Serving Central Oregon since1903 $'I
FRIDAY March 20,2015
Lll I MARCHMADNESS:FROM MADRASTOSTARTERFORNEW MEXICOSTATE, C3
bendbulletin.com
TODAY'S READERBOARD
PROPOSED:
Opening primaries, with a caveat
DOg anCeStry — Ashelter finds that assigning dogs a "breed" based on aDNAtest gets them adopted faster.A3
A robot lover? —Advances in artificial intelligence have some suggesting that love may soon be aclick away. A3
By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
Fatal explosion — u.s.
By Dylan J. Darling
Highway 26 wasclosed near Mount Hood; the FBI is investigating the explosion.B1
The Bulletin
For the second year in a
row Crook County is asking the state for a drought declaration, which would open the
Measuring wisdom — How the mind improveswith age.B2
And aWebexclusiveAaron Schock's race to be the youngest to doeverything earned him anunfortunate distinction: the youngestperson to resign from Congressmid-term. bendbuttetin.cnm/extras
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Biologists wary of DNA editing procedure
SALEM — One in
Drier times
The snowpack in most of the state, expressed below asits equivalent in water, is extremely lowThe percentages andboundaries on the charts below refer to the snowmelt equivalency as ariverbasinwide percentage of the1981-2010 median.
therefore can't vote in
way for assistance from state agencies. Crook County leaders sent a letter to Gov. Kate Brown
Hood, Sandy, Low t
asking her to declare a drought emergency, according to a news release issued Thursday.
6%
water supplies, snowpack, and rainfall that are typically available for irrigation and domestic use within Crook County are stored in various lakes and reservoirs throughout our county," reads the signed by two of the three members of the Crook County Court. "These reserves are
currently significantly below average, and estimated projec-
voters who can't vote until the general election.
e
32%
But if unaffiliated
w hee
voters want a say in
primary elections — when most of Oregon's legislative races are decided — they'll have to give up independence and register
21%
lamath
tions for precipitation do not
6%
provide much relief." Ochoco and Prineville reservoirs were at 73 percent full
with one of the state's
and 78percentfull,respectively, Thursday, and a lack
three major political parties to do it. i <I
I I i
70%-89%
alter human DNA in a way that canbe inherited.
snow site — located at 5,430 feet in the Ochoco Moun-
90%-109%
The biologists fear that
tains — had no snow as of Thursday.
SeePrimaries/A4
69%
~73% p
Ochoco Meadows automated
91%
sp
50%
Building a better diet soda
2%
110%-129% 130%-149%
A drought declaration from
Gov. Brown would allow the Oregon Department of Ag-
35%
29%
More than 150%
45% 48%
24'o
By Duane Stanford
riculture, Water Resources
Department and Office Emergency Management, as well as other state agencies, to help
also to enhance qualities like beauty or intelligence.
Crook County. The county Office of Emergency Management reported the drought could affect agriculture by
The latter is a path that
mid- or late summer.
many ethicists believe
Before being considered by Gov. Brown, Crook County's
to cure genetic diseases, but
process to the nearly 540,000 unaffiliated
13%
15%
11%
50% 69%
sues surrounding the technique, which could be used
primary elections
Malheur
ake Coun y G ak e
Rogue, Umpqua
Management. Indicative of the dire snow situation, the
to understand the ethical is-
that would open the
UpperDesc u es, Cr ed
letter dated Wednesday and
for a worldwide morato-
itssafety canbeassessed. They also want the public
A legislator has introduced a bill
9%
Less than 50%
push ahead with it before
tration law.
14%
6%
year, according to the Crook County Office of Emergency
effective and easy to use that some physicians may
rande Ronde, Powder, Burnt,
John Day
Willamette
A group of leading biologists on Thursday called
the new technique is so
25%
That ratio could
change, when an expected 300,000residents get registered under Oregon's new automatic voter regis-
38%
New York Times News Service
rium on use of a new genome-editing technique to
primary elections. atilla, Walla Walla Willow
"As you are aware, annual
of snowpack means water in both will likely be drawn down earlier than normal this
By Nicholas Wade
fourregisteredvoters in Oregon, including Deschutes County, doesn't belong to a political party and
Bloomberg News Source: Natural Resources Conservation Service
Greg Cross/The Bulletin
Dry conditions,lowsnowpackmay mean anearlystart to fire season
In a crowded lab on the edge of Copenhagen, food scientists at Swiss biotech company Evolva Holding are scrambling to help reinvent one of the world's most pop-
over human heredity with
request must go before the State Drought Council, which
this technique, and that is
meets as needed and assesses
By Dylan J. Darling
ed the evacuation of nearly
why we are raising the is-
water conditions around the
The Bulletin
200 homes in and near west
sue," said David Baltimore, a former president ofthe California Institute of Tech-
state, according to the governor's office. The Oregon Office of Emergency Management leads the council. SeeDrought/A5
A warm winter with light snowfall in the mountains near Bend means wildfire
Bend. The human-caused
for this time of year as of
blaze, the exact cause of which remains under investigation by the Oregon
Wednesday, according to the Natural Resources Conser-
ular drinks. The location is no accident: In 1900, Carlsberg brewery discovered a way to isolate pure yeast cells, which was crucial to the mass production of
vation Service. Many of the
beer, and the Danish
Department of Forestry,
city has been a hub of
should never be taken. "You could exert control
nologyand amember of the group whose paper on the topic was published in the journal Science. Ethicists have been con-
cerned for decades about the dangers of altering the human germ line — meaningto make changes to human sperm, eggs or em-
See the geological reasons the Crooked RiverCaldera struggles to get enoughwater at bendbulletin.com/cronkwater
How the caldera was forme4
bryos that will last through
the life of the individual and be passed on to future
season could come early. typically occur in Central Oregon until August, said
burned mainly through pri-
automated snow sites monitored by the federal agency
vate timberland near Tumalo
report no snow for the first
Ed Keith, Deschutes County
Reservoir. While fire season last year was busy around
time in three decades of recording data. A year ago the
the Northwest, few fires affected Bend after the Two
basin had 54 percent of the
normal snowpack on March
these researchers are harnessing high-tech yeast to craft a far different quaff: the
Bulls Fire.
20. Rain fell in Bend last week,
perfect soda. In biotech labs the
and the National Weather
race is on to find the industry's holy grail
Timber fires do not
forester, but the lack of snow may lead to big blazes earlier. "This year it may be June or July," he said Wednesday. Last winter was similar, although with more snow,
and a late spring wildfire brought a scare to Bend be-
generations. Until now,
fore Central Oregon's usual
these worries have been theoretical. But a technique
summer fire season. The 6,908-acre Two Bulls Fire started June 7 and prompt-
invented in 2012 makes it
River Basin snowpack was only 9 percent of normal
Whether fire season
comes early this year this year depends on weather this spring, which starts today. Springbegins with a dismal snowpack in Central Oregon. The Deschutes/Crooked
fermentation innovation ever since. Now
Service forecast calls for springlike weather, with
— a soda that tastes
rain expected to fall in Bend
as good as the iconic
tonight and rain and snow
colas, is sweetened
possible early next week.
naturally, and has zero calories. SeeSoda/A4
SeeFire /A5
possible to edit the genome precisely and with much greater ease. The technique
has alreadybeen used to edit the genomes of mice, rats and monkeys, and few
doubt that it would work the same way in people. SeeDNA /A5
4
TODAY'S WEATHER Some sun High 63, Low36 Page B6
INDEX All Ages Business Calendar
01-6 Classified E1 - 6 Dear Abby D6 Obituaries 85 C5-6 Comics/Pu zzles E3-4 Horoscope D6 Sports C1-4 In GO! Crosswords E 4 L o cal/State B1-6 TV/Movies 06, GO!
The Bulletin AnIndependent
Q I/i/e userecyclednewsprint
vol. 113, No. 79,
5 sectIons 0
88 267 0 23 2 9
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ea wi ran imisnu e ar ware — even as the U.S. Congress
By Bradley Klapper and George Jahn
alone misses the point. Com-
keeps up pressure on the adThe Associated Press ministration to avoid any LAUSANNE, Switzerland agreement leaving Iran with — The United States and Iran an avenue to become a nuclear are drafting elements of a nu- power. clear deal that commits TehOfficials said the tentative ran to a 40 percent cut in the deal imposes at least a decade number of machines it could of new limits on the number use to make an atomic bomb, of centrifuges Iran can operofficials told The Associated ate to enrich uranium, a proPress on Thursday. In return, cess that can lead to nuclear the Iranians would get quick weapons-grade material. The relief from some crippling eco- sides are zeroing in on a cap nomic sanctions and a partial of 6,000 centrifuges, officials lift of a U.N. embargo on con- said, down from the 6,500 they ventional arms. spoke of in recent weeks. That's also fewer than the Agreement on Iran's uranium enrichment program 10,000 such machines Tehran could signal a breakthrough now runs, yet substantially for a larger deal aimed at con- more than the 500 to 1,500 that taining the Islamic Republic's Washington originally wantnuclear activities. ed as a ceiling. Only a year The sides are racing to ago, U.S. officials floated 4,000 meet a March 31 deadline for as apossiblecompromise. a framework pact and a full But U.S. officials insist the agreement by the end of June focus on centrifuge numbers
bined with other restrictions on enrichment levels and the types ofcentrifuges Iran can use, Washington believes it can extend the time Tehran would need to produce a nu-
clear weapon to at least a year. Right now, Iran would require only two to three months
to amass enough material to make a bomb. President Barack Obama
appealed directly to Iranian citizens in a m essage commemorating Nowruz, the Persian New Year. "Our n egotiations h a v e
made progress, but gaps remain," Obama said Thursday in a video message posted online. "IfIran's leaders can agree to a reasonable deal, it can
lead to abetter path — the path of greater opportunities for the Iranian people," he said.
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anced-budget plans bristling with cuts in Medicaid andother benefit programs Thursday, determined to make a down payment on last fall's campaign promise to erasedeficits by the end of the decade. Last-minute maneuvering to match Pentagon spending levels requestedbyPresidentBarackObama consumed GOP lawmakers in both the HouseBudget Committee andthe counterpart Senate panel. Yet the GOP'sfocus also extended to deficit reduction, repeal of the health care law, anoverhaul of the tax code andother budget priorities long advocated by conservatives in control of both houses of Congress for the first time in nearly a decade. Odama On Climate —President Barack Obamaordered the federal government Thursday to cut its greenhousegas emissions by nearly half over the next decade, driving his climate changeagenda forward despite percolating challenges from Republican-led states. By curtailing pollution within the U.S.government, Obamasought to increase political pressure on other nations to deal seriously with climate change.TheU.S. andother nations will soon announce how much they're willing to cut their national emissions aspart of a global climate treaty to be finalized in December; scientists warn that if those pledges aretoo lax, the treaty could be too weak to stop the worst effects of global warming.
Bady'S grueSOme death —AColorado womanaccused of cutting open the belly of apregnant womanand removing herunborn baby went to great lengths to showherfamily shewas expecting a baby herself, evenarranging to meether husbandfor a pre-natal appointment on the day of theattack, authorities said. But whenDynel Lane's husband camehome together,hefoundhercoveredinbloodandababygasping for breath in abathtub. Lanetold herhusbandshe suffered a miscarriage, and he took herandthe babyto a hospital, where shewas later arrested on suspicion ofattempted first-degreemurder andother crimes. Police wrote in herarrest affidavit that she lured the pregnant stranger to her homewith aCraigslistad for baby clothes andthen cut heropen. Secret Service —Joseph Clancy, director of the Secret Service told lawmakers Thursday that newsaccounts of two agents crashing a car into a White Housebarricade this month wereoverblown and exaggerated. Clancy told senators that surveillance video debunked the idea that the March 4 incident involved any kind of serious collision. "Previous reports of a crash areinaccurate — there was no crash," Clancy said, offering his most forceful comments yet about the episode. "The video shows thevehicle entering the White House complex at aspeed of approximately1 to 2 mph, and pushing aside a plastic barrel. Therewas no damageto thevehicle." Afghan tfOOp plOSOIICO — TheObamaadministration is nearing a decision to keepmoretroops in Afghanistan next year than it had intended, effectively upending its drawdown plans in responseto roiling violence in the country. American officials had hopedthat a renewed push to bring theTaliban to the negotiating table would allow the United States to stick with its plan to drop the number of troops in Afghanistan. But those hopeshavebeendashed by signs that the Taliban remain deeply divided over whether to engage intalks and that the remaining al-Qaida presence is proving more resilient than officials had anticipated.
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Militiamen loyal to President AbedRabboMansour Hadi ride on atank on astreet in Aden, Yemen, on Thursday. Awoman onthe tank holds a representation of the old South Yemenflag that was used when it was an independent state before1990. Forces loyal to Yemen's former President Ali Abdullah Saleh stormed the international airport in the southern port city of Aden onThursday, triggering
an intense, hours-long gunbattle with the forces of the current President Hadi that intensified a monthslong struggle for power threatening to fragment the nation. Troops fended off the airport attack, the airstrikes missed the palaceand President Hadi was in asafe place, Aden's governor Abdel-Aziz bin Habtour said. The attack left13 people dead,however.
NetalIyahu daCktraCkS —Daysafter winning re-election, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu onThursday backtracked from hard-line statements against the establishment of a Palestinian state in the face of adiplomatic backlash. In the closing days of his campaign, Netanyahusaid there could be noPalestinian state while regional violence andchaos persist — conditions that could rule out progress on the issue for manyyears. Thecomments, aimed at appealing to his nationalist voter base, angered theObamaadministration, which views atwo-state solution as atop foreign policy priority. Netanyahu said in a TVinterview Thursday that he remains committed to Palestinian statehood — if conditions in the region improve. — From wire reports
M AG A K 88 L'
DOES EVERYONE MUMBLE?
TheBulletin
Connect Hearing
Weekly Arts &
Enlertainment Inside
••
YOUR HEARING PROFESSIONALS
2 terror groups,IslamicState included, claimattack in Tunisia By David D. Kirkpatrick
lize governments.
ment andCharlie Hebdo.
New York Times News Service
CAIRO — The Islamic State
Some analysts said they saw an ominous trend. "The shoot-
Brian Fishman, a researcher at the New America Founda-
and other extremists on Thursday sought to claim responsibility for the deadly attack that killed at least 21 people at the
ing spree tactic is really catching on, and that is going to be a huge headache for security services around the world,"
tion in Washington, said he,
National Bardo Museum in Tunis. The authorities there ar-
said Will McCants, a scholar o f Islamist militancy at t h e
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too, foresaw more low-tech as-
saults, "because these attacks are easy." ' Itmisian
o ff i c ial s sa i d
Thursday that they had not yet found evidence tying either of
rested at least nine people sus- Brookings Institution, noting pectedofbeing accomplices as the similarities with recent atmajor cruise lines indefinitely tacks on the Canadian Parliasuspended stops in Tunisia, a sign of the looming toll on the crucial tourist industry.
the twogunmen to any known
this SUHDAY
terrorist group.
aSH s
The assault was the latest evidence that the extremist
r
•
victories and cruelties in Syria, Iraq and elsewhere are emboldening like-minded militants to acts of violence around the world — including recent attacks in Paris, Ottawa and
Sydney.
•
The eagerness of the Islamic State and other jihadists to
•
' •
among the assailants who at-
•
•
•
associate themselves with the killings in Tunis underscored the looseness of their proliferating networks, recalling the distant ties to both the al-Qaida and Islamic State networks
-
-
•
•
•
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•
•
25% oFF * yaNL Any CIQSS
tacked the magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris two months
ago. The massacre of tourists
Breaking Bad Habits
on Wednesday, scholars said, was in some ways a throw-
The author of The Happiness Project tells us how to tap into our own personality traits to stop oversleeping, oversharing, overeating and more.
back to the tactics that older
militant groups had relied on in the 1980s and '90s. But the attack also comes at a time when some Islamist militants
elsewhere, most notably in Egypt, are gravitating to the
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a
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idea that economic interests
may be a vulnerable point they can exploit to destabi-
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FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Friday, March 20, the 79th
day of 2015. Thereare286 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE
HAPPENINGS
e increasin spee up o a options
EU Summit —Headsof state and government will wrap up their meetings in Brussels on economic and energy policies, the crises in Ukraine and Libyaandthe Greek debt problem.
Spring'S arriVal —The season officially changesat 3:45 p.m.
HISTORY Highlight:In1995, in Tokyo, 12 people were killed andmore than 5,500 others sickened whenpackagescontainingthe deadly chemical sarin were leaked on five separate subway trains by AumShinrikyo cult members. In1727, physicist, mathematician and astronomer Sir Isaac Newton died in London. In1815, Napoleon Bonaparte returned to Paris after escaping his exile on Elba, beginning his "Hundred Days" rule. In1852, Harriet Beecher Stowe's influential novel about slavery, "Uncle Tom'sCabin," was first published in book form after being serialized. In1899, Martha Placeof Brooklyn, NewYork, became the first woman to beexecuted in the electric chair as shewas put to death at Sing Sing for the murder of her stepdaughter. In1933, the state of Florida
electrocuted GiuseppeZangara for shooting to death Chicago Mayor Anton Cermak ata Miami event attended byPresident-elect Franklin D. Roosevelt, the presumedtarget, the previous February. In1952,the U.S. Senate ratified, 66-10, the Treaty of Peace with Japan. In1969, John Lennonmarried Yoko Ono inGibraltar. In1974, Britain's Princess Anne was the target of a kidnapping attempt near Buckingham Pala ce;thewould-beabductor, lan Ball, was captured. In1985, Libby Riddles of
Teller, Alaska, became the first woman to win the Iditarod Trail Dog Sled Race. In1999, Bertrand Piccard of Switzerland and Brian Jones of Britain becamethe first aviators to fly a hot-air balloon around the world nonstop as they floated over Mauritania past longitude 9 degreeswest. (They landed safely in Egypt the next day.) Tee years age:A visibly frustrated PopeJohn Paul II made a brief but silent appearanceat his Vatican apartment window after missing his first Palm Sunday Mass in 26years as pontiff. Five years age:PopeBenedict XVI sent an unprecedented letter to Ireland apologizing for chronic child abusewithin the Roman Catholic church, but failed to calm anger of many victims. Thousands of protesters — many directing their anger squarely at President Barack Obama— marched through the nation's capital to urge immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq andAfghanistan. One year age:President Barack Obamaordered economic sanctions against nearly two dozen members of Russian President Vladimir Putin's inner circle and amajor bank that provided them support, raising the stakes in anEastWest showdown over Ukraine.
BIRTHDAYS Producer-director-comedian Carl Reiner is 93. Actor Hal Linden is 84. TVproducer Paul Junger Witt is 74. Actor William Hurt is 65. Rockmusician Carl Palmer (Emerson, Lake and Palmer) is 65. Rock musician Jimmie Vaughanis 64. Movie director Spike Leeis 58. Actress Holly Hunter is 57. Actress-model-designer Kathy Ireland is 52. Actor David Thewlis is 52. Actress Jessica Lundy is 49. Actor Michael Rapaport is 45. Actor Michael Genadry is 37.Rockmusician Nick Wheeler (TheAll-American Rejects) is 33. Actor Michael Cassidy is 32. — From wire reports
DNA tests help shelter
I el 00
By Sue Manning
pet she wanted. Mazzola of San Carlos, Cal-
The Associated Press
L OS ANGELES —
ifornia, wanted a big dog, but 2-year-old, 6-pound Lily stole
A
quarter of the dogs taken in by one California animal shelter look like Chihuahuas. So how do you make
her heart. DNA results showed
ro o romance
her that her new dog was part miniature pinscher, part Yorkie terrier and part Chihuahua,
a pet stand out when it's
As artificial intelligence becomes more
NEW YORK — Convinc-
s o n ably believable."
dent, came up with the idea
Paz, an "Alaskan Chauzer"-
to speed up adoptions of Chihuahua-centric dogs.
that's American Eskimo, Chihuahua andminiature Schnau-
ing people to have a romantic Wh e r e things could really relationship with a computer take off is when new technolmight be easier than it sounds. ogies give computers the abilAtthisyear'sSouthbySouth-
i t y t o i n teract with humans
west Conference in Austin, i n radically new ways that go Texas, a chatbot on dating app beyond just holding intelligent Tinder convinced a number conversations.AnAI-powered of users that she was a cute computer that could learn to 25-year-old woman eager to analyze your facial expresstrike up a romantic relation- sions or look into your eyes ship. Too bad "Ava" turned and sense your moods could o ut to be just an Instagram
t h e oretically s i m ulate t h e
accountfor a characterin an types of emotional responses upcoming film ("Ex Machi- and triggers that we typicalna")abouttheimplicationsfor
l y a s sociate with a h u m an
romance in the era of artificial r elationship. Discussing the intelligence. central plot line of "Her," KurIn many ways, "Ava" was zweil says that your romantic playing a simplified form of p a rtner might not even need Alan Turing's famous "imita- to have a physical body, as tion game" by trying to con- longasthere'sa"virtualvisual vince human conversati onal presence." partners that it was huma n
So ima g i n e a computerthat
— or at least human enough could convince you that it was — to get Tinder usactually physicalers to watch a trailer ly interacting with for a movie. In one A I1Umeflyou. Ku r zweil sees conversational ex- CpmpUtef. this happening via changecapturedby a type of virtual AdWeek, Ava used reality experience: "With a typical chatbot like in the emerging tactic ee p mg a mOVle He( e ye mounted d i s human off-balance «I 1~ plays t h a t p roject by asking quesi mages onto t h e tions you wouldn't PlaCe at wearer' s reti n a s expect from a com 2 0 2 9 , ' WtIef i and a l so look out a t the w o rld, w e puter ("Have you P ever been in love?" will indeed soon and "What makes tl U man-leVel be a b le to do exactyou human?") — g l IAroUld l7e ly th a t . When we to convince male, send nanobots into I~ ~ techie-hipsters at <e> <Bt the brain — a cirSXSW that she was belieVable." ca-2 0 30s s cenario a real woman. by my timeline— Futuriet we will be able to We've a l ready "ay K""* e' do this with all of seen evidence that carrying on a relathe senses, and even tionship with a bot intercept other peois easier than it sounds. Con- ple's emotional responses." sider the Invisible Boyfriend
The ne x t f r o n tier, t h en,
(and Invisible Girlfriend) ex- could be the creation of rop erience, which really started
m a n ti c e x periences in t h e
as a clever way to use tech- bedroom for humans using nology to cover up a lack of a virtual reality devices such as romantic significant other. It
t h e O culus Rift. There have
turns out the experience was already been some attempts at so addictive that people start- adapting the world of romance ed to fall for the Invisible Boy-
so much on text messages to u l u s
R if t X X X " e x perience,
launch, maintain and end re- in which you can choose the lationships, it's perhaps no a ppearance of your partner surprise that a bot experience a s well as which activities you
such as Invisible Boyfriend w ill pursue in a virtual bedor Ava could take off. If you r oom. Imagine the types of b o n ds that could be formed
romance carried out via text w henyourInvisibleBoyfriend message these days, it's es- suddenly becomes a visible, sentially a chatbot experience
A I - powered Christian Grey in
powered by a really powerful a virtual reality world where computer — the human brain. anything is possible. The witty reply, the shared On et hing is clear — techinsider lingo between two lov- nology is already changing ers, the concerned text from a
t h e way humans think about
lover demanding a rapid reply relationships, whether it's via — this could all be simulated something simple such as texby an artificially intelligent t ing or something more comchatbot.
as little as 15 years. In his review of the 2013 Spike Jonze
e r s are starting to factor into t h ose relationships in i nter-
film "Her" (in which the char- esting — and some might say acter played by Joaquin Phoe- disturbing — new ways? In the
Eric Risberg/The Associated Press
b e come zer rni, according to a DNA part of the family, the $50 test — rune with a ball at the tests allow owners to find PeninsulaHumane Societyand out the background of their SPCA in Burlingame, California. Because pets
she wanted the dog to keep him
company while he recovered. After his operation, "he walked in the door, she ran up
to him and hasn't been out of his lap since," Mazzola said of the dog that had been at the
shelter for seven months. The adoption promotion they could exhibit. The tests helped Lily, but it's going to also allow the shelter to get tested small, brown dogs in the take more than a gimmick to creative by coming up with previous months. reduce the "alarming" number clever breed names that can Twelve more dogs were test- of Chihuahua mixes coming in, boost adoption odds. ed, and once the last few in that Delucchi said. "Another part is making For example, the Chi- group are placed, 24 more dogs huahua-Australian s h e p- will find out their breed back- spay-neuter low-cost or free to herd-Jack Russell t e r r i- grounds, Delucchi said. the community," he said."If you er-colliebecame a"Kiwi colIn the two batches of tests, have alotofone breed,you tarlier"; a Yorkshire terrier and only 10 of 23 dogs had no Chi- get that breed and those ownbeaglemixbecame a"York- huahua in them. Chihuahuas ers and make it easyfor themto le"; and a golden retriev- took over from the glut of pit do the right thing and get them er-miniature pinscher-Chi- bull mixes that dominated the fixed." huahua was prodaimed a shelter until five or six years He said facilities also work "golden Chinscher." ago, Delucchi said. with states that need small In February, the shelter There are a lot of reasons dogs, such as Florida and New tested 12 lookalike dogs. Chihuahuas became so popu- York, by flying in as many as One of the results was in- lar, he said, citing Hollywood they can handle. conclusive, but 11 showed stars toting them in purses and Despite the promotion's tagmutt combinations that the the "Beverly Hills Chihuahua" line, the question that never facility had never seen be- movies. gets answered is "Who's Your fore. The tested dogs were Seeing one of the tiny dogs at Daddy?" The DNA tests deall placed within two weeks theshelterchanged Lynn Maz- scribe two parents, but they — twice as fast as any 11un- zola's mind about what kind of don't reveal which one is dad. pooches and certain traits
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a r o m antic f u t u r e,thewaytoyourroman-
relationship with a disembod- tic partner's heart might not ied operating system called be flowers, chocolates or jew"Samantha"), Kurzweil said e lry — it might be the ability he expected similar types of to code a really cool romantic advances by the year 2029: experience for his or her digi"Samantha herself I
w o ul d t a l device.
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet 9• 9 •
plains why she goes after birds and mice and she's not nervous like a Chihuahua," she said. Mazzola's husband was about to undergo surgery and
plex, such as artificial intelli-
No wonder AI thought lead- gence or virtual reality. When er Ray Kurzweil has suggest- so much of our lives are spent ed that a real-life human-AI consuming digital 0's and 1's, romance might be possible in is it any surprise that comput-
nix carries on
zola said. For example, "it ex-
f o r the virtual reality headset,
friend bot — even when they and while the original experiknew the whole relationship ences were largely considered was made up — and paid for to be overhyped, the elusive — from the beginning. goal for some remains a type In an era when teens rely of highly customizable "Oc-
think about the typical teen
the DNA.
place at 2029, when the leap to human-level AI would be rea-
science fiction. By Dominic Basulto
which the shelter dubbed a "Chorkie." Knowing Lily's DNA gives you clues to her behavior, Maz-
The Peninsula Humane Society and SPCA in Burlingame, a 30-minute drive south of San Francisco, began free DNA tests under the slogan "Who's Your Daddy?" Scott Delucchi, the shelter's senior vice presi-
advanced, the idea is beginning to seem less like
special to The washington Post
similar to so many other dogs at the shelter? Check
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
Soda
A 12-ounce serving has 140
Continued from A1
threeOreo cookies.But soda makers must tread softly pearing as a drugstore elixir, when changing sweeteners, colas remain the world's most because they also help propopular packaged drink, ac- vide what food chemists call counting for more than half mouth-feel — the liquid's senof all sodas sold globally. sation on the tongue and in But concerns about obesity the back of the throat. and health have led to nine In recent years the indusyears of falling U.S. soda con- try has settled on stevia, a sumption. The new challenge plant long chewed by the for the $187 billion soft drink Guarani Indians of Paraguay, industry is giving consum- as the most promising no-calers in developed markets the orie sugar substitute. The Adam Rountree / Btoomherg News file photo sugary taste they want with- U.S. Food and Drug Adminis- Concerns about obesity and health have Ied to nine years of falling out a mouthful of calories. tration in 2008 green-lighted U.S. soda consumption; Diet Coke is losing U.S. sales at 7 percent The soda giants can't rely use of a key stevia molecule, a year, almost double the rate of decline of U.S. cola sales overall. on existing diet versions as called rebaudioside A, that's consumers are shying away as much as 300 times sweetfrom the artificial sweeten- er than sugar. By 2014 stevia tion. The process creates preTheoretically, growing the ers they contain, including accounted for 11.4 percent of cise copies of the desired mol- molecules in a yeast tank aspartame. Critics, rightly or the global sweetener market, ecule, like a biological Xerox would mean no limit to the not, have blamed the ingre- says researcher Future Marmachine. "It's as natural as stevia supply. And "the susdients for everything from ket Insights; it forecasts ste- beer or bread," says Evolva tainability arguments are weight gain to cancer. Diet via's share among sweeteners Chief Executive Officer Neil clear," Goldsmith says. The Coke is losing U.S. sales at 7 will grow to 15 percent by Goldsmith. goal is to prove yeast can percent a year, almost double 2020. Coca-Cola uses stevia the rate of decline of Amervariants in at least 20 prodican cola sales overall. So ucts globally, including the Coke and Pepsi are turning green-labeled Coca-Cola Life to science to save their cola that began a slow U.S. rollout businesses, which take in last year. It's also used in Pepabout two-thirds of the indus- si True, which is sold in a few A century after f i rst ap-
try's U.S. sales.
Continued from A1 House Majority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugene, filed House Bill 3500 on Thursday
morning. "I heard from many people in the last election cycle that
they felt those voters deserve to have a voice in choosing the candidates for the general
election. This bill would allow them to do so," Hoyle told The Bulletin.
The flock of voters leaving two of the state's major parties has been a growing trend and a headache for Oregon's Republican and Democratic parties, which have struggled to maintain numbers.
ed an internal taste test of the sweetener in tea, berry
water, lemon-lime soda, and cola. "What we h ave seen
has delivered significantly better taste," he says. "Sugarlike taste, no aftertaste, no bitterness." In an email, Co-
ca-Cola said it continues to work with suppliers "to pursue innovations that provide
So while scientists may find
cells from, say, a Himalayan orchid that heighten sugar perception, they might also come at twice the cost of sugar, cautions Chromocell's Kopfli. "Consumers are very demanding," he says. "They say, 'Less calories and same taste, but I'm not willing to
pay more for whatever it is.'"
safe, great-tasting sweeteners that complement our di-
verse range of ready-to-drink beverages." All of this science is like-
ly toraise red flagsfor some
Find It All Online
bendbulletin.com
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"If you can crack the per- com. fect sweetener, that would be Although reb A works well huge," said Howard Telford, in drinks such as tea, it faces an analyst at researcher Eu- a hurdle in cola: The more it's romonitor International. used, the more the molecule's America's 4 percent-a-year licorice aftertaste lingers. To drop in cola sales has wiped blunt that off taste in Cocaout $2.7 billion in annual rev- Cola Life and Pepsi True, enue overthe past five years, their makers have mixed according to E uromonitor. stevia with some sugar. The The decline has pushed Co- drinks have a third fewer calca-Cola, PepsiCo, and Dr ories than traditional sugared Pepper Snapple, the three colas but far more than an largest U.S. soda makers, to all-stevia product. crank ou t n e w b e verages, Scientists have since found including energy drinks and dozens of stevia molecules even designer milks. But soda with less bitter aftertastes. m akers have too m uch a t These molecules make up stake to simply resign them- less than 1 percent of the leaf, selves to cola's slow decline. so using them could require Researchers are focusing more land and water to grow on finding new sweeteners the plant, which would drive for a simple reason: That's up costs. To tackle the supply where almost all of a soda's problem, Evolva's scientists calories come from. The in Copenhagen are working classic American cola is 90 with stevia genes that genpercent carbonated water; erate the best-tasting molethe next most plentiful ingre- cules. Those are spliced into dient is calorie-laden sugar baker's yeast, which is fed or high fructose corn syrup. glucose to trigger fermenta-
Primaries
consumers, who are increasreasonable price on an indus- ingly demanding "natural" trial scale. Evolva has teamed ingredients in f o ods and up with agribusiness giant drinks, says Euromonitor's Cargill, a longtime sweeten- Telford. Then there's the cost. er supplier to Coca-Cola. The As with m olecules created ingredient will probably be by fermentation, sweetness ready next year, says Scott enhancers will have to be Fabro, Cargill's global busi- price-competitive with sugness development director. ar and artificial sweeteners In February, Cargill conduct- to be commercially viable. produce the molecules at a
calories or more, as much as
. US.Cellular.
There's never been a better time to switch. We'll pay off your old contract, up to $350 per line. Bill inSalem — House Bill 3500 would allow unaffiliated voters to vote in major party primaries. The voters would be required to register to a party while sendIng in the ballot. Sponsors:HouseMajority Leader Val Hoyle, D-Eugene History:Onein four registered voters in Oregon cannot vote in primary elections, when most legislative races aredecided. What'snext: Not scheduled for hearing. Online:Readthe bill at olis.leg.state.er.us
shared primary ballot. Hoyle's bill, which isn't yet the state's third major party, scheduled for a hearing but as enough registered voters would probably appear in joined the Independent Party the House Rules Committee, of Oregon to make it eligible as which she leads, comes after a major party under the state's voters handily defeated a ballaws. lot measure in November that House Bill 3500 marks an- would have drastically altered other significant topic of elec- the primary process and open toral reform in Oregon this it up to all voters.
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The trend in part led to the d esignation last m o nt h o f
session. Gov. Kate Brown al-
•l
11LIIIff III
•
C oalitions formed by t h e
ready signed House Bill 2177, Republican and Democratic which allows the state to auto- parties and unions opposed matically register eligible resi- Ballot Measure 90. In that sysdents to vote when they inter- tem, the top two candidates act with the DMV. That law is estimated to add 300,000 voters to the rolls, be-
advance to the general elec-
tion regardless of party. Washington state uses a top-two primary system open
fore eventually registering everyone in Oregon who inter- to all voters. acts with the DMV. Severalof Oregon's minor Bend Republican R ep. parties joined the coalition Knute Buehler was elected as to fight the ballot measure an Independent who promised because they said it would to look for ways to find more make them irrelevant. While options to include the regis- minor party candidates are tered voters in elections. almost never elected, the parHe said Thursday he didn't ties say they influence mainsupport Hoyle's bill because stream candidates and claim of the requirement that voters victories on social issues like join a party. gay marriage and marijuana "First the government forces legalization. Oregonians to register to vote The parties say they were against their will, and now surprised by the bill's filing in they're going to force them to part because they weren't conjoin a major party in order to sulted about it beforehand. "The bill is just leaving out vote in the primary," Buehler said. "I just don't think that minor parties altogether," said being a partisan should be a Alejandro Juarez, a spokesrequirement to participate in man for the Oregon Working an election." Families Party. "Really, it's The U.S. Supreme Court just going to benefit the major has said statescan'tforce par- parties, which is a main probties to open their primaries to
lem with this bill."
nonmembers, so Hoyle's bill A spokesman for the Secrecouldn't be amended to leave tary of State's Office said staff out the registration aspect. was still reviewing the bill and Instead, Buehler said he'd didn't yet know how it would prefer a ballot that allows un- be implemented. affiliated voters and registered
Independents to vote on a
— Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbuIIetift.com
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FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
Drought
DNA
Jennifer
improve the world." She de-
Doudna, a
Continued from A1 Along with Crook County, the council is currently considering drought r equests
Continued from A1 The newgenome-editing technique holds the power to repair or enhance any human gene. "Itraises the most fundamental of issues about how we are going to
genetics researcher
scribedherself as more of a pragmatist, saying, "I would try to regulate such things
from Klamath and H a rney
counties, said Cory G r ogan, spokesman for the Oregon Office of Emergency Management. "The issue primarily is they rely on the snowpack for much of their water supply, and there are dry conditions and lack of snowpack," he said. Earlier this week, the governor declared drought emergencies in Malheur and Lake counties. "Projected forecasts for
Malheur and Lake counties look bleak, meaning these rural communities will continue
to experience severe drought c onditions,"
G o v . Br o w n
saidin a news release issued Tuesday. Crook County asked for, and received, a drought emergency declaration last year
future and whether we are going to take the dramatic step of modifying our own germline and in a sense take control of our genetic destiny, which raises enor-
mous peril for humanity," said George Daley, a stem cell expert at Boston Chil-
any scientists believe it is ready for clinical use. Any such use is tightly regulated in the United States and Europe. American scientists, for instance, would have to
present a plan to treat genetic diseases in the human
year, Mike Ryan, emergency manager for the Crook Coun-
germline to the Food and Drug Administration.
ty Sheriff's Office, said the
The paper's authors, however, are concerned about
"So it ha d b een quite a
while," he said. Along with agriculture, he added that low reservoirs this
summer couldalso affectrecreation, particularly boating and fishing. The Natural Resources
countries that have less regulation in science. They urge that "scientists should avoid even attempting, in lax jurisdictions, germ line genome modification for clinical application in humans" until the full implica-
around Oregon, and of those, 75 percent were snow-free Thursday, said Julie Koeberle, a snow hydrologist with the federalagency's office in
tions"are discussed among scientific and governmental organizations." Though such a moratorium would not be legally enforceable and might seem unlikely to exert global sway, there is a precedent.
Portland. Thirty of the sites
In 1975, scientists world-
were at record lows. "We are in new territory, basically, where we haven't
wide were asked to refrain from using a method for manipulating genes, the
seen this many records," she
r ecombinant DN A
said. In the Deschutes/Crooked River Basin, half of the 14
nique, until rules had been established.
automated snow sites did not have snow.
"We asked at that time that nobody d o c e rtain
Typically the snowpack in Oregon peaks at the start of
experiments, and in fact nobody did, to my knowl-
Conservation Service maintains 82 automated snow sites
1
dren'sHospitaland a m ember of the group. The biologists writing in Science support continuing laboratory research with the technique, and few if
t e c h-
rather than shut a new technol-
ogy down at its beginning." genome-editOther scientists agree with ing technique, the Doudna group's message. "It is very clear that people is also among the scientists will try to do gene editing in calling for a humans," said Rudolf Jaenisch, worldwide a stem cell biologist at the moratorium Whitehead Institute in Camon its use. bridge, Massachusetts, who was not a member of the DoudElizabeth D. Herman/ na group. "This paper calls for New York Times a moratorium on any clinical News Service application, which I believe is the right thing to do." Writing in Nature last week,
view our humanity in the
from the state. Prior to last
county had not asked for help since 1992.
and co-inventor of a new
Edward Lanphier and other scientists involved in develop-
"lt raises the most fundamental of issues about how we are going to view our humanity in the future and whether we are going to take the dramatic step of... control of our genetic destiny, which raises enormous peril for
ing the rival zinc finger technique for genome editing also changes mean in terms of the called for a moratorium on overall genome," Baltimore human germline modification, said. "I personally think we are saying that use of current techjust not smart enough — and nologies would be "dangerous won't be for a very long time and ethically unacceptable." the knowledge of what those
— to feel comfortable about
the consequences of changhumanity." ing heredity, even in a single — George Daley, stem cell expert individual." Many ethicists have accepted the idea of gene therapy, edge," said Baltimore, who was tack them so they are ready the changes that die with the paa member ofthe 1975 group. next time those same invaders tient, but draw a clear line at "So there is a moral authority appear. Researchers can sim- altering the germline, since you can assert from the U.S., ply prime the defense system these will extend to f u ture and that is what we hope to do." with a guide sequence of their generations. The British ParRecombinant DNA was the choice and it will then destroy liament in February approved first in a series of ever-improv- the matching DNA sequence the transfer of mitochondria, ing steps for manipulating ge- in any genome presented to it. small DNA-containing organnetic material. The chief prob- Doudna is the lead author of elles, to human eggs whose lem has always been one of the Science article calling for own mitochondria are defecaccuracy, of editing the DNA at control of the technique and or- tive. But that technique is less preciselythe intended site, since ganized the meeting at which far-reaching because no genes any off-target change could the statement was developed. are edited. be lethal. Two recent methods, Though highly efficient, the There are two broad schools known as zinc fingers and TAL technique occasionally cuts of thought on modifying the effectors, came dose to the goal the genome at unintended sites. human germline, said R. Alta of accurate genome editing, but The issue of how much mis- Charo, a bioethicist at the Uniboth are hard to use. The new targeting could be tolerated versity of W isconsin and a genome-edit ing approach was in a clinical setting is one that member of the Doudna group. inventedby Jennifer Doudna Doudna's group wants to see One is pragmatic and seeks to of the University of California, thoroughly explored before balance benefit and risk. The Berkeley, and Emmanuelle any humangenome isedited. other "sets up inherent limCharpentier of Umea UniversiScientists also say that re- its on how much humankind ty in Sweden. placing a defective gene with a should alter nature," she said. Their method, known by the normal one may seem entirely Some Christian doctrines opacronym Crispr-Cas9, co-opts harmless but perhaps would pose the idea of playing God, the natural immune system notbe. whereas in Judaism and Is"We worry about people lam there is the notion "that with which bacteria remember the DNA of the viruses that at- making changes w i thout humankind is supposed to
The International Society
for Stem Cell Research said Thursday that it supported the proposed moratorium.
The Doudna group calls for public discussion but is also working to develop some more formal process, such as an international meeting convened by the National Academy of Sciences, to establish guidelines for human use of the genome-editing technique. "We need some principled agreement that we want to enhance humans in this way or
we don't," Jaenisch said. "You have to have this discussion because people are gearing up to dothis."
TOUCHMARK SlNCE 1980
•3
•
April, Koeberle said, but this
year it peaked around Jan. 1. That means the Ochoco
3-DAY SPECIALS!
and Maury mountains now have little, if any, snow.
Ranchers near Post and
FRIDAY, MARCH 20SUNDAY, MARCH 22
Paulina in Crook County de-
pend on snowmelt from the mountains to provide water for their cattle operations.
"They need that snowpack, and w e j ust d on't have it right now," said Seth
Crawford, a Crook County Commissioner. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
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any immediate plans to start
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but that could change with
the weather, said George Ponte, Central Oregon District forester for the Oregon
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Department of Forestry in
I
Prineville. The lack of snowfall has
left grasses in forests around Central Oregon ready to burn, he said. Snow typically crunches down grasses, lowering the likelihood of the grasses holding a flame once
TEXT CPN"TO62297TO GET COUPONS, SALES ALERTS 5 NIOREI
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the snow has melted. Without
snow, the grasses are taller and warm weather could dry
them out. "Those could go at any time with a spark or a
c a reless
match," Ponte said, noting that most early season wildfires in
Central Oregon are caused by people. — Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbuIIetin.com
B END RIVER PROM E N A DE, S EN D •
*mac s
5 4 1. 3 1 7 . 6 0 0 0
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
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Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
BRIEFING
uii ninr
Principal picked for Bendschool Bend-La PineSchools Superintendent Ron Wilkinson haspicked Scott Edmondson tobecome thenext principal at R.E. Jewell Elementary School, the district announced Thursday. Edmondson hasbeen the principal at SkyView Middle School for eight years. Hewill replace current Jewell Elementary Principal Kimberly Camren, who isstepping down July1. The district will begin looking for anewSky View MiddleSchool principal immediately. In other news,Lisa Birk waschosenasPacific Crest MiddleSchool's assistant principal. She is currently the assistant principal atBear Creek ElementarySchool. Pacific Crest is scheduled to open inthe fall.
Sewer service to be discussed Deschutes County and state agencieshave scheduled openhouses in April to discuss allowing sewerservice in unincorporated areas near La Pine. Extending sewerservice hasbeenproposed as a solution to ongoing concerns about nitrate levels in southernDeschutes Countygroundwater. The Department of Environmental Quality and the Department of Land Conservation and Development havemade a case for extending the city's sewerservice. The extension is not allowedunder Oregon land use laws,but the state canmakean exception. Meetings havebeen scheduled from1-3 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. April 7 in the Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250Overlook Road. Meetings also are scheduled for 2-4 p.m. and 6-8 p.m. April 30 at the La PineSenior Center, 16450 Victory Way. "The intent of these public meetings is to brief the audienceon the purpose of the ... exception and toshow the proposedmapof southern Deschutes County wherethe ... exception wouldapply," said Peter Russell, senior transportation planner for DeschutesCounty. Russell said staff members from thetwo state agenciesandthe county will give abrief summary of their portion of the project. The majority of the time will bespent listening to thepublic regarding the proposed exception, hesaid. After the two open houses, staff members from the state departments and thecounty will meet to decide whether findings about the exemption should be modified. Once finalized, the information will be part of a land useapplication to Deschutes County. That application process will include public hearings before both the Deschutes County Planning Commission and the County Commission. — Bulletinstaffreports
Correction The headline "City makes deal for new park," which appeared Thursday, March19 on Page B1,should have attributed the deal to the Bend Park & Recreation District. The Bulletin regrets the error.
• Bend campus still less expensivefor some By Abby Spegman
quarter at the same rate as
The Bulletin
12 credits. The change was
the next school year, Oregon
phased in over three years beginning in 2012-13 to help
State University's discount
lessen the blow to students.
for students taking extra credits could be a thing of the
This fall, in-state undergraduates in Bend would pay
CORVALLIS — Beginning
past.
a $100 fee as part of the new
University trustees Thursday approved tuition
tuition structure, plus $174
increases that do away with
undergraduates in Corvallis would pay $100 plus $183 per
the long-standing tuition plateau, where undergraduates
I' V
Tuition increasesat OSU-Cascades OSU trustees approved tuition increases Thursday that would affect students differently depending on how many credit hours they take per term. Since the rates amount to more than a 5percent increase, they must now beapproved by the state's Higher Education Coordinating Commission. 2014-15 tuition
2014-15 annualtuition for students taking 15 credit hours
Proposed 2015-16 tuition
2015-16 annualtuition for students taking 15 credit hours
In-state undergrad
$179/ credit hour
$7,245
$100+ $174/ credit hour
$8,130
Out-of-state undergrad
$613/ credit hour
$24,822
$335 + $582/ credit hour
$27,195
per credit hour, while in-state credit hour.
could take 13 to 16 credits per
SeeTuition /B5
Bend UGB steering committee meets
Source: Oregon State University
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
FIRST DAY OF SPRING
MOUNT HOOD
1found deadnear roadside explosion
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
Apartments, condos,
forest-fire risk and the migratory habits of elk are on the minds of city leaders as they prepare to expand Bend's urban growth boundary. The process is being overseen by a steering committee composed of the Bend City Council, two planning commissioners and Deschutes County Commissioner Tony
The Associated Press RHODODENDRON
— Federal agents spent hours investigating after one person was found dead
Thursdaynear the site of an explosion along U.S. Highway 26 on theflanks of Mount Hood. A spokesman for the U.S. Bureau of A l cohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives said investigators believe only one person was present when an explosion took place early
DeBone. The committee
met for two hours Thursday to approve the groundwork laid by a group of about 60 volunteers. The
Thursday outside a white
car parked along the road. Spokesman Brian Bennett said he doesn't believe any other explosive material
steering committee's work was brief compared to the
effort behind the proposals they approved, which entailed days of discussions and arguments on everything from population projections to how much parking a condo needs. The urban growth boundary is the line around a city beyond
Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Designer Mindy Mason arranges tulips Wednesday afternoon at Donner Flower Shop in Bend.
entral Oregon is in early bloom, but to see the state's best color, you'll have to head northwest to Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm, where the tulip
which new development is heavily restricted. In order
festival starts today.
for the state to approve
Travelingfortulips
an expansion, a city must
demonstrate it has made the most of the land available and has a real need to
grow. In 2010, the state rejected the city's bid to expand
its boundary to accommodate growth through 2028, arguing a better plan was needed for redevelopment and the intention to take in 8,000 acres was
unjustified. This time around, the
city is working on a plan with a greater emphasis on redeveloping and a smaller expansion, somewhere
in the ballpark of 1,000 to 3,000 acres, according to
city staff. The city's volunteers were divided into three
technical advisory committees assigned to respectively study residential needs, employment needs and the boundary.
He said it's going to take a while to determine what
happened. FBI spokesman Beth Anne Steele said the medical examiner will determine the cause of death.
Highway 26 between Rhododendron and Gov-
ernment Camp, closed most of the day, reopened
IF YOUGO What: W oodenShoeTulipFest When:Todayto May3 i'vertonCascade Sai Contact:503-634-2243, www. Highway woodenshoe.com Address:33814 S. Meridian Road 0 gon Woodburn 0 rdeo stsytoit Directions:TakeU.S. Highway 20 Silver Falls west toward Stayton. Thentake the State Park Cascade Highway to Silverton or try State Highway 214for a scenic route past Silver Falls State Park. From Silverton, take State Highway213 to Monitor Road until it turns in to Meridian Roadand take that north until you hit the farm. Signs direct the way once you get close. Toget moreout 0 R E G 0 N of your trip, visit the OregonGarden.
was found at the site. He described the death as "a tragedy" and added, "at this point it doesn't look like a criminal act"
about 9 p.m.
ooaens e
T lipFarm
e S.MontscristoRd.
MIRROR POND
Dam plan
squeaksby City Council
Sisters
Bend Carli Krueger / The Bulletin
A scenic view ofWoodenShoeTulip Farm. Qo See more at: bendbulletin.com/tulips
By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin
The Bend City Council narrowly backed a plan to replace the Mirror Pond
dam following a testy debate over the health of
the Deschutes River and downtown redevelopment. The 4-3 vote occurred
the stretch of Third Street
late Wednesday night after the council heard from a crowd vociferously opposed to the plan. It's not a done deal, as the dam won't be going anywhere in the near future, but the council backed exploring the project's feasibility, something it will accom-
just east of downtown. Planning Manager Brian
plish with the Bend Park & Recreation District.
The work of the residential
and employment committeeswas presented together and focused on
what areas in the city's current boundary could be redeveloped. An area that may see the most redevelopment is
The proposal calls
Rankin noted the site is
used almost exclusively by businesses, but may be
for the removal of the 100-year-old Mirror Pond
reinvented into a mixed-
dam and the addition of a
use neighborhood with
natural-looking structure that will maintain the current water level while
apartments. "You could consider it
as extending downtown eastward toward the park-
way while creating a more intensive connection to the historic downtown," Rankin told the steering committee. See UGB /B5
Submitted photo r Wooden Shoe Tulip Farm
providing fish passage and a path for kayakers and float ers.The floorof the pond would be partly dredged to speed the passing of water and deter the buildup of sediment. SeeMirror Pond/B2
B2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
REGON •
AROUND THE STATE
•
KitZhader emailS —The Oregon Department of Justice is delaying the release of former Gov.John Kitzhaber's emails to a federal grand jury. Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum's office agreed last month not to release Kitzhaber's emails if his lawyer filed a motion to block a federal subpoena. Rosenblum's office said the motion has been filed. Kitzhaber's lawyer, Janet Hoffman, said shecan't confirm she's filed the motion becausegrand jury proceedings are secret. Emails from Kitzhaber's personal and professional accounts were archived on state servers. Hoffman is trying to prevent the state from giving the personal emails to federal investigators, as well as the official emails between Kitzhaber and his government attorneys. A spokeswoman for Rosenblum said that other documents have been provided in response to the subpoena.
By Jeff Barnard The Associated Press
Public
h e a lt h off i c i als
Thursday issued a plea to parents of University of Oregon students to get their children vaccinated against meningitis
BrOWn ViSiting Pendleten —Gov. Kate Brown is visiting Pendleton in her first official trip to Eastern Oregon. Brown hastwo public events scheduled for her two-day trip to the east side of the Cascades. She toured aworkforce housing project Thursday and watch a training flight at the Pendleton UnmannedAerial Systems Test Site today. Brown took over asgovernor Feb. 18after John Kitzhaber resigned amid anethics scandal. A spokesman said Brown's previous public events have been inPortland and Salem.She's also met with newspaper editorial boards in Corvallis and Eugene.
after a sixth student has been found infected with the bacte-
ria that can cause the potentially fatal disease.
Dr. Paul Cieslak, director of infectious diseases for the Oregon Public Health Division, said the outbreak is far from over. He urged patents to
Detained dad releaSed —A fatherwhospent 2t/2 years in jail as a material witness waiting to testify in his son's murder trial is free to go after spending a couple of hours on the witness stand Thursday. Benito Vasquez-Hernandezdid not commit a crime, but a judge ordered the Mexico native to be kept behind bars because it was feared hewould flee rather testify against his son, who is accused of killing a Hillsboro womanwho vanished in 2012. Onthe stand, Vazquez-Hernandez repeatedly said hesaw nothing, while a prosecutor reminded him that he told detectives in 2012 hesawhis son with a bloody knife and that his son told him he killed a woman. After testifying, the father returned to jail to be processed for release.
get their children to have the
meningitis B vaccine before they leavethe Eugene campus, or when they get home during spring break. The university has been conducting an i ntense vac-
lpsgig ..
,' i
/ fi i r,,ii..."I
cination campaign, but so far only 9,000 of the 22,000
undergraduates have gotten shots. A university official said
Brian Davies/The (Eugene) Register-Guard file photo
to overcome young people's tendency to ignore preventa-
Pharmacist Jenna Wright administers the Meningitis B vaccine to University of Oregon freshman Drew Russert during a mass vaccination clinic at Matthew Knight Arena in Eugene on March 2. Public health officials have confirmed a sixth case in the outbreak of the contagious bacterial disease that has killed one student at the University of Oregon. A drive to get students vaccinated is less than half-
tive health care. The meningi-
way to its goal, and public health officials issued a plea Thursday for parents to get students vaccinat-
tis vaccine is not mandatory.
ed during spring break next week.
the administration is working
"We are realistic about the
effort needed to convince 19and 20-year-old to take an er offers three shots over six
meningitis, which infects the lining of the brain or spinal cord. One vaccine offers two shots over a month. The oth-
have been sent to parents. students who didn't get vacci- The university has worked Students who have been in nated. So we are hoping par- with insurance companies to close contact with those who ents will persuade them." be surethe vaccinations are came down with the disease Graduate students who live covered. are given an antibiotic to kill in campus housing are also Meningococcal disease is bacteria that may be current- beingurged tobevaccinated. rare, with 1,000 to 2,000 cases ly in their nasal passages. Cieslak said hundreds or per year among the U.S. popThere have been six cases even thousands of students ulation of 300 million people, since Jan. 13. One has died, have likely been exposed, but often erupts in outbreaks an 18-year-old f r eshman though only some will come among young people under woman on the acrobatics and down with the disease. stress in a new place, such as tumbling team. Around campus there are college campuses and miliFive of the six cases, includ- posters featuring smiling stu- tary boot camps, where they ing the young woman who dent-athletes showing off the are exposed to diseases for died, involved blood infec- arm where they were vacci- which they have no immunity, tions, Cieslak said. nated, and sporting a green or said Dr. Patrick Luedtke, Lane "It is not possible to have gold adhesive bandage with County public health officer. been on the University of Or- the school logo on it. In early Cieslak said he did not exegon campusthe lastseveral March, vaccinations were of- pect meningitis vaccine to weeks and not know there fered at the university's bas- become mandatory, because are meningococcal cases," ketball arena, and students it remains rare, and the rates he said. "And the vaccine is are now being urged to go of infection have been coming available. Messaging is ubiq- to local pharmacies. Emails down.
Mirror Pond
dubbed the "preferred alternative," and to commit to explor-
important action for preven-
tative health care," university spokeswoman Julie Brown said. "We expect this is going to take time to continue to
have a steady increase in the number of students vaccinat-
ed on our campus." The latest case is a 20-yearold sophomore man who lives off campus, and he went to an outpatient clinic with flu-like symptoms. Students are being offered two different types of new v accines that t arget th e B
strain of meningococcal disease, which can rapidly develop into a blood infection, or
uitous. Yet there are 13,000
months.
Victor Chudowsky, Doug Knight and Casey Roats voted Continued from B1 ing its feasibility. Councilors in favor of the plan. PacifiCorp, which oper- Barb Campbell and Nathan Chudowsky highlighted an ates the dam, would relocate Boddie and Mayor Jim Clinaspect of the plan that would its nearby substation to a ton opposed the resolution, transform parking lots adto-be-determined l o c ation. homing in on the language jacent to the river into new The site where the substation that endorsed the preferred buildings. "Here is one of the most now sits and adjacent prop- alternative. erties owned by PacifiCorp The three dissenters sup- beautiful rivers in the Unitwould be transferred to the ported exploring the project's ed States, and for much of its city, park district or an inde- feasibility, but were cautious length downtown we use it to pendent agency to be sold for to back the project with what park cars," he said. redevelopment. Profits from Campbell described as "a Campbell said downtown the sale of land would fund blank check." parking is important for busithe project. A portion of the City Manager Eric King em- nesses, one of which she owns. property near the dam would phasized this resolution just Roats noted Campbell's prebecome a public plaza, while gives the city the go-ahead to vious support of public transit, the historic brick powerhouse begin looking into it while any biking and walking initiatives would be preserved. actual expenditures would and said, "When it comes to The council's vote was on have to be approved at a later parking cars to get to your a resolution that called for point by the City Council. business, all of a sudden it's rethe body to support the plan, Councilors Sally Russell, ally important."
Campbell said she doesn't own a bike, but said she would "be happy there aren't as many other people driving in their cars when I drive." Clinton said he supported a
section of proposed development north of Newport Avenue but not south, which in-
cludes the parking lots. Chudowsky argued it's impossible to find a plan that
everyone will agree on, but if the city doesn't move forward, "things will fall apart." Knight highlighted the new ability to control the pond's level as a selling point. The banks of the pond are vulnerable to flooding when ice melts in the winter and spring. — Reporter: 541-633-216O, tleedsibendbulletift.com
The Bulletin will update items inthe Police Logwhensuch a request is received. Anynewinformation, such asthe dismissal of chargesor acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —A theft was reported at10:59 a.m. March11, in the61700 block of Daly Estates Drive. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at11:01a.m. March 16, in the100 block of SE Wilson Avenue. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at2:19p.m. March16, in the 200block of NE Franklin Avenue. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at4:27 p.m. March16, in the 2100blockof NWHill Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at7:14a.m. March 17, in the2100 block of NWHigh Lakes Loop. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at8:14a.m. March17, in the2700 block of NE27th Street.
Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported entered at10:21 a.m.March 17, in the1900 block of SWForest Ridge Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at3:38 p.m. March17, in the19900 block ofQuail PineLoop. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at5:58 p.m. March17, in the 20000 block ofRockBluff Circle. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at8:40 p.m. March17, inthe20000blockofFoxboroughLane. Griminsl mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at9:50 p.m. March17, in the500block of NE Majesty Lane. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:06 a.m. March18, in the800 block of NW Florida Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:10 a.m. March18, in the500 block of NE KearneyAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 9:19 a.m. March18, in the500 block of NE KearneyAvenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at10:08 a.m. March18, in the100 block of NE Franklin Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at10:08 a.m. March18, in thearea of NW13th Street and NW Galveston Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:08 a.m. March18, in the200 block of NW
Dil train Settlement —The owner of an oil train terminal in northwest Oregon hasagreed to pay areduced fine for moving six times more crude oil in 2013 thanwas allowed. Thefine was cut by $15,000, to $102,292. Thestate Department of Environmental Quality said the premise of fine originally was that the company acted intentionally in shipping nearly 300 million gallons through the terminal near Clatskanie. But the agency nowsays it can prove only that the companyacted negligently. Massachusetts-based Global Partners admitted no wrongdoing. Its lawyer said the company disagreed with the penalty but was happy the issue is resolved. Trains carrying North Dakota crude oil began moving through Oregon in 2012. At the Clatskanie terminal, it's put on barges for West Coast refineries.
SOn SentenCed in father'S murder — A21-year-old Ontario man has beensentenced to more than six years in prison with no option for parole or early release in the death of his father. Gregory Escobedo Jr. pleaded guilty in February to second-degree manslaughter in the death of 39-year-old Gregory Escobedo Sr., also ofOntario.Theyoung manwassentencedTuesday.Thepleacame six months after Ontario police responded to aJune16 assault outside an apartment complex. Theolder man suffered multiple stab woundsand waspronounceddeadatahospital.Defenselawyer Brenden Alexander says the violence beganwith a "parenting issue" at a birthday party and escalated. HOmeleSS mall Stallhed —Police in Portland say a 52-year-old homelessman sufferedastabwoundwhen hewasattackedonone of the city's bridges over the Willamette River. Sgt. Pete Simpson said witnesses described a group of five male "street kids" as being involved in the Wednesdayevening attack at the west end of the Hawthorne Bridge. They ranaway. Theunidentified victim was taken to a hospital. Simpson said the woundwas not life-threatening. Gillnet uSeage —The Oregon Court of Appeals has upheld state rules curtailing the use of gillnets on the main stem of the Columbia River. Commercial fishermen shunted to side channels and tributaries by the rules challenged them in court. The nets have long been the primary method of commercial fishing on the Columbia. Former Gov. John Kitzhaber sought the rules after a long dispute. Thenets hook fish by the gills. Critics said they hurt salmon becausethey catch fish indiscriminately, hauling in endangeredand other fish alike. Fisherman opposed to the rules said they maytake their case to the state SupremeCourt, or ask the newgovernor, Kate Brown, for relief. — From wire reports
Find It All ' ,
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AngerNanagementfor printerse
bendbulletin.com
GRAND OPENING
NEws OF REcoRD POLICE LOG
Murder-SuiCide —Gresham police said a couple, both in their late 80s, have died in amurder andsuicide. The police said one of their adult children discovered the bodiesWednesday. Thenames of the two people were not immediately madepublic. Police said they were the only people living in the home.
Riverside Boulevard. Theft —Atheft was reported at11:15 a.m. March18, in the1600 block of NE Lotus Drive. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at12:40 p.m. March18, in the300 block of NE Franklin Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at 2:27 p.m. March18, In the1100 block of SE Centennial Street. Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredat10:25 a.m. March
17, in the200block of SW17th Street. Theft —A theft was reported at12:07 p.m. March16, in the500block of NE GreenwoodAvenue.
Bend • March 21, 2015 • 9-5 . beQr'rrrfsmtvesty fi'erf Zip
PRIMEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT
Formerly Back BendYoga
Theft —A theft was reported at 5 a.m. March18, In thearea of NWThird Street.
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
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"Early Bird Special" Extra Discovnt on 2015 order s for Spring Delivery I
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FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN • 1 & 2 BR cluster cottages • Energy-efficient construction • Landscaped commonarea • Homes priced from $347,000
Around Central Oregon Sure, we are located in Bend, but we sell properties all over Central Oregon. Here's a sampling of our current offerings outside the Bend city limits.
GET THERE West on SkyiinorBRd., right on NW Lomhi PassDraa right on NW Diovillard Ave.
Northwest Bend
NORTHWEST a CROGGINC •
1148 NW 18th St. NORTHWESTCROSSING
Qmsaasm
• Large window areas • Daylight bonusroom • Master on mainlevel • Three-cargarage • Priced at$720,000
Northeast Bend
BET THERE West on Skyliner Rd., right on NW17ih St., left on NW Hartf ordAve.,righton NW 1eill St.
• Single Family Homes • Two-story townhomes • Plans from 1150-2250 sf • Some alley entry homes • Plans with master suite on main
GET THERE FromBend Parkway, east onNERevere Ave., left on NE Sth St., left on NE Isabella Ln.
SUNRIVER
Quelah Condo ¹13 • Bright end unit • Upgraded kitchen & baths • Priced at$202,000
2912 NW Ceijio Ln • Exquisite finishes & SHEVLINCREST
• asau&
Qaaaaaam
1946 NW Balitch Ct.
2056 NW Glassow Dr.
AWBREY BUTTE
AWBREY BUlTE
• Exquisite detail work • Large central living room • Spacious master suite • 0.65 acre lot on cul-de-sac • Priced at$750,000
• City & Cascade views • Energy saving features • Master on main level • Daylight lower level • Priced at$625,000
• Bonus room w/ wetbar • Near Discovery Park • Priced at$1,000,500
661 NE Vail Ln. ORCHARDHILL
• 3 beds, 2.5 baths • Great room plan • Bonus room • Selection of finishes • Priced at$$51,000
BET THEREFrom N.3rd St.(BUB.97), BET THERE From NW NewportAvo., west on Mi. WashingtonDr., left on NW north on NW9th St., left on NWSummit Starview Dr., left on NW Belich Ci. Dr . , left on NW GIGBow Dr.
•I
SHEVLINPINES
SHEVLINPINES
•CascadeMountainview • Master on main level • Slainless Dacorappliances • Hardwood & tile flooring • Priced at$630,000
• Master on mainlevel • Open floor plan • Spacious island kitchen • Solid quartz countertops • Priced at$650,000
• Cascade view acreage • Heated Rv garage/shop • Two.story living room • Priced $724,000 at
ORCHARDHILL
• 1547 to 1BBD sq ft
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f there's good in Oregon's new motor voter law, it's this: There's a bit less room for fraud regarding U.S. citizenship than in the online or by-mail registration that many of us currently use. Federallaw bars states from requiring would-be voters to provide proof of c i tizenship, according to Tony Green of the secretary of state's office. Rather, if you register online or by mail, you simply sign a statement saying you are a citizen. Thanks to the 1993 National Voter Registration Act, the state cannot ask for more proof of citizenship than that statement, a provision that was upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court in an Arizona case in 2013. That said, the penalty for lying about eligibility — citizenship — is severe. The crime is a felony, and a person convicted can be sent to jail and then deported. Oregon's new law won't violate the voter registration act, but the Department of Motor Vehicles will send the secretary of state's office information only on those people who meet Oregon's voter eligibility requirements, induding citizenship. What DMV won't do, however, is send an individual's proof of citizenship with that information. The secretary of state's office
sends its information on to the 36 county clerks in Oregon, complete with the electronic signature required when you get a driver's license, and that won't change. And, says Deschutes County Clerk Nancy Blankenship, every single signature on every single ballot is checked by her office at each election. That will not change, either. Blankenship does not expect a dramatically larger turnout as a result of the new law. As she notes, some people don't vote by designtheir church might discourage it or they don't believe it's important or whatever. Apathykeeps others from voting, and simply having a ballot appear in a mailbox is unlikely to change that. The result is that while the number of registered voters will dimb, Blankenshipsays,the percentage of voters actually casting ballots may well decline. If that's the case, the new law will not do what its supporters had hoped. It may, however, if the state government gets it right, help ensure that those who register really are eligible to vote.
Saving Oregonians from the sagegrouse t's official. Landowners in all or part of at least seven Central and Eastern Oregon counties will get some protection if the U.S. Department of the Interior decides to placethe sage grouse on the Endangered Species List. The department's U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and officials from five soil and water conservation districts, including those in Crook and Deschutes counties, signed what are known as Candidate Conservation Agreements with Assurances on Wednesday in Juntura. The conservation agreements assure that landowners will work to improve sagegrouse habitatnow in exchangeforavoiding further regulation should the bird be listed. It's one of several efforts in the west to protect both birds and humans on theregion's High Desert, and it's well underway in Harney County. Late last year the Harney County Soil and Water Conservation District won a national award for work it already is doing with
t
groundswillpay offin a 30-yearassurance against further regulation. Meanwhile, the Oregon Cattlemen's Association is supporting a tax on salt in feed, though it would not apply to feed for dairy cattle. The money raised, as much as $400,000 a year, would go to support conservation efforts centered on habitat. The Audubon Society has proposed a similar tax on bird seed,to be added to the same dedicated fund. And in Wyoming, Gov. Matt Mead and Dan Ashe, head of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, have agreed to open the country's first conservation bank for sage grouse. Conservation banks set aside land in perpetuity to be managed for the benefit of endangered, threatened or at-risk species. Others can then purchasecreditsfrom the conservation bank, to be used to compensate for the environmental impacts of their own projects. If High Desert ranchers and others who rely on the land for a living ranchers to protect sage grouse are to survive a sage grouse listing, habitat. Efforts to do such things as it will take efforts like these to make remove juniperand invasive grass- it happen. Fortunately, all sides see es and avoid sage grouse breeding the value in doing just that.
Your asswor M
that came with her various
The message of 'American Sniper'
STEVENS
ing the university deep on the west side is implausible at best. sentatives is: How will the campus What really makes many of us expand if the 46-acre pumice pit is upset is the disingenuous way this no longer deemed a viable location'? was done. Clearly the university We can all agree that a project of will be more than a few hundred this magnitude demands thought- students, but the politicians and ful and transparent master plan- those in power and in position to ning. Thus far, OSU has not decid- gain are trying to get this project ed on how it might expand or pro- approved based on a scenario that duced a true master plan for the full is simply the first stage, even while build-out of the university. the long-range plans and funding OSU-Cascades cannot exist on are public record. That is called mathe tiny, postage stamp, 10-acre nipulation. Some would say fraud.
ie, "American Sniper."
The movie was a wonderful depiction of an awful war and situation in the Middle East, from the
perspective of one very fine Navy SEAL who did both himself and the country proud (his book admittedly was a bit stark with language, etc.). The movie was not about his death, which had only a passing mention site that it currently owns. It is time Whatever adjective chosen, it's desat the end with subsequent video of for OSU-Cascades spokespersons tined for a bad result. the memorial procession, and thus to come forth with a blueprint for Glenn Mlllar was also not about Chad Littlefield expansion and a comprehensive Bend or his very tragic death. Both Chris master plan. The citizens of Bend Kyle and Littlefield were unsuccess- deserve nothing less. Ed Ray hassome fully attempting to help a suffering, Bill Eddie it appeared, Marine. Bend It's long past time for Dr. Ed Ray I believe Ms. Smith's letter to the
explaining todo
How to make food carts work in Sisters
editor totally missed the point and
any such criticism of the fine movie is unjustified in this writer's opinion. It also has little if anything to
Gee, some of you Sisters resi-
are starting to doubt the proposed
location of the college and that the group Truth In Site is not just a group of neighborhood naysayers. Most importantly, the editorial basically challenges OSU-Cascades to engagethe community and an-
for a bad result
In My Viewpolicy How to submit
We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
OU
not ust e
look something like this: "Xq10abl09rVA4!" Less secure, I suppose, but also
the office to sneak off and get the re-
5. Also on the list were "baseball,"
Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
a sswor
passable are things like "URx0tlc,"
passwords, all of them, several times a
or the name of the website we're vis-
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred.
Youalso know you're not supposed to write a list of your passwords down and keep it next to the computer, where it's accessible when you need it. larly on weekends. Banks don't have
name as a password. Nor our birthday came in at No. 2, and "qwerty" at No.
Bend
Letters policy
remind you that it's based on "you are exotic." I say more power to you
10 were the numerals 123456789, or
master plan for the project! This lat-
related to the site. You can't drive
which, if you wrote it yourself, might
some variation thereof. "Password"
about the OSU-Cascades planning
est decision adds to the thoroughly Let me be clear and reiterate irresponsible and tone-deaf finanwhat many havesaid.Our objec- cial mismanagement of the entire tions to an Oregon State Universi- project. ty campus here in Bend are solely Blll Gregorlcus
she couldn't figure out how to make it
of things we should do. We cannot use the cat's or the kid's or our mother's
of Oregon State University to return
to Bend and answer some critical questions from the citizens of Bend
do with what "we are as a country." dents seem to sound discriminatory fiasco. The announcement that Charles McCoy and exclusionary about food carts. OSU has contracted to spend an Bend Don't they fit the town theme'? Just additional $100,000 of our money put a western facade like a covered to retain a PR firm to now "retool wagon or a sheep herders wagon or its pitch" to the community about Bad plan for campus maybe a circus wagon since that's "the benefits of a college can bring The recent B u lletin e d itorial what you've turned this into. such amore skilled force and new chastising OSU-Cascades for not Ed Endsley businesses to serve the students" is defending their position regarding Bend beyond comprehension and is on the west-side building site is quite top the school's request for additiontelling. It illustrates that many folks OSU-Cascades isdestined al substantial funding to prepare a
would sit there, untouched, because
iting. Nor, pretty much, anything that She'd have had a ball in this era of makes it easytoremember thedarned computers, the Internet and, more im- thing once we've created it. portant, passwords. You know that rule. You also know I suspect most of us have a general you're not supposed to write a list of idea of what makes a good password. your passwords down and keep it It has to be long. It should contain next to the computer, where it's accesnumbers and letters, uppercase and sible when you need it. lower, maybe a symbol or two and it Each year someone, or several shouldn't remind anyone of anything. someones, puts out a list of the 10most And we shouldn't use the same tired commonly used or worst passwords oldpassword for everywebsite we vis- for the year just ended. SplashData, it where passwords are required. an Internet and computer security In fact, the list of password no-nos company, published its annual list a seems longer sometimes than the list couple of months ago. Half of the top
east/west, west/east today and add-
ably the most important question that should be posed to OSU repre-
In response to the submission
Good passwords, by contrast, often
JANET
swer some simple questions. Prob-
by Patricia Smith ("In My View," March 12, 2015) regarding the mov-
"dragon" and "football."
y mother had a friend who never read the instructions
gadgets and gizmos. She'd get a wonderful new electric appliance and it
M 1Vickel's Worth
purchasing from any site, to be sure. their password resetting folks availEven with all that, passwords don't if you can come up with a dozen or able at 10 p.m. Saturday night, for ex- necessarily protect us, apparently. so such things. I also say you deserve ample, and neither do a host of other Think of the stores that have been some sort of medal if you can, as the websites. If you work, that means hacked in the last year and huge experts tell us we must, change your you may have to find time Monday at amounts of p e rsonal i nformation about customers stolen. An insurance
year and stN remember them. quired assistance to reset that elusive company announced just this week it Maybe 12-year-olds can do all that. password. was hacked and private information We 67-year-olds cannot. But we try, I can understand all this security on about some 11 millionpeople exposed. oh, how we try. bank websites, actually, but some othStill, I'll continue to try to live by The problem is particularly bad for ers, not so much. I'm not sure, for ex- all the password rules, troublesome seldom-used passwords. I have sever- ample, why an interest-group site like though they maybe. Doing so may foil al for sites I visit once or twice a year, Ravelry.com needs a password, but it someone who wants to see what I've at most. I must do the visiting, but, un- does. The creators of some shopping read or knitted or viewed at a veteriless I've written the passwords down sites behave as if a visitor could reach nary supply site recently, and that, I'm and can remember where I put the list through his or her computer screen told, is a good thing. (doubtful, most days) I have to reset and run off with the goods, something — Janet Stevens is deputy editor I don't believe has happened. I do unthe silly things every single time. of The Bulletin.Contact: 541-617-7821, Doing so can be difficult, particu- derstandthe need for security when jstevens@bendbulletin.com.
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
UGB
BITUARIES
Continued from 61 One area of dissent within the residential committee
concerned the "housing mix,"
Les Sundet, of Prineville Nov. 5, 1941 - Feb. 24, 2015 Arrangements: Whispering Pines Funeral Home, 541-416-9733 Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday March 28, 2015 at 2:00 p.m. at the Prineville Elks
Lodge. Natalie Ribyat, of Bend
May 14, 1921 - Mar. 19, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Homes of Bend, (541) 382-0903. www.bairdmortuaries.com Services:
No services are planned, per Natalies request. Contributions may be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.partnersbend.org.
William "Bill" H. Burningham, of Bend July 13, 1949 - Mar. 14, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Services: No Local Service will be held.
Donna W. Bailey, of Bend Feb. 26, 1921 - Mar. 14, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at
which is the breakdown of
FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH NOTICES
housingtypesthe citywillplan for, such as single-family ver-
Anne Frank'scousin guardedher legacy, was pro iceskater (Buddy) Elias wound up adding to the
By Margalit Fox New York Times News Service
Buddy Elias, the closest living relative of Anne Frank and an ardent guardian of her legacy, died Monday at his home in Basel, S witzerland —
Franks' literary
legacy himself after his wife, Gerti, while
cleaning out the attic
a hou s e
of their house in
whose attic yielded a cache of l ong-forgotten letters from Anne and her family that formed the basis of a recent book. He was 89.
2001, came across a trove of letters, postcards and photographs — some
His death was announced
by the Anne Frank Fonds, a charitable fund in Basel be-
6,000 items in allsent to the Eliases
gun by Anne's father, Otto.
At his death, Elias was the fund's president, a post he
by the Franks, including the young Anne.
had held since 1996.
Elias was Anne's first cousin, four years older an and professional ice skat-
material ultimately formed the basis of a narrative non-
er, he lectured worldwide on the Frank family and on the
f iction b o o k , "Treasures From the Attic" (also titled
mission of the fund, which supports social and cultural projects centered on tolerance. A childhood playmate of
Elias was also instrumen-
tal in supplying material for a 2003 exhibition at the U.S. H olocaust Memorial M u -
seum in Washington. The
went into hiding in Nazi-oc-
exhibition featured exam-
cupied Amsterdam, and ends in 1944, before they
ples of all of Anne's writing, including her essays and short stories, many of them
ed by the Gestapo.
Services: Funeral service will be held Sat., Mar. 28, 2015 at 10:00 AM in the White & Day Mortuary, Redondo Beach, CA. Crypt entombment will follow at Pacific Crest Cemetery.
A nne died at 15 in t h e Bergen-Belsen c o ncentra-
never before seen in public. (Her full literary output was published that year as part of "The Diary of Anne
tion camp, shortly before the end of the war; Margot
well-received
Samuel Charters, 85:American music historian whose
Frank: The Revised Critical
Edition.")
also died there. Their mother, Edith, died in Auschwitz. Otto Frank, who survived Auschwitz, established the Anne Frank Fonds in 1963. He died in 1980. F irst published i n t h e Netherlands in 1947, Anne's
the world:
Bernhard Elias was born on June 2, 1925, in Frankfurt, where the Franks also
lived. As a boy, he often visited the Frank children, putting on puppet shows and playing hide-and-seek. "Anne was always good at hiding," Elias told CNN.
a d a ptations
for the stage, film a nd television.
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for oneday, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymaybe submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on anyof these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication. Obituaries must be receivedby5p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sunday publication, and by 9a.m. MondayforTuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obiis©bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708
com in 2012. In 1929, Elias' father, a merchant, was transferred
to his company's Swiss office. Two years later, Buddy and his mother joined him in Basel, where they remained for the duration of the war and beyond. After Hitler came to power in
books and f ield r esearch One of the chief functions helped detonate the blues and of the Anne Frank Fonds is folk music revival of the 1960s to control the copyrights to and 1970s. Died Wednesday at Anne's writings, including his home in Arsta, Sweden. the diary. As its president, Arthur Hartman, 89: Wash- Elias was called upon to ington's longest-serving am- say yea or nay — and it was bassador to the Soviet Union . quite often nay — to proDied Monday in Washington. posed works, from novels to Allen Jerkens, 85: Hall of stage plays to musicals, that Fame thoroughbred trainer sought to use Anne's words. who was known as the Giant (As was widely reported, he Killer for springing some of also once stopped a Spanish horseracing'sgreatestupsets. company from marketing Died Wednesday in Aventura, Anne Frank bluejeans.) Florida after being hospitalElias wound up adding to ized with an infection for sev- the Franks' literary legacy eral weeks. himself after his wife, Gerti, — From wire reports
Tom
ings, the committee decided to start at 2014.
"What actually happened
in the interim doesn't change
the need of the populace," said Sid Snyder, a member of the disagreed with the body's decision. "We looked at this as a need issue, and what the fu-
ture need of Bend willbe didn't changejustbecause some sin-
while noting that much work
sitesare based on a variety of criteria, such as their topogra-
phy, proximity to sewers and elk migratory patterns, and fire risk. The next step is to combine
the maps and to see which areas score the highest on the full
range of criteria. The boundary committee voted to leave out maps of fire risk from the
composite and instead use them "qualitatively." The reasoning behind this move was that those maps lacked a desired level of precision, though a number of committee mem-
bers disagreed. Some city councilors appeared skeptical of this move,
including Mayor Jim Clinton, who said, "All the maps are
is left to be done and numbers somewhat arbitrary." can move. Rankin explained Nonetheless, the steering the housing mix is only a goal, committee passed the proposand changes to the city's devel- al, agreeing to include the fire opment code intended to spur maps in the discussion but not multifamily development could in the composite map. have a range of impacts. The city hopes to complete The other point of contro- its work on the proposal and versy concerned the boundary submit it to the state by 2016. committee's work. So far, the — Reporter: 541-633-2160, group has produced a range tleeds@bendbulletin.com
"Are these changes going to its; in Bend, there are more impact our ability to recruit
Tuition
students take 12 to 16 cred-
Continued from 61
part-time students also tak-
and retain students to meet
ing classes at Central Oregon that goal?" is a weighted tuition increase Community College. An OSU freshman, the only of 7.6 percent, though the acIn-state graduate students student who testified about tual increase depends on how on both campuses will see a the increases, said making many credit hours a student 2 percent tuition increase and students pay fo r a d ditional takes. For someone taking 15 out-of-state graduate students credits may result in students credit hours, that comes out to will see a 5 percent increase. having to stay in school longer. an annual tuition of $8,130. Sherman Bloomer, OSU's budAlso Thursday, the board Out-of-state undergraduates get director, said the current v oted u n a nimously, a s in Bend would pay the same out-of-state tuition lags behind planned, to issue $57.5 miltuition as their counterparts that of peer universities, in- lioningeneral revenue bonds in Corvallis — $335 plus $582 cluding University of Oregon. to finance capital projects, per credit hour, for an annual The board approved in- including the planned camtuition of $27,195, a 5.7 percent creases to mandatory student pus expansion on the west weighted increase. fees. Undergraduates in Bend side of Bend. On Wednesday, The state Higher Education would pay $175 per term to OSU-Cascades Vice President Coordinating C o mmission cover student services, a $35 Becky Johnson spoke to trustmust still sign off on OSU's increase. Forthe summerterm ees about new degree proproposed increases in tuition it would go up to $88, a $68 grams the campus may add as and fees, because they exceed increase. This money goes to it grows into a four-year cam5 percent. student services and activities pus this fall. F reshmen coming i n t o and the increases also must be — Reporter: 541-617-7837, OSU this fall, including the approved by the Higher Eduaspegman@bendbulletin.com 100 OSU-Cascades is looking cation Coordinating Commisto enroll, would not feel the sion. effect of losing the tuition plaBrenda McComb, dean of teau. For other students, the OSU Graduate School, was university plans to offer more the only member of the board financial aid, though it will not to vote against the increases. help every student or cover the If the university's goal is to entire gap. In Corvallis, most award more degrees, she said, For the Bend students, that
•
•
with which he toured the
world as a comic skater. He later had an extensive career in film, television and
theater, much of it in Germany, before returning to
the material had been care-
Ben 's est e at c u offers more for members...
Elias' survivors include his wife; tw o s o ns, Pat-
fully put away by his moth-
rick and Oliver; and five grandchildren. To the end of his life, Elias recalled a Frank fam-
er, Helene Frank Elias, who was Otto's sister.
"On July 5, 1942, Otto
Frank sent a p o stcard to us telling us that we would have to understand that we
ily letter sent to his mother in 1945, just after the war's end. The letter was f r om Otto, who informed Elias'
could not correspond anymore," Elias recalled in a
2008 interview. "We knew mother that he had survived t hen that t hey w er e g o - but Edith had not. He was ing to hide. But we had no determined, he wrote, to lo-
idea where. And from then
cate Margot and Anne. "All my hopes are for the
on, there was no c ontact
w r o te. "I
anymore." It took Buddy and Gerti
children," Otto
Elias more than two years to
they are still alive and that
cling to the firm belief that
go through everything. The we will be together soon."
•
5 •
more weekly youth and family activities in addition to...
4 •
4 pools, Pilates, 25 yoga classes aweek,
John Andersch Quietly doing it right the first time.
541-419-7078 lmandersch@gmail.com
NMLS¹302845
"""'" All Sea.soTLs 445-
how advantageous different
zis occupied in 1940. As a young man, Elias spent more than a decade working for Holiday on Ice,
of their house in 2001, came Basel in the 1980s. across a t r ove o f l e tters, His films r eleased in postcards and photographs the United States include — some 6,000 items in all the Holocaust drama "My — sent to the Eliases by the Mother's Courage" (1995), Franks, including the young directed by Michael VerhoAnne. The house had long even, in which Elias plays a been in Elias' family, and rabbi.
•
boundary. The maps display
1933, Anne's father moved his branch of the family to Amsterdam, which the Na-
while cleaning out the attic
4
of maps examining the 18,000
K e m per, an o t her acres just outside the current
member of th e r esidential committee and executive dicommittee called for 55 per- rector of the region's housing cent single-family homes, 10 agency, said striving for more percent single-family attached multifamily units would be housing, which often means unrealistic. "Rents aren't high enough townhouses, and 35 percent multifamily, which is common- here to jump-start that kind of ly apartments. construction," Kemper said. However, after learning that Rankin added that additionfrom 2008 to mid-2014, about al apartments may be added 83 percent of the 2,912 new res- above commercialproperties, idences built were single-fam- something that isn't accountily homes, the committee ed for in the committee's work was tasked with determining so far. City Councilor Victor whether to begin applying its C hudowsky, chairman o f housing mix to all homes built the steering committee, arsince 2008 or those built since gued "unattainable goals are 2014. Startingthe count in 2008 de-motivating." would mean the city would The s teering c o m mittee plan for more multifamily voted unanimously to adopt houses while beginning in 2014 the work of the residential would lead to less. In its meet- and employment committees,
published in English in 2011.
Margot, Elias is mentioned fondly in A n ne's diary, which begins in 1942, just before she and her family
Deaths ofnote from around
gle-family homes gotbuilt."
between 2008 and 2028. Based on that need, the residential
"Anne Frank's Family"),
Anne and her older sister,
diary has sold tens of millions of copies in scores of languages and has inspired
The other point of controversy concerned the boundary committee's work.So far, the group has produced a range of maps examining the 18,000 acres just outside the current boundary. The mapsdisplay how advantageous different sites are based on a variety of criteria ...
written by Mirjam Pressler with Gerti Elias. It was first
were discovered and arrest-
ELSE%THERE
need 16,681 new residences
r esidential c ommittee w h o
than she. An actor, comedi-
www.niswonger-reynolds.com
DEATHS
sus apartments. The city estimated it wi ll
B5
YomLmhrFOrLIfe ~
N MLF¹i031099
549 SW MILL VIEW WAY,STE 101, BEND
over 40 cardio/strength group exercise classes a week, cycling, cardio, tennis, basketball, racquetball, private women's only fitness center, and exceptional service from Bend's Best Professionals.
B6
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byACCHWeather, inc. ©2015
I
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TODAY
iI
TONIGH T
HIGH 63' I f '
SATU RDAY
36'
1,
29'
ALMANAC
MONDAY
33'
Partly sunny, ashower or two; cooler
Mild with somesun
I
SUNDAY
TUESDAY
i k' Jr
~
48'
~
49'
b
So m e sun, then turning cloudy
Cloudy; showers around, breezy andcooler
Cloudy with a brief shower
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Shownistoday's weather.Temperaturesaretoday'shighs and tonight's lows. EAST: Sunshine Ha /4 mixing with some Umatiga Seasid TEMPERATURE Hood 70/47 clouds today; a mild 68/48 Yeslerday Normal Record Riyer Rufus • ermiston afternoon. A couple of Cannon 68' 52' 78'in 1918 /47 High l ington N / 44 portland ss/4s Meac am I ostine showers in the north N/48 30' 28' 8'in 1917 Low /4 9 64/ • W co l49 late tonight. 66/40 Entenrlse • • diet On • he Dag • • 65/41 Tigam • N/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Amixture andy • 69/47 57/47 • Mc innviu Heppner Joseph of clouds andsunGoveu nt • u pi • Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" Condon /43 Record 0.65"in 1975 shine today with a union 41 Lincoln 56/ Month to date (normal) 0.3 0" (0.47") comfortable afternoon. 57/48 Sale pray Graniteu Year to date(normal) 1.41 " (3.09") A few showers will 66/4 • 7/45 a 'Baker C Newpo 61/39 cross the area tonight. Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 0 8" • ~® /47 58/48 • Mitch H 66/40 Camp Sh man Red n WEST:Cloudsand 64/41 O N I S SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 63/38 • John limited sunshine to65/47 Today Sat. 57/48 • Prineville oay 40 tario day; rain will reach the 66/38 • P a lina 6 5/ 4 3 Sunrise 7:09 a.m. 7: 0 7 a.m. 44 66/3 coast this afternoon Floren e • Eugene • Be d B rothers 6 40 Sunset 7:17 p.m. 7 : 1 8 p.m. and spreadeastward 69/49 Valeu Su iVeru 63/36 Moonrise 7 :17 a.m. 7:54 a.m. tonight. 67/45 Nyssa u 61 Ham ton Moonset 8:0 7 p.m. 9:2 2 p.m. • La Plne Juntura Grove Oakridge • Burns OREGON EXTREMES New Fi r s t Full Last 67/44 66/44 42 • 6 9 Fort Rock Riley 67/37 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 62/36 l ux g 65/38 61/33 High: 73 Sandon Roseburg • Chr i stmas alley at Roseburg Jordan V Hey Mar20 Mar2e Ap r 4 Apr 1 1 61/50 Beaver Silver 64/37 Frenchglen N/47 Low: 19' 66/46 Marsh Lake 67/43 Tonight'e sky: Spring begins with the vernal at Lakeview Po 0 N/34 63/36 Gra • Burns Jun ion • Paisley Nl equinox at 3:45 p.m. PDT. a 71/43 Chsoquin 64/37
Bend through 5p.m. yesterday
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
0' Source: JimTodd,OMSI
2 I~
4
•
Kiamath • Falls
• Ashl nd
72/41
Fields•
• Lakeview 63/38
67/4
69/4
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ 4
Rorne
62/35
67/44
Bro inge
UV INDEX TODAY 10 a.m. Noon
Medfo
Gold 69/
Mcuermi
69/45
67/42
Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday Yesterday Today Saturday City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Astoris 62/41/0.00 60/47/r 56/40/sh L a Grande 64 / 27/0.00 68/44/pc 58/31/sh Portland 63/4 3/0.0066/49/c 61/41/sh Baker City 64/20/0.00 66/40/pc 58/27/sh L a Pine 65/20/0.00 61/35/pc 51/29/sh Prinevige 65/ 28/0.0066/38/pc 51/29/pc Srookings 62/43/0.00 59/47/r 56/45/sh M e dford 71/3 8/0.00 67/44/pc 66/41/sh Redmond 68/ 27/0.0068/37/pc 59/26/ sh Sums 62/21/0.00 67/37/pc 60/27/pc N ewport 59/4 1/0.00 58/48/r 5 5/43/sh Roseburg 73 / 39/0.00 69/47/c 65/42/sh Eugene 69/36/0.00 66/46/c 62/38/sh N o rth Send 6 1 / 43/0.00 61/49/r 58/44/sh Salem 68/38/0.00 66/47/c 61/38/sh Klamath Fags 65/25/0.00 62/38/pc57/31/sh Ontario 66/30/0.00 68/44/pc 67/34/c Sisters 67/23/0.00 66/38/c 56/27/sh Lakeview 64/1 9/0.00 63/38/pc 57/28/pc P endleton 66/ 3 6/0.00 69/48/pc 62/36/sh The Oages 6 7 / 36/0.00 69/47/c 63/36/sh WeatherlW):s-sunny, pc-parily cloudy,c-cloudy, sh-showers, t-ihunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snow flurries, sn-snow i-ice,Tr-lrace,Yesterdaydata asof 5 p.m.yesterday
2
The higherthe AccuWeatber.comSVIndex" number, the greatertheneedfor eyesndskin protecgon.0-2 Lcw, 34 Moderate;6-7 High;8-10VeryHigh; II+ Exlreme.
ROAD CONDITONS For web cameras ofourpasses, goto www.bendbuuetin.com/webcams
IM at Cabbage Hill: Pleasantlywarmtoday with partial sunshine.Showerstonight. US 20 at Santiam Pass: Mild todaywith variable cloudiness.Somerain tonight. US 2S atGov't Camp:Variabledoudiness today.Periodsof rain tonight. US 2S atOchocoDivide: Partly sunnyandmild today. Cloudytonight; a couple of showers. ORE 58at Wigamette Pass: Mostlycloudy today. Plenty ofcloudstonight with rain at times ORE138 at DiamondLake: Variabledouds today. Occasionalraintonight.
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 109 ~ o s
~ 08
~ f gs
~ 206
~ 30 8 ~ 40 8 ~ sg s ~ eea ~709 ~ 809 ~ ggs ~fggs ~ff Os
EXTREMES
YESTERDAY(forthe ~,4,, ' . ' 48 contiguous states) National high: Gs at Death Valley, CA National low: -15' at Saranac Lake,NY Precipitation: 1.02" at Phoenix, AZ
SKI REPORT
a am k * * 60/26 ,
'»49
6 /41
•
ea/37
in inches ss of 5p.m.yesterday
Ss l t Lske 69/46
ao/5
'
aa/43
62/4
pho • 80761 '
7 /ef
Juneau 45/sd
+ + 4 ARru
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Honolulu af/69
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El Paso Fairbanks Fargo Flagstaff Grand Rapids Green Say Greensboro Harrisburg Harfford, CT Helena Honolulu Houston Huntsville Indianapolis Jackson, MS Jacksonville
71/54/Tr 41/1 0/0.00
Amsterdam Athens Auckland Baghdad Bangkok Seijing Beirut Berlin Bogota Budapest BuenosAires Cabo San Lucas Cairo Calgary
54/41/0.00 57/37/0.02 64/57/0.00 81/60/0.25 96/82/0.00 68/44/0.00
47/34/Tr 54/40/0.00 41/27/0.00 43/29/0.00 47/44/0.32 46/27/0.00 37/1 7/0.00 60/37/0.00 80/66/0.00 79/67/0.47 65/51/0.20 50/40/0.02 75/59/0.05 78/59/0.01
60/49/sh 49/39/c 35/26/sn 60/41/sh 43/28/s 71/53/c 41/33/sn 72/59/t 39/29/sn 68/41/pc 70/51/sh 60/25/pc 72/49/s 35/26/sn 34/29/sn 44/34/sn 38/26/c 35/18/pc 77/57/c 68/45/c 69/46/c 63/37/s 59/42/pc 55/39/pc 47/38/sn 61/34/s 65/43/pc 75/54/c 78/58/c 52/40/pc 36/18/sn 76/65/1 64/56/sh 54/40/pc 68/38/s 67/42/s 55/41/pc 47/18/pc 70/47/sh 38/9/s 47/19/pc 58/25/s 53/38/pc 58/34/pc 62/43/c 37/28/sn 34/27/sn 69/41/pc 81/69/pc 79/64/1 68/46/c 54/40/pc 74/60/sh 83/61/c
62/50/c 58/27/pc 48/24/c 69/41/s 44/29/s 75/56/c 48/36/pc 66/56/r 55/37/pc 71/42/pc 72/54/c 45/24/c 66/39/c 43/26/sn 42/30/pc 44/21/sn 43/14/sn 36/8/sn 73/53/pc 72/50/pc 70/51/c 67/43/s 52/31/s 66/38/pc 54/25/pc 68/39/s 72/45/s 75/54/pc 80/59/c 63/33/pc 44/17/sn 72/62/r 63/54/r 64/34/s 73/44/s 63/36/s 57/27/pc 35/16/s 67/47/sh 34/9/s 37/22/pc 61/29/s 49/24/pc 46/23/pc 69/49/pc 54/32/pc 47/27/c 62/37/c 81/69/pc 70/63/r 70/53/c 65/35/s 71/58/r 80/62/pc
50/39/pc 55/42/sh 70/56/pc 72/52/s 98/81/s 66/39/s 62/55/sh 54/39/pc 64/47/1 53/32/s 89/56/s 81/61/pc 71/53/s 41/29/sh 86/72/s 53/36/c 51/35/c 62/42/pc 85/58/pc 79/69/pc 46/40/c 55/40/s 79/58/s 84/71/pc 66/53/pc 55/40/pc 59/45/sh 89/76/pc
47/30/c 56/45/pc 71/57/s 74/52/s 95/81/1 65/39/s 62/52/sh 46/30/sh 64/47/r 56/36/s 71/54/s 81/57/s 72/49/s 40/25/sf 87/69/s 48/34/pc 47/37/pc 57/36/r 83/59/s 79/69/pc 49/43/r 57/40/s 78/59/c 83/70/pc 65/51/sh 49/34/pc 61/41/sh
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock LosAngeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis Miami Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New York City Newark, NJ Norfolk, VA OklahomaCity Omaha Orlando Palm Springs Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME Providence Raleigh Rapid City Reno Richmond Rochester, NY
i
ao/42
su u
80/56/0.00 47/28/0.00 37/1 5/0.00 Albuquerque 56/41/Tr Anchorage 45/32/0.00 Atlanta 65/49/0.45 Atlantic City 43/26/0.00 Austin 80/57/0.00 Baltimore 51/27/0.00 Billings 60/35/0.00 Birmingham 68/55/0.24 Bismarck 47/27/Tr Boise 64/34/0.00 Boston 34/19/0.00 Bridgeport, CT 40/23/0.00 Buffalo 37/1 6/0.00 Burlington, VT 29/11/0.00 Caribou, ME 24/8/Tr Charleston, SC 63/52/0.36 Charlotte 54/50/0.09 Chattanooga 51/46/0.43 Cheyenne 52/36/0.00 Chicago 46/37/0.00 Cincinnati 55/41/0.02 Cleveland 41/27/0.00 ColoradoSpdings46/38/0.64 Columbia, MO 42/35/0.37 Columbia, SC 54/51/0.64 Columbus, GA 76/59/0.12 Columbus,OH 52/36/0.00 Concord, NH 30/1 5/0.00 Corpus Christi 79/68/0.03 Dallas 77/56/0.03 Dayton 50/36/0.00 Denver 48/37/0.47 Oes Moines 47/39/Tr Detroit 41/27/0.00 Duluth 47/27/0.05
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Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systems andprecipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. T-storms Rai n Sh owers S no w Fl u rries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Cold Front
Source: OnTheSnow.com
66/55/Tr 54/34/0.00
63/51/0.06 54/30/0.00 86/69/0.00 81/62/0.00 70/54/0.00 57/32/0.00 Cancun 84/70/0.00 Dublin 52/28/0.00 Edinburgh 54/32/0.01 Geneva 63/39/0.00 Harare 84/57/0.00 Hong Kong 81/73/0.01 Istanbul 46/38/0.00 Jerusalem 56/46/0.00 Johannesburg 76/58/0.21 Lima 85/73/0.00 Lisbon 64/46/0.00 46/42/0.00 London Madrid 54/43/0.18 Manila 91/75/0.00
Yesterday Today Saturday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City
2/22
**
Iwau v 9
Luv Au lev Anchorage 43/2
~*
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C icag 6 42
Omah
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Las V uv
Ski resort New snow Base AnthonyLakes Mtn:est.openingTBA Hoodoo SkiArea: est, opening TBA Mt. Ashland: est. openingTBA Mt. Bachelor 0 40-8 5 Mt. Hood Meadows 0 28-88 Mt.Hood SkiBowl:esL opening TBA Timberline Lodge 2 28-4 5 Wigamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 7 42-72 Vail, CO 3 50-5 0 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 20-80 Squaw Valley,CA 0 18-4 0 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 53-53 Sun Valley, ID 0 25-5 5
*
6 aa oi v 6 ey/42
w rbrruu City Cheyenn an n clsco 67/55
*
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Yesterday Today Saturday Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W
City Abilene Akron Albany
47/36/0.36 40/36/0.09 43/23/0.01 80/62/0.00 47/39/0.10 51/37/0.00 53/43/0.01 76/60/Tr 50/41/0.13 47/35/0.00 60/45/0.07 85/70/0.02 42/34/0.00 50/35/0.00 54/43/0.08 81/66/0.01 43/29/0.00 44/27/0.00 49/39/0.02 54/51/0.34 51/39/0.00 88/68/Tr
45/36/sh 45/31/sn 68/43/pc 74/45/s
46/28/0.00 70/60/0.01 47/29/0.00 32/16/0.00 37/19/0.00 54/42/0.22 60/28/0.00 71/36/0.00 55/34/0.00 37/17/0.00 Sacramento 81/46/0.00 Sl. Louis 51/40/0.01 Salt Lake City 60/34/0.00 San Antonio 77/65/Tr San Diego 70/63/0.00 San Francisco 74/50/0.00 San Jose 80/48/0.00 Santa Fe 61/37/0.02 Savannah 63/58/0.32 Seattle 60/47/Tr Sioux Falls 57/33/0.00 Spokane 55/36/0.00 Springfield, MO 47/38/0.02 Tampa 83/70/0.00 Tucson 69/53/0.05 54/47/0.02 Tulsa W ashingt on,OC 53/39/0.00 Wichita 48/42/0.08 Yakima 65/34/0.00 Yuma 76/64/0.10
39/32/sn 52/36/pc 80/61/pc 86/62/s
I Mecca Mexico City Montreal Moscow Nairobi
Nassau New Delhi Osaka Oslo Ottawa
Paris Rio de Janeiro Rome Santiago Sao Paulo Sapporo Seoul Shanghai Singapore Stockholm Sydney Taipei Tel Aviv Tokyo Toronto Vancouver
vienna
87nslr
Warsaw
53/39/pc 49/24/pc 80/55/s 85/57/s 56/39/c 65/43/pc 72/36/s 73/39/s 62/49/r 66/53/r 77/59/s 74/57/s 60/42/pc 70/46/pc 60/35/s 53/26/s
62/47/r 67/53/r 88/69/s 87/71/pc 59/39/pc 52/30/s 61/28/s 44/27/s
64/43/c 69/49/pc
80/65/1 79/66/1 36/32/sn 51/34/pc 37/31/sn 50/34/pc
54/40/r 57/43/pc 68/50/pc 71/53/pc 72/39/s 69/37/s
88/66/s 88/68/pc 84/63/Tr 89/61/s 90/60/s 51/38/0.03 60/42/pc 64/36/s 46/39/sn 58/28/pc 36/25/pc 40/20/sn 35/27/sn 44/28/c 63/40/r 67/48/pc 70/32/pc 69/32/pc 72/43/s 68/40/s 51/36/r 64/44/pc 46/35/sn 47/23/sn 75/50/pc 75/52/s 62/45/pc 71/46/s 69/45/s 72/42/pc 75/60/1 67/56/r
73/61/pc 71/59/pc 67/55/pc 68/54/pc 73/52/pc 72/52/pc 55/34/sh 65/34/pc
79/58/c 76/59/pc 61/50/c 57/40/sh 68/30/s 54/32/s 63/45/pc 55/32/sh
64/44/pc 72/47/pc 83/67/s 85/68/s 74/53/pc 79/53/s 69/48/pc 74/51/pc
43/35/sn 61/42/pc 73/41/pc 75/47/s 69/44/pc 66/30/c 84/63/s 89/62/pc
86/72/0.34 74/57/0.08 28/9/0.00 55/25/0.00 84/61/0.01 83/71/0.00 84/56/0.00 63/59/0.44 39/27/0.08 30/7/0.00 46/41/0.00
93/68/s
34/18/0.00 52/48/0.34 50/32/0.00 54/30/0.00
45/35/pc 54/46/r
77/56/pc 38/29/c 49/32/s 84/61/pc 84P2/s 84/64/pc 61/42/pc 47/39/r
39/30/pc 60/38/pc 84n5/0'.05 87//4/t 61/43/0.00 61/45/pc 90/57/0.00 95/59/s 77/66/0.43 78/67/1 51/34/0.01 45/34/c 66/39/0.00 66/35/pc 63/52/0.01 57/49/r 90/79/O.O4 90/7 7/s 54/30/0.00 40/30/sn 80/68/0.00 86/68/pc 81/73/0.00 84/69/pc 68/50/Tr 64/53/pc 56/52/0.14 58/48/c 53/34/s 51/35/pc
91/67/pc 76/48/pc 39/10/sf 45/28/r 85/61/pc 85/72/s 86/65/s 63/40/pc 42/35/pc 38/5/sn 51/37/sh 87/74/t 59/49/sh 89/57/s 76/65/1 46/35/pc 61/35/s 67/47/pc 91/77/pc 36/22/sf 73/68/c 77/64/c 66/53/pc 53/44/r 47/18/sn 52/37/sh 57/40/pc 51/30/sh
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 C o llege hoops, C3 Sports in brief, C3 NBA, C4 Golf, C3 NHL, C4
© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
GYMNASTICS Bend's Ohlrich in Pac-12 meet A gymnast from Bend is part of the Oregon State team that will be competing in the Pac-12 women's championship meet Saturday in Salt Lake City. Katelyn Ohlrich, a Mountain Viewgraduate, is a senior co-captain for the Beavers, whohave the No. 3seed in the eight-team competition. Ohlrich is in herfourth year with the Beavers and is part of thetheir balance beamlineup. — Bulletin staff report
FOOTBALL
Memorial set for Bill Enyart
COLLEGE BASKETBALL: MEN'S AND WOMEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENTS
Beaversreadyto open "'"'"' ~
tournament at home By Steve Gress
8 seed Middle Tennessee be-
Corvallis Gazette-Times
fore falling to top seed South
CORVALLIS — When the Oregon State women's basketball team earned an NCAA
Carolina. That success, and disap-
pointment of a loss, fueled the
tournament bid last season,
Beavers in the offseason.
itsfirstin 18 years,itcame as
The goal was to get back and go further — all the way
NCAA men's tournament: Oregon vs. OklahomaState When:3:45 p.m. today TV:TBS Radio:KBND1110-AM, 100.1-FM
a shock. The Beavers closed last sea- to the national title. son by winning nine straight Oregon State (26-4) has Pac-12 games, and the streak accomplished the first part stretched to 11 before they fell of that goal, as the Beavers in the title game of the Pac-12 received a No. 3 seed and tournament. will host the first and second They were the No. 9 seed rounds — the NCAA changed and went to Seattle for the
the rules to allow the top 16
first and seconds rounds when they knocked off No.
seeds to host this season. See Beavers/C3
Different looksfor Du cks in 3 teumeys By Steve Mims
Ducks past Oklahoma State
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
and Saint Louis two years ago
OMAHA, Neb. — Oregon men's basketball coach Dana Altman has taken the Ducks to three straight NCAA tournaments with three different
before Oregon lost to eventual
teams. A different leadership group has emerged each season to help the Ducks put together their longest string of NCAAwomen'stournnment:South Dakota State at Oregon State When:2 p.m. today TV:ESPN
trips to the Big Dance. E.J. Singler, an Ernie Kent
recruit inherited by Altman when he arrived at Oregon in 2010, and one-year trans-
champion Louisville. Last season, seniors Johnathan Loyd,Mike Moser and
Jason Calliste helped the Ducks finish strong to reach the tournament, where they
defeated BYU before almost upsetting Wisconsin. Joseph Young and Elgin Cook, the two veterans on
the roster this season, have come up big to get Oregon (25-9) back to the NCAA tournament.
See Ducks /C3
fer Arsalan Kazemi led the
CORVALLIS — A
memorial service for Bill Enyart, an Oregon State football legend who lived in Bendfor many years after his playing career anddied last month at age67, has been set for April 11 in Corvallis. The memorial is scheduled for 3 p.m. on the club level at Reser Stadium onthe Oregon State campus. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that donations be directed to the OSUathletics department's "Beavers Without Borders" fund. Checks should be made payable to the OSU Foundation (noting "Enyart Memorial gift") and sent to 850 SW 35th St., Corvallis, OR, 97333. Donations can also be made byphone by calling Our Beaver
PREP BASEBALL
Ll
MOTOR SPORTS
Teamwork, new crew chief fuels Ganassi ,
By Jenna Fryer
,
The Associated Press
CHARLOTTE, N.C.-
Jamie McMurray thought he had a shot at winning the pole
two weeks NSXt LIP ago in Las Vegas until a bobble on his lap endedhis
Nation at 541-737-2370. — Bulletin staffteport
NASCAR
Sprint Cup at Fontana When:Qualifytoday; Race, noon Sunday
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
looked at TV:FS1 the scor ing tower ( q ualifying), and, for a Fo" ('ace)
EAST REGIONAL illanova 93 Lafayette
52
. . State LSU
moment, teammate Kyle Larson was in first.
65
'Well, at least one of us got
"I thought to myself,
SOUTH REGIONAL UAB
I .e i
60 59
lowa St. UCLA
SMU
60 59
Utah
57
Stephen F. Austin 50
Sisters' Justin Horrer is surrounded by teammates celebrating his home run against Mountain View onThursday at Sisters High School.
See additional photos on The Bulletin's website: hendhulletin.com/sports
Bulletin staff report
O
SISTERS — Down five runs heading into the bottom of the
third inning Thursday, Sisters, as Outlaws coach Steve Hodges described it, "put the pedal to the metal."
5 48
The four-time Sky-Em League champions erupted for four runs in the third and tacked on four more in the
WEST REGIONAL
fourth en route to a 13-9 non-
i( 4i: '.si."
h
league baseball victory over Baylor
56
Mississippi
7 57
Mountain View. "We hit the ball pretty hard
Harvard
65
Wofford
5 53
for the Outlaws (1-0), helping
game last season, begin its quest toward another deep
Sisters, which advanced to the
postseason run.
93
down there and tell him
'Great job. Awesome.'And even though he didn't get the pole in the end, you can't hide that feeling. You
Justin Harrer went 3-for-3 with a home run and five RBIs
Class 4A state championship
Sisters' Alex Olivier slides under the tag of Mountain View's Koltin
Ramsoy while stealing second base.
"He certainly looked fluid
It's that very cooperation and teamwork that has
Chip Ganassi Racing off to a solid start through the first month of the NA-
SCAR season. McMurray finished second Sunday at Phoenix, where he had an oppor-
and four RBIs for Sisters.
tunity on a final restart to
Zach Morganbeltedtwo dou-
snatch the win away from
bles, and Jonathan Luz went 3-for-5 to add to the Outlaws' 12-hit attack.
Kevin Harvick. It would have been a steal after the
with two RBIs.
"I thought it was a good game, kind of a back-andforth game," said Mountain
today and was hitting the ball extremely hard," Hodges said of Harrer. "He's going to be a big part of our offense this
happy that someone else has done well."
year, for sure." Ryan Funk chipped in with three hits, including a double,
The Cougars had 10 hits and were led by Cody Anthony, who was 4-for-5, and Rich Madrigal, who was 2-for-2
today," Hodges said. "Coming back and having two big innings ... was really nice to see."
T exas Southern 7 2
it,'" McMurray said this week. "I was going to go
can't hide when you are
6
65
Texas
r Photos by Joe Kiine/The Bulletin
eorgetown 84 E. Washington 74 MIDWEST REGIONAL incinnati 6 Purdue 65 ( O T) Kentucky 7 Hampton 56 Notre Dame Northeastern
I
View coach Rick Morton. "They had some big innings,
way Harvick dominated, so McMurray was satisfied with second.
It followed an 11th-place finish the week before in Las Vegas and a strong run that was ended early at Atlanta when he was caught in a crash.
See McMurray/C4
and they capitalized on a cou-
ple of misplayed balls."
75 VCU
72 (OT)
Correction A story headlined "Athletes thaw at Icebreaker" that appeared in Thursday's Bulletin on page C3contained incorrect information about Bend High's baseball gameagainst Henley. Justin Parsons had two doubles for the Lava Bears. The error was the result of incorrect information provided to The Bulletin.
PREP TRACK AND FIELD
Sterm break the ice with dominant victory Bulletin staff report
Inside
eighth straight Class 5A track
• Panthers open baseball season with win over Willamette. Prep roundup,C4
and field state championship but set an all-classifications
was any indication.
PRINEVILLE — Last sea-
son, Summit not only won its
team points state record.
The Stormarepoisedto exact even more damage this season, if Thursday afternoon
With Emma Normand placing first in both the 100- and
200-meter dashes, the Summit girls racked up 259 points to
defeat runner-up Crook Coun-
Crook County's Danielle
ty by a resounding 151 points at the Breaking the Ice-Ice
Michael won the pole vault,
Breaker.
and Jordynn Slater won the shot put and discus for La
Emma Stevensonwon the Pine, which was fourth as a long jump and finished second team. Madras' Elle Renault in the 100 for the Storm, while claimed top honors in the Camille Weaver took first in javelin, and Culver's Emma the 100 hurdles and second in
the triple jump.
Knepp was third in the 800. SeeStorm /C4
Rick Scuten/The AssociatedPress
JomieMcMurray sayscooperation between his ond Kyle Lorson's teams hove led to a fast start for Chip
Ganassi Racing.
C2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
ON THE AIR
COREBOARD
TODAY Time TV/Radie Men's NCAA tournament,New MexicoSt.vs.Kansas 9a.m. CBS Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound 9 a.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAAtournament, Michigan St. vs. Georgia 9:30 a.m. TruTV Men's NCAAtournament, Wyoming vs. N. Iowa 10:30 a.m. TBS Men's NCAA tournament, Buffalo vs. WestVirginia 11 a.m. TNT Men's NCAA tournament, Indiana vs. Wichita St. 11:30 a.m. CBS Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound 11:30 a.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAAtournament, Virginia vs. Belmont noon T r u TV Men's NCAA tournament, UC Irvine vs. Louisville 1 p.m. TB S Men's NCAA tournament, Valparaiso vs. Maryland 1:30 p.m. TNT Women's NCAA tournament, S. Dakota St. at OregonSt. 2 p.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAAtournament, Oklahoma St. vs. Oregon 3:45 p.m. TBS, BASKETBALL
KBND1110-AM, 100.1-FM
Men's NCAAtournament, Robert Morris vs. Duke 4 p.m. CB S NBA, Portland at Orlando 4 p.m. CSNNW, KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM Men's NCAA tournament,Davidsonvs.Iowa 4:15 p.m. TNT Women's NCAAtournament, whiparound 4:30p.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAAtournament, Oklahoma vs. Albany 4:30 p.m. TruTV Men's NCAAtournament, Coastal Carolina vs. Wisconsin 6:15 p.m. TBS Men's NCAA tournament,St.John'svs.SanDiegoSt. 6:30 p.m. CBS Men's NIT, S.DakotaSt. vs. Vanderbilt 6:30 p.m. ESPNU Men's NCAAtournament,N.DakotaSt.vs.Gonzaga 6:45 p.m. TNT Men's NCAA tournament,Providencevs.Dayton 7 p.m. T ruTV BASEBALL
MLB preseason, W ashingtonatHouston MLB preseason, Chicago Cubs atChicagoWhite Sox MLB preseason, Cincinnati at SanFrancisco College, LSU atArkansas College, Arizona atStanford
10 a.m.
MLB
1 p.m. ML B 6 p.m. ML B 6 p.m. SE C 7 p.m. Pac-12
GOLF
PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup
1 1 a.m. G o lf 3 p.m. Go l f
MOTOR SPORTS
NASCARSprint Cup, Fontanapractice NASCARXfinity, Fontana practice NASCARXfinity. Fontana final practice NASCAR Sprint Cup, Fontanaqualifying
noon 1:30 p.m. 3 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
FS1 FS1 FS1 FS1
TENNIS
BNP Paribas Open,men's quarterfinal BNP Paribas Open,men's quarterfinal Womens college, California at UCLA BNP Paribas Open,women's semifinal BNP Paribas Open,women's semifinal
n oon 2 p.m. 3 p.m. 6 p.m. 8 p.m.
E S PN Tennis Pac-12 Tennis ESPN2
HOCKEY
College, BigTentournament, Minnesota vs. OhioSt. College, HockeyEast tournament, UMass-Lowell vs. Vermont College, Big Ten tournament, Michigan St. vs. Michigan College, HockeyEast tournament, Boston U. vs. NewHampshire WHL, Everett at Victoria BOXING
Alfonso Gomezvs. Yoshihiro Kamegai SOCCER Australia, Adelaide vs. Melbourne
1:30p.m. Big Ten 2 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. Big Ten 5 p.m. NBCSN 7 p.m. R o ot 8 p.m.
FS1
1:30a.m.(Sat.j FS2
SATURDAY SOCCER England, ManchesterCity vs. West BromwichAlbion 5:45a.m. NBCSN England, Newcastle United vs. Arsenal 8 a.m. NBCSN England, West HamUnited vs. Sunderland 10:30a.m. NBCSN MLS, Portland at Sporting KansasCity 5:30 p.m. Root Australia, Brisbane vs.Wellington 1 1 p.m. FS2 MOTOR SPORTS
United SportsCar Series, TwelveHours of Sebring NASCARSprint Cup, Fontanapractice NASCAR Xfinity, Fontana qualifying United SportsCar Series, TwelveHours of Sebring NASCARSprint Cup, Fontana final practice NASCARXfinity, Fontana United SportsCar Series, TwelveHours of Sebring
7:30 a.m. FS1 8:30 a.m. FS2 9 :30 a.m. F S 1
9:30 a.m. FS2 11:30 a.m. FS1 1 p.m. FS1 7 p.m. FS2
BASKETBALL
Men's NIT, Alabamaat Miami Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound Men's NCAAtournament, UCLAvs. UAB Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound Men's NCAA tournament, Kentucky vs. Cincinnati Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound Men's NCAAtournament, Arizona vs. Ohio St. Men's NCAAtournament, Xavier vs. Georgia St. Women's NCAA tournament, whiparound Men's NCAAtournament, Villanova vs. N.C. State Men's NCAAtournament, Utah vs. Georgetown NBA, Portland at Memphis
8 a.m. E S PN 8 a.m. ESPN2 9 a.m. CB S 10:30 a.m.ESPN2 11:30 a.m. CBS 1 p.m. ESPN2 2 p.m. CB S 3 p.m. TN T 3:30p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. TB S 4:30 p.m. CBS 5 p.m. CSNNW, 0 690-AM, 96.9-FM KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRC Men's NCAAtournament, North Carolina vs. Arkansas 5:30 p.m. TNT Women's NCAA tournament, St. Francis (N.Y.j vs. UConn 6 p.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAAtournament, Notre Dame vs. Butler 6:30 p.m. TBS GOLF PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 9:30 a.m. Golf PGA Tour, Arnold Palmer Invitational 11:30 a.m. NBC, Golf Champions Tour,Tucson Conquistadores Classic 2 p.m. Go l f LPGATour, JTBCFounders Cup 4 p.m. Go l f BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Toronto at Philadelphia 10 a.m. MLB College, South Carolina at Missouri 12:30 p.m. SEC MLB preseason, KansasCity at ChicagoWhite Sox 1 p.m. ML B 5 p.m. ESPNU College, Vanderbilt at Auburn TENNIS
BNP Paribas Open,men's semifinals BNP Paribas Open,men's doubles final
11 a.m. ESPN 7:30p.m. Tennis
GYMNASTICS
Women's college,Pac-12championships Women's college,Pac-12championships HOCKEY NHL, Vancouver at LosAngeles College, HockeyEast final College, Big Ten final
1 p.m. Pac-12 6 p.m. Pac-12 1 p.m. CSNNW 4 p.m. NBCSN 5 p.m. Big Ten
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madeby TVor radio stations.
ON DECK Today Baseball: Madrasat Mountain View,4 p.mcCrook County atTreasure Valey Invitational in Ontario, TBD;HiddenValley atSisters,4 p.m. Soflbau:MountainViewat Madras,4 p.m.; Ridgevie watReynolds,4:30p.m. Boyslacrosse:GlencoeatSummit,8p.mcMountain ViewatGrant, 8p.mcLiberty atSisters, 7p.m. Saturday Baseball: Bendat TheDaffes(DH), noon;Crook County atTreasureValley Invitational in Ontario, TBD;EaglePoint atSummit (DH),I p.m. Soflbalh TheDallesat Bend(DH), noon;Sisters at Cascade, noon; West Salemat Redmond (DH),11 a.m.;Sum mit at EaglePoint (DH),noon Boys lacrosse: Bend at BishopOD ' owd (Calif.), 5 .m.; Libertyat Summit, 2 p.m.; Mountain Viewat orestGrove,I pm.;Glencoeat Sisters,1 pm.
TENNIS
IN THE BLEACHERS
Professional BNPParibasOpen Thursday atIndian Wells, Calif. Men Guarlerfinals AndyMurray(4),Britain,def.FelicianoLopez(12), Spain,6-3,6-4. NovakDjokovic (I), Serbia, def. BernardTomic (32),Australia,walkover. Women Guarlerlinals JelenaJankovic (18), Serbia,def. LesiaTsurenko, Ukraine,6-1/4-1, retired. SabineLisicki (24), Germany, def. FlaviaPennetta (15),ltaly,6-4,6-7(3),7-6(4).
In the Bleachers O 2015 Steve Moore. Dlst. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomics.com/inthebreachers
sCAY'>rd ks QcE!.'
HOCKEY
UYI...NO.
GOLF
NHL
Z' CA5l
PGA
NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All TimesPDT
%%<G
Bay Hill Thursday atBayHill Club andLodge, Orlando, Fla. Yardage:7,419; Par: 72(36-36)
EaslernConference AtlanticOivision
(a-amateur) Firsl Round
MorganHofmann JasonKokrak KevinNa KenDuke JohnPeterson lan Poulter AdamScot BrandtSnedeker Billy Horschel HenrikStenson HarrisEnglish Keegan Bradley PadraigHarrington Martin Laird HunterMahan Matt Every BenMartin George McNeil Colt Knost DavidHearn KevinKisner Davis Loveff l RusselHenl l ey WebbSimpson CamiloViffegas ChrisStroud JasonDay LouisOosthuizen SeanOH ' air Justin Thom as DavidLingmerth Ryo Ishikawa TonyFinau RetiefGoosen K.J. Choi SamSaunders Shawn Stefani Spencer Levin SteveWheatcroft WilliamMcGirt RoryMcgroy RorySabbatini HidekiMatsuyama D.A.Points NicholasThompson ChadCollins Erik Comp ton Francesco Molinari Branden Grace Kiradech Aphibarnrat BrianStuard JasonBohn BrooksKoepka GaryWoodland Vijay Singh Matt Jones CarlosDrtiz Danny Wilett Alex Prugh KyleReifers FreddieJacobson AndresGonzales Carl Pettersson PaulCasey MarcLeishman RickieFowler ZachJohnson ErnieEls StewartCink BenCrane CharlesHowell ffl Brendan Steele ChadCampbell CharlieBeljan RodPampling Seung-Yul Noh ChessonHadley BlayneBarber DannyLee GraemeMcDowell Sangmoon Bae Steven Bowditch BenCurtis Jim Herma n JohnHuh Andrew Svoboda BerndWiesberger J.B. Holmse BrianHarman DanielSummerhays Zac Blair DanielBerger TrevorImm elman Billy Hurley ffl Chris Kirk JohnSenden Pat Perez KevinChappel RusselKnox l GrahamDeLaet S.J. Park KevinStreelman Tim Herron HudsonSwafford ShaneLowry a-MJMaguire GonzaloFdez-Castano AngelCabrera Scott Stallings NickTaylor BrandonHagy a-Gunn Yang LucasGlover BooWee kley RobertGamez AlexanderLevy BrianDavis RichardSterne RobertStreb RodPerry
32-34 — 66 34-33—67 33-34—67 33-34—67 34-33—67 34-33—67 34-34 — 68 35-33—68 35-33—68 35-33—68 37-31—68 33-35—68 33-35 — 68 35-33—68 34-34—68 36-32—68 33-35—68 34-35—69 33-36 — 69 36-33—69 35-34—69 35-34—69 35-34—69 34-35—69 35-34 — 69 34-35—69 34-35—69 34-35—69 34-35—69 34-35—69 34-35 — 69 35-35—70 35-35—70 34-36 — 70 37-33—70 36-34—70 35-35 — 70 35-35—70 35-35—70 33-37—70 34-36 — 70 38-32—70 34-36 — 70 35-35—70 35-35—70 34-36 — 70 35-35 — 70 36-34—70 35-35 — 70 36-34—70 35-36 — 71 36-35—71 35-36 — 71 34-37 — 71 36-35 — 71 36-35—71 36-35—71 34-37—71 37-34—71 35-36 — 71 36-35 — 71 35-36 — 71 37-34—71 37-34—71 37-34—71 36-35 — 71 35-36 — 71 37-34—71 36-35—71 34-37—71 37-34—71 36-35 — 71 37-35 — 72 38-34 — 72 37-35 — 72 36-36 — 72 36-36 — 72 40-32—72 36-36 — 72 35-37 — 72 39-33—72 35-37—72 38-34—72 35-37 — 72 39-34 — 73 38-35—73 37-36 — 73 36-37—73 36-37—73 36-37—73 37-36 — 73 36-37—73 36-38—74 37-37—74 35-39—74 39-35—74 39-35—74 36-38—74 36-38—74 37-37—74 37-38—75 37-38—75 41-34 — 75 41-34 — 75 38-37—75 39-36 — 75 38-38—76 37-39—76 39-37 — 76 39-37 — 76 40-36—76 41-35—76 39-38—77 38-39—77 38-39 — 77 40-37 — 77 40-37—77 40-37—77 41-38—79 38-41—79
Montreal Tampa Bay Detroit Boston Ottawa Florida Toronto Buffalo
Couegelnsider.com Tournament Au TimesPOT
SOCCER MLS
First Round Thursday'sGame
MAJORLEAGUESOCCE Au TimesPOT
UT-Martin104,NorthwesternSt. 79 SecondRound
EasternConference W L T Pts GF GA NewYorkCity FC 1 0 1 4 3 I OrlandoCit y 1 0 1 4 2 I Columbus I I 0 3 2 1 D.C.United I 0 0 3 1 0 TorontoFC 1 1 0 3 3 3 Philadelphia 0 0 2 2 3 3 NewYork 0 0 1 1 1 I Montreal 0 1 0 0 0 I Chicago 0 2 0 0 0 3 NewEngland 0 2 0 0 0 5 WesternConference W L T Pts GF GA Fc Dallas 2 0 0 6 4 I Los Angeles 1 0 1 4 4 2 Seattle I I 0 3 5 3 SanJose I I 0 3 3 3 Houston 1 1 0 3 1 1 Vancouver 1 1 0 3 2 3 RealSaltLake 0 Portland
0 2 2 3 0 0 2 2 2 Colorado 0 0 1 1 0 S porting KansasCity 0 I 1 1 2
3 2 0 4
Today'sGames Fc DallasatPhiladelphia, 7 p.m. Saturday'sGames Montrealat NewEngland,noon NewYorkCity FCat Colorado, I p.m. Vancouver at OrlandoCity,4:30p.m. PortlandatSporting KansasCity, 5:30p.m. Housto natLosAngeles,7:30p.m. Sunday/sGames D.C.UnitedatNewYork,2 p.m. ChicagoatSanJose, 4p.m.
BASKETBALL Men's college NCAAtournament AN TimesPOT EASTREG IONAL Round of64
Thursday'sGames
Viganova 93,Lafayette 52 N.C.State66,LSU65
Today'sGames MichiganSt. (23-11)vs.Georgia(21-11), 9:40a.m. N. Iowa(30-3) vs.Wyoming (25-9), 10:40a.m. Virginia(29-3)vs.Belmont(22-10),1210 pm. Louisville(24-8)vs.UcIrvine(21-12),1:10 p.m. Oklahoma (22-10) vs.Albany(24-8),4:27 p.m. Providence (22-11) vs.Dayton (26-8), 6:57p.m. Round of32 Saturday'sGame Villanova (332)vs. NC.State(21-13),410 pm. SOUTHREGIONAL Round of64
Thursday'sGames
UAB60, lowaSt. 59 UCLA60, SMU59 Utah57,StephenF.Austin 50
Georg etown84,E.Washington74 Today'sGames Duke(29-4)vs.Robert Morris (20-14),410 pm. lowa(21-11)vs.Davidson (24-7), 4:20p.m. SanDiegoSt. (26-8) vs.St.John's(21-11), 6:40p.m. Gonzaga (32-2) vs.N.DakotaSt. (23-9), 6:50p.m. Round of32 Saturday'sGames UAB(20-15)vs.UCLA(21-13),910 am. Georgetown (22-10) vs. Utah(25-8), 4:30p.m. MIDWESTREGIONAL
Round of64 Thursday'sGames
Cincinnati66,Purdue65, DT Kentucky79,Hampton56 NotreDam e69, Northeastern 65 Butler56,Texas48
Today'sGames Kansas(26-8) vs.Ne wMexico St.(23-10), 9:15a.m. WestVirginia(239)vs.Bufalo (239),11:10am. WichitaSt.(28-4) vs.Indiana(20-13), 11:45a.m. Maryland (27-6) vs.Valparaiso(28-5),1:50 p.m. Round of32 Saturday'sGames Kentucky(35-0)vs.Cincinnati(23-10),11:45a.m. NotreDam e(30-5) vs.Butler (23-10),6:40p.m.
WEST REGI ONAL Round of64 Thursday' s Games LPGA GeorgiaState57,Baylor 56 JTBCFoundersCupLeaderboard Xavier76,Mississippi57 Thursday at JWMarriotl Phoenix Deserl NorthCarolina67,Harvard 65 Ridge Resorl 6 Spa,Wildfire Golf Club Arkansas 56, Wofford53 Course, Phoenix Arizona93,TexasSouthern72 Purse: 61.6miuion Ohio State75,VCU72,DT Today'sGames Yardage: 6,663;Par: 72(36-36) SuspendedFirst Round Oregon(25-9)vs.OklahomaSt. (18-13),3:50 p.m. SCORE THRU Wisconsin(31-3)vs. Coastal Carolina(24-9), 6:20p.m. -6 1. KimKaufman F Round of32 -6 F 1. Sophia Popov Saturday'sGames 1. LydiaKo -6 F Arizona (32-3)vs.OhioSt.(24-10), 2;15p.m. -6 1. Tiffany Joh F GeorgiaSt.(25-9)vs.Xavier (22-13), 3:10p.m. -5 5. MoriyaJutanugarn F NorthCarolina(25-11)vs. Arkansas(27-8), 5:40p.m. -5 5. In Gee Chun F -5 5. DewiClaireSchreefel 10 National Invitation Tournament -4 F Au TimesPOT 8. SiminFeng -4 F 8. HaNaJang -4 8. SooBin Kim F SecondRound -4 Today'sGame 8. Pornanong Phatlum F -4 8. Amy Yang F S. DakotaSt.(24-10) atVanderbilt (20-13),6:30p.m. -4 8. Gerina Piler F Saturday'sGame -4 F Alabama(19-14)atMiami(22-12),8 a.m. 8. AustinErnst -4 4 8. Alena Sharp Sunday'sGames -3 16. MariaHernandez F George Washington(22-12) atTemple(24-10), 8a.m. -3 16. DemiRunas F ArizonaSt.(18-15)at Richmond(20-13), 4:30p.m. -3 16. PaulaCreamer F RhodeIsland(23-9) atStanford(20-13), 6:30p.m. -3 16. HaruNomura F Monday'sGames -3 F Louisiana 16. MariajoUribe Tech(26-8) atTexasA&M(21-11), 4p.m. -3 F 16. LauraDavies glinoisSt.(22-12)at OldDominion (25-7), 5 p.m. -3 16. Sei-Young Kim F MurraySt. (28-5)atTulsa(23-10), 6p.m. -3 16. AriyaJutanugarn F -3 16. KatieBurnett F College Basketball Invitational -3 16. JayeMarie Green F AN TimesPOT -3 F 16. MmaHarigae -3 F 16. SunYoung Yoo Guarterfinals -3 16. DanieffeKang 9 Monday'sGames -3 16. QBaek 7 Colorado(16-17)vs. Seattle (17-15),TBA -3 16. CarolineMasson 7 Mercer(19-15)vs.Louisiana-Monroe(22-12), TBA -3 16. SandraGal 6 Radford(22-11)vs.Vermont (19-13), 4p.m. -3 16. AngelStan a ford 5 OralRob erts(19-14)atLoyolaof Chicago(20-13)5p.m.
Today'sGame HighPoint(23-9)atE.Kentucky(20-11), 4 p.m. Saturday'sGames Canisius (1714)at Bowling Green(21-11),10a m. La.-Lafayette (21-13)atSamHoustonSt.(26-7), noon UT-Martin(19-12)atS.C.-Upstate(24-11), 3p.m. N. Arizona(20-14) atSacramentoSt. (21-11), 7p.m. Monday'sGames ClevelandSt.(25-8)at NJIT(19-11), 4p.m. Evansville(20-12)at E.Illinois (18-14),4p.m. KentSt.(22-11)at TexasA8M-CC(20-13), 5p.m.
Women's college NCAAtournament
Au TimesPOT
ALBANY REGIONAL Today'sGames Dayton(25-6)vs.IowaSt. (18-12), 9a.m. Kentucky(23-9) vs.TennesseeSt.(18-12),11:30a.m Texas(22-10) vs.S.Kentucky(30-4),2 p.m. California(23-9)vs.WichitaSt.(29-4),4:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames Louisville(25-6)vs.BYU(23-9),1 p.m. Rutgers(22-9)vs.Seton Hall 28-5), 3:30p.m. SouthFlorida(26-7)vs.LSUI17-13), 3:30p.m. Uconn(32-1)vs.St.Francis(N.Y)(15-18),6 p.m. SPOKANEREGIONAL
Today'sGames Duke(21-10)vs.Albany(N.Y) (24-8), 9a.m. MississippiSt.(26-6)vs.Tulane(22-10),11:30 a.m. OregonSt. (26-4)vs.S. DakotaSt.(24-8), 3p.m. George Washington(29-3)vs.Gonzaga(24-7),4:30p.m Saturday'sGames Princeton(30-0)vs.Green Bay(28-4), 8a.m. Chattanooga(29-3) vs.Pittsburgh(19-11), 8a.m. Maryland (30-2) vs.NewMexicoSt. (22-7),10:30 a.m Tennessee (27-5) vs.BoiseSt.(22-10),10;30a.m. OKLAHOMACITYREGIONAL Today'sGames Washington(23-9) vs.Miami(19-12), 9a.m. Northwestern(23-8) vs.Arkansas(17-13), 9a.m. lowa(24-7)vs.American(24-8),11:30a m. Baylor(303)vs.Northwestern St.(19-14),1130a m Minnesota(23-9) vs.DePaul(26-7), 2p.m. NotreDam e(31-2) vs.Montana(24-8), 4:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Oklahoma (20-11)vs.Quinnipiac (31-3),1 p.m. Stanford(24-9)vs.CSNorthridge(23-9), 3;30p.m. GREENSBOROREGIONAL Today'sGames SouthCarolina(30-2) vs.SavannahSt. (21-10), 2p.m Syracuse (21-9) vs.Nebraska(21-10),4:30 p.m. Saturday'sGames NorthCarolina(24-8) vs.Liberty (26-6), 8a.m. Florida Gulf Coast(30-2) vs.OklahomaSt.(20-11),8a.m OhioSt.(23-10)vs.JamesMadison(29-3),1030 a.m FloridaSt. (29-4)vs.AlabamaSt. (17-14),10:30 a.m Texas A8M(23-9) vs.UALR(28-4),I p.m. ArizonaSt.(27-5)vs.Ohio(27-4), 3;30p.m.
National Invitation Tournament Au TimesPDT Thursday'sGames Old Dominio69, n Virginia 62 St. John's64, Army56 Fordham70,CCSU67 Hampton 45, Drexel 42 WestVirginia84, Buffalo61 N.C. State73, ETSU58 Penn65,Hofstra 58 Temple 67,Marist 54 Duquesne 72,YoungstownSt.54 GeorgiaTech69,Elon47 SouthDakota68,Creighton58 Kansas St.86,Akron68 Missouri69,N.Iowa61 SouthernMiss79, TexasSouthern69 TCU85,StephenF.Austin 80 MiddleTennessee69, Ball St.58 N. Colorado 53,ColoradoSt.48 San Diego 63,LongBeach St. 56 UCLA70,CSBakersfield 54 Sacramento St.87, Pacific 79 Fresno St. 79,San Francisco73 Today'sGames WrightSt.(25-8)atToledo(18-13), 4 p.m. Maine(23-8)atVilanova(19-13), 4p.m. Richmond(18-13) atStetson(23-7), 4 p.m. Tulsa(17-13)atMissouri St.(18-14), 5p.m. E. Michigan (22-12) at Drake(20-10), 5:05p.m. Hawai(23-8) i at St.Mary's (Calif.) (20-10),6p.m. SecondRound Sunday'sGames Temple(17-16)atPenn(21-8),11 a.m. Fordham (21-11) atSt.John's(22-10),11a m. TCU(18-13)atSouthernMiss (23-10), noon Missouri(I8-13)atKansasSt. (19-13), noon Arkansas St. (24-10)atMiddle Tennessee(22-9), noon N.C.State(17-14)at East Carolina(22-10), I p.m. UCLA(14-18) vs.SanDiego(25-6),2 p.m. Georgia Tech(19-14) atMississippi (18-13),4 p.m. N. Colorado(21-12) vs.SouthDakota(26-7), 4p.m. Monday'sGame E.Wash ington(21-11)vs. SacramentoSt.(1715), 7pm. Tuesday'sGames Hampton(19-12)atWestVirginia (19-14), 4p.m. Richmond -Stetsonwin nerat Duquesne(22-10),4p.m. March21-24 FresnoSt. (23-9) vs. Hawaii-St. Mary's(Calif.) winner, TBA
Michigan(17-14)vs.Wright St.-Toledowinner, TBA E. Michigan-Drakewinner vs. Tulsa-Missouri St. winner,TBA Maine-Vilanova winnervs.Old Dominion(21-12),TBA Women'sBasketball Invitational Au TimesPDT First Round Thursday'sGames
Marshal81, l N.Kentucky 79 Mercer83,Troy68 Xavier57,Wilham& Mary56 Siena53, StonyBrook46 La.Lafayette78,Texas-PanAmerican56 McNeese St.87,Furman 70 SecondRound March21-22 NewMexico(21 12)vs OralRoberts(1715) TBA La.-Lafayette(20-12)vs.McNeeseSt. (18-13), TBA Marshal(17-14) l vs.Mercer (19-14), TBA Xavier(18-14)vs.Siena(20-12), TBA
GP W L OT 72 45 20 7 71 43 21 7 69 38 20 11 71 36 24 11 70 35 24 11 71 32 25 14 72 27 39 6 70 20 43 7
Pls GF GA 97 191 159 93 230 184 87 201 186 83 189 183 81 202 185 78 175 196 60 189 230 47 134 235
Metropolitan Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA N.Y.Rangers 69 44 18 7 95 207 159 N.Y.lslanders 72 43 25 4 90 222 203 Pittsburgh 71 39 22 10 88 197 177 Washington 72 39 23 10 88 212 177 Philadelphia 73 29 29 15 73 188 210 New Jersey 70 30 29 11 71 160 179 Columbus 71 32 35 4 68 190 223 C arolina 7 0 2 6 3 5 9 61 162 193 WesternConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA St. Louis 71 45 20 6 96 219 172 Nashville 72 43 21 8 94 205 176 Chicago 70 43 21 6 92 203 158 Minnesota 71 39 25 7 85 201 178 Winnipeg 71 36 23 12 84 198 189 Colorado 70 33 26 11 77 189 195 Dallas 71 33 28 10 76 220 230 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA Anaheim 72 45 20 7 97 211 197 Vancouver 70 40 26 4 84 199 191 Calgary 71 39 27 5 83 209 186 Los Angeles 70 34 22 14 82 188 175 SanJose 71 35 28 8 78 199 199 Edmonton 71 19 39 13 51 167 243 Arizona 71 21 42 8 50 147 236
Tbursday'sGames
Winnipeg 2, St. Louis1, SD SanJose4, Toronto1 Montreal4, Carolina0 Ottawa 6, Boston 4 Florida 3,Detroit I Washington3,Minnesota2 Dallas 2,Pittsburgh1 Calgary4, Philadelphia1 Columbus 6, Vancouver2 Colorado5,Arizona2
Today'sGames
NewJerseyat Buffalo, 4p.m. Detroit atTampaBay, 4:30p.m. ColoradoatAnaheim,7p.m.
Saturday'sGames St. Louisat Minnesota,11 a.m. Columbus at Calgary, I p.m. Vancouver at LosAngeles,1 p.m. SanJoseat Montreal, 4p.m. Torontoat Otawa,4p.m. BostonatFlorida,4 p.m. N.Y.IslandersatNewJersey,4 p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Carolina, 4p.m. WashingtonatWinnipeg,4 p.m. BuffaloatNashvile, 5 p.m. ChicagoatDallas, 5 p.m. PittsburghatArizona 6pm PhiladelphiaatEdmonton,7p.m.
DEALS Transactions BASEBAL L CDMMISSI DNER' S OFFICE— Suspended N.Y. Yankees RHPMoises Cedeno 72 games for violating the Minor LeagueDrug PreventionandTreatment Program. AmencanLeague HOUSTO NASTROS—Announced the retirement of assistanttrainer RexJones,effective at theendof the season. National League CHICAGOCUBS— DptionedRHPC.J.Edwards
to lowa (PCL). LOSANGELESDODGERS— ReassignedRHPBen Rowento minorleaguecamp. MILWAU KEEBREWERS — Exercised their 2016 optio nonmanagerRonRoenicke. NEWYORKMETS—Optioned RHPAkeel Morris
to Las Vegas(PCL). PITTSBU RGHPIRATES—OptionedINFAlenHanson andRHP s Casey Sadler andJameson Tailon to Indianapolis(IL)andDFWilly Garcia to Altoona(EL). Reassigned RHPCogin Balester, LHPJeremy Bleich, INF GifNgoepe t andDFMel RojasJr. to minor league camp. WASHIN GTONNATIONALS—OptionedLHPMatt Graceand0 DanButlerto Syracuse(IL)andINFWilmer Difo toPotomac(Carolina).
BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association NBA —FinedWashington CMarcin Gortat $5,000 fora second violation oftheleague'santi-flopping rules. MINNESOTA TIMBERWDLVES— SignedG Sean Kilpatrickto a10-daycontract. NEWYORKKNICKS— SignedGRickyLedotoa 10-daycontract. FOOTBALL
National Football League ATLANTA FALCONS— SignedTEJacobTamme. BUFFALO BILLS— SignedTE Charles Clay to a five-yearcontract. CHICAGO BEARS—SignedTEDante Rosario toa one-year contract. CINCINN ATIBENGALS — Si gned CB Brandon Ghee.Re-signedDTDevonStil. DALLASCOWBOYS — SignedFBRayAgnew. DETROIL TIONS— Re-signedCBRasheanMathis to a two-year contract. INDIANAPOLI SCOLTS— SignedOTDemarcoCox. JACKSONVI LLEJAGUARS— ClaimedRBBernard PierceoffwaiversfromBaltimore. MINNES OTAVIKINGS—Signed RBDuJuanHarris. NEW YORKGIANTS— Re-signedTEDaniel Fels. NEWYORKJETS— SignedDLJamesBrewertoa one-year contract. SANDIEGO CHARGERS—SignedCBPatrickRobinsontoaone-yearcontract. TAMPABAYBUCCANEERS— SignedCBSterling Moore. TENNE SSEETITANS— Agreedto termswith OT ByronStingily on a multiyearcontract. Name d Tom Kanavyassistant to the strength and conditioning coach,BrookeEllenberger vice presidentof ticketing andAmberHardingsocial mediacoordinator. Promoted BrentAkersto directorof teamoperations andShereme Siewnarineto directorof finance. WASHINGTONREDSKINS — Re-signed QB Colt
Mccoy.
HOCKEY National HockeyLeague COLUMBUSBLUEJACKETS— AssignedGOscar DanskfromSpringfield (AHL)to Kalamazoo(ECHL). DALLASSTARS —Assigned D EsaLindell from Assat(FinnishElite) to Texas(AHL). PHILADEPLHIAFLYERS— AssignedDMaxim LamarchefromLehighValley(AHL)to Reading(ECHL). TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS— RecalledFsDenver Manderson andPatrick WatlingfromOrlando(ECHL). VANCOUVER CANUCKS— Recall edGJoeCannata fromOn tario (ECHL)to Utica(AHL). WINNIPEG JETS— Agreed to termswith D Jan Kostalekonathree-year,two-way,entry-level contract SOCCER Major League Soccer SEATTLE SOUNDERS — Signed D NickMieleand FQudusLawal. COLLEGE HOLYCROSS— NamedBillCarmodymen'sbasketbag coach. PENNSTATE—Signedmen's basketball coachPat Chambers toatwo-year contractextensionthroughthe 2018-19season.
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
MEN'S COLLEGEBASKETBALL: NCAA TOURNAMENT ROUNDUP
GOLF ROUNDUP
a erae, con roversia oa en in ca s Llns
Bulletin wire reports LOUISVILLE, Ky. — After the call that brutally ended
Reinhold Matay/The Associated Press
Morgan Hoffmann acknowledges the crowd after hitting out
of a bunker and into the hole for an eagle onthe sixth green during the first round Thursday in Orlando, Florida.
Hoffman learnsrelative dies, then takesthe lead The Associated Press
a perfect smile.
ORLANDO, Fla. — Mor-
Not to be forgotten was his gan Hoffmann's day began golf. He had a one-shot lead with news that his 97-year- over five players, including old grandmother died Thurs- Ian Poulter and Kevin Na. day morning. It ended with The group at 68 included his first lead on the PGATour. Adam Scott, Henrik Stenson Hoffman began his round and Brandt Snedeker.
"It definitely would've hit the rim," UCLA guard Isaac
Hamilton said, watching a rehis career and gave UCLA an play on a phone. "Definitely." improbable60-59victory over Said Alford: "It could've SMU, Yanick Moreira blamed gone either way." himself. Brown could no t u n der"It's all my fault. I should stand why the call was not have let the ball hit the rim," reviewable. "Why would you have all Moreira said, and he broke down. these TV people and (not) With 13 seconds left in its take five seconds and review NCAA tournament opener, a goaltending?" he said. "It UCLA trailed by two points as might have been goaltending. guard Bryce Alford wheeled It probably was. But we've got and heaved a 3-pointer. all these cameras. It happened Moreira thought the shot so fast."
would miss the basket, so he
jumped and tipped the ball. The officials called goaltending. He protested, his expression pained. When the game was over, decided by the goaltending call, Moreira shielded his anguished face with his jersey. "I'm sick for t hose kids,"
A lford f i nished w it h
27
South Region UAB 60, lowa State 59:LOUISVILLE, Ky. — William Lee
H offman, who w ent t o Oklahoma State, first met Palmer at the 2009 Palmer
SMU coach Larry Brown said. scored the last four points for Even on replay, it wasn't 14th-seeded UAB in its upset
before stopping inches away for birdie. He also holed a bunker shot for eagle on the par-5 sixth, leading to a 6-under 66 and a one-shot
Cup at Cherry Hills. So it
call was correct. The ball
Utah 57, Stephen F. Austin
felt only fitting that his first
lead after any round on tour
camedownneartherim.Even if it would have hit the iron, it
50: P ORTLAND — Ja k o b Poeltl had 18 points and eight
would come at the Arnold Palmer Invitational.
had little chance of going in. For goaltending, the NCAA
rebounds, and fifth-seeded
"It's awesome," he said. "Arnie has inspired me very heavily since 2009 when I played the Palmer Cup at mann, who cooks his own Cherry Hills, and we talked meals to eat o n t h e g o lf for about an hour about flycourse (bison steak was for ing. He's inspired me to get lunch Thursday). my pilot's license and fly my"Mentally, I'm in kind of self to tournaments, which a weird state right now," he I'm now doing. It's pretty said. "My grandma passed cool, and he's been a big inaway this morning, so I'm spiration in my life." just pretty chilled out there Also on Thursday: and loving life right now. Top-ranked Ko tied for Just wish my family the best Founders Cup lead: PHOEat home. My whole family NIX — Top-ranked Lydia Ko texted me and said, 'Nan- shot a 6-under 66 for a share ny is playing golf with pop of the lead in the suspendup there,' which was pretty ed first round of the JTBC cool." Founders Cup. The 17-yearHoffmann hopes to attend old Ko rebounded from a a memorialservice forDoro- three-putt bogey on the sevlead in the Arnold Palmer Invitational. It all was a lot to chew on for the 25-year-old Hoff-
thy Lionetti in Ft. Lauderdale
enth hole with a 12-foot birdie
on Saturday night. It should be a short trip considering Hoffmann pilots his own plane that he recently bought
putt on the eighth to join Tiffany Joh, Sophia Popov and Kim Kaufman atop the leaderboard at Desert Ridge. Madeira Islands Open reduced to 54 holes: SANTO
from his friend David Booth,
who plays for the Toronto Maple Leafs. He was inspired to be a pilot after meeting with the tournament host during the
Palmer Cup in 2009. "I have a lot of stuff you guys didn't ask," he said with
A NTONIO
DA
SER R A ,
Portugal — Organizers have reduced the Madeira Islands Open to 54 holes and suspended play Thursday because ofhighwinds sweeping thePortuguese archipelago.
SPORTS IN BRIEF FOOTBALL Seahawks agree to deal with DT Rudin — Freeagent defensive tackle Ahtyba Rubin hasagreed to the terms of a dealwith the Seattle Seahawks, bolstering their defensive front. Rubin hasbeena full-time starter for most of his seven-year career, all of it spent with the Cleveland Browns. Hestarted all 59 games heplayed between 201013 and 11of13 games last season. Hehada careerhigh 83 tackles and five sacks in 2011but has not approached those numbers since the Browns switched to a3-4 defense.Seattle also signed defensive tackle O'Anthony Smith, who waswith the Seahawks in training camp last year before being placed oninjured reserve.
said in a statement, the ball
must be on a downward flight, be above the rim, and must
that the 2022 World Cup inQatar would beplayed in the winter months, announcing onThursday that its governing executive committee had set the date of that year's final for Dec. 18.Themove away from the summer months hadbeenexpected for years. Any move away from summerwould upset FIFA's richest stakeholders, most notably the Europeanleagues that would seetheir league and cup competitions interrupted and theUnited States media companies like Fox, which will have to broadcast the tournament during the American football season.
France to host2019 Women's WorldCup—FIFAhas picked France to host the Women'sWorld Cup in2019.TheFIFAexecutive commIttee awardedFrancethe hosting rights over South Korea. FIFAalso chose France to host theWomen's Under-20 World Cup in 2018, which will be played in four venues in the Brittany region.
back from a mini-slump with 21 points and 11 rebounds,
Utah won in its first NCAA tournament appearance in six
years. Georgetown 84, Eastern
and Andrew Harrison added 14 points for No. 1 Kentucky. Arizona 93, Texas Southern Hampton trailed by as many 72: PORTLAND — Rondae as 35 with 12:43 left. Hollis-Jefferson had 23 points, Notre Dame 69, Northeast- 16 in the first half, along with ern 65:PITTSBURGH — Zach
World Cup super-Gtitle for the fifth time after winning the last race in the discipline on Thursday at theseason-ending finals. Theday after clinching the downhill title, the 30-year-old American extendedher record to19 crystal globes. Vonnheld aslender eight-point lead over rival Anna Fenninger heading into the raceand was under pressure after the world super-Gchampion posted the fastest time. Vonn was only.01 second aheadat the first time split but then pushed it to.41 ahead at the second.
Canada'S COOk WinSfinal Super-G raCe — Dustln Cook won his first super-G raceThursday at the season-ending World Cup finals, and Kjetil Jansrud gained someground on Marcel Hirscher in the fight for the overall title by finishing second at Meribel, France. Cook, a 26-year-old Canadian, finished.05 seconds ahead ofOlympic super-G champion Jansrud. Roger Brice of Francewas.08 behind In third. Jansrud hasalready won the season-long super-Gtitle, and the 29-year-old Norwegian also took the downhill title Wednesday. — From wire reports
10 rebounds for second-seed-
Auguste scored 25 points, and ed Arizona. Jerian Grant added 17 for No. 3 seed Notre Dame. Butler 56, Texas 48: PITTSBURGH — Kellen Dunham
O hio State 75, VCU 7 2: D'Angelo PORTLAND Russell scored 28 points and
scored 20 points, including
from an early 12-point deficit for the overtime win.
rallied 10th-seeded Ohio State Arkansas 56, Wofford 53: JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — Mi-
chael Qualls scored 20 points, and Southeastern ConferC aupain got C i ncinnati t o ence player of the year Bobby o vertime w i t h h is bu z z - Portis added 15 points and er-beating layup, then Core- 13 reboundsfor fifth-seeded ontae DeBerry scored four of his 13 points in the extra
Arkansas.
session for the eighth-seeded East Region Bearcats. Villanova 93, Lafayette 52: PITTSBURGH Dylan West Region Ennis scored 16 points and North Carolina 67, Harvard helped top-seeded Villanova 65: J A CKSONVILLE, F l a . win its 16th straight game. — Justin Jackson hit a tying N .C. State 66, L S U 6 5 : jumper in the final minute and PITTSBURGH Bee Jay then had a fast-break dunk to Anya's hook s hot r o lled seal fourth-seeded North Car- around and in with a second olina's win. to play, lifting North CaroliGeorgia State 57, Baylor 56: na State to a stunning victoJACKSONVILLE, Fla. — R.J. ry. The eighth-seeded WolfH unter's 3-pointer with 2 .7 pack trailed by as many as 16 seconds remaining capped points but rallied to earn the a comeback from a 12-point victory.
the guys to enjoy that. Elgin and Joeand Jalilexperienced
Beavers
coming in intimidated and we
South Dakota State (25-7) today. While last year's late run
allowed the Beavers to be a surprise, there is no doubt t hey had this return trip -
and home games — inmind from the start of the season. "I think we're still having fun with it but we're working
so much harder and our focus is a lot clearer," point guard Sydney Wiese said Thursday. "We know what we want to get out of this tournament this
time. Not taking away anything from last year, I know
MadrasgradinNCAAtourney The NCAAwomen's basketball tournament has a Central Oregon connection. Abby Scott, a Madras High graduate, is astarting guard for the New Mexico State teamthat will face Maryland on Saturday in the first round of the SpokaneRegional. Maryland (30-2) is the No. 1 seed in the region and is hosting the first two rounds; NewMexico State (22-7) is the No. 16seed. Scott, a junior, is in her third season with the Aggies, who are making their third appearance in theNCAAtournament and their first appearance since1988. NewMexico State is seeking the first NCAA tournament victory in program history. After winning the Western Athletic Conference regular-season title — their first outright title in 20 years — theAggies won the conference tournament for the first time, beating Texas-Pan American 70-52 in the tourney final. In that game,Scott had five points, three assists and three rebounds in 29 minutes. For the season, Scott is fifth on the team inscoring with 7.8 points per game andalso ranksamong teamleaders in 3-point field goals made (1.6 per game)and assists (1.4 per game). — Bulletin staff report
to get deep into the tourna-
Vonn wins 5th super-G World Cup —LindseyVonnwonthe
J ACKSONVILLE, F l a . Matt Stainbrook scored 20 points and Dee Davis added 17 for sixth-seeded Xavier.
man said."As Ilookback, E.J. omore Theo Friedman played gave us help to get the first sparingly in the 87-68 victory Continued from C1 one, we had a good group of over BYU in the second round. No player on the current Or- seniors last year that wouldn't The rest of the Ducks will egon roster was with the team quit, and (Young and Cook) make their tournament debuts during its 2013 Sweet 16 run. were part of that this year. today. "We've always had guys to "We did it with a lot of new "I think that with me and guys, but those two carried give the ball to and they carry Joe asthe returning players us," Altman said of Young it, and this year it's those two who played in the NCAA, we and Cook. "... It's all about the guys." have to bring energy and put players, and these guys carOregon appeared to be on an emphasis on how importried us this year." the outside of the tournament ant it is," Cook said. "Make Cook, a junior forward who field for much of the season sure ourteammates are ready averages 13.2 points and 5.2 before winning 11 of its last 13 to compete for 40 minutes." rebounds, said that was not games to earn a No. 8 seed. Altman went to the NCAA entirely true. Young, one of three seniors tournament for three consec"Coach keeps saying it was on the roster, said Altman utive years as an assistant on us to carry the ball, but we used fear of failure to motivate at Kansas State from 1987 to wouldn't have been able to the team. 1989 and then as the Wild"He scared us," said Young, cats' head coach in 1993. His without him and his staff, so credit that," Cook said. "They who was named Pac-12 play- Creighton teams made seven did a good job bringing us to- er ofthe year afteraveraging tournament appearances in 16 gether and making us work 20.2pointspergame. "Hesaid, years, including five in a row 'Do you want to be one of the from 1999 to 2003. hard." Assistant coaches Kevin teams playing at the end? Do Now, he has taken Oregon McKenna and Tony Stubble- you want to put your jerseys up to three tournaments in his field have been with Altman or keepthem out?'We wanted first fiveyears. "I've been really fortunate," since hearri ved at Oregon, to be one of those teams that and Mike Mennenga joined keeps our jerseys out. That ran he said. "In 29 years of Divithe staff this season. through our heads. We can't sion I basketball, this is the "We, as coaches, try to help put the jerseys up, can't do it." 14th time we've been chosen them, but you have got to have Young scored 48 points to play. It never gets old. I'm as guys who want to work with and Cook added 28 in two excited now as I was the first you and who are unselfish, NCAA tournament games last time in 1987. It's just an unbegiving up part of their game season, and senior Jalil Ab- lievable feeling to be included. "... It's special, and I want for the best of the team," Alt- dul-Bassit and walk-on soph-
that last year we still wanted
SKIING
Karl-Anthony Towns bounced
Ducks
They take on No. 14 seed
It'S OffiCial: Winter WOrld Cup in 2022 —FIFAconfirmed
win.
have "the possibility, while in Washington 74: PORTLAND D'Vauntes Smith-Rivera flight, of entering the basket." The statement said the "goal- scored 25 points, and Mitending criteria was (sic) met." kael Hopkins had 10 points Afterward, members of a nd n in e r e bounds f o r both teams debated the call. Georgetown.
Continued from C1
SOCCER
deficit for 14th-seeded GeorH amptongia State. 56: LOUISVILLE, K y. Xavier 76, Mississippi 57: Kentucky 79,
points, hitting 9-of-11 3-point- a pivotal 3-pointer with 1:18 ers. The goaltending call gave to play, to lift sixth-seeded him UCLA's single-season Butler. 3-point record with 88. Cincinnati 66, Purdue 65: Also on Thursday: LOUISVILLE, Ky. — Troy
with a 35-foot birdie putt on No. 10 and finished it with a 9-iron that touched the hole
clear whether the o fficials'
Midwest Region
ment and make abig run, but I think it's more familiar to us.
We're taking the right steps in
ing," said center Ruth Ham-
the right direction and we're
blin, the Pac-12's defensive player of the year. "It makes
preparing a lot harder and pushing each other."
it feel like an away game even though we're very comfortseason is that the Beavers are able and we're at home." playing at home. So while the Being at home allows the What is also different this
other three teams here this
Beavers a chance to play in
week have had to deal with travel, Oregon State players have been practicing on a familiar court and sleeping in their own beds.
front of a fan base that averaged 4,167 per game this season. "I love that we get to share
it has this very official feel,
it with our fans," he said. "It's an incredible experience to be in the tournament, to have it here in front of them, we love
there's all these rules we can't do so that's kind of interest-
that, we play for these people." But don't expect that to hold
"It's definitely a l i t tle bit different but at the same time
too much weight. Rueck said the crowd will not intimidate
it once, but for everyone else it is the first time, so I wanted
them to understand how unusual and special this was. I want them to soak it in and en-
joy it, especially the freshmen. I told them, 'Fellas, let's get real
selfish and have this feeling all the time.' Soak it in to be motivation to do it every year."
The Ducks are a slight favorite to defeat Oklahoma State (18-13) today. If they win, they would figure to face No. 1 seed Wisconsin on Sunday and would be an underdog.
"I'm not satisfied, but I'm pleased, and I have made that comment b efore," A l t m an
said. "Individually, I d on't want Joe to be satisfied with
being the player of the year, I want him to want more. I don't want Elgin to be satisfied
with what he accomplished and how far he has come this year. I want them to be happy with what we accomplished and feel that we got something done, but in no way should we
be satisfied. "We can get better over the next two weeks or however
long we play."
know that." South Dakota State enters the tournament on a roll. The Jackrabbits have won eight
straight, while Oregon State is coming off an upset loss in the Pac-12 tournament.
"I think that we responded well to that," Wiese said of the
quarterfinal loss to Colorado. "Once we got back to practice, we didn't necessarily forget about it, but I think it fueled
us and we competed so hard last week and it was intense
practices. And going into this week, too, preparing for South Dakota State, I think
our mindset is just renewed and rejuvenated going into the last part of the season."
The Beavers expect the best shot from the Jackrabbits, who have been to the tournament six of t h e past
seven seasons. "We see they are a very "If they're intimidated it's hard-working, gritty team," because of something we did Hamblin said. "They're just on the floor," he said. "We un- very tough and physical, so I think that's going to be a huge derstand we have to go out and play our best and tune out part of the game, respondkng to that and raising the level." everything else." Added Rueck: "We just Added Hamblin: "Obviously playing at home is cool, have to play possession by to be able to put on a bit of a possession. We look at this team and we k now they show for our fan base, but it doesn't really give us any ad- expect to w in , t h at's what vantage on the court because they've done.... We respect everyone's coming in pre- our opponent and we know pared, they've been working we have to play our best to hard all season so they're not win." anybody.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
NHL ROUNDUP
PREP ROUNDUP
Jets take another step toward
Panthers open season with big bats, victory over Willamette
l, ( I I-j y
as,'$
Bulletin staff report
EUGENE Hunter Smith's grand slam was the
the playoffs WINNIPEG, Manitoba The Winnipeg Jets' latest vic-
Smith was 3-for-5 with five
Andrew Ladd scored the
decisive shootout goal, and the Jets beat the St. Louis Blues 2-1 on Thursday night. "That's playoff-style hockey," Ladd said. The Winnipeg captain and two-time Stanley Cup winner helped the Jets take another
Keeton Breitbach, the sec-
NBA SCOREBOARD
Hardenhas
Standings
50 points in Rockets win
EasternConference W L Pst GB
ton Rockets' past couldn't
outshine James Harden on Thursday night. H arden scored a
ca-
reer-high 50 points with 10 rebounds to lead the Rockets to a 118-108 win over the
Denver Nuggets on a night when the team celebrated the 20th anniversary of the
franchise's back-to-back NBA titles in 1994 and 1995. It was the 29th game
with at least 30 points and seventh with 40 this season for Harden, who is second
in NBA scoring. "It's really hard to get 50 points in a game and is not something many people can do," coach Kevin McHale said. "It was just one of those nights where he had good energy and he was driving hard." Also on Thursday: Suns 74, Pelicans 72: PHOENIX
-
Brandan
Wright scored 16 points and matched his career high with seven blocked shots to
lead Phoenix over New Orleans, which played without star Anthony Davis.
Timberwolves 95, Knicks
Rockets118, Nllggets108
All TimesPDT
x-Atlaita d-Clevelarid
d-Toronto Chicago Washington Milwaukee Miami Boston Indiana Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
53 15 44 26 41 27 41 28 40 28 34 34 31 36 30 37 30 37 29 37 27 39 24 44 21 49 16 52 14 53
779 629 10 603 12 594 12'/z 588 13 500 19 463 21'A 448 22'/r 448 22'/z 439 23 409 25 353 29 300 33 235 37 209 38'/z
W L 54 13 47 21 45 22 44 22 44 25 44 25 42 25 38 30 37 30 35 33 30 37 26 42 22 45 17 49 14 53
Pct GB
WesternConference
x-GoldenState d-Memphis Houston d-Portland L.A. Clippers Dallas SanAntonio Oklahoma City NewOrleans Phoenix Utah Denver Sacramen to L.A. Lakers Minnesota d-dIvisionleader x-clinched playoffspot
806 691 P/z 672 9 667 9'/z
638 u
638 11 627 12 559 1P/r 552 17 515 19'A 448 24 382 28'/z 328 32 258 36'/z 209 40
Thursday'sGames MinnesotaatNewYork,7:30 p.m. DenveratHouston, 8p.m. NewOrleansat Phoenix,10 p.m. Utah atLA.Lakers,10:30 p.m. Today'sGames NewYorkat Philadelphia, 4 p.m. Portlandat Orlando,4 p.m. DenveratMiami, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee atBrooklyn, 4:30p.m. Indiana atCleveland,4:30 p.m. Torontoat Chicago, 5p.m. Atlantaat OklahomaCity, 5p.m. Memphisat Dallas,5:30p.m. BostonatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. Charlotteat Sacramento, 7p.m. NewOrleansatGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Washingtonat L.A,Clippers,7:30p.m. Saturday'sGames Brooklynat Indiana,4 p.m. ChicagoatDetroit, 4:30p.m. Phoeni xatHouston,5p.m. Portlandat Memphis, 5p.m. Utah atGoldenState, 7:30p.m.
Summaries
92: NEW YORK — Zach
LaVine made the tying and go-ahead free throws with
10.7 seconds left and scored six of his 20 points in overtime for Minnesota.
Jazz 60, Lakers 73: LOS ANGELES
-
Gordon
Hayward scored 22 points, Trey Burke added 17 off the bench, and Utah handed
Los Angeles its 50th loss of the season.
Nextup Portland at Orlando When:4 p.m. todayTV:CSNNW Radio: KRCO 690-AM,96.9-FM
the victory.
5: SISTERS — Ivy Vann went 3-for-4 with a two-run home
Summit JV 11, La Pine 1: John WoodsI The Canadian Press
NBAROUNDUP
HOUSTON — Even the
tired the batter to secure a
Softball
Baseball
II -.
Winnipeg goaltender Ondrej Pavelec saves a shot as St. Louis' way we prepared and the en- Paul Stastny falls on him and the Jets' Mark Stuart defends during ergy we came outwith, and third period Thursday in Winnipeg, Manitoba. The Jets won 2-1 in how physical we were on the a shootout. puck, I think we're going to need to play that type of hockey down the stretch to get in," it slide." San Jose. Ladd said. T he Jets a r e t r y i n g t o Capitals 3, Wild 2 : S T. Drew Stafford netted the hold off Calgary in the wild- PAUL, Minn. — Alex Ovechonly goal in regulation for the card race in the Western kin scored two goals to lead Jets. David Backes scored the Conference. Washington, which won its lone goal for the Blues. Also on Thursday: third straight. Ovechkin's 13th "This is what you play for," Senators 6, Bruins 4: OTTA- multigoal game this season said Stafford, acquired from WA, Ontario — Ottawa's Bob- improved his NHL-leading Buffalo before last month's by Ryan scored a third-period goal total to 47. NHL trade deadline. "That's goal to a tie and move the SenStars 2, Penguins 1: DALwhy you play the game, to get ators within two points of Bos- LAS — Brett Ritchie and Jaa crack at the playoffs, to get a ton in the race for the second mie Benn scored 1:23 apart in crack and going to the dance." wild-card spot in the Eastern the second period for Dallas. Ondrej Pavelec made 32 Conference. Flames 4, Flyers 1: CALsaves for his 16th win of the Canadiens 4, Hurricanes GARY, Alberta — J o hnny season. 0: M O N TREAL Car- Gaudreau scoredhis 20th goal Brian Elliott stopped 33 ey Price made 31 saves for and added two assists to lead shots in the loss. his league-leading and ca- Calgary. "I said it before the game, reer-best 39th win of the seaBlue Jackets 6, Canucks 2: it's playoff-style games, close son for Montreal. V ANCOUVER, British C o Panthers 3, Red Wings 1: lumbia — Columbus rookie games, one-goal games," said Backes, whose goal marked SUNRISE, Fla. — Jaromir Marko Dano recorded his first the fourth time he has reached Jagr scored his 718th NHL two-goal game in the NHL. the 25-goal milestone in his Avalanche 5, Coyotes 2: goal, moving into fifth place nine-year NHL career. "It was on the career list, and added GLENDALE, Ariz. — Ryan O'Reilly and Jarome Iginla one heck of a game. an assist for Florida. "I don't think either team is Sharks 4, Maple Leafs 1: scored 29 seconds apart in the terribly disappointed, but we TORONTO — Logan Couture first period in Colorado's third needed two points, and we let had a goal and an assist to lead straight win.
biggest stars of the Hous-
q u i ck
ond of four Redmond pitchers, worked four innings for Also on Thursday:
Manitoba in 2011. "From our standpoint, the
The Associated Press
s econd base, but a
ference road loss. Grant Union 14-20, La Pine 2-2: CULVER — The Bull-
dogs were outhit 34-4 over the course of the doublehead-
er. Cheryl Aldred took a loss in the second game but went 3-for-3 at the plate in the first.
RBIs. Will Branson also was nonconference win. Little 3-for-5 with two doubles and was 4-for-4 with two doubles Girls lacrosse two RBIs, as Panthers batters and two RBIs for Culver (1Sisters 10, Crescent Valley pounded seven extra-base 2), and Jack Beeler scored 7: CORVALLIS — The Outhits. three times. laws grabbed an 8-4 halftime
tory had a springtime feel to it.
appearance since moving to
t h i rd, G r ant dropped to 2-1 with a noncon-
Union attempted to steal
biggest of 16 Redmond hits throw from Culver catcher as the Panthers rolled to a Mack Little to pitcher Clay season-opening 19-7 baseball McClure led to a pickoff of road victory over Willamette the Grant Union runner on on Thursday. third. The Bulldogs then re-
The Associated Press
step toward their first playoff
on first an d
Timberwolves 95,Knicks 92(OT)
DENYER I108) Chandler10-171-123,Galinari3-94-510, Faried 8-u 3-6 19,Lawson5-12 0-012, Foye9-190-023, Barton1-61-23,Nelson4-91-313, Arthur0-40-00,
Hicksori1-1 0-02, Niirkic1-51-23, Harris0-00-00,
Green 0-00-00. Totals 42-9311-19108. HOUSTON (118) Ariza 6-132-217, Jones4-5 2-210, Motieiunas 3-101-2 7,Beverley3-72-210, Harden12-272225 50,Brewer3-90-0 6, Smith 4-7 2-212, Prigioni 1-2 0-0 3,Dorsey1-31-5 3. Totals 37-83 32-40 118. Denver 27 22 24 35 — 108 Houston 33 32 25 28 — 118
Sllns 74, Pelicans 72 NEWORLEANS(72) Pondex ter2-52-46,Cunningham3-70-06,Asik 3-6 0-0 6, Evans 4-161-2 9, Gordon6-16 0-2 14, Cole 5-130-012, Ajinca5-130-010, Babbitt2-50-0 5, Williams1-20-02, Withey 0-02-t 2. Totals 3183 5-10 72. PHOENIX (74) Marc.Morris 1-0 0-2 2, Mark.Morris 5-157-9 17, Wright8-10 0-016, Bledsoe2-151-2 5, Tucker 5-131-212,Warren3-60-06, Goodwin 4-82-210, Green1-4 3-4 6, Barron0-1 0-0 0. Totals 29-83 14-2174.
New0rleans Phoenix
15 1 9 19 19 — 72 21 22 12 19 — 74
Leaders Through Wednesday'sGames
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG Westbrook,OKC Harden,HOU James,CLE Davis,NOR Cousins,SAC Aldridge,POR Curry,GO L Griffin, LAC Irving,CLE Thompson, GO Wade,MIA Lillard,POR Gay,SAC Butler,CHI Hayward,UT A Vucevic,OR L Ellis, DAL
Paul, LAC GasolCHI , Lowry,TOR
53 4 8 8 430 1465 27.6 66 521 558 1765 26.7 59 541 337 1523 25.8 55 526 300 1353 24.6 52 426 377 1231 23.7 59 548 260 1385 23.5 65 522 259 1521 23.4 54 467 256 098 22.2 65 507 279 1430 22.0 64 506 193 1404 21.9 49 40 227 1070 21.8 66 477 285 1400 21.2 61 452 290 1263 20.7 55 361 329 11'iO 20.2 66 435 319 1297 19.7 62 524 148 1198 19.3 69 524 199 1325 19.2 69 475 221 1283 18.6 65 473 241 1197 18.4 65 407 238 075 18.1
FG Percentage
Jordan,LAC Plumlee, Bro A.Johnson,TOR Valanciunas,TOR Gortat,WA S Mozgov,CLE Zeller,BOS Davis,NOR Favors,UTA Horford,ATL
FG FGA PCT 311 439 .708 251 432 .581 263 457 .575 305 532 .573 358 639 .560 264 478 .552 269 491 .548 526 971 .542 419 776 .540 432 817 .529
MINNESOT A (95) Wiggins4-1712-1420, Payne1-3 0-02, Dieng 9-101-419, Lavine7-135-520,Martin 8-265-522, Biidiriger4-112-210, Brown1-20-02, Kilpatrick0-1 Reborinds 0-00. Totals 34-8325-3095. G OFF DEFTOT AVG NEWYORK(92) Jordan,LAC 69 326 688 10'i4 14.7 Thomas3-100-06,Amundson3-90-06, Bargnani Drummond,DET 68 359 543 902 13.3 7-160-014,Shved 7216-620, Galloway9 200 021, Cousins,SAC 52 156 483 639 12.3 Smith2-41-25, Larkin4-61-210, Wear1-2 0-02, AlGasol, CHI 65 187 594 781 12.0 drich4-70-08,Acy0-20-00.Totals40-978-1092. C handl e r, DA L 63 250 469 719 11.4 Minnesota 29 2 5 15 16 10 — 95 Randolph,MEM 57 195 444 639 u .2 New York 26 2 0 23 16 7 — 92 VucevicORL 62 204 490 694 11.2 Aldridge,PQR 59 157 465 622 10.5 Monroe,DET 64 216 451 667 10.4 Jazz 80, Lakers 73 Davis,NOR 55 144 427 571 10.4
UTAH(80) Hayward5-1011-1322, Favors5-154-614, Gobert M 1-2 3,Exum05000,Hood06222,Ingles37 0-09, Booker 3-53-410, Burke7-0 0-217, Milsap 1-20-23, CooleyO-00-00.Totals25-6221-3180. LA. ULKERS (73) Johnson5-121-212, Hill 1-7 2-4 4, Black6-12 1-413, Clarkson3-8 2-28, Ellingtoii 3-8 0-0 6, Lin 1-80-02, Boozer 5-91-1 11,Davis 4-50-28, Brown 2-41-27, Kelly1-40-02. Totals 31-778-1773. UtaIi 18 15 25 22 — 80 LA. Lakers 16 20 19 18 — 73
Assists
Paul, LAC Wall, WAS Lawson,DEN Westbrook,OKC Rondo,DAL Curry,GO L James,CLE Teague,ATL Harden,HOU Carter-Wiliams, MIL
G AST AVG 69 690 10.0 68 678 10.0 6 3 61 3 9.7 5 3 44 7 8.4 5 6 457 8.2 6 5 514 7.9 5 9 435 7.4 62 439 71. 6 6 465 7.0 52 365 70.
Visiting La Pine (2-1) fell be-
lead and never looked back en route to their first win of
Mountain View 25, Sisters the season. Freshman Jessica Edwards led Sisters (1-1) with three goals and an assist, run, and the Cougars used while Jenny O'Connor, Langan 11-run first inning to run ley Vogt and Marissa Young away from the Outlaws in a each scored two goals. Goalnonconference contest. Han- keeper Bree Papworth was
hind 6-1 after two innings,
nah Wicklund smacked a
and Angelo Roes, one of four f reshman starters for L a
two-run double and was the winning pitcher for Mountain Boys lacrosse View (1-0). Anja Gnos drove Ridgeview 5, West Albany in two runs on a double for 1: ALBANY — Troy Purcell Sisters (0-3), and Leah McIn- scored three goals to lift the tosh had an RBI double in the Ravens to a season-opening first. nonconference win. Sherif Cascade 7, Crook County1: Elkelish and Joey Brant each TURNER — Crook County had a goal for Ridgeview.
Pine, scored the Hawks' only
run. Culver 7, Grant Union 6: CULVER — The Prospectors scored a run with one out in the sixth inning to cut their deficit to 7-6. With runners
Storm Continued from C1 For the boys, Alexander Yount won the 100 and the
200 to highlight Summit, which topped the team standings with 203 points. Ian Lybarger (400), Matthew Maton (800) and Alex Martin (1,500)
credited with eight saves.
110- and 300-meter hurdles, and Genesis Lucei (3,000), For La Pine, which was Zephaniah Phillips (discus) second with 144 points, Jus- and Brent Sullivan (high tin Pets won the javelin and jump) were each winners for the pole vault, while Brenden Madras. Wolf took first in the triple Corey Sledge recorded jump. Culver's top finish, a secCrook County's Michael ond-place showing in the Seyl was first in both the pole vault. each posted victories for the Storm.
PREP SCOREBOARD Jones,S,1:59.63.3, TyressTurnsplenty,LP,2:10.28. 200 — 1,Alexander Yount, S,23.89.2, SamSantiago, CC, 24.01.3,lari Lybarger,S,24.02.300h —1, Michael r' eyl,CC,4t81.2,NoahCarmack,CC,47.35.3, TreyPlamtndon, LP,47.82.1,600 relay —1,Crook County (Erickson,Cam acho, Pickha rdt, Bottoms ), 3:37. 46.2,Summit,3:38.72.3,Summi t,3:39.39. First Game HJ — 1,Brerit Sullivan,u, 6-2.2, BrendenWolf, (6 innings) Boys tennis LP,6-0. 3,lanJohnson,LP,5-10. Discus—1,ZephaGrant Union 330 404 — 14 19 1 Soricoritererice niah Philips,M,129-1.2,Tanner Hanson, LP , 05-10. Culver 002000 — 2 4 5 The Dalles 5, Madras3 3, ZachSmith, CC,05-5. PV— 1,Justin Petz, LP , 15-0. 2,CoreySledge, Cul, 14-0.T3,CamdenJones, At Madras SecondGame P ,12-0. T3, Nei l Ch a ne y , CC , 1 2-0. Shal — 1, Za c h Singles — ChristianMunoz,TD,def. Joseph (5 innings) ali ca,u,6-0,6-3;SimonSangha,M,def.Ethan Smith,CC,43-1.2,KyleHeimiler, S,42-u. 3, Yousef Grant Union 033 4(10) — 20 15 6 C S eml or,TD,6-2,6-2; Wil Coy,TD,def. JacobRudd, Daly,S,39-9.5.Javelin —1,Jiistin Petz, LP,153-9. 2, Ciilver 00020 —20 7 M, 6-2, 6-0; JosephSinghurst, TD, det Voshaun lan Johnson, LP,143-8. 3, Branseri Reynolds,S,134-4. Bryant, u, 6-0,6-0.Doubles —ObieEriza/Omar TJ — 1,BrendenWolf, LP,41-8.25. 2,NsalonHager, S ,40-8.t5.3, TommyRoss,CC,38-1.5. LJ—1,Ryan Domi n guez, u, def. Da n i e l santIl l a n/cody Mc cl i n Baseball nt,S,21-5.2,IsaacDerman,S,20-5.3,Cam tock, TD,6-3, 6-3;JesusBarajas/Luis Polomera, Tenna Noiiconference TD,def.JeremyBurgos/JesusEgoavil,u,t-5,6-2; McCormick,S,20-4. (8 innings) CalebTurner/OmarRodriguez, TD,def. OIIvier Fisk/ GIRLS Hillsboro 100 003 42 — 10 13 2 DeonCulpus,M,6-4,6-2;ColtonGoss/RyanLeRTeamscores— Summit259,CrookCounty108, Ridgeview 110 200 41 — 9 16 3 i che, u,detPedroLopez/AlexLopez,TD,6-0,6-0. GrantUnion71, LaPine 65, Madras47, Paisley 22, Culver19,NorlhLake16. Redmond 3 4 0 021 9— 19 16 1 Top threeplacers Sisters 4, CrookCounty4 willamese 0 120004 — 7 5 2 At CrookCounty 400-meterrelay —1,Summit(Cochran,Smith, Singles — JackStubblefield, CC,def. Colin NormaridSt , evenson), 49.74.2, CrookCounty, 5t34. La Pine 010 000 0 — 1 3 3 S,7-5, 6-3; GarrettHarper,CC,det Con- 3, Madras,56001500 —1,Olivia Brooks,S,4:5t81. Summit JV 330 050 x — 11 10 0 Reinert, 2, Hannah T obiason, S,5:05.10.3,Taylor Vandenborn, nor Schaab,S, 6-3, 6-4; CadenQuinn, CC,def. S,5;05.84.3,000 — 1, Meri Smiley,S,13;26.2, Maria G us Geo rgyf a l v y, S, 6-4, 6-4; Al e x N ym a n, CC r de f. Grantunion 1022001 — 6 6 2 kner,GU,1658.07.100— 1,EmmaNormand,S, Kennedy Hall, S, 6-1,6-2. Doubles — Sisters Faul Ciilver 022 120 x — 7 9 2 wins Nos. 1and2 doubles byforfeit. JoshKizziar/ 12.78. 2,Emm aStevenson,S,12.95. 3, LakenBerlin, Andrew Sterigel, S,def.Riley Logan/LanePiper, CC, CC, 13.37.400 —1,JozieRude,GU,67.90.2, Kalan 6-1, 6-0; Pi e rce W Wolfe, u,7017. 3, CaitlynMuhleman,LP7076.100h Ihrle/Noah E ck st e i i , S, det Sam e Girls tennis Hernandez /JaredOjeda,CC,6-1, 6-3. — 1, CamileWeaver, S, 16.44. 2, Kori Pen tzer, GU, Sonconference 17.21. 3,McKennaBoen, LP,17A8. 800— 1,Kaely The Dalles 5,Madras3 Gordon , S, 2: 2 2 . 8 6 . 2 , E mma S t e v e n s o n , S , 2:24.51. At The Dalles Track and field 3,Emma Knepp,Cul,2:44.42.200— 1,EmmaNorSingles — Robin Poshek,TD, def. Jessica mand, S, 27.47.2, HaleySmith, S,27.50. 3, Danielle Breaking theIce-Ice Breaker Gonzalez,u, 7-5, 6-3; Kiariapieli, TD,def. Jasmin MichaelCC, , 28.51.300h —1,Clair Christenseri,S, At CrookCountyHighSchool Mercado, u, 6-0,6-2; Rositasantellane,M, def. 50.4t 2, Cam ile Weaver,S,53.32. 3,laura Stahancyk, BOYS RebekahKohlffarber, TD,6-4, 6-1; LeslieLina-LoTeamscores—Summit 203,LaPirie144,Crook CC, 56.05,1,600 relay — 1,Summit (Ellington, pez,TD,Jennifer Ike-Lopez,u, 6-1, 6-t Doubles County, 126.5,Madras82.5, Culver33, GrantUnion Wicker,Dare, Cochrar), 4:16.30.2, Summit, 4:22.72. — AnnaMiler/JohannaWilson, TD, def. Sophie 3,Summit,4:33.26. 14.5,Paisley12.5, North Lake3. Gemelas/JenniYoung, M, 6-2, 6-3; AbbyMinnick/ HJ — 1,KaraMseiiwsen, S,5-2. 2, HannahCoTop threeplacers EmmaSmith-EI, TD,det MelissaOlivera/Stephanie chran ,S,4-0.3,MariahStacona,u,5-0.Discus 400-meter relay — 1, La Pi n e (G e or ge, K e ntOlivera, M, 6-2, 7-5; JazmineIke-Lopez/Jessica Alavez, M, def. Ellie Triijillo/CassieVazqiiez, TD, ner,Jo.Petz, Ju.Petz), 47.49.2,Summit, 48.66,3, La —1, JordyiinSlater,LP,110-u. 2, AshtonMorgan, C,101-0.3,BriannaMarderos,S,100-8. PV— 1, 6-4, 6-1;DaniSchmallz/KarenCorrea,u, def.Diana Pine,52.0.1500—I, AlexMartin, S,4:11.90.2,Eric C , 10-3. 2, Trinley Sherpa, S,8-6. Fykerud,S,4:13.05.3, MathewSjogren,S, 4:20.88. DanielleMichael, CC Fernaridez/Julissa Marquez, TD,6-3, 6-2. 3, MarissaShults, CC,H. Shal —1,JordynnSlat3,000 — 1,Genesis Lucei, u,11:30.16.2, Benjamin Ellis, M,11:3t42. 3,IsraelTapIa,M,11:32.100—1, er, LP,36-6.5. 2, BriaIinaMarderos,S, 31-3. 3, Cera CrookCounty4, Sisters 4 Clay, u30-6.5.Javelin —1,Ele Renault, M,116-8. AlexanderYount, S,1t33. 2, IsaacDerman, S,0.58. At CrookCounty JordynnSlater, LP,04-5. 3, ChelsieKodesh, GU, Singles —ElsaHarris, CC,det LaceyGilmore 3, NealonHageI S, 11.70. 400 — 1, lanLybarger, 2, TJ—1,Alijah Randolph, Mountain View,316-0, 6-0; GretaHarris, CC,def. MayaWieland, S, S, 54.84.2, ShaneViescus,CC,55.26. 3, marcodos 107-3. Santos,S,55.97.110h—1, MichaelSsyl, CC,17.16. 9. 2,SarahCurran,Bend,31-5.75. 3, Olivia Schneider, 6-1,6-0;MaggieKasberger, CC,def.JessicaHaugeri, Bend,29-6.5.LI — 1,Emm aStevenson, S,17-1. 2, S,6-0,6-0;SarahConnolly,CC,def.AshleyAdams, 2, ChandleGe r orge, LP,18.08. 3, CoreySledge, Ciil, GU,16-10. 3,MariahStacoria,M,16-8. 6-2, 6-2. Doubles— Brenna Weems/JessicaFarr, 1t.56. 800 —1, MathewMatoii, S,1:53.63.2,Tyler Kori Penlzsr,
Softball
Nonconference (5 innings) Mountain View (11)40 28 — 25 19 3 Sisters 1 30 1 0 — 5 4 8
McMurray
S, def.LauraFraser/GwynethPiomey, CC, 6-3, 6-3; AnnikaStadeli/RyleeWeber, S,def. Doubles—KadenceKee/GraceHarper, CC,6-4, 6-4; Mykaila HartmaNChaw riie Craig,S, def. CeliaEffiong/Katherine Monter o6-0,6-2;KennaCardin/AlanaLukens,S,def. ScoutWagner/PeemJantra,6-2,6-0.
happy when we do well. people skills. He's not hard "I just look at Penske, how to work for, he wants things Continued from C1 Brad wanted Joey and felt he done a certain way, and he's Larson, meanwhile, has and Joey together could build not scaredto yellor address put together back-to-back something; that's where we the issue immediately." top-10 finishes, and both needed to be as a two-car And immediately, McMurdrivers have advanced into team." ray noticed a difference in the final round of qualifying The Ganassi organization, his cars. in the last three races. up and down and occasionHe has been among the In their s econd season ally able to win a race, has fastest on the t rack when working together, McMurray struggled for years to build the teams unload each week, believes theabsence ofa pro- consistency and get its driv- and with m omentum and fessional rivalry has helped ers into the Chase for the confidence building, McMurthe Chip Ganassi Racing Sprint Cup championship. In ray believes he and Larson team grow into consistent a system now in which a reg- are very close to a win. weekly contenders. He said ular-season victory secures a How good does McMurray he views Team Penske, Chase berth, McMurray and feel about where the Ganaswhere Brad Keselowski and Larson slowly began inching si organization is right now? Joey Logano have a strong toward that benchmark last He likened his weekends to belief in teamwork, as the season. the kind that reigning chammodel for a successful twoThen McMurray got a jolt pion Harvick has been havcar organization. when crew chief Keith Rod- ing for more than a year. "I've never been able to "Kyle and I get along ex- den returned to H endrick ceptionally well. There's no Motorsports after just one unload and be one of the fastjealousy. Egos and jealou- season. Rodden was replaced est three cars on the track," sy, to me, are what destroys by Matt McCall, the lead en- McMurray said. "But now teammates," McMurray said. gineer for Ryan Newman we are, and it's stuff like "When you don't want to see last season, and he and Mc- what the (No.) 4 car did last the other guy do well, and Murray have bonded quickly. year. Every week, they were "I am in my second year among the fastest. It's a feelare bitter when they do, it's really hard to share every- with a rookie crew chief, and ing like no other, because thing. But Kyle and I, both that's hard," McMurray said. you feel like you belong and "But I love his work ethic, and you have this opportunity to of our p ersonalities, we're pretty laid-back, and even I sit back and watch his pro- go out and win a bunch of though we both want to beat cess, how he handles people, races. It's the only reason you each other, we are genuinely and he just has super good are here."
C5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
+
O» To look upindividual stocks, goto bendbugetin.com/business. Also seearecap in Sunday's Businesssection.
S &P 500 ~ $ 0 2 3
NASDAQ ~ 4,992.38
17,959.03
Todap
SstP 500
Friday, March 20, 2015
Home sales outlook
2 060.
KB Home's latest quarterly results could provide insight into how the market for new homes is faring. The homebuilder, due to report fiscal first-quarter earnings today, disclosed last month that its new home orders were running 25 percent higher than in the same stretch of the quarter last year. Investors will be listening for an update on how the sales trends are shaping up now that the spring home-selling season is under way.
$20
$14.08
KBH
$17.68 10
est. $0 02
1 Q '14
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2,160 " 2,080 "
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....... Close: 17,959.03 Change: -117.16 (-0.6%)
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StocksRecap NYSE NASD
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16000 S
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HIGH LOW CLOSE C H G. 18072.99 17934.24 17959.03 -117.16 -0.09 DOW Trans. 9165.59 9073.85 9118.86 DOW Util. 599.97 589.64 590.91 -5.93 NYSE Comp. 10976.83 10908.01 10931.36 -88.35 NASDAQ 5000.02 4979.94 4992.38 + 9 .55 S&P 500 2098.18 2085.56 2089.27 -1 0.23 -4.41 S&P 400 1526.12 1518.20 1522.35 Wilshire 5000 2221 6.60 22089.34 22135.81 -80.79 Russell 2000 1254.89 1248.48 1254.86 + 2 .72
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%CHG. WK MO QTR YTD -0.65% +0.76% -0.23% L L -0.99% T -4.40% -0.80% +0.85% +0.19% L L +5.41% -0.49% L +1 .48% -0.29% L L +4.81% -0.36% L +2 . 15% +0.22% L L +4.16%
1 Q' 1 5
NorthwestStocks NAME
Dividend: $0.10 Div. yield: 0.7%
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 68. 3 5 +. 3 8 +0.6 L L Source: FactSet Avista Corp T A VA 29.37 ~ 38.34 33 . 6 5 -.28 -0.8 L Bank ef America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 5. 6 1 -.37 -2.3 T T L Barrett Business BB S I 1 8.25 ~ 64.50 4 2. 9 9 - .52 -1.2 T Eye on stock options Boeing Ce BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 15 4.11 -1.62 -1.0 L L Four kinds of stock options and T Cascade Baacerp C A C B 4 . 11 ~ 5.82 4.81 -.03 -0.6 T futures contracts are due to expire ColumbiaBakg L COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.3 6 28.89 - .12 -0.4 L simultaneously today. Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — 0 59.43 59.25 + . 11 +0.2 L L The phenomenon, known as Cestce Wholesale CO S T 110.36 ~ 1 56.8 5 15 1.31 + . 38 $.0.3 L L quadruple witching day, happens Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ty 17.89 13 .12 -.25 -1.9 L L on Wall Street four times a year, FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 1. 2 7 -.25 -0.8 L T forcing traders to tie up loose ends Hewlett Packard HPQ 29 . 23 ty— 41. 1 0 32 . 84 -.19 -0.6 L T in contracts they hold. That can Intel Corp I NTC 24.49 ~ 37.90 3 0. 7 4 -.15 -0.5 T T KEY 11.55 — 0 14.74 14 .43 -.04 -0.3 T L result in particularly heavy volume Keycerp Kreger Ce K R 4 3 .02 ~ 77.62 76. 4 0 +. 6 0 +0.8 L L right before the closing bell, a Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ 9.19 6.87 +. 0 1 + 0.1 L L period known as the "witching LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 17.76 16. 2 2 +. 3 9 +2.5 T T hour." MDU Resources MOU 20 . 01 e — 36.0 5 21 . 3 6 -.22 -1.0 L T MentorGraphics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 24.07 +.31+1.3 L T L Microsoft Corp MSFT 37.79 ~ 50.05 4 2. 2 9 -.22 -0.5 L T Nike Inc B N KE 70.60 ~ 99.76 98. 3 2 +. 8 1 +0.8 L L Nerdstrem Iac JWN 59.97 — 0 81.78 81 .20 + . 7 1 +0.9 L L Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ 52.5 7 4 6. 9 8 -.43 -0.9 L T PaccarIac PCAR 55.34 ty— 71. 15 62 . 59 - 1 .15 - 1 .8 L T Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6 .27 +.27 $ .4.5 L T Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 43.8 0 +. 0 5 +0 .1 L L Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 28 7.98 -3.61 -1.7 L T Schaitzer Steel SCHN 1 5.38 e — 30.0 4 15 . 9 0 -.47 -2.9 T T Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 — e 29 1 .27284.49 +1.69 +0.6 T T Staacerp Facl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 7. 4 2 -.65 -1.0 L L StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 96.5 7 97. 7 6 + 1.92+2.0 L L umpquaHoldings UM PQ 14.70 ~ 1 9.6 0 17.26 -.04 -0.2 L L US Bancerp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 4. 4 4 -.41 -0.9 L L Washington Fedl WAF O 19.52 ty— 24. 53 21 . 86 -.04 -0.2 L L WellsFargo & Ce WFC 46.44 — e 56.28 55 .51 -.66 -1.2 L L Weyerhaeuser W Y 2 7.48 ~ 37.04 3 3.8 9 -.23 -0.7 L T
l;:l;",lTarget reaches 810M settlement Target plans to pay $10 million to settle a class-action lawsuit tied to its massive data breach in 2013. The breach exposed details of as many as 40 million credit and debit card accounts. The proposed settlement was endorsed by a U.S. District Court judge Thursday. The court is planning on
$86.36
TIF
$120
DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are not included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafter stock split, no regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid in preceding 12months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a closed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss in last 12 months.
$92.67
'15
100
80
Operating EPS
4Q '13
Target (TGT)
4 Q ' 14
52-WEEK RANGE
Price-earnings ratio: 61
$55
based on trailing 12-month results
AP
Dividend: $1.52 Div. yield: 1.8% Source: FactSet
AmdFocus
AmericanFunds New World has superior long-term result — an Marhetsummary annualized gain of 8.4 percent Most Active since June 1999 — earning NAME VOL (BOs) LAST CHG Morningstar's gold-medal analyst BkofAm 1071059 15.61 -.37 rating. 209.50 -.96 1.94 -.26 39.49 -.68 7.78 -.11 127.50 -.98 82.75 +1.84 9.50 -.19 25.33 -.31 12.61 -.14
American FundsNwWrldA m NEWFX VALUE
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME
LAST
VascuBio n 4.74 AmicusTh 12.46 CorenadoB 4.21 9.24 VisnChina 12.49 NevroCp n 50.01 JuheTher n 59.68 Celladen 27.26 Tillys 15.61 Guess 19.42 Hlthlnslttn
CHG %CHG +1.36 + 4 0.2 +3.11 + 33.3 +.99 + 3 0.7 +1.71
+2.14 +7.78 +8.75 +4.00 +2.19 +2.68
Losers NAME
Fcx
Close: $17.26%-0.97 or -5.3% The mining company continues facing a blockade by workers at one of its largest copper mines in Indonesia, halting production. $25 20
Transocean
RIG
Close:$14.167-1.09 or -7.1% The offshore drilling services company will scrap four rigs that it previously intended to sell as the price of oil remains low. $25 20 15
D
J F 52-week range
$1$4$~
M $39.32
D
J F 52-week range
$1$2$~
c-
cC $$
+ 2 2 .7
+ 20.7 co + 18.4 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ + 1 7.2 e Fund target represents weighted + 1 7.2 Q + 16.3 average of stock holdings + 16.0 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
CATEGORY Diversified Emerging
L AST 3.86 21.50 2.43 2.71 17.89
C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR R ATING™ **** * -1.08 -21.9 SungyMob DonegalB -5.50 -20.4 ASSETS $12,805 million -.52 -17.6 CumMed EXP RATIO Mkts Wheeler -.57 -17.4 MANAGER 1.03% -3.50 -16.4 VinceHldg SINCE Nicholas Grace RETURNS3-MO +2.2 Foreign Markets YTO +2.7 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +0.4 Paris 5,037.18 +3.76 + . 07 3-YR ANNL +4.7 London 6,962.32 +17.12 + . 25 5-YR-ANNL +5.2 -.20 Frankfurt 11,899.40 -23.37 Hong Kong24,468.89 +348.81 +1.45 TOP 5HOLDINGS -.55 2008-01-01 Mexico 44,118.17 -242.70 Milan 22,805.17 +239.98 +1.06 -67.92 -.35 Baidu Inc ADR Tokyo 19,476.56 Stockholm 1,707.50 + 3.54 + . 21 Hikma Pharmaceuticals PLC Sydney 5,91 2.50 +1 04.50 +1.80 Intl Container Terminal Services Inc Zurich 9,328.48 +72.24 + . 78 Naspers Ltd Class N
PCT
otal r eturn
1-yr
3 -yr*
$46.12
TLYS Close:$1 5.61 A2.19 or 16.3% The clothing and accessories retailer reported better-than-expected fourth quarter financial results and a positive outlook. $20
Vince Holding
VNCE Close:$17.89T-3.50 or -16A% The high-end clothing company reported better-than-expected profit, but its revenue results and outlook fell short of forecasts. $30 25 20 D
J
F
M
52-week range $1770~
$39.08
Vol.:3.3m (8.1x avg.) PE:1 9 . 8 Mkt.Cap:$657.42 m Y i eld: ...
Amicus Therapeutics
FO LD
Close:$12.46L3.11 or 33.3% The biotechnolcgy company will ask for accelerated U.S. approval for its Fabry disease treatment in the second half of 2015. $15 10
D
J
F
M
52-week range $$,77~
$ 1$.20
Vcl.: 21.6m (12.7x avg.) P E: ... Mkt. Cap: $1.19 b Yield: ...
Nucor NUE Close:$46.10 V-3.17 or -6.4% The steel company lowered its first-quarter earnings forecast, saying steel imports are pushing down prices. $55 50 45
MJ J A S O N D J F M D J F M 52-week range 52-week range $12.$1 ~ $2$ .$$ $42.$$~ $ $$.7$ Vol.:659.7k (4.7x avg.) PE: . .. Vol.:7.7m (3.1x avg.) PE: 20 . 7 Mkt. Cap:$815.18 m Yield : ... Mkt. Cap:$14.71 b Yie l d: 3.2%
SOURCE: Sungard
SU HIS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.97 percent Thursday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO
3 -menth T-bill 6 -month T-bill
. 0 1 .0 5 -0.04 T . 1 2 .1 4 -0.02 L 52-wk T-bill .23 .25 -0.02 ~ 2-year T-note . 61 .56 + 0 .05 T 5-year T-note 1.47 1.39 +0.08 T 10-year T-ttote 1.97 1.92
+ 0.05 T
30-year T-bond 2.53 2.51 +0.02 T
BONDS
L L
T T T T
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 95 -.13+1.6 +9.9 +12.2+11.6 A A A CaplncBuA m 59.72 -.33 +1.1 +7.8 +9.5 +9.0 A A A Oil returned to CpWldGrlA m 47.53 -.26 +3.5 +7.3 +12.6 +9.9 8 8 C its losing ways, EurPacGrA m 49.86 -.53 +5.8 +4.5 +9.0 +7.0 C 8 C dropping for the FnlnvA m 52. 9 0 - .28 +3.1 +12.3 +15.6+13.4 C C C seventh time in GrthAmA m 44.83 -.87 +5.0 +12.2 +17.2+13.9 C 8 D the last eight IncAmerA m 21.74 -.11 +1.5 +8.6 +11.4+11.0 8 A A days. Natural InvCoAmA m 37.22 -.14 +1.5 +12.3 +16.0+13.0 C 8 D gas fell after NewPerspA m38.34 -.20 +5.7 +9.4 +13.5+11.4 A A B the government WAMutlnvA m41.56 -.27 +1.5 +12.1 +15.7+14.4 8 8 A gave an update Dodge &Cex Income 13.91 -.81 +0.9 + 4.5 +4.1+4.9 0 8 B on the amount Intlstk 43.82 -.59 +4.1 +4 .8 +11.6 +8.3 A A A Stock 180.73 -1.49 -0.1 +9.0 +18.3 +14.3 0 A A of supplies in Fidelity Contra 102. 5 1 +.81+5.6 +12.5 +16.4+15.5 C 8 B inventory. ContraK 102 . 45 +.81+5.7 +12.6 +16.5+15.6 C 8 B LowPriStk d 51.40 -.27 + 2.3 + 9 .3 +15.4+14.5 0 0 C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 74.26 -.36 +1.9 +14.5 +16.4+14.8 A 8 A FraakTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.41 -.81+0.3 +1.4 +8.3 +8.4 E A A IncomeA m 2. 3 8 - .81+0.4 + 1 .6 + 8.8 +8.9 E A A Oakmark Intl I 24.90 -.20 +6.7 + 2 .7 +12.1+10.2 B A A Oppeaheimer RisDivA x 20. 1 8 - .13 +1.2 +11.4 +12.9+12.6 0 E 0 RisDivB x 17. 8 4 - .89 + 1.0 +10.5 +11.9+11.6 0 E E RisDivC x 17. 71 - .10 +1.0 +10.5 +12.1+11.7 0 E E SmMidValA m50.27 -.10 +3.3 +11.8 +16.1+12.7 B C E SmMidValB m42.27 -.88 +3.1 +10.9 +15.1+11.8 C 0 E Foreign T Rewe Price Eqtylnc 32.6 0 - . 3 0 -0.6 +7 .3 +13.3+12.0 E 0 0 Exchange GrowStk 56.8 9 + .19+8.0 +14.6 +17.9+17.0 B A A The dollar rose HealthSci 79.6 7 +.66+17.2+37.7 +38.5+29.7 A 8 A against the Newlncome 9. 6 6 - .82+1.3 + 5 .5 + 3.3 +4.3 B C D euro and other Vanguard 500Adml 193.57 -.94 +1.9 +14.6 +16.4+14.9 A 8 A currencies, 500lnv 193.52 -.94 +1.9 +14.4 +16.3+14.7 8 8 8 regaining much CapOp 56.88 +.19 +6.3 +17.4 +24.2+16.3 A A A of its losses Eqlnc 31.22 -.26 0 . 0 +11.6 +15.0+15.0 8 C A from IntlStkldxAdm 26.97 -.34 +3.7 +1.5 +5.9 NA C 0 Wednesday StratgcEq 33.99 -.83 +5.6 +14.9 +20.8+18.5 A A A when the TgtRe2020 29.14 -.13 +2.4 +8.6 +9.6 +9.4 A A A Federal Reserve TgtRe2035 18.32 -.10 +2.7 +9.3 +11.8+11.0 A 8 8 signaled that it Tgtet2025 16.94 -.88 +2.5 +8.9 +10.4+10.0 A A B may move TotBdAdml 10.96 -.82 +1.3 +5.7 +3.2 +4.2 B 0 0 slowly in raising Totlntl 16.12 -.21 +3.7 +1.5 +5.8 +5.0 C 0 D interest rates. TotStlAdm 52.96 -.21 +2.6 +13.6 +16.6+15.2 8 8 A TotStldx 52.93 -.21 +2.6 +13.4 +16.5+15.0 C 8 A USGro 31.69 +.82 +6.0 +16.5 +17.4+15.8 8 A 8 FAMILY
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
T L ~
.05 .08 .13
T .42 T 1.71 T 2.77 T 3.66
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
5-yr"
1.68 1.56 Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.25 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or 1.15 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.
M
Vol.:24.1m (1.3x avg.) PE: . . . Vcl.:14.4m (1.2x avg.) P E: . . . Mkt. Cap:$17.95b Yie l d: 7.2% Mkt. Cap:$5.29 b Y i e ld:21.2%
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.43 2.41 +0.02 T T Bend Buyer Muni Idx 4.20 4.23 -0.03 T T Price-earnings ratio: Lost money Barclays USAggregate 2.10 2.21 -0.11 T T (Basedonpaat12-monthresulta) PRIME FED Barclays US 81 Div.yield: 2.6o7o Dividend: $2.06 High Yield 6.37 6.35 +0.02 L L RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.60 3.67 -0.07 T T *annualized Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.74 1.74 .. . T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.95 3.06 -0.11 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 SelectedMutualpunds
Thursday's close:$60.60 T
AP
S&P500ETF 1044116 CSVLgCrde 622835 iShEMkts 612090 NokiaCp 521427 Apple Inc s 449287 Facebeok 410549 RegionsFn 383596 GenElec 375458 iShJapan 362414
preliminary approval, which will allow people to begin filing claims ahead of a final approval this fall. Peopleaffected by the breach will can file for up to $10,000 with proof of their losses, including unauthorized charges, higher fees or interest rates, and lost time for dealing with the problem.
-.O SOS
1.0638
Stocks mostly fell on Thursday, with energy companies among the hardest hit as oil prices continued to slide. Investors sold from the start and across industries. The losses came a day after big gains were spurred by a statement from the Federal Reserve suggesting it may take its time raising interest rates. The central bank has kept rates at record lows since late 2008, helping to lift stock prices. In economic news, a key index of expected economic conditions in the future rose modestly for a second month, indicating that economic momentum may have slowed. Nine of the 10 sectors of the Standard and Poor's 500 index fell, led by raw material stocks.
15
Financial analysts project that Tiffany's earnings improved in the November-January quarter versus a year earlier. The jewelry retailer announced in January that its holiday sales edged down 1 percent, hurt by a stronger U.S. dollar and some weakness inthe Americas and Japan. As a result, the retailer cut its full-year profit outlook. Tiffany reports fourth-quarter financial results today.
' "" ' /
StoryStocks
L + 14. 4 +4 8 .4 82 7 1 6 0 . 80f T -4.8 +16.4 2 3 0 1 1 1 . 32f T -12.7 -6.1 107106 45 0.20 L +56. 9 - 30.5 216 d d 0 . 88 15 L + 18. 6 +2 8 .0 2 514 21 3 .64f T 10 -7.3 -10.4 2 8 80 L +4.6 +4.4 390 19 0 . 64a D J F M L +33.0 +42 .0 14 0 3 1 0. 6 0 52-week range L + 6.7 +38 . 2 1 8 46 30 1 .42a $6.65 $15.72 T -1.6 -15.9 3 2 82 Vol.:890.3k (5.3x avg.) PE 35.4 : T -3.2 -7.8 53 6 2 2 0 .44f Mkt. Cap:$179.56m Yield : . .. T -18.2 +1 0.2 11711 13 0 . 6 4 T -15.3 t 28.1 26616 13 0 .96 Guess GES L +3.8 +5.4 1 3 175 14 0 . 2 6 Close:$19.42L2.68 or 16.0% L +19. 0 +7 3 .9 3 247 22 0 . 7 4 The apparel retailer's fourth-quarter T -0.3 -11.0 261 5 17 profit topped expectations and one T -2.1 -7.8 1496 dd analyst said its sales "are starting to T -9.1 - 35.1 600 1 4 0 . 73 show signs of life." +9. 8 + 4.2 564 19 0.22f $22 T -9.0 +10.4 32863 17 1 . 24 20 L +2.3 +23 . 7 5 1 69 29 1 . 1 2 18 L +2.3 +31. 1 75 8 2 2 1. 4 8f T - 5.9 +13.3 1 3 1 2 2 1 . 86 D J F M T -8.0 -2.4 1298 16 0.88a 52-week range T - 25.1 +171.5 250 2 2 $$$.$$~ $2$.$0 L + 0.5 +5.5 730 36 1.7 6 Vol.:11.4m (7.6x avg.) PE: 1 4 . 9 T -13.7 - 17.0 548 1 6 0 . 12 Mkt. Cap:$1.66 b Yie l d: 4.6% T -29.5 - 36.7 257 3 7 0 . 75 L +8.2 +39 . 2 85 3 3 2 2 . 68f K2M Group KTWO T -3.5 + 3 . 2 1 5 3 1 3 1 . 30f Close:$21.95%1.23 or 5.9% L +19. 1 +3 0 .0 10895 30 1 . 28 The medicaldevice company reL +1.5 -3.4 1630 23 0 . 60 ported a fourth-quarter loss, but the T -1.1 + 8 . 1 7 487 1 4 0 . 98 financial results and its outlook T -1.3 -4.8 58 5 1 4 0 .52f topped expectations. $25 L +1.3 +18 . 9 14487 14 1 . 40 T -5.6 +1 8.9 2336 25 1 . 1 6 20
Better quarter?
-.T O '
$43.96
Tilly's
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
based on trailing 12-month results
'"""'" /
Freeport-McMoRan
"
DOW
Price-earnings ratio: 2
+.ST
$16.10
Dow jones industrials
.......... Close: 2,089.27 Change: -10.23 (-0.5%)
Vol. (in mil.) 3,251 1,640 Pvs. Volume 4,063 1,945 Advanced 1107 1432 Declined 2021 1283 New Highs 1 40 1 6 1 New Lows 36 33
15
t
.
2,000' " ""'10 DAYS
'15
Operating EPS
GOLD $1,169.10 ~
10 YR T NOTE 1 97$/
2,089.27
T T T T T T T
3.47 4.80 2.34 5.31 4.4 1 1.8 8 3.0 9
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 43.96 44.66 -1.57 -1 7.5 1.45 1.47 +0.14 -10.8 1.72 1.77 -2.83 -6.7 -2.6 2.81 2.92 -3.66 1.77 1.80 -1.38 +23.6
CLOSE PVS. 1169.10 1151.40 16.10 15.53 1119.60 1092.60 2.67 2.59 765.45 764.30
%CH. %YTD -1.3 +1.54 + 3.69 + 3 .4 -7.4 +2.47 +3.38 -5.8 +0.15 -4.1
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -4.7 1.58 1.57 +0.91 Coffee (Ib) 1.40 1.36 +2.75 -1 6.0 -5.9 Corn (bu) 3.74 3.75 -0.33 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.62 + 0.75 + 4 . 5 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 280.20 278.70 +0.54 -1 5.4 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.06 1.13 -5.77 -24.2 Soybeans (bu) 9.62 9.65 -0.34 -5.6 Wheat(bu) 5.12 5.11 +0.24 -13.2 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4714 -.0149 -1.01% 1.6532 Canadian Dollar 1.2 738 +.0067 +.53% 1.1236 USD per Euro 1.0638 -.0106 -1.00% 1.3829 JapaneseYen 120.96 + . 2 7 + .22% 1 02.53 Mexican Peso 15. 3 108 +.1123 +.73% 13.2521 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 4.0353 +.0386 +.96% 3.4691 Norwegian Krone 8 . 1150 -.1312 -1.62% 6.0353 South African Rand 12.3332 +.1494 +1.21% 10.8681 Swedish Krona 8.7 0 2 0 + .0287 +.33% 6.4004 Swiss Franc .9911 +.0024 +.24% . 8 818 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.3116 +.0169 +1.29% 1.1054 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.1947 -.0316 -.51% 6.1939 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7577 +.0001 +.00% 7.7653 Indian Rupee 62.505 +.100 +.16% 60.975 Singapore Dollar 1.3882 +.0037 +.27% 1.2717 South KoreanWon 1122.42 +2.69 +.24% 1073.56 Taiwan Dollar 31.49 +.13 +.41% 3 0 .56
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder (aaa.opisnet.com): REGULARUNLEADED: •SpaceAge,20635 Grandview Drive, Bend ........... $2.72 • Fred Meyer,944
eveo er: istoric a e nee sto eremove
e - rivin esasin ..
summer
SW Ninth St.,
Redmond ....... $2.73 • Valero,712 SW Fifth
St., Redmond.....$2.74 • Fred Meyer,61535 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend ........... $2.76 • Ron's Oil,62980 U.S. Highway97, Bend ........... $2.77 • RiverwoodsCountry Store,19745 Baker Road, Bend ..... $2.80 • Chevron,61160 S. U.S. Highway97, Bend ........... $2.82 • Shell,16515Reed Road, LaPine.... $2.82 • Chevron,2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $2.82 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters ..... $2.82 • Texaco,539 NWSixth St., Redmond.... $2.84 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras...... $2.86 • Shell,15 NE Fifth St.,
Madras ......... $2.86 • Shell,992 SW
U.S. Highway97, Madras ......... $2.86 • Chevron,1210 SW U.S.Highway97, Madras ......... $2.86 • Chevron,1745NE Third St., Bend... $2.86 • Chevron,3405 N. U.S. Highway97, Bend............ $2.86 • Chevron,398 NW Third St.,
Prineville........ $2.86 • Texaco,718NW Columbia St., Bend ........... $2.90 • Shell,235 SWThird
St., Bend........ $2.90 • Chevron,2100 NE U.S.Highway 20, Bend............ $2.90 • Texaco,2409 Butler Market Road, Bend ........... $2.90 • Safeway,80 NECedar St., Madras...... $2.90 • Chevron,1501 SW HighlandAve., Redmond ....... $2.90 • Shell,1144 NE Third
St., Bend........ $2.96 • Shell,2699 NE U.S. Highway20, Bend ........... $2.96 • Quick WayMarket, 690 NEButler Market Road,Bend ........$3 DIESEL: • Ron's Oil,62980 U.S. Highway97, Bend ........... $2.80 • Chevron,1001 Railway, Sisters ..... $2.82 • Chevron,2005 S. U.S. Highway97, Redmond ....... $2.86 • Chevron,1210SW U.S. Highway97, Madras ......... $2.90 • Texaco,178SWFourth St., Madras...... $2.96
for the saleoI factory-
sealed containers of beer, wine and cider at retail to individuals for off-site consumption.
weeks would give Tesla own-
New York Times News Service
ers anew setofactive safety
Self-driving Tesla cars are coming to American roads by this summer, Elon Musk, chief
features, including automatic emergencybraking and blind-
executive of the automaker,
ings. Also to be added are tools to help drivers monitor the
said Thursday.
spot and side-collision warn-
Musk said that a software update scheduled for release in about three months would
status of charging stations and
give Model S Tesla sedans the ability to start driving them-
ning out of battery power. "It's basically impossible to
selves, which the company refers to as autopilot mode.
run out, unless you do so intentionally," Musk said.
Once updated, the cars will
be able to navigate highways
plot routes to ensure the ability to complete a trip without run-
The move is intended to help reduce "range anxiety," the
and major roads without the driver's touching the wheel or
fear drivers have that they will them to constantly calculate
By Joseph Ditzler
pedals. Musk said in a conference call that the self-driving technology was "technically capable of going from parking lot to parking lot," meaning
The Bulletin
through cities as well. But,
200 miles for the base model.
he said, Tesla will disable the
Other automakers have plans to match those numbers in the
Andy Tullie/Ttte Bulletin
The property on SW Industrial Way in Bend where the former Brooks-Scanlon crane shed once stood has been vacant for more than 10 years.
The developers planning a Marriott hotel on SW Industrial Way have asked
autopilot when cars are not
on highways or major roads, citing safety concerns.
Bend officials to remove the historic designation on the
The cars can also be summoned to the driver via
property, once the site of the
Brooks-Scanlon crane shed.
smartphone and can go park themselves in a garage or else-
Montana-based Braxton
Development, through a subsidiary, in February won approval from the city Planning Commission of its master plan and request to build above the three-story height limit. The subsidiary, BD Bend Development Group LLC, has yet to submit a specific site plan for city review.
where. That feature will be al-
lowed only on private property for now, Musk said.
He said Tesla had been testing its autopilot on a route from San Francisco to Seattle, Dean Guemeey/The Bulletin file photo
The Brooks-Scanlon crane shed, demolished in 2004, carried a historic designation that developers would like removed from the property near the Old Mill District.
"The other application
over 10 years," the petition
neighboring landowners
not reviewed yet is for the
states. "As a result, the site
this month, Henson said.
Landmarks Commission to remove the site" from the
no longer possesses any of the character-defining
If the commission recom-
city historic register, said
features or architectural
Bend Senior Planner Aaron Henson.
significance for which the property was originally designated."
measure then goes to the Bend City Council. Com-
The previous owners tore down the crane shed in 2004, but the historic
Braxton expects con-
struction of Springhill designation remains. Conse- Suites to start in spring quently, city code governing 2016, according to the historic preservation still company website. The 105applies to the site, according room, 75,000-square-foot, four-story hotel and conferto a petition filed with the commission by the develop- ence center "will be within er's attorney, Myles Conway, walking distance of several of Bend. Unless the city lifts restaurants in the area," that designation, Braxton is according to the website. It unable to build according to will also include "spectacuits approved plan, he wrote. lar views of the Deschutes Conway wrote that the River, modern lounge and site first appeared on the list patio area, pool and spa in 1998, but "records provide area and large fitness cenno evidence of a City Coun- ter, among other amenities." cil vote to include the crane Plans also call for a secshed on the historic inventoond, 57,000-square-foot ry," the petition states. In an building for office and other email to Henson, Conway commercial space on the 4.3-acre site. A Braxton repwrote that Braxton is open to erecting a plaque or mon- resentative was not availument that indicates the site's lumber mill history.
"The site has been cleared and has remained vacant for
mends de-listing the site, the mission Chairwoman Heidi
Slaybaugh was unavailable Thursday for comment. The crane shed, named for the 70-foot-tall trav-
distances and worry about being stranded. The Model S sedan has a range that starts at just over
coming years. Nissan, whose Leaf has a range under 100 miles, has announced intentions for a 250-mile-range electric car, and Volkswagen
has said it will build a car that can go 300 miles on a charge by2020. General Motors unveiled its effort at a 200-mile range electric car, the Bolt, this year at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit,
and in February said it would begin building the car in late 2016, with a target price of about$30,000,afterzero-emis-
sions taxbreaks.
Amazongetsapproval from FAAfor dronetests By Shan Li
give the FAA a monthly update
30 million board feet of
Los Angeles Tlmes
with information induding the
lumber, stood from the late
Amazon.com is inching doser to a future where packages will be delivered by drone.
number of flights conducted, unusual malfunctions and any
1930s until 2004, when the then-owner demolished it
without a building permit. The city sued and won a $100,000 judgment against the company, which sold the property to developer Stephen Trono for $5 million in 2005.
PremierWest Bank, since merged with AmericanWest
Bank, foreclosed on the propertyjustnorth ofthe Old Mill District in 2011. The
The online retail giant,
whichhas been aggressively opening new distribution
said on CBS' "60 Minutes" that the service would be available
tion Administrationto test an
forpackages weighingin at 5 pounds or less.
unmanned aircraft design. The "experimental airworthiness certificate" comes with
the pilot and observer; and the pilot must have, at minimum, a
that its drones will one day
several restrictions: Drones must be flown during the day
private pilot's license and cur-
jditzler@bendbulletin.com
Amazon is also required to
• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visitbendbulletin.com/bizcal
A video posted on Amazon's
website depicted a drone picking up a package at the end of a conveyor belt, then flying itacrossagrassyfieldbefore dropping the order outside a customer's doorstep. The companypromised then
Deschutes County records. — Reporter: 541-617-7815,
APRIL2 • HIDEC April Event: Transformingyour company's culture: A session that combines real-life examples, stories and solutions for various challenges around company culture; $55 members; $95 nonmembers, registration required; 8:30-11:30 a.m.; Bend Park & Recreation District Office, 799 SW Columbia St.; 541-3883236 or lessi@edcoinfo. com. • Managing Diversity in the Workplace:Part of the Leadership Series; develop strategies to capitalize olt diversity as an asset in your work group. Registration required; $95; 8a.m.-noon; COCCBend Campus,2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 Br www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.
Air concept back in 2013, when
Chief Executive Jeff Bezos
Notices of an April 21 hearing by the Landmarks
document. Prerequisites: Computers for Beginners; free; registration required; 10:30 a.m.-noon; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; 541-617-7085 or www. deschuteslibrary.org. APRIL1 • Introduction toVisio: Learn fundamental skills while creating several types of basic diagrams including workflows, flowcharts, organizational charts, directional maps, network and floor plans; registration required; class runs through June 3; Wednesdays; $360; 12:453:05 p.m., Central Oregon Community College Bend Campus, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270 or www.cocc.edul continuinged. • SCORE free business workshop:Managing your operations; registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; 541-617-7080 or www. scorecentraloregon.org.
The Seattle company first dangled the futuristic Prime
times, was grantedpermission Thursday by the Federal Avia-
able Thursday for comment. Commission went out to
loss of communication links.
centers to shorten delivery
current owner, Cal Cannon, bought it through a company called Crane Shed LLC for $1.4 million, according to
5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www. SCORECentral0regon.org. THURSDAY • EDCO MarchPubtalk: Several speakers and company pitches; $20 members, $30 nonmembers; 5-7:30 p.m.; McMenamins, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-3883236 x. 3; www.edcoinfo. com/events. • Summer JobsFair: Job opportunities include pool and tennis attendants, lifeguards, summer camp counselors, food and beverage, retail and customer service positions; 9 a.m.; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center, 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver or 541-585-5000. MARCH 31 • Word for Beginners: Introduction to Microsoft Word. Learn to navigate menus, get the help feature, type and edit text and save and opena
run out of juice, prompting
eling crane used to stack
BEST OFTHEBIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • Labor 8t Human Resources:Agricultural business workshop; learn where to make changes to increase efficiencies and prioritize needs; $10, registration requested; 9-11:30 a.m.; COCC Technology Education Center, 2324 SECollege Loop, Redmond; 541447-6228 or www.agbiz. eventbrite.com. SUNDAY • Nest Caravans launch party:The Tumalo company plans to celebrate the launching ofits prototype travel trailer; 5 p.m., The Cube atCementElegance,50 SE Scott St., Bend; info© nestcaravans.com. TUESDAY • SCOREfree business counseling:Business counselors conductfree 30-minute one-on-one conferences with local entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor;
with company drivers letting the car navigate the West Coast largely unassisted. Musk also announced Thursday that a software update within the next two
that's been submitted but
DISPATCH • Logan's Markethas opened in Redmond, in Nolan TownCenter. The 42,000-square-foot store will pair groceries with a True ValueHardware franchise. Thestore occupiesthe NolanTown Center anchor space, formerly occupied byRay's Food Place. • Mid Oregon Credit Unionhas received the Dora Maxwell Social Responsibility Community Service Award honorable mention forIts Pay it Forward initiative. Pay it Forward supports local people and projects for doing good things in the community. • US Market ¹350 applied March10 to the Oregon Liquor Control Commission as anew outletfor an off-premises sales license, which allows
By Aaron M. Kessler
and at 400 feet or lower; the air-
craft must stay within sight of
rent medical certification.
"be as normal as seeingmail trucks."
SeaWorld namesnew CEO amid whale controversy By Caitlin Dineen and Dewayne Bevil
the company begins a longterm marketing campaign,
Orlando (Fla J Sentinel
starting April 1, that will fo-
ORLANDO, Fla. — SeaWorld Entertainment on
cus on consumers ambivalent about SeaWorld.
Thursday named a new CEO as the company struggles with declining attendance and controversy over its killer
have hounded the company since the orca Tilikum killed
whales.
Joel Manby, who most recently ranthecompany behind Tennessee destination
Public relations crises trainer Dawn Brancheau in Orlando in 2010 and escalat-
ed after the 2013 documentary "Blackfish" criticized SeaWorld for its treatment of
Dollywood, will start April 7. "I am honored to be select-
captive killer whales.
ed as SeaWorld Entertain-
as CEO in January amid the troubles. Manby will earn a base salary of $1 million, according to his employment agreement
ment's new CEO," Manby said in a statement. "This company has tremendous
brands, and for more than 50 years, families have come to our parks to learn about
animals, have fun and be entertained." He comes aboard just as
Jim Atchison stepped down
dated March 16. His annual
bonus will be no less than 150 percent of his annual salary, and he received stock
options.
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W 50-Plus, D2-3 Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D5 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
O< www.bendbulletin.com/allages
Being homeless
BRIEFING
Screening test predicts MCI Researchers at the Mayo Clinic have developed a new screening test that measures whether a personis at an increased risk of developing a mild cognitive impairment that could eventually lead to dementia. Based on a multiyear study of 1,449 residents of Olmsted County, Minnesota, who were 70 to 89 years old, the screening test assigns points to certain illnesses or conditions that could contribute to a person's risk. Being diagnosed with diabetes before a person's 75th birthday can increase his or her score by15 points, according to a Mayo Clinic news release, while having 12 or fewer years of education can increase their score by two points. According to the news release, the variables that increase a person's score the most were his or her age, heart health factors, whether he or she had a slow gait and whether he or she suffered from depression or anxiety disorders. The researchers found the presence of an apolipoprotein E (APOE) gene was only a moderate risk factor toward the development of a mild cognitive impairment. The Mayo Clinic's researchers published their results and the scoring test itself online in the March18 issue of Neurology, the Official Journal of the American Academy of Neurology. They found 28 percent of the people in the sample group developed a mild cognitive impairment during the study's time frame.
with a pet
compounds difficulties By Nathan Bruttell The Associated Press
CORVALLIS — Bob a
warm.
The 57-year-old homeless manknows there is a warm bed and food available between November and March at the Men's Cold
Weather Shelter in Corvallis. But going there would mean havingto give up his best friend and the only one who has stuck by him through the worstyears of his life — his dog Lucas. Brokaw and the border Thihkstock
No one sets out to raise a bully, but habits that parents can unknowingly portray might be sending an unhealthy message to their kids.
collie have been inseparable for more than eight years. Wherever Brokaw goes, Lucas follows. But animals are not allowed into the cold
weather shelters unless they areserviceanimals.And Brokaw isn't going anywhere without Lucas.
"I'm not getting rid of my dog to go indoors. I'll just bundle up," Brokaw said. "That's a hard way to wake
up. But I'm not going to leave him." Every additional dollar Brokaw receives, whether
from collecting cans and bottles or from charity, goes to feeding Lucas. "He eats what I eat and
every time I have something extra, he gets it," Brokaw
said."I'd rather have himbe healthy. He's better than me. He deserves it more."
Kathleen Harringon, who has been homeless for 12 years, said she rides around Corvallis every day looking for a place where she and her longhaired Dachsund, Happy, willbe welcome — or at least free from harassment.
"It's scary sleeping out in the open and being a girl all byyourself," Harrington said."I sleep underneaththe
By Ashley Trexler• Special to The Washington Post
Study: Cognitive decline prevalent A recent study found 12.4 percent of the households in Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, lllinois, lowa, Louisiana, New Hampshire, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, West Virginia and Wisconsin contained at least one adult who was experiencing increased confusion or memory loss in 2011. The study also found at least one adult with cognitive decline in: • 21.7 percent of the households that had an income of less than $15,000 a year, • 16.8 percent of the
Brokaw has spent several nights in a dumpster just to avoid the rain and keep
dmit it. You've watched and wondered: Is my kid a bully? Not all the time. Not most of the time. But some of the time. The rough-handed grab, pushy attitude, resentful looks. Is it a bad day, a phase, or something more? Maybe no one has told you to your face you're raising a bully, but sometimes you can't help
and not a bully?
You've heard all the usual
talk about what causes bul-
lying — overly permissive parenting, violent video games, abuse. What might surprise you is how even the most well-intentioned parents — parents just like you — are unknowingly sabotaging their efforts to raise kind, caring kids.
Bullying starts and ends with an imbalance of power. Too much or too little, the
results are often the same: bullying behavior is simply a means to gain more power. Here are eight ways you may be unknowingly encouraging bullying.
1. Gossiping Want to raise a mean girl'? Act like one. If you wouldn't include your child in a con-
no options for homeless people with pets." Brokaw and Harrington are two of the estimated
100 homeless people living
but wonder if other parents are talking about it behind your back. So how do you make sure you're raising a kind child,
shelters at Avery Park from time totime. And there are
versation, you shouldn't have are no better than outright it within earshot of them. bullying. It's indirect bullyKids hear everything. The ing, and many of us do it all first time my daughter got the time. At some point in hold of my phone to mimic your life, someone probably me was truly eye-opening. decided you weren't "cool," My little cutie-pie morphed and you didn't get a say in into a gossip girl. Eyes wide, the matter. Didn't feel so hands waving, hips sashaygood, did it? Remember that ing, screeching, "Wow! No! feeling. Then do your best Hahaha!" She wasn't even 2 to shut off your inner gossip, years old yet. It was sobering especially in front of your to see myself through her kids. young eyes. Catty comments See Bullying /D4
with pets in Benton County. The National Coalition on Homelessness estimates that of the 3.5 million Amer-
icans who are homeless, nearly 10 percent own dogs or cats. Because most of the pets do not qualify as service or companion animals,
manyhomeless people who have pets in Benton County have to choose whether to stay withtheirpets in the
rain and cold, or stay warm and dry and possibly lose them forever. See Homeless/D5
households that had
an income of $15,000 to $24,999, • 13.3 percent of the households that had an income of $25,000 to $49,999, • 10.2 percent of the households that had an income of $50,000 to $74,999, and • 7.2 percent of the households that had an income of $75,000 or more. The study found an adult with these symptoms was living in 11.2 percent of the households in these 13 states that had only one adult occupanti.e. was living by him or herself — and 9.8 percent of the households in these states that had at least one
person under 18. — Bulletin staff reports
er on so ution to savin S CFISIS By Mac McLean Nobody doubts the state
who ran for a seat in the Or-
of Oregon is staring a possible retirement savings crisis straight in the eyes. The only question: What should it do from here? Since the beginning of this year, a handful of the state's most powerful political orga-
egon Legislature last year,
privately managed retirement plan with their employer. "This is a national epidemic," said Rob Sisk, the presi-
according to data from the National Institute of State Pol-
dent of Service Employees International Union Local 503,
itics — differ sharply when it
which is a member of the Fair
comes to how they think the
Shot for All coalition. "More
legislature should solve this problem, and their debate year's legislative session. On one side of the issue is
and more people are nearing retirement age with no savings and realizing they can't live off of Social Security." And on the other side of
The Bulletin
nizations banded together and
formed a pair of coalitions dedicated to sounding an
than $2.6 million in campaign contributions to candidates
could very well dominate this the Fair Shot for All coalition,
the issue is the State of Savers
alarm about the fact that less than half the state's work-
a team of unions, labor and immigrant rights groups that
Coalition, a group of business and finance organizations
ers have saved more than
thinks the state should create
that thinks the state should
$20,000 toward their eventual retirements.
its own retirement savings plan with automatic enroll-
promote existing retirement
But these two groupswhose members gave more
ment that would help people
going out on its own and creating something it fears could
who don't have access to a
savings options rather than
put the state and its employers at risk.
"We know these plans are affordable and highly competitive," said John Mangan, regional vice president for the American Council of Life Insurers, which is part of the State of Savers Coalition.
"(Our current system) is a
system that can take us to a
solution."
The legislation Introduced last month, the
could use to save for their retirements. The board would then select a private firm to
manage this plan through a request for proposals process. Businesses would be re-
quired to offer this plan or a privately managed pension, 401(k), Individual Retirement Account or a similar arrangement to their employees. The state plan would draw
its contributions through a series of automatic payroll deductions the employee could
proposed legislation — Senate cancel or change at any time. Bill 615 and House Bill 2960 It would invest this money into — would create a seven-mema large fund so it could keep ber Oregon Retirement Savits administrative costs and ings Board that would create a fees low. financial arrangement people See Savings /D3
D2 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
-Pr,vs
Email information for the Activities Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
si urnsou,o er Learning toapproachAlzheimer's caregiving in a positive manner rea canmean wiser By Diane C. Lade
(Fort Lauderdale, Fla.) Sun Sentinel
By Benedict Carey New Yorh Times News Service
Behind all
Be positive. Be practical.
And reclaim joy. These are the caregiving cornerstones for patients and families dealing with Alzheimer's disease, according to n a tionally known expert Teepa Snow, an occupational therapist,
t h ose canned
compliments for older adults — spry! wily! wise! — is an appreciation for something that scientists have had a hard time characterizing: mental facul-
ties that improve with age. Knowledge is a large part of the equation, of course. People
w ho are middle-aged and older tend to know more than young adults, by virtue of having been aroundlonger, andscorehigher on vocabulary tests, crossword puzzlesand other measures of
crystallized intelligence. Still, young adults who consult their elders (mostly when desperate) don't do so just to
i
aS
trainer and educator.
"Knowledge is power. But there is a lot of bad in-
~®lL,
formation out there," said
Mary Barnes, CEO and president of Alzheimer's Community Care, a non-
I'
profit serving patients and their families. Promoting
gatherfacts,solve crosswords or borrow a credit card. Nor,
of patients is exploding.
help with short-term memory
Christopher Silas Neal /The New York Times
or puzzle solving. Those abil- According to a new paper in the journal Psychological Science, ities, called fluid intelligence, elements of social judgment and short-term memory, important No, the older brain offers something more, according to a new paper in the journal Psychological Science. Elements of socialjudgment and short-term memory, important pieces of the cognitive puzzle, may peak later in life than previously thought. Postdoctoral fellows Joshua Hartshorne of MIT and Laura Germine of Harvard and Mas-
sachusetts General Hospital analyzed ahuge trove of scores on cognitive tests taken by peo-
pleofallages.Theresearchers found that the broad split in age-related cognition — fluid in the young, crystallized in the old — masked several important nuances.
"This dichotomy between earlypeaks and laterpeaks is way too coarse," Hartshorne
said. "There are a lot more patterns going on, and we need to take those into account to fully
understandthe eff ects of age on cognition." The new paper is hardly the first challenge to the scientific literature on age-related decline, and it won't be the last.
A year ago, German scientists argued that cognitive "deficits" in agingwere caused largely by the accumulation of knowledge — that is, the brain slows
pieces of the cognitive puzzle, may peak later in life than previously thought.
According to the A lzhei-
'[
mer's Association, more than 720,000 Floridians age 65 and older will have Alzheimer's in 2 025, an
almost 70 percent increase compared them with more recent results from tens of thou-
some mental manipulation of numbers peaked about age 30,
sands of people who took short
the study found, "a fact difficult
to assimilate into the fluid/cryswebsites, testmybrain.org and talized intelligence dichotomy." gameswithwords.org. The one The researchers also anadrawback of this approach is lyzed results from the Reading cognitive tests on the authors'
that, because it didn't follow
the Mind in the Eyes test. The
the samepeople over alifetime, test involves looking at snapit might have missed the effect shots of strangers' eyes on a of different cultural experi- computer screen and determinences, said K Warner Schaie, ingtheir moods from a menu of a researcher at Penn State options like "tentative," "uncertain" and "skeptical." University. But most previous studies The picture that emerges have not been nearly as large, from these findings is of an oldor had such a range of ages. er brain that moves more slowParticipants on the websites ly than its younger self, but is were 10 to 89 years old, and justas accurate in m any areas they took a large battery of and more adept at reading othtests, measuring skills like ers' moods — on top of being memory for abstract symbols more knowledgeable. That's a and strings of digits, problem handy combination, given that solving and facility reading so many important decisions emotions from strangers' eyes. people make intimately affects At least as important, the others. researchers looked at the efNo one needs a cognitive scifectof age on each type of test. entist to explain that it's better Previous research had often to approach aboss about a raise grouped related tests together, when he or she is in a good on the assumption that they mood. But the older mind may captured a single underlying be better able to head off interattribute in the same way a personal misjudgments and to coach might rate, say, ath- navigate tricky situations. "As in, 'That person's not leticism based on a person's speed, strength and vertical happy with all your quick
down because it has to search a larger mental library of facts. leaping ability. That idea has stirred some deThe result of the new apbate among scientists. proach? "We found different Experts said the new analy- abilities really maturing or ripsis raised a different question: ening at different ages," GerAre there distinct, indepen-
Ie
Snow said, as the number
generally, are they looking for
peak in the 20s.
s k i l l s to
cope with Alzheimer's is increasingly i m p ortant,
mine said. "It's a much richer
dent elements of memory and picture of the life spanthan just cognition that peak at varying calling it aging." times of life'? Processing speed — the "I think they have more quickness with which somework to do to demonstrate that one can manipulate digits, that's the case," said Denise words or images, as if on a Park, a professor of behavior mental sketch board — genand brain science at the Uni- erally peaks in the late teens, versity of Texas at Dallas. "But Germine and Hartshorne conthis is a provocative paper, and firmed, and memory for some it's going to have an impact on things, like names, does so in the field." the early 20s. But the capaciThe strength of th e n ew ty of that sketch board, called analysis is partly in its data. working memory, peaks at The study evaluated histor- least a decade later and is slow ic scores from the popular to decline. In particular, the Wechsler intelligence test, and ability to recall faces and do
thinking and young person's processing speed — he's about to punch you,'" said Zach Hambrick, a psychology professor at Michigan State University.
The details of this more textured picture of the aging brain are still far from clear, and social measures like the Reading
over the present. "I'm committed to cre-
ating dementia-competent communities because of
Courtesy Positive Approach via Tribune News Service
Teepa Snow is the occupational therapist, trainer and educator behind Positive Approach to Care.
our aging population," said Snow, who has created Positive Approach classes
and CDs. "We have to realize we can't hide people away. Families need to stop
feeling that they can't take (their loved ones with Alzheimer's) out to church." Snow, 60, spoke with the Sun Sentinel about how to embrace joy and avoidcommon caregiving mistakes. • What exactly does • your Positive Approach involve? • People with Alzhei• mer's are trying to
Q
deal with what they have
lost. We need to take a step back and realize they
in your mouth so you say no, thing as simple as saying, maybe start shrieking at me and I think you might need medication to calm down. But instead, if I just put the spoon
in your hand and guide it toward your mouth, your brain will r emember that
m ove-
ment and your hand will take overthetask.
Q•
of them that still exists.
the biggest misQ •• What's take caregivers make?
A• By the time they are ex• No. I,theytrytod oi ta ll.
the disease has progressed, and switching gears is devastating. So build a team early and give yourself permission to step back a little.
interested in Alzheimer's?
A• My grandmother had
• A lzheimer's. A n d I worked with autistic kids as
are good ways Q •• What for us all to improve our brain health'?
aren't crazy. Our job is to a teenager. I've always been • Engage socially a nd figure out the reason why drawn to people who are chal• actively with other huthey are doing what they lenged and find it fascinating man beings, and I don't mean do,then modify or change to partner with them, and to in a chat room. Nurturing things to make the situa- find joy with them. something, like caring for antion better. imals or plants, seems (helpYou talk a lot about the ful). Moving and singing at Can you give an • importance of people the same time, or ballroom • example? with Alzheimer's and care- dancing with a partner and • Let's say (you're the givers both embracing joylearning new steps, is good. • patient) you aren't a word many don't associate And finally, exercise and eat eating and I'm worried. So with such a devastating dis- decently. I take a spoon and try to ease. How can that happen'? put it in your mouth. But • We can find something See us for retractable
A
Q•
Q•
A
it doesn't feel natural that
I'm trying to shove food
A
• in a moment and celebrate that. It could be some-
awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun I/lihen yOu Wantit,
Get A Taste For Food. Home & Garden
and other experts said. And it
Every Tuesday In ATHOME
is not apparent from the new analysiswhether changes in cognition with age result from a single cause — like a decline in the speed of neural trans-
When that happens, you see inside the (patient) to that part
hausted and realize they can't,
You have had a long ca• reer doing many things, including working in a head injury clinic and with aging veterans. How did you become
the Mind in the Eyes test have not been used much in this
kind of research, Hambrick
'Come and dance with me.'
he
shade when you needit.
IRI I M
et II I
541-389-9983 www.shadeondemand.com
mission — or to multiple ones. But for now, the new re-
search at least gives some meaning to the empty adjective s~
rr
' REIJEFI m I I I I
AcTIvITIEs CALENDAR TOASTMASTERS:8 a.m.;Gordy's Truck Stop, 17045 Whitney Road, Bend; 541-771-9177. OLD MILL DISTRICT BIRDING WALKS: Go ona birdwalk guided by HIGHNOONERSTOASTMASTERS: theEastCascadesAudubon Society; Noon; New Hope Church, 20080 Pinebrook Blvd., Bend; 10 a.m.; The Old Mill Disctrict, 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6804. 541-312-0131. BINGO: 6 p.m.; Eagles Lodge8 BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Club, 235 NE Fourth St, Prineville; Post P44, 704 SW Eighth St., 541-447-7659. Redmond; 541-548-5688. WRITERS GUILDMEETING: Author Jane Kirkpatrick will offer SUNDAY six ways to increase pleasure and productivity in your writing life in BINGO: 12:30 p.m.; American "Give Yourself Credit"; 6:30 p.m.; Legion Post ¹44, 704 SW E!ghth St., Downtown Bend Public L!brary, Redmond; 541-548-5688. 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. centraloregonwritersgUild.com or MONDAY 541-548-4138.
TODAY
SMITH ROCKSTATE PARK HIKE: Hike in Smith Rock State Park with the Friends and Neighbors of the Deschutes Canyon Area; 10 a.m. registration required; Smith Rock State Park, Terrebonne; 541-504-5852.
TUESDAY LA PINE CHAMBER
WEDMESDAY REDMONDAREA TOASTMASTERS:Noon;Church of Christ, 925 NW Seventh St., Redmond; 541-905-0841. BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave.,Bend;541-383-2581.
V CI
O >N DEMA N D
KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: Noon; Juniper Golf Course,1938 SW Elkhorn Ave., Redmond; www.redmondkiwanis.org or 541-548-5935. PRIME TIMETOASTMASTERS: 12:05 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, 555 NW Third St., Prinev!Ile; 54 !-447-6929. BINGO: 6 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, 704 SW Eighth St., Redmond; 541-548-5688.
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THURSDAY SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL PROGRAM WITH NURSE-FAMILY PARTNERSHIP: Monthly meeting with Sarah Holloway, RNiBSN, of the Nurse-Family Partnership; noon; Deschutes County Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend.org or 541-382-8608. COMMUNICATORS PLUS TOASTMASTERS: 6:30 p.m.; Oregon Department of Environmental Quality, 475 NE Bellevue Drive, Suite110, Bend; 541-388-6146, ext. 2011.
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5 0-P L U S
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
Rota an PeaceCo s in reevancewit retirees By Kerry Hannon«New York Times News Service
hree years ago, Douglas Crumley sold his
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financial planning practice in Fair Oaks, California, and he and his wife, Ann, left the country.
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"The intention was to live in Ecuador and travel
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through South America doing the retirement thing," he said. "Well, I became absolutely bored. I don't speak Spanish well enough to assimilate and walkingup and down thebeaches seemed unproductive." So seven months after setting up stakes abroad, Crumley, now 69, and his wife, Ann, 53, moved back to the United States and settled in Tampa, Florida. She headed into the work force selling residential real estate, but Crumley was not certain what to do with himself. At his wife's suggestion, he adding, "way before Facejoined a nearby Rotary Cub. book." He s aid, "From its "'It will make you feel like start, Rotary meetings have you're doing more than tak- been an occasion for people ing up space,' she told me," to get together and exchange Crumley said. ideas, discuss critical issues happening in their communiA feeling of contribution ty, things happening globally She was right. For the past and to take action." It is still going strong. The year, he has been going to weekly breakfast meetings 110-year-old o r ganization, and volunteering in commu- which was founded in Chicanity service projects, for ex- go, has 1.2 million members ample, helping collect bikes in 34,000 clubs in 200 coundonated to children living at a tries and other geographical localorphanage. locations, and 28 percent of "I feel useful," he said. "It's
those members are r etired
a wonderful group of men and active in the group. In the and women who inspire me, United States and Canada, 26 and we've become friends." percentof Rotarians are beO lder v o lunteers l i k e tween 60 and 69 — nearing or Crumley are on the rise, as at retirement age — up from Americans live longer and 24 percent in 2009 and 21 perare healthier. In 2013, 24.2 cent in 2006. " We have R o tarians i n percent of Americans older than 65, 10.6 million people, their 70s and 80s traveling to did some type of volunteer Nigeria to work on polio and work, up from 22.7 percent in traveling to Bolivia to work 2002, and that number is ex- on a water project," Hewko pected to rise to more than 13 said. "For our retiree memmillion by 2020, according to bers, it's incredibly important the Corporation for National to stay engaged with people, and Community Service, a to be out and about, and to be federal agency that adminis- giving back." ters large national volunteer Like Rotary, the Peace programs such as Ameri- Corps is also working to enCorps and Senior Corps. list older U.S. volunteers. The corps, established in 1961 by Rotary clubs an executive order signed by Responding to that spirit, President John F. Kennedy, is old-line volunteer organi- still predominantly a younger zations like Rotary and the person's game, but 7 percent Peace Corps are stepping in of its volunteers are 50 or to deliver opportunities for older. "I would like to see that retirees to stay connected and give back. closer to 15 percent," said "Rotary was the original Carrie Hessler-Radelet, the social network," said John Peace Corps' director. Hewko, general secretary of The corps has no upper Rotary I n t ernational, l ater age limit. Although fewer
The New YorkT!mee
Kate Burrus stands with students she taught in Jamaica. As Americans live longer and healthier, volunteerism amongst the retired is on the rise — Burrus and her husband recently finished their second assignment with the Peace Corps.
a small primary school, and be a slightly smaller list of our assignment focused on countries you can consider," working with students needHessler-Radelet said. ing extra instruction in readrecently entered the service, All Peace Corps volunteers ing," Granger said. is an 86-year-old trainee in receivecomprehensive mediIn Rotary, the retiree volMorocco. cal and dental benefits during unteer story is similar. Myrservice. Financial benefits in- iad volunteer projects give A growing group clude paid travel to and from retirees outlets for t h eir of Peace Corps volunteers the country of service, living professional skills; for exThe push for older volun- expenses, vacation days and ample, mentoring budding teers began in 2 011, when a readjustment allowance entrepreneurs, tutoring chilthe Peace Corps began work- upon completion of service dren or working on disease ing with A A R P t o c onnect that can amount to thousands prevention. more older volunteers with of dollars. In the United States, avservice opportunities. Then, Marriedcouplesmay serve erage annual club dues are in 2012, it expanded Peace in the Peace Corps together, around$400,with some clubs Corps Response, a program but each person must apply including meals in their costs. that may be more appealing and qualify as a volunteer (Rotary members generally to older adults because it reseparately. John Granger and meet over a meaL) quires a shorter time com- his wife, Kate Burrus, from Peggy Halderman, 6 6, mitment, three months to a Eugene, both 64 and retired joined Rotary in Golden, Colyear instead of the traditional teachers, recently finished orado,after she retired from 27-month commitment. their second assignment with her job as assistant regional The program had been the organization. director for external affairs "We really felt that we had at the National Park Service. open only to Peace Corps vet"My husband has been a erans, but now anyone with a lot of experience to offer at least 10 years of work ex- and wanted to share it in a Rotarian since about 1991, perience and the needed lan- way that could make a dif- so I always helped out on guage skills may apply. In the ference," Granger said. "At all sorts of projects with his than 1 percent of volunteers are olderthan 70, more than 4 percent are 60 and older. And the oldest volunteer, who
2014 fiscal year, more than a
port them, so there may also
the same time, we wanted to
G olden Rotary
third of people who applied travel, to live in another culfor Peace Corps Response po- ture and experience a much sitions were 50 and older. simpler lifestyle." While the m edical eval-
tain we can medically sup-
vides volunteers and finan-
cial support, Halderman said. "So, I saw a blank canvas." She said she "had no idea
what the future would bring, but knew that now was the time for me to contribute in
my own backyard." Her project was fighting childhood hunger through the Golden Backpack Program, which initially delivered lunches in backpacks. Now in its seventh year, the program has raised more than $450,000 from Rotary
and other sources and has served more t ha n
3 50,000
meals to needy children in the Golden area. "To see the sheer joy on the faces of little kids when
they get their weekly sacks of food," Halderman said, is "all
our amazing volunteer team needs."
C l ub," s h e
sard.
Find It All Online
uation process is the same Utlizing skills regardlessof an applicant's On their first Peace Corps age, depending on medical assignment, they taught Enhistory, it can take longer glish in Chongqing, China, for an older volunteer to be from 2009 to 2012. Then they accepted. worked at a small primary "We only place our older school in the foothills of the volunteers where we are cer-
The club has a philosophy of "find your passion" and, once a member has developed a project, Rotary pro-
Blue Mountains in Jamaica. "We were each assigned to
bendbulletin.com
C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n r a h o m e . c o m
Savings
ment savings or health care because the financial market- of the people who have access plan they offer, and requires the place is already full of options to a retirement plan through Continued from 01 companiesthat manage these employers of all sizes can pick work use it. 541382-6447!2090NEWyttC t ! a T 1 01 A recent report conducted plans to meet certain fiducia- from if they want to give their — Reporter: 541-617-7816, Bend OR 97701 ~ bendurology.com by Portland State University ry requirements. It also gives employees a way to save tommclean®bendbulietin.com found 45 percent of the state's plan members the right to take ward retirement. He said that private sector workers — in- their employer to court if they while some of these options, cluding half the people who suspect their employer or plan such as a traditional 401(k) belong to Sisk's union — do administrator m i smanaged plan, can be cost prohibitive to not currently have access to a their benefit accounts or was in employers, others,such asthe retirement plan through their breach of their fiduciary duty. SIMPLE IRA, are easier and "We believe the federal less expensive than one might employers. It estimated 400,000 em- government wil l r e g ulate think. That's why his group and ployees would take advantage (the state's plan) and should of the state-managed retire- regulate (the state's plan,)" other members of the State of ment plan if it were created said Mangan, who disagrees Savers Coalition have introand that doing so could in- sharply with statements made duced a substitute version of crease the average worker's by SB 615/HB 2960's support- the state's retirement plan legretirement income by $10,540 ers that ERISA's rules will not islation that would create a dia year. According to the U.S. apply if their retirement plan rectory listing the various rew w Census Bureau, the average proposal becomes law. tirement savings options that senior-led household in OrMangan said the protec- are out there, teach employers egon earned just $18,675 a tions contained in t hi s l aw and employees about how year — about $1,550 a month could open every person in- they work and set up a special — if it did not have any retire- volved in the retirement plan tax credit businesses could ment income outside of Social up to lawsuits from current use to recoup some of the costs Security. and former employees who associated with getting one of "Everyone believes people are not satisfied with the re- these savings plans started. • • C e needtobe savingmore fortheir turn they got on their investSisk said promoting these • e • e retirements," Mangan said. ments, who think the plan ad- options isn't the best solution But Mangan and theother ministrator is being too risky to the state's retirement savmembers of his coalition don't with their investments or who ings crisis because they still think the state's approach to disagree with the amount of requireemployers and emdealing with its retirement cri- money that is being taken out ployees to set up an account, sis is the best way to proceed. of their checks at the end of ev- make their contributions and ery pay period. keep track of t h eir i n vestThe alternative "Every choice an employer ments once they've started Mangan said the SB 615/HB makes could be subject to lit- making contributions. He said 2960's employer mandate and igation," Mangan said as he the state-managed plan is likeautomatic enrollment rules described the nightmare sce- ly to see better results because would make the state govern- nario he thinks could occur it takes care of all of this work ment and, by extension, every if the federal government got ahead of time. "We have to be aware (this one of its employers, suscepti- involved with the state's retireble to the terms and conditions ment plan. "It's good ERISA's legislation) is going to affect a of the Employee Federal Re- protections regulations could huge portion of the population tirement Income Security Act. apply because they protect who is not financially savvy," This 1974 law requires em- workers." Sisk said. ployers to provide detailed Mangan also said these poPart of the PSU report that information about any retire- tential risks are unnecessary found 82percent ofthepeople •
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D4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
PARENTS EeKIDS
Email information for the Family Calendar at least 10days before publication to communitylife@bendbulletin com, or click on"Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updatedmonthly. Contact: 541-383- 0351.
FAMILY CALENDAR
TODAY STORYTIMES — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5 years;10:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. FREE KINDERMUSIKCLASS: Ages 2-3 years, class with music, movement, instruments, dancesand more; 10:30a.m.; CascadeSchool of Music,200 NWPacific Park Lane, Bend; www.ccschoolofmusic.org or 541-382-6866.
SATURDAY STORYTIMES— FAMILYSATURDAY STORIES: All ages; 9:30a.m.; East Bend Library,62080 DeanSwift Road, Bend; www.deschureslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. STORYTIMES — MUSIC, MOVEMENT8 STORIES: Ages 3-5;10:15 a.m.; Sisters Library, 110 N Cedar St., Sisters; www. deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070.
MONDAY KINDERMUSIKCLASS:For ages
0-24 months, class with music, movement, instruments and more; Parent or caregiver participates in the class with their child; 9:30
a.m.; Cascade School of Music, 200 NW Paci ficPark Lane,Bend; www.ccschoolofmusic.org or 541-382-6866. KIDS CAMP:COOKING101: Ages 7 to13, learn to cook breakfast, lunch and dinner from scratch;10a.m.; $300, registration required; Widgi Creek Golf Club,18707 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.welltraveledfork. com or 541-312-0097. STORYTIMES — FIZZ! BOOM! READ!:Ages 3-5 years, stories, songs and science;10:30 a.m.; Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — MUSIC, MOVEMENT &STORIES:Ages3-5; 10:30 a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 507 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050.
TUESDAY STORYTIMES — TODDLIN' TALES:Ages18-36 months;10:15
a.m.; Downtown Bend Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES — FAMILYBLOCK PARTY:Lego Universe: All ages; 10:30 a.m.; Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www.deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — FAMILYFUN: Ages 0-5;10:30 a.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane, Sunriver; www.deschuteslibrary. org/sunriver or 541-312-1080. STORYTIMES —TODDLIN' TALES:Ages18-36 months;11 a.m.; Downtown Bend Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5 years;1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 507 NWWall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050.
Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ eastbend or 541-330-3760. KIDSDAY:POISONOUS & VENOMOUS:Learnaboutthe
deadly waysplants andanimals adapt for survival from a safe distance;10 a.m.; $12, $7 for youth; The High Desert Museum,59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. highdesertmuseum.org/rsvp or 541-382-4754. STORYTIMES — MOTHER GOOSE AND MORE:Ages 0-2, participatory musical storytime with books, rhymes and bounces;10:15 a.m.; Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES —TODDLIN' TALES:Ages18-36 months;10:15 a.m.; Downtown Bend Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050.
STORYTIMES —BABYSTEPS: Ages 0-18 months.15 minutes of gentle stories, rhymes and rhythms; 11:30a.m.; Downtown Bend Public WEDNESDAY Library, 601 NWWall St., Bend; STORYTIMES—TODDLIN'TALES: www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. Ages 0-3; 9:30 a.m.; East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, STORYTIMES — MAKE: Ages12-
17, make simple circuits;1:30 p.m.; La Pine Library,16425 First St., La Pine; www.deschuteslibrary.org/ lapine or 541-312-1090. STORYTIMES — MAKE:Ages1217, learn to make simple circuit light boxes and cards; 2 p.m.; Redmond Library, 827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www.deschuteslibrary. org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — FAMILYBLOCK PARTY:Lego Universe; all ages; 2:30 p.m.; East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-330-3760.
THURSDAY STORYTIMES — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5;10:15 a.m.; East Bend Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road, Bend; www. deschuteslibrary.org/eastbend or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5 years, stories,
songs, rhymesandcrafts to develop early literacy skills;10:15 a.m.;Redmond Library,827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050.
STORYTIMES — FAMILYBLOCK PARTY:Lego Universe; all ages; 10:30a.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 507 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7050. STORYTIMES — FAMILYFUN: Featuring songs, rhymes and crafts;10:30 a.m.; La Pine Library, 16425 First St., La Pine; www. deschuteslibrary.org/lapine or 541-312-1090. STORYTIMES — FAMILYFUN: Ages 0-5;10:30 a.m.; Sisters Library, 110 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. STORYTIMES — LISTOS PARA ELKINDER(READY FOR KINDERGARTEN INSPANISH): Ages 0-5, interactive stories with songs, rhymes and crafts; 11 a.m.;Redmond Library,827 SW Deschutes Ave., Redmond; www. deschuteslibrary.org/redmond or 541-312-1050. STORYTIMES — BABYSTEPS: Ages 0-18 months.15 minutes of gentle stories, rhymes, and rhythms; 1:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St., Bend; www.deschuteslibrary. org/bend or 541-617-7050.
Wi 'over-s arentin ' meant e en 0 riva or our i s'? By Abby Phillip
parentingconcerns than they
The Washington Post
are concerned about the po-
"By the time children are
old enough to use social meYour toddler vomited in the tential negative consequences diathemselves,many already car on your way to the dentist. for their children, according to have a digital identity created Frazzled, you post a status on the survey of 569 parents with for themby their parents," SarFacebook about the terrible, childrenwho are 4or younger. ah Clark, associate research It's easy to understand why scientist in the University of horrible, no-good, very bad day. sharenting hasbecome so per- Michigan's Department of PeYour newborn has decided vasive. Sharing on Facebook, diatrics said in a statement. that sleep is for the birds and Twitter, Tumblr an d ot h e r "On one hand, social media you seek late-night company platforms has made communi- offerstoday's parents an outlet among the other moms. Oh, cating online easy — even for they find incredibly useful. On and doesn't she just look like parents whose ti m e isa scarce the other hand, some are conan angelwhen her eyes finally commodity. And for parents cerned that oversharing may close? who may be dealing with new pose safety and privacy risks Social media has made or difficult challenges associat- fortheir children." "sharenting" easier than ever. ed with their children, comfort According to the survey, But just becauseyou can do it, is nevertoo far away. parents seemwilling to call out It's no wonder that tweens other parents who over-share shouldyou? A new national survey from and teens are now tu r ning online. Three- quartersof parthe University of Michigan away from the social media ents say they know someone C.S. Mott Children's Hospital platforms that their parents are else who shares too much infound that more than half of beginning to infiltrate. Take formation about their child. mothers and a third of fathers Facebook: Formuch of the last More than half of those peoacknowledge that they share ll years, parents have shared ple dassify the information as the ins and outs of raising their the ins and outs of their chil- embarrassing or divulging too children online. We're talking dren's lives on that platform muchabout the child's location. everything from cute photos with impunity, leaving teens But what re ally am ounts and anecdotes to pleasfor help to live in a world where they to too much sharing online'? raising their little monsters. are inheriting a social media Is there a difference between And more parents who identity that they had no hand sharing stories intendedfor the share information about their in creating (beyondacting out consumption of Grandma and children online are more in- duringtheterrible twos and sit- Grandpa and exposing chilterested in the ways "sharent- ting still for mortifying grade- drentofutureembarrassment? ing" can help them cope with school photos). And are we handing over
the privacy of our children mother. I am Dylan Klebold's for the instant gratification of and Eric Harris's mother. I am online comfort, even as some JamesHolmes's mother. I am parents lobby social media Jared Loughner'smother. I am platforms todo moreto protect Seung- Hui Cho'smother." their children'?
Later, Long noted that the
Unless parents are careful about guarding their children's privacy, it is easy for well-intendedsharing to gowrong. A recent Fast Company report highlighted the disturbing trend of Instagram users "role- playing"with stolen baby
words were intended to be
shows how sharenting can enable exploitative behavior. Spears,who was convicted of poisoning her son with salt, hadblogged andtweeted about the difficulties of coping with her son's healthchallenges.
more of a semiprivate diary. It
just didn't stay thatway: "I wrote the words, 'I am Adam Lanza's mother,' not to
theworld, but to myself. Before I could get help for my son, I had to admit how desperately
The University o f Mi c h -
igan researchers note that parents may be divulging not just their struggles in raising their children, but also their
child's physical location and habits, which canbe fodder for
I neededit. That first stepAnd stories about the per- acknowledging to myself the ils of over-sharing are easy to gravity of my family's situa comeby. tion, our tenuousand faltering In the wake of the San- grip on the external trappings dy Hook ElementarySchool of normalcythatI so desperatemassacre in 2012, writer Liza ly craved — iswhat ultimately Long told her painful and per- allowedmy son to get the help sonal experience about rais - heneeds." ing a child who suffered from While that may have been mental illness. The post was her goal, Long's essay was originally written on her blog roundly condemned by other Anarchist Soccer Mom and mothers who viewed it as exaccompaniedby aphoto ofher plottative and damaging to her son,who was given the pseud- son'sfuture thanks to the Interonym "Michael." It quickly net's hauntingpermanency. circulated across the Internet The recent conviction o f as "I am Adam Lanza's Moth- notedmommy bloggerLacer," after a line Long had writ- ey Spearsin the death of her ten: "I am sharing this story young son Garnett is also because I am Adam Lanza's perhapsan extreme case that
predators. And perhaps most
photos.
saliently, parents who think they fully understand how to protect themselves and their
children online oftendon't, and they accidentally openthe door for i n advertent
di s dosures.
The ever-changing landscape of online privacy means that what you think you're protect-
ing today might be"fair game" tomorrow. "Parentsare responsible for
their child's privacy and need to be thoughtful about how much they share on social me-
dia so they can enjoy the benefits of camaraderie but also
protect their children'sprivacy today andin the future," Clark added.
Bullying
age. Current culture encourages us to treat our kids like
those boundaries.They'll feel a healthy senseof power and
encouragementto develop fully. Ripping a toy out of your
Contlnued from D1
mini- adults. But we forget that
independence, and they won't
kid's hand to give it to anoth-
2. Being too busyto
we are adults (trying to be, feel the need to bully in an efanyway), and most of us took fort toregain lost power.
er kid? Bad idea. Talk about our kids are on to us. The masharing, encourage sharing, jority of 10,000 kids surveyed
decadesto be able to even par-
but most importantly — teach
believed that achievement and
sharing. Offer to loan your child something he's been
success were their parents'
caring for others.We need to change that. You know your child's true personality. Deep down, you know if they're a bully or testing boundaries.Be the person your kid wants you to be, so your kid can be the
main priorities, rather than
personyouwant them to.
showyou care
You love your family. But tially manage all this stress. relationships have their ups Fully d isclosing fi n ancial and downs, with the direction burdens, family illnesses and often being down after chil- work issuesall the time just dren enter the picture. When adds additional layers to our was the last time you told your
kids' stress. And an outlet for
partner or family members stress? Bullying. that you loved them? In front
of your kids?Not, "I love you, but ...," but just, "I love you." Positive displays of intimacy
5. Over-schedulingyour kids' activities
7. The triple-play: wincing, waiting, watching Bullying happens at every age. Every time you watch someone or something happen that you could help prevent with word or action, you are a peer to bullying. You
of your dessert. Offer to help with a difficult chore. Forced sharing only results in a feeling of powerlessness.(Taking turns is something different.
are allowing it t o co n tinue Don't confuse the two.) Don't
make your child search for ways toregain their power. Be-
our kids' relationships. You're busy,but a simple hug and kiss
We arescared our kids will be at a disadvantage if they don't participatein everything. So werush to register them for
for each family member on the
ballet, karate, soccer and so
care.'Ihrn it off. The long- term
way out the door in the morning is a great start toward teaching healthy intimacy. Show them you care, so they
muchmore.But the only thing they miss out on if they have a
effects of desensitization are very real. Watch and laugh if
to grow uphappy and successful. But putting happiness and
slower schedule is anxiety and
you must, but remember your
can show others they care.
ageneration ofbullies. Arecent Harvard study discovered that
wanting to explore. Offer abite
through inaction. I un derstand the appeal of the squirrel launching rocket videos on Youlbbe. Really, 1do. But the more you watch, the less you
in the home are the basis for
success beforecaringis raising
A SustainableCup"' Drinkit up! • Fair trade coffee makes a thoughfful gift
cause who's the most powerful
kidin class'?The bully. As parents, wewant our kids
depression. If your child has child is learning how to react a passion,by all means allow to life through your actions.
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• 2 great locations!
them the opportunity to ex-
www.strictlyorganic.com plore it in more depth. But kids 8. Forcing your kids to share You hate your job. Those need unstructuredfree ti m e. Sharing is a learned skill 716 SW11th St. last few pounds you struggle Play time, creative time, quiet that takes time, maturity and ' Redmond 541.923.4732 I I ' I • I • o to lose, or dealing with that time. The damaging effects messy house,or frizzy hair of full schedules are well- doc— your attitude reflects how umented. O v er- scheduling youview the world. And when quickly leadsto stressed kids. 0 we act like we can't change Stress leads to anxiety, anger The Bulletin iS in the prOCeSS Of COmpiling a liSt Of Summer CampS in the outcome, we act helpless. and aggression,which paves Central OregOn. PleaSefill Out thiS fOrm tOVerify infOrmatiOn in Order tO How you feel about life has a the way forbullying behavior. long-lasting impact on your camps, programs,andactivitiesforchildren ofallages. be COnSidered fOr PubliCatiOn in the Summer YOuth ACtiVity Guide. kids. They hear their hero 6. Inconsistent rule +®~I~ 5~4~~ 3®2 ~ S~ ~ Emailinformation tO:SummerCamPS @bendbulletin.Com (you) acthelpless and that will enforcement To reserve your ad space in e make themfeel powerless too. The last thing I want to do Summer Youth Guide ggj/ fppm tp. If your kids feel powerless, after a long day of pickups, they may act to reclaim that drop- offs,work and errands is PublishesPriday, April17 2 15 The Bulletin, Attn: Martha RDgBFS,po. BDX6020, Bend, OR 97Q2 lost power through bullying deal with rule breakers,time- Adv riising ~eadlin:. 3. The "I hate mys"
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ATTENTIONCENTRAL OREGON SUMMER CAMPS
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behavior. Save the negative outs and te mper ta ntrums.
talk for after thekids go to bed (or better yet, channel your
So we chooseto enforce as few rules as possible. But we
frustration into a hobby you
enforce those few ru les all
love).Let your kids be kids.
the time. Inside those boundaries lies freedom. Lay the 4. Mini-me syndrome ground rules,enforce them Kids today are ever more and give your kids permismature at an ever younger sion to be themselveswithin
.
Friday, April, 15
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Ca m P Host: ~itgtocation: website: Phone:
Deadline to submit: April 3, 2015
The Bulletin ~
FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
PETS
D5
Email information for the Pets Calendar at least 10days before publication to communityli fe@bendbulletin.com, or click on "Submit an Event"at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly.Contact: 541-383-0351.
PETS Why does cardinal fly Circus decisioncelebrated CALENDAR for endangered elephants into window regularly? SATURDAY By Jerry Large
Newsday
SPAY IT FORWARD: Professionals offer Shiatsu
The Seattle Ttmes
Q
and facials to benefit Bend Spay and Neuter Project;
By Marc Morrone
window. It does not have to cover the whole window, just • Every single day now the bottom 8 inches or so. That
We pet them, we eat them,
• for the past week, a way, the bird can no longer see
we idolize them, we eradicate them. We hunt them to near
extinction, then carefully reintroduce them into the wild, then hunt them some more.
Our fellow animals are ofI
so wise in how we deal with the power we have over the
tions and sending them to the Center for Elephant Conservation in Florida to live out their lives in an environment more suitable to their nature. Circuses and z oos h ave
displayed elephants for centuries. People are drawn to them, which makes the an-
imals a source of revenue
Randy Pench i Sacramento Bee
Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus announced last week that it's phasing elephants out ofits productions so the animals can live in a more suitable environment elsewhere.
Elephants arehuge and need space to roam in. They're family oriented, but captivity
usually deprives them
that's hard to let go. In the
of that comfort. They're
U.S. in recent years some (not nearly all) zoos and circus-
intelligent and subject to psychological aswell as physical damage.
es have improved the conditions in which their elephants
live, trying to make captivity more humane. Some zoosin-
creased the size of enclosures, even back then what animal for instance, but captivity is abuse looked like, but we've still harmful to the animals. expanded our understanding Elephants are huge and of what is harmful or wrong n eed space to r oam i n . as we h ave l earned more They're family oriented, but about animals. In the 1970s, captivity usually deprives zoos around the world began them of that comfort. They're thinking more about the welintelligent and subject to psy- fare of their animals and upchological as well as physical dating their facilities to make damage. t hem feel an d l o o k m o r e Woodland Park Zoo in Se- natural. attle is sending its two female And now, there is a growelephants to the Oklahoma ing sense that even fixing up City zoo to join a family of el- a zoo may not be enough to ephants there. It's been a long make captivity justifiable. Sejourney to that decision. attle's mayor and City Council The zoo got its f i rst elewanted the Woodland Park phant in 1921, according to elephants sent to a sanctuary, a chronology on its website, where there would be more eland it was a big deal, with a ephants and more space. That parade to celebrate the event. might have been somewhat Its second elephant was ac-
quired as a humanitarian act in 1932, when Mayor John Dore confiscated an elephant
that was being held in deplorable conditions by a traveling show that made a stop in downtown Seattle.
There was no
q uestion
Homeless Continued from 01 Lucas suffered from a persistentcase of fleas for several months in 2014, Brokaw said,
because he couldn't afford flea medication and other preventative care. Like their humans,
living outdoors leaves the animals susceptible to numerous
health problems. Occupy Corvallis and Oregon State University's Shelter
Medicine Club offers free exams, vaccinations and preventative care for homeless ani-
mals twice each year as part of the "Street Dawgs and Cats Care Fair." The groups helped nearly 40 homeless pets receive care in October, and the next fair is scheduled for May.
"The homeless are generally very good pet owners but taking care of pets can cost
better for elephants already in captivity, but the ultimate solution is to keep elephants
free from now on. A number of zoos in the U.S., Canada, Britain and In-
dia have closed their elephant exhibits in recent years. Sometimes outside pres-
people who have animals who will not go to the shelter be-
cause they'd have to give the animals up." Emily James, development director at Heartland Humane
Society, said the organization recognizesthere is a need for
stable preventative care and temporary housing options in Corvallis, but space limita-
tions and legal issues prevent Heartland from p r oviding care to pets that the organiza-
tion does not own. "I would be performing veterinary care without a license
(if the animals are not ours)," James said. "In those cases,
people have the option to sign their animals over to us, and in those cases we'll do what we can. But we understand it's
sure propels change, and sometimes the zookeepers' own regard from wildlife does. We humans seem to be becoming more thoughtful about relationships to other animals, though there are many species that, if they could speak, would surely urge us to speed up the evolution in our thinking and behavior. The long list of species at
Only then can it go on with its
life.
Q
this situation before. Why
drops it. I am puzzled as to
is the bird doing this and
why she does this and what this behavior means.
what can we do? It does not our yard in the afternoon.
A • anything — it is j ust something that she likes to do.
• In the spring, when A • the daylight hours get longer, native birds ex-
A spayed cat has no estrogen, so she cannot have any mothering behaviors, so it is not
seem as if he is hungry. We see him at the bird feeder in
• It really does not mean
black rhinos, bonobos, mountain gorillas, bluefin tuna and
perience raging hormones. like she thinks it is a kitten. Males in particular will It could be that she is treatfight with others of their ing it like a prey animal she sex and species with severe may have just caught and is intensity to p rotect their looking for a place to hide it, nesting territory. It seems and then is not satisfied with that in the early morning any of the spots she encounthe angle of the sun allows ters and then forgets the idea. the bird to see its reflection Or it could just be that she did in your window, and, being it randomly one day and liked a bird, it thinks that reflec- the way that you reacted to tion is another of its spe- herbehavior,and learned that cies. Thus far the only ani- when she does this, you will mals that have been proven give her attention, so it has to have self awareness of become a game. Whateverthe
snow leopards. Accelerated
their reflections are apes,
reason, it is not a reflection on
climate change is having a devastating effect on marine life. Elephants in the wild are being killed by the thou-
dolphins and elephants.
your care of her, and it is not because she is lacking any-
risk of
e x t i nction i ncludes
sands for their tusks because
the ivory is highly valued in some Asian countries. The
ivory trade thrives on a mix of African poverty and Asian wealth, rising as C hina's wealth has increased. Some ofthe effortsto combat elephant poaching take into account the needs of the
people who have elephants in their backyards (sometimes literally) in South Asia and in Africa. These efforts include devising improved methods for preventing elephants from trampling crops, and sharing income from wildlife safaris
with nearby villages — practical steps that reflect a respect for both humanity and
nature.
difficult for people to give up shelter at any area inclement their pets." weather or other type of shelHeartland does offer a pet ter. Through this program, food bank for homeless pet Heartland will provide up to owners toreceive free food 30 days board and basic medtwice a m o n th , H e artland ical care to pets of clients stayr epresentatives said in a n ing in a shelter." "We haven't figured out if email. The organization also provides the Emergency and we'll be able to do a full vacciSafe Housing Program, which nation clinic yet," James said. is available to people seeking "But we recognize there is a shelter at any area inclement huge need, so we're going to weather or other type of shel- try to include it." ter. But several homeless in Harrington hopes that more Corvallis said giving up their affordable veterinary options pets, even temporarily, would become available soon. "It's very important because be too much of a risk and they would rather not be separated. we can't afford to do the shots Heartland representatives and (our pets) need them," she are scheduled to meet with a said. "When I got Happy, I consultant this month to dis- found out he had a heart murcuss the lack of low/no-cost mur and his previous owners assistance to local pet owners, didn't want to pay the vet bills. and whether onsite or mobile So far, he's been OK, but I woroptions would be most feasi- ry about him every day. And ble, James said in an email. I worry if something happens
"We're looking to restruca lotof money. You'd never guess there were so many an- ture our on-site services or imals on the streets because provide mobile services to help they keep such good care of fulfill that need. We're looking them," fair organizer Stepha- at doing it as soon as we can," nie Hampton said previously. she said, noting that it is un"Many people we work with likely the care will be offered equate Heartland with taking within the next year. "There their animal to jail. I k n ow
it finally chased that pesky interloper out of its territory.
does this with such inten-
piens, and we aren't always
elephants out of its produc-
its reflection and will t hink
our living room window over and over again for two hours in the early morning. Then it is gone for the rest of the day. The poor bird
• My spayed 5-year-old sity that his feathers get • indoor calico cat is not knocked off and stick to the normally vocal. However, in window. We have lived in the evening she carries her this house for 24 years, and fabric lanyard in her mouth, we have never experienced wailing mournfully, until she
ten at the mercy of Homo sa-
rest of the planet, but we can change. We are changing. Recently Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus announced that it is phasing
red cardinal crashes into
that I won't be able to afford it."
The Corvallis D aytime Drop-In Center's Advocates for Pets of Homeless People
provide one-on-one service assistance to homeless pets. Organizers have previously are no options for that locally provided assistance in getting for people in Benton County. animals certified as service or We feel like that's our role and companion animals, helped we really want to figure out a pet owners find low-cost vetway we can do it. We need to erinary care and provided find a solution that allows us connections to various charity to be compliant with the law organizations and programs and ideally provide limited around Corvallis. But funding veterinary services full time." for the program itself is seHeartland also is scheduled verely limited, said co-coordito host its "Snip 8 Spay" low- nator Peter Ewald. "It's not a strong program cost cat spay and neuter event April 11. James also noted, in because we don't have the an email Wednesday, that the funds or the volunteers we shelter offers the homeless need to do it," Ewald said. "But other services as well: when people have the needs "Heartland ... currently of- come in to the drop-in center, fersservices to the homeless we help them out to the point population, including a pet w e can. We're not able to do foodbank for pet owners to re- everything they need, but we ceive free food twice a month, do everything we can." as well as the Emergency and To volunteer or donate to the Safe Housing Program which program, residents can conis available to people seeking tact Ewald at 541-602-1792.
At any r ate, after the
sun gets higher, the light's thing in her life. a ngle probably will n o When I was a kid, I had a longer allow the cardinal cat named Frosty who lived to see its reflection and in outdoors and indoors and turn will end the window spent the whole day roaming attacks. This situation is very stressful for the bird,
the woods. He lacked nothing in his life, and yet he liked to
though, and means the bird just pick up things and carry has two fewer hours every them home. He would bring day to perform parental back sticks and small rocks duties. and leave them on our back You can easily solve the porch in a pile. It was a hobby problem by taping some of his, and only Frosty knew paper to the outside of the why he liked to do it.
massage, Swedish massage
$50 suggested donation appointments required; 10 a.m.; Synergy Health 8 Wellness, 244 NE Franklin Avenue, Ste. 5, Bend; 541508-6554 or www.bendsnip. org/event. CELEBRATE CHANCE PARTY:In 2013, BrightSide Animal Center rescued a severely injured pit bull who was found near death along the road. The public, and donors who helped in Chance's care and recovery, are invited to meet him and celebrate his happy, healthy new life; refreshments, photos and raffle drawings; free; 1-5 p.m.; BrightSide Animal Center, 1355 NE Hemlock Ave., Redmond; 541-923-0882 or www. brightsideanimals.org.
ADOPT ME
Submitted photo
A classic calico Barbie is a classic calico who came toCatRescue, Adoption and Foster Team with five other cats after their
owner died. She isabout 4 years old, quiet andaffectionate, and would make agreat companion. Tomeet Barbie and other adoptable cats at the Cat Rescue,Adoption and Foster Team, call 541-389-8420, email info©craftcats.org or visit www.craftcats.org.
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
'e
o se a o a i rin
TV SPOTLIGHT
The 12 charities that are to share i n t h e d o nations
Courtesy Bleecker Street
Al Pacino, right, as Danny Collins, depicts a scene from the film, "Danny Collins." The movie opens in U.S. theaters today.
The biennial March U.K.
ain's famed Red Nose Day
include the Boys & G i rls broadcast, featuring stars, Clubs of America, Children's comedy and music, has re-
charity event will m ake its
Health Fund and United Way.
U.S. debut with a NBC special benefiting anti-poverty groups. Money raised by the threehour "Red Nose Day" broadhelp children and families
Red Nose Day, operated in donations since it began, by Comic Relief in Britain, according to its organizers. was co-founded in 1985 by Emma Watson, Daniel Craig filmmaker Richard Curtis and Orlando Bloom were ("Love Actually," "Bridget among the stars appearing in Jones's Diary"). Celebrities, the 2015 special, which aired schoolchildren and others last week.
i n A f r ica, A sia an d
traditionally don red clown
L OS ANGELES —
Brit-
cast May 21 will be used to L atin
ceived more than $1 billion
"Red Nose Day is almost
This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday. ft should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitablefor children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13 are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational valuefor older children with parental guidance.
Rating:PG-13for intense violence and action throughout, some sen suality, thematic elements and brief
language.
i.» '
Tbe kid-attractor factor:That activist and Oscar presenter SeanPenn shoots, stabs and neck-snaps his way through Spain andThe Congo.
Goodlessons/badlessons:There
What it's about:The "divergent" P are n ts' advisory: More acteens and twentysomethings who t i o n-packed and violent than the atone for them. Unless you're the don't fit in carry out their revoit first "Divergent" film, still OK for hero in an action movie. against tyrannical conformity. 10 and up Violence:Lots and lots, bloody and The kid-attractor factor:Shailene T"EG"NMAN personal. Woodley,TheoJames,AnselElgort Rating:R for strong violence, lanand Miles Teller take charge of Language:Someprofanity. their sci-fi destiny in this violent gua g e and some sexuality. Ssx:Suggested. post-apocalyptic future. What it's about: A sickly ex-asDrugs:Alcohol, cigarettes Good lessons/bsd lessons:"Dark s a s sln needs to find out who from times call for extreme measures," h i s past is hunting him in order to Pare nts' advisory: Entirely too viobut violence begets violence. survive and continue his Third World lent for anyone under15.
Submitted photo
In a post-apocalyptic future, youth revolt against tyrannical conformity in "The Divergent Series: Insurgent." Best for ages 10-and-up.
Casua remar eaves ainu stin
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Dear Abby:My wife, "Tina," was very hurt by a friend recently. Her friend "Sally" called her "cheap" during a conversation ("she's cheap like you"). Sally didn't intend it to be hurtful, just an illustration — but my wife is very upset about it. We use coupons when we grocery shop or dine out; we also watch our
thermostats, r ecycle, etc. On the other hand, we have sent our children to uni-
DFP,R
Aggy
who has a fantastic life, a loving family, great grades in school and a nice house. I have a problem that seems to be taking over my life: 1'm very anxious.
afraid to talk to them and ask for help, then speak to a counselor at
schoolso the counselor can bring it to their attention. Because this is troubling you to the extent that you
At first, it seemed I was just a have written to me, please don't worrywart, but lately, it's been nuts. procrastinate. I'm terrified someone in my family Dear Abby:How do you politely is going to die and I refuse to hug or shake someone's worry o b sessively hand becauseof a medical issue over it. I try to think
that lowers your infection'?
just overtakes me. 1'm terrified of
months ago because of a recur-
it's going to be all right, but my anxiety
versity without loans, our mortgage is paid off, we have death and that my parents or my traveled extensively and our net siblings will die tomorrow. I don't worth is north of a million dollars know who to tell. My parents freak with no debt. How do I make Tina out over the slightest thing. Please realize that Sally's comment should help me. — Worrywart in Arizona not upset her so? — Thrifty in Texas Dear Worrywart: Many young Dear Thrifty: What happened peopleharbor the same fearyou was unfortunate because the prob- have. Butbecauseyou sayyourparlem may be that Sally simply chose ents tend to"freak out" at the slightthe wrong word. What she prob- est thing, I can't help but wonder ably meant was that your wife is if a tendency toward high anxiety frugal. The difference between runs in your family. "frugal" and "cheap" is that being Assuming that your family memfrugal is a VIRTUE. Because Sal- bers are in good health, your preocly hurt your wife's feelings, Tina cupation with the idea they might needs to tell her how it made her suddenly die should be discussed feel so Sally can apologize to her with a licensed psychotherapist. beforeitcausesapermanent rift. Ideally, you should tell your parDear Abby: I'm a teenage girl ents what's going on, but if you're
country gets involved in some way," actress Sienna Miller
("American Sniper") said in a statement. "1'm thrilled it's coming to the U.S."
NBC has yet to announce the talent roster for its special, but "Mad Men" star Jon
Hamm was featured in a promotional spot that aired
during the Super Bowl.
7:30 p.m. on TCM, Movie: "Star!" —Julie Andrews reteamed with her "The Sound of Music" director and producer, Robert Wise and Saul Chaplin, respectively, for this 1968 biopic of British musical actress Gertrude Lawrence. Lightning failed to strike twice, however, and the film was re-cut from nearly three hours to two, which didn't help. Despite only mediocre reviews, "Star!" earned seven Oscar nominations, including one for Daniel Massey as Gertie's best friend, Noel Coward. Richard Crenna also stars.
4
Vio lence: Yes,not alot of blood,but aid work. otherwise Pretty exPlicit. Language:Bits of profanity. $ Y tl ff Drugs:None to speak of.
forward to it and the entire
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES "THE QIVERGENT SFRIES: INSURGENT"
•
noses to promote the event, a
States, NBC said Wednesday. The Associated Press
•
like a national holiday in reflection of its lighthearted the U.K. — it's a day of real approach. excitement, everyone looks
America as well as the United
By Lynn Elber
e
r e sistance to
I had a stem cell transplant 18 rence of Hodgkin's lymphoma. 1'm now on a drug that keeps my white blood count low. If I get a fever, I
could end up in the hospital. I have been in remission for over a year and look healthy. I don't really care to get into a long conversation about my experience, but 1 don't want to put myself
at risk. How should I handle this without appearing rude? — Holding Back in Pennsylvania Dear Holding: Not extending your hand should send the message. However, if you are pressed, tell a short version of the truth, which would be, "I can't do that because I have a medical condition
that prevents close contact." — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box69440,LosAngeles, CA 90069
I
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 6, 9:15 • CHAPPIE (R)12:05, 3:05, 6:50, 10:05 • CINDERELLA (PG) l2:10, 12:40, 3:15, 3:40, 6:45, 7: l5, 9:45, 9:55 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-D (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 3, 7, 10 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT IMAX3-D (PG13) noon, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • DD YDU BELIEVE? (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9 • FIFTY SHADES DFGREY (R) 12:50, 7:25 • FOCUS (R) 12:30, 3:10, 6:25, 9:05 • THE GUNMAN (R) 11:35 a.m., 3:20, 6:20, 9:40 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R)12:15,3:45,7:35, 10:35 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) 3:50, 10:20 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)12:45, 3:55, 7:40, 10:40 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 11:25 a.m., 2:15, 5, 7:45,10:25 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:15 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 9:10 • SELMA (PG-13)6:10, 9:15 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT DF WATER (PG) 11:10a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE: SPONGE OUT DF WATER 3-D (PG) 2:05 • Accessibility devices are available for somemovies.
8 p.m. on 5, 8, "Grimm"The legend of a rabbit's foot gets a troubling manifestation among humansinthe new episode "Bad Luck." Nick and Hank (David Giuntoli, Russell Hornsby) look into the background of a homicide victim whosebody is m issing— see if you can guess, now —afoot. Monroe and Rosalee (Silas Weir Mitchell, Bree Turner) put themselves at risk to help in the investigation. Juliette and Adalind's (Bitsie Tulloch, Claire Coffee) face-off continues to affect Nick. 8 p.m. on10, "Glee" —And so it ends, tunefully, of course: The trendsetting musical drama concludes its six-season run with the two-hour episode "2009/Dreams Come True." The first half goes back to the formation of New Directions, while the concluding hour moves forward to project where the characters will be in five years. Lea Michele, Chris Colfer, Matthew Morrison and Emmy winner Jane Lynch take their last bows in their roles here, and many past cast regulars return. ct zap2it
SUN FoREsT CoNSTRUcTION
DESIGN I BUILD I REMODEL
t
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INHERENT VICE(R) 9 • INTO THE WOODS(PG) 6 • Younger than 2f mayattend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
PAINT
803 SW Industrial Way, Bend, OR
Pure. &rrbct.6 t"o.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY, MARGH 20, 2015:This yearyou embrace a new beginning, partially be-
cause youareso unusually creative and dynamic. You could decidetochangea certain facet of your life, even though you won't know what the result will be. No matter what happens, you are likely to be quite content in the long run. If you are single, you might Stsfs sbovrfbe klsd find that you're atof dsy yps'8 bsve tracted toatotally ** * * * D ynamic different type of ** * * Positive pe r sonality. Avoid *** Average making any major ** So-so commitments until * Difficult fall, if possible. If you are attached, you spontaneously will take off on a travel adventure together. You could surprise yourself with the choices you make. PISCES' emotional ways sometimes get to you.
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
worth it. Events seem to go as you would like, as the result of several careful negotiations. A loved one might feel slightly off. Be supportive. Tonight: Celebrate living. Your mood will be contagious!
** * * You might wake up with avery creativ eand dynamic idea.How youhandle yourself and the way in which you express your idea will make a big difference. You might be more focused on certain projects and tasks than you realize. Tonight: Follow your whims.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dsc. 21)
** * * You might be a little out of sorts, CANCER (June21-July 22) but events will occur that will allow you ** * * You might be on top of a problem more flexibility. Whether you decide to andfarmoreupbeatthan youhave been take this path is up to you. Lighten upa litin the past.Yoursenseof humoremerges tle and you might gain a new perspective. when dealing with others. Consider a new Honor a fast change. Tonight: Pretend that option. Ask yourself how much tension you you are a kid again. can handle before deciding. Tonight: TGIF! GAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan.19) LEO (July23-Aug.22) ** * Pressure builds as the day goes on. ** * * Return all calls before you make You might want to let off some steam and any decisions, especially those regarding then relax. A roommate or family member weekend plans. Consider takingashort could be more combative than usual. weekend escape.You can'timaginewhat Know that you'll be able to handle everythis getaway will do for you. Meanwhile, thing that comes your way. Tonight: Buy a ARIES (Msrch21-April19) bottle of bubbly on the way home. ** * * Your creativity opens door after detach from your immediate issues. Tonight: Follow the music. door. You'll greet the day feeling inspired AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) andenergetic.Know what youwant,and VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * You easily could change plans don't hesitate to go after it. Test out your ** * * Be more easygoing and you will and decide to head in a different direction. ideas before you make them realities. Ask seeabig difference in howa loved one Your sense of humor emerges when a friend to play the role of devil's advoresponds toyou. In asense, youcould dealing with a fiery personality. Try to be cate. Tonight: Lady Luck is with you. be renegotiating the terms of your relaserious when listening to this person; he tionship. Don't worry about the ups and or she might needto share somenews. TAURUS (April 20-Msy20) downs. Reach out to friends for support. Tonight: Hang out at a favorite haunt. ** * Your sixth sense speaks to you more and more throughout the day. Make Tonight: Tap into your imagination. PISCES (Fsb.19-March20) sure thatyou aren't listening to the voice ** * You could be taken aback by what LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22) that encourages you to go for what you *** Don't stand onceremony. Remain is going on. This morning's eclipse in your want, or you might have trouble. Have a positive, and your attitude easily could de- sign might drain you a little. Takeawalk private discussion with someone you care fine the response you get. Honor a change and relax, but don't push yourself. Postabout. Tonight: Not to be found! in your feelings. Regardless of whether pone any important decisions for now. this change is negative or positive, be If you need to, take the day off. Tonight: GEMINI (May 21-June 20) ** * * You might think that you need open and kind. Tonight: You have ahuge Treat yourself. to get an early start, and it just might be range of possibilities. © King Features Syndicate
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • MR. TURNER (R) 4 I
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aj. B~ dU
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Bend Redmond
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA (PG)11a.m.,1:30, 4, 6 30, 9 • THE DIVERGENTSERIES: INSURGENT(PG-l3) I I:45 a.m.,12:30, 2:30, 3:15, 5:15, 6:05, 8, 8:45 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 11:30 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG)4:45, 7:15 • THE DIVERGENTSERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13)5,7:30 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG)7 • THE SECOND BEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 4:30, 7 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 4:45 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CHAPPIE (R) I:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:35 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:35 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 11:30 a.m.,4:35, 7:10 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT3-D (PG-13)2, 9:50 • THE GUNMAN (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 9:55 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) 11:40 a.m., 2:05, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 •
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- -OoTHIEue
Your Beal appllanee experte
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (Upstairs — PG) 1:10, 4:10, 7:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 1, 4, 7, 9:45 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
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j ohnsonbro~thers trcom 541-382-6223
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in today's 0 GD! Magazine
•
' NQRTHWEsT CROSSING Aaxtard-aeinning
neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwe's'tcrossing.com
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 •
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Ads starting as low as $10/week rivate ait onl
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Call for package rates
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Packages starting at $140for28da s
Call for prices
Prices starting at $17.08 erda
Run it until it sells for $99 oru to12months
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On the web at: www.bendbulletin.com
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Pets & Supplies
Pets 8 Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
Computers
Misc. Items
Misc. Items
Heating & Stoves
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Donate deposit bottles/ T HE B U LLETIN r e - Hovv to avoidscam The Bulletin Offers The Bulletin recomcans to local all vol., TheBulletin and fraud attempts Free PrivateParty Ads Bend local pays CASH! I quires computer admends extra caution recommends extra ' non-profit cat rescue for firearms & ammo. vertisers with multiple YBe aware of interna- • 3 lines - 3 days when purc h as- trailer: Jake's Diner, i caution when purad schedules or those tional fraud. Deal lo- • Private Party Only 541-526-0617 ing products or serchasing products or • Hwy 20 E & Petco in selling multiple sysof items adverwhenever pos- • Total vices from out of the services from out of I CASH!! Redmond; donate at tems/ software, to dis- cally tised must equal $200 area. Sending cash, For Guns, Ammo 8 Smith Sign, 1515 NE I the area. Sending I close the name of the srsible. or Less Watch for buyers checks, or credit inReloading Supplies. 202 2nd, Bend; or CRAFT ' cash, checks, o r ' business or the term who offer more than FOR DETAILS or to f ormation may b e i credit i n f ormation 541-408-6900. "dealer" in their ads. in Tumalo. Can pick PLACE AN AD, Want to Buy or Rent subjected to fraud. may be subjected to your asking price and up Ig. amts, 389-8420. Call 541-385-5809 Christiansen Arms 300 Private party advertis- who ask to have For more i nformai FRAUD. For more Fax 541-385-5802 Wanted: $Cash paid for tion about an adver- www.craftcats.org L H , VX 3 ers are defined as money wired or information about an I RUM, vintage costume jew- tiser, you may call Leopold Scope 4x14, those who sell one Labrador pups,black, handed back to them. advertiser, you may I computer. ehy. Top dollar paid for the O regon State 8 wks, 3 males left, $400 N ew Fake cashier checks Find It in f call t h e Ore g onf B 8 C Reticle. Gold/Silver.l buy by the asking $3300. ea. 541-408-8880 and money orders ' State Atto r ney ' $5500, Estate, Honest Artist Attorney General's The Balletla Classiffeds! 54'I -815-2505. ngoodbuy" Say are common. C o n sumer Purebred Lab p ups,i General's O f f i ce Elizabeth,541-633-7006 Office 541-385-58 t09 HNever give out perProtection hotline at Consumer Protec- • champ bloodlines. to that unused 1-877-877-9392. sonal financial infor7F, 1M, blacks 8 yel- tion h o t line a t i Find exactly what item by placing it in mation. Wanted- paying cash lows. Avail. in May. i 1-877-877-9392. you are looking for in the The Bulletin for Hi-fi audio 8 stuThe Bulletin Classifieds sfTrust your instincts Come meet your new CLASSIFIEDS dio equip. Mclntosh, companion! S i sters t TheBulletin t DO YOU HAVE and be wary of Serving Cenrral Oregon sincetggs JBL, Marantz, DySOMETHING TO someone using an (503) 459-1580 e 5 4 1 385-5809 WANTEDwood dressSELL naco, Heathkit, SanThe Bulletin's escrow service or Queensland Heelers 212 ers; dead washers. FOR $500 OR agent to pick up your sui, Carver, NAD, etc. "Call A Service Standard & Mini, $150 541-420-5640 LESS? Call 541-261-1808 257 merchandise. Antiques & Professional" Directory & up. 541-280-1537 Non-commercial Musical Instruments www.rightwayranch.wor Collectibles 203 is all about meeting The Bulletin 263 advertisers may serving Central Oregon since1205 dpress.com yourneeds. Holiday Bazaar place an ad Tools B ready for Uke fest. C hina cabinet, o a k; with our 8 Craft Shows Kamoa ukelele + case. Reduce Your Past Tax Call on one of the trunk; 2 chairs, oak, "QUICK CASH (2)Tool boxes w/profes$165. 503-559-5360 upholstery no arms; professionals today! Bill by as much as 75 sional tools, $ 7 00 SPECIAL" Artistic Talent Search! small drop front desk, 1 week 3 lines 12 Drum Kits:Specializing Percent. Stop Levies, obo. 541-280-7608 Grizzly Ridge Upcycle Adopt a rescued cat or oak; redwood b u rl in High Quahty New & Liens and Wage Garor is currently accepting kitten! Altered, vaccitable 4x/2'x3/2'; round 2e eke 2 t n Used Drum Sets! nishments. Call The ~ 265 applications for cre- nated, ID chip, tested, end table; bookcase SAINT BERNARDS Ad must Kevin, 541-420-2323 Tax DR Now to see if ative, artistic people more! CRAFT, 65480 Brandy Building Materials mahogany. Must See! & Bruno's beauThe Drum Shop include price of you Qualify who want to sell their 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, tiful full-mask puppies541-388-3532 1-800-791-2099. n~ te t e i 2 5 0 0 creations in our new 1-5. La Pine Habitat 541 - 389-8420 2 fem. left! Born Jan. 11; or less, or multiple (PNDC) Old Gas Pumps /Soda c onsignment s t o r e www.craftcats.org For Sale: RESTORE ready now (photo taken Vending Machines items whose total Piano Technician opening soon in SisBuilding Supply Resale 2/27). Dew claws redoes not exceed ters, Oregon. The Bichon Frise AKC reg'd moved, 1st shots. $500. WANTED! Will pay cash. tools 8 supplies, Quality at SOCIAL S E C URITY Kyle, 541-504-f050 $500. with rolls of piano ideal candidate will be puppies, 3 females. For appointment, call LOW PRICES D ISABILITY BEN an out - of-the-box 541-953-0755 or string, $725. 541-548-3520 52684 Hwy 97 The Bulletin reserves E FITS. Unable t o Call Classifieds at 541-912-1905. Call 971-219-9122 thinker, able to create 541-536-3234 the right to publish all work? Denied ben541-385-5809 upcycled m erchanin Redmond Open to the public . ads from The Bulletin www.bendbulletin.com efits? We Can Help! dise that is beautiful, newspaper onto The WIN or Pay Nothing! clever, unique or even Prineville Habitat Oak upright piano, circa Contact Bill Gordon 8 Bulletin Internet webcomical. Space is is R emington 22- 2 5 0 1900, good c o nd, Associates ReStore site. at limited, so only the M700 Varmint. Circa $195. 541-312-9228 Building Supply Resale 1-800-879-3312 to best merchandise will 1980, 98% condition. 1427 NW Murphy Ct. The Bulletin start your apphcation Whoodle Pups, 8 weeks, sewing Central Oregon sincetgte b e a ccepted. F o r Boston Terrier Puppies. 1st shots & dewormed. 260 Scope & Case Incl. 541-447-6934 today! (PNDC) more info. go to: Shots, ve t ch e ck, Hypoallergenic/no shed, $650 Bend. S teve Open to the public. Misc.ltems 215 grizzlyridgeupcycle. puppy package. $750. 1 female, $1200; 6 males 541-550-8190 Coins & Stamps com or email: chrisandcyndi©ya© $1000ea. Health Collector seeks Are you in BIG trouble grizzlyridgeupcycle hoo.com. guarantee. 541-410-1581 Private collector buyin Wanted: high quality fishing items with the IRS? Stop Ogmail.com 541-279-3588. wage & bank levies, FIND IT! postage stamp albums 30 & upscale fly rods. liens & audits, unfiled 541-678-5753, or collections, world-wide BIIY ITIg tax returns, payroll is503-351-2746 SELL IT! and U.S. 573-286-4343 sues, & resolve tax The Bulletin Classifieds (local, cell phone). 251 debt FAST. Seen on CNN. A B BB . C a ll 240 Hot Tubs & Spas Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, 1-800-989-1278. Crafts & Hobbies 1F, adorable, UDT Marquis 2005 S ilver (PNDC) shots, health guar., pix, Anniv. Hot Tub, gray Bread maker, exc cond, $500/up. 541-777-7743 Doll clothes: fit Cabbage Patch, Flower and black, 6-8 person large, strong; books incl. 210 Kids. '80s. Orig. pkg. seating, new circuit $89 obo. 541-330-9070 280 286 Furniture & Appliances $5 ea. 54'I -419-6408 board. Delivery available, $2500. Buylng Dlamonds Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend 2 2 leaded glass & oak 541-815-2505 /Gofd for Cash Saxon's Fine Jewelers SHOP SALE Fri. & Sat. end tables, matching 253 541-389-6655 9-4. 64516 Boonesbor- c offee t a bl e $ 1 7 5. Pollshers • Saws TV, Stereo & Video o ugh Dr. off D e s - 541-678-5605 BUYING ESTATE SALE Repalr 8'5Supplles Flyer Vintage pine china 8 chutes Mkt. to Dale. A1 Washers8 Dryers DISH T V Ret a iler. Lionel/American s Automotive tools, cabiFull warranty, FREE trains, accessories. corner cabinets, anStarting at 541-408-2191. tique quilts, lots of an- nets, misc. shop items. delivery! Also, used $19.99/month (for 12 washers/dryers wanted. tiques of al l k inds, Some girl stuff also! 242 mos.) & High Speed BUYING & SE LLING 541-280-7355 farm relics, glassware 292 Internet starting at All gold jewelry, silver & pottery, plus house- Sales Other Areas Chairs w/ottomans, both Exercise Equipment $14.95/month (where and gold coins, bars, hold furniture, kitchen, rock/swivel, gd shape, available.) SAVE! Ask rounds, wedding sets, weight matools, yard & outdoor, Huge we're not dead $200 firm. 541-389-1574 BioForce chine,used 5 tim es,new About SAME DAY In- class rings, sterling sillots misc! Fri & Sat, estate sale! See Couch, 7', bought 6 wks condition. Cost $1250 stallation! CALL Now! ver, coin collect, vin9-4, numbers Fri 8 am yet tage watches, dental craigslist ad for items. ago, new cond. $200. new. Full body workout, 1-800-308-1563 2200 NE Hwy 20 ¹37 gold. Bill Fl e ming, easy to transport/reset. (PNDC) Sat 8-5, Sun 8-12. 541-706-9383 Rock Arbor Villa, in Fri8 541-382-9419. Tools, manual, DVD & 1296 N E Oc h o co Ben, behind Jake's Ave., Panasonic 55" plasma Electric bed twin size, complete i n structions. Prineville. Diner 541-350-6822 TV, 2 yrs old, like new, good cond., $300. $500. 541-416-0106 was $1000 new), selling www.atticestatesanMOVING/GARAGE 541-385-6168 dappraisals.com or $350. 541-550-7189 SALE. furn., garage, G ENERATE Power Plate SOM E March 21 & 22, 9-3 machine EXCITEllllENT in your Switch & Save Event 637 East A St., Culver. Vibrational exerfrom DirecTV! Packneighborhood! Plan a cises for musclearage sale and don't a ges s t a rting a t 286 MOVING SALE 30 + strengthening, orget to advertise in $19.99/mo. Free Sales Northeast Bend years accumulation, classified! stretching, massage y i i 3-Months of HBO, Tools, tack, cookware, Chainsaw-carved & relaxation, $500. furniture, wo m ens 541-385-5809. Starz, SHOWTIME 8 541-504-3869 C INEMAX. FRE E Momma and Baby clothing, doz. canning NEED TO CANCEL l ** FREE ** Bear. Momma is jars and accessories, GENIE HD/DVR UpYOUR AD? over 5-ft tall; baby is Garage Sale Kit r ade! 2 01 5 NFL lawn & garden, large 245 h The Bulletin 23" tall. May conPlace an ad in The hay tarps, books, and u nday Ticket. I n Classifieds has an Golf Equipment sider selling sepaBulletin for your gacluded with S e lect misc. antiques. Lots "After Hours"Line rage sale and rerately; both $850. more! 3/20-22 and Packages. New CusCall 541-383-2371 CHECK yOURAD Can be seen in ceive a Garage Sale 27-29, 9-5. Please no tomers Only IV Sup24 hrs. to cancel Prineville. Kit FREE! earlybirds. 1238 SW port Holdings LLC- An your ad! Call 541-447-7820 authorized D i recTV Dover Lane, Madras. KIT INCLUDES: Dealer. Some excluOak rocking chair, • 4 Garage Sale Signs Seasonal sions apply - Call for DID YOU KNOW 7 IN $50; 541-678-5605 • $2.00 Off Coupon To Garage Sale! details 10 Americans or 158 Use Toward Your March 19-20-21, 8 to 4 on the first day it runs 1-800-410-2572 million U.S. A d ults Next Ad Antiques & collectibles, Refrigerator to make sure it is cor- (PNDC) r ead content f r om • 10 Tips For "Garage Valentines, St. Patricks Frigidaire brand rect. nSpellcheckn and n ewspaper m e d ia Sale Success!" and Easter, linens new side-by-side human errors do oceach week? Discover Take care of handmade crafts, glass with icemaker. cur. If this happens to the Power of the Paware, artwork, lots of Paid $1200 your investments PICK UP YOUR your ad, please concific Northwest Newsold and new furniture, selling for $850. GARAGE SALE KIT at floral and garden decor. tact us ASAP so that with the help from paper Advertising. For 541-410-5956 1777 SW Chandler corrections and any a free brochure call No clothes, no junk. The Bulletin's Ave., Bend, OR 97702 adjustments can be 916-288-6011 or 4504 SW Minson Rd., Sgl bed mattress exc. made to your ad. "Call A Service email Powell Butte. The Bulletin 541 -385-5809 Sue, 541-416-8222, or cond, non s m oker cecelia@cnpa.com sening Central Oregon since fgot Georgia, 541-548-0927 $75. 541-382-8645 The Bulletin Classified Professional" Directory (PNDC)
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NOTICE TO ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for used woodstoves has been limited to models which have been certified by the Oregon Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n 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 not knowingly accept advertising for the sale of uncertified woodstoves.
The Bulletin is your
Employment Marketplace Call
541-385-5809 to advertise. WWW.bendbulletjn.Com
The Bulletin Serving Central Otggon tincg1903
E2 FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
341
476
Horses & Equipment
Employment Opportunities
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES
"a.
Monday • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed.
Deluxe showman 3-horse trailer Silverado 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel with semi living quarters, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277
Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. 375 Meat & Animal Processing Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri. Buermann's Ranch
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
• . 3:00pm Fri. • • 5:00 pm Fri •
Starting at 3 lines
Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
(call for commercial line ad rates)
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
*llllust state prices in ad
MX
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 267
267
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 & cost per cord to better serve our customers.
All yearDependable Firewood: Seasoned; Lodgepole, split, del, B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 or 2 cords for $365. Multi-cord discounts! 541-420-3484. 269
Gardening Supplies & Equipment
269
Gardening Supplie • & E q uipment
Fornewspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at 541-385-5800 To place an ad, call 541-385-5809
or email
classiiied@bendbulletimcom
The Bulletin serviny cenoar(hegcm sinceete
BarkTurfSoif.com
270
Lost & Found
REMEMBER: If you have lost an animal,
don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882
Madras
541-475-6889
Prineville
541-447-7178 or Craft Cats Husqvarna hedge trim541-389-8420. PROMPT DELIVERY mer comm. grade. 541-389-9663 used 1 t i me. N ew Subaru car key a nd $459, asking, $200. Thule rack key on Mt. COW MANURE - aged, 541-410-1483 Washington Dr., Tues. 150 cu.ft. truckload 3/1 7. 541-647-2514. d elivered, $150 . 541-420-6235 Just too many servlnyceneal oregon slncesor collectibles? Craftsman ride on lawn mower, LT1000, 17hp Sell them in $500. 541-420-2026 Need help fixing stuff? The Bulletin Classifieds Call A ServiceProfessional TURN THE PAGE find the help you need. For More Ads 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com
The Bulle6n
The Bulletin
316
Irrigation Equipment
Call54 I385580f to promoteyour service• Advertise for 28dolt startingot'lf0Ptoaosl foctrtoo ootorotobtronoorortotrl
o o
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Schools & Training
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ad8. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletimcom reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
Fuel & Wood
M eats. Annual Hog Sale /2 hog fully processed delivered to your area $240. Call 54f-573-2677
FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $5,000/acre Call 541-419-4440
Marketing Sales Manager Experience in the health care field preferred, but not required. Must be outgoing and pers onable. Mus t have reli a ble transportation. For more i nform ation, o r a n y questions, please call 541-385-4717
HTR Truck School REDMOND CAlvlPUS Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel Need to get an ad your home with the in ASAP? help of a professional 454 Looking for Employment from The Bulletin's Fax lt ta 541-322-7253 "Call A Service Woman willing to do er- Professional" Directory The Bulletin Classifieds rands for the elderly for s l ight f e e in Bend/Redmond. 541-280-0892 Circulation 476 The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Employment Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour Opportunities per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locaCAUTION: tions, hotels, special events and news dealer Ads published in outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a "Employment Opporlunities" include company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced employee and indeand supplied, managing newspaper counts for pendent positions. Ads fo r p o sitions the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those that require a fee or locations with new outlets. Position requires upfront investment total ownership of and accountability of all must be stated. With single copy elements within that district. Work any independentjob schedule will be Thursday through Monday opportunity, please with Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires i nvestigate tho r good communication skills, a strong attention oughly. Use extra to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility c aution when a p of motion and the ability to multi task. Essenplying for jobs ontial: Positive attitude, strong service/team oriline and never proentation, sales and problem solving skills. vide personal inforMust be insurable to drive company vehicle. mation to any source Send resume to: mewing@bendbulletin.com you may not have Applications are available at the front desk. researched and 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 deemed to be repuNo phone inquiries please. table. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y serving central oregon sinceroos online employment Pre-employment drug testing required. ad from out-of-state. EOE/Drug Free Workplace We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline Circulation Night Dock Assistant at 1-503-378-4320 The Bulletin is looking for a motivated, reFor Equal Opportusponsible individual to join our Circulation Denity Laws contact partment team and fill a vital position working Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, within our circulation Dock crew. Civil Rights Division, Person is responsible for all dock issues: sort97'I -673- 0764. ing, distribution, and loading all WesCom The Bulletin products to haulers and carriers. Knowledge of packaging, transportation and d istribution 541-385-5809 methods, as well as inventory skills and customer service skills a plus. May drive company vehicles to transport various WesCom Accounts products from time to time (such as post office, Receivable/ etc.). Interacts with Home Delivery Advisors, Carriers, Customer Service Representatives, Collections Clerk and all management at The Bulletin. with accounting experience and excellent Ability to lift 50 pounds, work night shift. Apcustomer service skills. Strong comproximately 24 hours per week shift to start. puter skills required. Wage DOE. All hiring is contingent on passing Must be a great team drug and DMV screening. player. Full time position Monday to Fnday, Please apply by delivering a letter of Interest 8am to Spm. Drug and resume, 8-5, Mon. through Fri. to The screening and backBulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave. or apply via ground check reemail to mewing@bendbulletin.com with a quired. Please email letter of Interest, resume, and with the job title cover letter with wage in the subject line. requirements, resume & references to barbara@athletic serving central oreoon since 1903 clubofbend.com EOE Drug Free Workplace WWW.HTR.EDU
Where can you find a helping hand? From contractors to NOTICE: Oregon state NOTICE: Oregon Land- yard care, it's all here law requires anyone scape Contractors Law in The Bulletin's who con t racts for (ORS 671) requires all construction work to businesses that ad"Call A Service be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form Professional" Directory Z~duf7 Qua/uP Construction ContracLandscape ConstrucZa~<0u er,. tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: 325 active license Full Service p lanting, deck s , means the contractor fences, arbors, Hay, Grain & Feed Landscape is bonded & insured. water-features, and inManagement Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir- First Quality, 2nd cutting CCB l i c ense at rigation systems to be grass hay, no rain, Spring Clean Up www.hirealicensedl icensed w it h th e barn stored, $225/ton. •Leaves contractor.com Landscape ContracCall 541-549-3831 •Cones or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit Patterson Ranch, Sisters Add your web address •Needles The Bulletin recomnumber is to be into your ad and read• Debris Hauling Orchard grass hay mends checking with cluded in all adverers on The Bulletin's the CCB prior to contisements which indi- clean, barn stored, no web site, www.bendWeed Free Bark tracting with anyone. cate the business has weeds, no rain, 75¹ bulletin.com, will be Some other t rades 8 Flower Beds a bond, insurance and bales, $250 ton. able to click through 54'I -416-0106 also req u ire addiworkers c ompensaautomatically to your tional licenses and Lawn Renovation tion for their employwebsite. certifications. ees. For your protec- Premium orchard grass, Aeration - Dethatching Overseed tion call 503-378-5909 barn stored no rain, Caregiver or use our website: 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. Prineville Senior care Compost Computer/Cabling Install www.lcb.state.or.us to avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 Top Dressing home looking for fullcheck license status or 541-948-7010. time Caregiver. Must Computer training, set before contracting with Landscape pass criminal backup & repair from the the business. Persons Wheat Straw for Sale. Maintenance ground check. doing lan d scape Also, weaner pigs. comfort of your own Full or Partial Service 541-546-6171 Call 541-362-5137 maintenance do not home.Dirk (y541) 647• Mowing oEdging 1341 or 619-997-8291 r equire an LCB l i •Pruning oWeeding cense. Looking for your Caregivers Water Management next employee? w anted t o j o i n Debris Removal Place a Bulletin Aerate I Thatching Fertilizer included oul' caring Weekly Service and help wanted ad with monthly program JUNK BE GONE m emory c a r e Spring Clean-ups! today and I Haul Away FREE Free estimates! c ommunity. A l l reach over Weekly,monthly For Salvage. Also COLLINS Lawn Maint. shifts a vailable. 60,000 readers or one time service. Cleanups & Cleanouts Ca/I 541-480-9714 each week. Must be reliable. Mel, 541-389-8107 Your classified ad Managing Also needed part Good classified ads tell will also Central Oregon t ime c hef. F o r appear on the essential facts in an Landscapes Courier Service more in f o rmabendbulletin.com interesting Manner.Write Since 2006 tion, or any from the readers view - not which currently questions, We will distribute Senior Discounts recefyes over the seller's. Convert the locally in C.O. please call 1.5 million page 541-390-1466 facts into benefits. Show or do line hauls 541-385-4717 Same Day Response the reader howthe itemwill views every between C.O. and help them in someway. month at no PDX area. extra cost. This D ID YO U KNOW Looking for loads for advertising tip Bulletin Newspaper-generour 26' Freiqhtliner brought tc you by Classifieds a ted content is s o Box truck |26,000 Get Results! valuable it's taken and GVW) with 4K l ift The Bulletin Call 541-385-5809 repeated, condensed, ate. Lic. 8 Bonded. ser ag cmwt o~ni a cs eto Serving Central or place your ad broadcast, t weeted, ontact Bill at Oregon Since 2003 on-line at discussed, p o sted, wsdahl © bendResidental/Commercial CPR LANDSCAPING broadband.com. copied, edited, and bendbulletin.com Weekly maintenance, Sprinkler emailed c o u ntless strxside Cea> cleanups. Lawn reGe e~ Activatien/Repair times throughout the pairs. Quality at an 341 day by others? DisBackFlow Testing a ffordable pric e . Horses & Equipment cover the Power of 978-413-2487 Maintenance Newspaper Advertis«Thatch & Aerate Black ba y M o r gan ing in FIVE STATES • Spring Clean up mare, flashy, 13-yr-old with just one phone Free Aeration! .Weekly Mowing Aerate /Thatching. show, trail & harness, call. For free Pacific & Edging i ntermediate rid e r , Northwest NewspaFree Estimates on Domestic Services •Bi-Monthly & Monthly Weekly Service! granddaughter in col- per Association NetMaintenance lege. $500 best offer or work brochures call (541) 383-1997 HOUSE CLEANING •Bark, Rock, Etc. abovealllawnaervice.com trade. 541-546-7909 916-288-6011 or Cleaning homes in email Bend for 18 years. ~Landsca in ceceliaocnpa.com Hourly rate, call Rosie •Landscape Painting/Wall Covering (PNDC) 541-385-0367. Construction oWater Feature KC WHITE Meet singles right now! What are you Installation/Maint. PAINTING LLC Handyman No paid operators, •Pavers Interior and Exterior looking for? just real people like •Renovations Family-owned I DO THAT! You'll find it in •Irrigations Installation Residential & Commercial you. Browse greetHome/Rental repairs 40 yrs exp.• Sr. Discounts ings, exchange mesSmall jobs to remodels sages and connect The Bulletin Classifieds Senior Discounts 5-vear warranties Honest, guaranteed live. Try it free. Call Bonded & Insured SPRING SPECIAL! work. CCB¹151573 541-815-4458 now: 8 77-955-5505. Call 541-337-6149 541-385-5809 Dennis 541-317-9768 LCB¹8759 CCB ¹204918 (PNDC) Building/Contracting Landscaping/Yard Care Landscaping/Yard Care
Health Deparfment Manager Grant County Public Health in John Day, Oregon is seeking a full-time Health Department Manager. Requires O r egon registered nurse licensure, degree in nursing from an accredited university, and p r ogressively responsible experience in a p u b lic health agency. Salary ra n g e is $60-$90,000/yr. DOE. Exc e l lent benefits. For more details, go to http://www.worksourceoregon.org, J ob L i sting ID : 1335732. If i n t ere sted, pleas e download an application at www.communitycounselingsolutions.org, forward it with cover letter and resume to ladawn.fronapel@go bhi.net. EOE.
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 ACCOUNTING Employment Staff Accountant Opportunities The Staff Accountant is responsible for maintaining multiple aspects of the general ledger to enMaintenance sure accurate and timely reporting. This posiWhispering tion will be responsible for the preparation of monthly financials, journal entries, balance Winds sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and Retirement month end accruals. is seeking a full-time maintenance tech. We seek a motivated individual that will bring a fresh perspective to our systems and proceWages DOE. Must dures. An ideal candidate will learn current prohave some basic cedures, while taking a proactive approach to electrical, plumbing, find efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with carpentry and financial analysis. painting experience. Apply in person at The position requires a detail-oriented individual with strong general accounting, organizational, 2920 NE Conners communication, and time management skills. Ave., Bend., We seek a positive individual that enjoys workPre-employment ing in a fast-paced team environment in beautidrug test required. ful Bend, OR. Essential job functions & responsibilities • General ledger maintenance: detailed understanding of each account and proper posting • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and balance sheet reconciliations • Fixed Asset additions, disposals & depreciation • Cost reporting and forecasting Experience & skills • General ledger accounting required • 4-year degree in Accounting • Advanced Excel and data entry skills • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus • Newspaper experience preferred To apply, please submit both a cover letter and resume to hwrightowescompapers.com or by mail to Western Communications, attn: Heidi Wright, PO Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Western Communications, inc. is a drug free workplace and EOE.Pre-employment drug testing is required.
Newsroom Assistant
The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and self-motivated full-time employee to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred. Organization, flexibility, and a high level of computer proficiency are essential. A solid knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. Ability to work for long periods doing detail-oriented work is necessary. This person must understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties.
Excellent customer service and interpersonal skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office experience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment drug screening is required prior to hiring.
To apply, please send a resume and any writing samples to: nolson@bendbulletin.com. No phone inquiries please.
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since r903
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Pressman
The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 /2 tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at
anelsonowescom a ers.com
with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.
The Bulletin servingcentral oregon sincefoor
Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral.
Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track record of success in selling multi-platform or digital advertising to major accounts and agencies. Managementexperi ence a plus, with the ideal candidate being able to demonstrate a history of success in implementing innovative ideas and developing the skills level of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug free workplace and pre-employment drug testing is required. Please email your resume to: jbrandtobendbulletin.com No phone calls please.
The Bulletin
serving central oregon sincero03
The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer
Human Resources Assistant The Bulletin is looking for a Human Resources Assistant. HR duties will include all areas of pre-employment drug testing, preparing paperwork for newly hired employees, orientation; benefit enrollment and helping employees keep t h eir p e rsonnel an d b e nefit information current. Maintains personnel files and records for the purpose of providing up-to-date reference and audit trail compliance. Assist with payroll processing as the back-up to the Payroll Manager. Provides advice to employees on matters in designated human resources areas. Establish and maintain favorable working relationships within all WesCom departments to assist in effectively achieving department objectives, while responding to requests for reports, records and information in a professional and timely manner. Review, input and audit data in HRIS to support employee actions such as promotions, transfers, hires and terminations while maintaining the highest level of data integrity. Other duties include, processing paperwork for unemploymentand worker's compensation as well as FMLA and other state qualifying leaves of absence. Fill in as a backup person for the Reception desk when necessary.
General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and Minimum two years human resources experiend between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. Allpoence (payroll and benefits knowledge presitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. ferred) in a support capacity. General knowlStarting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a edge of applicable state and federal laws. minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts California experience a plus. Working knowlare short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of edge of HRIS/Payroll systems. Strong comloading inserting machines or stitcher, stackputer skills with the ability to proficiently use ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup Word and Excel. Strong attention to detail. and other tasks. For qualifying employees we interpersonal skills. Must be able to offer benefits i ncluding l if e i n surance, Strong maintain highest degree of confidentiality, disshort-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid cretion and tact. vacation and sick time. Drug test is required prior to employment. For qualifying employees we offer benefits including life insurance, short-term & long-term Please submit a completed application attendisability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available Drug test is required prior to employment. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chandler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be EOE/Drug Free workplace obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldredobendbulletin.com). If interested please submit resume No phone calls please. Only completed appliand salary expectations to cations will be considered for this position. No hrresumesowescom a ers.com resumes will be accepted. Drug test is reNo phone ca//s please. quired prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
serving cenrrar oregons/nce roor
The Bullctin
Sertring Central Oreyon since 1903
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By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency
None of us are perfect, but some of us are impossible. Such is the case with Grapefruit, my sourpuss club member. He berates his partners without mercy. Grapefruit was North, and against South's four spades, West led the jack of clubs. South won and, seeing no problem, took the ace of t rumps. When West threw a club, South drew trumps and led a heart to dummy's king. East won and led the king of clubs, and South ruffed and tried to reach dummy by leadinga diamond to the king. He lost three diamonds and went down.
club, your partner responds one spade, you bid 1NT and he tries two clubs. What do you say? ANSWER: T h i s si t u ation i s uneasy, but bidding again with a minimum hand isn't likely to make you feel better. Your partner i s supposed to know what he's doing. He should allow for you to have a weak club holding and won't take a preference with f ewer than f our clubs. Pass. Two spades is unlikely to be a better contract. South dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 4106 3
REVERSE "Partner,"Grapefruit growled, "if you were any slower, you'd be in reverse." "What was I supposed to do?" South snapped. Grapefruit told the kibitzers that in the shopping mall of the mind, South resided in the toy store. After South takes one high trump, he leads a heart. When East wins and leads the king of c l ubs, declarer throws a diamond instead of ruffing. East must give dummy the leadand South his contract — one way or another. DAILY QUESTION
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03/20/15
E6 FRIDAY MARCH 20, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Automobiles
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Automobiles
Q Buick LeSabre Limited Sedan 2000, 3.8L V-6 cyl VIN ¹166929. (exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366 $2,688.
GMC Yukon XL 1500 SLT 2013, 4WD, 5.3L V-8 cyl. VIN ¹213994. $35,998.
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I
Vehicle? Call The Bulletin and place an ad today! Ask about our "Wheel Deal"! for private party advertisers
L'"" " " '
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Scion TCcoupe 2007, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹198120 Stock ¹44193B
Chrysler200 LX 2012, (exp. 3/22/1 5) VIN ¹292213 $13,999 or $175/mo., Stock ¹83014
Subaru Impreza2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹027174
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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Mercury Mariner oncord 00
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2010.Only 56k m i.. Vin ¹J20929
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Buick LeSabre 2005 custom, exc. cond., tires 40%, 3800 Series II 3.8 V-6, 69,300 mi., 2nd owner. $7700 obo 541-430-7400 or 541-815-8487
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The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L,
power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, always garaged, all maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
extra caution l I mends when p u rchasing I I products or servicesI from out of the area. I S ending c ash ,I or credit inI checks, formation may be I
I subject toFRAUD For more informaI tion about an advertiser, you may call I the Oregon StateI l Attorney General's l I Office C o n sumerI I Protection hotline at
I
1-877-877-9392.
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Mini Cooper Clubman Base Wagon2008, 1.6L 1-4 cyl. VIN ¹J46869. $8,995.
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m ailings f ro m t h e court and forfeiture counsel; and (3) A s tatement that y o u have an interest in the seized property. Your deadline for filing the claim document with forfeiture cou n sel named below is 21 days from the last day of publication of this notice. Where to file a claim and for more i nformation: D a i na Vitolins, Crook County District Attorney Office, 300 N E T hird Street, Prineville, OR 97754. Notice of reasons for Forfeiture: The property described below was seized for forfeiture because it: (1) Constitutes the proceeds of the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violates, the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution, or possession of controlled substances (ORS C hapter475); and/or (2) Was used or intended for use in committing or facilitating the violation of, solicitation to violate, attempt to violate, or conspiracy to violate the criminal laws of the State of Oregon regarding the manufacture, distribution or possession of c o n-
trolled su b stances St.) in the City Ad(ORS Chapter 475). ministration Office, and on the City's IN THE MATTER OF: web page (www.bend.or.us). Interested p a rties (1) One 2007 Ford Fusion, OLN may also request 728HAM, VIN copies to be sent 3FAHP08167R14199 through the mail by 1, $48 5 .0 0 & calling $2,950.00 in US Cur- (541)3'I 2-4915.
rency, Cas e
No
15-40954 seized February 13, 2015 from Gustavo Basa a nd Victoria S a ntellano Rodriguez. LEGAL NOTICE Public Notice and Notice of Public Hearing The City of Bend has received proposals for funding through the City's Community Development Block Grant (CDBG) Program. The Af fo r dable Housing A dvisory Committee has developed its funding recommendations for the 2015 — 2016 CDBG Pr o gram Year, outlined in the City's draft 2 015-2016 C D B G Action Plan.
Copies of the draft Action Plan, including the p roposed funding recommend ations, are n o w available for review at the at Bend City Hall (710 NW Wall
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LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF DEFAULT AND ELECTION TO SELL. Reference is made to that certain Trust Deed made by NICHOLAS DAVID McCALLION and DENISE MARIE HUYLER, as Grantors, to WESTERN TITLE & ESCROW COMPANY, as Trustee, in favor of GARY NICKERSON and BONNIE NICKERSON, as Beneficiary, dated June 29, 2012, recorded on June 29, 2012, in the Official Records of Deschutes County, Oregon, as Document No. 2012-025288, covering the following described real property situated in the above mentioned county and state, to wit:NLot 2, Block 3, NORTH PILOT BUTTE FIRST ADDITION,CityofBend, Deschutes County, Oregon". The undersigned hereby certifies that no assignments of the Trust Deed by the Trustee or by the Beneficiary and no appointments of a Successor Trustee have been made, except as recorded in the Records of the county or counties in which the above described real property is situated. Further, no action has been instituted to recover the debt, or any part thereof, now remaining secured by the Trust Deed, or, if such action has been instituted, such action has been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.735(4). There is a default by Grantors or other person owing an obligation, performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, or by the successor in interest, with respect to provisions therein which authorize sale in the event of default of such provision. The default for which foreclosure is made is Grantors' failure to pay: (1) monthly payments in the amount of $1,142.65 each, commencing with the payment due September 10, 2014, and continuing on the tenth day of each month thereafter; and (2) real property taxes for 2014 in the amount of $1,828.51, plus interest. By reason of the default, the Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable, those sums being the following, to wit: The principal amount of $164,160.22, plus accrued interest as of December 11, 2014 in the amount of 2,768.57, plus interest on the principal amount at the rate of 7.25% per annum from December 12, 2014, until paid; plus attorney fees and foreclosure costs, and any amounts advanced by the Beneficiary pursuant to the terms of the Trust Deed and/or applicable law. Notice is hereby given that the Beneficiary and Trustee, by reason of the default, have elected and do hereby elect to foreclose the Trust Deed by advertisement and sale pursuant to ORS 86.705 to ORS 86.795, and to cause to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder for cash or certified funds, the interest in the described property which Grantors had, or had the power to convey, at the time of the execution by Grantors of the Trust Deed, together with any interest Grantors or Grantors' successor in interest acquired after the execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the obligations secured by the Trust Deed and expenses of sale, including the compensation of the Trustee as provided by law, and the reasonable fees of Trustee's attorneys. The sale will be held at the hour of 10:00 o'clock, a.m., in accord with the standard time established by ORS 187.110 on April 30, 2015, at the following place: Inside the front entrance of the Deschutes County Courthouse, 1164 NW Bond, in the City of Bend, County of Deschutes, State of Oregon, which is the hour, date and place last set for the sale. Other than as shown of record, neither the Beneficiary nor the Trustee has any actual notice of any person having or claiming to have any lien upon or interest in the real property hereinabove described subsequent to the interest of the Trustee in the Trust Deed, or of any successor in interest to Grantors or of any lessee or other person in possession of or occupying the property, except:
Name and Last Known Address 1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167 $4,977
BMW328i XDrive 2011, 3.0L 1-6 cyl. VIN ¹N81801.$24,995. (exp. 3/22/1 5) DLR ¹366
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
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$3600 down, 84 mo., Toyota Avalon Touring 4 .49% APR o n a p 2008, 57k mi., proved credit. License ¹278429 • $15,295 and title i ncluded in payment.
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354
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Works at LEGAL NOTICE 5 41-923-1018. F o r Abandoned Mobile additional information, home for sale bevisit our website at longing to Earl Root, 4x4 and ready for www.housing-works.o 1515 NW Fir Space fun! Vin ¹J28963 ¹63B, R e d mond, rg. Housing works Bargain Corral does not discriminate Oregon 97756. The price $4,998 on the basis of race, property is a 1988 color, national origin, ROBBERSON Fleetwood, 2 bed, 1 .5 b at h h o m e. religion, sex, sexual CI ~ mmem orientation, physical Manufacturer ID ¹ or mental disability, 541-312-3986 ORFLJ48A09248SP cecelia©cnpa.com familial s t atus or www.robberson.com . Sale is by public (PNDC) source of income. Dlr ¹0205. Good thru bidding with sealed 3/31/15 bids Accepted from LEGAL NOTICE 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., OF SEIZURE Monday t h r ough NOTICE L ook at: FOR CIVIL Friday At RemingBendhomes.com FORFEITURE TO ALL ton Arms Office lofor Complete Listings of POTENTIAL cated at 1515 NW AND TO Area Real Estate for Sale Dodge Avenger2013, Fir Sp. 55 , R e d- CLAIMANTS ALL UNKNOWN m ond, Ore g on PERSONS (exp. 3/22/1 5) Subaru Outback 2014 READ THIS 97756. Remington Vin ¹535474 CAREFULLY A rms M H C re Stock ¹83015 $13,979 or $195/mo., serves the right to If you have any interreject any and or all $2000 down, 72 mo., est i n t h e s e i zed 4 .49% APR o n a p - bids. property d e scribed proved credit. License below, you must claim LEGAL NOTICE 541-598-3750 and title included in Housing Works 2015 t hat interest or y o u www.aaaoregonautopayment. Agency Plan will be will automatically lose source.com S UBA R U available for public re- that interest. If you do beginning March not file a claim for the Suzuk/SX4 2011 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. view 23rd, 2015 through property, the property 877-266-3821 May 7th, 2015 from 8 may be forfeited even Dlr ¹0354 a.m. to 5 p.m. at its if you are not conoffice at 405 SW 6th victed of any crime. Street, Redmond, Or- To claim an interest, egon 97756. A Public you must file a written Hearing will also be claim with the forfei4x4 with great gas held at the same lo- ture counsel named mileage ¹301851 cation on May 7th, below, Th e w r itten $11,977 Dodge Dart SXT2013, 2 015 at 9 a . m., t o claim must be signed 2.0L 1-4 cyl. entertain public com- by you, sworn to unROBBERSON VIN ¹106645.$14,995. ments and r e com- der penalty of perjury OI N c0 IN ~ st am t m (exp. 3/22/15) DLR ¹366 m endations. If y o u before a notary public, 541-312-3986 have any questions or and state: (a) Your SMOLICH need special accom- true name; (b) The www.robberson.com V Q L V Q Dlr ¹0205. Good thru modations, p l e ase address at which you 541-749-2156 contact Hous i ng will a c cept f u t ure 3/31/1 5 smolichvolvo.com Toyota RAV42003
$2000 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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Mountaineer 1999
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Volvo V60T5 Premier Wagon2015, 2.5L 1-5 cyl. VIN ¹202096. $34,995. $15,979 or $199 mo.,
$6,977!
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Subaru Forester2012,
Subaru Legacy 3.0R Limited 2008,
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Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹82770
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(exp. 3/22/15)
(Photo for illustration only)
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 Dlr¹0354
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Toyota Corolla2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹83072
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people Lookfor Information Call The Bulletin At 541 N385 N5809 About Products and $10,379 or $149/mo., Services Every pay through Place Your Ad Or E-Mail $2800 down, 60 mo., At: www.bendbulletin.com 4 .49% APR o n a p - Tfts tftfffst/„Sfatts/Nstfs
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Subaru Legacy LL Bean2006,
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(exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A
Scion XB2013, (exp. 3/22/1 5) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹83065
$15,979 or $199/mo., $20,358 or $249/mo.,
smolichmotors.com
Honda CRV 2007,
VWBUG 1971
Name of Right, Lien or Interest
IRS - Small Business/Self Employed Area ¹6 915 Second Ave Seattle, WA 98174
Tax Lien recorded in Deschutes County Instrument No. 2013-26268 against Nicholas McCallion
The State of Oregon - Department of Revenue 955 Center St NE Salem, OR 97301-2555
Tax Warrant recorded in Deschutes County Instrument No. 2014-03589 against Nicholas McCallion
Staffing Partners, LLC 1045 Gateway Loop Suite D Springfield, OR 97477
Deschutes County Circuit Court Judgment Case No. 12CV0577 against Nicholas McCallion
Notice is further given that any person named in ORS 86.753 has the right, at any time prior to five (5) days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure proceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed reinstated by payment to the Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable of being cured by tendering the performance required under the obligation or Trust Deed, and in addition to paying the sums or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default, by paying any accrued late fees and escrow charges and by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and Trust Deed, together with Trustee's and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.753. In construing this notice, the singular includes the plural, the wordOGrantorso includes any successor in interest to the Grantors 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 this 18th day of December, 2014. JONATHAN G. BASHAM, Successor Trustee. STATEOFOREGON,Countyof Deschutes) ss. I certify that the foregoing is a complete and exact copy of the original Trustee's Notice of Default and Election to Sell. JONATHAN G. BASHAM.
A public hearing will be held by the City Council at 7:00 pm, May 6, 2015 in the City of Bend Council Chambers at 710 NW Wall S t reet. The purpose of this h earing is t o r e ceive input on the Advisory Committee's 2015-2016 funding recommendations. Citizens, social ser-
vice agencies, eco-
nomic development organizations, homeless and housing providers, health p rofessionals, and other interested parties are encouraged to participate. Written comments are also welcome a nd must b e r e ceived by 7:00 pm, May 6, 2015 at City Hall, PO Box 431, Bend, OR 9 7 709. Both oral and written comments will be considered in the development of the Council's final funding decision. The location of the hearing is accessible to persons with disabilities. Please let Robyn Christie, at 54 1 - 388-5505, k now if y o u w i l l
need any special
accommodation to attend or participate in the meeting. More i n f ormation about th e C i t y's CDBG Program and the f unding p rop osal process i s a vailable a t C i t y H all, 7 1 0 Wal l Street, during regular office hours. Advance notice is requested. If special accommodations are needed, please notify Robyn Christie at 5 41-388-5505 s o that appropriate ass istance ca n b e provided. LEGAL NOTICE T RUSTEE'S N O T ICE O F S A L E. Reference is made to that certain short form trust deed line of credit (the "Trust Deed") dated November 10, 2010, executed by Paul J. Cordellos and Colleen Cordellos (the "Grantor") to U.S. Bank Trust Company, National Association (the "Trustee"), whose mailing address is 111 S.W. Fifth Avenue, Portland, Oregon 97204,to secure payment and performance of certain obligations of Grantor to U.S. Bank National Association, successor by merger to U.S. Bank National Association ND (the " Beneficiary"), i n cluding repayment of a promissory note dated November 10, 2010, in the principal a m ount of $80,000 (the "Note"). The Trust Deed was recorded on December 7, 2010, as Instrument No. 2010-48665 in t he o ff icial r e a l
property records of Deschutes County, Oregon. The legal d escription of t h e real property covered by the Trust Deed is as follows: LOT 16, BLOCK 93, DESCHUTES RIVER RE C R EA TION H O M ESITES, U N I T 8, P ART 11, D ESCHUTES COUNTY, OREGON. No action has been instituted to recover the o bligation, or a ny part thereof, now remaining secured by the Trust Deed or, if such action has been instituted, s uch action h a s been dismissed except as permitted by ORS 86.752(7). The default for which the foreclosure is made is Grantor's failure to pay when due the f ollowing sum s : monthly payments in full of $ 527.52 o wed under t h e Note beg i nning September 10, 2013, and on t he 10th day of e ach month t h ereafter; plus a n y late charges a c cruing thereafter; and excosts, penses, trustee fees and attorney fees. By reason of said default, Beneficiary has declared all sums owing on the obligation secured by the Trust Deed immediately due and payable which sums are as follows: (a) the principal amount of $ 73,166.93 as o f November 10, 2014, (b) accrued interest of $4,581.29 as of November 10, 2014, and interest accruing thereafter on the principal amount at the rate set forth in the Note until fully paid, (c) plus any late charges accruing thereafter and any other expenses or fees owed under the Note or Trust Deed, (d) amounts that Beneficiary has p aid on o r m a y hereinafter pay to protect the lien, including by way of illustration, but not limitation, taxes, assessments, interest on prior liens, and insurance p r e mi-
bidder the interest in
said real property, which Grantor has or had power to convey at the time of the execution by Grantor of the Trust Deed, together with any i nterest
t h at Grantor or the successors in interest to Grantor acquired after the execution of the Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obli g ations thereby secured and the costs and expenses of sale. NOTICE IS FURTHER G IVEN t ha t a n y person named in ORS 86.778 has the right, at any time prior to five days before the date last set for the sale, to have this foreclosure pr o ceeding dismissed and the Trust Deed r einstated by payment to Beneficiary of the entire amount then due (other than such portion of the principal as would not then be due had no default occurred), and by curing an y o t h er default complained of herein that is capable of being cured b y tendering t he p erformance r e quired under the obl igation o r T r u st Deed and, in addition to paying said sums or tendering the p e r formance necessary to cure the default, by paying all costs and expenses actually incurred in enforcing the obligation and T rust D e ed , t o gether with Trustee and attorney fees not exceeding the amounts provided by ORS 86.778. In construing this notice, the singular includes the p lural, and t h e wor d "grantor" i n cludes any successor in interest of grantor, as well as any other p erson owing a n obligation, the performance of which is secured by the Trust Deed, a n d the words "trustee" and "beneficiary" include their respective successors in interest, if any. In accordance with the ums, and (e) exFair Debt Collection penses, costs and Practices Act, this is attorney and trustee an attempt to colf ees incurred b y lect a debt, and any Beneficiary in foreinformation obclosure, i n cluding tained will be used the c os t of a for that p urpose. trustee's sale guarThis c o mmunicaantee and any other tion is from a debt e nvironmental o r collector. For f u rappraisal report. By ther in f ormation, reason of said deplease contact fault, B e n eficiary James M. Walker at and the Successor his mailing address Trustee have of Miller Nash Graelected to foreclose ham & Dunn LLP, the trust deed by 111 S.W. Fifth Avadvertisement and enue, Suite 3400, s ale pursuant t o Portland, O r egon ORS 86.705 to ORS 97204 or telephone 86.815 and to sell him at (503) the real p r operty 224-5858. DATED identified above to this 13th day of Febsatisfy the obligar uary, 2 0 15. / s / tion that is secured James M. Walker, by the Trust Deed. Successor Trustee. NOTICE IS File No. H EREBY G I V EN 080090-1159. that t h e un d e rsigned Successor Trustee or SuccesHave an item to sor Trustee's agent sell quick? will, on J une 2 2, 2015, at one o'clock If it's under (1:00) p.m., based '500 you can place it in on the standard of time established by The Bulletin ORS 187.110, just Classifieds for: o utside the m a i n e ntrance of 1 1 64 '10 -3 lines, 7 days N.W. Bond, Bend, O regon, sell f o r '16 - 3 lines, 14 days cash at public auc(Private Party ads only) tion to the highest
YOUR WEEKLY GUIDE TO CENTRAL OREGON EVENTS, ARTS AND ENTERTAINMENT ARTS: The Central4 Piano Quartet visits Bend, PAGE 11
EVERY FRIDAY IN THE BULLETIN MARCH 20, 2015
DRINKS: Roundup of locals nights at brewpubs, PAGE 14
FOOD: The Dawg House II serves up delicious 'dawgs,' PAGE20
mn a ~ m a i i a e i =
PAGE3 ~ ~
PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ONTAC T
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
in ez
US
REPORTERS
Cover design by Tim Gallivan/The Bulletin; Enrique Nunez/Submitted photo
David Jasper, 541-383-0349 djasperObendbulletin.com Kathleen McCool,541-383-0350 kmccool@bendbulletin.com Jasmine Rockow, 541-383-0354 jrockowObendbulletin.com Sophie Witkins, 541-383-0351 swilkinsObendbulletin.com
DESIGNER
(2
Tim Gallivan, 541-383-0331 tgallivan@bendbulletin.com
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! is published each Friday in The Bulletin. Please submit information at least 10 days before the edition in which it is printed, including the event name, brief description, date, time, location, cost, contact number and a website, if appropriate. Email to: events@bendbulletin.com Fax to: 541-385-5804, Attn: Community Life U.S. Illlail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
ADVERTISING 541 -382-1811
e
•
OUT OF TOWN • 22
• 'Cyrano'to open at Portland Center Stage • A guide to out of town events
Gunman,""Mr. Turner" and "Do You Believe?" open in Central Oregon • "Annie,""Exodus: Godsand Kings," "Penguins of Madagascar" and three DRINKS • 14 others are out on Blu-ray andDVD • The skinny on locals nights at area pubs • Brief reviews of movies showing in • More news from the drinks scene Central Oregon
GOING OUT • 8
CALENDAR • 16
• Madonna, Purity Ring and more
gt •
• A review of Dawg House II in Redmond • More news from the local dining scene
• COVER:Metalachi weds metal and mariachi in Bend • Jazz at the Oxford draws to a close • Appaloosa celebrates CDrelease in Terrebonne • Rodrigo y Gabriela visit Bend •TheBel fry hostsTheQuick & EasyBoys • Hong Kong Banana rocks Crow's Feet Commons
MUSIC REVIEWS • 9
et tn
RESTAURANTS • 20
• Central4 Piano Quartet plays Tower Theatre • Triage offers improv class • Author and poet Buddy Wakefield visits Bend • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
MUSIC • 3
• A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800.
ARTS • 11
e •
•
e j
• 25 g,,'¹I I» •MOVIES "The Divergent Series: Insurgent," "The
eAweek full of Central Oregon events
PLANNING AHEAD • 18 • A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
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Submitted photo
Los Angeles band Metalachi, the first name in metal mariachi acts, will play their first-ever Bend show Tuesday at Volcanic Theatre Pub.
Ifyouoo What:Metalachi When:9 p.m. Tuesday, doors open 8 p.m. Where:Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend Cost:$8 plus fees in advance atwww.bendticket.com, $10 at the door Contact:www volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881
la Rockcha. Sometimes joined by Tuesday (see "If you go"). The five- other relative-musicians, accordpiece band of experienced, classi- ing to de la Rockcha, the five grew cally trained mariachi musicians/ up playing music together. "We need some coverage, we By David Jasper Read up on them and it won't be ing with a mariachi band's bus in brothers wield guitarron (a large The Bulletin long before you come across some Tijuana, you'd get Metalachi!" bass guitar, played Nacho Pican- got a couple of cousins that cover That's my mediocre contribution te) guitar (Ramon Holiday), violin for our bros," de la Rockcha said, alf the fun of Metalachinamecheck/descriptor such as, "If or at least writing about Rob Zombie and Robert Rodri- to the many on the Internet, but an (Maximilian "Dirty" Sanchez) and adding with a chuckle, "We're all them — seems to be de- guez collaborated on a music video apt enough way to explain what's trumpet (El Cucuy) with, of course, in the familia, eh?" scribing the Los Angeles band. about Judas Priest's tour bus collid- in store when Metalachi visits lead howl/vocals by singer Vega de Continued Page 5 Volcanic Theatre Pub in on Bend
• The musical mashup that is Metalachi will play Volcanic Theatre Pub
H
music
PAGE 4 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
azz
10 UCel 0 • Raised on gypsy jazz, singer Cyrile Aimee iscarrying on the tradition ssuming her official bio R einhardt Festival" that celebrat- on a tour with her longtime duo is to be believed, Cyrille ed the iconic gypsy-jazz guitarist, partner Diego Figueiredo, a suAimee's background is a h e r websitesays. per-skilled Brazilian jazz guitarwonderfulstorybooktale. Later, she traveled across Eu- ist with whom she recorded a couRaised in France by a Domin- r ope, singing on street corners ple of albums in 2009 and 2010. ican mother and French father, w i t h f r iends. Along the way, she Together, their styles — her "she would sneak out of her bed- s t u mbled into the top prize at the lilt and gypsy swing, his gentle room window t o w a nder i nt o Mo n t r eux Jazz Festival's vocal fusion of Latin jazz and popthe nearby gypsy encampments competition. combine in a way that's transfilled with those attending the Cha r ming,isn'tit? portive, as great jazz tends to be. annual Django Yes, that's the word for Aimee, Close your eyes and let their aural and her music. She is blessed breeze carry you away to some ~ ~ I ; r;®a,A~'g. with a voice that is strong storybook world of your own. and textured, but also Cyrille Aimee & Diego Figueire-
A
do; 8 tonight, 5 and 8:15 p.m. Sat-
urday; SOLD OUT; The Oxford ease, or at least she
Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave.,
att e ste in By Ben Salmon
ture, though current plans call for four sets of shows instead of
six, said Ben Perle, general manager of the Oxford. The hotel is working with a new booking and has booked its performers agent on securing artists for the for the past five seasons, is step- series' sixth season in 2015-16. ping down as executive producSince its second season, Jazz er of the series, he said in a tele- at the Oxford has put on three phone interview. concerts per weekend across Jazz at the Oxford will consix winter holiday weekends, tinue beyond Glick- featuring regional and nationalman 's depar- ly touring headliners playing a M arshall G l i ckman, w h o founded the annual Jazz at the Oxford concert series in Bend
range of styles, from traditional
jazz andblues to Western swing,
com or 541-382-8436. — Ben Salmon,
*
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will stop in Bend
own
For The Bulletin
Bend;www jazzat theoxford.
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Latin jazz and modern soul.
Continued next page
for The Bulletin
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Cyrille Aimee &
Diego Figueiredo will perform at The Oxford Hotel tonight and Saturday. Submitted photo
k,
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
From previous page The shows are held in a basement ballroom at the Oxford that holds
music
spread community support." But he rity of the series," he said. "From my noted the costs and logistics of host- perspective, it's very important that
ing Jazz at the Oxford and said the 120 people; the series has hosted 60 shows are just one part of the hotel's shows, and all have sold out, with complex puzzle. "We love doing it, don't get me three moretocome thisweekend. That success is part of the rea- wrong. But we get lots of requests
versus regional acts, (and) that we provide a balance of styles. In order to make that work, I need more weekends to work with, not less."
formeetings and conferences
Ultimately, the two sides did not
and this and that and so we have to blend the jazz series
see eye to eye on the subject, and
"They wanted to ... have
that decides to branch off and
months looking at potential venues.
have been spectacular." Perle agreed that the series has
series' stylistic diversity and could
it within the confines of maintain-
had no problem moving tickets, and he said the Oxford — which is
"I did not want to compromise, if you will, the number of weekends.
owned by the Baney family, who foot the bill for the concerts — is grateful for the "incredible, wide-
that that will compromise the integ-
Glickman has steppeddown. He into our primary business," wants to start a new jazz series in Perle said. "Like any business Bend and has spent the past few
fewer shows (and) to talk G lick man d o something a little outside "Nothing was right, so we have to about other ways to tighten of its realm, it has to fit." sit out," he wrote in an email earlier the budget, and we didn't get a lot Oxford officials believe four sets this month. "That said, we are still further than that," said Glickman, of concerts next year fits better than working on jazz in Bend." who owns a sports consulting firm six. But reducing the number of So is Perle, the Oxford and their and is the former president of the shows was unacceptable to Glick- new booking agent, whose name Portland Trail Blazers. "My feeling man, who recently moved to the has not been announced. "We're still committed to sharing is that it's working. We're selling out Portlandarea after eight years of not only every ticket as we always living in Bend. jazz with the community in the curhave, but we're selling out far in Glickman believes fewer week- rent format," Perle said. "We don't advance. It's incredible. The shows ends and fewer shows would hurt the want to change it, but we have to do
traditional mariachi music, as their
portmanteau of a name suggests.
ing a successful hotel operation. Our core business is running a successful hotel and restaurant. We love If anything, I want to increase, not jazz, but the jazz needs to fit into evdecrease (weekends), because I feel erything else we do."
JUNE 10-21, 2015
gHk MQn7EjJ'- ALO RUK1 KO ItlQnG NELVtlMSEALS 8 JGB"POOR MANS WHIK ROY ROGERS AND THE D.R.K. BROTHERS COMATOSE " POLECAT DEAD WINTER CARPENTERS ACORN PROJECT" ASHER FULERO IAND - THESTVDENT LOAN ... P S MANY MORE
•
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— Reporter: bsalmonibendbulletin.com
"We get low-rider cholos, and also the heavy metal headbangers. And we also get real mariachi musicians
ib
there that are only into mariachi, and get interested in
what type of arrangements we're putting into these new songs that they've never heard before."
Masters of Soul
— Vega de ia Rockcha of Metalachi
idea because we used to play mariachi everywhere in east L.A. before, we also get real mariachi musicians and ... you'd meet people that love there that are only into mariachi, metal, and so we decided to just and get interested in what type of start something new, right?" arrangements we're putting i nto Though united in their current these new songs that they've never cause, some of Metalachi tilt more heard before," he said. toward mariachi, while others are Reactionsacross the board tend more inclined toward the metal. De to be positive, said de la Rockcha, la Rockcha lands heavily in the met- who acknowledges the lubricating al group, "but I love mariachi," he function beer may contribute to the said. festivities. "It is a concert, but it's also a parIn their first ever Bend appearance, Metalachi will play mostly ty, because we get a lot of drinkers," covers of well-known songs — all he said, chuckling. It's not all fun and games: Armore or less metal, depending on how much of a musical purist you ranging the tunes and playing them are. on mariachi instruments can be a They stuck mostly to the classics challenge. "It takes time, and if you want to on their one and only album (so far), 2012's "Uno." On it are sonic get a good product, especially musitreats such as Dio's "Rainbow in cally speaking, you want to put (in) the Dark," Ozzy's "Crazy Train," everything you have to make someGuns N' Roses' "Sweet Child 0 ' thing good, something that you're Prayer." Fans range in age from very young to old, de la Rockcha said. "We get low-rider cholos, and also the heavy metal headbangers. And
g@5'~~g $5
costJazz attheOxford sponsors.
"We started in east L .A.," explained de la Rockcha. "We had this
Mine" and Bon Jovi's "Livin' on a
SEND,Ollggog
we provide a balance of national
son Glickman says he was surprised when the Oxford approached him about scaling back the series from six weekends to four.
From Page 3 Several years back, with the help of their manager, they made the fateful decision to wed - "weld" alsoworks — '70s and '80smetalto
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 5
satisfied with and at the same time,
both with their party-song selections and their brand of humor, he
Show Night Sponsor:,
them posted on YodIItbe.
The live show "is nothing like the Youtube videos.Once you have the
whole live experience, it will change your perspective on exactly what we do onstage. We try to get people in the audience involved," de la Rockcha said. "We do have alot of comedy. On
YodIItbe you just hear the songs ... but people just stop recording (after) — they don't record whatever we're
talking about, or the skits we have in between songs. That's what a lot of people are very happy with, too, because they're able to listen to good music and at the same time get to
(see) that." And here, de la Rockcha gets in on the namecheck fun. "It's kind of like if Cheech and
you're able to entertain and have fun Chong, GWAR and KISS kind of with." In short, Metalachi is here to slay,
Notown Tribate!
said, warning that no one should make assumptions on their live show based solely on fan videos of
had, like,a threesome and had a
baby," he said. — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
APRIL 4 Comedy Extravaganza 8 Masters of Soul 10 Lee at Appomattox 12 lbleko Case 15 U of 0 Opera 18 Banff Mt. Film Fest 19Alex de Grassi LAndrew York 20 Leon Russell 24-25 Bend Follies IT'S BACK!
MAY 2 Hokule'a Ohana ofCentral Oregon 7 Los Lonely Boys 9 Love, Loss & What I WoreNEW! 541-317-0700
TheTowerTheatre 'q www.towertheatre.org f h eTowerTheatre y ©t o wertheatrednd
PAGE 6 + GO! MAGAZINE I
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musie
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
The Belfry hosts
thequickandeasyboys.bandcamp. com. Also on tonight's bill: Jive Cascadian f u n k-rock Coulis, a merry band of fellas crunchy, jammy, generally made from Ashland who play rock by white people from along the I-5 'n' roll streaked with strains of corridor — is by no means a rarity old-school funk, Southern blues around Central Oregon. You can and jammy goodness, a la Gov't see it and hear it in a number of lo- M ule. These cats have been playcal venues on just about any given ing around Central Oregon (and weekend. all of Oregon, actually) a ton over But rarely does a venue host the past few years, which is no two bands in one night that serve surprise: What they do fits snugly as such crystalline examples of with what folks here seem to dig. Hear 'em at www.reverbnation. the style. Tonight, though, The Belfry in com/jivecoulis. Sisters will bring back The Quick The Quick & Easy Boys, with & Easy Boys, the party-friendly Jive Coulis;8 tonight; $8 plusfees
The Quick5 EasyBoys March 27 —Polecat (newgrass),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.p44p.biz. March 27 —The Soft White Sixties (pop-rock),The Annex, Bend, www.redlightpro.com. March28 — Mothers W hiskey (metal),Third Street Pub, Bend, 541-306-3017. March 28 —Lost Lander (synth-pop),The Astro Lounge, Bend, www.astroloungebend. com. March 28 —The Hoons(rock), Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.com. March 28 —Iris Dement (folk), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com. March 29 —New Kingston (reggae),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.
com. April 1 —CJ Boyd
(experimental trance),Reed Pub, Bend, 541-312-2800. April 1 —Dead Winter
Carpenters(Americana),
Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.com. April1 —The Silent Comedy (folk 'n' roll),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. April 2 —The Student Loan
(newgrass),McMenaminsOld St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.com.
April 2 —Be Calm Honcho (indie rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. April 3 —Smokey Brights (indie rock),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www.volcanictheatrepub.
com.
April 6 —lamsu! (hip-hop), Domino Room, Bend, www. randompresents.com. April 8 —Masters of Soul (soul),Tower Theatre, Bend, www.towertheatre.org. April 8 —Albatross (folk), McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. April 8 —The Giving Tree
Band (Americana),Volcanic Theatre Pub, Bend, www. volcanictheatrepub.com. April 9 —The Talbott Brothers (roots-rock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www.
mcmenamins.com.
April 9 —The Brothers
Comatose(Americana), The Belfry, Sisters, www. belfryevents.com.
Portland-based power trio that
in advance at www.bendticket.
dials up a particularly punchy com, $10at the door; The Belfry, brand of rock 'n' roll. Over the 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. years, Quick & Easy has been at belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122. times a little big twangy, a little bit poppy and a little bit psychedelic, but on their most recent album, "Follow Us Overboard," they
Appaloosaplays album-releaseshow
just put their collective foot on Appaloosa has a great origin the gas and aim for a good time. story, so I'm just going to share You can hear that album at www.
part of it w ith you direct from the band: "In the spring of 2011,
and after they both retired from their careers, Eli Ashley said, 'I
think we're going to play music now.' And his wife, Dottie, re-
plied skeptically, 'We are?' A couple months later, he came home with the pickup loaded with used gear: electric amps, guitars and microphones. She figured he was serious." Good stuff. The Ashleys have
since added Steve Jensen on bass, they write all of their own music, and they perform their
originals in addition to covers from some of their favorite singer-songwriters, like John Prine,
Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Woody Guthrie and so on. A ppaloosa has o nl y p e r formed a handful of times in the area, but they already have their debut CD t ogether. It's called
"Out of the Gate," it was recorded with Dale Largent of Bend,
and it's chockablock with homespun folk, country and blues tunes, performed with simple charm. (All originals, too!) They call it "High Desert Americana," and you can hear clips of the songs at www.cdbaby.com/cd/ appaloosal. The band will have CDs for
sale tonight at its release cele bration a t
b e a u t ifu l F a i t h ,
Hope and Charity Vineyards in Terrebonne. Appaloosa CD-release show; 6-9 tonight; $5; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www.faithhopeandcharityevents. com or 541-526-5075.
musie
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 7
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YAIIADAMSII JENN YLEW IS
~t DISTR ICTS Go bananas—HongKong
ONLY rOREGONSHOWSWITHTHESELINEUPS
Bananas, that is
FRIMN22
The evolving nature of Hong Kong Banana is highlighted in the "About" section of
Il MAY 23
t h e P o rtland
band's Facebook: "Hong Kong Banana as it stands is a 5 piece rock
band ..." The key words there being "as it stands." In other words, HKB is
an impermanent entity, or at least one in an eternal state of flux. How much flux?Who knows? The band's
drummer isJohnny Mao, aka John Johnson, who stays plenty busy in his punk-blues duo Hillstomp and thus may not be able to commit fulltime attention to HKB. Two other members are named, according to
the band's bio, Nigel Bubblesworth and Stony Buttons, which sound a lot like aliases taken by folks on
leavefrom other music endeavors. Maybe they aren't, I don't know. The point is, Hong Kong Banana comes and goes, and when they come, you should catch 'em, because their music is great. Think
classic, slightly snotty, '60s-inspired garage rock 'n' soul a la "Sticky Fingers"-era Rolling Stones and you're on the right track. Or maybe a gentler Stooges. Or a less gentle Kinks. Whatever. All those bands are great,
goal. For now, at least. That was in late May of 2011. This Honk Kong Banana, with HELGA; weekend, the Mexican duo will sail 6 tonight; free; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; w ww.crowsfeetcommons.com o r 541-728-0066.
Rodrigo y Gabriela are back inBend
back into Bend on the strength of s9 Dead Alive," its first album of new material in five years. It's not out till
late April, but a sneak peek reveals more of what we've come to expect
from RodGab: boundless energy, warm tones, flamenco sounds, sparkling melodies and six-stringed ragLast time they were in B end, ers that zig and zag at warp speed. Rodrigo y Gabriela were onstage Rodrigo y Gabriela darn near at Les Schwab Amphitheater and
using their propulsive, percussive acoustic rock to transform a bunch of relatively sedate, early-arriving so that's really all that matters. And Decemberists fans into a roiling sea you can figure it out for yourself of humanityand dance moves and anyway by streaming the band's high fives. excellent debut EP, "Now, but Not It was a sight to see: Two people NOW Now" at www.fluffandgravy. — Rodrigo Sanchez and Gabriebandcamp.com. la Quintero — with two guitars, in "At this point," the band says else- total command of a throng nearly where on its Facebook, "we are just 4,000 strong. They made fans in having fun." Sounds like a good Bend that evening.
stole that Les Schwab Amphithe-
ater show back in 2011; on Saturday, they're the ones at the top of the bill, this time at the Tower Theatre. If
you already have a ticket in hand, clutch it tightly, as this thing is sold out.
Rodrigo y Gabrieia, with Zach Heckendorf; 8p.m. Saturday, doors open 7 p.m.;SOLD OUT; Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. — Ben Salmon, for The Bulletin
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PAGE 8 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
going out Looking for something to do? Check out our listing of live music, DJs, karaoke, open mics and more happening at local nightspots. Find lots more at H bendbulletin.comlevents. 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. LISA DAEANDROBERTLEE:Jazz standards; 6 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www. northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DAVE ANDMELODYHILL: Americana, folk and blues; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588.
FRIDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. NATALIECLARK:Singer-songwriter; 5 p.m.; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend; www. cruxfermentation.com or 541-385-3333. APPALOOSA:Americana; 6 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; 541-526-5075. FRANCHOTTONE: Rockand reggae; 6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 1500 NE Cushing Drive, Bend; 541-647-2198. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country-pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar, 7535 Falcon Crest Drive, 1100, Bend www.niblickandgreenes. com or 541-548-4220. TONE RED:Americana; 7 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendblacksmith.com or 541-318-0588. THE SUBSTITUTES:Classic rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SW Sixth St., Redmond; www.checkerspub.com or 541-548-3731. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock,blues and folk; 7:30 p.m.; Kelly D's Sports Bar 8 Grill, 1012 SECleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. B.I.G. IMPROV:Live comedy with BendImprovGroup;8 p.m.;$8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. HONEY DON'T: Americana and folkrock; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. DEREK MICHAELMARCBAND:Blues; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www. northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. DJ RRLTIME: 9 p.m .;Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949.
SATURDAY THE RE-RUNS:Countryand gospel music from the1960s era; 3 p.m.; Tumalo Community Church, 64671 Bruce Ave., Tumalo; 541-383-1845. MARK 8 RON: Country-rock;6 p.m.; Dawg House II Pub and Grill, 507 SW Eighth St.,Redmond; 541-526-5989.
WEDMESDAY
Submitted photo
Tone Red will play at The Blacksmith Restaurant at 7 p.m. tonight. LAUREL BRAUNS: Pop;7 p.m.;portello winecafe, 2754 NWCrossing Drive, Bend; www.portellowinecafe.com or 541-385-1777. MICHAELMANDRELLANDRUTH BECK:Featuring Michael Mandrell, guitar, and Ruth Beck, harp; 7 p.m.; $10$20; Unitarian Universalists of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; www.uufco.org or 541-385-3908. DAVEAND MELODYHILL: Americana, folk and blues; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; www.niblickandgreenes.com or 541-548-4220. THE SUBSTITUTES:Classic rock; 7:30 p.m.; Checkers Pub, 329 SWSixth St., Redmond; www.checkerspub.com or 541-548-3731. TRACORUM:Honky-tonk,Americana and pop; 8 p.m.; Silver Moon Brewing, 24 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend;www. silvermoonbrewing.com or 541-388-8331. RADIO BIKINI:The punk band from Holland performs, with Dirty Protest, RAID and The Kronk Men; 8 p.m.; $3; Reed Pub Company,1141 SE Centennial Court, Suite 1, Bend; 541-312-2800. RODRIGO Y GABRIELA: The instrumental acoustic-rock duo
performs; 8 p.m .;$58.50-$73.50 plus fees; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheater.org or 541-317-0700. DEREK MICHAELMARC BAND: Blues; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www. northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. THE DESOLATE: The metalband performs, with Existential Depression, Death Agenda and Gravewitch; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. STAND UPCOMEDY:Featuring live comedy by Benjie Wrightand Tony G, hosted by Ryan Traughber; 9 p.m.; Cinnabar Lounge, 121 NE Third St., Prineville; 541-419-0111. DJ MIKE MOSES: 9 p.m.; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin,147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. AMBASSADOR BIGGZ: 10p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0166.
SUNDAY OPEN MIC: 3:30 p.m.;Dawg House
II, 507 SW Eighth St., Redmond; www.dawghouseredmond.com or 541-526-5989. TRAILER 31:Americana and folk; 7 p.m.; BrokenTop Bottle Shop,1740 NW Pence Lane, Suite1, Bend; www.btbsbend.com or 541-728-0703. DJ DMP:8 p.m .;Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.facebook.com/farmtoshaker or 541-706-9949. GRIZZLY BUSINESS:The San Diego indie rock band performs, with Anthony Hall; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. OPEN MIC:Hosted by Mosley Wotta; 6 p.m.;TheLot,745 NW ColumbiaSt., Bend. HONEY DON'T: Am eric anaandfolkrock; 6 p.m.; Jersey Boys Pizzeria, 527 NW ElmAve.,Redmond; 541-548-5232. CRAIG CAROTHERS:The Nashville folk singer performs; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Blues-rock;7 p.m.; The Stihl Whiskey Bar, 550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-383-8182. RUSS PENNAVARIA:8:30 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St.,
Bend; www.astroloungebend.comor 541-388-0116.
THURSDAY
TUESDAY
BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606. LINDY GRAVELLE:The country and pop artist performs; 6 p.m.; $5; Faith, Hopeand Charity Vineyards,70450 NW Lower Valley Drive, Terrebonne; www. faithhopeandcharityevents.com. KENNY BLUERAYAND THEHIGH DESERTHUSTLERS:Blues; 7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. TOM VANDENAVOND: The Austin, Texas country-folk musician performs, with Woebegone;9 p.m .;$5;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatre.pub or 541-323-1881.
BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues,
• SUBMITAN EVENT by em ail ingevente@ bendbulletin.com. Deadline ie 10 days before publication. Include date, venue, time and cost.
MOMDAY BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; noon; Fat Tuesdays Cajun and Blues, 61276 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; www. fattuesdayscajunandblues.com or 541-633-7606.
GO! MAGAZINE• PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
musie reviews Spotlight: Madonna Madonna "REBEL HEART" Interscope Records
Donna Lewis
— as T Bone Burnett and Buddy
"BRAND NEW DAYn Palmetto Records Remember Donna Lewis' 1996 hit "I Love You Always Forever"? Once in your consciousness
Miller have done for "Nashville"
Madonna's 12 previous albums — "Like a Virgin," Bedtime Stories" and her relatively epic "Confessions on a Dance Floor," to name a few — confirm herbranding technique, each connecting a concrete idea with themes conveyed through the songs, more or
again, that perky earworm is unlikely to leave quickly. Lewis' new album, "Brand New Day," presents a radical makeover for the Welsh artist. The breathy vo-
less. The outlier, her forgettable
that recalls artists such as
last album, "MDNA," was a coy reference tothe drug MDMA(aka Molly or Ecstasy).
Holly Cole, Norah Jones, and Rickie Lee Jones.
Her latest, "Rebel Heart," is a far better album than "MDNA"
Iverson adds some dissonant flourishes to Antonio
— cleaner, crisper, less a flimsy attempt at drawing fickle youth ears and more a sturdy rhyth-
— it's even more of a challenge to
m ake characterdriven songs for a soap opera that can stand up on their own, removed from the sto-
ryline, and compete in the real-life marketplace that's fictionalized on Wednesday nights on Fox. In that regard, the "Empire" soundtrack does ... not too badcalist recorded it with the jazz trio ly. For instance, "Good Enough," The Bad Plus, and it's a moody, the ballad sung by Jussie Smolstripped-down collection lett, who plays Jamal,
While p i anist Joel Ryan/ Invieion/AP
forced to cope with the
'I
E t han
Carlos Jobim's "Waters
Madonna explores the duality of her personality in her most recent
of March," "Brand New Day" is a restrained, un-
album "Rebel Heart," which released March 6.
homophobia of his father Lucious (Howard), makes a plea for understanding n onspecific enough to be broadly interpreted by anyone who seeks the approv-
mic platform to showcase some
hurried affair. Lewis re-
al of a m u l e-headed parent. It would sound
of the most striking tracks she's made in 15 years (specifically, since "Music," her last great album).
veals her skills as a sensi-
right at home on a Tim-
tive cabaret singer, wheth-
baland-produced Justin Timberlakealbum. The
willing to take the consequenc- ant, minor-key "HeartBreakCies." A vague reference to her re- ty," snare-rolling confessions. "Holy Water" is the weakest of cent backward tumble during the Brit Awards? If not, it should be. the bunch. She raps during "IlFrom the start, "Rebel Heart" Regardless, hers is a noble luminati" — and doesn't sound spotlights a clarity of intention, goal, even if the stakes in her totally ridiculous, no small feat. one the artist conveys in notes brand of rebellion are hardly of That one, a Kanye West-co-prothat accompanied the release: apartheid proportions. Focus, duced shout-out to the all-see"I knew I wanted to explore the though, drives tracks such as ing eye and the secretive group duality of my personality which eIllumrnatr, Jeoan of of would be mystics, Arc" and "Iconic" into is renegade and romantic. And is one of the record's highlights. I wanted to write good songs ... that sweet spot beThat's it." Featuringproduction by artists
tween club frenzy and
Granted, the strug-
revelatory l y r icism,
gles our heroine de-
induding Avicii, Diplo, Kanye West and Sophie and guests including Chance the Rapper, Nicki Minaj and (in spoken form) Mike Tyson, it has completeness
the kind that can lift spirits t o e m o tional
scribes must be en-
to it rather than the mishmash of
could-be stabs at relevance that dots her lesser work. Madonna cites as inspiration
rebels such as the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., Nelson Mandela, Bob Marley and John Lennon,
all of whom "changed the world. They took the road less traveled and they made all the difference.
You can't be a rebel and not be
heights. T hey display
a
master of dance pop harness-
ing a mostly male team of contemporary beat producers and songwriters to merge word and rhythm. She explores ego-tastic peaks ("Bitch I'm Madonna," "Iconic"); devotion ( "Ghosttown"); the desire for salvation and the allure, and destructiveness, of drug-fueled revelry ("Devil Pray"); bodily fluids ("Holy Water"); and in the defi-
dured by conformists and rebels alike. Even bland office d r ones suffer heartbreak. Still, she's not
er covering familiar songs such as Gnarls Barkley's "Crazy" and Neil Young's "Helpless," o b scurities from David Bowie and own compositions (two new ones and, yes, "I Love
Philadelphia r a p per Yazz (real name Bryshere Gray, who plays Jamal's brother Hakeem), as well as such
You A l w ay s
guest stars as Estelle,
Chocolate Genius, or her F o r ever,"
which works surprisingly well in this context).
Mary J. Blige, and, regrettably, Courtney Love — does not main— Steve Klinge, tain that high standard (or entireThe PhiladelphiaInquirer ly avoid corniness). But it's a solid enough hip-hop and R&B platter Various Artists to be enjoyable even if you don't "ORIGINAL S O UNDTRACK watch the show. FROM SEASON 1 OF EMPIRE" Tbrn First Artists The success of "Empire," the
trying to fool anyone on "Rebel Heart." She's just being Madonna, an artist who has long prospered by matching her vision
runaway hit music business soap opera starring Terrence How-
with track-makers and lyrical collaborators at their own cre-
ard and Taraji P. Henson, would be nowhere without Timbaland,
ative peaks. ON TOUR: Oct. 17 — Moda Cen-
ier, Portland;wwwzosequar!er.com —Randall Roberts, Los Angeles Times
entire 18-song album — which also features
— Dan DeLuca, The PhiladelphiaInquirer
Purity Ring "ANOTHER ETERNITY" 4AD
Teasing its way closer to mainthe time-tested hip-hop producer stream pop, Purity Ring plays whom creator Lee Daniels hired complexgames ofapproach and to keep corniness at bay. But if it's evasion on its second album, "Anone thing to create credible new other Eternity." music for a prime-time TV show Continued next page •
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PAGE 10 + GO! MAGAZINE er-manipulated vocals. Roddick
From previous page Then again, pop has been approaching Purity Ring, too, as pop, hip-hop and electronic
you see me?" she suddenly wonnow deploys the arena-scale ders in "Sea Castle." Why not? sounds of European tranceBecause Purity Ring i s better grandiose piano a r peggios, that way, verging on pop but nebulous chords, buzzy bass maintaining a sense of mystery. lines, ratcheting snare drumsON TOUR: June 17— McMenamalongside the brittle, sputtering ins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; percussion samples of trap and www.etix.com. — Jon Pareles, the monumental bass and drum impacts of hip-hop producers New York Times I like Mike Will Made-It. A song like "Bodyache" — wit h t h e Colleen Green "I WANT TO GROW stuttering, poppy chorus "I-I-I lied, now I'm lying awake/ I-I-I UPn cried until my body ached" — is Hardly Art only a few steps removed from Los Angeles songradio hits by singers like Ariana writer C o lleen G r een Grande and Ellie Goulding. specializes in simple, Still, Purity Ring i s stub- t hree — and four bornly arty. Even as Roddick chord bub b l e-gum invokes electronic dance music, pop-punk songs that the songs resist dancing. In- are instantly c atchy stead, they are crystalline dirg- and sometimes sung es, with buildups that suddenly in an affectless stoner's voice. vanish and bass lines that sus- (Her Twitter handle is Colleentain or slow down, deliberately G reen420.) On h e r f i r s t t w o impeding the rhythm instead of home-recorded albums, that propelling it. And while James' was an entertaining enough voice sounds guileless, her lyr- formula. What creates welcome ics have stayed enigmatic. They tension and makes "I Want hint at intimacies and separa- to Grow Up" a more compeltions, love and death, swirling ling, and frequently thrilling, together images of bodies and proposition is the ticking-clock landscapes with brief moments anxiety palpable in such conof s t raightforward l o nging: f ronting-adulthood songs a s "Where have I been/ Why can't "Things That Are Bad for Me"
dance music have raided one
another's ideas. Purity Ring is a duo from Canada — Megan James on vo-
cals and Corin Roddick on instruments — whose 2012 debut album, "Shrines," was electron-
ic pop filled with strategic holes of sound and sense. James' high, ingenuous voice hopscotched through blithe melodies and cryptic, sometimes nightmarish lyrics; Roddick's tracks played hide-and-seek around her, with silences where beats or bass lines might have been and notes
that puffed up and disappeared like ragged breathing. Purity Ring went on to collaborate
with rappers and dancehall reggae acts; meanwhile, directly or indirectly, some of Purity Ring's blips and hollows were echoed in radio hits. "Another Eternity" is at once
m ore expansive an d m o r e t ransparent t h a n "Shrines." James' voice has moved consistently into the foreground, with newly succinct melody lines and pretty, overdubbed choruses alongside trickier, comput-
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(Parts I and II!!) and, especially,
swinging "Living la Vida Loca,"
the emotionally frank "Deeper Than Love."
M artin d i dn't r e ally n eed t o . That tune created, defined and
Green lays i t
u n c omfort- refined where L a tino-Anglo dance-pop could go, with the tion-grabber. "Will I find a love Puerto Rico-born singer as its that lasts as long as my life, or hip-shaking messiah. For his will I die before ever becoming first all-Latin language album a wife?" she wonders. since 1998's "Vuelve," Martin " Nowadays com m i t - reaches back to where he came ment seems like a bur- from (no, not Menudo) and den to carry. I don't brings it into the shimmying pop w ant t o t h i n k a b o u t present. ably on the line on that atten-
it, it's too scary." The
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c u m bia-meets-
baile "Adios" starts "A Quien six-minute inward look Quiera Escuchar" (To the One is relieved on both ga- Who Wants to Listen), referring rage-rock kickers such to the life he's led since becomas "Grind M y T e eth," ing a star. The singer injects simw hich bears t h e i m - ilar deep feelings into the midprint of producer Jake tempo tropicalia of "Cuanto Me Orrall of Jeff the Broth- Acuerdo de Ti." The rhythm also erhood, and the breezi- regales "La M ordita," touched ly existential closer "Whatever with reggaeton and cumbia. I Want," which makes growing Not every groove i s s a ls a-speedy, an d t h a t' s w h e r e up seem not so scary after all. — Dan DeLuca, Martin's soulfulness truly comes The PhiladelphiaInquirer alive. The humming Latin jazz of "Naufrago," the hand-drummed Ricky Martin flamenco of "Isla Bella," and the "A Q UIEN QUIE R A spare, cello-laced balladry of "Disparo al Corazon" are tender ESCUCHAR" Sony Music Latin displays of Martin's emotional R icky M a r ti n i s t o o o f t e n purr. — A.D. Amorosi, taken for granted. Although he hasn't recorded much since the The PhiladelphiaInquirer
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
• The Central4 PianoQuartet, formed after atrip to Central America,will perform in Bend By David Jasper The Bulletin
T
imothy Durkovic is a pianist whose music education took place at the Juilliard School
and Thornton School of Music at the University of S outhern
California. But he's not just a pianist. He's
also a real estate broker who just listed a $15 million property in Los Angeles. "Things are absolutely crazy at the moment," he said on Monday morning, sounding more than a little hurried. Fortunately, he and the other three members of Central4 Pia-
no Quartet — Elizabeth Hedman (violin), Meredith Crawford (viola) and Paula Fehrenbach (cello)will get a break from that hectic L.A. pace when they're in Bend
Ifyougo What:Central4 Piano Quartet When:7:30 tonight, pre-concert talk 6:45 p.m. Where:Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend Cost:$35, $10 students and children Contact:info@highdesertchambermusic.com or 541306-3988
was 18, and so I go down to Guate-
mala to perform quite regularly." In 2010, he was asked to assemble a string quintet to perform at
a Guatemala festival celebrating the bicentennial anniversary of composer Frederic Chopin's birth.
"We weregoing to do two conTheatre (see "If you go"). certs where we played both ChoThe concert, part of High Des- pin piano concertos, but t h ey ert Chamber M u sic's seventh wanted (us) to do the ... chamseason, marks the group's sec- ber versions for piano and string tonight for a concert at the Tower
ond trip to Bend, and will feature
i t
quintet.
"They're super, super effeca program of music by Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart and Johannes tive, and so I had to put together a Brahms. group of five string players to take
i
D urkovic, th e
so n o f m i s - down with me. Now Elizabeth, who's the violinist, and Paula, raised in Guatemala. He became who's the cellist, had played tri-
sionary parents, was born and
Submitted photo
Central4 Piano Quartet performs tonight at the Tower Theatre in Bend. The Los Angeles ensemble features piano, violin, viola and cello and will perform works by Mozart and Brahms. Violist Meredith Crawford is not pictured.
interested in the piano at age 5, os together, so the three of us got when his older sister was taking together and put together the rest lessons. In fact, she was his first of the group," he said. "We went teacher. down to Guatemala for 10 days, "Ilearned to read music before played the concert and had an I learned to read," he said. "I came amazing time." to the states for college when I Continued next page
arts
PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE From previous page Such an amazing time, in
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
ano and five strings is not that prolific," Durkovic said. They named their ensemble Central4 Piano Quartet
fact, the trip inspired them to
form a group back home in L.A., where the core members
had long performed in different configurations with various combos. However, they went
the route of a quartet, "a logical extensionbecause musicforpi-
Improveyourimprov
and so they wanted to call the in Spotlight Chamber Players, group Central Market and as well as perform and particI was like, 'No one is going ipate in a Q8 A at Bend Senior to know what that means,'" High School, according to Isain honor of the Central Mar- Durkovic said. belle Senger, HDCM's execuket, a massive marketplace in While they're in town, Cen- tive director. Guatemala City the group had tral4 will perform an outreach The Spotlight Chamber visited. concert at Whispering Winds Players will also be on hand "They were all very touched Retirement Community, give tonight, performing works and movedby thatexperience, instruction to HDCM students by Felix Mendelssohn, Pyotr
Tchaikovsky and Sergei Rachmaninoff prior to the concert.
The students selected for HDCM's Educational Outreach
program thisyear are Mateo Garza (viola), Ben Kroeker (viola), Hannah Ortman (violin), and Amy Wheeler (cello). — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasperibendbulletin.com
Classes will be held at Bend's will perform at 7:30 p.m. on Community Center, 1036 NE Wednesday at Volcanic The-
poetry slams and living out of his Honda Civic. in a classwith Triage Fifth St. atre Pub, 70 S W C e ntury Though he admitted he "could have made a better Longstanding Bend improv Upon completion of the be- Drive, in Bend. troupe Triage will launch a ginner class, players will have Prior to a 2012 Bend visit, choice on the car, in terms of weekly beginning i mprov the opportunity to continue in Wakefield discussed self-im- sleeping space," Wakefield's class on April 1. an intermediate class. provement with this reporter, goal, first and foremost, is Participants will learn the Contact: info®bendimprov. saying he'd been working at personal betterment. "I'm a growth junkie, and basics of improvisational com- com or 541-771-3189. a futon factory in Texas when edy via exercises and games a friend encouraged him to I thrive on feedback," he in a supportive and coopera- The return of author, move to Seattle in 1998. Three said. "I think I matured a lot tive atmosphere.
Rhonda Ealy and Judi Van poet Buddy Wakefield Houweling will lead the class Acclaimed spoken word at 6 p.m. Wednesdays through artist, champion slam poet May 6. Cost is $75 per person. and author Buddy Wakefield
Get
years after that, he quit his
slower than most of my peers
job as an executive assistant growing up, so I've never at a biomedical company and lost my taste for bettering went on the road for nearly 2t/z myself." years of writing, traveling to Hey! Pearl Jam! Turns out you c an find a better man. Tickets are $10. Submitted photo ATaste For Food. Home & Garden Every TUesday In AT HOME Contact: www.facebook. Author and champion slam TheBulletin com/bendtheatrepub or poet Buddy Wakefield will 541-323-1881. appearWednesday atVolcanic — David Jasper
Theatre Pub in Bend.
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
arts
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 13
ART E XH I B I T S ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring the works of 30 local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 19; www.artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. THE ART OFALFRED DOLEZAL: Featuring oil paintings by the Austrian artist; Eagle Crest Resort, 7525 Falcon Crest Drive, Redmond; 541-526-1185 or www.alfreddolezal.com. ATELIER 6000:"Beautiful Math," featuring mathematically inspired art by Barbara Hudin; through March 28; 389 SW Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito; 1024 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www. canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. CIRCLE OFFRIENDS ART & ACADEMY: "Friends Art StarS," featuring works by Julia Christoferson, Larry Goodman and Ron Englebrecht; through March 31; 19889 Eighth St., Tumalo; 541-706-9025. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLICLIBRARY: "Novel Idea: A Tale for the Time Being," featuring work inspired by the book by Ruth Ozeki; through June1; 601 NW Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FRANKLIN CROSSING:Featuring paintings by COCC Professor William Hoppe and selected students under his instruction; through March 29; 550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; 541-382-9398. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. CascadeAve., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC: Featuring photography by Stacie Muller and Michael Wheeler; 961 NW Brooks St., Bend; info© highdesertchambermusic.com or 541-306-3988. HOOD AVENUE ART: "Artists Group Exhibit," featuring various works by local artists; through Monday; 357 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; www.hoodavenueart.com or 541-719-1800. HOP N BEAN PIZZERIA: Featuring landscapeartby Larry Goodman; 523 E. U.S. Highway 20, Sisters; 541-719-1295. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 N. Larch St., Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series
Submitted photo
"Toronado," hand-blown glass art by Nancy Becker, will be on display at Tumaio Art Co. through March. with unique pieces; 1006 NW Bond St., Bend;www.johnpauldesigns.com or 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ARTGALLERY:Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 NE Hemlock St., Suite13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KARENBANDYDESIGN JEWELER: Featuring custom jewelry and paintings by Karen Bandy; 25 NW Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155.
Connections," featuring wood carvings and bronze sculptures by Hib Sabin; through March; 869 NWWall St., Bend; www.mockingbird-gallery.com or 541-388-2107. THE OXFORD HOTEL: Featuring art by Lloyd McMullen, Carol Sternkopf and Brittaney Toles; through March 29;10NW Minnesota Ave.,Bend; 541-382-9398. PATAGONIA © BEND: Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 NW Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694. LA MAGIEBAKERY5 CAFE:Featuring landscapewatercolors andpastels by PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring Patricia W. Porter; 945 NW Bond St., works by Julee Hutchison; through Bend; 541-241-7884. March; 869 NWWall St., Bend; www. paulscottfineart.com or 541-330-6000. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and PEAPOD GLASSGALLERY: Featuring Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 SW oil paintings and sculptures by Lori Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Bend; Salisbury; 164 NW Greenwood Ave., www.lubbesmeyerstudio.com or Bend; 541-312-2828. 541-330-0840. PRONGHORN CLUBHOUSE: Featuring LUMIN ARTSTUDIOS: Featuring oil paintings by Ann Ruttan; through resident artists Alisha Vernon, McKenzie April 5; 65600 Pronghorn Club Drive, Mendel, Lisa Sipe and Natalie Mason; Bend; 541-693-5300. by appointment; 19855 Fourth St., Suite QUILTWORKS:Featuring quilts by 103, Tumalo; www.luminartstudio.com. Bevalee Runner; through April1; 926 MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY:"Spirit NE Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend;
541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY:"Expressions of Nature," featuring paintings by Sue Gomen-Honnell, sculptures by Joren Traveler and pottery by Annie Dyer; through March 31; 103 NWOregon Ave., Bend; www.redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMONDPUBLICLIBRARY: "Spring Fling," featuring works by local artists; throughtoday;827 SW Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMINGAND GALLERY:"Fur and Feathers," featuring works inspired by animals and birds; through March 28; 834 NW Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERSAREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSGALLERY 8tFRAME SHOP: "Shooting in The Dark," featuring photography by Gary Albertson; through March; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www. sistersgallery.com or 541-549-9552 SISTERS PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring art by students of Sisters middle and
high schools; through March 31;110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1070 or www. sistersfol.com. SUNRIVERAREAPUBLIC LIBRARY: Featuring pastels by Nancy Misek and baskets by Dorene Foster; through March 27; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. TOWNSHEND'SBENDTEAHOUSE: "Loan Me Your Crown," featuring collage works by Kaycee Anseth; through April 2; 835 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-3122001 or www.townshendstea.com. TUMALOARTCO.: Featuring handblown glass by Nancy Becker; through March; 450 SW Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144. VISTABONITA GLASS ART STUDIO AND GALLERY:Featuring glass art, photography, painting, metal sculpture and more; 222 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-4527 or www.vistabonitaglass.
com. WERNER HOME STUDIO8tGALLERY: Featuring painting, sculpture and more by Jerry Werner and other regional artists; 65665 93rd St., Bend; call 541815-9800 for directions.
PAGE 14 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
rinks By KathleenMcCool •The Bulletin
T
here is no shortage of breweries in the high desert. With 19 in
Bend, four in Redmond, and one each in Sisters, Prineville and Sunriver, Central Oregon has become a beer mecca, and the word
" RAT , H~LI
is spreading. But don't think that all this fame has made Central Or-
egon's breweries forget about the little people. Plenty of breweries in the region have locals nights to honor the folks that helped them get to where they are today. Now, how do you prove you're a local? Despite being launched to the top of the brewing pyramid, these local breweries haven't gotten big
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heads. They still practice the small-town art of trusting thy neighbor, so
don't gather up proof of address just yet. Most of these breweries consider anyone a local just by stopping by on locals night. "Those who are in the know, know. Those who don't are just surprised when they get
their check," says Jason Randles of Deschutes Brewery. Gary Sobala of Riverbend Brewing Company wants "to make everyone who comes in feel welcome." And if you live in Sunriver, consider
yourself extra special, because a Sunriver zip code or a flash of a Sunriver Homeowners Association card is like a VIP pass to locals night at Sunriver Brewing Company.
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— Reporter: 541-383-0350, kmccool@bendbulletin.com
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Bend Brewing Companyjust celebrated its 20th anniversary in February, and it's celebrating locals from 4 p.m. to closeevery Tuesday. Pints are just $2.75, and appetizers are half price from 4-6 p.m. Giventheir lengthy history in Central Oregon, locals nights at BBC havea good reputation and can get pretty busy! Find BBC at1019 NW Brooks St. in Bend. • I •
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Rat Hole Brewing, Central Oregon's nanobrewery, holds locals nights from 4-8p.m.W ednesdays with$2.50 pints. It's a chancefor this smaller brewery to encourage locals to get out and try something new.FindRat Hole Brewing at 384 SWUpper Terrace Drive in Bend.
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Boneyard Beergives thanks to locals with discount growler fills on Wednesdays. Locals can get $9 growlers for $7. Thecrew at Boneyard says this is a good day to stock up onyour favorite brews for the week. FindBoneyard Beer at 37 NW Lake Place,suite ¹B, in Bend. II
Joe Kline / Bulletin file photo
Enjoy a change of scenery at Rat Hole Brewing on locals night, from 4-8 p.m. Wednesdays.
'IJ@ Q.IG'- Pf'
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Sometimes youwant to go where everybody knows your name. Dustin Riley of Silver Moon Brewing says locals night is "like going to Cheers." From opento close on Mondays, Silver Moon offers locals two housetacos for $5 and $3 pints of the majority of their beers with discounts on pricier selections. Find Silver Moon Brewing at 24 NWGreenwood Ave. in Bend. I
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GoodLife Brewing Companytreats locals to a taste of the good life each Thursday. Thecompany thanks its local fans with discounts on pints of its main beers and $7 growler fills. Find GoodLife Brewing Company at 70 SW Century Drive in Bend. •
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Sunriver locals get discounts on Tuesdays at Sunriver Brewing Company. A different special is offered each week, and locals get a special discount. Michael Hendrichs of Sunriver Brewing Company says locals tend to stay away during the busy season when the town becomes apopular tourist destination, so the company's locals night is dedicated to those who stick around all year long. Find Sunriver Brewing Company at 57100 Beaver Drive, Building 4 in Sunriver.
Andy Tullie/Bulletinfilephoto
Three Creeks Brewing Co. in Sisters has locals night every Wednesday. I
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Three CreeksBrewing Co. is a L.A.W.-abiding brewery — with its Locals Appreciation Wednesdays, that is. Every week, locals can indulge in a$10 steak dinner. Find ThreeCreeks Brewing Co. at 721 Desperado Court in Sisters. ••
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Deschutes Brewery hashad locals nights ever since it started back in the late '80s. Locals night starts at 5 p.m. Mondays with specials on burgers and pints. Find Deschutes Brewery 8 Public House at1044 NWBondSt. in Bend.
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Riverbend Brewing Companyprovides a local lunch special consisting of a beer and a burger madefrom local beef for $10 from11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondaythrough Friday. Find RiverbendBrewing Companyat 2650 NEDivision St. in Bend.
Correction In a story headlined "The beer run: an oh-so-Bend trend," which appeared Friday, March 13, on Page14 of GO!Magazine, the photo was incorrectly credited. The correct photographer is Scott Nelson. The Bulletin regrets theerror.
drinks
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 5
brew news
what's happening?
Three Creeks hostsMarch Maltness T hree-part Platypus Brewfest Three Creeks Brewing Co. is hosting the third annual March Maltness March 23-29 at its location in
Platypus Pub, located at 1203 NE Third St. in Bend, is partnering with Columbia Distributing to
Sisters. Six breweries will put their best "malt forward"
host a brewfest.
beers on the line in a competition for the best malty brew.
close on March 25, is the first of three that the
Local competitors include Bend Brewing Co., GoodLifeBrewing Company and Three Creeks Brewing Co., along with Burnside Brewing Co. of Portland, Oakshire Brewing of Eugene and Terminal Gravity of Enterprise.
The brewfest, taking place from 5:30 p.m. to pub will host over three months, including events on April 15 and May 13. This is the third annual brewfest that Platypus has hosted with Columbia
Distributing. Each event will feature seven breweries, including representatives from each brewery to talk about
The schedule is as follows: March 23-24 — First Round showcasing all six brews. Vote for your favorite and the top four advance. March 25-26 — Final Malty Four. Your vote will de-
termine the championship round. March 27-29 — Championship Face-Off. Help pick thebest of the best.
To participate, visit Three Creeks Brewing Co., 721 Desperado Court in Sisters, on any of the
scheduleddates,order a taster tray and cast your vote. Contact: www.threecreeksbrewing.com or 541-549-1963. — Kathleen McCool
the beer and offer samples.Two breweries will be featured at a time and will rotate about every 30 minutes.
Breweries featured are: • Crux Fermentation Project • Deschutes Brewery
• Hopworks Urban Brewery • New Belgium Brewing Company • Lagunitas Brewing Company • Full Sail Brewing Company • Dogfish Head Brewery The event is free. Contact: 541-323-3282. — Sophie Wilhins
FRIDAY
com or 541-382-3940.
WINETASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. BEER ANDWINE TASTING: Sample beer from Mazama Brewing and wine from Crowley Wines; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market, 1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www. newportavemarket.com or 541-382-3940. SATURDAY WINETASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. WINETASTING:Sample wines from Cousino Macul Estate; 3:30 p.m.; Newport Market,1121 NW Newport Ave., Bend; www.newportavemarket.
SUNDAY
WINE TASTING:Sample a selection of wines; 2 p.m.; Trader Joe's, 63455 N. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 4, Bend; www.traderjoes.com or 541-312-4198. WEDNESDAY CASK SERIESRELEASE: Featuring an O'Kanes Cask Series Release of the 2015 McMenamins Irish Stout Firkin; 5 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174. PLATYPUS/COLUMBIA BREWFEST:Sample beers from different breweries; 5:30 p.m.; Platypus Pub, 1203 NE Third St., Bend; 541-323-3282. • SUBMIT ANEVENTby emailing drinks@j bendbulletin.com. Deadline is to days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-3830377.
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PAGE 16 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETINâ&#x20AC;˘ FRIL
FRIDAY NATALIECLARK:The Scottish singersongwriter performs; 5 p.m.; free; Crux Fermentation Project, 50 SW Division St., Bend; www.cruxfermentation.com or 541-385-3333. HONG KONG BANANA:The Portland garage-soulband performs, with HELGA; 6 p.m.; free; Crow's Feet Commons, 875 NW Brooks St., Bend; www. crowsfeetcommons.com or 541-728-
0066. (Page7) AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Tim Palmer, author of "Field Guide to Oregon Rivers," will speak; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters or 541-549-0866. MONSTER XTOUR: Featuring monster trucks battling, motocross, demolition
derbies andmore,not recommendedfor
children under 2 years of age; 6 p.m.; $19, $10 for children ages 3-12, $5 for pit party, $25 for VIP; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SWAirport Way, Redmond; www.monsterxt our.com or480-773-6822. "FOLLOW THATRABBIT":A musical version of Alice in Wonderland, starring 30 local children, ages 2 to16, proudly presented by The Sunriver Stars Community Theater; 6:30 p.m.; $10, $8 for children12 or younger; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC), 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-2212. "THE LANGUAGEARCHIVE":A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. HIGH DESERTCHAMBER MUSIC:The Central4 Piano Quartet performs works by Mozart and Brahms, with the Spotlight Chamber Players; 7:30 p.m.; $35, $10 for students and children; The Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St.,Bend;541-306-3988.
(Page11) "WHAT'SEATING GILBERT GRAPE": A showing of the1993 film about a smalltown man; 7:30 p.m.; free; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library, 134 SE E St., Madras; 541-475-3551. JAZZ ATTHE OXFORD: Diego Figueiredo and the Cyrille Aimee Quintet; 8 p.m. SOLD OUT; TheOxford Hotel,10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend;www.oxfordhotelbend.com or 541-382-8436. (Page 4) THE QUICK &EASYBOYS: The Portland rock trio performs, with Jive Coulis; 8
p.m.; $8 plusfeesinadvance,$10;The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; www. belfryevents.com or 541-815-9122.
(Page 6)
TEASE: BURLESQUE REVUE: The Portland burlesque group performs; 9 p.m.; $12 plus fees in advance, $15 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
SATURDAY SPAY IT FORWARD:Featuring a group of talented professionals offering
facials, and Shiatsu and Swedish m assage tobenefi tBend Spayand Neuter Project; $50 donation suggested, registration suggested; Synergy Health and Wellness, 244 NE Franklin Ave., Bend; www.bendsnip.org or 541-508-6554. JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring Diego Figueiredo and the Cyrille Aimee Quintet; 5 and8:15 p.m.SOLD OUT;The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. oxfordhotelbend.com or 541-382-8436.
(Page 4) MONSTER XTOUR:Featuring monster trucks battling, motocross, demolition derbies and more, not recommended for children under 2 years of age; 6 p.m.; $19, $10 for children ages 3-12, $5 for pit party, $25 for VIP; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 SW Airport Way, Redmond; www.monsterxtour.com or 480-773-6822. "FOLLOW THATRABBIT":A musical version of Alice in Wonderland, starring
30 local children, ages 2 to 16, proudly presented by The Sunriver Stars Community Theater; 6:30 p.m.; $10, $8 for children 12 or younger; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic 8 Recreation Center (SHARC), 57250 Overlook Road, Sunriver; 541-588-2212. MICHAEL MANDRELLANDRUTHBECK: Featuring the guitar and harp duo; 7 p.m.; $10-$20; Unitarian Universalists of Central Oregon, 61980 Skyline Ranch Road, Bend; www.uufco.org or
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 1 7
IAY, MARCH 20, 2015
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323-1881. (Page 29) "FOUR BLOOD MOONS:SOMETHING IS ABOUT TOCHANGE": A film based on the book by Pastor John Hagee about the supernatural connection of certain celestial events to biblical prophecy; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844462-7342. (Page 29)
I• FRIDAY Tease:Burlesque Revue:They promise to be all that jazz!
TUESDAY •
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INTERNATIONALFLYFISHING FILM FESTIVAL:Featuring short and feature length films produced by professional filmmakers from all corners of the globe, showcase the lifestyle and culture of flyfishing; 7 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $17at the door; Tower Theatre,835 NW Wall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. (Page 29) METALACHI:The Los Angeles band plays a combination of heavy metal and mariachi music; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
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FRIDAY Hong Kong Banana: Freeoutdoor concert. Need wesay more?
(Page 3)
WEDNESDAY BnddyWakofiold: Poetry like you've never heard before!
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CRAIG CAROTHERS: The Nashville folk singer performs; 7 p.m.; free; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins. com or 541-382-5174. BUDDYWAKEFIELD:The champion slam poet performs; 7:30 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-3231881. (Page 12)
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THURSDAY
Tom Vandonavond: Country-folk, straightfrom Texas.
541-385-3908. "THELANGUAGE ARCHIVE":A play about a linguist at a loss for words when it comes to his own life; 7:30 p.m.; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; Cascades Theatre, 148 NWGreenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. RADIO BIKINI:The punk band from Holland performs, with Dirty Protest, RAID and The Kronk Men; 8 p.m.; $3; Reed Pub Company, 1141 SE Centennial
Court, Suite1, Bend; 541-312-2800. RODRIGO YGABRIELA: The instrumental acoustic-rock duo performs; 8 p.m.; SOLD OUT;Tower Theatre, 835 NW Wall St., Bend; www. towertheater.org or 541-317-0700.
(Page 7) THE DESOLATE: The metalband performs, with Existential Depression, Death Agenda and Gravewitch; 9 p.m.; free; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017.
"REAR WINDOW":A showing of the 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film; 2 and 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. (Page 29)
SUNDAY "REAR WINDOW":A showing of the 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film; 2 and 7 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 844-462-7342. (Page 29) "FOLLOW THATRABBIT":A m usical version of Alice in Wonderland, starring 30local children, ages 2to16, proudly presented by TheSunriver Stars Community Theater; 2 p.m.; $10, $8for children12 or
younger; Sunriver Homeowners Aquatic & Recreation Center (SHARC),57250 Overlook Road,Sunriver; 541-588-2212.
MONDAY "LIZIN SEPTEMBER": A showingof the 2014 film about a young woman celebrating her birthday, presented by the LGBT Stars and Rainbows; 6:30 p.m.; $5 suggested donation; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; 541-
"THE BREAKFASTCLUB: 30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION": A special showing of the pop culture classic featuring the brat pack; 7:30 p.m.; $12.50; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www. fathomevents. com or844-462-7342.
(Page 29) TOM VANDENAVOND: The Austin, Texas country-folk musician performs, with W oebegone; 9 p.m .;$5;VolcanicTheatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatre.pub or 541-323-1881. • SUBMITAN EVENT at www bendbulletin.com/ submitinfo or email events©bendbulletin.com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions? Contact 541-383-0351.
PAGE 18 + GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
planning ahea MARCH 27-APRIL 2 MARCH 27— AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Valerie Geary will read from and sign her new novel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W.HoodSt., Sisters; 541-549-0866. MARCH 27 —POLECAT:The Seattle stomp-grass band performs, with the
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Eric TollefsonDuo;9 p.m.; $8plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. MARCH 27— DECLASSIFIED:Local V'
group Triageperforms long-formimprov; 9 p.m.; $5;CascadesTheatricalCompany, 148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend;www. bendimprov.com or 541-771-3189. MARCH 28 —THESOLOSPEAK SESSIONS"WE ALL HAVE STORIES":
Join performers astheyshare personal stories from their lives, Not appropriate for children; 2 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance,$18 atthe door;Cascades Theatre,148 NW GreenwoodAve., Bend; www.solospeak.com or 503-860-5733. MARCH28—AUTHOR PRESENTATION: Valerie Geary will read from and sign her new novel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 422 SWSixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. MARCH 28— IRIS DEMENT: Thesingersongwriter performs, with Pieta Brown; 8 p.m.; $30plusfeesinadvance,$35 atthe door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main St., Bend; www.belfryevents.com. MARCH 28— MOTHERS WHISKEY: The Portland rock band performs, with Shovelbelt and TheBeerslayers; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SEThird St., Bend; 541-306-3017. MARCH 28 —DEADREMEDY:The Portland rock'n' roll duo performs, with The Hoons; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. MARCH 29— TIM AND MYLES THOMPSON: TheNashville folkduo performs; 6 30 pm.; $15- $20 suggested donation; TheGlenat Newport Hills,1019 NW Stannium Drive, Bend;541-480-8830. MARCH 29— NEW KINGSTON: The Brooklyn, NewYork reggae band performs, with Arise Roots andRealize; 8 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. APRIL1 — DEADWINTER CARPENTERS:TheAmericana-roots band performs, with Honey Don't; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881. APRIL2 — SUSANANDDANA
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lamsu! will perform at the Domino Room on April 6 at 7:30 p.m. ROBINSON: The Americana stringAPRIL 3-9 duo performs; 6:30 p.m.; $15- $20 suggested donation; The Glen atNewport APRIL3-5,9 — "THE25TH ANNUAL Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive, Bend; PUTNAM COUNTYSPELLING BEE":A 541-480-8830. musical comedy about a fictional spelling APRIL2 — BECALM HONCHO: The bee set in a geographically ambiguous indie-rockand blues band performs; Putnam Valley Middle School; 6:30 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, p.m. opening night reception April 3; 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. 7:30 p.m. April 3-4, 9; 3 p.m. April 5; volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. $22, $19 for students and seniors; 2nd
Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. APRIL3 — FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK: Art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine and food in downtown Bend and the Old Mill District; 5 p.m.; throughout Bend. APRIL 3 — "ELSAANDFRED": A showing of the 2014 movie about
two neighbors; 7:30 p.m.; Rodriguez Annex, Jefferson County Library,134 SE E St., Madras; www.jcld.org or 541-475-3351. APRIL3 — SMOKEY BRIGHTS:The Seattle pop band performs, with Modern Kin and TheSwing Letters; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; wwwvolcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
planning ahead
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
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Tim Palmer, author of "A Field Guide to Oregon Rivers," will speak at Paulina Springs Books in Sisters on Friday.
Talks 5 classes For a full list, visit bendbulletin.com/ events.
Center of Photography, 390 SW Columbia St., Suite110, Bend; www.
ccophoto. com,welcome©ccophoto.
com or 541-241-2266. MUSIC EDUCATIONWORKSHOP: A jazz workshop with guitarist Diego Figueiredo and vocalist Cyrille Aimee; 11:15 a.m.-1:15 p.m. Saturday; free; The Oxford Hotel, 10 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend;www.oxfordhotelbend.com. AVENUE Il WORKSHOP:Learn how to work with puppets; 1 p.m. Saturday; $10; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NE Lafayette Ave, Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-480-6499. AARP SMART DRIVERCOURSE: AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Tim Palmer, Learn safe strategies that can reduce author of "A Field Guide to Oregon the likelihood of a crash and more; Rivers" will speak; $5; 6 p.m. Friday; 9 a.m. Tuesday; $15 for members, Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., $20 for non-members, registration Sisters; 541-549-0866. required; Sisters Community Church, 1300 McKenzie Highway, Sisters; INTRODUCTIONTO MACRO 866-955-6301. PHOTOGRAPHY: Learn to create macro photographs using equipment, LUNCH ANDLEARN: Volcano composition, controlling depth and Veggies will speak on "The Story basics; $99; 9a.m. Saturday; Cascade of Aquaponics: Raising Veggies 8 CAREGIVERTRAINING: Understanding Medicines: Learn about understanding medicines in older adults; 9 a.m. Friday; free, registration required; Red Lion Hotel, 1415 NE Third St., Bend; 800-930-6851. TEEN WRITINGGROUP:Writing group with local author, artist and teacher presentations, all teens welcome; free; 4 p.m. Friday; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend or 541-617-7079.
APRIL4 —LIVINGEASTER ADVENTURE: Interactive tour through the last week of Jesus' life and resurrection; live performances, gamesand lunch; 11 a.m.-2 p.m.; Highland Baptist Church, 3100 SW Highland Ave., Redmond; www. hbcredmond.org or 541-548-4161. APRIL4 — FRANKKINGAND ALEX ELKIN: Live comedy featuring Frank King, speaker, comedian and Mental Health
Activist and Alex Elkin; 7 p.m.; $23-$51; The Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-301-9686. APRIL 6 — IAMSU!: TheCalifornia hiphop artist performs, with Rome Fortune; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; $20 plus fees in advance, $23 atthedoor;Domino Room, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. bendtic ket.com or800-922-8499. APRIL8 — MASTERSOFSOUL: Celebrate
Fish in Central Oregon," bring your lunch; noon Wednesday; Bend Senior Center,1600 SE Reed Market Road, Bend; www.bendparksandrec.org or 541-388-1133. SOROPTIMISTINTERNATIONAL PROGRAM WITHNURSE-FAMILY PARTNERSHIP: Monthly meeting with Sarah Holloway, RN/BSN, of the NurseFamily Partnership; noon Thursday; Deschutes County Historical Museum, 129 NW Idaho Ave., Bend; www.sibend. org or 541-382-8608. PRACTICINGTHEMOMENT: Michael Scott Stevens, author of "Being an Ordinary Buddha: Practicing the Natural Mind," will give a public talk entitled, "Practicing the Present Moment."; 7
p.m. Thursday;$10suggesteddonation; The Old Stone, 157 NWFranklin Ave., Bend. MARCH CENTRALPUBTALK OREGON: Dale Partridge, CEO of Sevenly, will speak; $20 for members, $30 for nonmembers; McMenamins, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.edcoinfo.com or 541388-3236 ext.3. the legendary songs and performers who defined soul music; 7:30 p.m.; TheTower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www. towertheatre.org or 541-301-9686. APRIL8— THE GIVING TREE: Therock 'n roll band performs, with The Cerny Brothers; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
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• THURSDAY • M ARCH 2 6 T H Join us for a 5 c o u rse di n n er paired with e x cepti onal w i nes fr om Winderlea Vineyard & Winery 5 :30 Cock t a i l s . 6 :0 0 D i n n e r P lease R S V P 72 ho ur c a n c e l l a t i o n n o t i c e
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541-383-8200 • reception@brokentop.com 62000 Broken Top Dr. • www.brokentop.com
PAGE 20 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
restaurants
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Meg Roussos/The Bulletin
The casual Dawg House II in Redmond is like an eclectic sports bar.
• Dawg House II is agood Dawg. Yesyou are.
there are plenty of dogs portrayed
By John Gottberg Anderson
offshoot of the original Dawg
The well-kept dining room seats about 60 at booths and ta-
For The Bulletin
House in Prineville. The owners
bles, with room for perhaps 20
N
early a year has passed of that little cafe, Jim and Lynn since a small pub, dedicated Straughan, boosted their daughter to hot dogs and beer, took and son-in-law, Angela and Steve over the former premises of the Boothroyd, in adding the new Cross Creek Cafe — a longtime property at Fifth and Antler streets Redmond favorite whose owners
in Redmond in2012.Son Sumner
had recently retired frombusiness. Saulsbury came on board fullThe Dawg House II has suc- time with the move to Eighth and ceededintaking a good cafe and Evergreen streets in April 2014. making it even better. The new residents have expanded the Sports barambiance space and the hours of operation,
spruced up the atmosphere and added afullbar.They have maintained a high quality of casual food while adding to the menu some of the best hot dogs for hours in any direction.
Located two blocks west of the city's principal southbound avenue, the Dawg House II is an
The atmosphere is that of an eclectic sports bar. At this time
of year, the flat-screen televisions are tuned mainlyto "March Mad-
ness" basketball games. On the walls are football and auto-racing memorabilia, but also bicycles, airplanes, a snowboard and a giant sailfish, perhaps a fishing trophy. And as befits a Dawg House,
as well.
more at picnic tables on a streetside patio. Half a dozen couches facing two large TVs are a great place to watch big games. And food service is also available in the adjacent lounge, which handles another 40 patrons. That service is excellent — at least in the dining room, where I
took my meals. On each occasion, I was encouraged to find my own table, whereupon a menu and water
were promptly delivered. Orders were taken and delivered quickly, accurately and with a smile. Weekends often bring live music, open mics and comedy performances to the Dawg House. And the calendar is constantly evolving. Continued next page
The Dawg HouseII Location:507 SWEighth St., Redmond Hours:11a.m. to 9 p.m. Mondayto Friday, 9 a.m. to 9 p.m.Saturday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. Sunday.Breakfast served 9 to 11a.m. weekends only. Price range:Breakfast $3.99 to $9.45; appetizers $4.49 to $8.99; salads $9.99 and$10.99, hot dogs $4.99 to $7.49, burgers andother sandwiches $6.45 to $11.99
Credit cards:MasterCard, Visa Kids' menu: Fourchoicesat$4.99 Vegetnrianmenu:Veggie burger; hummus-and-vegetable plate Alcoholic beverages:Full bar Outdoorseating: Yes Reservations:Recommendedfor large groups Contact:www.dawghouseredmond.com, 541-526-5989
Scorecard Overall:AFood:A-. Delicious preparations of American classics with a few creative touches. Service:A. Orders are taken and delivered quickly, accurately and wish a smile.
Atmosphere:B+.Ambiance is that of an eclectic sports bar with TVs and a sidewalk patio. Value:A-. Prices are very reasonable, especially for the quality presented.
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
restaurants
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 21
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Now Serving Brunch on Saturday and Sunday Hours: 11:30am — 3pm Featuring: Dungeness Crab Cake Eggs Benedict, Crunchy Brioche French Toast, Classic Hangtown Fry, Cajun Scramble with Buttermilk Biscuit and Etouffee. $3.00 Mimosas, Specialty Bloody Mary Menu. 541-382-5581 www.pinetavern.com 967 NW Brooks St.
Meg Reussos/The Bulletin
The Volcano Burger with pepperjack cheese, pineapple, jalapenos, lettuce, tomato end onions with a Deschutes Fresh Squeezed pint of beer at the Dawg House II in Redmond.
From previous page
Small dite
Dawg House'dawgs'
NEXT WEEK: LUNCH ATPRIMAL CUTS
years after its original restaurant closed to makeroom for La Magie Bakery, SobnFood of Asia has reopened in the former location of the Caldera Grille andGiuseppe's. Following a makeover that will include a newbar in April, Soba is serving a budget-priced selection of pan-Asian street foods, including a variety of salads, noodle dishes and rice bowls. Open11 a.m.to9p.m.MondaytoSaturday. 932 NWBondSt., Bend; www.facebook.com/eatsoba,
Dawg House, it is, of course, the
"dawg." Six varieties of hot dogs, ranging in size from a quarter pound toa halfpound, are offered on the menu as simply or as piled with condiments as one could want. There are Cajun dogs, Polish kielbasas, German sausages and all-American hot dogs. They are available with ketchups, mustards,
hot sauces; sauerkraut, peppers and other vegetables; even bacon or pineapple. My dining companion ordered a half-pound hot dog described on
541-318-1535. — John Gottberg Anderson
For readers' ratings of more than150 Central Oregon restaurants, visit 0» bendbulletin.com/restanrants.
I was very impressed with "Mom's served with hash-brown potatoes and sourdough toast. Presented as a
it.
chili dog, and I was instantly convinced that to drive from Bend to
Redmond just for a Dawg would not be unreasonable. I had one o f
t h e r e staurant's
dium but juicy, the one-third pound Five Hog Wild Wings, described of beef was presented with lettuce, as a "signature appetizer," were not tomatoes and pickles on a delicious, wings at all; instead, they were pork lightly toasted bun spread with may- shanks on the bone. Tender and onnaise and ketchup. tasty, they were presented with two Only the tater tots that we ordered sauces: a mustardy barbecue sauce, as an accompaniment didn't mea- which I preferred, and a chili sauce sure up. Smaller than usual, they that was minimally spicy and too were ultra-crispy on the outside but sweet for my taste. somehow greasy within. And then there was breakfast.
•
secretrecipe breakfast casserole,"
I was not disappointed. Cooked me-
ions. I had a bite of what was now a
•
a.m. Saturdays and Sundays, but it's worth planning a visit at this time.
half-dozen burgers — the grilled onion-mushroom-Swiss burger — and
it topped with chili, cheese and on-
'•
The Dawg House serves the morning meal only between 9 and 11
thick cake of eggs with a variety of ingredients rolled into it — including bacon, onions, mushrooms, red pepSpecial items pers, tomatoes and cheddar cheese On two other visits, we sampled — it featured the unlikely ingredient several more dishes. A grilled steak of cottage cheese, which was beaten wrap, rolled in a spinach tortilla into the omelet to give it more depth. with caramelized onions, lettuce A side of "bacon jam" enhanced the and tomatoes, hit the spot, as did the flavor even more. house salad (with a generous servIrequested a breakfast burrito for ing of pepperoncinis) that came with my companion as takeout. She heat-
the menu as "for the healthy appetite." She paid a little extra to have
w.
Return Of Seba — Several
If there's a signature dish at the
ed it up for her brunch an hour later,
and was satisfied the rest of the day. In addition to eggs and potatoes, it had three meats (bacon, sausage and ham) along with tomatoes and cheddar. All in all, the Dawg House II is a solid choice for casual dining in Redmond. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.com
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
CONCERTS
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Portland Center Stage
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• Portland CenterStagepresents the classiccomedy'Cyrano' By Kathleen McCool The Bulletin
eloved for its affirmation of love, friendship and the power of a well-developed sense of humor, "Cyrano" will light up Portland Center Stage beginning April 10. Directed by Jane Jones, "Cyrano" is a
B
new take on French poet and dramatist Ed-
in Paris in 1897. The American premiere opened a year later at the Garden Theater in New York City. Director Jones has performed, adapt-
ed,and directed works by writers such as Charles Dickens, Frank O'Connor and Jane Austen. For PCS, Jones has directed
"Pride and Prejudice" and "Twelfth Night," which won Portland's Drammy award for
mond Rostand's 1897 "Cyrano de Berger- Best Direction and Production in 2008. ac," set in 17th century France. Cyrano is Jones also received a Women's University a skilled swordsman and poet whose long, Club of Seattle Brava Award in 2009 and bulbous nose makes him believe no woman a 2010 Women of Influence award from could ever love him — until an urgent mes- Puget Sound Business Journal. She's now taking on Rostand's "Cyrano," sage from his cousin, Roxane, leads him to believe she may be in love with him. which has been compared to the best of Unfortunately for Cyrano, Roxane is Sophocles, Shakespeare and Moliere. in love with Christian de Neuvillette, and Even though most of Rostand's plays are wants Cyrano to play matchmaker. consideredtragedies,"Cyrano" leaves the Cyrano puts his own heartache aside audience feeling inspired and happy in a and uses his poetic finesse to help de Neu- way manycomediescan't. villette write love letters to Roxane and win her heart.
"Cyrano" opens at Portland Center Stage
April 10 and runs through May 3. TickSwordplay and wordplay ensue, and de- ets range from $36-$69 with discounts for spite his nose, Cyrano whittles the tragic groups, those under 25 and students. For love triangle into a twosome. more information and to purchase tickets, Born in 1868, Rostand always knew he visit www.pcs. org orcall503-445-3794. "Cyrano" is recommended for ages ten wanted to be a writer. After receiving his law degree in Paris, as most wealthy young and older. Children under six are not permen of his time did, Rostand began writing mitted at any PCS production. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, plays. "Cyrano de Bergerac" was first produced kmccool@bendbulletin.com
March 20 —Adventure Club, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* March 20 —Blackbird Raum,Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 20 —Echosmith, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* March 20 —Recycled Percussion, Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. March 20 —Rodrigo y Gabriela, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* March20 — Shpongle,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* March 20 —Tyrone Wells, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March20 — Dmphrey's McGee, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. March 21 —The Decemberists, Keller Auditorium, Portland; SOLDOUT; P5* March 21 —The Gaslight Anthem, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 21 —SavoyBrown, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 21 —Shpongle, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 22 —Futuristic & SamLachow, * Roseland Theater, Portland; CT March 22 —Hurray For TheRiff Raff, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF March 23 —Bad Religion, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* March23 — Home Free,Mc Donald Theatre, Eugene; TW* or 800-992-8499. March 23 —OKGo, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix. com. March 24 —Ewan Dobson,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 25 —Bad Religion, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* or 800-992-8499. March 25 —Colin Hay, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF March 25 —Dan+ Shay, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 25 —Marilyn Manson, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT; TW*
March 26 —OfMontreal, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 27 —Iris Dement, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 27 —The Mowgli's, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 27 —Punch Brothers, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 27 —Seth Avett and Jessica Lea Mayfield,McMenamins Crystal
Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. March 27 —The Ting Tings, Star Theater, Portland; CANCELED;www. startheaterportland.com. March 28 —DATSIK, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 28 —Joe Pug,Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF March28 — LaurieLewisand Kathy KaHick,Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.com. March 28 —Mark Battles, Roseland Theater, Portland; CT* March 28 —Metalachi, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 28 —Willamette Valley Wine & JazzFestival,The Oregon Garden, Silverton; www.oregongarden.org. March 28 —Yonder Mountain String Band,McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* March29 — AtThe Gates,Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 31 —Guster, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
com. March 31 —Whitehorse, Doug Fir Lounge, Portland; TF* April 1 —The Antlers, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
com. April 1 —Charlie Musselwhite, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. April 1 —YoungThug/Travis Scott, * Roseland Theater, Portland; CT April 2 —Charlie Musselwhite, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* April 2-3 —Dark Star Orchestra, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 2 —Monophonics, Star Theater, Portland; www.startheater.com. April 4 —Action Bronson,Wonder * Ballroom, Portland; TF April 4 —Dark Star Orchestra, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW April 4 —Magma, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF April 4 —Saint Motel, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.
com. April 5 —Andrew Jackson Jihad, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 7 —lamsu!, Alhambra Theatre, * Portland; TF April 7 —The Sing Off, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF April 7 —Odesza, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; SOLDOUT;TW* April 7 —Stromae, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix. com. April 8 —George Ezra, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF*
out of town
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015 April 9 —Belle and Sebastian, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* April 9 —BoDeans,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. April 9 —Josh Garrels, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF April10 —Junior Brown,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF April 10 —The Replacements, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT;www.etix.
com. April 10 —Vance Joy, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;CT* April 11 —Crizzly, Roseland Theater, Portland; www.etix.com. April 11 —Fruition, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 14 —Kimbra, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* April 14-20 —Soul'd OutMusic Festival,Various locations, Portland; www.souldoutfestival. com. April 16 —Lord Huron, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 16 —TwoGallants, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF April 17 —Faith Ho More, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* April 17 —Joanne Rand,Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www. stclairevents.com. April 18 —Blue October, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 19 —Dead Milkmen, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 19 —Kalin 8 Myles, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 20 —Damien Rice, Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* April 20 —Dezarie, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 22 —Mac DeMarco, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 23 —Clean Bandit, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* April 23 —Gramatik, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* April 23 —The LedZeppelin
Experience,McMenaminsCrystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 23 —Polaris, Aladdin Theater, * Portland; TF April 23 —Tech Hgne, Roseland * Theater, Portland; CT April 24 —Infected Mushroom, * McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW April 24 —Jose Gonzalez, * Roseland Theater, Portland; CT April 24 —The MoodyBlues, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* April 24 —Sylvan Esso, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom,
Portland; SOLDOUT;www.etix. com. April 25 —Infected Mushroom Live,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 25 —Maria Muldaur, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www.stclairevents.com. April 25 —Mastodon/Clutch, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* April 25 —The Willis Clan, Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. April 26 —Hightwish, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. April 30 —Chico SchwaH,The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. April 30 —GarthGuy,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF May1 —Jeff Austin Band,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May1 —Richard Cheese and LoungeAgainstThe Machine, McMenamins, Portland; www,etix.
com. May 2— HiHstomp,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* May 5 —Sleater-Kinny, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; www.etix.com. May 6 —Howard Jones,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF May 7 —GriZ, McDonald Theater, Eugene; TW* May 7-10 —Jazz Kings, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000.
LECTURESSK
COMEDY March 20 —AmySchumer, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. March 26 —Joel Hodgson, Pat Rothfuss and Paul & Storm, * Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF March 31 —Dr. Nicolas Bazan: Nicolas Bazan, M.D., Ph.D., has created a fable of music and the mind in his book, Una Vida, about a gifted jazz musician developing Alzheimer's; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. April 1 —Stuff You Should Know: Live!:The award-winning podcast hosted by Chuck Bryant and Josh Clarkand produced by the venerable website HowStuffWorks; Aladdin Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TF* April17 —Jimmy Tatro, Aladdin Theatre, Portland; TF* April 18 —Bill Maher, Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. April19 —Rob Bell and Pete
*Tickets TW:TicketsWest, www. ticketswest.com or 800992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticket-
fly.com or 877-435-9849 CT:CascadeTickets, www.cascadeticekts.com or 800-514-3849 P5:Portland'5 Centers for the Arts, www.portland5. com or 800-273-1530 Holmes,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
April 23 —Katherine Boo:Part of the Portland Arts & Lecture subscription-based series; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; SOLD OUT;www.literary-arts.org or 503-227-2583. May 2 —David Sedaris, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. May 2 —Hick Offerman and Megan MuHaHy,Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.
SYMPHOMY Sc OPERA March 21-22 —Symphonie Fantastique:Berlioz' brilliant take
on lovesickness, and the return of Canadian violinist James Ehnes; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. March 26-28 —"Educating Rita":Presented by Craterian Performances' Next Stage
Repertory Company;Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.
craterian.org. April 4 —Something Grand:90 minute family-friendly, ten-piano concert; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* April 4 —Ten Grands:Ten grand pianos and ten concert pianists playing a variety of classical and modern pieces both simultaneously and individually; Arlene Schnitzer * Concert Hall, Portland; P5 April 7 —Boyz H Menwith the OregonSymphony,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org. April 12 —Cantus Vocal Ensemble:Cantus will perform a blend of composers and styles in a widely varied and masterful program; Beall Concert Hall, Eugene; www.oregonbachfestival.
com.
April 16 —Beethoven's Pastorale: Eugene Symphony; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000.
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 23 April 18 —Death on the Downbeat:A splendid evening of classic film music and a delightfully different who-dunnit murder mystery; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony. org or 503-228-1353. April19 —"Peter and the Wolf": Three musicians and a conductor's assistant must outwit the fearsome wolf that threatens orchestra and audience alike (without upsetting the maestro!); Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. April 27 —Baroque at The Shedd, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. April 28 —Vivaldi's Four Seasons With Portland BaroqueOrchestra: Monica Huggett, director and violin soloist; Beal Concert Hall, Eugene; www.oregonbachfestival.com. May1, 3, 5, 7, 9 —"ShowBoat": Show Boat revolutionized the American musical theater, thanks to its epic story and musical sophistication. This saga of three romances that blossom aboard a Mississippi River show boat reflected the true face of America as it was...and still is today, more than 80 years later; Keller Auditorium, Portand; www. portlandopera.org or 503-241-1802 or866-739-6737.
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out of town
PAGE 24 • GOI MAGAZINE
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From previous page May 1 —Storm Large, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland;
www.orsymphony.org or 503-228-1353. May 7-10 —The Jazz Kings, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www. theshedd.org or 541-434-7000.
THEATERL DAMCE
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(Through Nov.1), "Long Day's
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Journey into Night" (March 25Oct. 31), "Secret Love in Peach Blossom Land" (April15-Oct. 31), "Antonyand Cleopatra" (June 2-Oct. 9), "Head Over Heels" (June 3-Oct. 10), "The Count of Monte Cristo" (June 4-Oct. 11), "The Happiest Song Plays Last" (July 7-Nov.1) and "Sweat" (July 29-0ct. 31); Oregon Shakespeare Festival, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161.
GARDENING.
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correspondent LaurenWeedman; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. March 24, 25 —"Camelot": Theater League; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. March 27-29 —Shen Yun: Heavenly realms and timeless legends spring to life through classical Chinese dance; Presented by Oregon Falun Dafa Association; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5* or 888-974-3698. March 28-April 26 —"School House Rock live!":Presented by Oregon Children's Theatre; Winningstad Theatre, Portland; P5* or 503-228-9571. March 31 —"Million Dollar Quartet":Stage musical based on the1956 chance gathering
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• o e o .
Join OSU Master Gardeners- for
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Q o CL 0 'Q I
Spring Gardening Seminar Saturday, April 18, 2015, 8 a.m.— 4:30 p.m. Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center, Redmond Event offers 16 classes, featuring: • Vegetable Gardening • Fruit Trees • Rock Gardens • Greenhouse Pest Management plus a Garden Market with plants, books, worm castings, landscape products, silent auction, optional lunch and more Register today: gocomga.com/gardening-news.html or call 541-548-6088 $10 per class (pre-registration deadline April 11); $15 on event day
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Through March 22 —"Other Desert Cities,"Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through April 5 —"The Invisible Hand":A 2013 Pulitzer Prizewinning play by Ayad Akhtar; Artist Repertory Theatre; Morrison Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep. org or 503-241-1278. Through Oct. 31 —Oregon Shakespeare Festival:The following productions are part of the Oregon Shakespeare Festival: "Fingersmith" (Through July 9), "Much Ado about Nothing" (Through Nov. 1), "Guys and Dolls" (Through Nov. 1), "Pericles"
March 20-21 —New Israeli Voices in Dance:Hillel Kogan, Batsheva rehearsal director, brings his award-winning duet "We Love Arabs," involving Jewish and Arab religious identity, national symbols, and hummus; Presented by Whitebird Dance; Portland State University, Portland; www. whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. March 20-28 —Northwest Ten: SevenYearItch!:Theseventh annual Northwest Festival of Ten-Minute Plays is presented by Oregon Contemporary Theatre and NW10; Oregon Contemporary Theater, Eugene; www.octheatre. org or 541-465-1506. March 21-April 19 —"The People's Republic of Portland": By former "Daily Show"
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•
Central Oregon
Master Gardener Association
of musical legends Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Carl Perkins, and Jerry Lee Lewis at Sun Records in Memphis, Tennessee; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org. March 31-April 26 —"The Price": A timeless classic by Arthur Miller; Artist Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage; Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241-1278. April 4 —Damsels, Divas, 8 Dames:A light-hearted evening of drag and impersonation, music, fun costumes and great humor; Hult Center for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. April 7-12 —"I love Lucy" Live on Stage:Presented by U.S. Bank Broadway in Portland; Keller Auditorium, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. April 9-11 —Urban BushWomen: Presented by White Bird Dance; * or Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5 800-380-3516. April10-May 3 —"Cyrano," Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. April 10-May 2 —"Lucky Me": A World Premiere whimsical comedyaboutlove,aging,bad luck, and airport security; Oregon Contemporary Theatre, Eugene; www.octheatre.org or 541-465-1506. April10-11 —"Tall Tales Up To Here!":The Moombah zanies find themselves smack in the middle of larger-than-life adventures with Davy Crockett and Sally Ann Thunder, Bre'er Rabbit, and other wild and crazy characters out of North American lore; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd. org or 541-434-7000. April 11 —NWDance Project: A collaboration between gifted
choreographersandsensational
talent in the contemporary dance world; Craterian Theater at the Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org. April 11-12 —"Tommy":Presented by Eugene Ballet Company; Hult Center for the Performing Arts for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. April 12-13 —Dvorak's Slavonic Dances,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; P5* or 503-228-1353. April 16-25 —"Impact": Oregon Ballet Theatre, Portland; www.obt. org or 503-222-5538. April 16-May 3 —"Soul Harmony": In the late '40s an unlikely partnership between a young Jewish woman and a dynamic black male vocal group gave birth to a new genre of music that would ignite a generation, R&B! Brunish Theatre, Portland; P5*, TW* or 800-273-1530. April 17-19 —"How Lovely To Be A Woman":Shirley Andress and Siri Vik; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. April 21-22 —Dance Theatre of Harlem:The company will perform
Varekai,Veterans Memorial Coliseum, Portland; TM* May 8-10 —"Cinderella: A Rock Opera Ballet": Presented by Ballet Fantastique; Hult Center for the Performing Arts for the Performing Arts, Eugene; www.radioreduxusa. com or 541-682-5000. May 9-31 — "Ramona Quimby": Presented by Oregon Children's Theatre; Newmark Theatre, Portland; P5* or 503-228-9571.
EXHIBITS
ThroughMay 6— Oregon Museum of Science and Industry:The following exhibits are currently on display: "Mazes" (Through May 6); Portland; www.omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. Through June 21 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum ofArt: The following exhibits are currently on display: "Laura Heit: Two Ways acontemporary program bysuch Down" (through March 29), "Under exceptional choreographersas Pressure" (through March 29), Ulysses Dove, TanyaWideman Masterworks on Loan (through and Thaddeus Davis; Presented by Apri!19), "Moris Graves' Goats: White Bird Dance; Arlene Schnitzer Heroes and Fantasies" (through Concert Hall, Portland; www. April19), "The Architecture and whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. Legacy of Pietro Belluschi" (through April 24-26 —"Reinvention": April 26) and "The Word Became Pendulum Aerial Arts presents Flesh: Images of Christ in Orthodox three days of performance by the Devotional Objects" (through June extremely talented Professional 21); Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Training Students; Pendulum Art, Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu. Aerial Arts, Portland; www. Through July11 —Museum pendulumaerialarts.org or www. of Contemporary Craft:The brownpapertickets.com. following exhibits are currently April 28-May 24 —"4000 Miles": on display: "Living with Glass" A comedic drama by Amy Herzog; (through May16) and "Extra Artist Repertory Theatre; Morrison Credit" (through July11); Museum Stage; Portland; www.artistsrep.org of Contemporary Craft, Portland; or 503-241-1278. www.museumofcontemporarycraft. April 29 —The BluesProject: A org or 503-223-2654. combination of nine astonishing Through Oct. 18 —Portland Art tap artists with a live blues band, Museum:The following exhibits led by award-winning musician and are currently on display: "APEX: composer Toshi Reagon; Presented Cris Bruch" (through March 22), by White Bird Dance; Arlene "Masterworks(Portland: El Greco" Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. (through April 5), "Breaking Barriers" (through April12), "Italian April 29 —Dorrance Dance: Style" (Through May 3) and "Hand Presented by White Bird Dance; and Wheel" (through Oct. 18); Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.portlandartmuseum. Portland; P5* or 800-380-3516. org or 503-226-2811. April 29-May2 —The Jefferson Dancers,Newmark Theatre, MISCELLANY Portland; www.portland5.com. May1 —"Paper or Plastic": A March 28 —Willamette Valley Wine 8 Jazz Festival,The comedic, one-act play by Werner Oregon Garden, Silverton; www. Trieschmann about workers and oregongarden.org. customers in a grocery store; Hult Center for the Performing Arts for April 13 —20th Annual Oregon the Performing Arts, Eugene; www. Book AwardsCeremony, Gerding hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. Theater at the Armory, Portland; May 2-June 14 —"The Lion": One www.literary-arts.org. man, six guitars, and a true story April 27-May 3 —CinemaPacific of love, loss, family loyalty, and Film Festival:This year's festival the redemptive power of music; features the Chinese arts of Portland Center Stage; Gerding Wushu, New Filipino Cinema, and Theater at the Armory, Portland; American Experimental Media; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Various locations, Eugene, Portland; May 6-10 —Cirpue DuSoleil: cinemapacific.uoregon.edu.
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01
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
ames, an evo ution r om i m t o i m first movie," says James of his says the man whose dreaminess elite-soldier character. "There's a has launched a small army of fan vulnerability there (that) wasn't
By Michael Ordona
question I've often asked myself,"
San Francisco Chronicle
all, with the brooding eyes of a p h ilosophy major? Check. Deep North Londoner voice of a rock singer? Check. Practiced in the art of saying only the most appropriate things in an
T
4,C
interview? Well ...
In an early scene in "The DivergentSeries:Insurgent,"Theo James found his character, Four,
at a table with franchise protagonist and Four's love interest Tris (Shailene Woodley) and two characters played by Woodley's recent screen paramours, actors Miles Teller ("The Spectacular Now") and Ansel Elgort ("The Fault in Our Stars"). James grimly acknowledges they were aware of the situation while filming. "'Cause we've all (been with) her," he says. Then he shouts, "In movies! We had several laughs about that."
He's quick to joke, but James' admiration for Woodley, surely one ofthe best actresses of her generation, as an artist and a person who reads as genuine. He is by turns polite and mischievous, profane and thoughtful, but is clearly fond of his co-star.
Submitted photo
Theo James, center, plays the love interest of Tris, left, played by Shailene Woodley, in "The Divergent Series: Insurgent."
a slow burn. We are 100 percent good friends, but it's a slow-burn thing; I think there's still more to
come. At least I hope so." There's certainly more to come
School.
"I had a pretty steep learning curve in film — as I'm still learning," he says. "The more you do, the more you should be willing to make mistakes. But then I guess
from the ascendant James, who has only been active since 2010, the more you do, the scarier it beyet already has 11 credits. This comes. If you're Joe Chump, then year alone, he has four movies on who gives a f-- — you don't care, the slate, including "Franny" with do you? Rock 'n' roll. But if you Dakota Fanning and Richard have something to uphold, it gets "Like any relationship, there's Gere; Jim Sheridan's "The Secret a little scary." an evolution. But both of us, in Scripture," with Rooney Mara; James' career is taking off, and "London Fields" with Johnny but he's philosophical about the terms ofthe people we were when we started — we're different now. Depp. Not bad for an actor who craft. That's likely due to his phiShai, obviously she's always been only recently was best known for losophy degree from the Univera greatactress,but compared to expiring in the sack on "Downton sity of Nottingham and relatively the first movie, she's grown as a Abbey." late blooming (he's 30, compared person in a really positive way. The youngest of five in a close- to most of hi s f resh-out-of-theSo that not o nly i n f orms her knit family of Greek descent (his dorms "Insurgent" cast mates). "You question, as anybody performance, but it informs our real last name is "Taptiklis"), the friendship. Oxfordshire-born James attend- should, the overarching worth of "In a nice way, Shai and I — it's ed the Old Vic Bristol Theatre your profession, right? So that's a
From previous page But to extrapolate from this into some grand vision of a future
just about everything in "Insur- wants to restore order by killing gent" is ridiculous, and the more all the Divergents. But Tris wants the movie expands to show how
society is absurd on its face. For the Candor people live and how one thing, dividing people into the hippie-dippy Amity dwellers self-contained factions is a reci- get along, the harder it is to keep pe for conflict, not cooperation. from groaning. Furthermore, the idea that people Faced with this, the actors and with similar personalities will get filmmakers do the one thing they along harmoniously contradicts can do. They commit to this world what we all know. People with vision with religious intensity. similar personalities often bang "Insurgent" begins where "Divergent" left off. Tris (Shailene Woodheads. Finally, nobody is one thing. ley), her handsome boyfriend and Everybody is "divergent," so the fellow warrior Four (Theo James), idea, repeated again and again, and a group of their associates are that divergent people are a special on the run from the power mad breed, is a little ridiculous. In fact,
Erudite ruler (Kate Winslet), who
to do more than survive. She wants to lead the revolution. I f you want to m ake a m i l -
lion dollars, write a teen novel in which a seemingly unremarkable teenage girl becomes the romantic obsession of an insanely handsome young man. (If you want to make a billion dollars, give her two insanely handsome young men, as in the "Twilight" series.) Like Bella, Tris is just awesome,
but at least Woodley makes you half-believe it, with her unclouded aura. Looking at her is like looking into clear water.
sites.
in the first movie. He was this
the affirmative answer."
last one. Now I've learned. I know
He says he had "naively" hoped standoffish, kind of cool guy and to continue to pursue music — his you don't learn much about him band, Shere Khan, broke up in until the very end. In this, he's 2012, though he's discussing re- trying desperately to protect the cording analbum now. But when singular person he loves and she's it comes to what he'd do if not in utterly self-destructive. So he's on the arts: "I was thinking recent- the back foot in a way. And he's ly, I've always loved the ocean. If struggling with the concept of I could do it all again, I might do leadership." To theactor's credit,Four's evoan oceanography degree. You can do ocean archaeology, and I lution is conveyed not only by exthought that might be fascinating position as we learn more about to do — man-made structures, his parentage, but by nuance in where the sea has risen above the James' performance. "You're constantly growing. structures." When pressed about how his I've done other movies in b euniversity studies affect his act- tween" the two "Divergent" chaping approach, he hesitates, then ters so far, he says. "I always think says, "It taught me a little bit of a that you finish one movie, you way of analytical thinking, the start a new one, and you think," Socratic method of questioning he says, boldly, "'OK. I did that "If anyone has a stringent belief how this works.' Then by the end they think is 100 percent correct, of the movie you think," he says not necessarily that you disagree quietly, "'No, I don't, really.'" "But in a good way. You should with it, but that line of questioning to find truth — that sounds be open to things happening and so ... pretentious — but in what things changing. Because whatI do, you need to ask questions ever you expect, it doesn't tend to constantly. Sometimes that pisses be. I'm sure that's true with any people off." job, but it's a constant, constant "Insurgent" finds Tris and Four learning process. The minute you on the run from an unholy alli- think you don't need to learn anyance of Erudite and Dauntless thing is probably when you befactions — the supposedly smart- come an actor." Lest he sound too serious about est and bravest people in dystopian future Chicago. As the pair it all, he adds something he has ponder whether to join the revo- observed from the likes of Kate lution they unwittingly sparked Winslet and Depp: "The best actors tend to be very in the first episode, Tris is haunted by guilt and Four is pushed by his professional — but they don't have to be boring, they can still past. "He's quite different from the f-- around and have a laugh."
Much of the screen time in
"Insurgent" is taken up with politics, the efforts of Tris and Four to forge alliances and launch a coup, but this makes for flat viewing. The world of the film is so
virtual sequences, in which we
see what Tris imagines, as she is hooked up to a simulator. These are the best scenes in the movie,
its one claim to, if not originality, idiosyncrasy, and it really helps
far-fetched that the mechanics of its functioning are of no interest.
"Insurgent" that the climactic se-
Robert Schwentke brings a kind of brain-dead intensity to
are saved for the end, and they
the calmerscenes,a passionate
"Well, that was OK," even though most of it wasn't. — Mick LaSalle is a film critic for The San Francisco Chronicle.
quence leans heavily in this virtuWhat's worse, the behavior of the al direction. "Insurgent" would be a much characters often goes against the movie's own internal logic, which worse movie if the good parts is flimsy to begin with. were all at the beginning. But they
fervor that admits no variety of humor, except the unintentionaL
But he does much better in the big
leave the viewer with a feeling of,
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 27
eeson momen one wron • Sean Penn'turn s as an agingaction hero really missesthe mark
M
aybe the blazingly talented Sean Penn has given a worse performance
)'
. »,lt„."
(
at some point in his film career, w hether it w a s i n "Shanghai
Surprise" or even in "I Am Sam," Oscar nomination for the latter notwithstanding.
I-' I
M aybe theremarkable Javier Bardem has delivered even hammier work at some point in HIS
career, e.g., "The Counselor." Rarely, though, have two Academy Award-winningactors been so stunningly off the mark in the same movie. "The Gunman" is that movie.
i
'e:
Given the "Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!"
nature of the plot, involving an international operative who tries to retire but finds himself engaging in endless shootouts and handto-hand combat with mercenar-
ies half his age, and the fact "The Gunman" is directed by Pierre Morel ("Taken"), one can reasonably surmise the 54-year-old Penn viewed this as his Liam Neeson Sean Penn stars as a former military contractor with a dark past in "The Gunman."
Submitted photo
moment.
It's more like bad Sly Stallone. In fact, the ripped and deeply bronzed Penn looks like he
es him in Barcelona, we learn Felix has become an immensely RICHARD did a stint at the Stallone School who wants him dead. His travels wealthy and powerful businessROEPER of Insanely Rippled and Veiny take him to London and then to man now involved in some sort of Muscles. He spends about half Spain, as he reunites with his old organization that ostensibly raisthe movie shirtless in his role of pals (including Ray Winstone and es money for developing counJim Terrier (what a name), who Mark Rylance), and it's embar- tries. It seems Jim is hopelessly in 2006 is a military contractor rassing how easy it is to figure out outmatched and outclassed if he "The Gunman" who's really on Jim's side and who expects to win back Annie and tasked with clearing an airport 115 minutes runway in strife-torn Congo. is setting him up. Forget about find out who's trying to kill him. But within hours, Felix is reEven though hundreds of thouR, for strong violence, languageand foreshadowing. This movie has five-shadowing. vealed as a theatrically drunken, sands of suffering refugees are some sexuality holedup in camps, and rebeland With the obligatory interna- insecure fool — and it doesn't help government forces are pillaging and staring daggers at Jim at that tional thriller techno-score hum- that Bardem plays him as A THEming inthebackground and some ATRICALLY DRUNKEN, INSEthe land for diamonds and other good-time bar. treasures while the people die in When Felix arranges for Jim to admittedly gorgeous internation- CURE FOOL!!! Meanwhile, Jim keeps finding the streets, Jim and his boys seem be the triggerman in the assassi- al scenery as a backdrop, "The to be having a hell of a good time nation of the country's minister Gunman" follows a predictable excuses to take off his shirt and in the Congo. At night they repair of mining, he knows it will mean pattern: cheesy, semi-tense dia- casually flex his pecs. He's also to a ramshackle bar where the Jim will have to flee the country, logue when characters confront suffering from post-concussion drinks flow, and Jim makes out never to see Annie again. Baha- each other, followed by either a syndrome, which Penn portrays with his beautiful saint of a girl- hahahah! Oh that Felix. shootout or a "Bourne"-type fight bygrabbinghis head in agony and friend, Annie (Jasmine Trinca), a Cut to 2014, when Jim is trying scene, in which our man Jimmy screaming, as his vision goes blurdoctor who works in a local clinic. to make amends for past sins by is, of course, by far the best shot ry and his ears ring while he has Bardem's Felix, who works for working for a relief organization and the best bone-cracker, much horrible flashbacks. It's a cheap the firm that has hired Jim and inthe Congo, while (unbeknownst to the surprise of the cocky, inter- and obvious way to portray a very his mates, is obsessed with An- to Jim) Felix and Annie are mar- changeable henchmen who come real and very serious condition. at him one at a time. Nobody gets out of this film nie. We know that because we ried and living in Barcelona. After three mercenaries try to Bardem's Felix is such a missed unscathed. Jasmine Trinca's Anget about a half-dozen shots of Felix looking longingly at Annie assassinate Jim (guess how that opportunity. When Jim surpris- nie is one of the least believable turns out), Jim flees the conti-
nent again in order to figure out
doctors in recent film history. And when Jim asks her why she married the obviously weak and corrupt and creepy Felix, she says it's like when you're in a fire and you're rescued by a firefighter. You owe him a debt, and she's repaying the debt with marriage. Really'? That's how it works? Even more ridiculous is the exchange between Idris Elba as the obligatory Interpol chief who meets with Jim on a bench in a public square and delivers a lengthy and tortured metaphor about building a tree house, and how sometimes you need help building the right tree house. Filled with gruesome violence in which the camera lingers on victims after they've been stabbed in the throat or gored by a bull (I'm not kidding) or shot in the heart, "The Gunman" veers dangerously close to camp in the final scenes. If you make it that far without
walking out. — Richard Roeper is a film critic for The Chicago Surt-Times.
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PAGE 28 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
u I
Submitted photo
Timothy Spall stars as the mid-19th century master of light J.M.W. Turner in the biopic "Mr. Turner."
e screen as' r. urner' ike Leigh, cinematic celebrator of th e B ritish working classes, delivers his second sumptuous period biography in "Mr. Turner," a lovely, lively and languorous biopic that's almost as painterly as its subject.
M
From the 19th Dutch women who chuckle past Turner as he sketches a windmill, to the im-
ROGER MOORE
"Mr. Turner" 150 minutes R, for some sexual content
on the pianoforte, hires prostitutes to pose for him (among other services) and is under no illusions about his own appeal. "When I peruse myself in a looking glass," he admits, "I perceive a gargoyle." Turner was an eccentric, con-
his famous "Slave Ship (Slavers thorough Gilbert and Sullivan biThrowing Overboard the Dead ography, "Topsy-Turvy," makes litand Dying, Typhoon Coming tle effort to trim this statelyportrait On)," and are on the water with
into a tighter film, more on the or-
Turner as he sees a famous sail- der of the recent painter bio-films ing warship towed, by steamboat, "Seraphine" and "Renoir." The to its death, which became "The stunning outdoor compositions Fighting Temeraire Tugged to Her and pithy, revealing interpersonal
troversial figure in V i ctorian Last Berth to Be Broken up." Britain — lauded and lampooned, Leigh creates a vast and lively maculately composed harbor deified and later dismissed. The London arts scene of Royal Acadscenes, shorelines and storms at carefully conceived quick strokes. portrait Leigh, Spall and Pope emy exhibitions in which Turner sea, Leigh alters his game and un- Spall's Turner is a Churchillian paint of him is of a working class mixes freely and grandly with leashes his frequent collaborator, lip-jutting grump who interspers- workaholic who sometimes rel- his contemporaries — theatricalcinematographerDick Pope, on a es his sometimes pretentious pro- ished his fame, but often hid from ly playing mind games with such color palette that would do the En- nouncements with every manner it — slipping off to the Continent lesser lights as Benjamin Haydon glish master proud. of throat clearing, guttural sob or or down to the coast as Mars- (Martin Savage) and John ConAnother member of Leigh's groan of pleasure. gate for sketching expeditions, stable (James Fleet). Rich swells repertory company, the wonderAt an exhibition, he appreciates traveling under his middle name shop for Turner's paintings, esful character actor Timothy Spall, a Flemish painting with a grunt (Mallord) to avoid scrutiny. He corted in and solicitously served delivers a tour de force turn in the and a smirk to his fellow artists, fathered children out of wed- by Turner's simple barber father title role. Joseph Mallord William who envied him and hung on his lock and exorcised his lust on his (Paul Jesson), shown stretching Turner, a mid-19th century mas- every word. adoring maid (Dorothy Atkin- canvases and grinding pigments "Uncommonly capacious rump son), and kept a secret lover in his in service to his son's talent. ter of light whose swirling, tempest-t ossed seascapes prefigured on the cherub" is his review. later years. Leigh, best known for films like We're treatedto a chance meet- "Happy-Go-Lucky" and "Vera Impressionism, vividly comes He croaks atune to impress a to life in two and a half hours of noblewoman accompanyinghim ing that might have inspired Drake" and not for his similarly
reactions are padded with scenes
thatdon'tdo enough to advance the story to merit inclusion. Still, we get a nice arc of Turn-
er's career, from his peak, just before Victoria took the throne, to his later, more controversial
and neo-Impressionistic work, dismissed by a snooty Victoria and Albert (Sinead Matthews and
Tom Wlaschiha) as a product of his "failmg eyesight." And as long as it is, it would be
a pity to cut one moment of Spall's immersive, utterly convincing portrait of this common man with
an uncommon gift.
— Roger Moore is a film critic for Tribune News Service.
movies
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 29
Submitted photo
Chappie, voiced by Sharlto Copley, battles a heavily weaponed war robot in "Chappie." of "Four Blood Moons," producedby Rick Eldridge anddirected by Academy Award winner Kieth Merrill, explains this fascinating phenomenon in acompelling Here's what's showing onCentral Ordocu-drama. Cinematic recreations of historical events from the United States, egon movie screens. Forshowtimes, Israel and throughout the Middle East see listings on Page31. illustrate this story along with expert testimonials from scientists, historians and religious scholars. This event screens at 7:30 p.m. Monday atRegal OldMill Reviews byRichard Roeper or Roger Stadium16 & IMAX inBend. Cost is Moore, unless otherwise noted. $12.50. Approximate runtime is150 minutes.(No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from Fathom Events HEADS UP "Get Hard" — When milionaire hedge "The Breakfast Club" (1985) — "The fund managerJames (Will Ferrell) is nailed for fraud and boundfor a stretch in San Breakfast Club" defined anentire Quentin, the judge gives him 30days to generation of pop culture and included such talent as Molly Ringwald "the get his affairs in order. Desperate, heturns to Darnell (Kevin Hart) to prep him for a princess," Anthony Michael Hall "the life behind bars. But despite James' onebrain," Emilio Estevez"the jock," Judd percenter assumptions, Darnell is a hardNelson "the rebel," and Ally Sheedy "the outcast." This 30th Anniversary working small-business owner whohas never received aparking ticket, let alone release includes thenewly restored been to prison. Together, the two mendo feature that has neverbeenseen before whatever it takes for James to "get hard" on the big screen plus anewly remixed featurette titled "The Breakfast Club —A and, in the process, discover howwrong Retrospective" that takes alook back they were about a lot of things — including each other. This film opens March 27with at the iconic film. Featuring personal early screenings Thursday. (R) insights from cast members aswell as contributions from filmmakers, this — Synopsis from WamerSros. Pictures featurette is a must seefor all Rebels, International FlyFishingFilm FestivalPrincesses, Outcasts, Brainsand Jocks. IF4 consists of short and feature-length This eventscreensat7:30p.m.Thursday films produced by filmmakers from all at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAXin of the globe, showcasing the Bend. Cost is $12.50. Approximate runtime corners passion, lifestyle and culture of fly-fishing. is120 minutes.(R) This event is sure to peakthe interest of — Synopsis from Fathom Events all anglers. IF4 features exclusive content "Four BloodMoons:Something is About not available in anyother fly-fishing film event. Thiseventbeginsat7p.m.Tuesday te Change" —The screen adaptation
O N LO C A L S CREEN S
at Tower Theatre in Bend.Tickets are $15 in advance, $17day of show. (No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from the festival's Facebook "Liz in September" —Liz has known several things since shewas achild: that she is gay, that beauty is powerandthat she would never be a victim. Determined to enjoy the times shestill has left on earth, she hides her terminal disease from her friends. Eva lost her son tocancer. The pain and guilt she feels hastarnished the relationship with her husband, sinking both into isolation. Heading alone onher vacation, Eva's car breaksdownleaving her stranded onthe road. Sheends up at Margot's Inn where shemeets Liz andher group of gay friends. Liz makes abetthat she can seducethe straight newcomer. Against all odds, the encounter between these two opposite womenchangestheir lives, setting new perspectives where love, life, and death, awayfrom any morals, play as simple steps of nature. Thismoviescreensat6:30 p.m .Monday at the Volcanic Theatre Pub inBend. Presented byLGBT Starsand Rainbows. $5 suggested donation. Runtime is100 minutes. (No MPAArating) — Synopsis from Cinema Management Group "Rear Window" —Widely considered one of Alfred Hitchcock's very best films, "Rear Window" finds photojournalist L.B. Jeffries (James Stewart) wheelchair bound with a broken leg and confined to his tiny, sweltering courtyard apartment. To pass the time between visits from his nurse (Thelma Ritter) and his fashion model girlfriend Lisa (Grace Kelly), the binocular-wielding Jeffries stares
through the rear window of his apartment at the goings-on in the other apartments around his courtyard. As hewatches his neighbors, he assigns them such roles and character names as "Miss Torso" (Georgine Darcy), a professional dancer with a healthy social life, or "Miss Lonelyhearts" (Judith Evelyn), a middleaged woman whoentertains nonexistent gentlemen callers. Of particular interest is a seemingly mild-mannered traveling salesman Lars Thorwald (Raymond Burr), who is saddled with a nagging invalid wife. Oneafternoon, Thorwald pulls down his window shade, and his wife's incessant shouting comes to a sudden halt. Out of boredom, Jeffries casually concocts a scenario in which Thorwald has murdered his wife and disposed of the body in gruesome fashion. Trouble is, Jeffries' musings just might happen to be the truth. This event screens at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. Sundayand Wednesday at Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 & IMAX in Bend. Cost is $12.50. Approximate runtime is 127minutes.(No MPAA rating) — Synopsis from Fathom Events
the screen time in "Insurgent" is taken up with politics, the efforts of Tris and Four to forge alliances and launch acoup, but this makes for flat viewing. "Insurgent" would be amuch worse movie if the good parts were all at the beginning. But they are saved for the end, andthey leavethe viewer with a feeling of, "Well, that was OK," even though most of it wasn't. This film is available locally in 3-D and IMAX 3-D. Rating: Twostars. 116 minutes. (PG-13) — Mick LaSalle, TheSanFiancisco Chronicle "De YeuBelieve?" —A dozendifferent souls — all moving in different directions, all longing for something more. Astheir lives unexpectedly intersect, they each are about to discover there is power in the Cross of Christ ... even if they don't believe it. Yet. When alocal pastor is shaken to the core bythe visible faith of an old street-corner preacher, he is reminded that true belief always requires action. His response ignites afaith-fueled journey that powerfully impacts everyone it touches in ways that only Godcould orchestrate. This film was not given astar rating. 115 minutes. (PG-13) WHAT'S NEW — Synopsis from the film's website "The Gunmen" —Rarely have two "The DivergentSeries: Insurgent" — For Oscar-winning actors been sostunningly what it is, "Insurgent" is a reasonably off the mark asSean Penn(ripped and executed, sporadically enjoyable deeply bronzed) andJavier Bardemare in installment in the projected four-part this international thriller. "The Gunman" "Divergent" series, based onthe novels follows a predictable pattern: cheesy, by Veronica Roth. Yet, there's no escaping semi-tense dialogue followed by either what it is, and what it is ... is silly. The a shootout or a"Bourne"-type fight best thing to say for the film, and this is scene. Rating: Onestar. 115 minutes. (R) no small thing, is that "Insurgent" moves — Roeper the storyforward significantly. Much of
Continued next page
movies
PAGE 30 + GO! MAGAZINE
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
"Selma" —Ava DuVernay directs a powerful, moving portrait of Martin "Mr. Turner" —Joseph Mallord Luther King Jr. (David Oyelowo, William Turner, a mid-19th century worthy of Oscar consideration) as master of light whose swirling, he fights to get President Lyndon tempest-tossed seascapesprefigured Johnson to pass theVoting Rights Impressionism, vividly comes to life Act. It's an important history lesson in two and ahalf hours of carefully that never feels like alecture. Rating: conceived quick strokes. Andas Four stars. 127 minutes. (PG-13) long as it is, it would be a pity to cut — Roeper one moment of (Timothy) Spall's "Song of the Sea" — Every scene is immersive, utterly convincing magical, every image work a of art in portrait of this commonmanwith an "Song of the Sea,"the latest Oscaruncommon gift. Rating: Three anda nominated feature from thefolks who half stars.150 minues.(R) — Moore gave us"The Secret of Kells." "Sea" is an Irish folk tale, amodern dayaccount of selkies, fairies andelves in Ireland, STILL SHOWING full of adult concerns andsadness, childhood wonderanddelight. It's "AmericanSniper" — Clint one of the best children's cartoons of Eastwood directs a powerful, intense the past fewyears. "Song of the Sea" portrayal of NavySEALChris Kyle, coverssome ofthesamegroundasthe hardly the blueprint candidate to John Sayles live-action fantasy "The become themost prolific sniper in Secret of RoanInish," and is every bit American military history. And yet as engaging, achild's fantasy in which that' swhathappened.In maybe adestiny must befulfilled, a boy must the best performance of his career, Submitted photo grow up andeveryone — adult and Bradley Cooper infuses Chris Liam Neeson, left, and Common star in "Run Ali Night." child — learns that losing your grief, with humanity and dignity. And your "feelings," is the most tragic vulnerability. Rating: Threeand ahalf destiny of all. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 132 minutes.(R) — Roeper adaptation of the first of E.L.James' interesting and dazzling than the inspirational sports movie that almost stars. 93 minutes.(PG) —Moore "Cheppie" — A couple of years in inexplicably popular "Fifty Shades" vast majority of mainstream fare. always works, evenwhenwe're fully "TheSpongeBub Movie:SpongeOut the future, robots havetakenover trilogy is a tediousexercise in dramatic Rating: Three stars. 148 minutes. (R) aware of howwe're being manipulated ef Water" —Spongebob Squarepants a chunk of Johannesburg's police — Roeper wheel-spinning that doesn't have every step of the way.Rating: Three goes whereHomerSimpsonand force. Scientist Deon (DevPatel) the courage toexplore the darkest stars. 128 minutes.(PG) —Roeper "Into theWoods" —Adapted from others havegone before, ananimated creates a sentient robot, Chappie, elements of thecharacters anddoesn't the sensational musical by Stephen "Paddington" — "Paddi n gton" brings character who steps out of his colorful who can think andfeel. Director Neil have the originality to stand onits own Sondheimand James Lapine,Meryl 2-D world and into our 3-Done, in children's bookheroPaddington Bear Blomkamp wrings intentional laughs merits. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. "The SpongebobMovie:Sponge Streep and Emily Blunt head an A-list tothe screen in a movi e as sweetas out of Chappie's ineptitude at fitting in out of Water." But what his movie 125 minutes. (R) — Roeper cast. "Into the Woods" rumbles on for orange marmal a de, as sentimental with a group of criminals who kidnap lacks in originality orfreshness it toolongand hassomedrypatches as a stuffed toy from childhood. It's "Focus" —Will Smith gets his him — and unintentional laughs at compensates for in loopiness. The here and there, but just whenwe're an utterly charming andendlessly cool back with his charismatic pretty much everything else. "The gags, punsmostly,skew quiteyoung. growing fidgety, weget another inventive way ofbringing atalking bear performance as anexperienced con Education of Little Chappie" drags And those things Spongebobdoes rousing musical number or another into present dayLondon, afilm that on and on, with passing suggestions man showing the ropes to anewbie dark plot twist, and we're back in uses all of themagic of the mediumand that drive his on-screencastmates (Margot Robbie). This is just sheer of how morality is taught andwhat nuts — the shrieks andgiggles and business. Rating: Threestars.124 our fond memories of MichaelBond's constitutes "sentient." Wrongheaded escapist entertainmentfrom start to songs — arepitched to be alot more minutes.(PG) —Roeper beloved bear togive him life. Rating: finish. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. in conception, eye-rolling in irritating to adults than to small fry. Three stars. 94 mi n utes. (PG) — Mool e "Kingsmen: The Secret Service"105 minutes. (R) — Roeper execution, "Chappie" is a childish Perhaps not as irritating as the3-D In a very violent and very silly movie, "Run All Night" — As a broken-down blend of the cute robot goofiness "Fexcatcher" —Disturbing and ticket prices demanded for what is Colin Firth gives a di s ciplined, serious of "Short Circuit" and the bloodyhit man racing to savehis son from memorable, "Foxcatcher" is basedon essentially an extendedepisode of the performance as aspy from asuperminded mayhem of "RoboCop." an army of thugs, Liam Neesonis a bizarre true story, andeven if you TV show. But if "nautical nonsense" secret British agency. "Kingsman," Rating: Onestar. 120 minutes. (R) at his gritty, world-weary best in a know exactly what happens, when and that fingernails-on-an-underwatera relentless, hardcore spoof of the — Moore stylish and kinetic thriller with some it does happen, it's shocking. Steve blackboard voice aresomething you old-school James Bondmovies, isthe of the coolest camera moves in recent "Cinderella" —Disney's live-action Carell nails the role of a rich eccentric, wish, drop off the kiddies andgive 'em craziest movie I've seen in a l o ng time. memory and a Hal l of Fame vi l lain "Cinderella" movie is anenchanting, with Channing Tatumand Mark some cash. This film is available locally Rating: Three and a hal f stars.129 in the great Ed Harris. Rating: Three in 3-D. Rating: Twoanda half stars. 90 exhilarating romantic adventure with Ruffalo revelatory as the wrestlers minutes. (R) — Roeper and a half stars. 114 mi n utes. (R) gorgeous scenery, terrific sets, stellar he mentors. Rating: Threeand ahalf minutes. (PG) —Moore "The Lazarus Effect" — A sci e ntist — Roeper stars. 134 minutes.(R) — Roeper cinematography andOscar-worthy "Still Alice" —At times maddeningly (Olivia Wilde) isn't the sameafter "The SecondBestExotic Marigold costumes. Lily Jamessparkles in the "Inherent Vice" —This148-minute overwrought and heavy-handed, "Still she dies and is resuscitated by title role, andCateBlanchett makes a Hotel" — I actually enjoyed this head trip stars Joaquin Phoenix asa Alice" tells the story of a 50-year-old her fiance (Mark Duplass) andhis deliciously terrifying evil stepmother. barefoot hippie detective namedDoc second chapter about British professor and momwho hasanidyllic colleagues using an untested serum. Instead of a re-imagined reboot, it's pensioner s who mov e t o a r amsha ckl e who gets embroiled in atangled web life until she is diagnosedwith early"The Lazarus Effect" is nothing buta old-fashioned, andthat's kind of retirement hotel in Jaipur, India, in1970 Southern California. Even onset Alzheimer's. What makesit cheap horror film cloaked in scientific refreshing. Rating: Threeand ahalf more than the first, because Iwas when director Paul ThomasAnderson worth the journey is JulianneMoore's mumbo-jumbo. Rating: One star. 83 stars. 105 minutes.(PG) —Roeper revisiting all those wonderful, is engaging in aself-indulgent lark brilliant and delicately calibrated lead minutes. (PG-13) — Roeper cheeky characters. It's shamelessly, "Fifty Shades ufGrey" —Thefilm of a prose poem,the result is more performance. Rating: Threestars. 99 "McFarland, USA" — Anoft-fired unapologetically sentimental, but minutes.(PG-13) — Roeper that's just fine becausewe're rooting coach (Kevin Costner) guides "Strange Magic" —"Strange Magic" impoverished students to crossfor everyone here.Rating: Three is a cartoon fantasy cooked upfrom country greatness. "McFarland USA" and a half stars.122 minutes. (PG) a half-baked ideafrom GeorgeLucas. follows the comfortable rhythm of the — Roeper The hook in that this tale of fairies fighting goblins over a lovepotion is II that every minute or three, some fairy, elf or goblin bursts into song. There Consign~&''p ep isn't a laugh in this thing, not one. B outz~ e p .,Boutique Clothing for Gals However, it does play as anice proofof-concept reel for Industrial Light 8z Guys, Jewelry, Shoes I and Magic. Theanimation — butterfly Sr Accessories. winged fairies of great detail, skin so 738 NW Columbia St. Ste A I I translucentyou can seelight through './I' it, skin with freckles — is impressive. Bend, OR 97701 And that story is a reminder that when AcrossPom the Food Lot e gr you're as big adeal as Lucas, it's hard 0• to find somebody whowill tell you that 541-647-2510 MESECONDSSIMICMASGOIDNOIELCOM new idea for a movieneedsmore time Follow us on Facebook! in the mixing bowl, and oven,before I BENDRegal Old Mill SIS T ERS flippedconsignment.com Stadium 16 & IMAX S i s ters Movie House filming begins. Rating: Oneand ahalf stars. 99 minutes.(PG) —Moore ' Flipped ConsignmentBoutique. Cannot becombined weh otjLbrdl PLAYING (844) 462-7342¹310 (541) 549-8800
From previous page
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THE SECOND BEST EXOTIC
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MARIGOLD HOTEL
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THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, MARCH 20, 2015
MOVI E
T I M E S • For the meekfoMarch 20
• There may bean additional fee for 3-Oand IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. I
Submitted photo
Christian Bale stars as Moses in "Exodus: Gods and Kings."
N EW O N D V D 8 a BLU-RA Y The following movies were released the week ofMarch17.
"Annie" — "Annie," a musical that the decades haverendered into a punchline, is modernized, made more streetwise and brought back to life in a production backed byJay Z and various members of theWill and Jada Pinkett Smith empire. Even with all this sparkle, the film staggers through its third act. DVDExtras: Director commentary, onefeaturette and a music video; Additional Blu-ray Extras: Five sing-along tracks, deleted song, bloopers, "Annie" trivia, photo gallery and four featurettes. Rating: Two and ahalf stars. 118 minutes. (PG) — Moore "Exodus: Godsand Kings"Director Ridley Scott's borderlinelunatic, bold, gargantuan andvisually stunning epic is in someways more reminiscent of his "Gladiator" than "The TenCommandments." Playing an intense, sword-wielding, tormented, visionary Moses, Christian Bale humanizesone ofthe most iconic figures of all time. DVD Extras: Deleted andextended scenesand commentary; Additional Blu-ray Extras: Trivia andfour featurettes. Rating: Four stars. 142 minutes. (PG13) — Roeper nPenguins of Madagascar""Penguins of Madagascar" is a delightfully silly star turn for this quartet of absurd little birds, who operate as ateam of commandos. It's gloriously juvenile, but also very, very funny. DVDExtras: Theatrical trailer, image gallery and threefeaturettes; Additional Blu-ray Extras: Twomusic videos, a deleted sceneandthree featurettes. Rating: Threeand ahalf stars. 92 minutes. (PG) — Michael O'Sullivan, The Washington Post
Also available:
"Low Down," "Song of theSea" and aTop Five."
Next Week:
"The Hobbit: TheBattle of the Five Armies," "Into the Woods" and "Unbroken."
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• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at Regal Old Mill Stadium f6 ff IMAX
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend,800-326-3264. • AMERICAN SNIPER (R) Fri-Thu: 11:40a.m., 2:50, 6, 9:15 • THE BREAKFAST CLUB (R) Thu: 7:30 • CHAPPIE (R) Fri-Thu: 12:05, 3:05, 6:50, 10:05 • CINDERELLA (PG) Fri-Thu: 12:10, 12:40, 3:15, 3:40, 6:45, 7:15, 9:45, 9:55 • THE DIVERGENTSERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:30a.m., 3, 7,10 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT IMAX3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: noon, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • DO YOU BELIEVE? (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:45a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9 • FIFTY SHADES OFGREY(R) Fri-Sat, Tue: 12:50, 7:25 Mon, Thu: 12:50 • FOCUS (R) Fri-Thu: 12:30, 3:10, 6:25, 9:05 • FOUR BLOOD MOONS: SOMETHING IS ABOUTTOCHANGE(no MPAArating) Mon: 7:30 • GET HARD (R) Thu: 7, 10:30 • THE GUNMAN (R) Fri-Thu: 11:35a.m., 3:20, 6:20, 9:40 • KINGSMAN: THESECRET SERVICE (R) Fri-Thu: 12:15, 3:45, 7:35, 10:35 • THE LAZARUS EFFECT(PG-13) Fri-Sat, Tue:3:50, 10:20 Sun, Wed: 10:20 Mon, Thu: 3:50 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) Fri-Thu: 12:45, 3:55, 7:40, 10:40 • REAR WINDOW (no MPAArating) Sun, Wed: 2,7 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) Fri-Thu: 11:25 a.m., 2:15, 5, 7:45, 10:25 • THE SECONDBEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL(PG) Fri-Sat, Mon-Tue,Thu: 11:15 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 9:IO Sun, Wed:11:15 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 10 • SELMA (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 6:10, 9:15 Thu: 9:35 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) Fri-Thu: 11:10a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-D(PG) Fri-Thu: 2:05
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GO! MAGAZINE • PAGE 31
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Paramount Pictures I Submitted photo
David Oyelowo stars as Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inuSelma.w Sat, Mon, Thu: 8:30 Sun: 7:30 • MR. TURNER (R) Fri:4 Sat, Mon, Thu: 5:30 Sun:4:30 Wed: 3 • SONG OFTHE SEA (PG) Sat, Mon, Thu: 3:30 Sun: 2:30 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA (PG) Fri-Sun: 11a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Mon-Thu: 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 11:45a.m., 12:30, 2:30, 3:15, 5:15, 6:05, 8, 8:45 Mon-Thu: 2:30, 3:15, 5:15, 6:05, 8, 8:45 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) Fri-Sun: 11:30a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:30 Mon-Thu: 2, 4:30, 7,9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG) Fri: 4:45, 7:15 Sat: 2:30, 4:45, 7:15 Sun: 2, 4:30, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri: 5,7:30 Sat:2,4:45,7:30 Sun: 1:30, 4:15, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 7 • MCFARLAND, USA(PG) Fri: 7 Sat: 4:30, 7 Sun:4,6:30
Mon-Thu: 6:15 • THE SECONDBEST EXOTICMARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) Fri: 4:30, 7 Sat: 2,4:30,7 Sun: 1:30, 4, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 3:45, 6:30 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) Fri: 4:45 Sat: 2:15 Sun:1:45 Mon-Thu:4 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • CHAPPIE (R) Fri-Thu: 1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:35 • CINDERELLA (PG) Fri-Thu: 11:35a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:15 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 11:30a.m., 4:35, 7:10 • THE DIV ERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 2, 9:50 • THE GUNMAN (R) Fri-Thu: 11:50a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 9:55 • RUN ALL NIGHT (R) Fri-Thu: 11:40 a.m., 2:05, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 •
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SUE CONRAD,BROKER, 541-480-6621
Updated 1316 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2 bath in NE Bend. Mature landscaping, fenced, RV parking, .21 acre. $279,900 • MLS 201501140 DIRECTIONS: Butler Market Road to Wells Acres Road. 1729 NE Wells Acres Road
2750 sq.ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath overlooking the canal in SEBend. Knotg alder cabinets, granite island. $435,000• MLS 201501033 DIRECTIONS:South on 15th St. to Golden Gate Pl, left on Sydney Harbor, right on Tamar Ln. 20872 Tamar Lane.
Brand new 2039 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, elevated views. Great room, island kitchen, office 8 bonus room. 5550,000 • MLS 201410958 DIRECTIONS: Shevlin Park Road to NW Crossing Drive. 2458 NW Crossing Drive.
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3155 sq.ft., 5 bedroom, 3.5 bath v game room. Private yard with patio, move in condition. $545,000 • MLS 201501470 DIRECTIONS: Galveston Ave. to Skyliners Rd, left on Flagline Dr. 490 NW Flagline Drive.
NEW Franklin Brothers built 2084 sq.ft. home. 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, laminate floors & 2.car garage. $314,900 • MLS 201404955 DIRECTIONS: East on Butler Market, right on Nolan St, left on Evelyn Pl. 21372 Evelyn Place.
OPEN SA'I' ckc Sl!N 12-3
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VIRGINIA ROSS, BROKER, 541-480-7501
BRENT LANDELS, BROKER, 541-550-0976
Vern Palmer updated end unit townhome, 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, 1825 sq.ft. Great room plan, wood 8 slate floors 8 bonus room. 5449,000• MLS 201501599 DIRECTIONS: West on Newport which turns into Shevlin Park, left on Mt Washington, left on Shields, right on William Clark. 1644 NW William Clark.
Brand new 2039 sq.ft., 3 bedroom, 2.5 bath, elevated views. Great room, island kitchen, office 8 bonus room. $550,000 • MLS 201410958 DIRECTIONS;Shevlin Park Road to NW Crossing Drive. 2458 NW Crossing Drive.
2750 sq.ft., 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath overlooking the canal in SE Bend. Knotty alder cabinets, granite island, 5435,000• MLS 201501033 DIRECTIONS:South on 15th St. to Golden Gate Pl, left on Sydney Harbor, right on Tamar Ln. 20872 Tamar Lane.
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www. bendproperty.com 541-382-4123 • 486 SW Bluff Dr., Old Mill District, Bend, OR 97702
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