Serving Central Oregon since1903 75$
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TODAY'S READERBOARD Going somewhere?Federal budget cuts are go-
IN SALEM
Bill seeks foreclosurenotices in newspapers
ing to hit airlines and those who travel. That means fewer
By Lauren Dake
flights and moredelays. A2
The Bulletin
The F ring of Saturn — Another reason to be fascinated by the second-largest
planet in the solar system. A3
~ggg~ •
i
Highway of anxiety
SALEM — Public notices for foreclosed homes must be published in newspapers if lawmakers approve a bill discussed Thursday before a state legislative committee. At the heart of House Bill 2822 is the question of how to best notify the
public.
"As I think about the purpose of a notice of sale, the purpose of that is to inform. It's to educate. It's to notify. And to me, I'm struggling with who better to do that than newspapers of general circulation," said Rep. Greg Smith, R-Heppner, during a committee hearing Thursday where lawmakers discussed the legislation. Tom Gallagher, a registered lob-
byist for the Oregon Newspaper Publishers Association, told lawmakers thateight years ago, newspapers and the state sheriff's association struck a deal, which gave the association the ability to post foreclosure notices on a website if the home went through a judicial foreclosure process. See Notices/A4
0 e
— Just how
dangerous
By Andrew Clevenger The Bulletin
is Interstate 84? We set out to find out.B1
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Department of Health and Human Servtces has awarded Oregon a $42 million grant to help the state implement changes
2 girls' nightmare — Two girls, ages 4 and 2,survive a night in the wreckage of the car crash that killed their mother. B5
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designed to improve
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Watch the dirdies — Afree
class from the Audubon Society is designed to get kids excited about nature.D1
And a Wedexclusive-
Olympic gold medalist
A couple who lived through Hurricane Katrina find that re-
Ashton Eaton spoke briefly
building their lives is wrapped up in red tape. bendbulletin.com/extras
to the Oregon state Senate
p
on Thursday, expressing his \
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Terror tips for evading drone attack By Rukmini Callimachi The Associated Press
TIMBUKTU, Mali — One of the last things the bearded fighters did before leaving this city was to drive to the market where traders lay their carpets out in the sand. The al-Qaida extremists bypassed the brightly colored, high-end synthetic floor coverings and stopped their pickup truck in front of a man selling more modest mats woven from desertgrass, priced at
$1.40 apiece. There they bought two bales of 25 mats each, and asked him to bundle them on top of the car, along with a stack of sticks. "It's the first time someone has bought such a large amount," said the mat seller, Leitny Cisse al-Djoumat. "They didn't explain why they wanted
b4
"I feel so strongly about this state," he said. "And I can't
w4
express enough how much I appreciate the work that is done within these wood walls that may unknowingly — by most of you in here — help me do what I am able to do every day. And I just want to extend Danialle Peterson /The Associated Press
the gratitude from the bottom
Oregon began imple-
of my heart from everybody in Tracktown USA (Eugene), from all the people and all the young
menting CCOs in August 2012, according to Tina Edlund, chief of policy for the Oregon Health Authority. Oregon is currently home to 15 CCOs, including Pacific Source Community Solutions in Deschutes County. See Grant/A4
kids in this state." Eaton won a gold medal in the decathlon at the 2012 Olympics and set a world record in the Olympic trials. He graduated from Mountain View High School in Bend and went to the University of Oregon. — Bulletin staff and wire reports
Oil boomforcesemployersto belandlords
so many."
By Kasia Klimasinska Bloomberg News
Military officials can tell
why: The fighters are stretching the mats across the tops of their cars onpoles to form natural carports, so that drones cannot detect them from the air. The instruction to camouflage carsis one of 22 tips on how to avoid drones, listed on a document left behind by the Islamic extremists as they fled northern Mali from a French military intervention last month. See Drones /A4
I
gratitude to lawmakers and the people of Oregon.
lnside
• Gov. John medical Kitzhaber treatment will brief for lowother income governors patients while reducon h is ing overall plan to cut Medicaid costs. The grant cos t s,B3 will help Oregon's Coordinated Care Organizations — locally based networks that combine physical, behavioral and dental care to cover all of a patient's medical needs — transition from a service-based fee system to one that rewards good outcomes. CCOs are designed to coordinate services and focus on prevention and improving care so that the populations they serve are healthier. "As a nation, we know that rising health care costs are putting a growing burden on our families, our business owners and government budgets," said Kathleen Sebelius, Secretary of Health and Human Services, in announcing the grants on a conference call with reporters. "We also know that too many Americans receive care that is fragmented, unreliable and generates poor health outcomes."
r
Daniel Acker/ Bloomberg News
A sign in a vacant lot welcomes visitors to Williston, N.D. The oil boom that has made the state home to the nation's lowest unemployment rate also has put pressure on its tight housing market.
TODAY'S WEATHER e~<,+ o~<4<~
Snow High 49, Low 26
Pa ge B6
WILLISTON, N.D. — Matt Grimshaw, who runs a hospital here, and Dale Patten, head of a family-owned bank in nearby Watford City, had the same problem and found the same solution. Both went into the real estate business to attract employees. Booming oil production means unemployment in Williams County
is the lowest in the nation at less than 1 percent. That's boosted the population of W i lliston, the Williams County seat, by 28 percent in 10 years. The result is a housing shortage in which one-bedroom apartments rent for about $2,300 a month and families stay in single hotel rooms for weeks. Mercy MedicalCenter has 50 out of 500 positions to fill at any given time, said Grimshaw, chief execu-
INDEX All Ages D1- 4 C lassified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D5 Obituaries B5 C1-4 Busines s/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Horoscope D5 Sports Calendar I n GO! Crosswords E4 L o cal & StateB1-6 TV/Movies D5, GO!
tive officer. When $5,000 sign-on bonuses offeredto attract nursing recruits didn't get enough takers, Grimshaw persuaded the parent company, Englewood, Colo.-based Catholic Health Initiatives, to build a $12 million, 68-unit apartment building near the hospital. "We'refacing some of the greatest staffing challenges we've ever encountered," Grimshaw said. See Boom/A6
4 P We userecycled newsprint AnIndependent
vol. 110, No. 53, e sections
O
88267 0232 9
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A2 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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FEDERAL BUDGET CUTS
X 8
DefenSe SeCretary —Barring any new,damaging information, Chuck Hagel hassecured the necessary votes for the Senate to confirm him to be the nation's next defense secretary. A vote ending the bitter fight over President Barack Obama's choice for his revamped
B I I ' I'BVB 8 8 5
second-term, national security team is expected next week. Hagel cleared the threshold when five-term Republican Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama said he would vote for the former GOP senator from Ne-
By Matthew L. Wald
who are now on duty each
braska after joining other Republicans last week in anunprecedented
New York Times News Service
day.
filibuster of the Pentagon nominee.
Administration workers. In addition, deplaning from inWASHINGTON — Airlines To handle such a m a j or ternational flights could be and airports across the coun- s taffing shortage bu t s t i l l slower because Customs and try are preparing for across- maintain safety, federal avia- Border Protectionagents are the-board federal budget cuts tion officials said they would expected to work fewer hours. due to hit next week as if they accept fewer airplanes into the When this would begin in were a hurricane, although system, the same tactic they earnest is not yet clear. Govwith even less certainty about use in bad weather. ernment rules require that how many flights might be That means that in places employees be given 30 days' canceled a n d pas sengers where airplanes normally fol- notice, which cannot be given stranded. low one another with a six- or until March 1. But the federal government seven-mile gap, there might So far the FAA is saying is warning about takeoff debe a 10- to 20-mile gap. As a very little specifically about lays and slower security lines result, passengers may sit on what it would do, although the that could begin soon after tarmacs and endure delays as National Air Traffic ControlMarch I, the day when the cuts they wait for planes to push lers Association is preparing are to start taking effect. back from the gate. a study correlating levels of "It's going to be like perpet- furloughs to reductions in the Transportation S e cretary Ray LaHood has told Con- ual bad weather," said Kevin ability to handle traffic. "Everyone is frustrated with gress that most of the Federal Mitchell, the chairman of the Aviation A dmi n i stration's Business Travel C o alition. the lack of specific informa47,000employees would face a "You're going to have to look tion," said Deborah McElroy, day of furlough per two-week at this as if you're going out the president of the Airports pay period, or on average a cut knowing there's a storm." Council International — North of 10 percent of the workforce There could also be longer America. "Airports are lookon any given day. That could security lines at airports be- ing at their contingency plans, mean 1,000 fewer air traffic cause of anticipated furloughs but the difficulty is, I don't controllers out of the 15,000 of Transportation Security know what I'm planning for."
Syria domdiIIg —A car bomb exploded Thursday nearSyria's ruling party headquarters in Damascus, killing at least 53 people and
scattering mangled bodies amongthe blazing wreckage in oneof the bloodiest days in the capital since the uprising beganalmost two years ago. Elsewhere in the city, two other bombs struck intelligence offices, killing 22, and mortar rounds hit the army's central com-
mand, activists said. Big SnOWStarm —Powdery snow, up to a foot and a half in some places, bombarded much of the nation's midsection Thursday, impeding travel and shutting down airports, schools and state legislatures. The widespread winter storm system swirled to the north
and east Thursday night, its snow, sleet and freezing rain prompting winter storm warnings in Kansas, Nebraska, lowa, Missouri and IIlinois. The storm was expected to be centered in the upper Midwest
by this morning. PeterSOn SentenCed —Drew Peterson — the swaggering Chicago-area police officer who gainednotoriety after his muchyounger fourth wife vanished in 2007 — was sentenced to 38 years in prison on Thursday for murdering his third wife. The sentence
came moments after Peterson shocked thecourtroom with a rare public outburst of anger as he proclaimed his innocence in the death of Kathleen Savio. Illinois does not have the death penalty, and the
59-year-old Peterson hadfaced amaximum 60-year prison term.
PiStOriIIS CaSe —South Africa's top detective was appointed lead investigator in the Oscar Pistorius caseThursday, replacing a veteran
pimppop App.
policeman who was charged with attempted murder in the latest shock development to hit a case being watched closely by the nation.
pdpciipidp pe
SHOOTING RAMPAGE ON LASVEGAS STRIP S
ADMINISTRATION Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool...........541-383-0374 Publisher Gordon Black ..................... Editor-in-Chief John Costa.........................541-383-0337
The decision to put police Lt. Gen.Vinesh Moonoo in charge came soon after word emerged that the initial chief investigator, Hilton Botha, is facing attempted murder charges, and a day after he offered
testimony damaging to the prosecution in Pistorius' bail hearing. Pistorius, an Olympic runner whose lower legs wereamputated when he was less than a year old, killed his girlfriend Reeva Steenkamp in the
predawn hours of Valentine's Day. r'
DEPARTMENT HEADS
-
FOur Charged —Four former peanut companyemployees have been charged with scheming to manufacture andship salmonella-
~W/
tainted peanuts that killed nine, sickened hundreds and prompted one of the largest recalls in history in 2009. The indictment by a federal
Advertising Jay Brandt..........................541-383-0370 Circulation andOperations Keith Foutz ......................... 541-385-5805 Finance Holly West ...........54f -383-032f
grand jury in Georgia wascharacterized by Justice Department officials as awarning to food manufacturers who maycompromise consumer safety in search of higher profits.
Human Resources Traci Donaca ......................
IIldio dOmdiOgS —A pair of bombs exploded in a crowded shop-
TALK TO AN EDITOR
ping area in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, killing at least13
Business ...................,........541-383-0360 City Desk Joseph Oitzler.....541-383-0367 Community Life, Health
people andwounding scores of others in the worst bombing in the
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and a busstation, police said. Thebombswere attached to two bicycles about 500 feet apart in a crowdedshopping area.
GO! Magazine Ben Salmon........................541-383-0377 News Editor Jan Jordan....54f -383-03f 5 Photos DeanGuernsey......541-383-0366 SporlsBill Bigelow.............541-383-0359
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country in more than a year, officials said. The blasts occurred about two minutes apart at around 7 p.m. Thursday outside a movie theater — From wire reports
SteveMarcus/ Las Vegas Sun viaThe Associated Press
Police cordon off the scene of a shooting and
driver of the Maserati also died, and his passenger
multi-car accident on the Las Vegas Strip in Las
Vegas early Thursday. Authorities say at least one person in a RangeRover shot at people in aMaserati that then crashed into a taxi. The taxi cab burst into flames, killing the driver and passenger. The male
was wounded. Police were looking for the Range Rover involved in the predawn shooting. At least six other
people were injured in the ensuing pileup at one of the city's busiest intersections. Police think a reported altercation at a hotel may have led to the shooting.
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By Mike Stobbe The Associated Press
ATLANTA — It turns out this year's flu shot is doing a startlingly dismal job of protecting older people, the most vulnerable age group. The vaccine is proving only 9 percent effective in those 65 and older against the harsh strain of the flu that is predominant this season, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday. Health officials are baffled as to why this is so. But the
and they are more vulnerable to the illness and its complications, including pneumonia. But health officials said they don't know why t his year's vaccine did so poorly in that
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One theory, as yet unproven, is that older people's immune systems were accustomed to strains from the last two years and had more trouble switching gears to handle this year's different, harsh strain.
age group.
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findings help explain why so many older people have been hospitalized with the flu this
year. Despite the f i ndings, the CDC stood by its recommendation that e v eryone over 6 months get flu shots, the elderlyincluded, because some protection is better than none, andbecause those who are vaccinated and still get sick may suffer less severe symptoms. "Year in and year out, the vaccine is the best protection we have," said CDC flu expert Dr. Joseph Bresee. Overall, across the age groups studied,the vaccine's effectiveness was found to be a m oderate 56 percent, which means those who got a shot have a 56 percent lower chance of winding up at the doctor with the flu. That is somewhat worse than what has been seen in other years. For those 65 and older, the vaccine was only 27 percent effective against th e t h r ee strains it is designed to protect against, the worst level in about a decade. It did a particularly poor job against the tough strain that is causing more than three-quarters of the illnesses this year. It is well known that flu vaccine tends to protect younger people better than older ones. Elderly people have weaker immune systems that don't respond as well to flu shots,
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN A 3
MART TODAY
TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day
It's Friday, Feb. 22, the 53rd day of 2013. There are 312 days left in the year.
DISCOVERIES HAPPENINGS Summit meeting — Japan's Prime Minister ShinzoAbeis scheduled to meet with Presi-
dent BarackObamafor a series oftalks in Washington, D.C.
Blazers look for win
— The Portland Trail Blazers try to end their six-game losing streak when they travel to Los
Angeles to take onthe Lakers.
The huge planet's complex system of rings has fascinated astronomers and stargazers for thousands of years. Now, the Cassini spacecraft, which has been orbiting Saturn for eight years, has provided an up-close look at the strange, volatile F ring. By Phil Plait
an image from the Cassini
Slate
At the Supreme CourtThe Obamaadministration will argue that the Defense of Marriage Act is unconstitutional
and should beoverturned.
HISTORY Highlight: In 1732, the first president of the United States,
George Washington, was born in Westmoreland County in the
Virginia Colony. In 1862, Jefferson Davis,
already the provisional president of the Confederacy, was inaugurated for a six-year term following his election in November 1861.
In1865, Tennesseeadopted a new constitution which included the abolition of slavery. In1909, the Great White Fleet,
a naval task force sent on a round-the-world voyage by President Theodore Roosevelt,
returned after more than ayear at sea. In1924, President Calvin Coolidge delivered the first radio broadcast from the White
House as headdressed the country over 42 stations. In1935, it became illegal for airplanes to fly over the White
House. In1959, the inaugural Daytona
500 race washeld; although Johnny Beauchampwas initially declared the winner, the
victory was later awarded to Lee Petty. In1967, more than 25,000 U.S. and South Vietnamese
troops launched Operation Junction City, aimed at smashing a Vietcong stronghold near the Cambodian border. (Although the communists were driven out, they later
returned.) In1973, the United States and
China agreed to establish liaison offices. In1980, the "Miracle on Ice" took place in Lake Placid, N.Y., as the United States Olympic hockey team upset the Soviets, 4-3. (The U.S. team went on to
win the gold medal.) Ten years ego: Jesica Santillan, the teenagerwho'd survived a botched heart-lung
transplant long enough to get a second set of donated organs, died two days after the second transplant at Duke University
Medical Center in North Carolina.
Five years age: Turkish troops crossed into northern Iraq in
their first major ground incursion against Kurdish rebel
bases in nearly a decade. One year age: A jury in Charlottesville, Va., found Univer-
sity of Virginia lacrosse player George Huguely Vguilty of second-degree murderin the death of his ex-girlfriend and lacrosse player Yeardley Love in May 2010.
BIRTHDAYS Announcer Don Pardo is 95. Actor Paul Dooley is 85.
Hollywood "ghost singer" Marni Nixon is 83. Movie director Jonathan Demme
is 69. Actor John Ashton is 65. Actress Miou-Miou is 63. Actress Julie Walters is 63.
Basketball Hall of FamerJulius Erving is 63. Actress Ellen Greene is 62. Former Sen. Bill Frist, R-Tenn., is 61. White House adviser David Axelrod is 58. Actor Kyle MacLachlan
is 54. World Golf Hall of Famer Vijay Singh is 50. Actor Paul Lieberstein is 46. Actress Jeri
Ryan is 45. Actor Thomas Jane is 44. Actress Tamara Mello is 43. Actress-singer
Lea Salonga is 42.Actor Jose Solano is 42. International Tennis Hall-of-Famer Michael
Chang is 41. Rockmusician Scott Phillips is 40. — From wire reports
spacecraft
The first time you see Saturn'srings through a telescope is amazing. It can change your life — literally, as it did for me when I was a wee lad. The r ings a r e s h ocking through a big telescope. Even through a small one you can see them clearly, and with a big one you can start to see some details, like the big Cassini Division, a dark gap slicing the main ring system in two. But there's nothing like being there. The Cassini spacecraft (named after the Italian astronomer Giovanni Cassini, who discovered his eponymous division) has been orbiting Saturn since 2004. A masterwork of engineering, Cassini has returned thousands upon thousands of incredible images, showing amazing details in the rings. On Dec. 25, 2012, from a distance of 1.1 million kilometers (680,000 miles), it took this phenomenal shot of Saturn's
shows Saturn's A
(upper left) and F rings. The star of this show is the weird, narrow F ring.
NASA/JPL/ Caltech/Space Saence Inetitute
outer rings (see photo): Saturn is off the frame to the upper left in this picture. Cassini was just over the plane of the rings, looking at them from a shallow angle. The sun is shining down on them, so they look very bright. The main A ring is to the upper left, and you can see the
somewhat c o u nterintuitive, but a video put out by NASA might help. The F r ing i s c onstantly c hanging, sometimes on a scale of just hours. Saturn is a huge, fiendishly complex system, and we knew it would be weird when we got there,
Seemore NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory at Cal Tech have produced a video on the F ring of Saturn. To watch, go to www.ipl.nasa.gev/videe/index.php? Id =1075.
Keeler gap, a narrow (25 mile) that's no accident. Orbiting just inside and outside of it are two very small moons named Prometheus and Pandora, and they act as shepherds, constraining the ice particles into that narrow strand. Due to the vagaries of orbital mechanics, most of the particles that stray urn). To give you a sense of outward or inward from the scale, the division between the ring are gently nudged back A and F rings is about 1,800 into it by the moons' gravity. miles, roughly the distance Both moons have o rbits from New York City to Den- that are slightly elliptical and ver, Colo. slightly tipped with r espect The ring i s n a rrow, and to the rings. That means, as empty region i n t h e r i ngs, where the ice particles that make up the rings have been swept clear by the gravity of the tiny moon Daphnis. But the star of this show is the weird F ring (the rings were named in order of discovery, not distance from Sat-
they orbit, they move toward and away from the F ring, Prometheus more than Pandora. As it moves toward the ring, P rometheus' gravity d r a gs material away from it, creating those fans and kinks in the ring, as well as the faint spiral pattern of material inside the
but I don't think anyone suspected just how weird it would be. And we discovered all this because we sent a probe there that could stay there, orbiting the planet over and again, looking at as much as it can over as long a period of time as it can.
Lafayette School
ring.
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Oddly, even though it does pull some of the material out of the ring, the overall effect of Prometheus is to keep the particles inside the ring. The interaction is c omplex and
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STUDY
Weight-losssurgerycosts exceed healthsavings By Michelle Fay Cortez Bloomberg News
MINNEAPOLIS — People who undergo weight-loss surgery don't reduce their costsas they take off pounds, as hospital stays for complications from the procedure exceed savings from obesity-related illnesses, a study found. Researchers tracked insurance claims of 29,820 patients for asmany as six years after bariatric surgery, comparing their costs with a group of people with obesity-related conditions who didn't have the procedures. While pharmacy expenses and office visits were lower for surgical patients, repeat procedures were higher, according to the study in the journal JAMA-Surgery. Bariatric surgery is one of the most effective weight-loss methods, with studies showing the procedure yields health benefits such as reduced diabetes risk and lower cholesterol for at least six years. There's no evidence, though, that it prolongs life. The study released Wednesday, the largest and longest of its kind, shows the improvements that stem from avoiding diabetes and heart disease don't necessarily bolsterhealth across the board. "This suggests that rampant bariatric surgery isn't going to be an answer to health-care costs," as some have suggested, said Jonathan Weiner, professor of health policy and management at Johns Hopk ins Bloomberg School of
Public Health, and the study's lead author. "That doesn't mean that some people, some of the time won't benefit from surgery. This is a major source of information into the overall decision into who should get
surgery." The study found no reduction in expenses to help recoup the $28,000average costofthe initial surgery, with repeat inpatient hospital costs peaking after two to three years. The patients traded off the type of care they needed, with costs remaining stable at roughly
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A4 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Drones Continued from A1 A copy of the document, which was first published on a jihadist forum two years ago, was found by The Associated Press in a manila envelope on the floor of a building here oc-
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cupied by al-Qaida of the Islamic Maghreb.
Coordinated intelligence The tipsheet reflects how alQaida's chapter in North Africa anticipated a military intervention that would make use of drones, as the battleground in the war on terror worldwide is shifting from boots on the ground to unmanned planes in the air. The presence of the document in Mali, first authored by a Yemeni, also shows the coordination between al-Qaida chapters, which securityexperts have called a source of increasing concern. "This ne w d o c ument shows we are no longer dealing with an isolated local problem, but with an enemy which is reaching across continents to share advice," said Bruce Riedel, a 30-year veteran of the CIA, now the director of the Intelligence Project at the Brookings Institution. The tips in the document range from the broad (No. 7, hide from being directly or indirectly spotted, especially at
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roofs of buildings, possibly by spreading reflective glass. While some of the tips are outdated or far-fetched, taken together, they suggest the Islamists in Mali are responding to the threat of drones with sound, common-sense advice that may help them to melt into the desert in between attacks, leaving barely a trace. "These are not dumb techniques. It shows that t h ey are acting pretty a stutely," said Col. Cedric Leighton, a 26-year veteran of the U.S. Air Force, who helped set up the Predator drone program,
Notices
Rukmini Callimachi /The Associated Press
A young vendor in Timbuktu, Mali, waits for clients alongside woven reed mats of the type purchased by fleeing Islamists, apparently to camouflage their vehicles from drones. An instruction on camouflaging cars is one of 22 tips on how to avoid drones, listed on a document left behind by the Islamic extremists as they fled northern Mali from a French military intervention in January. which later tracked Osama bin Laden in Afghanistan. "What it does is, it buys them a little bit more time — and in this conflict, time is key. And they will use it to move away from an area, from a bombing raid, and do it very quickly."
Success varies The successof some of the cumstances and the model of drones used, Leighton said. F or example, from th e a i r, where perceptions of depth become obfuscated, an imagery sensor would interpret a mat stretched over the top of a car as one lying on the ground, concealing the vehicle. New models of drones, such as the Harfung used by the French or the MQ-9 Reaper, sometimes haveinfrared sensors that can pick up the heat signature of a car whose engine has just been shut off. However, even an i n f rared sensor would have trouble detecting a car left under a mat tent overnight, so that its temperatureisthe same as on the surrounding ground, Leighton said. U narmed drones are a l r eady being u sed b y t h e French in Mali to collect intel-
Continued from A1 "Central Oregon was one of the first places in the state to pull together and show us how this could be done," she said. At first, Oregon will use the grant to focus on patients on Medicaid, which will enable the state to see if the flexibility provided by CCOs can produce both healthier patients and reduced costs, she said, noting that 20 percent of patients produce 80 percent of the costs. The grant will also be used in part to create and compile ways to m easure improvements in care. If the focus is on improved outcomes, a way
ligence on al-Qaida groups, at least three times in Arabic and U.S. officials have said plans are under way to establish a new drone base in northwestern Africa. The U.S. recently signed a "status of forces agreement" with Niger, one of the nations bordering Mali, suggesting the drone base may be situated there and would be primarily used to gather intelligence to help the French.
Written by Yemeni The author of the tipsheet found in Timbuktu is Abdallah bin Muhammad, the nom de guerre for a senior commander of al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula, the Yemen-based branch of the terror network. The document was first published in Arabic on an extremist website on June 2, 2011, a month after bin Laden's death, according to Mathieu Guidere, a professor at the University of Toulouse. Guidere runs a database of statements by extrem-
ist groups, including al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, and he reviewed and authenticated the document found by t he AP. The tipsheet is still l i ttle known, if at all, in English, though it has been republished
many people as possible have zenry. Not ready to give this
the information they need on Continued from A1 foreclosures," Fuller said. U ntil r ecently, th e b u l k Rep. Dennis R ichardson, of foreclosures on homes R-Central Point, was quick to were done nonjudicially, out- ask if that means double the side of courtrooms, and no- cost. The answer was yes. tices of sales were placed in Pat Ehlers, a lawyer and newspapers. member of the Oregon State The c o mbination o f a Bar, said he's been looking at change in law and a court rul- the issue of how to best serve ing has pushed banks to start the public when it comes to f oreclosing j u d icially. T h e notices. He spoke in favor of switch has called into question a centralized notification syshow well the public notice sys- tem for the sale of property. "If you've ever had an item, tem is working. The move has also meant a personal property item in newspapers have lost revenue. the last five years that you've Nonjudicial foreclosures have wanted to sell ... I would wager screeched to a halt, meaning a guess you have not placed an the postings have also dried ad in a newspaper," he said to up. lawmakers. As it's drafted now, the bill Rep. Smith, however, counwould mandate that foreclo- teredwith,"Well, Ilivein Heppsure postings be placed in ner, so be careful." newspapers, no matter the Ehlers said it's more likely route the foreclosure takes. an ad would be posted on Darrell Fuller, a lobbyist for Craigslist, "which is a centralthe Oregon State Sheriff's ized notification system for the Association, told lawmakers sale of property." that he plans to introduce an Later, Rep. Smith made his amendment that would man- position clear when he tweetdate that notices be posted ed, "Call me old fashion(ed) both on the sheriffs' websites but newspapers of g eneral and in newspapers. circulation provide a valuable "We think it's important as service in notifying the citi-
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Lt. Col. Leslie Pratt, U.S. Air Force via The Associated Press
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night) to the specific (No. 18, tips will depend on the cirformation of fake gatherings, for example by using dolls and statues placed outside false ditches to mislead the enemy.) The use of the mats appears to be a West African twist on No. 3, which advises camouflaging the tops of cars and the
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to measure them is needed, Edlund said. In addition, the grant will pay for "learning collaboratives," or meetings where providers can share best practices that they have found to be effective.
Up. Tim Gleason, the dean of journalism at the University of Oregon, said there is still value in posting notices in newspapers, particularly for rural communities. "There is no question we are moving more and more online; however, at the same time there is fairly significant evidence of the continued importance of print as a news and i n f ormation m e d ium, especially in rural communities," Gleason said. There is also the question of who is vetting the content of notices. Newspapers, he said, are a neutral third party. And, of course,the issue affects both sheriffs' and newspapers' bottom lines. "It is a cost and revenue question," Gleason said. "The sheriffs are interested in revenue as the newspapers are interested in revenue, but if you go back to the fundamental question of public notice, it's there to inform the public and
where people (go) to see the
on other jihadist forums after drone strikes took out U.S.born cleric Anwar al-Awlaki in Yemen in September 2011 and al-Qaida second-in-command Abu Yahya al-Libi in Pakistan in June 2012. It was m ost r ecently i s sued t w o weeks ago on another extremist website after plans for the possible U.S. drone base in Ni-
ger began surfacing, Guidere said. "This document supports the fact that they knew there are secret U .S. b ases f or drones, and were preparing themselves," he said. "They were thinking about this issue for a long time." The idea of hiding under trees to avoid drones, which is tip No. 10, appears to be coming from the highest levels of the terror network. In a letter written by bin Laden and first published by the U.S. Center for Combating Terrorism, the terror mastermind instructs his followers to deliver a message to Abdelmalek Droukdel, the head of al-Qaida in the Islamic Maghreb, whose fighters have been active in Mali for at least a decade. "I want the brothers in the I slamic Maghreb t o k n o w
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that planting trees helps the mujahedeen and gives them cover," bin Laden writes in the missive. "Trees will give the mujahedeen the freedom to move around, especially if the enemy sends spyingaircrafts to the area."
lamists at almost the same moment. Abou Zeid, the senior al-Qaida emir in the region, rushed to jam his car under a pair of tamarind trees outside the store. "He and his men got out of the car and dove under the awning," said a l -Housseini. Trees provide cover "As for what I did? Me and my Hiding under trees is exact- employees? We also ran. As ly what the al-Qaida fighters fast as we could." did in Mali, according to resiAlong with the grass mats, dents in Diabaly, the last town t he al-Qaida men i n M a l i they took beforethe French made creativeuse of another stemmed their advance last natural resource to hide their month. Just after French war- cars: mud. planes incinerated rebel cars Asse Ag Imahalit, a gardenthat had been left outside, the er at a building in Timbuktu, fighters began to commandeer said he was at first puzzled to houses withlarge mango trees see that the fighters sleeping and park their 4-by-4s in the inside the compound sent for shade oftheirrubbery leaves. large bags of sugar every day. H amidou S i s souma, a Then, he said, he observed s choolteacher, said t h e I s - them mixing the sugar with lamists chose his house be- dirt, adding water and using cause of its generous trees, the sticky mixture to "paint" a nd r ammed t h eir t r u c k s their cars. Residents said the through his earthen wall to cars of the al-Qaida fighters drive right into his courtyard. are permanently covered in Another resident showed the mud. gash the occupiers had made The drone tipsheet, discovin his mango tree by parking ered in the regional tax detheir pickup too close to the partment occupied by Abou trunk. Zeid, shows how familiar alIn Timbuktu also, fighters Qaida has become with drone hid their cars under trees,and attacks, which have allowed disembarked from them in a the U.S. to take out senior hurry when they were being leaders in the terrorist group chased, in accordance with tip without a messy ground batNo. 13. tle.The preface and epilogue Moustapha al-Housseini, an of the tipsheet make it clear appliance repairman, was out- that al-Qaida well realizes the side his shop fixing a client's advantages of drones: They broken radio on the day the are relatively cheap in terms aerial bombardments began. of money and lives, alleviatHe said he heard the sound ing "the pressure of American of the planes and saw the Is- public opinion."
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An MQ-9 Reaper, armed with GBU-12 Paveway II laser-guided munitions end AGM-114 Hellfire missiles, flies a combat mission over southern Afghanistan.
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each service provided. "We're in our i n fancy in terms of understanding how to shift payment i n h ealth care," Edlund said. "(The grant) is great news If CCOs in Oregon succeed for us, and it's great news for in improving care and driving health care p r oviders and down costs, they could serve CCOs here who have been as a model for the rest of the working so hard to improve country, she said. our system," Edlund said. Oregon was one of six states Oregon's grant proposal, awarded a total of $260 milsubmitted l as t S e ptember, lion in federal money over the focused on three areas: inno- next 42 months. vation and rapid sharing of The others are Arkansas, information; new treatment Maine, Massachusetts, Mindelivery models that coordinesota and Vermont. nate care for all of a patient's — Reporter: 202-662-7456, medical needs; and finding aclevengerC<bendbulletirLcom
Weekly AWs & EnteWainment ri<PoyOsn TheIPullelin
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Boom
the door. Penny Blotsky Groth put the restaurant opened by her mother up for sale as the stress related to the business, combined with health problems, became "a nightmare" prompting her to retire 10 years earlier than she initially planned. Workers quitbecause they know they can easily find anotherjob or because they can't stand the winter, she said. "In summer and fall they will actually live in their cars, or live in a small RV," Blotsky Groth said in a n i n terview at the restaurant on Jan. 30, when thetemperature reached minus-15degrees Fahrenheit. "But if the weather turns like this, they end up going back to wherethey'refrom because it's too cold out here." To keep workers, some organizations are using perks such as rapid promotions in addition to offering housing. Raymond Nadolny, president of Williston State College, has lostmore than 50 percent of his staff — custodians, directors and executive team members — who left to work
Continued from A1 "This is a most unique situation, really, in America." Among Grimshaw's staff is Jerry Freeman, a carpenter who moved from Spokane, Wash., insearch of a stable job in the oil fields. Grimshaw wooed Freeman away from the
rigs by arranging housing on the hospital campus for him and his wife, in a building once used by nuns and now shared with three other people. There are "a lot of good people that would still be here if they could find a way to live," said Freeman, who moved to North Dakota in 2011 and initially shared a trailer with his son-in-law until his daughter moved in and he had to find other lodgings. "I got lucky." To house a c o m mercial lender and a residential loan processor, McKenzie County Bank in W atford City p urchased t w o 1, 8 00-squarefeet townhouses for a b out $200,000each,said Patten,the bank's president. "It's either w e p u r chase these, or we didn't have any employees to fill the holes," said Patten, who can watch trucks hauling oil, chemicals or water on busy U.S. Highway 85 from his office window. One of the employees previously lived in an extended-stay facility for seven months, he said. The bank i s r e nting t he three-bedroom houses to its employees at $800 a month. P atten estimates th e m a r ket rental would be between $2,000 and $3,000 a month. The boom promises to last a while. Williston is atop the center of the Bakken oil formation, part of a larger geologic region called the W i l liston Basin. The Bakken, developed by companies including Con-
Photos by Daniel Acker / Bloomberg News
A crude oil drill rig stands on the horizon beyond a row of mobile homes in Williston, N.D. North Dakota State University in Fargo. By comparison, between 1940 and 2000, the state added 265 people, according to the same report. The population of Williams County is expected to more than double to 51,106 in 2025 from 24,374 in 2011. B usinesses that can't a f ford homes for their employees struggle. Skyrocketing growth has created conditions in which family businesses are choking on the expansion and secretaries arepromotedto directorships in months just to keep them. Gramma Sharon's F amily Restaurant i n W i l l iston closes early on Tuesdays and W ednesdays, because t h e business lacks enough staff for the evening shift. The eatery has openings for cooks, dishwashers and prep cooks listed on its website. The 200-seat restaurant, best known for its omelets and homemade soups, has become so popular during the boom that lines form out
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Rick Fitzgerald, an electrician from Salt Lake City, carries belongings into a mobile home to be shared with three other contractors in Williston, N.D. A booming local economy led by oil production has created a housing shortage that has driven the rent on onebedroom apartmentsas high as $2,300 a month. tinental Resources Inc., has turned North Dakota into the nation'ssecond-largest crude producer, following Texas and topping Alaska. Output more than tripled over the past four years to 731,000 barrels a day in November,according to the
U.S. Energy Department. North Dakota's population is expected to grow by 25 percent over the next 15 years, reaching 841,820 people by 2025, from 672,591 in 2010, according to a report by the Center for Social Research at
is reportedly below I percent, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis in a July article on its website. Halliburton Co., the world's second-largest oilfield-services provider afterSchlumberger Ltd., has built 50 single-family homes in W i lliston over the last two years and is completing 44 t ownhouses and two apartment buildings, according to Susie McMichael, a company s p okeswoman. Some employees live in a mo-
bile complex previously used at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver. Williston's mayor, E. Ward Koeser, estimates that about 6,000 men live in temporary units called "man camps" in Williams County. Some will find permanent housing in the 27 apartment buildings that are currently under construction around the town, he said. "Williston is a growing community, a thriving community," said Koeser, who moved to North Dakota from Montana in 1978 and has been the city's leaderfor more than 18 years of watching it expand. "I wish it wouldn't have happened as fast, but I use the expression:
for higher-paying employers such as the oil companies. To prevent more quitting, he promoted a secretary to a human resources director withinthree months, with a 50 percent salary increase, and he is considering a similar step again. "I hired a s ecretary this week," he said in an interview. "Immediately, when a director's position came open, I thought, 'This could be a good fit.' " The college has 24 mobile
you've got to play the game with the cards you're dealt, and so make the best of it." The city government has raised wages 10 percent a year for the past two years and topped it with at least a $350-amonth housing allowance for all its 200 employees. Williston also invested in apartment b uildings, which w i l l h a v e units for about 45 employees. "This is the new n ormal — continued growth and expansion an d d e velopment," said Grimshaw, who moved to North Dakota from Minnesota in 2010 and calls working in Williston "an amazing experience."
homes, including some purchasedfrom the Federal Emergency Management Agency, at its campus to house more than a tenth of it s employees as it builds a $10 million, 72-unit apartment building. The vacancy rate in Williston
Russia tries to rein in
drinking, smoking
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MOSCOW — Hours after his inauguration last May, President Vladimir Putin signed a decree ordering his government to increase Russian life expectancy to 74 y ears by 2018, reflecting urgency in the effort to keep the world's largest country filled with enough people to sustain it. Last year, life expectancy here was 66.5 years, according to estimates by the CIA World Factbook — 60.1 for men and 73.2 for women — compared with 78.5 years in the United States and 79.8 in the European Union. More people are dying than are being born.
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Russians bear a staggering load of risk factors for disease, with 60 percent of men smoking and each citizen consuming, on average, more than four gallons of pure alcohol a year. Half the population is overweight. T wo big steps are in t h e works to change some of the d ynamics. R u ssia's l o w er house of p a r liament over-
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whelmingly passed a bill forbidding smoking i n p u b l ic places, which the upper house approved Wednesday and is expected to be signed quickly by Putin. And a law that went into effect Jan. 1 has designated beer as an alcoholic beverage instead of a food, prohibiting its sale in ubiquitous streetcorner kiosks. But advocates for b etter health, leading to longer lives, say Russia needs to do f ar more. "Cigarettes are incredibly cheap," said D m itri Y a nin, chairman of the Conference of Consumer Protection Societies. "I think we can change consumer behavior eventually, but it won't be quick because the law doesn't include economic measures." Poor demographic trends have troubled Russia since the collapse of the Soviet Union, with a population of 148 million 20 years ago reduced to about 143 million now. In 2006, Putin ordered subsidiesfor women who give birth, calling the demographic situation "Russia's most acute problem today." Lastyear he said the population could decline to 107 million by 2050 if trends are notreversed.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
www.bendbulletin.com/local
The series
EKREL
Interstate 84 from Pendleton to Ontario is notorious for its steep grades and sharp turns. But how dangerous is it? Follow our series: I I I
In the wake of a Dec. 30 tour bus crash that killed
other sections of interstate
raphy, which posed some of the more daunting challenges It's also one of the more for 19th century pioneers in scenic pieces of interstate in ox-drawn covered wagons. In Oregon, passing through the contrast to the generally flat pine and fir forests of the Blue terrain which the freeway, and Mountains. The area's recrethe Oregon Trail before it, traational opportunities, verses in the 200 miles which include hunting, between Portland and fishing and the nearby Pendleton, the secEagle Cap Wilderness, tion through the Blues Oregon's largest backincludes: country area, attract • Four grades of 5 visitorsfrom across Rachelle percent or 6 percent, the nation. And many Lemmon among them Cabbage of those drivers live Hill just east of Pendin places where gentle terleton, where the westbound rain and temperate weather lanesplunge almost 3,000 verpredominate. tical feet from the mountains "There are a lot of people into the Columbia Basin in a from out of state who don't series of corners. know what these mountains This is one of a handful of are about," said Wendee Morhighways in Oregon where rissey, a bus driver for the the Oregon Department of Baker School District for 27 Transportation built emergency "escaperamps" — uphill years. "We only do 55 mph. People see that big yellow bus lanes carved into the slope beand think they just have to get side the highway where truck around that." drivers can stop should their brakes fail on the five-mile Dangerous sections descent. The route through the Blues The heaviest commercial is infamous not only for its trucks are urged, by a series weather but also for its topogof signs, to not exceed about
from Pendleton to Ontario deserves its notoriety. By Jayson Jacoby WesCom News Service
he best way to get around in Oregon's northeast corner is on a route that's prone to some of the region's worst weather. This paradox of Interstate 84 has earnedthe four-lane freeway — the most direct route between Portland, Boise and Salt Lake City — a widespread reputation for difficult driving conditions and frequent weather-relatedclosures between Halloween and, occasionally, Memorial Day. The section most notorious for inclement weather is the 168 miles through the Blue Mountains between Pendleton, in the Columbia River Basin, and Ontario, beside the Snake River onthe Oregon-Idaho border. This part of I-84, which roughly parallels the route of the historic Oregon Trail, pass-
T
es La Grande and Baker City, the two largest cities between Pendleton and Ontario. It also includes perhaps the most misleadingly named place in the whole region, said Rachelle Lemmon, who drives buses for the Baker School District. That's Pleasant Valley. The area, about eight miles south of Baker City, has neither steep grades nor sharp curves. But its microclimate makes it prone to snow and, especially, ice, when the freeway on either side is clear. "There's nothing pleasant about it, at least during the winter," Lemmon said.
Avital corridor I-84, in addition to its importance for local residents, is a vital commercial pike, with trucks making up about 43 percentofthetraffic,a m uch higher percentage than for
to make it safer
18 mph, lest their beleaguered ern Oregon University. brakes overheat. In summer• The second-highest pass time, ODOT fills 50-gallon of any freeway in Oregonmetal barrels with water for 4,193-foot Blue Mountain sumdrivers to use to refill radiamit near Meacham, between tors that have boiled over on Pendleton and La Grande. the eastbound ascent. • Ladd Canyon, a breach in "You always have to the basalt mountains be prepared for those between Baker City steep hills," said Sandy and La Grande that Fuller, who commutes acts as a natural wind two or three times per tunnel, creating ocweek from her home casional whiteouts that in Weiser, Idaho, to Wendee can constrict travelers' Marvin Wood Products Morrissey visibility to a couple of in Baker City, a 65-mile car lengths. "I don't think Ladd Canroute that includes about 50 miles of 1-84 between Farewell yon's reputation is overrated," Bend and Baker City. said Lemmon, who frequently Fuller also drove the Cabhauls Baker High School bage Hill section frequently sports teams to La Grande via when she was living in Milton- I-84. See I-84/B2 Freewater and attending East-
highway in Oregon.
nine, we set out to assess whether Interstate 84
Saturday:Attempts
I I •I
The NationalHighwaySysteminthe Northwest ' Yakima
AREASHOWN BELOW Portland
Boise
Bond
I
Anatomy of a highway
Modford
Twin Falls
The fivedeadliestsections
Elko
According to the Oregon Department of Transportation, there are five sections of 1-84 in
0
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-
-
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0 GF GOtt
Eastern Oregon comprising 45 miles of sharp curves
, Saltlako Clt
- Hermiston CAggAGE
-
Pendleton
and steep grades, or about 27 percent of the total
HILL
mileage betweenPendleton andOntario. From Jan. 1, 2002, to Dec. 31,2011,theseareas recorded 34 percent
Modern Interstate B4follows the same route as U.S. Highway 30, which includes the Columbia River Highway and the Old Oregon Trail Highway. Improvements to Highway 30 had been in the planning stages since the1930s, but it wasn't until1956, with the passage of the Federal lnterstate and Defense Highways Act, that Highway 30 was scheduled
nl
of all accidents on the stretch, and 38 percent of all deaths.
Twenty-one of the 23deaths were on dry pavement.
4, SPRINGj„. La Grande CREEK/. 4' B, I:ADD
-k@.
HILGARD
ELEVATIONPROFILE FROM PENDLETON TO ONTARIO
<CANYiON
to be superceded by
4,000 ft 3.000 ii
I
Baker City 2,000il
-- LaGrande-
r'
Baker City
L
Interstate 80 North, a northwest extension ofInterstate 80, which stretches from New York
to San Francisco. The
1,000 ii
UMATILLA INDIAN R Es E R VAT I 0 N
Pendleton
Bo/ Brad
olt 2,000tt l
4.B%of total mileage 7.1%of total accidents 13% of total deaths Total accidents:B6 Injuries:147; Deaths: B Accidents on dry pavement:58% Fatal accidents on dry
3,500ff lI ,'
, 'B%giade
X NATIONAL
Milepost 244-253
iX FOREST
—
—
—
-
—I
~
L a Grande
4,000 ii
6% and 5%grades
3500ft ~
1
3 OOO tt
5.4% of total mileage 9.4% of total accidents 3.3% oftotal deaths Total accidents:81 Injuries:114;Deaths: 5
Accidents on dry pavement:44% Fatal accidents on dry
pavement:100%
LADD CANYON
PLEASANTVALLEY
Milepost 270-278
Milepost 30O-a18
4.B%of total mileage 10.1%of total accidents B.3%of total deaths Total accidents:122 Injuries:177; Deaths: 5 Accidents on dry pavement:67%
7.1%of total mileage 6.5% of total accidents 10% of total deaths Total accidents:79 Injuries:119; Deaths: 6 Accidents on dry pavement:20%
Fatals accidents on dry pavement:100%
aker City
4,000 — — —fl — 9 — — -P — — t — — t-
3 60I fl
'
PLIEASANT VALLEY
SPRIMG CREEK/ HILGARD
UMATILLA
Milepost 217-225
pavement:100%
WALLOWAWHITMAN NATIONAL
3.000 lt
CABBAGEHILL
, 5% grade
full four-lane section from Pendleton to
onF~
Ontario was begun in 1966 and completed by 1980. The highway
,1.'
was eventually
I
redesignated Interstate 84.
Fun fact: The National Highway System represents
~l
1
4 percent of the nation's roads, but
-
carries more than 40percent of all highway traffic, 75 percent of heavy truck traffic and 90 percent of tourist traffic.
, THREEMILE HILL x1Ontario
THREEMILE HILL
Weiser, ID 6'
0/Ir I c )
Ontairlu 2,750fi i
pavement:B0%
2.25
' 6% grade. ,
L
J
l I
4.B% of total mileage 3.2% of total accidents 3.3% of total deaths Total accidents:39 Injuries:BB;Deaths: 2 Accidents on dry pavement:64% Fatal accidents on dry
~i io
Fatal accidents on dry
a
Milepost 356-364
L
pavement:50%
r
l
Sources: Oregon Department of Transportation, Google, OpenstreetMap.org, United States Geological Survey, Federal Highway Administration Andy ZeigertiThe Bulletin
Paid Advertisement
Anti-poverty group Hydrologists talk options is shutting down MIRROR POND
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
Hydrology experts assembled by the City Club of Central Oregon said Thursday there's no urgency to develop a plan to address silt buildup in Mirror Pond, and suggested an approach somewhere between attempting to maintain the historic pond and removing the Newport Avenue Dam could win broad community support. Hundreds filled a lecture hall at St. Charles Bend on Thursday to learn more about silt accumulation in the downtown Bend pond,formed by the construction of the dam 100 years ago and last dredged in 1984. In the years since then, the pond has become shallower, the result of silt washing into the Deschutes River upstream and settling on the bottom in the slowmoving waters of Mirror Pond. Hydrologist Joe Eilers — who was joined by hydrologist Gabe Williams and Upper D eschutes Watershed
Council Director Ryan Houston on the City Club panel — told the audience Thursday that dredging to preserve Mirror Pond as a pond is at best a short-term fix.
By deepening the channel, dredging causesthe water to move even more slowly, Eilers said, allowing more silt to fall out of suspension ratherthan be carried further downstream. A pond like Mirror Pond will re-silt fastest in the first few seasons afterdredging, he said, reaching 80 percent of its maximum silt-holding capacity within 10 years, and 90 percent within 20 years.
"If you're going to go the full dredg-
ing route, you might as well buy a dredge,because you'llbe back therein the not-too-distant future," Eilers said. As of today, Mirror Pond probably has about 90 percent of the silt it can take, Eilers said, but it's hard to know when it might reach 100 percent. See Pond/B5
By Leslie Pugmire Hole The Bunetin
Ten years after its inception as a high-profile Central Oregon-based nonprofit, Partnership to End Poverty has announced that 2013 will be its last year. There was foreshadowing last fall when the organization shared the news that its only source of funding, Northwest Area Foundation, would be ending its fiscal support, but the announcement made Thursday by Jason Carr, the partnership's executive director, was the first official word. "Our funding stream was never meant to be continuous," said Carr. "We've reached the point where they (Northwest Area Foundation) felt they had made the investment intended for Central Oregon." Unlike nonprofits that provide direct services, Partnership to End Poverty — initially known as Central Oregon Partnership — focused on providing funds to partner nonprofits that addressed breaking the cycle of poverty by providing services to build self-sufficiency. See Poverty/B3
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
l-84
feared mainly for it s nasty w inter weather, actually i s more dangerous during the w armer months. Of th e 5 1 fatal crashes during the 10year period,39 of them — 76 percent — occurred on dry pavement. A majority of fatal accidents — 30 of 51, or 59 percent — happened during the warmer half of the year, April through September. There is, however, more traffic on the freeway during that six-month period, with a pproximately 2 ,000 m o r e vehicles per day — about 20 percent more than during the O ctober-through-March p e riod. And the most common contributing factor i n f a t al accidents — attributed to 27 of the 51 crashes — was excessive speed. O DOT c r ash d at a a l s o show that accidents, including fatal crashes, aren't confined to the hilly, sinuous sections such as Ladd Canyon a nd Cabbage H i ll . O D O T statistics corroborate the experiences of people who frequently drive 1-84, including commuters, snowplow drivers and Oregon State Police troopers. They say the vast majority o f t r a v elers t h ey see drive more slowly when
Continued from B1 The north side of the canyon, where eastbound traffic climbs a 6percent grade, so often became a b o ttleneck when a s i ngle t r uck s p un out while beginning the ascent that ODOT, for the first time in Eastern Oregon, buried heating coils in the right lane severalyears ago to try to prevent ice and snow from accumulating.
sald. Almost a s b a d , P a yton said, the expanses of straight, flat freeway entice some drivers to set their cruise control, which can quickly turn a car into an uncontrollable missile if it rolls over a patch of ice.
Warning system
ODOTofficials have strived over theyears to ensure that drivers aren't surprised by d angerous c o nditions, b y means of a series of warning signs and remote cameras, December's tragedy the latter being available on The potential dangers of computers, smartphones and the freeway,the most heavtablets. Morrissey, who has ily traveled thoroughfare in hauled hundreds of athletes the area, were subject to conto sporting events from Onsiderable scrutiny earlier this tario to Pendleton, said she winter when the driver of a never leaves for a trip without Canadian tour bus lost conchecking ODOT's Tripcheck trol near Pendleton and cawebsite www.tripcheck. reened down a 200-foot emcom. bankment. Nine passengers The agency also has tried died and 38 were hurt in the to mitigate dangerous drivDec. 30 crash. It's the highest ing conditions by installing death toll in a single accident fences that block snow, by on an Oregon highway since widening the freeway to give 1971. Oregon State Police are truck driversa safer place to still investigating the crash put on chains, and even by and have not released an ofburying heated wires beneath ficial cause. one lane on a steep two-mile Witnesses said the freeway stretch in L add Canyon to was icy at the time. And some prevent snow and ice from said the bus was traveling as accumulating. fast as 70 mph, 5 mph above freezingfog glazes the pavePayton said t h i s s a fety the posted speed ment with black ice, or winds campaign has w orked. He limit. send snow skimming across p oints in p a rticular to t h e Based on Oreall four lanes. Burnt River Canyon, through "We don't see that many gon Department which the freeway runs for of T r ansportafatalities i n the w i n t e r," about a dozen miles between tion s t a t i stics said Brad Payton, a 30-year Baker City and Huntington. for the 10-year S a n dy ODOT employee who manBefore ODOT installed an p eriod f rom Ful l e r ages ODOT's m aintenance electronic warning sign near J an. 1 , 2 0 0 2 , station in Baker City. Its em- Durkee, where the freeway through Dec. 31, 2011, a case ployees are responsiblefor enters the canyon and a series could be made that Interstate the 50-mile section of I - 84 of curves with posted speed 84 deserves its notoriety. between North Powder and limits of 50 mph or 55 mph, "It's a challenging area at Weatherby. "People are slow- accidents, usually i nvolving all times of the year, particu- ing down enough that they're trucks, were a regular occurlarly during the winter," said somewhat prepared for the rence there, Payton said. Tom Strandberg, a spokes- conditions," he said. The first corner that eastman for ODOT's Eastern ReYet away from the steep bound traffic encounters, at gion office in La Grande. grades, the expanses Milepost 332.5 near the of flat,straight freeAsh Grove Cement plant, Freeway comparisons w ay ca n i n s t il l a was the site most prone Adjusted for differences in sense of complacency to crashes, he said. traffic volumes, the Pendle- in some drivers that A ccording to O D OT ton-to-Ontario stretch has a often isn't warranted. statistics, there were 11 higher rateof accidents, and T he deadly bus crash B r a d accidents at that corner of fatal crashes, than Ore- on Dec. 30 happened P ayto n betw e e n 2002 and 2011 gon's other mountainous sec- at just such a place. — but j ust t w o s i nce tion of freeway, the 125 miles The 25 miles between Bak- the sign, which warns of the of Interstate 5 between the er City and Ladd Canyon has curves and displays drivers' California border and Rose- but one minor hill, a 3 percent current speed, was installed burg. That s t retch c a rries grade just north of the Baker about four years ago. "Now if we get one down about three times more traf- Valley Rest Area. Payton said fic than the Eastern Oregon that stretch can be just as there a year, I'm surprised," stretch of I-84. slippery as the passes. Payton said. "I think people get lulled to Yet the ODOT data also — Reporter: jjacoby@ reveal that I-84, although it's sleep," sometimes literally, he baher cityherald.com
Submitted photo
The Oregon State Police provided this photo from the scene of December's deadly bus crash on Deadman Pass on l-84 east of Pendleton. A bus owned by the charter company Mi Joo Tour & Travel from Vancouver, British Columbia, crashed into and over a railing, killing nine.
Compared to other notorious sections of highway... INTERsTATE 84 INTERsTATE 84 © © © INTERsTATE5 125 miles Pendleton to Ontario:168 miles Mul tnomah Falls lo Mosi 40 er:miles Roseburg to Calif. border: Daily traffic:About 9,000
Daily traffic:About 23,000
Daily traffic:About 25,300
TRUCKS ASPERCENTAGE OF TOTAL TRAFFIC
FATAL ACCIDENTS
FATAL ACCIDENTS BY SEASON
from Jan. 1, 2002, to Dec. 31, 2011 from Jan. 1, 2002, to Dec. 31, 2011
43%
60
~ 1
15
Theft — Atheft wasreported and arrestsmade at7:54 p.m. Feb.18, in the 20100block of Pinebrook Boulevard. Burglary — A burglary wasreported and arrests made at 8:01 a.m. Feb. 19, in the 500block of Northeast Franklin Avenue. Theft — Atheft wasreported at 10:15a.m. Feb.19, in the 61400 blockof South U.S. Highway 97. Burglary — A burglary wasreported at5:53 p.m. Feb.19, in the 61500 blockof American Lane. Burglary — A burglary wasreported at 2:31 p.m. Feb. 10, in the1500 blockofNorthwest Wall Street. Prinevnle Police Department
The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log when such a request is received. Any new information, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358. Bend Police Department Unauthorized use — A vehicle was reported stolen at 7:09 p.m. Feb.11, inthe900 block of Northeast10th Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief wasreported at 1202 p.m. Feb.12, inthe1500block of Northeast Neff Road.
Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4329 Email:oregon.treasurer©state.or.us Web: www.ost.state.or.us • Attorney General Ellen Rosenblum, 0 1162Court St. N.E. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4400 Fax: 503-378-4017 Web: www.doj.state.or.us • Labor Commissioner Brad Avakian 800 N.E. Oregon St.,Suite1045 Portland, OR97232 Phone: 971-673-0761 Fax: 971-673-0762 Email: boli.mail@state.or.us Web: www.oregon.gov/boli
STATE OF OREGON • Gov. John Kitzhaber, 0 160State Capitol, 900 Court St. Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-378-4582 Fax: 503-378-6872 Web: http://governor.oregon.gov • Secretary ofStateKate Brown, 0 136StateCapitol Salem, OR97301 Phone: 503-986-1616 Fax:503-986-1616 Email: oregon.sos@state.or.us • Treasurer TedWheeler, 0 159 OregonState Capitol 900CourtSt. N.E.
~
~ • 45 ~
Unlawful entry — Avehicle was reported enteredats:08a.m. Feb. 20, in the area of Southeast Lynn Boulevard. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief wasreported at 11:56 a.m. Feb.20, in thearea of Northeast Clearview Way. Theft — Atheft wasreported at 3:53 p.m.Feb. 20, in the area of Northwest Fourth Street.
1,883
291
~ ~
Crashes involving trucks
~
Crashes on dry pavement
411
161
i
I
942
668
212
Crashes during daylight
1,025 541
Crashes at night
645 Source: Oregon Department of Transportation
The BendPark 8 Recreation District appointed Dan Fishkin as its
newest board memberTuesday. Fishkin will fill the vacancy left after Dallas Brown resigned in
January, andwill serve until June. Fishkin is a business attorney with
35 years of experience. Hehas servedasamemberoftheBend Park 8 Recreation District Budget
Committee andasdirector of the
Wednesday 4:26 p.m.— Unauthorized burning, in the area of Northwest LoloDrive. 12 —Medical ald calls.
Tower Theatre Foundation Board.
Bend garbage truck destroyed in fire
Online
fire Thursday afternoon in a southeast Bend neighborhood, the Bend Fire Department said. The truck, which was parked on
bendbulletin.com
1 p.m. after a hydraulic line in the
Bartlett Lane,caught fire around
THE
LO~CA,L MrJA>RK>ET AT
Andy Zeigert / The Bulletin
T HE B E S T OF TH E W E S T
I
< OZIi(5) IRIiIE+I3El or use the < QiEN©3K6gl service to be
I Qa
automatically emailed of notices that match your needs. Qa
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Emsdtk r mu
Rescue personnel reached the scene just after 4:30 p.m.,and found the boycomplaining of pain
arrived at the scene to find the truck
in his leg and hip. He was stabilized and taken by snowmobile to Edison Sno-park, where medics from the Sunriver Fire Department met him
fully engulfed in flames,andthe fire threatening to spread due to high winds. The crews were able to snuff out the fire before it could spread to
any nearby homes. The fire caused$200,000 in damage to the vehicle.
Snowmobiler injured near EdisonSno-park A juvenile from San Francisco was hurt Thursday in a snowmobile crash west of Edison Sno-park. According to the Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, at around 3:47 p.m., the boy lost control of his rented snowmobile, went off the trail and struck a tree. Forest Service law enforcement and volUnteers from Deschutes County
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W WW . C EL E B R A T E T H E S E AS O N . N E T 541-CHICKEN (244 - 2 5 3 6 )
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Wear the green — prize awarded for best costumes
S ATURDAY 9AM 5 P M
6 151 5
N H N Di shwasher
Search andRescueheaded forthe scene onsnowmobiles.
,ii, F
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Food, beverage & live music at the Post Dash Bash
I fT
life-threatening injuries. — From staff reports
Start and Finish — Deschutes Brewery, downtown Bend
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SK Fun Run benefitting the Boys & Girls Clubs Sunday, March 17 -10:05 am
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garbage truck failed andsprayed flammable hydraulic fluid onto the hot surface of theengine. Firecrews
C E L E B RA T E T H E S EA s o N
r
I
Injuries
2,425
Over 80 Oregon Newspapers, from 36 Counties,
I
Non-fatal crashes
1,600
Park district appoints new boardmember
BEND FIRE RUNS
QN
i
J uly- O c t.Se pt. De c .
2$8
5KRKM3
I
Jan.- AprilMarch June
1,159
456
$ Ig~~e Publishare Association •
Deaths
Fatal crashes
316
A Free Public Service
•
5
from Jan. 1, 2002, to Dec. 31, 2011
THE LOCAL MARKET ~p A Orepon Newspapcv
5
17
1
BRIEFING
Find It All
For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletirLcomioff icials.
q
OTHER CRASHSTATISTICS
A CascadeDisposal garbage truck was destroyedafter it caught
PUBLIc OFFIGIALs
v + l2
1
Pendleton Multnomah Roseburg toOntario Fallsto t o Calif. Mosier bo rder
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~
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
Kitz a erwi resent Me icai cost- owerin an to overnors By Jonathan J. Cooper
interview. K itz h a b e r SALEM — Gov. John Kitzi ntroduced t h e haber will b rief other state plan in 2011 in leaders this weekend on his the face of a seplan to lower Medicaid costs, Kitzhaber ve r e s t ate budtouting an overhaul that Presiget deficit, and dent Barack Obama highlight- he's been talking for two years ed in his State of the Union ad- about expanding the i nitiadress for its potential to lower tive beyond his state. Now, it the deficit even as health care seems he's found people ready expenses climb. to listen. The Oregon Democratleaves Hospital executives from for Washington, D.C., today to Alabama visited Oregon last pitch his plan that changes the month to learn about the efway doctors and hospitals are fort. And the U.S. Department paid and improves health care of Health and Human Serviccoordination for l ow-income es announced Thursday that residents so t h a t t r e atable it's giving Oregon a $42 milmedical problems don't grow lion grant to help spread the in severity or expense. changes beyond the Medicaid Kitzhaber says his goal is population and share informato win over a handful of other tion with other states, makgovernors from each party. ing it one of only six states to "I think the politics have earn a State Innovation Model been dialed down a c ouple grant. of notches, and now people Kitzhaber will address his are willing to sit down and counterparts at a meeting of talk about how we can solve the National Governors Asthe problem" of rising health sociation. His talk isn't schedcare costs, Kitzhaber told The uled on the official agenda, but Associated Press in a recent a spokeswoman confirmed The Associated Press
Poverty
"We didn't think it w ould
same dollars, given the current economic climate," he said. N onprofits that h ave r e ceived grantsfrom the organization have been aware this day was coming, said Carr. The partnership's most reing programs. cent grants include Mosaic With the l oss of o utside Medical's low-cost clinics and funding, t h e p a r t nership's a fixedbus route for Cascades board had to decide whether East Transit in Redmond, conit would be the right choice to necting the city core with the continue and to begin vying Redmond C entral O r e gon against its local partner orga- Community College campus nizations for grants and dona- and a nearby workforce traintions, said Carr. ing center.
I I
Gell Celltrel measeres —Gun control advocates in the Oregon Legislature are abandoning bills to outlaw the sale of semi-automatic
rifles and high-capacity gun magazines. Democratic Sen. Floyd Prozanski said such measuresare unlikely to pass in Oregonand would work better at the federal level. Instead, he said, the Judiciary
Committee will take up four proposals. Theywould forbid holders of concealed handgun licenses to takeweapons to public schools;
that Kitzhaber is expected to present. "The governors love what they call stealing from one another — taking the good ideas and thesuccesses of their colleagues and trying to figure out how to apply that in their home state," said Matt Salo, director of the National Association of Medicaid Directors. There's been "huge interest" among other states in Oregon's health overhaul, Salo said, not because the concepts are brand new, but because the state managed to avoid pitfalls that often block health system changes. Kitzhaber persuaded state lawmakers to r edesign the system of delivering and paying for health care under Medicaid, creating incentives for providers to coordinate patient care and prevent avoidable emergency room visi ts.H e has long complained that the current financial incentives encourage volume over quality, driving costs up without making people healthier.
Obama, in his State of the Union address this m onth, suggested that changes such as Oregon's could be part of a long-term strategy to lower the federal debt by reigning in the growing cost of federally funded health care. " We'll bring d o w n costs b y changing th e w a y o u r government pays for M edicare, because our m e dical bills shouldn't be based on the number of tests ordered or days spent in the hospital — they should be based on the quality of care that our seniors receive," Obama said. The Obama administration has invested in the program, putting up $1.9 billion to keep Oregon's Medicaid program afloat over the next five years while providers make the transition to new business models and incorporate new staff and
prevent them from taking their weapons into the state Capitol; expand
technology.
basketball through a small plastic hoop. It's an exercise a veterinarian recommended for his arthritic elbows. Eddie is15, quite old for a
A new $30,000 grant for
workforce training, especially in computers, said Porterfield. Ideally, the program will also be able to support child care to enable adults to more easily use the services. Currently, LC A o p erates out of small offices inside two county buildings. The grant from Partnership to End Poverty may enable it to move into its own location and have room for larger events and trainings, said Porterfield. Sustaining a Red m o nd headquarters will take more than the $30,000 grant — especially with the partnership
be appropriate, going after the the regional Latino Commu-
Continued from B1 The organization typically funneled about $1 million a year to various efforts in the region aimed at w o r kforce and education, health, leadership and other capacity-build-
AROUND THE STATE
nity Association has yet to see results, but hopefully that's only a matter of t ime, said LCA Executive Director Brad Porterfield. "It helps us to get that seed money because other foundations look at that — they like to see an organization had received big grants before they decide (to make a donation)," he said. The grant will fund a Latino Family Empowerment Center in Redmond, where individuals and families can receive
In exchange, though, the statehas agreed to lower percapita health care cost inflation by 2 p ercentage points without affecting quality.
background checks to include sales between private individuals; and require "live-fire" training for concealed handgun licenses.
FirearmS Seized — Portland police say they've seized 35 firearms during a heroin bust, and they're checking serial numbers to determine if they are stolen. The police said they arrested two people
Wednesday on drug charges: 30-year-old Joshua Michael Buettner and26-year-oldJehnaGowanlock.A policespokesman saidthe amount of weaponry was unusual. It included rifles and handguns. Police said they also seizedammunition and two safes. Police said they'd begun an investigation in January and found Buettner on
Wednesday withanounceofheroinandahandgun. Pedestriall flagS —After several pedestrians in Astoria were hit and one died, the City Council has tried a safety experiment. It's put
orange flags in buckets on either side of two busy downtown intersections so that pedestrians can carry them across the street and be more visible to drivers. The Daily Astorian reports the experiment
hasn't been entirely successful. A reporter saw fewpeople using the
flags. And a city official reports they're being stolen quickly: 27 of the first 40 put out are missing. Others have been seen in the gutters and
are now dark anddiscolored in the buckets. AthletiC Otter —Nothing but net? No problem for one sporty sea otter at the OregonZoo. Eddiethe otter has beentrained to dunk a sea otter. But as they put it at the OregonZoo, he's got game. Eddie makes most of his shots, but when he misses, he hits the boards,
grabs the reboundand goes up again until he scores. — From wire reports
b owing out — so LCA h a s applied for two sizable grants that, if received, will move the project forward and perhaps build its programming. "We can dream and hope
its, he said, was help with the business side of things: board management, staff development, technology and budgets. That may be an area of focus for this year, Carr said. "We're looking at whether and pray we get bigger grants," said Porterfield. there's an existing nonprofit Partnership to E n d P o v- that could help other organierty's board is currently set- zations with that," he said. "Or ting priorities for its last year, do we need one? Nonprofits said Carr, ensuring that its are typically more focused last funds are spent equitably on helping, not operations. throughout Central O regon We want to f i n d w ays f or and according to the highest our funds to last beyond our need and most potential. history." One thing identified as a — Reporter: 541-548-2186, strong need for all nonproffpugmireC<bendbulletin.com
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economy in a variety of grants. Most recently the social media giant awarded $100,000 to Crook County High School for science and technology education and an additional $82,000 for a study on ways to boost tourism in the county. That came on the heels of a $105,000 gift in January to schools and nonprofit organizations in the area. That's a far cr y f rom what the company would have paid in property taxes had it not located in an enterprise zone, to be sure. Outside the enterprise zone, Facebook's taxes on property and equipment wouldhave amounted to $4.4 million, and, arguably, Facebook mightnot have decided to come to Central Oregon in the first place. But come it d id , an d even without community donations, its presence has been felt. As reporter Elon Glucklich noted in an article in The Bulletin on Thursday, building the company's two Crook County facilities has provided jobs for some 1,200 Central
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Oregon construction workers at a time when they were sorely needed. In addition, it employs about 70 full-time workers in a variety of jobs. That's nothing to sneeze at in a small county that's had an unemployment rate of more than 10 percent since 2009. Nor are the company's gifts to the community.When unemployment rates are high, groups from the local economic development organization to the humane society find demand for their services going up even as their ability to raise money falls. Facebook has helped close some of that gap. Would county r esidents be willing to settle for those property taxes alone? Perhaps. Would they get them'? Not likely, given the company's ability to get deals from other counties in the country. Facebook's gifts may not replace the foregone taxes, to be sure, but they certainly make life better in Crook County and beyond.
Higher education staff ratios need examination igher education critics say istrator while others do not. there are too many adNevertheless, the C h ronicle ministrators a t c o l leges said research does show colleges and universities, contributing to hiring more administrators than sharp increases in tuition in recent faculty over the last two decades years. and hiring more part-time instead To explore the question, the Or- of full-time faculty. egon Legislature is considering reSome of the additional adminisquiring better reporting of staffing trators are the result of new duties, ratios from its public universities such as increases in technology, and community colleges. student services, federal reporting The move is being pushed by mandates and fundraising related students, faculty and classified to diminishing government supstaff, according to a report in The port. And in some places, tradiRegister-Guard newspaper in Eu- tional faculty responsibilities like gene, but resisted by university of- student advising have shifted to ficials who object to an additional administrators. reporting mandate and say uniIn Oregon, unions representversities don't fit in the usual civil ing classified workers have comservice framework. plained that when the Legislature While we agree that a univer- ordered state agencies to cut mansity is not like a state agency, staff- agement/worker ratios in 2011 and ing ratios are worth exploring 2012, it didn't impose the same as we struggle with rising tuition rules on the state's public universiand student debt. Additional data ties and community colleges. It's a is critical to an informed conver- complaint we can't support, given sation, but it must be data that is the state's sharply diminishing firelevant to the higher education nancial support of higher educasetting. tion and the move to give higher The debate about how many education more independence administrators are needed is long- from state government. standing and n ationwide. The The key is to find a consistent Chronicle of H igher Education way of reporting so colleges and reports that comparisons are dif- universities can be compared to ficult because institutions catego- each other, providing the basis for rize staff differently. For example, a meaningful examination of the some say a librarian is an admin- balance of staffing.
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NI Nickel's Worth Gay marriage is a moral and civil rights issue
both directions. Traffic was backed up past Orion Greens Road and people were getting out of their cars to Gay marriage is a moral issue. see what was happening. After the Nevertheless, first and foremost, traffic cleared and I was able to get gay marriage is a s e cular civil across the railroad tracks, I drove rights issue. Since civil unions are toward Third Street to see how long significantly inferior to marriage the line of cars was. Would you regarding legal rights and privibelieve it extended down to where leges,same-sex marriage-like re- you can t ur n i nt o t h e O utback lationships merit the same rights Steakhouse? as opposite-sex relationships. AcWhat part of "this is a major trafknowledging these rights is long fic problem" don't ODOT and the overdue. Burlington Northern Railroad get'? Within the churches, active ho- How can a two-lane roundabout at mosexualityneeds to be addressed. 15th Street and Reed Market Road At the same time, the full spectrum solve this problem? of human sexuality needs to be adI think it's way past time for somedressed. Promiscuity, premarital one to get this traffic mess cleared and extramarital sex, adultery and up. After all, Reed Market is a very a long list of activities that do not important east-west byway in this belong within a moral expression of town, carrying thousands of cars sexualityneed to be addressed. This and emergency vehicles every day. issue of homosexuality challenges Why can't the city of Bend make us to avoid hypocrisy and recommit logical decisions regarding our horto God'sstandards across the spec- rible traffic problems and act like trum of morally founded sexuality. the large city it wants to be? Gordon Shaw Judith Vanderpool Bend Bend
ery law enforcement officer took it upon him- or herself to interpret the law as he or she saw fit? Should law enforcement apply the Oregon Basic Rule regarding speed limits to all laws, so that each officer gets to decide whether or not a law is broken'? Law enforcement officials are elected and paid to support existing laws. Those who choose not to do so are not eligible to be called officers of the law. Judy Alford Bend
Say yes to larger fines for cellphone driving I definitely think we should impose larger fines on drivers using cellphones. I saw the piece in the paper where Sen. Betsy Close (R-Albany) voted against the bill because she's worried that the fines are too
steep, especially for young people.
What about the people who are killed by some distracted driver using their cellphone? Maybe if people get hit with higher fines, they'll Questions for supporters think t w ic e a b out e n dangering themselves and others on our roadof sheriffs ways — and, hey, it will be more To all who support Linn County money so that Oregon can afford Sheriff Ti m M u eller's comments more policeto catch speeders and that he would not support laws cellphone users who are endangerthat he believes infringe upon the ing the public. When Oprah still had Second Amendment, Iwould pose her show onthe air,she did a piece three questions: about people who have lost loved How safe would you feel if your ones or who were severely injured law enforcement officers arbitrarily and now have life-altering physical decided which laws they would or problems due to these careless, diswould not support, regardless of the tracted drivers. Constitution? Darlene Ashley How safe would you feel if evRedmond
Reed Market Road needs attention As I sat in traffic today on the east side of town, specifically Reed Market Road, this thought went through my mind: Why are we getting two overpasses at the south end of Bend on Highway 97 when we can't get one overpass over the Burlington Northern Railroad tracks on Reed Market Road? I sat through four traffic signal changes at 15th Street and Reed Market, while traffic backed up in
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Right to own a gun also comes with responsibilities T By Helen Seidler he presumably unintentional midday shooting of a man by his wife in Bend's northside McDonald's on Feb. 7 gives us the opportunity to reflect on Oregon's gun laws and the issue of public safety. The shooting occurred when t he wife's loaded and unlocked gun fell on the floor, sending a bullet into the husband's stomach. Is it legal to take a loaded and unsecured gun into a public establishment? The answer is yes. Any adult (most convicted felons excepted) can carry any exposed and legally available gun into a public
dling guns that cause injury or damage (as in the McDonald's incident) or being in the wrong place at the wrong time when guns are used deliberately in a public setting (as in the Clackamas Town Center shooting last December). Those of us who feel this is an acceptable situation need not challenge the status quo. But for those of us who think we can do better, this is the time to act. And action means contacting elected representatives in both Salem and Washington, D.C. to voice your opinion on increas-
ing gun safety. While the right to own guns is
place (schools and federal buildings not under dispute, the rights of the excepted) with no requirements that the gun be unloaded or locked. If the gun is concealed, a concealed handgun license is required. There is an obvious risk to public safety when practically anyone can be armed with a w eapon without restriction. The danger to the public arises either from mistakes in han-
non-gun-owning publicneed to be acknowledged and upheld as well. Those rights should include protection from gun violence in public, a right that would be enjoyed by gun owners and non-gun owners alike. The right to gun ownership should be accompanied by responsibilities compatible with owning a deadly
IN MY VIEW
weapon. Gun owners should be held liable for damage caused by their weapons to people and property. This would include leaving their weapons unsecured sothat children and those seeking to steal weapons are able to access them. I can think of several reasons to have a gun. One is owning a tangible piece of American history represented by guns handed down from earlier generations. Another is sport shooting, which can be and for the most part is safely practiced at shooting ranges. A third is self-defense in the home (which requires accepting the fact that statistically, those who live in homes withguns are atfargreater risk of harm than any intruder might be). A final reason to have a gun is to impose one's will on another person or persons with the threat or reality of firing the gun. That final reason leads to criminal law, but that is not
In 1973, about half of American households had guns; in
2010, only one in five Americans owneda gun. Surely we
can find a way to allow the minority who own guns to do so without sacrificing the safety of the majority of us who do not. where the gun regulation gaps can be found. The gaps are in the uncontrolled proliferation and ready access to guns by everyone. M aybe some also want to ow n guns just because they like them. But most of us do not own guns. The National Policy Opinion Center at the University of Chicago conducts a periodic General Social Survey and has found that gun ownership has declined in recent decades. In 1973, about half of American households had guns; in 2010, only one in five Americans owned a gun. Surely we can find a way to allow the minority who own guns to do so without sacri-
ficing the safety of the majority of us who do not. Oregon's gun laws are notoriously lax, requiring no registration or safety training in order to buy a gun, no safety locking devices or safety standards for guns, and no penalty for allowing a minor access to a firearm. While Oregon does require background checks of purchasers at gun shows, sales through the newspaper and the Internet are free of these checks. There is much work to be done on the gun safety issue. Please join the conversation now. — Helen Setdler lives in Bend.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
BS
OREGON NEWS
BITUARIES DEATH N O T I CE S
Charlene Ruth Clifton, of Bend Nov. 12, 1924 - Feb. 16, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will take place in July in Snohomish, Washington. Contributions may be made to:
The charity of your choice.
Sharon Louise Miller, of Redmond June 21, 1947 - Feb. 13, 2013 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel 541-548-3219 please sign our online guestbook www.redmondmemorial.com Services: None will be held at her request.
Robert "Bob" Wylder Mar. 13, 1936 - Feb. 16, 2013 Robert J. Wylder of Bend passed away on F ebruary 16 at the age of 76. He was p receded m d e ath b y h i s w ife, Susan Wylder. H e i s survived by h t s d a ughter, Melissa Farley and grands on, Connor F a rley, b o t h of Danville, CA, as well as many nieces and nephews. S ervices will b e h el d o n M onday, February 2 5 a t 1:00 p.m. a t Ni s w o n gerReynolds Chapel, 105 NW Irving A v e.. i n B e nd . I n lieu of f l o w ers, m emorial donations may be made to Partners In Care Hospice, 2075 NE W y att C t . , Bend OR 97701. P lease s ig n o u r gu e s t book at www.niswonger-reynolds.com
Barbara Scott Victorin Aug. 8, 1929- Jan. 26, 2013 B arbara w a s b o r n a n d raised in a s m all c o m munity on the Oregon Coast, "up Fiddle C r e ek " sh e fondly called it . Sh e t h en lived many y ears i n gh" Southern
Oregon
Barbara Scott Victorin
until moving to Madras in 1964. She also became a snowbird
spending
21 w mters enjoying the sunshine a nd wonderful f r i e nds i n Florence, AZ. Barb was creative, a gracious hostess, loyal friend, and a loving wife, mother, a nd grandmother. I n h e r r etirement, s h e en j o y e d visiting family and had recently become proficient at t exting t o k e e p i n t o u c h . H er o t h e r p a s s io n w a s playing cards, but as much f or the f r i endships as t h e cards. B arbara i s s u r v i ved b y her husband of 6 4 y e a r s, Bob; three children, Bruce Victorin ( Linda), J a n e t M orris ( Paul) a n d T r u d y Martin (Bill); seven grandc hildren; a n d 15 gr e a t grandchildren. She will be d eeply missed by al l w h o knew and loved her. A celebration of l if e w i l l be held Saturday, March 2, 1:00 p.m. at Culver Christ ian Church, 501 4th A v e . In lieu of f l o w ers, memor ial d o n a t i on s m a y b e made to Hospice ofJefferson County.
F E ATURED OBITUARY
Derby rescued exotic and performing animals By Christine Mai-Duc Los Angeles Times
L OS A N GELES — P a t Derby could coax Willie the bear with a handful of jelly beans, make Christopher the cougar twitch his tail on command and even kissed Rijo the tiger. But when it came to Walt Disney, she had less patience. Derby, a Hollywood animal trainer turned animal rights activist, once walked out on h im in th e m i ddle of f i l m ing for "Disney's Wonderful World of Color" after he subj ected her bear cub to t w o hours of retakes under the hot studio lights. She always got along better with animals than people, anyway, she often said. "I am not a natural at public relations," she once wrote. Derby, who later devoted her life to protecting and rescuing exotic and performing animals, died Friday after a long battle with throat cancer, said her longtime partner, Ed Stewart. She was 70 and died at their home in San Andreas, southeast of Sacramento and the site of a sprawling, 2,300acre animal sanctuary they established in 2000. In the 1960s and '70s, Derby was known in Hollywood circles as a trainer of anteaters,tigers and grizzly bears. She worked on the TV shows "Flipper," "Lassie" and "Gunsmoke" but later quit to become one of the most vocal critics of the abuse of animals in show business. Her 1976 book, "The Lady and Her Tiger," was a stinging expose of the industry's practices and angered much of the Hollywood elite. Her organization, th e P e rforming Animals Welfare Society, or PAWS, became a leading voice calling attention to the plight of animals in captivity and operated one of the first sanctuariesfor former wild animal petsand performers in the United States. " She was a g i ant of t h e animal r i g ht s m o v ement," said TV game-show host Bob Barker, a friend of nearly 30 years and a f ellow activist whose donations helped send a number of animals to the sanctuary, including Ruby, an elephant from the Los Angeles Zoo. "There was just no limit to what she could do. She had this great energy."
DEATHS ELSEWHERE Deaths of note from around the world: Magic Slim, 75: Musician who was a contemporary of blues greats Muddy Waters and Howlin' Wolf and who helped shape the sound of Chicago's electric blues. Died Thursday in Philadelphia. — From wi re reports
Obituary policy Death Notices are free and will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They maybesubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted Until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and Monday publication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. MondaythroUgh Thursday for publication on the second day after submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or Monday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; please call for details.
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708
2 girls surviveovernight 0"~ lf:after motherdiesin crash :'=., oc.> .:l By Steven DuBois
M ississippi, went into t h e brush and signaled McClure PORTLAND — As their to alert authorities. "I don't know exactly what mother lay dead in the middle of the night, a 4-year-old told us to turn around, but I'm Oregongirldragged herseri- just really thankful we did," ously injured younger sister McClure said Thursday. from a crashed car and the T he me n s p o tted t h e two huddled under a blanket wrecked car a few hundred — and waited. feet from the road. Nearby With th e m a ngled c ar were the two young girls, stuck deep in the woods, and scared and confused. "They no skid marks on the high- could say their names but way, the crash site was near- were totally in shock," Mcly impossible to detect. Clure said. In fact, authorities estiThe W ashington S t ate mate the sisters were alone Patrol said the girls' mother, in the frigid woods for sev- 26-year-oldJessica Rath, of eral hours early Wednesday Astoria, probably was asleep as many m otorists drove when she veered off the road past it. and struck the tree shortly The girls finally got help after midnight. She died at after two commercial fisher- the scene. men spotted what appeared McClure and Beutler disfrom a distance to be a bas- covered the crash site around ketball-sized gash in an al- 8:30 a.m. der tree along state Highway The 2-year-old, who had 401 between Astoria and Na- s erious leg i n j uries, w a s selle, Wash. Kraai McClure flown to a Portland hospital. and Scott Beutler travel the The 4-year-old was treated two-lane road f r e quently, at an Astoria hospital and and had a gut feeling some- released. thing was wrong. An Oregon Health & SciThe men slowed down, ence U n iversity s p o kesdiscussed the situation and woman confirmed that the decided to turn around and younger sister, Lylah Huff, go take a l o ok . M c Clure was at Doernbecher Children's Hospital. said he called 911 to see if there had been any reports The girls' father, Keaton of a wreck during the night. Huff, declined interview reThere hadn't. quests Thursday and asked Beutler, who was a first the hospital not to release his responder when he lived in daughter's condition.
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Doaon Way
Pond
be the easiestcourse of action. Such an approach could Continued from B1 involve dredging out a deIcing during the winter has fined channel while buildso far discouragedplants from ing up and "armoring" some taking root where they might areas where silt deposition turn shallows to dry land, he is most pronounced. Other said, adding that even if the portions of the pond could be pond reaches its maximum restoredas above-water-level silt-carrying capacity, the wa- parkland, he said, such as the ter should continue to flow. shallows in the wide bow just Club member Jim Lussier, behind the Drake Park stage. the former president and CEO M ike H ollern, CE O o f of St. Charles Health System, B rooks Resources and a asked the panelists what the pond-side resident, latched on long-term costs of doing noth- to Eilers' description of "deing might be. signer dredging." Hollern said While Eilers focused on the hispersonalpreference would cost of maintenance that is be for the future pond to represumed to be needed on the tain many of its present charaging PacifiCorp dam, Hous- acteristics, but acknowledged ton said the cost of inaction that those who live closest to may be more abstract. Those the water benefit most, and who enjoy the views across should contribute to a local the pond, its waterfowl, or improvement district to help paddling along the slow-mov- pay for any work on the pond. ing waters could lose those Hollern suggested a retainamenities if Mirror Pond is ing wall backfilled with silt left alone, he said. dredged from the pond could "It's not just the capital ex- be used to expand Harmon penditures, it's what do people Park on the west side of the care about," Houston said. river. Specifics of the future of the Houston said such a comdam were leftunaddressed promise could hit a "sweet spot" that could at least parThursday. Although not on Thursday's panel, A n gela tially satisfy those who desire Price of PacifiCorp was in views, wildlife habitat and attendance. Price declined to accessto the water for recreelaborate on how long Pacifi- ation. Dry land for expanded Corp intends t o c o ntinue parks could persuade the operating the dam, or what park district to buy in, Housmight happen if her company ton said, while developed wetconcludesthe cost of upkeep lands that could help clean up outweighs its power-generat- the wastewater dumped into ing potentiaL the pond by city storm drains Taking outthe dam comcould attract funding from pletely would have a signifi- the city or grants from clean cant impact beyond the area water groups. commonly thought of as MirGary Fish, founder of Desror Pond, Houston said. Re- chutes Brewery, joked that moving the dam would drop the brewery would have to water levels directly behind scrap "about 25 million pieces the dam by 8 to 10 feet, he of printed material" depicting said, and the river would find the pond that serves as the a new channel through the namesake of M i rror Pond main body ofthe pond. The Pale Ale, but echoed Houseffect could be noticeable as ton's comments about findfar upstream as McKay Park, ing a middle ground between where Houston said water dam removal and repeated levels could drop by a foot. dredging. "I don't think anybody's In response to an audience question, Houston said many going to get everything they of the consulting engineers want, but they should get a lot working on p ossible solu- of what they want," Fish said. tions for Mirror Pond are also T hursday's f o ru m wa s working on the Bend Park 8r independent of an effort unRecreation District's plans der way by the Mirror Pond
to develop a safe passage Management Board, a group through the Colorado Avenue Dam spillway, and are confident they can find a way to make both projects work together. The dam's removal would be the best option for fish, Eilers said, lowering water temperatures and boosting the level of available dissolved oxygen by allowing the river to move faster. He said a fastermoving river through Drake Park would also be likely to drive off the geese that have multiplied in the area over the years. Eilers suggested a fourth option — which he dubbed "designer dredging" — might
formed by th e Bend City Council in2009. The management board has an online questionnaire where l ocal residents can share w h at they value about Mirror Pond and the Deschutes River at www.mirrorpondbend.com through Feb. 25. In March and April, the board will be using the public input it's gathered to develop potential plans of action, including illustrations and cost estimates. Past estimates have placed the cost of a 1984-style dredging at between $2 and $5 million. — Reporter: 541-383-0387, shamrners@bendbulletin.com
20536 Gloucester Ln. • Greenbuilding features $179,950 • Qpen greatroom • Convenient islandkitchen Directions:From Bend Parkway, easton Empire Are., left on Boyd AcresRd, lefton GloucesterLn
W O O D H IL L
- PA R K -
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3004 NE Hope Dr. • Vaulted ceilings $215,000 • Great room plan • Attractive finishes
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Oirections:FromHighway20 East, north on NE 27th st.,righton NEFaith Dr., righton NEPikes PeakRd., left on NE Hope Dr. •
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1496 NE Saddle Rock Ct. • Freshlypainted inside $231,500 • Den/office& flex room • Vaulted ceilings, skylights Directions:From NE3rd St. (Business 97), eastonNE Olney Ave.(becomes NE PennAve., then NENeff Rd.), left on NE Parkridge Dr., left on NEDaphne Dr., right into NE Saddle RockCt.
63410 Overtree Rd. • 5 BRhome,z5 acres $579,000 •Cascademountainviews • Two mastersuites Directions: From BendParkway exit Empire Ave. eastbound, left on NE Purcell Blvd., right on YeomanRd., left onOvertreeRd.
NEw HQMEs
NORTHWEST i CROSSING i
N EA RI N G C O M P L E T I O N
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2346 NW Frazer Ln. • 8
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2616 NW Crossing Dr.
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• 4 bedroom, 3bathroom • FacesCompassPark • Pacedat $489,900
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NorthWest Crossing.
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2762 NW Crossing Drive
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B6
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
W EAT H E R Maps and national forecast provided by Weather Central LP ©2013. • •
•B4
4•
Today: Heavy CHX4NNE
snow in the mountains, lighter snow
HIGH
Ktt<Z.COM
Tonight: Heavy snow will continue for locations above 5,000
LOW
elsewhere.
49
f eet .
HIGH LOW
26
"
"
'
:
'
'
'
'
'
WEST Rain and very windy with snow above 4,DDDfeet.
4 4 DageS„5Q/35) n 6Ariifrg On a >'4 4 4 H;I)sboroport (and ) 4 4'4' 58/38,>t) Wa td,c,44 <54/34 EnterPn<< )' 4 4 4 4 44+Pfendletono 4 2/35 Meacham<g 4 4'En«r'.' 4 gr 46/35• ) )46/36 'Sandy.4 4 4 4 4 )4 CENTRAL Tillamooko,,E +4)I27 4 4 • .. ) ~ 4 4 p 4 4 d„ g 4 4 4 4 4 4 IIL 4 4Maupi d 4 4 ) d 46/31) d d < oa d 1 I Xh( d Windy, with rain <McMinnville, La Grande • 47/36 •I ' d Gov e rnmentt 4 52 ) 334 4 d d ood ." d 4 4 d 4 d and snow early, a
Q andan 4 4 4 4 4
4 4
Camp 33/22 < 4 4 4 oa
i <m42/31 Uniarr<rq 3/Y<25 4 4
) d 4 4 P 34 4 . 4. 4 4 4 444 4 4I Ign 4 4)/29~ salem 4 p 5/9 Granle y 4 4 ~ 4 4 4 4 4 4 then rain. 6) d d d47/36• 4 4 4 4 4' g 4 4 d< vigowaa » d , 51 2 9,„ d d 4 4 dg » t 4 U 26/2< sd d d 4 d 4 4 4 4 4 4 44 Albany~ dWar mSprinqs d 4 4 Espray4708 4 4 • ) 4 dog 4 4 4 4 4 EAST Newppg4 4d 4 <)9/35 • 4 d d d 5 2 /25 Ad I d d l5aKer t.ity 4 4 d Md d d 4 d d d 4 d 4 d4 Rain and snow dcorval)ls i 4 4 dcamPshermano d 4 5»3 4 4. d d 4 4 d4 4f d d4444 d 4 <v 449/35( d 4 amu)7~ ) 4 d d • fohn /n i <Tv d <, 4 4 d 4 early, turing to all Yachatsod~ • d4d d d 4 vn dg • PrinevillemoJ 4 4 4 - pay 4< 4'u d d d rain. )44 4 4"444& 44 )~ S i stersl/n 4 d d d 44 O'Paulina d ) 4 4 4 4 42/27 42/174 d d d d d d d d d g d d Q 4 d d d 4 d 8 47n9d d <RPdmondd 4 d E 49/2 Florencea 4 < Ugen If d d d d d K • 2 +4 n d 4 4 nvaledod J d d 9 d 4 . d 58/49 ~ 48/ 3 6 4 4 d d d d d p dnrivei • tsellCI d d d d d <i 4 dd d d < 4 931 d 6 d d ' 4 d <' 'm 7/ O O 49/264 dograthe<S 46 d d d d d d d d d 4 4 O O d ( N'SS d 4 4O O " /)64 n n, i n 4 " n 4 4 n n n n 4 otn n n a 4 4 4 Cottage „4 Oakridg .
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I
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o www m o
OH 7/23
. <6 e attle<6 4 49/39 ' 4 •
(in the 48 contiguous states):
• •
.
Halifax 25/18
Quebec
21/16
28/18
• 92a McAgen, Texas
I '""l':,";;
47/31 <)t' 4<'
• -26a
• 1.56 w Vicksburg, Miss.
K
Li
chica o
) v'4" m 36/75 L
Denver
4
38/30 h e w york 4"/33 41 /33 • , ilad elphia tn 40V33 n 44/ 29dk
~ ~
Columbus 6 ~
39/35
6 L o u'isviHe i ' «4 4 Jr
•
Oklahoma City Little Rock Nashville
44/25
Honoluluioh, v<~
R +
s Moines jt D e29/12
„ „,
CO 80/71
Detroit
o w v< ~
• 33/17
~i ~ C heyenn~
Vv<t
Crane Lake, Minn
Tj
Tijuana 65/50
P(
SO)5 /32,
H A W A I I Bos '
Chihuahua
q))rminghamt 6 t
t tt '
•
60137
•
Orleans 72/57
4/64
• Miami 83/73
70s
-% — • Anchorage 26/11
La Paz 69/55
Monterrey Mazatlan • TS/62
78/56o
CONDITIONS
Juneau
38/29
OALASKA
FRONTS Cold
snowfall is expected.
HIGH LOW
HIGH LOW
42 21
44 26
45 27
I Pi I
PLANET WATCH
TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION
Tomorrow Rise Set Mercu<Y....7:12 a.m...... 7:04 p.m. Venus......6:40 a.m...... 4:59 p.m. Mars.......7:24 a.m...... 6:44 p.m. Jupiter.....10:41 a.m...... 1 45 a.m. Satum.....ll:15pm......942 am. Uranus.....8:05 a.m...... 8:25 p.m.
Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 39/25 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........70m1995 Monthtodate.......... 0.00" Recordlow.......... 8in1955 Average monthtodate... 0.84" Average high.............. 45 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low .............. 24 Average year to date..... 2.37"
Barometricpressureat 4 p.m30.06 Record24 hours ...1.56 in1956 *Melted liquid equivalent
ULTRAVIOLET INDEX
OREGON CITIES
S K IREPORT
S aturdayThe higher the UV Index number, the greater ski report from around the state, representing H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:
City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.
for solar at noon.
Astaria ........47/41/0.72.....48/38/r.....47/41/sh Baker City...... 38/1 9/0.00.... 42/29/rs.....38/1 9/sn Brookings......50/34/0.10....51/39/sh.....48/35/sh Burns..........37/19/0.00.... 45/24/rs.....37/16/sn Eugene........46/35/0.09.....48/36/r.....46/36/sh Klamath Falls .. 38/1 5/trace ....47/26/r ...36/21/sn Lakeview.......36/16/0.00 ...44/24/rs.....34/16/sn La Pine........35/23/0.00.... 46/16/rs.....33/18/sn Medford.......47/34/0.09.....53/34/r.....44/28/sh Newport.......45/41/0.18.....50/38/r.....45/40/sh North Bend.....48/37/0.15.....50/40/r.....47/37/sh Ontario........45/23/0.00....47/32/sh.....46/26/sn Pendleton..... 45/30/trace.....52/35/r..... 49/30/rs Portland .......46/40/0.07.....46/36/r.....46/35/sh Prineville.......37/26/0.00....46/21/sh.....39/23/sn Redmond.......41/23/0.00.....49/27/r.....41/22/sn Roseburg.......48/38/0.07....50/37/sh.....45/32/sh Salem ....... 45/36/0 08 . .47/36/r ...47/36/sh Sisters.........42/23/0.00....47/19/sh.....36/24/sn The Dages......47/32/0.01 .....50/38/r.....50/32/sh
0 0
Snow accumulation in inches Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . . 1 . . . . . .64-66 H oodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . . . . 7 2 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .68-1 06 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 . . . . . 97-112 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . . 4 . . . . . . . . 98 Mt. HoodSkiBowl............ 4......55-60 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0 -0 . . . . . . . 123
LDW MEDIUM HIGH 2
4
6
8
10
ROAD CONDITIONS Snow level androadconditions representing conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday. Key:TT. = Traction Tires. Pass Conditions 1-5 at Siskiyou Summit........ Carry chains or T. Tires 1-84 at Cabbage Hill....... .. . Carry chains or T. Tires
Warner Canyon....... . . . . . . . 0.0... no report Wigamette Pass ....... . . . . . . . 4 . . . . . .36-85
Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . 8 . . . . . .33-40 Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0. . . . .93-185 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . . 1 .. . . . .47-60 SquawVagey, California..... . .0.0 . . 2 6 -97 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . .24-48 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . . 7 . . . . . .59 65 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . . 3 . . . . . . . . 39 For up-to-minute conditions turn to: For links to thelatest ski conditions visit: www.skicentral.com/oregon.html www.tripcheck.com or call 511 Legend:w-weather, Pcp-precipitation,s-sun, pc-partial clouds,cclouds, h-haze,sh-showers,r-rain, t-thunderstorms,sf-snawflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-raiu-snowmix, w-wind,f-iog, dr-drizzle,tr-trace
Hwy. 20 at Santiam Pass...... Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Government Camp.. Carry chains or T. Tires Hwy. 26 at Ochoco Divide..... Carry chains or T. Tires
TRAVELERS' FORECAST NATIONAL
INATIONAL WEATHER SYSTEMS
extremes
Partly cloudy to mostly sunny skies.
Light
HIGH LOW
Sunsettoday...... 5 45 p.m F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 6:52 a.m Sunset tomorrow... 5:46 p.m Moonrisetoday.... 2:58 p.m Maonsettoday .... 4:46 a.m Feb. 25 Mar. 4 Mar. 1I Mar.19
Yesterday F r iday Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W
IA
qpe, Cpeqh CC'qhqy
SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 6:53 a.m Moon phases
49'38
I A
A few clouds, much drier.
BEND ALMANAC
. Astoria 4 d d d d d d 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 d d d d 4 4 4 4 d 4 4 4 d d d d d d d 4 4 d 4 d ( 4 d awmd4 d d d 4 d 2 d d d d d d d d 4 U 8 Ba 1 d d d d d d 4 4 d 4 d d' d d d d Seasideo ' ' ' ( d d 4 d klOOGd4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 a %" I ', d 4 ' o44 ( oCannonBeochd ) 4 4 4 4 oivet) dTf<ed d d d d 4 4 4 A • u d d d d d d ld 4 d d d d <! d d 4/d,wagowa,d 4 d 4 4 4R ' o-4 d d4 <4 < „4Nf)39d p 8 Biggsd d . ' a 4 d• Hermistonssas < P t a OW a ,
coo 8 y 4 4
Early morning snow will come to an end by the afternoon.
57 20
IFORECAST:5TATE
incon nyd
•
• ++$t • • ++++ t
a4
* * ** * * *
*
*
*
4< < 6
W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Snow
Ice
Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday Yesterday Friday Saturday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/La/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/LolW Hi/LolW City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene TX......63/41/018...53/29/s .. 60/44/s GrandRapids... 26/21/000... 33/28/i. 33/23/sn RapidCity.......25/19/008..33/I7/pc. 41/21/pc Savannah.......71/35/000... 67/58/t...75/50/t Akron..........25/18/001 ... 40/29/< ..40/24/rs Green Bay........23/4/0.00 ..30/23/su. 31/14/sn Rena...........46/27/0.00 ..53/30/pc.. 45/23/c Seattle......... 44/39/0.07... 49/39/r. 46/39/sh Albany..........24/18/000 ..37/26/pc ..38/30/rs Greensboro......54/25/0 00... 37/34/r. 45/37/sh Richmaud.......46/24/000... 38/37/r...48/35/r Sioux Falls.......23/11/004... 21/5/sn. 23/I5/pc Albuquerque.....46/27/022..44/25/pc. 52/29/pc Harusburg.......35/23/0.00... 36/318..39/31/rs Rochester, NY....21/14/0.00... 37/31/c ..44/28/rs Spokane........37/27/0.04 .. 42/31/rs. 43/25/sn Anchorage......27/19/000..26/11/sn. 26/16/sn Hartford,CT.....31/24/000..39/26/pc..37/31/rs Sacramento......61/33/000 ..64/42/pc. 61/37/pc Springfield, MO ..32/28/062... 32/I5/s. 37/24/pc Atlauta.........64/34/000...52/44/t...61/41/r Helena..........36/18/000...39/26/c. 38/21/snSt. Lauis.........30/21/089 ..37/19/pc.34/23/pc Tampa..........79/60/000 ..82/66/pc. 81/69/pc Atlantic City.....37/22/000...41/36/r...48/38/r Honolulu........79/69/020 ..80/71/sh. 79/70/sh Salt Lake City....35/26/002 .. 33/28/sn.34/19/su Tucson..........52/33/000...56/33/s.. 65/38/s Austin..........79/59/001 ..66/3ipc .. 73/46/s Houston........75/60/029 ..72/45/pc .. 71/52/s SanAntonio.....80/63/000... 71/41/s .. 74/47/s Tulsa...........36/32/086...37/I9/s. 44/29/pc Baltimore ......38/23/0.00... 38/33/r...42/34/r Huntsvile.......56/31/0.20... 63/41/t. 54/32/pcSanDiego.......59/48/000..63/49/pc. 62/49/pc Washington,0C..41/25/000... 39/35/r .. A4/36/r Billings........ 38/20/0.04..39/26/pc..42/27/rs Indianapolis.....31/17/0.00 ..43/26/sh. 35/23/pc SanFrancisco....57/44/000 .. 58/45/pc.56/43/pc Wichita.........29/23/086...27/Npc. 34/25/pc Birmingham.....63/33/0.02... 66/49/l. 60/39/pc Jackson, MS.... 60/42/0.91 . 76/44lt. 61/40/pc SanJose........58/37/000 ..61/41/pc 58/39/pc Yakima.........53/23/000... 49/29/r. 51/28/pc Bismarck........23/13/0.10...23/9/pc. 27/12/pc Jacksonvile......70/37/0.00...82/61/c...81/60/t SantaFe........43/24/000..38/I9/pc. 46/25/pc Yuma...........65/41/000... 69/43/s.. 73/48/s Boise...........43/20/000... 47/31Ir ..41/2Ilrs Juneau..........37/35/013... 38/29/r ..35/30/rs INTERNATIONAL Boston..........33/25/000...37/29/s ..38/30/rs KansasCity......24/20/0.59 ..28/13/pc. 34/24/pc Budgeport, CT....35/24/0.00..38/31/pc..39/33/rs Lausing.........24/20/0.00... 32/278.. 33/22/c Amsterdam......36/28/000.. 33/25/c 36/30/c Mecca..........91/72/000 .97/73/s ..95/73/s Buffalo.........21/16/0.00.. 38/30/rs..42/25/rs Lasyegas.......53/37/0.00...57/43/s.. 63/42/s Athens..........57/53/000... 63/47/r .. 58/50/s MexicoCity .....77/55/000... 75/45/s .. 76/44/s BurlingtonVT....I9/11/002... 33/25/s. 38/30/sn Lexington.......37/16/0 00.. 56/34/sh. 46/26/pc Auckland........77/59/000 ..79/59/pc.79/57/pc Montreal.........21/9/013 ..32/27/pc ..34/32/rs Caribou,ME.....34/27/001 ... 30/2/s.. 32/16/c Lincoln..........24/21/029...24/5/pc. 30/19/pc Baghdad........71/50/000..75/62/pc. 78/55/pc Moscow.........19/3/000 ..22/10/pc... 15/6/c Charleston, SC...65/34/0.00... 62/56/t...69/49/t Little Rock.......37/32/1.25... 51/30/s. 50/33/pc Bangkok........95/81/000 ..97/73/pc. 97/77/pc Nairobi.........86/57/000... 82/58/s.. 81/57/s Charlotte........58/29/000...41/38/t...52/39/r LosAngeles......61/45/000..63/48/pc. 61/49/pc Beiyng..........37/21/000 ..40/31/pc. 44/29/pc Nassau.........82/68/000 ..78/71/pc. 78/72/sh Chattanooga.....53/32/000...58/44/t.61/34/pc Louisville........39/21/002 ..55/31Ish. 44/26/pc Be<rut..........61/57/000...70/55/c.62/53/sh New 0elh<.......79/54/000... 78/57/c. 75/56/sh Cheyenne.......2)/I2/007...32/16/c. 42/19/sn Madison VY J.....25/I0/0 00... 32/20/i. 29/11/pc Berlin...........28/23/000...30/27/c.31/30/su Osaka..........45/30/000 ..45/34/pc. 43/36/pc Chicago.........32/19/000...36/25/i.31/21/pc Memphis....... 45/34/086 53/31/pc 49/34/pc Bogota.........66/50/0.07... 75/52/t .. 79/52/c Oslo.............21/0/0.00 .. 33/28/pc. 32/18/pc Cincinnati.......32/21/000 ..52/30/sh. 42/25/pc Miami..........82/68/0.00..83/73/pc. 84/69/pc Budapest........36/19/000 .. 32/32/si.35/30/sh Ottawa..........25/3/006 .. 32/25/pc ..34/25/rs Cleveland.......22/18/001 ... 37/30/i. 37/27/pc Milwaukee..... 28/18/0.00... 33/25/i. 30/18/pc BuenasAires.....81/63/2 35..81/66/pc.. 83/67/c Paris............37/28/0 00..34/25/pc. 34/26/pc Colorado Spnugs.27/18/000..35/16/pc. 45/22/pc Minueapolis......22/7/0.00 ..26/14/su .. 27/8/pc CaboSanLucas..72/59/0 00..68/63/pc. 75/55/pc Ria deJaneira....95/77/000...89/73/s...84/73/t Columbia,MO...27/22/I 42 ..30/12/pc. 31/19/pc Nashville........48/25/014...62/34/c. 51/32/pc Cairo...........77/54/000..77/55/pc.. 71/51/s Rome...........55/34/0 00..53/45/sh...51/47/r Columbia,SC....65/32/0.00... 46/45/t...55/44/r New Orleans.....75/55/0.01... 72/57/t...70/56/t Calgary..........36/9/000..37/23/pc.. 36/19/s Santiago........91/55/0 00..88/63/pc.. 82/59/s Columbus, GA....69/34/000... 64/57/t. 67/44/sh New York.......34/24/0.00 ..41/33/pc...42/33/r Cancun.........84/75/0.00..84/77/pc. 84/76/pc SaoPaulo.......88/72/0.00...82/66/t...76/67/t Columbus, OH....29/22/000 ..44/29/sh. 41/24/pc Newark,NJ......36/24/0.00..40/33/pc. 42/33/sh Dublin..........37/36/000...36/33/c. 39/32/pc Sappara ........28/21/0 24...28/16/c...23/8/si Concord, NH.....27/19/000...37/21Is..37/29/rs Norfolk VA......44/29/0 00... 42/40/r...57/39/r Edinburgh.......39/27/0 00.. 31/29/sl.. 39/30/c Seoul...........36/19/0 00...33/I8/s. 34/24/pc Corpus Christi....85/71/000 ..72/50/pc.. 70/56/s OklahomaCity...37/32/0 74...40/27/s. 53/36/pc Geneva.........32/28/000...31/22/c. 30/19/pc Shangha<........48/41/0 00..48/38/pc.. 47/42/s DallasFtWorth...68/43/013... 54/32/s .. 63/44/s Omaha.........26/21/034.... 25/6/c. 29/18/pc Harare..........79/63/0 00...84/59/t. 79/56/pc Singapore.......84/77/0 1I...84/79/c...90/77/t Dayton .........26/20/000..46/28/sh. 38/23/pc Orlaudo.........83/57/0.00..84/64/pc. 86/66/pc Hong Kong......68/63/0 00..72/63/pc. 72/67/pc Stockholm.......27/18/0 00.. 29/28/si.. 32/20/c Denver..........23/12/0.11..41/20/pc.46/25/pc PalmSprings.....63/42/0.00...69/45/s.. 72/49/s Istanbul.........52/41/0 00...51/44/c. 49/43/sh Sydney..........79/73/0 00..73/70/sh...79/72/t pes Moines......27/19/008 ..29/I2/sn. 29/16/pc Peoria......... 29/I4/trace... 34/20/i. 30/I7/pc lerusalem .......63/43/0.00..68/50/pc. 57/49/sh Taipei...........70/61/0.00...69/60/t.. 66/64/c Detroit..........27/21/0.00... 35/30/i. 36/23/pc Philadelphia.....37/25/0.00... 40/33/r...45/36/r Johanneshurg....84/60/0.00...81/56/s.. 82/57/s TelAviv.........73/48/0.00..74/54/pc. 65/55/sh Duluth.......... 20/7/000 ..25/I5/sn .. 28/13/c Phaeuix.........58/39/000... 62/43/s .. 67/45/s Lima ...........75/66/0 00...75/70/t.. 77/71/c Tokyo...........45/34/0 00..46/36/pc. 46/32/pc El Paso..........51/33/000 ..54/33/pc .. 60/40/s Pittsburgh.......25/19/0 00... 38/358..43/26/rs Lishan..........63/52/0 00..59/52/sh 53/42/pc Toronto......... 25/9/0 00 . 32/32/si 37/25/rs Fairbauks.........2/-3/0.00...-4/-9/sn..l/-14/pc Portland,ME.....29/24/0.00...37/24/s.. 38/29/c London .........36/34/000...35/30/c. 38/29/pc Vancauver.......46/37/0 18...45/36/r. 46/39/sh Fargo...........20/8/000...20/4/sn... 21/8/c Pravidence......34/25/000..39/27/pc..39/31/rs Madrid .........52/45/0 04..50/38/sh. 43/26/pc Vienna..........32/25/0 00..28/28/sn. 33/33/sn Flagstaff........28/20/001 ..35/15/pc .. 42/14/s Raleigh.........54/25/0 00... 39/36/r...47/38/r Manila..........88/77/000... 79//4/t. 88/75/pc Warsaw.........27/18/000... 30/29/c ..32/29/si
WEST NEWS
Horse advocatesanxious for First Amendment ruling By Scott Sonner
::~~ — ."':~o'
The Associated Press
RENO, Nev.— There may or may not be too many horses on federal lands in the West, but a U.S. district judge says there's not enough judicial staff in Nevada to deal anytime soon with an appeal over First Amendment rights a t w i l d h o r se roundups. U.S. District Judge Larry Hicks told lawyers for the government and a horse protection group he won't make a ruling until after March on a case Liz Margerum/ Reno Gazette-Journal file photo sent back to his court last year A Nevada Department of Agriculture helicopter helps round up by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court Of wild horses on the Virginia Range, east of Reno, Nev. •
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Appeals. The lawsuit was brought by
Laura Leigh, a photographer and leader of the group Wild Horse Education who says her freedom Of press rights were violated in 2010 when she was denied access to mustang roundups in Nevada's Lincoln County near the Utah line. A three-judge panel in San Francisco overturned Hicks' earlier ruling and told Hicks to reconsider whether the Bureau of Land Management's restrictions on media access to roundups are constitutional. "Courts have a duty to conduct a thorough and searching review of any attempt to restrict public access," said Gordon Cowan, a Reno lawyer for Leigh. The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and National Press Photographers Association have signed on asbackers as friends of the COUft.
Hick said at the close of a two-day hearing Wednesday that he recognizes it's an issue that "strikes deeply in people's emotions and interests." "I also recognize the government is placed in a difficult position. It seems no matter what they do, they are going to be subject to certain controversy and challenges," Hicks said. Hicks said Nevada's judicial district is so understaffed that four judges now oversee cases that seven judges used to handle. He added that the district's caseload has nearly doubled
"When the government announces it is excluding the press ... its real motive may be to prevent the gathering of information about government abuses or incompetence."
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since it was fully staffed six years ago and that it was one of the busiest districts in the nation even then. Ninth C i r cuit A p p ellate Judge Milan Smith said in an 18-page opinion last February the COurt muSt balanCe the uVital public interest in preserving the media's ability to monitor government activities against the government's need to impose restrictions if necessary for safety or other legitimate reasons. "When the government announces it is excludingthepress forreasons such as administrative convenience, preservation of evidence, or protection of reporters' safety, its real motive may be to prevent the gathering of information about government abuses or incompetence," the judge wrote. About half of the estimated 37,000 horses and burros on federal lands are in Nevada. The BLM maintains that the range can sustain only about 26,000 and conducts roundups regularly to try to get closer to that number. Agency officials t estified
during the hearings this week they do their best to provide publicaccess to the roundups and temporary holding of the animals and denied Leigh's claims she was singled out to be kept away from the mustangs. "No one is treated any differently than any other one," testified Patricia Bute, who served as thepublic information officer overseeing the roundup. They said they eventually stopped public tours at one temporary facility in Nevada because interest was dmndling and the tourswere costing the government nearly$2,000 per tour— a total of more than $50,000 during the period. Horse protectionadvocates testified they believe the access was restricted because critics of the operations were gathering video documenting abuse of the animals. "I don't believe it was a matter of diminished interest, just some people quit hitting their head against BLM's wall before SOme Of the reSt Of uS did,u Said Terri Farley, author Of the children's book series "Phantom Stallion."
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© www.bendbulletin.com/sports
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
PREP WRESTLING
PREP SKIING
OISRAstate starts today
GIRLS PREP BASKETBALL
•
Cowgirls pull off upset
•
The Oregon Inter• •
scholastic Ski Racing
Association's nordic division is staging its state championship meet today and Saturday at Willamette Pass Resort. The girls kickoff the
over Storm
eventat 1 p.m.today with a 5,000-meter
freestyle race. Theboys are scheduled to start 15 minutes after the
conclusion of the girls race. Racing continues Saturday morning at10
o'clock with the boys 5K classic races. The girls classic on the same course starts five minutes after the boys are finished.
The boys andgirls varsity and junior varsity relay races, which
are slated for noon, conclude the two-day
competition.
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Coach J.D. Alley watches as his team practices Wednesday evening at Culver High School. The Bulldogs are preparing for their upcoming state wrestling championship this weekend.
The Mountain View boys are aiming for their
seventh consecutive OISRA state championship, while the Cougars' girls team is vying for its fourth straight title. For more information,
go to www.oisra.org. — Bulletin staff report
NBA
Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Crook County snapped a six-game losing streak and possibly stole away Summit's bye into the first round of the Class 5A girls basketball state playoffs Thursday night when the Cowgirls upset the Storm 63-54 in both teams' final regularseason game of the year. Freshman Kimmer Severance scored a game-high 27 points for Crook County in the Intermountain Hybrid contest, and Jessie Maley-Loper added 18 points for the Cowgirls (10-14 overall), who play at Seaside on Saturday in the 4A play-in round. "Hopefully this builds some momentum that carries over into the play-in game," Cowgirls coach Dave Johnson said. The Storm (17-7), who entered the game No. 8 in the Oregon School Activities Association rankings — the top-eight teams at the end ofthe regular season receive byes into the 5A state playoffs — trailed 20-14 at the end of the first quarter and were behind 34-26 at halftime. Sarah Heinly and Raja Char scored 19 points apiece — both guards hit four 3-pointers Thursday — but Summit had no answerforSeverance, especially late in the game. Crook County's standout post scored 13 points in the fourth quarter to help the Cowgirls seal the victory and knock Summit to ninth in the OSAA rankings. The Storm, who would likely host a play-in game if they finish outside the top eight, will learn their postseason fate Saturday night.
Blazers trade for point guard
BOYS PREP BASKETBALL
PORTLAND — Port-
land acquired reserve point guard Eric Maynor from the Oklahoma City Thunder at the NBA trade deadline on
Thursday. Maynor is making
$2.3 million this season and becomes arestricted free agent this sum-
mer. The Blazers acquired him in exchange for the draft rights to
Georgios Printezis. Maynor, in his fourth NBA season, is
averaging 2.8 points, two rebounds and10.6 minutes in 37 games with the Thunder this
season. Hemissed most of last season with a
knee injuryand then got bypassed in the rotation by second-year guard Reggie Jackson earlier this season. The Blazers acquired the draft rights to Print-
ezis last July in a trade that sent Raymond Felton and Kurt Thomas to the New York Knicks. Portland used the trade exception from that deal
to acquire Maynor. "Eric is a player we have valuedand pursued for some time," Blazers general managerNeil 01shey said in astatement. "His skill level andchar-
• Culver wrestling coach I.D. Alley hasbuilt oneof thetop programsinthe state By Grant Lucas
CLASS 6A, SA, 4A, 3A AND 2A/1ASTATE WRESTLING CHAMPIONSHIPS
The Bulletin
CULVER — J.D. Alley's passion for wrestling is immeasurable. He holds the sport in the highest regard and has looked to instill that passion in hiswrestlers each season. His commitment has developed into consistency at tiny Culver High School that few other prep athletic
When:Today, 8:30 a.m.; Saturday, 8:30 a.m. (finals start at 6:30
p.m.) Where:Memorial Coliseum, Portland
Cost:$15 for adults, $10 for
programs in Oregon can match. The Bulldogs have placed in the top two of the Class 2A/IA state championships in 10 of the past 11 seasons. They have taken six consecutive state titles and will be bidding to make it seven in a row this weekend at Portland's Memorial Coliseum, where the Oregon School Activities Association state championships begin today and conclude on Saturday. For nearly a generation — 23 years to be exact — Alley, 46, has been the head coach for Culver wrestling, a run of longevity that among current varsity coaches in Central Oregon
students on Friday; $10 for adults,
$8 for students per session on Saturday Wed:www.osaa.org
is matched only by Bend High boys basketball's Don Hayes. "I think it's rare, and I think it's only going to get rarer," says Rusty Zysett. Currently the athletic director at La Pine High, Zysett was an assistant wrestling coach at Culver in the mid-1980s when Alley was a member of the Bulldog wrestling team. And Zysett was athletic di-
rector at Culver in 1990, when Alley was hired as head coach of the school's wrestling program. "In this stage, professional sports teams, if you don't win right away, you're fired as a coach," says Zysett. "Now, that's trickled down to the college level with the amount of money they make, and of course it's trickled down to the high school level in a much lesser form, but there's still that expectation that when you come in, you're going to win. I think it's special that someone can stay
at a school for as long as he (Alley) has and be as revered as he is in that community and the wrestling world." The length of his tenure is a bit staggering even to Alley. A threetime wrestling state champion at Culver and an NAIA national runner-up in 1989 while at what is now Southern Oregon University, he never envisioned himself back then as a coach. SeeAlley/C4
"Just to watch kids mature and grow, that is the reward in coaching. They don't have to win state championships to have value, to lend validity to what wrestling's about.... In myjob, whether I can get a kid to achieve a state medal is really not the important thing. The important thing is to instill that same passion about wrestling in them." — Culver wrestling coach J.D. Alley
g
urnrnit rO//g to victory over Crook County Bulletin staff report Nine players scored for Summit as the Storm ended their regular season with a 74-57 Intermountain Hybrid boys basketball rout over visiting Crook County on Thursday. Nick Moyer scored 20 points and Ben Ritchey added 15 points, but the highlight of the night, according to Summit coach Jon Frazier, was Storm student-manager Ronak Patel starting and playing extensively in the fourth quarter. "That was the first time he's ever suited up," Frazier said. "There was some good energy out there and that gave us a lift." Preston Washechek led the Cowboys, who finished the season 7-17 overall, with 16 points. Summit (11-13), which will likely be on the road Tuesday for a Class 5A play-in round game, led 38-31 at halftime but put the game away in the third period by outscoring Crook County 22-9. "We were able to play a lot of kids and keep a high tempo," Frazier said. "Eventually that wore them down and we forced some turnovers which led to easy buckets." The Storm, who snapped a two-game losing streak Thursday, will find out who their play-in opponent is late Friday night.
acter will be excellent additions to our culture
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on and off the floor."
MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL
As a result of the deal for Maynor, the Blazers
waived backup guard Ronnie Price, who averaged 2.7 points, 1.1
Formany teams,hopeshingeon health
rebounds, 1.9 assists and13.1 minutes in 39
games. Many expected the Blazers to move big man J.J. Hickson, who
signed a one-year deal worth a reported $4 mil-
lion prior to this season. For more onThursday's trades, seeC3. — The Associated Press
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Ducks, Beavers each suffer loss A last-second shot by Cal kills Oregon, while Oregon State is rolled by Stanford,C3
By Noah Trister The Associated Press
Derek Jeter crumpled to the dirt, his season suddenly over and his baseball future uncertain. New York's pennant hopes faded quickly after the star shortstop broke his ankle last October, and the offseason was not much easier "I .~jJ for the Yankees, with Jeter and his team forced into a tense recovery process that still is not yet over. "Our big thing is not to have any setbacks now," Yankees manager Joe Girardi said recently. "Let's not push this too fast. Let's get to where he's supposed to be when he's supposed ! l,, t - , to be there, and not hurry. But, it's really nice to see him on the field." li 'r For Jeter and the Yankees, the April I season opener against Boston is looking more like a deadline than a day of anticipation. Matt Slocum / rhe Associated Press Jeter insists he will be in the lineup that afNew York Yankees' Derek Jeter, right, points to his ternoon, but teammate Alex Rodriguez has ankle as he talks with first base coach Mick Kelle- no chance. her during a workout Wednesday in Tampa, Fla. SeeHealth/C4
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY GOLF 6a.m.: LPGATour, LPGA Thailand, second round, Golf Channel. 9:30 a.m.:World Golf
Championships, Match Play Championship, third round, Golf Channel.
MOTOR SPORTS 12:30 p.m.:NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Daytona qualifying, ESPN2.
BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Men's college, North Dakota State at Akron, ESPN2.
Belmont, ESPN2.
8 p.m.: Men'scollege, Washington at Arizona State, ESPNU.
GOLF 9 a.m.:World Golf Championships, Match Play Championship, fourth round,
Golf Channel. 11 a.m.: World Golf
Championships, Match Play Championship, fourth round, NBC. 11 a.m.: LPGA Tour, LPGA Thailand, third round, Golf Channel.
4 p.m.:Men's college, St. Louis at Butler, ESPNU. 5 p.m.:NBA, Minnesota
Timberwolves at OklahomaCity Thunder, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Stephen E Austin State at Long Beach State, ESPNU.
MOTOR SPORTS 10:15 a.m.:NASCAR, Nationwide Series, Daytona, ESPN. 10 p.m.:NHRA, Arizona
at Mountain View, COTV.
Spurs at Golden State Warriors, ESPN. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail
Blazers at Los Angeles Lakers, Comcast SportsNet Northwest. 8 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon State at Stanford, Pac12 Network.
HOCKEY 1 p.m.:Men's college, New Hampshire at Vermont, CBSSN.
6 p.m.:Friday Night Fights, Kendall Holt vs. Lamont
Peterson, ESPN2.
Anton Kuivanen vs. Michael Chiesa, FX.
SOCCER
Stanford at Utah, Pac-12 Network.
Indiana State, ESPNU.
9 a.m.:Men's college, Clemson at Maryland, ESPN2.
SUNDAY MOTOR SPORTS 9 a.m.: NASCAR, Sprint Cup, Daytona 500, Fox. 5 p.m.: NHRA, Arizona Nationals
9 a.m.:Women's college, Johnson C. Smith at Shaw, CBSSN. 10 a.m.:Men's college, Eastern Kentucky at Valparaiso, ESPNU.
BASKETBALL 10 a.m.:NBA, Los Angeles
10 a.m.:Men's college,
at Michigan, ESPN.
Lakers at Dallas Mavericks, ABC.
10 a.m.:Men's college, lllinois 10 a.m.:Women's college, Purdue at Minnesota, ESPN2.
11 a.m.: Men's college, South
10 a.m.: W omen'scollege,Texas Carolina at Georgia, CBS. Tech at Kansas, RootSports. 11 a.m.:Men's college, Oklahoma 10:30a.m.:Women'scoll ege,NC State at West Virginia, ESPN2. 11 a.m.: Men's college, VCU at
State at North Carolina, ESPNU.
11 a.m.:Men's college, xavier, CBSSN. Cincinnati at Notre Dame,CBS. Noon:Men'scollege,Montanaat Noon:Women's college, Dukeat Davidson, ESPNU.
Maryland, ESPN2.
Noon:Men'scollege,W ashington
Noon: W omen'scollege,Arizona
State at Arizona, Root Sports.
1 p.m.: Men'scollege, Georgetown at Syracuse, CBS. 1 p.m.:Men's college, NC State at North Carolina, ESPN. 1 p.m.: Men's college, Detroit at Wichita State, ESPN2.
1 p.m.:Men's college, New
at Arizona State, Pac-12 Network. 12:30 p.m.:Women's college, Notre Dame at DePaul, ESPNU.
12:30 p.m.:Men's college, UCLA at USC, Root Sports.
1 p.m.: Men's college, Michigan State at Ohio State, CBS.
2 p.m.:Women's college, Texas
Mexico at Colorado State, NBCSN. A&M at Vanderbilt, ESPN2.
2 p.m.:Men's college, Baylor at Oklahoma, ESPNU.
2 p.m.: Men'scollege,Santa Clara at Portland, Root Sports. 3 p.m.:Men's college, Creighton
2 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon State at California, Pac12 Network.
3 p.m.:Men's college, Florida
3 p.m.:Men's college,
State at Virginia Tech, ESPNU. 4 p.m.: NBA, Memphis Grizzlies at Brooklyn Nets, ESPN.
Marquette at Villanova, ESPN2.
4 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon
3 p.m.:Men's college, Nevadaat
at Stanford, Pac-12 Network. 6 p.m.: NBA, Boston Celtics at Portland Trail Blazers, Blazer
at St. Mary's, ESPN.
San Diego State, NBCSN. 3 p.m.:Men's college, California at Oregon State, Pac-12 Network.
4 p.m.:Men's college, Arkansas at Florida, ESPNU.
4 p.m.:Men's college, San Diego at Gonzaga,Root Sports. 5 p.m.:Men's college, South Dakota State at Murray State, ESPN2. 5 p.m.: Men's college, Stanford at Oregon, Pac-12 Network.
5 p.m.:Men's college, Harvard at Yale, CBSSN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Missouri at Kentucky, ESPN.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Providence at Rutgers, ESPNU.
6 p.m.:Men's college, Pepperdine at SanFrancisco,
Network (Ch. 39). 6:30 p.m.:NBA, Chicago Bulls at Oklahoma City Thunder, ESPN.
BASEBALL 6 p.m.:College, Oregon State at San Diego State, KICE-AM 940.
BASKETBALL 7:30 p.m.:NBA, Portland Trail Blazers at Los Angeles Lakers, KBND-AM 1110, KRCO-AM 690.
Championships, Match Play Championship, final round, NBC.
HOCKEY 1 p.m.: Men'scollege,Boston College at Merrimack, CBSSN. 4:30 p.m.: NHL, Tampa Bay Lightning at Pittsburgh Penguins, NBCSN.
3 p.m.:Men's college, California at Oregon State, KICE-AM 940. 5 p.m.: Men's college, Stanford at Oregon, KBND-AM 1110.
SUNDAY BASEBALL Noon:College, Oregon State at San Diego State, KICE-AM 940.
SATURDAY
BASKETBALL 6 p.m.: NBA, Boston Celtics at
Portland Trail Blazers, KBND-AM BASKETBALL
Thursdey's results Intermountain Hybrid SUMMIT (54) — SarahHeinly 19, RajaChar 19, Trejo12,Cuniff 2,Edwards2, Dugast. Totals 18 7-15 54.
CROOKCOUNTY(63) —Kimmer Severance27, Loper-Maley18,Ovens7, Malott 5, Lindburg5, Benton 2,Estes,Smith, Wood.Totals 2216-27 63. Summit 14 12 18 10 — 54 Crookcounty 20 1 4 11 18 — 63 Three-pointgoals — Summit:Heinly 4,Char4, Trejo 3;CrookCounty: Loper-Maley,Ovens, Lindburg.
Boys basketbalI Thursday's results Intermountain Hybrid CROOKCOUNTY (57) — Preston Washechek 16, Dees12,Benton10, Lee5,Sutlin 4,Rutz3,Bartels 3, Sofich 2,Kessi 2,Tavernia. Totals 246-1857. SUMMIT (74) Nick Moyer 20,Ritchey15, Peters 7,Rasmussen7, Categ 7, Higlin 7, Menefee5, Mullen 4 Dermon 2, Lucas, Reeves, Patel, Michalski. Totals 24 22-26 74. Crookcounty 10 2 1 9 17 — 67 Summit 20 18 22 14 — 74 Three-pointgoals—CrookCounty: Lee,Benton, Rutz;Summit: Peters,Higlin, Ritchey
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AH TimesPST
EasternConference Atlantic Division
GP W L OT PtsGF GA N ew Jersey 17 10 3 4 2 4 45 40 Pittsburgh 1 7 1 1 6 0 22 57 44 N.Y.Rangers 16 8 6 2 18 41 41 P hiladelphia 19 8 1 0 1 1 7 53 59 N.Y. Islanders 17 7 9 I 15 50 60 Norlheast Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Montreal 1 7 11 4 2 2 4 49 39 Boston 1 4 10 2 2 2 2 41 33 Ottawa 1 8 10 6 2 2 2 43 34 Toronto 1 8 11 7 0 2 2 51 41 Buffalo 1 8 6 11 1 1 3 48 59
Southeast Division
GP W L OT Carolina 15 8 6 1 TampaBay 16 8 7 1 Winnipeg 1 6 7 8 1 Florida 16 5 7 4 W ashington 16 5 1 0 1
1110, KRCO-AM 690.
PtsGF GA 17 44 44 17 61 51 15 41 50 14 40 58 1 1 43 54
Western Conference Central Division
GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 16 1 3 0 3 29 55 34 Nashwge 1 7 8 4 5 21 39 38 St. Louis 17 9 6 2 20 53 51 Detroit 17 7 7 3 17 45 51 C olumbus 1 7 5 1 0 2 1 2 39 53 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Vancouver 16 9 3 4 22 48 40 Minnesota 16 8 6 2 18 36 39 Coiorado 15 7 7 1 15 38 43 Edmonton 16 6 7 3 15 37 44 Calgary 15 5 7 3 13 40 54 Pacific Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Anaheim 15 1 2 2 1 25 53 39 San Jose 1 5 8 4 3 19 39 34 Phoenix 16 8 6 2 18 44 41 Dallas 17 8 8 1 17 44 47 Los Angeles 15 7 6 2 1 6 36 38 NOTE:Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss. Thursday's Games Ottawa3, N.Y.Rangers2,SO Toronto3,Buffalo 1 Florida 5,Philadelphia2 NewJersey3, Washington 2 Winnipeg 4, Carolina 3 N.Y.Islanders4, Montreal 3, OT Boston4, TampaBay2 Columbus 3, Detroit 2 Vancouver4Dallas3 Minnesota 3, Edmonton 1 Today's Games Florida atPittsburgh,4 p.m. VancouveratNashvile, 5 pm. San Jose atChicago,5:30p.m. Saturday's Games NewJerseyatWashington,9a.m. Winnipeg at Philadelphia,10a.m. PhoenixatEdmonton,12:30 pm. Colorado at LosAngeles, I p.m. Nashville atDetroit, 4p.m. Tampa Bayat Carolina, 4 p.m. TorontoatDttawa,4 p.m. N.Y.RangersatMontreal, 4p.m. N.Y. Islanders at Buffalo, 4p.m. SanJoseatDallas,5p.m. Columbus atSt. Louis, 5p.m. Minnesota at Calgary, 7p.m.
BASKETBALL NBA NATIONALBASKETBALL ASSOCIATION All Times PDT
Eastern Conference d-Miami d-NewYork d-Indiana
Brooklyn Chicago Atlanta Boston Milwaukee Philadelphia Toronto Detroit
Cleveland Washington Orlando Charlotte
W
L
38 32
14 19
33 33 31 29 28 26 22 22 22 17 15 15 13
21 22 23 23 26 27 30 33 34 37 37 39 41
WesternConference
W d-SanAntonio 4 4 d-Oklahoma City 39 d-L.A. Clippers 3 9 Memphis 35 Denver 34 GoldenState 31 Utah 31 Houston 30 L.A. Lakers 26 Portland 25 Dallas 24 Minnesota 20 NewOrleans 19 Sacramento 19 Phoenix 18 d-divisionleader
L 12 15 18 18 21 23 24 26 29 29 29 31 36 36 37
Thursday'sGames
Miami86,Chicago67 SanAntonio116,LA. Clippers90 Today's Games Chicagoat Charlotte, 4 pm. NewYorkatToronto, 4 p.m. Detroit atIndiana,4p.m.
DenveratWashington, 4 p.m. SacramentoatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Houstonat Brooklyn,4:30p.m. Orlandoat Memphis, 5p.m. Dallas atNewOrleans, 5p.m. MinnesotaatOklahoma City, 5p.m. Boston atPhoenix,6p.m. SanAntonioatGoldenState, 7.30p.m. Portlandat L.A.Lakers, 7:30p.m. Saturday's Games Denverat Charlotte, 4p.m. Clevelandat Orlando, 4p.m. HoustonatWashington, 4 p.m Miami atPhiladelphia,4:30p.m. IndianaatDetroit, 4:30p.m. AtlantaatMilwaukee 530pm Utah atL.A.Clippers,7:30 p.m.
Miami59,NcState55 MississippiSt.75, Alabama51 Old Dominion75 Wiliam 8 Mary64 Presbyterian62,Campbell 51 Tennessee 83,Auburn 61 Tulane57, UAB52 UALR51,FIU47
Thursday's Summaries
Pct GB 731 627 5'/z 611 6 600 6'/z 574 8 558 9 519 11 491 12'/z 423 16 400 17'/~ 393 18 315 22 288 23 278 24 241 26
Pct GB 786 722 4 684 5H 660 Zr/2
618 9'/z 574 12 564 12'/z 536 14 473 17/z 463 18 453 18'/z 392 21'/z 345 24'/~ 345 24'/z 327 25'/z
TENNIS Professional U.S. National IndoorChampionships Thursday At The RacpuetClub of Memphis Memphis, Tenn. Purse: Men,$1,353,550(WT500);W omen, $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles Men SecondRound MichaelRussell, UnitedStates,def. LukaszKubot,
Nebraska 57, Michigan39 S. DakotaSt. 69,Nebraska-Omaha56 SouthDakota56,IUPUI39
Spurs 116, Clippers 90 SAN ANTONIO (116) D.Green5-10 2-215, Duncan4-81-4 9, Splitter 3-4 4-410, Parker12-167-731, Neal1-22-2 5, Ginobili 3-5 3-410, Diaw 2-30-0 4, Bonner3-40-0 7, De Colo3-51-2 9, Jackson2-61-2 5, Blair1-4 0-0 2, Mills1-21-1 3,Baynes3-40-0 6. Totals 43-73 22-28 116.
Poland,6-2,6-4. Denis Istomin, Uzbekistan,def. Lleyton Hewitt, Australia, 6-1,6-2.
WichitaSt.68 Evansville49 Youngstown St. 73,ClevelandSt.69
AlexandrDolgopolov (7), Ukraine,def. RhyneWilliams,UnitedStates,6-4,4-6, 6-4. Marin Cilic (1),Croatia,def. Igor Sijsling, Nether-
Southwest Rice66,UCF49 SMU69,Tulsa60 Texas A8M82, Mississippi 53 UTEP 73, Houston 55 Fer West BYU79, Portland64 L.A. CLIPPERS (90) Cal Poly66,CSNorthridge 49 Butler 4-82-211, Griffin 7-173-417, Jordan1-1 E. Washington 83 PortlandSt. 51 002, Paul16224, Bigups 0-26-76, Crawford Gonzaga 70, SantaClara55 6-12 2-2 15,Barnes6-12 5-6 18, Odom2-4 0-04 Hawai54, i UCSanta Barbara 51 Bledsoe2-81-2 5, Hill 0-1 0-0 0,W.Green2-3 0-0 6, IdahoSt. 68,WeberSt. 37 Hogins1-20-02. Totals 32-7621-25 90. LoyolaMarymount58,Pepperdine56 SanAntonio 34 24 34 24 — 116 Pacific 81,CalSt.-Fullerton 50 L.A. Clippers 21 2 2 21 26 — 90 San Diego 67,Saint Mary's (Cal) 50 UC Davis70, UcRiverside56 UC Irvine65, LongBeachSt. 57
Heal 86, Bulls67 MIAMI (BB) James11-153-326, Haslem0-2 0-00, Bosh5-9 2-412, Chalmers4-100-0 8,Wade8 151-217, Battrer1-30-03, Andersen 0-21-21, Allen4-112-311, Cole 4-60-0 8,Anthony0-00-00, Lewis0-00-00, Jones0-00-00.Totals 37-73 9-14 86. CHICAGO (67) Deng3-120-0 6, Boozer5-9 2-2 12, Noah5-11 1-211, Robinson5-122-214, Hamilton 3-81-1 7, Gibson3-80-06, Butler0-30-00, Belinegi0-43-43, Teague3-50-06,Cook0-10-00, Mohammed1-2002,Radmanovic0-0 0-0 0.Totals28-75 9-1107. Miami 22 23 20 21 — 86 Chicago 22 13 19 13 — 67
Men's college Thursday'sGames East Bryant88,CCSU67
St. Francis(NY)76,Wagner 75 St. Francis(Pa.)69, FairleighDickinson63 Temple82 LaSale 74 Uconn73, Cincinnati66, OT South CharlestonSouthern92,VMI69 Duke88,Virginia Tech56 Elon 63,Samford 62 FIU 65,UALR52
Jacksonville68,Sc-Upstate64 Louisiana-Lafayette 76, Troy66 Mercer83, l.ipscomb58 Middl Tennessee85,SouthAlabama50 N. Kentucky64,KennesawSt. 54 North Florida77,ETSU64 Tennessee Tech83,UT-Martin 68 UNCGreensboro94, Chatanooga 68
W.Kentucky75,Louisiana-Monroe57 Wofford53,Georgia Southem47 Midwest BowlingGreen87,NewOrleans56 Rlinois64,PennSt. 59 Southwest Arkansas62,Georgia60 NorthTexas66, FAU57, OT Far West Californra48,Oregon46 Colorado60,Utah50 Portland70, SanDiego67 SaintMary's(Cal)64,BYU57 SanFrancisco61,Loyola Marymount59 Stanford82, OregonSt. 72 Thursday's Summaries
California 48, No. 23Oregon46 CALIFORNIA (17-9) Solomon 3-92-2 8, Kravish1-50-02, Cobbs6-11 2-414, Wallace 2-50-04, Crabbe5-121-212, Smith 0-30-00, Bakg-10-00, Thurman3-32-48. Totals 20-49 7-12 48. OREGON (21-6) Kazemi3-95-711, Singler1-124-67, Woods1-3 0-1 2, Loyd 0-6 0-00, Dotson4-121-2 9,Austin 2-4 0-04, Moore 0-00-00, Carter0-10-20, Emory5-11 2-213. Totals16-5812-20 46. Halftime Oregon26-21. 3 PointGoals California 1-6 (Crabbe 1-4, Smrth 0-2), Oregon2-15 (Emory 1-2, Singler1-7, Loyd0-2, Dotson0-4). Fouled Out—None. Rebounds —California 37 (Solomon 11), Oregon 39 (Kazemi 18).Assists—California13 (Cobbs7),Oregon8(Loyd4). Total Fouls—California 19, Oregon 12. A—8,223.
Stanford 82, OregonState 72 STANFORD (16-11) Brown5-11 3-513, Huestis 7-136-820, Powell 5-11 4-414,Bright5-110-012, Randle5-10 1-413, Nastrc0-0 0-00, Lemons1-1 0-02, Allen1-3 0-02, Harris 0-00-0 0, Verhoeven0-0 0-00, Gage2-4 0-0 6. Totals 31-6414-21 82. OREGON ST. (13-14) Moreland4-8 3-511, Burton8-14 0-116, Starks 0-2 0-0 0, Barton1-6 0-0 2, Nelson10-26 7-8 28, Robbin s0-0 0-0 0,Schaftenaar2-2 2-2 7,Reid 0-2 0-00, Collier3-52-48. Totals 28-6514-2072. Halftime —OregonSt. 35-34. 3-Point Goals—Stanford 6-16(Gage2-4, Randle 2-4, Bright2-4,Allen 0-1, Brown0-1,Huestis0-2), OregonSt 2-15(Schaftenaar 1-1, Nelson1-9, Starks 0-1, Barton0-2, Moreland 0-2). FouledOut—Randle. Rebounds—Stanford 40 (Huestis,Poweg11), OregonSt. 37(Moreland11). Assists — Stanford10(Bright6),OregonSt.12(Burton4) TotalFouls—Stanford17,OregonSt. 18.A—4,649. Pacific-12 Conference AH TimesPST
Conference Arizona Oregon UCLA California ArizonaSt Colorado SouthernCal Stanford Washington OregonSt. Utah WashingtonSt.
W 10 10 9 9 8 8 7 7 5 3 3 2
L 4 4 4 5 5 5 6 7 8 10 11 12
Thursday'sGames Calrfomia48,Oregon46
Overall
W L 22 4 21 6 19 7 17 9 19 7 18 7 12 14 16 11 13 13 13 13 11 15 11 16
Colorado60, IJtah50 Stanford82,OregonState 72
Saturday'sGames WashingtonStateatAnzona,noon California atOregonState, 3p.m. Stanfordat Oregon,5 p.m. WashingtonatArizonaState, 8 pm. Sunday's Game UCLAat USC,12.30 p.m.
Women's college Thursday's Games East Albany(NY)79, Boston U.72 Dayton67,St. Bonaventure63 Drexel57,George Mason 46 Fordham 51,RhodeIsland 42 Maryland86, Boston Colege 61 Northeastem 65,Georgia St.50 South
Clemson64, Virginia 62 CoastalCarolina77, Charleston Southern72, OT Gardner-Webb 65,HighPoint 57
Georgia66,Arkansas34 Georgi aTech82,WakeForest64 JamesMadison79, Towson 45
Liberty 75,UNCAsheville 43 Marshall72,EastCarolina 60 Memphis80, SouthernMiss. 74,OT
lands,7-6(2),3-6,7-6(7). Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,def.DonaldYoung, United
States,6-3, 6-3. Marinko Matosevic,Australia, def. SamQuerrey
(4) UnitedStates 3-6 6-4 7-5 JackSock,UnrtedStates, def. JamesBlake, United States,7-5,6-4.
FelicianoLopez,Spain,def.Tommy Haas(6), Germany,walkover. Women Guarterfmals SabineLisicki (3), Germany, def. Kristina Mladenovic(8),France,6-3,6-3. Magdalena Rybarikova (7), Slovakia,def. Kirsten Flipkens(1), Belgium,6-7(11),7-5, 6-3. MarinaErakovic,NewZealand,def.Jamie Hampton,
GOLF
UnitedStates,7-5, 6-2. StefanieVoegele, Switzerland,def.HeatherWatson (4), Britain,6-1,6-2.
WGC Accenture Match PlayChampionship Partial Results At Dove Mountain, TheRitz-Carlton Golf Club Marana, Ariz. Yardage:7 791 Par 72 Frrst Round Thursday
Seeds in parentheses Sergio Garcia(12), Spain, vs. ThongchaiJaidee (53) Thailand,20holes. Matt Kuchar(21), UnitedStates,def. Hiroyuki Fujita (44), Japan,3and2. lan Poulter(11), England,def. StephenGagacher (54), Scotland,2and1. Bo VanPelt (22), UnitedStates,def. JohnSenden (43), Australia, 6and5 Russel Henley (56), UnitedStates, def. Charl Schwartzel(9), SouthAfrica, I up. JasonDay(41) Australia, def. ZachJohnson(24), UnitedStates,6and5. RichardSterne(55), SouthAfrica, def.JasonDufner(10),UnitedStates,1up. Hunter Mahan(23), United States, def. Matteo Manassero (42), Italy, 5and4. JustinRose(5), England, def.K.J. Choi(60),South Korea,2and1. Nicolas Colsaerts (37), Belgium,del. Bill Haas (28), United States,5 and4. Tim Clark(59), SouthAfrica, def. AdamScott (6), Austraia, 2and1. ThorbjornOlesen(38), Denmark, del. JamieDonaldson(27), 3and2. BubbaWatson(8), UnitedStates,def. ChrisWood (37), England,2and1. Jim Furyk(25), UnitedStates, def. RyanMoore (40), United States,4 and2. RafaelCabreraBello (58),Spain, def. LeeWestwood(7),England,19holes. MartinKaymer(26), Germany,def. GeorgeCoetzee (39), South Africa, 2and1. MarcusFraser(52), Australia, def. KeeganBradley (13), United States, 1up. FredrikJacobson(45), Sweden,def.ErnieEls(20), SouthAfrica, 1up. SteveStricker(14), United States,def. HenrikStenson (51),Sweden,5and4. Nick Watney(19), UnitedStates, def. DavidToms (46), United States,5 and4 AlexanderNoren(49), Sweden, def. DustinJohnson (16),UnitedStates,6and4. Graeme McDoweg(17), NorthernIreland,def. Padraig Harrington(48), Ireland,2up. WebbSimpson(15), UnrtedStates, def.David Lynn (50), England, 5 and4. Peter Hanson(18), Sweden, def. ThomasBjorn (47), Denm ark, 3and 2. l.ouis Oosthuizen(4), South Africa, def. Richie Ramsay (61),Australia, 2andl. RobertGarrigus(36), UnitedStates, def. Branden Grace(29), SouthAfrica, 4 and3. LukeDonald(3), Engand, def. MarcelSiem(62), Germany,1up. Scott Piercy(35), UnitedStates, def. PaulLawrie (30), Scotland,4and3. ShaneLowry(64), Ireland,def. RoryMcgroy(1), NorthernIreand, I up. CharlesHowellIII (63), UnitedStated, def. Tiger Woods(2), UnitedStates, 2and1. Did NotFinish Carl Pettersson(33), Sweden,leads Rickie Fowler (32), United States, I up through17holes. GonzaloFernandez-Castano (31), agsquarewith Francesco Molinari (34),Italy,through15holes.
LPGA Tou LPGAThailand
Thursday At Siam CountryClub(Pattaya Old Course) Chonburi, Thailand Purse: $1.5 million Yardage:6,469; Par:72 (36-36) First Round 30-33—63 StacyLewis 32-34—66 KarineIcher 33-34—67 CatrionaMatthew 33-34M7 InbeePark 31-36—67 GerinaPil er 34-33—67 AmyYang 34-34—68 BeatrizRecari 36-32—68 So Yeon Ryu 34-34—68 LizetteSalas 34-35—69 CarolineHedwall 33-36—69 Mi JungHur 34-35—69 AriyaJutanugarn 34-35W9 .LydiaKo 33-36—69 RheeLee 34-35—69 Ai Miyazato 35-34—69 Mika Miyazato 34-35W9 Se RiPak 35-34—69 AngelaStanford 34-35—69 KarrieWebb Eun-Hee Ji 36-34—70 I.K. Kim BrittanyLang
AzaharaMunoz Jiyai Shin AyakoUehara ShanshanFeng SandraGal MoriyaJutanugarn Cristie Kerr ShinobuMoromizato SuzannPetersen Lexi Thomp son JulietaGranada Numa Gulyanamita Hee-WonHan CindyLacrosse Na YeonChoi Haeji Kang JessicaKorda CandieKung MeenaLee BrittanyLincicome Pornanong Phatlum StacyPrammanasudh .Suppamas Sangchan HeeKyungSeo KarinSjodin NicoleCastrale KatieFutcher MrnaHangae JenniferJohnson Michege Wie SunYoungYoo NatalieGulbis HeeYoungPark MorganPressel YaniTseng MomokoUeda ChellaChoi
PaulaCreamer DanielleKang AnnaNordpvist JennyShin CheyenneWoods JodiEwartShadoff Julilnkster KatherineHull-Kirk
36-42 — 78 41-38 — 79 38-42—80
Giulia Sergas VickyHurst MamikoHiga
Vanderbilt 68,Florida57 Winthrop78,Longwood46 Midwest Bradley93,Drake84 0reighton 73,N. Iowa66 Ill.-chicago81,Wright St.78,OT Loyola ofChicago91, Detroit 81 Milwaukee 75,Valparaiso 71 Minnesota 57, OhioSt.56 Missouri St 81, S.Illinois 74 N. Colorado44,North Dakota41
Delaware73 Drexel71, 2OT MountSt. Mary's83, LIUBrooklyn 71 Quinnipiac81, SacredHeart 74 RobertMorris77, Monmouth(NJ) 65
HOCKEY
GOLF 10:30 a.m.: LPGA Tour, LPGA Thailand, final round, Golf Channel. 11 a.m.: World Golf
ON THE AIR:RADIO TODAY
Girls basketball
vs. Malik Scott, NBCSN.
(same-day tape), ESPN2.
Southern Miss at Memphis, Root Sports.
PREPS
BOXING 7:30p.m.:VyacheslavGlazkov
SATURDAY BASKETBALL 8 a.m.:Men's college, lona at
Today Boys basketball: Bendat MountainView, 7p.m., Ciass 4A play in round, Astoria atMadras,6 p.m.; Class4Aplay-in round,Ridgeviewat Henley,7p.m. Girls basketball: MountainViewat Bend,7 p.m.; Class 4A play-in round,ElmiraatSisters, 7:15p.m. Wrestling: Class6A,5A,4A,3A,2A/1Astate championships inPortland,8:30a.m. Nordic skiing: OISRA state championships atWillamettePass,I p.m. Saturday Girls basketball: MountainViewat Mazama, 6p.m.; Class 4A play inround,Madrasat Dntario, 4 pm (PST);Class4Aplay-in round, CrookCounty at Seaside,6:30p.m. Alpine skiing: OSSA at Mt.Bachelor's Ed'sGarden, slalom,10a.m. Wrestling: Class6A,5A,4A,3A,2A/1Astate champronshrps in Portand, 8:30a.m.; finals start at 6:30 p.m. Nordic skiing: OISRA state championships atWillamettePass,10a.m.
MIXED MARTIALARTS 5 p.m.:UFC157, prelims, Lavar Johnson vs. BrendanSchaub,
HOCKEY 5 p.m.: MLS, Desert Diamond 4:30 p.m.:Men's college, Yale at Cup, final, teams TBD, NBCSN. Quinnipiac, NBCSN. GYMNASTICS 7 p.m.:Men's college, North 7 p.m.: Women' s college, Dakota at Denver, NBCSN. BOXING
ON DECK
Nationals, qualifying (same-day tape), ESPN2.
LACROSSE 6 p.m.:Women's college, Oregon 10:30 a.m.:Men's college, at California, Pac-12Network. at Loyola (Md.), 7 p.m.:High school boys, Bend Maryland NBCSN. 7:30 p.m.:NBA, SanAntonio
COREBOARD
Root Sports.
7 p.m.:Men's college, Ohio at
34-36—70 33-37—70 35-35—70 34-36—70 36-34—70 36-35 71 35-36—71 35-36—71 36-35—71 34-37—71 39-32—71 34-37—71 37-35 — 72 39-33 — 72 36-36 72 38-34—72 35-38—73 35-38—73 35-38 — 73 36-37 — 73 37-36 — 73 36-37 — 73 36-37 — 73 37-36 73 35-38—73 37-36—73 39-34—73 35-39—74 38-36—74 35-39—74 36-38—74 38-36—74 39-35 74 35-40—75 34-41—75 37-38—75 38-37—75 38-37—75 36-40—76 40-36—76 39-37—76 39-37 76 41-35 — 76 38-38 — 76 38-39 — 77 39-38 77 39-39—78
Copa Claro Thursday At Buenos Aires Lawn Tennis Club Buenos Aires, Argentina
Purse: $570,470(WT250) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Julian Reister,Germany, def. AllazBedene,Slove-
nia, 6-1, 1-6,6-2
NicolasAimagro(2), Spain,def. AndreyKuznetsov, Russia,7-6(5), 6-2. Federico Delbonis, Argentina,def. Albert Montanes,Spain,6-1, 6-4. FabioFognini (6), Italy,del. MarcoTrungelliti, Argentina,7-5,6-2. TommyRobredo, Spain, def. Diego Sebastian Schwartzman, Argentina, 6-3, 6-1. AlbertRamos(8), Spain, def. Leonardo Mayer, Argentina,6-3, 7-6(3). David Ferrer(1), Spain, def. David Nalbandian, Argentina,2-6, 6-4,6-0.
Copa ClaroColsenitas
Thursday At Club Campestre el Rancho
Bogota, Colombia Purse: $235,000 (Intl.) Surface: Clay-Outdoor Singles SecondRound Lara Arruabarrena-Ve cino, Spain,del. FlaviaPennetta (5),Italy,6-3,4-6, 6-0. PaulaOrmaechea,Argentina, def.FrancescaSchiavone(4), Itay,2-6,6-3, 7-6(3). AlexandraCadantu, Romania, def. TerezaMrdeza, Croatia,4-6,6-3, 6-4. JelenaJankovic (1), Serbia,def. MarianaDupueMarino,Colombia,6-3, 6-2. Karin Knapp,Italy, def. LourdesDominguezLino (3), Spain6-3, , 4-6, 6-4. World TourDpen13 Thursday At Palais desSports
Marseiue, France Purse: $800,000(WT250) Surface: Hard-Indoor Singles SecondRound DmitryTursunov,Russia, def.JankoTipsarevic(4), Serbia,7-6(4), 6-2 Gilles Simon(6), France, def. RobertoBautistaAgut, Spain6-3, , 6-1. JuanMartindelPotro(2), Argentina,def. Michael Llodra,France,3-6,7-6(4), 7-5. JerzyJanowicz(7), Poland,def.Julien Benneteau, France, 7-6(0), 6-3. Dubai Duty FreeChampionships Thursday At Dubai TennisStadium Dubai, United ArabEmirates Purse: $2million (Premier) Surface: Hard-Outdoor
Singles
Guarterfinals RobertaVinci, haly,def.SamStosur (7), Australia 6-2, 6-4. Sara Errani(5), Italy, def. NadiaPetrova,Russia, 6-4, 0-6,6-3. CarolineWozniacki (8), Denmark, def. MarionBartoli, France,4 6,6-1,6-4. PetraKvitova(6), CzechRepublic, def.Agnieszka Radwanska (3), Poland,6-2,6-4.
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
American League
TEXAS RANGERS—Named IvanRodriguezspecial assistant to the generalmanager/instructor/ambassador. National League WASHING TONNATIONALS—Agreedtotermswith RHPChrisYoungonaminor leaguecontract. BASKETBALL
National Basketball Association
NBA —NamedGregTaylor senior vicepresident for playerdevelopment. ATLANTA HAWKS—Traded GAnthony Morrowto Dallasfor G/FDahntayJones. CHARLOTTE HORNETS— TradedF Hakim Warrick to OrlandoforFJosh McRoberts.
GOLDENSTATE WARRIORS—Traded GCharles Jenkinsandcashto Philadelphiafor aprotectedsecond-rounddraft pick.TradedFJeremyTyler to Atlanta for cashandfuture draft considerations. HOUSTO NROCKETS—Traded FMarcus Morris to Phoenixfora2013second-rounddraft pick. TradedF PatrickPatterson,CCole Aldrich andGToneyDouglas to Sacrame nto for CThomas Robinson, FFrancisco GarciaandFTylerHoneycutt. MIAMI HEAT Traded CDexter Pittman, a2013 second-rounddraft pickandcashconsiderations to Memphisfor thedraft rights to FRicky Sanchez. NEW YORKKNICKS— Traded G/F Ronnie Brewer to Oklahoma City for a2014second-rounddraft pick and cash. OKLAHOMA CITYTHUNDER— Traded G Eric Maynor toPortlandforthe rightsto FGeorgios Printezis andcash. ORLANDOMAGIC— Traded GJ.J.Redick,C Gustavo Ayon andGIshSmith to Milwaukeefor GDoron Lamb, GBenoUdrih andFTobias Harris PHOENIS XUNS—WaivedFLukeZeler. TORONTORAPTORS— Traded C Hamed Haddadi and a2014second-round draft pick to Phoenixfor G SebastianTelfair. WASHINGTONWIZARDS — Traded G Jordan Crawfordto Boston for CJasonCollins andGLeandro Barbosa. FOOTBALL National Football League
DETROIT LIONS NamedTerry Heffernanassistant offensivle inecoach. HOCKEY National Hockey League
ANAHEIMDUCKS— ReassignedRW MattKennedy from Norfoik (AHL) to FortWayne (ECHL). Named BrianBurkepart-time proscout. NEWYORKRANGERS Rea ssignedGScottStajcer fromGreenvige(ECHL) to Connecticut (AHL). ST. LOUISBLUE S—Assigned G Jake Allen to Peoria(AHL). SANJOSESHARKS—ReassignedRWMatt Pelech to Worcester(AHL). TORONTOMAPLE LEAFS— AssignedFBradRoss to Idaho (ECHL). SOCCER North American Soccer League
NEW YOR KCOSMOS—Signed FPeri Marosevic and FHenryl.opez PORTLA
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL
SPORTS IN BRIEF
Stanford pullsaway from OregonState
BASEBALL Big seventh inningleads BeaVerS tOWin —The Oregon State baseball team sent nine batters to the plate in a five-run seventh inning that
helped the Beavers to a8-1 win over San Diego State Thursday night at Tony Gwynn Stadium
inSanDiego.MaxGordon, Tyler Smith and Danny Hayes all drove in runs during in the
seventh inning, which saw the Beavers accumulate five hits after tallying just two
in six innings against SDSU starter Michael Cederoth. The Beavers, though, held a 2-1
0
I 0
lead entering the inning dueto sacrifice flies by both Michael Conforto and Jake Rodriguez in the third and sixth innings, respectively. Oregon State and San Diego State continue their
series tonight at 6 o'clock.
MOTOR SPORTS Harvick, Kyle Buschwin Daytona Duels —Kyle
Busch won the second of Daytona's twin qualifying races by holding off a late challenge from Kasey Kahne. Busch will join Kevin Harvick in the sec-
ond row of the season-opening Daytona 500 on Sunday. The two earned their starting spots
by winning their respective 150-mile Budweiser Duel race on Thursday. Kahne finished
second behind Buschafter failing to get close enough to
attempt a race-winning pass. Third went to Austin Dillon, who earned a spot in his first Daytona 500. Harvick won the first duel to make it two for two
at Speedweeks. Healso won last weekend's exhibition race.
The starting lineup for the Daytona 500 is set by the results
of Thursday's races. Danica Patrick will be on thepole for the race.
SOCCER Timders signmidfielder — The Timbers have signed midfielder Michael Nanchoff,
adding another player who played for new Portland coach Caleb Porter at the University
of Akron. Last week, theTimbers acquired former Akron midfielder Ben Zemanski from Chivas USA. Portland midfielder Darlington Nagbe also played for the Zips. Nanchoff
played the past two seasons with the Vancouver Whitecaps. He was selected with the No. 8 overall pick in the 2011 MLS SuperDraft. The Timbers on
Thursday also announcedthat they haveacquired second-
round picks in both the 2014 and 2015 MLS SuperDraft from
the Whitecaps in exchange for the first right of refusal to English midfielder Nigel Reo-Coker. — From wire reports
C3
Bnan Davies/The (Eugene) Register-Guard
California's Justin Cobbs, left, hits the game-winning shot as he is defended by Oregon's Johnathan Loyd (10) during Thursday night's game in Eugene. California won 48-46.
ucsa o The Associated Press EUGENE — The California cursecontinues forNo. 23
TOP 25 ROUNDUP
The Associated Press CORVALLIS Josh H uestis started of f s l o w Thursday night, admittedly forcing shots that didn't fall. But the Stanford junior forward w a sn't w o r r i ed. He has bought into coach Johnny Dawkins' 'next-play mentality.' Huestis came back stronger for the Cardinal in the second half, scoring 16 of his game-high 20 points after the break to help his team hold off Oregon State 82-72. "It was just on to the next play for me," said Huestis, who also had 11 rebounds. "I knew if I just kept trying to play through the offense I would get shots and they would start falling." Stanford (16-11, 7-7 Pac12) also got 14 points and 11 rebounds from Dwight Powell, while Andy Brown and Chasson Randle had 13 points apiece. R oberto Nelson had 28 points and Eric M oreland added 11 points, 11 rebounds and three b l ocked shots to lead the Beavers (13-14,
ears In the huddle, Cobbs asked for the final shot. "He wanted it, he felt it. He said, 'Give me the ball. Give me the ball,' " Montgomery said. "He made that shot. It was fabulous." Cal trailed by ll p oints in the first half but came back to tie the score 29-29 on a dunk by Thurman 4 minutes into the second half. Also on Thursday: N o. 6 Duke...... . . . . . . . . . . . 8 8 V irginia Tech...... . . . . . . . . . 5 6 BLACKSBURG, Va. — Seth C urry scored 19 of h i s 2 2 points in the first half as Duke opened a 20-point lead and sent Virginia Tech to its ninth consecutive loss. C olorado ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 0 U tah...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 0 BOULDER, Colo. — Spenc er D i n widdie s c ored 1 3 points and had a key block in
Greg Wahl-Stephens/Associated Press
Stanford's Dwight Powell (33) shoots against Oregon State's Eric Moreland (15) during the first half of Thursday night's game in Corvallis.
"Every night, I keep raishim down, I didn't play my ing expectations higher and higher for him and he keeps Oregon. best," said Kazemi, who had J ustin Cobbs hi t a l o n g 10 points and six rebounds in meeting them o r e x ceedjump shot with 0.7 seconds a 58-54 loss to Cal three weeks 3-11). ing them," Dawkins said left and the Golden Bears ral- ago. "And it really hurts right Oregon State closed with- of Huestis. "He just comes lied to upset the league-lead- now sitting here and not winin 73-69 after Nelson's out- out and plays every night, ing Ducks 48-46 on Thursday ning this game." side jumper with 2:41 left. he tries to compete and he night. Cobbs' final shot, w hich Stanford answered with an makes the plays that are The loss was Oregon's 11th came after the Golden Bears Aaron Bright 3-pointer and available." straight against Cal (17-9, 9- ran nearly all of the final 26 a Powell dunk to go back The Cardinal never trailed 5 Pac-12), and this time, the seconds off the clock, hit nothahead 78-69 with 1:09 left. after a 7-0 run, capped by Ducks (21-6, 10-4) had no one ing but net. The Beavers got no closer Bright's lay-in, gave them a "Pure as the driven snow," 43-37 lead early in the secto blame but themselves. than six from there. The Ducks shot a season- Cal coach Mike Montgomery Bright had 12 points and ond half. A long jumper by low 27.6 percent from the field satd. six assists for the Cardinal, Huestis extended the Cardiand it led to a season low in The shot was a bit of rewhich had lost three of their nal advantage to 49-42 with points. They were 16 for 58 demption for Cobbs, who had previous four g ames. Joe 15:18 remaining. from the field, two for 15 from a team-high 14 points to go Burton had 16 points and Oregon State closed withthe 3-point line and 12 for 20 with eight rebounds and seven eight rebounds for Oregon in two points twice before from the free throw line. Brown converted a convenassists. But the junior guard State. "That's really a disappoint- also had a team-high eight Huestis made five of seven t ional three-point play t o ing loss," said Oregon coach turnovers. field-goal attempts in the sec- make it 54-49. Dana Altman, who was going The Beavers got within But with the game on the ond half to help him score in for his 600th career win. "The line, he asked for the ball. double figures for the eighth two twice more before Stan"Just the whole game I felt the late going, helping Cologuys played awfully hard, straight game. He reached ford opened up a 63-56 lead but you got to hit some shots. like I had a lot of mental laps- rado pull away for a victory that level just six times in his on Bright's 3-pointer with team's first 19 contests. 8:33 remaining. We had some open looks and es and I owed it to my team," over Utah. didn't knock them down." Cobbs said. "I've been workOregon lost sole posses- ing on my jump shot a lot and sion of first place in the Pac-12 I knew if I got the ball in the with the loss and is tied with right spot I'd be able to knock Arizona. it down." Cal, meanwhile, continued Allen Crabbe, the Pac-12's its climb up the rankings with leading scorer, had 12 points Bobcat of Central Oregonhas a full line of rental equipment to meetyour its sixth win in seven games. on five-of-12 shooting. Richneeds. From large commercial projects to yourbackyard, we have the The Bears are tied with Ariard Solomon had eight points equipment for you. Weoffer competitive pricing anddelivery to your iobsite zona State for third place, just and 11 rebounds. one game behind the Ducks Oregon, which led 26-21 at and Wildcats. halftime, was up 46-43 with S ales • S e r v ic e • P a r t s • R e n t a l s A rsalan Kazemi ha d 1 1 2:06 to p lay w h e n R obert I e ( i II points and a season-high 18 Thurman recorded a threeo ~ i ~ 0 rebounds for the Ducks, who point play for Cal on a dunk lost their 11th straight game and free throw to tie it. Monday - Friday www.bobcatofcentraloregon.com to the Bears. Carlos Emory Oregon had possession with 7am - 5pm 63084 Crusher Ave., Bend, OR 97701 scored 13 points for Oregon, under a minute to play but which hasn't beaten Cal since missed on two shots before Feb. 9, 2008. Cal got the rebound and called "The last g am e a g ainst a timeout with 26.3 seconds California, I told Coach I let left.
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Minor movesmade Spurs beat at trade deadline Clippers for fifth By Brian Mahoney The Associated Press
NEW YORK — The only trade involving Dwight Howard came lastsummer. The potent scorers that moved
did so long ago. There was no eye-catching activity left for deadline day, resulting in minor deals Thursday to the disappointment of those hoping for a frenzy. Josh Smith stayed put and the Boston Celtics' core stayed together, leaving J.J. Redick, dealt to Milwaukee, as the biggest name to be traded. There were nine moves, nothing approaching a blockbuster and none to jump-start the Lakers. Players such as James Harden and Rudy Gay were traded far before the deadline, but with teams perhaps fearful of new penalties for the biggest spenders, Thursday was mostly quiet. "I don't think I've seen fewer trade deadline deals, ever," said Houston general manager Daryl Morey, who completed two trades Wednesday. "But I think it's a one-
year blip." The Atlanta Hawks held onto Smith, and Utah kept both Paul Millsap and Al Jefferson on a day when much attention was focused on both situations, since those players have value and could leave their teams this summer as free agents. The long-shot deals never materialized. Howard remained in Los Angeles, just what Lakers general manager Mitch Kupchak repeatedly said would happen. Kevin Garnett and Paul Pierce will continue wearing Celtic green, as will Rajon Rondo when he's healthy enough to put on a uniform again. The Celtics did make one deal, acquiring guard Jordan Crawford from the Washington Wizards for center Jason Collins and injured guard Leandro Barbosa. Finances certainly played into it. The collective bargaining agreement that went into effect in 2011 came with much more punitive penalties for teams that repeatedly exceed the luxury tax and limits the options of those over the salary cap, and decisions Thursday were made with that in mind.
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straight victory BLOWER The Associated Press LOS ANGELES — Tony Parker scored 31 points and the San Antonio Spurs led all the way in beating the Los Angeles Clippers 116-90 on Thursday night for their fifth straight victory and first over the Clippers this season. The Spurs improved to an NBAbest 22-10 on the road, where they've also won five in a row. Parker had seven assists and no turnovers in 28 minutes and Danny Green added 15 points. The Westleading Spurs tied their season-best with 59-percent shooting, hit eight 3-pointersand made 22 of 28 free throws. They had lost both previous meetings with the Clippers in November. Matt Barnes scored 18 points, Blake Griffin had 17 points and Jamal Crawford 15 points as the Clippers' four-game w i nning s t reak ended in their first game after the All-Star break. Chris Paul, MVP in Houston last weekend with 20 points and 15 assists, was held to four points on one-of-six shooting and three assists. Also on Thursday: H eat...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 6 B ulls ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 7 CHICAGO — L e B ro n J a m es scored 26 points and grabbed 12 rebounds, and Miami beat Chicago for its season-high ninth straight win.
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
NHL ROUNDUP
Canucks edge Stars The Associated Press DALLAS — The Vancouver Canucks used a third-period rally to stop their losing streak. Jason Garrison and Henrik Sedin scored third-period goals to help th e C anucks overcome a 2-1 second-period deficit en route to a 4-3 victory over the Dallas Stars on Thursday. Alex Burrows and Kevin B ieksa also scored for t h e Canucks, who ended a three-
game losing streak (0-1-2), including a 4-3 decision to the Stars in which they squandered a 3-1 lead in Vancouver on Feb. 15. "I think it w a s important for our team to put together a better two-way effort and I thought we did that tonight," C anucks coach A l ai n V i gneault said. "Even though we started off on our heels a little bit, I thought the guys responded after that." And despite giving up the first goal just 35 seconds into the game, Cory S chneider bounced back and made 22 saves for the win. "It's never good to give up a goal in the first minute of the game, so it was good to show some resilience and we didn't crack under that," Schneider said. "It was nice to sort of return the favor and come back on them a couple of times in their building." Jamie Benn, Michael Ryder and Brenden Morrow scored for Dallas, which lost for the third time i n i t s p ast f our
games. " I thought t hat w e h a d chances to get a head and m aybe stay ahead, but w e didn't convert," Dallas coach Glen Gulutzan s a id. "But overall, I t h ought that o u r work ethic was strong tonight and we improved certainly some of the things we've had
for a couple of days in practice but i t' s a r e sult-based business and we didn't get the result." C ristopher Nilstorp, w h o was recalled from AHL Texas on Sunday, stopped 18 shots. Also on Thursday: D evils ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 C apitals ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 WASHINGTON — Ilya K ovalchuk scored th e t i e -
breaking goal on a 5-on-3 power play w it h a bout 8'/2 minutes left to complete New Jersey's comeback v i ctory over Washington. P anthers...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5
F lyers .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 PHILADELPHIA — Jonathan Huberdeau and Peter Mueller each had two goals to help Florida snap a five-game losing streak with a v ictory over Philadelphia. B ruins...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 L ightning..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 TAMPA, Fla. — Nathan Horton scored two goals, and Boston beat Tampa Bay.
S enators........... . . . . . . . . . 3 R angers.......... . . . . . . . . . . 2
Kaspars OTTAWA Daugavins scored in the seventh round of th e shootout and backup goalie Ben Bishop earned the victory in relief of injured starter Craig Anderson as Ottawa beat the New York Rangers. B lue Jackets..... . . . . . . . . . . . 3 R ed Wings...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 2 DETROIT — Vinny Prospal scored with 24.7 seconds left, capping a comeback that lifted Columbus over Detroit.
M aple Leafs.......... . . . . . . . 3
S abres ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 TORONTO — James van Riemsdyk scored two goals to lead Toronto past Buffalo, spoiling the NHL head coaching debut of the Sabres' Ron Rolston.
I slanders .......... . . . . . . . . . 4 C anadiens.......... . . . . . . . . 3
Rookie MONTREAL defenseman Thomas Hickey s cored in o vertime for h i s first NHL goal, and the New York Islanders rallied to snap Montreal's five-game winning streak. J ets ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 H urricanes...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 RALEIGH, N.C. — Blake Wheeler scored his second goal of the game with 4:54 remaining to lift Winnipeg over Carolina. W ild..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 O ilers ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1 E DMONTON, Alberta Matt Cullen had two goals and an assist to lift Minnesota over Edmonton.
c ro, o o s a ea r i n a c GOLF ROUNDUP
The Associated Press MARANA, Ariz. — Rory Mcllroy and Tiger Woods knocked out in the first round of the Match Play Championship'? Not many would have given that a snowball's chance in the desert. Almost as surprising as the freakish snowstorm on Dove Mountain was the sight of golf's two biggest stars heading to the airport, only the second time in the 15-year history of this wild tournament that No. 1 and No. 2 didn't last more than a day. Shane Lowry of Ireland chipped in twice and drilled a fairway metal to 3 feet to seize control, and then knocked out McIlroy with a bunker shot to 4 feet to save par on the final hole. Just as the shock was wearing off, Charles Howell III came up with the kind of shots he's used to seeing Woods make in the clutch — a wedge that stopped inches from the cup on the 15th hole, and a 25-foot birdie on the 16th that carried him to a 2-and-I victory. "It's definitely a day I'm going to remember," said Lowry, the third player in the past four years to eliminate the No. 1 seed in the opening round. "I had nothing to lose," Howell said. The biggest loser Thursday might have been NBC Sports, which lost the two biggest draws. Not even Phil Mickelson can save the day. He's
not playing this year. Howell had not faced Woods in match play since he was 17 and lost to him in the third round of the 1996 U.S.Amateur. He said he had never beaten him even in the dozens of casual games they played over the years at Isleworth before Woods moved away to south Flonda. What a time to change that losing streak. Howell, who qualified for this World Golf Championship for the first time in five years, played a fabulous round in cold conditions. They matched scores 10 times in 14 holes before Howell came through with back-to-back birdies. "In this format, match play is crazy," Howell said. "He's Tiger Woods. I was lucky to hang in there." The final matches were played in near darkness, and they could have stopped after 15 holes. Woods wanted to play on, even though Howell had the momentum. Woods was 2 under for the day, and neither of them made a bogey. "We both played well," Woods said. "He made a couple of more birdies than I did. He played well, and he's advancing." Mcllroy, the No. I player in the world, built a 2-
up lead early in the match until Lowry rallied and grabbed the momentum by chipping in for birdie on the par-5 11th to avoid falling behind, chipping in from behind the 12th green for birdie and then ripping a fairway metal to within a few feet for a conceded eagle on the 13th to go 2 up. Lowry missed a short par putt on the 14th, only for Mcllroy to give away the next hole with a tee shot into the desert and a bunker shot that flew over the 15th green and into a cactus. But the two-time major champion hung tough, coming up with a clutch birdie on the 16th to stay in the game. McIlroy nearly holed his bunker on the 18th, and Lowry followed with a steady shot out to 4 feet and calmly sank the putt. In another event on Thursday: Lewis leads LPGA Thailand at 9 under CHONBURI, Thailand — Stacy Lewis shot a 9under 63 in the first round to take a three-stroke lead at the LPGA Thailand. The American had an eagle on the par-4 third hole, then added four more birdies on the front nine at the Siam Country Club Pattaya Old Course. She had two more birdies before abogey at No. 16.The 2012 LPGA Tour player of the year then birdied the last two holes to finish three strokes ahead of Karine Icher (66).
Alley Continued from C1 "It's been a real good, satisfying ride," says Alley, a 1985 Culver High graduate. "Particularly at Culver, we have the fortune to watch kids as young as second grade. Some of them don't make it. To see the ones that do and see them d evelop and m ature a s a wrestler and as a person and grow up a little bit, it's been fantastic. It's beyond my wildest dreams, if we had this conversation 23 years ago." His first 10 seasons or so as the Culver wrestling coach were a grind — a "hard pull," as Alley describes it. But since 2002, 17 Bulldog wrestlers have won a combined 25 individual state
I
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championships. And in only one season since then has Culver missed placing in the top two in 2A/IA. "Obviously, Culver has had a ton ofsuccess under him," Zysett says. "He's done a great job. It's absolutely nothing that I did. J.D.'s a quality
Ryan Brennecke / Ryan Brennecke
Coach J.D. Alley stands in front of Culver's state championship team photos in the school gym on Wednesday. Alley hopes to lead his wrestling team to its seventh straight state championship this weekend.
of wrestling has on making kids mentally tougher and guy, a great coach, and more helping them understand and importantly, he's a good per- appreciate the benefit of a son. He was one of the smart- strong work ethic. "Just to watch k ids m aest kids I've had the pleasure to have coached. When he t ure and grow, that is t h e came back to us, I knew he'd reward in coaching," Alley do well, and sure enough, he says. "They don't have to win has." state championships to have A lley a t t r i butes t h o s e value, to lend validity to what achievements to consistency wrestling's about. ... In my within the program, to a youth job, whether I can get a kid program that was installed in to achieve a state medal is rethe late 1990s. The coaching ally not the important thing. The important thing is to instaff has not changed, nor has the philosophy they folstill that same passion about low. Becauseof these factors, wrestling in them." Alley's athletes become acDuring his 23-year coachcustomed to one system and ing tenure at Culver High (he know exactly what to expect. does not teach at the school), Simply put, Alley says, suc- where the current enrollment cess breeds success. Winning, is just over 200 students, Although, is not what defines his ley has formed familial bonds wrestlers, Alley says. Instead, within the small farm commuit is about the impact the sport nity of about 1,300 residents.
Health
He still runs into his former wrestlers at the local market or the gas station, many of whom he considers to be like his own sons. Culver wres-
Spending more time tending to his hay and cattle ranch? Or perhaps, he says with a chuckle, he would be just sitting around, getting "fatter tling is a family, Alley says, than I already am." So Alley has stuck with and he sees himself as the "leader of the ship." coaching. And after 23 years, "He's the founder," says sen- he continues to inspire young ior Jared Kasch, who won his wrestlers — like Tucker Dafourth straight district cham- vis, a Culver sophomore who pionship last week and seeks won a state title last season a fourth consecutive state title and has known Alley since in Portland this weekend. "He Davis was in seventh grade. "He's been pretty big," says made this. He plays a lot of parts — friend,coach, menDavis, mentioning the help his tor, inspirer. He's all that stuff. coach provides in school or as He's all of it." a friend to talk to. "I mean, if Being "all of it" for all these it wasn't for J.D., I probably years has taken time away wouldn't even wrestle. He's from things like his familyjust a great coach." wife Tammy and 17-year-old Things Alley talks about "great, daughter Gabrielle. But Alley with his athletes has little idea what he would long speeches," Kasch calls be doing i f n o t c o aching them — he relates to everywrestling. Hunting, maybe? day life. Four years ago, Alley
first to third, simulate stealing bases. Those are all things that you do anyway. I have to progress Continued from C1 through that." Then thereis closer Mariano Rivera,who isreThe Yankees won 95games lastyear despite loscovering from a significant injury of his own after ing Rivera to a torn anterior cruciate ligament in hurting his knee last May. his right knee. He is expected to be ready by openAnd the Yankees are just one club with the ining day. Ace left-hander C.C. Sabathia also is on jury bug. All around baseball, division races may the mend. He is coming off arthroscopic surgery in be decided not by offseason moves or midsummer October to remove a bone spur from his left elbow. surprises but by how well teams can keep their top Meanwhile, Rodriguez is not even at spring training. His rehabilitation from hip surgery is players on the field. "I think you get to the point where you can't taking place primarily in New York, and the third count on what happens with an injury, that a lot of baseman is expected to be sidelined until at least times, it goes on a lot longer than you think," said the All-Star break. Milwaukee manager Ron Roenicke, whose first The Yankees hope to be as close to full strength baseman, Corey Hart, is coming off surgery on his as possible in a wide open American League. Deright knee. "I think you just kind of move on. You troit won the pennant last year, even though Martiexpect things not to go as you would like them to." nez missed the whole season because of a left knee Trying to handicap the National League West injury. race between World Series champion San FranThe Tigers are glad to have the upbeat Martinez cisco and new-look Los Angeles? A lot depends on back in the clubhouse, and true to form, he found a how healthy Carl Crawford is, and whether he can bright side to his lost season. "This year was weird, but at the end I'm going to rediscover with the Dodgers the form that made him one of the game's top left fielders. tell you: It was the best year of my life," Martinez Think Detroit is a lock to win the American said. "I got the time that I never had before to spend League Central? What if Victor Martinez cannot with my family, my kids. I was able to go to bed and rebound from his knee injury, and the Tigers go wake up with them every single day. I don't think the whole season without a productive designated anything's going to beat that." hitter? Still, watching the Tigers play on without him What about all the changes in Toronto? The Blue was difficult. In that respect, Martinez can reJays could be much improved — assuming Jose late a bit to what Baltimore's Brian Roberts went Bautista is fully recovered from wrist surgery. through. "All the exercises and rehab and stuff like that Roberts has been with the Orioles during his have come andgone, and I've been working my butt entire big league career, but when the team finally off to make sure I was ready to go when the season made the playoffs in 2012, he had undergone season-ending hip surgery in August. After another started," Bautista said. "Worked out pretty hard at the gym, too, and now it's time to get on the field." operation for a sports hernia in December, it is unAny discussion of injury worries should begin certain whether the second baseman's body can with the Yankees, who lost Jeter to a broken left an- hold up. kle in the AL Championship Series opener against "I just need to play. That's going to be the biggest Detroit. The Yankees went on to lose to the Tigers thing, to just get out there," Roberts said. "I want to in four straight games, and Jeter endured what he get game action. That's the only way to get where described as a"terrible" offseason. you want to be physically and mentally and emoHe has been able to take part in spring training tionally, to get out there and play and have some workouts, but his first exhibition game is probably success and feel confident in your body and everything else that's going on." a couple weeks away. "I've already said to myself, 'I'm good.' But there's No matter what a team did during the offseason, steps along the way," Jeter said. "Run the bases, go a significant injury can ruin the best of plans. The
a
had the members of his team memorize a quote from longtime American politician Adlai Stevenson: "On the plains of hesitation lie the blackened bones of countless millions who at the dawn of victory lay down to rest, and in resting died." Kasch says that quote has been burned into his brain. "That basically means that when you're about to give up right at the end of the (round), don't do it," says Kasch. "Just k eep pushing until i t' s a l l done. That's how he coaches." Not surprisingly, K asch credits Alley for helping him develop into the wrestler he is today. "Just the way he coaches, he's all about a tightknit family, a tightknit team," says Kasch, who has been under Alley's tutelage since the first grade. "That's helped me get to my fourth straight (state) title, and I'm almost there." The best part about the Culver wrestling program, Alley says, is the support surrounding the Bulldogs. Moms in th e c o ncession stands,
dads emptying
g a rbage
cans, neighbors running the scoreboard. "I think there's a lot of community members that take as much pride in the program as us involved in it," Alley says. "You just want to be a part of it." Every now and then, Alley says, he will begin thinking that maybe he is getting too old, maybe he should think about doing something else. For now, however, he will e njoy Culver's long run o f wresthng success. "It's something that gives you the pride and honor," Alley says, "to put on an orange and black singlet." — Reporter: 541-383-0307; glucas®bendbulletin.com.
Blue Jays look like contenders in the AL East after acquiring Jose Reyes and R.A. Dickey, but Bautista was limited by those left wrist problems last year, hitting only 27 home runs after slugging 97 over the previous two seasons. Atlanta was among the biggest offseason newsmakers in the National League, signing B.J. Upton and trading for his brother Justin. But there is still a questionat catcher because Brian McCann is returning from surgery to repair a torn labrum in his right shoulder. The Dodgers haveundergone a complete makeover since the start of last season, acquiring the likes of Crawford, Hanley Ramirez, Adrian Gonzalez,Josh Beckett and Zack Greinke. Crawford came over from Boston in August, but he has not played forhis new team because of reconstructive
elbow surgery. "Physically, my body feels good," Crawford said recently. "I think I can hit the cutoff man by opening day, but I don't know if that's when they'll want me to come back, so we'll just have to see how it
goes."
You could put together a pretty good lineup just of players coming back from serious injuries or operations. Colorado shortstop Troy Tulowitzki hit 30 home runs in 2011, but last season he was ruined by a groin injury that required surgery. "We have the best shortstop in the game, the best shortstop on the field, back," Rockies outfielder Carlos Gonzalez said. "He's a beast, Tulo. He plays with passion, but he plays the game the right way
— hard."
Back in New York, the Yankees are not the only team with medical concerns. Johan Santana
missed a year following shoulder surgery in September 2010, and although he looked plenty healthy last June I when he threw the first no-hitter in Mets history, his season ended in August because of ankle and back problems. Now, after two Cy Young Awards and countless other accolades, the 33-year-old Santana is simply hoping he can take the ball every fifth day and make it through a whole season. "What's important right now is to stay healthy," Santana said. "As far as numbers and all that, if I'm healthy and I'm there, I have a good chance to put up those numbers."
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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Toda+
+
S&P 500
10 YR T NOTE
1,502.42
1.98%
+ g
32 g2
1,560
S&P 500
Strong holiday sales?
1,520
Close: 1,502.42
Did Abercrombie & Fitch get a healthy boost in the fourth quarter
1,480 '
Friday, February 22, 2013
from holiday season sales? Wall Street finds out today, when the teen retailer reports its latest quarterly results. A&F entered the fourth quarter after a surprisingly strong third quarter, when it recorded a 41 percent jump in earnings as sales improved. The company hadbegun reacting more quickly to runway trends, a move that has resonated with shoppers.
Change: -9.53 (-0.6%)
•
$44.33
$35.16 50 40
'12
'13
Operating EPS 3Q '11 3 Q '12 Price-earnings ratio:
30
based on past 12 months' results source: Factset
Contract questions HMS Holdings reports its earnings for the fourth quarter today. Investors will be listening for an update on the status of a key government contract. Last fall, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services awarded a contract to HMS to coordinate benefits and to ensure that Medicare is only paying when it is the primary form of coverage. But a rival for the contract has filed an appeal protesting the decision.
S
0
StocksRecap
N
HIGH LOW C LOSE C H G. 13927.54 13837.02 13880.62 -46.92 5921.47 5842.24 5875.56 -45.91 475.63 472.23 472.56 -3.07 8852.67 8778.05 8810.29 -73.33 3155.19 3118.62 3131.49 -32.92 1511.95 1497.29 1502.42 -9.53 1104.10 1088.48 1093.27 -10.83 15966.15 15794.03 15854.42 -111.73 912.70 -8.10 900.48 905.40
0
5067 4964 28 05 2597 12.42 11.42 0 4636 43.69 78.02 76.81 7.18 6.22 65.45 64.23 58.47 56.99 105. 9 7 100.69 8.92 6.64 2 716 25.94 29.72 17.10
Higher payroll taxes may hurt Wal-Mart Stores in the year ahead. The world's largest retailer offered a weak outlook Thursday, even as it reported an 8.6 percent increase in profit for the fourth quarter. Wal-Mart says it earned $5.6 billion, or $1.67 per share, in the quarter ended Jan. 31. That's up from $5.16 billion, or $1.50 per share, a year earlier. The retailer is considered an economic bellwether because it •
$57~ 1-Y R :20%
-
~
CHG %CHG -13.65 -42.8 -1.84 -38.0 -5.07 -26.6 -2.46 -20.6 -1.69 -19.7
Foreign Markets LAST 3,624.80 London 6,291.54 Frankfurt 7,583.57 Hong Kong 22,906.67 Mexico 44,136.61 Milan 16,009.55 Tokyo 11,309.13 Stockholm 1,188.95 Sydney 4,998.56 Zurich 7,505.71
%CHG. WK MO OTR YTD -0.34% A A +5.93% -0.78% +10.72% -0.65% A +4.30% -0.83% T A +4.34% -1.04% A +3.71% -0.63% A +5.34% -0.98% A A +7.14% -0.70% A A +5.73% -0.89% A A +6.60%
CHG %CHG -85.08 -2.29 -103.83 -1.62 -145.33 -1.88 -400.74 -1.72 -162.96 -.37 -517.95 -3.13 -159.15 -1.39 -11.59 -.97 -115.84 -2.27 -120.30 -1.58
+0 8 X +0 1 W
A A
X A
+15 2 +7 7 -1.6 + 14. 7 +0 9 -0.6 -0.1 +6.8 +2.0 +2 5 +16. 2 +20.0 -10.6 -1.8 +10. 9 + 10.5
2L
cC 00
CATEGORY Large Growth MORNINGSTAR RATING™ ** A y yyy ASSETS $2,978 million EXP RATIO 1.07% MANAGER Nick Thakore SINCE 2008-11-30 RETURNS3-MD +10.1 YTD +4.8 1-YR +1.6 3-YR ANNL +5.9 5-YR-ANNL +6.6
TOP 5HOLDINGS Apple Inc
Qualcomm, Inc. Tronox Ltd
Google, Inc. Class A Microsoft Corporation
f
accounts for nearly 10 percent of nonautomotive retail spending in the L.S. Low- and lower-middle-income people have continued to struggle even as the housing and stock markets improve. yef4$ Wal-Mart's latest results, which 4 cover the three months that ended Jan. 31, show that gas prices and the payroll tax increase of 2 percentage points are shrinking the little disposI. able income many of the chain's , customers have.
~
78 10-YR*: 6%
Dividend: $1.59 Yield: 2 . 3 %
Pric e -earnings ratio (trailing 12 months): 14
Market value: $235 billion
*annualized
SOURCE: FactSet
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 21.11 -.12 $3.5 +11.1 $-11.2 + 55 A A A BondA m 12.85 +.81 -0.5 +4.1 +6.0 + 41 D C E CaplncBuA m 54.81 -.27 +2.3 +1 0.5 +9.3 + 30 A 8 C CpWldGrlA m 38.32 -.39 +3.0 +1 1.8 +8.6 + 1.6 8 C C EurPacGrA m 41.97 -.58 +1.8 +8.3 +6.5 + 07 C C A FnlnvA m 42.68 -.37 $4.5 +12.3 $-11L4 + 34 8 C C GithAmA m 35.73 -.31 +4.0 +12.5 +10.6 + 33 A D D IncAmerA m 18.59 -.11 $2.9 +11.2 $-11.1 + 52 A A 8 InvCoAmA m 31.41 -.20 +4.1 +11.0 +9.8 + 32 C D C NewPerspA m 32.29 -.32 $3.3 +12.5 $-10.1 + 36 A 8 8 WAMutlnvA m 32.58 -.22 $.4.4 +11.3 $.12.7 + 4.1 D 8 8 Dodge &Cox Inc o me 1 3.87 +.81 +0.1 + 5 . 6 + 6.4 +6.9 C C 8 IntlStk 35.49 -.54 + 2 .5 + 9 . 9 + 7 .1 +0.6 8 8 A Stock 129.53 -1.31 + 6.3 +16.9 +12.0 +2.6 A 8 D Fidelity Contra 79.99 -.40 + 4 .1 + 10.4 +12.8 +4.9 8 8 8 GrowCo 96.14 - . 80 + 3 . 1 +6 . 9 +14.2 +6.8 D A A LowPriStk d 41 . 44 -.34 + 4 .9 + 10.9 +13.8 +7.0 C C 8 Fidelity Spartan 50 0ldxAdvtg 53 . 36 -.32 +5 .7 + 12.8 +13.0 +4.6 B A B FrankTemp-Franklinlncome A m 2.2 7 - .01 +2 .3 + 11.4 +10.6 +5.7 A A 8 Oppenheimer RisDivA m 18.3 2 - .14 + 5 . 3 +9.2 +11.4 +4.0 D C C RisDivB m 16.5 9 - .13 + 5 . 1 + 8.2 +10.4 +3.0 E D D RisDivC m 16.5 1 - .13 +5 . 2 + 8.4 +10.6 +3.2 E D D SmMidValA m 35.21 -.23 +8.6 + 9.5 +9.5 +0.9 E E E SmMidValB m 29.70 -.20 +8 . 5 + 8.6 +8.6 +0.1 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.1 9 . .. -0.2 + 7 .3 + 6 .8 +7.3 A 8 A T Rowe Price Eqt y l nc 28.05 -.17 + 6 .0 + 14.5 +12.4 +4.2 8 8 8 GrowStk 39.07 - . 22 + 3 . 4 +9 . 6 +13.5 +5.6 8 A 8 HealthSci 44.5 1 - . 29 +8 . 0 + 27.3 +21.4+13.4 A A A Vanguard 500Adml 138.84 -.84 $5.7 +12.8 +13.0 +4.6 8 A 8 500lnv 138.81 -.85 $5.7 +12.7 +12.9 +4.5 8 A 8 CapDp 36.23 -.40 +7.8 +17.1 +10.0 +5.4 A D 8 Eqlnc 25.72 -.13 +6.5 +14.8 +15.4 +6.1 A A A GNMAAdml 18.82 -.81 -0.5 $-1.5 +5.2 $5.7 D A A MulntAdml 14.38 +.81 +0.4 +4.0 +5.6 +5.5 8 8 8 STGradeAd 18.83 +.81 +0.3 +3.6 +3.7 $3.9 8 8 8 StratgcEq 22.93 -.21 +6.9 +13.1 $.15.7 $5.3 8 A C TotBdAdml 18.99 +.81 -0.6 $.3.2 +5.6 +5.6 D D C Totlntl 15.17 -.18 $1.3 +6.7 +6.0 -0.9 D C 8 TotStlAdm 37.75 -.26 $5.9 +12.7 $-13.4 $5.2 8 A A TotStldx 37.73 -.26 $5.9 +12.5 $-13.2 $5.1 8 A A USGro 22.32 -.22 +5.0 $9.3 +12.2 +5.6 8 8 8 Welltn 35.12 -.15 +3.8 +10.8 +10.5 +5.9 A A A WelltnAdm 68.65 -.27 +3.8 +10.8 +10.6 +6.0 A A A FAMILY
FUND American Funds BalA m
PCT 8.56 2.93 2.85 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs 1$paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption 2.33 fee. f - front load (saies charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or 2.2 redemption fee. Source: Mtirnngstar.
1.3172+
-.0109
StoryStocks
PAY
Close:$18.24 V-13.65 or -42.8% The electronic payments company's forecast disappointed due to the weak European economy and problems with big customers. $40 30
Safeway SWY Close:$22.97%2.84 or 14.1% The grocery store chain's customer loyalty program is boosting market share, and its profit rose more than Wall Street expected. $25 20
20
N
D J 52-week range
F
$17.93~
$55.89
Vol.:50.3m (14.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$1.97 b
PE :30.9 Yield: ...
Berry Petroleum
SelectedMutualFunds
CH G %CHG $a +3. 8 9 +136.0 +1 . 3 6 +85.0 «C +1.78 +73.3 00 +.93 +30.3 «C +.68 +29.2 470 +2 . 9 1 +25.5 Morningstar OwnershipZone™ +.65 +24.8 +2. 5 1 +24.7 O o Fund target represents weighted $..7 2 +23.6 average of stock holdings +1 . 9 1 +23.1 • Represents 75% offund'sstock holdings
Losers
~
3 -Y R*: 12%
total returns through Feb. 21
150.42 -.92 3.07 -.03 Putnam VoyagerA m PVOYX 43.09 —.60 23.27 + . 44 VALUE BL EN D GR OWTH 20.25 -.48 -.14 17.52 cC 0 27.28 -1.18 00 0e 13.88 +.17 $L 27.49 -.38
Gainers
+ 39 + 03 38 56 +1 23 +.02 85 +3.21 39 83 -.72 +.40
52-WEEK RANGE
This fund's performance has been inconsistent since Nick Thakore became manager in 2008. It outMost Active performed in the growth-oriented VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG markets of 2009 and 2010, but un11.42 —.38 derperformed the past two years. 2290913
NAME Paris
F
Wal-Mart's wary outlookl;.",l;"l
Marketsummary
Ebix lnc Gentium TASER
J
DividendFootnotes: a -Extra dividends werepaid, but are not included. b - Annual rate plus stock c - Liquidating dividend. e - Amountdeclared or paid in last12 months. f - Current annual rate, wi7>ciwas 7 mcreased by most recent diudend announcement. i - Sum ot dividends pud after stock split, no regular rate. l - Sum of uvidends pud tus year. Most recent uudend was omitted or deferred k - Declared or pud t&$ year, a cumulative issue with dividends marrears. m - Current annual rate, which was decreased by most recent dividend announcement. p - imtiai dividend, annual rate not known, y>eld not shown. 7 - Declared or paid in precedmg 12 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, appro70matecash value on exaustribution date.pE Footnotes:q - Stock is a closed-2nd fund - no p/E ratio shown. cc - p/E exceeds 99. dd - Loss in last12 months
FundFocus
Synacor
D
+29 0 590 12 +7 1 329 20 1 22 f -3.2 w w w +4 7.6229091 44 0 . 0 4 -1.3 w A A + 1 60.1 4 8 23 0.5 2 + 16 A A A + 16 7396 1 5 1 9 4 f +0.3 V V V + 4 .2 2 dd -0.1 w w w +1 2.2 7 4 1 4 1.4 0 +6.0 A A A +10 . 5 46 8 2 0 0.8 8 -0.4 w w A +29 . 3 26 81 24 1 .10a -0 4 w A A +2 1 10 51 -2.7 w A A +5. 3 19 0 7 1 8 0. 2 8 +2.4 A A A -41.8 28856 dd 0 .53 Home Federal Bncp ID HOME 8.67 ~ 1 4.0 0 11.11 +.05 +0.5 w w w + 2. 1 23 85 0. 2 4a Intel Corp INTC 19.23 ~ 29.27 2 0. 2 5 -.48 -2.3 v v w -21.0 59644 10 0 .90 Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 9.64 9 .3 4 -.81 -0.1 w L x +17 .4 15618 11 0 . 20 Kroger Co KR 2098 — 0 28.80 28 . 76 + 1.09 +3.9 A A A +17 . 9 8 9 58 2 4 0. 6 0 Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 6.89 4 .7 6 89 -19 w A x +19 3 - 272 3 8 3 d d LA Pacific L PX 7 . 67 22.13 20 .54 03 0. 1 V V A +6.3 +1 5 4.9 2 685 c c MDU Resources MDU 19.59 24.34 23 .83 23 -1.0 w A A +12. 2 +1 4 .2 5 8 5 0.69 Mentor Graphics MENT 12.85 17.87 17 .35 +.01 $-0.1 V A A $-1.9 $- 1 7.4 73 6 14 Microsoft Corp M SFT 26.26 ~ 32.95 2 7.4 9 -.38 -1.4 w w > +2.9 -8.1 48332 15 0 . 92 Nike Inc 8 NKE 4 2.55 ~ 57.41 54.5 4 +.5 2 +1 .0 V A X + 5.7 +2.7 46 3 7 2 3 0. 8 4 NordstromInc JWN 46.27 ~ 5 8.44 5 4.5 2 -.63 -1.1 W W A +1.9 +10 . 0 2 9 06 1 7 1. 0 8 Nwst NatGas N WN 41.01 ~ 50.80 45.6 0 +. 0 6 +0 .1 A A A +3.2 -1.9 114 2 0 1. 8 2 OfficeMax Inc DMX 4.10 14.92 11 .64 -.45 -3.7 + 19.3 +111.3 8884 2 0.0 8 PaccarInc PCAR 35.21 48.75 46 .69 -.63 -1.3 V A +3.3 +5. 9 1 9 2 9 1 5 0 .80a Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 2.60 1.8 9 +. 0 2 +1 .1 +32 2 -13 0 7 dd Plum Creek PCL 35.43 49.69 47 .59 -.12 -0.3 V V A + 7 3 +27 0 8 12 38 1 6 8 Prec Castparts PCP 150.53 94.95 182.55 + . 13 + 0.1 w w w - 3.6 + 9 . 0 5 8 5 2 0 0 . 1 2 Safeway Inc SWY 14.73 23.16 22 .97 +2.84+14.1 A A A +27.0 -9.4 34396 11 0 .70 Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 47.45 28 .88 -.46 -1.6 w w w -4.8 - 30.6 456 4 2 0 . 75 Sherwin Wms SHW 9910 ~ 167.27 155.91 -2.92 -1.8 V V A +1.4 +6 0 . 4 1 226 2 4 2 .00f Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 41.99 38 .89 -.34 -0.9 w x +61 - 11 2 0 0 1 3 0 9 3 f StarbucksCp SBUX 43.04 62.00 53 .35 +. 8 4 +0.1 V V V -0.5 +11.6 6808 29 0 . 8 4 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 7 .26 4 . 5 0 -.25 -5.3 w w w -6.8 -27.3 7913 UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 13.88 12 .89 -.11 -0.8 V A A $-9. 3 +4. 3 384 14 0.3 6 US Bancorp USB 28.26 35.46 33 .77 -.08 -0.2 w A x +5.7 +18 . 0 10362 12 0 . 7 8 WashingtonFedl WAFD 14.30 18.42 17 .76 -.14 -0.8 V A A $-5. 3 $- 1 3.8 14 7 1 4 0.3 2 Wells Fargo &Co W FC 29.80 ~ 36.60 35.4 6 +.3 6 +1 .0 X A X +3.7 +16. 1 3 4878 11 1 . 00f W est CoastBcp OR WCBD 16,39 — 0 24,06 23 .63 -.22 -0,9 W A A +6,7 +41 , 4 41 21 0,20 Weyerhaeuser W Y 1 8 .60 ~ 31.74 2 9.1 1 -.67 -2.2 w w + +4.6 +47 . 2 7 620 40 0 . 6 8
AP
LAST 18.24 3.00 14.00 9.47 6.90
N
52-WK RANGE oCLOSE Y TD 1Y R VO L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO OTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Total return YTD: 3%
NAME VeriFone
'
+ -1.62 '
The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell a second straight day Thursday following weaker-than-expected reports on the economy. More workers filed for unemployment benefits last week than economists expected. Stocks of raw material producers had some of the day's steepest drops after prices sank for copper, crude oil and other commodities. Technology stocks also fell more than the rest of the market.The day's decline was milder than Wednesday's, when the S&P 500 fell to its biggest loss since November. That was due to speculation that the Federal Reserve may rein in its bond-buying program meant to boost the job market. Verifone Systems
12,400 .A.
D
DOW DDW Trans. DDW Util. NYSE Comp. NASDAQ S&P 500 S&P 400 Wilshire 5000 Russell 2000
Yaa-Maar Stores(WMT) Thursday's close:$70.26
L AST 6 75 2 .96 4.21 4 00 3 00 Repros wtA 1 4.30 AlimeraSci 3.27 ReprosTh 1 2.69 UnivBus h 3 .77 Repros wtB 1 0.19
Change: -46.92 (-0.3%)
NorthwestStocks
fiscal 2013, the company's revenue grew 16 percent from a year earlier. Cyberonics reports fiscal third-quarter earnings today.
NAME CombiM rs WSP Hldgs ParkerVsn CollabRx NeurMx rs
ll
1 0 DAY S
12,800
ALK 31 29 — A VA 2278 ~ Epilepsy fighter BAC 6 . 72 Sales of Cyberonics' products for BBSI 16.50 — treating epilepsy and depression BA 66. 8 2 have been a key driver of earnings CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 for the company. CascadeCp CASC 42.86 The neurological device company Columbia Sporlswear COLM 45.37 makes implants that treat the two CostcoWholesale C OST 81.98 ~ ailments by delivering electrical Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 ~ stimulation to the vagus nerve. FLIR Systems FLIR 17 99 ~ HPQ 11.35 ~ Through the first half of Cyberonics' Hewlett Packard
NAME BkofAm S&P500ETF 1165052 SiriusXM 791964 iShEMkts 760388 BariPVix rs 674292 Intel 596444 SPDR Fncl 507896 Facebook n 487998 RschMotn 487971 Microsoft 483317
Close: 1 3,880.62
13,200
1,350 A
$92.84
Dew jones industrials
•
13,600
1,400
+.08
$28.70
1,450
NAME
30
GOLD $1,578.20
14,000
1,500
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CYBX
,
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14,400
Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co
$60
• $
13,800
1,550
NYSE NASD
•
• 1 3 960
1 0 DA Y S
Vol. (in mil.) 4,161 2,013 Pvs. Volume 4,089 1,935 Advanced 9 41 7 6 1 Declined 2117 1 7 17 New Highs 61 56 New Lows 43 36
•
+
BRY
Close:$46.02 %7.43 or 19.3%
N
D J 52-week range
$14.73 ~
F $23.99
Vol.:34.5m (6.2x avg.) PE: 1 2 .2 Mkt. Cap:$5.5 b Yiel d : 3 . 0 %
Heckmann
HEK
Close:$3.56 V-0.12 or -3.3%
Oil and gas producer Linn Energy is
A Jefferies analyst downgraded the
buying the drilling company in a stock deal worth about $2.5 billion.
drilling services provider's shares, citing slower activity in the oil and gas fields where it works. $4.5
$50 40 N
—
D J 52-week range
$30.21 ~
L F
52-week range $37.29
$2.90 ~
$5.44
Vol.:11.2m (14.7x avg.) P E: . . . Vol.: 4.2m (1.8x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.41 b Yiel d : 0 .7% Mkt. Cap:$557.88 m
Tesla Motors
TSLA Close:$35.16 V-3.38 or -8.8% The electric car maker's loss deepened on higher production costs for the new Model S. It predicted a small profit for this quarter. $40
HomeAway AWAY Close:$28.38 A3.34 or 13.3% The vacation rentals website's revenue outlook for this year bested analyst expectations and Raymond James upgraded its shares. $30 25
35
20
N
D J 52-week range
F
$25.92~
$40.00
Vol.:9.0m (6.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4b
PE: .. Yield:..
Rubicon Technology
N
D J 52-week range
$19.19 ~
F $29.74
Vol.:3.9m (6.1x avg.) P Mkt. Cap:$2.36 b
E: 1 7 7.4 Yield:...
R B C N ParkerVision
Close: $4.92 V-0.85 or -14.7% The maker of LED chips predicted a deeper-than-expected loss and lower sales in the current quarter due to dropping prices.
$7
PRKR Close:$4.21 %1.78 or 73.3% A Florida court sided with the company's interpretations of key
terms in a patent case against mobile chip-maker Qualcomm.
$6
N
D J 52-week range
$4.93~ Vol.:1.1m (3.2x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$110.88 m
F $12.99 PE: .. Yield :..
N
D J 52-week range
$0.79 ~
F $4.39
Vol.:11.2m (21.4x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$348.9 m
P E: . . . Yield: ... AP
SOURCE: Sungard
InterestRates
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO 3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
The yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 1.98 percent Thursday. Yields affect interest rates on consumer loans.
. 1 2 .12 . 1 3 .13 .15 .15
... ... ...
2-year T-note . 2 5 .26 5-year T-note . 8 4 .86 10-year T-note 1.98 2.01 30-year T-bond 3.17 3.20
-0.01 -0.02 -0.03 -0.03
BONDS
A A ~
A A i
A W V
V W W W
i A A A
T .29 L .86 A 2.00 A 3.15
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MO OTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.88 2.92 -0.04 A A Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.06 4.05 +0.01 A A Barclays USAggregate 1.93 1.93 . . . W A PRIME FED B arclays US High Yield 5.81 5.83 -0.02 w + RATE FUNDS Moodys AAACorp Idx 3.96 3.95 +0.01 A A YEST 3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.12 1.15 -0.03 W A 6 MO AGO 3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 2 .82 2.83 -0.01 W A 1 YR AGO3.25 .13
Commodities Crude oil settled at its lowest price since 2012 after a report showed that supplies are healthier than analysts expected. When a commodity's supply is high, its price tends to fall.
Foreign Exchange The dollar rose against the euro after a report showed that business activity in Europe weakened more than economists expected in February. The dollar fell against the yen.
h5N4 QG
.09 .12 .14
A A A w A A A
2.66 4.58 2.16 7.2 1 3.90 1.08 3 4.1
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD Crude Dil (bbl) 92.84 94.46 -2.52 $ - 1 .1 Ethanol (gal) 2.35 2.37 - 0.08 + 7 . 2 Heating Dil (gal) 3.10 3.16 -1.92 $ - 1 .7 -3.1 Natural Gas (mm btu) 3.25 3.28 -1.01 Unleaded Gas(gal) 3.04 3.06 - 0.75 + 8 . 0 FUELS
METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
CLOSE PVS. 1578.20 1577.60 28.70 28.62 1620.00 1647.10 3.55 3.61 733.20 736.00
%CH. %YTD -5.8 +0.04 +0.28 -4.9 - 1.65 + 5 .3 -1.53 -2.5 - 0.38 + 4 . 4
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -3.5 1.25 1.25 +0.16 1.42 1.41 +0.53 -1.4 6.91 -1.1 Corn (bu) 7.01 -1.39 Cotton (Ib) 0.81 0.82 - 1.18 + 8 . 2 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 378.00 383.20 - 1.36 + 1 . 1 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.28 1.26 +1.95 +10.3 Soybeans (bu) 14.88 14.83 + 0.34 + 4 . 9 Wheat(bu) -7.3 7.21 7.39 -2.34 AGRICULTURE
Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)
1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5242 +.0002 +.01% 1 .5786 Canadian Dollar 1.01 9 6 + .0015 +.15% . 9 9 65 USD per Euro 1.3172 —.0109 —.83% 1.3244 —.69 —.74% 79.71 Japanese Yen 93.1 2 Mexican Peso 12.7 663 + .0441 +.35% 12.7691 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.6994 +.0280 +.76% 3.7391 Norwegian Krone 5.6807 +.0895 +1.58% 5.6871 South African Rand 8.9028 —.0106 —.12% 7.7251 6.4265 +.0818 +1.27% 6.6468 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9319 +.0040 +.43% .9120 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9768 + .0007 +.07% .9 3 70 Chinese Yuan 6.2452 +.0028 +.04% 6 .2978 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7557 +.0014 +.02% 7 .7538 Indian Rupee 54.478 +.407 +.75% 4 9.305 Singapore Dollar 1.2426 +.0030 +.24% 1 .2573 South Korean Won 1090.92 +8.68 +.80% 1125.13 Taiwan Dollar 29.72 $ -.11 $-.37% 2 9 . 57
© www.bendbulletin.com/business
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
CentralOregon fuel prices Price per gallon for regular unleaded gas and diesel, as posted Thursday at AAA Fuel Price Finder
(aaa.opisnet.com). GASOLINE • Space Age,20635 Grandview Drive,
Bend............ $3.56 • Ren's Oii,62980 U.S.
Highway 97, Bend............ $3.63 • Chevron,61160 U.S. Highway97, Bend $3.72 • Chevron,3405 N.U.S. Highway 97, Bend .. $3.74 • La Pine Mini Mart, 52530 U.S. Highway 97,
0a e By Alejandro Lazo Los Angeles Times
Mortgage delinquencies posted significant declines at the end of 2012, signaling that distress in the housing market is diminishing just as prices rebound and demand surges. The national delinquency rate for mortgage loans on one- to four-unit properties fell to 7.09 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association. That was the lowest level since 2008. It was also a decline from 7.40 percent the prior quarter and 7.58 percent
e i n uencies a months without a payment or inthe process offoreclosuresdropped to 6.78 percent, down from 7.03 percent the prior quarter and 7.73 percent during the same period a year prior. The only note of caution flagged by the association: The number of loans that were more than 90 days delinquent increased to 3.04 percent, up from 2.96 percent the prior quarter but down from 3.35 percentduring the same period a year prior. The declines in delinquencies come as home prices
duringthe same period a year prior. "We areseeing large improvements in mortgage performance nationally and in almost every state," said Jay Brinkmann, chief economist for the mortgage bankers group. "With fewer new delinquencies, the foreclosure start rate and foreclosure inventory rates continue to fall and are at their lowest levels since 2007 and 2008 respectively." The number of loans that were seriously delinquent — those gone more than three
BRIEFING
Bend Research to work withBASF Bend Research and Germanchemical company BASFhave
rise. One measure of national home prices rose last month with a vigor not seen since the bubble days as the number of foreclosedhomes and other distressed properties on the market shrank. The median sales price for previously owned U.S. homes rose 123 percent annually in January to $173,600, the National Association of Realtors said Thursday. It was the 11th consecutive month of annual increasesand the strongest such gain since November 2005.
agreed to jointly develop
substances to improve drug formulations for the pharmaceutical
industry, the companies announced Thursday. Both companies bring individual strengths to the joint effort, according to a
news release. Based in Ludwigshafen, Germany, BASF bills itself as the world's
leading chemical com-
• Texaco,178 Fourth St.,
pany, according to its corporate profile, with more than111,000
Madras ......... $3.76
employees at more than
• Chevron,1210 U.S. Highway 97,
370 sites worldwide.
La Pine.......... $3.79
Bend Research has more than 285 employ-
Madras ......... $3.76
ees working at six facilities in the Bendarea,
• Chevron,398 N.W. Third St., Prineville........ $3.79 • Texaco,539 N.W. Sixth St., Redmond.... $3.76
according to the news
release.
Jobless claims
• Chevron,2005 U.S.
climb to 20 000
Highway 97,
The number of
Redmond ....... $3.69 • Chevron,1001
Americans who applied last week for new
Railway, Sisters .. $3.76
unemployment benefits rose sharply, though i
DIESEL
Ctt'
it remained at a level that suggests slow but
1
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• Chevron,1210 U.S. Highway 97, Madras ....... . . .$4.14 • Texaco,539 N.W. Sixth
steady improvement in
y+p
the labor market. Initial jobless
I
St., Redmond.... $4.21 Ashley Brothers I The Bulletin
claims rose 20,000 to a seasonally adjusted 362,000 in the week ended Feb.16, the Labor Department said
Thursday. The increase may have beenpartly influenced by the fed-
BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR SATURDAY • 2013 SpringSheep ProducersWorkshop — Lambing Tour: Central Oregon sheepproducers, in cooperation with Oregon State University Extension Service, will present this three-part series, designed to give all ages andlevels of sheep producers an opportunityto connect, observe and learn; free; 10 a.m.; HayCreekRanch, 1219 S.E. Haycreek Road, Madras; 541-480-1340 or tcf©cbbmail.com. TUESDAY • Marketing Strategy, Do I Need One?Yes!: Kelly Walker, creative director at lntrepid Marketing will discuss the importance of a strategy to capitalize on social media and marketing budgets; lunch included; RSVP required; $25 for Chamber members and $45 for nonmembers; 11 a.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-383-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. • Understanding and Managing Credit:Workshop from HomeSource of Neighborlmpact about how to use banksand other financial institutions; reservations requested; free; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Redmond AreaPark and Recreation District, Activity Center, 2441 S.W. Canal St.; 541323-6567 or www. homeownershipcenter.org. WEDNESDAY • BusinessAfter Hours, Saving Grace:Saving Grace provides support and services to survivors of domestic violence, sexual assault, dating violence, date rapeand stalking; registration required; free; 5 p.m.; Saving Grace, 1425 N.W. Kingston, Bend; 541-383-3221 or www. bendchamber.org. • How To Develop A Business Plan:First-time business owners can learn how to evaluate their finances, target their market and present their ideas in a written business plan; registration required; $59; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290.
To find freeincome tax preparation help, visit the Events Calendarat ytrww. bendbuifetin.com/events.
For the completecalendar, pick upSunday's Sulletin or visit bendbufietin.corn/bizcai.
eral holiday on Monday — full claims data for four states, including California and Virginia,
were not completed on time and had to be estimated.
Initial claims, a rough gauge of layoffs, have mostly stayed north of 360,000 over the past year. Although they've
Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin
Aimee Svendsen, from left, Stephanie Warner and Lars Pajunen sell items branded for Oregon State University-Cascades Campus out of the mobile gear store on campus every Tuesday and Thursday.
occasionally fallen below that level, claims have always bounced back up. If claims can
• OSU-Cascades students start up a rolling shopthat offers school-brandeditems By Rachael Rees
On theWeb
The Bulletin
tudents at Oregon State University-Cascades Campus wanted to give their school its own identity and show their pride, so they created a logo and started a store. "We are different," said A imee Svendsen, a 19-year-old sophomore. "We are our own university, even though we're a branch of OSU. It's just brand awareness, getting people to know we aren't OSU, we are OSU-Cascades." The gear store is the only place to buy sweatshirts, T-shirts, coffee mugs and lanyards with the official "OSUjCascades" logo. It's f u nded t hrough student fees and ru n b y Svendsen and two other s t u dents, with proceeds returning to the school and gear store. Like any good business, it's meeting a d emand, said A ndrew D avis, coordinator of Student Life at OSU-Cascades. "We had a lot of students who were requesting to be able to buy campus
For more information about
the OSU-CascadesGear Store, visit www.osucascades.edu/ gear-store-trailer gear, like any traditional college student would, and we didn't have a process in place for them to do that here," he said. Davis said there wasn't room for a book or clothing store on campus. So, he suggested a mobile concession trailer. Today, the gear shop operates out of a 14-foot refurbished cargo trailer that's open Tuesdays and Thursdays. The students also take it to school and community events. The gearshop made itsfirstappearance duringcommencement in June, Svendsen said. "My vision for the store is to keep the trailer so we can go to different events," she said. "(But) ultimately I'd like to see it inside a building, when we have a four-year university, so we can
break below that threshold and stay there, it
would suggest companies haveaccelerated
carry more products and spread the word. OSU-Cascades V ic e Pr e sident Becky Johnson agrees. "Not only has the gear store been a great opportunity for our students to get some business experience, it's also provided a way for us to get our brand out into the community a little more," Johnson wrote in an email. "We would like to have an OSU-Cascades bookstore or fan shop in Bend in the future, but this gives us an interim solution." The Corvallis campus also supports the student-run store. "I love showing my pride for my school through wearing school colors and logos, and I'm excited for OSUCascades Campus students to develop a logo all their own to wear proudly, too," said Amelia Harris, president of Associated Students of Oregon State University. "The Cascades Campus gear store is a very impressive studentrun initiative, and I look forward to seeing it grow."
hiring or are cutting
even fewer workers.
Nielsen tocount broadbandviewers The company that measures television viewership said Thursday it will soon begin
counting people who watch programming through broadband in addition to the tradition-
al broadcast or cable hook-up. Nielsen's move is a significant step toward
recognizing a world where the definition of TV viewing is swiftly
changing. Separately, Nielsen is developing ways to track content on tablets
and mobile phones. For many years, roughly 99 percent of homes in the U.S.had
— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com
televisions that received service through broad-
Consumerpricesflat in Januaryfor 2ndconsecutive month The Associated Press WASHINGTON — U.S. consumer priceswere flatin January from December for the second month in a row, the latest sign inflation is in check. That could give the Federal Reserve leeway to continue its efforts to stimulate growth. The consumer price index
has risen 1.6 percent in the 12 months ending in January, the Labor Department said Thursday. That's down from a 2.9
the Fed's inflation target. That's also down from the 23 percent pace in the same month a year
percent pace a year ago.
billion in Treasurys and mortgage bonds each month in an effort to keep interest rates low. Food prices were flat last month after rising for 10 straight months. And energy
Excluding the volatile food and energy categories, core prices rose 03 percent in January. Core prices have risen 1.9 percent in the past year, below
ago. The Fed is purchasing $85
cast, cable or satellite signals. Now the number ofhomes without
such service is 4.2 per-
costs, which include gasoline, dropped 1.7 percent. The relief at the pump ended in recent weeks, with prices rising steadily this month. Higher
cent — and growing. About three-quarters
gas prices will likely push up
programming through game consoles or ser-
measures of inflation in February, though economists expect overall price increases to stay mild.
of those homesstill have TVs, however, and their owners watch vices like Netflix and
Amazon. — Staffand wire reports
DISPATCHES • Parr Lumber Companyhas received the Central Oregon Builders Association's 2012 GreenBuilding Supplier of the Year.Theaward was given for Parr Lumber's focus on awarenessandeducation of
environmentally sustainable products. In 2012, Parr Lumber participated in the Living Building Challenge home.To learn more, visit www.parr.com. • Luvs Donutshas leasedspace at The Oxford Hotel in Bend. Brian
Fratzke and Jeff Reed, of Fratzke Commercial RealEstate Advisors Inc., represented the landlord in the agreement. • Sol Alchemy,a yoga and Reiki healing center, will be opening March
1 at 568 N.E.Savannah Drive, No. 2, in Bend. Thecenter will provide group and individual yoga classesand one-on-one Reiki healing sessions. Beginning in April and continuing through the summer, the center will
also provide workshops and retreats focused on personal transformation. A grand opening celebration is planned for 6-8 p.m. April 5. Tofind out more, contact 541-285-4972 or visit www. solal chemy.com.
IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > 50-Plus, D2-3 Parents & Kids, D4 Pets, D4 THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
O www.bendbulletin.com/allages
BRIEFING
Nature center classes for kids The Sunriver Nature
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Center and Oregon Observatory will offer
classes for kids during spring break. Classes are designed for ages 4 to10and cost$15 for nonmembers or
))
$13.50 for members
of the nature center. Each class is from 10:30 a.m. to 12:30
p.m. and includes: • Reptibians on March 25;
• Friends of Flight on March 27; and •Tracking the Wild
Beast on March 29. The nature center will be open from10
a.m. to 4 p.m. every day, March 23-30. Admission is $3 for
adults, $2 for ages 2-12. The observatory will be open those
same dates for solar viewing from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Admission is
lllustration by Greg Cross The Bulletin
free. Night viewing is available from 8 to10 p.m. March 23, March
27, March 29and March 30. Cost is $6 for adults and $4 for
age 2-12. Hourlong bird walks
take place eachSaturday during March at 9 a.m. The center is located at 57245 River
Road.
Teen birth rate at historic low The birth rate
among teenagers in the U.S. continues
to decline, according
• STORIES connectUShelpsCentral Oregonseniorswrite downtheir memoriesfor future generations
to the vital statistics report for 2010-11. The birth rate for ages 15-19 is at a historic low, at 31.3 births per 1,000 women.
By Mac McLean• The Bulletin
The information, which is compiled from the National
g
y
Center for Health Statistics, the Centers
for DiseaseControl and Prevention and Johns Hopkins School of Public Health, also
includesdataonmany other aspects of birth and children. The report found that the percentage of children
born preterm dropped for the fifth straight year to 11.7 percent. Overall, the number of births in the U.S. declined by1
Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
Judy Bowden, right, 80, reads one of her stories during a STORIESconnectUS meeting at the Redmond Senior Center.
Connect with yourstories STORIESconnectUS is acollaboration between OSUCascadesCampusand program founder DanaPerry that helps people write their autobiographies. Tolearn more, call 541-420-4301.
oming of age during the early days of the Cold War, Bob Vancil hated the communists. There was no doubt about it. The retired high school teacher blamed them for starting the Korean War, and after watching newsreels that played at the movies every time he went to see a film as a teenager, he began to think communists were no better, if not worse, than the despots who ruled Germany, Italy and Japan during World War II. But Vancil's opinion changed in the 1990s when he flew from Oregon to the Siberian city of Novosibirsk and met some communists face to face. "Every person I visited with was genuinely concerned about their sons and daughters," Vancil, 73, said as he read about this experience during a STORIESconnectUS meeting last week.
a(And I thought,) rHow could I hate these people? All they really wanted was a better world for their offspring.'" Through STORIESconnectUS and other writing programs like it, older adults across the region are given a chance to look back on their memories and commit them to paper. Experts say this experience is an opportunity to reconnect with a part of their lives — one that may remind them about what they've accomplished and who theyare — and record theirstories so that future generations will get a chance to learn about their past. "We know people across the board will benefit when they get an opportunity to really sit down and write their life stories," said Dana Perry, who started the writing program almost two years
ago. See Stories/D3
percent.
Age WideOpen offers series
SUPPORT SYSTEM
Age Wide Openis offering aseries of educational programs to help adult children
Birding for toddlers
who are taking care of their parents. Each
• East Cascade Audubon Society's free classhelps Central Oregonchildren get excited about nature
of these hourlong discussions will be held at 6 p.m. at the Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 Wall St., and will be followed
by a support group session: • aHow to Communicate SoYour Senior Can Hear You,a with
counselor and senior advocate Ali Davidson, on March 4; • "Alzheimer's and
Dementia from a Caregiver's Perspective," with geriatric
specialist Dr. Richard MacDonnell, on April 1; and,
• "Medication Do's
and Don'ts and Medi-
cal Warning Signs," with a panel of geriatric nurses, on May6. — From staff reports
Gavin Straw, 3, of Bend, uses binoculars to look around while birding with a group of other preschoolers at Drake Park in Bend.
By Alandra Johnson
GOOD QUESTION
When anaging parent cant ive aone anymore
The Bulletin
Every Monday, Mary Yanalcanlin tromps through Bend's Drake Park with a group of preschoolers, pointing out birds, trees and wildlife. She has been leading the free, informal class called Birding for Preschoolersfor more than two years as a representative of the East Cascade Audubon Society (see "If you
Editor's Note: Good Question is a recurring feature in which a local expert in a particular field answers a question related to families and aging. Have a question? Send it to mmclean@bendbulletin.com.
aa a
By Mac McLean The Bulletin
go," Page D4).
"It's basically an exploration of nature with kids," Yanalcanlin said. She believes these classes help plant the seeds of interest in nature for children. She loves the classes and what the experience is like for the kids. aI love seeing the excitement in their faces and their bodies when they observe something for the first time," said Yanalcanlin. "Their excitement is what's exciting for me." Yanalcanlin didn'tbecome interested in birds until about four years ago. She then joined the local Audubon
-a
a preschoolteacher, Yanalcanlin says, when she encounters something new or interesting, she often thinks of how
A• Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
Mary Yanalcanlin, left, talks to a group of toddlers about birds and nature at Drake Park on Monday morning. Yanalcanlin has been leading the free Birding for Preschoolers class for two years.
group and suggested a kids' class. As to share it with children. Each class is different, based on the number and temperament of the children who attend. Sometimes the
. My elderly parent is incapable of liv. ing alone and is thinking about moving into my home. What types of things should I do to my house to prepare for this transition? Todd Sensenbach is a co-owner of • Bend's Home Instead Senior Care franchise, a business that supplies home health care aides to elderly Central Oregon residents. His business's aToo Close for Comfort" program helps people make this transition with its website www.makewayformom.com. He said one of the first things people should considerwhen preparing theirhome foran elderly relative is whether the housing preparations would be worth the cost or if it would be better forto try a diff erentapproach. "Always look for t h ings that are not changeable," Sensenbach said. See Question /D3
kids want to be more active; other times they have more questions and want more discussion. See Birding /D4
D2
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Email information for the 50-Plus 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.
0-PLUS SOCIAL SECURITY
nameS eSt ImS
Deadline is March '1 0 for payment switch
ACTIVITIES CALENDAR
TODAY
OI' I'OWA-LI S
BEND KNIT-UP:$2; 10 a.m.noon; Rosie Bareis Community Campus, Bend; 541-728-0050. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752.
By Bill Newcott
AARP The Magazine
By Pamela Yip The Dallas Morning News
If you get Social Security or other federal benefits by
paper check, prepare to say goodbye to the paper. Federal benefit recipients have until March I to open a direct deposit bank account or get a prepaid debit card as the Treasury Department continues to phase out paper checks. Since May I, 2011, all new applicants for f ederal benefits have had to pick an electronic delivery method. Now remaining recipients have a choice of using direct deposit or a prepaid debit card, such as the government's Direct Express card. The government's aim is to save money and tomake the receipt of benefits safer. "Choosing d i r e ct
deposit «
HOW IO
signup
E xpr e s s c ard makes For m o r e it eas i er , inf o , call the safer a n d Go D i rect more c on prog r am venient fo r toll - free at beneficiaB00- 3 33ries to r e 1795 o r visit ceive their w ww. G o payments," Dire c t.org. said David L ebr y k , commissioner of t h e T r easury's Financial Management Service. " Switching t o a n electronic payment is not optional. It's the law." There are no signup fees or monthly fees to receive benefits electronically. W hile th e T r easury e x pects most people to meet the March deadline, "there will be extenuating c i r cumstances, people with unique situations, so we'll wait until after March I and see what we're left with and we'll start reaching out to people direct through the mail," said Walt Henderson, director of the Treasury's EFT Strategy Division. You needn't worry about l osing your benefits if y o u don't m ee t t h e d e a d line. "These are benefit payments," Henderson said. "Oftentimes they are the primary source of income, so we're not going to disrupt that payment." However, you'll be prodded by the Treasury to eventually switch over to electronic payment.
The exceptions If you're 90 or older, you're exempt from the requirement. O thers wh o d o n' t w a n t t o switch can apply fo r a waiver, but the Treasury will grant exceptions only in rare circumstances. For instance, you must be living in a remote area that makes it difficult to receive electronic payments. Or you m u s t b e s o m eone "for whom electronic payments would i m pose a hardship due t o a m e n t al impairment." "Sometimes the electronic payment's the better choice vs. delivering a check to a remote area," Henderson said. "The person wh o p e rhaps is having trouble managing theirfinances should perhaps have a caregiver involved." To get the word out, the Treasury has launched the Go Direct public education campaign and is w orking w ith more than 1,800 partner organizations nationally. "Some seniors really like to see the comfort of that check," said Suzanne Cobb, director of the Guardianship and Money Management program at the Senior Source in Dallas. "Some seniors don't even have a bank account. They deal strictly with cash, so we try to counsel with them." Of course, many seniors already have direct deposit. "The challenge here is to reach the ones who a ren't getting direct deposit," Cobb said. "It's our older people who have a distrust of banks because of the Depression."
Even if 2 012 had n ot brought us "The Best Exotic Marigold Hotel" — featuring an all-star cast with an average age well north of 60 — it wouldhavebeen averygood year for grown-up movies. And, lucky for those who appreciatesuch fare, most of the films AARP honored Feb. 12 at its annual Movies for Grownups Awards event — along with new director Dustin Hoffman — already are available for home viewIshika Mohan via Mcclatchy-Tribune News Service ing, or soon will be. Judi Dench, Tom Wilkinson and Bill Nighy star in "The Best Exotic Listed here ar e t h ose Marigold Hotel," which was honored as best movie for grown-ups winners. Unless otherwise at the AARP's annual Movies for Grownups Awards event. noted, they're now available on DVD/BluRay, onShirley line streaming and Video MacLaine on Demand. and Jack Black star in 'The Best Exotic "Bernie." Marigold Hotel' Millennium Entertainment via (Best Movie for Grownups; The Associated Best Actress, Helen Mirren) Press W ho would h ave e x pected the tale of a group of British retirees (including aR m ~ la I Helen Mirren, Judi Dench and Tom Wilkinson) settling into a "restored" lux- Hoffman, th e c o nsummate ury hotel in India to be one movie actor,had never before of the year's biggest hits? directed a film. In this funny, Many of these films are Every laugh, every tear, poignant story of love, jealousy Oscar contenders. To read is a u thentically e a r ned and redemption at a home for more information, see thanks to screenwriter Ol retired opera singers, Hoffman Page 24 in today's GO! Parker's knowing s cript gets a lot of help from his veterMagazine. and John Madden's smart an cast including Billy Connoldirection. As a bonus, we ly, Tom Courtney, Pauline Colget to see the battling ma- lins, Michael Gambon — and triarchs ( M aggie S m ith Maggie Smith, who it appears a time machine to bring back and Penelope Wilton) of has succeeded James Brown enough corduroy and over"Downton Abbey" in two as the hardest-working person sizedeyeglassesto supply an very differentroles. in show biz (in theaters). entire episode of "Lou Grant"
SUNDAY BINGO:12:30 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-5 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. SPIRITUALAWARENESS COMMUNITY:Annual membership meeting; 5:30 p.m.; The Old Stone, Bend; sacbend© gmail.com or 541-508-1059.
'Flight' (Best Actor, Denzel Washington; Best Supporting Actor, John Goodman) In a ca r e er-crowning performance, Washington convinces us that a boozeand-drug-addled airline pilot can hide his addictions from the world — even as we can see he's really flying blind. And as his ever-chipper Dr. Feelgood, Goodman is disturbingly delightful. 'Bernie'
(BestComedy) Not only are Jack Black and Shirley MacLaine a hoot in the true story of a Texas funeral director and the domineering local matriarch he loves/hates; w riter-director Ri c h a r d Linklater also enlists reallife small-town folks to play themselves.
'Searching for Sugar Man' (Best Documentary) Maybe you don'tremember '70sDetroitrocker Rodriguez, but two of his biggest fans in South Africa sure did. Their "whatever-happened-tog e search makes for one of the biggest cinematic surprises of the year.
'Argo' (Best Time Capsule) For their story about the daring circa-1970s rescue of six American hostages in Iran, director Ben Affleck and production designer Sharon Seymour seem to have enlisted
BEND KNIT-UP: 6-8 p.m.; Gossamer The Knitting Place, Bend; 541-728-0050. CLASSICSBOOK CLUB: 6 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, Brooks Room; 541-312-1046 or kevinb@deschuteslibrary.org. THE GOLDEN AGECLUB: Canasta; 9:45 a.m.-2 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. HIGHNOONERSTOASTMASTER CLUB:Noon-1 p.m.; New Hope Church, Classroom D, Bend; 541-390-5373 or 541-317-5052.
'Amour' (Best Foreign Film) With the help of hi s a stonishing stars (Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva), writer-director Michael Haneke finds beauty in the starkly artful story of a longmarried couple's last months.
Where Buyers And
(in theaters).
Sellers Meet 1000's Of Ads Every Day
'Robot & Frank' (Best Buddy Picture) Yes, one of the buddies here is a little white robot, but to an ailing loner (Frank Langella), he embodies all the elements of a good friend. Also, Robot helps Frank get the girl, a radiant Susan Sarandon.
Who Refuseto Grow Up)
4
The kids ( Jared Gilman and Kara Hayward) are adorable i n di re c tor/co-writer Wes Anderson's tale of young love — but no less so than the film's befuddled adults (Bruce Willis, Edward Norton, Bill Murray, Frances McDormand and Tilda Swinton).
•
vPure C rrod.6 Go.
rd u u >~ B~ Bend Redmond John Day Burns Lakeview
"Quality Painting Inside and Out" Painting in Central Oregon for over 18 years
•
Inquire about trading goods for services.
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Phone: 541-383-2927 Email: heartlandllc@msn.com
Bend, OR97702
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TheBulletin
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(Best Screenwriter, Ben Lewin) W ho else bu t L e w i n, a polio survivor himself, could have concocted the story of a middle-aged polio victim (John Hawkes) who seeks a sex surrogate (Helen Hunt) for l essons in lovemaking? Directing his own script, Lewin elicits unexpected empathy — and admiration — for all concerned.
It's hard to believe that
AT HOME
•
'The Sessions'
Dustin Hoffman)
Get a taste of Food. Home Sr Garden In
Insured Bonded and Licensed¹156152 18633 RiverwoodsDrive
to imagine anything being
'Quartet' (Breakthrough Accomplishment, Director
THURSDAY
Reartlaqd Paiqtiqg
'Moonrise Kingdom' (Best Movie For Grownups
'Silver Linings Playbook' (Best Supporting Actress, Jacki Weaver; Best Intergenerational Movie) As ever-smiling Dolores, Weaver insists everything is fine, even when it's hard worse. As her character's family c ollapses around h er, Weaver exudes infectious, endless hope (in theaters).
BEND CHAMBER TOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; The Environmental Center, Bend; 541-610-2308. BINGO:6 p.m.; American Legion Post ¹44, Redmond; 541-548-5688. THE GOLDEN AGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 54 I-389-1752. KIWANISCLUB OF REDMOND: Noon-1 p.m.; Juniper Golf and Country Club, Redmond; 541-5485935 or www.redmondkiwanis.org. PRIME TIME TOASTMASTERS: 12:05-1 p.m.; Home Federal Bank, Prineville; 541-416-6549. REDMOND AREATOASTMASTERS: Noon-1 p.m.; Ray's Food Place, Redmond; 541-771-7789.
AMERICANLEGION POST 4:6 p.m.; VFW Hall, Bend; cabinetman© CRIBBAGE CLUB:6 p.m.; Bend dldrury.com or 541-480-7600. Elks Lodge; 541-317-9022. BINGO:6 p.m.; Elks Lodge, Bend; THE GOLDENAGE CLUB: Double 541-382-1371. deck pinochle; 11a.m.-4 p.m.; 40 CENTRAL OREGON WRITERS S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. GUILD:6:30-9 p.m.; Central Oregon SWEETADELINES:6:30 p.m.; Community College, Redmond; Redmond Senior Center; 541-350-6583. 541-447-4756. COMMUNICATORS PLUS SCOTTISH COUNTRYDANCE: TOASTMASTERS:6:30-7:45 p.m.; 7-9 p.m.; Sons of Norway IHOP, Bend; 541-593-1656 or 54 I-480-0222. Hall, Bend; 541-549-7311 or 541-848-7523. THE GOLDENAGECLUB: Pinochle; 12:45-4 p.m.; 40 S.E. Fifth St., Bend; 541-389-1752. TUESDAY
(in theaters).
'Hitchcock' (Best Di rector, Steven (Best Grownup Love Story) Spielberg; Reader's Choice The passions of youth have Award) long since faded, but as Mr. and Too many celluloid LinMrs. Alfred Hitchcock, Ancolns have been barely as thony Hopkins and Helen Miranimated as the robotic one ren revel in the warm waters at Disneyland. Spielberg's of longtime love. In one thrillgenius is in delivering both ing scene, as the two labor on a warm personal portrait of the infamous "Psycho" shower Lincoln and a fierce look at scene, we see them in their elea wily politician gaming the ment: best friends and gleeful system in the name of a mor- partners in crime (home video al imperative (in theaters). release not yet announced).
WEDNESDAY
MONDAY
Oscarnominees
'Lincoln'
LA PINECHAMBER TOASTMASTERS:8-9a.m.;Gordy's Truck Stop, La Pine; 541-536-9771.
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5 0-PL U S
Question
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D 3
DATING COACH
Continued from D1 He said it's crucial to make sure an elderly parent can access his or her bathroom, bedroom a nd the home'scommon areas without going up or down stairs in case he or she develops problems walking or has to use a wheelchair. It's also important to make sure there are no steep slopes leading up to or away from the house so the parent can use the front and back doors without any problems. " If y ou're l o oking t o move, build or consolidate, a single-level home is your best option," Sensenbach said. If a person lives in a multilevel house and their parent doesn't, he added, then it may be better to have the child move in with the parent instead. Sensenbach said it's important for both generations to have a place they can go for privacy besides their bedrooms. Studies h ave shown adult children spend significantly more time caring for their parents once they've moved in together, so its crucial to make sure everyone can get some time apart. Once a person's home has met these requirements, then Sensenbach said its time to start looking at things that can be changed. The first place is the bathroom, where it's important to make sure the doorway is wide enough for a wheelchair and the barrier between the bathtub/shower is low enough so the parent can bathe without the risk of falling. It's also important to make sure there is enough space to install handrails so the toilet or the bathtub/shower is easier to use. For the o t her r o oms, Sensenbach said its important to make sure there is a sharp diff erence in color between surfacesthat are different heights — such as the kitchen floor and counters — so an elderly parent can still see them if he or she starts to lose their sight. Otherwise, he or she may bump into things or t r ip even when there is a slight change in elevation. Sensenbach also recommends making sure there is enough lighting in the hallways leading to the parent's bedroom or bathroom so they can get in and out of bed with both feet firmly planted on the floor, that the hallways be free of throw rugs somebody can slip on and that the doors have lever doorknobs so a person can use them without putting too much strain on the hands. Sensenbach said some of these upgrades are relatively cheap — many hardware stores sell inexpensive lever doorknob adapters to be installed over round doorknobs — while others can cost a lot of money. That's why it's important to make sure aperson's home issuitable to house an elderly parent before taking any more steps.
5 atin ti s orma in a irst ate reat Make your first date a great one with the help of these tips:
equal: When people are nervous, they have a tendency to • Leave your past in t h e jibber-jabber.Be sure to ask a past. In college, the motto my man a lot of questions. If you friends and I always lived by find yourself talking continuwas what happened at colously for more than a minute lege stays at college. The same information about y o u rself. or two without him saying a goes for your ex on a firstdate. Often we think w e are do- word, then be aware that you Leave him out of the conver- ing ourselves a favor giving a are probably overtalking. A sation, other than to say you man lots of information about first date is a time for sharing were married and divorced. ourselves on a first date. First a lot of surface information Men consider ex-bashing, or dates are nothing more than about your likes and interests troubles with the ex, too much meet-and-greets to determine on different topics. Your goal drama to deal with at this ear- if you'd like to get to know is to find common threads to ly stage of the dating game. each other better. see if you want to take this to a • Don't give out too m uch •Be sure communication is second date.
Stories Continued from D1
The program During e ac h S T O RIESconnectUS meeting, participants write a two-page essay about a p a rticular moment or theme in their lives. Vancil w r ot e h i s N o v osibirsk essay for an assignment on tolerance, while others in last week's session read a story about the holidays. The program's participants then share and discuss each other's stories and topics without critiquing the written work. Perry made it c l ear that t he program is not a w r i t ing workshop, but more of a forum where people can express themselves and reflect on their lives. Critiquing their work for poor grammar or word choice, she said, would be "like editing someone's letters." The g r oup-based s t r ucture used in Perry's program draws its inspiration from a guided autobiography courses gerontologist James Birren developed more than 30 years ago, said Chris Wolsko,
a psychology professor with Oregon S t at e Un i v ersityCascades Campus. Wolsko and Perry teamed up to start STORIESconnect-US in November 2010 and offered the first series of meetings at Hospice of Redmond in 2011. The two are now working with community organization Central Oregon Council on Aging and a local Veterans of Foreign Wars chapter to expand the program and possibly set it up as a stand-alone nonprofit
group. Wolsko said Birren's approach to writing autobiographies has several benefits because it incorporates many elements used in group therapy sessions.People work as individuals when they write their stories and sometimes find relief when they write about something they were holding back for a long period of time, he said. Then they get a sense of validation when they share their stories in a supportive environment. "It's a perfect tool to get people thinking about their lives," Diane Kellstrom, the bereavement coordinator with Hospice of Redmond, who hosted the workshop when it f i r st started out. "It brings the past back to life (for people) and connects them with it."
— Reporter: 541-617-7816, mmcleanibendbulletin.com
LISA COPELAND
•Be "present." Put your cell-
As women, we are so used to
phone away so you can engage taking care of others that we in a conversation. A man wants to feel as if you are interested in getting to know him. Plus, as we age, multitasking is a lot harder to do. You'll probably find you didn't hear a word he said if you're on your phone texting during your date. And it's pretty embarrassing to look
forget and automatically start trying to make life easier for the man sitting across the table from us on a first date. Let him take care of the bad service, don't tell him how he should have handled a situation and for sure don't criticize him for what he eats or how he walks up over your reading glasses or talks. If you find you don't and say, "Could you please re- like this man, then walk away. peat that?" — Lisa Copeland is "The Dating •Put your most feminine side Coach Who Makes Dating Fun forward; let him be the man: and Easier after 50n'
Gillespie said his efforts at recording history have been focused on having a single person interview people about a certain topic — r anching and farming, the timber industry and World War II — and recording those interviews so they can be featured as part of an exhibit. But he knows this program is l i mited because one person can only do one interview at a time and they have to pick the people they interview. "We certainly don't have Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin the time to do what Dana's Bob Vancil, 73, left, discusses an essay he wrote about the Cold War during a STORIESconnectUS doing," he said, explaining meeting at the Redmond Senior Center. that STORIESconnectUS is a more efficient way of collecting these stories because it Reconnect with one's self do more with their lives. wrote about one afternoon creates an atmosphere where Perry worked closely with w hen she was 6 a n d s aw several people write stories all K ellstrom w he n s h e wa s Saving history the Rockettes take the stage at once. ready to run the first series of Judy Bowden, 80, d idn't dressed as toy soldiers. In addition to being free "Sixty years later, that rou- of these personnel and time S TORIESconnectUS m e e t - think her l if e was i nterestings in September 2011. The ing when she signed up for tine is still a part of the pro- l imitations, G i l lespie s a i d program's first 2 0 p a r t ici- STORIESconnectUS. But as g ram," Bowden said of t h e the program has been able pants had all experienced the she progressed through her performance and how excited to help people come out of loss of a loved one and had writing assignments, she real- she was to see it. their shells. His oral history signed up with the hospice's ized she had done a lot more Gordon Gillespie, executive interview subjects are limited grief counseling program. than she thought and seemed director of Prineville's Bow- to the people who come forKellstrom said many of these satisfied with its results. What man Museum, said stories like ward or are recommended by people, who were between the she may not have realized was these are important to record someone else, he said, adding ages of 56 and 82, were having that by preserving her stories, because they can add a lot of that if someone doesn't come problems re-establishing their she was also preserving a little detail and perspective to the forward tobe interviewed, he identities as individuals rather bit of history. basicfacts recorded in many might miss their stories altothan as somebody's spouse. When she read her holiday historical accounts. His mu- gether and miss their contri"They felt like they didn't traditions essay, Bowden talk- seum and the Crook County butions to history. "You lose people," he said. have a purpose any more," she ed about how people some- Historical Society have been said, adding this was usually times missed plucking a few working to record these sto- "They die and they take their harder for the women than it pin feathers when they cooked ries and they're also thinking stories with them." — Reporter: 541-617-7816, was for the men. "The days of a holiday turkey and got an about turning to STORIESbeing a wife or a mother were unpleasantsurprise.She also connectUS for help. mmclean@bendbulletin.com behind them and they didn't know who or what they were." As they went through the process, Kellstrom said she saw how one person's story might prompt someone else in the group to think about the same time period in their lives — for instance, hearing Vancil read about the Cold War might have prompted someone else in the group to think about their experiences during that time — and an accomplishment they may have overlooked because it had been overshadowed by something else. Often, people look back on a time when their family was s truggling, realize the r o le they played in getting through it and come back with a much b etter image of w h o t h e y were and what t hey could accomplish. "You could see them evolving back into the strong women they had been before their loss," she said, adding that this experience alone was enough to inspire someone grieving the loss of a loved one to keep living and
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D4
TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
PARENTS 4 ICIDS A pair of ducks swim past the
FAMILY CALENDAR JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring a performance by the Mel Brown Septet; $35 plus fees in advance; "LEGALLYBLONDE,THE 5 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel,10 N.W. MUSICAL":The Redmond High Minnesota Ave., Bend;541-382School drama department presents 8436 or www.jazzattheoxford.com. the musical about sorority girl Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law SPAY-GHETTIBENEFIT DINNER: A School to win back her ex-boyfriend; spaghetti dinner with music and a pastry auction; proceeds benefit the $10-$15; 7 p.m.; Redmond High BrightSide Animal Center's spay and School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; neuter program; $15, $10children 541-923-4800 or www.redmond. ages 10 and younger; 5-8 p.m.; k12.or.us/rhs/site/default.asp. VFW Hall, 1836 S.W.Veterans Way, "THE BROTHERSGRIMM Redmond; 541-923-0882. SPECTACULATHON"AND "LEGALLYBLONDE,THE "GOLIDLOCKS ONTRIAL": The MUSICAL":The Redmond High Summit High School drama School drama department presents department presents two back-tothe musical about sorority girl Elle back plays that put a modern spin Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law on classic fairy tales; $5; 7 p.m.; School to win back her ex-boyfriend; Summit High School, 2855 $10-$15; 7 p.m.; Redmond High N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; School, 675 S.W. RimrockWay; 541-322-3300. 541-923-4800 or www.redmond. CHRISTOPHER OFTHE WOLVES: k12.or.us/rhs/site/default.asp. The multi-instrumentalist "THE BROTHERSGRIMM performs, followed by a sound SPECTACULATHON"AND healing experience; bring pillows "GOLIDLOCKS ONTRIAL": The and blankets; $10-$15 suggested Summit High School drama donation; 7-9 p.m.; Hawthorn department presents two back-toHealing Arts Center, 39 N.W. back plays that puta modern spin on Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-330-0334 classic fairy tales; $5; 7 p.m.; Summit or www.hawthorncenter.com. High School, 2855 N.W.Clearwater FIRE PITPARTY:Sit around the Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300. outdoor fire pitand tell stories, with TELLURIDEMOUNTAINFILM ON food, beverages,andlive music by TOUR:Screening of films that Harley Bourbon; proceedsbenefit celebrate mountain people, culture Cascade School of Music; free and conservation; proceeds benefit admission; 7-10p.m.; Riverfront Plaza, The Environmental Center; $17.50 on Brooks Street at theBreezeway, plusfeesin advance,$20 day of Bend, Bend;541-728-0066 or show, $30 in advance for both crowsfeetcommons©gmail.com. nights; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; TELLURIDEMOUNTAINFILM ON Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall TOUR:Screening of films that St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. celebrate mountain people, culture towertheatre.org. and conservation; proceeds benefit "WORKING":Thoroughly Modern The Environmental Center; $17.50 Productions and Stage Right plusfees in advance,$20 dayof Productions present the musical show, $30 in advance for both depicting the working lives of nights; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; everyday people; $21, $18 students Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette towertheatre.org. Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or "WORKING": Thoroughly Modern www.2ndstreettheater.com. Productions andStageRight CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY Productions present the musical WINTER CONCERT: The Central depicting the working lives of everyday Oregon Symphony performs a people; $21, $18students and seniors; winter concert, under the direction 7:30 p.m.; 2ndStreet Theater, 220N.E. of Michael Gesme; featuring Lafayette Ave., Bend;541-312-9626 or Kate Hamilton; free but a ticket www.2ndstreettheater.com. is required; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-3173941,info©cosymphony.com or SATURDAY www.cosymphony.com. CENTRAL OREGONGUITAR & GEARSWAP:A swap of guitars, SUNDAY accessories and other musical instruments; $2.50 admission; 9 EAGLE WATCH2013:Includes a.m.-4 p.m.; The SoundGarden,1279 presentations, tours, exhibits, N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633activities that explore the natural 6804 or www.coguitarswap.com. and cultural significance of eagles and more; event also takes place EAGLEWATCH2013: Includes within Cove Palisades State Park; presentations, tours, exhibits, free;10a.m.-4 p.m.; Round Butte activities that explore the natural Overlook Park, Southwest Mountain and cultural significance of eagles View Drive, Madras; 800-551-6949 and more; event also takes place or www.oregonstateparks.org. within Cove Palisades State Park; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Round Butte CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY Overlook Park, Southwest Mountain WINTER CONCERT: The Central View Drive, Madras; 800-551-6949 Oregon Symphony performs a or www.oregonstateparks.org. winter concert, under the direction of Michael Gesme; featuring FREE FAMILYSATURDAY:The Kate Hamilton; free but a ticket is museum offers complimentary required; 2 p.m.; Bend High School, admission for the whole family; overflow parking and shuttle service 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info@cosymphony.com or www. available at Morning Star Christian cosymphony.com. School; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. KNOW CLUE,D.B. COOPER AND Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. THE EXPLODINGWHALE: View a slide show tour of legendary KNOW CLUE,D.B.COOPER AND Northwestfolk heroes with author THE EXPLODINGWHALE: View William L. Sullivan; free; 2 p.m.; a slide show tour of legendary Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Northwest folk heroes with author Cedar St.; 541-312-1034 or www. William L. Sullivan; free; 2 p.m.; deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or REDMOND COMMUNITYCONCERT www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. ASSOCIATIONPERFORMANCE:
Eugene Ballet performs contemporary dance to the music of The Beatles; $50 season ticket, $20 students, $105 family ticket; 2 and 6:30p.m.;Ridgeview HighSchool, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-3507222, redmondcca@hotmail.com or www.redmondcca.org. "WORKING":Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present the musical depicting the working lives of everyday people; $21, $18 studentsand seniors;3 p.m.;2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com.
TODAY
MONDAY CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY WINTER CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs a winter concert, under the direction of Michael Gesme; featuring Kate Hamilton; free but a ticket is required; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-3173941,info@cosymphony.com or www.cosymphony.com.
TUESDAY No Family event listings.
WEDNESDAY GETTING STARTED: This is an opportunity for prospective students to meet with a COCC admissions representative for guidance through time-sensitive steps for enrollment, including federal funding, choosing appropriate courses and the use of academic support services; free; 2-3 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7500. GETTING STARTED: This is an opportunity for prospective students to meet with a COCC admissions representative for guidance through time-sensitive steps for enrollment, including federal funding, choosing appropriate courses and the use of academic support services; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Boyle Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7500. "LEGALLYBLONDE,THE MUSICAL":The Redmond High School drama department presents the musical about sorority girl Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law School to win back her ex-boyfriend; $ IO-$15;7 p.m.;Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.redmond. k12.or.us/rhs/site/default.asp.
YOUR PET
curious eyes of a group of preschoolers birding in Drake Park. Andy Tullie The Bulletin
Submitted photo
Birding Continued from D1 During t h e ho u r long class, Yanalcanlin tries to engage their senses: listen-
Charlie loves to play
Ifyou go
Say hello to Charlie, an English cream retriever who celebrated
What:Birding for Preschoolers
his fifth birthday onWednesday. Charlie lives with Debi Persons
When:10 a.m. Mondays;
ing, seeing and especially
aboutan hourlong
touching. (Children might examine the tactile difference between a pinecone and a s p ruce cone, for
Where:Meet near the rest-
instance.).
Ol'g
Yanalcanlin a l s o i ncludes songs and o t her activities. A typical class might draw as few as three child ren or as m any a s 2 0 — warmer weather usually means more kids. What the children encounter depends on the day and time of year. The group frequently enco u nters Canada geese, mallards, northern pintail ducks and
roomsat DrakePark, Bend Cost:Free Contact:www.ecaudubon.
mon," said Yanalcanlin. And with awareness, she hopes, comes adesireforthe children to learn more. "As you get to know it, you get to love it and you want to protect it." The East Cascade Audub on Society also o f fers a monthly indoor class for kids c alled Fledgling Fun. T h i s pygmy and red-breasted class is aimed at children in n uthatches, as w e l l a s kindergarten to f i fth g r ade, American robins and com- a lthough p r eschoolers a r e mon ravens. More rare but also welcome.The class takes still regularly spotted birds place from 3:45-5:15p.m. on include red-tailed hawks, the second Monday of each bald eagles an d b e lted month at The Environmental kingfishers, according to Center in Bend. Children learn Yanalcanlin. about different topics through She also makes sure to hands-on activities and arts i nclude i n formation f o r and crafts. the parents in the group, Yanalcanlin says families to offer suggestions about are also welcome to attend how to explore nature with field trips and other activities children. put on by the group, including She believes once some- Birding By Ear, a new class o ne starts p ointing o u t slated to begin sometime in birds, trees, flowers and the spnng. other aspects of nature, All of the programs are free. "It's a great way to introduce they start to become more aware. Then, every time yourself and young children to they encounter nature, they birds and nature," Yanalcanlin see more detail. "There is said. such beauty in the com— Reporter: 541-617-7860,
in Bend. He loves playing outside with his toys —especially tug of war — and enjoys riding in the
car andgoing onwalks. Charlie is a wonderful companionwith lots of energy. • Tell ue about your pet: To submit a photo for publication, email a high-resolution image along with your animel'e name, ege and species or breed, your name, ege, city of residence and contact information, and afew words aboutwhat makes your pet epeaab Send photos to pete@ bendbulletimcom, drop them off at 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, or mail them to The Bulletin Pete section, P.O. Box 6020, Bend, OR 97708. Contact: 541-383-0358.
ADOPT ME
Subm>tted photo
Plays well with others Meet Harvey, a 6-year-old
Gordon setter andGerman shepherd mix. Harveyloves everyone hemeets anddoes well with other caninefriends. He has also lived with cats but is very playful with them. Harvey
loves going for walks, playing with toys, hiking and socializing. • If you would hke to meet Harvey or any other animal available for adoption at the shelter Humane Society of Central Oregon, visit 61170 S.E. 27th St., Bend. All adoptione include spay or neuter, afree health exam, microchip lo, vacanation, collar, leash orcarrying box, ID tag, food end more.
THURSDAY "LEGALLYBLONDE,THE MUSICAL":The Redmond High School drama department presents the musical about sorority girl Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law School to win back her ex-boyfriend; $10-$15; 7 p.m.; Redmond High School, 675 S.W. Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www.redmond. k12.or.us/rhs/site/default.asp. "WORKING":Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present the musical depicting the working lives of everyday people; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com.
OlllTHINB
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HELMETS • GQGGLRS POLES•GLOVIS GEARBAGS
STORY TIMES and library youth events • Forthe weekof Feb.22-28. Story timesare free unless othenvise noted. I i
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2690 N.E. U.S. Highway 20, Bend; 541-318-7242 • ONCE UPON ASTORYTIME: All ages; 11 a.m. Friday. I
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19530 Amber MeadowDrive, Bend; 541-388-1188 • STORYTIME:All ages; 11a.m. Thursday. 'll
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175 S.W. MeadowLakesDrive, Prineville; 541-447-7978 • PRESCHOOL STORYTIME:Ages 3and older; 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and 11a.m.Thursday. • WEE READ: Ages 0-3;10a.m. Mondayand Wednesday. I I
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IIS IMQ SK (Last years inventory)
• • t •
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241 S.W. Seventh St., Madras; 541-475-3351 • BABIES AND TODDLERS STORY TIME:10:10 a.m.Tuesday. • PRESCHOOLAND OLDER STORY TIME:Ages 3-5; 10:30 a.m. and 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. • SPANISHSTORYTIME: All ages; 1 p.m. Wednesday. •
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601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-617-7097 • BABY STEPS: Ages 0-18 months; 11:30 a.m. Wednesday and 1:30 p.m. Thursday. • TODDLIN' TALES:Ages18-36 months; 10:15 a.m. and 11 a.m. Tuesdayand10:15 a.m. Wednesday. • PRESCHOOLPARADE:Ages3-5;10:30a.m.Fridayand 1:30 p.m. Tuesday. • MUSIC & MOVEMENT: Ages 3-5: 10:30 a.m. Thursday. •
$10 ages 65and older, $7ages 5-12, free ages 4andyounger)
• WILD WEDNESDAYS: Ages 7-12; treasure hunt; 12:30p.m.tocloseW ednesday. • BACKPACK EXPLORERS:Ages3-4; explore museum's animal habitat, sharestories andsongs;10to11 a m.Thursday; $15 per child nonmembers,$10per child members. • TOTALLYTOUCHABLETALES: Ages 2-5; storytelling about animals andpeople of the High Desert; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.
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62080 DeanSwift Road; 541-330-3760 • TODDLIN' TALES:Ages0-3;9:30a.m.W ednesday. • PRESCHOOL PARADE:Ages 3-5; 9:30 a.m. Thursday. • SATURDAY STORIES:All ages; 10 a.m. Saturday. • BLOCK PARTY:Ages6-11:LEGO Universe;2:30to4 p.m. Wednesday. 59800S. U.S.Highway97,Bend;www.highdesertmuseum.org; 541-382-4754 • Vn/ess noted,eventsincluded withadmission($12adults,
16425 First St.; 541-312-1090 • FAMILY STORY TIME: All ages; 10:30 a.m. Thursday. • TECH LAB:Ages12-17; 3 p.m. Monday. I
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56855VentureLane;541-312-1080 • FAMILY FUNSTORYTIME: Ages 0-5; 10:30 a.m. Tuesday.
Prices not applicable to prior sales.
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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT TV TODAY
e : ea e' ownoina c e s TV SPOTLIGHT By Derrik J. Lang The Associated Press
L OS ANGELES — K r i sten Kish is no longer among the leftovers on "Top Chef: Seattle." T he 28-year-old chef d e cuisine at Boston restaurant Stirreturned in Wednesday's edition of the Bravo cooking competition after facing off against five previously eliminated contestants on "Last Chance Kitchen," the weekly companion web series that offers abooted chef the chance
to come back. In the penultimate installment, Kish and unstoppable finalist B r ooke W i l l iamson toppled Sheldon Simeon, the 30-year-old executive chef at Star Noodle in Lahaina, Hawaii. Kish and Williamson will go head to head in the finale Wednesday. D uring th e f i n ale, K i sh and Williamson will prepare a five-course meal on the fly as the show's panel of judges and acrowd of diners spectate from the sidelines. For the first time in a"Top Chef" finale, the judges will declare winners as
each course is served, meaning th e c o mpetitors might not even make it to dessert if one of the women comes out ahead. "It's gonna be a great competition," said h ost P adma Lakshmi. " Whenever i t ' s one against another, it's always more exciting. Both of these chefs are very equally matched, and yet their cooking styles are so d i fferent. When I think about all the food I've tasted from Brooke and Kristen, I don't know who my money would be on. It's re-
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4 p.m. on ESPN2, "College Basketball" — BracketBusters, the two-day college hoops event that gave national IV exposure to NCAA Tournament hopefuls from nonpower conferences, will be held for the final time today and tomorrow.
Contestants Kristen Kish, left, and Brooke Williamson are the finalists in nTop Chef: Seattle," the cooking competition series airing at 10 p.m.
7:30 p.m. on ESPN,nNBA Basketballn — A clash of Western Conference playoff contenders goes down tonight in Oakland, Calif., where Stephen Curry and the Golden State Warriors hope to get a little payback against Tony Parker and the SanAntonio Spurs.
Wednesdays on Bravo.
8 p.m. onE3, "The Job" — Viceroy Hotel Group, which operates luxury resorts in such high-end locations as Beverly Hills, Palm Springs and Abu Dhabi, has an opening for a spa manager. Five candidates ranging in age from 25 to 43 have the opportunity to compete for that position. Four Viceroy executives and representatives of three other companies judge their efforts.
Bravo via The Associated Press
ally anybody's game."
PARENTS'GUIDE TO MOVIES This guide, compiled by Orlando Sentinel film critic Roger Moore, is published here every Friday It should be used with the MPAA rating system for selecting movies suitable for children. Films rated G, PG or PG-13are included, along with R-rated films that may have entertainment or educational value for older children with parental guidance.
'SNITCH' Rating: PG-13 for drug content and sequences of violence. What it's about: A teen lets a pal talk him into accepting a drug shipment, and thekid's dad has to go undercover to get his son's federal prison sentence reduced. The kid attractor factor: Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, fighting drug dealers, driving tractor trailers. Goodlessons/bad lessons: Minimum mandatory sentencing m eans you make a singledrugrelated mistake, your life is ruined.
Violence: A few shootouts with bloody consequences. Language: Profanity, but not as much as you might think. Sex: None. Drugs: Sold, shipped, and cocaine is sniffed. Parents' advisory: A reasonably realistic portrayal of what happens when civilians get mixed up in the drug trade, suitable for13 and older.
'ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH' Rating: PG for action and some
mild rude humor. What it's about: Aliens who "come in peace" find themselves abducted, held captive in Area 51 and in need of rescue. The kid attractor factor: Aliens and spaceships. Goodlessons/badlessons: Looking out for you, "that's what brothers do." And beware the Slurpee "brain freeze." Violence: Some, mostly of the cartoon slapstick variety. Language: Squeaky clean. Sex: Nota hint.
Courtesy Steve Dietl via Summit Entertainment
Dwayne Johnson stars as John Matthews in "Snitch." See the full review in today's GO! Magazine.
Dear Abby: My wife of six years answer phone calls, so I text her. was recently arrested for wire She'll respond with one-word anfraud, involving the receipt of unswers — "yes," "no," "maybe." e mployment benefits. She w a s It doesn't bother me that she receiving money when she should chooses to live this way. She's an not have been. I knew she had ap- adult. I sent her money for her birthplied for benefits since she was laid day. She didn't acknowledge it. If I off; however, I was text invitations to her, I don't hear from her. not aware that she was falsifying docuShe doesn't go to • EAR ments in order to recollege, doesn't drive, ABBY 4 ceive the benefits. doesn't have a job and I feel h u rt , b e lives off her enabling trayed and offended. mother. According to I am a retired law enforcement of- her brother, she plays video games ficerand currently an independent all night and sleeps all day. fraud investigator. Our relationship After her birthday silence, should had been on the rocks for some I continue sending her money for time prior to this humiliating event. occasions'?The lack of respect How do I handle this mess? makes me think not, but my love — Betrayed in Florida for her says I should. The money is Dear Betrayed: The first thing to insignificant. Learning respect, I do is realize that your wife's indis- believe, is important. — Dad inBattle Creek, Mich. cretions are a reflection only on her character, not yours. Then let Dear Dad: It doesn't bother you the law take its course, and once that your daughter chooses to live you have cooled off, decide ratio- this way? That she doesn't work, nally if you want to continue a mar- doesn't go to school, plays video riage that has been "on the rocks games all night and sleeps all day? for some time." Is sheon drugs? Suffering from seDear Abby: Before my daughter vere depression'? turned 18, she followed the court's Your daughter's behavior is not visitation specifics, as her brother normaL You have described ayoung does. Now that she's 18, she doesn't woman in serious need of counselcall or come over at all. She won't ing to bring her back to reality. If
you love your daughter, forget the etiquette lesson and help her to get the psychological help she needs. Dear Abby: When I was 17, I was checked into a psychiatric hospital for severe depression and a suicide attempt. While I was there I met "Jim," a boy who was there for the same reasons. To make a long story short, we kept in touch and now we're dating. We benefitted from the experience and are good for each other. The catch is that he lives more than an hour away from me. We see each other frequently, but friends often ask how we met and we don't know how to answer the question. Neither of us wants to advertise that we spent time in a psych ward. How can we gracefully sidestep the question? — Dodging the Question in the U.S.A. Dear Dodging: It is difficult to sidestep a question that is asked so frequently in the course of conversation — especially if a couple seems compatible. Because you would rather not be specific, just say you met in a teen counseling group a few years ago. It's the truth — you were being counseled.
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORFRIDAY,
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov. 21)
FEB. 22, 2013: Thisyear othersfind you to be alluring and nearly magical. You have a flair for the dramatic. It is a given that you will be noticed. Romance ranks high in your life, asyou are unusually passionate this year. If you Stars showthe kind are single, you of dayyou'll have c ould encounter ** * * * D ynamic one great person ** * * P ositive a f t er another. Go ** * A verage with whatfeels100 ** So-so percent right. If you * Difficult are attached, the two of you will spice up your relationship in manyways. Do something very special for your sweetie this year. LEOmight not show it, but he or she often gets jealous.
ARIES (March 21-April 19) ** * * You switch gears with ease. You also put a lot of emphasis on your priorities, and you tend to break down self-imposed barriers. By dusk, others clearly receive your message: It is time for a changeofpace.Evenworkaholicswould benefit from this advice. Tonight: Life becomes fun.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20) ** * * You are able to say what you want, but it might appear as if your message isn't well-received. Don't be surprised if you have to repeat this discussion at least two more times; there might be something that the other party isn'tgetting. Tonight: Head on home.
YOUR HOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
than you thought. Relax and go with the flow. This, too, shall pass. Tonight: Catch up on a friend's news.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
— Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com
or P.o. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069
** * * F inish some research and make some calls in order to get to the root of what is going on. Youcould feel as if no one is giving you all the facts. Details keep slipping, no matterwhoyou speakto. Try a different approach, if need be.Tonight: In the limelight. ** * * S omeone really needs your time and attention. Make it your pleasure to be his or her voice of reason and/or a source of advice. Imagine what it might be like to be this person, and know that you might need to repeat this conversation again. Tonight: Do something different.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22)
** * * * O t hersseekyou out. Be receptive, but resist taking on someone else's responsibilities. You will be alot happier in the long run. Many invitations head your way. Sort through them, andyou could find the right one for you. Tonight: Make plans to bewith a special friend.
** * * You could feel a little off in the morning, but later you'll feel as if nothing can stop you. The difference is not only remarkable to you, but also to others. If you have been postponing an important discussion, the timeto have it is now. Tonight: You are the top dog.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) ** * Understand what is happening behind the scenes. Ask questions if you feel thatyou are missing some details. Realize thatyou need more information, and refrain from taking action for a while. You could develop a different opinion as a result. Tonight: Not to be found.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18)
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 • BEAUTIFUL CREATURES (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:40, 9:30 • DARK SKIES (PG- I3) 1:20, 3:55, 7:40, 10:10 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) I2:50,4:25,7:55 • ESCAPE FROM PLANETEARTH(PG) 3:25, 9:25 • ESCAPE FROM PLANETEARTH3-D (PG) 1:05, 7:05 • A GOOD DAY TODIE HARD IMAX (R) 12:15, 4, 7:10, 9:45 • A GOOD DAY TO DIEHARD (R)Noon,3:40,6:50,9:15 • THE HOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY3-D (PG-13) 6 • THE HOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13) I:35, 9:40 • IDENTITY THIEF (R) l2:40, 3:50, 6:55, 9:50 • LIFEOFPI (PG) I2:20 • LIFE OF PI 3-D (PG)3:20, 6:15, 9:10 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:20, 9:35 • MAMA (PG- I3) I:30, 4:35, 7:45, 10: I5 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 12:45, 3:45, 6:30, 9:20 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) 1, 4:10, 7:20, 9:55 • SNITCH (PG-13) 12:10, 3, 6:05, 9:05 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 1:15, 4:20, 7:30, 10:05 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:10, 6:35, 10 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies. •
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9 p.m. on TRAV, "Ghost Adventures" — In the new episode "New Orleans," Zak, Nick and Aaron visit the city reputed to be the nation's most haunted. They check out three locations where paranormal activity is said to be strong: a bordelloturned-pub, a mortuary and the home of voodoo queen Bloody Mary. What haunts them most, however, is a visit to the Lower 9th Ward, where the devastation left by Hurricane Katrina is still apparent. ©zap2tt
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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E. U.S.Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • AMOUR (PG-13) Noon, 3, 7, 9 • ARGO (R) 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:20 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) 12:15, 6:15 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 1, 4:15, 7:25 • QUARTET (PG-13) 1:15, 4, 7, 9:30 • SILVERLININGS PLAYBOOK (R)12:30,3:30,6:30,9:25 • STAND UP GUYS (R) 3:15, 9:15 I
Elevation Capital Strategies 400 Sw BluA Drive Suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz
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McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W.BondSt., 541-330-8562 • THIS IS40 (R) 9 • THETWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART2 (PG-13) 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 2f and older only. Younger than 2f may attend screenings before 7 pm. ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. i
3 NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Award-ceinning
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • BARBARA (PG-13) 5:30 • A ROYAL AFFAIR (R) 8 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777
• BEAUTIFUL CREATURES (PG-13) 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 • AGOOD DAYTO DIE HARD (R)4:30,6:45,9 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4, 6:30, 9 • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) 4 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 7, 9:15
Sisters Movie House,720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • ESCAPE FROM PLANETEARTH(PG) 5, 7 • A GOOD DAY TO DIEHARD (R)5:30,7:45 • IDENTITY THIEF (R) 5:15, 7:45 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 5, 7:30
** * * F ocus on accomplishing what you need to get done. Also, take time to schedule some personal appointments that you have let go for far too long. Your sense of humor helps dispel some tension. Make time later in the day for friends. Tonight: Accept an invitation
Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W.U.S. Highway 97,541-475-3505 • ESCAPE FROM PLANETEARTH3-D (PG) 5:05, 7: IO,9: I5 • A GOOD DAY TO DIEHARD (R)5,7:20,9:40 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) 4:25, 6:50, 9:20 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 3:20, 6:30
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)
Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., 541-416-1014 • ESCAPE FROM PLANETEARTH(PG) 3:40, 6:30 • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(UPSTAIRS — R)4, 7 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
** * * Your imagination takes over and forces you to concentrate. This is effective, ** * * * Y ou have taken on more as it helps you get through important tasks responsibility than you would have liked and complete your to-do list. You'll see an to with a project. Complete it, if possible, GEMINI (May 21-June20) end to all this extra effort, so lighten up. and you will feel much better. Also, work ** * * * R eturn all of your phone calls Tonight: Join afriend for munchies, but on saying "no" more often. An afternoon and clear your desk in the morning. Come meeting could develop into a get-together. don't make it a late night. midafternoon, you will want some time for yourself. A meeting could go far longer Tonight: A must appearance. ©2013 by King Features Syndicate
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22)
MOVIETIMES TDDAY • There may beanadditional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21)
** * * F ollow through on key matters as you wish, and keep aneye onthe change of pace as the weekend draws near. You will need to clear up amiscommunication or a problem with someone at a distance. Tonight: Time to go off and treat yourself to that long-desired item.
9 p.m. onI3, "Touch" — Martin (Kiefer Sutherland) is forced to make a difficult decision and an unlikely alliance in the wakeof some unfor eseendevelopments at Aster. Lucy (Maria Bello) gives the police some new information about her missing daughter. Avram (Bodhi Elfman) warns Martin and Jake (David Mazouz) that Guillermo (Said Taghmaoui) is looking for them in the new episode "Perfect Storm."
of "Planet 51" and "Monsters vs. Aliens," inoffensive to all ages.
Drugs: Tranquilizer darts. Parents' advisory: A mash-up
Fraudinvestigator mortified bywife's arrest '%i..
8 p.m. onI3, "Kitchen Nightmares" — Nino's, an Italian restaurant in Long Beach, Calif., has been open since1958, but it may not be open much longer if somethingdoesn'tchange.The couple who had been running the restaurant from the beginning have retired and left their oldest son in charge, and he's doing a poor job, to say the least. He's also a confrontational fellow who makes excuses for everything. His folks call on Gordon Ramsay to talk some sense into him.
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film reviews inside today's GD!Magazine.
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YEAR-END CLEARANCE l I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I
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With Coupon, while supplies last.
I ¹Pt I HWY 20E & Dean Swift Rd. l I (1 block West of Costco) I
> 541-323-3011• StarkS.COm l
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TH E BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
/5 ppoV>D<o ~ ""
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Enjoy a spectacular 5-night French Polynesia vacation courtesy of Pleasant Holidays,
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Getaways Travel and The Bulletin. This fabulous trip for two includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights'accommodation at Bora Bora Pearl Beach Resort 8c Spa. You'll discover the sparkling magic of the lagoon, admire the awe-inspiring Mount Otemanu while luxuriating in the peace and tranquility of the surroundings. A prize package valued at $7,000
FOR MORE INFORMATION OR TO SUBSCRIBE, CALL THE BULLETIN AT
For complete rules and regulations, visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacationrules or stop by The Bulletin at 1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend. Additional entry forms are available in newspapers for sale across Central Oregon and in the lobby of The Bulletin. Entry forms should be delivered or mailed to The Bulletin. Last day to enter is March 22, 201 3 at noon. Winner will be drawn March 25, 201 3. *Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELES and Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required.
OIPIPIICIIAIL IILIILILIRI'IIM CIRMWAVS tI'IRAVR VACAtI'IIOIMIMMWAV SWIRRIS PMKIRS RIMtt'IRV IPOIRN Sign me up to win The Bulletin's Sixth Annual Subscriber Vacation Getaway Sweepstakes! O fficial entry form o n ly. No ot he r rep ro d u c t i o n s are a c c e p t e d
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Getaways Travel l Pleasant ttaliftatts. GETAWAYS TRAVEL is located at: 563 SW 13th St., Bend, OR 97702• 541-317-1274 • www.getawaystravel.net
RULES:This award is valid for travel April 1 —May 31, 2013 & November 1 — December 12, 2013. Award is non-transferable, non-refundable, not redeemable for cash and may not be sold. Travel over holidays and other peak travel periods is restricted. Optional insurance and any upgrades are the responsibility of the recipient. The recipient of this certificate is responsible for paying any resort taxes and fees, parking fees, room service charges and any other incidentals assessed directly by the hotel, and/or not directly specified above. Travel is subject to availability and some restrictions may apply.Winner must be at least 21 years old. Employees of participating companies and its properties, sponsors, vendors and their immediate families are not eligible to win. The Bulletin reserves the right to deem entries ineligible. One coupon per edition. For all rules and regulations visit www.bendbulletin.com/vacationrules. Email addresses will not be sold but individuals who enter this contest may receive emails from THE BULLETIN, GETAWAYSTRAVEL and PLEASANT HOLIDAYS. One coupon per edition.
ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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c ontact u s : Place an ad: 541-385-5809
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Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the business hoursof 8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
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ITEMS FORSALE 201 - NewToday 202- Want to buy or rent 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 204- Santa's Gift Basket 205- Free Items 208- Pets and Supplies 210- Furniture & Appliances 211 - Children's Items 212 - Antiques & Collectibles 215- Coins & Stamps 240- Crafts and Hobbies 241 - Bicycles and Accessories 242 - Exercise Equipment 243 - Ski Equipment 244 - Snowboards 245 - Golf Equipment 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. 248- Health and Beauty Items 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs 251 - Hot TubsandSpas 253- TV, Stereo andVideo 255 - Computers 256- Photography 257- Musical Instruments 258 - Travel/Tickets 259- Memberships 260- Misc. Items 261 - MedicalEquipment 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. 263- Tools
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Want to Buy or Rent
Wanted: $Cash paid for vintage costume jewelry. Top dollar paid for Gold/Silver.l buy by the Estate, Honest Artist Elizabeth,541-633-7006
Just boughtanewboat? Sell yourold oneinthe ClaSSifiedS!ASkabOutour
SuperSellerrates!
541-385-5809
Estate Sales Look What I Found! You'll find a little bit of
everything in The Bulletin's daily
garage and yard sale section. From clothes to collectibles, from housewares to hardware, classified is always the first stop for cost-conscious consumers. And if you're planning your own garage or yard sale, look to the classifieds to bring in the buyers. You won't find a better place for bargains! Call Classifieds: 541-385-5809 or email
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Snowberry Village 1188 N E 27th ¹6 . L o t so f kitchen items, furniture 8 household items.. Fri-Sat 8:30-4; Sun. 8:30-2. 286
Sales Northeast Bend 8th Street Artisans Saturday Market, 10-4 every Sat. 1036 NE 8th St., Bend behind 7-11 on Greenwood.
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264-Snow RemovalEquipment 265 - Building Materials 266- Heating and Stoves 267- Fuel and Wood 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 270 - Lost and Found GARAGESALES 275 - Auction Sales 280 - Estate Sales 281 - Fundraiser Sales 282- Sales Northwest Bend 284- Sales Southwest Bend 286- Sales Northeast Bend 288- Sales Southeast Bend 290- Sales RedmondArea 292- Sales Other Areas FARM MARKET 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery 316 - Irrigation Equipment 325- Hay, Grain and Feed 333- Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies 341 - Horses and Equipment 345-Livestockand Equipment 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers 358- Farmer's Column 375- Meat and Animal Processing 383 - Produce andFood
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Pets & Supplies
Furniture & Appliances
English Bulldogs AKC two males 4 yrs., both studs, $500 ea./$900
NEED TO CANCEL YOUR AD? The Bulletin Classifieds has an "After Hours" Line Call 541-383-2371 24 hrs. to cancel
Guns, Hunting & Fishing
both. 541-420-9950
German Shepherds, AKC www.sherman-ranch.us 541-281-6829
Japanese Chin pups, 1M 1F 7 wks, 1st shots, $250 ea. 541-447-0210.
your ad! Over 40 Juniper lamps, all sizes, call for pics, 541-408-4613
K ittens/cats avail. a t Refrigerator, F rigidaire PetSmart (nr Target) thru 26 cu ft side x side with several rescue groups, water & ice, $225 obo. Feb 23 & 24, 11am-4pm. 541-923-8006 Tame, shots, altered, ID Table, round, glass with chip, more. Info/photos, red/black chairs $75. 541-389-8420; or visit 541-639-6656. www.craftcats.org Twin size bed frame, Labrador, AKC b l ack white, only $10. puppies, family raised, 541-639-6656. parents on site. $300 each. 541-508-0429 212 Labrador Pups, AKC Antiques & Chocolate/Yeliow/White Collectibles Hips OFA guaranteed. $300-$400. 1851 Civil War parlor 1-541-954-1727 chair, $500. Call for MiKi/Chihuahua pups pic, 541-408-4613 1st shorts, $250 ea. 541-447-0210
Pitbull Blue Fawn pups. $250 F; $200 M. Both p arents o n s ite . 541-571-9623
Beer "Pump",1900s, Poodle pups AKC toys. made in England by Loving, cuddly compan208 Gaskell 8 Chambers, ions. 541-475-3889 $450. 541-408-4613 Pets 8 Supplies Queensfand Heelers standard 8 mini,$150 8 People Look for Information Adopt a nice CRAFT cat Alaskan Malamute up. 541-280-1537 About Products and or kitten from Tumalo pups, 2M 3F, $400 rightwayranch.wordServices Every Daythrough sanctuary, Pet Smart, or each. 541-771-9255. press.com TheBulletin Classiiyeds Petco! Fixed, shots, ID Australian Shepherd Rodent control experts The Bulletin reserves chip, tested, more! 389AKC Reg'd puppies, red 8 420. P h otos, i n f o: (barn cats) seek work in the right to publish all 8 blue merle, red tri, www.craftcats.org 8 like exchange for safe shelready to go! $700/up. ter, basic care. Fixed, ads from The Bulletin us on Facebook. 541-420-1580 or shots. W e del i ver! newspaper onto The www.highdesettaussies com 541-389-8420. Bulletin Internet webAdult companion cats site. Australian She p herd S cottish Terrier A K C FREE to seniors, disminis, purebred, no pamale, 1st shots, wormed, abled & veterans! Tame, The Bulletin Ser eg Central Cregcc snce l903 altered, shots, ID chip, pers, 1 blue female, 1 red 10 wks, ready to go now! 541-317-5624 more. Will always take male. 541-604-6060 240 back for any r eason. Siberian Husky female, Crafts & Hobbies 5 41-389- 8 4 20 . V i s it AKC, 15 mos, beautiful! Sat/Sun 1-5. P h otos, $400. 541-977-7019 Rockhound Equipment info: www.craftcats.org. Yorkies! Everlasting love - Saw, grind, sand & just in time for Valenp olish. L o rtone & . giN' Alaskan Malamute AKC tines, 3 puppies left. Highland Park Bend. p ups, ready to g o. Boxer / English Bulldog 541-777-7743 Info 541 280-5574 (Valley Bulldog) F irst shots & d e w 210 brindle puppies, CKC ormed. $ 7 0 0-$800. Need help fixing stuff? Recl'd First shots. Furniture & Appliances Call A Service Professional 541-410-7563. $800. 541-325-3376 find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com Chihuahuas, 8 wks, long A1 Washers&Dryers hair female 8 male, $250 $150 ea. Full war246 ea, cash. 541-876-1028 ranty. Free Del. Also Guns, Hunting wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355 & Fishing
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The Bulletin Offers Colt 357 Magnum Py- Hiking boots, L O WA Free Private Party Ads lines - 3 days BarkTurfSoil.com thon 6" barrel. Graded Gortex wm's 11, worn •• 3Private Party Only at 98% from local ap- once, retail $179; sell • Total of items adverpraiser. A joy to shoot, $75. 541-815-2737 PROMPT D E LIVERY tised must equal $200 a lthough i t has n 't 541-389-9663 255 or Less been shot often. BluFOR DETAILS or to ing is i n e x c ellent Computers Need help fixing stuff? PLACE AN AD, condition and it a very Call A Service Professional good looking g u n. T HE B U LLETIN r e - Call 541-385-5809 Fax 541-385-5802 find the help you need. Asking $2,250. Call quires computer adwww.bendbulletin.com Eric at 541.639.7740 vertisers with multiple Unique birdhouses f or pictures o r f o r ad schedules orthose 7 styles, from $15-$28, more information. selling multiple sysFor newspaper Don, 541-977-1737 tems/ software, to disdelivery, call the Federal 2-10, Large rifle close the name of the Circulation Dept. at primers, $75; business or the term Wanted- paying cash 541-385-5800 Hi-fi audio & stuttf41-408-7826 "dealer" in their ads. for To place an ad, call equip. Mclntosh, Private party advertis- dio Fidelis Arms CAR-15 541-385-5809 J BL, Marantz, D y M-4 5.56 w/mag. New ers are defined as or email naco, Heathkit, Santhose who sell one class<f<edottendttulletin.ccm $1200. 541-633-7017 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. computer. Call 541-261-1808 Fishing vest, Wild Life, sewing central oregon enre 1sat size M, 16 pockets, $20. 541-410-4596 • Misc. Items SUPER TOP SOIL Building Materialsg Fly fishing net, $10. Swivlwww.hershe sotlandbark.com eze 23" boat seat exten- Advertise V A CATION Screened, soil & comLa Pine Habitat SPECIALS to 3 m i lsion, $9. 541-410-4596 post mi x ed , no RESTORE lion P acific N o rthrocks/clods. High huGUN SHOW westerners! 30 daily Building Supply Resale mus level, exc. for Feb. 23rd & 24th, 2013 Quality at newspapers, six flower beds, lawns, Deschutes Fairgrounds LOW PRICES states. 25-word classtraight Buy! Sell! Trade! gardens, 52684 Hwy 97 sified $525 for a 3-day SAT. 9-5 • SUN. 10-3 s creened to p s o i l . 541-536-3234 a d. Ca l l (916) $8 Admission, Bark. Clean fill. De288-6019 o r visi t Open to the public . 12 & under free! liver/you haul. www.pnna.com/advert OREGON TRAIL GUN 541-548-3949. Prineville Habitat ising pndc.cfm for the SHOWS, 541-347-2120 ReStore Pacific Nor t hwest or 541-404-1 890 Supply Resale Daily Con n ection. Building Lost 8 Found 1427 NW Murphy Ct. •
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HUNTER EDUCATION
(PNDC) classes at Bend High beginning Feb. 25th. Air conditioner (window) G oldstar, 19 " w i d e Sign up online at dfw.state.or.us $60. 541-639-6656. Military Special metal Bend's Indoor Swap AR-15 30 rnd mags, Meet - A Mini-Mall full $40 while they last. of Unique Treasures! 541-601-7858 Bend 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. Remington 22LR Golden H V ammo, 500 r d s, Buying Diamonds $100. 541-647-8931 /Gofd for Cash Fine Jewelers Remington 22LR Sub- Saxon's 541-389-6655 Sonic ammo, 300 rds, $60. 541-647-8931 BUYING Remington 700 - 7mag, Lionel/American Flyer trains, accessories. 3 x 9 s c o pe, 300+ 541-408-2191. rounds ammo. $675
541-447-6934
Open to the public. Heating & Stoves • NOTICE TO ADVERTISER
Found digital camera in case on Hwy 97. Call to identify, 541-383-3510 Lost little black dog, 25¹ mini Schnauzer, male, Sunriver. Call 503-327-1531 or
Since September 29, 541-410-0308. 1991, advertising for If you used woodstoves has REMEMBER: have lost an animal, been limited to moddon't forget to check els which have been c ertified by the O r - The Humane Society in Bend 541-382-3537 egon Department of Redmond, Environmental Qual541-923-0882 ity (DEQ) and the fedPrineville, eral En v ironmental 541-447-7178; Protection A g e ncy OR Craft Cats, obo. 541-419-5060 BUYING & SEL LING (EPA) as having met 541-389-8420. smoke emission stanRuger 10-22 SS, Butler All gold jewelry, silver A cer t ified Creek folding stock, and gold coins, bars, dards. rounds, wedding sets, w oodstove may b e 25 rnd mag,. $350 class rings, sterling sil- identified by its certifi541-948-2646 ver, coin collect, vin- cation label, which is Ruger Mini 14 ranch rifle tage watches, dental permanently attached .223 w/4-16x scope, 150 gold. Bill Fl e ming, to the stove. The Bulletin will no t k nowrds ammo. E x cellent! 541-382-9419. $1150. 541-771-5648 ingly accept advertisBOXES & BUBBLE ing for the sale of Ruger S S sy n thetic WRAP. Call for details. uncertified stock 10-22, like new, 541-548-6642. woodstoves. $325. 541-948-2646 DISH Network. Starting Hay Grain & Feed Russian SKS 7.62x39, $19.99/month (for Amana chest freezer, 15 1000 Chedite shotgun near perfect condition, at Fuel & Wood • 1 2 mos.) & Hi g h 1st quality grass hay, cu ft, gd cond, incl bas- primers, $45. 1000 rounds and dies Speed Internet start70- Ib bales, barn stored, kets $200. 541-549-1276 B541-408-7826 available. $1200. E-mail c '~ s ee ing at $14.95/month $250/ ton. Also big bales! autotechsales Dachshund mini, AKC Dryer gas; W hirlpool .223 AR-15 w/ammo, too (where av a i lable.) WHEN BUYING Patterson Ranch, Oclearwire.net 286 FIREWOOD... Choc longhaired F. Shots washer, HD, $150 ea.. much to list, $ 3000. S AVE! A s k Ab o u t Sisters, 541-549-3831 Sales Northeast Bend done, saving new owner Ralph 541-728-0428 541-419-5158 SAME DAY InstallaTo avoid fraud, $120! $600. 541-598-7417 Spring Chinook t ion! C A L L Now ! The Bulletin Entertainment c e n t er2-NEF Pardner 12 ga. Fishing Trips. 1-866-947-7995. recommends payTV, 3" Single Shot shotFarmers Column Diamond Country Value cherrywood & ** FREE ** 30 ft. N orth R iver (PNDC) ment for Firewood $200. 541-639-6656. guns. Used once. Like Dog Food with cabin for any/all Garage Sale Kit only upon delivery 10X20 STORAGE 40 lbs. - $17 GENERATE SOME GENERATE SOME ex- new. $230.00 for both. weather (Portland Place an ad in The and inspection. BUILDINGS Quarry Ave. Hay & citement i n your 541-639-9895 EXCITEMENT area). $125 per perBulletin for your ga• A cord is 128 cu. ft. for protecting hay, Feed. 541-923-2400 IN YOUR neighborhood! Plan a 9 Lake trolls, $3 ea. 2 son. Ask about full 4' x 4' x 8' rage sale and refirewood, livestock www.quarryfeed.com NEIGBORHOOD. garage sale and don't Mitchell-Garcia 300 reels, boat special! March ceive a Garage Sale • Receipts should etc. $1496 Installed. Plan a garage sale and forget to advertise in 15th early June. $20 each. 541-410-4596 include name, Kit FREE! 541-617-1133. Donate deposit bottles/ don't forget to adverCall Captain Greg phone, price and cans to local all volun- classified! CCB ¹173684. 541-385-5809. AK47, 75 rnd drum, 2-30 tise in classified! 541-379-0362. KIT I NCLUDES: kind of wood purteer, non-profit rescue, to kfjbuilders@ykwc.net rnd mags, b i -pod, 541-385-5809. • 4 Garage Sale Signs help with cat spay/neuter I-Joy massage chair, chased. b ook, b ox . $1 2 00 • $2.00 Off Coupon To vet bills. Cans for Cats Rafter L F Ranch & • Firewood ads $250. Call fo r p i c, ammo avail. 541-350 Springfield Armory XDm GET FREE OF CREDIT Use Toward Your Farm Svcs.- Custom trailer at Sheriff's parking 541-408-4613 MUST include spe40 cai, 5 t/4" match-grade CARD DEBT NOW! -3335 Next Ad Haying & Field Work lot, Hwy, 20 W, 2/11-22, barrel, adjustable sights, Cut payments by up cies and cost per • 10 Tips For "Garage Call Lee Fischer, PetSmart 2/23-25. Do- Maytag side x side re- AK-47 Romanian Special 3-16 rd mags & carrier, to half. Stop creditors cord to better serve Sale Success!" frigerator, works f ine, 541-410-4495 nate M-F O Smith Signs, Forces, NIB, lots of ex- new & u nfired, $750. from calling. our customers. 1515 NE 2nd; or at Tu- $100. 541-728-0428 tras, 2 30-rd clips, $1100 503-789-3971, Redmond 866-775-9621. malo sanctuary anytime. obo. 541-771-9902 Microwave GE PICK UP YOUR (PNDC) S&W Model 422 22LR Info: 541- 3 89-8420;works good, small, $20; serving central oregon sincelscs Meat & Animal Processingi GARAGE SALE KIT at AR-15 Bushmaster .223 pistol. VGC. 4 mags, www.craftcats.org. 541-639-6656. Hand-blown Riedel wine 1777 SW Chandler brand new in box, $1495 hard case, h olster, orig $300; sell 1 cord dry, split Juniper, All N atural g r ain-fed Ave., Bend, OR 97702 obo. 541-556-8224 BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! manual. $350. Bend, decanter, beef $2.88/lb. hang$175. 541-312-9955 $190/cord. Multi-cord The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Assortment of fresh & 662-760-6237. ing wt, half or whole discounts, 8 t/a cords still over 2,000 folks in our community without saltwater fishing tackle. to b e pro c essed bought a new boat? People Lock for Information available. Immediate permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift mid-march. $500 dep. Wife needs space! Call Just About Products and Sell your old one in the delivery! 541-408-6193 camps, getting by as best they can. Half Hog Sale, $190 in541-646-8784 for appt. Need help fixing stuff? classifieds! Ask about our Services Every Day through cludes cutting wrapCall A Service Professional The following items are badly needed to Super Seller rates! Bend local pays CASH!! The Bulletin Classifieds All Year Dependable ping and cure. find the help you need. help them get through the winter: 541-385-5809 for all firearms 8 Firewood: Seasoned WHILE THEY LAST! www.bendbuiietin.com eX CAMPING GEAR of any sort: S Highspeed Internet EV- Lodgepole, Split, Del. ammo. 541-526-0617 541-573-2677 Wanted: Collector ERYWHERE By Sat- Bend: 1 for $175 or 2 ONE DAY SALE, Sat. New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. seeks high quality Browning A-bolt . 3 38 ellite! Speeds up to 9-2, 327 NE Burgess for $335. Cash, Check Eastern Oregon ranchfishing items. 8 WARM CLOTHING: stainless rifle, syn stock 12mbps! (200x faster or Credit Card OK. raised, grain-fed quality Pl. Studded snow tires Call 541-678-5753, or $750. 541-647-8931 Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. than dial-up.) Starting Minicooper & RRoyce 541-420-3484. beef I/4 t/a or whole, for 503-351-2746 car covers, new Euro- PLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT at $49.95/mo. CALL CASH!! Summer 2013 delivery. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER Wanted: SCAR 17, NOW & GO F AST! Seasoned Juniper, $3.25/Ib hanging wt + pean skis & p o les, For Guns, Ammo & 1-888-718-2162. mens ski boots, wom- 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. Reloading Supplies. .308 caliber. $200 spilit & delwprocessing. For more info ens riding boots. PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKE A DIFFERENCE. 541-408-6900. 541-410-0922 ered. 541-977-2040 call Ed, 541-701-1492. (PNDC) -
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
E2 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon.
Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • e a
Noon Tuese
Thursday • • •••• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • No on Wed. Fri d a y . . . . . . • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • •• • • •• • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday • • • • 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday. • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri• Place a photoin your private party ad for only$15.00per week.
PRIVATE PARTY RATES Starting at 3 lines
"UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500in total merchandise
7 days .................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days..................................
(call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box is available at Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN ( *) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin reserves the right to reject any ad at any time.
CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m.
*Must state prices in ad
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476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
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Food Service Meadow Lakes Golf Course is looking for a w ait s t aff e m - chasing products or I ployee. Good work services from out of ethic and excellent I the area. Sending customer se r v ice c ash, checks, o r skills are essential. I credit i n f ormation Must be 21 or over I may be subjected to as you will be exFRAUD. pected to be able to For more informatend bar periodically. tion about an adverH ours ma y v a r y .I tiser, you may call I Pays minimum wage the Oregon State
Get Results! Call 385-5809
health • Assist with discharge
The Bulletin
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Can be found on these pages :
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools and Training 454- Looking for Employment 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities 486 - Independent Positions
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FINANCEANO BUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans and Mortgages 543- Stocks and Bonds 558- Business Investments 573- Business Opportunities
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Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
City of Sumpter is accepting a pplicaAds published in "Em- tions for Utility Mansalary starting ployment Opportuni- ager;' $1,700.00 t ies" i n c lude e m - at 421 ployee and $2,000.00 a month Schools & Training i ndependent po s i - DOE. Residency retions. Ads for posi- quired. Must have A IRLINES ARE H I R- tions that require a fee H igh S c hool D i ING - Train for hands or upfront investment ploma or GED, clean on Aviation Mainte- must be stated. With driving record, pass nance Career. FAA any independent job drug screen. For job approved p r ogram. opportunity, p l ease description p h one or Financial aid if quali- investigate thor- 541-894-2314 email cityoffied - Housing avail- oughly. sumpter@yahoo.co able. Call Aviation Inm. Send resume to stitute of Use extra caution when Box 68 Maintenance. applying for jobs on- P.O. 1-877-804-5293. line and never pro- Sumpter, OR 97877 (PNDC) vide personal inforto any source ATTEND C O L LEGE mation you may not have re- BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS ONLINE 100%. searched and deemed Search the area's most *Medical, *Business, comprehensive listing of *Criminal Jus t i ce, to be reputable. Use extreme caution when classified advertising... *Hospitality, *Web. esponding to A N Y real estate tc automotive, Job placement assis- ronline e m p loyment merchandise to sporting tance. Comp u ter ad from out-of-state. goods. Bulletin Classifieds available. F i n ancial appear every day in the Aid if qual i fied. We suggest you call print or on line. SCHEV a u thorized. the State of Oregon Call 541-385-5809 Call 866 - 688-7078 Consumer Hotline at www.bendbulletin.com www.CenturaOnline.c 1-503-378-4320 om (PNDC) sehvhg central 0 egoh «hhelhe Just bought a new boat? For Equal Opportunity Sell your old one in the L aws: Oregon B uCourt Operations classifieds! Ask about our reau of Labor & InSupervisor Super Seller rates! dustry, C i vil Rights State of Oregon Judicial 541-385-5809 Division, Department, Jefferson 971-673-0764 454 County, Madras, Oregon. Court Operations SuperLooking for Employment If you have any ques3 & Mediation Cotions, concerns or visor Provides suCARPENTER l o oking comments, contact: ordinator.and training of f or w or k a s le a d Classified Department pervision court staff, and coordimaintenance or careThe Bulletin nates the District's met aker for r e sort o r 541-385-5809 d iation program. R e ranch. Experienced in quires associate's degree a ll phases o f c o n 3 years supervisory The Bulletin and struction, fencing or experience (or education heavy equip. Seaand experience equivasonal or full time. Selent to 4 years). Salary: rious inquires only. Automotive Techni- $3801-$6188/mo. plus Jeff, 701-580-0296. c ian Neede d . benefits. For complete Mopar exp. desired. announcement and apWhere can you find a Chrysler ce r t ified plication visit and ASE certifica- www.courts.ore on. ovi helping hand? t ion are a m a j or ~ OJ Di'obs From contractors to p lus. V er y b usy or call 541-447-6541, yard care, it's all here shop. Hard worker x 102. Closes March 13, and attention to dein The Bulletin's 2013 O 11:59 pm tail. Will be reqarded "Call A Service with top pay. Find exactly what Professional" Directory Send replies to: you are looking for in the PO Box 6676 470 Bend, OR 97708 CLASSIFIEDS Domestic & In-Home Positions People Lookfor Information DO YOU NEED About Products and A GREAT Are you in need of an Services Every Daythrough honest, exp'd h ouseEMPLOYEE The Bulletin Classifieds keeper? 541-977-2450 RIGHT NOVV2 Call The Bulletin before 11 a.m. and Independent Contractor get an ad in to publish the next day! 541-385-5809. * Supplement YourIncome * CAUTION READERS:
VIEW the
Operate Your Own Business ++++++++++++++++++ Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor
© Call Today © We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in:
* Terrebonne *
Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.
Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at online © bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin
Classifieds at: www.bendbulletin.com
FIND YOUR FUTURE HOME IN THE BULLETIN
Yourfutureis justa pageaway. Whetheryou're lookingfor ahat or aplaceto hangit, TheBulletin Classifiedis yourbestsource. Everydaythousandsofbuyers and sellersolgoodsandservicesdo businessinthese pages.They knowyoucan't beatTheBulletin ClassifiedSectionfor selection andconvenience- everyitemis just phon a ecall away. TheClassifiedSectionis easy to ttse.Everyitemis categorized andeverycategoryis indexedon the section'front s page. Whetheryottarelookingfor ahome or need aservice, yourfutureis in the pages of TheBuletin Classfied.
The Bulletin
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RENTALS 603- Rental Alternatives I I 604 - Storage Rentals - RoommateWanted I 605 616- Want To Rent I 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges Rooms for Rent I 630631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent I I 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend Apt./Multiplex NWBend I Attorney General's Ix 636and tips. Apply on638- Apt./Multiplex SEBend Office C o n sumer line at w ww.cityof-I Protection hotline at l 640- Apt./Multiplex SW Bend prineville.com I 1-877-877-9392. I 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond HEALTHCARE ii g 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished LThe Bulleti Case Manager 648- Houses for RentGeneral Nurse Liaison for 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend Central Oregon Looking for your next 652- Houses for Rent NWBend employee? Facilities 654- Houses for Rent SEBend The case manager will Place a Bulletin help 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend serve as a liaison be- wanted ad today and 658- Houses for Rent Redmond reach over 60,000 tween the healthcare de659- Houses for Rent Sunriver livery teams within the readers each week. Regency Pacific skilled Your classified ad 660- Houses for Rent La Pine nursing and assisted livwill also appear on 661 - Housesfor Rent Prineville ing facilities throughout bendbulletin.com 662- Houses for Rent Sisters Central Oregon. The key which currently 663- Houses for Rent Madras functions are as follows: receives over 1.5 • Act as triage and coor664- Houses for Rent Furnished million page views dinate appropriate care every month at 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent transitions for residents no extra cost. 675- RV Parking at risk in care partner asBulletin Classifieds 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space sisted living and home
planning at hospitals by providing timely admissions decisions and facilitate a smooth admissions process. bendbulletin.com • Ability to make sales calls, spending 80% of is located at: time in the marketplace. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. • Must have 3 years of sales and marketing exBend, Oregon 97702 perience, preferably in a healthcare setting. Nursing Licensure PLEASE NOTE: Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is required. needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or Please send resume to: 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 more days will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday.
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REAL ESTATE 705- Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726 - Timeshares for Sale 730 - New Listings 732 - Commercial Properties for Sale 738 - Multiplexes for Sale 740 - Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744 - OpenHouses 745- Homes for Sale 746 - Northwest BendHomes 747 - Southwest BendHomes 748- Northeast BendHomes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750 - RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756 - Jefferson CountyHomes 757- Crook CountyHomes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763 - Recreational HomesandProperty 764 - Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land 648
or place
Houses for Rent General
your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
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Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory
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Want To Rent
30-yr. old male seeks a room; pay up to $250 + share utils. 541-848-9180
541-385-5809
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PUBLISHER'S
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NOTICE All real estate advertising in this newspaper is subject to the F air H o using A c t 745 which makes it illegal to a d vertise "any Homes for Sale preference, limitation or disc r iminationBANK OWNED HOMES! based on race, color, FREE List w/Pics! religion, sex, handi- www. BendRepos.com cap, familial status, bend and beyond real estate 20967 yeoman, bend or marital status or national origin, or an intention to make any FOR SALE
Vacation Rentals Medical 476 Jefferson County EMS 486 & Exchanges Employment District currently has Independent Positions such pre f erence, a position open for an limitation or discrimi- When buying a home, Opportunities :) ocean front EMT with 2 years ex- Sales nation." Familial sta83% of Central house, beach walk tus includes children Oregonians perience. JCEMS is a Education turn to Daytime Inside from town, 2 bdrm /2 under the age of 18 C oordinator fo r S t u - small special district. bath,TV, Fireplace, Sales living with parents or dent Su c cess f o r t hat p rovides A L S $85 per night, 2 service to a large ru- Will hire t w o s a les- BBQ, legal cust o dians, Serving Central Oregon «hce 1903 High Desert ESD; night MIN. people to work from 208-342-6999 pregnant women, and 20 hrs/wk; pro-rated ral area. Call 541-385-5809 to people securing cusbenefit pack a ge, Salary package varies The Bulletin newspaplace your p er office f o r t h e tody of children under starting pay no less DOE, For more infor630 Real Estate ad. NewspaperIn Educamation contact us at 18. This newspaper than $27,000/yr. The Rooms for Rent will not knowingly acCoordinator will work PO Box 265, Madras, tion sales campaign. 750 This is a part-time, inOR 97 7 4 1 . Or cept any advertising with the ESD, local Studios 8 Kitchenettes Redmond Homes dependent contractor for real estate which is school districts, higher 541-475-7476. Furnished room, TV wi in violation of the law. ed, non-profits and Deadline for application sales position, and cable, micro 8 fridge. O ur r e aders a r e you will not be emregional government is March 8, 2013. Looking for your next Utils & l inens. New ployees of The Bulle- owners. informed that to create and expand emp/oyee? $145-$165/wk hereby tin. We offer a short all dwellings advera culture of h i gher Mobile Home Park Place a Bulletin help 541-382-1885 paid orientation protised in this newspaeducation for children Managerwanted ad today and gram. The average per are available on 634 in Crook, Deschutes Klamath Falls, OR reach over 60,000 an equal opportunity readers each week. and Jefferson Coun- Requires strong inter s alesperson e a r n s Apt./Multiplex NE Bend $400 to $7 0 0 p e r basis. To complain of ties. Q u a lifications: personal skills, baYour classified ad for a 27-hour d iscrimination cal l Bachelors degree in will also appear on sic bookkeeping and week, s GREAT wINTER e wee k . T h e HUD t o l l-free at education, public ad- c omputer bendbulletin.com skil l s , w ork DEAL! 1-800-877-0246. The ministration or related grounds maint exp., dress code is casual which currently re2 bdrm, 1 bath, and this is soft, retoll f re e t e l ephone field; advanced deceives over good driving record, & $540 w/lease. number for the heargree preferred. Ex- good physical condi- l axed business t o $530 1.5 million page Carports included! ing im p aired is business sales. We pertise with f o rmal tion, previous moviews every month 1-800-927-9275. prefer a background FOX HOLLOW APTS. continuous improveat no extra cost. bile home park or in "business to busiment processes in(541) 383-3152 Bulletin Classifieds Just too many cluding analysis and apartment manage- ness" selling. This is Cascade Rental Get Results! interpretation of data. ment exp. preferred. not ad o r s ubscrip- Management. Co. collectibleso Call 385-5809 or Facilitation skills and No pet animals over tion sales, however, if place your ad on-line lb s . emai l : you have p r evious Where can you find a techniques, d e mon- 2 6 at Sell them in strated success in fa- parkmanager18O g experience in adverhelping hand? bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classifieds mail.com tising sales, I will give cilitating large groups From contractors to of diverse individuals you priority considerto de v e lo p and Plumber, Journeymen ation. I'm looking for yard care, it's all here 541-385-5809 Get your implement collective needed for new c onmotivated, energetic, in The Bulletin's business action plans. Supervi- struction, local & valley articulate people with Rented your prop"Call A Service sory skills, as well as areas. Start immediately! excellent communicaerty? The Bulletin Professional" Directory tion skills. Call Melamarketing, f u ndrais- Call Gary, 541-410-1655 Classifieds ing and promotional nie at 541-383-0399. has an "After Hours" a ROW I N G Call for Spectals! experience. For job Remember.... Line. Call Limited numbers avail details, contact Paul A dd your web a d 541-383-2371 24 with an ad in 1, 2 and 3 bdrms. Andrews, pau l .an- dress to your ad and hours to The Bulletin's W/D hookups, patios drews@hdesd.org. d readers on The or decks. "Call A Service For application con- Bulletin' s web site MOUNTAIN GLEN, 675 tact www.hdesd.org will be able to click Professional" 541-383-9313 or 541-693-5625. RV Parking through automatically Directory Professionally to your site. managed by Norris 8 RV space for rent TuuSE THE CLASSiFiEOS. Stevens, Inc. 775 malo. 30 amp + water 8 sewer. Gravel lot. Manufactured/ Dcor-to-door selling with I Sales: Here is yourl 636 528 Avail. 3/1. $350 mo. fast results! It's the easiest chance to be a team ~ Mobile Homes Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 541-419-5060 member at this dyLoans & Mortgages way in the world to sell. ( namic company. We FACTORY SPECIAL Drake Park luxury apt., are seeking a TerriWARNING New Home, 3 bdrm, The Bulletin Classified 1 bdrm, w/d, d / w , The Bulletin is your tory Sales R epreThe Bulletin recom$46,500 finished 541-385-5809 cable, $950 / mo. E mploy m e n t sentative wh o is mends you use cauon your site. 541-788-0087 ~ preferably a B end ~ tion when you proJ and M Homes Marketplace vide personal 541-548-5511 ( resident. Find out FINANCE Small studio close to limore about and apinformation to compa- brary, all util. pd. $550, Central Oregon RV Call nies offering loans or $525 dep. No pets/ d ealership has a n I ply by going to • I t credit especially smoking. 541-330immediate opening those asking for ad5 41 -385 5 8 0 9 9769 or 541-480-7870 for a full-time expevance loan fees or rienced Meet singles right now! 638 companies from out of to advertise. Finance Manager No paid o p erators, state. If you have Apt./Multiplex SE Bend who will share our just real people like concerns or quescommitment to our you. Browse greettions, we suggest you 2 bdrm in duplex w/large www.bendbulletin.com customers. We offer ings, exchange mesconsult your attorney backyard, $775 mo, $700 competitive pay and sages and c o nnect or call CONSUMER dep, incl water 8 garb.; an excellent benlive. Try it free. Call HOTLINE, et negotiable. 1-year efits package. now: 8 7 7-955-5505. serving centrar oregon smce 1903 1-877-877-9392. ease. 559-213-8160 Apply in person at (PNDC) 63500 N. Hwy 97 in BANK TURNED YOU interloris currently Bend, or email your DOWN? Private party recruiting for a resume to will loan on real esbcrvhireO mail.com Quality Control tate equity. Credit, no Superintendent problem, good equity FINANCIAL at our Gilchrist location. is all you need. Call Sr. Business Lender The person who joins now. Oregon Land Call54I 385 5809totramote yourservice'Advertise for 28daysstarting at I'4I lnrr 5pec ialphrkrgeir haihailaile ohohrheaiiel Bend, OR our team must have a Mortgage 388-4200. Craft3 is a n o n-profitproven track record in Community D e v elop-key areas to include the LOCAL MONEyrWe buy secured trustdeeds & ment Financial Institution following: hard money Building/Contracting Excavating LandscapingNard Care (CDFI) with a mission to Managing all aspects of note,some loans. Call Pat Kelley strengthen e c o nomic,site quality control pro541-382-3099 ext.13. Levi's Dirt Works NOTICE: Oregon state N OTICE: O R E G O N ecological and family re- grams; maintaining/utilaw req u ires any- for all your dirt & excavaLandscape Contracsilience in Pacific North- lizing all production op573 one who co n t racts tion needs. Concrete, tors Law (ORS 671) west communities. We timization systems to Driveway Gradingdo this by providing loans maximize margins; de- Business Opportunities for construction work r equires a l l bu s i and assistance to entre- fining/establishing overto be licensed with the Low cost! ccb¹ 194077 nesses that advertise 541-639-5282 preneurs, non-profits, in- all quality strategy to A Classified ad is an C onstruction Con t o p e r form L a n dW A Y TO tractors Board (CCB). dividuals and others, in- determine, investigate, EASY scape C o nstruction People Look for Information cluding those who don't and resolve quality is- REACH over 3 million A n active lice n se which includes: About Products and normally have access to sues; identifying/lever- Pacific Northwestern- means the contractor p lanting, dec ks , financing. aging opportunities to ers. $5 2 5 /25-word i s bonded an d i n - Services Every Day through fences, arbors, improve quality man- c lassified ad i n 3 0 s ured. ~p i r p w ater-features, a n d Ve r if y t h e The Bulletin Classifieds Responsible for gener- agement; directing/de- daily newspapers for contractor's CCB installation, repair of ating and underwriting veloping quality control 3-days. Call the Pac ense through t h e Handyman • irrigation systems to new business loans and staff. cific Northwest Daily CCB Cons u m er be licensed with the servicing a loan portfolio Preferred qualifications: Connection (916) Website I DO THAT! Landscape Contracthat meets Craft3's mis- Grade 12, post-second- 2 88-6019 o r e m a il www.hirealicensedcontractor. t ors B o a rd . Th i s Home/Rental repairs sion, financial and risk ary education preferred; elizabeth©cnpa.com com 4-digit number is to be Small jobs to remodels goals. The primary lend- experience in sawmill for more info (PNDC) or call 503-378-4621. included in all adverHonest, guaranteed ing focus targets micro, optimization technology; The Bulletin recomtisements which indiwork. CCB¹151573 small and medium busi- minimum of 5 y e ars mends checking with Dennis Need to get an cate the business has 541-317-9768 nesses in central and sawmill/planer/QC exp; the CCB prior to cona bond, insurance and ad in ASAP? eastern Oregon, specifi- exp in pine specialty tracting with anyone. ERIC REEVE HANDY workers c ompensacally those owned by mi- products including apYou can place it Some other t r ades SERVICES. Home 8 tion for their employnorities, women, immi- pearance grade, gradalso req u ire addi- Commercial Repairs, online at: ees. For your protecgrants, and low-income. ing certification pretional licenses and Carpentry-Painting, tion call 503-378-5909 Located in our new Bend, ferred; computer skills www.bendbulletin.com certifications. Pressure-washing, or use our website: Oregon office, this posi- including Microsoft ExHoney Do's. On-time www.lcb.state.or.us to tion will also p rovide cel and Word profi541-385-5809 promise. Senior marketing assistance in ciency; understand and Debris Removal check license status Discount. Work guarthe eastside Oregon area use statistical analysis Extreme Value Adverbefore con t racting anteed. 541-389-3361 with t h e and be responsible for process; lean manufac- tising! 30 Daily newsb u s iness. JUNK BE GONE or 541-771-4463 Craft3 branding efforts. turing or six sigma a Persons doing landpapers $525/25-word I Haul Away FREE To learn about Craft3, plus. Bonded & Insured scape maintenance classified, 3- d a ys. For Salvage. Also visit www.craft3.org CCB¹181595 Please apply tor do not require a LCB Reach 3 million Pa- Cleanups & Cleanouts Complete the application; debb.kraft©interfor.com license. Mel, 541-389-8107 Margo Construction htt s:iihomeieease.ad . Interfor offers a competi- cific Northwesterners. For more information LLC Since 1992 com/recruit/? id=3970901 tive salary and benefits SPRING CLEAN-UP! • Pavers• Carpentry Hirinq decision is sched- package. All applicants call (916) 288-6019 or Just bought 8newboat? Aeration/Dethatching • Remodeling • Decks uled for 3/13. offered a position must email: Weekly/one-time service Sell your oldoneinthe • Window/Door avail. Bonded, insured. Cralt3is an equal successfully complete a elizabeth@cnpa.com classifieds! Askaboutour Replacement • Int/Ext Free Estimates! opportunity employer; pre-employment back- for the Pacific NorthSuper Seller rates! women and minorities ground check and drug- west Daily ConnecPaint • CCB 176121 COLLINS Lawn Maint. are encouraged toappiy. test. tion. (PNDC) 541-385-5809 541-480-3179 Ca/l 541-480-9714
The Bulletin
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E4 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
DAILY B R I D G E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9
NEw YORK TIMES CROSSwORD w'll sho t2r
ruary22,2013 F r iday,Feb
ACROSS
Numb and number
z "Hold on, why am I being dragged into this?" ts Last single blasts? t7 Unlikely
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services
"My partner fixates on numbers," a fan's email reads. "He thinks a good line of play is the one that will work most often — whether it actually works or not." My fan's partner was declarer at four spades. He took the ace of hearts, did some mental calculations and cashed the three top trumps. When East discarded, South started the clubs, but his number was up when West ruffed the third club and the defense took three diamonds.
ANSWER: Although it's possible that two clubs is your last makeable contract,the reasonable chances for game oblige you to bid again. You have eight good points, and partner may have as many as 18. A bid of 2 NT o r t w o s p a des w o ul d b e misdescriptive. Bid two hearts. If partner must pass, you'll be at a playable spot. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
DAILY QUESTION
WEST 4J872 0 QJ 10 6 0Q43 A82
EAST 443 Q 983 0 AK 9 6 2 + 10 9 3 SOUTH 4 EAQ96 5 942 0 87 5 4Q76
North 14 2Q 4 4E A
44 Filched
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE
East South Pass 1 4I Pass 24 ll P as s
RA T T I SE E B EA T T H D DA Y R OS S A N T G U E V S T R I E G NA W O A K L O R E E MO T M I N D
West Pass Pass
You hold: 4 A Q 9 6 5 Q 4 2 0 875 4 Q7 6 . Y ourpartneropens Opening lead — Q Q one heart, you respond one spade and he bids two clubs. What do you say? (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
Cape
4s It's lighter than mustard is Filched 46 It has its limits, to 2007 Oscar briefly winner Swinton 4s Burn prevention meas. zo Wildlife 49 Like some 23 Twin or triplet debts zo San Francisco's so "I'm gone!" Tower sz lt's bound to 37 Bear in "The leave the field Jungle Book" s3 Does some zs Resign flattering oo Poke on 3o Salem-toFacebook, say Portland dir. oz Relaxes 32 Classic brand with a bunny mascot DOWN 2 Ring grp. 32 Choices for poachers 3 Part of a crack response? 34 Crop-killing caterpillars 3 One in a pack
NORTH 4 K 10 Q AK 7 5 O J10 4 AKJ5 4
PERCENTAGES "My partner said his play would w ork if trumps broke 3-3 or if a defender had J-x or th e singleton jack: about a 54 percent chance in all. He would still be safe if a defender with J-x-x-x had three or more clubs. I think our partnership's days are numbered." South was so focused on arithmetic that he missed the correct play. At Trick Two he should let the ten of trumps ride. Even when West takes the jack, South is safe. If the defense leads three rounds of d i amonds, South can ruff with dummy's king and reach his hand to draw trumps.
to deyelop clothing lines?
4 "No worries" s First European to cross the Mississippi 6 Some spreads 7 Pennsylvania city or its county s What to take the lead from 9 Brown letters? zo When many fleurs bloom zz ". .. which from heat did canopy the herd": Shak. zz Top web developer? 13 "Big Momma's House" co-star, 2000 14 Going along zs Willing subjects zo Grilling sub)ect, informally zz What bateaux move across 33 "The Soul of a Butterfly" autobiographer za Pirate 34 Line to wrap things up with zs Brasserie offering zs Certain duster zo Floppy lid 33 Some univ. entrance exams 33 Reaches, as a vacation resort 3s They have endto-end cars: Abbr. 36 Iridescent green bird of tropical America 37 Like many new couples
36 Rock icon for whom a Manhattan block is named 39 Key target of resolution 43 Massachusetts'
A N S E
T O W M E B I CA
I H O P
S H A K Y
E E R I E
A L A N S
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S L I T
I E O H
N I N E
O R B
I C O T
C E D T E A OT D A M N A R SM A N L E P I E B A L E E A L CT U R E S A R R A C E S E D O L HE P I L L RO I S R EA N EL I E V E E E SWA X S E E S T O
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puzzleby TIM CROCE
3s Eschews the draft? 4o Relative of a fjord 41 Its 49-Down is about 200 meters 43 Chose, perhaps 4s Riots 47 "Left" or "right" group, in math
so Jack of "The Green Berets," 1968
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sz Lacking sz Old 58-Down capital
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sa Eur. land
ss 58-Down article
so Places with vital monitors, in brief
For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.
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crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. AT&T users: Text NYTX to 386 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past
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DOWN 1 O l d ski lift 2 Bisset's "The Meph i sto Waltz" co- s t ar 3 Dogcatchers? 4 Phrase in a tot's
game
15 "Metamorphoses" poet 16 He helped get Cassio demoted 17 Carving tools 18 North African
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63 Case for pins and
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beachhead 54 R wanda native 55 Bleu shade 57 C h uck E. Cheese et al. 58 Re v iew target 60 Opie's great-aunt 61 Camping Drg.
separatists
ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: F I OL C L A G L O
F L O E S
T H O S I E C H S E S H A U R G E O N E S R V S A W A R E P A L O S A N G E L A K I N O T I AD A G E R P M L O A N A R I E L C O Z A N Y O H O O D O R V E S R AR E A R E xwordeditor Eeaol.com 6
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02/22/13
THE BULLETIN• FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22 2013 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
•
•
•
BOATS &RVs 805 - Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorhomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885 - Canopies and Campers 890- RVsfor Rent
•
•
v
870
Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For an other types of watercraft, please see Class 875. Snowmobiles
541-385-5809
The Bulletin
2007 Ski-Doo Renegade 600 w/513 mi, like new, now reduced to $4500. GENERATE SOME excitement in your neigCall 541-221-5221 borhood. Plan a ga( 2) 2000 A rctic C at rage sale and don't Z L580's EFI with n e w to advertise in covers, electric start w/ forget classified! 385-5809. reverse, low miles, both excellent; with new 2009 Trac-Pac 2-place trailer, gennng Central Oregon srnre t903 drive off/on w/double tilt, lots of accys. Selling due Used out-drive to m e dical r e asons. parts - Mercury
The Bulletin
$8000 all. 541-536-8130
800 Polaris,less than 250 mi, like new. 700 Polariswith less that 900 mi, like new. RMK; tag good until 2015. Asking $6000 for both, you will not believe how nice they are. (541) 350-6865 • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1750. • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 EXT, $1250.
• Zieman 4-place trailer, SOLD! All in good condition. Located in La Pine. Call 541-408-6149.
OMC rebuilt marine motors: 151 $1595; 3.0 $1895; 4.3 (1993), $1995. 541-389-0435 875
Watercraft 2007 SeaDoo 2004 Waverunner, excellent condition, LOW hours. Double trailer, lots of extras.
$10,000
541-719-8444
Ads published in nWatercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motor860 Ized personal Motorcycles & Accessories watercrafts. For
CRAMPED FOR CASH? Use classified to sell those items you no longer need. Call 541-385-5809
The Bulletin
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Sport Utility Vehicles
WOW!
SOArr &Zr/
Travel Trailers RV CONS IGNMENTS WANTED
We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins! Free Advertising. BIG COUNTRY RV Bend 541-330-2495 Redmond: 541-548-5254
Toyota 4x 4 Pi c kup, 1983, 8000-Ib Warn winch, 2 sets of tire chains, canopy, 22R motor, 5-spd transFIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, mission, $2495 obo. 1/5th interest in 1973 door panels w/flowers 541-350-2859 Cessna 150 LLC & hummingbirds, 150hp conversion, low white soft top & hard 935 time on air frame and top. Just reduced to Sport Utility Vehicles engine, hangared in $3,750. 541-317-9319 Bend. Excellent peror 541-647-8483 2011 Acura MDX AWD formance & affordwith technology pkg able flying! $6,500. n¹506888 • $35,995 541-382-6752
Location, Location, Location!
1979 ways hangared since with 351 Cleveland new. New annual, auto modified engine. pilot, IFR, one piece Body is in windshield. Fastest Archer around. 1750 to- excellent condition, tal t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. $2500 obo. 541-475-6947, ask for
Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000
541-420-4677
Rob Berg. T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport.
Call 541-382-8998.
obo. 541-408-3811
Trucks & Heavy Equipment
Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390
eng, power everything, new paint, 54K original miles, runs great, excenent condition in & out. Asking $8,500. 541-480-3179
Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 29', weatherized, like n ew, f u rnished 8
ready to go, incl Wine- Diamond Reo Dump ard S a tellite dish, Truck 1974, 12 -14 26,995. 541-420-9964 yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812 GMC txgton 1971, Only $19,700! Original low exceptional, 3rd G K E A T mile, owner. 951-699-7171 Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , $19,999 firm. 541-389-9188
R U Y T Hysfer H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours,
541-420-3277
Toyota 4Ru n n er 1 993, blue, 4 d r . , 4WD, V6, 5 speed, t ow pkg., plus 4 studs tires on rims, r uns g reat. W a s $ 5500, no w o n l y $4000.541-659-1416
Kia Optima EX 2004 2.7L V6, all power
options, moonroof, spoiler, leather, Infinity AM/FM/CD, BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. alloys, Michelin & owner, exc. c o n d. studded tires, 101k miles, new tires, meticulously mainloaded, sunroof. tained, $4900. $8900. 541-706-1897 Bend, 760-715-9123
~oo
MorePixatBendbulletin.com
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~ The Bulletin ~
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J
503-269-1057.
Toyota Corolla 2004, Honda Odyssey EXL auto., loaded, 2 04k Honda CRV 2004, 2 004, auto., ver y Taurus wagon 2004, miles. orig. owner, non $10,495. g ood c o nd., T e a l Ford Call 541-610-6150 or see l eather s eats, t o w very nice, pwr everything, smoker, exc. c o nd. Prin e ville 120K, FWD, good tires, $6500 http://bend.craigslist.org kg., 100k miles, 503-358-8241 /cto/3617273265.html $', 8,900. 541-617-0691 $4900 obo. 541-815-9939 '
$3500,call 541-749-0724
.
Jeep Comanche, 1990, original owner, 167K, 4WD, 5-spd, tags good till 9/2015, $3900 obo. 541-633-7761
Fifth Wheels
Peterbilt 359 p o table water t ruck, 1 9 90, 3200 gal. tank, 5hp n
The Bulletin
Sernng Central Oregon srnce 1903
hoses, camlocks, $ 2 5,000.
880
p ump, 4 - 3
Motorhomes
1000
541-820-3724
WOW!
'Qjj jj
oeo
Subaru wagon 1991 Loyale 4x4, 5-spd, updates, $1950 obo.
Automo b iles
Mercedes E-class E430, 2002, AWD 4-dr sedan, Buick Lucerne CXL Special Edition, $15,000 2009, $12,500, low obo. Call 12-5pm (Iv low miles; 2003 Le- msg), 541-350-0215 Sabre, $4000. You'll not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a Oregon AutoSource thousand words. Call Vehicle? VOLVO XC90 2005 V8 Bob, 541-318-9999. Call The Bulletin 541-598-3750 AWD. New mud and for an appt. and take a and place an ad toaaaoregonautosource.com snow tires siped, 53k day! m iles, n e w fro n t drive in a 30 mpg car! Ask about our brakes. very c lean. Chevy C o balt 2 0 0 5, "Whee/ Deal"! $14,995 white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K for private party 541-382-2682 miles, over 35mpg, auto advertisers trans, AC, CD player, dual airbags, manual Vans Buick Enclave 2008 CXL locks & windows, good AWD, V-6, black, clean, cond in/out, runs/drives mechanicall y sound, 82k great, non-smkr, always 96 Ford Windstar & miles. $19,995. maintained. $4950. 2000 Nissan Quest, Call 541-815-1216 Call 541-350-9938 TURN THE PAGE both 7-passenger vans, 160K miles, For More Ads low prices, $1200 & The Bulletin $2900, and worth every cent! Chrysler Sebring Con541-318-9999 vertible, 2004, beautiful condition, dark g r ay/ Chevy Tahoe 1999, 4x4, brown w/tan leather intemost options, new paint Chevy Astro rior, 84K miles, $5995. & tires, 159K mi., $4250. Cargo Van2001, 541-350-5373 Call 541-233-8944 pw, pdl, great cond., Nissan Sentra 2012 business car, well F ord F reestyle S E L maint'd, regular oil 12,610 mi, full warranty, 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, PS, PB, AC, & more! changes, $4500. front 8 side airbags, 25 $16,000. 541-788-0427 Please call mpg, 3rd row seating, 541-633-5149 pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, traction contro!, new tires Toyota Camrysr & brks, maintained ex- Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 "MyLittle Red Corvette" 1984, SOLD; 7 -pass. v a n wit h t remely well, runs 8 1996 coupe. 132K, 1985 SOLD; drives exlnt,148K hwy mi, p ower c h a i r lif t , 26-34 mpg. 350 auto. 1986 parts car $1500; 1989 Dodge $6700. 541-604-4166 $1 2,500 541-923-1781 Turbo Van 7 - pass. only one left! $500 has new motor and Call for details, t rans., $1500. I f i n 541-548-6592 terested c a l l Jay
Legal Notices Plymouth B a r racuda 1966, original car! 300 Carri-Lite Luxury 2009 Hariey Davidson Soft929 hp, 360 V8, centerLEGAL NOTICE by Carriage, 4 slideTail Deluxe 20 0 7, lines, (Original 273 Automotive Wanted CIRCUIT COURT OF outs, inverter, satelwhite/cobalt, w / paseng 8 wheels incl.) OREGON FOR DESlite sys, fireplace, 2 senger kit, Vance & 541-593-2597 DONATE YOUR CARCHUTES COUNTY, flat screen TVs. Hines muffler system k a Fast Free Towing 24 U.S. BA N K NA $60,000. PROJECT CARS:Chevy 8 kit, 1045 mi., exc. hr. Response Tax TIONAL A S S OCIA541-480-3923 2-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & 2003 Fleetwood Disc ond, $16,9 9 9 , covery 40' diesel moDeduction U N I T EDChevy Coupe 1950 TION, AS TRUSTEE 541-389-9188. BREAST C A N C ERrolling chassis's $1750 UNDER S ECURITItorhome w/all FOUNDATION P r o- ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, ZATION SERVICING Harley Heritage options-3 slide outs, viding Free Mammo- complete car, $ 1949; AGREEMENT Softail, 2003 satellite, 2 TV's,W/D, grams 8 Breast Can- Cadillac Series 61 1950, DATED AS OF JULY $5,000+ in extras, e tc.32,000 mile s . cer Info 888-785-9788 2 dr. hard top, complete 1 , 2 0 0 5 ST R U C$2000 paint job, Wintered in h e ated 30K mi. 1 owner, (PNDC) w /spare f r on t cl i p ., TURED ASSET SEshop. $89,900 O.B.O. Laredo 2009 30' with 2 For more information $3950, 541-382-7391 CURITIES CORPO541-447-8664 slides, TV, A/C, table RATION please call Call The Bulletin At & c h airs, s a tellite, 541-385-8090 Automotive Parts, STRUCTURED ASArctic pkg., p o wer 541-385-5809 or 209-605-5537 SET I N V ESTMENT Service & Accessories Place Your Ad Or E-Mail awning, Exc. cond! LOAN TRUST HD Screaming Eagle $28,000. 541-419-3301 256 Ford diesel engine, At: www.bendbunetin.com MORTGAGE Electra Glide 2005, PASS-THROUGH n in c l udesWinys, 1946, runs, good 103 motor, two tone 32' Fleetwood Fiesta '03, NuWa 29 ?LK Hi t ch- complete, SEcandy teal, new tires, no slide-out, Triton eng, Hiker 2007, 3 slides, injector pump, $250. shape, $4400 obo. Call CERTIFICATES, 2005-7, RI ES 541-549-1236 23K miles, CD player, an amenities, 1 owner, 32' touring coach, left Needs rebuilt. C a ll Plaintiff, v. DAVID N. hydraulic clutch, ex- perfect, only 17K miles, kitchen, rear lounge, 541-447-1522. H ATFIELD; SA R A 933 many extras, beautiful cellent condition. $21,500. 541-504-3253 ELIZABETH c ond. inside & o u t , Studless snow tires, 225/ Pickups Highest offer takes it. WOLTANSKI; $32,900 OBO, Prinev- 60R-17, fit '13 Subaru 541-480-8080. ine. 541-447-5502 days Outback,less than 2500 SHARON HATFIELD; & 541-447-1641 eves. miles, exlnt cond, $450. Chevy 3/4 ton 4x4 MORTGAGE E LECCheck out the 541-536-1789 1971 new trans, 2 TRONIC REGISTRAclassifieds online new t i r es , ne w TION SYS T EMS, Take care of www.bendbuffetfrt.com brakes, 2nd owner, I NC.; GN M O R T Updated daily Econoline RV 19 8 9, your investments Antique & r uns/drives g o o d . GAGE, LLC; COMloaded, exc. cond, MUNITY W EST with the help from Make good wood Husaberg 570 2 0 0 9, fully Classic Autos 35K mi. , R e duced truck. $2395 OBO B ANK, N . A.; A N D street license 8 title, $15,250. 541-546-6133 The Bulletin's 541-350-2859 PERSONS OR PAR4260 miles, excellent "Call A Service TIES UNK N OWN condition, Trail Tech Four Winds Class CLAIMING A NY headlight, heated grips H u r ricane Professional" Directory Chevy Sil v erado 8 more. $5500. Steve, A 3 2 ' RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN 1921 Model T 2007. CAN'T BEAT 2000, 1/2 ton, V-8, 541-788-0211 O R I NTEREST I N Delivery Truck THIS! Look before 8' box, bed liner, std THE PRO P E RTY Restored & Runs you buy, b e low cab, auto, 4x4, 54k DESCRIBED IN THE market value! Size $9000. mi., e xc . co n d ., COMPLAINT ATVs 8 m i leage D OES 541-389-8963 $9000. HEREIN, matter! 12,500 mi, 541-977-6653 D efendant(s). N O . an amenities, Ford 12CV0970. SUMV10, Ithr, c h erry, Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th MONS BY PUBLICAslides, like new! New wheel, 1 s lide, AC, TION. TO: DAVID N. (t-/:» CERTIFIED low price, $54,900. TV,full awning, excel.lalagran' ' H ATFIELD; SA R A 541-548-5216 lent shape, $23,900. CARS-TRUCKS-SUVS ELIZABETH 541-350-8629 Yamaha Banshee 2001, W OLTANSKI; A N D Gulfstream Scenic custom built 350 motor, 1966 GMC, 2nd owner PERSONS OR PARrace-ready, lots of extras, Cruiser 36 ff. 1999, too many extras to list TIES UNK N OWN Cummins 330 hp die$5500/obo 541-647-8931 $8500 obo. Serious buy CLAIMING A NY sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 ers only. 541-536-0123 RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN in. kitchen slide out, O R I NTEREST I N new tires,under cover, IBoats & Accessories THE PRO P E RTY 2006 CHEVY hwy. miles only,4 door Pilgrim In t e rnational DESCRIBED IN THE SILVERADO 3500 fridge/freezer ice2005, 36' 5th Wheel, COMPLAINT 17' 1984 Chris Craft crew cab dually with 8' maker, W/D combo, Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 HEREIN. I N THE box,4x4. ¹186633 - Scorpion, 140 HP Interbath tub & Fall price $ 2 1,865. NAME OF THE $24,995 inboard/outboard, 2 shower, 50 amp pro541-312-4466 STATE OF OREGON: Chevy C-20 Pickup depth finders, tron541-598-3750 pane gen 8 more! 1969, an orig. Turbo 44; Corner 97 & w. Empire You are hereby reing motor, full cover, $45,000. quired to appear and auto 4-spd, 396, model EZ - L oad t railer, www.aaaoregonauto541-948-2310 Canopies & CampersI defend against t he CST /an options, orig. $3500 OBO. source.com allegations contained owner, $22,000, 541-382-3728. Chevy Silverado 2010 Canopy, fits '99-'07 Ford 541-923-6049 in the Complaint filed HD 2500 Diesel Crew- a gainst you i n t h e 7-ft bed, white, exc cond, '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn Cab. Red w/ Blk Lthr. call for details, $1000 18.5' Sea Ray 2000, entitled proPROJECT car, 3 50 11,800 miles. $42,900. above obo. 541-593-3331 ceeding within thirty 4.3L Mercruiser, 190 small block w/Weiand 541-593-0204 (30) days from the hp Bowrider w/depth dual quad tunnel ram date of service of this finder, radio/CD player, Monaco Dynasty 2004, with 450 Holleys. T-10 loaded, 3 slides, dierod holders, full can0 Summons upon you. 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, sel, Reduced - now vas, EZ Loader trailer, If you fail to appear 0 0 • I Weld Prostar whls, exclnt cond, $14,500. $119,000, 5 4 1-923and defend this matextra rolling chassis + 707-484-3518 (Bend) 8572 or 541-749-0037 ter within thirty (30) extras. $6000 for all. days from the date of 541-389-7669. Ford 250 XLT 1990, publication specified 4III 6 yd. dump bed, herein along with the j 139k, Auto, $5500. r equired filing f e e , 541-410-9997 20.5' 2004 Bayliner U.S. Bank N ational Association, as 205 Run About, 220 FORD RANGER XLT HP, V8, open bow, Southwind 35.5' Triton, 1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 trustee under SecuriServ i cing exc. cond., very fast 2008,V10, 2 slides, Duspeed, with car alarm, tization Chevy Wagon 1957, w/very low hours, pont UV coat, 7500 mi. dated as CD player, extra tires Agreement 4-dr., complete, Bought new at of July 1, 2005 Struclots of extras incl. on rims. Runs good. $132,913; $7,000 OBO, trades tower, Bimini 8 tured Asset SecuriClean. 92,000 miles asking $93,500. Please call Corp o ration custom trailer, o n m o t or . $2 4 0 0 ties Call 541-419-4212 541-389-6998 Structured Asset In$19,500. OBO. 541-771-6511. rigtggg541-389-1413 vestment Loan Trust Chrysler 30 0 C o u pe Mortgage Pass1967, 44 0 e n g ine, Through Certificates, 1/3 interest in Columbia auto. trans, ps, air, Series 2005-7 will ap400, $150,000 located frame on rebuild, re- I nternational ply to the Court for the @ Sunriver. H o urly painted original blue, Bed Pickup 1963,Fla1t relief demanded in the rental rate (based upon original blue interior, ton dually, 4 s p d. 20.5' Seaswirl SpyComplaint. The first der 1989 H.O. 302, Winnebago 30A Sight- approval) $775. Also: original hub caps exc trans., great MPG, date of publication is seer 2012, 31 ft., all S21 hangar avail. for chrome, asking $9000 could be exc. wood 285 hrs., exc. cond., February 22, 2 0 13. options, 2 sli d es, s ale, o r l e ase @ or make offer. stored indoors for hauler, runs great, NOTICE TO DEFEN362HP V10, 10K mi., $15/day or $325/mo. 541-385-9350 life $11,900 OBO. new brakes, $1950. DANTS: READ mint cond., $105,900. 541-948-2963 541-379-3530 541-419-5480. T HESE PAP E R S 541-330-5516 CAREFULLY! You must "appear" in this • -'h • I • Chrysler SD 4-Door case or the other side will win automatically. 1930, CD S R oyal To "appear" you must Standard, 8-cylinder, body is good, needs file with the court a leWinnebago Suncruiser34' 1/3 interest i n w e l l- some r e s toration, gal paper called a 22' Custom Weld Jet, 2004, only 34K, loaded, equipped IFR Beech BoRAM 2500 2003, 5.7L "motion" or "answer." runs, taking bids, 2002, 350 Vortec, 210 too much to list, ext'd nanza A36, new 10-550/ 541-383-3888, hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, The "motion" or nanhrs, garaged, loaded. warr. thru 2014, $54,900 prop, located KBDN. am/fm/cd. $8400 obro. swer" must be given 541-815-331 8 541-923-0854. Dennis, 541-589-3243 541-420-3634 /390-1285 $65,000. 541-419-9510 Serving Central Oregon smce 1903
975
Autom o biles •
.
Executive Hangar Galaxie 500 1963, at Bend Airport (KBDN) Ford 60' wide x 50' d eep, 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer & w/55' wide x 17' high bi- radio (orig),541-419-4989 fold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent Ford Mustang Coupe to Frontage Rd; great 1966, original owner, visibility for aviation busi- V8, automatic, great ness. 541-948-2126 or shape, $9000 OBO. email 1jetjock@q.com 530-515-8199 Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, Ford Ranchero based in Madras, al-
"boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809
933
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AUTOS &TRANSPORTATION 908 - Aircraft, Parts and Service 916- Trucks and Heavy Equipment 925 - Utility Trailers 927 - Automotive Trades 929 -Automotive Wanted 931 - Automotive Parts, Service and Accessories 932- Antique and Classic Autos 933 - Pickups 935- Sport Utility Vehicles 940 - Vans 975 - Automobiles
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fg5eK!
1000
1000
Legal Notices to the court clerk or administrator w i t hin thirty days along with the required filing fee. It must be in proper form and have proof
Legal Notices TATIVE: K A RNOPP PETERSEN LLP,
Legal Notices ment secured, and as are provided by statute. W H E REFORE, notice is hereby given that the undersigned Trustee will on April 2, 2013, at the hour of 11:00 o'clock A.M., in accord with the standard of t ime established by ORS 187.110, a t Des chutes County Courthouse steps, 1 164 N W Bond, City o f Bend, County of Deschutes, Oregon, sell at public auction to the highest bidder for cash the interest in said described real p roperty which t h e Grantors had or had power to convey at the time of the execution by him of the said Trust Deed, together with a n y int e rest which the Grantors or their successors in interest acquired after the execution of said Trust Deed, to satisfy the foregoing obligations thereby secured and the costs and ex-
Thomas J . S a yeg, OSB¹ 873805, tsj I karnopp.com, 1201 NW Wall Street, o f service o n t h e Suite 300, Bend, OR TEL : plaintiff's attorney or, 97701-1957, if the plaintiff does not (541) 382-3011, FAX: have a n at t o rney, (541) 388-5410. Of proof of service on the A ttorneys fo r P e r plaintiff. IF YOU sonal Representative. HAVE ANY Q UESLEGAL NOTICE TIONS, YOU Public auction to be S HOULD SEE A N held on March 2, 2013 A TTORNEY I M M E - at 10:00 am., Wickiup DIATELY. If you need Storage, 52419 Skidhelp in finding an at- gel Rd., La Pine. The torney, you may call units to be sold are the O regon S t ate C-5, Esther G rout, Bar's Lawyer Referral and C-7, Crystal Sain. S ervice a t (503) LEGAL NOTICE 684-3763 or toll-free in Oregon at (800) TRUSTEE'S NOTICE OF SALE 452-7636. The object of the said action and Reference is made to the relief sought to be that certain trust deed made b y K e r i L. o btained therein i s Anderson, a s i n gle fully set forth in said complaint, a n d is person, as grantor, to briefly stated as fol- Amerititle, as trustee, lows: Foreclosure of a in favor of Bank of the Deed of T rust/Mort- Cascades Mrtg. Cenbe n eficiary, gage. Grantors: David ter a s N. Hatfield. Property dated May 19, 2005, and recorded on May address: 22815 penses of sale, inL onghorn Cour t , 31, 2005, as InstruB end, O R 977 0 1 . ment No. 2005-33842 cluding a reasonable of the Official Records charge by the Publication: The Bend of Deschutes County, T rustee. N o t ice i s Bulletin. DATED this th a t further given that any 20th day of February, O regon, a n d certain Assignment of person named in ORS 2013. Craig A. Peterson. Craig A. Peter- Trust Deed dated May 86.753 has the right, son, OSB ¹ 120365, 1 9, 2005 a n d r e - at any time prior to Robinson Tait, P.S., corded June 3, 2005 five days before the a s I nstrument N o . date last set for the Attorneys for Plaintiff. 2005-34640 wherein s ale, to h a v e t h i s LEGAL NOTICE Oregon Housing and foreclosure proceedIN T H E CI R CUIT Community Services ing dismissed and the COURT O F THE Department, State of Trust Deed reinstated STATE OF OREGON Oregon, was desig- b y payment to t h e FOR THE COUNTY nated as the succes- Beneficiary of the enOF DES C HUTES sor beneficiary, cov- tire amount when due PROBATE DEPART- ering th e f o l lowing (other than such porMENT. Estate of AL- described real prop- tion of the principal as I CE L. COBB, D e - erty situated in said would not then be due c eased. Case N o . county a n d st a t e, had no default ocNOTICE TO INTER- to-wit: Lot Twenty-four curred) and by curing ESTED P ERSONS. (24), SOUTH V I L- any o t he r d e f ault NOTICE IS HEREBY LAGE, Des c hutes complained of herein G IVEN that the u nCounty, Oregon. Both that is capable of bedersigned has been the Beneficiary and ing cured by renderappointed P e rsonal t he T r ustee h a v e ing the performance R epresentative. A n elected to sell the said r equired under t h e persons having claims real property to satbligation o r T r u st against the Estate are isfy th e o b ligations oDeed, and in addition required to p r esent secured by said Trust to paying said sums them, with vouchers Deed and a Notice of or tendering the perattached, to the unDefault has been reformance necessary dersigned P e rsonal corded pursuant to to cure the default by Representative at Oregon Revised Stat- paying all costs and Karnopp P e t ersen utes 86.735(3); the expenses actually inLLP, 1201 NW Wall default for which the curred in enforcing the S treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , foreclosure is made is obligation and t r ust Bend, Oregon G rantor's failure t o deed, together with 9 7701-1957, wi t h i n p ay when due t h e Trustee's and four months after the following sums: a ttorney's fees n o t date of first publica- G rantor's failure t o exceeding the tion of this notice, or pay monthly install- amounts provided by the claims may be ment payments due 86.753. In conbarred. All p e r sons under the Promissory ORS struing this notice the whose rights may be Note in the amount of masculine gender inaffected by the pro$838.00 per month for the f eminine ceedings may obtain the months of August, cludes and the neuter, the additional information September and Octo- singular includes the from the records of ber 2012. By reason plural, et h e word the court, the P e r- of said default, the nGrantors includes sonal Representative Beneficiary has deany successor in inor the attorneys for clared an sums owing to the Grantors the Personal Repre- on the obligation se- terest as well as any other s entative, wh o a r e cured by said Trust person owing an obliKarnopp P e t ersen Deed immediately due gation, th e p e rforLLP, 1201 NW Wall a nd p ayable, s a id mance of which is seS treet, S u it e 3 0 0 , sums being the folcured by said Trust Bend, Oregon 97701- l owing, t o -wit: t h e Deed, and the words 1 957. D A TE D a n d principal balance of "Trustee" and "Benfirst published Febru- $106,789.67 together eficiary" include their ary 15, 2013. Franklin with accrued interest respective s u c cesHeath Cobb, aka F. through October 22, in interest, if any. H eath Cobb, P e r - 2012, in the amount of sors DATED: October 29, sonal Representative, $1 779 06 (interest 2012. Benjamin M. FAX: 5 4 1-388-5410. continues to accrue at Kearney, Successor PERSONAL REPRE- the rate of $15.8571 T rustee, 8 0 0 Wil SENTATIVE: Franklin per diem from Octolamette Street, Suite Heath Cobb, aka F. ber 22, 2 0 1 2 u n t il 8 00, E ugene, O R Heath Cobb, 943 E. paid), plus late fees in 97401, 541-484-0188. Cascade Ave., Sis- the amo u n t of ters, OR 97759, TEL: $ 102.12, and s u c h Need help fixing stuff? (541) 719-1313. AT- other costs and fees Call A Service Professional TORNEY FOR PERas are due under the find the help you need. SONAL REPRESEN- note or other instru- www.bendbunetin.com
E6 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013 • THE BULLETIN
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PLUS:It's Oscartime! Find out who got RogerEbert's vote andfill out your ballot, PAGE24
PAGE 2 • GO! MAGAZINE
C ON T A C T
US
EDITOR
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
insi e
Cover photo submitted
Julie Johnson, 541-383-0308 jjohnson Obendbulletin.com
REPORTERS Elise Gross, 541-383-0351 egross@bendbulletin.com David Jasper, 541-383-0349
djasperIbendbulletin.com Ben Salmon, 541-383-0377 bsalmon@bendbulletin.com Jenny Wasson, 541-383-0350 jwasson@bendbulletin.com
SUBMIT AN EVENT GO! MAGAZINE 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. Mail or hand delivery: Community Life, The Bulletin 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, OR 97702
ADVERTISING 541-382-1811
Take advantage of the full line of Bulletin products. Call 541-385-5800. ull
PLANNING AHEAD • 18
• A review of Hot Rock Pizza in Bend
• A listing of upcoming events • Talks and classeslisting
ARTS • 12 MUSIC • 3
DESIGNER Althea Borck, 541-383-0331 aborckIbendbulletin.com
RESTAURANTS • 10
• COVER STORY: Pennywise plays Bend • Orgone is back • Liquid Lounge plans funk shows • Method Man is at the Domino Room • Oxford hosts Mel Brown's septet • Joe Craven hits the HarmonyHouse • Reggae show at Astro Lounge • Trigger Itch to rock Big T's • Busy week at The Horned Hand
• Central Oregon Symphony performs winter concerts • Rising Star contest deadline is March 10 • Fiddler Jamie Laval plays Saturday show • Open Studio event set at Caldera Arts
OUT OF TOWN • 20
Center
• A review of "Dead Space3" • What's hot on the gaming scene
• Portland JapaneseGarden hasart show • A guide to out of town events
GAMING • 23
• Old Ironworks District hosts Last Saturday • Art Exhibits lists current exhibits
MOVIES • 24
• Jennifer Batten plus local bands • A listing of live music, DJs,karaoke, open mics and more
OUTDOORS • 15
• Oscars are this weekend! Check out Ebert's picks and brush up onsometrivia • "Snitch" and "Dark Skies" open in Central Oregon • "Anna Karenina,""Argo," "Sinister," "Undefeated," "Atlast Shrugged: Part II" and "Fun Size" are out on Blu-ray and
MUSIC RELEASES • 9
CALENDAR • 16
GOING OUT • 8 • Great ways to enjoy the outdoors
•TheW ayne,RichardThompsonand more • A week full of Central Oregon events
DVD
• Brief reviews of movies showing in Central Oregon
Central Oregon's 50+ Magazine for health, active lifestyle, finance and more. •
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AGELESS - a colorful and dynamic magazine full of content developed specifically for the largest and fastest growing segment of our community - those over 50 years of age. The Central Oregon Council On Aging and The Bulletin have partnered to produce AGELESS. Locally written, it will feature engaging, informative content developed with our local senior and boomer population in mind.
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No other locally written magazine highlights today's Central Oregon seniors and their active lifestyle
like AGELE55. Createdfor seniors, but a helpful and thoughtful read for any stagein life. SPONSORED BY: (/P IJm C
Bend Memorial Clinic
Tot a toare IN PARTNERSHIP WITH;
bendbulletin.com
Publishes: March16 CALL 541.382.1811 TO RESERVE YOUR ADVERTISING SPACE IN AGELESS TODAY! Where Can yOufind One? AGELESS will be delivered to all Bulletin subscribers and in Bulletin racks and newsstands, reaching more than 70,000 readers. Plus 2000copies will be distributed through COCOA,their partners and other related businesses. Also find the full magazine online at www.bendbulletin.com
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music
PAGE 4 + GO! MAGAZINE
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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The Annex welcomes Orgone's funky tunes
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By Ben Salmon The Bulletin
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• uic Ez Easy Boys oin u with Mono honics in Ben By Ben Salmon
back approach to heavy funk and psychedelic soul, where grooves ocal promoter Gabe John- move at awalking pace and the son's Volcanic Funk concert wah-wah guitar pedal gets a seriseries is in a p articularly ous workout. fruitful season right now, with Sly Stone and George Clinton shows by Sophistafunk and Ear- are the deities in Monophonics' phunk in the rearview mirror and u niverse, and t h e "Influences" bands like Polyrhythmics and section of the band's Facebook The Pimps of Joytime making reads like the coolest record coltheir way to Bend in late March. lection ever: The Bar-Kays, CurBut Saturday brings arguably tis Mayfield, David Axelrod, The the best one-two punch of the Meters, Syl Johnson, and so on. bunch to Liquid Lounge, where Portland's Quick & Easy Boys Monophonics and The Quick & are less cool-dude attitude, more Easy Boys will team up to make frenetic. They spike their Funkyou move. Both are fine bands. adelic worship with unmistakably What's interesting is their very punky nods to The Minutemen different paths toward funkiness. and early Chili Peppers, and their Monophonics, fro m C a l ifor- live shows replace subtle headnia's Bay Area, mine the sounds nods with sweaty, stage-consumof the 1960s and '70s, right down ing energy. to the pop and crackle of vinyL A The Boys have posted a bunch of six-piece, the band takes a laid- songs (both from their upcoming The Bulletin
If yougo What:Monophonics and The
Quick 8 Easy Boys When:8:30 p.m. Saturday Where:LiquidLounge,70 N.W . Newport Ave., Bend
Cost:$8 plus fees in advance at www.bendticket.com, $12 at
the door Contact:www.p44p.biz or 541-389-6999 album and previous ones) on their Bandcamp, so it's easyto check'em out. Just visit www.thequickand easyboys.com and you'll find a link. Oh, and Monophonics are at www.monophonics.com. Duh. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, bsalmon@bendbulletin.com
If yougo
roove. What:Orgone In music, it's a nebuWhen:9 p.m. Thursday, l ous concept, a h a r d doors open 8 p.m. to-define spot where a band Where:The Annex, 51 N.W. burrows into it s b est e f fort Greenwood Ave., Bend and stays there, cranking out tasty goodness for whoever's Cost:$12 plus fees in listening. advance (ticket outlets listed You know it when you hear on website below), $15at it. thedoor Groove is also an increasingly Contact:www.random elusive holy grail for live-mupresents.com or 541-788sic lovers. Obviously, there are 2989 lots of great bands out there, but thereis also an ever-growing number of acts that don't sound that could easily be mishave the schooling, chops or taken as an authentic artifact confidence to drop into a sultry, from one of those "Sounds of the '70s" compilations adverswinging groove. Orgone is not one of those tised for sale on late-night TV. bands. But not cheesy. Not cheesy Bendites know this by now. at all. No, Orgone is as cool Or they should, at least. That's as modern f un k b a nds get, because Orgone — a band built with all the credible swagger around a core group of rhythof Sharon Jones & The Dap m ically in c l i ne d l o n g t i me Kings, the cosmopolitan flavor buddies — has played in town of The Budos Band and a little several times now, using heavy bit of organic grit derived from doses of groove to turn every- the paved paradise of its homething from small, dark clubs to town of Los Angeles. That's the long way of saysunlit Drake Park into a dance party. ing this band knows how to Orgone has been at it since groove. No joke. Hear for yourthe late 1990s, fusing influenc- self at www.orgonespace.com. — Reporter: 541-383-0377, es such as funk, soul, disco and Afrobeat into a n i r r esistible bsalmonC<bendbulletin.com
music
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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• New York City rapper visits the DominoRoom By Ben Salmon The Bulletin
have been putting off w r iting about Method Man for days. He's a tricky subject, y'know? Let me start with this: I come here not to disparage Meth's legendary crew, the Wu-Tang Clan, makers of one of hip-hop's classic albums, "Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)." Those 13 tracks — the oddball rhymes, the martial arts references,RZA's gritty boom-bap beats — are, collectively, a landmark of the genre, the canary in the coal mine of New York City's rediscovery of rap's pulse in the 1990s. I wouldn't dare chip away at any of that. As we all know, Wu-Tang Clan ain't nothin' to, ahem, mess with, so I'm not going to mess with 'em here. But "36 Chambers" also powered a slew of solo careers that have varied wildly in terms of both artistic and commercial success, none more so than Method Man's. His debut, 1994's
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From Page 3 Lindbergand companyhad notyet embarked on the tour when The Bulletin caught up with him last week. After two reunion shows in January at the Hollywood Palladium, and a quick run to South America, Lindberg sounded guardedly optimistic about Pennywise's future. "We're just brushing off the cobwebs, so to speak," he said. Getting back together with his old band mates — guitarist Fletcher Dragge, d rummer Byron M cMackin a n d bassist Randy Bradbury — was not as strange as he expected. "We've been doing it so long together ... I was ready for a break for a while, but coming back even with the extended time away, it felt pretty normal." In all, he was away three years. During t ha t p e r iod, P ennywise toured with Teglas and Lindberg formed Black Pacific, another blow to his relations with his old band. According to an interview with KROQ radio station in Los Angeles, Teglas had been sidelined from touring by a back injury incurred in Germany, and had contactedLindberg himself about coming back. ("He's actually happy. He's happy to get the hell out of here," Dragge told KROQ. "Jim told me he was calling and saying, 'Hurry up and come back man.'") The reunion came "Pretty much
"Tical,w soldwell, thanks largelyto his quick start — he was first out of the post-Wu box — and Mary J. Blige's memorable hook on the GrammyW winning remix of AII I Need." Other Meth efforts have found an audience since, most notably his apocalyptic "Tical" sequel in 1998 and collaborations with Redman. He even turned his fame into a film career. But his musical output was spotty in the early 2000s, and over the past few years, other ventures seemed to have stolen his time and attention. A long-promised solo album called "Crystal Meth" is currently slated for a 2013 release. Method Man's spotty d i scography isn't unique within the WuTang Clan, but it does help to frame him in the context of his crew. Meth doesn't possess the lyrical genius of Ghostface Killah or Raekwon, the mic skills of GZA or Inspectah Deck, RZA's brilliant ear for production or the late Ol' Dirty Bastard's outsized personality.
out of left f i eld," Lindberg said. "Right before Fletcher called me (about a reunion), if you had asked me could I ever imagine myself playing with Pennywise again, I'd have said 'There's no chance in hell.' But life is strange that way. Fletcher gave me a call, we had a very long heart to heart, kind of talked about a lot of the problems in the past, and somehow at the end of it, we decided we should play some shows. It was as simple as that." Though he'd formed Black Pacific, "(Pennywise) meant v e ry, very much to me,w Lindberg said. "Besides my friends and family, it was pretty much my whole life for 20 years. I wasn't happy to leave the band, so to have it put back together in its proper form was something I was open to — as long as we could make some agreements on how we should behave in the future." His band mates have done a little growing up themselves in the last few years, he said. "I hope so, and that's kind of the point. Byron, our drummer, has a young son, and Fletcher has his two dogs. I hope that helps," Lindberg said,
laughing. "I think there's a little more understanding now of the challenges that people with kids (face) being touring musicians," he said, "and you've got
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people would just bring in finished songs and the other guys would play them. "That wasn't cool. We had strayed from what it meant to make music together," he said. After 20 years together, "it gets harder to go to that well and have it be fruitful collaboration. But I know we can get back to that. We just have to remember what we loved about playing music. It wasn't about selling records or filling venue seats. It was about playing rad music together." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulletin.com
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to find that balance. That was always part of the issues. It was a big issue for everyone, but I think if we can find some balance with home life and touring, and tour smart, we should be able to do it for years to come." That means a new studio album could be in the works. "We're talking about that. It's very important to me that, if we're going to make music together, we have to be on the same page. That was one of the many unspoken problems I was facing before; we had become very distant in the songwriting process," Lindberg said. "It just got to the point where people would bring in their own songs and instead of the collaboration we pretended it was,
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Method Man, with Serge Severe, Doc & Wyatt and Mike Fish; 9 p.m. Wednesday, doors open 8 p.m.; $27 plus fees in advance (ticket outlets listed on website below), $30 at the door; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Avc m Bend; www.random presents.com.
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Winner, Best Solo Performance - LA Drama Critics
MARCH 1
"Simon Wiesenthal"
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MUSEWomen's Conference
3
Kevin E ubanks
6
Ryan Stiles
7 8
Ignit e Bend Tnvia Bee
9
C.o. G ot Talent
10 14 17
Lady smith Black M ambazo
"Wonder Woman!" Beat ! SOleil
Tickets & Information
3I 541-317-0700 Z"The TowerTheatre" P' WWW.tOWeitheatre.Org
T 0 W R E TI-IEATPF
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PAGE 6 e GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Na lyld.aSP~ oga Fov Eegi,~~ers Monday 7:00 — 8:00pm
A %Qg
Me~tio~ Tlnis Aot $ $ou.r Fivst aessiolyl. WiLL Eeg itst pS !
Joe Craven hits the HarmonyHouse 1 1 35 NW Galveston Bend, OR 97701
WWW.Namaspa.Com 541.550.8550
NNI 9
12-Point Kid Inspections
grin 8 bear it run PreSented By
-OoosS UsseeSS. @emae CmWN
Saturday March 9 at LesSchwab Amphitheater The Family Fun Fair Returns Come for the RUN and stay for the FAIR Fun for everyone! Family Fun Run Presented By
we change lives
QUOTA
— o unteers ee e oo Call 541-383-6357 Register on line at www.myhb.org
If all press kits were as succinct, evocative and well-written as California freestyle-folkie and multi-instrumentalist Joe Craven's, I would be out of a job. F ortunately, most a r en't. B u t Craven's bio is a terrific snapshot of what he does and why it's special, so much so that I think we should just let it have the floor: "Picture a stage that looks more like a yard sale; found objects from the natural environment as well as dumpsters, yard sales 8c thrift stores. Throw in string 8 percussion instruments from around the world — and around the house. "Connect this with a dash of technology involving plugging in electric bedpans, 3 stringed thing-a-majigs and looping landscapes of sound — all created in the moment by Joe. Then toss rhythmically with some corny jokes, a little theater thickener, a pinch of audience participation and — voila! Welcome to 'The Joe Show.'" Craven'smusic isfun and creative, and he's got serious chops, too: He played percussion and violin alongside legendary mandolinist David Grisman for 17 years. Seeing him do his thing in an intimate environment like the HarmonyHouse in Sisters sounds like a very good time. Joe Craven;8p.m. Saturday, doors open 7 p.m.; $15-$20suggested donation; HarmonyHouse, 17505Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209.
Trigger Itch to rock Big T's in Redmond There is no angle to Trigger Itch. No "look whatclever or unexpected thing I learned about them on the In-
ternet." No "they take this style and that style and blend it into a cutesy, cosmopolitan cocktail of blah blah blah." No, Trigger Itch is just straight up, stripped down, pedal-to-the-metal rock 'n' roll played with punkish fury by a crew of Idahoans who cite bands like Motorhead, the Ramones, Zeke and Supersuckers as influences. Oh wait, look w hat I l e a rned about them on the Internet: "Band Interests," says the Trigger Itch Facebook: "Suck knob on zero, Awesome all the way up to 10." Rock 'n' roll in its purest form. Trigger Itch, with High Desert
the mellow, horn-laden solo work of Archers of Loaf's Eric Bachmann.
cana. First up (presumably) will
Mel Brown's septet
Anyway ... good band. Two good bands. 8 p.m. $5.
• Hobo Nephews of Uncle Frankare two brothers, originally from New Jersey and now based in Minnesota, who make classic, rambling folkblues music. Their sound is mostly raw and rocking, with heavy doses of harmonica, like Bob Dylan at his most ornery. (OK, not that ornery. Dylan'smost ornery ispretty ornery. But you get the idea.) They'll return to Bend on Saturday night after an opening set by local rustic-folk troubadour Bill More. 8 p.m. $5. • The Horned Hand has started an Hooligans, The Confederats and No open mic night on Tuesday beginCash Value; 8 tonight; $3; Big T's, ning around 4 p.m. Guest artists will 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., Redmond; sometimes sit in, but otherwise, the 541-504-3864. stage is open. Bring down your instruments and your songs. It's a busyweek • Wednesday night will be a midweek treat at The Hand asThe Presat The Horned Hand ervationrolls into town from Austin, For all the worries about the future Texas. A jangly, roots-rockin' fiveof The Horned Hand (507 N.W. Colo- piece, the band draws from '60s pop, rado Ave., Bend) as a music venue a '90s alt-country and modern-day incouple months back, the place sure die rock, and the result is quite, quite is cooking with sounds right now. pleasing. Pleasing enough to require Every week, it seems they host two two quites, I guess. Check out their to four fine shows, and the schedule fine "Two Sisters" album at www — at www.reverbnation.com/venue/ .thepreservation.bandcamp.com. thehornedhand — doesn't seem to Opening will b e l ocal doom-folk be slowing down. Here's what's on band Rural Demons,who are great tap for this week. as well. 8 p.m. $5. • Tonight brings about a delectable double bill of darkened-door Ameri- Oxford Hotel hosts be locals Wilderness,who've been busy making a name for themselves 'round here by staying busy with gigs. Then, it's time for Terrible Buttonsfrom Spokane, Wash., aband that cites Tom Waits, Fleet Foxes, Arcade Fire and Bonnie Prince Billy as influences. I, however, think the songs they have online sound like
Twice now, Ihave attended concerts in the Jazz at the Oxford series. In both cases, hornblowers were the headliners: saxophonist Bobby Watson during the 2011-12 season, trumpeter Jeremy Pelt a couple months ago, in the current season.
Continued next page
music
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
I
From previous page And both times, I made a point to include a passage in my review that could be summed up thusly: Watching drummer Mel Brown work his magic was worth the price of admission all by itself. The Portland-based Brown is a veteran musician, a former staff drummer for Motown Records,and an Oregon jazz legend. He's also the namesake and captain of three different bands that play three different nights each week at Portland's popular Jimmy Mak's jazz club. His quartet plays Wednesdays. His organ group plays Thursdays. But it's his septet — Tuesday's band at Jimmy Mak's — that he'll bring to Bend this weekend for three shows over two nights. The septet features four horns (Renato Caranto on tenor sax, Stan Bock on trombone, Derek Sims on trumpet and John Nastos on alto/soprano saxophones), plus killer pianist Gordon Lee and a dazzling rhythm section. Tickets to the shows are either sold out or close to it, so if you can get one, go watch a master work. It's a blast. Mel Brown Septet; 8 tonight, 5 and 8 p.m. Saturday, 5 p. m. show SOLD OUT; $35 plus fees, available at w w w . bendticket .com; The Oxford Hotel, 10N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; www ja zzattheoxford.com or 541-382-8436.
Reggaeshow willm ake you dance at Astro Lounge The Astro Lounge in downtown Bend has halted its weekly reggae night with local MC/ DJ/irie everyman MC Mystic and replaced it with a monthly event celebrating the island style. The new series will kick off with a bang next week as NorCal's J-Ras and Southern Oregon's Marko come to town. Mystic will also perform. All these dudes work from a reggae base, though J-Ras has a little more of a high-energy hip-hop/dancehall style whereas Marko keeps things a little more chilled out and dubby. Both come to Bend as part of the 2Blessed Tour and will have a live band with them. To hear J-Ras, visit wwwjrasmusic.com. For Marko, click over to www.reverbnation .com/markoreggae. And for Mystic, go to a show in town. See if he's there. Say hi. Get to know him. Cool dude. J-Ras, with Marko and MC Mystic; 9 p.m. Wednesday; free; Astro Lounge, 939 NW. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. — Ben Salmon
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GO! MAGAZINE + PAGE 7
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March 1 —Naive Melodies (Talkiug Heads tribute),Liquid Lounge, Bend, www.bendticket. com. March 2 —HiHstump(puukblues),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/thehornedhand. March 2 —The Newsboys (Christian pup-ruck),Hooker Creek Event Center, Redmond, www.ticketmaster.com. March 3 —Kevin Eubanks aud Stanley Jordan (jazz), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.com. March 5 —Kate Brown (fulkrock),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/thehornedhand. March 6 —The Blackberry Bushes Striugbaud(alteruative folk),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. March6 — Johnny Outlaw & The JohnsonCreek Strauglers (cuuutry),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand. March 7 —Nathaniel Talbut Quartet(fulk),The Belfry, Sisters, www.belfryevents.com. March8 — The Autunumics (ruck),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand. March 9 —Eight Dollar Mountain (bluegrass),Silver Moon Brewing 8 Taproom, Bend, www.siivermoonbrewing.com. March 10 —Ladysmith Black Mambazu(African vucals), Tower Theatre, Bend, www. towertheatre.org. March12 —DownNorth (fuuk), GoodLife Brewing Co., Bend, www.goodlifebrewing.com. March 12 —Esterlyu (guspel), The Sound Garden, Bend, www. thesoundgardenstudio.com. March13 —CudyBeebe 8 The Crooks (ruutsrock),McMenamins Old St. Francis School, Bend, www. mcmenamins.com. March13 —Kury Quinn8 The Comrades(Americaua), The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand. March14 —ToddCluuser & A Love Electric(ruck),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand. March 15 —LukeRedfield (fulk),The Horned Hand, Bend, www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand.
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PAGE 8 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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 www.bendbulletin.com/events.
TODAY OPEN MIC: 6-9 p.m.; Book 8 Bean, 395 N. Main St., Prineville; 541-447-3778. THE PRAIRIEROCKETS:Americana; 6 p.m.; Jackson's Corner, 845 N.W. Delaware Ave., Bend; 541-647-2198. COMEDY WITHMARVIN DELOATCH: with Del VanDyke; $10 includes a drink; 6:30 p.m.; TheOriginal Kayo's Dinner HouseandLounge, 415 N.E. Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. DAVIDMILLER & STACIE JOHNSON: Rock; 6:30 p.m.; Cross CreekCafe, 507S.W.Eighth St.,Redmond; 541-548-2883. RAND BERKE: Americana; 6:30 p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 19570 Amber Meadow Drive,Bend;541-728-0095. ISLES:Ambient improv set, with DJ Panimalia; 7 p.m.; tbd loft, 856 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-7558. LINDY GRAVELLE: Country and pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, Redmond; 541-548-4220. SCOTTY BROWNWOOD:Folk;7p.m .; Dudley's Bookshop Cafe,135 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-749-2010. THE ANVILBLASTERS:Roots music; 7:30 p.m..; Kelly D's,1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. JAZZ AT THEOXFORD:Featuring the Mel Brown Septet; $35; 8 p.m.; The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W.Minnesota Ave., Bend; www.jazzattheoxford.com.
KEEGAN SMITHANDTHEFAM: Funk, reggae and more; $5; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W.BondSt., Bend; 541-388-0116.
SATURDAY
JOE CRAVEN: Freestyle folk; $15-$20 suggested donation;8 p.m.,doors open 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209.
(Pg. 6)
JENNIFERBATTEN:Rock guitarist, preceded by aclinic; $25 clinic and JAZZ ATTHEOXFORD: Featuring the concert, $5 concert in advance or $10 Mel Brown Septet; $35 (5 p.m. SOLD atthedoor;8:30 p.m .,6-7:30 p.m. OUT); 5 and 8 p.m.; TheOxford Hotel, clinic; The SoundGarden, 1279 N.E. 10 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; www. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or jazzattheoxford.com. www.thesoundgardenst udio.com. THE QUONS:Folk-pop; 6 p.m.; Cork MONOPHONICS:Funk, with The Cellars Wine Bar 8 Bottle Shop, 160 S. Quick & Easy Boys; $8-$12; 8:30 p.m.; Fir St., Sisters; 541-549-2675. Liquid Lounge, 70 N.W.Newport Ave., TWO-THIRDSTRIO:Jazz; 6:30 p.m.; Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.p44p. biz. (Pg. 4) Bend d'Vine, 916 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-323-3277. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock, blues and folk; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & COMEDY WITHMARVIN DELOATCH: with Del Van Dyke; $10 includes a Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. drink; 6:30 p.m.; The Original Kayo's Dinner House and Lounge, 415N.E. BOXCARSTRING BAND:Blues, with Third St., Bend; 541-323-2520. Blackflowers Blacksun; $5; 9 p.m.; WILLOW PARKER: Acoustic;6:30 Silver Moon Brewing & Taproom, 24 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; p.m.; River Rim Coffeehouse, 541-388-8331. 19570Amber Meadow Drive, Bend; 541-728-0095. COMEDIANJIM MORTENSON:9 p.m.; ALL YOUALL: Rock; 7 p.m.; Parrilla Hardtails Bar and Grill,175 N. Larch Grill, 635 N.W. 14th St., Bend; St., Sisters; 541-549-6114. 541-617-9600. NECKTIEKILLER:Ska;9 p.m.;Third BOBBY LINDSTROM: Rockand blues; 7 Street Pub, 314 S.E.Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. p.m.; Eco Bistro, Bar andBoutique, 905 S.E. Third Street, Bend; 541-306-6697. THE SWEATBAND: Funk; 9 p.m.; DAN CRARY:Bluegrass; registration Hideaway Tavern, 939 S.E.Second St., requested; a portion of the proceeds Bend; 541-312-9898. benefits the High 8, Dry Bluegrass THE CHARLES BUTTONBAND:Blues; Festial v;$15;7 p.m .;Runway Ranch, 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W.Bond (Pg. 6) 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend; www. St., Bend; 541-388-0116. hadbf.com. HOBBS THEBAND: Blues-rock,with Travis Ehrenstrom; 8 p.m.; $5-$10; The LAURELBRAUNS:Indie-folk; 7 p.m.; SUNDAY Belfry, 302 E. MainAve., Sisters; www. portello winecafe, 2754 N.W.Crossing belfryevents.com. Drive, Bend; 541-385-1777. LISADAE AND ROBERT LEETRIO: TERRIBLEBUTTONS:Dark folk, with LINDY GRAVELLE:Country and Jazz; 5 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, W ilderness; $5;8 p.m.;TheHorned 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; pop; 7 p.m.; Brassie's Bar at Eagle 541-383-0889. Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; Crest Resort, 1522 Cline Falls Road, 541-728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ Redmond; 541-548-4220. MARIANNE THOMAS:Pop;6 p.m.; thehornedhand. (Pg. 6) JAMIE LAVAL:The North Carolina5Fusion & Sushi Bar,821 N.W.Wall TRIGGERITCH: Punk rock, with based Celtic violinist performs, with St., Bend; 541-323-2328. the High Desert Hooligans, The acoustic guitarist Dan Compton; $16, HILST & COFFEY:Chamber-folk; 7 Confederats and NoCashValue; $13; $8 students ;7:30 p.m.;The Old Stone, p.m.; Broken Top Bottle Shop & Ale 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413S.W.Glacier Ave., 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; www. Cafe,1740 N.W. Pence Lane, Bend; Redmond; 541-504-3864. (Pg. 6) brownpapertickets.com. (Pg. 13) 541-728-0703. THE RIVERPIGS: Rock, blues and THIRD SEVEN:Dark folk, with Melcho PENNYWISE:Punk, with folk; 8:30 p.m.; Northside Bar & and the Bad Bits; 7:30 p.m.; Stuart's of Lagwagon, Stick to Your Guns Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road,Bend; Bend, 50 S.E.Scott St. and The Confederats; $20-$23; 7 541-383-0889. BLOODOATH: Metal, with Open p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. ALLURA:Metal, with Laid in Stone, Defiance, Hive Tyrantand Oblivorous; Greenwood Ave., Bend; www. Exfixia and Existential Depression; free; 8 p.m.; Big T's,413S.W. GlacierAve., randompresents.com. (Pg. 3) 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314S.E. Third Redmond; 541-504-3864. St., Bend; 541-306-3017. HOBO NEPHEWS OFUNCLE FRANK: MONDAY ARDENPARKROOTS: Reggae-rock, Roots-rock, with Bill More; $5; 8 p.m.; SCOTTISH COUNTRYDANCE with Subliminal; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Liquid The Horned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Lounge,70 N.W.NewportAve., Bend; Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. CLASSES:Noexperience or partner 541-389-6999. facebook.com/thehornedhand. (Pg.6) necessary; $5, first class free; 7
p.m.; Sons of Norway Hall, 549 N.W. Harmon Blvd., Bend; 541-388-1908.
TUESDAY BOBBYANDDEREK:with Garth Osborn; rock and blues; 7 p.m.; Northside Bar & Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; 541-383-0889. SCRIBBLED RHYMES: Hip-hop; 7-9 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749. OPEN MIC:with guest performers; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; www.facebook. com/thehornedhand.
WEDNESDAY OPEN MICWITH BOBBY LINDSTROM: 5 p.m.; Eco Bistro, Bar andBoutique, 905 S.E. Third Street, Bend; 541-306-6697. ALLANBYER: Folk; 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174. THE RUMANDTHESEA: Folk-rock; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 N.W. BondSt., Bend; 541-382-5174. THE PRESERVATION: Pop-rock,with Rural Demons; $5; 8 p.m.; TheHorned Hand, 507 N.W.Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand. (Pg. 6) J-RAS: Reggae, with Marko and MC Mystic; 9 p.m .;Astro Lounge,939 N.W . Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. (Pg. 7) METHOD MAN:Hip-hop,withSerge Severe, Doc & Wyattand Mike Fish; $27-$30; 9 p.m.;Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend;www. randompresents.com. (Pg. 5)
THURSDAY JEFF JACKSON: $5; 5-8 p.m.; Faith, Hope and Charity Vineyards, 70455 N.W. Lower Bridge Way,Terrebonne. BOBBY LINDSTROM:Rockand blues; 6:30 p.m.; Kelly D's, 1012 S.E. Cleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. 2ND HANDSOLDIERS: Reggae; 8:30 p.m.; Deschutes Brewery & Public House,1044 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-9242. ORGONE:Funk'n' soul; $12-$15; 9 p.m.; The Annex, 51 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com. (Pg. 4) • TO SUBMIT:Email eventsObendbulletin. com. Deadline is 10 days before publication. Please include date, venue, time and cost.
Submitted photo
~ JENNIFER BATTEN INBEND Look at that picture above. Look at who
is next to the blondewomanplaying guitar. Do you recognize that lithe figure? It's MICHAEL JACKSON. You may have
heard of him. If not, he was apopstar in the1970s, '80s and '90s. Dudewas a big deal. The woman is Jennifer Batten, a genre-defying guitar shredder with a two-
decade career of solo music andsession work under her belt. Oh, and she played guitar for MICHAEL JACKSON on three
world tours, as well as the halftime show of the 1993 Super Bowl in front of a TV
audience of more than1 billion people. Fewer than that will see her play ashow and do a guitar clinic Saturday at The Sound Garden in Bend. Details at left.
'O~LOCAL BANDS OUT AND ABOUT There is a finite amount of space in GO! Magazine, which means we can't always give all the great musical things
happening in town the ink they deserve. This weekend, there are a bunch of
locals playing good gigs, including All You All at Parrilla Grill, Hobbs and Travis Ehrenstrom at The Belfry, Boxcar String Band and Blackflowers Blacksun at Silver Moon, Two-Thirds Trio at Bend d'Vine and Isles doing an ambient set at the tbd loft. Oh and Third Seven returns from
his European tour with a homecoming show Saturday at Stuart's of Bend! Do a CTRL+F forany ofthose names to see more details at left. Or if that doesn't work on a print newspaper, just scan the listing
with your analog eyeballs. — Ben Salmon
GO! MAGAZINE ~ PAGE 9
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
musie releases Josh Groban
Richard Thompson
"ALL THAT ECHOES" Reprise Records It's a strange twist of Josh Groban's artistic fate that he is now seen as far more charming and adventurous in his extracurricular activities — fill-in talk-show host, quirky brother on "The Office," comedian on "Jimmy Kimmel Live" — than in his music. With "All T hat E choes," he hopes to change that. Groban teamed with Green Day producer Rob Cavallo for the new album, and there certainly are new rockish trappings here, starting with the Coldplayesque first single, "Brave." The move toward pop and rock seems to be a response to the sales slide of Groban's 2010 album, "Illuminations," his first not to go multiplatinum. It's a good idea on paper, but in practice, Groban doesn't quite fit in with his new surroundings. On "Brave," his classically trained, powerful vocals compete with the extra drama ofthe orchestral arrangements. His booming take on Stevie Wonder's "I Believe (When I Fall in Love It Will Be Forever)"
"ELECTRIC" New West Records On "Electric," Richard Thompson plugs in and delivers his most generous helping of guitar solos
in many years, perhaps ever.
feels a little forced, though he fares much better on his version of "Falling Slowly," the ballad from the movie and Broadway musical "Once,"where his strong voice is the sole focus. A nd Groban st il l d oes h i s trademark mix of classical and pop well, especially in the gorgeous "E Ti Promettero" and the stunningly simple "Sincera." "All That Echoes" may not be the major shift that Groban was hoping for, but it is an interesting first step into styles he can try to master as much as the "popera" that launched him. — Glenn Gamboa, Newsday
The fretwork is marvelous even by his lofty standards, and some credit for inspiration probably goes to producer Buddy Miller, a fair picker himself. While Thompson's notes come in a flurry, he has always been prolific as a composer, too, and
Jim James "REGIONS OF LIGHT AND SOUND OF GOD" ATO Records My Morning Jacket singer Jim James has dabbled outside the band before with Monsters of Folk and other projects, but this is his first proper solo album. Begun after he was injured in a fall from the stage in 2008, and partially inspired by Lynd Ward's 1929 wordless woodcut novel "God's Man," the present album
is a loose song cycle largely conv
Here and there March 9 —Hawthorne Theatre, Portland; www. cascadetickets.com or 800514-3849.
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Frightened Rabbit "PEDESTRIAN VERSE" Atlantic Records Over their first three records, Frightened Rabbit has made some big changes. We've all but forgotten about the angular, taut rock of "Sing the Greys," since it was followed by the excellent songwriting and acoustic-driven, jangle-pop bent of "The Midnight Organ Fight."
But "Winter of Mixed Drinks" didn't expand that so much as crushed it under the foot of some serious maximalist rock moves. That's not to say it didn't work, but old, old-fashioned warmth of "Midnight Organ Fight" became something larger as, well, the band's shows also became somethinglarger. So now they're a big honking rock band, with a major-label deal to boot, but "Pedestrian Verse" does not, smartly, continue to stretch those limits. — Matthew Fiander, PopMat ters.com
cerning one man's crisis of faith and rebirth. With James playing almost all of the instruments himself,
here he serves up another solid batch of songs. He might get flagged for a late hit on Sarah Pal-
Find It All Onlinebendbulletin.com
— Steven Wine, The Associated Press
Here and there
I ~la
May14 —McMenamins
I
Crystal Ballroom, Portland;
IIIIP
lii
www.cascadetickets.com or 800-514-3849.
the album moves around stylistically, as you might expect of a restless artist of James' catholic tastes. It's more spare, however, than a typically jammy MMJ record, taking advantage of James' clear, soaring, s piritually y e a rning voice, particularly on the opening "State Of The Art (A.E.I.O.U)," in which layers of sound are built
The Wayne Shorter Quartet "WITHOUT A NET" Blue Note Records Saxophonist Wayne Shorter ranks among j azz's g reatest composers, but when his quartet performs live — as on this album — his compositions are mere frameworks for daring improvisations that take off in unexpected directions without a safety net. His acoustic quartet includes three leaders in their own right — pianist Danilo Perez, bassist John Patitucci and drummer Brian Blade — who've developed an almost telepathic interplay after
in with "Sally B," but it rocks, as does "Stony Ground," where unrequited love turns bloody. Otherwise, the body count's lower than on most Thompson albums. He's ably accompanied by his touring mates, drummer Michael Jerome and bassist Taras Prodaniuk, and the arrangements give the guitarist plenty of room to do his thing. Each time Thompson launches into one of his eclectic breaks, "Electric" becomes electrifying.
12 years together. On "Without a Net," his first Blue Noterecording in 43 years, the 79-year-oldShorter remakes two earlier compositions, "Or-
up from a simple repeated piano figure, and the sweetly optimistic love song at the core of the album, "A New Life." — Dan DeLuca, The Philadelphia INquirer
bits," written for the Miles Davis Quintet, and "Plaza Real," created for his jazz-fusion band Weather Report. "Flying Down to Rio," from the 1933 film that first paired Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers, is transformed into a h armonically complex, other worldly exploration. There are six new Shorter compositions, ranging from the hypnotically melodic "Starry Night" to the 23-minute chamber jazz, tone poem, "Pegasus," performed with The Imani Winds quintet that walks a tightrope between written and improvised music. — Charles J. Gans, The Associated Press
Where Buyers And Sellers Meet •
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PAGE 10 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Joe KiineI rhe Bulletin
Seen through a glass case holding slices of pizza for sale, Jessica Sesnon works in the kitchen of Hot Rock Pizza in Bend.
• Hot Rock Pizza hasgreat salads, panini sandwichesand, yes, pizza
Hot Rock Pizza Location: 1288S.W.Simpson Ave.,
By John Gottberg Anderson For The Bulletin
f you're like me, you enjoy a good salad with your pizza. That's why it's always perplexed me that so few pizzarestaurants offergood fresh greens. More often than not when I go out for pizza I am offered a small house salad made with iceberg lettuceor, in exceptional cases, a salad bar with options such as cottagecheese,chilled beets orgarbanzo beans. That's why I found Hot Rock Pizza, in the Ray's Market strip mall on Bend's west side, to be such a pleasant surprise. Hot Rock is a tiny establishment, seating just 22 patrons at seven tables. The name is reflected by a large, hand-painted mural above its south-facing windows, next to a single small corner television. Artful blackboards hang above the counter where orders are taken.
t
This is the place that used to be Pizzicato, the lone Central Oregon franchise of a popular Portland-based company. Four months ago,franchise owner Greg Simmons terminated his corporate contract and set out to build a pizza parlor his own way. He expanded the choice of salads and hot panini sandwiches, introduced some of his own pizza variations, and began supplementing the menu with everything from daily soup choices to creative flatbread spreads. Now I consider Hot Rockto be one of the best of its kind in the region.
Garden greens Take thesalads,forinstance.There are seven choices on the daily list, including a changing seasonal special, served with a half-dozen house-made dressings.
Continued next page
Suite1, Bend
Reservations:No Contact:www.hotrockpizzabend .com or 541-382-1228
Hnurs:11a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday to Thursday, 11a.m. to 9 p.m. Friday,
Scorecard
noon to 9 p.m .Saturday,noon to 8
OVERALL:A-
p.m. Sunday Price range:Starters $2.75 to $6.25, salads $4.50 to $10, paninis $8.75, pizzas $14 to $28 ($2.75 to $4 by the slice) Credit cards:American Express, Discover, MasterCard, Visa
Kids' menu: No Vegetarianmenu:Pesto garden pizza is one of manychoices Alcoholic deverages:Beerand wine Outdoorseating: Seasonal patio
Food: A-.Greatmenuofsaladsand panini sandwiches complements high-quality pizza choices. Service:A. Order at the counter;
food is casually but professionally delivered to your table. Atmosphere:B+. Hand-painted mural sets the scene for a small room with an outdoor patio. Value:A. Prices are highly competitive, and a broader-than-
expected menucreates extra value.
restaurants
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 11
From previous page
Nextweek: Rio Distinctive Mexican Cuisine
You can get all the usual favorites — a wedge salad of iceberg with bacon and blue cheese, a garden salad with fresh leaf lettuce, a tossed Greek salad with kalamata olives and pepperoncinis. I found the Caesar to be simple, but very fresh and generous, tossed with Grana Padano c heese and served with a
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lemon wedge. But it wa s th e pistachio spinach salad t ha t r e a lly knocked my socks off. The pairing of fresh baby spinach leaves with roasted pistachio n uts wa s e n hanced w i t h crumbled goat cheese, rings of raw red onion and an original honey-mustard dressing. The dish was big enough that a single slice of pizza would be all one would need to complete a meal. Also excellent was the pear pecan salad, although I would have preferred ifthe somewhat woody stems had been removed from leavesof chard in the spring mix. The salad also featured arugula and red leaf lettuce, thinly sliced pears, candied pecans and sweetened cranberries, along with red onions, Gorgonzola cheese and a fruity raspberry vinaigrette.
garlicbread. Fresh, whole-milk mozzarella and Grana Padano are the cheeses employed. In a trio of visits, my din-
Joe Kline/The Bulletin
ing companion and I sampled
A lunch special at Hot Rock Pizza in Bend last week included a salad, a slice of pizza and a beverage for $7.50. Pictured are a slice of Mediterranean pizza with a pear and pecan salad.
counter— an industry professional who could bop to the classic-rock soundtrack without missing a beat of courtesy and efficiency — which panini he would recommend to me. "The Smokey Top," he said. "Without question." It was a fine choice. Served on a hoagie roll, baked in Hot Rock's oven with Parmesan cheese and an herbal hint of rosemary, the sandwich included top sirloin sliced and layered as in a French dip sandwich. My attendant told me it had been smoked inLighter fare house. Dressed with creamy The p anini s a n dwiches (but very mild) horseradish, are lunchtime favorites. As the panini featured caramelwith the salads, there are a ized onions and provolone half-dozen on t h e r e gular cheese. menu — meatball, chicken A cup of chicken-dumpling pesto and a smoked turkey soup was similarly excellent. club among them — as well Big pieces of chopped chickas a manager's special that en breast were mixed into a changes weekly. broth with carrots, onions, Inaskedthemanbehindthe celery and yeasty drops of
three different varieties. With a nod to the establishment's owner, we began with "Greg's Fave." Not a heavy pie, it features an olive oil-andgarlic base, and is topped with mozzarella, arugula, prosciutto, caramelized onions and goat cheese. " The Carnivore" wa s a meat-eater's delight. Spread with roasted tomato sauce, it was loaded with Canadian bacon, Italian sausage, pepperoni and smoked bacon. The meats were clearly fresh. We balanced ourmeat eating with a "Veggie Supreme."
what may have been unbaked pizza dough.
Fine pizzas "We make ourdough daily using Pendleton flour," owner Simmons tells readers in small print on the front of his menu. "We knead and double-proof it to ensure maximum elasticity when we hand-toss our thin, peasant-crust pies." Indeed, I found the crust to
be light and crispy, like good
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$4. I'm not going to say these are the best pizzas I've had in Bend, but they're definitely on the upper tier. — Reporter: janderson@ bendbulletin.corn
SMALL BITES Sweet Saigon opened Tuesday in the former Amalia's and Hans' space in downtown Bend. Under the same ownership as th e p opular Pho Viet on Third Street, the restaurant offers a casual lunch menu, including pho
(beef noodle soup) and banh mi (sandwiches) and a choice of gourmet Vietnamese dinners, such as Dungeness crab and pi n e apple-marinated steaks at moderate prices. Open daily except Sunday. 915 N.W. Wall St., Bend.
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PAGE 12 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
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Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin
The Central Oregon Symphony rehearses at Wille Hall on the Central Oregon Community College campus. The symphony will present its winter concert Saturday, Sunday and Monday.
• Nontraditional orchestra musicvi,ola soloist will be featured atC.O.Symphonyperformance By David Jasper
go") opens with Symphony No.
The Bulletin
I for Brass, written by Brian Balmages. Though still in his 30s, the Baltimore-based composer is also a conductor, producer and performer whose pieces have been performed around the world. Balmages wrote Symphony No. IforBrass forJames Madison University's Brass Ensemble, the same institution from which he received hisbachelor's degree, according to CentralOregon Symphony Maestro Michael Gesme. "It's a 14-person brass section,
hances are that when you think o f o r c hestras, the French horn, viola and harp are not the first instruments that spring to mind. But at its winter concert this weekend in Bend, Central Oregon Symphony will put the spotlight on instruments that — for various reasons — don't always get the kind of attention normally reserved for violins, pianos and cellos. The performance (see "If you
and some percussion. It's beautiful music, but it is something so different — we've never done anything likethis, at least since I've been here, at a symphony concert, where just the brasssection comes out.There will be nobody on stage other than this brass group," said Gesme. Often, the brass section's role in a symphony setting is secondary, but, as a certain insurance company claims, it's there when you need it (just like a good neighbor). "Normally, the brass section in an orchestra setting often is used solely for a little power, a little color, a little of this," Gesme explained. "It's glorious — I mean, reallyjust to let them rip." The orchestra's members are
equally enthused, he said. "It's new and different, and a challenge. So that'll be fun." Acclaimed viola soloist Kate Hamilton, of Concordia College in Moorhead, Minn., will join the orchestra forthe next piece inthe concert, 20th century British composer Ralph Vaughan Williams' Suite for Viola and Small Orchestra. "The thing that makes this particular (work) cool is that it's a concerto for viola," said Gesme. "Despite its beginnings as one of the prominent instruments during the baroque period ... it has over time become just one of the inner voices of the orchestra," he continued.
Continued next page
Ifyou go What:Central Oregon
Symphony Winter Concert When:7:30 p.m. Saturday and
Monday, 2 p.m. Sunday Where:Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St. Cost:Free, butaticketis required. E-tickets are available
in advance atwww .cosymphony.com; anumber of tickets are also available at the door
Contact:www.cosymphony .com, info©cosymphony.com or 541-317-3941
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Fiddler jamie Laval plays Saturday show Acclaimed Celtic fiddler Jamie Laval w il l p r esent a 9 0 - minute program of traditional music from around the Celtic diaspora, including a musical journey through the Scottish Highlands, Saturday at The Old Stone, 157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend. Laval won the 2002 U.S. National Scottish Fiddle Championship. His most recent album, "Murmurs and Drones," was a top-five nominee for "Best World Traditional Album" at the 2012 Independent Music Awards. Portland guitarist Dan Compton will provide guitar accompaniment. The concert starts at 7:30 p.m., with doors opening at 6:30 p.m. Tickets are $16, $8 for students, in advance at www.brownpapertickets .com/event/310331, or at the door. Contact: caledonian@bend cable.com or 541-410-0259.
Open Studio eventset at Caldera Arts Center Caldera Arts Center will open its doors to visitors from 1-3 p.m. Saturday for its Open Studio event. Open Studios present the work of individuals from around the country
From previous page With violin at the high end of the sound spectrum, and cello and bass at the other, "the viola is in the middle, and there's not a lot of solo written for the viola. It's all written for the extremes — the cellos and the violins." Violist Hamilton is the other component of what makes the concert "cool," Gesme said. Hamilton taught viola to his wife, Janet Gesme — who plays viola in CentralOregon Symphony — when she and her future husband were students at the University of Missouri. "She also played a concerto with me as a part of one of my masters conducting recitals; so I know her from 20-plus years ago," he said. Hamilton is a widely sought-after viola soloist. "The sound that she can make is so beautiful. I mean, you can hardly know that that would come out of what you're looking at in front of you. Because the viola is somewhere in between a violin and cello ... but it's so rich, the sound she is able to draw out of this instrument." The Williams' piece has eight short movements "that show off everything that is wonderful about the viola," he said, from the tender and lyrical to the crazy and raucous. In
arts
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 13
Studios. Learn more about Caldera artists and their creative lives during a reception featuring light h o rs d'oeuvres and glasses of wine followed by a three-course dinner and wine pairings.To reserve a spot, contact: 541-595-6620.
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Old Ironworks Arts District hosts Last Saturday Each Saturday the a rt-friendly businesses of the Old Ironworks Arts District in Bend stay open late to offerfood,beverages and art.The free Submitted photo event takes place from 6-10 p.m. at the Celtic fiddler Jamie Laval performs Old Ironworks, 50 Scott St., Bend. Saturday at The Old Stone in Bend. The Workhouse will feature the work of artist Alisha Mann and the music of Billy Mickelson, Mechlo who have been chosen by jury and and The Bad Bits. Studio 3 will have awarded four-week stays at Blue an opening for a collaborative projLake through Caldera's Artist in ect byTambi Lane, JeffK ennedy and Residence program. Katie Scott and live music by R8 R. Presentations by the artists start Sparrow Bakery will feature paintat I:20 p.m., followed by self-guided ings by Jacob Norris, while Cinderstudio tours. Refreshments will be cone Clay Center hosts an opening served.The event is free and open to for potter Justin LeBart's works and the public. music by Thumper. Stuart's of Bend Contact: www.calderaarts.org. will show more new works in two Caldera i s a l s o c o l laborating dimensions. with House on Metolius in nearby Contact: w w w .tinyurl.com/iron Camp Sherman for a special dinner wurk. — David Jasper and overnight rate following Open
fact, he and his wife played one of the movements at their wedding. After intermission, the orchestra will perform Symphony in D Minor, which Romantic period composer Cesar Franck scored for flutes, oboes, English horn, clarinets, bass clarinet, bassoons, trumpets, cornets and trombones along with tuba, timpani, harp and strings, according to Gesme's program notes. Beforefinding success as a composer, Franck was a piano prodigy whose father had him touring from a young age, or as Gesme puts it, "Does a Mozart imitation, in the sense that he takes him and tours him around, trying to show off his wunderkind son." Franck, born in 1822, went to the Paris Conservatoire and gained "a fantastic reputation as an organist and composer of organ music as well," Gesme said. "He's established, but for whatever reason, he's drawn to the idea of writing a symphony." At the time, opera was en vogue around Paris — meaning no one wrote symphonies, said Gesme. "If you wanted a reputation, you wrote opera music. There were other people writing other kinds of music, of course, but it was usually smaller, chamber music, that kind of thing," he said.
W hen they di d w ant t o h e ar symphonies, audiences preferred Beethoven. "That was cutting-edge style for them," he said. Then came Franck and p e ers with their symphonies, the critics tsk-tsking the facts that, I) they were not wr iting operas, and 2) their symphonies did not sound like Beethoven. History has been kinder to Franck and his symphony. "It's a really cool piece of music. It uses lots of instruments that were not traditional in the symphonic setting, such as the English horn, lots of harp — again, not a common orchestral instrument." This is not the first time Gesme has programmed a concertconsidering all ingredients in an orchestra. "In the time I've been here, I've frequently done some of the standard concertorepertoire — piano pieces by Beethoven and Mozart, and violin concertos by Beethoven and Mendelssohn — but I've also deliberately tried to do a little bit nontraditional. I've done trombone concertos.I've done tuba concertos. "This is just part of my philosophy," he said, "that there are more than just violins and pianos out there." — Reporter: 541-383-0349, djasper@bendbulietin.com
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PAGE 14 • GO!MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
ART E KHI B I T S ~l
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ALLEDA REALESTATE: Featuring works by members of the High Desert Art League; through Thursday; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite1, Bend; 541-633-7590. AMBIANCE ARTCO-OP: Featuring gallery artists; 435 S.W. Evergreen Ave., Redmond; 541-548-8115. ARTISTS' GALLERYSUNRIVER: Featuring local artists; 57100 Beaver Drive, Building19; www. artistsgallerysunriver.com or 541-593-4382. ATELIER 6000:Featuring "Above and Below the Surface," collagraph works by various artists; through March 29; 389 S.W. Scalehouse Court, Suite120, Bend; www.atelier6000.org or 541-330-8759. BEND CITY HALL:Featuring "UNSEEN::WORLD," works exploring how Bend's unseen world inspires community; through March 29; 710 N.W. Wall St.; 541-388-5505. BEND D'VINE:Featuring eco-art by Brenda Reid lrwin; 916 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-323-3277. CAFE SINTRA:Featuring "3 Points of View," a continually changing exhibit of photographs by Diane Reed, Ric Ergenbright and John Vito;1024 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-8004. CANYONCREEKPOTTERY: Featuring pottery by Kenneth Merrill; 310 N. Cedar St., Sisters; www.canyoncreekpotteryllc.com or 541-549-0366. DON TERRAARTWORKS: Featuring more than 200 artists; 222 W. Hood Ave., Sisters; 541549-1299 or www.donterra.com.
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"Market Baskets," a mixed media work by Jacqueline Newbold, will be on display through Thursday at the Red Chair Gallery in Bend. DOWNTOWN BEND PUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "Earth, Water, Sky," paintings, collages and photographs by various artists; through May 6; 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-389-9846. FURNISH.:Featuring works by Sue Smith; 761 N.W. Arizona Ave., Bend; 541-617-8911. THE GALLERYAT THE PINCKNEY CENTER:Featuring student artwork; through March 15; Pinckney Center for the Arts, Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend;541-383-7510. GHIGLIERI GALLERY:Featuring original Western-themed and African-inspired paintings and sculptures by Lorenzo Ghiglieri; 200 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.art-lorenzo.com or 541-549-8683. HELPING YOUTAX 5 ACCOUNTING:Featuring paintings by Carol Armstrong; 632 S.W. Sixth St., Suite 2, Redmond; 541-504-5422. JENNIFER LAKEGALLERY:
Three Course Dinner Specials Nightly From 5pm-10pm 0
Featuring paintings by Jennifer Lake; 220 W. Cascade Ave., Sisters; www.jenniferlakegallery. com or 541-549-7200. JILL'S WILD (TASTEFUL) WOMEN WAREHOUSE:Featuring works by Jill Haney-Neal; Tuesdays and Wednesdays only; 601 North Larch St, Suite B, Sisters; www.jillnealgallery.com or 541-617-6078. JOHN PAULDESIGNS: Featuring custom jewelry and signature series; 1006 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-318-5645. JUDI'S ART GALLERY:Featuring works by Judi Meusborn Williamson; 336 N.E. Hemlock St., Suite 13, Redmond; 360-325-6230. KAREN BANDYDESIGN JEWELER:Featuring fine custom jewelry and abstract paintings by Karen Bandy; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Suite 5, Bend; www.karenbandy.com or 541-388-0155. LA PINE PUBLIC LIBRARY: Featuring works by Colleen Burbank;through June 5; 16425 First St., La Pine; 541-312-1090. LUBBESMEYER FIBERSTUDIO: Featuring fiber art by Lori and Lisa Lubbesmeyer; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 423, Old Mill District, Bend; www.
Every h e s d a y ...................................................................... $10.9$ Dinner Salad R. Bread Two Boneless Pork Chops, Mashed Potatoes & Vegetable Homemade Cobbler & Scoop of Ice Cream Every Satu r 4 a y ...................................................................S10.95 Dinner Salad R. Bread 3 Piece Fish-n-Chip with Coleslaw Homemade Cobbler & Scoop of Ice Cream
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PAUL SCOTTGALLERY: Featuring landscape oil paintings by Jeff Pugh; through Thursday; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www. paulscottfineart.com or 541-330-6000. QUILTWORKS:Featuring works by Lori DeJarnatt and a group exhibit by The Woolies; through Wednesday; 926 N.E. Greenwood Ave., Suite B, Bend; 541-728-0527. RED CHAIRGALLERY: Featuring "The Power of Color," works by Linda Swindle, Jacqueline Newbold and Vanessa Julian; through Thursday; 103 N.W. Oregon Ave., Bend; www. redchairgallerybend.com or 541-306-3176. REDMOND PUBLICLIBRARY: Featuring "All About Oregon," works by Joanne Donaca; through March; 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1 050. ROTUNDAGALLERY:Featuring artwork by Candace Simpson and Jacqueline Newbold; through Wednesday; Robert L. Barber Library, Central Oregon Community College; 26 00 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7515. SAGEBRUSHERSARTSOCIETY:
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1020 NW Wall St. Bend • 541.385.8898 www.sidelines-bend.com ~Find us on Facebook!
lubbesmeyerstudio.com or 541-330-0840. MARCELLO'S ITALIAN CUISINE AND PIZZERIA:Featuring several local artists; 4 Ponderosa Road, Sunriver; 541-593-8300. MOCKINGBIRDGALLERY: Featuring works by Xiaogang Zhu; through Thursday; 869 N.W. Wall St., Bend; www.mockingbirdgallery.com or 541-388-2107. MOSAIC MEDICAL:Featuring mixed-media collage paintings by Rosalyn Kliot; 910 S. U.S. Highway 97, Suite 101, Madras; 541-475-7800. NANCY P'SBAKING COMPANY: Featuring photography by Wendy Caro; through Thursday; 1054 N.W. Milwaukee Ave., Bend; 541-322-8778. PATAGONIA O BEND:Featuring photography by Mike Putnam; 1000 N.W. Wall St., Suite 140; 541-382-6694.
Locatedon the Bend Muntcipal Airport
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Featuring works by Lee August; through Thursday; 117 S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; 541-617-0900. SAGE CUSTOM FRAMING AND GALLERY:Featuring "Outside the Box," mixed media art and frame designs by local artists; through Saturday; 834 N.W. Brooks St., Bend; 541-382-5884. SISTERS AREACHAMBEROF COMMERCE:Featuring fiber art by Rosalyn Kliot; 291 E. Main Ave.; 541-549-0251. SISTERSART WORKS: Featuring "Sense of Place," fiber art by the Journeys Art Quilt Group; through Thursday; 204 W. Adams Ave.; www.sistersartworks.com or 541-420-9695. SISTERS GALLERYIit FRAME SHOP:Featuring landscape photography by Gary Albertson; 252 W. Hood Ave.; www.garyalbertson.com or 541-549-9552. SISTERS PUBLIC LIBRARY: Works by local artists, an annual art exhibit hosted by the Friends of the Sisters Library; through Wednesday; 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1 070. ST. CHARLESBEND:Featuring the Watercolor Society of Oregon's Traveling Show; through Thursday; 2500 N.E. Neff Road; 54 I -382-4321. ST. CHARLESREDMOND: Featuring "Feathers and Fiber," works by Kay Pearson and Linda Shelton; through March 29; 1253 N.W.CanalBoulevard,Redmond; 54 I-548-8 I31. SUNRIVER AREAPUBLIC LIBRARY:Featuring "A Fresh Look at Flora and Fauna," works by Susan Berger and Nancy Crandell; through April 27; 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1080. SUNRIVER LODGEBETTY GRAY GALLERY:Featuring works by Pat Oertley and Ann Ruttan; through March1; 17600 Center Drive; 541-382-9398. TOWNSHEND'S BEND TEAHOUSE:Featuring "Eternal Ephemera," photography by Travis Jennings; through Thursday; 835 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-312-2001 or www. townshendstea.com. THUMP COFFEE:Featuring "Landscapes of the lmagination," works by children of the Waldorf School of Bend; through Thursday; 25 N.W. Minnesota Ave., Bend; 541-388-0226. TUMALO ARTCO.:Featuring "Celebrating Central Oregon Color," works by gallery artists; through Thursday; 450 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Suite 407, Bend; www.tumaloartco.com or 541-385-9144.
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 15
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
out oorS Outing shorts are trimmed versions of stories published in The Bulletinin the past several weeks. For the complete stories, plus more photos, visit www.bendbulletin.com/outing.
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he 600-acre Horse
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Ridge Recreation
nmarked and marked ski trails abound at Odell Lake, including some groomed
Area, located about
by lakeside resorts. These trails wind through
15 miles southeast of
gorgeous forest, sometimes with views of
Bend, is in high season
Diamond Peak, and offer relative solitude.
for mountain biking.
— Bulletin staff
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The trail is firm, dry and mostly void of ice
If yougo
and snow except on
worth bringing a four-wheel-drive vehicle on this trip. When:Through March, OdellLake
Getting there:From Bend,drive south on U.S. Highway 97 for roughly 46 miles. In Crescent,
north-facing nooks and
Lodgeisopen8a.m.to8p.m. on weekendsand holidays, and 8
turn right on Crescent Cutoff
crannies and closer to
a.m. to 6 p.m. midweek Difficulty:Easy to intermediate
Road. A highway sign indicates it's the route to Davis Lake and
the top, approximately
Rentals:Ski and snowshoe
state Highway 58. Continue on
4,700 feet. A good desert
the road for approximately12
option to crowded
Highway, until hitting Highway 58. Turn right and drive west for about five more miles. Odell Lake Lodge 8 Resort will be on the right. The drive is about 65 miles and it takes
miles, crossing the CascadeLakes
sno-parks. r
— Bulletin staff
about an hour and ahalf one way. The roads are plowed, but it's
a cL
rentals are available at Odell Lake Lodge 8 Resort and at Shelter
Cove Resort Cost:$5 per person for access to trails maintained byOdell Lake Lodge & Resort Cuntact:www. odelllakeresort. com or 541-433-2540
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Find It All Onlinebendbulletin.com
Getting there:Toget to Horse Ridge Recreation Area from Bend,
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Frontage Road(Old Highway20) and proceed 0.7 miles to the Horse A rusted gas can rests alongside the trail, the Badlands visible in the distance. Ridge Trailhead on left. Difficulty: Moderate to difficult; recommended for cold-weather
riding only; be cautious on rocky terrain. Cost:Free
Bend
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Contact:www.blm.gov/or/
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PAGE 16 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDA
I $35 plus fees inadvance;8 p.m .;The Oxford Hotel, 10 N.W. Minnesota SPIKE & MIKEFESTIVAL OFANIMATION: Ave., Bend; 541-382-8436 or www. jazzattheoxford.com (Story, Page 6) An animated film screening of "Spike TERRIBLEBUTTONS:The Spokane& Mike's New Generation Show" at 6 based folk act performs, with Wilderness; p.m., followed by "The Sick 8 Twisted Show" (ages18 and older) at 9 p.m., with $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or a reception between shows; proceeds benefit KPOV radio; $13 for one show, $24 www.facebook.com/thehornedhand. for both shows; 6 and 9 p.m. screenings, (Story, Page 6) reception from 8-9 p.m.; Greenwood TRIGGERITCH: The Idaho-based rock act Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., performs, with the High Desert Hooligans, Bend; 541-322-0863 or www.kpov.org. The Confederats and No CashValue; $3; (Story, Page 28) 8 p.m.; Big T's, 413 S.W. Glacier Ave., "LEGALLYBLONDE: THE MUSICAL":The Redmond; 541-504-3864. (Story, Page 6) Redmond High School drama department ALLURA:The Los Angeles-based metal presents the musical about sorority girl act performs, with Laid in Stone, Exfixia Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law and Existential Depression; free; 9 p.m.; School to win back her ex-boyfriend; Third Street Pub, 314 S.E. Third St., Bend; $10-$15; 7 p.m.;Redmond High School, 541-306-3017. 675 S.W.Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or ROOTS:The Californiawww.redmond.k12.or.us/rhs/site/default. ARDEN PARK based punk-rock act performs, with asp. Subliminal; $5; 9:30 p.m.; Liquid "THE BROTHERSGRIMM Lounge, 70 N.W. Newport Ave., Bend; SPECTACULATHON"AND "GOLIDLOCKS 541-389-6999. ON TRIAL":The Summit High School KEEGAN SMITHAND THE FAM: The drama department presents two backPortland-based reggae-funk musician to-back plays that put a modern spin on performs; $5; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 classic fairy tales; $5; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. Bend; 541-322-3300. SATURDAY CHRISTOPHER OF THE WOLVES: The multi-instrumentalist performs, followed Feb. 23 by a sound healing experience; bring pillows and blankets; $10-$15 suggested CENTRALOREGON GUITAR& GEAR donation; 7-9 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing SWAP:A swap of guitars, accessories Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; and musical instruments; $2.50 541-330-0334 or www.hawthorncenter. admission; 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; The Sound com. Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541633-6804 or www.coguitarswap.com. FIRE PIT PARTY:Sit around the outdoor fire pit and tell stories, with food, EAGLEWATCH2013: Includes beverages, and live music by Harley presentations, tours, exhibits, activities Bourbon; proceeds benefit Cascade that explore the natural and cultural School of Music; free admission; 7-10 significance of eagles and more; event p.m.; Riverfront Plaza, on Brooks Street also takes place within Cove Palisades at the Breezeway, Bend, Bend; 541-728State Park; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Round 0066 or crowsfeetcommons©gmail.com. Butte Overlook Park, Southwest Mountain View Drive, Madras; 800-551TELLURIDEMOUNTAINFILM ON TOUR: Screening of films that celebrate mountain 6949 or www.oregonstateparks.org. people, culture and conservation; proceeds FREE FAMILYSATURDAY: The museum benefit The Environmental Center; $17.50 offers complimentary admission for plusfeesin advance,$20dayofshow,$30 the whole family; overflow parking and in advance for both nights; 7 p.m., doors shuttle service available at Morning Star openat6 p.m .;TowerTheatre,835 N.W . Christian School; free; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. HighDesertMuseum, 59800 S.U.S. towertheatre.org. (Story, Page28) Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. "WORKING":Thoroughly Modern KNOW CLUE:D.B.COOPER AND THE Productions and Stage Right Productions EXPLODINGWHALE:View a slide show present the musical depicting the tour of legendary Northwest folk heroes working lives of everyday people; with author William L. Sullivan; free; 2 $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. www.2ndstreettheater.com. SPAY-GHETTIBENEFIT DINNER: A JAZZ AT THE OXFORD: Featuring a spaghetti dinner with music and a pastry performance by the Mel Brown Septet; auction; proceeds benefit the BrightSide
TODAY
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I• TODAY Spike & Mike Festival of Animation: A celebration of twisted toons.
SATURDAY & SUNDAY Eagle Watch:Exercise your eagle eye.
SATURDAY Free FamilySaturday: Browse the High Desert Museumfor free.
SATURDAY-MONDAY Central Oregon Symphony:A winter concert featuring Kate Hamilton.
SUNDAY Pennywise:Punchy punk rock.
WEDNESDAY MethodMan:Therapperand hip-hop artist from New York comes to Bend.
Animal Center's spay and neuter program; $15, $10 children ages10 and younger; 5-8 p.m.;VFW Hall,1836 S.W. Veterans Way, Redmond; 541-923-0882. LAST SATURDAY:Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and a patio and fire pit; free; 610 p.m.; Old lronworks Arts District, 50 Scott St., Bend; www.tinyurl.com/ ironwurk. (Story, Page 13) "LEGALLYBLONDE:THE MUSICAL": 7 p.m. at Redmond High School; see Today's listing for details. "THE BROTHERS GRIMM SPECTACULATHON"AND "GOLIDLOCKS ONTRIAL":7 p.m.at
Summit High School; see Today's listing for details. DAN CRARY:The California-based bluegrass guitarist performs; registration requested; a portion of the proceeds benefits the High 8 Dry Bluegrass Festival; $15; 7 p.m.; Runway Ranch, 22655 Peacock Lane, Bend; www.hadbf. com. TELLURIDEMOUNTAINFILM ON TOUR: 7 p.m.,doors open at6 p.m .atTower Theatre; see Today's listing for details. "WORKING":7:30 p.m. at 2nd Street Theater; see Today's listing for details. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE: Featuring caller Laurel Thomas and
music by Fiddlplay; $7; 7 p.m. beginner's workshop, 7:30 p.m. dance; Boys & Girls Club of Bend, 500 N.W. Wall St.; 541-330-8943. CENTRAL OREGON SYMPHONY WINTER CONCERT: The Central Oregon Symphony performs a winter concert, under the direction of Michael Gesme; featuring Kate Hamilton; free but a ticket is required; 7:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-317-3941, info@ cosymphony.com or www.cosymphony. com. (Story, Page12) JAMIE LAVAL: The North Carolina-based Celtic violinist performs, with acoustic guitarist Dan Compton; $16, $8 students;
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based funk-rock band performs, with The Quick 8 Easy Boys;$8 plusfees in advance, $12 at the door; 8:30 p.m.; Liquid Lounge,70 N.W. NewportAve., Bend; 541-389-6999 or www.p44p.biz. (Story, Page 4)
SUNDAY Feb. 24
7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Old Stone,157 N.W. Franklin Ave., Bend; www.brownpapertickets.com or 541410-0259.(Story, Page 13) TRIAGE:The comedy improvisational troupe performs; $5; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www.cascadestheatrical.org. JAZZ ATTHE OXFORD: 8 p.m.atThe Oxford Hotel,5 p.m. show SOLDOUT; see Today's listing for details. HOBO NEPHEWS OFUNCLE FRANK: The Minnesota-based folk band performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or
www.facebook.com/thehornedhand. (Story, Page 6) JOE CRAVEN: The multi-string folk musician performs; $15-$20 suggested donation; 8 p.m .,doors open 7 p.m.; HarmonyHouse, 17505 Kent Road, Sisters; 541-548-2209. (Story, Page 6) JENNIFER BATTEN: The Portland-based guitarist performs, preceded by a guitar clinic; $25 clinic and concert, $5 concert in advance or $10 at the door; 8:30 p.m., 6-7:30p.m. clinic;TheSound Garden, 1279 N.E. Second St., Bend;541-6336804 or www.thesoundgardenstudio. com. MONOPHONICS:The San Francisco-
EAGLEWATCH2013: 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at Round Butte Overlook Park; see Saturday's listing for details. BOOK DISCUSSION:Discuss "Mighty Be Our Power" by Lehmah Gbowee, with a soup lunch available before the program; free admission; 12:302:30 p.m.; Nativity Lutheran Church, 60850 S.E. Brosterhous Road, Bend; 541-388-0765. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY WINTER CONCERT:2 p.m. at Bend High School; see Saturday's listing for details. KNOW CLUE:D.B.COOPER AND THE EXPLODING WHALE:View a slide show tour of legendary Northwest folk heroes with author William L. Sullivan; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. REDMOND COMMUNITYCONCERT ASSOCIATIONPERFORMANCE: Eugene Ballet performs contemporary dance to the music of The Beatles; $50 season ticket, $20 students, $105 family ticket; 2and 6:30 p.m.;Ridgeview HighSchool, 4555 S.W. Elkhorn Ave.; 541-350-7222, redmondcca©hotmail.com or www. redmondcca.org. "WORKING":3 p.m. at 2nd Street Theater; see Today's listing for details. PENNYWISE: TheCalifornia-based punk band performs, with Lagwagon, Stick to Your Guns and the Confederats; $20 plus fees in advance, $23at the door;7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541788-2989 or www.randompresents.com. (Story, Page 3)
TUESDAY Feb. 26 HUNGERBANQUET:Learn about global hunger and poverty in an educational event sponsored by Oxfam America; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. SULLIVAN FUNDRAISER: A raffle and a silent auction, with fire pits and drinks; a portion of proceeds benefit the Sullivan Children Scholarship Fund; free admission; 5-7 p.m.; GoodLife Brewing Co., 70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-728-0749. KNOW CLUE:HITCHCOCK — ANXIETY, SEX ANDPEEPING TOMS: A screening of the PG-rated 1954 Alfred Hitchcock film, "Rear Window," with a presentation by GregLyonsand adiscussion;free;5:30 p.m.; Redmond Public Library, 827 S.W. Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. BEYONDFORESTHARDBALL: A panel discussion aboutthe management and restoration of the Deschutes National Forest, titled "Can Enviros and Loggers GetAlong in the Deschutes?"; hosted by the Sierra Club; donations accepted; 7 p.m.,6:30 p.m .gathering;The Environmental Center, 16 N.W. Kansas Ave., Bend; 541-389-0785. HISTORY PUB:Learn about "Sagebrush Rebels in the Plundered Province: AntiFederalism in the American West, 1970s1990s"; free; 7 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174 or www.mcmenamins. com.
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Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1074 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "LEGALLYBLONDE:THE MUSICAL": 7 p.m. at Redmond High School; see Today's listing for details. STORIESFROM THE FIELD:OREGON FIELD GUIDE:Former producer Jeff Douglas shares experiences and stories about Oregon Field Guide, presented by the Deschutes Land Trust; registration requested; free, ticket required; 7-8:30 p.m.; Century Center, 70 S.W.Century Drive, Bend; 541-330-0017 or www. deschuteslandtrust.org. THE PRESERVATION: The Texas-based rock act performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.facebook.com/ thehornedhand. (Story, Page 6) J-RAS:The California-based hip-hop artist performs, with Marko and MC Mystic; free; 9 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. (Story, Page 7) METHOD MAN:Thehip-hop artist performs, with Serge Severe, Doc 8 Wyatt and Mike Fish; $27 plus fees in advance, $30 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at8 p.m.; Domino Room,51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www.randompresents.com. (Story, Page 5)
THURSDAY Feb.28
FASHIONSHOWFUNDRAISER: The Back Porch8 Company hosts a Magnolia Pearl fashion show to raise money for Avrey Walker, a young girl battling cancer; with appetizers and dessert; $20; 5:30 a.m.8:30p.m.;418 S.W .Sixth St.,Redmond; WEDNESDAY 541-526-1161. CONVERSATIONS ONBOOKS AND Feb. 27 CULTURE:Readand discuss "What's THE HISTORYOF MOLE: IT'S NOT Going On?" by Nathan McCall; free; CHOCOLATE ONCHICKEN!:Spanish noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community professor Robin Martinez discusses the College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. famous and complicated Mexican dish of College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. mole and its history; free; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; "LEGALLYBLONDE:THE MUSICAL": Central Oregon Community College, Boyle 7 p.m. at Redmond High School; see MONDAY Education Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Today's listing for details. Bend; 541-383-7786 or http://www.cocc. Feb. 25 "WORKING":7:30 p.m. at 2nd Street edu/. Theater; see Today's listing for details. CONVERSATIONS ONBOOKS AND DEBATINGFAIRLY:CIVILITY, ORGONE:The California-based Afro-beat DISAGREEMENT ANDDEMOCRACY: CULTURE: Readand discuss"The New band performs; $12 plus fees in advance, Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age Southern Oregon University professors $15 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at of Color Blindness" by Michelle Alexander; Daniel Morris and Prakesh Chenjeri 8 p.m.; The Annex, 51 N.W.Greenwood discuss what it means to be civil; free; followed by a discussion; free; noon-1 Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 6:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community randompresents.com. (Story, Page 4) CampusCenter,2600 N.W. College W ay, College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. Bend; 541-383-7412. • SUBMITAN EVENT at www.bendbulletin. CENTRAL OREGONSYMPHONY WINTER THE LIBRARYBOOKCLUB: Read and com/submitinfo or email events@bendbulletin.com. discuss "The Swerve" by Stephen CONCERT:7:30 p.m. at Bend High School; Deadline is 10 days before publication. Questions~ Greenblatt; free; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Contact 541-383-0351. see Saturday's listing for details.
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
planning ahea performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. MARCH 7 —CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW:Featuring vendors and a variety of resources for outdoor recreation, with a head and horns competition, a kids trout pond, cooking demonstrations and more; $10, $5 ages 6-16, free ages 5 and younger, $15 for a two-day pass; noon-8p.m.;DeschutesCounty Fair8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503-246-8291 or www. thesportshows.com. MARCH 7 —AUTHOR! AUTHOR!: Stephen Greenblatt, Pulitzer Prize winning author of "The Swerve" and "Will in the World: How Shakespeare became Shakespeare" speaks; $20$75; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; 541-312-1027 or www.dplfoundation.
MARCH 1-7 MARCH 1-2 — "THEBROTHERS GRIMM SPECTACULATHON"AND "GOLIDLOCKS ONTRIAL": The Summit High School drama department presents two back-to-back plays that put a modern spin on classic fairy tales; $5; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300. MARCH 1-2 — "LEGALLY BLONDE: THE MUSICAL": The Redmond High School drama department presents the musical about sorority girl Elle Woods, who enrolls at Harvard Law School to win back her ex-boyfriend; $10-$15; 7 p.m.; Redmond High School,675 S.W . Rimrock Way; 541-923-4800 or www. redmond.k12.or.us/rhs/site/default.asp. MARCH 1-2 — "WORKING": Thoroughly Modern Productions and Stage Right Productions present the musical depicting the working lives of everyday people; $21, $18 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-3129626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. MARCH 2-3— BACHELOR BUTTE DOG DERBY: A trophy race for sled dogs and skijoring, with up to 30 dog teams; free for spectators; 8:30 a.m.; Wanoga Sno-park, Century Drive, Bend; www. psdsa.ol'g. MARCH 1— FIRST FRIDAY GALLERY WALK:Event includes art exhibit openings, artist talks, live music, wine andfoodindowntown Bend andtheOld Mill District; free; 5-9 p.m.; throughout Bend. MARCH 1— TASTE OF THE TOWN: Featuring live music and food from Bend restaurants; proceeds benefit Central Oregon Community College scholarships; $25 in advance, $30 at the door; 6-10 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Mazama Gymnasium, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7761. MARCH 1— NAZI HUNTER — SIMON WIESENTHAL:A one-man show chronicling Simon Wiesenthal's lifelong fight against Holocaust amnesia; $15$25 plus fees; 7 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. MARCH1 — "LEONTHE PROFESSIONAL": A screening of the R-rated1994 film; free; 7:30 p.m.; Jefferson County Library, Rodriguez Annex, 134 S.E. ESt., Madras; 541-4753351 or www.jcld.org. MARCH 1 — "SWANLAKE": The Eugene Ballet Company presents Tchaikovsky's classic work; $12-$42; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; Bend High School, 230 N.E. Sixth St.; www.bendticket.com. MARCH1 — THEHORDEAND THE HAREM:The indie-rock band
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Guitarist Kevin Eubanks will perform with Stanley Jordan on March 3 at the Tower Theatre in Bend. performs, with The Beautiful Train Wrecks; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. MARCH 2 —"THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: PARSIFAL": Starring Katarina Dalayman, Jonas Kaufmann and Peter Mattei in a presentation of Wagner's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted live in high definition; $24, $22 seniors, $18 children; 9 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. MARCH 2 — KNOW SHAKESPEARE: WHO WERESHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN?:Portland State University professor Amy Greenstadt explores Shakespeare's most memorable women and how they challenged gender stereotypes of Elizabethan England; free; 3 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. MARCH 2 —THENEWSBOYS:The Christian pop-rock band performs; $20$75 plus fees;7 p.m .;Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, Hooker Creek Event Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; www.ticketmaster.com.
MARCH 2 —HILLSTOMP: The Portland-based punk-blues duo performs; $10; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. MARCH 3 — KNOW SHAKESPEARE: WHO WERESHAKESPEARE'S WOMEN?:Portland State University professor Amy Greenstadt explores Shakespeare's most memorable women and how they challenged gender stereotypes of Elizabethan England; free; 2 p.m.; Sisters Public Library, 110 N. Cedar St.; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. MARCH 3 — KEVINEUBANKS AND STANLEYJORDAN:The guitar virtuosos perform; $32-$47 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MARCH 5 — KNOW SHAKESPEARE: SHAKESPEARE ONTHESCREEN: A screening of the1996 PG-13 rated film "Hamlet"; free; 6 p.m.; Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W. Tin Pan Alley, Bend; 541312-1032 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. MARCH 5 —GREEN TEAM MOVIE NIGHT:Featuring a screening of
"Surviving Progress," a documentary film about the implications of human progress; free; 6:30-8:15 p.m.; First Presbyterian Church, 230 N.E. Ninth St., Bend; 541-815-6504. MARCH 5 — KATE BROWN: The Eugene-based folk-rock artist performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/thehornedhand. MARCH 6 —"THE METROPOLITAN OPERA: RIGOLETTO":Starring DianaDamrau, Oksana Volkova and Piotr Beczala in an encore performance of Verdi's masterpiece; opera performance transmitted in high definition; $18; 6:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-382-6347. MARCH 6 — RYANSTILESAND FRIENDS:The improvisational comedian performs, with Northwest improv all-stars; $50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MARCH 6 — JOHNNY OUTLAW 8I THE JOHNSONCREEKSTRANGLERS: The Portland-based country act
MARCH 7 —"OKLAHOMA!":The Mountain View High School music and drama departments present the story of two cowboys in 20th Century Oklahoma Territory seeking the hearts ofthewomen they love;$8,$6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6 and younger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12. or.us/mvhs. MARCH 7 —"THE SHADOW BOX": Preview night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. MARCH 7 — PALEYFEST:"THE WALKING DEAD":A pre-recorded Q&A with stars and producers from the television horror series, "The Walking Dead"; $15 plus fees in advance; 8 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com.
MARCH 8-14 MARCH 8-10 — CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMEN'S SHOW: Featuring vendors and a variety of resources for outdoor recreation, with a head and horns competition, a kids trout pond, cooking demonstrations and more; $10, $5 ages 6-16, free ages 5 andyounger, $15 for a two-day pass; noon-8 p.m. March 8, 10 a.m.-8 p.m. March 9 and 10 a.m.-4 p.m. March10; Deschutes County Fair 8 Expo Center, 3800 S.W. Airport Way, Redmond; 503-246-8291 or www.thesportshows.com.
planning ahead
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
MARCH 8-9, 14— "OKLAHOMA!": The Mountain View High School music and drama departments present the story of two cowboys in 20th Century OklahomaTerritory; $8, $6 MVHS students, seniors and children ages 6andyounger; 7:30 p.m., doors open at 6:45 p.m.; Mountain View High School, 2755 N.E. 27th St., Bend; 541-383-6360 or www.bend.k12.or.us/mvhs. MARCH 8-10, 13-14 — "THE SHADOWBOX": Cascades Theatrical Company presents the drama about the lives of three terminally ill people; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m. March 8-9, 13-14 and 2 p.m. March10; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.
MARCH 9 — GRIN AND BEAR IT RUN: 5K, 10Kand1-mile run/walks to benefit Healthy Beginnings; races begin and end at the amphitheater; costs vary, see website for details; free for spectators; 10 a.m.; Les Schwab Amphitheater, 344 S.W. Shevlin Hixon Drive, Bend; 541-3836357 or www.myhb.org. MARCH 9— PINTS FOR POLIO: Taste beers and take home apint glass; registration requested; proceeds benefit the Rotary Club of Greater Bend and the EndPolio Now campaign; $25; 2-6 p.m.; downtown Bend; 541-383-8180 or www. pintsforpolio.org. MARCH 9— CENTRALOREGON'S GOTTALENT: Atalent show contest with local participants; proceeds benefit special recreation programs; $12, $8 ages12 and younger, plus fees; 6 p.m., doors open 5 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. MARCH10 — LADYSMITHBLACK MAMBAZO: Athree-time Grammywinning South African group performs; $32-$50 plus fees; 7:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall
MARCHB — TRIVIABEE: The Education Foundation for the Bend-La PineSchools holds atrivia competition; with hors d'oeuvres; ages 21 andolder only; proceeds benefit the foundation; $21 plusfees; 7 p.m., doors open 6p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend;541317-0700or wwwtowertheatre.org.
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Talks 8 classes OPEN STUDIOCLASS: Aweekly painting group with David Kinker; $25 per session; 9:30 a.m.12:30 p.m. or 6-9 p.m. Monday; Sagebrushers Art Society,117 S.W. Roosevelt Ave., Bend; www. sagebrushersartofbend.com or 360-880-5088. REMODELINGSUSTAINABLY: Learn about costeffective and sustainable remodeling, with keynote speaker and architect Lawrence Schechter; free; 34:30 p.m. March 3; Brooks Room, Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-408-3638. CENTRAL OREGONCREATIVECARDMAKING DAY: Learn how to make12 all-occasion greeting cards, supplies provided; registration required by Thursday; $25;10 a.m .-3 p.m .M arch 16;Redmond Senior Center, 325 N.W. Dogwood Ave.; janinpb© cbbmail.com or 541-390-3390. CENTRAL OREGON BEEKEEPERS BEE SCHOOL: An all-day class for beginning or aspiring beekeepers;
St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. M ARCH13 — KORYQUINN 8t THE COMRADES:The Portlandbased Americana band performs, with Left Coast Country; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507
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Learn about beekeeping at the Central Oregon Beekeepers Bee School. See the listing at left for more details. registration required; $25; 9 a.m.-5 p.m. March 9; Partners In Care, 2075 N.E. Wyatt Court, Bend; www.cobeekeeping.org or 541-280-4940.
N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541728-0879 or www.reverbnation. com/venue/t hehornedhand. MARCH 14 —WONDERWOMEN: THE UNTOLDSTORYOF AMERICANSUPERHEROINES: BendFilm presents the 2012festival
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winner for best documentary, followed bya Skype Q&Awith director Kristy Guevara-Flanagan; $12 plus fees; 7 p.m., doors open at 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W. Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. O
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PAGE 20 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
outo town The following is a list of other events "Out of Town."
CONCERTS
Courtesy of the Norm Tolman Collection, Tokyo
nHeian Verse," clockwise from left, "Comment" and "Fleeting Passage," by Japanese artist Toko Shinoda, are currently on display at the Portland Japanese Garden.
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• Toko Shinoda'sart honors50yearsof Portland JapaneseGarden By Jenny Wasson The Bulletin
n 1963, landscape architect Takuma Tono
began designing and landscaping a Japanese gardenon the site ofthe former Washington Park Zoo (now called the Oregon Zoo). Featuring five traditional garden styles, the Portland Japanese Garden is now considered the most authentic Japanese garden outside of Japan. In celebration of its 50th anniversary, the garden will present "50 Prints and Paintings, Toko Shinoda at 100." Part of the "Art in the Garden" series, the exhibit is currently running through March 17 in Portland. Artist Toko Shinoda, who turns 100 years old in March, isconsidered one ofJapan's "foremost modern practitioners of the ancient art of calligraphy," according to a news release. She began her training in calligraphy at the age of 6 and had her first solo exhibition in Tokyo in 1940. Inspired by the abstract expressionist movement of the 1950s, Shinoda's works "combine
a refined minimalism with a dynamic abstract energy,"according to the news release.eHer masterful brushstrokes are often complemented with a subtle touch of color and convey a Zen-like sense of tranquility." The exhibit comprises 50 of Shinoda's calligraphy pieces, lithographs and paintings — one foreach year of the garden's history. Works will be available for purchase. The 50th anniversary celebration continues throughout 2013 with special programs, events and exhibits including "Isamu Noguchi: We are the Landscape of All We Know" (May 3-July 21) and "A Distant View: The Porcelain Sculpture of Sueharu Fukami with Photographs by Jean Vollum" (Oct. 4-Nov. 17). G eneraladmission to the garden is$9.50 for adults, $7.75 for seniors (ages 62 and older) and college students (with identification) and $6.75 for youth (ages 6 to 17). For more information, visit w w w j apanesegarden.com or c o ntact 503-223-D21. — Reporter: 541-383-0350, jwasson@bendbulletin.com
Through Feb. 23 —SaHie Ford & The Sound Outside,Wonder Ballroom, * Portland; TF Through Feb. 24 —Portland Jazz Festival:Featuring Afro-Cuban All Stars, Geri Allen, Terri Lyne Carrington, EsperanzaSpalding,Jack DeJohnette and Kenny Garrett; various locations in Portland; customers of our local Jazz at the Oxford series get a10 percent discount to all PDXJazz shows (using a promotional code); www.pdxjazz.com or 503-228-5299. Feb. 22 —Pennywise, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 23 —Galactic, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 23 —STS9,McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 24 —Molly Hatchet, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb.25— GoldFields,McM enamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 26 —Patti Smith, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* Feb. 26 —RobbenFord, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 27 —Dave Alvin & TheGuilty Ones,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* Feb. 27 —STRFKR,Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* Feb. 28 —Toro y Moi, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March1 —Con BroChill, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 1 —moe., McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* March1 —Tyrone Wells,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 2 —Alahama Shakes, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLD OUT;CT* March 2 —B.B. King, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT;TW* March 2 —Hey Marseilles, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March 2 —Ken Peplowski, The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. March 2 —The Reverend Horton Heat, * Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF March 3 —Why?,Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 3-4 —MarchFourth Marching Band,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT* March7 — G.Love & SpecialSauce, * Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF March 7 —Great Big Sea, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
March 8 —"Blues at the Crossroads: A Tribute to MuddyWaters and Howlin' Wolf":Featuring The Fabulous Thunderbirds, James Cotton, Bob Margolin and Jody Williams; Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. March 8 —Emancipator, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 8 —Hollywood Undead, * Roseland Theater, Portland; TW March 8 —Ladysmith Black Mambazo,Aladdin Theater, Portland; *
TF
March 8 —Morrissey, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; RESCHEDULED DATE (WASNOV. 11); TM* March 8 —Sue Foley and Peter Karp, Unitarian Fellowship, Ashland; www. stclairevents.com or 541-535-3562. March 9 —Frightened Rabbit, * Hawthorne Theatre, Portland; CT March 9 —Greensky Bluegrass, * Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF March 9 —Ladysmith Black Mambazo,The Shedd lnstitute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. March 10 —B.B. King, Hult Center, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. March10 —The James Hunter Six, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March11 —Flogging Molly, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 12 —Martha Wainwright, Doug Fir Lounge, Portland; TF* March 14 —TommyCastro & The PainkiHers,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF*
March 14-16 —"Siri Vik: My Funny Valentine — The Life & Lyrics of Lorenz Hart,"The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. March 15 —Big Head Toddand The Monsters,McMenamins Crystal * Ballroom, Portland; CT March 15 —Dervish, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March 15 —Imagine Dragons, Roseland Theater, Portland; SOLDOUT; TW*
March15 — Umphrey'sM cGee, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* March 16 —The Paperboys, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March 19 —Hoodie Allen, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 20 —Fun., McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; SOLDOUT; CT*
March 21 —Josh Ritter & The Royal City Band,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT*
out of town
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 26 —The Specials, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 27 —Major Lazer, Roseland Theater, Portland; TW* March 29 —Lotus, Roseland * Theater, Portland; TW March 29 —The Metal Alliance Tour,McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT*
March 21 —Wishbone Ash Performs "Argus" Live,Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March 21-24 —Treefort Music Fest:Featuring Sharon Jones & the Dap-Kings, The Walkmen, Animal Collective, Built to Spill, YACHT, Brother Ali and Sage Francis; Boise; www.treefortmusicfest.com. March 22 —Clinton Fearon & The Boogie BrownBand, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 22 — IrisDement,Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 23 —Mika, Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF March 23 —Pickwick, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 23 —Rebelution, McMenamins Crystal Ballroom, Portland; CT*
LECTURES 5 COMEDY
March 23 —Sarah Brightman, Rose Garden, Portland; CANCELED;www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. March 25 —The JoyFormidable, Wonder Ballroom, Portland; TF* March 26 —Matt Costa, Wonder
Stephen Hough; music by Weber, Beethoven, Liszt and Hindemith; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.
*Tickets TM:Ticketmaster, www
.ticketmaster.com or 800745-3000 TW:TicketsWest, www .ticketswest.com or 800992-8499 TF:Ticketfly, www.ticket fly.com or 877-435-9849 CT:Cascade Tickets, www
Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. March 15, 17, 19, 21, 23 — "Rinaldo":Opera by Handel; Portland Operaand Portland Baroque Orchestra; Newmark Theatre, Portland; TM* March 16 —"The Legend of Lelda: Symphony ofthe Goddesses":Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. March 18 —Andre Rieu, Rose Garden, Portland; www. rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. March 21 —"Beethoven Violin Concerto":Featuring violinist Stefan Jackiw; music by Rouse, Beethoven and Bartok; EugeneSymphony; HultCenter, Eugene; www.hultcenter.org or 541-682-5000. March 23-24 —"Dvorak's Eighth Symphony":Musicby Liszt, Rachmaninoff and Dvorak; Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343.
March 3 —"Dr. Seuss' 'The Sneetches' andOther Tales": Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www. orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. March 3 —Marc-Andre Hamelin: Presented by Portland Piano International; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530.
.cascadetickets.com or 800-514-3849
Feb. 27 —Steve Rannazzisi, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* Feb. 27 —Wil Wheaton vs. Paul & Storm,Alberta Rose Theatre, Portland; www.albertarosetheatre. com or 503-764-4131. Feb. 28 —Marc Maron, Aladdin Theater, Portland; TF* March 2 —Marc Maron, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* March 8 —John Hodgman, McDonald Theatre, Eugene; TW* March 12 —Sherman Alexie, Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall,
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 21
Portland; www.pcpa.com or 503-946-7272. March13 — MikeTyson,Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. March 21 —DaveHill, Funhouse Lounge, Portland; TF*
March 9-11 —"Saint-Saens & Shostakovich": M usicby Mussorgsky, Saint-Saens and Shostakovi ch;Oregon Symphony; Arlene Schnitzer Concert Hall, Portland; www.orsymphony.org or 800-228-7343. March 15, 17 —"Dead Man Walking":Pacific Northwest premiere of Jake Heggie's opera based on the book by Sister Helen Prejean and the movie starring Susan Sarandon and SeanPenn; Eugene Opera; Hult Center,
SYMPHONY 8c OPERA Feb. 23, 25 —"HoughPlays Liszt":Featuring pianist
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PAGE 22 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
From previous page
THEATER 8c DANCE
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Through Feb. 23 —"Swan Lake": Featuring choreography by Christopher Stowell, fashioned after the1895 version by Petipa/ Ivanov; presented bythe Oregon Ballet Theatre; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.obt. org or 888-922-5538. ThroughFeb.24— "Spank!The Fifty Shades Parody":Comedy filled musical satire that captures all of the naughty fun of the book; written and directed by Jim Millan; Aladdin * Theater, Portland; TF Through March 2 —"La Celestina": Fresh adaptation by Raquel Carrio from the classic Spanish Golden Agenovelby Fernando de Rojas; Milagro Theatre, Portland; www. milagro.org or 503-236-7253. Through March 10 —"Venus in Fur": Play by David Ives; 2012 Tony Award nominee for Best Play; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Through March 17 —"Red Herring": Comedic noir fable by Michael Hollinger; presented by Artists Repertory Theatre; Alder Stage, Portland; www.artistsrep.org or 503-241- I278. Through July 7 —"Two Trains Running": August Wilson's searing portrait of African-American life in the1960s; Oregon Shakespeare Festival;Angus Bowmer Theatre, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Through Nov. 3 —"King Lear": Contemporarystaging of Shakespeare's tragedy; part of "Shakespeare for a New Generation"; Oregon Shakespeare Festival; Thomas Theatre (previously known as the New Theatre), Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Through Nov. 3 —"My Fair Lady". Lerner and Loewe's adaptation of George Bernard Shaw's "Pygmalion"; Oregon Shakespeare Festival; Angus Bowmer Theatre, Ashland; www. osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. ThroughNov.3— "The Tamingofthe Shrew":This production of Shakespeare's play is part of "Shakespeare for a NewGeneration"; OregonShakespeareFestival;Angus Bowmer Theatre, Ashland; www.osfashland.org or 800-219-8161. Feb. 23 —"The Best Medicine!": Presented by Magical Moombah; The Shedd Institute, Eugene; www.theshedd.org or 541-434-7000. Feb. 26-March 3 —"War Horse": Winner of five 2011 Tony Awards; featuring life-sized puppets created by South Africa's Handspring Puppet Company; Keller Auditorium, Portland; www.pcpa.com or 800-273-1530. Feb.26-March 24 — "TheW hippingM an": Play by Matthew Lopez is an extraordinary tale of loyalty, deceit and deliverance; Portland Center Stage; Gerding Theater at the Armory, Portland; www.pcs.org or 503-445-3700. Feb. 27-March 2 —MOMIX:Renowned dancer-illusionists return to Portland with "Botanica"; part of the White Bird Dance Series; Newmark Theatre, Portland; www. whitebird.org or 503-245-1600. March 13 —"Shrek the Musical": Hit
Broadway musical with book and score by writers Jeanine Tesori and David LindsayAbaire; Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www. craterian.org or 541-779-3000. March 17 —Rhythm of the Dance, Craterian Theater at The Collier Center for the Performing Arts, Medford; www.craterian.org or 541-779-3000.
EXHIBITS Through Feb. 24 —Portland Art Museum: The following exhibits are currently on display: "NOH: Dance Drama of the Samurai" (through Feb.24),"A TrueSenseofThings:Maude I. Kerns in Oregon" (through March10), "APEX: Sang-Ah Choi" (through March 31), "Folkert de Jong" (through April 21) and "Carrie Mae W eems:ThreeDecadesofPhotography and Video" (through May19); Portland; www. portlandartmuseum.org or 503-226-2811. Through March 17 —"50 Prints and Paintings, TokoShinoda at100": Exhibit features calligraphy, lithographs and paintings by Japanese artist Toko Shinoda; Portland Japanese Garden; www.japanesegarden.com or 503-223-1321. Through April 27 —"We Tell Ourselves Stories in Order to Live":Featuring nine distinguished Oregon-based artists; Museum of Contemporary Craft, Portland; www.museumofcontemporarycraft.org or 503-223-2654. Through April 28 —Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art:The following exhibits are currently on display: "West of Center: Art and the Counterculture Experiment in America" (through April 28) and "German Expressionism" (through May 19); Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027. Through May —"Noise!": Featuring interactive stations on sound, music and hearing; Science Factory Children's Museum & Exploration Dome, Eugene; www. sciencefactory.org or 541-682-7888. ThroughMay 5— Oregon Museum of Science and Industry:The following exhibits are currently on display: "MythBusters: The Explosive Exhibition" (through May 5) and "Desert Air: Photographs by George Steinmetz" (through Aug. 18); Portland; www. omsi.edu or 800-955-6674. March 1-April 7 —"Julie Green: The Last Supper":A selection of "The Last Supper," a series of some 500 porcelain painted plates that illustrate final meal requests of U.S. death row inmates; Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art, Eugene; jsma.uoregon.edu or 541-346-3027.
MISCELLANY Through Feb. 23 —Portland International Film Festival:Featuring more than 125 features, documentaries and short films, including the hit Australian film "The Sapphires"; presented bythe NW Film Center; Whitsell Auditorium, Portland Art Museum, Portland; www.nwfilm.org or 503-221-1156. Feb. 23 —Harlem Globetrotters, Rose Garden, Portland; www.rosequarter.com or 877-789-7673. Feb. 27 —Diversity Employment Day Career Fair,The Ambridge Events Center, Portland; www.citycareerfair.com or 562-409-0056.
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 23
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
gaming Ul
OUISe
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Magazine rank the top downloadable gamesfor the 1. "The Walking Dead" (PS3, X360, PC, iOS) 2. "PlanetSide 2" (PC) 3. "Borderlands 2: Sir Hammerlock's Big Game Hunt"
(PS3, X360, PC) 4. "The Elder Scrolls V: Skyrim
By Tim Turi
— Dragonborn" (X360)
Game Informer Magazine
5. "Pinball FX2: Marvel Pinball
A
— Civil War" (X360) 6. "Trials Evolution: Riders of
Doom" (X360) 7. "Retro City Rampage" (PS3, X360, Wii, PC, Vita) 8. "The Cave" (Wii U, PS3, X360,
PC) 9. "Little Inferno" (Wii U, PC) 10. "XCOM: Enemy Unknown-
Second Wave" (PS3,X360, PC) McClatchy-Tnhune News Sertnce
Game lnformer Magazine
"Dead Space 3" is the most polished, well-paced entry in the excellent sci-fi horror series yet. Bringing a friend along for two-player co-op is a blast.
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played. Most of "Dead Space 3's" preview coverage has highlighted hero Isaac Clarke's harrowing quest on the inhospitable ice planet, Tau Volantis. I was surprised and pleased to play several exciting acts that take place before his trip to th e H oth-like snowball. One section made me feel like an astronaut more than any other game has, and I loved it. Floating around the debris of destroyed space shipsis surreal yet calming. This zero-gravity, focused part of the game
DOWNLOADS The editors of Game Informer month of February:
• 'DeadSpace3' takes gamers on afierce ride that builds onthe winning formula s long as mankind has existed, our base instincts have included survival and tool creation. Visceral Games' latest entry in its acclaimed horror franchise expertly taps into these core desires. Players still creep t hrough di m c o r r idors w h i l e blasting limbs off alien zombies, but the scope of survival has expanded. What you bring to battle is completely up to you thanks to the deepweapon-crafting system. Protagonist Issac Clarke can also suit up with a buddy this time in two-playerco-op. These features culminate into one of the most rewarding videogames I've ever
TOP 10
just as satisfying as finding that critical health pack when things get rough. Even better, you acquire little robots that troll areas for goodies and automatically return to your workbench, so every trip to a bench is like Christmas. Sorting through all your items to see what new weapons you can craft or tweak is a worthwhile endeavor that gives you a greater sense of ownership over your equipment. Previous "Dead Space" games had players purchase new
'DEAD SPACE3' 9.75 (out of 10) PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 Electronic Arts, Visceral Games ESRB rating: M
aging experimentation. I started
mopping up necromorphs with
my devastating custom plasma c utter/flamethrower hybr i d , complete with s t asis-enhanced is more open than previ- R E VEW I we a pons, but "Dead Spacerounds. ous "Dead Space" entries, 3" gives you one gun to "Dead Space 3" is still creepy, allowing you t o s h uttle start with and sets you but this entry i s m ore actionbetween sites and accept optional loose with the best weapon-craft- packed than p r evious games. missions. Tau Volantis has a simi- ing systemI'veever encountered. That's a good thing. Isaac's inlar structure, sans the zero grav- W eapon components like g u n tuitive new d odge roll m akes ity. Straying off the critical path frames, plasma cores, and ammo avoiding the larger nercromorph and accepting side quests regular- modifiers can combine into count- attacks more manageable. His enly rewards players with goodies less configurations. Ithought Ihad hanced mobility is extra helpful like ammo, health, and precious optimized my resources bycob- during gigantic, tense boss battles resources. bling together a decent line cutter that force players to think straUnlike the first two games, play- that I used for half the game. tegically about their stasis and ers gather resources like tungsten Then I spent 15 minutes recon- telekinetic powers. Battles may and scrap metal instead of money. structing my main firearm from be frequent and frenzied, but the These materialsare used to make the ground up, and boy was I game does a great job of building extra ammo, upgrade your suit, wrong. Your upgrade circuits and suspense. Battling necromorphs craft weapons and more. Scav- components are salvaged when along Tau Volantis' frozen surenging much-needed resources is you dismantle weapons, encour- face while your body temperature
plummets is thrilling. The game also boasts one of the most intense,Lost-style crash sequences in gaming. The only notable speed bump occurs in the final act of the game, which has tedious backtracking and difficult battles that feel forced. Otherwise, the pacing is masterful. Every event in the game, including t h e afo r e mentioned crash sequence, is playable with a friend via online-only co-op. One player is Isaac, the other is Carver, a no-BS military man. The game tossesmore enemies at players in co-op mode, but having an extra gun makes the deadly mission more fun and decidedly easier (we recommend playing
ANDROID
1. "Carbon" (Premium) 2. "Cubes vs. Spheres" 3."SO SMS PRO SpringSuper Theme"
4."Super Hexagon" 5. "Wipeout" APPLE 1. "Clear Vision 2"
2. "WhatsApp Messenger" 3."Wood Camera— Vintage Photo Editor" 4. "Minecraft — Pocket Edition" 5. "Angry Birds Star Wars" McClatchy-Tribune News Service
co-op on hard).
Visceral laid th e f o undation for a terrific horror series with the first "Dead Space." The clean, HUD-less presentation, dismemberment-focused gunplay, and expertly crafted derelicts have made each successiveentry feelahead of its time. "Dead Space 3" evolves the winning formula into a title not only befitting of the fantastic series, but also one of the best games of this generation.
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
TheBulletin
PAGE 24 . GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN â&#x20AC;˘ FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
movies
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few years ago, I came across an article about the newly identified psychological concept of elevation. Scientists claim it is as real as love or fear. It describes a state in which we feel unreasonable joy; you know, like when you sit quiet and still and tingles run up and down your back, and you think things can never get any better. I don't think I felt uncontrollable elevation in making any of my guesses this year. That doesn't mean itwas abadyear at the movies. Harvey Weinstein, in accepting his life achievement award from the Producers Guild, said he thought 2012 was the best in 90 years. Maybe he felt elevation when he gazed upon the Weinstein Co.'s box-office figures. Anyway, my guess for the Best Picture Oscar was made a while ago. On Sept. 10, I wrote: "The winner of the Academy Award for Best Picture will be Ben Affleck's tense new thriller 'Argo.' How do I know this? Because it is the audience favorite coming out of the top-loaded opening weekend of the Toronto Film Festival." Also, because I had a feeling. Nothing has changed. I did feel elevation during a 3-D shot in "Life of Pi" when the camera looks up from beneath the lifeboat and we experience the ocean'ssurface as a membrane between sea and sky. But a membrane does not an Oscar win, and another reason Ben Affleck's film will win this year is that it's a dashed entertaining example of what Hollywood always knew how to do, and seems to be forgetting: It's a great story. Lives are at stake, yet comedy sneaks in. There'sa caper needing split-second timing and blind luck. It depends on story and not star power or a franchise. Our side tries to rescue some Americans hidden inside the Canadian embassy in Tehran by concocting a phony sci-fi movie named "Argo" as a cover to
ROGEREBERT
smuggle a rescue team into Iran during the hostage crisis. It is said "Les Miserables" has a chance in this category. That would be an insult to the other finalists. I get the sensation this year that the awards reflect a new Hollywood reality: With so many different ways for audiences to see films, the new emphasis will be on (yes) quality in whatever genre, and away from blockbusters that are pounded down our throats. Streaming video looks pretty darn good. A good reason to see a first-run movie in a theater is to join a cool audience that knows why it's there. Friday night at a superior film will feel more like the 8:30 a.m. pressscreenings at Cannes: We are the select, the chosen few. The dark horse here may be "Django Unchained," which appeals to an academy that is growing so much younger that, in many cases, these people have actually grown up on Quentin Tarantino. The realization is sinking in that he's one of the greats and not just this goofy former video-store clerk kid with a chin Jay Leno envies.
Best Director This has traditionally been the easiest category to guess right because the winner of the Directors Guild A w ard almost always goes on to win the Oscar. A funny thing happened on the Spielberg wa y t o Oscar night, howe ver, when one of t h e presumed front runners, Ben Affleck, didn't even qualify in the final five.
Continued next page
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
From previous page That leaves us with M ichael Haneke for "Amour," Benh Zeitlin for "Beasts of the Southern Wild," Ang Lee for "Life of Pi," Steven Spielberg for "Lincoln," and David O. Russell for "Silver Linings Playbook." I'll pause to observe with what insight and generosity the Academy honored Zeitlin, a first-timer making a daunting low-budget film with all the hazards of a location involving water. Then I'll move on to predict Spielberg. I'll be fine with that, although observing that "Lincoln" is well within his gifts as a director and that Ang Lee (also overcoming water) achieved a breathtaking breakthrough in 3-D in "Life of Pi." That wasn't merely a technical achievement, but permeated the very membrane of the film.
ings Playbook." She's all edges and elbows with this guy, who has the misfortune of having chosen professional sports as the avatar for his personal life. "Silver Linings Playbook" would have been an ideal choice for many wives and mothers to sneak out and see during the Super Bowl — and would have given them a lot more to think about than the football game.
Best Supporting Actor
If I were predicting based on elevation, I'd choose N aomi W atts f o r "TheImpossible," no question, and praise how seamlessly her w ork b l ends i n t o Lawrence C G I t o m ake it all convincing. But I'm
Best Original Screenplay
Michael Haneke's "Amour" will win. His work avoids the slightest attempt to sentimentalize its story of a long-married, loving couple finally brought down by the realities of old age. Hollywood often believesaudiences aren'tprepared to accept the inevitability of a sad
ending, and finds a cagey way during the end credits to elevate the
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 25
AcademyAwardstrivia
guessing Jennifer Lawrence, who plays the new lover of the hero (Bradley Cooper) in "Silver Lin-
I would have voted for Christoph Waltz in"Django Unchained," illustrating once again how Tarantino can take an overlooked actor, give him ingenious dialogue and use him to carry a picture. But Best Actor the winner will be Daniel Day-Lewis, for Steven Tommy Lee Jones Spielberg's "Lincoln." It's a finely for "Lincoln." His controlled, non-heroic perforcharacter is invalumance. He interprets the character able to the film, and anew, not burdened often he projects the conviction that by its weight of his- he has private means and reasons tory. Day-Lewis and that aren't what everyone assumes. Spielberg create a Also Oscar-worthy: Alan Arkin, Lincoln who is older who with John Goodman helped and less robust than "Argo" work by providing Affleck Day-Lewis we us u a lly i m a g - with comic Hollywood cutaway ine him, and who scenestoincreasetension and avoid shows not fiery heroism but great the monotone of action. They're in patience as he shepherds his anti- another film, a Hollywood comedy. slavery legislation through a conBest Supporting Actress gressional maze. I'm guessing Anne Hathaway This Lincoln makes me think of Obama in the way he doesn't for "LesMiserables" because she spout off and moves in delibera- holds the general consensus, and tion. The movie is much about that we're predicting, not choosing. She political process. We understand may benefit from an the 13th Amendment passed not occasional academy so much for moral reasons, but tendency to award for immediate pragmatic ones. this category to what Lincoln won thenecessary votes it sees as the Best from the necessary legislators by Picture r u nner-up. making those pragmatic schemHathaway Her character isn't ers anofferthey couldn't refuse. e ven essential i n "Les Miserables," but which charHere again, the runner-up is probably "Les Miserables" and acter is? The Victor Hugo novel Hugh Jackman. God knows he fills its characters with abundant does the best that he can with the life. The film assigns them to line material he's given, but what a load up and belt out dirges to the camof bloated and stagy baggage he era,which representsthe audience. has to haul. I remind you that my The Oscars haven't even been held task here is to predict the winners yet, and "Les Mis" is already a picto help you in the office pool, and ture that is over with. not to write new reviews of films.
Best Actress
movies
By Gina Mclntyre Los Angeles Times
tone. Surely amour can't end in despair? Oh, yes. It can. And does.
Best Adapted Screenplay Tony Kushner will win for "Lincoln," and deserves to, in taking a story marinated in history and viewing it as something that could have gone either way. The slaves weren'tfreed entirely for reasons of decency. Working from books about the politics involved, Kushner in "Lincoln" shows that Congress often has cynical and pragmatic motives for its "idealism."
Best Animated Feature "Wreck-It Ralph," because the academy members aren'tidiots, and in this category, the academy often prefers a film that goes somewhere and says something, over cute pandas that use Earth as a trampoline. The film's creative inspiration takes place inside video games, like "Tron," another Disney film from 31 years ago. Wreck-It Ralph is the avatar who gets assigned to do the munching and stomping. That's no life, and the movie suggests to the kids in the audience they should have a little empathy for those whom life has typecast as the villains.
Best Foreign Film Haneke's " Amour," h a n d s down. Don't bet against it.
Best Cinematography Although cinematography can involve a great many things apart from "being beautiful," Claudio Miranda's work for "Life of Pi" does those things. For my money, here is a film that justifies the use of treacherous 3-D.Its story of a boat on the wide Pacific risks giving many of its images the appearance of being flat, and Miranda does something I didn't realize was possible. It brings depth to
"empty" space.
It has no need of those bungeejumping pandas that zoom toward us. Long shots and close shots all take place in tangible space. We see the boy and the tiger and the Pacific Ocean is behind them, and we can see that it is. I don't know how it's possible, but empty air takes on presence. A lifeboat might seem claustrophobic. Miranda's cinematography raises the passivity of agoraphobia. — Roger Ebert isa film critic for The Chicago Sun-Times.
LOS ANGELES — The 85th Academy Award nominations yields some fun trivia. Forinstance: • There are four first-time nominees in the lead acting categories: Bradley Cooper ("Silver Lin-
ings Playbook"), Hugh Jackman ("Les Miserables"), Emmanuelle
Riva ("Amour") and Quvenzhane
Pronunciationprimer QuvenzhaneWallls(KwahVEN-zhah-nay):The9-yearold, Louisiana-born star of "Beasts of the Southern Wild" is the tiniest nominee in the
lead actress category, but her moniker is big. Still stumped? Just call her by her nickname,
Nayzie.
Wallis ("Beasts of the Southern
Behn Zeitlin(Ben ZITE-lin):
Wild").
Nothing fancy here,folks.
• France's Riva, 85, is the oldest lead actressnominee in Academy Awards history; Wallis, 9, is the youngest. Gloria Stuart, who was 87 when she was nominated for hersupporting performance in "Titanic," stands as the oldest nominee. The youngest actor to ever be nominated was 8-yearold Justin Henry for "Kramer Vs. Kramer." • Nine of the 20 acting nominees — Daniel Day-Lewis, Denzel Washington, Alan A r k i n, Robert De Niro, Philip Seymour Hoffman, Tommy Lee Jones, Christoph Waltz, Sally Field and Helen Hunt — are previous Oscar winners in the acting races. • "Lincoln's" Kathleen Kennedy and Steven Spielberg share the record for the most best picture nominations with eight each. • " Amour" is t he f i f th f i l m to be nominated for both Best Picture and Best Foreign Film. It joins the ranks of "Z," "The Emigrants," "Life Is Beautiful"
The H is silent in the New York-born "Beasts" director's
and "Crouching Tiger, Hidden
Dragon." • "Silver Linings Playbook" is the first film with nominations for Best Picture, director, screenplay and all four acting categories since Warren Beatty's 1981 epic "Reds." • John Williams has more nominations than any other living person, with 48. The only person with more is Walt Disney. He had 59. Woody Allen is the runner-up with 23. • Michael Kahn is t he most nominated film editor; he receives his eighth nomination this year for "Lincoln." • Thomas Newman earns his 11th nomination with his score for the James Bondfilm"Skyfall." The Newman family — Alfred, Lionel, Emil, Thomas, David and Randy — now have 87 nominations altogether. • Similarly, Roman Coppola, who was nominated with Wes Anderson fo r t h ei r o r i g inal
first name, as inother famous Bens like Affleck, Franklin and Folds Five. And "Zeit" rhymes with "might." Michael Haneke (Mik-ALE
HAN-uh-ka):TheAustrian writer-director of "Amour" is known for the dark subject matter of his films. But when it comes to his name, think festival of lights. "Haneke"
sounds like "Hanukkah." JanuszKamlnski (YAN-ush Ka-MIN-ski):
Steven Spielberg's Polish cinematographer just received his sixth Oscar nomination with his work on "Lincoln," which makes it a fine time to finally start saying his name right. The "sz" in Janusz
sounds like "shhhh." John Gatins(GAYT-Ins):He's nominated in theoriginal screenplaycategory for "Flight." And his last name
sounds like "gate." ChrlstophWaltz(KrlsTOFF Valtz):Nominated for supporting actor, Waltz is
German-Austrian, which means the W in his last name sounds like a V.And
"Christoph" is notypo — leave off the "er."
AngLee:TheTaiwan-born director of "Life of Pi" added the G to masculinize his name
among Englishspeakers.
"Ang" rhymes with "Tang," not"Gong." Still confused? Be respectful and call him Mr. Lee. — Los Angeles Times
screenplayfor "Moonrise Kingdom," is the sixth member of the Coppola clan to receive a nomination — he joins Carmine Coppola, Francis Ford Coppola, Talia Shire, Nicolas Cage and Sofia Coppola — bringing the family total to 24 nominations.
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PAGE 26 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
Roger Ebert's predictions aremarked byv' but he did not make aguess for every category.
•
+ Be s t Picture + Director 0"Amour"
• Michael Haneke, "Amour"
0"Argo" Q
ClAng Lee, "Life of Pi"
0 "Beasts of the Southern Wild"
• David O. Russell, "Silver Linings Playbook"
0 "Django Unchained"
• Steven Spielberg, "Lincoln"I/
0 "Les Miserables" •
•
•
• Benh Zeitlin, "Beasts of the Southern Wild"
0"Life of Pi" 0 "Lincoln" 0 "Silver Linings Playbook"
+ Screenplay
0 "Zero Dark Thirty"
Adapted
+ Actor
• Tony Kushner, "Lincoln" V
0 Bradley Cooper, "Silver Linings Playbook" 0 Daniel Day-Lewis, "Lincoln" V
ClDavid O. Russell, "Silver Linings
0 HughJackman, "Les Miserables"
• Benh Zeitlin and Lucy Alibar,
0 Joaquin Phoenix,"TheMaster"
"Beasts of the Southern Wild"
• David Magee, "Life of Pi"
+ Original Song + Film Editing 0 "Before My Time," from "Chasing
0 "Argo"
Ice"
• "Life of Pi"
• "Everybody Needs a Best Friend," from "Ted"
0 "Lincoln"
• "Pi's Lullaby," from "Life of Pi" • "Skyfall," from "Skyfall" 0 "Suddenly," from "Les Miserables"
0 "Anna Karenina"
0 Jessica Chastain, "ZeroDarkThirty"
• "Life of Pi" V
• Chris Terrio, "Argo"
0 "Skyfall"
0 Jennifer Lawrence, "Silver Linings
• Wes Anderson andRoman Coppola, "Moonrise Kingdom"
Playbook"af
• Mark Boal, "Zero Dark Thirty"
0 Emmanuelle Riva, "Amour"
• John Gatins, "Flight"
0 QuvenzhaneWallis, "Beasts of the
• Michael Haneke, "Amour" /
Southern Wild"
• Quentin Tarantino, "Django
0 Naomi Watts, "The lmpossible"
Unchained"
+ Foreign Film
+ Supporting
• "Amour" (Austria) Q • "Kon-Tiki" (Norway) • "No" (Chile)
Actor 0 Alan Arkin, "Argo" 0 Robert De Niro, "Silver Linings Playbook" 0 Philip Seymour Hoffman, "The
Master" 0 Tommy LeeJones, "Lincoln" 0 Christoph Waltz, "Django Unchained"
Q
!
I
+ Supporting
Actress 0 Amy Adams, "The Master" 0 Sally Field, "Lincoln"
0 "Life of Pi"
0 Anne Hathaway,Q "Les Miserables" 0 Helen Hunt, "The Sessions" 0 Jacki Weaver, "Silver Linings Playbook"
Journey" 0 "Les Miserables" 0 "Lincoln"
• "The lnvisible War"
+ Costume Design
• "Searching for Sugar Man"
• "Anna Karenina"
+ Documentary
Short
0 "Les Miserables" 0 "Lincoln" • "Mirror Mirror"
• "Inocente" • "Kings Point"
0 "Snow White and the Huntsman"
• "Mondays at Racine"
+ Sound Editing
• "Open Heart" • "Redemption"
• "Argo" 0 "Dlango Unchained" 0"Life of Pi"
+ AnimatedFeature
Short Film
Animated
• "Fresh Guacamole" • "Head over Heels'" 0 "Maggie Simpson in 'The Longest Daycare'" • "Paperman"
• "Wreck-It Ralph" V
+ Short Film
+ Original Score
Design
0 "Anna Karenina"
• "5 Broken Cameras" • "The Gatekeepers" • "How to Survive a Plague"
Feature
0 "Adam and Dog"
• "The Pirates! Band of Misfits"
Production
0 "The Hobbit: An Unexpected
+
• "ParaNorman"
I
+
+ Documentary
• "A Royal Affair" (Denmark) • "War Witch" (Canada)
• "Brave" • "Frankenweenie"
• "Les Miserables"
• "Django Unchained" • "Lincoln"
Original
+ Makeup
"The Hobbit: An Unexpected + Cinematography 0Journey"
0 Denzel Washington, "Flight"
+ Actress
• "Zero Dark Thirty"
• "Hitchcock"
Playbook"
+ Screenplay
0 "Silver Linings Playbook"
Live Action
• "Skyfall" 0 "Zero Dark Thirty"
+ Sound Mixing 0 "Argo" 0 "Les Miserables" 0"Life of Pi" 0 "Lincoln" • "Skyfall"
+ Visual Effects
• Mychael Danna, "Life of Pi"
0 "Asad"
0"The Hobbit: An Unexpected
• Alexandre Desplat, "Argo"
• "Buzkashi Boys"
Journey"
• Dario Marianelli, "Anna Karenina"
• "Curfew"
0"Life of Pi"
• Thomas Newman, "Skyfall"
• "Death of a Shadow"
0 "Marvel's The Avengers"
• John Williams, "Lincoln"
0"Henry"
0 "Prometheus" • "Snow White and the Huntsman"
movies
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 27
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Dwayne Johnson stars as John Matthews in "Snitch." I o
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' ni c 0 Oo t takes forever to get going, and lollygags along even after that. As a businessman scrambling to find a way to get his son's federal prison sentence reduced, Dwayne Johnson has to play fear, tough love, pity and panic — and he's a bit in over his head. But that's the point of "Snitch," a straight-no-chaser thriller "inspired by a true story." The pacing is off, too many scenes lack d r amatic punch and play like filler. But Johnson is pretty good at being a guy in over his head, sharing scenes with flinty pros like Susan Sarandon, Benjamin Bratt and Barry Pepper. It's a tale of a civilian who gets mixed up in the feds-vs.-Mexican drug cartels war, whose "mandat ory m i n imum s entencing" h a s snared John Matthews' naive 18year-old son. The prosecutor (Sarandon) is a hard case, readying a run for Congress. So John makes a deal — he'll get "an introduction" into that world through his construction supply business. He'll use his Jefferson City, Mo., trucks for transport, and they'll nail big players from the cartel. Co-writer director Ric Roman Waugh is a stuntman turned director. But he wastes a staggering
t
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or in cas that good. Pepper sports a Civil War-worthy ROGER MOORE goatee inhis role as an undercover fed who fretsover John's safety. Rafi Gavron is properly frightened as the boy who let a friend entrap him with a box full of pills and sets "Snitch" this whole saga in motion, though Waugh loses track of the kid for 112 minutes much of the movie. We need rePG-13, for drug content and minding of the stakes, the danger. sequences of violence But I like the way Johnson, often shot inextreme close-ups, underamount of time setting that scenar- plays this guy. And I like the way io up, and even more time getting to the script lets John's ineptitude and the point where his no-digital stunt discomfort in this world create the experience pays off. Some of that humor, the way Waugh has some establishes that John is a fish out scenes setto music, no sound efof water and shows us his learning fects, the way he dispenses with curve. Mostly, though, that slow the obligatory "I'm gonna need to pacing robs the story of tension and head to the gun shop" scene and the suspense. way the man films a car and truck What gives it juice is the supchase — rending metal, shattered porting cast. Jon Bernthal (Shane glass, none of that digital fuss and in "The Walking Dead") is cred- fakery. "Snitch" isn't a great film. But afibly wary as the ex-con John begs to get him in the door of the drug ter the run of brawling, over-the-top world. And t h e t e rrific M i chael s hoot-'em-ups/drive-'em-ups t h a t Kenneth Williams is the first dealer have cluttered Johnson'sresume, he meets, a guy who pulls a gun on it's good to see him try his hand him just to test him. at acting, even if he is just as overWaugh can be forgiven for givmatched as the fellow he's playing. — Roger Moore isa film critic for ing these guys more scenes than are absolutely necessary. They're McCtatchy-Tribune News Service.
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movies
PAGE 28 • GO! MAGAZINE
I t J'fgirj'Ir, O N L O C A L S CRE E N S Here's what's showing on Central
Oregon movie screens. For showtimes, see listings on Page 31.
Ft
Reviews by RogerEbert unless otherwise noted.
Q cs
rn ~
HEADS UP
Q F-
"Jackthe Giant Slayer" — An age-old war is reignited when a young farmhand unwittingly opens a gateway betweenourworld and a fearsome race of giants. Unleashed on the Earth for the first time in centuries, the long-banished giants strive to reclaim the land theyonce lost, forcing the youngman, Jack (Nicholas Hoult), into the battle of his life to stop them. Acclaimed
rn Cl 0
filmmaker Bryan Singer directs the 3-D action adventure. The film also stars Eleanor Tomlinson, Stanley Tucci, lan McShane,Bill Nighy and Ewan McGregor. Thefilm opens March1. Fans cancatch a late night screening Thursday at local theaters. The film is available locally in 3-D and IMAX. (PG-13) — Synopsis from Warner Bros. Pictures Telluride Mountainfilm on Tour — Mountainfilm onTour returns to Central Oregon tonight at theTower Theatre in Bend.Theevent is a showcase ofthe best films from the world-renownedMountainfilm festival in Telluride, Colo. Thefilms "celebrate mountain people, culture, adventure, conservation and thepower of film to create social change,"according to a news release.Theevent screens at 7 tonight and Saturday (doors open at 6 p.m.).Eachnightfeatures a different lineup of movies. Tickets are $17.50 plusfees in advance ($30 for both shows)and$20 dayof
show. Tonight only, student tickets (with identification) may beavailable for $12.50. Proceeds benefit The Environmental Center in Bend. — Synopsis from The Environmental Center Spike & Mike Festival of Animation — The Spike 8 Mike Festival of Animation kicks off tonight at Cascade TheatricalCompany's Greenwood Playhouse in Bend. Featuring 90 minutes of new animation from around theworld, "Spike & Mike's NewGeneration Show" screens at 6 tonight. "The Sick & Twisted Show" (for ages18 and older) screens at 9 p.m.. Tickets are $13 for oneshow and$24 for both shows. Proceedsbenefit Bend's community radio station, KPOVat 88.9 FM. — Synopsis from KPOII Volcanic Theatre Pub —Located in Bend's Century Center, the new Volcanic Theatre Pub will offer screenings of classic movies. This
CA
a
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
week's schedule includes "Sling Blade" (7:30 tonight through Sunday) and "City of God" (7:30 p.m. Thursday). Tickets are $6. For a full schedule, visit www. volcanictheatrepub.com or contact 54 I -323- I88 I.
if he is just as over-matched asthe fellow he's playing. Rating: Twoand a half stars. 112 minutes. (PG-13) — Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service
STILL SHOWING "Amour" — The Palmed'Or winner from Cannes2012 is amasterpiece from Michael Haneke("Cache," "The White Ribbon") about the closing days of a great romance.TheFrench legends Jean-Louis Trintignant and Emmanuelle Riva co-star as acouple who have lived in love together for decades, but now, in their 80s, their time together begins to end.Such a story is not melodrama. Nor is it tragedy. It is just about the way things are. A profound anduplifting masterpiece. Rating: Four stars. 127 minutes. (PG-13) "Argo" — BenAffleck directs and starsin theincredible true story of how, at the height of the lranian hostage crisis, a CIAagent anda couple of Hollywood professionals dreamedupacockamamie scheme to free six Americans whowerenot being held in the American Embassy but had found refuge with the Canadian Embassy. Kept top secret for18 years, the operation created a fake sci-fi production named"Argo," convinced the lranians it was real and used it to spirit the Americans out of the country. With lots of tension and also somehumor from JohnGoodman andAlan Arkin as the Hollywood pros involved. Rating: Four stars. 120 minutes. (R)
WHAT'S NEW "Dark Skies" — As anescalating series of disturbing events torments ayoung suburban family, the husband and wife try to stop the mysterious force targeting them. With Keri Russell, Josh Hamilton, DakotaGoyo and Kadan Rockett. Written and directed by Scott Stewart. This film was not screened in advance for critics. 97 minutes. (PG-13) — Synopsis from LosAngeles Times "Snitch — As a businessman scrambling to find a way to get his son's federal prison sentence reduced, Dwayne"The Rock" Johnson has to play fear, tough love, pity and panic — andhe's a bit in over his head. But that's the point of "Snitch," a straight-no-chaser thriller "inspired by atrue story." The pacing is off, too many scenes lack dramatic punch and play like filler. But Johnson is pretty good at being aguy in over his head, sharing scenes with flinty pros like SusanSarandon, Benjamin Bratt and Barry Pepper. "Snitch" isn't a great film. But after the run of brawling, over-the-top shoot'em-upsl drive-'em-ups that have cluttered Johnson's resume it's good to see him try his hand atacting, even
Continued next page
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
From previous page "Barbara" —"Barbara" is a film about the old Germanyfrom one of the best directors working in the new: Christian Petzold. For more than a decadePetzold hasbeen makinghis mark on the international cinema scene with smart, tense films that resemble psychological thrillers, but are distinguished by their strange story turns, moral thorns, visual beauty and filmmaking intelligence. His latest to open in the United States, "Barbara," begins in1980 with an East Germandoctor from Berlin (Nina Hoss) who, after an unspecified offense, has beenrecently banished to the boonies. There, in between hospital rounds andharassmentfrom the secret police, shewaits and she burns. "Barbara" screens at Tin Pan Theater. This film was not given a star rating. 105 minutes. (PG-13) — Manohla Dargis, The NewYork Times "Beautiful Creatures" — Though not specifically conceived to fill the void left by the $2 billion "Twilight" franchise, comparisons are inevitable, as we're again presented with a story about a smart, serious, semiloner high school student who falls for a mysterious newcomer with supernatural powers. It would all be prettytedious, goth-youth nonsense if notforthe considerable delights provided by a mostly veteran supporting cast of Jeremy lrons, Emma Thompson, Viola Davis and Emmy Rossum, whoareall having great fun. If only that approach extended to the two young leads, who behave like typically sullen teenagers. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars.124 minutes. (PG-13) — Richard Roeper, The Chicago Sun-Times "Ojango Unchained" — Bullets, bullwhips andbeatings produce slo-mo geysers of blood. Pistoleros launch into soliloquies onslavery andthe German Siegfried myth. "Django Unchained" is set in QuentinTarantino's pre-Civil War South. The historical bastardization of "Inglourious Basterds" has nothing on "Django," wherepre-Civil War characters areseeninfaded Confederate uniforms, anddynamite, that talisman ofevery Z-gradeWestern, shows up nineyears before it was patented. The soundtrack ranges from imitation Spaghetti Western themes to Jim Croceballads to gangster rap. Geographically incompetent, with plantations overfilled with all mannerof shootably venal white overseers, this isn't Ken Burns history. All part of the fun.Some scenesconveyTarantinoesque tension. ButTarantino's unwillingness to trim anything slows the film to a crawl. Rating: Twostars. 165 minutes. (R) — Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service "Escape From Planet Earth" — If you're a parent, chancesareyou've seen worse animated films than "Escape from PlanetEarth." Mostly, one mightadd, from the samestudio that released this one. But"Earth" is something of a giant — OK,mini-giant — leap forward for TheWeinstein Co. It's not much funnier than most of their earlier fare. But at least it's not as ugly as "Hoodwinked," "Doogal" and the rest. Reaching that"Space Chimps"I"Planet 51" level of good-
looking mediocrity is anachievement. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twostars. 89 minutes. (PG) — Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service "A GoodDayto DieHard" — The latest installment of the action franchise plays as if we're watching Bruce Willis in a Bruce Willis movie in which Bruce Willis can survive anything while taking out the villains, video-game style. A quartercentury after the first "Die Hard," the venerable John McClanehasbeen stripped of any real traces of anactual three-dimensional character. This film is available locally in IMAX. Rating: One and ahalf stars. 97 minutes. (R) — Richard Roeper, The ChicagoSun-Times "The Hobbit: AnUnexpected Journey" —Forthose who simply cannot get enough of Middle-earth, Peter Jackson's "The Hobbit" promises to bethe ultimate Travel New Zealand miniseries. Heand his "Lord of the Rings" teamhavetaken J.R.R. Tolkien's dense but slight and more comical "Rings" prelude, a simple quest to rob adragon, and blown it up into atrilogy. And since the first installment, "An Unexpected Journey," clocks in at almost three hours ... well, you seewhat lies ahead of us. Thesettings are gorgeous. The effects are spectacular. But in adding a prologue, in transposing characters from the "Rings" films into the narrative, and in having the luxury of including "Hobbit" minutia by the bushel basketful, I have tosay the bloat shows. The hardcore faithful won't admit it, but less cynical studios could have told this entire tale in three hours. This film is available locally in 3-D. Rating: Twoand a half stars.169 minutes. (PG-13) — Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune News Service "Identity Thief" —Thepairing ofJason Bateman andMelissa McCarthy in a roadtrip comedy seems inspired. They're two unique comedic talents who always put an interesting spin on aline or a double take, whether starring in sitcoms or effortlessly swiping scenes in bigscreen fare. Unfortunately, "Identity Thief" is a depressingly predictable road-trip buddy comedythat's far more interested in car chases, lame shootouts, physical shtick and cheap schmaltzthan creating anything original. Rating: Twostars. 112 minutes. (R) — Richard Roeper, The ChicagoSun-Times "The Impossible" — Thetsunami that devastated the Pacific Basin in the winter of 2004 remains one ofthe worst natural disasters in history. We were in Europewhen it struck, andwe sat mesmerized,watching the news on TV — again andagain, that towering wall of water looming from thesea, tossing trucks, busesand its helpless victims aside. Surely this was ablow from hell. In this terrifying triumph of special effects, JuanAntonio Bayona's film becomes apowerful story of a family's cohesive strength. With Naomi Watts, EwanMcGregorand Tom Holland. Oneof the best films of 2012. Rating: Four stars. 114minutes. (PG-13)
Continued next page
movies
GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 29
N EW D V D B LU- R A Y R EL E A S E S The following movies were released theweek of Feb.19. "Anna Karenina" —Joe Wright's daringly stylized newversion of "Anna Karenina" is staged largely within an actual theater, anduses not only the stagebuttheboxesandeven themain floor — with seats removed —to present the action. Keira Knightly, almost distractingly beautiful here, stars as Tolstoy's heroine. Jude Law is her dryand proper husband, a government minister, andAaron Taylor-Johnson playsVronsky, the young military officer with whom she begins adisastrous affair. A sumptuous film, extravagantly staged and photographed, perhapstoo much so for its own good.Thereare times when it is not quite clear if weare looking at characters in astory or players on astage. DVDand Blu-ray Extras: Sixfeaturettes, deleted scenes and audio commentary. Rating: Two and a half stars. 129minutes. (R) "Argo" —BenAffleck directs and stars in the incredible true story of how, at the height of the lranian hostage crisis, a CIAagent and a couple of Hollywood professionals dreamedupacockamamie scheme
Laurie sparham / Focus Features / Ap
Keira Knightley stars in the title role in the drama "Anna Karenina." to free six Americans whowerenot being held in theAmerican Embassy but had found refuge with the Canadian Embassy.Kept top secret for18 years, the operation created a fake sci-fi production named "Argo," convinced the lranians it was real and used it to spirit the Americans out of the country. With lots of tension and also somehumor from JohnGoodman and Alan Arkin as the Hollywood pros involved. DVD Extras: Onefeaturette; Blu-ray Extras: Four additional featurettes. Rating: Four stars. 120 minutes. (R) "Sinister" —Astory made of darkness, mysterious loud bangs in the attic, distant moans from
the dead, vulnerable children, an egomaniacal crime writer and his long-suffering wife, who is plentyfed up — evenbefore she discovers he has moved his family into the same house where horrifying murders took place. EthanHawkestars as the best-selling true crime writer, Juliet Rylance is his increasingly alarmed wife and their children experience night terrors and sleepwalking. Few films have everbeen bathed in so much darkness. DVD and Blu-ray Extras: Two featurettes, deleted scenesand audiocommentary; Rating: Three stars. 109 minutes. (R) "Undefeated" —Thestory of a high school football team that was possiblythe worst in Tennessee,and the volunteer coachwho dedicated himself to turning around theteam and the lives of its players. Coach Bill Courtney comesacross as stubborn and brave in hisapproach. Winner of anAcademyAward as best documentary feature. DVDand Bluray Extras were not listed with this film. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 113 minutes. (PG-13) ALSOTHIS WEEK: "Atlas Shrugged: Part II" and "Fun Size." COMINGUP:Movies scheduled for national releaseFeb. 26include "Chasing Mavericks," "Chicken with Plums," "Holy Motors" and "The Master."
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PAGE 30. GO! MAGAZINE From previous page
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"Les Miserables" — There are moments early on in "Les Miserables" when viewers may feel like they're about to witness a bona-fide disasterpiece, one ofthose spectacular miscalculations that can be almost as entertaining — almost — as a superbly executedwork of audacious ambition andscope. This adaptation of the mega-hit Broadway musical lives in that kinda-sorta, okay-not-great, this-worked-thatdidn't in-between for which words like "better" and "worse" fall woefully short. Enoughfaint praise. There's plenty to cheer in "Les Miserables," not the least of which is the presence of some genuinely astonishing breakout performances. It's all very big, all the time. Stars HughJackman, Russell Crowe,Anne Hathaway, AmandaSeyfreid,Helena Bonham Carter. Rating: Twoand ahalf stars. 157 minutes. (PG-13) — Ann Hornaday, The Washington Post "Life of Pi" —A miraculous achievement of storytelling and a landmark of visual mastery. Inspired by a worldwide best-seller that seemed unfilmable, it is a triumph over its difficulties. It is also a moving spiritual achievement, amoviewhosetitle could have beenshortened to "Life." The
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THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
"Quartet" —A sweet, sentimental, predictable story set in a luxurious British retirement home for actors I and opera singers. First-time director Dustin Hoffman hashis heart in the right place and loves these characters. His screen is filled with legends (TomCourtenay, Maggie Smith, Michael Gambon, Billy ,t Connolly, Gwyneth Jones). Rating: Two and a half stars. 99 minutes. (PG-13) "Rise of theGuardians"Hyperactive 3-D animated fantasy regarding the plight of Jack Frost, who nobody seemsable to see. Jonathan Wenk/Summit Entertainment via The Associated Press Called upon in acrisisto help the Rob Corddry, left, and Nicholas Hoult star in "Warm Bodies." Guardians (Santa, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth Fairy, etc.), he saves the day. Younger children like the story involves the227 daysthat its of politics. DanielDay-Lewis createsa breakneck action, magical ability to fly, and the youngherowho has teenagehero (Suraj Sharma)spends Lincoln who is calmly self-confident, tired of being overlooked. Their drifting across thePacific in the same patient and willing to play politics in a lifeboat as aBengaltiger. Themovie realistic way.Rating:Fourstars.149 parents and older siblings may find minutes. (PG-13) the 89-minute running time quite quietly combines various religious long enough. Rating: Three stars. 89 traditions to enfold its story in the "Mama" —Tothe credit of director minutes. (PG) wonder of life. Oneofthe year's best. Andy Muschietti, his co-writing This film is available locally in 3-D. team and a first-rate cast, "Mama" "A RoyalAffair" — Theprinciples Rating: Fourstars. 125 minutes. (PG) succeeds in scaring the wits out of us that would inspire the French "Lincoln" —Steven Spielberg's new and leaving some lingering, deeply Revolution first took practical shape creepy images, despite indulging in film focuses ononly afew months of in Denmark in the18th century. many horror-film cliches. Movies Lincoln's life, including thepassageof The ideas of Voltaire arrived there like "Mama" are thrill rides. Wego the13th Amendmentending slavery, with Dr. Johann Struensee (Mads to be scared andthen laugh, scared the surrender of theConfederacy and Mikkelsen), aGerman physician who and then laugh, scaredandthen his assassination. Rarely has a film was hired to care for the deranged shocked. It's a ride horror fans would King Christian Vll (Mikkel Boe attended morecarefully to thedetails takeagain. Rating: Threestars.100 Folsgaard), andeventuallytook very minutes. (PG-13) good care indeed of his comely new — Richard Roeper, queen from Britain, QueenCaroline The Chicago Sun-Times Mathilde (Alicia Vikander). This film
screens at Tin PanTheater in Bend. Rating: Threeand a half stars. 137 minutes. (R) "Safe Haven" —Directed by the versatile Lasse Hallstrom and starring the attractive duo of Josh DuhamelandJulianneHough,"Safe Haven" is yet another entry in the Nicholas Sparks book-to-movie factory that has given us "The Notebook," "Message in aBottle," "Dear John," etc. For 90 percent of the journey, it's a solid movie for those in the moodfor some good old-fashioned, great-lookingcouple-gets-caught-in-the-rain romance.Thensomething happens at the very end that'll make you question the film's sanity. Rating: One and ahalf stars. 115 minutes. (PG-13) — Richard Roeper, The ChicagoSun-Times "Side Effects" —Rooney Mara stars asanedgyyoung womannamed Emily wh osehusband (Channing Tatum) has been releasedafter four years in prison for insider trading. Things don't go smoothly for Emily and she's referred to a psychiatrist (Jude Law), who prescribes anew drug named Ablixa. The drug causes some alarming behavior as director Steven Soderbergh draws us into a vortex of whispers that something haunted andpossessed is going on. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 105 minutes. (R) Continued next page
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movies
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
From previous page "Silver Linings Playdooko — Pat (Bradley Cooper) is confident and upbeat for a man just released from a mental hospital and under a restraining order from his wife. He's determined to surprise everyone bymoving ever onward and upward. What stage of bipolar disorder would you guess he's in? His parents (Robert De Niro and Jacki Weaver) arewell-meaning but dubious. A prickly neighborhood widow (Jennifer Lawrence) wants to sleep with him and is offended that he's interested only becauseshe's in touch with his ex-wife. This all somehow comesdown to intersecting bets about a football gameand a ballroom dancecontest. Written and directed by David O.Russell. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 122 minutes.
(R)
"StandUp Guys"— AlPacino, Christopher Walken andAlan Arkin were in the samegang, andafter Pacino is released following a 28year prison sentence, they unite for a long day andnight as animplacable deadline approaches. Comedy,chase scenes, sometension and, above all, the acting of the Stand UpGuys. Rating: Three and a half stars. 95 minutes. (R) "This Is 40" — Stupid freaking Judd Apatow, with his stupid freaking foulmouthed and sentimental "Hobbit"length comedies, his stupid freaking insistence on not only peopling them with his old comic cronies, but his wife and cursing kids. Happy freaking R-rated holidays, America. Here's your "Meet the Parents" this year — longer and less funny. Stars Leslie Mann (Mrs. Apatow) andPaul Rudd. Rating: Two stars. 131 minutes. (R) — Roger Moore, McClatchy-Tribune NewsService "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 2" — Fifth and final installment of the "Twilight" series, beginning where the previous one ended, as BellaSwan(Kristen Stewart) gives birth to little Renesmee,and is introduced by her husband, Edward Cullen (Robert Pattinson), to her new life with vampire powers. Rating: Two and a half stars.115 minutes. (PG-13) "Warm Bodies" — Here's a bloody, fresh twist on the most popular horror genre of this century, with none-too-subtle echoes of acertain star-crossed romancethat harkens backto a certain Bard who placeda certain young Romeounder a certain balcony. A well-paced, nicely directed, post-apocalyptic love story, it has a terrific sense of humor and the, um, guts to be unabashedly romantic and unapologetically optimistic. Rating: Three and ahalf stars. 97 minutes. (PG- l3) — Richard Roeper, The ChicagoSun-Times "Zero DarkThirty" — Two hours of watching a loner femaleCIAstrategist who knows she is right — and the payoff that she is. Jessica Chastain stars as Maya,who wasright all along, providing the film with atimely heroine. Lots of murky action in the big capture anddeath, but lacking the split-second timing and relentless action of director Kathryn Bigelow's "The Hurt Locker." These characters are less compelling, and theoutcome less meaningful. Rating: Threestars. 157 minutes. (R)
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• Accessibility devices are available for some movies at RegalOld Mill Stadium16 tI IMAX.
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Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX, 680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend, 541-382-6347 • BEAUTIFUL CREATURES (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:30, 3:30, 6:40, 9:30 • DARK SKIES (PG-I3) Fri-Thu: 1:20, 3:55, 7:40, 10:10 • DJANGO UNCHAINED (R) Fri-Thu: 12:50, 4:25, 7:55 • ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH(PG) Fri-Thu: 3:25, 9:25 • ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH3-D (PG) Fri-Thu: 1:05, 7:05 • A GOOD DAYTO DIEHARD IMAX(R) Fri-Wed: 12:15, 4, 7:10, 9:45 Thu: 12:15, 4, 7:10 • A GOOD DAY TO DIEHARD (R) Fri-Thu: Noon, 3:40, 6:50, 9:15 • THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY 3-D (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 6 • THE HOBBIT: AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 1:35, 9:40 • IDENTITY THIEF (R) Fri-Thu: 12:40, 3:50, 6:55, 9:50 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYERIMAX (PG-13) Thu:10 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER3-D (PG-13) Thu:10 • JACK THE GIANT SLAYER(PG-13) Thu:10:15 • LIFE OF PI (PG) Fri-Thu: 12:20 • LIFE OF PI 3-D (PG) Fri-Thu: 3:20, 6:15, 9:10 • LINCOLN (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:20, 9:35 Thu: 11:50 a.m., 3:05, 6:20 • MAMA (PG-13) Fri-Wed: 1:30, 4:35, 7:45, 10:15 Thu: 1:30, 4:35, 7:45 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:45, 3:45, 6:30, 9:20 • SIDE EFFECTS (R) Fri-Thu: 1, 4:10, 7:20, 9:55 • SNITCH (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:10, 3, 6:05, 9:05 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 1:15, 4:20, 7:30, 10:05 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) Fri-Thu: 11:45 a.m., 3:10, 6:35, 10 I
Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717 N.E.U.S.Highway 20, Bend, 541-382-6347 • AMOUR (PG-13) Fri-Sat: Noon, 3, 7, 9 Sun-Thu: Noon, 3, 7 • ARGO (R) Fri-Sat: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45, 9:20 Sun-Thu: 12:45, 3:45, 6:45 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) Fri-Thu: 12:15, 6:15 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 1, 4:15, 7:25 Sun-Thu: 1, 4:15 • QUARTET (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 1:15, 4, 7, 9:30 Sun-Thu: 1:15, 4, 7 • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) Fri-Sat: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30, 9:25 Sun-Thu: 12:30, 3:30, 6:30 • STAND UP GUYS(R) Fri-Sat: 3:15, 9:15 Sun-Thu: 3:15 I
Food, Home & Garden In AT HOME
T I M E S • For the zoeekof Feb. 22
• There may be an additional fee for 3-D and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time.
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GO! MAGAZINE PAGE 31
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend, 541-330-8562 • RISE OF THE GUARDIANS (PG) Sat-Sun: Noon, 3 Wed: 3
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Courtesy Andrew Cooper via Summit Entertainment
Kristen Stewart, from left, Mackenzie Foy, Robert Pattinson and Taylor Lautner star in "The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn — Part 2.n • THIS IS40 (R) Fri-Thu: 9 • THE TWILIGHTSAGA: BREAKING DAWN — PART 2(PG-13) Fri-Thu: 6 • After 7 p.m., shows are 21and older only. Younger than 21mayattend screenings before 7pm.ifaccompaniedbya legal guardian. •
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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, Bend, 541-241-2271 • BARBARA (PG-13) Fri-Sat: 5:30 Sun: 2:30 Mon-Tue, Thu: 8:30 • A ROYAL AFFAIR(R) Fri-Sun:8 • The "Spaghetti Western" will screen at 6 pm. (door s openat530pm) Wednesday andincludes an all-you-can-eat spaghetti dinner. I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.Odem Medo Road, Redmond, 541-548-8777 • BEAUTIFUL CREATURES (PG-13) Fri: 4:15, 6:45, 9: l5 Sat-Sun: 11:15 a.m., 1:45, 4:15, 6:45, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 4:15, 6:45 • A GOOD DAYTO DIE HARD (R) Fri: 4:30, 6:45, 9 Sat-Sun: Noon, 2:15, 4:30, 6:45, 9 Mon-Thu: 4:30, 6:45 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) Fri: 4, 6:30, 9 Sat-Sun: 11 a.m., 1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 Mon-Thu: 4, 6:30 • SILVER LININGS PLAYBOOK(R) Fri, Mon-Thu: 4 Sat-Sun: 11 a.m., 1:30, 4 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) Fri-Sun: 7, 9:15 Mon-Thu: 7 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, Sisters, 541-549-8800 • ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH(PG) Fri:5,7 Sat: 3,5,7 Sun:1:45,4,6 Mon-Thu: 6 • A GOOD DAYTO DIE HARD (R) Fri: 5:30, 7:45
Sat: 3:15, 5:30, 7:45 Sun: 2:15, 4:30, 6:45 Mon-Thu: 6:30 • IDENTITY THIEF (R) Fri: 5:15, 7:45 Sat: 2:45, 5:15, 7:45 Sun: 2, 4:15, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) Fri: 5, 7:30 Sat: 2:45, 5, 7:30 Sun:1:45,4,6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:15
Madras Cinema 5,1101S.W. U.S. Highway 97, Madras, 541-475-3505 • ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH3-D (PG) Fri: 5:05, 7:10, 9:15 Sat: 12:50, 3, 5:05, 7:10, 9:15 Sun: 12:50, 3, 5:05, 7:10 Mon-Thu: 7:10 • AGOOD DAYTO DIE HARD (R) Fri: 5, 7:20, 9:40 Sat: 12:40, 2:50, 5, 7:20, 9:40 Sun: 12:40, 2:50, 5, 7:20 Mon-Thu: 7:20 • SAFE HAVEN (PG-13) Fri: 4:25, 6:50, 9:20 Sat: 2, 4:25, 6:50, 9:20 Sun:2,4:25,6:50 Mon-Thu: 6:50 • WARM BODIES (PG-13) Fri: 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 Sat: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:25, 9:30 Sun: 1, 3:10, 5:20, 7:25 Mon-Thu: 7:25 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) Fri: 3:20, 6:30 Sat-Sun: 12:10, 3:20, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:30
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lES SCNWAN Pine Theater, 214 N.Main St., Prineville, 541-416-1014 • ESCAPE FROM PLANET EARTH(PG) Fri: 3:40, 6:30 Sat-Sun: 1:10, 3:40, 6:30 Mon-Thu: 6:15 • SILVERLININGS PLAYBOOK (UPSTAIRS — R) Fri:4,7 Sat-Sun: 1, 4, 7 Mon-Thu: 6 • The upstairs screening room has limited accessibility.
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PAGE 32 • GO! MAGAZINE
THE BULLETIN • FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2013
OPEN DAILY 12-3
OPEN SUNDAY 12-3 =ppOI I
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3 bedroom, 4.5 bath, 3488 sq. ft. home. Top-of-the-line finishes. Gorgeous main level
New Construction by Signature Home Builders. 1605 sq, ft, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, fenced EL landscaped front yard. Stainless appliances, island, granite counters.
MORRIS REAL ESTATE
MLS¹201209509 $ 2 19,900 DIRECTIONS: Reed Market to left on 27th St, Left on Capella, 1st house on the right. 21194 Capella Pl.
master with luxurious bath.
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MLS¹201300652 $595,000 DIRECTIONS: Newport/Shevlin Park Rd to NW Park Commons Dr, left on Mt. Jefferson Pl, right on Mt. Shasta Dr. 19016 Mt. Shasta Dr.
Independently Owned and Operated
SUZI KASTING, BROKER •
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VIRGINIA ROSS, BROKER, ABR, CRS, GRI 541-480-750 1
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OPEN THURS & FRIDAY 11-3
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MLS¹201207629 $ 224,950 DIRECTIONS: South 3rd St. to east on Murphy Rd, south on Parrell Rd, right on Grand Targhee, left on Miles. 60955 Miles Ct.
DON KELLEHER, BROKER •
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MLS¹201300676 $ 3 84,900 DIRECTIONS: Galveston/Skyliners west to north on Mt. Washington, east on NW Toussaint. 2148 NW Toussaint Dr.
DAVID GILMORE, BROKER 541-312-7271
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SE Bend -New 1500 sq. ft. single level model home on large lot. Gourmet kitchen, stainless appliances open to great room. Cozy floor to ceiling rock fireplace.
master with luxurious bath.
MLS¹201300652 $595,000 DIRECTIONS: Newport/Shevlin Park Rd to NW Park
MLS¹201300465 $ 2 3 5,000 DIRECT IONS:South 3rd Stto east onMurphy Rd,southonParrell Rd,right on GrandTarghee,left onMilesCt. 1sthouseonthe right. 60959MilesCt.
Commons Dr, left on Mt. Jefferson Pl, right on Mt. Shasta Dr. 19016 Mt. Shasta Dr.
JEN BOVVEN, BROKER
MARGO DEGRAY, BROKER, ABR, CRS 541-480-7355
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541-280-2147
OPEN SUN & MON 11-3
OPEN SATURDAY 12-3
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MLS¹201201006 $410,000 Directions: Murphy Road to Country Club Drive, turn right into Mountain High to 20475 Timberline Court.
NICOLETTE JONES, BROKER 541-241-0432
SE BEND - New 1655 sq, ft, 4 bedroom, 2.5 bath. Laminate wood floors, gourmet kitchen with quartz counters. Master suite with double vanities 6 walk-in closet.
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MLS¹201209504 $ 223,500 DIRECTIONS: 27th St to west on Capella Pl. 21174 Capella Pl.
DON KELLEHER, BROKER •
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541-480-1911