton for a layup with 12.6 seconds to play to give Oregon State (10-8, 0-4 Pac-12) a 68-67 lead. Devon Collier's game-winning attempt was blocked by Eric Wise as time ran out. Byron Wesley scored 12 of his 19 points in the first half, and Wise added 18 points for the Trojans (8-11, 3-3). J.T. Terrell, who passed toFuller forthe game winner, scored 11 points. Roberto Nelson scored a season-high tying 26 points for the Beavers, who overcame a 15-point second-half deficit to take a 49-48 lead with 11:52 remaining. Burton and Collier scored 16 points apiece. The win was the first of the most recent interim stint for Trojans coach Bob Cantu, elevated after the school fired Kevin O'Neill on Monday.Cantu, who has been in the program 12 years, previously served as interim coach in 2011, in a loss to Arizona. The Trojans had chances to win but lost by two against Oregon on Thursday. They had to turn around and prepare for a Beavers squad that has driven USC nuts in recent games with a 1-3-1 zone defense. USC committed 20 turnovers Saturday. "Man, that 1-3-1 is annoying," Trojans guard Jio Fortan said after scoring just eight points on two of two shooting. Against Oregon, Fortan had 33 points but missed three crucial shots late. "This week's dragged out," Fortan said. "We missed a game we should've had and got it done today in a game that should've been easier." The game was close until late in the first half, when six different USC players scored on the way to a half-closing 15-7 run and a 39-31 halftime lead. USC opened the second half by scoring seven straight points for a 15-point lead that led to an Oregon State timeout. The Beavers answered by outscoring USC 16-2 over the next 6:20 for a 49-48 lead. "We just stayed with it (1-3-1 zone) because it was working so well,"Beavers coach Craig Robinson said. "We forced some great turnovers and got some great results. "But we can't enjoy it much because it is such a bitter loss." The Trojansdidn'tscore for 5:40. "When a 15-point lead starts to evaporate,my blood pressure certainly goes up," Cantu said. "The guys didn't give up. They fought. We turned it over too much, but we found a way to get the win." Moreland and Victor Robbins returned to the Oregon State lineup after missing three games for violating team rules. Moreland had three points, eight rebounds, the late assist and three turnovers, one of which led to a late USC go-ahead score. Robbins played one minute.
NHL ROUNDUP
Stallings in control Blackhawks beatdefending champI(ings
at PGA Tour event The Associated Press LA QUINTA, C alif. Last year, Scott Stallings left the Humana Challenge early after a funny conversation that probably made his aching ribshurt even more. "I played La Quinta for one round and I played with Carl Pettersson and, after nine holes, he said, 'Either you're going to withdraw or I'm going to withdraw. I can't watch this anymore,' " said S tallings, forced to w i t h draw after tearing cartilage around five ribs. This year, Stallings is in position to run away with his third PGA Tour title after opening a five-stroke lead Saturday. He shot a 9-under 63 at PGA West's Jack Nicklaus course to reach 22under 194 after three days in perfect conditions in the Coachella Valley. "I stayed aggressive," Stallings said. "Playing with
conservatively aggressive," Stallings said. "Like No. 8, I hit a really good drive and had 8-iron. But just because I had 8-iron to a par 5, I fired it in the middle of the green, had a 20-footer and was happy to make it." Rollins had a 64 to move into a tie for second with Stewart Cink, Roberto Castro, Charles Howell III and Charley Hoffman. "We had a good group and the mojo in the group has been positive," Rollins said. "It was great to see a lot of good shots, putts going in." Cink had a 66 on the Nicklaus course to get into the final threesome with Stallings and Castro. Also on Saturday: Rose leads in Abu Dhabi A BU D H A B I , Un i t e d Arab Emirates — Justin Rose extended his lead at the Abu Dhabi Championship, shooting a 4-under 68 to take John (Rollins) was a huge a two-shot lead over Jamie help. He's a good guy and he Donaldson and T horbjorn was an easy guy to club off Olesen. of.... We made a lot of birdFrost takes 2-stroke lead ies the last couple days, and K AUPUL E H U - K O N A , so we kind of fed off each Hawaii — David Frost shot a other." 65 to hold a two-stroke lead Stallings made two eagles, on John Cook after the sechitting a 6-iron to 8 feet on the ond round of the Mitsubishi par-5 13th early in the round Electric Championship. Kirk and holing a 20-foot downhill Triplett, the 2012 Rookie of putt on the par-5 eighth. the Year, was third, another "I guess you can say it's two strokes back after a 68.
The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — The ChicagoBlackhawks raised their own Stanley Cup championship banner just two seasons ago, so their core players already know it's tough to go back to work after a pregame party. When the Los Angeles Kings were finished raising their banner and receiving their rings Saturday, the Blackhawks reminded the champs that what happened last year won't help the Kings in this shortened NHL season. Marian Hossa had two goals and an assist, Corey Crawford made 19 saves, and Chicago crashed the Kings' Stanley Cup celebration with a 5-2 victory. Captain Jonathan Toews and Patrick Kane each had a goal and an assist for the Blackhawks, who jumped to a 3-0 lead on Michael Frolik's goal less than 15 minutes in. With superior speed and skill, Chicago ruined the festivities shortly after the Kings hung their first championship banner in the Staples Center rafters. "We wanted to have a good start, and whether they were going to be on their game or not didn't really matter to us," said Toews. Also on Saturday:
Penguins....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 3
D evils .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2
Islanders........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1
C, )I
Jae C. Hong/The Associated Press
Chicago's Jonathan Toews (19) controls the puckpast Los Angeles Kings' Drew Doughty as the Blackhawks' Daniel Carcillo watches during the first period of Satur-
day's game in Los Angeles.
son had a goal and two assists and Ottawa spoiled Winnipeg's home opener. B ruins... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
F lyers .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 PHILADELPHIA — T y ler K ennedy Rangers ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 and James Neal both scored goals to lead BOSTON — Tuukka Rask stopped 20 Pittsburgh past Philadelphia. shots for Boston in his first game after D ucks ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 taking over for two-time Vezina Trophy C anucks......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .3 winner Tim Thomas, and the Bruins beat VANCOUVER, British Columbia the New York Rangers. Teemu Selanne had two goals and two Maple Leafs....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 assists as Anaheim thumped Vancouver. Canadiens....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 S enators.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 MONTREAL — Nazem Kadri and TyJ ets .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 ler Bozak scored power-play goals as ToWINNIPEG, Manitoba — Erik Karls- ronto took a victory over Montreal.
UNIONDALE, N.Y. — David Clarkson's goal at 8:17 of the third period sent New Jersey to a season-opening win over the New York Islanders. L ightning.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 C apitals.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 TAMPA, Fla. — Martin St. Louis and Eric Brewer each scored two goals as Tampa Bay beat Washington. P anthers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 H urricanes.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 SUNRISE, Fla. — Jonathan Huberdeau's first NHL shot resulted in his first NHL goal and opened an early Florida scoring barrage, as the Panthers eased past Carolina. B lues.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 R ed Wings.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 ST. LOUI S — Roo k i e V l a d imir Tarasenko scored twice in his NHL debut and Chris Stewart also had a pair of goals to help St. Louis manhandle Detroit. B lue Jackets .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 P redators... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 NASHVILLE, Tenn. — Derick Brassard scored in the sixth round of a shootout, and Columbus beat Nashville for its fifth win to start a season. S tars .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4
Coyotes ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 DALLAS — Jaromir Jagr scored two goals and assisted on the game-winner in his Dallas debut, and the Stars opened with a victory against Phoenix. W ild ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 A valanche .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 ST. PAUL, Minn. — Dany Heatley had two power-play goals on assists from new teammate Zach Parise, and Minnesota surged into its season with a victory over Colorado.
D4 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
Musial
NBA ROUNDUP
Blazers fallto Bucks,110-104 The Associated Press P ORTLAND — T h e J i m Boylan era is starting well for the Milwaukee Bucks. Brandon Jennings had 30 points and eight assists, Ersan Ilyasova added a season-high 27 points and 14 rebounds, and the Bucks beat the Portland Trail Blazers 110-104 Saturday night to win for the fifth time in seven games since Boylan was promoted to replace Scott Skiles as coach. "I'm r eally proud o f t h e guys," Boylan said. "They've really responded well to the coaching change. We've got our eyes on the future and that's where we are going." D amian L i l lard h a d 2 6 points and 10 assists for Portland, which has lost a seasonhigh five straight games. LaMarcus Aldridge had 20 points and 14 rebounds, while Wesley Matthews added 21 points. M ike D u nleavy h a d 1 4 points and Monta Ellis added 13 for M i lwaukee. Ilyasova was 10 of 14 from the field, making all three of his 3-point attempts and all four of his free throws. The Bucks went 3-1 while on a weeklong road trip. Milwaukee was coming off a historic victory of sorts, beating the Suns 115-107 Thursday night for their first win in Phoenix since the 1986-87 season, ending a stretch of 24 consecutive losses. The Bucks kicked off the trip by beating Toronto. They now head home to host Philadelphia. Boylan, a longtime NBA assistant who was once interim head coach in Chicago, took over when the team parted ways with f i f th-year coach Skiles on Jan. 8 amid talk that Skiles was unhappy with the personnel makeup of his team and looking to leave. P ortland was one of t h e hottest teams in the NBA after winning 12 of 15 games between Dec. 10 and Jan. 10. But the Blazers struggled with closing out games of late, losing each of their past five by six points or less. Part of the problem has been a tendency to fall behind and dig too big of a hole. "We definitely have had a trend of that lately," Aldridge said. "We have to figure out how to shake it. We always start a little slow and we always find a way to come back, but if we have better starts, then we won't have to fight so hard to come back." The Bucks led by 16 with 3:45 remaining in the game,
Don Ryan /The Associated Press
Milwaukee forward Luc Richard Mbah a Moute, left, knocks the ball away from Portland forward Nicolas Batum during the first quarter of Saturday night's game in Portland. but the Blazers managed a 120 run to cut it to 104-100, with Lillard and Matthews hitting back-to-back 3-pointers. But Jennings and Ellis made six of eight free throws in the final minute for Milwaukee, while Lillard missed tw o 3 -point tries. Jennings and Ilyasova each had 15 points in the first half and Milwaukee led by 17 going into the break after opening up a big first-quarter lead with a 17-0 run. The Bucks extended their lead to 2 2 p o i nts m i dway through the third quarter. Portland briefly cut the lead to eight when Lillard beat the t hird-quarter buzzer with a 3, but the Bucks went on a 7-0 run to open up the fourth, with Beno Udrih feeding Ellis for a dunk and Dunleavy hitting a 3. J.J. Hickson had 15 points and 12 rebounds for Portland. Nicolas Batum was just two of nine for seven points after injuring his wrist in practice Friday. However, he had seven rebounds and five assists. Also on Saturday:
Spurs ............ . . . . . . ... 98 Hawks...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 ATLANTA — Tony Parker had 23 points and 12 assists, a nd San A n tonio held o f f s hort-handed Atlanta for it s fourth straight victory. Grizzlies..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 Bulls ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82 C HICAGO — M a r c G a sol scored 19 points, Zach
Randolph had 13 points and 19 rebounds, and Memphis beat Chicago in overtime. Clippers.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 94 Wizards ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 87 LOS ANGELES — Chris Paul had 22 points and 11 assists, Blake Griffin added 17 points and 11 rebounds, and Los Angeles hung on to beat pesky Washington for its 24th win in 27 games. Warriors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 Hornets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . .112 NEW ORLEANS — Kl ay Thompson had a season-high 29 points,Jarrett Jack scored seven of his 25 in the final minute and Golden State beat New Orleans. Timberwolves...... . . . . . . . . 92 Rockets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79 M INNEAPOLIS — C h r i s Johnson and Mickael Gelabale signed 10-day contracts with Minnesota on Saturday morning, then scored the first 23 points of the fourth quarter to lift the Timberwolves over slumping Houston. Kings ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 97 Bobcats.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Marcus Thornton scored 18 points off the bench, Tyreke Evans came up big down the stretch, and Sacramento held on to beat Charlotte for its third win
fifth of six children of Lukasz Musial, a Polish immigrant Continued from 01 who worked at a steel and "There is only one way to wire company, and his wife, BALTIMORE — Earl pitch to Musial — under the Mary, a New York City native plate," Leo Durocher, the manWeaver, the fiery Hall of of Czech descent. Fame managerwho won His father had no interest ager of the Brooklyn Dodger and New York Giant teams 1,480 games with the Balin the frivolity of baseball, but that Musial often victimized, timore Orioles, has died, the young Musial competed in the team says. He was 82. once said. gymnastics at a Polish sports He was renowned for his The Duke of Earl, as club, developing his athleticoncentration at t h e p l ate, he was affectionately cism, and he played baseball and his patience: He struck known in Baltimore, took with balls that his mother out only 696 times in 10,972 the Orioles into the World sewed from rags and string. at-bats — or 6 percent of the Series four times over His high school didn't have time — in his 22 major league 17 seasons but won only a baseball team, but he exseasons, all as a CardinaL A one title, in1970. His.583 celled in A merican Legion gentlemanly and sunny figwinning percentage ranks play as a left-handed pitcher, ure — he loved to play "Take fifth among managers and he could hit as well. The who served10 or more Me Out to the Ball Game" C ardinals signed him to a on his harmonica — he was seasons in the 20th cenminor league contract for the tury. never ejectedfrom a game. 1938 season. When admirers approached Weaver had areputaMusial spent 1945 in the him, he chatted them up with tion as a winner, but Navy, which assigned him his familiar "whattayasay, umpires knew him asa to play baseball for its ball hothead. He was ejected whattayasay." clubs to entertain servicemen. But he otherwise had little 91 times, including once When he returned to the Carin both games of a doubledinals, he picked up where he of the glamour of the other header. stars of his era — from the had left off, winning his sec— The Associated Press World War II years to the earond battling title with a 365 ly 1960s — when baseball was average in 1946 and helping the undisputed king of sports. to propel the Cardinals to the He did not have the mystique Post-Dispatch in 2010. "There pennant, which they won in of Joe DiMaggio, the tempes- is one man that gets that re- a playoff with the Dodgers. tuousness of Ted Williams, the spect, and that's Stan Musial. They also won the World Seelectrifying presence of Willie I know El Hombre is The Man ries title, defeating the Boston Mays, the country-boy aura of i n Spanish. But he is T h e Red Sox. Mickey Mantle. His Cardinals Man." Despite Musial's consistent were far removed from the A f r ail M u sial, wearing brilliance, the Cardinals fell coastalmedia centers,and he a Cardinal red sport jacket, in the standings during the shunned controversy. came to the White House in late 1940s and '50s, when the He simplytattooed National February 2011 to receive the Dodgers and Giants National League pitching. Medal of Freedom, the na- League. M usial played o n t h r ee tion's highest civilian award, Musial thrived at the DodgWorld Series championship from President Obama, who ers' Ebbets Field, plastering teams, won three Most Valu- called him "untarnished, a be- the right-field scoreboard and able Player awards, had a ca- loved pillar of the community, hitting home runs over it, and reer batting average of .331 a gentleman you'd want your winning the grudging admiwhile playing in the outfield kids to emulate." ration of the notoriously tough and at first base, and was the There is one Gateway Arch Brooklyn fans. "I did some phenomenal fourth player inducted into the in St. Louis but two statues Baseball Hall of Fame in his of Stan the Man. Both are hitting there," he told The first year of eligibility. outside the Cardinals' Busch Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. "The He was the most cherished Stadium, the earlier one en- ballpark was small, so the Cardinal of them all in a city graved with the words of Ford seats were close to the field that witnessed the exploits of Frick, the baseball commis- and you could hear just about Grover Cleveland Alexander sioner at the time, speaking anything anybody said. Then and Rogers Hornsby, Dizzy at aceremony before Musial's I'd come to the plate and the Dean an d t h e G a shouse final game, on Sunday, Sept. fans would say, 'Here comes Gang, Enos Slaughter, Marty 29, 1963, at home against the that man again.' And a sportsMarion, Red Schoendienst, Cincinnati Reds: "Here stands writer picked it up and it beOzzie Smith, Lou Brock, Bob baseball's perfect w a r rior. came Stanthe Man." Gibson, Mark McGwire and Here stands baseball's perfect The nickname, attributed Albert Pujols. knight." to Bob Broeg of The St. Louis Pujols, the slugger from S tanley F r an k Mus i a l P ost-Dispatch, stayed w i t h the Dominican Republic, was was born on Nov. 21, 1920, Musial as he piled up the hits. sometimes saluted as El Hom- in Donora, Pa., a zinc and M usial retired after t h e bre as he neared the end of his s teel mill t ow n s om e 3 0 1963 season, having played time in St. Louis. miles from Pittsburgh where in 24 All-Star Games. He was "I don't want to be called smokestacks sent grime aloft elected to the Hall of Fame in that," he told The St. Louis around the clock. He was the 1969.
Orioles manager Weaverpasses
.2 •
•
in four games. Jazz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 109 Cavaliers ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 98 SALT LAKE CITY — Randy Foye scored 20 points, Derrick Favors had a season-high 19 and Utah beat Cleveland.
NBA SCOREBOARD Standings NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PST EASTE BN CONFERE NCE W L Pct GB d-Miamt 26 12 684 d-New York 25 13 658 d-Indiana 25 16 610 2'/2 Brooklyn 24 16 600 3 Chicago 23 16 590 3 1/2 Atlanta 22 18 550 5 Milwaukee 21 18 538 5'/2 Boston 20 19 513 e~/p Philadelphia 17 23 425 10 Orando 14 25 359 12'Iz Detroit 14 25 359 12'lz Toronto 14 26 350 13 Charlotte fo 30 250 17 Cleveland 10 32 238 18 Washington 8 3 0 211 18 WEST ERN CONFE RENCE W L Pct GB d-Oklahoma City 32 8 800 d-LA. Clippers 32 9 780 '/2 d-SanAntonio 32 11 744 1'I~ Memphis 26 13 667 5'lz GoldenState 24 15 615 7'/z Denver 24 18 571 9 utah 22 19 537 10'/z Portland 20 20 500 12 Houston 21 21 500 12 Minnesota 17 20 459 13'lz LA. Lakers 17 22 436 14'Iz Dallas 17 24 415 15'lz Sacramento 16 25 390 16'/z NewOrleans 13 27 325 19 Phoenix 13 28 317 19'I~
5 15 3-3 13,Udoh0-2 0-0 0,Dunleavy4-73-3 14, Daniels0-00-00, Udrih3-40-06, Henson1-33-45, Dalembed 0-10-00. Totals 39-88 26-32 110.
PORTLAND (104)
Summaries Saturday'sGames
Bucks 110, Blazers 104 MILWAUKEE (110) Mbah aMoute3-111-3 7, llyasova10-144-427, Sanders4-11 0-0 8, Jennings9-2012-15 30, Ellis
21 23 19 29 — 92
-s
.'I
Kings97, Bobcats 93
Batum2-92-27, Aldridge 5-1210-1020, Hickson 5-10 5-7 15,Lillard9-215-6 26,Matthews8-184-4 sAGRAME NT0I97) 21, Freeland0-00 00,Smith0-00-00, Babbitt4-90Salmons2-40-04, Thompson 5-61-211, Cous011, claver0-00-00,Barton1-10-12, Price0-02-2 i n s 8-19 1-217, I.Thomas 4-117-815, Evans6-10 2,Jeff ries0-10-00.Totals34-81 28-32104. 4-4 16, Thornton 6-u 2-2 18, Robinson0-1 0-0 0, Milwaukee 30 32 22 26 — 110 Portland 19 26 31 28 — 104 Johnson4-8 1-19, Brooks0-42-22, Hayes0-3 0-0 0, Ga r c i a2 40 05. Totals37-81 18-21 97. 3-Point Goal— s Milwaukee 6-18 (IIyasova 3-3, CHARLOTTE (93) Dunleavy3-5, MbahaMoute0-1, Jennings0-4, Ellis Kidd-Gilchrist 1-4 2-4 4, Warrick 3-7 6-8 12, 0-5), Portland8-28 (Babbitt 3-8, Lillard 3-9, Batum Biyombo0-0 0-00, Walker 6-171-1 14,Henderson 1-z Matthews1-8, Jeffries0-1). FouledOut—None. 1-2 15,Haywood3-5 3 5 9, Gordon4-10 1-2 Rebounds —Milwaukee 52 Illyasova 14), Portland 7-15 sessions5-10 5-716, Adrien 2-3 5-7 9, Taylor 54 (Aldridge14).Assists—Milwaukee26 (Jennings 1z 2-2 2 Totals 31-72 26-38 93. 8), Portland19(Lilard 10).Total Fouls—Milwaukee 0-1 25 26 27 19 — 97 22, Portland25.Technicals Sanders 2, Matthews. Sacramento Charlotte 20 26 30 17 — 93 Ejected —Sanders. A—20,487(19,980).
Clippers 94, Wizards87 WASHINGTON (87) Webster 1-7 0-0 3, Nene6-14 0-1 12, Okafor 3 4 0 3 6, Price2-4 1-3 7, Beal5-11 0-0 I3, Wall 7-16 10-14 24,Seraphin2-7 0-0 4, Ariza3-7 3-4 11,Jo.crawlord1-51-1 3,Booker2-20-1 4.Totals 32-7715-27 87. LA. CLIPPERS (94) Butler 3-90-06, Griffin5-187-1017,Jordan2-6 0-2 4, paul6-16B922, Green3 40 07,Jacrawtord 3-131-27, Bames3-73-410,0dom2-40-24, Bledsoe4-82-211,Turiat0-10-00,Hill3-70-06. Totals 34-93 21-31 94. Washington 22 18 24 23 — 87 LA. Clippers 24 2 3 26 21 — 94
d-divisionleader
Saturday's Games SanAntonio98,Atlanta 93 Sacramento 97, Charlotte 93 Memphis85,Chicago82,OT Minnes ota92,Houston79 Golden state116, Ne worleans n2 utah109,Cleveland98 Milwaukee n 0, portland104 L.A. Clippers94,Washington 87 Today'sGames LA. Lakers at Toronto, 10a.m. Dallas atDrlando,3 p.m. Bostonat Detroit, 4:30p.m. OklahomaCity at Denver,5 pm. Monday'sGames Indianaat Memphis,10 a.m. Sacramento atNewOrleans,10 a.m. Minnesota atAtanta, n a.m. Houston at charlotte, u a.m. BrooklynatNewYork, fz30 p.m. LA. ClippersatGoldenState, f p.m. SanAntonioatPhiladelphia, 4 pm. LA. Lakersat Chicago,6:30p.m. Wash<ngton at Portland, 7p.m.
Minnesota
Warriors 116, Hornets 112 GOLDEN STATE(116) Barnes 1-2 0-1 2, Landry3-9 5-6 11, Ezeli 5-9 3-313, Curry 5-178-10 20,Thompson11-16 2-2 29, Biedrins0-10-0 0, Green2-2 0-0 5, Jack7-13 10-11 25,Jefferson 4 82-2 11, Jenkins0-0 0-0 0, Tyler 0-0 0-0 0,Bazemore0-0 0-0 0.Totals 38-77 30-35 116. NEWORLEANS(112) Aminu r-9 0-1 14,Davis9-12 2-7 20, Lopez12 0-0 2, vasquez3-100-0 8, Gordon7-16 6-7 23, Anderson8-141-219, Mason5-70-012, Henry 0 f 1-21, Smith1-2 2-24, Rivers4-60-0 8,Thomas0-0 1-21. Totals 45-7913-23112. GoldenState 33 34 18 31 — 116 Newerleans 27 3 032 23 — 112
Spurs 98, Hawks93 'IIL
SANANTONIO(98)
Leonard484414, Diaw 47 00 9, Splitter 7-0 0-014, Parker10-223-523, Green3-9 0-07, Blair371-2 t, Jackson 0-30-00, Neal2-90-04, Decol0120-03, Bonner 7-80-0 17.Totals 41-86 8-1198.
ATLANTA (93) Smith 8-155-8 21, Horford4-111-2 9 Pachulia 2-40-04, Teague 6-164-416, Korver7-120-019, Johnson1-30-0 z Harris 4-83-6 13, Jenktns3-12 2-29, Scott0-20-00, TolliNero-20-00. Totals 3585 15-22 93. San Antonio Atlanta
'-@Neg
Grizzlies 85, Bulls 82 (OT)
Benll: February16
MEMPHIS(85) Gay 6-194-6 16,Randolph6-201-413, Gasol 7-10 5-8 19, conley5-11 3-5 13, Allen 3 63-4 9, Bayless1-30-02, Spetghts2-71-1 5, Arthur4-7 0-0 8, Ellington 0-10-0 0.Totals 34-8417-28 85.
BROUGHT TD YO U BY
cHIGAG0 I82)
Butler 5-13 8-B 18, Boozer7-19 3-6 17, Noah 5-11 0-0 10,Hinrich 1-4 0-0 3,Hamilton 2-71-1 5, Robinson 5-150-011, Belinelli 3 91-28, Gibson3 7 4-410, Cook0-00-0 0, Teague0-0 0-0 0 Moham med0-00-00,Radmanovic0-00-00.TotaIs31-85 17-21 82. Memphis 18 26 16 16 9 — 85 Chicago 22 12 13 29 6 — 82
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Jazz109, Cavaliers 98
CLEVELAND (98) Gee2-70-05,Thompson5-9 2-3 12,Zeller6-12 1-2 13, Irving 7-202-218, Miles4-0 3-312, waiters HOUSTON (79) Parsons2-1022 7, Patterson1-3 0 03, Asik1-4 6-1410-1223,Walton 3-50-0 7, Livingston0-3 6-8 6, Leuer01 000, casspi 00000, parg000000, 0-0 2, un 3-12c-e 12,Harden5-18 8-1018, Smith Jones 1-10-02 Totals 34-83 24-3098. c-90-012, Delfin05-121-215, Beverley0-42-42, UTAH I109) Morris 1-30-0 3, Douglas1-3 2-2 5. Totals 25-lij Ma Williams1-5 2-2 5,Millsap3-7 2-3 8,Jeftee 21-28 79. son 7-140-014, Tinsley5-70-011, Foye8-15 0-0 MINNESOTA (92) 2-101-2 5, Favors r-11 5-719, watson Kirilenko 8-11 5-8 21, Williams 3-9 4-4 11, 20, Hayward Stiemsma 0-40-0 0, Rubio1-35-6 7, Ridnour6-13 0-1 0 0 0,Burks04 0-0 0, Kanter7-80-0 14, car0-1 0-00, Evans0-0 0-00 3-3 16 Barea5-13 0-0 11, Amundson0-1 0-0 0, roll 5-7 3-3 13 Murphy Totals 45-90 13-17109. Johnson4-4 7-8 15, Gelabale3-6 5-7 u. Totals Cleveland 23 25 20 30 — 98 30-64 29-3692. utah 26 27 31 25 — 109 Houston 16 22 21 20 — 79
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Wrestling Continued from D1 "This is definitely a step in the right direction," said Huffman, whose squad has been zeroed in on the 4A state title all season. Culver also sealed its championship with a victory at 126 pounds, but in much more dramatic fashion. The Bulldogs were tied 36-36 with Lowell with just two matches to go before Kasch, Culver's three-time defending state champion, defeated Red Devil junior Chasen Clayton 13-7. Kasch led just 7-6 after the first two periods but recorded two takedowns and earned two near-fall points in the final period to secure the 2A/IA Classic title, Culver's first tournament championship of the season. "This team needed this," said Bulldog coach J.D. Alley, whose squad is eying its seventh consecutive state title this season. "It's halfway through the season and this is the first trophy we've taken home." Lowell, which ha s t aken second at state behind Culver each ofthe past three seasons, jumped out to a 30-6 lead after the first six matches. Mitch Adams snapped the Bulldogs out
of their funk, though, by pinning Noah Casarez 45 seconds into the two w restlers' 195pound match. Culver closed out the 2A/IA final by winning six of the last seven matches, including Kasch's victory at
TENNIS
Crook County's Dean Smith celebrates after pinning Sweet Home's Brian Malloy during their 160-pound match in the Class 4A finals of the Oregon Wrestling Classic on Saturday evening in the Hooker Creek Event Center at the Deschtues County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond.
SllBrBpOYBreBdles
Aussie Openquarters By John Pye
fourth-round surprise like she did here last year with an upMELBOURNE, A us - set win over Serena Williams. tralia — Maria Sharapova Kerber and Makarova were beat Kirsten Flipkens 6- two of only four women in 2012 I, 6-0 today to continue a to beat Williams, who lost only dominant and unparalleled one match in the second half of run to the Australian Open last season as she collected tiquarterfinals. tles at Wimbledon, the London T he No. 2-r a n k ed Olympics, the U.S. Open and Sharapova conceded only the WTA Championships. "Seems like it was the same five games in her first four matches, a record atthe this year and last year. Unbeseason's first major. lievable feeling," M akarova "Well I'm certainly hap- said. "I really like to play here. py to be playing this well The crowd is so perfect." but ... it only gets tougher In the first men's match tofrom here," said Sharapo- day, fourth-seeded David Ferva, who is playing her first rer had a 6-2, 6-1, 6-4 win over tournament of 2013 after No. 16 Kei Nishikori of Japan not playing an exhibition to reach th e q u arterfinals, match inSouth Korea and a where he will meet Spaniard warmup event at Brisbane Nicolas Almagro. Nishikori had won two of because of an injured right collarbone. his previous three matches The reigning French with Ferrer and was a quarterOpen champion is showing finalist in Australia last year, no signs of trouble with the but struggled with 65 unforced collarbone in Melbourne. errors in the 2-hour, 10-minute Steffi Graf conceded only match. Almagro advanced later eight games in her opening four matches here in 1989, today, leading 6-2, 5-1 when when she won the second N o. 8Janko Tipsaveric retired of her three straight Aus- from their fourth-round match. tralian Open titles. Monica It will be the first all-Spanish Seles matched that mark. quarterfinal at the Australian S harapova h a s b e e n Open since 2011, when Ferrer even more dominant.She ended Rafael Nadal's bid for a started with a pair of 6-0, 6- sequence of four consecutive 0 wins — the first time that major titles. N o. 1- r a nke d Nov a k has happened at a major since 1985 — and then beat Djokovic, who has the past two s even-time Grand S l a m Australian titles, had a night winner Venus Williams 6-1, match against No. 15 Stanislas 6-3 in the third round. Wawrinka. She next plays fellow On Saturday night, No. 2Russian Ekaterina Makaro- ranked Roger Federer knocked va, who ousted fifth-seeded Bernard Tomic out of the tourAngelique Kerber 7-5, 6-4. nament to end Australia's parSharapova beat Makarova ticipation in the singles. in the quarterfinals here Federer gave the 20-year-old last year on her way to the Aussie an instant reality check final. by breaking him in the very "I really want t o p l ay first game, ending Tomic's run against Mariabecause Ilost of 76 service games unbroken, here last year," Makarova to set up a 6-4, 7-6 (5), 6-1 win. said. "Now I'm pretty confiFederer next plays big-servdent and I like my game. ing Canadian Milos Raonic, "Last year I was so sur- who had a 7-6 (4), 6-3, 6-4 prised ... and I had so many win over Germany's Philipp thoughts in my mind. This Kohlschreiber. year I'm a little bit used to it, so I think I'll be ready to The Associated Press
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
126 pounds. "If it comes down to one guy, I'm going to pick Jared Kasch," Alley said. "I was pretty hap-
pion Dallas 48-18 in the 5A championship match, and Glide cruisedpast Vale 55-24 for the 3A title. Redmond High was the py (before the match) when only other Central Oregonteam I figured out where we were to place at the Classic, which ending." drew 80 teams to the two-day Elsewhere in t h e t o urna- high school tournament. The ment, David Douglas defeated Panthers avenged a pool-play Crater 33-29 in the 6A final defeat to Sandy on Friday with — Crater upset Roseburg in the a 49-27 win over the Pioneers semifinal round — Hermiston on Saturday to place third in routed reigning 5A state cham- the 5A division. Mountain View
lost in the quarterfinals to Dallas, and Madras fell to Crook County in the quarters. After competing in the "unofficial" dual-meet state championships on Friday and Saturday, Crook County, Culver and Redmond all wrestle in t he Reser's Tournament of Champions at H i llsboro's Liberty High next weekend. — Reporter: 541-383-0305, beastes@bendbulletin.com.
en s iersswee a ac eor Bulletin staff report MOUNT BACHELOR Bend High skiers topped the team and individual standings Saturday in O regon School Ski Association alpine racing on the I-5 run at Mt. Bachelor ski area. The Lava Bears' Keenan Seidel placed first in the boys slalom competition with a combined two-run time of 1 minute, 4.07 seconds. Summit's Jared Schiemer was a close second in I:04.50, and Bend's Mitchell Cutter finished third in I:06.56. The Bend High boys were first among f ou r c o mplete teams, winning with a combined time of 3:19.38. Sum-
PREP ROUNDUP
Rogue Valley Adventist... . .46 T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . . . 13 MEDFORD — The Saints NORDIC SKIING are now 0-8 in Class 1A Mountain Valley L e ague action Cougars sweep HOODOO — With five top- and 1-14 overall after falling 10 individual placers in each to the Hawks. Shu Akiyama scored six points and Nate race, Mountain View swept the boys and girls divisions Carpenter blocked seven shots of the 5,500-meter Oregon for Trinity Lutheran, which I nterscholastic Sk i R a c i ng hosts Klamath Falls' Triad on Association B erg's C l assic Friday. at Hoodoo Mountain Resort. Butte Falls..... . . . . . . . . . . . . .74 Imran Wolfenden was the top Gilchrist.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 finisher for the boys, taking BUTTE FALLS — The Grizsecond just six seconds be- zlies were outscored 25-13 in hind South Eugene's Trevor the second quarter, putting Merrifield. The Cougars won them in a 20-point halftime the relay, helping them beat hole en route to their third straight Class IA M o untain South Eugene in the overall team standings. Summit fin- Valley League loss. Gilchrist mit (3:22.21) placed second, ished fourth as a team, paced (4-4 MVL, 7-7) hosts Silver Redmond (4:05.16) finished by Alex Martin's third-place Lake's North Lake on Friday. third, and Sisters (4:31.40) was showing. For the girls, four GIRLS BASKETBALL fourth. C ougars placed in t h e t o p South Wasco County...... . 41 On the girls side, the Lava eight, led by Melanie Nacht- Central Christian..... . . . . . . 25 Bears' Brooke Kelley took first mann's fifth-place effort. With REDMOND — Desi Duke place with a two-run time of those top performances and scored a game-high 11 points, I:08.74. Elinor Wilson, also of a second-place finish in the but the Tigers registered just Bend, was second in I:09.20, relay, Mountain View edged three field goals and missed and Summit's Madison Archu- South Eugene by one point in 22 of their 41 free throws beleta was third in I:10.52. the team standings. Summit's fore dropping their Class IA Bend also won th e g i r ls Micaela Martin won the inBig Sky League contest to the team competition with a time dividual race in 22 minutes, Redsides. Central Christian (0of 3:29.00. Summit (4:14.33) 8 seconds, as the Storm took 7 BSL, 2-13) visits Dufur for a was second and the only other fifth as a team. league matchup on Tuesday. BOYS BASKETBALL team with a c omplete team Rogue Valley Adventist .....44 T rinity Lutheran ..... . . . . . . . 43 time. South Wasco County....... 86 Both Seidel and Kelley were Central Christian.... . . . . . . . 28 MEDFORD — After trailREDMOND — The Tigers ing for most of the game, the also individual winners in the previous week's season-open- dropped to 0-8 in Class IA Big Saints took a four-point lead ing OSSA competition, a giSky League play after losing with less than a minute to go. ant slalom race on Bachelor's to the Redsides at home. Caleb The Hawks answered with Cliffhanger run. Stewart finished with 10 points five straight points to go ahead Next Saturday's OSSA meet to pace Central Christian (1-12 by one, and after gaining poswill be a slalom competition at overall), which will travel to session with five seconds left, Dufur on Tuesday for a BSL Trinity Lutheran could not get Hoodoo. In other Saturday action: contest. a shot off before the buzzer,
falling in its Class 1A Mountain Valley League contest. Megan Clift paced the Saints with 12 points and five steals, and Katie Murphy chipped in with 10. Trinity Lutheran (3-5 MVL, 7-8) entertains Triad of Klamath Falls on Friday. Butte Falls..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 51 Gilchrist.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 39 BUTTE FALLS — Despite a
game-high 28 points by Ashley James, the Grizzlies could not overcome a 21-14 halftime deficit and fell to the Loggers in a Class IA Mountain Valley League contest. Sydney Longbotham added five points and eight rebounds for Gilchrist (2-6 MVL, 4-9), which hosts North Lake on Friday. Prospect ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44 North Lake...... . . . . . . . . . . . 25 S ILVER LAK E — M o l l y Phillips led the Cowgirls with seven points and Karah Davidson added five steals, but it was not enough as North Lake fell to the Cougars in Mountain Valley League play. The Cowgirls (1-7 MVL, 3-9) are at Gilchrist on Friday.
5
play a good game."
IN !
WILSONSof Redmond
No. 19-seeded Makarova took out the highest seed to tumble so far at the season's first major, causing another
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December 2012
PREP SCOREBOARD Wrestling Saturday'sresults OregonWrestling Classic At the DeschtttesCounty Fair a ExpoCenter in Redmond Class 6Afinal — DavidDouglas33,Crater 29 Class 5Afinal — Hermiston48, Dallas18 Class 4Afinal — CrookCounty43, Sweet Home 33 Class 3Afinal — Glide55,Vale24 Class 2A/1Afinal — Cuvet45, Lowell 36
Girls basketball Saturday'sresults Class1A Big SkyLeague SOUTHWASCOCOUNTY(41) — ZoeMoteli 8,MolyFoteaker8,RoxanneO'Neal8,Popchock6, R. Morelli 4, DiBartolo3, Schmitz2,Kelly 2, Hisatake. Totals 1511-24 41. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN (25) — Desi Duke11, McAfee5, Stealey5, Hannay4, S.Brunoe, Allen. Totals 319-41 25. Sottt hWascocounty 7 12 9 13 — 41 C entral Christian 7 5 1 0 3 — 2 5 Three-pointgoals— None.
Mountain Valley League GILCHRIST(39) — AshleyJames2B, Longbotham 5, Shuey4, C James2, Krohnke, Archer, Lowell, Bean.Totals 1311-25 39. BUTTEFALLS(51) — Funk13, Hobbs11, Kirpatrick 9,Weaver 8, Cteech5, Stubbs5,White. Totals 20 10-25 51. Gilchrist 8 6 14 11 — 39 Butte Falls 12 9 11 19 — 51 Three-point goals —Gilchrist: A. James;Butte Fa Is:Funk. TRINITY LUTHERAN (43) Megan Clill 12, Murphy10,Spencer5, Sample 4, Carpenter 4, Eidler 4, Cowan 2, Martin Z Totals186-1543. ROGUE VALLEYADVENTIST (44) — Kendra
Haugett14,Petray10, Scott 9, Bates 4 Gilmore3, Bartley 2,Zamora2. Totals 16 9-16 44. Trinity Lutheran 5 11 1 4 13 — 43 Rogue Valley Advetttists 11 11 14 — 44 Three-pointgoals Trinity Lutheran:Spencer; Rogue Valley Adventist: Scott 2, Pettay.
Boys basketball Saturday'sresults Class1A Big SkyLeague SOUTH WASCOCOUNTY(86) —David Ocacio 22, Damm antt 15,Myers 10,Correa8, C. Nannini 7, Creel 7 Duling 6,Raget 5, Hayes4, Grace 2,T. Nannini. Totals 385-7 86. CENTRAL CHRISTIAN (28) — CalebStewatr 10, Sibley 7, Eells 4, Roberts 3, Kruse2, Poole1, Davis 1,Koo.Totals11 5-18 28. SouthWascoCounty 36 20 14 16 — 86 C entral Christian 4 6 6 12 — 2 8 Three-pointgoals— SouthWasco County: Dammann 3,Myers2; Central Christian: Sibley.
Mountain Valley League TRINITY LUTHERAN(13) — ShuAkiyama6, Carpenter4,G.Philis 2, Nihei l, L Phillis, Alnip, Law, Kruger,Dunn,C. Kttauss,D. Ktauss, Olatto.Totals 61-813. ROGUE VALLEYADVENTIST (46) — Micah Neufeld10,Armstrong9, Alvatez7, Wood6 Allen 6, James4, Bornemann3, Mailand1, Petray,Katzenbach Totals 197-11 46. Trinity Lutheran 1 2 8 2 — 13 Rogue Valley Adventist10 21 7 8 — 46
Three-point goals — Trinity Lutheran:None,
RogueValley Adventist: Bornema nt.
Alpine skiing Saturday'sresults OSSA Slalom At Mt. Bachelorski area's I-5
Boys
Team scores — 1, Bend,3:19.38. 2, Summ it, 3:22.21. 3,Redmond,4:05.16.4, Sisters 4:31.40. Top 10 combined times — 1,KeenanSeidel, Bend,1:0407. 2,JaredSchiemer, Summit, 10450. 3, Mitchell Cutter,Bend,h06.56.4, ThomasWimberllI Summit, 1:07.24. 5,Javier Colton, Bend,1:0934. 6, MatthewScheater, Bend,1:09.62. 7, Wiliam Mayer, Summit, 1;10.47. 8, BrodySwisher, Bend,1:0.03 9, SamuelNelson,Bend,1:l1.31. 10,Jack Pepper, Summit, 1:13.24. Girls Teamscore s— 1,Bend,3:29.00.2,Summit, 4:l4.33. Top 10 combined times — 1, BrookeKelley, Bend, 1:08.74. 2, ElinorWilson, Bend,1:09.20. 3, Madison AtchuleIa, Summit, 1:10.52 4, Kiki Nakamura-Koyama,Bend, 1:ll.06. 5, Shelby Cutter, Bend, 1:15.1Z 6, LuciaCharlton, Bend,1:19.30. 7, JacquelineAdler,Bend,1:21.t t 8, ShannonBrennan, Bend,1:25.22 9,CammiBenson,Sisters,1:2747.10, NatalIeMerrill, Summit, h28.38.
Nordic skiing Saturday'sresults OISRABerg's Classic at Hoodoo Girls Teamscores — Mountain View30, South Eugene31,NorthEugene47 Ashland64,Summil75. Top10 — 1, MicaelaMartin, Sum,2208.2, Phacelia Cramer, SE,22.14. 3, HelenCuting, NE,23:OZ4, ClaraHottsInger,A,23:13. 5, MelanieNachtmantt, MtI 23:55. 6,TiaHaton, MV,24:11. 7, RyleNiitolaus, MtI 24:52. 8,AveryVanDuzer, MV,25:03. 9, Claile Pelill, NE, 2509.T10,RaeannMoteli, MV,25:10.T10,Anne Famey,SE,25:10. Boys Team scores — MountainView18,South Eugene31,Sheldon67,Summit77,Ashland98. Top10 1, TrevorMerrifield,SE,1818 2, Imtan Wolienden, MV,18:24. 3,AlexMartin, Sum,18:35.4, SamKing, MV,19:03 5,DevonCalvin, Sis,19:20. 6, DakotaThornton, MV,1929. 7, Gabriel Wihtol, SE, 19:38 8, DylanGilespie, MV,19:59.9, Adi Wolfenden, MV,20:26.10, LangdonJunge,Shel, 20:34.
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D6 TH E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
AFC
Ravens atPatriots
Continued from 01 That Lewis and Brady will bring a mutual admiration society to Gillette Stadium adds some flattery to what has become an intense rivalry. "Both sides understand the game of football," Lewis said. "There have been some great, great rivalries and we have one of those going on with New England now." Adds Brady: "It's really a pleasure to play against him. He's really been so consistent over the years and durable and tough. He's so instinctive." At the forefront in this rematch, naturally, is Brady, who has won three NFL titles and would be only the second player to reach six Super Bowls by leading New England (13-4) past Baltimore (12-6). And there's Lewis, the most dominant inside linebacker the league has seen s ince the heyday of M i k e Singletary. Brady is all about composure, accuracy and even sophistication. Lewis brings
About the Ravens: Are 8-
5 on road in postseason, best among teamsthat have played at least10
games.... QBJoeFlacco is tied with Eli Manning for most road playoff wins at five.... In past three
games vs. Patriots, Flacco is1-2 but his stats are outstanding: 77-of-110
(70 percent) for 973 yards with seven TDs vs. two INTs and a110.9 passer rating.... Torrey Smith
has averaged24.4yards per catch in four playoff
games. Adout the Patriots:
They are14-3 at homein playoffs, including 4-0 in AFC title games.... Tom
Brady is17-6 in playoffs and is NFL all-time leader
in playoff completions (524j.... WesWelker has most career postseason receptions (61j in franchise history and Deion Branch the most
receiving yards (836) in franchise playoff history. Prediction: Patriots, 27-24. Look for Ravens to keep it closer than
aggression, ferocity and mayhem to the field. An odd couple, indeed, but one that appreciates the attributes of the other. "He doesn't give up hardly any plays, makes a ton of tackles," Brady said of the 37year-old Lewis, who missed 10 games with a right triceps injury, but has been a tackling machine in the postseason. "He's great in the pass game, great in the run game. He blitzes well, like he did a few years ago. He's really a playmaker for them, so they give him an opportunity to make those plays. You see when he makes a play, their whole sideline gets really amped up." No one can be more amped up for this opportunity than Lewis. No one, of course, raises his teammates to a more fevered pitch than Lewis. But what the Ravens need today is discipline to go with the fervor. Otherwise, Brady will pick them apart. For all t h e e nergy a nd clutch plays Baltimore's defense has made since Lewis returned, it remains vulnerable because it's three big-
expected andkeepthe finesse-oriented Patriots offense on its heels, but in the end Brady will find
a way. — From wire services gest stars — Lewis, safety Ed Reed, outside LB Terrell
Suggs — are aging and not nearly 100 percent healthy. There's also the exhaustion factor: The Ravens have played one more postseason game than the Patriots, and went into the sixth period last week at Denver. "In all honesty, I thought we were as fresh in the overtime game the other day as we looked at any time during the year," Ravens defensive coordinator Dean Pees said. "I think at this point in time during the year, too, everybody is a little fatigued. "But at the same time, your adrenaline is pumping, and the emotion is a lot different now than it is if you're playing the seventh ballgame of
NFC
It's just different. You've got to find a way to pull a little more out of you, and I think the guys do. I think everybody does that — both teams." The leaders of those teams, Brady an d L e w is, a r en't exactly one-man bands. Indeed, Brady seems to make everyone into a star — witness third-string r u n ning back Shane Vereen's three touchdowns against Houston — and Lewis isn't the best Raven on defense right now, end Paul Kruger is. Baltimore must deal with Wes Welker and Aaron Hernandez, Brady's top targetsstar tight end Rob Gronkowski is out with a broken left arm — and 1,000-yard rusher Stevan Ridley. The Ravens need to find a way to penetrate a line that yielded only 27 sacks, second in the AFC. Kruger (nine sacks in regular season, 2'/2 in playoffs) is the main threat, and Suggs has been coming on since returning from an Achilles tendon injury. DT Haloti Ngata is a handful, as good as his counterpart with the Patriots, Vince Wilfork. It also must be r emembered that Ravens QB Joe Flacco outplayed Brady in the 23-20 AFC championship defeat last January. Flacco and receivers Anquan Boldin, Torrey Smith and Jacoby Jones havebeen particularly dangerous on deep balls in this postseason. N o m a tter w h o fi n d s his way into the spotlight, though, he won't shove aside Lewis or Brady. Lewis thinks it is an honor to face Manning and then Brady in consecutive weeks. Then again, it's a necessity if Lewis is going to end his career hoisting the Lombardi Trophy. "You're talking about arguably the top two or three greatest quarterbacks of all time," Lewis said. "So when you go from Peyton Manning
Continued from 01 They want to follow in the footsteps of those magnificent teams that captured five Super Bowls titles in the 1980s and '90s, led by giants of the game such as Joe Montana, Jerry Rice and Steve Young. The Falcons? They've never won even a single Super Bowl. Heck, they've only gotten that far one time, during the 1998 season when a c h arismatic bunch known as the "Dirty Birds" shockingly made a run to the big game — and was p romptly blown out b y t h e Denver Broncos in John Elway's finale. "They're trying t o r ecapture greatness," Falcons safety Thomas DeCoud said. "We're trying to break the ceiling on it."
Harbaugh looked like a genius when K aepernick r an all over the Packers in a 45-31 victory, turning in one of the great performances in playoff history. It wasn't so much that he passed for 263 yards and two touchdowns. What really stood out was what he did when he kept the ball himself. Kaepernick scored two touchdownsincluding a 56-yarder in which he looked more like Michael Johnson than a football player — and finished with 181 yards rushing, a postseason record for a quarterback. "He's super fast, athletic and he can throw the ball," 49ersrunning back LaMichael James said. "But once he takes off, he's faster than a lot of run-
to Tom Brady, you're going from IA to IA . It's not like
you get a drop-off. "Playing against Brady
and just watching him sometimes, you're always in awe on watching on how good he really is." Better not watch too much, Ray. Or retirement will be at the season playing 87 plays. hand.
yards (NFL record for a quarterback) and two TDs in 45-31 division-round
win over GreenBay. He has a 98.7 passer rating and is 6-2 as a starter.... San Francisco led NFL with nine players selected to Pro Bowl.... Michael Crabtree had nine catches for119 yards and two TDs vs. Packers.... The49ers tied for second-fewest giveaways in NFL with16. About the Falcons: QB Matt Ryan's 56 regularseason wins in first five
5%4l
posts100-plus rating. ... Michael Turner and Jacquizz Rodgers combined for 162 rush has five straight seasons of10-plus rushing TDs....
Roddy White (1,351) and Julio Jones (1,198) are first Falcons teammates with
1,000 receiving yards in same season since1998. Prediction: 49ers, 30-20. Falcons, who are fortunate to get this far after blowing big lead last week against Seattle, won't be able to contend with 49ers' multitude of playmakers. — From wire services ning backs and linebackers. He's an incredible athlete." While certainly aware of their team's proud background, most of these San Francisco players were molded by adversity. The 49ers went eight straight seasons without a winning record or trip to the playoffs until Harbaugh arrived in 2011 from nearby Stanford and immediately turned things around. The team went 13-3, won the NFC West and advanced to the conferencechampionship, where a fumbled punt return in overtime led to a wrenching 20-17 loss to the New York Giants. San Francisco doesn't want another chance to get away. "This opportunity is rare," linebacker Patrick Willis said. "It doesn't come that often even
The Falcons are coming off their first playoff win since the 2004 season, erasing a major stumbling block w it h t h eir 30-28 victory over the Seattle Seahawks. It wasn't nearly as easy as the 49ers' victory. A fter squandering a 2 0 point lead in what would have been thegreatest fourth-quarter collapse ever in the playoffs, Matt Ryan brought Atlanta back in the final 30 seconds. Living up his nickname "Matty Ice," the fifth-year quarterback completed two long passes to set up Matt Bryant's 49-yard field goal with eight seconds remaining. After going one-and-done in his first three trips to the playoffs, Ryan is finally a postseason winner. A burden has been lifted,for sure. "It's a good thing to get that first win out of the way," he said. "I think that everyone did a great job of not letting it distract us, but it can be distracting." Now, to get started on a playoff winning streak. "I feel the same as I did last week," Ryan insisted. "When you walk in and you turn on the film on a Monday or a Tuesday and you're getting ready to play your next game, there's a whole new laundry list of problems that you need to address. That's more of where my focus has been, and I think that's where it needs to be."
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1 10 W AY S T O D I S C O V E R . 'The Bulletin C ENT R A L O R E G O N PRESENTINGA COLLECTION PreSenting the area'SmOStCOmPrehenSiVe guide tO PlaCeS, eVentSaiid aCtiVitieS to keeP you
entertained throughouttheyear. The Bulletin's 110 Ways to Discover Central Qregon is one of the most comprehensive visitors' guide in the tri-county area This colorful, information-packed magazine can be found at Central Oregon resorts, Chambers of Commerce and other key points of interest, including tourist kiosks across the state, It is also offered to Deschutes County Expo Center visitors throughout the year.
OF ORIGINALLOCALLY WRITTEN,AWARD-WINNING MAGAZINESANDEVENT GUIDESPUBLISHEDBY THE BULLETIN
HOVE RTISERS: LOONIN GFOR llNIOUE , LOCHL HQYE RTIBING -: OPP ORTUNITIES?
W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: publishing twoeditions a year Spring/Summer: April (Date to be announced) Fall/Winter: October (Date to be announced)
il Ilf •
year."
yards last week. Turner, 30,
NEED AN IDEA FOR HOW TO SPEND YOUR FREE TIME? THIS GUIDE HAS 110 IDEAS.
I
"We were so excitedafter winning th e S aints game," Smith said. "This was, 'All right, we took care of business, find out who we play, it's Atlanta, let's go down there and take care of business and try to get to the big one.' It definitely had a different feeling than last
Team is 20-0 when he
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playoffs.
seasons is NFLrecord.
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(eight) years before that we were at home and didn't make the playoffs. Just to have that opportunity again to be here is one of those things we don't take for granted. We know that window for chances like that are slim and we have to take advantage of the opportunity." Defensive end Justin Smith noticed a divergent mind-set after the victory over the Packers, compared to what he felt a year earlier, when the 49ers pulled out a last-second win over the Saints in the divisional
About the 49ers: Colin Kaepernick rushed for 181
While the Falcons (14-3) are the NFC's top seed and playing at home, they opened as a three-point underdog against the 49ers (12-4-1), who looked unstoppable in last week's rout of the Green Bay Packers in the divisional round. The most dynamic player on that field was a quarterback who began the season as a backup. Colin Kaepernick took over the starting job when Alex Smith was injured, and coach Jim Harbaugh made the bold decision to keep it that way even when Smithhealed. Never mind that the former starter had led San Francisco to the NFC title game a year ago and was one of the top-rated passers in the league this season.
if we werehere last year.The
49ers atFalcons
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Your complete guide toCentral Oregon's golf mecca. The Central Oregon Golf Preview is dedicated to the golf enthusiasts of Central Oregon. The guide includes information about approximately 30 courses throughout the region and what's new in golf for 2013. The guide also includes a comprehensive golf tournament schedule, clinics and special events taking place in Central Oregon. A consumer section included in the guide highlights the newest equipment on the market,
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
reatin ue rom t in air • Canadian firm's pilot technology is designed tocapture CO,for reuse :sr sii
By Anne Eisenberg New Yorlz Times News Service
Whether streaming from the tailpipes of cars or the smokestacks of so many power plants and factories,carbon dioxide emissions keep
growing around the globe. Now a Canadian company has developed a cleansing technology that may one day capture and remove some of this heat-trapping gas directly from the sky. And it is even possible that the gas could then be sold for industrial use. Carbon Engineering, formed in 2009 with S3.5 million from Bill Gates and others, created prototypes for parts of its cleanup system in 2011 and 2012 at its plant in Calgary, Alberta. The company, which recently closed a $3 million second round of financing, plans to build a complete pilot plant by the end of 2014 for capturing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, said David Keith, its president and a Harvard professor who has long been interested in climate issues. See Carbon /E2
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t Photos by Rob Kerr/The Bulletin
The former El Jimador restaurant, located at 801 N.W. Wall St., Bend, is undergoing renovations and will open as The Drake in April. Co-owner Ted Swigert says it will be an upscale diner, complete with black-and-white checkered floor, an open kitchen, wooden bar and booth seating.
• Former El Jimador, Amalia's and Firehall to becomehomesto 3 restaurants downtown Carbon Engineenngvia New YorkTimes News Service
By Rachael Rees The Bulletin
ark w i n d ow s h a v e g r e eted would-be restaurants in several downtown Bend venues of late. The Firehall, which housed two restaurantssince 2005, has sat vacant for more than a year; El Jimador for nearly six months; and Amalia's for about eight weeks. But behind the locked doors and empty windows, leases have
i,
been signed. And a lease is pending for the former B o R estobar, which could nearly fil l a v ailable restaurant venues downtown. More than two dozen restaurants have closed downtown since 2007. Despite the number of restaurants that have come and gone overthe lastfive years,restaurateurs still believe downtown is the place to be. "Downtown's a great place, said Ted Swigert, owner of The Drake, the diner scheduled to open in the former El Jimador location in April. "I think it's always been pretty solid. "It's the hub." Downtown Bend provides more walk-in customers attending events or staying at hotels. But it's also a location that brings additional expenses, especially rent. Jeff Porad, owner of both the Bend and Redmond Brickhouse locations, decided to move the Bend restaurant from its current
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Co-owner Jenna Swigert, coowner of The
Drake, says the long, narrow space is considering the feel of an old diner in its new design, offering brunch, lunch and dinner menus.
David Keith, center of back row, is president of Carbon Engineering. By the end of next year, this Canadian company plans to build a pilot plant for capture of atmospheric carbon dioxide.
Smartphones fuel smart cars, smarter drivers By Susan Carpenter
venue on Southwest Industrial Way to the nearly 5,000-square-foot Firehall on Northwest MinnesotaAvenue and Lava Road. While business is steady at his current space, he said, it's more of a destination location. By being downtown, he hopes the proximity to hotels and the foot traffic will increase revenue. In addition, he said he'll have space for a bar, which will provide more causal dining and happy hour options. Tan Vo, owner of Pho Viet 8 Cafe on
Northeast Third Street, said he's opening a second restaurant on Northwest Wall Street in the former Amalia's. Called Sweet Saigon, the downtown restaurant will create a dozen jobs, meet community demand for a west-side location and tap into tourism. Downtown has appeal, he said. Everybody that visits Central Oregon goes downtown because of Drake Park and the bustle of activity. See Restaurants /E5
Downtownrestaurant lineup changes SWEETSAIGON
BRICKHOUSE
THE DRAKE
• 915 N.W. Wall St., formerly Amalia's,
• 5 N.W. Minnesota Ave., formerly
801 N.W. Wall St.,
will house SweetSaigon, aVietnamese restaurant planning aFebruary opening.
Bourbon Street Sea 8 SoulFood, will house
• formerly El Jimador, will house TheDrake,
the Brickhouse, a steak and seafood restaurant
an upscale diner, planning to open in April.
planning to open inApril.
The Orange County (Catif) Register
One of the most innovative automotive technologies at last week's Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas is something most drivers already own: a smartphone. Android or iPhone, it doesn't matter; the car of the near future will enInside able mobile devices to dou• Smartphone ble as car keys and to alert applications that drivers if their vehicles have are available in been hit while parked. And cars, E3 that's just the start. Among other tasks, phones soon will be used to verify that the driver is, in fact, the car's owner. They'll even beable to prove a driver's safe driving record to insurance companies and coach sportscar owners on setting up a turn. It's called the connected car. And if y ou thought it was neat just to be able to talk handsfree via Bluetooth, that's only the beginning. See Smart /E3
SEAFOOD WATCH
Curb the import appetite • U.S. shrimp processors seek newfederal tariffs to help in slowing imports
, fp.
"
By Rob Hotakainen McClatchy Newspapers
Photos by Tim Isbell / Biloxi Sun Herald
Richard Gollott holds a handful of shrimp at his Golden Gulf Coast Packing Co. in Biloxi, Miss. Gollott laments the price of shrimp and the competition from foreign markets. "You can buy shrimp cheaper than you can buy bologna right now," he said.
WASHINGTON — They survived hurricanes and oil spills, but Gulf Coast shrimp processors say there's no way they can battle foreign governments to stay in business. While Americans gobble up imported shrimp asnever before,processors from Florida to Texas say they can't compete with billions in subsidies that are propping up shrimpers in places such as China and Thailand while driving down the priceforAmerican consumers. "You can buy shrimp cheaper than you can buy bologna right now. We just don'thave the kind ofmoney and backbone to stay in business competing against these countries," said Richard Gollott Sr., a co-owner of Golden Gulf
A basket of shrimp waits to be processed at Golden Gulf Coast Packing Co. in Biloxi. Coast Packing Co. in Biloxi, Miss. With imports now accounting for more than 90 percent of the U.S. shrimp market, processors say it's time to fight back: They want thefederal government to put new tariffs on imported shrimp, making it more expensive to sell in the United States. "This is just survival. We're trying to survive, and that's what this is all about," Gollott said. See Shrimp/E3
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
BUSINESS CALENDAR Email events at least10 days before publication date to business©bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
TODAY KNOW MONEY,THE THRIFTY TRAVELER:Learn tips for traveling cheaply and well; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080.
MONDAY KNOW CRAIGSLIST: 10:30 a.m .noon; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-536-0515. GALA ATTHERIVERHOUSE: Featuring a meal, silent auction and a presentation by former NBA basketball player A.C. Green; registration requested; proceeds benefit the Boys & Girls Clubs of Central Oregon; $125; 5:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Hotel & Convention Center, 3075 N. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-617-7174 or www.river house.com/gala.
Baiocco from Click Advisors; $25 for chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 11:30 a.m.-1 p.m.; St. Charles Bend conference center, 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 541-385-1992 or director©adfedco.org. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL OF BEND:Leslie Koc will be speaking on "Enriching the Golden Years"; reservations required; $10 lunch buffet; noon; Boston's, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite140; 541728-0820, president©sibend.org or www.sibend.org. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2-3:30 p.m .; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONAL WILDFIRE CHAPTER WEEKLYMEETING: Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; 3:30 p.m.; Bend Honda, 2225 N.E. U.S. Highway 20; 541-480-1765.
KNOW MONEY,JUNK IN YOUR DRAWERS, CASH INYOUR POCKET:Learn about selling and KNOW CRAIGSLISTFOR investing in coins, metals and other BEGINNERS: 10:30 a.m.-noon; collectables; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Area Downtown Bend Public Library, Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. 541-312-1080. NEW HEALTHCAREREFORM: GETTHEBESTCARDEAL: Business success program; Presenting the workshop with over registration required; $25 for chamber 49 years experience in theautomobile members and $45 for nonmembers; industry is TomCollier, president of 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., Classic Motor Car Company Inc.; 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend;541registration required; free; 382-3221 or http://bendchamber.org/ 6 p.m.; Mid Oregon Credit Union, chamber-even ts/business-success1386 N.E. Cushing Drive, Bend; program-01. 541-382-1795. KNOW WORDII: 2-3:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, FRIDAY 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7080. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:2:30-4 p.m .; KNOW DIGITALBOOKS: 10:30 a.m.-noon; Sunriver Area East Bend Public Library, 62080 Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. 541-312-1080. OPEN COMPUTERLAB:3-4:30 p.m.; KNOW INTERNETSEARCHING: Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. 10:30a.m.-noon;Redmond Public Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: 541-312-1050. SCORE business counselors will be available every Tuesday for free one- CENTRALOREGONREALESTATE on-one small business counseling; INVESTMENTCLUB:Free; 11 no appointment necessary; free; a.m.; ServiceMaster Clean, 20806 Sockeye Place, Bend; 541-610-4006 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend or bobbleile@windermere.com. Public Library, 601 N.W.Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or www.scorecentral KNOW WORD H:2-3:30 p.m.; oregon.org. Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. BUSINESSSTARTUP WORKSHOPS: Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. For people contemplating business BUSINESSAWARDBANQUET: ownership; registration required; Redmond Chamber of Commerce $15; 6-8 p.m.; COCC — Crook award banquet and annual meeting; County Open Campus, 510S.E. Lynn RSVP required; $35 includes dinner; Blvd., Prineville; 541-383-7290. 6-9 p.m.; Eagle Crest Resort, Conference Center,1522 Cline Falls WEDNESDAY Road, Redmond; 541-923-5191 or Karen@visitredmondoregon.com. BUSINESSNETWORK INTERNATIONALBENDCHAPTER SATURDAY WEEKLYMEETING:Visitors are welcome and first two visits are free; SMALL BUSINESSCOUNSELING: 7 a.m.; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. SCORE business counselors will Reed Market Road; 541-749-0789. be available for free one-on-one KNOWDIGITALBOOKS:9:30-11 a.m.; small business counseling; no Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar appointment necessary; free; 10 St.; 541-312-1070. a.m.-noon; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312KNOW COFFEE,KNOW EBOOKS: 1050 or www.scorecentral Learn about eReaders and how to oregon.org. download eBooks and audiobooks from Deschutes Public Library KNOW MONEY,STRETCHING system; eReaders are available or YOUR FOOD DOLLARS: Learn how bring your own; free; 1:30-2:30 p.m.; to work within your food budget to Bellatazza Coffee, 869 N.W.Wall St., create healthy meals; 1:30 p.m.; East Bend; 541-617-7083. Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-330-3760. BUSINESS AFTERHOURS: 5-7 p.m.; Cellular Sales, Verizon Wireless, 1120 KNOW MONEY,JUNK IN YOUR S.E. Third St., Bend;541-678-5396. DRAWERS, CASH INYOUR POCKET:Learn about selling and investing in coins, metals and other THURSDAY collectables; 2 p.m.; Downtown JANUARYADBITE:Conversion Bend Public Library,601 N.W. Wall rate optimization; featuring Theresa St.; 541-617-7080.
TUESDAY
Carbon
plans," Fox said. "Carbon
393 parts per million. "You have to handle much larger volumes of gases" to capture the same amount of carbon dioxide from the air that you would from power plant flue g ases, Goeppert said. "But Dr. Keith is going to be able to capture it with the absorbent he uses." The recovered carbon dioxide may be sold one day, not only for enhanced oil recovery, but also to feed algae to produce biofuel. It may also be sequestered in places like unmineable coal seams and oil and gas reservoirs, says a new Energy Department report. Gas capture would be extremely important in developing a rational price for carbon emissions, said Fox of the Brit-
Engineering is the leading
ish mechanical engineering
Continued from E1 The c a r bon-capturing tools that Carbon Engineering and other companies are designing have made great strides in the past two years, said Timothy Fox, head of energy and environment at the Institution of Mechanical Engineers in London. "The t echnology h a s moved from a po s i tion where people talked about the potential and possibilities to a point where people like David Keith are testing prototype components and producing quite d etailed
designs and engineering contender in this field at this moment for putting an industrial-scale m a chine t ogether an d g e t ting i t working." Should the cost of capturing carbon dioxide fall low enough, the gas would have many customers, he predicted. Chief a m o ng them, he said, would be the oil industry, which buys the gas to inject into oil fields to force out extra oil. The injection has minimal risk, said Howard Herzog, a senior research engineer at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. "The enhanced oil recovery industry has put tens of millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the ground every year for decades with no problems," he said. Much of the carbon dioxide forenhanced oilrecovery comes from naturally occurring un d e r ground r eserves; the carbon di oxide is then piped to oil fields, said Sasha Mackler, vice president of Summit Carbon Capture, a unit of Summit Power Group in Seattle. Summit C a rbon Capture harvests carbon dioxide gas from coal and natural gas-burning plants before it can be spewed into the air. The global demand for carbon dioxide will only grow as oil becomes scarcer and demands for transportation fuel rise, Mackler said. Direct capture from the atmosphere would offer another source for the gas.
society. "Whatever it costs to take it out of the air and store it away," Fox said, "that's the price polluters would pay if they want to put carbon into the air." F' Another advantage of dig rect air capture is geographic flexibility. "It doesn't matter w here you take the carbon dioxide out," he said, since the gas is mixed evenly in the earth's atmosphere. "You could have air capture machines in the Australian desert to account for New York City car Carbon Engineenngvia New YorkTimes News Service emissions." A prototype of parts for Carbon Engineering's carbon dioxide Most important, air capture scrubbing plant. Carbon Engineering, a Canadian company, plans could be used to get rid of that to build a pilot plant to determine whether scrubbing carbon dioxlast fraction of carbon dioxide ide directly from the atmosphere can be cost-effective. that escapes into the air, for example, even from power plants outfitted to collect most Keith says he thinks it may dors tell us they need" to pro- of their emissions, said Klaus be possible to lower the cost of vide performance guarantees Lackner, a Columbia profescapture toward $100 a ton as for a full commercial plant. sor and a board member and the company grows. The process is intended to col- adviser to Kilimanjaro Energy, Carbon Engineering's ma- lect at least 100,000 tons of the another company working on chines use a carbon-dioxide- gas ayear. collecting atmospheric carbon absorbing solution of caustic The concentration of carbon dloxlde. "I see direct air capture as soda to remove the gas from dioxide scrubbed from the flue the air. gases of coal- and gas-fired the long-term way of dealing "The issue at the pilot plant," power plants is about 5 per- with all those emissions that Keith said, "will be to test the cent to 15 percent higher than can't be dealt with in any other equipment at the scale the ven- that in the air, where it is about way," he said.
~!II jj, i
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
Brenda Grigsbyto Mark S. andJennifer M. Roberts, Township17,Range12, Section 26,$488,000 Drinkwater Ranch toStallcup Properties LLC,Cabinet A Page17, Lots 1,2,7and 8, Block16, $700,000 Pronghorn EstatesLLCto Hydrau-Bear Inc., Estates at Pronghorn, Phase 2,Lot 102, $135,000,400 Bend Equity GroupLLCto Angelina M. Zamboni, Brookland Park, Lot 20, $195,635 Randall G.andSusanM. Wight to Edward J. RoleyandZora B.Roley, Township 22,Range10, Section 5, $252,500 ReneeA.FeeneytoJasonMendell, River CanyonEstates No. 4,Lot 286, $212,660 Ridiculous Enterprises LLCto Brad J. Johnson andAnna L.Johnson, Tetherow, Phase1, Lot281, $195,500 Pahlish HomesInc. to Kenneth C.Long, Bridges at ShadowGlen, Phase1, Lot 20, $389,850 Lisa Schartz to Lindsay S.and Phyllis V. Wallace, NorthWestCrossing, Phases2 and 3, Lot 87,$387,000 Ciro Saldanaand AnaM.deSaldana who acquired title asAnnaM. Saldana to Daniel L.Crowe,Braydon Park, Lot 36, $187,400 SallyA.Bones, DebraD.Borgeand Susan L. Young toDonaldand Shirley Harmony,CascadeWest, Lot18, $178,000 Gloria A. ClaytonandAlfred L. Stewart II to Judith M.Craig trustee for Judith M. Craig RevocableLivingTrust, Ridgeat Eagle Crest, Lots1,82and182, $190,000 Land BendLLCto Jeffery and Roxanne Ramseyer, South Deerfield Park, Lot 6, $199,400 Timothy A. andStacy A. Fondiller to George andJennifer Perrault, Parks at Broken Top,Phase5, Lot185, $190,000
TheBullelin
The expense Yet the cost of capturing carbon dioxide directly from the air has yet to be demonstrated, said Alain G oeppert, a s e n ior r e search scientist at the Loker Hydrocarbon Research Institute at the University of Southern California. Goeppert recently reviewed the literature of air capture
technology. "There is a lot of speculation of how much it will actually cost," he said, with estimates from $20 a ton to as much as $2,000. "We won't know for sure until someone builds a pilot plant." (An average passenger vehiclegenerates about 5 tons of carbon dioxide a
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DEEDS Deschutes County Steven andDawnThomasto Mark G. O'Brien Jr. andMary E. O'Brien, 27th Park, Lot 2, $150,000 Allison Monroeto Jessie Pincher, Brightenwood Estates 4, Lot 5, Block 4, $189,900 GordonR.and H.JeanniePecktrustees for Peck FamilyTrust to JanaCardoni, Eagle Crest2, Phase1F,Lot59, $300,000 Wood Hill Enterprises LLC toSharyl L. Stewart, Forest Meadow,Phase2, Lot 14, $340,000 Michael L. andDanaM. Ivancovich to James R.Wilson, Township15, Range 13, Section 4, $700,000 JohnWundertoFalconFarmsLLC, South Village, Lot 20, $160,000 JamesM.Harristo Carolyn J. Erwin, Wheeler Ranch,Phase2, Lot14, $589,500 Bend Equity GroupLLCto Mary L. O'Connor,Brookland Park,Lot18, $210,000 Rande M.andGreta L. Ortonto Jeffery C. and Amanda L. McCarthy, PonderosaEstates, SecondAddition, Lot 3, Block 3, $228,000 OCATInc. to Kathy E.and Dennis J. Bilestrustees for Biles Living Trust, Yardley Estates, Phase 7,Lots1, 58 and 158, $323,000 Robert C. andSylvia J. Knudtson trustees for Knudtson Family Trust to John W.and Catherine M. Brimacombe,Stonehaven, PhaseH1, Lot 74, $275,000 James S.andPatricia A. DeSmet trustees for De Smet Family Trust to Karen E.and Gary M. St. Louis, Golf Course Homesite, Lot135, $160,000 Patricia G. Iskrato MannaHoldings LLC, Star Bright Estates, Lot 4, Block 1, $162,00
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At Our January AdBite, ThereSaBaioCCOfrOm CliCk Willard G. Bronson trustee for Willard Gardner Bronson Revocable Trust to FMH LLC,American Lane lndustrial Park, Phase1, Lot13, $330,000 ConradW.and AnneM. Marquard trustees for Living Trust to Richard S. and Dorothy J. Roland, Ridge atEagle Crest17, Lot 6, $447,000 Eden R. Brown trustee for Eden Rose Brown Living Trust to Harold E. Holzschuh Jr. andNancy J. Holzschuh, Fairway Crest Village, Phase1, Lot 22, Block 3, $274,000 Richard L. andDonnaYoung to Angler LLC, Estates at Pronghorn, Phase1, Lot 7, $675,000 Jerome G.andSusan G.Hoffinger to Lawrence Leong andJanice Pratte, Alpine Village 2 at Mountain High, Lot 13, $405,000 Pahlisch Homes lnc. to Courtney L. and Jason L. Drewsen, Newport Landing, Lot 26, $256,000 Bend Properties LLC to BendEugene Storage LLC,Township17, Range12, Section 33, Township18, Range12, Section 4, $1,500,000 John E. andMargaret A. Mooney to Kent M. and Susan B.Miller, Crosswater, Phase 3,Lot 58, $950,000 Hayden Homes LLC to Todd P.and Karlene L. Jensen, Partition Plat 200843, Parcel1, $150,023 Ryan D. and H.Lisa Reinto RalphT. Parker. NorthWest Crossing, Phase5, Lot 173, $635,000 James E. Hodson trustee for James E. Hodson Family Trust andMary D. Hodson trustee for Mary D. Hodson Family Trust to Elk Ridge Properties LLC, Townsite of Redmond, Lots1 and 2, Block 7, $247,500 Dunlap FineHomes lnc.to Howard L. and Marjorie J. Ediger, Deer Pointe Village, Phase 2, Lot 7, Block 3, $194,900
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Smart Continued from E1 At last week's CES, some of the world's largest automakers demonstrated different strategies for leveraging cellphone services and making them accessible through vehicle dashboards, steering wheels and navigation screens. "It's a little bit like 50 years ago when hot-rodding first came on t h e s c ene," said Scott Fosgard, communications "infotainment" manager for General Motors. "People were customizing their cars through the engine. Today, people are customizing their cars through what we once thought was a r a dio. With apps, I can make my Chevrolet Malibu different from your C hevrolet Malibu j ust l i k e your iPhone is different from my iPhone." General Motors and Ford Motor Co. both unveiled new music, news and points-of-interest applications that will be available in upcoming GM vehicles equipped with MyLink and immediately in Ford cars with Sync AppLink. In select 2014 model-year vehicles, General Motors will allow drivers to update their cars with manu facturer-approved apps a s they become available. Those U.S. automakers announced programs this week that will allow s o ftware d e velopers to access the manufacturers' vehicle frameworks and accelerate the integration of new apps with their cars' controls, using voice recognition, display screens, buttons and microphones. Many of the apps available in Ford and General Motors cars ar e l i f e style-oriented, originally designed to be useful outside of a car. But what's coming down the pike is entirely different. "These are apps created specifically for the car," said Fosgard, who at a"hackathon," or programming conference, in Las Vegas last week fielded 200 developerpitches for apps that keep tabs on a car's systems and advise drivers when they need service, or that track a driver's acceleration habits and following distances, among other things. M ore t h a n 1 bi ll i o n smartphones are in use globally, according to Ford Vice President of Engineering Hau Thai-Tang, and to date more than 55 billion apps have been downloaded worldwide. With another billion smartphones expected to be in use by 2015, Thai-Tang said, "Smartphone owners want to use the fully expanded capabilities of their phones in the car."
Distracted drivers? For now, many of them are doing so in a manner that isn't safe. Smartphone usersare twice as likely as other phone users to interact with their phones' touchscreens an d k e y pads while driving if the technology embedded in their vehicles doesn't meet their needs, Thai-Tang said, adding that recent studies have shown smartphone users i n creasingly are using their devices to access the Internet while in a car. "The issue today is that consumers want to access their cellphone content while driving on the road, and the only way to do that is to use their phones while driving, which is not safe and in most states is illegal," said Jake Sigal, founder of M i chigan-based Livio Connect, a system that makes apps accessible through a vehicle's controls. Livio Connect is available in the 2013 Chevrolet Spark, an entry-level minicar that uses the system to access the global radio-station and podcast app TuneIn via voice commands. On M o nday, Livio announced it would expand the apps available to its partner automakers, some of which provide w e a ther up d ates (Accuweather), i n f ormation on nearby parking (Parkopedia) and the ability for incar FM radio listeners to contact radio stations and their sponsors through Bluetoothconnected smartphones (FM
Connect). Livio Connect, and other systems that sync vehicle controls with phones' connectivity to the cloud, are capable of importing almost any app consumers areusing on their mobile devices into a car's infrastructure. But automakers are gatekeeping. A ctivities that could d istract drivers, such as watching a TV show
on Hulu or playing "Angry Birds" on the center console
Smartphone apps incars AHA RADIO What it does:Organizes drivers' favorite Internet
content, including radio channels, news, music, audio books, social media feeds and podcasts. Available in:Ford
vehicles equipped with Sync AppLink, including Mustang, Fiesta, F-150and
Expedition. BECOIIPLY What it does:Suggests date ideas anddirects couples to their destinations with turn-by-
turn navigation. Available in:Ford vehicles equipped with Sync AppLink, including Mustang, Fiesta, F-150and Expedition.
BRINGGO What it does:Provides
full-function navigation, including turn-by-turn directions. Available in:Future
versions of the Chevrolet Spark and Sonic.
GLYMPSE What it does:Allows drivers to share their location information with family and friends via email, SMS, Facebook or Twitter using voice
commands. Available in:Ford
vehicles equipped with Sync AppLink, including Mustang, Fiesta, F-150and
Expedition. KALIKI What it does:Reads select magazinesand local newspapers in a real human voice. Available in:Ford vehicles equipped with
Sync AppLink, including Mustang, Fiesta, F-150and Expedition.
PARKOPEDIA What it does:Provides
information on nearby parking garages, including pricing and real-time space availability, as well as
navigation to get there. Available in:Livio Connect-enabled vehicles.
RHAPSODY What it does:Lets drivers
access any of the service's 1 6 million songs through their phones, or listen
without a connection by downloading a playlist to
a mobile device accessible through the car. Available in:Ford vehicles equipped with Sync AppLink, including
Mustang, Fiesta, F-150and Expedition.
Shrimp
g -/
Continued from E1 As tw o f e deral agen- ( I i' I cies prepare to begin considering the t ariffs case this week, opponents say it would be misguided for Washington to intervene. "Instead of seeing our friends in the Gulf industry innovate and try to improve their practices in the marketplace, they're just trying to regulate the competition out of the business," said Travis Larkin, the president of Seafood Exchange, a seafood importing company in Raleigh, N.C. "If you look at the big picture of it, it just doesn't make any sense." Tim Isbell / Biloxi Sun Herald Processors s u c h as Phuc Nguyen and Ngot Thi Huynh check shrimp as it moves along the processing line at Golden Gulf G ollott, part of a g r o up Coast Packing Co. in Biloxi, Miss. c alled The C oalition o f Gulf Shrimp I n dustries, "There's no such thing as free trade. p redict that t h ey'll w i n . They say that foreign govSomebody'spaying a price:An American ernments in the seven bigworker somewhere is paying the price for free Shrimp imports account gest importing countries for more than 90 percent trade. It's about the dollar, and we arejust have engaged in u n f air of the U.S. market and are trade by giving more than little people in the middle who are getting hurting U.S. producers. $13.5 billion in subsidies squeezed." Below, where shrimp to their shrimp industries imports come from: since 2009. — Richard Gollott, owner of Golden Gulf Coast Packing Co. The processors say the Total imports: case bears close watch$5.2 billion in 2011 ing, with Gulf shrimp sales • U. S. shrimpers want tariffs amounting t o h u n d reds we will make our trading part- sands of jobs in the United on the $4.3 billion shrimp imports from these seven o f millions a y e a r a n d ners play by the rules." States for truckers and longcountries: their industry employing McLendon said th e G u lf shoremen, on steamship lines Thailand Other 32% thousands. Coast processors were bat- and at ports, warehouses and Mexico spy ~ 9% "The public ought to care, tling countries that were in supermarkets. because what's happening much the same position as the Overall, imported seafood with the shrimp industry is 5% United States not so long ago. accounts for roughly 454,000 "They're becoming indus- jobs in th e U .S., according symptomatic of what's happening to many industries, trialized, they're putting peo- to t h e N a t i onal F i sheries maybe most industries in ple to work, and the middle Institute. "Imports have stepped in this country," said David class is developing," he said. "So they're p u t ting t h e se to fulfill a market demand," Veal, the group's executive 13% directorand a former prostimulus programs together Larkin said. "The product Indonesia fessor of agricultural engito not only put people to work is available all year around, 12% neering at Mississippi State but also to feed this newly de- the quality is consistent and Source: National Manne Fishenes University. veloping middle class. And the production i s p r e dictService Graphic: Judy Treible that's fine and dandy, if they able. This is a market-driven 'Somebody's paying' keep the product in their own commodity." Gollott, 68, said he'd been © 2012McClatchy-Tribune News Service country." Gollott saidprices had fallen in th e s h r imp b u siness sharply, noting that a pound of Once $11 a pound since he was 13, following dustry has been particularly medium-sized shrimp, which his grandfather and father. hit hard in the past decade, Shrimp is the most popular sold for $4 in the mid-1980s, He has more than 60 boats, he said, enduring at least a seafood in the U.S., with each now goes for as little as Q, a one of the largest shrimp 50 percent reduction in the American eating an average drop of 25 percent. But while fleets in Mississippi, though number of s h r imp v essels, of 4.2 pounds per year, accord- diesel fuel sold for 90 cents a that's half his former fleet. Hurricane Katrina i n 2 0 05 ing to industry statistics. gallon in 2001, it's now $3.20 a Last year, he said, his com- and the largest oil spill in the L arkin, who i n a p r e v i- gallon, he said. pany only broke even, and nation's history f iv e y e ars ous job in the 1990s handled McLendon, 34, said prices more jobs disappeared. later. He said the i n dustry shrimp procurement forsuch for some types of shrimp were "There's no such thing w as still c o ntending w i t h restaurants as Red L obster even much higher than that in as free trade," said Gollott, false fears that Gulf shrimp and Olive Garden, said the the 1980s. "During Hurricane Katrina, who has more than 50 em- weren't safe to eat as a result domestic industry — even in ployees. "Somebody's pay- of the spill. the best of times — no longer our whole building was deing a price: An American But Nkenge Harmon, the could provide enough shrimp stroyed, and I actually found worker somewhere is pay- deputy assistant U.S. trade for the vast U.S. market. some financial statements and ing the price for free trade. representative for public and Imported shrimp has be- tickets from the late 1980s. It's about the dollar, and media affairs, said President come a much bigger business They were paying as much as we are just little people in Barack Obama's administra- than the domestic industry, $11 a pound for some shrimp," the middle who are getting tion "has demonstrated that Larkin said, providing thou- he said. squeezed." Jonathan McL e ndon, the vice president of Biloxi Freezing a n d Pr o c essing Inc., said some Gulf shrimpers weren't making enough to cover fuel costs ~ a for their boats. "When the boats are not making m o ney, t h ey're closing up, an d w i t hout the boats the processors are going downhill," said PROMOTEYOUR SERVICES McLendon, whose com-
Shrimp imports swamp theU.S.
';:-;..~A
•
SIRI What it does:Allows drivers to get things done while driving by asking the Apple iPhone intelligent assistant. Available in:Future versions of the Chevrolet
Spark and Sonic andfuture Hyundai models. TIINEIN What it does:Streams
audio from a global network of 70,000 radio stations; a listener in
California could listen to an Afrobeat station in Nigeria. Available in:2013 Chevrolet Sparkand future
versions of the Sonic.
screen while the vehicle is moving, aren't enabled. C ar c ompanies ar e a l lowing only apps that safely enhance the driving experience, such as audio, navigation,real-time traffic rerouting and searches for points of interest, along with even more-cutting-edge technologies that send i n formation the other way — from the car, through the cloud, to the car's owner, even when he isn't in the driver's seat. Computer microprocessor maker Intel is working with a utomakers such as B M W , Hyundai, Nissan and Toyota to enable their vehicles' cameras and sensors to notify a driver's smartphone if something has happened to the car while the driver was away. Intel has also developed a system that securely pairs cars with smartphones so they can be used as virtual keys for remote entry, similar t o t r aditional fobs. On a more personal level, Intel's intelligent car system also can access cellphones' contact lists and alert drivers when someone they know is nearby.
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75 people. "And it's not only the jobs. This is generations of a way of life on the Gulf Coast that they're putting into jeopardy." The coalition is challenging seven countries that exported $4.3 billion worth of shrimp to the United States in 2011, accounting for 85 percent of all imports and more than three-fourths of the U.S. market: China, Thailand, Ecuador, India, Indonesia, Malaysia and Vietnam. The group, which represents processors in Mississippi, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Alabama and Texas, said it had documented more than 100 programs that provided benefits to shrimp producers in those countries, including grants, low-interest loans, tax breaks, even shrimp feed. Among th e e x a mples cited: Thailandbuys shrimp from farmers and sells it to processors at low prices; India provides subsidies to reduce ocean freight costs; China has provided financing to build the world's largest shrimp-processing and export plant; Malaysia is spending millions to build shrimp farms andprocessing plants aimed at exporting more shrimp. On top of that, Veal said, the countries pay l ower wages. Veal, of Biloxi, said that as recently as 30 years ago, U.S. processors accounted for 80 percent of all shrimp sold in the country. But the Gulf shrimp in-
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
Restaurants
taurant in downtown Bend," he said. " The reality is w e Continued from E1 have a life expectancy of two He said rent will also be years. We come and go very triple the cost of his current quickly for a reason." space. Dinner p late p r ices Parking limitations, comwill increase slightly over the petition from street vendors, cafe and he plans more luxu- in addition to $6,000 a month ry items like Dungeness crab, for rent led to the closure of sea bass and quail to make up Amalia's, he said. for the cost. While dozens of downtown To attract tourists, he said restaurants have failed, othservers at Sweet Saigon will ers like the Pine Tavern, High be dressed in traditional Viet- Tides Seafood Grill and Soba namese work shirts, and de- Asian Bistro have proven it's cor will include a classic Viet- not impossible to make it. namese bike. Matthew C arter, general For some former restaura- manager of the Pine Tavern, teurs, the price of rent didn't said therestaurant has been o utweigh the benefits of a a landmark downtown since downtown location. the 1930s. "It's just managing in a way It's hard to subsidize a restaurant d owntown w i t hout that you can still be profitadditional locations or deep- able," Carter said. "I've been pocketed investors, said for- in the business for 20 years, mer Amalia's owner, James and it's always the same modOrsillo. el. In the downturn you have "It is quite hard to run a res- to monitor everything you do:
what you're spending, what your menu is like and how
and working for national restaurant groups. "When you're (in) a small much labor you're bringing in." town like this, you want to be O n th e e dg e o f d o w n - locally driven, attached to the town, The Blacksmith, which community," he said. "Hospiopened in 2003 and made the tality and customer service list of Conde Nast Traveler's will set us apart." He's gutting t h e 1 , 622best new restaurantsin 2004, is struggling. s quare-foot space at W a l l Manager Will Johnston said Street and Northwest Frankafter several investors pulled lin Avenue that housed El Jiout, the restaurant was in a mador to create The Drake, financial squeeze. Although which he calls an u p scale it's for sale, he said, the res- diner complete with a blacktaurant remains open and is and-white checkered f l oor, using social media and stag- an open kitchen, wooden bar ing new events to bring in new and booth seating. "Its not your typical greasy customers. "We're doing what w e're s poon kin d o f t h i n g , b u t doing, keeping it alive day-to- you'll see elements of that on day," Johnston said. the menu," he said. "There Swigert, o w ner o f Th e will probably be a nice big Drake, said despite the diffi- cheeseburger, but .. . w e 're culties, he's confident. not a burger joint for sure." He's been in the restaurant Swigert said t h e d i n ner business for about 25 years, price range will be from $12 opening a dozen restaurants to $28 toaccommodate cus-
tomers who go out on a regular basis as well as and those looking for a filet mignon or cut of halibut. He plans to open in April with a staff of about 20. Darren P owderly, p r esident of Compass Commercial Real E state Services, said the economic downturn caused many restaurants to
go under. "You saw the locals tighten their purse strings dramati-
cally (and) less tourists spending less money," he said. Restaurants typically don't have a war chest of capital to fall back on, he said, so when they start losing money over months, quarters and years, that's it. Powderly said some owners were locked into high lease rates they couldn't afford, but a multitude of management mistakesalso occurred. "They weren't ahead of the
By Sarah Frier
ting his wish, with the debut of OKCupid's Crazy Blind Date Late one night in 2002, Sam application. The free app for Yagan got a call from a former iPhones and Android phones Harvard buddy with an idea is intended to eliminate the for their next big company. effort it takes to set up a date. What if they made a website If you'refree for an hour at with a button you could press 7 p.m. on a Wednesday, you to set up a blind date? can fill the slot with a date. Y agan told h i m t o c a l l You select a local bar or cofback when he was sober, but f ee shop to meet from t h e continued to think about it. app's recommendations, then To set up people on random choose among four p eople dates successfully, you would the company's algorithm has need an enormous database suggestedwho arealso free at of users and t h eir p r efer- that time. ences. You also would need The dates are not totally a system that could pick a blind — you can see names, place to meet that was close ages and faces — but the photo both people. tos have been scrambled. You Yagan an d t h a t f r i e nd, meet, and afterward the app Chris Coyne, didn't develop asks how it went. The better the idea. Later that year, they it was, the more you pay, from joined with others to create nothing up to $3. "If it were a perfect world, OKCupid, a free dating site that matches users through I would charge by success," mathematical al go r i t hms said Yagan, 36, who has been based on answers to ques- m arried fornineyears. "Ifyou tions about their tastes. As could start a dating site where OKCupid expanded its a c you just got paid for marriage tive user base to 3.8 million, or sex, that'd be pretty cool. becoming one of t h e m o st This is the closest we can popular dating sites for young come." singles, Coyne's original idea OKCupid was acquired in continued to percolate. 2011 by New York-based IAC/ On Tuesday he's finally get- InterActiveCorp,mediamogul Bloomberg News
Barry Diller's holding company. Last October, Yagan took over its portfolio of d ating sites, which had $518 million in revenue in 2011, up 29 percent from the prior year. The company's other sites include Match.com, for people looking for serious relationships, and OurTime, for daters over age 50. Most of the sites either ask for a monthly subscription fee, like Match, or charge users to send messages. OKCupid, aimed at users ages 18 to 34, makes money mainly through advertising. OKCupid attempted a Webbased version of Crazy Blind Date in 2007, but not enough users had smartphones at the time, the company said. Now the industry is shifting to mobile, with more people using apps than websites for dating in 2011 for the first time, according to a n I B I SWorld report. The OKCupid mobile app and website receive 20 times as much activity as in January 2012, according to the company. Y agan ha s t r a cked a l l kinds of data on users to determine what they want from
OKCupid — his company's
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10 WORST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
Markets closed in observance of MLK day Google earnings 4Q est. 810.57 Year ago $9.50 IBM earnings 4Q est. $5.25 • Year ago $4.71 Johnson & Johnson earnings 4Q est. $1.17 • Year ago $1.13 Apple earnings 1Q est. $13.45 • Year ago $13.87 McDonald's earnings 4Q est. $1.33 • Year ago $1.33 Microsoft earnings 4Q est. $0.75 Year ago $0.78 New home sales Dec. est. 383k Nov. 377k Procter& Gamble earnings 4Q est. $1.11• Year ago $1.10
Has the great Apple run ended? by Samsung and other rivals in the smartphone For years, lt seemed like Apple stock could only market, particularly for lower-cost devices. Until now,Apple has focused on making premium go Up. It surged from less than $100 in March 2009 to $700 last September. But since then, products, charging premium prices and netting the Apple has been mostly sinking. It fell below $500 resulting premium profits. But speculation is rising last week for the first time that Apple may introduce a Apple has stumbled in the last four in nearly a year on worries cheaper, low-end IPhone to months, following years of near-constant gains that sales of its latest better compete. That could Fridayclose, 2013 IPhone model are slowing. expandApple's sales but $700 On Wednesday, also cut into its profit AAPL investors get to see how margins. Apple's sales did during Most analysts still rate the crucial holiday I•• • • I • I A pple as "Buy," but several shopping season, when it have cut back their Jan 14,2011 / reports results for the $348 expectations for its stock. October-through-December 4« Stifel Nicolaus analysts quarter. trimmed their target price to Apple's troubles stem 300 $725 from $825, for from increased competition s ource: Factset exa m p l e .
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directly. 1ess than 10% of the U.S. population currently visitsa government web site daily,'* but 80% of aII Oregon adults read a newspaper atleast once **' during an average week, and 54% read publicnotices printed there.
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. .except75%of seniors.
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COMPANY
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ing their menus. "Overall, things ar e getting better. The economy is improving," Powderly said. "We're not out of the woods yet, but we're stable, we're growing and moving in the right direction."
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The eeullelinMAGAZINE
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
maker of personal comput-19.3 ers on Tuesday reached its highest level since May amid -14.7 speculation that lt is in talks -28.0 about a buyout.
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blog, OKTrends, displays line graphs detailing things like a country's per capita GDP versus the percentage ofpeople who are looking for casual sex on the site. Ultimately, he said, users are just looking for fun and convenience. But the average visit to the site lasts 20 minutes, since users must sift through messages or work on
Weekly Stock Winners and Losers
curve," Powderly said referring to restaurant management. "They were reacting to the trends, rather than being proactive and radically cutting expense and adjusting their menus ... T hey w ere spending based upon lofty and incorrect projections." But businesses that survived the G reat Recession have less competition and came out wiserand stronger, he said. Powderly noted that restaurants owners are opening second locations, while oth-
Weekly AWs Sr EnteWainment
OICCupidreleasesapp for 'Crazy Blind Dates'
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s8 P 500 Frankfurt DAX London FTSE100
Hong Kong Hangseng ParisCAC-40 Tokyo Nikkei 225
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA BuenosAires Merval Mexico City Bolsa
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LAST FRI. CHG 1485.98 +5.04 7702.23 -33.23 6154.41 +22.05 23601.78 +262.02 -2.53 3741.58 10913.30 +303.66
FRL CHG WK MO aTR v T n +0.34% +4.19% -0.43% +1.18% +0.36% +4.35% +1.12% +4.17% -0.07% +2.76% +z86% +4.98%
3197.35 +28.81 45213.66 +270.32 61956.15 -237.92 12725.69 +50.96
+0.91% +0.60% -0.38% +0.40%
350.89 -0.30 2539.51 +7.08 874.32 -z36 7368.80 -61.09 17554.13 -33.22 40166.53 +201.97 1135.02 -1.18
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j
+12. 02% +3.45% +1.65%
+2.35%
EUROPE/AFRICA
Amsterdam Brussels Madrid Zurich Milan Johannesburg Stockholm
+2.39% +2.57% +6.02% +8.01% +7.87% L
+z33% +2.74%
Source: Factset ASIA
'
Seoul Composite SingaporeStraits Times INILSHIRE 5000 M 48 08 Sydney AllOrdinaries Taipei Talex i5,674.57 ~+ 4 Shanghai Composite
1987.85 +13.58 3211.22 +16.12 4794.65 +14.93 773Z87 +116.22 2317.07 +32.16
+0.69% +0.50% +0.31%
-0.46% +1.39%
t1.53% t1.41%
+0.43% +2.11%
+z79%
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
UNDAY DRIVER 2013 BUICK VERANO
Rustproofing acar
te artur oa s unc tose an is an evolvingidea
By Mark Phelan
Detroit Free Press
By Paul Brand
The 2013 Buick V e rano turbo marks the latest step in Buick's journey from a hopelessly dull brand into one that consistently delivers unexpected fun, features and value. The turbo adds muscle to the likable but leisurely Verano c o m pact
Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
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with 100,300 miles. Lately, the transmission sometimes will not shift into third gear. If I pull over, shut the car off and rustproofing — like my opin- restart, it's fine. It does not ion on extended warranty happen all time. Last week I and service contracts — has was cruising at 72 mph and evolved over the three de- the car shifted down to seccades I've been writing about ond. I pulled over and just cars. started over, and it was fine. First, let's distinguish be- If it was the transmission, tween rustproofing and un- wouldn't it happen all the dercoating; they are two dif- time? I suspect it is the senferent concepts.Undercoat- sor. Also, the cruise control ing is a relatively thick rub- stopped working. I replaced berized material applied to the fuse but still n othing. the exposed underbody and What are your suggestions? chassis to primarily act as a • When t he t r a n smissound deadener. This coating • sion will not shift out of obviously has some anti-cor- second gear, it is most likely rosion properties but does not operating in the "limp" mode, protectvulnerable areas such meaning either an electronic as boxed sections and the bot- issuesuch as lossofthe speed tom of the doors. sensorsignal ora m echanical Rustproofing is a l i ghter or hydraulic issue such as low spray-on material that is ap- hydraulic pressure. Because plied to seal and p revent of the loss of cruise control, I moisture from reaching vul- would scan for a speed sensor nerable areas such as inner issue and physically inspect fender lips, door bottoms, in- the electrical connections on side door skins, boxed frame the transmission. sections, inside rocker panels, door jambs, lower insides of I have a 2005 GMC Enthe front and rearfenders, • voy SLT that I bought the cowl, the underside of new. It has steering wheel the hood and trunk lips. The controlsfor the stereo, trip spray can r each untouch- odometer, fan speed, etc.Sevable areas and the material eral of these switches do not remains pliable, allowing it light up at night. Are there to flex, stretch and self-heal replaceablebulbs or do Ineed small scratches. Rustproofing to replace the entire switch? can be very effect ive when Does thesteering wheel come applied properly and main- apart to replace these'? tained on a regular basis. . According to GM serThat said, the build quality, . vice information, the alloys and galvanized steel bulbs in the steering wheel used in modern automobiles controls are not serviceable, has reduced the need for ad- meaningthe complete switch ditional rustproofing. In fact, assembly must bereplaced. several carmakers like Volk- But my Alldata automotive swagen and BMW rustproof database pulled up GM sertheir vehicles when built. vice bulletin 04-08-45-010, When would rustproofing dated September 2004, that make sense'? I used to rust- identifies a poor connection proof used vehicles to prolong at "ground splice pack G201" their service life, and I would on the right side of the front consider having a new vehicle console as a possible cause. rustproofed if it had to survive To replace the switches, the more than a decade in a rust- steering wheel must be reproneenvironment where salt moved, which involves safely is used to de-ice roads. disabling the air bag — a job But the absolute best rust- best left to a professionaL — Brand is an automotive proofingis frequent carwashing that includes a thorough troubleshooter andformer race flushing of the underside of car driver. Email questions to the chassis, wheel wells and paulbrand@startribune.com. the inside edges of doors, Include a daytime phone number.
Q
. I'm 70 years old and . keep my cars for years. I just purchased a 2013 Toyota in October. I have heard a lot of pros and cons on getting the vehicleundercoated and rustproofed.I need a professional, u n biased o p inion. What's your view? . Here's my semi-profes. sional, completely biased opinion. My opinion on
s e dan. With 250
horsepower and 260 pound-feet of torque, the Verano turbo overpowers an d o u t classes s mall competitors l ik e t h e Acura ILX and TSX, Audi A3, VW Jetta GLI and Volvo C30. Pricesfor the Verano turbo start at $ 2 9,105, compared with $23,080 for the base sedan. In addition to the 2.0-liter turbocharged f o u r -cylinder engine, the Verano turbo offers a long list of standard features. Six-speed manual and automatic transmissions are both available for the base
hood and trunk. As a metallurgical engineer once told me, "Rust never sleeps. Ferrous metals simply prefer to exist in an oxidized state. You can't stop rust; you can only slow it down." I have a 1995 OldsmoQ ..bile Cutlass Supreme
A
price. I tested a w e l l-equipped model with the manual gearbox, Bose audio, Bluetooth phone and audio, heated seats and steering wheel, leather upCourtesyTom Drew/ Buick via McClatchy-Tribune News Service holstery and more. It stickered The 2013 Buick Verano turbo has more power than competitors like the Acura ILX and TSX, Audi A3, at $30,395. All prices exclude VW Jetta GLI and Volvo C30. destination charges. My test car lacked memory for the driver's settings but more horsepower and torque s h o uld be the same. was otherwise well-equipped. than any of the competitors. The e l ectric power steering Standard safety features inIt requirespremium fuel for is responsive and has good clude backup video, ultrasonic maximum performance, but o n - center feel. The suspension rear parking assist, blind-spot Base price:$29,105 regular is acceptable and pro- h o lds the road in quick maand cross-traffic alerts, curvides plenty of power. neuvers and fast curves. The As tested:$30,395 tain an d s eat-mounted air The availability o f p e a k ca r i s stable under hard accelType:Front-wheel drive bags for front and rear pastorque from just 2,000 rpm e r a t ion and braking, with very five-passenger compact sengers and front-seat knee equates to strong acceleration, l i t tle squat or dive. sedan air bags. w hether from a stoplight o r I was su r p r ised b y t h e Engine:Ecotec 2.0L fourThe interior is a t tractive, passing on the highway. I ex- a m o unt of r oad noise from cylinder turbocharged roomy and comfortable. The perienced virtually no torque r o ug h s u rfaces, particularly engine with continuously car I tested featured a two-tone steer. since the turbo has the same variable valve timing It's easy to slice charcoal and cafe-au-lait color tires and suspendelivering 250 horsepower scheme, leather upholstery, quickly t h r o ugh sion design as the oftorque;six-speed soft-touch materials, attractive the gears, thanks The V eranO notablyquietbase automatic or manual faux wood and nickel-finish to th e m a nual gU f.gp jS yjSUgliy Ve r ano. transmission chrome. gearbox's precise The c o mpetiMileage:21 mpg city, ' More storage cubbies for shifter and l i ght, tion among com31 mpg highway th'lt~ 1IO glltZQ pact l u x ury cars sunglasses, iPods, p h ones, easyclutch. etc., would be welcome. will be fast and py-I gcer The Verano's voice-recogturbo is visually t furious this year. I nition system is excellent. It makes its controls easyto use. understated, with A new model of batted nearly a thousand with At 95 cubic feet, the Vera- no glitzy boy-racer the Audi A3 will names and addresses, includ- no's passenger compartment touches. Dual exfeature a s e dan ing getting the number-laden is larger than that of any of the hausts and a mild rear spoiler b o dy style developed with U.S. address "361 17th St. North- competitors I've named with are the most noticeable chang- t a stes in mind. Mercedes-Benz west, Atlanta, Ga." right on plenty of head and legroom. es from the base car. is about to enter the fray with the first try. The touch screen The 14-cubic-foot trunk — it The Verano turbo's EPA i t ssleeknew A-class. Bothof is easy to use, thanks to large grows minimally to 14.3 with- rating of 31 mpg in highway t h o se cars promise plenty of icons and the ability to cus- out the excellent Bose speak- driving tops al l t h e c o m - po w e r and optional all-wheel tomize the home screen so the ers — has a large opening and petitors except the Jetta GLI, d r i ve, which should improve featuresyou use most are on a regular shape that allows which scored 33 mpg. Bu t h a n d l ing. the first page. you to use all its space. It trails the EPA rated the Verano on Othe r l u x ur y b r ands will The Verano also has con- only the VW Jetta GLI and regular fuel, while the less- j o i n t h e fray, but the Buick ventional buttons and dials for Audi A3's cargo space. powerful Jetta GLI required V e r ano turbo has set the early key controls like volume, tunThe 2.0-liter turbocharged premium. The EPA predicts s t a ndardforperformance,feaing, fan and temperature. That engine produces considerably the two cars' annual fuel costs t u r es and value.
2013 Buick Veranoturdo
Q•
WHEN IT COMES TO YOUR HEALTH, By Brad Bergholdt
ation, I stumbled across a few folks who had also balked • I have recently experi- at the price of the Lexus part • enced a problem with and, with a little home engithe security lock system in my neering, grafted a $5 universal 2001 Lexus RX 300. It appears door-lock actuator motor to that the master sensor in my the Lexus latch, and voila. I've used these actuators, car doesnot work, but the rest of the locks work fine. I have purchased on eBay and elseto manually insert the key to w here, forseveralprojects;one lock the door. is a solar-powered, automatic I took the car to a mechan- cat-food dispenser with more ic, and he wanted more than than 900 flawless operating $500 tochange the master sen- cycles to date. For such an insor, located on the driver-side expensive price, these little door, to correct the problem. servo-motors ar e a m a zing. That seemed a lot of money. The folks who retrofitted their Is there a way I can do it, if I Lexus left the original actuator know what parts I need to re- in place and connected a push pair it? rod from the latch to the new — Ralph Lee actuator (bracket and push rod • R alph, it s o u nds l i k e are included with the part). . your Lexus is suffering This requires some headfrom a f aulty d r iver's door scratching and a few holes to power door l o c k a c t uator. be drilled to mount the new This part is a small revers- part within the door. The two ible electric motor that pushes wires connected to the origiand pulls on the door latch's nal actuator are transferred l ocking mechanism and i s to the replacement unit — reunfortunately integrated into verse them as needed for cora very expensive door latch/ rect actuator direction — and lock/actuator assembly ($354 the new actuator pushes/pulls list price, available online for the intact original assembly leabout $250). Replacement isn't ver with moderate ease. particularly difficult once the Component integration has door trim panel is removed become a widespreadpractice — the published labor time is a little less than an hour. Renewing the assembly is t he traditional way t o t a k e care of this, but I do have a slightly kooky option, should you be inclined to tinker a bit. While researching your situMcClatchy-Tribune News Service
Q
A
on modern automobiles. What used to be perhaps three or four individual components are often combined into a single assembly. This makes sense from a manufacturing standpoint as it saves weight, space,assembly time and cost, and often improves reliability. An assembly's replacement price can be tough to swallow as a consumer when service is needed, but I try to remember to look at the whole car. Integration and cost savings in one place allows money to be better spent in other places, giving us s ome a mazingly safe, efficient and gadget-filled cars at only a slight premium in inflation-adjusted dollars over cars of the past. One might criticize the idea of modifying such an exquisite car with a h o me-generated solution, but if it's done safely and effectively and is invisible to the eye, it beats paying about five times what the original part is worth. Also, it feels really good to fix something, as opposed to just replacing parts. — Bergholdt teaches automotive technology. Emailquestions to under-the-hood@earthlinlt.net.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
m
ers
Introducing Dr. Matthew N. Simmons Dr. Mallhew N. Simmons is a urologic oncologist and surgeon who specializes in robotic-assisted surgical options. Dr. Simmons served as Assistant Professor of Surgery for Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western Reserve Universily (CCLCM). He assisted in the development of the robolic and Iaparoscopic surgical curriculum at The Cleveland Clinic in addition to publishing numerous articles and book chapters on Ihe subject. He is a leader in academic urology and COmeS frOm the U.S. NeWS' multi-year
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Commentary, F3 O» www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 201 3
" ~IJ JOHN COSTA
Oregon's agenda A
rite of journalistic passage in Salem is a briefing by legislativeleaders and the governor on what they see coming up as the Legislatureapproaches a new session. That new session is upon us and Gov. John Kitzhaber, along with the minority and majority leaders of the state House and Senate, spoke to the assembled press corps Tuesday. At this early stage, it is difficult to identify which issues really have legs, or which will simply fade from view. And it is important to keep in mind that the Democrats have control of both houses of the Legislature as well as the governorship. But the need for a three-fifths majority in both houses for any revenueenhancing measure gives Republicans a fair amount of bargaining power. The House is split 34-26 and the Senate 16-14 with Democrats in control of both, but short of three-fifths majority. That said, what impressions were left after the briefing? As in any representative body, thereare agreements and disagreements between the parties. And Salem is no exception. One agreement seems to be over the issue that is dominating the news — gun control. It is so polarizing that the leaders — on both sides of the aisle — seem to believe that the downside of a debate is not worth the possible upside of incremental changes. Besides, the action is really with the federal government. As Speaker Tina Kotek said, "I can't think of a proposal that has the legs" to get out of the House. If there is a single unifying agreement across the aisle, it is that the state has to find ways to create jobs and improvethe economy. While the challenge is agreed upon,the answers are divisive. One fight appears to be over new revenue,the arena in which the Republicans have some voting clout even as a minority. Kotek and Kitzhaber say progress requires new revenue, though they suggest different approaches. Kitzhaber believes reforming PERS and criminal sentencing will free funds to build the physical and intellectual capital of the state. The governor believes that unless the state can get control of the costs in those two areas, there will not be additional funds for other needs, particularly education, which most leaders identified as a top priority. RepublicanMike McLane of Powell Butte, the House minority leader, said that even with Kitzhaber's suggested PERS reforms, governments would have an increased cost in public employee benefits. "It doesn't cut costs in this biennium," he said. Kotek suggested that the elimination of tax exemptions and perhaps the addition of selective excise taxes should be on the table. But McLane said the cost of delivering services has to be brought under control. With somuch staterevenue dependent on income taxes, it is critical, he said, to increase Oregon's workforce. And, he added, if taxes did not affectcorporate conduct, Kitzhaber would not have called a special oneday session to give Nike special tax treatment to keep its expansion in Oregon. "Companies are mobile," McLane said. He could have added: so are workers. Still, there was at least a sense that the existing relationship between revenue and public purpose was discussable, if not agreeable, to both sides. Maybe that's just the necessary pose at the beginning of the session, but you never know. One tax reform is clearly off the table by both parties. That's a sales tax, and that's too bad. One issue that was conspicuous by its absence is the state of our court system. Affected by all the necessary cutbacks and furloughs that state agenciesare operating under,courts are now swamped under the burden of judicial foreclosures. That has to be fixed. — John Costa is editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta@bendbulletin.com
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Mohammad Hannon/TheAssociated Press
A wounded Syrian refugee makes his way on water and mud at Zaatari refugee camp near the Syrian border in Mafraq, Jordan. Syria's neighbors Jordan and Turkey have refugee camps that house thousands of displaced Syrians.
• Refugees from a seeminglynever-ending civil war scroungefor food, health care and comfort Aconstantstruggle
By Steven SotloffeForeign Policy
ATMEH, Syria-
month-old civil war, it is the roughly
m Ibrahim shivered in the rain
22 manthS —Syrian civil war's timespan so far
3 million refugees and internally displaced 60,000 — Number of Syrians killed during the war
outside her tent. It was less than persons who are suffering daily. 40 degrees Fahrenheit, and the winter wind cut to the bone. When I asked why she didn't
At camps such as Atmeh, located less
COMMENTARY
than 1,000 feet from the border with Turkey, they are struggling
have a blanket like everyone else at the
to survive without heat, electricity or
Atmeh refugee camp, she shrugged and
adequate sanitation. The meager rations
looked down. "I sold it to buy bread for my
provided by a smattering of small NGOs
children."
leave them scrounging in order to keep
While the world is abuzz with news that 60,000 Syrians have died so far in the 22-
Adottt 3 million —Total refugees and internally displaced persons 2.5 mllllon —Internally displaced refugees in Syria 508,000 — Syrians who have fled the country
13,000 — Number of Syrians at Atmeh refugee camp
100 —Number of new refugees per day atAtmeh
their hunger at bay.
Source: Steven Sotloff, Foreign Pohcy
See Refugees/F6
"The shelling forced us from our village. We tried to outlast it as long as we could, but then the regime soldiers set fire to my house. My son fights with the Free Syrian Army, so that was President Bashar Assad's revenge on me." — Sabah Jauda, who fled her home in Kafar Taal, Syria
v v
v .
Rina Castelnuovo / New York Times News Service
Refugees line up for supplies being distributed by the United Nations at the Zaatari refugee camp in Jordan, where about 55,000 Syrians live in hardship. Zaatari, like Atmeh refugee camp near Turkey, is struggling to care for displaced Syrians.
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
The Bulletin
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ov. John Kitzhaber wants to replace the death penalty with life imprisonment without the possibility of parole. It would need a statewide vote. Legislators should give voters the So the obvious question opportunity to decide. is, if voters keep the death Oregon law has gone back and penalty, would Kitzhaber forth on the death penalty. Oregon voters outlawed the death penalty keep his moratorium? It in the 1960s, reinstating it in 1978. would seem likely. The stateSupreme Court overturned it in 1981. Voters amended the constitution in 1984 to make it So the obvious question is, the law again. if voters keep the death penOregon uses lethal injection. alty, would Kitzhaber keep his Only two peoplehave been ex- moratorium'? ecuted since 1984. There are 37 It would seem likely. people on deathrow in Oregon, according to the Death Penalty We asked his spokesman, Tim Information Center. Raphael. Raphael declined to Kitzhaber put a moratorium on speculate. executions in 2011. There may be no reason to "I refuse to be a part of this have the vote as far as how Kitcompromised an d i n e quitable zhaber will treat the death penalsystem any longer; and I will not ty. Of course, Kitzhaber won't be allow further executions while I governor forever. He hasn't decided if he is going to seek another am governor," he said. term. And futuregovernors may He had allowed two executions not share his views on the death to go forward when he was gover- penalty. nor before. But the real question for the "I do not believe that those ex- Legislature is if it should let votecutions made us safer; certainly ers decideagain after 28 years I don't believe they made us more what the law should be. noble as a society," he said. "And The Legislature should put I simply cannot participate once the death penalty question on the again in something I believe to be ballot. morally wrong."
Oregon's smart choice for immigrant licenses regon has decided to grant driver's licenses and identification cards toimmigrants approved for President Obama's Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program. It's a smart move that recognizes the immigrants' legal status but also wisely sets the licenses to expire at the end of the deferral period. About 1,200 have been accepted into the president's program in Oregon, according to a report in The Oregonian, and at least several hundred more are eligible. To get licenses or state ID cards, the immigrants must also satisfy all the usual requirements, including providing proof of identity, age and address, as well as passing tests and paying fees. It's good news for those who will get the licenses but also for the rest of us, who benefit from the young adults driving legally, with insurance and having passed a test. Oregon officials took nearly four months to decide how to handle the situation, conferring with the state Department of Justice. In
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the meantime, some licenses and permits were issued in error, and many had to wait. In the end, the officials decided to accept the deferred action work permits asproof of lawful presence in the United States, which has been required in Oregon since 2008, according to the (Salem) Statesman Journal. Oregon was among the last states to decide to issue the licenses, while a few, including Arizona, Iowa, Michigan, Nebraska and North C arolina, have decided against doing so, the Journal said. The deferred action program allows certain young illegal immigrants to get a two-year work permit, which may be renewable but does not grant amnesty or provide a path to citizenship. Meanwhile, since his re-election, the president has declared his intent to work toward comprehensive immigration reform during his second term. If he's successful, perhaps these licenses will be renewable on a more permanent basis.
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M Nickel's Worth Outlawing studded tires
to this. I appreciated hearing many points of view. Recently you published a letter Evidently, the city has had numerto the editor blaming big trucks for ous problems involving teen vanroad damage. You need toget out dalism and graffiti. Mayor George your tape measure and measure the Endicott and the City Council have ruts in the roads. You will find that a solid track record of m a k ing they are the exact width of a com- good decisions for our community. pact car. I respect what they are trying to You should focus o n o u tlaw- accomplish. ing studded tires. If d r ivers feel In view of the seriousness of the they need more traction, put on problems and the lack of any better chains and slow down. By the way, solution, I reluctantly support their I learned to drive in Minnesota and efforts at this time. It is another exhave lived in Central Oregon for 42 ample of giving up some freedoms years and have never owned stud- to gain more security just like the ded tires and had no problem get- whole country did after 9/II. Howting where I wanted to go. Please ever, it is a balancing act that must do your homework before you print be closely monitored and, as we false information. Thank you. gain more security, we should back Mark Winger off on the surveillance. More camerRedmond as in public places are not only very sad, but a little creepy as well.
trucks does not cause these ruts — their 18 tires will handle their weight without causing ruts. How about a studded tire tax? We d ecided s o meone n e eded to speak up for the t rucking companies.
Henry and Linda Sorensen Sorensen Trucking LaPine
Gun control discussion
In my opinion, following all the recent horrible tragedies around our country, and the controversy regarding gun control, much has been said about what types of weapons, what types of magazines, should be banned; much has been said about mental health issues; much has been said about keeping these types of weapons out of the hands of Barry Jordan criminals. Terrebonne What has not come up in any media coverage that I have seen Trucks are not the problem or read has been discussion about punishing those who use weapons In response to the Jan. 10 letter re- of any kind t o c ommit violence garding road damage by trucks: a gainst another person. It m a y You are v ery m i sinformed if be true that I don't need an AK-15 you think trucks do not carry their or 30-round magazine for huntweight for repairing the roads. Have ing, but if I obey existing law and you checked withthe Oregon De- cause no one any harm, what is the partment of Transportation lately problem? to see how many millions of dollars There areplenty of laws regardtruckers pay to the state through the ing gun ownership — if laws are igOregon Mileage Tax? We pay 0.1638 nored, what good are they? If those cents for every mile our trucktravels laws are not enforced, and the conin Oregon. Also, keep in mind our li- sequences of breaking those laws censing fees — $2,000 each year. are not significant enough to make a I hope you are not talking about difference, that's where we are now! the ruts in the roads caused by studCraig McDonald ded tires on cars. The weight of the Madras
Redmond cameras
I w a s re c ently s t o pped i n Redmond by a television reporter who asked me what I thought of the city of Redmond placing cameras in some public places to monitor the public's behavior and help stop all the vandalism. My initial reaction was that it seemed like an invasion of privacy. The question caught me off guard because I wasn't aware the city was considering doing this. By now, it is a done deal. My comments regarding invasion of privacy were heard by many people who know me. I was stopped on the street, cornered in public places, visited in my office and got a lot of telephone calls. The general feeling was sorrow that it had to come
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Get involved and support the beauty of the backmuntry By Mia Sheppard
wildfire, the public lands of southeast Izaak Walton League — are recomhis past fall during the opening Oregon continue to provide some of mending that high-value backcountry weekend of the upland bird sea- the most unique and valuable fish and BLM areas be conserved as "backson, I hunted chukar partridge wildlife habitat and sporting opportu- country conservation areas," or BCAs, in southeast Oregon with Walt Van nities in the state. a newly proposed land-use allocation Dyke, retired Oregon Department of The semi-arid mountain ranges en- that is being driven from the ground up Fish and Wildlife biologist for Malcompass key habitatsfor mule deer, and speaks to Western values. BCAs heur County, and Pat Wray, author bighorn sheep, pronghorn, elk and up- maintain existing vehicle access and of "The Chukar Hunter's land birds. Small streams allow for habitat projects while assurCompanion." Walt and Pat QlFIl prov i de habitat for unique ing that backcountry lands are conare avid sportsmen and native fisheries. These out- served for future generations to enjoy. passionate about conservadoor experiences must be Under the BCA allocation, the BLM tion of fish and wildlife and southeast conserved for future generations. would uphold traditional uses of pubOregon. To that end, hunters and anglers lic land but allow wildlife managers to The weather was warm, and the are working to safeguard some of the restore the rangeland and habitat by heat of the day penetrated our bones. state's most intact and high-quality enabling vegetation management to By noon sweat dripped from our wildlife habitat and fisheries through control noxious weeds such as medubrows. Nelly, my shorthair pointer, a Bureau ofLand Management land- sa head,restore bunchgrass to benefit was unaccustomed to the heat and use plan amendment process covering wildlife and livestock and reduce the had drunk almost all the water I was 5.1 million acres in southeast Oregon. risk of wildfire. BCAs also would alcarrying. Rain hadn't fallen in the These sportsmen — representing the low ranchers to maintain agriculture desertsagebrush country since July, Theodore Roosevelt C onservation improvements and continue their opleaving this rangeland highly vulner- Partnership, Oregon Hunters Associa- erations and traditional way of life. able to fire. tion, Association of Northwest SteelAreas proposed for BCA allocaDespitean increasing prevalence of headers and the Oregon Division of the tion include Slaughter Gulch and
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De Armond Mountain, which provide excellent habitat — and hunting — for mule deer, elk and upland birds, in the ODFW Malheur River Wildlife Management Unit. BCA management would conserve these lands, maintain hunting opportunities and sustain the considerableeconomic boost sportsmen providethe region. According to Van Dyke, "The BCA concept promotes and protects the primitive, open nature of important fish and wildlife habitats while allowing flexibility in land management activities that will enhance the quality of those habitats — activities that are often necessary to maintain the habitat and ecological values of public lands in today's world." As a sportsman, I want to return to places like Slaughter Gulch and see that the landscape hasn't changed or has been improved. During our chukar hunt, Van Dyke, Wray and I covered territory that hadn't seen human
footprints in weeks. A breeze was blowing, and the coveys of chukar flushed wild. But hitting a bird is just a bonus compared to the remarkable views and solitude found in southeast
Oregon. Oregon BLM should conserve highquality backcountry hunting and fishing lands that sustain fish and wildlife populations and uphold multiple-use management with a focus on habitat conservation. If you are interested in protecting sporting opportunities on public lands in southeast Oregon, now is the time to get involved. Join thousands of sportsmen working to conserve our public lands by contacting the state BLM office and promoting BCAs as a land-management tool. Contact the BLM at: 100 Oregon Street Vale, OR 97918; 541-473-3144. — Mia Sheppardis the Oregon field representativefor the Theodore Roosevelt Conservation Partnership and an avid chukar hunter and angler.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ar e ween he horrific Newtown, Conn., mass shooting has unleashed a frenzy to pass new guncontrol legislation. But the war over restricting firearms is not just between liberals and conservatives; it also pits the first two amendments to the U.S. Constitution against each other. Apparently, i n t h e s e q uential thinking of James Madison and the Founding Fathers, the right to free expression and the guarantee to own arms were the two most important personal liberties. But now these two cherished rights seem to be at odds with each other and have caused bitter exchanges between interpreters of the Constitution. Many liberals believe there is no need to own semi-automatic assault rifles, magazines that hold more than 10 bullets, or even semi-automatic handguns. They argue that hunters and sportsmen don't need such rapidfiring guns to kill their game — and t hat slower-firing r evolvers a n d pump- or bolt-action rifles are sufficient for home protection. Implicit to the liberal argument for tighter gun control is the belief that the ability to rapidly fire off lots of bullets either empowers — or indeed encourages — mass murderers to butcher the innocent. Most conservatives offer rebuttals to all those points. Criminals will always break almost any law they choose. Connecticut, for example, has among the tightest gun-control
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e amen men s
VICTOR DAVIS HANSON laws in the nation. A murderer can pop in three 10-bullet clips in succession and still spray his targets almost as effectively as a shooter with a single 30-bullet magazine. Like a knife or bomb, a gun is a tool, and the human who misuses it is the only guilty party. An armed school guard might do more to stop a mass shooting on campus than a law outlawing the shooter's preferred weapon or
magazine. Homeowners should have the right to own weapons comparable to those of criminals, who often pack illicit semi-automatic handguns. If mass murders arethe realconcern, should ammonium nitrate be outlawed, given that Timothy McVeigh slaughtered 168 innocents in Oklahoma City with fertilizer? Banning semi-automatic weapons marks a slippery slopeeach new restriction will soon lead to yet another rationalization to go after yet another type of gun. Liberals counter that just as free speech is curtailed (you cannot yell "Fire!" in a crowded auditorium), the constitutional right to bear arms is no more infringed upon by the banning of semi-automatic, large magazine firearms than it is by current prohibitions against heavy machine guns. Conservatives reply that the chief
purpose of the Second Amendment was not necessarily just to ensure personal protection from criminals or the freedom to hunt with firearms, but in fact to guarantee that a wellarmed populace might enjoy some parity to an all-powerful, centralized government. To the Founders, the notion that individual citizens had recourse to weapons comparable to those of federal authorities was a strong deterrent to government infringing upon constitutionally protected freedoms — rights that cannot simply be hacked away by presidential executive orders. That may be why the brief Second Amendment explicitly cites the desirability of a militia. By intent, it was followed by the Third Amendment, which restricts the rights of an abusive government toquarter federal troops in citizens' homes. So which amendment shouldwe begin pruning to deal with monsters like those at Newtown and Columbine? The Connecticut shooter, Adam Lanza, was known to be mentally unstable. He sat for hours transfixed with violent video games — in a popular culture of cheap Hollywood mayhem where bodiesimplode on the big screen without worry over the effect of such gratuitous carnage on the viewer. Just as semi-automatic weapons mark a technological sea change from the flintlock muskets of the Founders' era, computer-simulated
video dismemberment is a w o rld away from the spirited political pamphleteering of the 18th century. If we talk of restricting the Second Amendment to protect us against modern technological breakthroughs, why not curtail the First Amendment as well? How about an executive order to Hollywood to stop its graphic depictions of mass killings, perhaps limiting the nature and rationing the number of shootings that can appear in any one film? Can't we ban violent video games altogether in the same way we forbid child pornography? Isn't it past time for an executive order to curtail some of the rights of the mentally unstable — given that the gunmen in mass killings usually have a history of psychic disorders and often use mood-altering drugs? Ifconservatives have ensured that there are millions of semi-automatic assault weapons in American society, liberals' unprecedented expansions of free expression have led to an alarming number of unhinged Americans onour streets,nursed on sick games like "Grand Theft Auto" and hours of watching odious movies such as "Natural Born Killers." Legislating away the evil in men's heads and hearts can be a tricky — and sometimes unconstitutional — business. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover 1nstitution,
Stanford University.
For Obama, it just takes one to tango WASHINGTONresident Standoffish doesn't want to be seen as a stiff. "Most people who know me know I'm a pretty friendly guy," he protested at his White House news conference Monday. "And I like a
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of lonely in this big house. So maybe a whole bunch of members of the Maybe. But P r esident B arack House Republican caucus want to Obama always seems to be dancing come overand socialize more." alone. And that was the vibe of his Some Democrats wish he would swan-song news conference for Act start a regular game in the Indian 1 of his presidency. Treaty Room so he could work on His words were laced with an edge his pokerface.Others are ready for — churlish, chiding and self-pitying. a Bridget Jones approach: Love the He sardonically presented himself president the way he is. Time to go as Lonely Guy, shafted by the op- with the flow. position, kicking around the White It is striking how subdued the House on his own. Days before his mood is as the president heads into second inauguration, he seemed to be his second inauguration party. intimating that the job he had fought At his first one, the nation's capital so hard for and won against all odds was suffused with passion and wonwas a bit of a chore, if not a bore. der and dreams, nearly 2 million When the man who once enrap- hope-besotted faces beaming up at tured packed stadiums was asked by the new president, hoping he could The Times' Jackie Calmes about the save their shirts, shrieking with decriticism that his administration has light as W.'s helicopter flew away been too insular, he bristled a tad. over the Capitol. He acknowledged, while conveyNow the thrill is dimmed, with ing that he didn't believe it, that he a series of grinding, petty fights could "do a better job" on nurturing ahead. Certainly, there's a sense personal relationships with lawmak- among Democrats that they're hapers. (Even if Republicans see him, as py Obama is president; the race was Politico's Glenn Thrush wrote, as "a close enough that they got a metallic pedantic, hectoring fuss-budget.") taste of how bad the country would "Now that my girls are getting have been if that bunch of backward older, they don't want to spend that Republicans got in. much time with me anyway," he But the cost of W.'s misbegotten said, as reporters laughed, "so I'll be wars and his mishandling of the probably calling around, looking for economy overwhelmed Obama's somebody to play cards with me or first t erm. A n d O b am a u n dersomething, because I'm getting kind whelmed on traits everyone thought
good party."
he'd excel at: negotiating, selling, charming, scaring, bully-pulpiting, mobilizing, dealing with Capitol Hill and, especially, communicating. It's taken the White House fouryears to develop a coherent message: Pay your bills. Washington's mood is as gray as the weather, full of burning Republicans and yearning Democrats. We're facing default. Again. We're mired in p artisan trashtalking. Still. And despite the tragedy of the children riddled with bullets in Newtown, Conn., no one is expecting any consequential fixes to our absurdly lax gun laws. Many top Democrats here feel distant from the White House. They like seeing him try to take it to the Republicans on money and, in the all-too-brief time he has left to get things done before he morphs into a lame duck, want him to follow through on guns and immigration,
to say this is the right thing to do and this is what we got elected on and either get on board or get out of the way. The president complained that even when he invites Republicans to a White House picnic and poses with their families, "it doesn't prevent them from going onto the floor of the House and blasting me for being a big-spending Socialist." Steve Stockman, a Republican elected to the House from Texas, has barely started work, but he's already threatening to start impeachment proceedings against the president if he takes executive action on gun safety measures. A Greek chorus of historians and pols has been urging the president to spend more time schmoozing with Republican and Democratic lawmakers, as other presidents like Jefferson, Lincoln and LBJ did to get their way. But Obama still resists the idea that personal relationships can be pivotal, noting that his "suspicion" is that the issues will be resolved only if A mericans "push hard," vote recalcitrant lawmakers out and "reward folks who are trying to find common ground." And it's true that Republicans have snubbed the president. John Boehner blew off Obama's invites for six state dinners, and Mitch McConnell skipped all but one. Unlike Chris Christie, Republicans here want to make sure that the president dances alone. — Maureen Dowd is a columnist for The New York Times.
It's time to shine a light on Medicare's problems By Charles Lane The Washington Post
ow costing more than $500 billion per year, Medicare is central to the United States' fiscal predicament. For this complicated problem, there are many complicated proposed solutions. But what if we try something simple, like journalism'? In essence, that is the argument that Dow Jones, publisher of the Wall Street Journal, is pressing in a federal court in Jacksonville, Fla. Dow Jones is asking District Judge M arcia Morales Howard to lift a 1979 court order that exempted from the Freedom of Information Act all provider-specific data on Medicare payments. Arguments ended in August, and a ruling could come at any time. Thanks to the 33-year-old injunction, the press and the public cannot examine the treatments individual physicians billed to Medicare ormost important — how much Medicare paid for them. Yet this is a matter of obvious public concern, given that Medicare made $28.8 billion in improper payments in 2011, according to a Government Accountability Office report last February.
Media coverage could be a powerful weapon against waste, fraud and abuse, Dow Jones argues — plausibly, given the Journal's recent work. In 2009, Dow Jones and the nonprofit Center for Public Integrity sued the Department of Health and Human Services for access to its database of physician fee-for-service claims. HHS resisted but ultimately agreed to supply a small portion of its information in return for a fee and a promise not to reveal individual physicians' names. Even with those limitations, the Journal produced articles in 2010 and 2011 documenting many millions of dollars' worth of excessive spinal fusion surgery, questionable prostate-cancer treatments and dubious billing for home health care services. More irregularities might turn up if all journalists could comb through Medicare'srecords using data-mining techniques. And imagine how many irregularities would be deterred if providers knew that they might benamed and shamed. Doctors, of course, see a threat to privacy — theirs, not patients', since patients would not be identified no matter how a lawsuit turns out. "Pri-
vately employed individuals have a substantial interest in the privacy of their personal financial information, including their income," the American Medical Association argued in its brief to the court. The doctors warn of "deleterious effects on the physician-patient relationship." One physician affidavit avers that "it would undermine my ability to care for my patients if they think that I might be prescribing" a particular therapy "for the money rather than for t heir well-being." Public disclosure of Medicare billing would increasesuch purported misconceptions, because non-experts can't interpret the data accurately, the doctors claim. How paternalistic can you get? Information about doctors' incentives might in fact empower health-care consumers, as it generally does in other markets. Surely patients who got some of the 276 spinal fusions performed by a single Midwestern surgeon in 2008 would have wanted to know, as the Journal reported, that the doctor received more than $400,000 in payments from spinedevice makers. Privacy was the doctors' argument in 1979, when they first sought,
and won, a permanent injunction to stop a Carter administration plan to disclose Medicare reimbursement data. Though issued by a single Florida district court, the injunction applied nationwide and can be lifted only if the court that imposed it finds, in essence, that times have changed. They have:Medicare cost a mere $37.4 billion in 1980. For that reason alone, the nation's interest in cost control today far outweighs doctors' interest in billing secrecy. Sens. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, and Oregon's Ron Wyden agree and have introduced legislation to overturn the injunction, though their bill is moving slower than the Dow Jones lawsuit. In a way, it's too bad that Dow Jones framed itscase as a matter of fighting fraud. It is indeed that. But the vast majority of providers are honest. Still, doctors' resistance to disclosure illuminates the mentality bred by a system of open-ended public financing on the one hand and private provisionof fee-for-service care on the other. — Charles Lane is a columnist for The Washington Post.
THOMAS FRIEDMAN
Obama's 1-2 punch?
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f election campaigns are supposed to bean exercise in com-
ing to grips with our biggest
problems, then the one we just went through was a dismal failure. Our only real solution — a strategy to reignite consistent growth so we can narrow our income gaps and lift the middle class — never got a serious airing. Instead, each side was focused on how to secure a bigger slice of a shrinking pie for its own base. This lousy campaign produced the worst of all outcomes: President Barack Obama won on a platform that had little to do with our core problems and is only a small part of the solution — raising taxes on the wealthy — so he has little incentive to rethink his strategy. And the Republicans did not lose badly enough — they held the House — to have to fully rethink their strategy. It does not bode well. In his book "The Moral Consequences of Economic Growth," Harvard economist Benjamin Friedman argues that periods of economic growth have been essential to American political progress; periods of economic prosperitywere periods of greater social, political and religious harmony and tolerance.On Sunday, The Times' Annie Lowrey wrote a piece quoting Friedman, who wondered aloud whether we're not now entering a reverse cycle, "in which our absence of growth is delivering political paralysis, and the political paralysis preserves the absence of growth." I think he's right and that the only way to break out of this deadly cycle is with extraordinary leadership. Republicans and Democrats would have to govern in just the opposite way they ran their campaigns — by offering bold plans that not only challenged the other's base but also their own and thereby mobilized the center, a big majority, behind their agenda, to break the deadlock. If either party does that, not only will it win the day but the country will win as well. What would that look like? If the Republican Party had a brain it would give up on its debt-ceiling gambit and announce instead that it wants to open negotiations immediately with Obama on the basis of his own deficit commission, the Simpson-Bowles plan. That would at least make the GOP a serious opposition party again — with a platform that might actually appeal outside its base and challenge the president in a healthy way. But the GOP would have to embrace the tax reforms and spending cuts in Simpson-Bowles first. Fat chance. And that's a pity. As for Obama, if he really wants to lead, he will have to finally trust the American people with the truth. I'd love to see him use his Jan. 21 Inaugural Address and his Feb. 12 State of the Union message as a one-two punch to do just that — offer a detailed, honest diagnosis and then a detailed, honest prescription. On the diagnosis side, Obama needs to explain to Americans the world in which they're now living. It's a world in which the increasing velocity of globalization and th e i n formation technology revolution are reshaping every job, workplace and industry. As a result, the mantra that if you "just work hard and play by rules" you should expect a middle-class lifestyle is no longer operable. Today you need to work harder and smarter, and learn and relearnfaster and longer to be in the middle class. In the State of the Union, I'd love to see Obama lay out a detailed plan for tax reform, spending cuts and investments — to meet the real scale of our problem and spur economic growth. We'll get much more bang for our buck by deciding now what we're going to do in all three areas and signaling markets that we are putting in place a truly balanced approach but gradually phasing it in. As for investment, I'd love to see the president launch us on an aspirational journey. My choice would be to connect every home and business in America to the Internet at 1 gigabit per second, or about 200 times faster than our current national household average, in five years. I still believe that America's rich and the middle classes would pay more taxes and trim entitlements if they thought it was for a plan that was fair, would truly address our long-term fiscal imbalances and would set America on a journey of renewal that would ensure our kids have a crack at the American dream. Then again, I may be wrong. Maybe my baby-boomer generation really does intend to eat it all and leave our kids a ticking debt bomb. — Thoms Friedman is a columnist for The New York Times.
F4 © www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
Sweet tale
is a gift from trio of writers
'RISE TO GREATNESS'
Boo examines e ear o Lincon's resi en By Christopher Ave
(Avon,$7.99)
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
Following their successful endeavor of "The Lady Most Likely," this trio of popular writers once again gift readers with a "novel in three parts." This time, four ladies are kidnapped by a d r unken Scottish laird, determined to find wives for his two nephews. When the four ladies are revealed at the crumbling castle where the unsuspecting nephews are shocked by their uncle's action, they also discover the uncle had inadvertently kidnapped a duke as well. How can this not be a fun, witty and entertaining story? Make that three stories, that blend together for one enchanting and charming novel. In the first part, Catriona is well familiar with Taran (the Scottish laird) and his antics. He r co m posure, practicality and poise — not to mention her beauty, intelligence and humor — attract the duke immediately. But as a poor daughter of a Scottish squire, she's not exactly bridal material for a duke. Catriona is probably the most likable of the three heroines, although all are admirable in their own way. Duke Bret is probably the most likable of the three heroes, although all of them are admirable in their own way as well. For example, the middle section pairs the stoic and somber Byron, an earl, with Fiona, a ruined heiress. Byron always has been a stickler for propriety and abhors scandals. And last, but not least, is the story of Robin and Cecily. Robin is known as the "Prince of Rakes," an image he never tries to discourage. He's convinced that the best thing for the pure and sweet Cecily is for him to avoid her. Cecily isn't so convinced. Cecily wins. And so does Robin.
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the bestsellers for weekending Jan. 12. Hardcover fiction
1. "A Memory of Light" by Robert Jordan(Tor) 2. "Gone Girl" by Gillian Flynn iCrownj 3."The Husband List" by Janet Evanovich (St. Martin's) 4. "Collateral Damage" byStuart Woods (Putnam) 5."Kinseyand Me"by SueGrafton (Putnam/Marian Wood) 6. "Tenth of December: Stories" by George Saunders iRandom House) 7. "The Racketeer" by John Grisham iDoubledayj 8."TheBlood Gospel"byJames Rollins (William Morrow) 9. "Cross Roads" by William Paul Young (FaithWords) 10. "Threat Vector" by TomClancy (Putnam) Hardcover nonfiction
1. "Shred: TheRevolutionary Diet" by lan K. Smith, M.D. (St. Martin's) 2. "Killing Kennedy" by Bill O'Reilly (Henry Holt) 3. "The Plan" by Lyn-Genet Recitas (GrandCentral) 4. "Ninja lnnovation" by Gary Shapiro iWilliam Morrow) 5."My ShareoftheTask"byGen. Stanley McChrystal (Portfolio) 6. "Barefoot Contessa Foolproof" by lna Garten (Clarkson Potter) 7. "No EasyDay" byMark Owen (Dutton) 8. "The Virgin Diet" by J. J. Virgin iHarlequin) 9. "I Declare' by Joel Osteen (FaithWords) 10. "Wheat Belly Cookbook" by William Davis (Rodale) — McClatchy-TribuneNewsService
"Kinsey and Me"
hone stories weren't enough, that they needed to fatten up the book with something more, anything more, and By David Martindale u ltimately wound up w i t h Fort Worth Star-Telegram two tastes that don't go great Sue Grafton's new collec- together. tion of short stories, "Kinsey The truth, however, is that and Me," is a mixed bag of "Kinsey and Me" is actually material. a reprint of a story collection There are gems inside that Grafton privately published fans of Grafton's "alphabet in 1991, printing a mere 300 series" of Kinsey Millhone copies to distribute among detectivecapers are sure to friends and family members. enjoy. Grafton's rationale for putHer bestselling n ovels, ting these mismatched stodating back to 1982's "A Is ries in the same book? "I wanted readers to see for Alibi" and progressing all the way to 2011's "V Is for the curious juxtaposition of Vengeance," are all readily mypublic and private selves," available in bookstores. the author has said. " Kinsey Millhone is a n But did you k now t h at Grafton also w r ote e ight invented version of me. Kit mystery shorts featuring her Blue is the 'self' I was 50 plucky private eye? years ago. "These stories are very Published in the late 1980s and early '90s in Redbook personal, exploring e m oand in v a rious anthology tional wounds that have long collections, these breezy de- since healed. I thought othtective shorts haven't been ers might benefit from seeas easy to track down over ing the troubles I survived the years. and knowing it's possible to That makes "Kinsey and work through painful family Me" a kind of desert oasis for issues. "None of us gets to choose die-hard, r e ad-everythingalready fans as they wait our parents, nor do we have for the next installment in any say in the matter of what the series, the as-yet-untitled happens to us early on in life. "W" book due this year. The only power we have is to But accompanying these turn our misfortunes to our solid mini-mysteries is a col- own advantage instead of lection of h e ad-scratchers allowing ourselves to be dethat simply don't belong in fined by them." the same volume: D quasiBut do Sue Grafton fans a utobiographical stor i e s really want that from her? about a girl named Kit Blue Maybe some readers will and her painful early l i fe think it's interesting. with an alcoholic mother. But most w il l p r obably It's as if Grafton and her yearn for more of what atpublisher worried that a slen- tracted them t o G r afton's der 200 pages of Kinsey Mill- writing in the first place. by Sue Grafton(Marian Wood/Putnam, $27.95)
"Rise to Greatness" by David Von Drehle (Henry
"The Lady Most Willing" by Julia Quinn, Eloisa James, Connie Brockway By Lezlie Patterson
Grafton offers mixed bag of short stories
Holt, 466 pgs., $30)
Abraham Lincoln is history's most scrutinized American. Nearly every facet of his life — his political accomplishments, ethics, religion, marriage, even his sexual orientation — has been explored in the 148 years since his assassination. What could a new Lincoln biography offer? For author David Von Drehle, the answer lies in tracing Lincoln's transformation from i nexperienced n e w p re s i dent of a crumbling country to steady-willed leader who saved the Union in its most vulnerable hour. But even a story focused in this way could fill multiple volumes. So Von Drehle, a journalist and historian with impeccable writing chops, limited himself to a single year of Lincoln's presidency — 1862, w hich h e c a l l s "America's most perilous year." He said he chose 1862 in part because so many previous Lincoln books have dismissed its significance. "I reflected on the way it's understood in terms of Civil War history — as a year of failure, a year when nothing really happened," he said recently from hi s K a nsas City-area home. "It seems to me it was all backwards. The question was ... how did the guy even survive the year, and end it so much stronger than before?" Von Drehle makes his argument by immersing the reader I in L i ncoln's d aily life in 1862, starting on New Year's Day. This simple technique offers a nearly real-time glimpse into the tumble of tragedy and tumult facing him. We are at Lincoln's side as he struggles to persuade, cajole and finally order his generals to usetheirsuperior numbers to bring the war to the South. We watch as the heartbroken Lincolns suffer the death of their son, Willie, his father's favorite. We see, too, the sometimes Machiavellian efforts the president makes to keep his fragile coalition of a cabinet united around his primary goal of preserving the union. Most important, we observe the evolution o f L i n c oln's thinking on the crucial issues of the day. In one particularly effective scene, Von Drehle finds meaning in the incomplete thoughts Lincoln left on a scrap of paper one day in September. "The will of God prevails," Lincoln wrote. And despite the mounting human carnage the Civil War inflicted, God "wills that (the war) should not end yet." But why? L i ncoln's note ends abruptly, without an answer. Von Drehle argues that in that moment, Lincoln began to believe that ending slavery was the realreason for the war. The author fast-forwards to Lincoln's sublime second inaugural address in 1865, in which the president publicly revealed his theory: that God's purpose in allowing the hideously bloody war to continue must have been to abolish the offense of slavery. Back in September 1862, Von Drehle surmises, that theory led Lincoln to a decision. If the Union army could thwart a rebel invasion into Maryland, then the president would :;
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Mathew Brady i Metropolitan Museumof Art via The Assoaated Press
Abraham Lincoln, pictured in 1861, has been the focus of many biographies since his assassination 148 years ago. "Rise to Greatness" focuses on 1862 as a significant year.
make slaverya centerpiece of the war by issuing his Emancipation Proclamation, freeing slaves in rebel territory and setting the stage for the final eradication of slavery in the Dth Amendment. Aided by the chance discovery of secret Confederate battle orders, the Union did repulse the rebel invasion. But o n ce again, C o nfederate Gen. Robert E. Le e escaped from slowf ooted Union G e n . George Mc C l ellan. Von Drehle explores the exquisite pressures L incoln faced as h e dealt with McClellan, a proud and mercurial young
— and, apparently,impenetrable. But Von Drehle, an editor-at-large for Time, puts the reader as close as anyone has to Lincoln's mind in a crucial year. He deftly explores Lincoln the leader as well as the man, tracing the evolution of his thinking as the full horror of the war was only beginning to make itself known.
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supplies accompanied by his own comically exaggerated estimates of the enemy's strength. Von D r ehle uses McClellan's letters to his wife to show the general's utter contempt for the commander in chief, as the general referred to Lincoln as a "gorilla" and worse. Finally, after his party survived midterm elections in the fall without much damage, Lincoln felt strong enough to get rid of McClellan. (To his credit, the ambitious and arrogant general resisted pleas to attemptsome sortofcoup,preferring to wait until the 1864 election to challenge Lincoln
at the polls.) No matter how long you look at Abraham Lincoln, Von Drehle concedes, you never really get to his core. His levels of humanity, sorrow, grace and toughness are endless
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McClellan wa s f e r vently supported by pr o- U n ion Democrats across the North. the Union general simply take control of the government). At the same time, McClellan was lambasted by northern radicals who felt that "Little Mac" was sabotaging Union efforts and taking it easy on Lee, perhaps to aid his own political future. Amid such furor, Lincoln navigated a steady course, visiting and wiring McClellan with encouragement that t urned t o i m p atient c o m mands as the year went by. When he bothered to reply, McClellan o f f ered v a r ious excuses, including frequent requests for more men and
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W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear Wednesdays: April 17, June 19, August 28, November 13
DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER From itsheritage tothearts, there's somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals who work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.
SISTERS M AGAZ I N E WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS
Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniquenessof this mountaintown. Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlig ht Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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U OF • Fictional sniper takes on mystery behind ICennedy'sassassination — and solvesit "The Third Bullet" by Stephen Hunter (Simon 4 Schuster, $26.99) By David Martindale Fort Worth Star-Telegram
Someone should have asked
a sniper. That's what Stephen Hunter — a bestselling novelist who created Bob Lee Swagger, the bestshooter there everwas, the Gun Whisperer— believes. The gaping hole in the middle of most Kennedy assassination theories, Hunter says, is that the theorists, even those attached to the original Warren Commission, don't know the first thing about shooting, ballistics or angles. "Looking at the body of assassination material," the author says, "too many people who knew too little have said too much." Hunter's action-packed new thriller, "The Third Bullet," in stores Tuesday, puts Swagger on the case and introduces a shockingly plausible alternative to the Lee Harvey Oswald"lone gunman" explanation. Without giving too much away, it involves a conspiracy of just three people, a sharpshooter hidden in the neighboring Dal-Tex Building and an "exploding" bullet t h at leavesno forensic trace.
You have to develop an ear for what is authentic and for what is just hooey." Hunter also vetted the ballistics issues with experts, which "I'm very curious what the is more than most conspiracy assassination community will theorists seem to do. "The Third B u llet" also make of it," Hunter says. But ultimately it makes no casts serious doubts about Osd ifference if experts try t o wald, a lifelong ne'er-do-well, pick apart his scenario, beand whether he was capable cause there'sa safety net for of succeeding as the shooter. Hunter: His book is a work of For example, when Swagfiction, and is not presented as ger wonders why O swald didn't take the obvious shot, revelatory findings and gospel truth. when Kennedy was closest "I know what criticism will to the Texas School Book be leveled at me," he says. "It's Depository and was a barethat I want it both ways, that ly moving target, only to I want credit for an ingenious take three rushed shots as the theory, but I don't want to be Alas, Swagger is a fictional motorcade pulled away, the held too strictly to a standard character. reader will wonder the same of truth because this is a thrillBut Hunter, who visited the thing. What's more, when Swager. The only answer I have to requisite Dallas landmarks, that: guilty, guilty, guilty." including the Dal-Tex Build- ger speaks disparagingly of "The Third Bullet" is Hunt- ing, from which a " second Oswald's WWII-era mail-orer's eighth book about Bob shooter" could have theoreti- der Mannlicher-Carcano, a Lee Swagger. cally fired the fatal bullet, is badly built Italian rifle with an B ob is a m a n's m an, a hardly a rookie. ineptly mounted scope, raising He's not a firearms savant the question of whether Osthrowback to another, more rugged time. He's part John like the character he invented, wald could have hit anything Wayne, part Ted W i l liams, he concedes. "But I'm a guy he aimed at, the reader will part Audie Murphy. In Viet- who, from age 3 onward, has start scanning the Dallas skynam, heearned the nickname loved and been attracted to line in a desperate search for "Bob the Nailer" because of and been absorbed by guns." any other possibility. his prowess with a rifle. The Hunter maintains that he is But remember, "The Third things he can make a bullet do one of the first people to bring Bullet" is a thriller, so it's posboggle the mind. that kind of knowledge to this sible not only for Swagger to If anyone i s c a pable of historic mystery. raise interesting questions but "It's not something you can also to solve the mystery and walking through Dealey Plaza in Dallas nearly 50 years after pick up from reading a few even mete out justice 50 years the shooting of President Ken- copies of Guns 8r Ammo," he after the crime. Let's see your typical JFK nedy and seeing possibilities says. "You have to know the that no one else even consid- culture. You have to k n ow c onspiracy theorist pull o f f ered, it's Bob. what is possible and what isn't. that trick.
Mansbachrekindlesgolden ageof graffiti "Rage is Back: ANovel" by Adam Mansbach (Viking, $26.95) By Connie Ogle The Miami Herald
Adam Mansbach is a novelist best known for a parody. But don't think that he bears any ill will toward "Go the F**k to Sleep," his hilarious, bestselling ode t o t o d dlerwhipped parents. "It's a funny thing; I think people expect that I'm somehow embittered by b e ing known for that book, and I'm definitely not," says Mansbach. "It's opened some doors for me. I'm grateful for all of th e attention. People who know me are tickled by what happened because it was an honest manifestation of my humor, and it hit the zeitgeist in a weird way." Now, however, Mansbach hopes readers turn their attention to his engaging new novel, "Rage is Back" (Viking, $26.95). It's narrated by the wily teenage Dondi K i lroy Vance, the wisecracking biracial son of New York City's most notorious graffiti artist of the golden age, Billy Rage (Dondi's mom, Karen, was an infamous artist back in the day, too). "Three hours into my earthly existence, Billy went bombing, because that's what a fiend does," Dondi tells us. "Triumph and tragedy are met identically. Boredom too. Something happens, or noth-
ing happens, and you need a fix." Billy flees the city a f ter
bombing (spray painting) one too many trains with a message accusing a Vandal Squad cop of murdering his friend, and he doesn't return for 16 years, when Dondi has been kicked out of his prestigious
prep school (the "Whoopty Who Ivy League We's A Comin' Academy") for selling weed. What happens when the family reunites — and by family we mean the whole weird, wild tribe of graffiti's best, brightest and craziest — involves father-son dysfunction, time travel, mindbending hallucinogens, shamanism and an epic graffiti caper to restore the balance of power in New York City's tunnels — and to turn those trains once again into rolling works of old-school art. "What's great about Adam is that his writing is often funny, but it's never silly or light," says Victor LaValle, author of "The Devil in Silver," via email. "While reading 'Rage is Back' I'd be laughing pretty hard at some scene and only later realize just how much serious business the scene had dealt with. It's takes a special touch to make a reader both laugh and gasp.
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stakes are higher. But that's true any time you're writing a character of another race or genre, a male writer writing a female characteror a straight writer writing a gay character." For all his fine comic writing, Mansbach doesn't neglect the more serious aspects of New York City's battle over graffiti in "Rage is Back." "The war on graffiti in many
ways was a war on young people, young people of color in
"As a kid who grew up in New York City in th e '70's and '80s it was also just fun to see that long-gone New York City evoked in the pages of this noveL Adam doesn't ignore the decay and crime that blighted those decades, but he also insists the time period generated true magic, true American art." M ansbach, who l i ves i n Berkeley, Calif., grew up as a fan of hip-hop in the 1980s and '90s, and the beats drew him to the world of graffiti. He spent a big chunk of his life preparing to write this novel, even if he didn't realize it. "Back then, when hip-hop was under the cultural radar, you had to be conversant in all parts of it," he says. "I was a bad graffiti writer, never serious about it, but to be part of that community you had to be knowledgeable to all the elements of it, music, dancing, the visuals. And the visuals of graffiti always appealed to me. "To me, graffiti w r i ters were theeccentrics and mad geniuses of hip-hop. They labored in obscurity. There were so many paradoxes in their art and how they thought about it. It was art and vandalism.... Even the words to describe it: They'd use 'beautify' and 'destroy' interchangeably, with all this language of violence and destruction ... bombing trains, killing lines. There was always something epic about
particular," he says. "The reaction to graffiti opened the door and ushered in a lot of what we see today in public policy: the zero tolerance policy, misdemeanors being elevated to felony. Graffiti is also a window into sociology.... It's poignant: The guys who invented graffiti watched it die in front of them. By the '90s the city had won. They buffed trains clean before they left the yard." If "Rage is Back" is any indication, Mansbach is nostalgic for the old days. "The evolution of the art on the train happened so rapidly,
it's a compressed history of art,
like going from cave drawings to Cubism in five years," he marvels. "There was an intensity to it. A lot of the old-school writers said things evolved so fast you couldn't leave the city. ... They'd say, 'I can't go on vacation, I gotta sit on the benches and see what rolls by.' "There was nothing remunerative to it. These kids were devoted to it with a purity and a drive that is hard to imagine today. The world is so different. Now they'd be Instagramming it." Exploring such complexity, of course, is one of the things Mansbach likes best about being a writer. "Complexity always draws
'Scoop' recallsJack Nelson's celebrated career in muckraking "Scoop: The Evolution of a
tling city expanding outwards in all directions, far more cosmopolitan than Georgia as a whole. The city fathers had begun courting Northern inof Mississippi, $26) vestment as early as the '20s, promoting Atlanta as a busiBy Steve Weinberg ness-friendly center of manuThe Atlanta Journal-Constitution facturing, transportation and Born into humble circum- banking. stances in Talladega, Ala., Although segregation was in 1929 and later reared in rigidly enforced until the '60s, Biloxi, Miss., Jack Nelson be- the town had a r eputation came a journalist by accident. for racial moderation, which He showed enough talent as helped attract businesses and a rookie reporter on small- out-of-town conventions. Wiltown newspapers that in 1953 liam Hartsfield, who served he receiveda job offer from six terms as mayor and owed The Atlanta Constitution. It his longevity to the black vote, was a big step up, and Nelson dubbed Atlanta "the city too was elated. busy to hate." Much of the acDuring the rest of the de- tion related by Nelson occurs cade, Nelson, fearless in the in Alabama, Louisiana and face of corrupt, powerful Mississippi. The most searpublic officials, developed ing Georgia chapter is set in into one of the best investiga- Milledgeville, where the state tive journalists in the South. mental hospital had become By the time the Los Angeles a nightmare of inhumanity. Times established an Atlanta When a Georgia state legisbureau in 1965 and hired Nel- lator from Milledgeville sugson to staff it, he had become gested that the Atlanta newsa living legend. That legend papers investigate it, Nelson would continue to grow until received the assignment. Nelson's death in 2009. Nelson found a few knowlNelson's memoir was only edgeable sources willing to partly completed at the time help with the expose, includof his death. Barbara Matu- ing several physicians and sow, his widow, is a talented other employees. The incombroadcast and magazine jour- petence, heartlessness and nalist. She decided to conduct unsanitary conditions affectresearch to fill in the gaps. ed black and white patients The result: One of the most alike, but the blackpopulation interesting, instructive mem- definitely suffered more. oirs by an investigative jourEach reader is l ikely to nalist that I have read. And I identify a favorite section of have read a lot of them. this enthralling memoir. Mine The memoir endsin 1972, revolves around Nelson's relabefore Nelsontransferred to tionship with George Wallace, Washington, D.C., and be- the snarling racist governor of camethehighlyvisiblebureau Alabama who made a serious chief there for the Los Ange- bid for the U.S. presidency. les Times. But those missing Wallace became the relucdecades areirrelevant to an tant subject of so many Nelappreciation of the memoir. son articles that he became That's because Nelson relates s omewhat obsessed w i t h such gripping stories about the plucky j ournalist and exposing political corruption began telling stories about and racism in the Old South him. When Nelson decided (as it slowly crept toward be- to challenge Wallace in percoming the so-called New son about the inaccuracies of South) that no reader is likely certain anecdotes, Wallace to feel cheated. replied, "Well, let's put it this Atlanta seemed like a gi- way — about half of what gantic city to Nelson, but he you write about me is so, and adapted well. He recalls an about half of what I say about exciting metropolis, "a bus- you is so." Southern Reporter" by Jack Nelson edited posthumously by Barbara Matusow (University Press
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graffiti." "Rage is Back" is a bracingly funny book, largely due to Dondi's magnetic narration Mansbach said he's never had so much fun writing anything. A white writer telling a story from the point of view of a black teenager is often eyeballed uneasily by critics, but Mansbach gets Dondi just right, and nobody is complain-
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"It's something I don't do lightly," says Mansbach, who is also the author of "Angry Black White Boy," a satire about a white kid deeply invested in hip-hop. "I've been engaged with these issues in a pretty serious way, and the
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
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'Boo Mone 'isroote inCase Ant on case
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"Blood Money"
But it is not a victory Jack celebrates. The case had become "a pop-culture juggernaut," (Harper,$26.99) bringing an onslaught of hate By Oline H. Cogdill mail and demonstrations and Sun Sentinel (Florida) relentless coverage from Faith "Ripped from th e h ead- Corsco at the BNN cable news lines" is an apt term for Flori- company. Jack ha d n ever da author James Grippando's even wanted the case, agree10th exciting legal thriller fea- ing to fill in for a friend whose turing Miami attorney Jack death after the first hearing Swyteck. left Jack the "attorney of reFloridians — as well as the cord." And there was Sydney rest of the nation — will rec- herself — a self-centered, ognize the Casey Anthony immature, money-grubbing case as the inspiration for the woman given to t a ntrums meticulously plotted "Blood — whom Jack disliked. Money." Readers will recogWhile the mob was kept nize several similarities from outside the courtroom, Sydthe Anthony case, as Grip- ney's release sets off a frenzy pando spins "Blood Money" with even more demonstrainto an intriguing look at the tors and o ne-sided covermedia, v e n geance-seeking age by Faith, a Nancy Grace crusaders and our p ercep- clone. tion of defendants and their The crowd is revved up by attorneys. Faith's rumors that Sydney Jack has just won an ac- may be taking "blood monquittal for his client, Sydney ey" for a movie or book deal. Bennett, a young nightclub During the fracas outside the waitress accused of murder- women's detention c enter, ing her 2-year-old daughter. Celeste Laramore, a young
e
by James Grippando
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Mohammad Hannon /The Associated Press
Members of a Syrian refugee family warm themselves inside their tent at Zaatari refugee camp near the Syrian border in Mafraq, Jordan. With the number of Syrian refugees expected to climb in 2013, the misery in the struggling camp highlights a deepening humanitarian crisis.
Refugees Continued from F1 The camp's managers, employed by the Syrian-American Maram Foundation, based in Houston, Texas, do what little they can. But understaffed and underfunded, the most they can offer on many occasions are encouraging words and hope that the next day's aid shipment will alleviate the suffering of the camp's 13,000 residents — mostly from Syria's northern Idlib province. F or U m Ib r a h im , s u c h supplies cannot come quick enough. Unable to feed her nine children on t h e d a ily bread ration, she sold h er camp-issued blanket to pay for another bag of loaves. Now she spends her nights huddled with her children for warmth.
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college student who has just come from a Sydney Bennett look-alike contest at a South Beach bar, is assaulted so violently she ends up in a coma. Jack alsois attacked and receives escalating threats that are increasingly more personal.Agreeing to represent Celeste's distraught parents, Jack begins to take another look at Sydney's case and what didn't come out during the course of his defense. G rippando continues to look more deeply into the psyche of J ac k S w y teck, the author's go-to character since he first appeared in "The Pardon" in 1994. While part of Jack hates the attention this case has brought, he also is forced to realize that handling u npopular c ases are what he does best. His deepening relationship with an FBI agent, Andie Henning, and his friendship with bar owner and former client, Theo Knight, keep Jack
grounded.
Ben Schrank'slatest is aself-help satire "Love Is a Canoe"
Raad Adayleh/TheAssociated Press
A Syrian refugee family rests after crossing the border from Syria to Jordan in September 2012. About 508,000 Syrians have fled civil war to find safety in neighboring countries like Jordan, Turkey, Lebanon and Iraq.
by Ben Schrank (Sarah Crichton Books/Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $26) By Marion Winik Newsday
Jordan, Lebanon and Turkey, Atmeh does not receive funding from international organizations like the U.N. World Food Program or the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner
drinking, dating a woman he doesn't love. Ben Schrank's new novel, "Love Is a Canoe," an enjoyable inside-publishing satire, hinges on a contest held to celebrate the anniversary of Herman's book by its publishers, Ladder and Rake. Up-and-coming editor Stella Petrovic has been ordered to boost sales of older books, and her idea is an essay competition whose winners — the people with the best troubled marriage! — will spend an afternoon getting advice from Herman himself. The c h apters a l t ernate among t h r eads: e x cerpts
offices of Ladder and Rake, scenes from Herman's life and the story of the couple who wins the contest, Brooklyn hipsters Emily and Eli Babson. Emily suspects that her ultrahot bicycle-maker husband is cheating on her; as a fan of "Canoe" since age 9, she is the contest's most eager entrant. Schrank's setup g e nerates a lot of fun, but there are times when you're not sure how seriously he takes his characters. For example, when Eli and Emily talk to each other,they use the formulation "I love that you feel (that, noticed that, etc.)" with great frequency. Is he making fun of t hem'? I wasn't sure.
ing trailers, it's not bombs that Good love is a quilt — light are killing refugees — it is lack as feathers and strong as Struggles and shortages of medicine and proper sanitairon. Camp residents not only tion. The camp's medical staff A good marriage is a canoe — it needs care and isn't complain of paltry provisions treatsroughly 300 people per but also erratic service. day for diseases ranging from meant to hold too much — no "We get two meals a day," for Refugees (UNHCR). Such tonsillitis to g astrointestinal more than two adults and a said 70-year-old Said Ahmad, organizations are barred by ailments. Every day, an averfew kids. a retired farmer from the vil- international law from operage of three toddlers contract These pearls of wisdom lage of Salut Zuhar. "But there ating in countries without the bronchitis, but there is little come from a fictional selfare no specific times. Some- consent of the government. the medical staff can do. help book titled "Marriage "It is a completely fluid situ"We don't h av e e nough times breakfast comes at 2 Is a Canoe," written 40 years p.m. and dinner much later." ation," said UNHCR spokes- breathing masks for everyago by Peter Herman, a oneWhen the food does arrive, man Adrian Edwards. "We one," explained Hassan alhit wonder now stumbling from the original book (one it looks more like a selection of at the moment do not have an Khawam, a 26-year-old generthrough his golden years in step above Deep Thoughts by bite-sizehors d'oeuvres than a operational presence in places al practitioner. "So we sterilize upstate New York, widowed, Jack Handey), episodes at the full-course meal. The first of- like Atmeh.... That would be the masks and reuse them." fering is often limited to one for OCHA to negotiate with The poor sanitary condipiece of bread, small packets Syria," he said, referring to the tions are taking their toll. Chilof butter, and jelly or chocolate U.N. Office for the Coordina- dren are contracting hepatitis spread, topped off with a few tion of Humanitarian Affairs. A from contaminated food, olives. The small rations have B ut w it h D a m ascus r e- and cholera has afflicted some forced residents to l uctant t o a l l o w of the older residents. Their improvise. Those i nternational o r - suffering is prolonged by a "WejuSt dOn't gani z ations to op- lack of medication. l ucky enough t o "We just don't have what have extra bread Qgye I/yQg] I/I/e erate in rebel-held leave th e d e sice ter r ito r i es, i t i s we need here," explained Khacated crumbs out left to tiny NGos wam as he rubbed the stomto soak. When the l ike th e M a r a m ach of a dazed child. rain r e h y drates to al Khawam, 28 Foundation them, they eat the gene r ai ractitioner p foot the $3,000 to Daily problems edible portions. $ 4,000 daily b i l l At the end of the day, how"We are learnfor meals, gas and e ver, the r esponsibility f o r ing new uses for water in A t m eh. keeping Atmeh running falls food every day," notes Ziyyad Other small NGOs bear some to Yakzan Shishakly, the head Najib, a 35-year-old taxi driver of the operating costs. The of Maram. During the day, from Idlib. Turkish Red Crescent, for ex- the 34-year-old, who sports Water is slightly more plen- ample, supplied the tents and scraggly hair and an unkempt tiful, but like most supplies provides breakfast. The Inter- beard, has no time to speak. at Atmeh, it also runs out too national Medical Corps pays His cellphone constantly hums soon. The four to five I-liter the camp's three to four doc- with requests, problems, and bottles that each of the rough- tors (depending on the day), queries from h e adquarters, i 72 months, $2999Down,MSRP$17,160, $1361 Discount. Stk.rH12188, VINi/KMHCT5AE3DU081405. ly 1,300 tents receives every and the International Rescue other aid organizations, and Zt4%. Expires t/31/20t3. All Financingsubject to credit approval. All vehiclessubject to prior sale, tax, day are always empty before Committee provided roughly others trying to help. At night, title, licenseandregistration fees Pictures for illustration only. Seedealer for details. the sun sets. Residents then 1,300 winterization kits, one he makes the trek back to Turrefill them at water trucks, the for each tent. key to procure new supplies. contents of which are often From purchasing fuel for of substandard quality. "It's A growing number the generators to procuring not clean water," complained Every day, however, rough- potatoes for t h e r e sidents, Anwar S h arqi, a 5 1 -year- ly 100 new Syrians arrive in Shishakly and his small staff old mechanic from Killi. "It Atmeh, stretching the camp's are gettinga crash course in comes from wells that villag- resources even thinner. refugee camp management. "The s helling f orced u s ers use only for washing, not But if his time as an owner s ~~ drinking." from our village," explained of an air-conditioning com~®lw Most shortagesare due to 38-year-old Sabah Jauda, who pany in Houston did not prectatv how supplies are r ationed. fled her home in Kafar Taal. pare him to manage Atmeh, Each family is only allotted "We tried to outlast it as long h is pedigree certainly d i d . six bags of food. But families as we could, but then the re- Shishakly's grandfather Adib vary insize, forcing members gime soldiers set fire to my was president of Syria from of some families to split the house. My son fights with the 1953 to 1954 — and his fam84 months,$2999Down,MSRP$t95t0, $t711Discount. StktH12190,VINt 84months,$1999Down,MSRP$19,290, $169t Discount.StktH12192, KMHDH 6AEODU013249.349%. Expires i/31/2013. AIIFinancingsubject to VINr KMH D35LE2DU051524.3.49%.ExI ires 1/3t/20t3.All Financingsubject already-limited pr o v i sions Free Syrian Army, so that was ily name earns him instant reI credit approval All. vehiclessubjectto prior sale,tax,title, licenseandregistration to crediapproval t .Allvehiclessubjectto prior sale,tax, title, licenseand a mong them. And life i n a President Bashar Assad's re- spect throughout Syria. ~> feesPicturesfor ilustrationonly.Seedealerfor details. registrationfeesPicturesfor ilustrationcnly. Seedealer fcr details. shared tent is just as difficult venge on me." In A t meh, h owever, it 's as sharing food. Th e 180As the Syrian government Shishakly's hard workthat has square-foot canvass dwell- has intensified it s b l o ody won the refugees' admiration. "Yakzan is there for us, to ings sag under the weight of campaign in recent months, the elements and occasionally the flow of refugees into Jor- help with everything," said collapse. dan, Lebanon and Turkey has Jauda, gratefully. Shishakly As the rain seeps under the steadily increased. g rinned bashfully, bu t h i s flaps, the cold earth softens Today, more than 508,000 smile quickly dissipated when into clay, leaving behind a pit Syrians have fled the country, his cellphone rang with the of mud. according to the U.N. Office latest crisis. "Problems with aid delivIn late December, when I for the Coordination of Huery," Shishakly relayed with visited Atmeh, a b u l ldozer manitarian Affairs. Another was carving up the earth be- 2.5 million, like the residents a sigh of exhaustion. But he hind the camp's communal of Atmeh, are internally disquickly found a second wind. bivouac shelter, which doubles placed, according to the Syr- "Tomorrow we'll try to resolve MSRP $33,230, $323t Discount.StktHt2124, VINPKMHFG4JG6CA179888. 84months,$2999Down,MSRP$25400,$2401Discount.StkÃHt2tt2,VINt it," he said before trudging as a mosque. Workers placed ian Arab Red Crescent. Loyalowner$750/hmt bonuscash$750: $1500total. All FinancingbyHMCattd KM8JUC AC2DU553021.3.49%.All FinancingBYHMCandsttbtect tocredit black pipes in the excavated O nce they arrive i n A t - back across the border. subject tocredit approval.All vehiclessubject to prior sale,tax, title, licenseattd approvalAtl . vehiclessubjectto prior sale,tax, tttle, licenseandregistration fees registration fees P i c t u res for i l u stration onl y . Se e d ea l e r for de t a i l s . Pictures for ilustrationonly.Seedealer for details. — Steven Sotloff has covered areas and connected them to meh, however, refugees have a nearby concrete structure, trouble putting the horrors of Libya for Time magazine. which had been built to house war behind them. The regime I • g America's Best Warranty' bathrooms. The t e mporary has targeted Free Syria Army 10-Year/100,000-M//e camp was taking on a perma- positions near the camp, and Food, Home & Garden nence few want, but everyone the loud explosions caused by In desperately needs. heavy weaponry f r equently "We m a k e ca r b u y i n g e a s y. " Assurance But provisions ar e s l ow wake residents. in coming. Unlike the dozen But at Atmeh's makeshift All vehicles subj e ct to prior sale, tax, title, license & regi s tration fees. All financing subj e ct to credit approval. Pictures for illustration purposesonly. I • Pe&uetm *Mttst be exactsamevehicle, andmust be in ottr dealer stock. Must meetall requirements for rebates. Offers expire 1/3t/13, at close of business. other camps spread out across clinic, composed of two adjoin-
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HY U I I OAI
ON PAGE 2 NYT CROSSWORD ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free ltems 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Pets & Supplies
Dachshund, Mini AKC male, choco/tan 13 wks, 1st shots and wormed $500. C a ll 541-408-6762
Dachshund pups, mini, smooth. Permanent love
• B en d
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Lab puppies, purebred, Rodent control experts males & females, all col- (barn cats) seek work in ors! $350. 541-416-1175 exchange for safe shelLabradoodles - Mini 8 ter, basic care. We demed size, several colors liver! 541-389-8420. 541-504-2662 www.alpen-ridge.com
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Antiques & Collectibles
O r e g o n
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Crafts & Hobbies
Exercise Equipment
8th Street Artisans Complete Bowflex UltiSaturday Market m ate, resistance &
-4 p.m. RC Bzt'fc103610a.m. NE 8th St., Bend Dgrllrn
Visit our HUGE home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501
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behind 7-11 store. Support local craftsmen!
aerobic machine with leg attachment, other extras, excellent cond, $800. 541-433-2192
541-977-1737 Golf Equipment Labrador Pups, AKC Donate your d e positChocolate/Yeliow/White guaranteed. Golf Membership ATTENTION bottles/cans to local all Hips OFA $300-$400. Lease, Brasada CRAFTERS! volunteer, non-profit aniSpringer Spaniel Pups 1-541-954-1727 SPRING FAIR Mar 22-24 Ranch. 541-408-0014 mal rescue, to help with ready 2/17,Champion www.redeuxbend.com at Douglas County Faircat spay/neuter vet bills. Labrador purebred lines, Now taking dep, grounds. Our 38th year! See CRAFT's Cans for pups! $150 males, $500. 541-604-6232 Booths available for Guns, Hunting Cats trailer at E a gle $200 females. Find exactly what Wplf-Husky Pups, $325; ypu are lppking ipr in the quality crafts. For info, & Fishing Crest Clubhouse, 956 541-408-4408. send SASE to: Spring Niagara Falls, 1/14-22; pure Sibenan Husky pup, Fair 2013, PO Box 22, CLASSIFIEDS Ray's Market, Century $4pp 541 g77 7pf g 15 Duck Decoys with Dillard, OR 97432 Dr, Bend, 1/23-2/10. Or weights, $5 each. Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl, The Bulletin reserves donate © Smith Signs, 541-383-4231 2 boys, potty training, 2nd/Olney, M-F; Tumalo the right to publish all I Lt health guar., pixs avail, 300 Win Mag, fired only Find exactly what sanctuary, anytime. ads from The Bulletin 15 times, + 1 box shells, $550 8 up. 541-777-7743 newspaper onto The www.craftcats.org or Fayou are looking for in the LABS, AKC. All colors, $325. 541-719-8549 cebook. 541-389-8420 Bulletin Internet web210 CLASSIFIEDS 5 avail. Born 12-8-12. site. .308 AMMO 358 rnds $600. 541-410-0588 Furniture & Appliances mil-surp FMJ, 1 lot, 1st DO YOU HAVE The Bulletin $300 ca s h . Tim, Like cats & kittens? Get SOMETHING TO Serv>nqCentral Oregon rince 1903 Rockhound Equipment 541-419-6936 your kitty fix by volun- A1 Washers&Dryers SELL Saw, grind, sand & teering for CRAFT. Help FOR $500 OR $150 ea. Full warNeed help fixing stuff? The Bulletin p olish. L o i tone 8 is always appreciated ranty. Free Del. Also LESS? Call A Service Professional Highland Park Bend. To Subscribe call with c a ttery c h ores, wanted, used W/D's Npn-cpmmercial find the help you need. Info 541 280-5574 541-385-5800 or go to grooming or interacting advertisers may 541-280-7355 www.bendbulletin.com with cats, events & adopwww.bendbulletin.com place an ad with tions, transporting to vet OUI Dryer, 3 yrs old, Admiappts., trapping aban"QUICK CASH HD, $125 . doned cats, meds 8 spe- ral, SPECIAL" 541-647-9051. cial c a re , fo s tering, 1 week 3 lines 1 2 phone calls, minor fix-it GENERATE SOME exo ~2 e e k s 2 N jobs, more. Even a few 208 Ad must include i n your hours helps! 5 41-389 citement price of single item neighborhood! Plan a Pets 8 Supplies 8420, www.craftcats.org. of $500 or less, or garage sale and don't 0 Looking for rough coat forget to advertise in multiple items Jack Russell Terrier The Bulletin recomwhose total does classified! to adopt. No pups, 541-385-5809. not exceed $500. mends extra caution adult dog only. Call when purc h as- I t 541-318-4222. NEED TO CANCEL Call Classifieds at ing products or serYOUR AD? 541-385-5809 vices from out of the Maltese Poodle puppies, The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com area. Sending cash, 1 off-white male, 1 aprihas an checks, or credit incot male, $250 ea., cash. Classifieds "After Hours" Line f ormation may b e 541-546-7909 I Want to Buy or Rent Call 541-383-2371 subjected to fraud. Maremma Guard Dog 24 hrs. to cancel For more i nforma• f WANTED: Tobacco pups, purebred, great your ad! tion about an advert pipes - Briars, Meerdogs, $30 0 e a c h, tiser, you may call 541-546-6171. shaums and smoking the O r egon State The Bulletin accessories. Attorney General's English Mastiff pup- Newfoundland Pup- recommends extra WANTED: RAZORSOffice Co n s umer Easy, flexible, and affordable ad packages I ca vo s e p pies. AKC males/fe- pies, purebred black 8 Gillette, Gem, Schick, Protection hotline at Boxer/English Bulldog males. $1200 8 up. Landseer puppies ready chasing products or • etc. Shaving mugs 1-877-877-9392. (Valley Bulldog) puppies, 541-279-1437 are also available on our Web site. to go home in Feb. Born services from out of I and accessories. C~KC R ' d, 1 u dl & Nov 29th, $900-$1100. l the area. Sending I Fair prices paid. FREE rescue cats, all The Bulletin fawns, 1st shots. $800. Call Jill to come pick out cash, checks, or Call 541-390-7029 Sen ng Cem al0 egonsnce 1903 541-325-3376 fixed: 1 Siamese girl; 1 your puppy. $300 de- l credit i n f o rmation between 10 am-3 pm. Calico long-haired girl; posit. 541-279-6344 may be subjected to To place your Bulletin ad with a photo, The Bulletin Boxer Puppies! 2 boys 1 large long-haired gray l FRAUD. For more Alaskan Malamute hybrid and 2 g i rls. Super boy. 541-536-4440 visit www.bendbulletin.com, click on To Subscribe call information about an I pups,4 females, 3 males c ute, o n l y $45 0 . 541-385-5800 or go to $500 ea. 541-771-9255 advertiser, you may Frenchie Faux "Place an ad" and follow these easy steps: 541-610-7274 or P eople g i ving p e t s call t h e Or e gon / www.bendbulletin.com puppies, $400. 541-848-9802. away are advised to State Attor ney ' 541-447-0210 AUSSIES, Mini AKC blue be selective about the l General's O f fl ce Choose a category, choose a classification, Find exactly what merle w/blue e yes, Boxer Puppies, pure- Golden Retriever AKC new owners. For the Consumer P rotec- • and then select your ad package. you are looking for in the r e d/black tri, parents on bred, $650 each, 2 of the ani- t ion ho t l in e at I puppies, available 1/26, protection F awn F emales, 2 she 54' " " 3' 4 mal, a personal visit to CLASSIFIEDS $400 8 $450. g Write your ad and upload your digital photo. Brindle Fem a l es, the home is recom- l 1-877-877-9392. (541) 943- 3120 541-420-6977 mended. BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! Create your account with any major credit The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Cats 8 s ome k ittens The Bulletin card. Serv~ng Cent~al Oregon s>nre 1903 still over 2,000 folks in our community without available thru r escue fJ 212 permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift group in Tumalo on Sat. Pit Bull Boxer mix, free n camps, getting by as best they can. Ail ads appear in both print and online 8 Sun., 1-5 PM. Shots, Antiques & t o good h ome, a l l The following items are badly needed to altered, ID chip, more. shots 8 neu t ered, Collectibles Please allow 24 hours for photo processing before your help them get through the winter: Map, photosof some 8 Havanese puppies AKC, 1 1-mo. g oo d w i t h ad appears in print and online. info at www.craftcats.org. hypo-allergenic and non kids. 541-388-4230 @ CAMPING GEAR of any sort: @ 1932 Mills Lion front 5C New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. 541-389-8420. shed, UTD shots/ PoodleToy, apricot male, slot machine, w/ origie WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. wormer, $850. 5 mos, smart & lovable! n al m e t a l st a n d , Chihuahua 12 week old 541-460-1277. $1800. 541-330-5516 PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT $300. 541-520-7259 female, fawn c olor, To place your photo ad, visit us online THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER $250. 541-419-7188. al .be d bullel .co Antiques wanted: tools, Queensland Heelers 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. furniture, fishing, standard 8 mini,$150 & www.hendhulletin.r om Dachshund, AKC mini Yorkshire Terrier female For Special pick up please call marbles, beer cans. up. 541-280-1537 black/tan female, $300. Ken © 541-389-3296 6mp $12pp rightwayranch.wordtoys, costume jewelry. 541-633-3221 541-788 0090 PLEASEHELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. Call 541-389-1578 press.com
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$250 ea, 541-815-3799
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Advertise with a full-color photo in The Bulletin Classifieds and online.
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C188'SjftetIS
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SAT. R SUN. NOON — 3PM
A •
• 1996 sq. ft. • Oak hardwood floors • L arge k i t c h en w/Corian counters • P rivate well p l u s irrigation water
63885 N. Hwy 97
Directions: Highway 97 just north of Cascades Uillage Mall. with hpt tub Drive down a Private /reed • Detached 528 sq. ft. 3 -rppm office wi t h road ro this amazing property wlCascade Mtn. views. bath
• Wrap-around decks
HOS/ed byr
RICK COFFIN Principal Brober
541-385-5069
$235,000
HOLIDAV R EA LT V
of Central Oregon C t
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
G2 SUNDAY JANUARY 20 2013 • THE BULLETIN
T HE N E W Y O R K T I M E S C R O S S W O R D MAGIC SQUARE By Elizabeth C. Gorski / Edited by Will Shortz
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I Sting 7 Makes a lo v e c o n n e c t i o n?
54 Poison hemlock or Queen Anne's lace
1 03 Dance i n s t r u ct i o n
5 6 When the Festi v al de Cannes opens
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5 8 "Peac e
1 4 Like Bi g M a m a T hornto n' s " H o u n d
h and "
59 Comic ac tor Jacques
Dog"
60 Company closing?
20 Inclined
107 Ditch-digging, e.g.
12 Friendly
112 Hip 114 With 93-A c r oss, 34-Down and 48-
1 5 Leaves out of t h e bag?
Down, what each line in th e center square should do
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61 Silent screen star Naldi
22 Limestone variety
6 2 Winging i t ?
23 M idd le r o w
66 Back door
2 5 Ones gettin g hi t o n at salsa clubs?
68 Lift
69 "I' m i m p ressed!"
118 One who's beyond beI i e f?
26 File ext en si o n s
70 Woodstock artist Guthrie
119 Revolutionary figure?
71 P.T.A.'s concern:
120 High-hat
24 Muslim leader
I 2 I Te n n i s H a I I — o fFamer born in
29 Light side
27 Gen. Bradley 28 Sledge who sang "When a Man
7 2 Atlanta B r a v es' d i v .
73 Knee-length hip-hop
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shirts
3 1 Stretched, in a w a y
78 Mother wh o wa s a Nobelist
33 Nesting place for a bird
8 0 Skeleton secti o n
35 Horned Frogs' sch.
8 6 Rotating
36 Like magic squares
surveying
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4 2 Investo r' s b o t t o m line
8 7 Holly w o o d ' s Patricia and others
44 "Spider-Man"
89 "It Happened One Night" d i r e ctor
director Sam
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46 Eco-conscious
plans, say 91 Show some
47 Like letters marked "Return to sender"
i rritat i o n
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Sons"
9 8 Chorus after "Al l i n favor"
For any three answers, call from a touch-tone hone: 1-900-285-5656, 1.49 each minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800814-5554.
100 Road sign that may e licit a g r o a n 101 Used, as a dinner
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Loves a Woman"
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sign)
happen"
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48 See 114-Across
6 One of tw o p h o to s i n
49 Snake along
63 Many a Rubens subject
79 Worshiper wit h a pentagram
9 4 Co-star of " T h e
81 German pronoun
95 "There Is
64 B ot r om r r i w
7 Where Ponce de Leon died
52 H.S. senior's exam,
65 Parisian schools
8 3 E.M.T. tr ai n i n g
67 Sports car feature
84 Drought-prone
9 9 Laundry p r o b l e m
8 Bernstein's "Candide," for one
5 3 Divi sion po l i t i q u e
74 Greenish shade
85 Newspapers
102 The Wright
55 Playwri ght Fugard
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88 Dates
9 Black
57 Beginning of
76 Slippery
91 Donnybrooks
77 Mercedes models
92 Mete out
10 Stay fresh 1 1 Pitcher' s datu m
once
(watershed moment)
108 Somewhat 109 Impart
(song by the Cure)
82 Steamed bun i n
50 Oil- r ic h l a nd
an ad
106 Diamonds, e.g.
Stunt Man"
Chinese cookery
9 6 Monet's D u t c h
110 Bow attachment
I I I Price to play
subjects
113 Commandment adjective 115 Hand-held o rganizer, in br i ef
brothers' home
1 04 "Hairspray" ro l e 105 Some e-mail
116 Hollywood's home: Abbr.
attachments
PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . Tuesday .. . . . . . . . . Wednesday.. . . . . . . Thursday.. . . . . . . . . Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Saturday Real Estate .. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . Sunday.. . . . . . . . . .
Starting at 3 lines "UNDER'500in total merchandise
... 5:00 pm Fri ... . Noon Mon Noon Tues .. . Noon Wed ... Noon Thurs ... 11:00 am Fri ... 3:00 pm Fri ... 5:00 pm Fri
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place aphotoin your private party ad for only $75.00 perweek.
OVER'500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7days. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1.50
Garage Sale Special
A Payment Drop Bo x i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
C©X
4 lines for 4 days... . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
PLEASE NOTE; Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if 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 onthe policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 ormoredays will publish in the Central Oregon Marketplace eachTuesday.
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Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Guns, Hunting tk Fishing
Heating & Stoves •
Complete VTech phone with 6 handsets, 308 Savage $600 wl GUN SHOW: E Albany system scope & ammo. Ruger Lions, Linn C o unty $90. 541-788-5325 Red Label 20 ga., 3" F airgrounds, E x p o Eddie Bauer wmns ski chamber, o/u, $1200. Building. Jaru 19th & jumpsuit sz 8, new wl 541-420-0065 20th. Sat. 9-5, Sun. tags $100. 541-678-5407 9-4, Admission $5. A303 Beretta SP Trap Info - 541-928-7710 GENERATE SOME 30" Full Choke SemiEXCITEMENT A utomatic, $105 0 New Sig Pro 2340 .40 IN YOUR 541-915-8324 cal, $500. SKS rifle, NEIGBORHOOD. AMMO - I've got it! 22LR, $400. 541-603-0669 Plan a garage sale and 223, 7.62x39 AK47,9mm (RIFLES FOR SALE) don't forget to adver40 cal, + more ammo 8 Made by DPMS, Olymtise in classified! clips. 541-815-4901 pic Arms, Bushmaster, 541-385-5809. CMTS, Ruger, Federal Just bought a new boat? Arms, Volunteer Arms. Sell your old one in the guns w it h e x tra People Look for Information classifieds! Ask about our All About Products and mags. Best prices in Super Seller rates! Services Every Daythrough town. 541-447-4101 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classiffeds Wanted: Collector AR-15's seeks high quality GET FREE OF CREDIT fishing items. All New-in-box. S&W CARD DEBT NOW! Call 541-678-5753, or M&P-15, Magpul acCut payments by up 503-351-2746 cessories, $ 2 ,500. to half. Stop creditors Windham Weaponry 251 from calling. AR-15, $1,900. NI B 866-775-9621. Hot Tubs & Spas Ruger Mini-14, syn(PNDC) thetic stock-stainless steel bbl 8 receiver, 3 Costco Hot tub, new lid, Highspeed Internet EVs-person, $2500 obo 20-rd mags: $1,475. ERYWHERE By Sat541-389-9268 541-390-9927. Local ellite! Speeds up to private party - not an 255 12mbps! (200x faster FFL. Computers than dial-up.) Starting at $49.95/mo. CALL Bend local pays CASH!! T HE B U L LETIN r e - N OW & G O F A S T! for all firearms & 1-888-718-2162. quires computer adammo. 541-526-0617 vertisers with multiple (PNDC) CASH!! ad schedules or those For Guns, Ammo & The Bulletin Offers selling multiple sysReloading Supplies. temsl software, to dis- Free Private Party Ads 541-408-6900. • 3 lines - 3 days close the name of the Private Party Only Colt AR-15 early model business or the term •• Total of items adverSP-1 . 22 3 c a l iber, "dealer" in their ads. semi-auto rifle. All orig. Private party advertis- tised must equal $200 or Less w/Colt 3X telescopic ers are d efined as FOR DETAILS or to site. 95% orig. cond., those who sell one PLACE AN AD, orig.access. 2 extra 30 computer. CalI 541-385-5809 round mags. $2500. Fax 541-385-5802 541-504-3122. Musical Instruments COLT AR15 p r e-ban Wanted- paying cash Sporter, HBAR .223/5.56. 1923 Chickering 5'6" for Hi-fi audio & stuExcellent cond, selling Baby Grand, beautiful dio equip. Mclntosh, with 20-rd mag & 100 rds tone & action, $2500. J BL, Marantz, D y ammo. $2000 obo. Call 541-504-4416 naco, Heathkit, Sanor text 541-390-1085. sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Guitar lessons: $15 for Call 541-261-1808 /2 hour. All ages, most IT MISSTHIS DOM styles. Exp. teacher with B.Mus 8 M.Mus degrees. Phone/text • Medical Equipment• DO YOU HAVE 541-312-8118 SOMETHING TO Medical Alert for SeSELL Yamaha Piano, Upright niors - 24/7 monitorFOR $500 OR Grand, like new, $3000 ing. FREE Equipment. LESS? obo. 541-389-9764 FREE Shipping. NaNon-commercial tionwide Ser v i ce. 260 advertisers may $ 29.95/Month C A L L place an ad Misc. Items Medical Guardian Towith our day 88 8 - 842-0760. "QUICK CASH 2 Studded tires on (PNDC) SPECIAL" Honda rims. 165/R-13, $70. 541-504-1123 1 week3lines 12 Ot' Buying Diamonds Tools ~ae e ks 2 0 ! • /Gotd for Cash Ad must Saxon's Fine Jewelers 500W halogen work light include price of 541-389-6655 w/4-6' tripod, NIB $30. a~ le te f ssoe 541-504-1123. or less, or multiple BUYING items whose total Lionel/American Flyer does notexceed trains, accessories. 541-408-2191. $500. •
Call Classifieds at
BUYING 4I(
SE L LING
Bend Habitat All gold jewelry, silver RESTORE and gold coins, bars, rounds, wedding sets, Building Supply Resale Quality at LOW class rings, sterling silPRICES DPMS Panther AR15, ver, coin collect, vin740 NE 1st new .223, $2500. Also tage watches, dental 541-312-6709 have . 22 3 a m m o. gold. Bill Fl e ming, 541-480- f 536 541-382-9419. Open to the public. 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for
used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been c ertified by the O r egon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal En v ironmental Protection A g e ncy (EPA) as having met smoke emission standards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e identified by its certification label, which is permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k nowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.
267
267
Fuel 8 Wood
Fuel & Wood
WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD... To avoid fraud, The Bulletin
recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8'
• Receipts should include name,
phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include species and cost per cord to better serve our customers.
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since reaa
1 cord dry, split Juniper, $185/cord. Multi-cord discounts, 8 t/9 cords
available. Immediate
delivery! 541-408-6193 A-1 DRY JUNIPER $185 split, or $165 rounds. per cord, delivered. Call 541-977-4500 or 54f -350-1809
Supplies a' ardening & Equipment
For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800
To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
classified@bendbulletw.com
The Bulletin
Sen ne Central Oregon ance raea
All Year Dependable Firewood: S plit, Del. Bend. Lod g epole, Find exactly what Pine: 1 for $180 or 2 for $350. Cash, Check you are looking for in the CLASStFtEDS or Credit Card OK. 541-420-3484.
Dry, split Juniper or Lodgepole, mixed, $200/cord, deliyery included! 541-923-6987, Iv msg.
Gardening Supplieq & Equipment
Lost & Found FOUND LADIES RING
b etween Rays a n d Subway on Simpson Screened, soil 8 comAve. email to post mi x ed , no Ifinbend@yahoo.com rocks/clods. High hu- to identify. mus level, exc. for FOUND: remote key for flower beds, lawns, gardens, straight Dodge on street in s creened to p s o i l . Ponderosa E s tates last month. Bark. Clean fill. Deliver/you haul. 541-389-1260. 541-548-3949. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! SUPER TOP SOIL
www.herahe eoilandbatk.com
541-385-5809 Lost & Found
•
Found wedding band with inscription, near Inn E xpensive bicy c le at the 7th Mtn. Call to found i n Or c hardidentify, 541-31 8-0581 Prompt Delivery Neighborhood District. Rock, Sand 8 Gravel Call to ID People Lookfor Information Multiple Colors, Sizes About Products and Instant Landscaping Co. 541-948-2252 Services Every Daythrough 541-389-9663
The Bulletin Classitteds
your web source for STATEWIDE classifieds
30BS I REAL ESTATEI CLASSIFIEDS edS.oregon.COm u iS a neW SuppOrted by OregOn neWSpaperS,"ClaSSifi WebSite dediCated to bringing CLaSSified LiStingS frOm arOund the StateOf OregOn tOgether On One eaSy-to-USe WebSite. FrOm jObSto homeS and inVeStment PrOPertieS,yOu'llfind the faSteSt u grOWing CLaSSifiedS SeCtiOn iS "ClaSSifiedS.oregon.Com
BROWSE THE ENTIRE
STATE OFOREGON
classifieds.
ore On • ColYI
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 G3
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER C A T T
O S H A
N L R B
J O O P E B F I E E S 0 M C RA M A T H EM A I M I N R E A I E N N DI A T AT N F L I GH U 0 Y 0 0 NL D U C E R E S N E A AL S R I S T L E A N A YE T E 0 N S I T H I O W I S T Y H N O O T
H A V A N A
0 0 K P P E E S E R P E D T I C T E T S A U S L I 8 1 T 3 5 H 4 9 E R I B C C A P H 0 R S T E P S A D D U I N F I N A S T
S A V E
U S E R
P B L U E 0 0 L N B 0 N C Y S A E A V E L N E T C A G R E E G E T A L M A I I I N C N R E A R E A R L 0 T A L L T G E Y L E A B A Z 0 N T A L E T 0 U R T 0 I L A T 0 F I F T E L P L A S E S A D
E I G H T 0 N E S I X
S T 0 I C S
Y E S B U T
476
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
fg,/F~>Jir ) JI,J j Jl)IJjjJ~ Jg Can be found on these pages:
CUSTOMER SERVICE
General
Mechanic - HeavyEquipment EMPLOYMENT FINANCEAND BUSINESS Republic Services is REPRESENTATIVE 410 - Private Instruction 507 - Real Estate Contracts s eeking field m e Immediate opening 421 - Schools and Training 514 -Insurance College chanic to handle rein th e C i r culation 454- Looking for Employment 528 - Loans and Mortgages has openings listed pairs / preventative department for a full A 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 543 - Stocks and Bonds Go to maintenance on t ime e n tr y le v e l below. https://jobs.cocc.edu heavy e q u ipment 476 - Employment Opportunities 558 - Business Investments R R Customer S e rvice to view details 8 apa nd s u pport v e - 486 - Independent Positions Representative. 573 - Business Opportunities U A S E ply online. Human hicles at Coffin Butte Looking for someR esources, N e w Landfill and Pacific one to assist our 476 B A T 528 berry Hall, 2600 NW Region C o mpost. subscribers and deEmployment Loans & Mortgages XIHE!MQ 6 T A College Way, Bend These facilities are livery carriers with Opportunities OR 97701; l ocated 9 mile s subscription t r ans8 M8zem I 7 I T LOCAL MONEyrWe buy North of C orvallis, actions, acc o unt (541)383-7216. For secured trustdeeds & SERVICE EVALUATOR hearing/speech imOregon. For full job B 2 questions and delivnote,some hard money No Associated Fees paired, Oregon Red escription and t o ery concerns. Esloans. Call Pat Kelley E E S E Safeway Inc. is a Forlay Services numapply online, please sential: Positive at541-382-3099 ext.13. ber is 7-1-1. COCC visit w ww.republic- tune 100 company and T A V E L titude, strong one of the largest food 573 is an A A/EO emservices.com service/team orienR I L S and drug retailers in EOE M/F/D/V tation, and problem ployer. Business Opportunities North America based on 528 solving skills. Must B I L Y sales. The company opOffice Specialist, have accurate typOR RN n e eded, exp.erates 1,678 stores in the Loans 8 Mortgages A Classified ad is an R D ing, computer entry Admissions & EASY W AY TO only. N o w eekends, United States and westRecords experience and REACH over 3 million nights or call. Red- ern Canada. WARNING A L K A phone skills. Most Provide c u s tomer mond Surgery Center: We are seeking respon- The Bulletin recomPacific NorthwesternW P E E N service support to w ork is d on e v i a ers. $5 2 5 /25-word Email resume to su- s ible, motivated a n d mends you use cautelephone so strong p rospective stu whitley@uspi.com or computer literate indition when you proc lassified ad i n 3 0 L D N E T p rofessional c o m - dents fo r A d m is- fax 541-316-2513. daily newspapers for vide personal viduals to provide feedmunication skills and sions 8 R e c ords. S A D L E information to compa- 3-days. Call the Paback specific to store Just bought a new boat? Coordinate applicathe ability to m ulti nies offering loans or cific Northwest Daily and service Sell your old one in the conditions task in a fast paced tions and track trancredit, especially Connection (916) levels. Hourly rate paid PUZZLE IS ON PAGE GZ classifieds! Ask about our for scripts. 2yrs exp + e nvironment i s a 2 88-6019 o r e m a il driving, observation, those asking for adSuper Seller rates! must. Bilingual in elizabeth@cnpa.com and report times. Reimvance loan fees or 476 541-385-5809 Spanish/English req. Work shift hours are bursement for mileage companies from out of for more info (PNDC) Lost & Found Employment Tuesday and Friday $2238-$2665/mo. based on the distance state. If you have Advertise V A CATION Relief Pharmacist Opportunities 8:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Closes Jan 22. associated with assignconcerns or ques(Part -time) SPECIALS to 3 m i lREMEMBER: If you Wednesday and tions, we suggest you lion P acific N o rthExpress, LLC is a ments. have lost an animal, Director of Human C&K For additional informa- consult your attorney Thursday 5:30 AM to family & e m ployeewesterners! 30 daily don't forget to check CAUTION READERS: and to submit an on 2:30 PM., Saturday Resources or call CONSUMER owned comp a ny tion newspapers, six The Humane Society line application visit: 6 00 A M t o 1 2 0 0 Plan, direct, and suHOTLINE, based in Brookings htt s:// ualit sho er.or states. 25-word clasin Bend 541-382-3537 Ads published in "Em- PM. O c c asional pervise all aspects 1-877-877-9392. Oregon. sified $525 for a 3-day Redmond, ployment Opportuni- S unday shift a n d of the HR functions. We are currently rea d. Cal l 541-923-0882 (916) t ies" i n c lude e m - holidays required. Administer all c o lBANK TURNED YOU cruiting for a Part-time 2 88-6019 o r vis i t Prineville, 410 ployee and Please send resume lective b a r gaining P harmacist fo r o u r DOWN? Private party www.pnna.com/advert 541-447-7178; i ndependent po s i - t o: PO B o x 6 0 2 0 Private Instruction agreements, rePharmacy Express lowill loan on real esising pndc.cfm for the OR Craft Cats, tions. Ads for posi- B end OR . 9 7 7 08 sponsible for classication in R e dmond, chasing products or I tate equity. Credit, no Pacific Nor t h west 541-389-8420. tions that require a fee attn. Music Lessons for All Circ u lation fication / compensaOR. Applicant must services from out of ~ problem, good equity Daily Con n ection. tion system, policy Just bought a new boat? Ages! Find a music or upfront investment Customer S e rvice have a current OBOP f the area. Sending is all you need. Call (PNDC) Sell your old one in the teacher! Ta k eLes- must be stated. With Manager or e-mail: development, HRIS license in good stand- c ash, checks, o r now. Oregon Land classifieds! Ask about our sons offers affordable, any independent job and Affirmative Acahustedio'bendbuling. This position is re- f credit i n f o rmation Mortgage 388-4200. Find exactly what Super Seller rates! safe, guaranteed mu- opportunity, p l e ase letin.com tion review process. sponsible for provid~ may be subjected to ~ E ver Consider a R e - you are looking for in the 541-385-5809 s ic l e s sons wi t h investigate thorBachelors + 5yr exp ing p h a rmaceutical EOE/Drug free FRAUD. teachers in your area. oughly. workplace req. $ 6 5 ,224 care to patients in the For CLASSIFIEDS verse Mortgage? At more informaOur pre s c reened community while as- tion about $77,646/yr. Closes an adver- ~ least 62 years old? sisting with all aspects teachers specialize in Use extra caution when Jan 28. Stay in your home & Extreme Value Adveryou may call singing, guitar, piano, applying for jobs onof daily o perations./ tiser Need to get an the Oregon State / increase cash f low! tising! 30 Daily newsCompetitive pay. Ind rums, Violin, a n d line and never proPartTime Safe 8 Effective! Call papers $525/25-word ad in ASAP? formation is available I Attorney General's more. Call vide personal inforinstructor of Now for your FREE classified, 3-d a ys. Office Co n s umer t You can place it 1-866-974-5910! mation to any source on o ur web s i te Veterinary DVD! C a l l Now Reach 3 million PaProtection hotline at I www.ckmarket.com. (PNDC) you may not have reonline at: Technician 888-785-5938. cific Northwesterners. Must pass drug test & I 1-877-877-9392. searched and deemed www.bendbulletin.com Education (PNDC) For more information background check. to be reputable. Use Provide instruction in Find exactly what call (916) 288-6019 or gThe Bulletin extreme caution when the Vet e r inarian If interested, email reI BUY REAL ESTATE email: you are looking for in the 308 541-385-5809 r esponding to A N Y Technician program, sume and application Notes, Mortgages, elizabeth©cnpa.com CLASSIFIEDS Farm Equipment online e m ployment develop curriculum, to jobs@ckmarket.com People Look for Information and Trust Deeds. for the Pacific Northad from out-of-state. Development Director evaluate stu d e nt or fax to: & Machinery 877-264-8623 west Daily ConnecAbout Products and 421 541-412-0002. for KPOV, High Desert p erformance. 3 y r tion. (PNDC) Services Every Day through We suggest you call Community Radio exp as DVM or LVT EOE Consigned Farm Schools & Training the State of Oregon The Bulletin Cfassiffeds part t i me . C l oses with current license. ~rEs o Machinery & ov' Good classified ads tell Oc January 25. Details at: Start date Spring Equipment Auction A IRLINES AR E H I R - Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 ~ DESCHUTES COUNTY k Term 2013. the essential facts in an Sat 8 Sun ING - Train for hands ~ Looking for your next interesting Manner. Write Jan.26 8 27,2013 on Aviation Mainteemployee? Part Time from the readers view - not at 9:00 am sharp! nance Career. FAA For Equal Opportunity CAREER OPPORTUNITIES Place a Bulletin help Get your lnstructor's Woodburn approved p r ogram. L aws: Oregon B u the seller's. Convert the wanted ad today and reau of Labor & InLooking for talented Auction Yard, Financial aid if qualibusiness facts into benefits. Show reach over 60,000 individuals to teach fied - Housing avail- dustry, C i vil Rights /2 mile south of Woodthe reader how the item will readers each week. Division, part-time in a variburn, OR able. Call Aviation Inhelp them in some way. Your classified ad BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPEGIALIST I —Housing ety o f d i s ciplines. on HWY 99 E stitute of 971-673-0764 G ROW I N G This will also appear on Check our web site More info at Maintenance. Specialist (2013-00007), Behavioral Health advertising tip bendbulletin.com If you have any queshttps://jobs.cocc.edu 1-877-804-5293. www.woodburnaucwith an ad in brought to you by which currently tions, concerns or Division. Full-time position $3,416 — $4,675 . Positions pay $500 tion.com (PNDC) receives over 1.5 The Bulletin's comments, contact: per load unit (1 LU = The Bulletin per month for a 172.67 hour work month. million page views The Bulletin "Call A Service 1 class credit), with BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Classified Department every month at To Subscribe call The Bulletin Deadline: SUNDAY, 02/03/13. additional perks. Search the area's most Professional" no extra cost. Remember.... 541-385-5809 541-385-5800 or go to comprehensive listing of Bulletin Classifieds Directory A dd your we b a d Hospitality BEHAVIORALHEALTHSPECIALIST II —Access classified advertising... www.bendbulletin.com Get Results! Front desk positions dress to your ad and real estate to automotive, The Bulletin Call 385-5809 Team (2013-00004), Behavioral Health readers on The Servrng Central Oregon s>nce 1903 part time and full time. merchandise to sporting or place DO YOU NEED Bulletin' s web site Apply in person at Division. Two full-time positions $4,057goods. Bulletin Classifieds your ad on-line at A GREAT Sugarloaf M o untain will be able to click appear every day in the Call a Pro bendbulletin.com $5,553 per month for a 172.67 hour work EMPLOYEE Motel, 62980 No. Hwy through automatically print or on line. Whether you need a to your site. 97, Bend, Oregon. RIGHT NOW? month. Deadline: W EDNESDAY, 01/30/13. Call 541-385-5809 fence fixed, hedges Call The Bulletin Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, www.bendbulletin.com Where can you find a before 11 a.m. and Press Supervisor trimmed or a house BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST II - Older virtually new, less than 5 helping hand? The Bulletin is seeking a night time press suget an ad in to pubhrs. $7500 new; asking The Bulletin built, you'll find Adult Behavioral Health Specialist (2012serwng central oagan svre 1903 pervisor. We are part of Western Communicalish the next day! From contractors to $5000. 541-421-3222 professional help in tions, Inc., which is a small, family-owned group 541-385-5809. 00076), Behavioral Health Division. One ATTEND COL L EGE yard care, it's all here consisting of seven newspapers, five in Oregon VIEW the ONLINE 100%. The Bulletin's "Call a and two in California. Our ideal candidate will full-time position $4,057- $5,553 per month in The Bulletin's Classifieds at: Hay, Grain & Feed *Medical, B u s iness, Service Professional" manage a small crew of three and must be able for a172.67 hour work month ANDone partwww.bendbulletin.com "Call A Service *Criminal Jus t i ce, to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A Directory 1st quality grass hay, *Hospitality, *Web. Professional" Directory hands-on style is a requirement for our 3~/~ time position $3,448 - $4,720 per month 70- Ib bales, barn stored, Job placement assis541-385-5809 tower KBA press. Prior management/leader$250/ ton. Also big bales! tance. for a 146.77 hour work month (34 hr/wk). Com p uter OLLECTOR- L o c a l General ship experience preferred. In addition to our Patterson Ranch, available. F i n ancialCagency 7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous Deadline: OPEN UNTIL FILLED. Sisters, 541-420-4567 seeking expeCROOK COUNTY Aid if qual i f ied. commercial print clients as well. In addition to a third p a rty EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES SCHEV a u thorized. crienced competitive wage and benefit program, we also ollector. FDC P A , BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST III Find exactly what Call 86 6 - 688-7078 provide potential opportunity for advancement. HIPAA and U DCPA Crook CountyLibrary you are looking for in the www.CenturaOnline.c If you provide dependability combined with a — Access Team (2013-00003), Behavioral knowledge preffered. Library Public Services Associate om (PNDC) positive attitude, are able to manage people and CLASSIFIEDS DAKCS/STING expeHealth Division. Full-time position $4,851 $23,912- $24,653 DOE schedules and are a team player, we would like rience a plus. PerforThe Bulletin Full time vv/benefits to hear from you. If you seek a stable work enWheat S traw: s m a ll $6,517 per month for a 172.67 hour work mance based comCloses: February 15, 2013 at 5:00p.m. To Subscribe call vironment that provides a great place to live and bales $2 bale or $65 pensation p a ckage month. Deadline: WEDNESDAY,01/30/13. raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact ei541-385-5800 or go to t on. After 6 p.m . plus benefits. S e nd Crook County Library seeks a full time Library ther; Keith Foutz, Corporate Circulation 8 Op541-546-9821 Culver. www.bendbulletin.com resume to: CAI, PO Associate. Bachelor's degree in English or erations Director at kfoutz@wescompapers.com LANDFILL ENGINEER TEGHNIGIAN — (2013BOX 39, Bend, OR related field and library experience in collecThe Bulletin or anelson@wescompapers.com with your TRUCK SCHOOL 0006), Solid Waste Dept. Full-time position 97709 tion development, reference, and program complete resume, references and s a lary To Subscribe call www. IITR.net planning is highly desirable. Varied schedule history/requirements. Prior press room experiRedmond Campus $3,584 - $4,575per month. Deadline: 541-385-5800 or go to USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! includes evening and weekends. ence required. No phone calls please. Drug Student Loans/Job www.bendbulletin.com SUNDAY, 02/03/13. test is required prior to employment. EOE Waiting Toll Free Door-to-door selling with Applications and full job description can be 1-888-387-9252 PEER SUPPORT SPECIALIST(2013-00002j fast results! It's the easiest found at w w w.co.crook.or.us. Candidates Farmers Column People Lookfor Information way in the world to sell. should attach a resume and cover letter to Behavioral Health Division. Part-time position application. Please apply at the Crook County About Products and 10X20 STORAGE Treasurer's/Tax Office at 200 NE 2nd St., $1,450$1,983 per month for a129.50 hour Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classified BUILDINGS Prineville, OR 97754; 541-447-6554. EOE The Bulletin Classifieds 541-385-5809 work month (30 hr/wk).Deadline: SUNDAY, for protecting hay, Independent Contractor firewood, livestock 01/27/13. Electrician etc. $1496 Installed. Customer Service Representative 541-617-1133. Midstate Electric Cooperative, located in La Pine, * Supplement Your Income * SEASONAL DEPUTY SHERIFFATV & Marine 5ierraPane '" Oregon, is seeking a qualified applicant for the CCB ¹173684. C O41P Q S I T E S O LU T I O N S osition of customer service representative. kfjbuilders@ykwc.net Patrol (2013-00005) Sheriff'5 Office. Onust be a high school graduate or equivalent. Journeyman Manufacturing call positions $25.10 — $32.02 per hour. One year of office expenence is required. Must FIND YOUR FUTURE Electrician in Medford, OR. be reliable, motivated, creative, self-starter, HOME INTHE BULLETIN Deadline: SUNDAY, 01/27/13. team player, goal oriented, personable, well-or- • Scope of Duties(not all-inclusive): Conducts, ganized with ability to work under high stress maintains and repairs electrical, mechanical, Your future is just a page ++++++++++++++++++ SECRETARY — Developmental Disabilities and pneumatic systems/components. away. Whetheryou're looking situations. Must exhibit proven problem-solving hydraulic and decision-making skills. Previous public Applies knowledge of electrical and mechanical for a hat or a place tohangit, Program (2013-00001), Behavioral Health contact experience is preferred. Must have abil- principles in determining equipment malfuncThe Bulletin Classified is Division. Part-time position $1,357- $1,856 ity to establish sound customer relations while tions. Applies skill in restoring equipment for opyour best source. working effectively with customers and the pub- eration. Ability to troubleshoot and complete reper month for a103.60 hour work month (24 Every daythousandsof lic, and promoting a pleasant working atmo- pairs to equipment such as programmable buyers and sellers of goods sphere among associates. Ability to indepen- controls, power supplies, drives, gages and hr/wk). Deadline: SUNDAY, 01/27/13. and services do business in dently establish files and maintain records presses. Provides skilled mechanical and elecaccurately and efficiently. Possess working trical/electronic support to all areas of manuthese pages.They know We are looking for independent conknowledge of personal computer (current ver- facturing. Must be able to follow all company's you can't beat TheBulletin tractors to service home delivery sion of M S O ffice), word processing and safety processes successfully and work as part TO APPLY ONLINEFOR THE ABOVE LISTED Classified Section for routes in: spreadsheet capabilities. Proficient with 10-key team using effective communication skills. selection and convenience POSITIONS,PLEASE VISIT OUR WEBSITE AT and data entry. Must possess valid Oregon - every item isjust a phone www.deschutes.or g/jobs DeschutesCounty driver's license. • Work Schedule: Relief shift schedule call away. This position is an Hourly/Non-Exempt Personnel Dept., 1300 NW Wall Street, Suite Must be available 7 days a week, early morn• Education and Experience: The successful The Classified Section is Bargaining Unit Position — IBEW Local 125. ing hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle. candidate will hold and maintain a State of Ore. 201, Bend, OR 97701 (541) 388-6553. easy to use. Every item license for Journeyman, Manufacturing Plant is categorized andevery Submit resume with a cover letter to: Please call 541.385.5800 or Deschutes County provides reasonable Electrician. Applicants will not be considered Human Resources 2/1/2013 cartegory is indexed onthe without holding a valid State of Ore. Iicense for Midstate Electric Cooperative, Inc. section's front page. 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or a ccommodations for p e rsons w i th Journeyman, Manufacturing Plant Electrician P 0 Box127, La Pine OR97739 apply via email at disabilities. This material will be furnished Whether youarelooking for and have 2+ years experience in a manufacturFax No. 541-536-1423 online © bendbulletin.com a home or need aservice, in alternative format if needed. For hearing E-Mail:smiesen@midstateelectric.coo ing environment within the last seven years. your future is in the pagesof impaired, please call TTY/TDD 711. The Bulletin Classified. NO TELEPHONE CALLS WILL BE ACCEPTED. Send resumes to thaakinson@sierrapine.com with subject line stating: Journeyman, Manufacturing Plant Inquiries. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER The Bulletin All resumes must be received by 5:00 p.m. on www.sierrapine.com Friday, February 1, 2013. EEOE
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541 -385-5809
G4 SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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Houses for Rent SE Bend
Redmond Homes
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Boats & Accessories •
17' 1984 Chris Craft Looking for your next emp/oyee? - Scorpion, 140 HP elect., garage, yard. Place a Bulletin help inboard/outboard, 2 $725 mo. + dep. wanted ad today and depth finders, trollNo pets/smoking. reach over 60,000 ing motor, full cover, 541-389-7734 readers each week. EZ - L oad t railer, Your classified ad $3500 OBO. 658 will also appear on 541-382-3728. Houses for Rent bendbulletin.com Redmond which currently receives over Eagle Crest - R e sort 1.5 million page s ide. B e h ind th e views every month gates. Beautiful 8 well at no extra cost. maintained. Bulletin Classifieds • 2100 sq.ft., 3/2.5, 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 Get Results! Reverse living. Large Volvo Penta, 270HP, Call 385-5809 or garagetworkshop. Hot place your ad on-line low hrs., must see, tub. $1400/mo. Lease $15,000, 541-330-3939 at option. $365,000. bendbuHetin.com • 2400 sq.ft. 10th fairway. 3/3.5+ den, 771 Large 2 car garage. 20.5' 2004 Bayliner Lots Views. $1450/mo. 205 Run About, 220 $395,000. OWNER HP, V8, open bow, (2) Bend City lots, 2851 CARRY W/ DOWN. exc. cond., very fast Rent incl. water & use & 2857 Huettl St., off w/very low hours, of a menities. S e c/ Butler Mkt. All utils under lots of extras incl. dep. 5 4 1-923-0908, round $89,900 for both. tower, Bimini & all Ron, 541-206-7995 541-480-7863 custom trailer, 773 $19,500. 659 541-389-1413 Acreages Houses for Rent Sunriver
Motorhomes
Fifth Wheels
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
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3 bdrm 1 bath, appl., all
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682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted REAL ESTATE 616- Want To Rent 705 - Real Estate Services 627 - Vacation Rentals & Exchanges 713 - Real Estate Wanted 630- Rooms for Rent 719- Real Estate Trades 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 726- Timeshares for Sale 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 730- New Listings 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744 - OpenHouses 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745- Homes for Sale 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746 - Northwest BendHomes 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 747 -Southwest BendHomes 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 748 - Northeast BendHomes 652-HousesforRentNWBend 7 4 9- Southeast BendHomes 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750- RedmondHomes 656-Housesfor RentSWBend 75 3 -Sisters Homes 658 Hou - sesforRentRedmond 7 55 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 757- Crook CountyHomes 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 762 - Homes with Acreage 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 764- Farms andRanches 664- Houses for Rent Furnished 77 1 - Lots 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages 675 - RV Parking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land
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Monaco Dynasty 2004, Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 loaded, 3 slides, dieby Carriage, 4 slidesel, Reduced - now outs, inverter, satel$119,000, 5 4 1-923lite sys, fireplace, 2 8572 or 541-749-0037 flat screen TVs. $60,000.
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CHECK YOUR AD
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Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, Shp pump, 4-3" h o ses, Please check your ad camlocks, $ 2 5,000. on the first day it runs 541-820-3724 to make sure it is correct. Sometimes inUtility Trailers structions over the~ WANTED! phone are misRV Consignments understood and an error Paid for or Not! can occur in your ad. If this happens to your Big Tex LandscapBIG iW x ad, please contact us lng/ ATV Trailer, COUNTRY RV the first day your ad dual axle flatbed, • 90/0 of all RV buyers appears and we will 7'x16', 7000 lb. are looking to finance be happy to fix it GVW, all steel, or trade. as soon as we can.• $1400. • We have a dozen If we can assist youW 541-382-4115, or finance options. please call us: 541-280-7024. • We take anything on 541 -385-5809 • trade, paid for or not. TheBulletin Classified • We do all of the workyou et the CASH Automotive Wanted j Southwind 35.5' Triton, 2008,V10, 2 slides, Dupont UV coat, 7500 mi. Bought new at $132,913; asking $93,500. Call 541-419-4212
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CHECK YOUR AD check your ad Sunriver, Three Rivers, Please on the first day it runs 20.5' Seaswirl SpyLa Pine. Great to make sure it is cor- der 1989 H.O. 302, Selection. Prices range rect. Sometimes in- 285 hrs., exc. cond., $425 - $2000/mo. s tructions over t h e stored indoors for View our full DONATE YOUR CARphone are misunder- life $11,900 OBO. Apt./Multiplex NE Bend inventory online at Fast Free Towing 24 stood and an e rror 541-379-3530 Village-Properties.com can occur in your ad. hr. Response - Tax Gambling Too Much? e GREAT WINTER @ 1 -866-931 -1 061 Fleetwood Wilderness Deduction U N I T ED If this happens to your Ads published in the Free, confidential help DEAL! 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, BREAST C A N C ER ad, please contact us 687 is available statewide. "Boats" classification 2 bdrm, 1 bath, rear bdrm, fireplace, F OUNDATION P r o U > > the first day your ad Call 1-877-MY-LIMIT include: Speed, fishCall Cliff at $530 8, $540 w/lease. Commercial for AC, W/D hkup beau- viding Free Mammoappears and we will to talk to a certified 541-815-6144 ing, drift, canoe, Carports included! tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. grams & Breast CanRent/Lease be happy to fix it as counselor 24/7 or visit house and sail boats. cer Info. FOX HOLLOW APTS. s oon a s w e ca n . 1877mylimit.org to For all other types of 888-785-9788 Spectrum professional Deadlines are: Week- watercraft, (541) 383-3152 chat live with a counplease see 630 (PNDC) Cascade Rental building, 3 5 0 ' -500', days 11:00 noon for selor. We are not here Class 875. Rooms for Rent Management. Co. $1.00 per ft. total. No next day, Sat. 11:00 to judge. We are here 541-385-5809 N NN. C a l l And y , a.m. for Sunday and Call for SPeclals! Automotive Parts, Studios & Kitchenettes 541-385-6732. Monday. your life back. Furnished room TV w/ Limited numbers avail K omfort 25' 2 0 06, 1 Service & Accessories 541 -385-5809 Winnebago 30A Sight1, 2 & 3 bdrms cable, micro 8, fridge, Thank you! seer 2012, 31 ft., all slide, AC, TV, awning. w/d hookups, Utils 8 l i nens, New • We Buy Junk The Bulletin Classified options, 2 sli d e s, NEW: tires, converter, • • I I owners.$145-$165/wk pati o s or decks. Cars & Trucks! 362HP V10, 10K mi., batteries. Hardly used. 541-382-1885 Mountain Glen I YoUR BoAT... I $15,500. 541-923-2595 Cash paid for junk mint cond., $110,000. 541-383-9313 776 with o u r spec i a l vehicles, batteries 8 541-330-5516 Professionally managed by rates for selling your I catalytic converters. No paid o perators, Manufactured/ Norris & Stevens, Inc. ( boat or watercraft! Serving all of C.O.! just reai peopie iike Apt./Multiplex NE Bend Take care of Mobile Homes SUBSIDIZED UNITS Call 541-408-1090 you. Browse greet/ Place an ad in The your investments ings, exchange mes- 2-story 2 master suites, Studio, 1 & 2 bedroom FACTORY SPECIAL all appliances, ga-' B ulletin w it h ou r 62 8 over sages and connect with the help from New Home, 3 bdrm, / 3-month p ackage and / or Disability. 744 Antique & MONTANA 3585 2008, iive. Try it Iree. Caii rage, w/s/g paid. no $46,500 finished The Bulletin's $750 M u lti-Family Housing/ which includes: exc. cond., 3 slides, 877 955 5505 pets/smoking. Open Houses Classic Autos on your site. Project-based. mo. 541-389-7734 king bed, Irg LR, Arc(PNDC) "Call A Service J and M Homes Greenwood Manor Apts I *5 lines of text and tic insulation, all op541-548-5511 55 Chevy 2 dr . wgn Professional" Directory 3B/2B, range, fridge, w/d 224 8 NE 4th St. a photo or up to 10 Open 12-3 tions $37,500. PROJECT car, 350 Thank you St. Jude & cable & inte r net , Ben d , OR 97701 LOT MODEL ] lines with no photo. 541-420-3250 1496 NE Saddle small block w/Weiand Sacred H e ar t of fenced yard. All utili 541-3 8 9-2712 *Free online ad at LIQUIDATION Rock Ct. Jesus. j.d. Nuyya 29 7LK Hi t ch- dual quad tunnel ram tiesincluded. $1250. TDD 800-735-2900 Prices Slashed Huge I bendbulletin.com Quiet Cul-de-Sac 450 Holleys. T-10 Hiker 2007, 3 slides, with 541-317-1879 www.gres.com Savings! Full Warran*Free pick up into Near Pilot Butte 32' touring coach, left 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Equal Housing ties, Finished on your ~ The Central Oregon ~ Prostar whls, Carol Donohoe, Find exactly what - Opportunity kitchen, rear lounge, Weld Check out the site. 541-548-5511 ] Nickel ads. Broker many extras, beautiful extra rolling chassis + you are looking for in the cla s sifieds online JandMHomes.com extras. $6000 for all. 541-410-1773 innebago Ita s ca c ond. inside & o u t , 541-389-7669. www.bendbulletin.com Apt./Multiplex NW Bend CLASSIFIEDS I Rates start at$46. I W $32,900 OBO, PrinevOwn your own home for Sundancer 26' 1987, Updated daily ille. 541-447-5502 days less t ha n r e n ting. Call for details! 51K mi., exc. cond. & 541-447-1641 eves. 541-385-5809 Nice, quiet, upper level 2 Centrally located in $8000. 541-419-9251 Bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, Madras. In- h ouse i W/S/G/cable pd, laundry financing opt i o ns 1921 Model T Ltlleting facils. $650mo $500 dep. available. Call now at gThe B Delivery Truck No smkg. 541-383-2430 541-475-2291 Restored 8 Runs GENERATE SOME exSmall studio close to li$9000. citement in your neigbrary, all util. pd. $550, 541-389-8963 Winnebaqo Suncruiser34' Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th borhood. Plan a gaC all 54/ - 3 8 5 -5 8 0 9 $525 dep. No pets/ www.thegarnergroup.com rage sale and don't 2004, only 34K, loaded, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Q smoking. 541-330to r o m ot e o u r s ervice forget to advertise in too much to list, ext'd 9769 or 541-480-7870 classified! 385-5809. warr. thru 2014, $54,900 Open 12-3 Dennis, 541-589-3243 /Building/Contracting Handyman 638 20536 Gloucester Apt./Multiplex SE Bend Serv>ng Central Oregon srnce 1903 881 Ln. NOTICE: Oregon state law req u ires any- I DO THAT! Woodhill Travel Trailers Call The Bulletin At A STUNNING 1966 GMC, 2nd owner, one who co n t racts ParkCrossing 2 BDRM/$625 541-385-5809 too many extras to list, for construction work Green 8 Affordable 850 61545 ParreH Road Place Your Ad Or E-Mail COACHMEN $8500 obo. Serious buyto be licensed with the Erin Campbell, Classy new exterior. Snowmobiles At: www.bendbulletin.com 1979 23' trailer ers only. 541-536-0123 C onstruction Co n Broker Small quiet complex Pilgrim In t e rnational Fully equipped. tractors Board (CCB). 541-410-0872 completely new inte2005, 36' 5th Wheel, 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade $2000. A n active lice n se Used out-drive rior upgraded with 600 w/513 mi, like new, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 541-312-8879 means the contractor Handyman/Remodeling parts - Mercury decorator touches. very fast! Reduced to Fall price $ 2 1,865. i s bonded an d i n - Residential/Commercial or 541-350-4622 OMC rebuilt maNew kitchen cabinets $5000. 541-221-5221 541-312-4466 s ured. Ver if y t h e rine motors: 151 and granite counterSwatt Jokc to contractor's CCB -~j $1595; 3.0 $1895; tops, all new appliEwire ttoo>n Remodels c ense through t h e Chevy C-20 Pickup ances, large master 4.3 (1993), $1995. CCB Cons u mer Garage Organizalion 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; with 3 closets. Private 541-389-0435 Arctic Cat (2) 2005 Website Home tnsPection RePairs 00 • I auto 4-spd, 396, model patio. Includes w/s/g. www.hirealicensedcontractor. F7; EFI Snowpro & CST /all options, orig. Quality, Hrn>exl ~ork NO SMOKING/PETS. com 875 EFI EXT, 4,000 owner, $22,000, Call 541-633-0663 or call 503-378-4621. Dennis 541 317.9768 541-923-6049 www.thegarnergroup.com miles each. $2400 Watercraft ccstss> svs Bondedltnsured The Bulletin recomFleetwood Wilderness 642 each; 541-410-2186 Gl 31' 1999. 12' slide, mends checking with 24' awning, queen the CCB prior to con- LandscapingNard Care Apt./Multiplex Redmond 2007 SeaDoo Open 12-3 tracting with anyone. bed, couch/tablemake 2004 Waverunner, 63855 Sunset Dr. into dbl beds, FSC, Some other t rades N OTICE: O R E G O N 2 bdrm, 1 bath duplex excellent condition, Space & Seclusion outside shower, E-Z lift also req u ire addi- Landscape Contrac- unit, $550 mo.+ $635 LOW hours. Double Aircraft, Parts d ep. 1326 SW O b at Edge of Bend Snowmobile trailer s tabilizer hitch, l i ke tional licenses a nd trailer, lots of extras. tors Law (ORS 671) s idian, Avail Feb. 1 . & Service Chevy Wagon 1957, Matt Garner, Broker 2002, 25-ft Internew, been stored. certifications. $10,000 r equires a l l bu s i - 541-728-6421. 4-dr., complete, 541-610-6446 state & 3 sleds, $10,999. 541-419-5060 nesses that advertise 541-719-8444 $7,000 OBO, trades, $10,900. Redmond's newest low Oo to p e r form L a n d~ Debris Removal please call 541-480-8009 scape C o nstruction i ncome hous i n g Ads published in "WaMOrePiXajjjtiljjjilllejiiI,COm 541-389-6998 eewr which includes: project has an accestercraft" include: KayChrysler 30 0 C o u pe p lanting, decks , s ible 3 bd r m u n i t • Yamaha 750 1999 aks, rafts and motorCall 1967, 44 0 e n g ine, fences, arbors, available. Mountain Max, $1750. Ized personal 541-504-7786. EHO 1/3 interest in Columauto. trans, ps, air, w ater-features, a n d • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 watercrafts. For bia 400, located at frame on rebuild, reinstallation, repair of " boats" please s e e EXT, $1250. 648 Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. painted original blue, irrigation systems to • Zieman 4-place Class 870. Call 541-647-3718 Houses for original blue interior, be licensed with the Will Haul Away trailer, $1750. 541-385-5809 Springdale 2005 27', 4' original hub caps, exc. Landscape ContracRent General All in good condition. www.thegarnergroup.com slide in dining/living area, J&18FREE chrome, asking $9000 t ors B o a rd . Th i s Located in La Pine. sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 or make offer. 4-digit number is to be For Salvage v' PUBLISHER'S Call 541-408-6149. obo. 541-408-3811 541-385-9350 745 included in all adverNOTICE Any Location g 880 tisements which indi860 All real estate adverHomes for Sale ,:rt Removat ~ Motorhomes cate the business has tising in this newspaMotorcycles & Accessories a bond, insurance and per is subject to the BANK OWNED HOMES! Also Cleanupsi t" 1 /3 interest i n w e llworkers c ompensa- F air H o using A c t equipped IFR Beech Bo- Chrysler SD 4-Door j8c Cteanouts' > FREE List w/Pics! CRAMPED FOR tion for their employ- which makes it illegal www.BendRepos.com nanza A36, new 10-550/ 1930, CD S Royal CASH? ees. For your protec- to a d v ertise "any bend and beyond real estate prop, located KBDN. Standard, 8-cylinder, Use classified to sell 20967 yeoman, bend or tion call 503-378-5909 preference, limitation $65,000. 541-419-9510 those items you no body is good, needs or use our website: or disc r imination slide,Bunkhouse style, some r e s toration, longer need. AIRPORT CAFE NOTICE www.lcb.state.or.us to based on race, color, sleeps 7-8, excellent runs, taking bids, Call 541-385-5809 (Bend Municipal Airport) All real estate adverEconollne RV 1 9 8 9, check license status religion, sex, handi$ 1 6 ,900, NOW OPEN under 541-383-3888, fully loaded, exc. cond, condition, before con t racting cap, familial status, tised here in is subHandyman 541-815-3318 new management! 35K m i. , R e duced 541-390-2504 ject to t h e F e deral with t h e bu s iness. marital status or naCome 8 see us! $15,250. 541-546-6133 Persons doing land- tional origin, or an in- F air H o using A c t , Open Mon.-Sat., 8-3 which makes it illegal Harley Davidson SoftERIC REEVE scape maintenance tention to make any Call 541-318-8989 I COLLECTOR CARl advertise any pref- Tail Deluxe 20 0 7, CAN'T BEAT THIS! do not require a LCB such pre f erence, to AUCTION white/cobalt, w / pas~I HANDY I~ Look before you license. limitation or discrimi- erence, limitation or Executive Hangar ~ Saturday, Feb. 2nd discrimination based senger kit, Vance & buy, below market SERVICES nation." Familial staat Bend Airport SALEM, OR I State Fairgrounds Painting/Wall Covering tus includes children on race, color, reli- Hines muffler system value! Size & mile(KBDN) 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. aqe DOES matter! Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 60' gion, sex, handicap, Au Home & under the age of 18 wide x 50' deep, Call now for info $19,9 9 9, Class A 32' Hurri29', weatherized, like Commercial Repairs living with parents or familial status or na- cond, w/55' wide x 17' high 541 -689-6824 541-389-9188. cane by Four Winds, tional origin, or intenn ew, f u rnished & Carpentry-Painting legal cust o dians, tion to make any such bi-fold door. Natural www.petersen 2007. 12,500 mi, all ready to go, incl WineHoney Do's. Harley Heritage pregnant women, and preferences, l i mitagas heat, office, bathcollectorcars.com amenities, Ford V10, ard S a tellite dish, room. Parking for 6 Small or large jobs, people securing cus- tions or discrimination. Softail, 2003 Ithr, cherry, slides, 26,995. 541-420-9964 tody of children under $5,000+ in extras, no problem. c ars. A djacent t o like new! New low will not knowingly $2000 paint job, 18. This newspaper We Frontage Rd; g reat Senior Discount price, $54,900. accept any advertis30K mi. 1 owner, European will not knowingly ac- ing for r eal e state visibility for a viation Au work guaranteed. 541-548-5216 it I 'gf any advertising which is in violation of For more information II bus. 1jetjock©q.com 541-389-3361 Professional cept please call for real estate which is 541-948-2126 Gulfstream Sc e n ic 541-771-4463 this law. All persons 541-385-8090 in violation of the law. are hereby informed Painter Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, Bonded - Insured or 209-605-5537 P iper A rcher 1 9 8 0 O ur r e aders a r e that all dwellings adCCB¹149468 Cummins 330 hp die- Weekend Warrior Toy based in Madras, al- FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, hereby informed that Repaint Hauler 28' 2007, Gen, ways hangared since door panels w/flowers HD Screaming Eagle vertised are available sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 all dwellings adver& hummingbirds, Electra Glide 2005, in. kitchen slide out, fuel station, exc cond. new. New annual, auto Specialist! an equal opportutised in this newspa- on 8, black/gray pilot, IFR, one piece white soft top & hard 103" motor, two tone nity basis. The Bullenew tires,under cover, sleeps 30 years Construction per are available on interior u s e d 3X top. Just reduced to Oregon License candy teal, new tires, hwy. miles only,4 door windshield. Fastest Ar- $3,750. Experience an equal opportunity tin Classified $24,999. 541-317-9319 23K miles, CD player ¹186 147 LLC f ridge/freezer ice cher around. 1750 tobasis. To complain of 541-389-9188 17 Years or 541-647-8483 hydraulic clutch, exmaker, W/D combo, Just too many tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. cal l In Central 541-81 5-2888 discrimination cellent condition. Interbath t ub 8 541-475-6947, ask for HUD t o l l-free at collectibles? Oregon Highest offer takes it. shower, 50 amp proLooking for your Rob Berg. 1-800-877-0246. The 541-480-8080. pane gen 8 m o re! next employee? toll f re e t e l ephone T-Hangar for rent Margo Sell them in $55,000. Place a Bulletin help Winter is an number for the hear- The Bulletin Classifieds Honda 750 Nighthawk, 541-948-2310 at Bend airport. wanted ad today and COnStruCtiOn, LLC excellent time to ing im p aired is 1991 pristine condiCall 541-382-8998. reach over 60,000 1-800-927-9275. tion. 17k mi., $1,995. paint the INTERIOR Home Repairs & readers each week. Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 541-279-7092. 541-385-5809 of you home! Qjf • Ip Your classified ad 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Rented your propRemodeling Trucks 8 Give mea call - I will come and 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 erty? The Bulletin will also appear on 870 Window & Door give you afree consultation Heavy Equipment radio (orig),541-419-4989 bendbulletin.com Classifieds Boats & Accessories and a reasonablend. Ihave FOR SALE Replacement which currently rehas an "After Hours" Ford Mustang Coupe excellent referencesfrom ceives over 1.5 milccn ¹176121 Line. Call 1966, original owner, satisfied customers. Myinterior When buying a home, 13' Smokercraft '85, Immaculate! 541-383-2371 24 lion page views evV8, automatic, great (and exterior) work isneat and 83% of Central good cond., 15HP Beaver Coach Marquis 541-480-3179 ery month at no hours to completed in atimely manner. shape, $9000 OBO. Oregonians turn to 40' 1987. New cover, d! gas Evinrude + extra cost. Bulletin 530-515-81 99 Cce¹ 194169 new paint (2004), new Classifieds Get ReMinnkota 44 elec. The Bulletin Rent /Own Just bought a new boat? Ser ngCentatOregon\nce l9lU inverter (2007). Onan sults! Call 385-5809 Jeff A. Miller motor, fish finder, 2 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Diamond Reo Dump TURN THE PAGE Sell your old one in the watt gen, 111K mi, or place your ad extra seats, trailer, 6300 Painting Call 541-385-5809 to Truck 1 9 74, 1 2-14 classifieds! Ask about our $2500 down, $750 mo. parked covered $35,000 on-line at For More Ads extra equip. $2900. Super Seller rates! OAC. J and M Homes place your obo. 541-419-9859 or yard box, runs good, 541.404.2826 bendbulletin.com The Bulletin 541-548-5511 Real Estate ad. 541-388-9270 541-280-2014 541-385-5809 $6900, 541-548-6812 VILLAGE PROPERTIES
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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Antique & Classic Autos
Ford Ranchero 1979
with 351 Cleveland modified engine. Body is in excellent condition,
$2500 obo.
541-420-4677
Ford T-Bird 1966 390 engine, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excellent cond. in 8 out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
Sport Utility Vehicles •
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 20, 2013 G5
Aut o m obiles
Automobiles •
•
Ford Freestyle S E L,
2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC,
front 8 side airbags, 25 mpg, 3rd row seating, pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, traction control, new tires .M~et 8 brks, maintained ex- Chrysler Sebring 2006 Mazda Mazda3i Sport t remely well, runs 8 Fully loaded, exc.cond, 2010, Auto, low miles, drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, very low miles (38k), clean. Vin¹ 2 3 9812. $7200. 541-604-4166 always garaged, Was $14,999. Now transferable warranty $12,488 incl. $8100 obo 4ij® SU B ARU. 541-848-9180 Chrysler Sebring 2008, 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 blue/tan, 20,430 mi. Dlr ¹0354 ¹689658. $13,988. GMC Envoy 2002 4WD $6,450. Loaded, Look at: Leather, Heated Oregon Bendhomes.com seats, Bose sound AutoSource system. Ext. roof rack for Complete Listings of 541-598-3750 (218) 478-4469 Area Real Estate for Sale aaaoregonautosource.com BUBARUOPBBHO COM
P
GMC Y~ton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low Honda CR-V EX 2005, mile, exceptional, 3rd moon roof, tow pkg, owner. 951-699-7171 alloys. Vin¹ 0 4 7942 w as $ 12999, N o w $8988.
Honda Accord 2000 105K miles, exc. mech. cond. small dent in rear panel, incl good cond. studded tires on wheels. $3,700.
SUBARUOPBRHD COM
4WD, 5-spd, tags good
Jeep Wrangler 4x4, 1997 6-cyl, soft top, roll bar, front tow bar, new tires, chrome rims, 103K miles, gd cond, $5700 obo.
M
Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, (Original 273 eng & wheels incl.) 541-593-2597
541-504-3253 or 503-504-2764
Honda Civic EX Coupe 2007, Auto, l o a ded, low mi. Vin¹ 529501. W as $13,988. N o w $11,888
My Little Red Corvette" 1996 coupe. 132K, 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. $12,500 541-923-1781
S UBARUOPBR H O C O M
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 1
Vans
Chevy Astro Cargo Van 2001, pw, pdl, great cond., business car, well Ford 250 XLT 1990, 6 yd. dump bed, 139k, Auto, $5500. 541-410-9997
maint'd, regular oil changes,$4500. Please call 541-633-5149
Hyundai Accent GLS 2012, Keyless entry, low mi. Vin¹ 087539. Was $16,999. Now $14,488.
©
S UB A R U . SUBARUOl BBHO COM
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 S •
FORD RANGER XLT 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5
.
.
Say Ugoodbuy
B
speed, with car alarm, to that unused CD player, extra tires item by placing it in on rims. Runs good. Clean. 92,000 miles The Bulletin Classifieds Hyundai Elantra Ltd 2012, Loaded, auto, o n m o tor. $ 2 6 00 leather. Vin¹ 271938 OBO. 541-771-6511. Was $22,999. Now 5 41 -385-580 9 $19,488. Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 4 Q S U B A R U . 7 -pass. v a n wit h I nternational Fla t p ower c h a i r lif t , 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend Bed Pickup 1963, 1 877-266-3821 $1500; 1989 Dodge t on dually, 4 s p d. Dlr ¹0354 Turbo Van 7 pass. trans., great MPG, has new motor and . I~ could be exc. wood t rans., $1500. I f i n hauler, runs great, terested c a l l Ja y new brakes, $1950. 503-269-1057. 541-41 9-5480.
RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise,
am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. 541-420-3634 /390-1285
Ford Windstar 1996 Mini Van, 173K, no air, 3 seats, room galore! Dependable, road-ready to anyplace, even Tumalo! All this for $1500really! 541-318-9999
Hyundai Sonata GLS 2012, auto, low miles. V in¹ 3 2 2715. W a s $17,999. Now $16,488.
©
S UB ARU. BUBARUOPSBHDCOM
2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 975
Automobiles
877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
ISport Utility Vehicles
BMW 328i, 1998, sun- Hyundai Sonata GLS roof, white/grey interior, 2012,auto, low miles. all electric, auto trans, Buick Enclave 2008 CXL c lean, 1 6 8 ,131 mi , V in¹ 3 2 1163. W a s Now $17,999. AWD, V-6, black, clean, $3200. 541-419-6176 $16,488 mechanicall y sound, 82k miles. $20,995. 4ttfsrh SUBARU. Call 541-815-1216 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. owner, exc. c o n d. Kia Optima EX 2004 101k miles, new tires, 2.7L V6, all power options, moonroof, Chev Tahoe, 1999 most loaded, sunroof. spoiler, leather, Inoptions, new & tires, runs $9500. 541-706-1897 finity AM/FM/CD, good, 159K miles, $4250. Oo ~ alloys, Michelin & 541-233-8944 MorePixatBendbulletin.com studded tires, meticulously maint'd, Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 $7750. (in Bend) 4x4. 120K mi, Power 760-715-9123 seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd
row seating, e xtra tires, CD, privacy tinting, upgraded rims. Fantastic cond. $7995 Contact Timm at 541-408-2393 for info or to view vehicle. Ford Explorer 4x4, 1991 - 154K miles, rare 5-speed tranny & manual hubs, clean, straight, everyday driver. Was $2200; now $1900! Bob, 541-318-9999
BMW Z4 Roadster 2005, 62K miles, excellent cond. $14,000. 541-604-9064
USB
Mazda Mazda3 2006, Buick Lucerne CXL 5 spd, alloys, tinted 2009, $12,500, low windows, clean. Vin¹ low miles; 2003 Le505829. Was Sabre, $4000. You'll $10,999. Now $8788. not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a 4@)SUBARU. thousand words. Call Bob, 541-318-9999. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 for an appt. and take a drive in a 30 mpg car! Dlr ¹0354 S UBARUOPBB H O C O M
~E P LI B L I C NOTICES INP O
operative, Inc. are up for election. They are: District ¹ 4 Powell Butte District ¹ 6 Redmond
940
Pickups
•
BOATS &RVs 805- Misc. Items Porsche 911 1974, low 850 - Snowmobiles mi., complete motor/ 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories trans. rebuild, tuned 865 - ATVs suspension, int. & ext. refurb., oil c o oling, 870 - Boats & Accessories shows new in & out, 875 - Watercraft erf. m ech. c o n d. 880 - Motorhomes uch more! $28,000 541-420-2715 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers Want to impress the 890 - RVs for Rent
and place an ad todayl Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
lThe Bulletin l
L'"" " " ' J
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Automobiles
•
•
AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916 - Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932 - Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935 - Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Subaru Forester - 2006 Toyota Corolla 2004, Original owner, auto., loaded, 204k regular maintenance, miles. orig. owner, non )ow miles (63K), smoker, exc. c ond. asking $10,900. $6500 Prin e ville Call 970-629-1690 503-358-8241
PORSCHE 914 1974,
Roller (no engine),
lowered, full roll cage, Scion XB Sport Wagon 5-pt harnesses, rac- 2006, MP 3, t in t e d very clean. ing seats, 911 dash & windows, in¹ 0 6 0267. W a s instruments, d ecent V shape, v e r y c o ol! $11,999. Now $8688 $1699. 541-678-3249
54 1 B385-5809
•
©
S UB A R U . SUBARUOl BRHD COM
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Saturn SL2 1996, 97K mi, 877-266-3821 studs inc, recent tune-up, Dlr ¹0354 $1200. 541-318-5311
(in La Pine)
WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Toyota Camrysr 1984, $1200 obo; 1985 SOLD; 1986 parts car, $500. Call for details, 541-548-6592
~OO
MorePixatBendbuletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.
SUSARUOPBBHD COM
"I illa-
Toyota 4Runner Ltd 2003 V8, tow pkg., Ithr, loaded. 107K miles, exclnt cond. original owner. $12,500 541-788-4229
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin
gj@SUBARU.
LEGAL NOTICE PROJECT CARS: Chevy Directors' Positions 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) 8 Porsche Cayenne 2004, Honda Civic LX Coupe 86k, immac, dealer 2006, 5 speed, low Chevy Coupe 1950 positions with rolling chassis's $1750 maint'd, loaded, now miles. Vin ¹ 5 7 8725 Three incumbents r u nning ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, $1 7000. 503-459-1 580 Was $11,999. Now for reelection on the complete car, $ 1949; $8,988. Board of Directors at Cadillac Series 61 1950, Central Electric Co4 @) S U B A R U . 2 dr. hard top, complete
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
Automobiles
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
Legal Notices
w/spare f r ont cl i p ., $3950, 541-382-7391
Automobiles
r-,;„;..;,.v
Garage Sales Garage Sales
4 @ S U B A R U.
till 9/2015, $4500 obo. 541-633-7761
975
Nissan Sentra, 201212,610 mi, full warranty, PS, PB,AC,8 more! Mitsubishi 3 00 0 G T $16,000. 541-788-0427 1999, a uto., p e a rl w hite, very low m i . $9500. 541-788-8218. Garage Sales
Timm 541-408-2393
2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 877-266-3821 Jeep Comanche, 1990, Dlr ¹0354 original owner, 167K,
975
R TA N T
An important premise upon which the principle of democracy is based is thatinformation about government activities must be accessible in order for the electorate to make well-informed decisions. Public notices provide this sort of accessibility to citizens who want io know more about government activities. Read your Public Notices daily in The Bulletin classifieds or go fowvvvr.bendbulletin.com and click on "Classified Ads"
The Bulletin
District ¹ 9 Prineville Pursuant to the By-Laws of the cooperative, other members that live in that district are eligible to run for election. Petitions and information
for candidates, i ncluding district boundaries and eligibility requirements, are available at the Cooperative's office at 2098 North Highway 97 in Redmond Oregon. Petitions will be a c-
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
9 20 SW 3 r d A v enue, First F loor, Portland, OR 97204,
Phone:
369-6122,
(877) Ext .
3370, Fax: ( 503) 694-1460, eday@mccarthyholthus.com. Of Attorneys for Plaintiff. LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS The undersigned has been appointed per-
sonal representative of the Estate of Daniel L . E m erson, D e ceased, by the Circuit C ourt, State of O r egon, County of Deschutes, Probate No. 12-PB-0124. All persons having claims against the estate are required to p r esent t heir c l a im s wit h vouchers proper within four m o nths from this date, to the undersigned, or they may be barred. Additional information may be obtained from the court records, the undersigned, or the attorneys named below. Dated and first published: January 13, 2013. J O YC E E. VERNON, P ersonal R epresentative, c / o C.E. FRANCIS, OSB
cepted at the same cooperative office until 5:00 PM on February 8, 2013. LEGAL NOTICE ¹77006, FRA N C IS IN TH E C I RCUIT HANSEN & MARTIN C OURT OF T H E L LP, 1148 N W H i ll STATE O F O RStreet, B e nd , OR E GON FOR T H E 97701. COUNTY OF DESC HUTES, FED - LEGAL NOTICE ERAL N A T IONAL undersigned has M ORTGAGE A S - The been appointed perSOCIATION B B sonal representative ( FNMA ), Plaintiff, o f the E s t at e o f v s. LEONARD T . RONALD JOHN H AABY; DAVI D SMITH Deceased, by HOOLE AND LORthe Deschutes County ETTA HOOLE; COC ircuit Court of t h e L UMBIA RIVE R State of Oregon, proB ANK; OCCU bate number P ANTS O F TH E 12PB0125. A l l p e rPROPERTY, Desons having claims fendants. Case No.: against the estate are 1 2CV0921. S U Mrequired to p r esent MONS BY PUBLIthe same with proper CATION. To: David vouchers within four Hoole and Loretta (4) months after the Hoole. Y o u are date of first publicahereby required to tion t o t h e u n derappear and defend signed or they may be the Complaint filed barred. Add i tional against you in the i nformation may b e above entitled o btained f ro m the cause within thirty court records, the un(30) days from the dersigned or the atdate of service of torney. Date first pubthissummons upon lished: January 13, you, and in case of 2013. ER I C A L. your failure to do so, Per s o nal for want t h ereof, SMITH, R epresentative, c/o Plaintiff will apply to Ronald L. Bryant Atthe court for the retorney at Law, Bryant lief demanded in the E merson & Fit c h , Complaint. NOTICE L LP, PO B o x 4 5 7 , TO D E FENDANT: Redmond OR 97756. READ THESE PAPERS CA RELEGAL NOTICE FULLY! You must TRUSTEE'S NOTICE "appear" in this case OF SALE or the other side will Reference is made to win a u tomatically. a trust deed made by To "appear" you P 8 P Ventures, LLC, m ust file with t he an Oregon limited licourt a legal paper ability company, as called a "motion" or Grantor, to Amerititle, "answer." The Bmoas Trustee, in favor of tion" or "answer" (or The F i rst N a t ional "reply") must be Bank of Mount Dora and Barbara Bothe, given to the court clerk or administraa s Trustees of t h e tor within 30 days of William A. Iles Trust the date of first pubd ated January 2 2 , lication sp e cified 1987, as A m ended herein along w ith a nd R e stated, a s the required filing B eneficiary, dat e d fee. It must be in May 29, 2007, and rec orded on June 1 , p roper form a n d have proof of ser2 007 i n t h e De s vice on the plaintiff's chutes County Offia ttorney or, if t h e cial R e c ords as Document No. p laintiff does n o t have an a t torney, 2007-31132, covering t he f o l lowing deproof of service on the plaintiff. If you scribed real property have questions, you situated in the should see an attorabove-mentioned ney immediately. If c ounty a n d st a t e, to-wit: Real property you need help in finding an attorney, in the County of Desy ou may call t h e chutes, State of OrOregon State Bar's egon, described as Lawyer Re f e rral follows: Lot (9), Block Service at (503) Fifty-seven (57), DE684-3763 or toll-free S CHUTES RI V E R in Oregon at (800) RECREATION 452-7636. The reHOMESITES UNIT 9, l ief sought in t h e PART 2, Deschutes C omplaint i s th e County, Oregon. The f oreclosure of t h e Deed of T rust was property located at modified by that cer21049 Don Street, tain Modification and Bend, OR 9 7 701. Extension Agreement Date of First Publirecorded February 17, cation: January 13, 2010, as D ocument 2013. McCarthy & No. 2010-07081. The Holthus, LLP, Erica undersigned was apDay, OSB¹ 113653, pointed as Successor
1000
Legal Notices
Trustee by the Ben- trustee and attorney e ficiary by a n a p - fees not e xceeding pointment dated Authe amounts provided by ORS 86.753. NOgust 31, 2012, and recorded on Novem- TICE TO RESIDENTENA N T S : ber 2, 2012 in the De- T IAL schutes County Offi- The property in which cial R e c ords as you are living is in Document No. foreclosure. A foreclo2012-044168. The sure sale is schedaddress of the trustee uled for March 26, is 69 3 C h e meketa 2013. The date of this Street NE, Salem, OR sale may be p ost97301. Both the benp oned. Unless t h e eficiary a n d the lender that i s f o retrustee have elected closing on this propto sell the said real erty is paid before the property to satisfy the sale date, the forecloobligations secured by sure will go through said trust deed and a and someone new will notice of default has own this property. Afbeen recorded pursu- ter the sale, the new ant to O regon Re- owner is required to vised Statues provide you with con86.735(3), the default tact information and for which the foreclo- notice that the sale sure i s ma d e in took place. The folinf o rmation grantor's failure to pay lowing when due the follow- applies to you only if ing sums: The sum of you are a bona fide $70,000.00 in princi- tenant occupying and renting this property pal, together with interest and late fees. as a resi d ential B y reason of s a id dwelling under a ledefault th e b e n efi- gitimate rental agreeciary has declared all ment. The i nformasums owing on the tion does not apply to obligation secured by you if you own this said trust deed imme- property or if you are diately due and pay- not a bona fide resiable, said sums being dential tenant. If the the following, to wit: foreclosure sale goes The sum of through, t h e new owner will have the $70,000.00, plus interest thereon at the right to require you to rate of 10% per an- move out. Before the n um from June 1 , new owner can re2007, until paid; plus quire you to move, the the cost of f oreclo- new owner must prosure report, attorney's vide you with written fees, an d t r ustee's notice that specifies the date by which you fees; together w ith any other sums due or must move out. If you thatmay become due do not leave before under the Note or by the move-out d ate, reason of the default, the new owner can this foreclosure and have the sheriff reany further advances move you from the made by Beneficiary property after a court a s allowed b y t h e hearing. You will reN ote and Deed o f c eive notice of t h e Trust. WHEREFORE court hearing. PROnotice is hereby given T ECTION FRO M that the undersigned E VICTION I F Y O U trustee will on March ARE A BONA FIDE 26, 2013, at the hour TENANT O C CUPYof 10:00 o'clock, a.m., ING AND RENTING i n accord w ith t h e THIS P ROP ERTY AS standard of time es- A RESI D ENTIAL tablished b y OR S DWELLING, YOU 187.110. at the main HAVE THE R I GHT d oor o f t h e De s - TO CONTINUE LIVchutes County Court- ING IN THIS PROPhouse, 1 10 0 NW E RTY AFTER T H E B ond Street, in t h e FORECLOSURE City of Bend, County SALE FOR: • TH E of Deschutes, State of REMAINDER OF Oregon, sell at public YOUR FIXED TERM auction to the highest LEASE, I F YOU bidder for cash the HAVE A FIXED i nterest in t h e r e al TERM LEASE; OR • property d e s cribed AT LEAST 90 DAYS above w h ic h the F ROM TH E D A T E g rantor had o r h a d YOU ARE GIVEN A power to convey at WRITTEN TERMINAthe time of the execu- TION NOTICE. If the tion by grantor of the new owner wants to trust deed t o gether move in and use this with a n y int e rest property as a primary which the grantor or r esidence, the n e w grantor's successors owner can give you in interest acquired written notice and reafter the execution of quire you to move out the trust deed, to sat- after 90 days, even isfy the foregoing ob- though you have a ligations thereby se- fixed term lease with cured and the costs more than 90 days and expenses of the left. You must be prosale, including a rea- vided with at least 90 sonable charge by the days' written notice trustee. Notice is fur- after the foreclosure ther given that any sale before you can person named in ORS be required to move. 86.753 has the right, A bona fide tenant is a at any time prior to residential tenant who five days before the is not the b orrower date last set for the (property owner) or a s ale, t o h a v e t h i s child, spouse or parforeclosure proceed- ent of the borrower, ing dismissed and the and w hose r e ntal trust deed reinstated agreement: • I s t h e b y payment to t h e result of a n a r m'sbeneficiary of the en- length transaction; • tire amount then due R equires th e p a y (other than such por- ment of rent that is not tion of the principal as substantially less than would not then be due fair market rent for the had no default ocproperty, unless the curred) and by curing r ent is r e duced o r any o t he r d e f ault subsidized due to a complained of herein federal, state or local that is capable of be- subsidy; and • Wa s ing cured by tender- entered into prior to ing the performance the date of the forer equired under t h e closure sale. ABOUT o bligation o r tr u s t Y OUR TEN A N CY deed, and in addition BETWEEN NOW to paying those sums A ND T H E FO R E or tendering the per- C LOSURE SAL E : formance necessary RENT YOU to cure the default by SHOULD CONTINUE paying all costs and T O PAY RENT TO expenses actually in- YOUR L A NDLORD curred in enforcing the UNTIL THE P R OPobligation and t rust ERTY IS SOLD OR U NTIL A COU R T deed, together with
Legal Notices T ELLS YOU O T HERWISE. IF YOU DO N OT P A Y RE N T , YOU CAN BE EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAY M E NTS YOU MAKE. SECURITY DEPOSIT - You
may apply your security deposit and any rent you paid in advance against the current rent you owe your landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do this, you must notify your landlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of
your security deposit or prepaid rent from your rent p ayment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current landlord. If you do t his, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys this property at the foreclosure sale is not r esponsible to you for any deposit o r p r e paid rent you paid to your l andlord. ABOU T
Legal Notices a directory of legal aid
programs, g o to: http://www.oregonlawhelp.org. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, t h e word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest if any. DATED: Nov ember 1 9 , 20 1 2 . Russell W. Pike, Suc-
cessor Trustee.
PUBLIC NOTICE Housing Works will open the Mainstream H ousing Choi c e Voucher waiting list on Monday, February 4th, 2013 through Friday, February 8 t h, 2013. Applicants are asked to apply for the waitlist o n l in e at www.oregonhousingworks.org. This is a Y OUR TEN A N CY first-come, first-served AFTER THE FORE- waitlist. Th e o n l ine CLOSURE SALE: The application will open new owner that buys from 1:00 p.m. on the this property at the 4th of February until foreclosure sale may 5:00 p.m. on the 8th be willing to allow you of February. Central to stay as a tenant in- Oregon C ommunity stead of requiring you Service Agencies may assist their clients in to move out after 90 days or at the end of the filling out the onyour fixed term lease. line application form. Upon request, HousAfter the sale, you should receive a writ- ing Works staff will ten notice informing provide technical asyou that the sale took sistance for c l ients out the online place and giving you filling the n e w own e r's application. The appliname and contact in- cation must be comformation. You should piete in order to be contact t h e new accepted by the online wait list system owner if you would like to stay. If the new for processing. owner accepts rent from you, signs a new Families may request r esidential rent a l paper application as a agreement with you or reasonable a c comdoes not notify you in modation. R e asonacc o mmodawriting within 30 days able tions must b e in after the date of the writing and may be foreclosure sale that you must move out, granted should an individual have barriers the new owner bec omes y o u r ne w to completing the onl andlord an d m u s t line application. maintain the property. Main s t ream Otherwise: • You do The Choi c e not owe rent; • Th e H ousing Voucher Pro g ram new owner is not your landlord and is not re- provides rental assissponsible for m ain- tance for low-income taining the property on households that meet income eligibility reyour behalf; and • You quirements. Ap p l imust move out by the date the new owner cants must be a disabled head, co-head, specifies in a notice to spouse of houseyou. The new owner or may offer to pay your hold and under 62 moving expenses and years of age. This is a f i rst-come, f i rsta ny other costs o r amounts you and the served to be placed new owner agree on onto the waiting list. in exchange for your Should funding beagreement to l e ave come available within the premises in less a one year timeframe, than 90 days or be- applicants will be profore your fixed term cessed in the order their application was lease expires. Y ou received. If selected, should speak with a lawyer to fully under- the applicant will be stand your rights be- contacted by mail to fore making any deci- proceed with the eligisions regarding your bility process. At the tenancy. IT I S U N- c onclusion o f on e year, if funding has L AWFUL FOR A N Y PERSON TO TRY TO not been allocated, a new waiting list will be FORCE Y O U TO LEAVE YOUR opened and previous DWELLING UNIT applicants must reapW ITHOUT FI R S T ply. For further information please conGIVING YOU WRITtact Housing Works at TEN NOTICE AND (541) 923- 1 018. G OING TO C O U R T TO EVICT YOU. FOR Housing Works does MORE IN F O RMA- not discriminate on the basis o f r a c e, TION ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU color, national origin, SHOULD CONSULT religion, sex, physical or mental disability or A LAWYER. If y o u believe you need le- familial status.
gal assistance, you may contact the OrPUBLIC NOTICE egon State Bar and Mini Storage Auction ask for the lawyer re- 56840 Venture Lane ferral s e r vice at Sunriver, OR 97707 503-684-3763 or February 9, 2013 at toll-free in Oregon at 11:00 a.m. 800-452-7636 or you A-13 Stephen Nuttall may visit its website A-18 at: Rob McCutcheon http://www.osbar.org. B-25 Tonya Tappert If you do not have Village Properties enough money to pay 541-593-1 653 a lawyer and are otherwise eligible, you People Lookfor Information may be able to reAbout Products and ceive l e ga l a s s istance for f ree. F or Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Classifieds more information and
To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809
G6 SUNDAY JANUARY 20 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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U MAG A Z I N E CENTRAL OREGON'S WOMEN'S MAGAZINE • • I
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