Bulletin Daily Paper 1/24/13

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since1903 75tII

THURSDAY January 24,2013

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HEALTH• D1

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Shelley Vaughn, her husband, Ray Vaughn,and her son, Jeremy Jones,

Dumpthe debt ceiling? — Some economist shavea simple answer for raising the debt ceiling — get rid of it.A2

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• 3 former prosecutors allege the DA destroyedevidence

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Bend's Farewell Bend Park its new home.B1

By Sheila G. Miller The Bulletin

• A family reopensHampton Station, hoping to revive the tiny outpost At the Super Bowl —San Francisco place kicker David Akers has long been known for his reliability — until this

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Gun control could split Obama,Reid

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Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Hampton Station reopened Jan. 1. Its new operators plan to keep it open most days year-round.

By Paul Kane

By Rachael Rees

The Washington Post

The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — The success of President Barack Obama's starkly liberal second-term agenda will rest largely on the shoulders of Senate Majority leader Harry Reid, who has been a rock-solid political ally and a valued legislative tactician for Obama during his first term. But for the first time since Obama became president four years ago, his political interests and

rivers along the desolate stretch of U.S. Highway 20 in eastern Deschutes County will be greeted by yellow banners announcing the reopening of Hampton Station three miles before they arrive at the outpost. "We are open all year-round," said Shelley Vaughn, who's leasing the space with her husband, Ray, and son, Jeremy Jones. Hampton's cafe and fuel pumps, owned by a Christmas Valley family since 2008, according to county records, has struggled to remain open, operating seasonally and closing for extended periods of time. But the Vaughns, who reopened the station Jan. 1, hope to change that. "We just want to bring Hampton back to life," Shelley Vaughn said. Hampton Station is one of two locations selling fuel in the 104-mile stretch between Bend and Riley — except on Sunday and Monday, whenboth Hampton Station and the Brothers Stage Stop and Cafe close, at least during the winter. SeeHampton/A6

Reid's may be diverging.

Not so much because there is huge disagreement on the president's agenda, but because helping Obama may hurt vulnerable Democrats in the Senate. Re-elected and unconcerned about ever having to face voters again, Obama seems determined to push a far-reaching

Three former prosecutorssuing Patrick Flaherty are asking a federal judge to issue a judgment in their favor, alleging the Deschutes County district attorney has been d eliberately deceptive a n d destroyed emails,a computer and other evidence that would help their case. Former deputy district attorneys Phil Duong, Brentley Foster and J ody V a ughan Fl a herty filed the lawsuit in April 2011, claiming Flaherty unlawfully fired them when he took office because they tried to form a union. The lawsuit asks for more than $22 million in damages. Flaherty was elected DA in May 2010. He took office in January 2011. Lawyers representing Duong, Foster and Vaughan filed two motions on Jan. 11, one askingthat Flahertyturn over documents they believe have been improperly withheld under attorney-client or work-product privilege. The second asks the court to sanction Flaherty for "spoilation of evidence," alleging he allowed email and Facebook accounts to lapse,didn't properly search fordocuments that were part of discovery, and even wiped his hard drive and recycled his computer in an attempt to avoid turning over evidence that could help the former prosecutors' case. Flaherty, through his assistant, declined to comment, citing pending litigation. SeeLawsuit/A6

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"We want to put Hampton Station back on the map like it was 20 years ago." — Shelley Vaughn

The Washington Post

Smokers who quit by around age 40 can stave off an early death, according to a landmark study that fills key gaps in knowledge of smoking-related health ills. While smokers who never stop lose about a decade of life expectancy, those who quit between ages35 and 44 gained back nine of those years, the study found. Moreover, the benefits of dropping the habit extend deep into middle age. Smokers who quit between 45 and 54 gained back six otherwise lost years, and those who quit between 55 and 64 gained four years. Quitting young, before age 35, erased the entire decade of lost life expectancy. The message: It's never too late to quit, even for heavy smokers with decades of puffing behind them. SeeSmoking/A6

agenda — on guns, climate change and gay rights, among other topics — that looks toward his presidential legacy. Reid, D-Nev., significantly more encumbered, must worry about how to protect 20 Democratic-held Senate seats that will be up for grabs in 2014, while Repub-

licans are defending only 14 spots. For some Democrats up for re-election next year, supporting the president will be politically treacherous terrain, and no issue may capture that disconnect better than gun control. SeeGuns/A4

In modern Sicily,eventhe mafia isgoing green By Anthony Faiola

ensuring the future of the Earth as well as the Cosa Nostra: renewable

The Washington Post

PALERMO, Italy — Inside a midnight-blue BMW, a S i cilian entrep reneur delivered his pitch to t h e accused mafia boss. A new business was blowing into I t aly t hat could spin wind and sunlight i nto gold,

TODAY'S WEATHER Partly cloudy, dry High 45, Low 24

Page B6

energy. "Uncle Vincenzo," implored the businessman, Angelo Salvatore, using a term of affection for the alleged head of Sicily's Gimbellina crime family, 79-year-old Vincenzo Funari. Accord-

ing to a transcript of their wiretapped conversation, Salvatore continued, "for the loveof our sons, renewable energy is important.... it's a business we can live on." And for quite awhile, Italian prosecutors say, they did. In an unfolding plot that is part "The Sopranos," part

4 P We userecycled newsprint

INDEX D1-5 Obituaries Business/Stocks C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Calendar B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sports Classified E1 - 6 D ear Abby D6 Lo c al & StateB1-6 TV/Movies

"An Inconvenient Truth," authorities swept across Sicily last month in the latest wave of sting operations revealing years of deep infiltration into the renewable energy sector by I taly's rapidly m odernizing c r i me families. See Mafia/A4

AnIndependent

B5 Ct-4 D6

Vol. 110, No. 24,

s sections

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A2 T H E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

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WASHINGTON — Defense Secretary Leon Panetta is lifting the military's ban on women in combat, which will open up hundreds of thousands of additional front-line jobs to them, senior defense officials said Wednesday. The g r oundbreaking d e cision overturns a 1994 Pentagon rule that restricts women from artillery, armor, infantry and other such combat roles, even though in reality women have found themselves in combat in Iraq and Afghanistan, where more than 20,000 have served. As of last year, more than 800 women had been wounded in the two wars and more than 130 had died. Defense offi cials offered few details about Panetta's decision but described it as the beginning of a process to allow the branches of the military to put it into effect. Defense

officials said Panetta had made the decision on the recommendation of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Women have long Panetta chafed u n de r the combat r e strictions and have increasingly pressured the Pentagon to catch up with the reality on the battlefield. The move comes as Panetta is about to step down from his post and would leave him with a substantial legacy after only 18 months on the job. Panetta's decision came after he received aJan. 9 letter from Gen. Martin Dempsey, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who stated in strong terms that the armed service chiefs all agreed that "the time has come to rescind the direct combat exclusion rule for women and to eliminate all unnecessary genderbased barriers to service." In the military, serving in combat

positions like the infantry remains crucial to career advancement in the military, and women have long said that by not recognizing their real service the military has unfairly held them back. It is unclear to what degree Congress will review the decision, although in the past some Republican members of the House have balked at allowing women in combat. But as of Wednesday afternoon, there appeared to be bipartisan support for the decision on Capitol HilL "I support it," Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich., chairman of the Senate Armed Services Committee, said in a statement. "It reflects the reality of 21st century military operations." Sen. Kelly Ayotte, R-N.H., a member of the Armed Services Committee, said in a statement that she was pleased by the decision and that it "reflects the increasing role that female service members play in securing our country."

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membership declined from11.8 percent to11.3 percent of the workforce, another blow to a labor Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan and other states to curb bargaining rights and weaken union clout.

Overall membership fell by about 400,000 workers to 14.4 million, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. More than half the loss, about 234,000,

came from government workers, including teachers, firefighters and public administrators. But

unions also saw losses in the private sector even as the economy created1.8 million new jobs in 2012. That membership rate fell from 6.9 percent to 6.6 percent, a troubling sign for the future of

organized labor, as job growth generally has taken place atnonunioncompanies.

Cameron offers Brits vote on EU —British Prime Minister David Cameron pledged Wednesday to offer citizens a vote on whether

to leave the EuropeanUnion if his party wins the next election, prompting rebukes from European leaders accusing the premier of putting the bloc's

future at risk over domestic politics. Cameron said that public disillusionment with the 27-nation EU is "at an all-time high." The fiercely independent

island nation has neverbeen anenthusiastic member of the bloc, seeing itself as culturally different and balking at having policy dictated by Brussels.

But the drumbeat hasgrown over fears that new EU regulations to address the debt crisis will further restrict the country's control over its own

Clinton defendsactions in Benghazi By Michael R. Gordon New York Times News Service

ADMINISTRATION

ment figures releasedWednesdayshowed union movement already stretched thin by battles in

By Elisabeth Bumiller and Thom Shanker New York Times News Service

541 -382-1811

N EW S R O O M

omen et

Union memdership plummets — Govern-

WASHINGTON — In one of her final appearances as secretaryof state, Hillary Clinton on Wednesday vigorously defended her handling of the Sept. 11 attack on the U.S. diplomatic compound in Benghazi, Libya, which killed four Americans and prompted a scathing review of StateDepartment procedures. "As I have said many times, I take responsibility, and nobody is more committed to getting this right," she said, reading a statement during a day of testimony before Senate and House committees. "I am d etermined to leave the State Department and our country safer, stronger and more secure." But Clinton, whose appearance before Congress had been postponed since December because of illness, quickly departed from the script. She jousted with Republican lawmakers over who deserved blame for the security problems at the compound and choked up as she described being at Joint Base Andrews, outside Washington, when the bodies of the Americans killed in the assault arrived from Libya. The continuing controversy over the attack, whichresultedinthe deaths of Ambassador Christopher Stevens and threeother Americans, has cast

economic policies.

N. Korea threatens nuclear test — North Korea said Wednesdaythat its nuclear weapon program was nolonger negotiable, and indicated

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton testifies on Capitol Hill before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee on the deadly September attack on the U.S. diplomatic mission in Benghazi, Libya.

that it might conduct its third nuclear test to retali-

Manuel Balce Ceneta/The Associated Press

transformed into a masskilling ground Wednes-

ate against the U.N.Security Council's tightening of sanctions against the isolated yet highly militarized country. The North's comments came as the

U.S. reaffirmed its policy of punishing North Korea for moving toward the development of long-range

missiles tipped with a nuclear warhead, spearheading international backing for a unanimous Security Council resolution Tuesdaycondemning North Korea's Dec. 12 rocket launch as a violation

of earlier resolutions banning the country from any tests involving ballistic missile technology, and tightened existing sanctions.

Bomber kills 35 iII Iraq — A crowded tent full of Turkmen funeral mourners in northern lraq was day by a suicide bombing that left at least 35 people dead and117 wounded, regional officials and

tribal leaders said. It came aday after an extended a cloud over Clinton's final months at the State Department. It was the first time she had faced extensive questioning about her role in the episode. "I feel responsible for the nearly 70,000 people who work for the State Department," Clinton told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in the morning. "But the specific security requests pertaining to Benghazi, you know, were handled by the security professionals in the department. I didn't see those requests. They didn't come to me. I didn't approve them. I didn't deny them." One ofthe sharpest exchanges of

the day came when Clinton responded to questions from Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wis., by saying there was too much focus on how the Benghazi attack had been characterized in its early hours and not enough on how to prevent a recurrence. "Was it because of a protest, or was it because of guys out for a walk one night who decided they'd go kill some Americans? What difference, at this point, does it make?" Clinton said, her voice rising. "It is our job to figure out what happened and do everything we can to prevent it from ever happening again, senator."

outbreak of sectarian shootings and bombings in the country that killed at least 24 lraqis.

AdupteeS leaVe RuSSia — Some ofthe Russian children caught in limbo by their country's ban

on adoptions by Americans haveleftfor the United States with their new parents, the U.S. Embassy in Moscow said Wednesday. The confirmation to

The Associated Press from pressattache Joseph Kruzich was the first official word that any of the 46 children had been allowed to leave Russia. Kruzich

did not say exactly how many ofthe children had already left, but it was clear that all of these adoptions could now go forward, bringing huge relief to

the children's would-be parents in America. — From wire reports

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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q 11Q 12Q 24 Q 43 Q45 O The estimated jackpot is now $130 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are

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House vote sidesteps an ultimatum on debt By Jonathan Weisman

ing to step up and do the right thing," Rep. Eric Cantor of WA SHINGTON — Avoiding Virginia, the House majority an economic showdown with leader, said after the vote. President Barack Obama, the Senate Democratic leaders House on Wednesday passed shrugged off the dictate as an legislation to eliminate the na- i nsignificant g i m mick a n d tion's statutory borrowing lim- claimed victory. "The president stared down it until May, without including the dollar-for-dollar spending the Republicans. They blinkcuts that Republicans once in- ed," said Sen. Charles Schumsisted would have to be part of er, D-N.Y. any debt limit bill. Sen. Harry Reid of Nevada, The 285-144 vote staved off the majority leader, thanked an impasse that could have put House Speaker John Boehner the full faith and credit of the for reversing course and said U.S. government into doubt he would take up and pass the and potentially set off an eco- House bill without changes as nomic disaster. Instead, the soon as next week, possibly by next Republican showdown unanimous consent. He said with the president will come in he would then move quickly March, when the subject will on a budget plan for the first be across-the-board spending time since 2009. The Democuts first and a possible govern- crats aim to h ighlight their ment shutdown by the end of priorities versus the proposal the month. Ryan plans to move through "We know w ith certainty his committee. "Democrats are eager to that a debt crisis is coming to America. It's not a question of contrast our pro-growth, proif. It's a question of when," Rep. middle-class budget priorities Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the with the House Republicans' Republicans' vice-presidential Ryan budget that would end nominee lastyear and current Medicare as we know it, gut Budget Committee chairman, investments in jobs and prosaid as he vowed to press ahead grams middle-class families with deep spending cuts. depend on, and cut taxes for To give House Republicans the wealthiest Americans and a rationale for giving in on biggest corporations," said the debt ceiling after dropping Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., demands for offsetting cuts, the Senate Budget Committee the House legislation included chairwoman. a provision that would withH ouse R epublicans a p hold the pay of lawmakers in a peared eager for that fight. chamber of Congress that fails For two years, the House has to pass a budget blueprint by passed detailed but nonbindApril 15. That allowed House ing budget plans that would Republicans to turn a spotlight cut domestic programs to levon Senate Democrats, who els not seen since World War have not passed a detailed II, enact changes to Medicare budget blueprint since 2009. that would offer older people "It took one week in which fixed subsidies to buy private their paychecks were on the health insurance and mandate line, and now the Senate is go- a much-simplified tax code. New York Times News Service

Get rid of debt limit, say some fiscal experts WASHINGTON — With the White House and

The White House backed the short-term plan

Congress engaged in their second major battle in

Tuesday, and indications were that the Senate

18 months over the debt limit, some lawmakers, solution: Just get rid of it. The U.S. is one of the few nations with such a

would go along with the strategy. The move delays the looming threat of a default, but the broader debate over the debt limit and its role will continue to simmer.

borrowing mechanism. And aspolitical fights over raising the limit have escalated in recent years,

In each year's budget, Congress decides how much money shouldbespent,whichalsode-

chilling financial markets and triggering the firstever U.S. credit-rating downgrade, critics said the

termines how much must be borrowed to cover

economists and analysts are offering a simple

timehascome to makeachangeinW ashington. "Congress has gonefrom grandstanding on the debt ceiling to actual use of it as an economic

weapon of massdestruction," Rep. Peter Welch, D-Vt., said. "It's extremely dangerous."

Welch and several Democratic Housecolleagues last weekproposed eliminating the debt limit, which has been in place since1939, to avoid the risk of a default.

They're joined by agrowing chorus of analysts

who have called the U.S. debt limit "ridiculous,"

"screwy" and just plain "nuts." "The debt ceiling is a dumbideawith no ben-

efits and potentially catastrophic costs if ever used," Richard Thaler, a professor at the Univer-

sity of Chicago's Booth School of Business, wrote

any shortfall in revenue. SoCongress also must frequently increase thedebt limit to allow for the borrowing. The debt limit has been raised 76 times since 1962. It now stands at $16.4 trillion, a level the government will hit as early as mid-February. The University of Chicago's survey of 38

academic economists found that 84 percent agreed that "a separate debt ceiling that has to

be increased periodically creates unneededuncertainty and canpotentially lead to worse fiscal outcomes." Just 3 percent disagreed. "It's a very unusual provision because in most countries, if they vote for a budget, they either have to borrow the money to pay for it or they

have to raise taxes or cut someplaceelse," said Jacob Funk Kirkegaard, a senior fellow at the

in response to a University of Chicago poll of

Peterson Institute for International Economics in

economists released this month. House Republican leaders, for now at least,

Washington. "Separating out the spending from theactual

want to put off a showdown. The House voted Wednesday to suspend the limit until mid-May. In effect, there will be no debt limit for four months.

payment for the spending is just a reckless fiscal

Democrats h av e c r i t icized those plans but have declined to produce an alternative and instead have demanded what they called a "balanced approach" to deficit reduction. Now, Republicans said, the debate will be over numbers. "We have a budget that's described as draconian, that d ecimates this program or that. They have a phrase, 'balanced approach,'" said Rep. Trey Gowdy, R-S.C. "I'm tired of debating against a phrase."

policy," Kirkegaard said.

House Republicans say punting the debt ceiling to May 18 is not so much a retreatasa "resequencing" of the coming budget showdowns. House Republicans now take for granted that the first deadline, March I, will come and go and that $110 billion in across-the-board spending cuts to military and domestic programs — known as a sequester — will go into force. "The sequester is going to go into effect on March I unless there are cuts and reforms

— Tribune Washington Bureau

that get us on a plan to balance the budget over the next 10 years. It's as simple as that," Boehner said. The next real showdown will come by March 27, when the stopgap measure financing the government expires. Republicans have made clear that they are willing to let the government shut down at that time to forcedeep spending cuts or changes to Medicare and Social Security that would bring down deficits in the long run.


THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MART TODAY

A3

TART • Discoveries, breakthroughs, trends, namesin the news— the things you needto knowto start out your day

It's Thursday, Jan. 24, the 24th day of 2013. There are 341 days left in the year.

RESEARCH

DID YOU HEAR?

HAPPENINGS

In

Kerry vetted —TheSenate Foreign Relations Committee holds a hearing on the nomination of Sen. John Kerry, D-

Mass., to besecretary of state. (The committee should vote on his nomination next week, with

on rain isease

Until now, chronic traumatic encephalopathy — a degenerative condition found among athletes and

Senate approval likely to follow.)

others who have suffered repeated concussions — could only be diagnosed post-mortem. But new

JOrdanian VOte —Results are expected inJordan's par-

research suggests that PET scans could be used to identify and treat CTE in living patients. By Ken Belson

minister and runday-to-day af-

New Yorlz Times News Service

fairs, powers that used to reside with King Abdullah II.

For years, researchers have had to use tissue obtained posthumously to diagnose chronic traumatic encephalopathy, or CTE, the degenerative brain disease that has bedeviled athletes, soldiers and others who have suffered repeated head hits and concussions. But a study published in The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry this week suggests that PET scans could one day be usedtodiagnose the disease in living patients. Last year, five retired NFL players who were 45 and older and suffered from mood

Highlight:In 2003, the U.S.

Department of HomelandSecurity officially opened asits head, TomRidge, was sworn in. (Creation of the newCabinet agency was the largest government reorganization in more

than 50 years, a responseto the Sept. 11 attacks and the threat of further terror.) In1813, the Royal Philhar-

monic Society was formed in London. In1848, James Marshall

discovered a gold nugget at Sutter's Mill in Northern California, a discovery that led to

the gold rush of '49. In1908,the Boy Scoutsm ovement began in England under the aegis of Robert BadenPowell. In1943, President Franklin D.

Roosevelt and British Prime Minister Winston Churchill

concluded awartime conference in Casablanca, Morocco. In1961, a U.S. Air Force B-

52 crashed nearGoldsboro, N.C., dropping its payload of two nuclear bombs, neither of which went off; three crew members were killed. In 1965, Winston Churchill died in London at age 90.

In1978,a nuclear-powered Soviet satellite, Cosmos 954, plunged through Earth's atmosphere and disintegrated, scattering radioactive debris over parts of northern Canada.

In1987,gunmen in Lebanon kidnapped educators Alann Steen,Jesse Turner, Robert Polhill and Mitheleshwar Singh. (All were eventually

released.) In1989, confessed serial killer Theodore Bundy was executed in Florida's electric chair.

Ten years ago:Connecticut became the first state to take

part in the U.S.government's plan to inoculate a half million

not apply By Malcolm Ritter

liamentary elections: The new legislature will choose the prime

HISTORY

Would-be Neanderthal moms need

swings, depression and cognitive problems were given PET, or positron emission tomography, scans. The authors of the study said those scans revealed tau protein deposits in their brains, a signature of CTE. While not definitive, the distribution of tau in the retired players was consistent with those found in the autopsies of players who had CTE. But the size of the group was tiny; far larger and more in-depth studies will be needed before PET scans can be used to identify the tau pathology in patients who are not already experiencing cognitive problems. It may take years and perhaps decades for doctors to determine how much of a role head hits and brain trauma have in patients with CTE, as opposed to one's genetic predisposition and other health maladies like heart disease. But the study is a first step toward the possibility of using PET scans to develop strategies to prevent the onset of the disease and provide treatment for those suffering from it. "For the first time, it opens the possibility we can intervene and stop the inexorable decline" of those with CTE, said Dr. Julian Bailes, the codirector of t h e N o r thShore Neurological Institute in Evanston, IlL, and originator of the research. "We are connecting more dots. This was the holy

grail of CTE." The players in the study received intravenous injections of FDDNP, a chemical marker designed to bind to deposits of amyloid beta plaques and neurofibrillary tau tangles that are signs of Alzheimer's disease. The FDDNP was then viewed on the PET scans, which were compared to those of healthy men of similar age, body mass, education and family history of dementia. The tests were done at Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior at UCLA. The five players had all suffered at least one concussion. The players consistedof a linebacker, a guard, a center, a defensive lineman and aquarterback. "Early detection of tau proteins may help us to understand what is happening sooner in the brains of these injured athletes," said Dr. Gary Small, a professor of psychiatry and biobehavioral sciences at the Semel Institute and the lead author of the study. "Our findings may also guide us in developing strategies and interventions to protect those with early symptoms, rather than try to repairdamage once itbecomes extensive." Neuroscientists have been

encouraged by the growing number of researchers who have addedtothe knowledge of concussions and head trauma, which they claim has traditionally been underfinanced. And while they are encouraged by the possibility that PET scans may be used to diagnose CTE in living patients, they would need to see larger studies to be convinced of its efficacy. Researchers, too, have been limited to studying patients who have e ffectively been self-selected: football players, other athletes and soldiers, all of whom have shown significant symptoms of CTE. Larger studies tracking patients over many years need to be done to determine how prevalent the disease is in the general population and whether certain people are predisposed to getting the disease.

The Associated Press

Concussions: causesandrecovery A concussion is a change in mental status caused by a blow to the head,neckorupperbody.Symptoms may include confusion, amnesia, nausea, dizziness, blurred vision or loss of consciousness.

How it happens There are two types of injuries that can lead to concussions. IMPACT

SPIN

When the head slams into a hard ) 4 surface, the skull stops abruptly while the brain, floating in cerebral fluid, continues to move and is shaken and sometimes bruised when it finally hits the skull.

t•

A blow to the head can cause the head to snap rapidly. When the head stops abruptly, the brain continues to rotate, potentially causing cell damage.

The crisis and the healing At the moment of injury, the brain goes through an initial period of crisis followed by an undetermined period of healing. The rate of recovery varies according to the severity of the injury. Period of R Ano t h er concussion during this period ulnerability can lead to irreparable damage or death. 0 oaYs1 2

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6

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P MOMENT OFINJURY • DEMAND FOR GLUCOSE • BLOOD FLOW • METABOLIC RATE FOR OXYGEN

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After the injury, the arteries constrict, causing reduced blood flow to the brain and lowering the rate that oxygen is metabolized. The demand for glucose also rises to provide cell energy for healing. But the high demand for glucose cannot be met by the constricted arteries. This mismatch creates a metabolic crisis. .

.

As the cells slowly repair themselves, the demand for glucose eases and blood flow returns to normal as vessels become less constricted. But the brain remains in a state of metabolic depression, a quiet state akin to rest, for a long period before returning to normal.

Source: David A. Hovda, Ph.D., UCLA Brain Injury Research Center New YorkTimes NewsService

NEW YORK — A prominent genetics expert from Harvard Medical School wants to make one thing perfectly clear: He is NOT looking for a woman to bear a Neanderthal baby. Not even an adventurous one. "Definitely n o t ," said George Church. Is he advocating for creating a Neanderthal? No. Does he plan to pursue such a project? "We have no projects, no plans, we have no papers, no grants" to dothat, he said earlier this week. You wouldn't know that from news reports shooting around the Internet that make Church sound like he's supporting the idea and even looking for an "adventurous" woman to bear the Neanderthal child. He says those reports are based on misunderstandings of an interview he gave the German magazine Der Spiegel about his r ecent book, "Regenesis: How Synthetic Biology Will Reinvent Nature and Ourselves." Church said the idea of

bringing back Neanderthals gets brief mention as a theoretical possibility, and the book refers to an "adventurous" woman merely to point out that the process would require a w o m an who no doubt would be adventurous. "It said you're going to need someone like that if you're going to do it," he said. "It's certainly very different from taking out a want ad." Scientists have recovered DNA from Neanderthal fossils. Making a Neanderthal would start w it h p utting such DNA into human cells. They would be used to make an embryo, which would be carriedto term by a surrogate mother, Church said. Such a process would face ethical questions i nvolving respect for the mother and child, as well as safety issues, and it would also require societal approval, he sa>d.

health care workers against

smallpox. (Only four doctors agreed to bevaccinated the first day.) Five years ago:Congressional leaders announced adeal with the White House on an

economic stimulus package that would give most tax filers

refunds of $600 to $1,200.

CULTURE

Parental warningscan BOARD vary with the territory MEMBER NEEDED

French bank Societe Generale

announcedit had uncovered a 4.9 billion euro fraud by a single futures trader. Italian Premier Romano Prodi

resigned after losing a Senate confidence motion.

One year ago:Declaring the American dream under siege, PresidentBarack Obama used

his State of the union address to deliver a populist challenge to shrink the gap between rich

and poor, promising to tax the wealthy more and help jobless

Americans get work andhang onto their homes. Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney released his 2010

tax returns, showing that his annual income topped$20 million and that he paid about $3

million in federal incometaxes.

BIRTHDAYS Singer-songwriter RayStevens is 74. Singer-songwriter Neil Diamond is 72. Singer Aaron Neville is 72. Comedian Yakov

Smirnoff is 62. Actress Nastassja Kinski is 54. Comedian Phil LaMarr is 46. Olympic

gold medal gymnast Mary Lou Retton is 45. Actor Matthew Lillard is 43. Actor Ed Helms

is 39. Actress Mischa Barton is 27. — From wire reports

By Ken Jennings

a Ukrainian mom: She'd be Slate sure it would make you sterile. "Is it really true that if you Some Peruvians are told that clip your f i ngernails while lingering too long in front of the your relatives are flying some- fridge can cause cancer.Filiwhere," the r adio p roducer pino kids can't wear red when asked, "their plane will crash?" it's stormy out, since that would I was being interviewed about attract lightning. Germans and my book "Because I Said So!," Austrians live in mortal fear which fact-checks 125 parental of drafts, which get blamed for cliches: don't sit so close to the everything from pneumonia to TV, don't swim right after you blocked arteries. eat, and so on. During the comIn South Korea, however, mercial break,the producer the concern about ventilation is asked me about this bit of wis- the opposite. Koreans will only dom passed along by her mom. use electric fans if a window is I took a long look at her; she cracked, because leaving a fan seemed to bein dead earnest. on in an enclosed room, it's al"Where does your mom, uh, most universally believed, can happen to be from?" I asked as be fatal. The mechanism beinnocently as I could. hind the threat is a little vague: "She grew up in Russia." Sometimes it's said to be a lack I told her I'd never heard that of oxygen that kills you, someone before — maybe it was a times it's a chill. But either way, Slavic thing. I wasn't surprised you won't care. You'll be dead. to find out that her mom had I grew up in Seoul, and evbeen raised outside the U.S. In eryonetookthe Great Fan Menwriting the book, I'd learned ace forgranted. An apartment very quickly that these bits of of Americans I knew teased folklore tend to be extremely their lone Korean roommate culture-specific. by going to bed one night in an In China, for example, it's enclosed room with six electric believed that sitting on a seat fans on. He pleaded with them warmed by someone else's be- not to throw their lives away hind can give you hemorrhoids. and slept in the hall. When all The Brits, on the other hand, three survived,the roommate attribute hemorrhoids to sitting was still not convinced. on cold surfaces. But sitting on Obviously, he said, they had that same cold concrete would cracked a window as soon as lead to a different lecture from he was out of the room.

. 6 -~

COCC Board of Directors

The Central Oregon Community College Board of Directors consists of seven members representing the seven geographic zones in the District. Currently, the Zone 7 position is vacant. The COCC Board of Directors is seeking applicants for this position and plans to appoint a new member ln February. The person appointed will serve through June 2013. An election will be held in May 2013 for a two-year term. Zone 7 consists of the southern and southwestern portions of Deschutes County, including LaPine and Sunriver, and the parts of Klamath and Lake Counties that are part of the COCC District. In Deschutes County, this includes precincts 23, 24, 39, 40, 50, 16, 38, 10, 21, 42, 43 and 49; in Klamath County it is precinct I; in Lake County precincts 13 and 14. Anyone interested in applying for this position is asked to send a cover letter,* resume and a written answer to the question in 200words or less: What do you see asthe major challenges COCC should be addressing in the next five to ten years?

SUBMIT TO:

OR EMAIL:

COCC Board of Directors Central Oregon Community College 2600 NW College Way Bend, Oregon 97701

rparadis@cocc.edu *Include your voter precinct with your submission.

Deadline for submitting applications

Wednesday, February 6 Questions

C EHTRAL OREGOH community college

(541) 383-7599


A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

Guns

Mafia

Nevada mining town, Searchlight. He and his three brothers Continued from A1 bonded over shooting doves Sens. Max Baucus of Mon- during childhood, and he still tana, Tim Johnson of South owns a 12-gauge shotgun. Dakota, Mary L a ndrieu of A right-handed triggerman, L ouisiana, Mar k U d al l o f he nailed two clay birds out of Colorado and Mark B egich six shots fired at the 2010 event of Alaska) face r e-election with LaPierre. The 2,900-acre battles in states where gun shooting range outside Las Vecontrol is politically unpopu- gas that was the scene of the lar, making t h eir p o tential event was built largely through votes on the Obama proposals land-procurement legislation problematic. backed by Reid, along with $61 Even if t h ose Democrats million in federal funding. v ote against some or all of Reid has a lifetime grade the proposals, they are likely of "B" from the NRA, and the to find themselves tied to the group's political action comp resident's effort to r ein i n mittee has donated more than gun rights — just as dozens $9,000 to Reid's past two Senof House Democrats voted ate campaigns. Moreover, as against Obama's health care majority leader since 2007, legislation but were still at- Reid has not advanced any tacked over the issue in their gun control measures, with campaigns in 2010. his power growing by helping elect other pro-gun Democrats Hearings set for next month in states such as Alaska, ColoThis week, Senate Minority rado, Missouri and Montana. Leader Mitch McConnell, REven when Democrats held Ky., signaled his belief that gun 59 and 60 seats in 2009, gun rights is still a winner. "Our laws were only eased. LegisSecond Amendment rights are lative amendments won wide under attack, and I am ready approval that loosened gun to do whatever it takes to stand restrictions in national parks up for our freedom," he wrote and on Amtrak. in a fundraising pitch, a day By spring of 2010, Reid's after his campaign manager national profile as one of the sent a similar missive to poten- Democrats' main combatants tial donors with an ominous in Washington's partisan wars warning: "The gun-grabbers had madehim deeply unpopuin the Senate are about to lar in Nevada. Still, his camlaunch an all-out assault on paign made a pitch to the NRA, the Second Amendment." toutinghis trackrecord on guns But the president — keenly and noting that opposing Reid aware of how national polls would be a big mistake: Had show a tilt toward stronger Reid lost, he probably could gun control laws f ollowing have been succeeded as majorithe Dec. 14 shootings at an el- ty leader by Richard Durbin, Dementary school in Newtown, Ill., or Charles Schumer, D-N Y., Conn. — has made new gun both of whom hold lifetime "F" restrictions a priority. ratings from the NRA. The Senate Judiciary ComThe NRA di d not r eturn mittee w il l h o l d h e a rings requests for comment about on new gun p roposals this the 2010 race. Reid's advisers month, and today, Sen. Di- think the reversal was the reanne Feinstein, D-Calif., plans sult of pressure from the many to formally introduce legisla- conservative activists who are tion that would ban assault members of the gun lobby, but weapons and limit ammuni- Reid won by a c omfortable tion clips to 10 rounds. margin and will b e central Reid has remained silent on to the outcome of the coming the individual gun control pro- debate. posals. His prepared statement The question is which Harry last Wednesday, after Obama Reid will emerge. announced the proposed legislation, left gun control advocates and gun rights supporters parsing each sentence. Some focused on Reid's hailing of the president's "thoughtful recommendations," while others noted hisvague promise that "the Senate will consider legislation." Some of Reid's fellow Democrats are worried. Feinstein said she had a private conversation with Reid to voice her displeasure after he told a Nevada television station that, given the current political environment, it might be futile to move an assault weapons ban through Congress. "You have to try, you can't sit back and WHEN YOU TAKEAN EXTRA 30% OFF just let the gun organizations Orig.*49.50-69.50, call public policy," Feinstein finaI cost 17.32-24.32. said in an interview last week. Clearance dress shirts

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shadow over our renewables Continued from A1 industry." The still-emerging links of Revelations of malfeasance the mafia to the once-boom- in one of Italy's most promising windand solarsectorhere ing new sectors is underscorare raising fresh questions ing a recent push by one of the about the use of government world's largest criminal orgasubsidies to fuel a shift toward nizations into a host of legiticleaner energies, with critics mate businesses, from chain claiming huge state incen- supermarkets t o s h o pping tives created excessive profits malls. But perhaps most imfor companies and a market portantly, the mafiataint on an bubble ripe for fraud. China- industry seen as a rare engine based Suntech, the world's for new jobs in a country stilllargest solar panel maker, last mired in the region's debt crimonth said it would need to sis is foreshadowing a massive restate more than two years challenge ahead for Europe. of financial results because of Deep involvement allegedly fake capital put up to finance new plants in Italy. To ensure the future of the 17-nation euro zone, econoBecauseitreceives more sun and wind than any other part mists argue that the lagging of Italy, Sicily became one of south must begin to rapidly Europe's most obvious hotbeds modernize,mirroring the ecofor renewable energies over nomic successesof northern the past decade. As the Italian neighbors like Germany. Yet government began offering the single biggest barrier may billions of euros annually in be overcoming the i n vestsubsidies for wind and solar ment-inhibiting, market-disdevelopment, th e p o tential torting power of corruption. "The mafia is contaminatprofitability of such projects also soared — a fact that did ing the economy by entering not go unnoticed by Sicily's in- more legitimate businesses, famous crime families. making markets less transparent and corrupting public Advanced knowledge officials," said Michele Polo, Roughly a third of the is- professor of economics at land's 30 wind farms — along Bocconi University in Milan. with several s olar p o w er "Along with tax evasion, complants — have been seized bating corruption is the maby authorities. Officials have jor obstacle ahead for Italy's f rozen more t han $ 2 b i l - economy." lion in assets and arrested a Here in Sicily, the depth of dozen alleged crime bosses; the mafia's involvement has corrupt local councilors and been a gradually emerging stomafia-linked entrepreneurs. ry, with a first wave of arrests Italian prosecutors are now in 2010. After acquiring new investigating suspected mafia evidence through a network of involvement in renewable en- informants and wiretaps, auergy projects from Sardinia to thorities staged a second round Apulia. of arrests last month. "The Cosa Nostra is adaptThose newly charged ining, acquiring more advanced cluded Angelo, the construcknowledge in new areas like tion i ndustry b u sinessman renewable energy that have who, officials say, was caught become more profitable be- by a wiretap in 2007 talking cause of government subsi- with Funari about a partnerdies," said Teresa Maria Prin- ship in the renewables sector. cipato, the deputy prosecutor Jailed pending trial, Angelo in charge of Palermo's Antihas denied the c orruption Mafia Squad, whose head- charges against him. Arrestquarters here are emblazoned ed in 2010, Funari is appealwith the images of assassi- ing his conviction on mafia •

According to court documents, wiretap t r anscripts and interviews with officials familiar with th e i nvestigations, mafia involvement in the renewablessector followed a familiar path. Crime families and businessmen would target land suitable for wind or solar plants, sometimes pressuring landowners to sell or offer long-term leases. Corrupt local officials were enlisted to speed through application processes that could o therwise take three to six years. After receiving approval, they would approach foreign investors eager to tap the Italian government's green subsidies program. Some foreign investors involved in the projects apparently did not knowthe extent of the illegality they were stepping into."But others just didn't want to know," said one official familiar with the case who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press.

One man's experience Meanwhile, the mafia's involvement inhibited legitimate renewable business investment in Sicily. The experience of Salvatore Moncada — a local entrepreneur who sought

to legally build clean energy projects here — became a cautionary tale for potential investors. Moncada said he entered the sector in the late 1990s, e ventually r o lling ou t s i x wind farms, 10 solar parks and one solar panel factory amid the sloping vineyards and sleepy farmhouses of the Sicilian countryside. But as he attempted to sidestep a push by organized crime to control the renewables sector — eschewing efforts to use mobconnected developers and refusing to make a customary payment of2 percent of profits — his business came under attack. In 2007, arsonists set fire to one of his wind farms, caus-

ing $4 million in damages. In 2009,the Terrasi crime fam-

ing of a new shooting range in southern Nevada. LaPierre heaped praise on Reid, who was in deep trouble going into his re-election contest. "I also want to thank you, Senator, for your support every day at the federal level for the Second Amendment and for the rights of American gun owners," LaPierre said. But five months later, the NRA declined to endorse Reid, deciding instead to stay neutral in the election. Reid won, but considered the NRA's silence a betrayal. "He doesn't forget," said one Reid adviser who spoke on the condition of anonymity to describe Reid's reaction. On its face, the NRA endorsing a Senate Democratic leader in a tough re-election bid seems outlandish, but Reid is not an ordinary Democratic leader. He grew up in a tiny

Indeed, the mafia has targeted legitimate businesses in Sicily beyond renewable energy, with a 2008 probe revealing the island's largest supermarket chain to be a front for mafia cash. Sicily's former governor,Raffaele Lombardo, stepped down last July after being charged with mafia ties. His predecessor, Salvatore "Toto" Cuffaro, is serving a seven-year jail sentence after being convictedon organized crime charges. Citing its poor finances and a mountain of debt, the Italian government is now curbing new subsidiesfor renewable energies. A nationwide program has also been rolled out requiring developers to sign affidavits proving they have no links to organized crime. In Sicily, where a new antimafia government came to power in November, construction of most new renewable projects has been stopped. The new government is seeking ways to ensure the mafia is rooted out of the industry before allowing fresh projects to go forward. "Criminal or g a nizations were allowed to do business" in the renewables sector, said Nicolo Marino, Sicily's new energy minister. "We lost a vital opportunity for development and the region lost the chance to profit from it."

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On Tuesday, Reid sounded more open to a bold approach. "This is an issue that we're not going to run from," he told reporters. "It's an issue we need to talk about... It may not be everything everyone wants. But I hope it has some stuff in there that's really important." Currentand former advisers say Reid's uneasy relationship with the National Rifle Association could make him open to more stringent gun laws than in prior years, as he balances the chance to pass historic legislation with the need to protect some of his more vulnerable incumbents from tough votes on gun control. In March 2010, Wayne LaPierre, the executive vice president of the NRA and the president's gun control nemesis, made a politically helpful appearancefor Reid atthe open-

Mafia supermarket

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ily attempted to block one of his company's new wind farms by c l aiming ownership rights to the land, eventually prompting 14 arrests and forcingMoncada and his family into two years of police protection. The difficulty of doing business in Sicily eventually led his company to focus overseas, with the company moving to invest in renewables in the United States, South America and North Africa. "It's not only the criminal infiltration, but the corrupt bureaucracy that m akes it difficult to do business here," Moncada said.

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A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

Hampton Continued from A1 Still, that's an abundance of fuel options compared to five years ago, when the Brothers store stopped selling fuel and Hampton Station was closed. Regular u n leaded r eached about $4.30 a gallon, on average, in Central Oregon, in mid-2008. Besides fuel, Vaughn said, travelers stopping at Hampton Station can get their vehicles serviced b y h e r hu s b and and enjoy some "good home cookin'" from th e cafe she runs with her son. The station is located in the unincorporated c o m munity of Hampton, a 35.37-acre rural service center along U.S. Highway 20 near the L ake County line, said Nick Lelack, interim director for the Deschutes County C o mmunity Development Department. "In general, the few people living near s m all, i s olated

Lawsuit Continued from A1 "We clearly dispute the representations made," Flaherty's attorney, Keith Bauer, said. "Within the documents there are some places where they clearly contradict themselves." Bauer said his office plans to file responses to the motions, though he said he didn't have a firm date when they would be ready. According to court documents, responses are due Jan. 28. "Folks have different ways of trying to prosecute their cases and make different attempts to position themselves," Bauer said of the motions. "We'll be filing motions of our own." "Mr. Flaherty, through his attorney, will be given the opportunity to respond and I anticipate that after his response is filed we will be scheduled for a court hearing before the judge to discuss these issues," said Portland attorney Judy Snyder, who represents

Duong.

'No ordinary defendant' A memo t o s u pport t h e sanctions a l leges F l aherty purposely destroyed evidence. " While this type of m i sconduct is troubling from any defendant, Flaherty is no ordinary defendant," the memo states. "He is an attorney licensed to practice law in the stateof Oregon, an elected official and the highest ranking legal authority in Deschutes County. Flaherty also is a legal expert on evidence." The memo claims Flaherty in December 2010 or January 2011 received litigation hold notices, requiring him to preserve evidence, but that he let a primary email addresspat@flahertyforda.com — expire in January 2012 without searching for communications that might b e d i scoverable evidence. A second email address, which the memo alleges was set up primarily to communicate about hiring decisions that are at the center of the federal litigation, also lapsed,

as did a Facebook page used for Flaherty's campaign for DA. Pat Horton, a former Deschutes County District Attorney who first volunteered his help to Flaherty during his transition into office and then worked for about six months as a deputy district attorney, produced as part of discovery some emails sent by Flaherty from that now-closed account t hat d iscussed hiring, t h e union and articles published

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A banner on the side of an old delivery van advertises Hampton Station, which reopened on Jan. 1. rural service centers such as Hampton are not enough to economically sustain the businesses, particularly if t h ere is not a post office, school or other community or regional destination in the immediate area to attract people," Lelack sard.

Therefore, service centers like Hampton often rely on pass-through highway traffic for customers,which can be a challenge, he said.

past several years, he said, making the job even more difficult. Running a rural business is nothing new for the Vaughns. Before Hampton Station, the family operated a restaurant in Christmas Valley. Shelley Vaughn said the family had been looking to relocate closer to Bend. When the property owners asked if the Vaughns were interested in leasing Hampton Station, she said they packed up and headed to Hampton. Because the station only operated during the summer over the past eight years, she said, it's been a challenge to get the word out, but business

is slowly picking up.

"We're looking forward to meeting all the different types of people that travel Highway 20," she said. "We want to put The economy and high gas Hampton Station back on the prices have led to r educed map like it was 20 years ago." traffic on state highways in — Reporter: 541-817-7818, Deschutes County over the rrees@bendbulletin.com

The f o rmer p r o secutors want an order from the court forcing Flaherty to turn over Major events in the federal lawsuit against Patrick Flaherty a series of Horton's emails, May18, 2010:In a primary election, Patrick Flaherty, who once as well as any of Flaherty's served as chief deputy DA, unseats Deschutes County District emails between himself and Attorney Mike Dugan, who was first elected to the office in1986. Hansen's office that have a It was the first time Dugan had faced an opponent in more than15 third party copied on them; years. and for Flaherty and Horton Sept.14, 2010: Deschutes County prosecutors vote to Unionize to testify about the emails amid discussions about possible employment shake-ups in the and other conversations with DA's Office. Hansen. "During discovery, PlainJan. 3, 2011:Flaherty is sworn into office and fires five deputy tiffs learned that F l aherty DAs. Traci Anderson is hired as chief deputy DA. shared with Mr. Horton and April1, 2011: Three of the fired prosecutors — Phil Duong, perhaps Ms. A nderson the Brentley Foster and Jody Vaughan — sue Flaherty, Deschutes advice he was receiving from County, and county commissioners Alan Unger,TammyBaney (Hansen). He may have even and Dennis Luke.Thelawsuit asks for $21 million in damages and included them in discussions alleges the trio were unlawfully targeted for firing because they he had with Mr. Hansen about actively tried to form a union. whether or not they should Oct. 24, 2011:A federal judge dismisses the county and interview s ome i n cumbent commissioners from the lawsuit. deputy district attorneys, speJan.11, 2013: Plaintiffs file two motions, one asking the judge cifically Plaintiff V aughan," to sanction Flaherty for destroying or hiding evidence, another the memo states. asking the judge to compel production of documents the plaintiffs Because Horton was n ot believe aren't subject to attorney-client privilege. employed at the time he was assisting with the process and because Flaherty was seeking "Folks have different ways pf trying tp advice as a private citizen, the memo states, his attorney-cliprosecute their cases and make different ent privilege doesn't stand. attempts tp position themselves. We'll be filing Horton produced emails, motions pf pur pwn." but Flaherty's attorney asked they b e wi t h h eld, c l a im— Kevin Bauer, attorney for Patrick Flaherty ing they were work product or subject to attorney-client privilege. in The Bulletin. not yet looked through. According to a log detailing "Any defendant who engag- documents Flaherty believes Some emails that Horton turned over indicate Flaherty es in flagrant disregard of his are privileged, the emails insought accessto former pros- legal obligations and overt de- clude, among other topics, disecutors' Facebook accounts struction of relevant evidence cussion of the proposed union and looked through their old in the manner that Flaherty contract, the collective bargainwork emails to investigate the has would warrant the court's ing agreement,conversations handling of older cases. most severe sanction: dis- with county c ommissioners The memo also alleges Fla- missal or default judgment," about the union, and Flaherty's herty recycled the personal the memo states. "... Anything refusal to hire Duong. "Flaherty's communications computer he was using at the less than the ultimate sanction time, wiping its hard drive. In would completely undermine do not receive special protechis deposition, Flaherty said the Court's integrity." tion simply because he gives the computer was breaking the group of private citizens down. According to his depo- Email, computer with whom he is talking a nifsition, he was not able to find The second motion asks ty title like 'transition team,'" any notesfrom the prosecutor the court to compel Flaherty the memo states. interviews he conducted be- to provide documents that The information contained fore taking office, including in- until now h e h a s c l aimed in the emails in question also terviews of Duong, Foster and are not discoverable aspart can't be obtained in any other Vaughan. The list of questions of attorney-client and other way, the memo states, making asked during the interviews privileges. them necessaryfordisclosure. was on the computer that no Flaherty sought legal ad- The memo also notes Horton longer exists. vice from local attorney Mar- and Flaherty both state in their "In other words, at a time tin Hansen in October 2010, depositions they can't rememwhen he knew that litigation months before he was sworn ber information discussed in was likely, Flaherty went to into office. The legal advice many meetings with Hansen. the effort to personally scrub was related to labor and emHorton s ai d W e d nesday the hard drive on his laptop to ployment issues surrounding that he had alerted attorneys remove any data from it," the his impending term as DA . on both sides that the issue of memo states. Hansen did not return a call attorney-client privilege might In a deposition mentioned for comment. come up. "I don't care either way," he in the memo, Flaherty said he Usually, a memo written to may still have documents rel- support the motion to compel said of whether the emails and evant to the case that he hadn't states, those c onversations communications are protectyet tracked down because he would be subject to attorney- ed. "I'm happy to comply with considered the lawsuit a "low client privilege. either what ( the a ttorneys) priority" and a "massive obBut the former deputies say agreed to or what the judge destruction" of his office. He said that when a third party was cides is the appropriate thing in the deposition that there present in meetings or was to do." may be as many as nine boxes included on emails, that privi— Reporter:541-617-7831, containing documents he had lege does not apply. smiller@bendbulletin.com

Timeline

Jordanians go tothe polls

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since research on smoking and health began in the 1950s, Continued from A1 the rate of smoking-related But younger s m okers d e aths is now nearly equal should not be lulled into b e t ween m al e a n d f e m ale thinking they can smoke s m o kers. until 40 and then stop withWom e n t ook t o cigarettes out consequences, said in large numbers only after Prabhat Jha,anepidemiolo- W o r ld War II, lagging behind gist at the Center for Global m e n by about 20 years. The HealthResearchin Toronto. c o nsequences of that shift are Jha led the new study, pub- j u s t now reaching women in lished online Wednesday in t h eir mid-50s and older. Meanthe New England Journal w h i l e, lung cancer risk in male of Medicine. smokers l e veled T hat's be off in the 1980s. +e USe~ ~P "AstheMadMen cause the risks

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matured, the risks ratory diseases i n w omen w h o linger for years rlS jf pf ~jjiieSS smoke continue to after stubbing fpp f TI SITI pjfjiig. incr e a se," said Mithelastbutt. chael Thun of the Tfi>f dpeS< f M ost of t h e American Cancer gains in life ex- SeelTI <P ~e Society, lead aupectancy come )f Ue fI pyy." thor of the second because the twin report, which drew risks ofheart dis- — Steven Schroeder, on that g r o up's a smoking Cancer Prevention ease and stroke and health expert Study. That study q uickiy d r o p at the University tracked 1.2 million smoking of California, men and women ends. Both disSan Francisco through 2010. eases occur as "We used to the byproducts oftobaccosmoke think women were triggerclottingin at less risk of illthearteries,aprocessthatcan n e ss from smoking," said Sterapidly reverse. ven Schroeder, a smoking and Damage to th e l u ngs, h e a lth expert at the University meanwhile, takes longer o f C a l ifornia, San Francisco, to heal. "The risk for lung w h o was not involved in either cancer doesn't disappear s t u dy."That doesn't seem to and the risk of respiratory b e t rue now. My guess is that disease doesn't disappear" e a rly women smokers didn't in former smokers, said s m o k e as much as men beJha. "But the acute risk for c a use there was some stigma heart attack or stroke pret- t o it. Now they're smoking as ty much disappears." many cigarettes as men are." While the study delivI n oth e r w o r ds, he said: ered some good news for "Smoke like a man, die like a q uitters, it also hammered m a n ." home the m essage tha t In th e American Cancer Socontinuing to smoke car- c i ety study, men and women ries grave risks. smokers both experienced a Current smokers in the 2 5 - fold higher risk of d y ing study died earlyat a rate from lung cancer over people triple that of people who w h o n ever smoked. Risk of never smoked. And fe w de a th from other lung diseases smokers reached age 80. a l s o soared about 20-fold in Just 38 percent of female s m okers. smokers and 26 percent of A bou t 4 5 m illion Americans male smokers hit that mile- s m oke, including 21 percent of stone, while 70 percent of m e n a nd 17percentofwomen, womenwhoneversmoked a c cording to a 2 010 report a nd 61 percent of men who f r o m t h e C e nters for D i s never smoked did. ease Control and Prevention. The study linked surveys S m o king has been steadily of 217,000 adults collected f a l l ing in popularity since the for the f ederal National 1 9 70s for men and the 1980s Health Interview Survey f o r women. between 1997 and 2004 to cause-of-death records in the National Death Index. Previous long-term studies of s mokers followed clean

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hkely health>er than t he general population, such as nurses or physicians, said Jha marking the new study as more representative of the risks of smoking — and the benefits of dropping the habit — across the entire nation. A second report, also published in the New England Journal of Medicine, showed that smoking-related deaths among women have soared in recent decades. For the first time

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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5

Weather, B6

©

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 201 3

BRIEFING

Radio contract approved Deschutes County commissioners voted unanimousl yWednesday to authorize a $115,758 contract for a consultant to design the

next generation emergencycommunications network for Central

Oregon public safety agencies. Sparling, a Lynwood, Wash., consulting and electrical engineering firm, will help create a

u n s m a e r e viewe Waden:

0e

• Social services could take hit as the focus shifts back toeconomicdevelopment By Scott Hammers The Bulletin

Several local social service organizations could see their funding trimmed in coming years, as the Deschutes County Commission considers a change in how it allocates state lottery dollars. Each of the state's 36 coun-

ties receives a share of the funds generated by the Oregon Lottery's video lottery machines. State law requires the money be spent on economic development, and Deschutes County anticipates it willreceive around $600,000 during the budget year be-

ginning in July.

For years, commissioners took a generous view of what constitutes economic development, using around half its lottery dollars to provide grants to local organizations working with low-income Deschutes County residents. As Commissioner Tammy Baney explained Wednes-

day, helping families secure food and shelter can assist family members in finding

and keeping a job, providing

an economic benefit to the

region. However, Baney said how counties spend their lottery dollars may soon be subject to greater scrutiny. State Rep. Patrick Sheehan, R-Clackamas, has said he wants a hearing and possible legislation to prevent lottery funds from being funneled to social welfare programs. See Lottery/B5

The Bulletin

WASHINGTON — During the 113th Congress, the House Subcommittee on Communications and

munications system to

replace andconsolidate the separate analog systems currently in place.

Deschutes County Sheriff's Capt. Erik ut-

Technology will continue

ter, who serves on the Public Safety Agency

/~gg~ggl/ to focus on

freeing up I N D.C. large swaths

Emergency Communications Work Group, said it's challenging to communicate with dif-

ferentagencies because of the multiple outdated

systems. Hetold commissioner sWednesday that Sparling will design

different models so the appropriate one, based onneed and cost, can be selected. Hesaid the firm estimates project

completion by August. Commissioner Tammy Baneysaid she's looking forward to the

outcomeofthenew system, but not the price of the project, which could

cost millions.

Inmate dies in hospital An inmate from Deer Ridge Correctional Institution died unexpect-

edly Monday afternoon Oregon Department of Corrections announced Wednesday.

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

A barred owl takes flight from a picnic shelter at Farewell Bend Park Monday while hunting for food along the Deschutes River

The department identified the inmate as John Derrick Stafford, 49. Stafford was taken to an

seenin en

OW

area hospital Monday with medical issues and

died at approximately 4:40 p.m. A Corrections De-

partment news release did not specify the hospital where Stafford was

taken and arepresentative was not available for comment.

Oregon State Police criminal investigators found Stafford's death was not related to a

crime, the department reported. Stafford entered custody March 22, 2011, to

serve a sentence for one count of first-degree

burglary out of Marion County, according to the department. His earliest

release datewas Dec. 27, 2015.

Deer Ridge, a minimum-custody facility in Madras, houses

approximately 756 inmates who arewithin four years of release.

Wireess a 'vibrant part' of economy By Andrew Clevenger

digital regional com-

at a local hospital, the

www.bendbulletin.com/local

By Dylan J. Darling The Bulletin

A barred owl, a cousin of the northern spotted owl, may be taking roost at Farewell Bend Park in Bend. The owl has been seen around the park along South Reed Market Road near the Deschutes River crossing since about Sunday, said Devon Comstock, who was among the birders to go and see the owl this week. Word of the barred owl has been abuzz on a Central Oregon birder Listserv. Comstock, program director at the nonprofit Heart of Oregon Corps, led a group of new workers Tuesday at lunchtime to see the owl. They found it sitting on a juniper branch, swiveling its head and looking around "It was just really being a typical owl during the day," she said. The owl has alsobeen

seen hunting in the park; two of the owls may be preparing a nest there, said Steve George, district biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife in Bend. If there are two owls they have yet to be seen together. "They're not too afraid of people," he said. "... So they can be quite visible." George said this is the firsttime he's aware of barred owls being seen in town. Barred owls live in other cities in the state, though, said Robin Bown, a fish and wildlife biologist for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "We havethem breeding here in Portland," she said. The owls are often in long, skinny and forested parks along creeks, Bown said. They've also been seen and heard in the forest on the West Hills. See Owl /B2

Owl occurrence Barred owls have moved into the Northwest from the East Coast over the past100 years. Federal researchers are studying how they interact with

native spotted owls. I L

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Andy Zeigert/The Bulletin

— From staff reports

ofbroadband spectrum so that the limited resource can be used more efficiently, committee Chairman Rep. Greg Walden, R-Hood River, said Wednesday. "This is a very vibrant part of our economy that can be made even more so by our policy decisions," Walden said during a question-and-answer session with reporters in which he laid out his agenda for the new term. Walden has helmed the panel, a subcommittee of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, since 2011. The first order of business will be a hearing Feb. 5 on efforts to place the responsibility for overseeing the Internet under the jurisdiction of the International Telecommunications Union. The U.S. has rejected that plan, and was not one of 89 countries that signed a treaty promoting the International Telecommunications Union in Dubai in December. The Feb. 5 hearing will be a joint hearing with the House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation and Trade, which is chaired by Rep. Ted Poe, R-Texas. The witness list has not yet been finalized, but the hearing will include a discussion of "what America's forward to make sure the Internet is free from legacy regulation and countries that have a different view about democracy and freedom on the Internet," Walden said. Oversight will remain an important part of the Communications and Technology Subcommittee's activities, he said. During the last session, the committee produced legislation authorizing incentive auctions of broadband spectrum currently occupied by broadcast television in order to make large blocks available for wireless carriers. See Walden /B5

More briefing,B2

LEARNING ABOUT DIVERSITY IN 'FROGTOWN' STATE NEWS I Portland The Dalles /'

fh

Springfield Jj

• Portland: Trial

resumes in alleged car-bomb plot. • The Dalfes: 5-year-

old kidnapped boy is rescued, police say. • Springfield: Woman's use of experimental cancer drug prolongs her life, and could save others. Stories on B3, B5

Ryan Brennecke i The Bulletin

Performers Heather Christie andAndy Stokes greet children Wednesday as they leave the La Pine High School auditorium

The students attended apresentation of "Frogtown," a live multimedia show of a

and Portland writer/composer Philip Pel-

saxophone-playing tadpole that teaches the values of cultural diversity. The showplays

letier captures it on his phone.

today at the Tower Theatre in Bend.

Bend rap event canceled as stars deny involvement Bulletin staff report Musician and p r oducer K anye West will not be in Bend on Saturday evening to judge a rap battle at the Domino Room. In fact,the event has been canceled entirely. Doubts about the hip-hop star's supposed appearance in Bend began to circulate as soon as news of the event came out. The Underground Ra p E v ent, which had been advertised by the Power 94 radio station, has now been " postponed," according t o Valerie Goodew, co-founder of the Redmond-based o n l in e c l o t hing company, ROYLT KingRQueenPin Clothing, that was set to sponsor the event. Goodew, 17, who sold tickets to

the rap contest and show on her website, w ww . q ueenpinclothing. com, said her company is issuing refunds to everyone who purchased a ticket online. Speculation about the event's legitimacy began to sw irl Tuesday when two artists advertised as part of the event denied their involvement via social media outlets. Rapper Young Sam, a Los Angeles artist, refuted the claim via Facebook on Tuesday morning, for example. "I'm not performing in O regon This weekend at In Bend that's false advertisement sorry to my Oregon fans but I never knew about this event," Young tweeted on his Twitter account. See Rap/B2


B2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

E VENT

AL E N D A R

Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communitylifeibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at vttvttw.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.

TODAY CONVERSATIONS ONBOOKS AND CULTURE:Readand discuss "The Hunger Games" by Suzanne Collins; followed by a discussion; free; noon-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Campus Center, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-383-7412. KNOW MONEY:JUNK IN YOUR DRAWERS, CASH INYOUR POCKET:Learn about selling and investing in coins, metals and other collectibles; free; 4 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. FROGTOWN:A live multimedia show teaching the values of cultural diversity, with singing and dancing; geared toward elementary-school children; $12, $8 children 12 and younger, plus fees; 6 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. CHELSEAGRIN: The metal act performs, with I Declare War, At The Skylines, Upon This Dawning, American Me and Vereh Falls; $10 plus fees in advance, $13 at the door; 7 p.m., doors open at 6:30 p.m.; The Sound Garden,1279 N.E. Second St., Bend; 541-633-6804 or www.brownpapertickets.com. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "THE BEST OFRIFFTRAX LIVE: 'MANOS' THEHANDSOFFATE": A screening of the PG-13 film, with commentary by the comedians of "Mystery Science Theater 3000"; $12.50; 7:30 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX,680S.W. Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-3826347 or www.fathomevents.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Preview night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $10; 7:30 p.m.; Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-3890803 or www.cascadestheatrical. Ol'g.

FABRICCHECK: Livefashion by Rescue, 541 Threads, Rise Up International and more, plus musical performances by Aceyalone, J-Natural, Pat Maine and more;

BRIEFING Continued from Bf

Fainting woman rescued fromcanyon A Bend woman who fainted while hiking the Dry Canyon

Trail was assisted Wednesday by Deschutes County Search &

Rescue. Dispatchers received acall at 4:18 p.m. from Paul Petersen, reporting that his wife,

Mary Bryan, 60, hadfainted while hiking with him on the trail about19 miles east of Bend and was unable to stand. Six volunteers from Des-

chutes County Search & Rescue, two deputies from the Deschutes County Sheriff's

Office, two BendFire Department paramedics and aForest Service law enforcement of-

ficer were sent to the scene. The paramedics located Bryan about /4 mile from the trailhead

and began treating her. When other emergency responders arrived, Bryan was secured to a backboard and towed behind an ATV to the trailhead. Bryan was taken to St.

Charles Bend byambulance for treatment of non-life-threatening injuries. — From staff reports

The Bulletin Call a reporter: Bend ................541-617-7829 Redmond........541-977-7185 Sisters.............541-977-7185 La Pine ........... 541-383-0348 Sunriver.........541-383-0348 Deschutes ......541-617-7837 Crook ..............541-633-2184 Jefferson ........541-633-2184 Salem..............541-554-1162 D.C..................202-662-7456 Business........ 541-383-0360 Education .......541-977-7185 Public lands .....541-617-7812 Public safety.....541-383-0387 Projects .......... 541-617-7831

Submissions: • Civic Calendar notices: Email event information to news©bendbulletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" in the subject, and include acontact name andphone number. Contact: 541-383-0354

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

Miya Corpstein, center, playing Annie, and her fellow actors sing while practicing a scene for "Annie Jr." at Bend High School. The play is being staged at Central Oregon Community College. free; 8:30 p.m.; The Blacksmith Restaurant, 211 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-318-0588. HOT BUTTEREDRUM: Theacoustic string band peforms; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; 9 p.m., doors open at 8 p.m.; Domino Room, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-788-2989 or www. randompresents.com.

FRIDAY "ANNIE JR.":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in 1930s New York City; $15, $10ages 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beattickets.org. STAFFORDBIRTHDAY CELEBRATION:Celebrate the life and poetry of William Stafford, with poetry readings and more; free; 7 p.m.; Sunriver Nature Center & Observatory, 57245 River Road; 541-593-4394. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30

p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT": Opening night of Cascades Theatrical Company's presentation of Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; with a champagne and dessert reception; $24, $18 seniors, $12students;7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. "THE BIGLEBOWSKI": A screening of the R-rated1998 film, with a costume parade; $10 plus fees; 8 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www. towertheatre.org. SLIGHTLYSTOOPID:The rock and reggae group performs, with Karl Denson; $25 plus fees in advance, $30 at the door; 8 p.m., doors open at 7 p.m.; Midtown Ballroom, 51 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541788-2989 or www.midtownbend. com. DJ WEATHER:The Portland-based DJ performs; free; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.

SATURDAY SPIRITUAL DIVERSITY CONFERENCE:Explore the role of religion in promoting tolerance, with presentations by Dr. Allen McKiel and Wajdi Said; free; 9:30 a.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-318-7412. FREE FAMILYSATURDAY:The museum offers complimentary admission for the whole family; overflow parking and shuttle service available at Morning Star Christian School; free;10 a.m.-4 p.m.; High Desert Museum, 59800 S. U.S. Highway 97, Bend; 541-382-4754. SATURDAYMARKET: Featuring local vendors, with new and used items, antique collectibles, crafts and more; free admission; 10 a.m.-4 p.m.; Bend Masonic Center,1036 N.E. Eighth St.; 541-977-1737. KNOW MONEY:STRETCHING YOUR FOOD DOLLARS: Learn how to work within your food budget to create a week of tasty, healthy meals; free;1:30 p.m.; East Bend Public Library, 62080 Dean Swift Road; 541-312-1032 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar.

"ANNIE JR.":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in 1930s New York City; $15, $10 ages18 and younger; 2 and 7 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beattickets.org. KNOW MONEY:JUNK IN YOUR DRAWERS, CASH INYOUR POCKET:Learn about selling and investing in coins, metals and other collectibles; free; 2 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 N.W. Wall St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. DINNER WITHCALDERA ARTISTS: Dine with Caldera Artists in Residence, with an open studio; registration requested; $45; 5-9 p.m.; House on Metolius, Forest Road 980, Camp Sherman; 541595-6620 or jade@metolius.com. JACKIE GREENE: The folk-rock artist performs; proceeds benefit the Bend Surgery Center Scholarship Foundation; ages 21 and older; $35$45 plus fees; 6 p.m., doors open at 5 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 N.W, Wall St., Bend; 541-317-0700 or www.towertheatre.org. LAST SATURDAY:Event includes art exhibit openings, live music, food and drinks and a patio and fire pit; free; 6-10 p.m.; Old Ironworks Arts District, 50 Scott St., Bend; www.tinyurl.com/ironwurk. "FOR THELOVE OF MUSIC": 3 Leg Torso performs, with a raffle auction; proceeds benefit the Summit High School music department; $15 plus fees in advance,$20 atthe door;7 p.m., doors open 6 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 N.W. Clearwater Drive, Bend; 541-322-3300 or www. friendsofmusic-shs.org. "COUPLEDATING": Susan Benson directs the play by Cricket Daniel; $18, $15 students and seniors; 7:30 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 N.E. Lafayette Ave., Bend; 541-312-9626 or www.2ndstreettheater.com. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18 seniors, $12 students; 7:30 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W.Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org. BEND COMMUNITY CONTRADANCE:Featuring caller

Ron Bell-Roemer 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.; 54 I-330-8943. SYSTEM ANDSTATION: The Portland-based indie-rock act performs; $5; 8 p.m.; The Horned Hand, 507 N.W. Colorado Ave., Bend; 541-728-0879 or www. reverbnation.com/venue/ thehornedhand. THE QUICK& EASYBOYS: The Portland-based indie-rock act performs; $10; 8 p.m.; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters; 541-8159122 or www.belfryevents.com. MUCH MORE COUNTRY: The Portland-based country act performs; free; 9 p.m.; Maverick's Country Bar & Grill, 20565 Brinson Blvd., Bend; 541-325-1886 or www. maverickscountrybar.com. DJ WEATHER:The Portland-based DJ performs; free; 10 p.m.; Astro Lounge, 939 N.W. Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116.

SUNDAY VOLUNTEEREXPO:Community organizations will be on hand to talk about volunteering options; free; noon-3 p.m.; Sunriver Area Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane; 541617-7080 or www.deschuteslibrary. org/calendar. KNOW MONEY:REAL-LIFE BURIED TREASURE:Discover gold prospecting, metal detecting, treasure hunting, rock collecting and more, with an interactive gold panning demonstration; free; 1 p.m.; La Pine Public Library, 16425 First St.; 541-312-1034 or www. deschuteslibrary.org/calendar. "ANNIE JR.":Bend Experimental Art Theatre presents the musical about Little Orphan Annie, set in 1930s New York City; $15, $10ages 18 and younger; 2 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Pinckney Center for the Arts, 2600 N.W. College Way, Bend; 541-4195558 or www.beattickets.org. "TWELFTH NIGHT":Cascades Theatrical Company presents Shakespeare's comedy about mistaken identities and merry rogues; $24, $18seniors, $12 students; 2 p.m.;Greenwood Playhouse, 148 N.W. Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-389-0803 or www. cascadestheatrical.org.

Owl Continued from B1 Urban sightings of barred owls underline some of their differences from the more famous spotted owl, the federal protection of which more than 20 years ago led to more strict rules on logging in the Northwest. While barred owls are "generalists," she said spotted owls are "specialists." That goes for food and habitat. Barred owls are not a protected species under state or federal law. They will eat just about anything they find crawling, slithering or slimming, Bow n s a id . T h ey'll eat rodents, amphibians and snails, even other birds. Spotted owls focus on flying squirrels, red tree voles and duskyfooted woodrats, depending on where the owls live. B arred owls d on't m i n d being a suburban bird. Spotted owls typically stay in forests, particularly those with downed wood, snags and a variety of t ree ages. Bown said spotted owls are found outside old growth f orests, but old growth forests usually meet their preferences. Given the broader palate of barred owls, they don't need aslarge a territory for hunting, Bown said. A pair of barred owls in Oregon typically need 800-1,500 acres; a pair of spotted owls need 2 ,500-3,500 acres. S o i t ' s easier for the barred owls to find a home range even on developed land. Bown wasn't surprised to hear about the barred owl in Bend. " They ca n p r ett y m u c h show up anywhere," Bown sa>d. About a century ago barred owls were in th e East and spotted owls were in the West, she said. The Great Plains appear to have been a huge divider between the similar-

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Unlike the more famous spotted owl, the barred owl can be found in urban areas. looking birds. In t h e e a rly 1900s, the barred owls started a move west that took generations and possibly a detour through Canada to complete, although the specifics of how and why the birds made it to the West are still mysteries. "Something broke that barrier that the Great Plains represented," Bown said. By the 1970s they were in Oregon, W a s hington a n d even parts of California. Along with being less finicky than spotted owls, barred owls are slightly larger and more aggressive, according to a 2012 Fish and Wildlife Service report. "Because barred owls may compete with s potted owls and may exclude them from substantial amounts of otherwise usable habitat, securing habitat alone may not be sufficient for spotted owl recovery, as barred owls may prevent or limit use of this habitat by spotted," according to the report. For about the past five years, the Fish and Wildlife Service has suggested the study of killing barred owls, by means of shotgun blasts, to stop their encroachment onspotted owls.

The agency is still wo rking on paperwork to do the study around Oregon, Washington and California, Bown said. There are no test sites planned for Central Oregon. Barred and spotted owls will also breed and produce hybrid owls, which some call "sparred owls," but Bown said the hybrids are rare. "They kind o f l ook h alfw ay between the tw o a n d they kind of sound halfway between the two," she said. "So, given the choice, they are probably not attractive to either species." The names of the two owls describe their lo o ks. Bo t h have spots on their heads and wings, but barred owls have a sequence of bars on their underbelly while spotted owls have more spots, George said. They are both about a foot tall, with the females in both species bigger than males. Barred owls are typically larger than their spotted cousins, Bown said, but it is hard to see the size difference. "If t hey w e ren't s ide-by side," she said, "you won't recognize it."

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— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarfing@bendbulletin.com

Rap

Sam, YG and HBK Gang remained on its website, as did Continued from B1 a Web advertisement featurOn Tuesday evening, Power ing a photo of West and the 94 removed any mention of word "Kanye." West from its Facebook proP ower 94 c o uld n o t b e file, though a poster for the reached for comment. West's publicist's office, as event claiming "select underground local and (non-local) well as Soulja Boy's manager, unsigned artists"and perfor- said their artists are not inmances by Soulja Boy, Young volved in the show.

Goodew said she had received verbal c onfirmation from various publicists — including West's — that their respective artists would participate in the event. W hile Goodew said s h e plans to reschedule the event, it's on hold "until we figure out exactly what we want to do."


THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

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Defense, prosecution both find help in FBI's report on bombplot suspect By Nigel Duara

day under cross examination The Associated Press in Mohamud's terrorism trial PORTLAND — A n e a r ly that Mohamud's attempt to live FBI assessment ofa teenager two lives meant he could be agents thought was a potential easily manipulated. He wrote terrorist threat has given am- that Mohamud seemed to have munition to both prosecution left his radical Islamic leanings and defense attorneys in an Or- behind when he went to college egon terrorism trial. at Oregon State University in Mohamed Mohamud was August 2009. 17 years old in the summer of But DeLong said the bureau 2009, when he captured the also worried that Mohamud's FBI's attention by correspond- previous writing and the fact ing with a Saudi Arabian man that his concerned father consought by Interpol on terrorism tacted the FBI worrying that charges. Mohamud had been "brainIn an email assessment of washed" led agents to believe Mohamud, FBI Special Agent he couldbecome a threat. Isaac DeLong told colleagues DeLong's initial suggestion Mohamud was "conflicted and was to try to "pitch" Mohamud manipulable," but his writings on being an informant for the for an online English-language FBI on the Corvallis Muslim jihadi magazine praising 9/II community. It's unclear whethconcerned him. er that suggestion was ever se"(Mohamud) wants to have riously entertained. it both ways," DeLong wrote in DeLong's testimony a l so the November 2009 email, say- revealed that FBI agents in the ing Mohamud wanted to both Charlotte, N.C., office tracking live under hardline Islamic rule now-deceased al-Qaida operawhile also enjoying the college tive Samir Khan were the first party scene of binge drinking to identify Mohamud as a poand smoking marijuana. tential threat because of comMohamud is accused of at- munication between the two. tempting to detonate a bomb The FBI was tracking Khan at a Portland Christmas tree- — who was killed in a drone lighting ceremony in Novem- strike with then-al-Qaida leadber 2010. er Anwar al-Awlaki — when DeLong testified Wednes- they came across Mohamud's

emails to him in early 2009. Theytracked down Mohamud's IP address to a Portland suburb and identified him. When he cropped up on the bureau's radar again, DeLong said he was able to rely on that information to identify Mohamud. DeLong also said that a team of FBI agents followed Mohamud during his freshman year of college, monitoring his phone calls, textmessages and emails, along with video and photo surveillance. At any time, federal public defender Steve Wax asked, did Mohamud write or say anything concerning a potential terrorist attack? DeLong said he hadn't. Earlier on Wednesday, defense attorney Lisa Hay tried to drawinto questionthe accuracy and selectiveness of the written records made by the FBI agent who headed up the undercover investigation into Mohamud. The records are crucial to establishing the initial face-toface contact between Mohamud and an undercover agent posing as a jihadi. That meeting would help establish Mohamud's mindsetbefore an FBI sting operation targeting him swung into high gear an d c u l m inated

AROUND THE STATE Man aCquitted in 'Sexting' CaSe —A jury has acquitted an Oregon manaccused of soliciting naked pictures of a13-year-old Utah girl. The Deseret Newsreports a jury returned not-guilty verdicts Tuesday night in the case of 31-year-old Daniel Dean Divine. He'd been charged in July with three felony counts of sexual exploita-

tion of a minor and onemisdemeanor count of enticing a minor over

with his arrest. His attorneys are trying to show he was not predisposed to terrorism before he met two men — actually undercover agents — who promised him the chance to work for al-Qaida and carry out an act of terrorism in the U.S. The FBI has said the undercover agent attempted to taperecord the original face-to-face meeting with M ohamud on July 30, 2010, but the battery in his recording device failed. After the meeting, the undercover agent's FBI handler, Elvis Chan, took notes and wrote a summary about it. The FBI learned on Aug. 2, 2010, that the recorder did not function, but Chan said he wasn't told about it. He destroyed his notes on Aug. 3, 2010, leaving only his written summary. During Mohamud's terrorism trial on Wednesday, defense attorney Lisa Hay questioned why Chan chose not to record the agent telling Mohamud that he was in competition with five other men to help carry out a purported al-Qaida plot, a fact that Hay asserted in previous questioning could coerce a naive 18-year-old into getting involved with the plot.

the Internet. The Duchesne County teen told investigators Divine gave her an iPhone and asked her to use it to take nude photos of herself.

Charging documents say the girl's mother helped the girl take three naked pictures, even though she knew they'd be sent to Divine. The mother pleaded guilty to child abuse in December. Her name is being withheld to protect the identity of her daughter.

NeW NatiOnal Guard leader —Gov. John Kitzhaber has appointed a newhead of the Oregon National Guard. Kitzhaber said Wednesday that Brigadier General Daniel Hokanson we be the next adjutant general. Hokanson is a1986 graduate from the U.S. Military

Academy andserved on active duty before joining the OregonNational Guard. He has served in Iraq and Afghanistan and commanded nearly100 air-rescue and firefighting missions throughout the Pacific

Northwest. Hokanson is currently the director of strategic plans and policy for the National Guard Bureau at the Pentagon.

Man extradited in cold case —Police sayan Oregonmanhas been extradited to California to face charges he allegedly stabbed a woman to death in her Southern California apartment in 1990. Pros-

ecutors say 74-year-old Charles LeeClark of Beavercreek returned to Orange County on Wednesday and is being held on $5 million bail. Clark is accused of renting a room in 36-year-old Kathleen Witkows-

ki's apartment while hewas out on bail for a federal bank robbery in

early1990. He allegedly stabbed her to death with a knife on Nov. 18,

and her body wasdiscovered five days later. Clark has two previous strike convictions for robberies in1975 and1990. Hewas linked to the crime scene by DNA that was submitted for analysis in 2011, and matched against state and national databases.

Teen Cited in killing Of hawk —An Oregon State Police wildlife trooper has cited a16-year-old boy for killing a protected

red-tailed hawk nearKlamath Falls. Police say the trooper responded Sunday to a landowner's report that two juveniles had been involved in shooting a hawk on his property and then tried to run off. The

trooper found the deadbird andcontacted the juveniles, citing one of them for unlawful taking of a protected species. — From wire reports

5-yeaI-old kidnappedafter parentswereassaulted is rescued, safe, policesay The Associated Press PORTLAND — A 5 -yearold boy from The Dalles was found unharmed Wednesday a few hours after he was kidnapped by a man who assaulted his parents with a hammer, police said. Officers found Brian Depriest, 36, and the child, Skylar

Meldin Coulcer- Jarding, in the small town of Dufur, 15 miles south of The Dalles, said Capt. Ed Goodman of the Dalles Police Department. The child's parents, Josh Jarding and K athryn Riter, both 30, were taken to MidColumbia Medical Center in The Dalles with serious inju-

ries. Both have been released. Depriest is Riter's ex-boyfriend and a restraining order was in effect at the time of the attack, Goodman said. He did not know when the pair dated. The assault and kidnapping occurredshortly before 6 a.m. Wednesday on the west side of The Dalles, triggering a state-

wide Amber Alert that included photos of Depriest, the boy and the stolen Chevrolet Cavalier they were traveling in. "It was the car of a neighbor who was running it in the driveway to clear the windows of frost," Goodman said. Detectives imme d iately started calling Depriest's rela-

tives, many of whom live in Dufur, and one of them directed police to a family member's home, where Depriest was arrested without incident. H e was booked into t he Northern O regon Regional Correctional Facility on charges of assault, kidnapping, menacing, unauthorized use of a

vehicle, custodial interference and contempt of court. Bail was set at $890,000. Depriest worked at Precision Lumber Co. in The Dalles for thepast three years and was a "great employee," manager Matt McCall said. " This has b een q u ite a shock," he added.

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NEws OF REcoRD DUII — EdwardAnthony Truong, 31, was arrested onsuspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at The Bulletin will update items 2:07a.m. Jan. 20, in theareaof U.S. in the Police Log when such Highway 97 andPowers Road. a request is received. Any Criminal mischief — Anact of new information, such as the criminal mischief was reported at dismissal of charges or acquittal, 8:15 a.m. Jan. 21, in the100 block of must be verifiable. For more Northeast Fourth Street. information, call 541-383-0358. Criminal mischief — An act of Bend Police Department criminal mischief was reported at 9:04 a.m. Jan. 21, in the 400 block of Theft — Atheft was reported andan Northeast Alden Avenue. arrest madeat1:40 p.m. Jan. 14, in the 300 block of Northeast Second Street. Criminal mischief — An act of criminal mischief was reported at Theft — Atheft was reported andan 10:09 a.m. Jan. 21, in the 2100block of arrest made at8:43 a.m.Jan. 15, in the 2000 block of Northeast Monterey Northeast Bear CreekRoad. Avenue. Theft —Atheft was reported at 11 a.m. Jan. 21, in the100 block of DUII — LaurenAshley Martin, 27, was arrested on suspicion of driving under Southeast Heyburn Street. the influence of intoxicants at 2:21 a.m. Criminal mischief — An act of Jan.16, in the 400 block of Southwest criminal mischief was reported at Bluff Drive. 11:04a.m. Jan. 21, in the1400 block of Northwest Fourth Street. DUII — TobyJo McBroome,40,was arrested on suspicion of driving under Theft —Atheft was reported at10:54 the influence of intoxicants at 2:06 a.m. p.m. Jan. 21, in thearea of Southeast Jan.19, in the 61500 block of South Third Streetand Southeast Reed U.S. Highway 97. Market Road.

POLICE LOG

Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 6:02 a.m. Jan. 22, in the1500 block of Northwest Portland Avenue. Criminal mischief — Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 2:07 p.m. Jan. 21, in the61300 block of South U.S. Highway97. prinevnle police Department Theft — A theft was reported at 2:20 a.m. Jan. 22, in thearea of Northwest Eighth Street. Burglary — A burglary, theft and an act of criminal mischief were reported at 9:09 a.m. Jan. 22, in the areaof Northeast Knowlege Street. Burglary — A burglary and theft were reported at 4:13p.m. Jan. 22, in the area of Southeast Court Street. Oregon State Police DUn — Kernella DeeMaloney, 42, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:05 p.m. Jan. 22, in thearea of West state Highway126 near milepost108.

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1300 N.W. Wall St., Bend, OR 97701 Web: www.deschtttes.org Phone:541-388-6571 Fax: 541-382-1692

County Commission • Tammy Baney, R-Bend Phone: 541-388-6567 Email: Tammy Baney@co.deschtttes .OI'. US

• Alan Unger, 0-Redmond Phone: 541-388-6569 Email: Alan unger@co.deschtttes .OI'. US

• Tony Deaone, R-La Pine Phone: 541-388-6568 Email: Tony DeBone©co.deschutes .OI.US

JEFFERSON COUNTY 66 S.E. D St., Madras, OR97741 Phone:541-475-2449 Fax: 541-475-4454 Web: www.co.iefferson.or.us

County Commission • Mike Ahern, John Hatfield, Wayne Fording Phone: 541-475-2449 Email: commissioner©co.iefferson .Qr. Us

CITY OF BEND 710 N.W. Wall St. Bend, OR 97701 Phone: 541-388-5505

Web: www.ci.bend.or.us

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• City Manager Eric King Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: citymanagerC!ci.bend.or.us

City Council • Jodie Barram Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: ibarram@ci.bend.or.us • Mark Capell Phone:541-388-5505 Email: mcapell©ci.bend.or.us • Jim Clinton Phone:541-388-5505 Email: jclinton@ci.bend.or.us • Victor Chudowsky Phone: to be determined Email: to be determined • Doug Knight Phone: to be determined Email: to be determined • Scott Ramsay Phone: 541-388-5505 Email: sramsay@ci.bend.or.us • Sally Russell Phone:541-480-8141 Email: srussell©ci.bend.or.us

CITY OF LA PINE P.O. Box 3055, 16345 Sixth St. La Pine, OR97739 Phone: 541-536-1432 Fax: 541-536-1462

City Council • Kathy Agan Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kagan@ci.la-pine.or.us • Ken Mttlenex

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Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: kmulenex©ci.la-pine.or.us • Don Greiner Phone: 541-536-1432 Email: dgreinerOci.la-pine.or.us • Dan Varcoe Phone:541-536-1432 Email: dvarcoe@ci.la-pine.or.us

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For The Bulletin's full list, including federal, state, county and city levels, visit www.bendbulletin.com/officials.

DESCHUTES COUNTY

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PUBLIc OFFIcIALs

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W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear Wednesdays: April 17, June 19, August 28, November 13

DISCOVER EVERYTHINGTHISCHARMING TOWNHASTOOFFER From itsheritage tothearts, there's somethingfor everyonein Redmond. Four times a year, Redmond Magazine is published to highlight the businesses and individuals vvho work to build a strong community. The publication features a calendar of community events, personality features and insight into "hidden treasures" around Redmond.

• stu Martinez

Phone:541-536-1432 Email: smartinez@ci.la-pine.or.us

CITY OF MADRAS 71 S.E. D Street, Madras, OR97741 Phone:541-475-2344 Fax:541-475-7061

Gity Gouncil • Mayor Melanie Widmer Phone:541-475-2344 Email: mwidmer@ci.madras.or.us • Tom Brown Phone:541-475-2344 Email: thbrown@ci.madras.or.us • Walt Chamberlain Phone: 541-475-2344 Email: to be determined • Royce Embanks Jr. Phone: 541-475-2344 Email: rembanks@ci.madras.or.us • Jim Leach Phone: 541-475-2344 Email: ileach©ci.madras.or.us • Richard Ladeby Phone: 541-475-2344 Email: rladeby©ci.madras.or.us • Charles Schmidt Phone:541-475-2344 Email: to be determined

SISTERS M AGAZ I N E WELCOMETOTHECENTRAL OREGON TOWN OFSISTERS

Sisters Magazinehonorsthe uniquenessof this mountaintown. Sisters Magazine is the area's foremost resource for events, activities, artists and businessesthat make up the backbone of this small mountain town. In the coming year, each edition will highlig ht Sisters' events that draw thousands to the area.

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SISTFJISCHM S T KL S ETZKTS

IKOWDkYSlet QUKDR ETENTS CLLENDLlt '~ I lf TZIIS I T L M 17 M Q H T S

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W HEN TO LOOK FOR IT: pudlishing four editions ayear

Fridays. March 29 (My OwnTwo Hands), May 24 (Sisters Rodeo), June 28 (Sisters Outdoor Quilt Show), August 23 (September in Sisters), November 15 (A Cowboy Christmas)


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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

The Bulletin

EDITORIALS

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end residents are taking the first steps to decide Mirror Pond's future. Should the dam go'? Should the pond be dredged? Should the community do nothing, or is there a better choice'? If you want to have a say in the process, now is the time to get involved. The steering committee for the pond has established a questionnaire to identify options to present to the community. The questionnaire has been up only a short time at www.mirror pond.info. There are already some 350 responses. It's not a scientific poll, but Don Horton, the executive director of the Bend Park 8 Recreation District, says the purpose is to get as many people involved in the process as possible. Public meetings are planned for February. Jim Figurski, the Mirror Pond projectmanager employed by the park district, is also going to be speaking to various community groups. In March and April, a consultant will come up with a series of options with cost estimates. Then there will b e a nother round ofoutreach to pick a preferred option. It should be chosen by June. Paying for the chosen option is

only one significant issue. What is the future of the dam? Representatives f r o m Pa c i fic Power, the dam's owner, have repeatedly said they want to find out what the community wants first before making decisions about its future. But what Pacific Power does with the hydroelectric dam is obviously fundamental to any choice. It doesn't make any sense to spend millions dredging if Pacific Power wants to give up the dam. There's also the issue of the ownership of the land under the pond. About 90 percent of it belongs to the McKay family, whose ancestors shaped Bend's development. The family wants liability protection if there is a dredging operation. That's so they wouldn't be forced to pay to clean up the dredged material, if it is found to be contaminated. It's not clear how much that protection might cost. MirrorPond has been a central feature of Bend since 1910. Make your voice count and fill out the questionnaire.

Labor relations board's rules trapped in the past ees but all employees. The NLRB has made recent decisions that found hitting the "Like" button sufficient to indicate concerted action and that a series "Many view social media as of complaints on Facebook without the new water cooler," said Mark any plan for group action is worthy Pearce, the NLRB chairman, to of protection. The New York Times. "All we're The NLRB doesn't allow evdoing is applying traditional rules erything. It recently permitted the to a new technology." firing of a reporter in Tuscon who The NLRB may hold that view tweeted about a slow news night: about social media. But the tra- "You stay homicidal Tuscon." In another permitted firing, there d itional rules can't simply b e was an employee who suggested stretched to cover new technology. on Facebook that health care There is a whale of a difference workers might "withhold care if between chatting around the water they were personally offended by cooler at work and posting com- the patients." ments on the Internet for the world But the Meyers Industries decito see. sion was made 30 years ago. TechThe precedentthat forms the nology has changed. A "virtual basis for the recent NLRB deci- watercooler" that can be broadcast sions was set under a 1983 case around the world is not the same called Meyers Industries. The as the contained environment of a NLRB basically ruled in that de- real watercooler or a picket line. cision that worker activity should If the NLRB's decisions aren't be protected if the action was sensitive to th e d i fference becomplaining about working con- tween blasting complaints out to ditions and acting in a concerted the world through social media way with other employees for mu- and more private discussions, the tual aid and protection. It's been NLRB is not keeping up with techapplied not just to union employ- nology. It's backward. ecent decisions by the National Labor Relations Board have given workers more freedom to gripe about work by tweeting or posting on Facebook.

R

IISUIIE MSPIA SESVICSS

RECOVERV

New gun control laws won't help prevent further tragedy By Don Thomas s an original member of the Central O r egon S h ooting S ports Association and i n light of the recent tragedy in Connecticut, making any new gun laws in the U.S., or in Oregon to be more specific, will not keep an individual from committing a crime with a gun, whether it be pistol or a long rifle.

A

IN MY VIEW Maybe it's a pro boxer that has his fists classified as such. Could it be the daily-used automo-

bile (455 deaths daily)?

Common sense should be the best thing in our arsenal of weapons, but for reasons unknown to man, it's a thing of the past. In the days to come, the issue over Making high capacity magazines guns and related items will be hotly unlawful is like making McDonald's contested, and tempers will flare, 1'm responsible for overweight people sure. But just think for a moment; a because they like lots of french fries gun is a tool, it can lay on a table for — one at a time. many years, loaded, cocked, ready Deranged people that are bent to fire and nothing happens until on killing someone will use many the human element enters and pulls forms of a weapon, may it be a gun, the trigger. knife, hatchet, baseball bat, knitting Our beloved Constitution and needle — or even an automobile. bylaws have survived us for many, 1, for one, support the Second many years now and does not need Amendment of o u r C o nstitution to be changed in any form whatsoand all the rest of the amendments, ever, by anyone, regardless of who and as a Korean veteran fought for they may be, especially from the those rights from 1951-1955 (45,000 present administration, both federal died in the conflict). and Oregon state. I ndividuals u s in g t he Fi r s t The NRA is to be commended for Amendment to attackour Second speaking out against all the frenzy Amendment is the lowest thing any the entire news media has been in American could think of in my opin- for the last month, so anxious to ion. It's outrageous! scoop one another that they get their Legislative bills that would imfacts distorted — grossly. pose any restricti ons on guns, Reporting an "assault rifle" was magazines and related items, must used to kill 26 innocent victims was be killed at the opening gavel of the bogus. Now, the investigation shows 2013 session. Just enforce the exist- that no "assault rifle" was f ired ing law as it is. — the shooter used two handguns Can anyone define to America only! what is an assault weapon? Red RyLater police opened the trunk of der BB guns — 100 rounds! the stolen car, thereupon discover-

ln the days to come, the issue over guns and related items will be hotly

contested, and tempers will flare, l'm sure. But just think for a moment; a gun is a tool, it can lay

on a table for many years, loaded, cocked, ready to fire and nothing happens until the human element enters and pulls the

trigger. ing two rifles with ammo. Providing more help in the mental health department would be a great asset both locally and nationwide for all those who in fact need it and should get it. There are no none shot cure all n answers for us all to expand on, but cool heads will prevail, that I'm certain of, and without any intrusion on all our Second Amendment rights. In closing, as stated before, the gun issue in these United States of America is a very simple thing — it's called responsibility — and, teaching our youth the same culture that we have so much shied away from. — Don Thomas isa member of the Central Oregon Shooting Sports Association and he lives in Bend.

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Let Forest Service experts manage our public lands H

By Royce Deardorff

a ving spent most of my l i f e working in the timber industry dealing with bug-infested forests,wildfires and other hazards associated with the woods, 1 have come to the conclusion that the most costly and greatest danger to wildlife and naturalresources is people who for some reason areso set on their own agendas they cannotsee the forest for the trees. E nvironmental groups that a r e funded by large corporations and other interest groups don't understand how naturalresources really work or how they are managed by our Forest Service. They do harm not only to themselves but do all of us a great disservice. The Forest Serviceis in charge of our public lands and they have experts who have been working in the field for years and know how to manage our forests. Let's let them

manage.

According to the Jan. 7 Bulletin article, "Groups to sue to stop logging," Oregon Wild and Cascadia Wildlands plan to sue the Forest Service to stop the logging on the D-Bug Project, which Forest Service officials say would lower wildfire danger brought on by a mountain pine beetle outbreak that began in 2004 around Diamond Lake and nearby Lemolo

Lake. By halting the logging, they are decreasing the value of the timber over time, which decreases the revenue return that would be extremely beneficial to our public schools, the state's budget, our federal budget and

much more. By being dragged out in court, it will cost taxpayers money to pay for the lawsuit, time and money to review the proposed harvest plan and cause delays to other projects needing attention. In the meantime, the value of the timber is being decreased, bug infestations are destroying healthy forests, the wildfire threat is increased

IN MY VIEW

because of a high volume of fuels left behind by the bugs after they have finished and moved on to another healthy stand of timber. Not to mention the danger of lightning strikes that could cause the fires that destroy timber and other wildlife, and also wipe out spotted owl habitations. The list goes on. It seems to me that the spotted owl is quite crafty and has been known to find habitation within some city limits and other places. Our Forest Service has already spent much money in planning and producing a w orking t imber sale management plan to protect our forests, not just for some, but for this generation and generations to come. 1 believe that the time has come to stop catering to the special interest groups and start broadening our thinking to realize that with good, sound management of our forests and natural

l believe that the time has come to stop catering to the special interest groups and ... realize that with good,

sound management of our forests and natural resources, everyone can start benefiting from that management.

resources, everyone can start benefiting from that management instead of just a few. For revenuefor schools, state budgets, federal budgets, employment to benefit our economy, for the pure pleasure of enjoying something beautiful that was created for all of us. Our forestsare a natural resource. Unattended they will go to terrible waste. History has shown us the cost. We pay when we neglect to take care of our forests, or any natural resource. Correct harvesting, re-planting, thin-

ning, de-bugging and other responsible actions ensure that our forests will continue to benefit us for genera-

tions to come. Just to name two fires from the past, the B 8 B complex fires, located

in the Cascade Range (2003) burned 90,769 acres. Cause: lightning. To name one more,the most recent fire in our area, the Pole Creek Fire (2012), also caused by lightning, forced evacuations of homes in the Sisters area and other hardships to homeowners and forestusers in the area. 1 wonder if these fires could have been preventedor at least been contained to a smaller area if proper thinning an d o t her m a nagement tools would have been in motion. — ROyCe Deardarff liVeSiITBend.


THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

BS

OREGON NEWS

BITUARIES DEATH NoTIcEs Alma Elizabeth Shortreed Ronald "Ron" W. Molebash, of Bend

Sept. 12, 1926- Jan. 20, 2013

Alma Elizabeth (Spencer) S hortreed o f Red m o n d , OR, passed awa y p e a cefully with her family at her side on January 20, 2013. She was 86. A Memor ial Se r v ice w i l l be held on Saturday, January 2 6, 2 0 1 3, Contributions mey be made at' 100 to: p .m. at Partners In Care Terreb2075 NE Wyatt Court o nne A s Bend, Oregon 97701 Alma Shortreed sembly of www.partnersbend.org God Church, located at279 N W Smith R oc k W a y i n Terrebonne, OR. A r e cept ion w il l i m m e diately f o l low. Death Notices are free and Alma was b or n S eptemwill be run for one day, but ber 12, 1926, i n S t e r ling, specific g Uidelines must be Colorado, t o D e a n and followed. Local obituaries Minnie (Mitchell) Spencer; are paid advertisements and along with he r sister, A lice an d b r o t h er , A l a n submitted by families or w ere triplets. As a y o u n g funeralhomes. They may be girl, she moved t o S outhsubmitted by phone, mail, e rn Oregon with her f a m email or fax. The Bulletin i ly, eventually s ettling i n reserves the right to edit all Redmond, OR, wh ere she submissions. Please include graduated from R e dmond contact information in all U nion H i g h S c h oo l a n d correspondence. l ived f o r m o r e t h a n 5 1 years. She married Lester For information on any of Shortreed in Redmond, OR these services or about the in 1949. obituary policy, contact A lma spent m ost o f h e r 541-617-7825. career working in the food Deadlines:Death Notices service industry as a c h ef are accepted until noon and owned and managed a Mondaythrough Friday for n umber of Redm o n d ' s next-day publication and by most p opular r e staurants 4:30 p.m. Friday for Sunday and cafes. She was an avid b o w l er and Monday publication. and also enjoyed p l aying Obituaries must be received c ards with f r i ends and o f by 5 p.m. Monday through course, baking. But, m o st Thursday for publication of all sh e enjoyed spendon the second day after ing time with her family. submission, by A lma is survived by h e r 1 p.m. Friday for Sunday or s ons, W i l l i a m "Kenneth" Monday publication, and by (wife, Linda) Shortreed of 9a.m. Mondayfor Tuesday H ouston, T X , W a y n e E . (wife, Kathleen) Shortreed publication. Deadlines for o f T e r rebonne, O R , a n d display ads vary; please call S pencer T . S h o r t reed o f for details. Redmond, OR; d aughters, Phone: 541-617-7825 Mary P. (husband, Donald) Email: obits©bendbulletin.com L isius o f O l y m p i a , W A , Fax: 541-322-7254 a nd C a th y E . M il l e r o f Redmond, OR. Other surMail:Obituaries v ivors i nc l u d e A l ma' s P.O. Box 6020 triplet si ste r , A li ce Bend, OR 97708 Johnson of Redmond, OR; h er sisters, Rut h H y l t o n , also of Redmond, OR, and DEATHS L ois B u chanan o f C h a r lotte, N C ; 1 5 gr a n d c hilELSEWHERE d ren a n d ma ny g r e a t grandchildren. She is preceded in death Deaths of note from around by her loving husband; her the world: parents and tw o b r o t hers Cardinal Jozef Glemp, 83: and one sister. Head of Poland's influential Memorial co n t r i b utions Roman Catholic church from in Alma's memory may be 1981 to 2004 — a time when s ent t o H o s p ice o f R e d it played a historic role in the mond-Sisters, 732 SW 23rd Red m o n d, OR fight a g ainst c o m munism. Street, 9 7756, or T errebonne A sDied Wednesday. sembly of God Church, 279 Taiho, 72: Considered the NW Smith Rock Way, Tergreatest sumo wrestler of post- rebonne, OR 97760. war Japan despite his weight A utumn F u n e r al s R e d of justover 300 pounds. Died mond is honored to serve the family, (541) 504-9485, on Saturday in Tokyo. — From wire reports www.autumnfunerals.net. Dec. 22, 1935 - Jan. 21, 2013 Arrangements: Baird Funeral Home (541) 382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A Memorial Service will take place at Eastmont Church, located at 62425 Eagle Road in Bend on Thursday, January 24, 2013, at 10:30 AM.

Obituary policy

Springfield womantests 'smart bomb' cancer drug,savingherself and others By Bob Welch

The choice wasn't hard, says Jolly, a retired elemenSPRINGFIELD She taryschoolteacher. "This or hospice? Which doesn't strike you as your typical hero. Eighty-three years would you choose?" she asks. old. Lives in a S p r ingfield "I just thought if I can help mobile home park in a house anyone else I'd go ahead and with no medals on the wall, no do it." newspaper clippings in a bindIn 2008, Jolly was diager, no calendars with speak- nosed with follicular lympho-

her ascomfortable as possible until she died — or enrolling her in a research trial for a drug that has yet to be approved by the Federal Drug Administration for her type of cancer. It's called brentuximab ve-

dotin, developed by Seattle Genetics, which touts itself as "the industry leader in antibody-drug conjugates, a technology designed to harness the targeting ability of monoclonal antibodies to deliver cell-killing agents directly to cancer cells." Smart bombs, if you wilL "These 'smart bombs' are the way things are going," said Cho. "In traditional chemotherapytreatment for decades, (the drug) preferentially hits cancer cells but also hits your hair, gets in your gut, your immune system...." With smart bomb technology, he said, "companies are learning to bring the chemotherapy directly to the cancer cell and so you don't get all the collateral damage. You get the best of both worlds: the benefit of the treatment without a lot of side effects." Jolly was fortunate to even have a choice. The Willamette Valley institute happened to be leading this particular clinical trial; the center has been part of studies that have led to 43 FDA-approved cancer therapies. This particular drug had

never been tried on a patient with relapsed follicular lymp homa, but after Cho r a n some tests on Jolly, he concluded the drug might work on her. "Dr. Cho is real good," says Jolly. "He didn't say 'you gotta have this.' It was my choice." She began treatment last June. She felt tired for three or four days after each treatment and lost a little hair, but experienced no other side effects. Meanwhile, over the first five months of treatmentand six doses — Jolly's cancer responded dramatically. A PET scan (positron emission tomography) showed her cancer was virtually gone. The scan highlights sugar — "cancer uses lots of sugar," says Cho — and the "after" image showed high substances of sugar only in her brain and bladder, which are high-sugar areas. The other high-sugar areas from the "before"had

the biggest demand, which is wireless services, and any Continued from B1 that you don't make available Walden said it was vital diminishes our ability to build that the auctions are handled out broadband across the properly. He said he will keep countryside," he said. "This an open mind abouthow the is a very valuable, taxpayerFederal Com m u nications owned commodity." Commission proceeds, but The subcommittee will also he has some concerns that it monitor the progress of Firstwill make the guard bands, or Net, an interoperable public bufferregions between users, safety network, which was too big, and waste precious also enacted into law during spectrum. the last Congress, he said. "We're trying to f ree up It will also look for ways spectrum so itcan be auc- to make th e government's tioned for what is arguably spectrum use more effi cient,

and to see if any blocks of broadband can be consolidated or repurposed. Much of the government's broadband use involvesthe Defense Department, which complicates the subcommittee's efforts to streamline. Walden said the subcommittee is fortunate to have Rep. Mike Rogers, R-Mich., as part of the Federal Spectrum Working Group, because as chairman of the House Select Intelligence Committee, "he can get behind a curtain that we're not even allowed

to know exists some days because of his clearance levels." T he s ubcommittee w i l l also delve into cybersecurity, building on hearings it held during the last Congress, he said. Experts told members to make "first, do no harm" a guidingprinciple, and Walden intends to tread carefully. "When you get too prescriptive, the bad guys know what the good guys are held to, and then they find a way around it," he said.

Lottery

last six years, and is budgeted to receive $112,000 next year outside of any funds allocated to Sisters or La Pine. EDCO Executive Director Roger Lee said his organization has found communities often prefer to have somebody working solely on their behalf rather than rely on EDCO's regional efforts. Commissioner Alan Unger said while he largely supports the idea of assisting communities with their economic development initiatives, funding positions in individual cities could create problems if other cities in the county don't feel they're being treated equally. Commissioners briefly dis-

cussed the possibility of outsourcing some of their social welfare spending by working withthe United Way instead of choosing which organizations should be awarded grants. Ken W i lhelm, e xecutive d irector of U nited Way o f Deschutes County, told commissioners his organization would be up to the task, but only if the county provided some direction on the kinds of programs it would like to support. Commissioners are planning further discussion of the issue at their annual planning retreat on Monday.

Eugene Register-Guard

ing eventsforgroups eagerto

ma, a typically slow-growing

hear her story. But in the war on cancer, Norma Jolly is, indeed, a quiet hero. She willingly let herself be

form of n on-Hodgkin lymphoma, a cancer of the white blood cells. She was, says Cho, unable to tolerate more traditional forms of cancer therapy because of other health problems. In 2010, Jolly was given treatment that helped for a while. But by last spring her cancer had turned from slow-

a guinea pig for a new type of anti-cancer drug that proved amazingly effective for her. "She was among the first in the world to get this therapy for her type of cancer," says Dr. Benjamin Cho, J olly's oncologist at Eugene's Willamette Valley Cancer Institute and Research Center. And had she not greenlighted the use of the experimental drug on her? The search for a n swers wouldn't be as far along. And she probably would be dead. "No, she wouldn't be alive at this point," says Cho, 39. "She had a few weeks or a month to live."

growing to aggressive, which, says Cho, usually proves fatal. The cancer had built up particularly thick in her abdomen. He could only offer two

choices: hospice — keeping

Walden

Continued from B1 Sheehan also co-sponsored House Bill 3188 in the 2011 legislative session. The bill would have required each county to file a report describing how it spent its state lottery funds. Separate from any action taken by the Legislature, the city councils in Sisters and La Pine have approached the county commission in search of lottery dollars to finance their own economic development efforts, diverting some of thefunds currently used to bolster the social safety net. Sisters City Council President McKibben Womack told

commissioners W e dnesday he's seeking a commitment of $30,000 a year for two years to hire a person to focus on business recruitment. Commissioner Tony DeBone said La

Pine is looking for help hiring a half-time person to do similar work luring companies to the La Pine Industrial Park. If funded, both positions would likely be coordinated with Economic Development for Central Oregon, a regional o rganization that works i n Crook, Deschutes and Jefferson counties. EDCO has received more lottery-funded economic development dollars than any other organization in Deschutes County over the

disappeared.

"I'm a believer," says Jolly. "Look at those pictures. What

can you say?" Not that she hasn't ruled out other factors in her turnaround. "I pray a lot, too."

— Reporter: 202-662-7456, aclevenger@bendbulletin.com

— Reporter:541-383-0387, shammers@bendbulletin.com

E er wasaccom is e Frenc orn a er an con uctor By Margalit Fox New Yorh Times News Service

Joseph Eger, a French horn player, conductor and advocate for progressive causes whose work sought

FEATURED to p r o mote OgpUARy harmony in

both senses of the word, died on Jan. 13 at his home in Durham, N.C. He was 92. His wife, Dorita Beh-Eger, confirmed the death. A distinguished horn soloist in the mid-20th century, Eger later turned to conducting; in the 1960s he served under Leopold Stokowski as an associate conductor of the American Symphony Orchestra. In the 1960s and '70s Eger founded several groups designed to conscript music and the other arts in the service of social change. The best known of these, Symphony for United Nations, a nongovernmental organization associated with the United Nations, was established in New York in 1974. Comprising a f l uid, everchanging roster of professional musicians and other performers, the group has put on concerts throughout the world, including benefit performances for victims of the Chernobyl disasterand Bosnian refugees. It gave its last performance, in San Francisco, with Eger conducting Beethoven's Ninth Symphony, in 2010. Beh-Eger

said she hoped to revive the group under a new conductor. Joseph Eger was born on July 9, 1920, in South Manchester, Conn., and reared in and around Pittsburgh. After studies at the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia, he played in orchestras throughout the United States. By the 1950s he had embarked on a solo career, something that few players of the French horn, with its temperamental constitution and limitedsolo repertory, have been able to do. "When you ask a hornist to name a famous hornist from that time, the name everyone would give was Dennis Brain," said Kate Pritchett, an assistant professor of French horn at Oklahoma City University, invoking the celebrated English player, who died in 1957. "And Joseph Eger was very much the A m e rican e q u ivalent." (Pritchett wrote a doctoral dissertation on Eger's work.) As a soloist, Eger appeared on some of New York's principal concert stages, including Carnegie Hall. Reviewing his performance of Mozart's Third Horn Concerto at Town Hall in 1956, The New York Times wrote that "his playing of the difficult cadenza in the first movement elicited from yesterday's audience a subdued gasp of admiration." In the early 1960s, the slip

New York Times News Service file photo

Joseph Eger, a French horn player and conductor who sought to promote harmony in both senses of the word, is pictured in1972. He died Jan. 13. of a tool while Eger was in the dentist's chair gave him a lip injury that ended his playing career. He switched to conducting, studying under Pierre Monteux. In the '60s and afterward, Eger founded a series of professional and semiprofessional ensembles in Manhattan, among them the West Side Symphony and the New York Orchestral Society, that gave free concerts in city parks, housing projects and other public spaces. By the end of the decade he had begun presenting concerts that fused classical music with

rock and featured psychedelic spectacles by Joshua Light Show. In the early '70s Eger founded Aware, New York, a group intended to p r omote social harmony in the city through live multimedia performances. The next year he founded the Yoga Symphony, which sought to infuse Eastern music and spiritual practice into Western concert halls. Eger's first m a r riage, to Dixie Blackstone, ended in divorce. Beh-Eger, whom he married in 1990, is his only immediate survivor. Among his recordings is a critically praised 1957 album, "Around the Horn" (RCA Victor), which includes solo pieces and alecture by Eger about the French horn. He was the author of a book, "Einstein's Violin: A Conductor's Notes on Music, Physics, and Social Change," published in 2005.

Eger's musical philosophy

was perhaps best expressed by a concert he conducted at Alice Tully Hall in 1972. The program included "Wind Piece," a composition by John Lennon and Yoko Ono that called for huge electric fans to be stationed in the orchestra, blowing the pages of Beethoven's Fifth Symphony at random on players' music stands. The players played whatever page was open at any

given moment. The result, as The Times described it, was "chaos." But that, Eger said, was precisely the point. "You can drop bombs on people," he told The

Times afterward, "and blow their pages apart, so to speak, but the people will remain. London didn't fall apart during the blitz, and New York won't fall apart now."

~u5 er~e Paprre LayernePayne,92,passed away peacefully in Citrus County, Florida. She was born to Hazel 6 Elver Thompson, Sept. 15, 1920, in Portland, Oregon. LaVerne grew Up in Vernonia, married Glenn H. Payne in 1941, and lived many years in Bend, Oregon, where she raised her two daughters. Laverne and Glenn spent their winters in Hawaii and Florida after his retirement as a CPA in Bend. In their later years they lived fulltime in Dunnellon, Florida, until Glenn's death in 2001, at which point LaVerne moved back to Oregon where she lived for 8 years in Seaside. She returned to Florida in 2008.

Laverne and Glenn shared a love of the outdoors and sunshine. They were both avid swimmers, played tennis and golf, enjoyed hiking and fishing. LaVerne also loved riding herhorse, especially trail rides in the High Cascades, and canoeing. Her daughters were raised swimming in cold Cascade mountain rivers and lakes and traipsing up mountainsides or sledding down snowyslopes. She was an active and respected Camp Fire Girl leader for 16 years. Layerne is survived by her brother, Tommy Thompson, Dunnellon, FL; her daughters, Sherri (Payne) Campbell and her husband, Joe Campbell, Portland; Christi Payne and her husband Greg Darms, Astoria; her grandsons, Christopher Campbell, Everett, WA; Rob Campbell, Nilwaukie, OR; and two great-grandsons. The family will hold a small service in the spring at Willamette National Cemetery; any donations made in her name could be made to RaphaelHouse in Portland, OR.

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B6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

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' 48/44

47/39

Umatilla

Hood

Seasidev'~~~ 47/43 •.Cannon Beachi

alls 4//20 ~

/3 9 ~

• -6 0

Fields•

• Lakeview 33/1 9

McDermitt

38I22

Ontario

33/9

o www m Quebec

28/ 3

-1/-2

Bismarc

Organ Pipe, Ariz. • -26 0 Crane Lake, Minn w

16/-1

Billings

ortland~ 43/39

• 84'

• 1.97

Fsaskatoon Wjnnipe

Ca gary j

43/39 • Seattle

(in the 48 contiguous states):

os

J.

t. Paul

t

0

Boise

Toronto

reen Bay 1S/12

San Francisco w Salt Lafte

Detroit

• Jfunalo

Halifax 11/-3 t ortland 13/-6 lftfl ' ton 19/8 ew York 22/12

iladelphia

os 51/19 •,

Omahac

m

27/14 ngton, D.C. 30/19

22/ 8

L

Crescent City, Calif.

66/47 + 9

KL~rigeles,

~

Albu q uerque

Oklahoma City Little Rock

m t HROS Q

t 4S/23

Nashville ~~

o CD HonoluluII5A 80/67

Oanas

65/5th

H A WA I I

4 4 4i 4 + 4 'Pirfningham t

di

r o 4, 4 x

71/51

BO

70s

Chihuahua

lando

71754

-20s -10s Anchorage 27/6 108

8

p

showers in the after-

Monterrey

La Paz 7S/61

M a zatlan 84/69

Cold

Os

CONDITIONS

04 * * + vt 4 4 4 * *** * • t++ + t 3 4 8 4 '* * * * * t a t * +*

FRONTS

OALASKA

3/51

• Miami 76/61

75/56 •

Juneau 37/30

Conditions will stay partly cloudy and

A chance for a few snowflakes throughout the day.

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

HIGH LOW

47 26

40 23

41 2 2

43 21

SUN AND MOON SCHEDULE Sunrisetoday...... 7:30 a.m Moon phases Sunsettoday...,,, 505 p,m F ull L ast N e w First Sunrise tomorrow .. 7:30a.m Sunset tomorrow... 5:06 p.m l• Moonrisetoday.... 3:11 p.m Moonsettoday .... 5:33 a.m Jan. 26 Feb. 3 Feb. 9 reb. 17

• Pl

PLANET WATCH

TEM P ERATURE PRECIPITATION

Tomorrow Rise Set Mercury....7:57 a.m...... 5:26 p.m. Venus......6:44 a.m...... 3:46 p.m. Mars.......8:27 a.m...... 6:38 p.m. Jupiter... 12:33pm......334a.m. Satum......l:11 a.m..... I 1:34 a.m. Uranus.....9:56 a.m.....10:12 p.m.

Yesterday's weather through 4 p.m. inBend High/Low.............. 50/27 24 hours endmg 4 p.m.*. . 0.00" Recordhigh........61 m2005 Monthtodate.......... 0.70" Recordlow........ -15in1962 Average monthtodate... 1.21" Average high.............. 42 Year to date............ 0.70" Average low .............. 25 Average year to date..... 1.21" Barometricpressureat 4 p.m29.89 Record 24 hours ...0.75 in1999 *Melted liquid equivalent

ULTRAVIOLET INDEX

OREGON CITIES

S K IREPORT

Yesterday Thursday Friday The higher the UV Index number, the greater Ski report from around the state, representing Hi/Lo/Pcp H i/Lo/W H i /Lo/Wthe need for eye and skin protection. Index is conditions at 5 p.m. yesterday:

City Precipitationvaluesare24-hour totals through4 p.m.

for solar at noon.

Astoria ........43/38/0.73....45/43/sh.....48/41/sh Baker City...... 30/1 2/0.00.....32/1 8/c.....30/1 6/sn Brookings......53/42/1.50....53/41/pc.....53/42/sh Burns........ . ..28/2/0 00....29/1 5/pc..... 30/I6/rs Eugene........ 37/30/0.24.....45/40/c.....47/37/sh Klamath Falls .. 46/38/0 00 ....41/20/c ...45/25/sh Lakeview.......43/16/0.00 ...33/19/pc.....39/25/pc La Pine........47/30/0.00....43/I9/pc.....42/14/sh Medford.......59/33/0.01 .....53/37/c.....52/37/sh Newport.......45/41/1.09....48/42/sh.....51/42/sh North Bend.....48/45/0.71 .....51/45/c.....53/42/sh Ontario........ 13/-6/0.00....28/12/pc.....26/16/sn Pendleton......25/21/0.00.....43/30/c.....42/31/sh Portland .......36/33/0.20.....43/39/c.....47/39/sh Prinevige....... 51/32/0.00....43/24/pc.....48/29/sh Redmond.......52/23/0.00.....47/27/c.....51/28/sh Roseburg....... 43/38/0.51 .... 53/38/sh..... 51/37/sh Salem ....... 37/32/0 23 ..42/40/c ...46/40/sh Sisters.........46/25/0.00....44/22/pc.....46/22/sh The Dages......32/28/0.00.....42/33/c.....43/31/sh

Snow accumulation in inches

1

Ski area Last 24 hours Base Depth Anthony Lakes ...... . . . . . . . . 0 .0 . . .no report Hoodoo..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .62-70 Mt. Ashland...... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .66-1 04 Mt. Bachelor..... . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . .82-100 Mt. Hood Meadows..... . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 82 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl..... . . . . . . 0 .0 . . . . . . . . 46 Timberline..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . . . 100

L 0

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 ........ . . . . . 0.0...no report

Aspen, Colorado...... . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .20-22 Mammoth Mtn., California.....0.0. . . . .89-192 Park City, Utah ...... . . . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .36-50 Squaw Vagey,California...... . 0 0 . . . . .28-106 Sun Valley, Idaho....... . . . . . . 0.0.. . . . .24-49 Hwy. 58 at Wigamette Pass.... Carry chains or T.Tires Taos, New Mexico...... . . . . . . 0.0. . . . . .32 40 Hwy. 138 at Diamond Lake.... Carry chains or T.Tires Hwy. 242 at McKenzie Pass........ Closed for season Vail, Colorado...... . . . . . . . . . 0.0... . . . . . 22 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-snowflurries, sn-snow,i-ice,rs-rain-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

YeSterday'S

gz

Some flurries are possible, light accurnulatio.

BEND ALMANAC

IFORECAST:5TATE I

Light off and on

noon.

LOW

peratures.

gz

W ar m Stationary Showers T-storms Rain

+

F l urries Snow

Ice

Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday Yesterday Thursday Friday City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W City Hi/Lo/Pcp Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene, TX......76/48/0.00..77/40/pc. 56/34/pc GrandIlapids.....18/4/0.10 ..18/12/pc.. 24/8/sn RapidCity.......26/12/000...43/22/c.. 39/19/s Savannah.......59/30/0 00...60/35/s.. 54/45/c Akron...........16/1/000...20/9/sn. 23/12/sn GreenBay.......14/-2/0.01 ..15/12/pc.. 23/6/sn Reno...........57/28/0 00...48/30/c.. 51/35/c Seattle..........45/35/0 17...46/39/c. 48/39/sh Albany...........10/1/000... 13/6/s .. 19/4/pc Greensboro......41/19/0 00... 34/22/s. 32/22/sn Richmond.......34/14/000... 33/15/s. 30/22/sn Sioux Falls........17/3/000...10/10/c ..17/5/pc Albuquerque.....58/24/000 ..62/34/pc. 56/34/pc Harnsburg........21/9/0 00... 25/12/s. 25/I7/sn Rochester, NY.....14/7/000...13/6/sn. 21/I2/sn Spokane........29/20/004... 34/28/c..36/30/rs Anchorage......33/28/000....27/6/c.. 24/15/c Hartford CT......19/9/000....21/4/s. 20/14/pcSacramento......57/42/0.09... 58/45/c .. 60/43/c Springfield, MO ..57/22/0.00.. 32/24/pc. 45/20/pc Atlanta.........56/29/000 ..51/30/pc.41/34/sh Helena..........33/20/0.00...42/20/c .. 40/24/c St. Louis.........42/13/000 ..28/22/pc..37/19/si Tampa..........71/47/000... 72/54/s .. 74/54/s Atlantic City.....23/10/0.00... 29/14/s. 29/25/sn Honolulu........80/71/0.00... 80/67/s .. 80/67/sSalt Lake City.....20/4/000 .. 36/15/sn.. 40/22/c Tucson..........80/46/000 ..77/52/pc.. 75/50/c Austin..........75/40/0.00 ..76/52/pc.. 72/48/c Houston........75/45/0.00 ..75/57/pc .. 73/53/c SanAntonio.....75/46/000 ..76/54/pc. 74/52/pc Tulsa...........62/27/000...38/28/c. 51/30/pc Baltimore .......25/12/000...29/16/s. 27/19/sn Huntsville.......57/34/000...49/38/r. 40/29/sh SanDiego.......73/56/000 .. 64/55/sh...60/52/r Washington,DC.28/15/000... 30/19/s. 28/21/sn Billings.........37/16/000..51/25/pc. 46/27/pc Indianapolis......22/9/0.00..21/16/pc.. 29/12/c SanFrancisco....55/50/0.08... 57/49/c.. 56/46/c Wichita.........58/19/0.00... 37/25/c. 53/25/pc Birmingham.....54/30/000... 50/38/r. 52/32/sh Jackson, MS.... 68/35/000...58/50/c. 61/32/sh SanJose........59/47/001 .. 61/45/c 60/44/c Yakima.........31/26/001... 37/28/c .. 40/28/c Bismarck........11/1/000...16/I/c..10/5/pc Jacksonvile......63/32/000...70/46/s. 73/51/pcSantaFe........54/22/0.00.. 52/28/pc.48/30/pc Yuma...........79/52/0.00... 77/56/c. 70/53/sh Boise............20/1/000...37/I8/c .. 41/22/c Juneau..........39/33/0 24 .. 37/30/rs. 35/31/sh INTERNATIONAL Boston..........1 7/10/000...19/8/pc. 23/20/pc Kansas City......46/I3/0 00 ..26/22/pc .. 45/I9/s Bndgeport,CT....20/11/000.... 25/9/s. 24/19/pc Lansing..........18/I/0.00 ..17/10/pc .. 22/7/sn Amsterdam......27/19/000 .. 28/23/c 27/19/pc Mecca..........95/72/000 88/69/s. 88/69/pc Buffalo..........15/5/001 ...13/7/sn. 20/13/sn LasVegas.......62/43/000...66/47/c. 61/46/sh Athens..........59/51/0.00 ..61/51/sh. 56/45/sh MexicoCity......66/50/0.00... 68/42/s .. 69/44/s BurlingtonVT..... 0/8/000 .. 3/13/pc..10/ I/pc Lexington.......33/10/0 00 ..26/24/pc. 32/16/sn Auckland........77/64/000...72/59/c.70/61Ipc Montreal........4/17/000.....7/2/s... 2/8/c ..22718/pc.. 39/11/s Baghdad........69/50/000 Caribou,ME.... -5/20/000.:3/13/pc....0/7/s Lincoln...........349/0 00 ..69/57/pc.. 72/57/c Moscow.........16/0/001 ...12/3/pc....7/7/c Charleston SC...56/30/000...57/35/s.. 51/44/c Little Rock.......63/29/000...44/35/c .. 51/31/c Bangkok........93/77/000 ..97/76/pc. 92/76/sh Nairobi.........82/57/000... 78/57/s .. 80/58/s Charlotte........47/19/000...45/23/s...33/27/I LosAngeles......75/59/000..66/54/sh...63/51/r Beiyng..........32/18/000... 25/I0/s. 23/11/pc Nassau.........75/70/000 ..73/64/pc. 73/65/pc Chattanooga.....53/32/000 ..44/29/pc. 38/30/sh Louisvile........39/15/0.00..29/24/pc.. 34/18/c Beirut..........66/59/000...65/58/c.69755/pc New Delh/.......66/41/000...68/46/s .. 69/47/s Cheyenne.......58/39/000 ..51/19/pc. 50/25/pc MadisonWl......19/7/002 ..19/13/pc.. 24/7/sn Berlin...........21/I8/000...22/13/c ..24/9/pc Osaka..........48/41/000 ..51/33/pc .. 39/34/c Chicago.........23/10/000..22/18/pc. 29/14/sn Memphis........55/29/000 38/34/pc..46/30/c Bogota.........70/46/0.00... 68/52/t...68/45/t Oslo............10/-9/0.00 ..19/12/pc.. 11/10/c Cincinnati.......23/14/000..24/19/pc.30/14/sn Miami . . . . 76/64/000 76/61/s 77/62/s Budapest........34/27/004 ..33/23/pc 28/21/c .. Ottawa.........3/18/000.... 2/8/s....l/8/c Cleveland........16/7/000 ..20/11/sn.22/18/sn Milwaukee.......18/4/0.00..21/17/pc. 26/13/sn BuenosAires.....91/66/000 ..99/54/pc .. 77/57/s Paris............37/34/000 ..32/19/pc.25/20/pc Colorado Spnngs.68/23/000..58/27/pc.. 49/28/s Minneapolis......18/I/0 00....9/8/pc ..15/7/pc CabosanLucas..86/66/000..88/70/pc.73/68/pc RiodeJaneiro....88/70/000...85/74/s. 89/76/sh Columbia,MO...45/13/000 ..26/20/pc. 39/16/pc Nashville........53/23/0.00..37/30/pc .. 37/23/c Cairo...........68/55/000.. 74/61/c .. 73/54/s Rome...........52/39/000..51/39/pc.. 46/36/c Columbia,SC....54/27/0.00... 52/2B/s...39/33/i New Orleans.....70/44/0.00... 73/56/s. 76/58/pc Calgary..........10/7/000 .. 42/16/s. 37/19/pc Santiago........86/59/000... 87/67/s .. 87/68/s Columbus GA....59/32/000 ..60/35/pc. 60/40/sh New York.......20/11/0 00... 22/12/s. 23/21/sn Cancun.........77/66/020..76/70/sh ..77/72/c Sao Paulo.......79/64/000..79/67/sh. 83/70/sh Columbus,OH....22/11/000..22/18/pc. 27/11/sn Newark,Nl......21/11/000...24/11/s. 24/21/sn Dublin..........39/30/0.00 .. 39/35/rs...43/36/I Sapporo ........32/20/0.07... 32/7/sn .. 31/9/pc Concord,NH......9/I/000...12/8/s..15/0/pc Norfolk VA......33/23/000..33/18/pc.33/26/sn Edinburgh.......37/32/000... 30/27/c ..33/33/rs Seoul...........37/32/000... 27/2/pc .. 11/3/pc Corpus Christi....80/52/000 ..83/61/pc. 81/60/pc Oklahoma City...70/27/0.00...39/29/c. 49/34/pc Geneva.........36/23/000...30/17/c. 30/20/pc Shangha/........46/36/000...48/34/s. 43/32/pc DallasFtWonh...75/47/000 ..71/51/pc.. 59/40/c Omaha.........29/10/000 ..20/17/pc... 32/9/s Harare..........73/61/000..70/56/sh.78/60/sh Singapore.......86/77/019...84/75/c.86/74/pc Dayton ..........20/8/002 ..21/15/pc.25/10/sn Orlando.........70/43/000...73/51/s.. 75/52/s HongKong......70/63/000..69/54/sh. 67/57/pc Stockholm........18/1/000..19/11/pc.. 13/10/c Denver..........58/35/0.00..65/25/pc.. 54/27/s Palmsprings.....77/52/0.00...73/55/c. 71/53/sh Istanbul.........55/50/0.04 52/52/sh. .. 55/49/sh Sydney..........73/70/0.00... 82/70/t.82/72/pc DesMoines......30/11/000..16/14/pc.. 25/5/pc Peoria..........34/13/0 00..20/I6/pc .. 29/I2/c lerusalem.......59/48/000... 63/57/c.64752/pc Taipei...........66/61/000 ..61/52/pc. 57/53/pc Detroit...........18/5/000 ..21/15/pc.24/13/sn Philadelphia.....22/12/000... 27/14/s. 27/20/sn Johannesburg....84/66/000... 87/65/s .. 90/62/s Tel Aviv.........68/55/000...71/60/c.71/57/pc Duluth........... 5/8/001 ... 6/-I/pc.ll/-10/sn Phoenix.........81/51/0.00..78/56/pc.. 73/54c Lima...........79/70/000 ..80/67/pc. 78/67/pc Tokyo...........46/39/000 ..43/28/pc. 43/29/pc El Paso..........70/29/000 ..71/45/pc.66/44/pc Pittsburgh........16/4/0 00.. 20/10/si. 23/I4/sn Lisbon..........57/43/000.. 59/55/r 60/52/sh Toronto.........14/6/002 15/11/pc..18/10/si Fairbanks......... 9/6/000 -I6/30/sn.-28/48/c Portland ME.......8/0/0 00 .. 13/6/pc .. 17/3/pc London.........36/34/0.01... 33/26/c .. 33/31/c Vancouver.......43/37/0.05... 43/39/c.45/36/sh Farg0...........9/-11/0.00... 5/-3/sn..4/-13/pc Providence.......16/9/0.00....22/6/s. 24/19/pc Madrid .........46/32/000..50/34/pc.41/37/pc Vienna..........28/23/001..30/18/sf.. 25/10/c Flagstaff........51/15/000... 48/31/c. 45/32/sh Raleigh.........42/18/000... 34/23/s. 34/25/sn Manila..........82/73/000..83/72/pc. 81/74/pc Warsaw.........18/14/005...20/9/pc... 17/4/c

NORTHWEST NEWS

Government releasesplan for Columbia Basinpygmyrabbits Getaway

By Nicholas K. Geranios

~I

The Associated Press

ll

SPOKANE, Wash. — The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service on Wednesday released its final recovery plan for the endangered Columbia Basin

pygmy rabbit. The p la n r e c ommended continuing m an y r e c overy efforts already under w ay. Those include r eleases Of captive-bred animals into the wild, relocating pygmy rabbits from places outside the Columbia Basin, and semicontrolled f i e l d br e e ding measures. It also called for surveys to determine if pygmy rabbits may exist in areas not covered in earlier surveys. P ygmy r a bbits a r e t h e s mallest r abbits i n N o r t h America, with adults weighi ng about on e p o und a n d growing to less than a foot

long. Columbia Basinpygmyrabbits are believed to be extinct in the wild. The last known individuals were captured in

2004 for a breeding program intended to boost numbers for eventual reintroduction. Threats to the species include large-scale habitat loss and fragmentation, mainly from past agricultural development, plus f i re, i nvasive plant species, r ecreational activities and livestock grazing. Other t h r eats i n clude extreme weather, predation, disease and loss of genetic diversity. "All these influences have impacted the Columbia Basin pygmy rabbit and t ogether led to th e p opulation's endangered status," the agency said. P ygmy r a bbits r e l y o n sagebrush to p r ovide food and shelter and are one of only two r abbit species in North America that digs its

JkCAI'IIOOM VOO Shannon Dininny/The Associated Press file photo

An adult pygmy rabbit peers out from a a shaded area inside a sixacre enclosure near Ephrata, Wash. in July 2012.

Enjoy a spectacular 5-nighI French Polynesia vacation

0

courtesy of Pleasant Holidays, Getaways Travel and The Bulletin.

ColumbiaBasin pygmyrabbit

own burrows. They usually are found in areas with dense sagebrush cover that h ave relatively deep, loose soils. There are o t her s pecies of pygmy rabbits across the West, but the Columbia Basin

HABITAT THREATS

This fabulous trip for two includes: roundtrip air from Los Angeles on Air Tahiti Nui and five nights'accommodation af Borct Bora Pearl Beach Resort 8c Spc2.A prize package valued at $7,000 -0.

FOR MORE INFORMATION ORTO SUBSCRIBE, CALLTHE BULLETIN AT

,

• Past agricultural

541-385-5800

development • Fire

species has been geographically separated from t h em and is genetically distinct. They w e r e hi s t o rically found t h r o ughout c e n tral Washington, including portions of Douglas, Grant, Lincoln, Adams, Franklin and B enton counties. Th e l a st known w i l d s u bpopulation occurred on state lands in southern D o uglas C o unty. This site also is the location for ongoing s t ate r e introduction efforts that were resumed in 2011. Due to dramatic declines in the number of Columbia Basin pygmy rabbits during the 1990s, the state of Washington started a captive breeding program for the population in 2001. The captive breeding program was conducted in cooperation with W ashington State University, the Oregon Z oo an d N o r t hwest T r ek Wildlife Park. Numerous rab-

ig

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• Invasive plant species • Recreational activities

• Livestock grazing

9

*Winner is responsible for transportation to LOS ANGELESand Transfers from Bora Bora airport to resort and return. Passport valid for more than 6 months after the start of the trip is required.

OTHER THREATS • Extreme weather

• Predation • Disease • Loss of genetic diversity

bits have since been released into the Columbia Basin, and appear to be doing well. The released rabbits have been breeding successfully in protected enclosures of s agebrush, m a nmade a n d natural burrows, and areas with overhead netting to protect the rabbits and their offspring from predators. The enclosures are designed to acclimate the rabbits to their natural environment before biologists release them to the wild.

M Ce ~ ~

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IN THE BACI4: BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NE%S > Scoreboard, C2 Sports in brief, C2 Tennis, C2 Prep sports, C2

NBA, C3

College basketball, C3 NHL, C4

© www.bendbulletin.com/sports

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

COLLEGES

NCAAunder fire in Miami case CORAL GABLES, Fla.— After nearly two years, the NCAA

has finally announced some of the wrongdoing

SNOWBOARDING

White eager to return to slopes leatWinterXGames

discovered during the investigation of Miami's

By Pat Graham

athletic compliance practices.

Make no mistake, though: His strength is not tied to his hair. His command comes from innovation as he perpetually tries to stay two steps ahead of the competition in the halfpipe, where he performs tricks few others would dare attempt

The alleged rulebreakers: Former NCAA

employees. NCAA President Mark Emmert revealed Wednesday that the Miami investigation is on hold after the gov-

The Associated Press

and captures about every big competition he enters. But that is not enough. White, 26, wants to be just as commanding — and just as feared — in the slopestyle competition, especially with the event making its Olympic debut next winter in Sochi. SeeWhite/C4

;

David Zatubowski /The Associated Press file

Shaun White competes at the Winter X Games in 2010. White hopes to return to the top of the heap in slopestyle at this year's X Games.

BOXING

erning body for college

NFL: SUPER BOWL XLVII

sports in this country

discovered "a very severe issue of improper conduct" — specifi-

Erratic

cally that the attorney for former booster and convictedPonzischeme architect Nevin Shapiro

kicker has 49ers crossing fingers

was used "to improperly obtain information ... through a bankruptcy proceeding that did not involve the NCAA." The NCAAdoes not

I,,g

have subpoenapower. At least one of the peo-

ple deposed byattorney Maria Elena Perez as part of Shapiro's bank-

ruptcy case appeared undersubpoena,and

his testimony would not have been otherwise available to NCAA investigators. The investigators who were involved are no longer with the NCAA, Emmert said. "How in the world can you get this far without it being recognized that

By Greg Bishop New Yorh Times News Service

In this, the strangest season of his National Football League career, David Akers connected on a 63yard field goal, nearly shanked his way out

this was an inappropriate way to proceed?"

of employ-

Emmert asked. That's the question that the NCAA wants answered, and fast. Miami

has been bracing for the arrival of its notice of al-

legations — the charges it will have to defend itself against during the sanctioning phase of the

NCAA probe. Thoseallegations are now onhold until an outside review

of the NCAA's procedures, specifically in this

case, are completed. — The Associated Press

NFL

Seau's family sues league Add Junior Seau's family to the thousands

of people whoare suing the NFL over the long-

term damagecaused by concussions. Seau's ex-wife and four children sued the

league Wednesday, saying the former line-

backer's suicide wasthe result of brain disease caused by violent hits he sustained while playing football. The wrongful death lawsuit, filed in California

Superior Court in San Diego, blames the NFL for its "acts or omissions" that hid the dangers of repetitive blows to the head. It says Seau

Ryan Brennecke /The Bulletin

From left, local boxers Victor Bernabe, 12, Jose Beltran, 13, and Beto Avila, 15, will be competing in the National Silver Gloves Tournament in Missouri Jan. 30-Feb. 4, representing the Deschutes County Rocks boxing club.

• Several young Central Oregon boxers are headed to the National Silver Gloves Tournamentfor... By Mark Morical

Bend boxers Beto Avila, 15, Jose Beltran, 13, and VictorBernabe, 12,are headed to Missouri The modest-sized gym nestled between Sil- next week. Avila, a sophomore at Bend High ver Moon Brewery and the Bend Parkway on School, fights at 125 pounds. Beltran, an eighththe edge of downtown is cramped with nearly grader at Pilot Butte Middle School, boxes at 106 20 boxers jumping rope, punching bags and pounds. And Bernabe, a sixth-grader at High grinding out sit-ups. DesertMiddle School,competes at75 pounds. The walls are covered with promotional postFor Avila and Bernabe, the trip to nationals ers of bygone professional fights, old newspaper will be their first time on an airplane. "It's something amazing," says Avila, taking clippings, and even a life-size cutout of Sylvester Stallone. a break from jumping rope during his workout. At the Deschutes County Rocks Boxing Club "You feel proud of it. You're going to represent in Bend, young Central Oregon fighters are Oregon. It's just really sweet to have an opporjust starting out in the training they hope will tunity like this." one day lead them to the Olympics and the pro Rocks coach Richard Miller has taken many ranks. of his boxers to national events in the nine years Three of those boxers are taking an impor- since he started the club in Bend, but never has tant step in that direction, having qualified for he had as many as three advance to a single nathe 2013 National Silver Gloves Tournament, set tional event. forJan.30-Feb. 4 in Independence, Mo. SeeBoxing/C4 The Bulletin

Madrasdoxeralso off to nationals Another Central Oregon boxer, 10-year-old Kywon

Thompson, of Madras, has also qualified for the 2013 National Silver Gloves Tournament. A fifth-grader at Metolius

Elementary School, Thompson competes for the TFT

(The Fighting Thompsonsi boxing club in Madras. Thompson, who will box in the 80-pound weight class, is making the trip to Missouri with his father and coach, Del-

Ray Thompson. — Bulletin staff report

ment in San Francisco, A kers underwent treatment for a double hernia injury, received death threats on social media, shuttered his Twitter account and won a job competition that took place beforethe playoffs started. Some season. It will end less than two weeks from now, in the ultimate triumph or perhaps the worst kind of defeat. It could end with the payoff Akers always hoped for, his first Super Bowl ring. Or it could end with another missed field goal in a season filled with far too many of them, a result that would live in ignominy for a kicker who until 2012 was known for his reliability. As the 49ers prepare for Super Bowl XLVII, the franchise's most important game in more than a decade, the body part that produces the most angst per pound is not the torn triceps tendon of defensive lineman Justin Smith, nor the right arm of the inexperienced young quarterback Colin Kaepernick. It is Akers' left leg. On Monday, coach Jim Harbaugh told reporters in San Francisco that "David Akers is our kicker" for the Super Bowl. SeeKicker /C4

developed chronic traumatic encephalopathy

(CTE) from those hits, and accuses the NFL of deliberately ignoring and

concealing evidenceof the risks associated with traumatic brain injuries.

Seau died atage43of a self-inflicted gunshot

in May. Hewasdiagnosed with CTE, based

on posthumous tests, earlier this month. — The Associated Press

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Ducks, Beavers post Pac-12 wins Oregon improves to 6-0 in league, OSU gets first

conference victory,C3

Ashley Wagner, of the United States, skates her

free program to win the silver at the ISU figure skating Grand Prix Final event in December of last year in Sochi, Russia. Wagner will try to defend her title at nationals, which begin today in Omaha, Neb. Ivan Sekretarev / The Associated Press File

FIGURE SKATING

Wagner wants to defend national title and bonor of Americanskating "For me, it has been my dream to notjust go to the Olympics, but be competitive at the Olympics and be a medal hopeful." — Ashley Wagner, the favorite to win the upcoming U.S. Figure Skating Championships

By Nancy Armour

der the pressure and expectations, she has thrived, giving Go ahead. Put an entire the Americans their best shot country's Olympic medal hopes on the international scene since on Ashley Wagner's shoulders. Michelle Kwan and Sasha CoAsk that she single-handedly hen hung up their skates. " For me, i t h a s b een m y return the A m erican women to glory in a sport they once d ream to not j ust g o t o t h e ruled. Olympics, but be competitive She can take it. at the Olympics and be a medal Since winning her first title at hopeful," said the 21-year-old the U.S. Figure Skating Cham- Wagner, an overwhelming fapionships last y ear, Wagner vorite at this year's nationals, has shown she is not like the which begin today in Omaha, one-hit wonders who preceded Neb. her. Rather than cracking unSee Skating /C4 The Associated Press


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

ON THE AIR: TELEVISION TODAY TENNIS 12:30 a.m.:Australian Open, men's first semifinal, ESPN2. 10 a.m.:Australian Open, men's first semifinal (taped), ESPN2.

FRIDAY TENNIS 12:30 a.m.:Australian Open, men'ssecond semifinal,ESPN2. 10 a.m.:Australian Open,

men's second semifinal (taped), ESPN2.

GOLF 2 a.m.:European Tour, Qatar Masters, second round, Golf Channel.

GOLF 1:30a.m.: EuropeanTour,

Noon:PGA Tour, Farmers Insurance Open, first round, Golf Channel.

Channel. Noon:PGATour, Farmers Insurance Open,second round,

WINTER SPORTS Noon:WinterX Games, ESPN. 6 p.m.: WinterX Games,ESPN.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.:Men's college, VCUat Richmond, CBSSN.

4 p.m.: Men'scollege,Purdue vs. Michigan, ESPN. 4 p.m.:Men's college, Tennessee at Mississippi, ESPN2.

Qatar Masters, third round, Golf

Golf Channel.

WINTER SPORTS Noon:WinterX Gam es,ESPN. 7:30 p.m.:Winter X Games, ESPN.

HOCKEY 4:30 p.m.:Men's college, Yale at Cornell, NBCSN.

BASKETBALL 4 p.m.: Men'scollege,Loyola

(Md.) at Manhattan, ESPNU. 5 p.m.: NBA, San Antonio Spurs State at Tennessee Tech, ESPNU. at Dallas Mavericks, ESPN. 5 p.m.:NBA, New York Knicks at 6 p.m.:Women's college, Boston Celtics, TNT. Arizona at UCLA, Pac-12 5:30 p.m.:Men's college, Calat Network. Utah, Pac-12 Network. 6 p.m.:Men's college, Green 6 p.m.:Men's college, LICLA at Bay at Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Arizona, ESPN2. ESPNU. 6 p.m.:Men's college, Wyoming 6:50 p.m.:Boys high school, at UNLV, CBSSN. Redmond at Mountain View, 7 p.m.:Men's college, Stanford COTV. at Colorado, ESPNU. 8 p.m.:Women's college, 7 p.m.: Men'scollege,TexasColorado at Cal, Pac-12 Network. San Antonio at Seattle, Root

5 p.m.:Men's college, Murray

BOXING

Sports. 7:30 p.m.:Men's college, USC at Arizona State, Pac-12 Network.

7:30 p.m.:NBA, Los Angeles Clippers at Phoenix Suns, TNT. 8 p.m.:Men's college, BYU at Gonzaga, ESPN2.

9 p.m.:Men's college, Pepperdine at Loyola Marymount (same-day tape),

6 p.m.: Friday Night Fights, Sergiy Dzindziruk vs. Brian Vera, ESPN2. Listings arethe mostaccurate available. 777e Bulletin/s not responsi bleforlatechangesmadeby TV or/adiostations.

Root Sports.

SPORTS IN BRIEF BASKETBALL

and Royal 8 Ancient Golf Club

announced Nov. 28 aproposed

PeliCanS, not HOrnetS — The New Orleans Hornets are moving ahead with plans

to change their name to the Pelicans nextseason,people familiar with the decision said.

The people spoke to TheAssociated Press Wednesdayon condition of anonymity because the Hornets have not announced the name change.Thepeople say that is expected to come Thursday, when the club also

rule that would outlaw players from anchoring the club against their bodies. That's the

stroke used for belly putters and broom-handle putters. Another month remains in a

90-day comment period before

the governing bodies decide whether to adopt the rule. Then, it would not be enforced until 2016.

SantoS leadS in Qatar

has said since buying the NBA club last spring that he wanted

— Ricardo Santos of Portugal had five birdies on his back nine to finish with a 7-under 65 Wednesdayin the opening round of the Qatar Masters in

a new namerepresenting New

Doha, taking a oneshot lead

Orleans and Louisiana. The brown pelican is the state bird

over Anthony Wall and Peter Whiteford. Santos finished with

andhasbecome symbolicof

eight birdies to go with a lone bogey on his second hole. Com-

will unveil the proposed new

color scheme of blue, gold and red. Hornets owner TomBenson

efforts to restore Louisiana's fragile coast, which has been hit hard by the 2010 BP oil spill

and erosion from major storms including Hurricane Katrina,

which displaced the Hornets to Oklahoma City for two seasons from 2005-07.

Knicks mostvaluadle-

on Sunday, the 30-year-old golfer from Portugal is looking

for his second win on the European Tour.

as the most valuable team in the

hOStS —Thirteen U.S. cities,

NBA, according to Forbes'annu- from Miami to Seattle, will host al study. Boosted by renovations Gold Cup gamesthis summer. Knicks' value increased 41percent to $1.1 billion. The Lakers were second at $1 billion. The

report releasedWednesday estimated the averageNBAteam's value at $509 million, a 30 per-

The federation for soccer in North America, Central America

and the Caribbeanannounced the sites Wednesday for the July 7-28event.M atchups have not

been determined. Eight of the stadiums have never taken part

cent increase from last year. The in the tournament: Atlanta; BalChicago Bulls, Boston Celtics timore; Denver; Hartford, Conn.; and Dallas Mavericks round out the top five. Portland is No. 15.

Today Wrestling: MountainViewat Summit, 7p.m. Swimming: Sisters atSweetHome three way, 3:30 p.mJ Ridgeview at Madras, 4:45p.m. Friday Boys basketball: Bendat CrookCounty, 7 p.m., Madras atGiadstone, 7p.m.; Sisters atElmira,5:45 p.mc NorthLakeat Gilchrist, 8:30 pm.; Central Christian atGriswold, 6:30p.m.; Triadat Trinity Lutheran,5:30p.m.; RidgeviewatSummit, 7p.m.; RedmondatMountain View,7p.m.; Sweet Homeat La Pine,5:45p.m. Girls basketball: CrookCountyat Bend,7 p.m.; MountainViewat Redmond, 7 p.mcGladstoneat Madras, 7p.m.;Sistersat Elmira, 7:30p.m.; North Lake atGilchrist, 7 p.m.; CentralChristianat Griswold,5 p.m.;TriadatTrinity Lutheran,4 p.m.; Sum-

mit at Ridgeview,7 p.mcSweet Home at LaPine, 7:15 p.m. Swimming: Bend,Summit, MountainViewat Bend City MeetatJuniper Swim& FitnessCenter, 3:45 p.m. Wrestling: Redmond,Crook County, Culverat Reser Tournam ent of Champions at Liberty Highin Hillsboro, 10a.m.; MountainViewat HoodRiver Valley,TBD Saturday Boys basketball: Gilchrist atPaisley, 4p.mcCondon/Wheeleatr Central Christian, 5:30p.m.; Trinity Lutheran at HosannaChristian, 7 p.m.;Waldport at Culver,4p.m. Girls basketball: GilchristatPaisley,230p.mcCondon/Whee er/Arlington atCentral Christian, 4p.m.; Trinity Lutheranat HosannaChristian, 5:30p.m.; WaldportatCulver,2:30p.m. Alpine skiing: OSS Aat Hoodoo,Slalom,TBD Nordic skiing: OHSN Oclassic raceat TeacupSnopark, 11a.m.;OISRAskateandrelay racesat WillamettePass,11:30a.m. Wrestling: Chiloquin at Gilchrist, TBD;Mountain View at HoodRiverInvitational, TBD; Redmond, Crook County,Culver at ReserTournament of Champions at Liberty High in Hiffsboro,TBD; Ridgeview, Summit, Sisters at MadrasInvitational, 11a.m.

PREP SPORTS Wrestling Wednesday'sresults Redmond78, Bend3 At RedmondHighSchool 106 — Doescher,R, pins Simms, B,:42. 113 Woodward, R,wins byforfeit. 120 — Rystedt, R, pins Navez,B,1:36. 126 Short, R,winsbyforfeit 132 — Christiansen,R, pinsDuPuis 8, 3:52. 138 — Block, B,det.Wiliams, R,8-5. 145—Hickey, R, pins Blake,B,:51. 152 — Lindquist, R,pinsVinton, 8,:36. 160 —Barichio, R,wins byforfeit. 170 —G. Brauchler,R,pins Hanson,B,3:05.182 —Sigado, R, pins Foisset, 8,3:10.195 Gates, R,pinsGentner, 8, 2:41.220—Saulsbury, R,pins O'Connor, 8, 4:19. 285 — Breitling, R, winsbyforfeit. Cronk County78, LaPine 0 At CrookCountyHighSchool 106 Shores ,CC,def.Wilson,LP,4 2.113 Tr. Libolt,CC,wins byforfeit.120 — Avina,CC,wins by forfeit. 126 — Ovens,CC,wins byforfeit. 132 — Bates,CC,pins Knabe, LP,1:07. 138 —Meeker, CC, pinsMacy,LP,5:55. 145 — Shinkle, CC,pins Love, LP, 3:31. 152 — Barber,CC,wins byforfeit. 160 D. Smith, CC,pins Swayze,LP,3:22. 170 — Swindle,CC,pins Markland, LP,:48.182 — Biasius, CC,winsbyforfeit. 195 — Crawiord, CC,pins Bryant,LP,3:20. 220—Rasmussen,CC,def. Jaynes, LP,7-3. 285 —Wiliams,CC,pins Duffey,LP,1.47.

Crook County71, Ridgeview6 At CrookCountyHighSchool 106 — Shores,CC,pins Boatman,RV,1:54.113 — Tr. Libolt, CC, winsbyforleit 120 — Avina, CC, def. CarpenteRV r, , 18-2. 126— Ovens, Cc, winsby forfeit. 132 — Bates,CC,def. Rodm an, RV,17-4. 138 Meeker,CC,wins byforfeit. 145 Shinkle, CC, pinsPrescott, RV5:14. 152—Barber,CC,def. Paniagua,RV,6-0. 160 — D.Smith, CC,def. Wolford, RV,20-5.170 — Swindle, CC,winsbyforfeit. 182 — Fleming,RV,pins Blasius, CC,3:42. 195 —Crawford,CC,wins byforfeit. 220—Rasmussen, CC, pinsSperling, RV,3:32 285 Williams, CC, pins Chavez, RV,:33.

FOOTBALL NFL NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE AO TimesPST

PostseasonGlance Pro Bowl Sunday At Honolulu AFCvs.NFC,4p.m.(NBC) Super Bowl Sunday, Feb.3 At NewOrleans Baltimorevs. SanFrancisco, 3p.m.(CBS)

Betting line

NFL 6. Totals 25-5318-2674. O p e n Current Underdog Halftime —Oregon St. 39-29 3-Point GoalsFeb. 3 Washington7-18 (Wilcox4-11, Suggs2-5, Gaddy 49ers 4 .5 3 . 5 Ravens 1-2), OregonSt. 6-19 (Starks 2-4, Schaftenaar2-6, Nelson 2-8, Barton0-1). Fouled Out—Gaddy Rebounds —Washington35(N'Diaye10), OregonSt. 36 BASKETBALL (Moreland10).Assists Washington11(Andrews6), OregonSt. 18(Coffier 5). Total Fouls—Washington Men's college 21, Oregon St.14.A—4,213. Wednesday'sGames Pacific-12 Conference East AN TimesPST AmericanU.72,Navy49 BostonU.85,Albany(NY)80,OT Conference Overall Colgate93, Army90,OT W L W L Drexel55,Hofstra52 Oregon 6 0 17 2 GeorgeMason77,Towson67 UCLA 5 1 15 4 George Washington66,RhodeIsland 65 Arizona 4 1 16 1 La Salle54, Butler53 Washington 4 2 12 7 Lafayette63, HolyCross53 Arizona St . 3 2 14 Lehigh65,Bucknell 62 Southern Ca 3 3 8 11 Northeastem95,Wiliam 8 Mary91, 2OT California 2 3 10 7 Saint Louis73,Duquesne64 Stanford 2 3 11 7 SetonHall55, SouthFlorida 47 Colorado 2 4 12 6 St. Bonaventure 73, SaintJoseph's 64 OregonSt. 1 5 11 8 St. John's72,Rutgers 60 Washington St. 1 5 10 9 StonyBrook67,UMBC60 Utah 1 5 9 9 Temple76, Penn69 Wednesday' s Games WestVirginia71,TCU50 Oregon 68,Washington State61 South Oregon State74,Washington 66 Campbel69, l Radford 60 Today'sGames CharlestonSouthern 79,Presbyterian 59 California at Utah,5:30p.m. Charlotte63,Xavier57 UCLAatArizona 6p.m. DelawareSt.63,Howard46 Stanfordat Colorado,7p.m. EastCarolina91,UAB85 USCatArizonaState, 7.30p.m. Florida64,Georgia 47 Saturday'sGames GeorgiaSt.81 UNCWilmington63 UCLAatArrzonaState,1 p.m. High Poin96, t VMI69 WashingtonStateatOregonState, 2p.m. JamesMadison64,Delaware50 USCatArizona,4 p.m. LSU58,TexasA&M54 WashingtonatOregon,4p.m. Miami 90,Duke63 Sunday'sGames NorthCarolina79,Georgia Tech63 CaliforniaatColorado,12.30p.m. SouthernMiss. 102,Marshall 46 S tanford at Ut a h, 6 p.m. UCF78,Rice67 UNCAsheville 63,Coastal Carolina60 Vanderbilt 73,Aubum61 Wom en's college Winthrop61,Gardner-Webb55 Wednesday'sGames Midwest East Akron71,Toledo56 Albany(NY)57,Boston U.50 BowlingGreen70,Kent St.55 Army51 Colgate48 Buffalo66, BallSt.63 Ba I St.69,Buffalo 55 Dayton96, Fordham51 Buckneff 53,Lehigh 37 Drake74, Creighton69 Butler 75,UMass61 Evansville66,Bradley56 Harff ord63,New Hampshire56 Rl.-chicago60,Milwaukee50 Holy Cross60,Lafayette 55 RlinoisSt.60, IndianaSt.58 Navy61,American U.42 Indiana72,PennSt. 49 NotreDame73, Pittsburgh 47 Loyola ofChicago67 ClevelandSt.55 Provi dence65,Viff anova60,OT N. Illinois74,Cent. Michigan61 St. Bonaventure 48,RhodeIsland28 N. Iowa58, S.Illinois 45 Syracuse 60, St.John's57 Northwestern55,Minnesota48 Temple59,Penn51 Ohio74,Miami(Ohio) 62 UMBC70,StonyBrook 59 Valparaiso73,GreenBay61 Vermont61,Maine53 WMichigan63, E.Michigan59 South WichitaSt.62, Missouri St.52 Chattanooga 66 Samford 60 Youngstown St.68,WrightSt. 61 Davidson88, UNC-Greensboro 48 Southwest Duquesne 73,VCU51 Arkansas96 Mississippi St.70 FIU 64,Louisiana-Lafayette63, OT TexasTech56, lowaSt. 51 GramblingSt. 76,NewOrleans44 Tu sa87, Houston 72 Saint Louis52, Richmond49 Far West SouthAlabama56, W.Kentucky46 Air Force90,NewOrleans48 Tennessee St. 76,Jacksonville St.67 BoiseSt.74, FresnoSt. 67 W. Carolina88,Furman83, 30T NewMexico66,ColoradoSt.61 Wofford56,Coll. of Charleston55 NewMexicoSt.53, Denver42 Midwest Oregon68,Washington St.61 Baylor66,lowaSt. 51 OregonSt.74,Washington 66 Cent. Michigan 77,Ohio48 San DiegoSt. 78,Nevada57 Fordham 48,Xavier 41 SantaClara66,CSBakersfield 36 Kansas76,Texas38 Kansas St.76,OklahomaSt.70,OT Wednesday'sSummaries To edo77,Akron65 W. Michigan54,N. 8inois51 Southwest No. 16 Oregon68

Favorite

Washington St. 61

UALR77,FAU45

WASHINGTON ST.(10-9) Motum4-115-614, Shelton2-50-05, Ladd6-14 5-1019, Lacy1-84-4 7,Woolridge3-7 0-06,Leavitt 0-0 0-0 0, Dilorio 0-20-0 0, Hunter0-0 0-0 0,Longrus1-20 02, Hayenga 010 00, Kernich-Drew3 6 0 08. Totals 20-5614-20 61. OREGON (17-2) Kazemi7-132-316, Singler 7-123-319, Woods 2-4 3-3 7,Artis1-5 4-6 7, Dotson3-10 3-411, Loyd 0-1 0-0 0,Austin0-0 0-00, Carter1-20-0 2, Emory 3-80-26 Totals 24-5515-21 68. Halftime WashingtonSt 39 29.3-Point Goals WashingtonSt. 7-24 (Kernich-Drew2-4, Ladd2-6, Motum 1-3, Shelton 1-3, Lacy1-5, Hayenga0-1, Woolridge 0-1, Dilorio0-1), Oregon5-16 (Singler 24, Dotson 2-6, Artis1-4, Loyd0-1, Em ory 0-1). Fouled Out — None.Rebounds— WashingtonSt.33(Ladd8), Oregon37 (Dotson9). Assists WashingtonSt. 10 (Ladd5), Oregon18(Singler 5). TotalFous—WashingtonSt.19,Oregon19. A—6,946.

NewMexico68, CooradoSt. 54 San DiegoSt.69, Nevada57

Oregon St.74, Washington 66 WASHINGTON (12-7) Simmons 0-3 0-0 0,N'Diaye 4-5 2-4 10,Gaddy 6-121-214, Suggs4-111 111,Wilcox9-211 323, Andrews1-3 1-23, Jarreau1-20-0 2, Kemp,Jr.1-2 1-2 3.Totals 26-597-14 66. OREGON ST. (11-8) Reid 1-1 0-0 2,Collier 4-5 8-1116, Burton6-10 1-213, Starks4-80-010, Nelson3-147-815, Barton 0-1 0-0 0,Moreland5-72-512, Schaftenaar2-70-0

Far West FresnoSt. 70,BoiseSt 57 Wyoming76, UNLV54

HOCKEY NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE All Times PST

NewJersey

0

2 0

WesternConference Central Division

0

5

10

GP W L OT PtsGF GA Chicago 3 3 0 0 6 14 8 Nashville 3 1 0 2 4 8 8 St. Louis 3 2 1 0 4 12 6 Columbus 3 1 1 1 3 7 11 Detroit 3 1 2 0 2 5 11 Northwest Division GP W L OT PtsGF GA Minnesota 3 2 1 0 4 6 5 Vancouver 3 1 1 1 3 8 12 Colorado 2 1 1 0 2 5 5 Edmonton 2 I I 0 2 6 8 Calgary 3 0 2 I 1 7 12 Pacific Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA Anaheim 2 2 0 0 4 12 7 Dallas 3 2 1 0 4 6 5 SanJose 2 2 0 0 4 10 4 Phoenix 3 1 2 0 2 12 11 Los Angeles 2 0 2 0 0 3 8 NOTE: Twopoints for a win, onepoint for overtime loss

Wednesday'sGames Vancouver3 Calgary2,SO Toronto5, Pittsburgh2 N.Y.Rangers4,Boston3, OT Phoenix5,Columbus1 Today'sGames N.Y. IsandersatToronto, 4p.m. N.Y.RangersatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. Montrealat Wa shington, 4p.m. Buffalo atCarolina,4p.m. Ottawa at Florida, 4:30p.m. Nashviffe atSt. Louis,5 p.m.

Chicago atDalas, 5:30p.m. Columbus at Colorado, 6p.m. LosAngelesatEdmonton,6:30p.m. PhoenixatSanJose, 7:30p.m Friday's Games N.Y. IslandersatBoston,4 pm. Carolinaat Bufalo, 4pm. Washin gtonatNewJersey4pm Ottawa at Tampa Bay, 4:30p.m. Minnesota atDetroit, 4:30p.m. Pittsburgh at Winnipeg5 pm VancouveratAnaheim,7p.m.

TENNIS Professional Australian Open At MelbournePark Melbourne, Australia Purse: $31.608million (GrandSlam) Surface: Hard-Outdoor Singles Men Wednesday Ouarterfinals Roger Federer(2), Switzerland, def. Jo-Wifried Tsonga (7), France,7-6(4), 4-6, 7-6(4), 3-6,6-3. Women Today Semifinals Li Na(6), China,def. MariaSharapova(2), Russia,

6-2, 6-2.

Victoria Azarenka(1), Belarus, def. SloaneStephens(29), UnitedStates,6-1,6-4.

DEALS Transactions BASEBALL National League COLOR ADOROCKIES—Agreed to termswith INF JonathanHerreraonaone-yearcontract. PHILADE LPHIAPHILLIES—Agreed to terms with OF Joe Mather onaminorleaguecontract. BASKETBALL National Basketball Association MEMPHIS GRIZZLIES—Signed G-F Chris Johnsonto a10-daycontract. MR.WA UKEE BUCKS—Signed general manager John Hamm ondto a contract extension throughthe 2015-16season. SAN ANTONIO SPURS— Assigned G CoryJoseph to Austin (NBADL). FOOTBALL

National Football League

Eastern Conference Atlantic Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA

2 Pittsburgh 3 N.Y.Islanders 2 N.Y.Rangers 3 Philadelphia 3

2 0 0 2 1 0 1 1 0 1 2 0 0 3 0

4 5 1 4 11 9 2 5 5 2 8 12 0 3 11

Boston Buffalo Ottawa Toronto Montreal

3 2 2 3

2 2 2 2

0 0 0 1

I 0 0 0

2

I

I

0

5 4 4 4 2

8 7 8 8 5

6 3 1 5 3

3 2

1 2 0 0 2 0

2 0

6 2

9 9

TampaBay Winnipeg Florida Carolina

Washington 2

Norlheast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA

Southeast Division GP W L OT Pts GF GA 3 2 1 0 4 13 8 3 1 1 1 3 6 8

SAN DIEGOCHARGERS—Named Ron Milus second ar y coach and KentJohnston strength and conditioningcoach. HOCKEY

NationalHockeyLeague NHL—Suspended Philade phiaFBraydenSchenn one game tor chargingNewJerseyDAnton Volchenkov in aJan.22game. MONTREALCANADIENS— Assigned F Mike Blunden to Hamilton (AHL). SAN JOSESHARKS SignedC ScottGomeztoa one-yearcontract COLLEGE

CALIFOR NIA—Named Garret Chachere defensive endscoachandZachYenseroff ensivelinecoach. ILLINOIS —Named Jim Bridge offensive line coach. I.ONG BEACHSTATE—AnnouncedformerUCLAG Ty erLambhasjoined themen's basketball team. LOUISVILLE —Agreedtotermswith football coach CharlieStrongonaneight-year contract extension. NORTH CAROLINA—Suspended junior G Leslie McDonaldfor threegames.

ing off a fourth-place finish at

passed the LosAngeles Lakers

to Madison Square Garden, the

ON DECK

the Abu Dhabi Championship

SOCCER Portland amongGoldCup

The New York Knicks have sur-

COREBOARD

Crook County wrestling rolls to dualwins Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Four days after winning the 4A classification of the Oregon Wrestling Classic, outscoring opponents 386-53 in the process, Crook County returned to the mat, defeating La Pine 78-0 and Ridgeview 71-6. " These ar e t w o yo u n g teams," Cowboys coach Jake Huffman said of the Hawks and Ravens. "Sometimes it's hard to gauge yourself against them. Overall, though, I think it went well. It's a good tune-

pounds, when R i dgeview's B oomer F l e m in g pin n e d Dean Blasius in 3 minutes, 42 up for us." seconds. Crook County, which comT he Ravens get back t o petes at th e R eser's Tour- work on Saturday, when they n ament o f C h a mpions i n compete at the Madras InvitaHiflsboro on Friday and Sat- tional. La Pine hosts Summit urday, saw Ryder Shinkle (145 in a dual next Thursday. pounds) and Jason Williams In other Wednesday action: WRESTLING (285) record pins in each dual, as the Cowboys accumulated R edmond..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7 8 12 falls total, including seven B end ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 against La Pine. REDMOND — P aced by The lone points against host three quick falls, the Panthers Crook County came at 182 cruised past the visiting Lava

PREP ROUNDUP

Bears as they prepare for the Reser's Tournament of Champions in Hillsboro on Friday and Saturday. Austin Doescher (106 pounds), John Hickey (145) and Chance Lindquist

(152) dispatched their respective opponents in less than a minute, with L i ndquist registering a fall in 36 seconds. Tristan Block tallied Bend's lone points with an 8-5 decision over K ody W i l liams at 138. The Lava Bears visit Mountain View next Thursday for a dual.

Houston; Miami; Portland; and Salt Lake City. The tourna-

ment returns to five venues

GOLF PGA addresses anchor-

in Arlington, Texas; Chicago; Pasadena, Calif.; Harrison, N.J.; and Seattle.

DefendingchampAzarenka into final against Li

Illg — The first PGA Tour

meeting on a proposed rule for long putters made only one thing clear to commissioner

Tim Finchem. There's still a long vvay to go to decide what the tour will do, and it figures to

FOOTBALL Te'0 talkS —Notre Dame linebacker Manti Te'o admitted to Katie Couric he answered

Wednesday."So consequently,

questions about his "dead," online girlfriend evenafter he received a call Dec. 6 from awoman posingasthefake person. Te'o also maintained

it's a difficult situation. Personally, I view the professional

he played no part in the hoax. Pressed by Couric to admit that

be messy. "It's a very different kind of issue, and it stirs a lot of strong feelings," Finchem said

game as being the strongest

he was in on the deception, the

it's ever been. So I don't like to see distractions, but it's not a

All-American said he vvas convinced the woman he knew as

perfect world." Finchem also

LennayKekuadiedinSeptem-

said there might be a place for bifurcation — two sets of rules

ber. Te'o claims he never met

Kekua in person but developed for the game — in certain areas a serious relationship with her of golf, but he did not think the through phone calls and eleclong putter issue vvasoneof tronic messages. — From wire reports them. The U.S.Golf Association

By John Pye The Associated Press

MELBOURNE, AustraliaVictoriaAzarenka overcame a sore left ankle, some anxiety and a slewof frustrating forehand errors before fending off American teenager Sloane Stephens to reach the Australian Open final against Li Na. For the second time in two days, the 19-year-old Stephens sat patiently on a c ourtside chair during a medical timeout by an experienced, older player late in the second set. Today, the top-seeded Azarenka returned to finish off a 6-1, 6-4 win on her sixth match point. It had been a different outcome Wednesday, when Stephens rallied from a set

TENNIS: AUSTRALIAN OPEN and a break down to beat an injured Serena Williams in three sets. A zarenka said in a n o n court interview that she "almost did the choke of the year" when she wasted five match points on serve at 5-3 in the second, mostly with unforced errors on her forehand. She went to the locker room for medical treatment after dropping that game, then returned tobreak the 29th-seeded Stephens' serve to finish off the match. The 23-year-old Azarenka later said the treatment was for chest pain.

"I couldn't breathe. I had chest pains," she said. "It was like I w a s g etting a h e art attack." The temperature hit 97 degrees during the second women's semifinal, slightly hotter than it had been when Li Na beat No. 2-ranked Maria Sharapova 6-2, 6-2 to reach t he Australian Open f i n al for the second time in three years. Sharapova was the heavy favorite after conceding only nine games in her first five matches,a record at the Australian Open. But the semifinal started

badly for the 25-year-old Russian, serving double-faults to lose the first two points and conceding a break in the first

game. Li was the f i rst Chinese player to reach a Grand Slam f inal when she lost to K i m Clijsters at Melbourne Park in 201L She had her breakthrough a few months later when she won t h e F rench Open, beating Sharapova in the semifinals along the way. In the m en's draw, topranked Novak Djokovic will continue his bid for a t h ird consecutive Australian t itle when he takes on No. 4 David Ferrer today. No. 2 Roger Federer and No. 3 Andy Murray will meet Friday.


THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP LO

NBA ROUNDUP

ortan sto s osin s i

44

The Associated Press Jg~tl. J~lt,

W

)UST RlGHT

Brian Davies/The Associated Press

Oregon's Arsalan Kazemi slams home two points in front of Washington State's Brock Motum (12) and Royce Woolridge (22) during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Eugene.

No. 16 Oregoncontinues pe ectstartin Pac-12 • The Ducks beat Washington State, 68-61 The Associated Press EUGENE — The last time No. 16 Oregon was 6-0 in league play the Ducks were known as the Webfoots and the league was called the Pacific Coast Conference, not the Pac-12. But Oregon (17-2, 6-0 Pac12) reached that mark for the first time since 1925-26 on Wednesday with a 68-61 victory over Washington State, a win that required a rally from the Ducks' largest halftime deficit of the season. E.J. Singler had 19 points — 14 in the second half — for Oregon, which trailed 39-29 at halftime before pulling out its eighth straight victory. Arsalan Kazemi added 16 points and Damyean Dotson had 11 points and a career-high nine rebounds. The win was Oregon's 19th straight at home, tied for the sixth-longest active streak in the nation, and kept them a lone in f irst place in t h e Pac-12. "It was just one of those games, I guess," Singler said. "All that matters is we got the 'W.'We have to have the mindset that we're the hunted now." Mike Ladd had 19 points and Brock Motum scored 14

No. 25Miami routs No.1Duke CORAL GABLES, Fla. — With a steady din com-

ing from the sea oforange behind the visitors' basket, No. 1-ranked Duke had a tough time making a shot. The Blue Devils (16-2, 3-2 Atlantic Coast Confer-

ence) went more than eight minutes without a field goal in the first half

Wednesday night, and a sellout became a blowout for No. 25 Miami, which delighted a boisterous crowd with a 90-63 victory. The defeat was the third-worst ever for a No. 1 team, and Duke's worst

in nearly five years. Durand Scott scored

" We bounced back a n d found a way," Oregon coach Dana Altman said. "But you maybe get one of t hose a year, or two of those a year where you're really outplayed in the first half. You get those d ouble-digit deficits and i f you think y ou're going to come back from those every

single game, you're making a mistake." Also on Wednesday: L a Salle...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 5 4 N o. 9 Butler.... . . . . . . . . . . . 5 3 P HILADELPHIA — R a m on Galloway w en t t h e length of the court for the winning basket with 2.7 seconds left to send La Salle past Butler (16-3, 3-1 Atlantic-10). N o. 7 Indiana..... . . . . . . . . . 72 P enn State..... . . . . . . . . . . . 4 9 BLOOMINGTON, Ind. — Victor Oladipo scored 19 points, and Yogi Ferrell added a season-high 15 to help

added a season-high 22, and Shane Larkin had18 points, 10 rebounds and five assists. Miami beat a No. 1 team for the first time, taking control with a stunning 25-1 run midway through the opening half. — The Associated Press

help Florida (15-2, 5-0) shake

gler said. "Some of the guys gave me some good passes, a nd I k n o cked down t h e shots. That got me going and coach ran some plays for me." The Cougars went back

up 53-52 on a layup by Royce Woolridge with 7:38 to play, but Kazemi answered with a dunk off a pass from Singler, and Dominic Artis made a 3pointer on another assist by Singler as the Ducks took a 57-53 lead and led the rest of the way.

off a sluggish first half and romp past another Southeastern Conference opponent. N orthwestern.... . . . . . . . . . 5 5 N o. 12 Minnesota..... . . . . . 48 EVANSTON, Ill. — Jared Swopshire scored 16 points to lead Northwestern past Minnesota, handing the Gophers (15-4, 3-3 Big Ten) their third straight loss. No. 15 New Mexico...... . . . 66 C olorado State..... . . . . . . . 6 1 A LBUQUERQUE, N . M . T ony Snell scored 23 points and New Mexico (17-2, 4-0 Mountain West) held off a late Colorado State rally. D rake...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74 N o. 17 Creighton...... . . . . . 69 D ES MO I N ES , Iow a — Richard Carter scored 20 points and D r ake h anded Creighton (17-3, 6-2 Missouri Valley) consecutive losses for the first time this season. No. 20 Wichita State ..... . .62 M issouri State..... . . . . . . . . 52 SPRINGFIELD, Mo. — Cleanthony Early scored 17 points, Carl Hall added 15 and Wichita State (18-2, 7-1 Missouri Valley) rallied past Missouri State.

Qregon Stateholdsoff Washington to pick up first Pac-12 win of season

(12-7, 4-2). Washington chipped away at a 10-point halftime deficit

early in the second half. The Huskies closed within 41-35 as Wilcox closed out a 6-0 run with a shot from outside. A Wilcox 3-pointer later made it 49-45 Oregon State. Wilcox hit another from 3point range with 12:16 left that got Washington within 53-52. The B eavers e x t ended the lead to 61-55 on Roberto Nelson's 3-pointer with 8:17 left. Oregon State later scored five straight points, with Ahmad Starks' 3-pointer and Collier's tw o f r e e t h r ows m aking it 6 6-57 with 5 :l l

remaining.

Spurs ......... . . . . . . . . . ..106 Hornets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102 SAN ANTONIO — Tony Parker had 24 points and 13 assists as San Antonio rallied past New Orleans, overcoming the absence of Tim Dun-

can and coach Gregg Popovich for its 15th straight win at home. J azz..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 2 W izards ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 88 SALT LAKE CITY — Paul Millsap had 16 points and 15 rebounds to help Utah hold off Washington.

NBA SCOREBOARD

ATHENS, Ga. — Scottie Wilbekin scored 17 points to

Standings NATIONAL BASKETBALLASSOCIATION All Times PST

EasternConference d-Miami d-NewYork Brooklyn tt-Chicago Indiana Atlanta Milwaukee Boston Philadelphia Detroit Toronto Orlando Cleveland Charlotte

Washington

tN t 27 12 25 14 26 16 25 16 26 17 24 18 22 18 20 21 17 25 16 26 i5 27 t4 27 t 1 32 10 32 9 31

Pct GB .692 .641 2

tN L 33 10 34 11 32 11 27 14 26 15 26 18 23 19 2t 21 22 22 t7 22 tB 24 17 25 16 27 14 28 i 4 28

Pct GB .767

WesternConference d-Oklahoma City d-SanAntonio d-LA. Clippers Memphis GoldenState Denver Utah Portland Houston Minnesota Dallas L.A. Lakers Sacramento Phoenix NewOrleans d-divisionleader

.619 2'/r

.610 3 605 3 .571 4'/r

550 5 1/2

.488 B ,405 tt i/r .381 12'/r .357 13'/t

.341 t4 .256 tB .238 18'/r

Washington got no closer than six from there, and the Beavers led by as many as 10 in the closing minutes. O regon State shot 26 of 59 overall from the field, while Washington was 25 of 53. Oregon State jumped to an 11-1 lead at the start of the game behind five points from Starks. The Beavers, on their way to their most firsthalf points in a Pac-12 game thisseason, kept the pressure on, goingahead 20-9 on Olaf Schaftenaar's 3-pointer. Oregon State took its biggest lead of the half at 3414 on Collier's dunk off a steal with 5:28 left before intermission.

ana 16(West,Hill, Stephensort3), Portland29 (Lillard, Batttm8).TotalFouls—Indiana20, Portland17. A—t8,934 (19,980).

Bulls 85, Pistons 82 DETROIT (82) Prince 5-120-0 11, Maxiel 3-6 0-0 6, Monroe 4-t3 1-3 9, Knight4-9 5-5 13,Singler5-7 0-1 12, Drummond 4-6 0-08, Stttckey5-161-2 11,Daye1-3 0-0 3, Byrtum 3-9 3-3 9, Vilantteva0-10-00. Totals 34-82 10-14 82. CHICAGO (85) Butler 6-145 618, Boozer7-142-216, Noah3-8 4-810, Hiririch 0-5 0-0 0,Hamilton 4-82-21t, Belinelli 2-5 t-t 5, Gibson 5-74-514, Robinson4-9 2-2 1t,MohammedO-t0-00.Totals 31-71 20-26 85. Detroit 23 24 21 14 — 82 Chicago 14 24 19 28 — 85

.225 18t/r

.756 .744 1 659 5 .634 6 .591 7'/r .548 9'/r ,5QO tti/r ,5QQ 11rir

.436 14 ,429 14'ir .405 15'/r .372 17 ,333 t8rir .333 18'/r

Wedttesday's Games Atlanta104,Charlotte92 Miami123,Tororito116,OT Chicago85,Detroit 82 Denver105,Houston95 Memphis106,LA.Lakers93 Brooklyn9t, Minnesota83 San Antonio106,NewOrleaits i02 Utah 92,Washington88 Portland100,Indiana80 Phoenix106,Sacramento96 GoldenState104, OklahomaCity 99

Today'sGames

The Associated Press C ORVALLIS — De v o n Collier had 16 points and Oregon State held off a secondhalf run by Washington for a 74-66 win on Wednesday night. Eric Moreland added 12 points and 10 rebounds off the bench for the Beavers (11-8, 1-5 Pac-12), who saw a 20-point first-half advantage shrink to one but never gave up the lead. C.J. Wilcox had 23 points and seven rebounds and Aziz N'Diaye added 10 points and 10 rebounds for Washington

and Mike Conley added 19 as Memphis beat Los Angeles, handing the Lakers their fourth straight loss and 10th in 12 games. Heat..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123 Raptors..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 116 MIAMI — Dwyane Wade scored 35 p o i nts, L e Bron James got his 34th career triple-double and Miami rallied from a 15-point deficit to beat Toronto. N ets..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 1 T imberwolves..... . . . . . . . . . 83 MINNEAPOLIS — Brook Lopez strengthened his case for a spot on the All-Star team with 22 points on 10-for-16 shooting, helping B rooklyn hold off Minnesota. B ulls... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85 P istons.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 2 CHICAGO — Nate Robinson had 11 points and seven assists in 21 minutes off the b ench, l eading a fu r i o u s fourth-quarter comeback that carried Chicago past Detroit. The Bulls overcame a 17-point deficit to beat the Pistons for the 17th straight time. Hawks..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 B obcats ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 92 CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Josh Smith had 30 points and 13 rebounds, and Atlanta snapped a six-game road losing streak with a win over Charlotte. Nuggets.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 105 R ockets ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 H OUSTON — T y L a w son scored 21 points, Wilson Chandler had 20 and Denver pulled away in the third quarter a g ainst m i s take-prone Houston.

rout Penn State. N o. 8 Florida ..... . . . . . . . . . 64

Georgia.......... . . . . . . . ..47

The senior forward scored 10 straight points, tying the game 46-46 with the second of his consecutive 3-pointers. His free throws at the 11:45 mark gave the Ducks their first lead of the game, 48-46. "I was just feeling it," Sin-

fun basketball but it was tough. To be honest, when you're up 15 with three minutes to go, you still don't think you quite have it. But we needed a win like that." A fter t h e Bl a z er s l e d through the first quarter, D.J. Augustin tied it at 20 with a 3-pointer to start the second quarter. Augustin hit another 3 to put the Pacers ahead 2422, but the lead was short-lived and Portland went up 34-26 on rookie Will Barton's running jumper and layup. Aldridge made three consecutivelong jumpers for a 44-28lead as Portland broke it open with a 22-4 run. The Blazers led 44-32 at the half. His dunk made it 55-42 midway through the third quarter. Lillard's p u l l-up j u m p er gave the Blazers a 76-59 lead early in the fourth quarter, but the Blazers' biggest margin of the game was the final score. It was Portland's greatest margin of victory this season. "They came out and played with great desperation. It's very difficult to come out and play a really good team on a six-game losing streak," Pacers coach Frank Vogel said. "They came out and brought the fight t o u s w i t h t h e ir defense." Also on Wednesday: Warriors.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 104 T hunder.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 99 OAKLAND, Calif. — Stegames. phen Curry had 31 points and "We knew c o m in g in seven assists, David Lee finthat this team was going to ished with 22 points and 12 rechallenge us, especially on bounds, and Golden State beat their f l o or," s ai d G e orge. Oklahoma City. Kevin Durant "They had u s s c r ambling, had 33 points, nine assists and running all over the floor all five rebounds for the Thunder, night. Aldridge did a good job who blew an eight-point lead of knocking shots down and in the fourth quarter. getting hot. " Suns.... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Portland snapped a 10-game K ings..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 6 streak in which all of its games S ACRAMENTO, Cal i f . were decided bysix points or — Luis Scola scored 21 points less, a franchise record. and Phoenix won its first game "It was r efreshing, espe- under new c o ach L i n dsey cially since we were on the Hunter, beating Sacramento. good side of it," Blazers coach Grizzlies..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106 Stotts said about the lopsided L akers..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 93 margin. "That 10-game streak MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Darof last-minute games, that was rell Arthur scored 20 points PORTLAND — LaMarcus Aldridge insists h e w a sn't thinking about a n A l l -Star spot. "I was just trying to win," shrugged the Trail Blazers forward after scoring 27 points in Portland's 100-80 victory over the Indiana Pacers on Wednesday night. The victory snapped a sixg ame losing streak for t h e Blazers. Portland also ended a four-game skid at home and avoided dropping five straight at the Rose Garden for the first time since 2006. Aldridge was a f i r st-time All-Star last year, but is by no means a lock this season. The reserves, selected by the coaches from each conference, will be announced today. R ookie D a m ia n L i l l a r d added 20 points and eight assists, while J.J. Hickson had 14 points and 13 rebounds for his 24th double-double this season. Portland shot a season-high 56.4 percent from the floor against Indiana, the league'sbest defensive team. No other team had shot that well from the floor against the Pacers this season. Paul George had 22 points and seven rebounds for Indiana, which had won seven straight a g a inst We s tern Conference teams, its longest streak since 2004. Indiana (2617) lost for the third time in 10

Indiana (17-2, 5-1 Big Ten)

a season-high 25 points for the Hurricanes (14-3, 5-0 ACC), KennyKadji

for the Cougars (10-9, 1-5), who shot just 27.3 percent from the field in the second half as they lost their big lead. "It seemed like they turned the heat up in the second half," Washington State coach Ken Bone said. "There's a reason why they're ranked 16th in the country." Oregon opened the second half on a 9-0 run, getting within a point of the Cougars' double-digit advantage on a breakaway dunk by Carlos Emory that made it 39-38 with 15:33 left. But Dexter Kernich-Drew snapped a zero-for-five start to the second half for Washington State with a t o ugh layup and Motum followed with a three-point play to put the Cougars back up 44-38. Then Singler took over.

C3

Torontoat Orlando,4p.m NewYorkat Boston,5 p.m. L.A. Clippersat Phoenix, 7:30p.m.

Friday's Games MinnesotaatWashington, 4p.m. BostonatAtlanta, 4:30p.m. Milwaukee atCleveland, 4:30p.m. Detroit atMiami,4:30 p.m. SanAntonioatDalas, 5p.m. GoldenStateatChicago, 5p.m. Brooklynat Memphis, 5pm. Houstonat NewOrleans, 5p.m. Oklahoma City atSacramento, 7p.m. Utah atL.A.Lakers,7:30 tt.m.

Heat123, Raptors116 TORONTO (116)

Fields 351 2 7, Davis 583413, Johnson 69 3-315, Caderoit 6-9 0-0 17, DeRozait 5-10 2-412, Anderson 7-182-220, Ross7-160-016, Lowry4-11 3313, Acy 00 00 0,Lttcas1-2 00 3, Gray00 00 0. Totals 44-88 14-18 116.

MIAMI (123)

James12-236-7 31,Haslem1-1 0-02, Bosh3-7 6-1212, Chalmers 5-101-2 14,Wade13-199-t535, Anthony1-20-0 2, BaN ier 1-30-03, Allen7-100-0 18, Cole2-32-2 6, Miler 0-4 0-0 0. Totals 45-82 24-38 123. Toronto 28 29 27 25 7 — 116 Miami 22 28 38 21 14 — 123

Grizzlies106, Lakers 93 LA. tAKERS (93)

World Peace4-94-4 15,Clark5-131-1 11,Howard 0-42-42, Nash2-6 t-27, Bryantt1-237-829, PGasol4-105-813, Jamison0-21-21, Dtthon 1-1 0-0 3 Morris 1-11-13, Meeks3-4 2-2 9, Sacre0-0 0-00 Totals 31-7324-3293.

MEMPHIS(106)

Gay 3-114-5 t2, Randolp6-130-012, h MGasol 4-7 0-0 8, Conle9-14 y 0-0 t9, Allen 6-110-012, Haddadi0-1 0-0 0,Arthur 9-152-2 20, Bayless4-7 t-2 t0, Wroten 4-t31-1 9 Johnson2-40 04. Totals 47-968-10 106. LA. takers 23 27 23 20 — 93 Memphis 24 35 24 23 — 106

Nets 91, Timberwolves 83 BROOKLYN (91)

Wallace2-62-26, Evarts 1-1 0-02, Lopez10-162522, Dero.Wiliams 6-124-518, JJohnson8-160-0 i8, Humphries1-50-02, BogaiIs0-4 0-00, Blatche 3-11 3-4 9,Stackhouse0-3 0-0 0, Watson6-8 0-014, Brooks0-20-00. Totals 37-8411-16 91.

MINNESOT A(83)

Summaries Wedttesday's Games

Blazers100, Pacers 80 INDIANA(80)

George8-19 3-3 22,West8-15 5-6 21, Hibbert 4101-29, Hill51400 t1, Stephensortt-5002, THansbrottgh0-31-2 t, Johnson0-2 0 00, Mahinmi r-5 4-4 8,Augristin 2-70-06. Totals 30-80 14-17 80.

PORTLAND (100)

Batttm4-100-010, Aidridge12-173-427, Hick-

son 7-100-014, LillaId9-162-2 20,Matthews4-11 2-210, Jeffries1-11-23, Leonard4-60-08, Barton 3-72-28, Babbitt 0-00-00, Price0-00-00, Smith 0-00-00. Totals 44-7810-12100. Indiana 1t7 15 27 21 — 80 Portland 20 24 26 30 — 100 3-Point Goal— s Indiana 6-23 (George3-8, Attgustin 2-5,Hill t-7, JohnsonO-t, Stephenson0-2), Portland2-11(Batum2-5, Lilard 0-3, Matthews0-3) FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Indiana39 (Hibbert, George7), Portland50 (Hickson 13). Assists—Indi-

Kirileitko 6-102-3 15, DerrWiliams 4-11 1-1 9, Stiemsma 1-5 0-0 Z Rubio2-5 1-2 5, Ridnottr 6-15 0-013, Cunningham 7-12 0-014, Geabale1-4 0-02, Barea5-11 0-0 t 1, C.Johnson6-10 0-01z Totals 38-83 4-6 83. Brooklyn 24 29 15 23 — 91 Minnesota 17 25 20 21 — 83

Nuggets 105, Rockets 95 DENVER (105)

Gallirtari 6-13 3-4 18, Faried0-2 0-0 0, Kotttos 4-9 0-2 8, tawsoit 8-i5 3-4 21, Igttodala5-114-5

14, McGee 6-7 2-2 t4, Brewer3-8 1-3 8, Chandler 7-15 4-520, A.Miler1-5 0-0 2,Randolph0-10-00. Totals 40-86 17-25 105. HOUSTON (95) Parsons2-81-2 6, Patterson4-7t-210, Asik3-5 0-16, Lin3-73-39, Harden8-175-523, Smith t-2 0-0 2, Morris4-90-010, Beverley0-30-0 0, Delfitto 6-120-015,Douglas4-110-08,Anderson2-20-06, Aldrich 0-00-00. Totals 37-8310-1395. Denver 27 19 36 23 — 105 Houston 21 23 22 29 — 95

Hawks104, Bodcats 92 ATLANTA(104) Stevertsont-80-03, Smith t5-240-230,Johnson 4-11 4-612,Teague4-91-2 10, KorverB-110-0 21, Jenkins 3-70-0 8, Petro2-6 0-0 4,Scott 2-3 1-2 5, Pargo3-6 0-0 8, Tolliver 1-2 0-0 3. Totals 43-87 6-12 104.

CHARLOTTE (92)

Kidd-Gilchrist 3-6 2-2 8,Warrick t-4 2-2 4, Biyombo1-5 02 2,Walker 411 231t, Henderson2 6 2-2 6, I-laywood0-24-6 4, Sessions10-166-6 27, Adrien t-64-4 6,Taylor3-82-2 9, Gordon6-120-0 t5. Totals31-7624-2992. Atlanta 28 25 26 25 — 104 Charlotte 20 26 21 25 — 92

Jazz 92, Wizards 88 WASHINGTON (88)

Webster3-6 6-6 15, Nene3-14 3-4 9, Oitafor310 0-06, Price 49 0-010, Beal 51i 2-612, Wall 5-11 4-414, Seraphin2-7 0-2 4, Crawford3-9 2-2 9, Ariza2-52-2 7, Booker1-40-0 z Totals 31-86 19-26 88.

UTAH (92)

Ma.Williams2-50-0 4, Milsap7-132-416, Jefferson5-t71-211, Tinsley5-110 011,Foye4 82 2 12, Favors4-80-0 8, Hayward 5-t2 5-7 15,Watson 22 0 0 4,Carroll 0 41-21, Kanter44 2210, Burks Q-i0-00.Totals38-8513-19 92. Washington 19 19 20 30 — 88 utah 25 27 21 19 — 92

Spurs 106, Hornets 102 NEWORLEANS(102) Amirtu 4-70-1 8,Davis3-73-4 9, Lopez3-71-1 7, Vasrtuez 6-131-115, Gordon5-8 4-417, Anderson 5-10 4-4 16,Smith5-11 3-6 13, Mason1-3 0-0 3, Rivers1-70-02, Roberts4-60-0 t0, Thomas0-00-0 0, Henry1-20-2 2.Totals 38-8116-23 102. SAN ANTONIO (106) Jackson61000 t5, Diaw0 t 020, Splitter t0t 1 5-6 25,Parker1O -t8 4-724, Green5-11 0-012, Neal 3-110-08, Bonner3-7 0-17, Ginobili 3-7 3-5 9, DeColo2-30-0 4, Blair t-t 0-2 z Totals 43-80 12-23 106. Neworleans 35 2 9 15 23 — 102 sanAtttonio 32 28 18 28 — 106

Suns106, Kings 96 PHOENIX (106) Tttcker2-60-04, Scola 9-133-421, Gortat5-62-2 12, Dragic5-122-2 t2, Dudley3923 B, Morris4-10

0-0 10, BrOW n4-9 3-3 12, Telfair 3-7 0-0 8, Bear ley 8-15 2-219, WJohnson0-30-0 0,Zeller 0-00-0 0.

Totals 43-9014-16106. SACRAME NTO(96) Salmons 2-22-66,Thompson2-6 0-04,Cousins 7-18 0-015,Thomas2-t0 2-2 6,Evans6-143-416, Robinson6-9 0-2 tZ Thornton2-5 3-3 8, Brooks 2-3 3-4 8,J.Johnson6-9 2-3 t4 Hayes0-0 0-0 0, ottt aw2-2 0-05, Fredette 1-10-0 z Totals 38-79 15-24 96. Phoenix Sacramento

Warriors104, Thunder 99 OKLAHOMA CITY (99) Dttrant t0-t711-1233, Ibaka 5-92-412, Perkins 6-80-0 t2, Westbrook3-164-610,Sefoloshat-72-2 5, Co lisoit 26 0 0 4,Martin 6 9 2216, I iggiits i-i 0-02,Jones0-0 0-0 0,Jackson2-5 t-t 5.Totals 36-78 22-27 99. GOLDEN STATE(104) Barnes0-52 22, Lee9-184522, Ezeli O-i 121, Curry 1t-27 6-6 31,Thompson6-11 4-419, Green0-0 0-0 0, Jack4-9 i-2 9, Biedrirts 0-0 0-0 0, Jefferson0-1 0-0 0, Landry7-12 6-6 20,Baze-

more0-00-00,Jenkins0-00-00.Totals37-84 24-27104.

OklahomaCity Golden State


C4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

NHL ROUNDUP

Canueks get past Flames in shootout The Associated Press VANCOUVER, B r i tish Columbia — Zack Kassian scored in regulation and got the winner in the shootout, lifting the Vancouver Canucks to a 3-2 victory over the Calgary Flames on Wednesday night. Kassian scored the dec isive shootout goal b y d eking F l a me s go a l i e M iikka K iprusoff i n t h e fifth round. Alex Burrows also scored in the shootout for Vancouver, and Cory Schneider secured the win by stopping Curtis Glencross on the final shootout attempt. Mason Raymond al so scored for the Canucks (I-

I-l), giving them a 2-0 lead about halfway through the second period. Alex Tanguay scored in regulation and had one in the shootout for Calgary (02-1), and Mikael Backlund had the tying goal with just under four minutes to go in the second period. Schneider and Kiprusoff entered the g ame l o oking to redeem themselves. Despite a few gaf f e s, Schneider was much sharper than in his season-opening effort as he and Kiprusoff both finished with 34 saves. Schneider was pulled after allowing five goals on 14 shots in Vancouver's 7-3 loss to Anaheim on Saturday, and then watched from the bench as the Canucks lost Sunday in a shootout to Edmonton. Also on Wednesday:

R angers.......... . . . . . . .4 B ruins...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 NEW YORK — Marian Gaborik scored twice in the first period and then completed his hat trick 27 seconds into overtime as New York overcame a pair of blown leads and beat Boston for its first win of the season. Taylor Pyatt also scored for the Rangers. Brad Marchand, Milan Lucic and Nathan Horton got the Bruins' goals.

M aple Leafs.......... . . . .5 P enguins..... . . . . . . . . . . . 2 PITTSBURGH — James van Riemsdyk scored twice, and James Reimer stopped 28 shots as Toronto spoiled Pittsburgh's home opener. Clarke MacArthur, Mikhail Grabovski and Tyler Bozak also scoredfor the Maple Leafs, and Nikolai Kulemin added three assists. Sidney

Crosby and reigning NHL MVP Evgeni Malkin scored their first goals of the season for Pittsburgh.

C oyotes .......... . . . . . . .5 B lue Jackets..... . . . . . . . . 1 GLENDALE, Ariz. Steve Sullivan scored three goals, Oliver Ekman-Larsson had two goals and an assist, and Phoenix beat Columbus for its first win of the season. Fedor Tyutin scored for Columbus in its first regulation loss of the season.

Boxing

Skating

for a fifth straight year, putting them on par with that figure Continued from C1 skating powerhouse Georgia "I think I have proven I can — the country, not the state. be competitive among some It is not much better at home, of the top competitors in the where six d i fferent women world, and that is very gratify- have won the past seven U.S. ing. I still have a lot of work to crowns. Should Wagner win do, and I'm not where I want to this week, she would be the be going into next year's Olym- first repeat champion since pics. But I am closer." Kwan in 2005. For six decades, the podium The women's competition at the Olympics and the world begins tonight with the short championships was U.S. ter- program. Pairs also begins toritory. Americans won seven day, and men and dance start Olympic titles from 1956 to Friday. 2002, along w it h 1 0 o t her No one has felt the effects of medals. the U.S. skating slump more They won at least one medal than Wagner, who missed out at every Winter Games but one on the Vancouver Olympics between 1952 and 2006, and because the Americans had that lone exception — 1964 only two spots instead of their — came three years after the usual three. Determined to entire U.S. team was killed in avoid a similar disappointment a plane crash. They won 25 in 2014, she left her family and world titles from 1955 to 2006 friends on the East Coast and and claimed at least one med- moved to Southern California al at all but two of the world in the summer of 2011 to train championships between 1970 with John Nicks, better known and 2006. as Cohen's coach. "The main reason I went to But those were the good old days. These days, well, the him is because he has so much Americans are a bit of a mess. experience. He has been with They have not won a world or so many skaters in this sport, Olympic medal since 2006, a I wanted him to call the shots," worse drought than the one Wagner said. "It's hard to pinthat followed the devastating point one thing, but really he 1961 plane crash. They will has helped my confidence in have just two spots at worlds competition."

That showed at last year's nationals, where Wagner won her first title with an elegant yet chilling rendition of "The Black Swan." Two weeks later, she beat two-time world champion Mao Asada to win Four Continents. A month after that, Wagner finished fourth at the world championships, the best showing by a U . S. woman since Kimmie Meissner was fourth in 2007. Wagner won b ot h S k ate America and T rophee Eric Bompard — beating all three of Russia's top prospects for Sochi inthe process. She then finished second to Asada at the Grand Prix final despite a nasty fall in the free skate that left her with a hip pointer. She was able to rest and recover overthe past month and is ready to finish off the season in style. First come nationals, where Wagner's biggest competition is likely to come from fellow Grand Prix finalist Christina Gao, 2008 U.S. champion Mirai Nagasu, or one of the past two junior champions, Gracie Gold and Courtney Hicks. T hen it should be o n t o worlds, where Wagner hopes to bring the U.S. flag out of mothballs and help the Americans get a third spot back for Sochi.

Kicker

that would have forced overtime. He was playing for Balti-

a key reason for the Eagles' 21-16 loss and perhaps why he Continued from C1 was not retained. That was a decision HarHis charmed existence in baugh made early, perhaps to San Francisco continued in the inspire confidence in either his season opener this year, when kicker or his fan base, or even his 63-yard try against the in himself. Yet his decisions Packers hit the crossbar — and over the past month spoke to still went between the uprights, a lack of confidence, not an tying an NFL record for disabundance of it. tance.Not bad for a man who The kick that typified Ak- would turn38 in December. ers' season took place this past Akers, in fact, converted his Sunday, in the third quarter of first six attempts. Then everythe NFC championship game thing fell apart. He shanked against the Atlanta Falcons. kicks with alarming regularThe 49ers trailed by t h r ee ity, missed right and left and points. Akers trotted onto the short, but left most often. He field, conducted his usual rou- totaled 13 unsuccessful fieldtine and sailed a 38-yard at- goal attempts in the regular tempt toward the goal posts. season, making for his worst The kick struck the left upright conversion rate (69 percent) and bounced no good into the since 1998. end zone below. The question most pertinent Akers looked despondent. to the Super Bowl is whether He sat on the bench and stared Akers' struggles will change intospace. Histeam scored an- the 49ers' strategy and if so, other touchdown and rendered how? Their f i n a l r e g ularirrelevant the latest error from season contest, a home victheir kicker, who otherwise tory over Arizona, provided a played well Sunday, with five small window into Harbaugh's kickoffs that went for touch- thinking. backs and four successful exIn that game, Akers missed tra points. two attempts. At one point, he Afterward, Akers told The threw his helmet on the sideSan Francisco Chronicle he line. The crowd booed him, was three inches from a per- starting before he missed anyfect game, which is both true thing. Harbaugh apparently and precisely the point. Super shared their frustration, twice Bowls have been, and will be, electing to attempt to convert decided by less. on fourth down and long in "This has been the toughest Arizona territory rather than year for him," Jerrold Colton, let Akers perform a task cenAkers' agent, said Tuesday. tral to his job description. "He hasn't performed up to After that game, Akers shut his usual standards. No one is down his Twitter account after harder on David than himself. at least one irate fan threatBy the same token, he still has ened "miss one more field tremendous confidence." goal you about to get your life Akers made All-Pro in 2011 ended,"the sentence posted in with a season among the best all capital letters. He also told at his position. He set league local reporters that last Februrecords for field goals in one ary he had undergone surgery season (44) and points for a to repair a double hernia, an kicker (166). His successful at- injury that flared up enough tempt against the New York during the season that Akers Giants tied the NFC title game, said he went back to the doctor which went into overtime. He who performed the operation did all this in his first year with for treatment. San Francisco, the perfect Harbaugh signed Billy Cunrevenge on the Philadelphia diff before the playoff run, an Eagles, who let him walk afodd decision, if only for the timter 12 seasons. His two misses ing. Cundiff, after all, botched against Green Bay in the 2010 a crucial field goal in last seaplayoffs (41 and 29 yards) were son's AFC championship game

thing they've ever done in their lives," Miller says of the Continued from C1 trip to Missouri, on which he Silver Gloves includes box- will accompany the y oung ers of ages 10 to 15. To qualify boxers. "They've never even for the national tournament, been on an airplane before. the Rocks boxers won the Or- Just the experience alone ... egon state championship in what it does for them ... they their respective classes, then put in a lot of hard work to get won the f i ve-state regional to this point." (Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Miller notes that during the Montana and Wyoming) in recent Christmas break the Hillsboro earlier this month. boxers ran for conditioning Eight r e g ional c h a mpions every morning, sometimes in from each weight class (12 single-digit temperatures and classes in the 10-11 age group, with a few inches of snow on 14 in the 12-13 age group, 16 in the ground. "They never missed a day," the 14-15 age group) advance to nationals. Miller i nsists. "That's how "I think it's pretty special, dedicated they are." because we'reone of the eight Miller says that of the three best in the United States," Ber- Rocks qualifiers, Avila probnabe says with a proud smile. ably has the best chance to Deschutes County Rocks is win three bouts in Missouri a nonprofit club, and travel is to claim the Silver Gloves napaid for through private dona- tional title, which would autotions and sponsors. The boxers matically qualify him for the also pay a monthly club fee of Junior Olympics. "He knows what it takes," $50, and they raise additional funds by hosting events such Miller says of Avila. as fun runs and car washes. Avila, whose older brother "It's probably the biggest got him into boxing four years

ago, says he believes he has a "good shot" to win the national championship. "I've been w orking o u t really hard for t h is," Avila says. "We ran when it w as snowing for a whole week, but you've got to do it." The local national qualifiers all agree that boxing teaches them discipline, respect and the value of hard work. A lso, says Miller — w h o works full time at Springtime Landscape 8 I r r igation and puts in countless hours at the club entirely on a volunteer basis — training four nights per week and t r aveling to bouts on weekends keeps the young boys focused and out of trouble. M iller beams w it h p r i de when talking about the boxers he is taking to Missouri. "It does mean a lot to me," he says. "It just shows that the program is on the right track and that it's working. And we're here to stay." —Reporter: 541-383-0318, mmorical@bendbulletin.com

more, coached by Harbaugh's brother and Super Bowl coaching counterpart, John. The 49ers staged a kicking competition before their most important game of the season, kept Cundiff on the roster for their playoff victory against the Green Bay Packers, then cut him before the Falcons game. H a rbaugh's a c tions did not indicate a high level of confidence in Akers, who only compounded the issue when his kick against Atlanta struck the upright. Now the 49ers find themselves in the Super Bowl, behind a formidable defense and a blossoming young quarterback and an offensive line as good as any in the NFL. It is almost a complete team. Almost. Akers, of course, will continue with the mentality that carried him through 15 hazardous years, past dozens of challengers for his job, all the way to the most critical game of his career. "He believes the next kick," Colton said, "is going through the uprights."

white

"Look, (White) is really good at snowboarding. But

Continued from C1 This w e ekend a t t he Winter X G a m es, W h i te everybody is good in will show off some of those slopestyle. new slopestyle maneuvers, — Winter X Games like the backside triple he pulled off in a practice run snowboarder Mark McMorris Wednesday. That should get him some attention, maybe even open ing it quickly, too, winning a some eyes. Winter X slopestyle competiSee, White i s la r g ely tion in Tignes, France, last viewed as just another com- winter. " This makes m e w a n t p etitor i n s l o pestyle, a n event in which snowboard- to learn more tricks," said ers move through rails, big White, a 14-time X Games jumps and bumps on their c hampion, i n cluding f i v e way down the hill. He is not straight i n the h a l f p ipe quite as revered. ( Winter X r e fers to i t a s There was a time, though, superpipe). when W h it e c o mmanded Really, in t h e h a l fpipe, that event as well. White has no one pushing But that was four years him all that much. ago, and a new generation Not right now, anyway. has since hit the course. Sure, he is working on maThese days, the Shaun neuvers in the halfpipe, but White of slopestyle just may his biggest challenger just be Mark McMorris, a 19- may be himself. year-old from Canada who However, topping his own has no fear on the slopes and performance is getting more even less when it comes to, and more difficult. Last year well, White. in Aspen, White turned in a "Just another guy you're perfect score. riding against in a contest," Asked w h o pr e sented McMorris recently said in a the biggest challenge in phone interview. the halfpipe, White danced D on't mistake t hat f o r around the question by saya rrogance. McMorris h a s ing, "I'm not really looking plenty of respect for White, around." "I'm looking to land my even considers him a friend and one o f t h e f a vorites run," he said. "As long as I do t his weekend. Unlike t h e that, I'm happy. I usually fohalfpipe, McMorris simply cus on what I'm up to." does not see White dominatBecause slopestyle was not ing slopestyle. an Olympic sport at the 2010 Not with riders such as Vancouver Games, W hite Norway's Torstein Horgmo decided to take a hiatus from and Canada's Sebastien Tou- those competitions. tant in the field. Of course, Instead, he trained in sethere is also McMorris. clusion on a halfpipe built "Look, (White) is really for him in the backcountry good at snowboarding," said of Colorado as h e h oned McMorris, who won slope- the Double McTwist 1260, style and big air last year in a dazzling and dangerous Aspen. "But everybody is trick that ultimately led to good in slopestyle. It's crazy, an Olympic gold medal in because you see new win- Vancouver. ners all the time because the Now, he is devoting just tricks have become so tech- as much time to slopestyle. nically challenging." After all, Olympic organizWhite sat next to McMor- ers voted to add slopestyle to ris at a news conference to the program starting in 2014, kick off Winter X, intently which gives White a chance listening as McMorris de- at two gold medals in Sochi. scribed the burgeoning rivalThat certainly keeps him ry between White and him- motivated, especially here at self. Mainly, McMorris said, Winter X, where he is by far it is a media-fueled thing. the biggest attraction. "It's funny what they make He has to be creative. It is of it," McMorris said. "It's a expected. "I show up here and have fun showdown." That it is, especially for all the eyeballs on me a lot of White, who is enjoying try- time," White said. "I want to ing to bridge the gap between be prepared for that. It's fun himself, McMorris and the for me to learn new tricks rest of the field. White is clos- and new things."

~

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ALK 31.29 — based on past 12 months' results A VA 22.78 ~ BAC 6 . 72 Dividend: $0.92 Div. Yield: 3.3% BBSI 15.68 — BA 66. 8 2 Source: FactSet CascadeBancorp CACB 4.23 — CascadeCp CASC 42.86 Columbia Sporlswear COLM 44.84 CostcoWholesale COST 81.00 Craft Brew Alliance BREW 5.62 Fees flying higher FLIR Systems FLIR 17.99 Hewlett Packard HPQ 11.35 The first two checked bags still fly free on Southwest Airlines, but many Home Federal BncpID HOME 8.67 Intel Corp INTC 19.23 other fees are going up. Keycorp K EY 6 . 80 — In recent weeks, the airline has Kroger Co KR 209 8 — announced plans to start a no-show Lattice Semi LSCC 3.17 ~ fee for passengers who book its LA Pacific L PX 7 , 66 — cheapest fares then fail to cancel MDU Resources MDU 19.59 ~ before their flight. Southwest, which Mentor Graphics M ENT 12.85 ~ reports fourth-quarter earnings Microsoft Corp MSFT 26.26 ~ today, is also raising existing fees on Nike Inc 9 NKE 4 2.55 ~ early check-in and oversized bags. NordstromInc JWN 46.27 ~ Is the strategy working, or turning off Nwst NatGas N WN 41.01 ~ travelers? OfficeMax Inc OMX 4. 1 0 — PaccarInc PCAR 35 21 ~ Planar Systms PLNR 1.12 ~ Plum Creek PCL 35,43 — Prec Castparts PCP 1 50.53 ~ 1 Safeway Inc SWY 14 73 ~ Schnitzer Steel SCHN 22.78 ~ Sherwin Wms SHW 94,15 — Stancorp Fncl SFG 28.74 ~ StarbucksCp SBUX 4 3 04 ~ 6 Triquint Semi TQNT 4.30 ~ m ~ .l il UmpquaHoldings UMPQ 11.17 ~ US Bancorp USB 27.30 ~ WashingtonFedl WAFD 14.30 ~ 1 Wells Fargo &Co WFC 28.77 ~ W est CoastBcp OR WCBO 15,85 — Weyerhaeuser WY 1 8 .60 — Expansion mode

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Starbucks reports quarterly earnings today, and Wall Street will be listening for details on the

company's expansion plans. The coffee retailer recently announced plans to add at least 1,500 stores in the L.S. over the next five years. It's also considering new locations overseas, particularly in China, which is expected to surpass Canada as Starbucks' second-biggest market in the next

two years.

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McDonald's value menu helped it post a profit in the fourth quarter, but management warned that a key sales figure is expected to drop this month. The negative forecast reflects the intensifying competition and changing dining habits McDonald's is facing. Consumers also are increasingly heading to chains such as Chipotle and Panera that offer restaurant quality food for slightly higher prices. For the October to December period,

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FundFocus Manager Chuck Myers had one of his strongest years in 2012 as this highly rated fund posted a 20 Most Active percent return. He's got a new VOL (Ogs) LAST CHG co-manager, Derek Janssen, who 11.42 + . 07 came on board in mid-January. 1165373

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CATEGORY Small Value MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * * * * y t ASSETS $1,980 million EXP RATIO 1.13% MANAGER Charles Myers SINCE 2008-05-31 RETURNS3-MO +12.4 YTD +6.5 1-YR +20.8 3-YR ANNL +15.2 5-YR-ANNL +10.2

Price-earnings ratio

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(trailing 12 months): 18

102 0 -YR: 23%

*annualized

Market value: $93.7 billion SOURCES: Morningstar; FactSet

SelectedMutualFunds PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK N AV CHG YTD 1Y R 3 Y R 5YR 1 3 5 American Funds BalA m 21.12 t3.5 +14.3 t11L6 + 55 A A A BondA m 1 2.93 0.0 +5.6 +5.9 + 38 D D E CaplncBuA m 53.88 -.81 +2.1 +1 3.3 +9.1 + 31 A 8 C CpWldGrlA m 38.41 +.83 +3.3 +1 7.4 +8.2 + 22 8 D 0 EurPacGrA m 42.28 -.82 +2.6 +1 5.2 +6.2 + 1.6 8 8 A FnlnvA m 42.6 4 + .83 +4.6 +16.5 +11.8 + 41 8 C C GrthAmA m 35. 8 1 $4.3 +18.5 t11.2 + 38 A D D IncAmerA m 18 .58 $2.9 +1 3.3 tt1.2 + 52 A A 8 InvCoAmA m 31 .45 +.83 +4.3 +15.0 +10.3 + 33 C D D NewPerspA m 32.42 +.83 +3.7 +18.8 +10.4 + 43 A 8 8 WAMutlnvA m 32.43 +3.9 +13.4 +13.0 + 39 D A 8 Dodge 8 Cox Inco me 13.90 +.81 + 0 .3 + 7 . 3 + 6 .3 +6.8 8 C 8 IntlStk 35.87 -.85 + 3 .6 + 17.0 + 7.2 +1.4 A 8 A Stock 128.84 +.35 + 5 .7 + 20.6 +12.1 +2.9 A 8 C Fidelity Contra 80.80 +.35 + 4 .2 + 16.5 +13.4 +5.4 8 8 8 GrowCo 97.20 +.58 + 4 .3 + 15.6 +15.5 +7.1 8 A A LowpriStk d 41. 34 -.07 + 4 .7 + 17.3 +14.4 +7.8 8 C A FrankTemp-Frankliln ncome A m 2.29 ... +2.8 +14.5 +10.6 +5.8 A A 8 RisDivA m 18.2 4 - .83 +4 .8 + 12.4 +11.7 +4.0 E C C Oppenheimer RisDivB m 16.5 3 - .82 + 4 .8 + 11.3 +10.7 +3.1 E D D RisDivC m 16.4 5 - .82 + 4 .8 + 11.5 +10.9 +3.2 E D D SmMidValA m 34.19 -.84 +5.5 +11.3 +9.0 +0.9 E E E SmMidVal8 m 28.86 -.83 +5.4 +10.4 +8.1 0.0 E E E PIMCO TotRetA m 11.2 5 . . . + 0. 2 +9 . 2 + 6 .8 +7.2 A 8 A T Rowe Price Eq t ylnc 27.71 -.06 + 4 .8 + 16.9 +12.5 +4.0 8 8 8 GrowStk 39.33 + .11 + 4 .1 + 17.5 +14.3 +6.2 A A A HealthSci 44.1 8 - . 15 +7 .2 + 31.6 +21.4+12.6 A A A Vanguard 500Adml 137.81 +.21 $4.9 +16.1 +13.4 +4.6 8 A 8 500lnv 137.80 +.20 $4.9 +16.0 $.13.3 t4.4 8 A 8 CapOp 35.75 +.14 +6.3 +18.9 +10.6 +5.8 A D 8 Eqlnc 25.28 -.81 t4.7 +15.2 +15.5 +5.6 C A A GNMAAdml 10.87 +.81 -0.2 t2.1 +5.3 +5.6 D A A MulntAdml 14.47 +0.8 t5.4 +6.0 +5.1 C 8 8 STGradeAd 10.84 +0.2 t4.3 +3.7 +3.8 8 8 8 StratgcEq 22.71 +5.9 +18.9 +16.5 +5.8 A A C Tgtet2025 14.80 +3.0 +12.3 +10.2 +4.5 C 8 A -0.1 +4.2 +5.6 +5.5 E D C TotBdAdml 11.86 Totlntl 15.35 -.83 t2.5 +13.4 +5.6 +0.2 D C 8 TotStlAdm 37.47 +.84 $5.1 +16.4 +13.8 +5.3 8 A A TotStldx 37.46 +.84 $5.1 +16.3 $.13.7 $5.2 8 A A USGro 22.38 +.85 $5.3 +18.1 $.12.7 t5.7 A 8 8 Welltn 35.82 +.81 t3.5 +12.7 +10.6 +6.0 8 A A WelltnAdm 60.48 +.81 t3.5 +12.7 +10.7 +6.1 8 A A FAMILY

FUND

PCT 2.84 Superior Energy Services lnc 2.7 DCT Industrial Trust, Inc. 2.67 Fund Footnotes. b - ree covering market costs is paid from fund assets. d - Deferred sales charge, or redemption Hanesbrands Inc 2.66 fee. f - front load (sales charges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually a marketing feeand either asales or Platinum Underwriters Holdings, Ltd. 2.6 redemption fee. Source: Morningstat. TOP 5HOLDINGS TCF Financial Corporation

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StoryStocks Strong earnings reports from technology giants helped lift the Standard & Poor's 500 index Wednesday to its sixth straight gain. IBM, Google and chipmaker Advanced Micro Devices all reported better fourth-quarter results than financial analysts expected. That helped drive technology stocks in the S&P 500 to an average gain of 1.2 percent. That was by far the best performance of the 10 industries that make up the index. The No. 2 industry, telecoms, rose an average of just 0.2 percent. Six industries fell on the day. The S&P 500 is up 4.8 percent so far in January. The last time the index had that good a month was October 2011, when it rose 10.8 percent. COH Close:$50.75 V-9.93 or -16.4% The upscale handbag seller said a challengingeconomy and heavy discounting by competitors weighed on its second-quarter results. $65

CSX

CSX Close:$21.68L0.87 or 4.2% The railroad operator posted a 3 percent decline in fourth-quarter net income, but the results still beat Wall Street expectations. $22

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Adv. MicroDevices

IBM

AM D

Close:$2.73 %0.28 or 11.4% The Sunnyvale, Calif.-based chipmaker reported results for the fiscal fourth quarter that beat Wall Street expectations.

$3.0 2.5

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Close: $204.72 %8.64 or 4.4%

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2.0 N D 52-week range

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Praxair

RPC

PX Close: $110.77 V-3.25 or -2.9% The industrial gas company's net income slipped 1 percent in the fourth quarter, due to unfavorable foreign

currency exchanges. $115

14

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Google

MAP Pharma.

GOOG Close:$741.50 %38.63 or 5.5% The Internet search firm said its fourth-quarter earnings rose as on-

line advertisers spent more money in pursuit of holiday shoppers. $750 700 650

00

MAPP Close: $24.71 %9.13 or 58.6% Allergan, the specialty drugmaker, is buying the headache drug developer for $882.5 million to expand into migraine treatments. $25 20 15

N D 52-week range

$888.82 ~

InterestRates

McDonald's said sales at restaurants open at least a year rose 0.1 percent globally. In the L.S., the figure rose 0.3 percent. But in Europe, McDonald's biggest market, the figure fell 0.6 percent. Sales fell 1.7 percent in the region encompassing Asia, the Middle East and Africa. The figure is an important measure of a restaurant chain's performance because it strips out the impact of newly opened and closed locations.

5 -Y R*: 16% 1

total returns through Jan. 22

AP

149.37 4.64 17.35 2.73 13.88 27.61 30.82 21.94 21.11

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2-year T-note . 2 4 .25 5-year T-note . 7 5 .76 10-year T-note 1.83 1.84 30-year T-bond 3.02 3.03

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Commodities The price of crude oil fell from a fourmonth high on worries about demand after the International Monetary Fund trimmed its forecast for global economic growth in 2013.

Foreign Exchange The dollar was little changed against the euro and other currencies after the International Monetary Fund trimmed its forecast for economic growth in the L.S., Europe and other areas

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3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill 52-wk T-bill

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METALS

Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz) AGRICULTURE

CLOSE PVS. 1686.30 1692.80 32.41 32.15 1691.70 1696.30 3.67 3.69 725.45 729.15

%CH. %YTD - 0.38 + 0 . 7 + 0.82 + 7 . 4 - 0.39 + 9 . 9 - 0.54 + 0 . 8 - 0.51 + 3 . 2

CLOSE 1.26 1.50

PVS. %CH. %YTD -3.2 1.26 +0.04 1.49 + 1.21 + 4 . 6 7.21 + 3 .2 Corn (bu) 7.29 - 1.06 Cotton (Ib) 0.80 0.80 + 0.69 + 7 . 1 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 356.80 353.30 +0.99 -4.6 -0.4 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.16 1.15 +0.35 Soybeans (bu) 14.37 14.52 - 1.02 + 1 .3 Wheat(bu) 7.75 -0.4 7.79 -0.58

Cattle (Ib) Coffee (Ib)

1YR. MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.5843 —.0001 —.01% 1.5559 Canadian Dollar .9993 +.0067 +.67% 1 . 0082 USD per Euro 1.3321 +.0004 +.03% 1 . 3015 —.10 —.11% 77.00 Japanese Yen 88.66 Mexican Peso 12.6 700 + .0248 +.20% 13.1503 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3. 7247 —. 0063 —. 17% 3.7810 Norwegian Krone 5.5584 —.0176 —.32% 5.8585 South African Rand 9.0475 +.1942 +2.15% 7.9347 6.5186 +.0092 +.14% 6.7410 Swedish Krona Swiss Franc .9296 +.0002 +.02% .9276 ASIA/PACIFIC Australian Dollar .9479 + .0014 +.15% .9 4 97 Chinese Yuan 6.2227 -.0018 -.03% 6.3380 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7530 -.0006 -.01% 7.7604 Indian Rupee 53.636 -.090 -.17% 50.083 Singapore Dollar 1.2266 -.0007 -.06% 1.2668 South Korean Won 1067.40 t3.77 t . 35% 1127.50 Taiwan Dollar 29.05 + .05 +.17% 30 . 00


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

BRIEFING

Region's jobless rates mostly flat Unemployment rates in Crook and Jefferson

counties remainedessentially unchanged last month compared with November, while

DeschutesCounty's rate dipped slightly, accord-

ing to figures released Wednesday. When compared with December 2011, how-

ever, rates for all three counties improved,according to anewsrelease from the OregonEmployment Department.

esc u es ea srecor srues By Rachael Rees The Bulletin

After a public hearing, Deschutes County commissioners voted 2-1 Wednesday to slightly modify how the public willaccess property records online. The issue came up recently because the county will soon be launching a new Web application for accessing property ownership, value, sales and tax information. Commissioners approved a two-tiered public-access sys-

tem: standard and enhanced versions. Both will allow searches of individual properties by the owners' names. However, the enhanced version — which will link to deeds recorded at the Deschutes County Clerk's Office, photographs and other future features — will require users to complete a free online registration process with the county. The three commissioners debated the competing issues of privacy versus government

"I would prefer that anybody be able to get the information without having to log in," Kuhn said after the meeting. "But I understand it's a process.I'mvery gratefulthey are going to review it again in six moths. I think it's wise on their part." Kuhn wasn't alone. Thirteen of the 14 emails the board received prior to the meeting opposed the registration requirement. While the decision could change in the future, Bob

transparency and access to public information. Commissioners Alan Unger and Tony DeBone voted for the new policy, while Commissioner Tammy Baney voted against it. Baney said access to the information should remain as it currently is — without a registration. All three agreed to review the new policy in six months. William Kuhn, one of four people who addressed the commission, said he agreed with Baney.

Crook County recorded a13.3 percent seasonally adjusted unemployment rate for December. It had a14.1 Deschutes County's rate in December, 10.5 percent, reflected a 0.2

of a percentagepoint dip from November's rate. The rate in December

2011 was11.8percent. Jefferson County had

an11.9 percent seasonally adjusted unemployment rate last month. In December 2011 it was

12.8 percent. Oregon's 8.4 percent statewide jobless rate

in Decemberwasalso unchangedfrom November, but an improvement from the 9percent rate in December 2011, accord-

ing to the release. — From staff reports

BEST OF THE BIZ CALENDAR TODAY • January Adbite: Conversion rate optimization; featuring TheresaBaioccofrom Click Advisors; $25for chamber members and$45 for nonmembers;11:30a.m.1 p.m.; St. CharlesBend conferencecenter, 2500 N.E Neff Road; 541-385-1992 or director©adfedco.org. • Soroptimist International of Bend: LeslieKocwill be speaking on "Enriching the Golden Years"; reservations required; $10 lunchbuffet; noon; Boston's, 61276S. U.S. Highway97,Suite140; 541-728-0820, president© sibend.org or www.sibend. org. • Get The BestCar Deal: Presenting the workshop, with over 49 years experience inthe automobile industry, is Tom Collier, presidentof Classic Motor CarCompanylnc.; registration required; free; 6 p.m.; Mid OregonCredit Union, 1386 N.ECushing Drive, Bend; 541-382-1795. FRIDAY • Business awards banquet: Redmond Chamberof Commerceawards banquet andannualmeeting;RSVP required; $35 includes dinner; 6-9 p.m.;Eagle Crest Resort, Conference Center, 1522ClineFalls Road, Redmond;541923-5191 orKaren© visitredmondoregon.com. SATURDAY • Small-business counseling: SCORE businesscounselors will be available for freeoneon-onesmall-business counseling; noappointment necessary; free; 10a.m.noon; RedmondPublic Library, 827 S.W.Deschutes Ave.; 541-312-1050 orwww. scorecentraloregon.org. TUESDAY • Mid-Oregon Construction Safety Summit: Designed for residential and commercial construction workers;the themeis, "Safety TakesEvery Person. Get in Step;" continuing education credits are pre-approvedfor the Construction Contractors Board, Building Codes Division (plumbers and electricians), and LandscapeContractors Board; conference attendeescanalsochoose from14 different classes, such as fall protection and multi-employer worksite safety; registration required; $65; The RiverhouseHotel & Convention Center, 2850 N.W.Rippling River Court, Bend;www.orosha. org/conferences. For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday's Bulletin or visit bendbulletin.comlbizcal

see big

By Anick Jesdanun The Associated Press

risk in LI.S. fiscal woes

NEW YORK — New Zealand entrepreneur Kim Dotcom — still wanted by U.S. authorities on allegations of copyright infringement — launched a new online service this week

RFVIEW

By Jim Puzzanghera

fo r storingand sharing files.

Los Angeles Times

Staying true to his outsized personality and reputationfor excess, Dotcom unveiled the Mega service with great fanfare, renting a helicopter and hiring actorsdressed as police agents to re-enact a raid that followed the shutdown of his first venture, Megaupload. The new Mega service promises user privacy and a

generous50 gigabytesoffree storage space — officially for documents and other files you own or are authorized to share. What Mega doesn't promise is a good experience. Instead, it feels like a work in

progress. Several other services do what Mega does — and do it better. I have reviewed Dropbox, Google Drive and Microsoft's SkyDrive, and I like the way they let people store files remotely using a Web browser. Like Mega, they all let you create links that you can send to friends to download and view specific files. All three go further by letting you do so from a wide range of browsers. Mega warns that using anything other than Google's Chrome browser is bound to cause problems. That includes Microsoft's Internet Explorer, which comes with every Windows computer, and Apple's Safari, which comes with Mac machines. Chrome comes with, well, Chromebook machines, which few people have. Mega says it's pushing the envelope with technology that other browsers lack. Mega also doesn't have one of the best features available with Dropbox, Google Drive and SkyDrive — the ability to create a special folder on your

— Reporter: 541-617-7818, rrees@bendbulletin.com

Investors

,W

percentjobless ratein December 2011.

Haas, GIS Deschutes County program developer and coordinator, said it will allow the transition between the county's old and new applications. "We appreciate that the commissioners have adopted a policy that provides a framework formoving forward," said Haas. "We anticipate releasing the new Dial Property Information application within the next few weeks."

The Associated Press file photo

Indicted Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom appears on a large screen during the launch of his new file-sharing website, Mega, at his mansion in Auckland, New Zealand, Sunday. computer that automatically syncs with the service. You can add a document to your Dropbox folder on your work computer, for instance, and it will automatically appear on your Dropbox account online. When you'rehome, the updated document is waiting on your computer. Make a change there, and the work computer will get it, too. Mega says it's working on something similar. Same goes for mobile apps. M ega says apps to access files on smartphones and tablet computers are coming. Mega also isn't as versatile when it comes to sharing options. Dropbox, Google Drive and SkyDrive offer two main ways to share individual files and entire folders. You can create a Web link that anyone can use to access a file or folder without signing up for an account. You can also add specific users to a permission list and invite nonusers to join. Shared files and folders would show up in their accounts, without needing a

specific link. Either way, you can revokeaccess to specific users or cancel a link entirely should you change your mind. With Mega, files can be shared only through a link, but there doesn't seem to be a wayto cancel it. With Google Drive and SkyDrive, you can also give others permission to edit documents with the link. Links with Mega and Dropbox are for viewing only. For folders, you need to add people's email addresses to the permission list, and those who are not already users will get an invite to join. With this approach, you can choose whether to let them read files only or make changes. You can also revoke permission. But again, this works only with folders. To allow someone to edit one file, you have to put it alone in a folder and give that person permission to edit that folder. Dropbox, Google Drive and SkyDrive let you share both files and folders with either method. One thing Mega has that other services don't: en-

hanced encryption of files. Unless you're sharing a file with someone, Mega says, you are the only one with a key to view that file. Mega says its employees can't access it, even under the threat of legal action. Mega also offers far more free storage than any of the otherthree services — 50 GB compared with 2 GB on Dropbox, 5 GB on Google Drive and 7 GB on SkyDrive. Upgrade plans on Mega start at $160 a year for 500 GB. You'd have to pay $499 to get that on Dropbox and $240 to get just 405 GB on Google Drive. SkyDrive doesn't even offer that much. All that space is perfect for

super-large files — say, a feature-length movie. Of course, I don't condone piracy, and Mega says it doesn't, either. Its terms of service prohibit you

from using Mega for copyright infringement. If you do, according to Mega, it's you who will be liable, not Mega. Mega says it will remove links to unauthorized files brought to its attention.

WASHINGTON — Investors around the world say the fiscal woes of the U.S., highlighted by the ongoing fight over the debt limit, pose the biggest risk to the global economy this year, according to poll results released Wednesday. More than a third of the respondents in the Bloomberg Global Poll — 36 percent — said the troubles in Washington addressing the huge U.S. budget deficit were their biggest concern. That topped the European debt crisis at 29 percent and the slowing of China's economy at 15 percent. Although the poll found the divisive political atmosphere was chilling investment in the U.S., the nation still easily ranked first as the best place to invest this year. The U.S. was chosen by 38 percent of the 921 randomly selected investors, who could chose one or two markets as providing the best opportunities, with China at 31 percent and the European Union at 22 percent. The likely reason: A majority of investors — 53 percent — said the U.S. economy was improving, compared with 32 percent for China and 16 percent for the eurozone. The White House and Congress avoided the potentially calamitous "fiscal cliff" with a deal enacted Jan. 2 to extend most of the George W. Bushera tax cuts. But they put off decisions about large automatic government spending cuts until the end of February. Despite the threat of another contentious battle over the debt limit, which would be a repeat of 2011' s brinkmanship, 92 percent of global investors said the U.S. was unlikely to default on its sovereign debt.

Plane battery theory ruled out By Hiroko Tabuchi New York Times News Service

TOKYO — The Japanese investigation into a battery that overheated and prompted the emergency landing of a Boeing 787 airliner last week has found no evidence that the battery was overcharged, a top aviation safety official said Wednesday, casting doubts on one recent explanation put forward by Japanese investigators and clouding the U.S. aircraft maker's efforts to get

its planes back in the air. Regulators around the world have grounded the advanced 787, called the Dreamliner, after a battery malfunction and smoke caused pilots aboard an All Nippon Airways flight to make an emergencylanding last week, and a similar battery aboard a parked 787 operated by Japan Airlines ignited at Logan Airport in Boston on Jan. 7. Japanese investigators who retrieved the charred and dis-

figured battery pack from the All Nippon plane initially suspected overcharging, a dangerous condition where a battery is charged beyond its electrical capacity and becomes susceptible to overheating and fire. But data retrieved from the All Nippon jet suggested that the battery had not been charged beyond its maximum design voltage, 32 volts, Norihiro Goto, chairman of the Japanese Transport Safety Board, said.

The Associated Press

National Transportation Safety Board materials engineer Matt Fox on Wednesday examines the casing from the battery involved in the Japan Airlines Boeing 787 fire.

PERMITS City of Bend • High Returns LLC,20062 S.E Millbrook, $253,261 • Upper 40 LLC, 20528 N.E. Avro, $171,058 • Tennant Family Limited Partnership, 2155 N.W.

Lemhi Pass, $211,296 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 61194 Snowbrush, $181,608 • Brookswood Bend LLC, 61145 Snowbrush, $182,855

• BPCM Company,2440 N.E Fourth, $150,000 • Hayden HomesLLC, 63759 Hunters, $162,884 • Bend Equity GroupLLC, 2496 N.E.Saranac, $207152 • RF Wilson Trust, 2717

N.E Rosemary, $274,345 • HaydenHomesLLC, 63785 Hunters, $183,645 • HaydenHomesLLC, 63793 Hunters, $160,512 • West Bend Property Company LLC,2195 N.W.

LemhiPass,$204,077 Deschutes County • Gabriel M. Williams, 65025 Hunnell Road, Bend, $303,048 • Michael G. Johnston, 20311 Swalley Road,

Bend, $204,214.40 • Pacwest 2 LLC, 273 Foss Drive, Terrebonne, $243,694.28 • Pacwest 2 LLC, 9371 13th St., Terrebonne, $268,040.08

• Stephen and Antoinette Waldram, 2660 Cliff Hawk Court, Redmond, $401,931.36 • Tetherow Glen 58 LLC, 19470 Randall Court, Bend, $375,414.08


IN THE BACI4: ADVICE 4 ENTERTAINMENT > Health Events, D2

Fitness, D3 Nutrition, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

O www.bendbuiietin.com/heaith

GONNA EAT THAT?

App tells youhow muchyou'll have to sweat that would take 5t/~ hours). Maybe I'll have a steak instead. Perhaps an Outback Steakhouse 10-

By Anne Aurand

come from the AltheteInMe .com website and its associated smartphone app. After entering your body FITNF55 ou n ce New York weight, the program calculates strip, with 545 how many minutes of exercise calories and 35 are neededto burn offthe grams of fat. That equals 80 calories in specific menu items minutes of biking, or 50 minfrom dozens of franchise resutes of jogging, or 70 minutes taurants as well as hundreds of of swimming or 125 minutes of other food items. It's an alternative way to walking for a person my size. These exercise conversions consider the caloric content

The Bulletin

If I were to order the chicken alfredo for dinner at the Olive Garden — 1,440 calories and 82 grams of fat — and I wanted to burn it off, I'd have to jog for 132 minutes (for me, that's farther than a half-marathon), or swim for 185 minutes (I would rather starve than swim for three hours), or walk for 330 minutes (I must point out

of food. It's an incentive to skip the alfredo or the steak and instead choose Subway's Veggie Delite on wheat, hold the cheese (which equals 31 minutes of biking, 20 minutes

lllustration by Greg Cross The Bullein

of jogging, 28 minutes of swimming or a 50-minute walk). The idea behind it, its creator said, is to encourage people to make healthier menu choices and to motivate themto exercise. SeeApp/D3

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Until recently, the staff at Deschutes County's Behavioral Health Annex were grieving all too often for people gone too soon. The severely mentally ill c ounty residents who receive services

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at the rate of nearly one per m o n th . N a t i onally, lifeexpectancy is roughly 25 years shorter for those with difficult, chronic mental illnesses such as schizophrenia and bipolar disorder than for the general public, said Travis Sammon, supervisor of Deschutes County Behavioral Health's Assertive Community Treatment team. These individuals often grapple with physical health issues in addition to their mental health concerns, and they struggle to navigate the medical system. "They were really struggling with how can we solve this," said Mosaic Medical Executive Director Megan Haase, who shared the concern of county staff. "They have very close relationships with their patients and care so much about them." SeeAnnex/D5

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components. Most of the anticipation has been focused on rules that determine how the new state-based insurance marketplaces, or "exchanges," will operate. Also closely awaited are decisions about how the government will tax medical devices, allot the shrinking pool of money for hospitals that treat the uninsured and determine how birth-control insurance coverage can be guaranteed foremployees of reli gious institutions. See Rules/D2


D2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

HEALTH EVENTS

MONEY

CLASSES HEALTHYBEGINNINGS SCREENINGS:Freehealth screenings for ages 0-5; Saturday; Bend; call for location, 541-383-6357. M EET THE OOULAS: Expectant

mothers canmeetand interview several practicing doulas in a"speed dating" format, with prizes and

refreshments; free; registration requested; 3-5 p.m.Saturday; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 N.W. Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541-480-0491. HEALTH CAREREFORM FORUM: Learn how health care reform laws will affect local business

in a seminartitled, "Healthcare Reform: What Oregon Employers Need to Know," hosted by

PacificSourceHealth Plans;$15, includes breakfast; registration required; 7:30-10:30 a.m. Jan.

31; McMenaminsOldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W. Bond St., Bend; www.healthcarelawguide.com/

events/bend.

e ica riva r ues e an u By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar The Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Those medical privacy rules you run into at hospitals, pharmacies and in your own doctor's office are getting an update. Regulations unveiled this week by the Obama administration create new information rights that should make life easier for consumers. They also tighten restrictions on medical service providers trying to use patient information for marketing, and they greatly expand the list of businesses that can be punished for unauthorized disclosures. "The government has taken pretty dramatic steps to strengthen privacy protections that previously existed for consumers," said Dianne Bourque, a Boston lawyer specializing in medical regulation. The long-awaited rules

carry out a 2009 law promoting electronic medical records and updating federal privacy protections. On the privacy front, doctors will now have to get prior approval from patients to pitch new medications or medical devices if those pitches are

being paid for by a drug company or manufacturer. For example, sometimes a pharmaceutical company will pay doctors to send all their heart patients a letter about a new medication. It may not be readily apparent to the patient that the drug company is compensating the doctor for sending the update. The rules also create new rights for consumers. For instance, you should find it much easier to get your medical records electronically instead of on paper. Up to now, some doctors and hos-

pitals have been able to avoid provid-

ing records electronically by saying they don't have the capability. "They won't be able to default to, 'Sorry, we can't send this to your home (computer) system; we have to give you a paper copy,'" said Susan McAndrew, a government lawyer who oversaw the regulations at the Health and Human Services Department. Another welcome change: with your permission, your doctor can share your children's immunization records directly with a school. That simple tweak to existing rules will save parents from having to shuttle forms back and forth. And, if you pay cash for a medical service, you can tell the doctor not to share information with your insurer. The sensitivity sometimes arises with people paying out-of-pocket for men-

ae

tal health c ounseling, McAndrew sa>d. The onus of complying with the n ew rules will f all m ainly on t h e health care industry and contractors. One of the most notable changes is that companies that provide support services to doctors and hospitals will now face steep penalties for unauthorized disclosures of patient information. "The compliance bar for folks who work with health care providers is much higher now," said Bourque. The rules take effect at the end of September, after a period for health care serviceproviders to learn the new requirements. The original federal privacy law, the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, known as HIPAA, dates back to 1996.

How to submit HealthEvents: Email event

information tohealthevents© bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at

www.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 days before the desired date of

publication. Ongoing class listings must be updated monthly and will appear at

www.bendbulletin.com/ healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. People: Email info about local people involved in health

issues to healthevents@ bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

PEOPLE • Erln MacDonald has recently beenelected chairperson of the St. Charles Foundation by its board of directors. MacDonald has served on the board since 2008, and previously served asboard vice chairperson and on theSaints Gala committee. She is apartner in the Trusts and Estates Department of Karnopp Petersen LLP inBend.

Rules Continued from 01 "We knew right after the election, this is all coming out," said Blair Childs, an executive at the Premier health alliance, which advises hospitals. Some of the rules have been in the works for near-

ly a year. Other key decisions will be determined outside the rule-makingprocess, as the Obama administration selects participants in several experimental p r o g rams, including a new payment method for doctors, hospitals and other providers. Here are summaries of some of the significant decisions on the health law that t h e a d m i nistration is expected to announce shortly:

• Medical device excisetax

shaped"people)are in farbet-

In February, the Internal Revenue Service proposed a rule on how t o a pply this 23 percent tax, which kicked in at the start of January. The major unresolved issues concern which devices will be included and how the tax is applied and collected. Among th e q u estions: S hould the tax apply to devices commonly u sed by veterinarians if the device is also used in human m edicine? W h a t a b out items sold in retail settings but also used in medical procedures, such as dental instruments and latex gloves? Does the tax apply to kits — two or more medical tools packaged and sold together — even if the manufacturer of each component had already collected the tax when it was sold to the kit maker? Brendan B e n ner, a spokesman for the Medical Device Manufacturers Association, said companies are making marketing and sales decisions based on what they expect to happen, but that presents problems. "When you don't know what the answer to the question is, it's hard to make a decision," he said.

ter shape than those who carry most of their excess weight

• Hospital payments

Is being pear-shaped not so good after all'? By Melissa Healy Los Angeles Times

If you're pear-shaped and smug, a new study's findings

may take you down a peg: For those at slightly increased risk of developing diabetes, fat stored in the buttocks pumps out abnormal levels of two proteins associated with inflammation and insulin resistance. The new r e search casts some doubt on a conventional wisdom: That when it comes to cardiovascular and diabetesrisk,those of us who carry some excess fatin our hips, thighs and b ottoms ("pear-

around the middle ("apples"). The new study, posted online this week in the Journal of C l i nical E n d ocrinology and Metabolism, focuses on a number ofproteins:chemerin, resistin, visfatin and omentinI, which could one day be used to distinguish between obese people headed for trouble and those whose obesity is less immediately dangerous. The subjects in the study were all people with "nascent" metabolic syndrome — meaning p atients w h o a l r eady have at least three risk factors for developing diabetes (large waist c i rcumference, high blood pressure, high triglcerides, low HDL and high

fasting blood sugar) but no cardiovasculardisease or diabetes complications yet. The researchers found these subjects' "gluteal adipose tissue" — fat in and around the buttocks — pumped out unusually high levels of chemerin, a protein that has been linked to high blood pressure, elevated levels of C-reactive protein, triglycerides and insulin resistance, and low levels of good cholesterol.

Between 2014 and 2019, the government will cut $36 billion from the money that goes to hospitals that treat large numbers of poor patients. The cuts were included under the rationale that many currently uninsured patients would be covered either through the Medicaid expansion or through subsidized insurance. The administration has to figure out how it will allocate those cuts among hospitals — a task made more complicated by the Supreme Court ruling that allows states to opt out of expanding Medicaid. On the one hand, hospitals in states that don't expand

"It's a paradoxical situation. In states that choose not to do the Medicaid expansion, they're going to still have the uncompensated

son, and they have to get these products up." Mendelson said a lot is at stake for the government to care and those people are still going to go to make sure its rules lead to a marketplace that d oesn't hospitals." founder. He pointed to Medi— Chip Kahn, president and chief executive of care officials' efforts to get the the Federation of American Hospitals prescription drug plan, Part D, ready to roll out in 2006. The Centers for Medicare and MedM edicaid w il l c o n tinue t o consumer advocates are con- icaidServices needs "to work serve a crush of u ninsured cerned that the rules may give collaboratively with the health p atients, so they w il l w a nt insurers too much leeway in insurance industry to bring to more federal support. On the deciding how skimpy or rich market a new set of products," other hand, experts note, the b enefits are w i thin t h e 1 0 Mendelson said. "It's always a government doesn't want its broad categories of coverage challenge for CMS. They did policy to reward those states the health law requires. "You it beautifully under Medicare by ponyingup more money to can end up with places that Part D and that resulted in a soften the blow. have fine prescription drug market that is quite robust and "It's a paradoxical situa- treatment and r eally l ousy functioning." tion," said Chip Kahn, presi- maternity care," she said. • Bundled payments dent and chief executive of the Other i n surance r egulaFederation of American Hos- tions are also expected. The The administration has alpitals. "In states that choose government has to clarify new ready gotten off the ground not to do the Medicaid expan- standards for companies that t wo major changes to t h e sion, they're going to still have insure their own workers, in- way the g overnment pays the uncompensated care and cluding what level of coverage hospitals and doctors. One those people are still going to is sufficient, how a new tax designates accountable-care go to hospitals." on premiums included in the organizations t hat r e w a rd health law will b e assessed h ospitals an d d o ctors f o r • Insurance plans and how wellness programs working together to provide For t h e ad m i n istration, designed to encourage emmore efficient care. The othsome of the trickiest decisions ployees to adopt health behav- er begins to pay hospitals on concern how insurance poli- iors will operate. the quality of the care they cies mustbe designed, priced Several ofthese insurance provide through the valueand sold starting in October, rules appear to be far along in based purchasing program. when open enrollment begins the pipeline and are pending By January, the law calls for for the new online exchanges before the White House Office the government t o l a u nch that will offer plans to indiof Management and Budget, another m a j o r in i t i a tive: viduals and small businesses. the final stage before issuance. bundled payments. For instance, the law allowed The office's website shows that The Center for Medicare insurers to alter their prices three rules — on exchanges, and Medicaid Innovation is for people based on age, fam- the health insurance market in the final stages of selectily size, where they live and to- and wellness programs — were ing which providers will be bacco use. The Department of submitted by HHS to the OMB included in the program. UnHealth and Human Services days after the election. has to determine how insurDan Mendelson, chief exers can go about setting those ecutive of the consulting firm prices. Avalere Health, said: "It's a "The big one that everyone's breakneck time f r ame, beEVERGREEN watching is more definition cause there's really only eight In-Home Care Servtces Care forloved ones. Comfort for au. around the exchanges," said months left before open sea541-389-0006 www.evergreeninhome.com Chas Roades, chief research officer at the Advisory Board, a Washington consultancy. The government also has to specify how cost-sharing rules for consumers will work and what types of medical services must be covered in health plans sold in the exchanges. Twenty-six states have already chosen an existing health plan as a benchmark identifying what "essential benefits" their state's insurers must provide. In those states that don't esIntroducing Dr. Matthew N. Simmons tablish a benchmark, the administration is empowered to Dr. Matthew N. Simmons is a urologic oncologist choose one. Until the government does,insurers say they and surgeon who specializes in robotic-assisted are hampered i n d e v ising surgical options. Dr. Simmons served as what kind of insurance policies to offer. Assistant Professor of Surgery for Cleveland "Unless such guidance is Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case forthcoming, it will be difficult Western Reserve University (CCLCM). He for health plans to complete product development, fulfill assisted in the development of the robotic network adequacy requireand laparoscopic surgical curriculum at The ments, obtain necessary state approvals and reviews, and Cleveland Clinic in addition to publishing ensure that their operations, numerous articles and book chapters on the materials, training and cussubject. He is a leader in academic urology tomer service teams are fully prepared," Daniel Durham, a and comes from the U.S. News' multi-year vice presidentfor America's ranking as ¹ I Urology Program Health Insurance Plans, testified before a House subcomin the country. mittee in September. Debra Ness, president of the National Partnership for Women and Families, said

der the plans, the government would pay a lump sum to cover all the medical needs of patients going into the hospital, a nursing home or getting home health services for a specific ailment. Applicants h ave t a i lored their p r oposals t o s p ecify whether it covers just one part of the patients' medical treatments, such as post-hospital care, or all the services in the episode. The applicants have also selected specific diagnoses that they will use to test this new payment method. The goal is the same as the other ongoing experiments: to move providers away from being paid piecemealforeach service — a method thatencourages excess treatments and drives up Medicare's expenses. "People in our community are looking at it as a way to dip their toes in the water," said Atul Grover, chief public policy officer at the Association of American Medical Colleges. Kaiser Health News (ww Mr Izaiserhealthnews.org) is an editorially independent news service, a program of the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonpartisan health-care-policy organization that is not affiliated with Kaiser Permanente.

E LEVATIO N Klevation Capital Strategies 400 SW BluADrive Suite 101 Bend Main: 541-728-0321 www.elevationcapital.biz

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

D3

FITNESS RESEARCH

rainin insi s roms ara e es By Gina Kolata New York Times News Service

Of course e l ite a t hletes are naturally gifted. And, of course, they train hard and may have a phalanx of support staff — coaches, nutritionists,

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psychologists.

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But they often have something else that gives them an edge: an insight, or even an epiphany, that v aults them from the middle of the pack to the podium. I asked several star athletes about the single realization that made the difference for them. While every athlete's tale is intensely personal, it turns out there are some common themes.

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Natalie Coughlin, in the 2012 Olympic trials; Brian Sells, in the 2008 Olympicmarathon trials; and Helen Goodroad, in a 112-mile road ride, each had a moment that transformed them into star athletes.

Francisco investment bank and trying to spend time with Energy pie? All the things her husband an d f r i e nds. that take time and energy — a Finally, six y ears ago, she job, hobbies, family, friends asked Matt Dixon, a coach, and of course athletic training. if he could make her a better "There is only so much room triathlete. in the pie," said Spence. One thing that turned out Martin's advice was "a lec- to be crucial was to underture on limiting distractions," stand the principles of trainhe added. "If I wanted to get to ing. When she was coaching the next level, to be competi- herself, Kessler did whatever tive on the world scene, I had she felt like, with no particushe was doing, staying fo- to make running a priority." lar plan in mind. Dixon taught cused and thinking about her So he quit graduate school and her that every workout has a technique. made running his profession. purpose. One might focus on "That's when I really started "I realized this is what I am endurance, another on speed. improving," she said. "The doing for my job." And others, just as important, more I did it, the more success It paid off. He came in third are for recovery. "I had not won an Ironman I had." in the 1991 marathon world In addition to her many vic- championships in Tokyo. He until he put me on that structories, Coughlin won five med- made the 2004 Olympic mara- ture," said Kessler, 34. "That's als in the 2008 Beijing Olym- thon team, coming in 12th in when I started winning." pics, including a gold medal in the race. Now he is head crossAnother crucial change was the 100-meter backstroke. country coach and assistant to quit her job so she could track coach at Shippensburg devote herself to training. It Manage your 'energy pie' College in Pennsylvania. And took several years — she left In 1988, Steve Spence, then he tells his teams to manage banking only in A p ri l 2011 — but it made a huge differa 25-year-oldself-coached dis- their energy pies. tance runner, was admitted ence. Now a professional athinto the U.S. Long Distance Structure your training lete, with sponsors, she has Runner Olympic Development M eredith Kessler wa s a won four Ironman championProgram. It meant visiting Da- natural athlete. In high school, ships and three 70.3 kilometer vid Martin, a physiologist at she played field hockey and championships. Georgia State University, sev- l acrosse. She wa s o n t h e Kessler's parents were myseral times a year for a battery track team and the swimming tified when she quit her job. of teststo measure Spence's team. She went to Syracuse She reminded them that they progress and to assess his University on a field hockey had always told her that it did diet. scholarship. not matter if she won. What During dinner at Martin's Then she began racing in mattered was that she did her favorite Chinese restaurant, Ironman t r i athlons, w h i ch best. She left the bank, she he gave Spence some advice. require athletes to swim 2.4 said, "to do my best." "There are always going miles, cycle 112 miles and then to be runners who are faster run a marathon (26.2 miles). Take risks than you," he said. "There will Kessler loved it, but she was Helen G o odroad b e g an always be runners more tal- not winning any races. The competing as a figure skater ented than you and runners former sports star was now in when she was in fourth grade. who seem to be training hard- the middle of the pack. Her dream was to be in the er than you. The key to beatBut she also wa s w o rkOlympics. She was athletic ing them is to train harder and ing 60 hours a week at a San and graceful, but she did not

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Stay focused Like many distance swimmers who spend endless hours in the pool, Natalie Coughlin, 30, used to daydream as she swam laps. She'd been a competitive swimmer for almost her entire life, and this was the way she — and many others — managed the boredom of practice. But when she was in college, she realized that daydreaming was only a way to get in the miles; it was not allowing her to reach her potential. So she started to concentrate every moment of practice on what

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ness that Reents noted was that, so far, the database mostContinued from 01 ly includes exercise equivaCheckout the website for Thousands of websites and lents fo r r e staurant i t ems free: www.athleteinme.com/ — not many grocery items. mobile apps are available to caloriecounter.aspx. help the conscientious eater He obtained the calorie conThe AthletelnMe.com track calories, said Stan Retent of menu items from chain "Exercise Calorie Converter" ents, the president and CEO restaurants, which must disapp works for AppleiPhone, of AthletelnMe.com, based in close the calories of their food. iPad, and iPod Touch, and Phoenix. He is building up his database, for Android-compatible "I wanted to create somehe said, and adding more grosmartphones, andcosts thing different. The w h ole ceries. The U.S. Department $2.99. point is to get people moving," of Agriculture provides an he said. online nutrient database from "A lot of people count calowhich Reents — or anyone ries, but no one has any perResearchers found when the — can acquire the calories for, spective on how to relate calo- physical equivalent was post- say, a banana, a tablespoon of ries to minutes of exercise. ed, beverage sales dropped. peanut butter, a slice of bread When you give people that They concluded the physical or a cup of milk. information, their jaws drop. It activity equivalent may have Reents noted that his system tends to have a bigger impact the greatest effect on f o od did offer a unique category: on them," he said. selection. beer. "It might be kind of humorThe concept was boosted by Reents, who has an educaa study that said providing the tion and work experience in ous, but people need to realize physical activity e quivalent clinical pharmacy and an in- that alcohol is a high source of — such as minutes of jogging terest in fitness, said he came calories," he said. — for sugar-sweetened bever- up with the exercise calculaI had already discovered ages reduced the consumption tions f o r A t h l eteInMe.com this section. The list doesn't of such drinks. The study, pub- by averaging data about exappear to include local microlished in the American Journal pended caloriesfrom exercise brews, so it was hard to find of Public Health in December from at least six physiology the ones I drink. But I've been 2011, suggested the physical textbooks. known to enjoy a Tecate (146 activity equivalent was a more This provides an average, calories) on a hot summer day, effective way to encourage but not an exact number of which equals 21 minutes of healthy lifestyle choices than minutes of exercise needed biking, or 13 minutes of runjust posting the calorie content for any individual, he admits. ning, or 19 minutes of swimof various foods. No two people burn calories ming or a 34 minute-walk. Researchersfrom the School the same. The rate at which an In the winter, when a Guinof Public Health at Johns Hop- individual burns calories de- ness Extra Stout is more apkins University posted t he pends on many factors, includ- pealing, I'm going to have to caloric information of sugar- ing their body type and their work harder. To burn off that sweetened beverages in three effortexpended. The website 176 calories, I'd have to bike 26 different ways near their point and app, for example, don't say minutes, or jog 16 minutes, or of sale: I) A basic calorie count, whether you should run fast or swim 22 minutes or walk for 2) the percent of total recom- jog slow for some number of 40 minutes. mended daily intake or 3) the minutes to burn off a burger. And that's before eating a activity equivalent ("Did you Reents used an average be- chicken alfredo. "Dieting (calorie restriction) know that working off a bottle tween the fast and the slow of soda or fruit juice takes about paces for various exercises. is clearly important for suc50 minutes of running?"). The system's other weakcess," Reents said in an email.

FindAthlete inMe

really look like a figure skater. Goodroad grew to be 5 feet 11 inches. "I was probably twice the size of any competitor," she said. "I had to have custommade skates starting when I was 10 years old." One day, when Helen was 17, a coach asked her to try a workout on an ergometer, a rowing machine. She was a natural — her power was phenomenal. "He told me, 'You could get a rowing scholarship to any school. You could go to the Olympics,'" said Goodroad. But that would mean giving up her dream, abandoning the sport she had devoted her life to and plunging into the unknown. S he decided to t ake t h e chance. It was hard and she was terrified, but she got a rowi ng scholarship t o B r o w n. In 1993, Goodroad was invited to train with the junior national team. Three years later,she made the under-23 national team, which won a world c h ampionship. (She rowed under h e r m a i d en name, Betancourt.) It is so easy to stay in your comfort zone, Goodroad said. "But then you can get stale. You don't go anywhere." Leaving skating, leaving what she knew and loved, "helped me see that, 'Wow, I could do a whole lot more than I ever thought I could.'" U ntil thi s acad e m ic year, when she had a baby, Goodroad, who is 37, was a rowing coach at P r inceton. She still runs to stay fit and plans to return to coaching.

to be obese, according to researchers. But a new study published

The other guy ishurting, too

in the journal JAMA

In 2006, when Brian Sell was racing in the U.S. Half Marathon Championships in Houston, he had a realization. "I was neck-and-neck with two or three other guys with two miles to go," he said. He started to doubt himself. What

Pediatrics chipped away at the theory that screen

time is exceedingly to blame for inactivity in youth.

Overall, 70 percent of the 1,218 children

ages 6 to11 who were

was he doing, struggling to

involved with the study met physical activity

keep up with men whose race times were better than his? Suddenly, it came to him: T hose other guys must be hurting as much as he was, or else they would not be staying with him — they would be

recommendati ons,and 54 percent of them met screen-time limitations. However, fewer than 4 in10 children met both recommendations at the

pulling away.

same time. In conclusion, low

"I made up my mind then to hang on, no matter what happened or how I was feeling," said Sell. "Sure enough, in about half a mile, one guy dropped out and then another. I went on to win by 15 seconds or so, and every race since then, if a withering surge was thrown in, I made every effort

levels of screen time do

not necessarily predict higher levels of physical activity, researchers wrote. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin

to hang on to the guy surging." Sell made the 2008 Olympic marathon team andcompeted in the Beijing Olympics, where he came in 22nd. Now 33 years old, he is working as a scientist at Lancaster Laboratories in Pennsylvania.

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D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

NUTRITION Tide turns on child obesity

Vitamins

A study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association in December said

Continued from 01 "If they removed (prostate cancer cases), the reduction for all other cancers was 12 percent. That's a pretty significant reduction in cancer risk," said Frei, who was not involved with the research. "I don't think there's any other pill out there that has that large of an effect on cancer." Freisaid because itw asa randomized, p l acebo-controlled trial done on a large group over a long duration, the results hold some weight. Most studies on vitamins have been observational in nature, which doesn't show a cause and effect. "I think this is proof of the concept that m u l t ivitamins can prevent cancer," said Frei. How vitamins may prevent cancer is not understood in great detail, Frei said. The researchers, from Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School in Boston, acknowledge this. "It is difficult to definitively identify any single mechanism of effect through which individual or multiple components of our tested multivitamin may have reduced cancer risk," the authors wrote. They postulated that the reduction in cancer risk was due to the combination of low-dose vitamins and minerals, rather than an emphasis on a high dose of any one vitamin or mineral. "It's probably a little bit of everything that brings the effect," Frei agreed. Folic acid, he said, is important in maintaining integrity of the DNA. Antioxidants, selenium, copper and zinc all play a role in normal metabolism and immune functions. "With respect to cancer, some (vitamins) may be more important, like folate, possibly (vitamin) D, certain minerals like selenium, but, it's hard to pin it down to a single ingredient. The whole ideabehind multivitamins is that you cover all the bases."

childhood obesity in low-income preschoolers appears to have started declining. Researchersfrom the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analyzed 26.7 million children ages 2 through

4 from 30 states and the District of Columbia between 1998 and

2010. The children were eligible for federally funded maternal and child health and nutri-

tion programs. The prevalence of obesity in this population increased from 13 percent in1998 to just

above 15 percentin 2003. The prevalence

of obesity decreased slightly to just below15 percent in 2010.

The prevalence of extreme obesity increased from 1.8 percent in 1998 to 2.2 percent in 2003. Extreme obesity decreased to 2.1 percent in 2010.

Obesity during early childhood tends to continue into adulthood and

has beenassociated with cardiovascular

risk factors, increased health care costs and premature death. — Anne Aurand, The Bulletin

The general population Thinkstock

It's possible that the physi-

are differences between how men's and women's bodies handle drugs, but the exact differencesare generally unknown, Gonsalves said. Multivitamins ar e g e nerally safe when taken in "physiological doses" as opposed to "pharmacological or clinical doses," Gonsalves said. Physiological doses are the amount in which the vitamin could be consumed from food. Pharmacological doses are isolated and concentrated amounts of a vitamin. Used therapeutically,these high doses can come group, such as dairy, are prob- with side effects. ably missing nutrients from Read the label on any multithat food group. vitamin bottle and make sure individual vitamins are in dosConsiderations es of 100 percent of the RDA But Gonsalves stops short of or less, she insisted. suggesting most people take a No standard or regulatory multivitamin. definition defines what nutri"In general, a multivitamin ents a multivitamin-mineral isn't a problem," she said. supplement should contain. But, she said, "sources are Manufacturers decide types saying there may be no ben- and levels of the ingredients. efit, a small benefit or even a Sometimes, in the interest small risk of harm by taking of marketing, an individual vimultiple vitamins." tamin will be as high as 3,000 For example, one study on percent of the RDA, with excepwomen suggested health risks tional health claims for fighting associated with regular use of cancer, forexample, she said. It's also worth c onsidersupplements. The observational s tudy ing what other fortified foods was published in the Archives you're consuming, she said. of Internal Medicine in 2011. It Fortified foods such as cereassessed vitamin and mineral als and snack bars may add to supplementation o n 3 8 ,772 one's vitamin intake, and push women with a mean age of certain levels too high. 62. Researchers suggested, Some studies, Gonsalves based on the outcomes, that said, have shown long-term commonly used dietary vitas upplementation w it h h i g h min and mineral supplements levels of vitamin A o r b e ta "may be associated with incarotene is associated with increased total mortality risk." creased risk of some cancers. The association was strongest Vitamin A at two or three times with supplemental iron. the RDA in pregnant women Frei dismissed this study, can cause birth defects, she known as the Iowa Health said. And, too much vitamin A Study, as "an outlier," an excan thin the bones and lead to ception to the bulk of studies. osteoporosis, she said. "Those things, if you take But, he said, he does suggest older adults take supplements multivitamins and eat fortiwithout iron. fied cereals and extra fortified Gonsalves also noted that foods, could be a big deal," she this study w a s e x clusively sard. done on women, just as the G onsalves generally d i scancer benefit study was just courages high-dose suppleon men. N e ither o u tcome ments such as Emergen-C or should be extrapolated to the Airborne, although she said general p o pulation. T h e re "usually people take t h em (RDA) of vitamin E, he said. In some black populations, the shortage is higher. Vitamin D inadequacies and deficiencies are common. More than half of Americans don't get enough magnesium. Deficiencies in vitamins A, C and B6 are common, he said. Adults don't absorb B12 as well as they get older, added Julie Hood Gonsalves, a registered dietician and associate professor atCentral Oregon Community College And, Gonsalves said, people who avoid any particular food

More onvitamins The Linus Pauling

Institute at Oregon State University: http://Ipi.oregonstate.edu/ infocenter/multivitaminmineral.html Office of Dietary

Supplements, National Institutes of Health: http://ods.od.nih.gov/ factsheets/MVMSHealthProfessional/

cians who were the subjects in the study have generally healthier lifestyles than the average American. In that case, the impact of m u ltivitamin use in the general population could be even greater than it was in the doctors, Frei said. Still, federal guidelines and most dieticians don't outright recommend that most people take a multivitamin. The federal government's 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans says nutrients should come primarily from foods. "Sufficient evidence is not available to support a recommendation for or against the use of multivitamin/mineral supplements in the primary prevention of chronic disease for th e h e althy A m e rican population," according to the national guidelines. But Frei said he believes most people couldbenefit from taking a supplement to fill nutritional gaps because most don't consume all the recommended amounts of vitamins from their diet. "Everybody is lacking some nutrients unless you eat nine

(servings of) fruits and vegetables every day and an otherwise healthy diet," he said.

"There's no group or specif-

ic population that doesn't have an inadequacy of something," Frei said. "To make sure you get all of them, a multivitamin is a no-brainer." About 93 percent of Americans don't get the recommended d a i l y all o w ance

I

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<I —.

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The same research that resulted in findings about reduced cancer from long-term, daily multivitamin use also showed that taking a m u l t ivitamin regularly did not lower the risk of majorcardiovascular events — heart attacks, strokes and deathfrom heartdisease. The physicians on which the research was conducted, Frei said, are more likely to " self-medicate" w i t h ba b y aspirin or statin medications that lower rates of heart disease. Physicians tend to have a lower rateof heart disease than t h e g e neral p o pulation. Therefore, he said, they might not need the multivitamin as much as the general population. In the doctors, he said, "you probably wouldn't see an additional (lowering o f heart disease) from t h e multivitamin." — Reporter: 541-383-0304, aaurand@bendbulletin.com

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short-term and it's not a big deal." T h ese s u pplements, which dissolve into a glass of water, are marketed as energy and immune boosters that improve health. "It's a marketing thing not backed by science. People can make a lot of money on supplements. But they're not multivitamins," she said. These products include a selection of vitamins in h i g h d oses. Emergen-C, for example, contains more than 1,600 percent of the RDA of vitamin C and 500 percent of the RDA of B6. Airborne is similar with more than 1,600 percent of RDA for vitamin C, and 150 percent of RDA for manganese. O verloading y o u r bo d y with vitamin C, for example, could create gastrointestinal upset and, potentially, kidney stones, she said. Vitamin D in excessive doses can also lead to kidney stones. But these things take a long time to develop. Niacin, in pharmacological doses, can spark an immediate hot flush and over time, can cause liver damage, Gonsalves said.

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • T HE BULLETIN D S

MEDICINE

Me itationma e By Karen Herzog

c r o nic in ammation

The study by University of Wisconsin neuroscientists with the Center for I nvestigating Healthy Minds at t h e Waisman Center was the first designed to control for other therapeutic mechanisms, such as supportive social interaction, expert instruction or learning new skills, according to a university news release. The mindfulness-based approach is not a magic bullet, said Melissa Rosenkranz, assistant scientist at the center and lead author of the paper, which was published recently in the journal Brain, Behavior and Immunity. But the study does showthat there are ways that mindfulness can be beneficial, and that some people may be more likely to benefit from this approach than other interventions, she said. Significant portions of the population do not benefit from available pharmaceutical treatment options, for example.

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

MILWAUKEE — While interest in mindfulness meditation as a s tress relieverhas grown through the years, there's been little evidence to support that it helps those suffering from chronic inflammation conditions in which psychological stress plays a major role. Until now. A new study by University of Wisconsin, Madison, neuroscientists suggests mindfulness meditation tech-

niques may help people suffering from rheumatoid arthritis, i n f lammatory bowel disease and asthma. Mindfulness-based stress reduction, originally designed for patients with chronic pain, consists of continuously focusing attention on the breath, bodily sensations and mental content while seated, walking or practicing yoga.

ic

Some of these patients suffer from negative side effects of the drugs or simply do not respond to the standard of care for treatment of the disorder. The study compared two methods of reducing stress: a mindfulness meditation-based approach and a program designed to enhance health in ways unrelated to mindfulness. Accordingtothe news release: The comparison group participated in the Health Enhancement Program, which consisted of nutritional education; physical activity, such as walking; balance, agility and core strengthening; and music therapy. The content of the program was meant to match aspects of the mindfulness instruction in some way. For example, physical exercise was meant to match walking meditation, without the mindfulness component. Both groups had the same amount of training, the same level of

expertise in the instructors, and the same amount of home practice required of participants. Using a tool called the Trier Social Stress Test to induce psychological stressand a capsaicin creamto produce inflammation on the skin, immune and endocrine measures were collected before and after training in the two methods. While both techniques were proven effective in reducing stress, the mindfulness-based stress reduction approach was moreeffectiveat reducing stress-induced inflammation. The results show that behavioral interventions d esigned t o re d u ce emotional reactivity are beneficial to people suffering from chronic inflammatory conditions. The study also suggests that mindfulness techniques may be more effective in relieving inflammatory symptoms than other activities that promote well-being.

Thinkstock

App shows aging after alcohol Ever wonder about the impact all that drink-

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Annex

services into the world of mental health, an environment the clients already know and trust. "What we wanted to do is think where is that health care home," Haase said. "For a lot of patients, it's with their primary care provider. But for this population, it really is the Annex." For her part, Busby has worked to fit in these patients' world to build relationships. "The more patients trust and participate in their care," Busby said, "the more effective it is."

While it helps, it doesn't completely remedy the challenges. "A lot of people don't know Continued from 01 To turn this tide, Deschutes how to handle people with County and Mosaic Medical, mental illnesses," said Patria regional organization that cia von Riedl, a county peer p rovides health care to t h e support specialist. "Doctors underserved, decided to creare not always used to dealing ate a pilot program. A Mosaic with that population." primary-care physician would In contrast, medicine uncome once a week to the Anfolds a little differently at the nex, where those with mental Annex. health issues already visit regBusby works in an o f fice ularly for counseling and other with a laptop and a few simple services. The doctor would medical tools. Ronda Jordan, build trust with patients, coora medical assistant at M o dinate their care and help consaic, accompanies her every nect them with any specialized Medicine in the Annex Tuesday and coordinates the medical services they need. For a person with a severe patients. Today, what is now called mental illness, getting medical S ome appointments a r e the Deschutes County Behav- care can present a challenge. scheduled, but time is always ioral Health-Mosaic A nnex Making appointments and reserved for drop-ins. People Project has grown from rough- getting to them can be dif- waiting sometimes mingle in ly six patients a little more than ficult, Sammon said. So can the Rainbow Room, a gathera year ago to about 100. dealing with the clinic enviing place in the Annex buildThe physician, Dr. Tina Bus- ronment.Some people experi- ing for a community that faces by, has convinced five people to ence severe anxiety or audi- similar challenges. quit smoking. She recognized tory hallucinations. A few patients, Busby said, "Just sitting in a crowded have wanted to meet her beundiagnosed diabetes in one person and is now helping with waiting room for 30 to 40 min- fore being willing to particiits management. Only a couple utes is too long," he said. pate in any discussion about of deaths have occurred since Once in the exam room, their medical conditions. The the project began. some patients don't always county therapists also someThe project has been so ef- communicate well. They might times come to the appointfective that the two entities are mumble or not be able to talk ments to make the individuals working on expanding it. The about their symptoms with more comfortable. goal is to have a Mosaic pri- clarity. Others require more Busby usually spends more m ary-care doctoron-site five time to build trust than is often time with each patient than she days a week, serving up to 500 allotted at a clinic. would at the clinic. She gets to patients. Then there is making sure know their stories as well as Merging mental health and the individuals follow their their medical issues. medical services is a newer doctors' instructions or take A number ofthem do have concept in health care that the nextrecommended steps. medical conditions that require in recent years has gained S omething as simple as a monitoring such as diabetes, traction. blood test becomes complicat- chronic obstructivepulmonary M osaic Medical an d S t . ed if the person has difficulty disease and high cholesterol. Charles Primary Care clinics, making it to the lab or can't be Their management might be for instance, have psycholo- relied upon to fast for 12 hours. more complex depending on gists and other mental health Deschutes County has hired their various medications. professionals stationed within staff,called peer support speBusby said it can take time primary-care clinics. cialists, who accompany peo- to convince people to get the What is different with the ple needing help to their medi- care they need. For instance, Annex Project, Sammon said, cal appointments and explain if she b elieves a p a tient's is it brings the primary-care instructions. sleep issues merit an assess-

ment that requires dozing off in a lab, she might talk about that over the course of several appointments. "I give them time to process it to make sure they understand," she said. When she does make such referrals, Busby also makes an effort to coordinate with the specialist. She will contact the office ahead of time so they're aware of the patient's mental illness, and she makes it clear that the specialist is welcome to call her for follow-up information.

Getting results One positive that quickly emerged from the projectwas better communication among care providers. With county therapists, the county psychiatrist and Busby under one roof, information about clients gets shared. They pop into each other's offices to ask questions. The mind and body issues can also be related. For instance, atrial f i brillation, a type of irregular heart beat, is associated with feelings of anxiety. "It's really hard when you don't work in one office," Sammon said. "Everyone has a little piece of the picture. It's fragmented." Some of the clients like the setup, as well. Albert Mills, 49, of La Pine, said he isn't certain he would be seeking out the care he needs for early emphysema and other issues if it

weren'tforthe Annex Project. "She just cares about people," he said of Busby. "She wants to know what's going on and she tells you what's up." In the long run, Haase said, ensuring access to primary care for this population will keep them out ofemergency situations, which drives down health costs overall. Launching the project didn't require a cash infusion, she added. Some of the Deschutes County's clients already came to Mosaic Medical's clinics, so the big difference was changing the setting. Scott Johnson, director of Deschutes County Health Services, said in an email that the expansion of the Annex Project is one of the department's highest budget priorities for the coming year. The county is presently doing a feasibility study that includes a proposed remodel of the building where the Annex Project is located. U ltimately, the effort w i l l help better care for an already vulnerable population.

ing and binge drinking, plays on people's vanity and specifically targets

women. Android and iPhone users with the "Drinking Mirror"

app are able to upload or snap photos of themselves and enter information about their

drinking habits. Once they do so, they will see how their faces might

age if they continue to drink at their current

rate. The app's website, which seeks to spread awareness about health

concerns associated with excessive alcohol consumption, warns that weight gain, dull

skin, wrinkles and red cheeks areassociated with drinking heavily on

a regular basis. The Drinking Mirror

app is free for iPhone and Android. — The Washington Post

"This is a group of people

with a lot of skills and joys," Busby said. "They deserve to be cared for and respected."

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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013

ADVICE 4 E N T ERTAINMENT

eware: eria i ersare ooseon TV SPOTLIGHT

— and partly it's the way that they are glamorized. By Robert Lloyd I understand that terror has Los Angeles Times its uses and am not averse to In an alarming bit of syna bit of frightful catharsis; too chronicity, or what some might much decorum in our shared call a lack of cultural imaginafantasies can be as unhealthtion, two new series premierful as too little. Nor do I believe ing o n n e t w ork t e levision that, in a general way, violence n early within a m onth w i l l in entertainment makes viorevolve around serial killings, lent people; indeed, some studand serial killings by proxy: ies have suggested quite the "Cult," which begins Feb. 19 opposite. (A 2010 study from on the CW, and the similarly Texas A8cM suggested, for titled "The Following," which instance, that "violent games premiered Monday on Fox. reduce depressionand hostile B BC A m e r ica's p e r i od Tiger Aspect wa New York Times News Serwce feelings in p l ayers through procedural " Ripper S treet," Charlene McKenna, right, in a scene from the BBC show "Ripper mood management.") meanwhile, began its eight- Street." The show, a period police procedural created by Richard But it does create violence episode run Saturday not with Warlow, is set in the slums of London in 1889. in the culture, in the social air the Jack but a murderer — if we commonly breathe, and such a comparative may be objections to it should not be allowed — even more distaste- violence was a hot subject in and rape all these women ev- dismissed merely because it ful. And NBC has "Hannibal," the wake of th e N ewtown, ery night, every day, week af- can't be tied to a particular realconcerning the early days of Conn., school shooting, CBS ter week, year after year.") world act or because most of Thomas Harris' cannibal kill- Entertainment President Nina What is it about these char- us are smart enough to tell the er, on its docket for a date to be Tassler and NBC Entertain- acters that bothers me so'? difference between fantasy and announced. ment Chairman Bob GreenbThey are supposed to both- reality. This is nothing new. We are latt — a Showtime executive er us, of course, on the way to I recognize, as well, that in Season 8 of CBS' "Criminal w hen "Dexter" was born providing some sort of enter- great art has been made on Minds," a weekly cavalcade were called on to defend their tainment. (Perhaps it's the "en- this theme: "M," "Monsieur of just such intricately devised series. tertainment" that's my prob- Verdoux," "The Night of the horrors whose viewership has Each stood behind the prod- lem.) Partly, it's that in spite of Hunter," "Peeping Tom," "Badhovered pretty consistently be- uct.Greenblatt defended "Dex- all the pathologies and florid lands" (a murder-spree story, tween 12 million and 14million, ter" by saying it isn't as violent particulars with which their technically), even that comwith its ranking improving as as "Criminal Minds." Tassler creatorsdress them and the edy chestnut "Arsenic and the overall size of the broad- defended "Criminal Minds" as complicated manners of kill- Old Lace." There is violence in cast audience has shrunk; it something meant for adults, ing they devise for them, they Homer and Shakespeare, and, is a palpable hit. And there is and a show she likes. (Former are tediously alike. Partly it is Lord knows,there is violence "Dexter," on Showtime, whose star Mandy Patinkin, by con- that, being deviant, they have in the Bible — both the fire and protagonist serially murders trast, told New York magazine nothing much to tell us about brimstone of the Old Testaserial murderers. awhile back that the series ourselvesor the world — there ment and the feel-His-pain torAt the recent Television Crit- was "the biggest public mis- may be more serial k i llers ments of the New. Dante was a ics Association press conclave take I ever made.... I never about than we think, but there great inventor of tortures. But in Pasadena, Calif., where TV thought they were going to kill are fewer than we imagine we are talking about some-

what lower horizons here. In most popular fictions, the serialkillerisoften notjustsmart but brilliant: Almost psychically sensitive to their opponents and

prey, able to play the game 10 moves ahead. These figures are self-styled iibermenschen (they are usually menschen), typically with an "artistic" bent. "He didn't just eviscerate 14 female students," Kevin Bacon's reactivated FBI agent says of James Purefoy's Poe-obsessed serial

killer (and leader of serial killers) in "The Following," "He was making art." Created by Kevin Williamson ("Scream," "Dawson's Creek"), "The Following," in which an imprisoned serial killer marshals an army of l i k e-minded m u rderers, multiplying the effect, does seem torepresent some sortof watershed for network TV. Its survival relies on the survival of its villain and, therefore, the continued failure of its hero, and an unending stream of variations on the central ritual — the stalking, the torture, the

killing. ("Cult," a kind of metaseries about a show-withinthe-show called "Cult," feels somewhat less gruesome for being more mysterious.) The success of "Criminal Minds" notwithstanding, a n d t he many hands that had to sign contractsand checks to bring it to life, it strikes me as an odd, sadplan for a TVshow, at least in the framework of network broadcast TV.

Gir rien wants rin e ore roomie

MOVIE TIMESTODAY

Dear Abby:I am a woman in my early 20s and in my first serious relationship. I adore "Paul." We have a wonderful, respectful relationship. One day I hope we'll be married. I feel strongly that we should not live together before we are • EAR married. Hedisagrees. He feels couples need to know each other's habits fully b e fore they make a lifelong commitment. I understand the financial and emotional convenience of sharing a home with your loved one. However, I believe that marriage changes a living dynamic whether you have lived together or not. Conflicts that arise post-marriage can be facedwith a greater sense of resolve, knowing that a formal commitment has been made. Abby, what's your take on this? Should couples live together before marriage? I don't want to be stubborn and say I'll never live with anyone before getting m arried, because I know it's a very common thing to do. What can I say to Paul and friends who disagree with me to defend my "old-fashioned" logic'? — Traditionalist in Chicago

Regal Old Mill Stadium16 8 IMAX,680 S.W.Powerhouse Drive, 541-382-6347 •THE BEST OF RLFETRAX LIVE:MANOS, THE HANDS OF FATE (PG-13) 7:30 • BROKEN CITY (R) 12:40, 3:20, 6:05, 9:10 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 12:50, 4:30, 8:05 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) I2:35, 3: I5, 6: IO,9: I5 • THE GUILT TRIP (PG-13i 1:30 • HANSELAND GRETEL: WITCH HUNTERS IMAX (R)10:45 • A HAUNTED HOUSE(R) 1:40, 4:40, 7:55, IO:IO • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)7 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY IMAX (PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 3:25, 7:05 • JACK REACHER (PG-13) 3:55, 10 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 12:15, 3:50, 6:25, 9:20 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 11:40 a.m., 3:05, 6:30, 9:55 • LLFB OF Pl (PG)Noon • LIFEOFPI3-0(PGl3:45,7:20, IO: l5 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 11:50 a.m., 3:10, 6:30, 9:50 • MAMA(PG-I3) 1:05, 3:40, 7: IO,9:40 • MONSTERS, INC. 3-0(Gj 1:20 • PARENTAL GUIDANCE(PG) 1:45, 4:20 • SKYFALL (PG- I3) 3:35, 6:40, 9:50 • THIS IS 40lRl 12:05, 3:30, 6:35, 9:35 • WRECK-IT RALPH (PG)11:45 a.m., 2:25, 5 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 11:45 a.m., 3:25, 6:50, 8, 10:15 • Accessibility devicesareavailable forsome movies.

Dear Traditionalist: I don't think you should argue with them on the subject at all. Just say that although many couples live together today w i thout m a r riage, Y OU aren't comfortable with it. You are not the only person who feels this way. M any people w i t h strong religious convictions feel the way you do about it. In my opinion, this is something that couples should work out between themselves. Dear Abby:My next-door neighbor "Rod" and I work at the same place, about 10 miles from our homes. He has a medical condition that prevents him from driving. Until recently, he took the bus, but that route was stopped, so he now relies on his wife for transportation every day. She works and also takes care of their three kids. Last summer, I drove Rod for a while, but he was a terrible carpool companion. He was perpetually late, and I'd have to wait for him in the morning and after work. He would brag nonstop about how good he is at his job, and then want to stand around in our driveway chatting instead of just going inside.

ABBYQ

He never offered to pay for gas or compensate mein any way, and seemedunableto find other arrangements when I had to work late or run errands after work, which made me feel trapped in his schedule. I finally got tired of the hassle and made an excuse to stop driving him. There isno real reason I can't take him now except that he was such a pain in the you-know-what that I don't want to. But I feel guilty when I see his wife loading up all their kids to make the drive. What's the right thing to do? We may be neighbors for a very long time. — Kind Commuter fn Madison, Wis.

Dear Kind Commuter: I recognize your generosity in extending yourself to your co-worker, who apparently never learned the basics of carpool etiquette. Because you got nothing positive out of driving him, I do not recommend you start again. However, if you would like to do his wife a favor, see if there are transportation services for people with disabilities in your city, and if there are, give that information to her. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P0. Box69440,Los Angeles, CA 90069

• There may beanadditional fee for 3-0 and /MAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. t

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Regal Pilot Butte 6, 2717N.E.U.S. Highway 20, 541-382-6347 • ARGO (R) 12:I5, 3, 6 • HYDE PARK ONHUDSONlR) 1:15, 7 • THE IMPOSSIBLE (PG-13) 12:30, 3:30, 6:15 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) I2:45, 4 • PROMISEDLAND(R) 4:15 • RUST AND BONES(R) 1, 3:45, 6:30 • SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOKiRl Noon, 3:15, 6:45 I

HAPPY BIRTHDAYFOR THURSDAY, JAN. 24, 2013:This year you'll want to avoid power plays at all costs. You might generate a lot of plans only to find that many of them will fall apart. Ask yourself why this happens. It could Stars showthe kind be something that of day you'll have is totally unrelated ** * * * D ynamic to your decisions. ** * * P ositive If you are single, ** * A verage you r nurturing ** So-so style draws many * Difficult people to you. Do you always want to be a nurturer? Think about that scenario before you decide to relate to a needy individual. CANCERis very moody.

ARIES (March 21-April19)

YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar

Tonight: Treat yourself to a favorite dessert.

CANCER (June21-July22) ** * * Y our impulsiveness might carry you through a problem, but there is a strong likelihood thatyou could collide with someone. This person might be a partner who often gets into control games. Take astand if you need to, but know that it could prolong the issue. Tonight: Charm works. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) ** * T ake your time right now. You might be on overload and thinking through a lot of issues that all might be connected. Don't worry, because as you process your feelings, you will become more logical. Avoid a difficult person. Screen your calls. Tonight: Do something just for you.

** * * You could have your fair share of hurdles to jump over at the present time, especially when someone suddenly becomes extremely controlling. Don't play into this person's games. You might get frustrated when dealing with someone else's finances.Tonight:Mosey on home. VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) ** * * M e etings with groups of people TAURUS (April 20-May20) and one-on-one interactions will allow ** * * G o with someone else's greater success and more support. suggestion. You might feel as if you cannot Brainstorming with others encourages breakthrough an associate's resistance. greater involvementfrom all parties. A Why even try? Detach, and suddenlythis partner acts in a most unexpected manner. person could want to pull you back in. Tonight: Onlywhatmakesyou happy. You can't avoid this situation. Tonight: LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) Discussions over dinner at afavorite spot. ** * * Deal with an authority figure GEMINI (May 21-June20) who often causes you aproblem. This ** * * You seem to acting be as if person can bevery controlling, yet you another holiday is around the corner. Be must be responsive. You might decide to smart. Rein in your impulsiveness andyour tighten your budget in order to create more desire to indulge. Express your feelings flexibility when you needit. Check in with an insteadofspending moneytoappease older relative. Tonight: A must appearance. them; you'll be happier in the long run.

SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21) ** * * K now when enough is enough. Be willing to understand what is happening with a child or a loved one at adistance. Sometimes your attitude pushes people away.Open uptosom enew ideasthat could invigorate your daily life. Tonight: Let your imagination make the call.

SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec.21) ** * * Your emotional nature takes over. Avoid getting pulled into a difficult situation. You will workthrough your feelings quickly if you canstay calm. A loved oneis unpredictable. Nothing you can dowill make this person honor the status quo.Tonight: How about a cozydinner?

CAPRICORN (Dec.22-Jan. 19) ** * * * Y ou could be surprised at what falls into your lap. The energy from an unexpected source will carry you through the day. Maintain your sense of humor, and worry less. The immediate situation or crisis does not reveal the whole story. Tonight: Go with the flow.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fed.18) ** * * Pace yourself. Know that some situations cannot be resolved; worrying about them is awaste of your time. Unexpected news points to a newdirection or idea. This might be hard to realize atfirst, but eventually you will know what to do. Tonight: Get someexercise.

PISCES (Fed. 19-March20) ** * * Your attention turns to child a or loved onewho makes it clear that he orshe wants your attention. Youmight be surprised at the cost of a token ofappreciation. A friend you previously counted onmight not be reliable or supportive right now.Tonight: Go with your feelings. ©2tn3 by King Features Syndicate

TV TODAY 12 p.m. on ESPN,"Winter X Games" —The Winter X Games return to Aspen/Snowmass, Colo.,as more than 200 of the world's premier winter action sports athletes — including Bobby Brown, Kelly Clark, Tucker Hibbert, Mark McMorris and Shaun White and others — compete insuchevents as Snowboard SuperPipe, Ski Big Air, and Snowmobile SnoCross. ESPN andABChave 20 hours of live competition coverage today through Sunday. 5 p.m. on TNT,"NBA Basketdall" —Two divisional rivalries play out tonight on TNT's Thursday doubleheader, starting with this Atlantic tilt in Boston between Rajon Rondo's Celtics and Carmelo Anthony's first-place New York Knicks. Then it's a clash of Pacific foes when Chris Paul and the division-leading Clippers pay a visit to Goran Dragic and the last-place Phoenix Suns. 8 p.m. on H C), "Last Resort" — A violent battle for control of the Colorado erupts leaving lt vulnerable to being takenover by a third party that may not haveits best interests at heart, to say the least. Marcus andSam (Andre Braugher, Scott Speedmanl struggle to keepthat from happening in the season finale.

Bp.m. on f®,"The Big Bang Theory" —A game of Words With Friends puts Sheldon's (Jim Parsons) friendship with Stephen Hawking to the test in this episode. Penny (Kaley Cuoco) decides to take a college course but doesn't tell anyone. 8 p.m. on (CW),"The Vampire Diaries" —Damon (lan Somerhalderl coaches a furious Jeremy (Steven R. McQueen) for a battle with Klaus' (Joseph Morgan) new vampires, but Kol (Nathaniel Buzolic) has beaten them to it. Rebekah (Claire Holt) tries to mend fences with Stefan (Paul Wesley). Bonnie, Sheriff Forbes and Mayor Hopkins (Kat Graham, Marguerite Maclntyre, Rick Worthy) want answers from Shane (David Alpayl about the Founders' Council deaths. 10 p.m. on USA,"Suits" — The war with Daniel may be over, but the battle has left Pearson Hardman vulnerable, and Harvey (Gabriel Macht) must protect the firm from a rival whoseattackseems as personal as it is professional. Louis (Rick Hoffman) and Mike (Patrick J. Adams) are forced to pay the price for previous actions. ©Zap2it

4' b m

C To talcare

Bend Memorial Clinic i~

for appointments

call 5LI1-382-4900

e~e~eCLASSIC

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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 N.W.Bond St., 541-330-8562 • CHASING MAVERICKS(PG) 6 • FLIGHT (R)9 • After 7 p.m., shows are2f andolder only. Youngerthan 21 may attend screenings before 7p.m.ifaccompanied by a legal guardian. t

COVERINGS Also see usfor

Awnings, Solar Screens 8 Custom Draperies

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Tin Pan Theater, 869 N.W.Tin Pan Alley, 541-241-2271

(541) 388-4418

• CHASING ICE(PG-13) 6, 8:30 I

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Redmond Cinemas,1535 S.W.OdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • DJANGO UNCHAINED(R) 3:45, 7:15 • GANGSTERSQUAD lR)4:I5,6:45 • THEHOBBIT:AN UNEXPECTED JOURNEY (PG-13)3:30, 7:05 • THE LAST STAND(Rl 4:15, 6:30 Sisters Movie House, 720 Desperado Court, 541-549-8800 • GANGSTER SQUAD(R) 6:30 • LIFEOFPI(PG) 6:15 • SILVER LININGSPLAYBOOK(R) 6:30 • ZERO DARK THIRTY (R) 6

lbethlehem Inn

shelter help

hope

Donate your

redeemable bottles and cans

today! www.befhleheminn.org 541.322.8768 exf. 21

HFiigidaire Madras Cinema5,1101 S.W. U.S. Highway97, 541-475-3505 • CIRQUEDU SOLEIL:W ORLDS AWAY 3-D (PGl4:25 • GANGSTERSQUAD (Rj4:35,7 • A HAUNTED HOUSE(R) 5:10, 7:10 • THE LASTSTAND(R) 5, 7:20 • LES MISERABLES (PG-13) 6:30 • SILVERLININGSPLAYBOOKiRl 4:15, 6:50 •

Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • LES MISERABLES (UPSTAIRS — PG-l3) 6:15 • LINCOLN (PG-13) 6 • Theupstairs screening roomhaslimited accessibility.

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ON PAGES 3&4.COMICS & PUZZLES ~ The Bulletin

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Yorkshire Terrier female Costco Hot tub, new lid, BUYING & SE L LING 8th Street Artisans The Bulletin 6 mo., $1200. 6-person $2500 obo All gold jewelry, silver Saturday Market recommends extra ' 541-788 0090 541-389-9268 and gold coins, bars, DON'TMISS THIS 10 a.m. - 4 p.m. l caution when purrounds, wedding sets, ITEMS FORSALE 264-Snow RemovalEquipment 1036 NE 8th St., Bend Japanese Chin male chasing products or, class rings, sterling sil201 - NewToday 265 - Building Materials behind 7-11 store. free to good home services from out of I ver, coin collect, vinDO YOU HAVE Computers 202- Want to buy or rent 266- Heating and Stoves Support local only. 541-447-0210 l the area. Sending I tage watches, dental SOMETHING TO craftsmen! 203- Holiday Bazaar & Craft Shows 267- Fuel and Wood cash, checks, or Fl e ming, SELL Labradoodles - Mini 8 T HE B U LLETIN r e - gold. Bill 541-977-1737 204- Santa's Gift Basket 268- Trees, Plants & Flowers i n f o rmation FOR $500 OR med size, several colors l credit quires computer ad- 541-382-9419. 205- Free ltems may be subjected to 269- Gardening Supplies & Equipment 541-504-2662 People Look for Information LESS? vertisers with multiple Char-Broil electric 208- Pets and Supplies 270 - Lost and Found www.alpen-ridge.com l FRAUD. For more About Products and Non-commercial ad schedules or those information about an I Services Every Daythrough smoker with manual, 210- Furniture & Appliances advertisers may selling multiple sysGARAGESALES Labrador puppies, pure- advertiser, you may I $25. 541-610-4100 211 - Children's Items place an ad tems/ software, to disThe Bulletin Clessiffeds 275 - Auction Sales bred, black, M & F, $300 / call t h e Or e gont with our 212 - Antiques & Collectibles close the name of the each. 541-416-1175 280 - Estate Sales ' State Attor ney ' "QUICK CASH 242 business or the term Wanted- paying cash 215- Coins & Stamps 281 - Fundraiser Sales "dealer" in their ads. for Hi-fi audio 8 stuLike cats & kittens? Get l General's O f f i ce SPECIAL" 240- Crafts and Hobbies Exercise Equipment 1 week3lines 12 Private party advertis- dio equip. Mclntosh, 282- Sales Northwest Bend your kitty fix by volun- Consumer P r otec- • 241 - Bicycles and Accessories ho t l in e at I Tunturi Treadmill, old J BL, Marantz, D y teering for CRAFT. Help t ion or ers are defined as 284- Sales Southwest Bend 242 - Exercise Equipment naco, Heathkit, Sanis always appreciated l 1-877-877-9392. k 20 ! those who sell one ~2 286- Sales Northeast Bend but runs well, $50. 243 - Ski Equipment sui, Carver, NAD, etc. with c a ttery c h ores, Ad must computer. 541-382-3076 244 - Snowboards 288- Sales Southeast Bend Call 541-261-1808 grooming or interacting include price of 290- Sales RedmondArea 245 - Golf Equipment with cats, events & adop257 246 ii f $5 0 0 246-Guns,Hunting and Fishing 292- Sales Other Areas tions, transporting to vet WHEN YOU SEE THIS or less, or multiple Guns, Hunting Musical Instruments appts., trapping aban212 247- Sporting Goods - Misc. items whose total FARM MARKET & Fishing doned cats, meds & spedoes notexceed ~Oo 248- Health and Beauty Items Antiques & 1923 Chickering 5'6" 308- Farm Equipment and Machinery cial c a re , fo s tering, $500. 249- Art, Jewelry and Furs Baby Grand, beautiful Collectibles MorePixatBendbuletin,com 316 - Irrigation Equipment 1911 Custom .45 auto, phone calls, minor fix-it 251 - Hot TubsandSpas tone 8 action, $2500. On a classified ad $525. Colt 1851 Navy jobs, more. Even a few 325- Hay, Grain and Feed Call Classifieds at 541-504-4416 253- TV, Stereo andVideo go to hours helps! 541-389 1932 Mills Lion front 5@ Civil War, $1150. Win541-385-5809 333Poultry, Rabbits and Supplies www.bendbulletin.com 255 - Computers 8420, www.craftcats.org. s lot m a c hine, w / chester 1892 . 3 2-20, www.bendbulletin.com Guitar lessons: $15 for 341 Horses and Equipment original metal stand, $895. 541-815-4901 to view additional 256- Photography /2 hour. All ages, most Just bought a new boat? $1200. 541-330-5516 345-Livestockand Equipment photos of the item. 257- Musical Instruments Sell your old one in the 1975 Colt .45ACP. Nickel DPMS AR-15, .223 with styles. Exp. teacher 347 - Llamas/Exotic Animals 258 - Travel/Tickets classifieds! Ask about our Antiques wanted: tools, plated. Fired o nce. 2 mags 8 c ase, Nl B with B.Mus 8 M.Mus W ild C o u ntry TT X 350 - Horseshoeing/Farriers Super Seller rates! degrees. Phone/text 259- Memberships Perfect cond. Collector $2150. 541-647-8931 furniture, fishing, 235-75R/1 5 (2 tires) 358Farmer's Column 541-312-8118 541-385-5809 q uality. Perfect f o r 260- Misc. Items marbles, beer cans. Kahr CW40 semi-auto 75% tread (2 tires) home defense or carry. 375- Meat and Animal Processing 261 - MedicalEquipment Looking for rough coat tovs, costume jewelry. Very rare. $1750 OBO. pistol. Carry case and Yamaha Piano, Upright 50% on n ice 6 -lug 383 - Produce andFood Call 541-389-1578 262 - Commercial/Office Equip. Jack Russell Terrier 2 m a g s i n c luded.Grand, like new, $3000 rims $400 OBO 541-410-0922 to adopt. No pups, 263- Tools 541-385-0432 Ive msg. $450. 541-408-4662. obo. 541-389-9764 .308 AMMO 358 rnds adult dog only. Call Like new Ruger 77, 44 208 mil-surp FMJ, 1 lot, 1st 541-318-4222. 261 $300 ca s h . Tim, magnum caliber rifle with n DgslIZn Pets 8 Supplies Misc. Items • nice scope & case $400 Maremma Guard Dog 541-419-6936 Medical Equipment 0 firm. 541-719-8549 pups, purebred, great Visit our HUGE AUSSIES, Mini AKC blue Dachshund, AKC mini A303 Beretta SP Trap Remington700 -7mag, (2) 55-gallon burn bar- Miracle-Ear 950 open ogs, $ 30 0 e a c h , home decor merle w/blue eyes, black/tan female, $300. d 30" Full Choke Semirels, $10 each. Call 541-546-6171. consignment store. BTE. Can be t ransred/black tri, parents on 541-633-3221 A utomatic, $105 0 3x 9 s c o pe, 3 0 0+ 541-610-4100 ferred by Miracle Ear. New items rounds ammo. $675 site. 541-598-5314 Miniature Pinscher/Rat 541-915-8324 New $5500; sell $699. Dachshund, Mini AKC arrive daily! obo. 541-419-5060 Bend's Indoor Swap Terrier, 11 wks, male, 541-410-0432 male, choco/tan 13 930 SE Textron, AK-47 Slide Fire stock, Meet A Mini-Mall full shots, neutered, miMini-14s .223 & wks, 1st s hots a nd Bend 541-318-1501 NIB, a sking $ 3 25. Ruger of Unique Treasures! c rochipped. $1 5 0 . www.redeuxbend.com 7.62x39, AR-15 clips wormed $500. Call 541-771-9902 541-815-3742 & Pistol Hi-caps. For 3rd St. & Wilson Ave. 541-408-6762 10-5 Thurs-Fri-Sat. Building Materials blue female, free The Bulletin reserves Arsenal AK47 custom prices, 541-447-4101 Want to Buy or Rent Dachshund Mini pups - Pitbull, NIB, with two 30-round Sig Sauer P238 twoBuying Diamonds to apprvd home Shots Bend Habitat BE MY VALENTINEI the right to publish all c lips, $ 2500 o b o . tone pistol. .380 cal. UTD: excellent wlth pets/ WANTED: Tobacco /Gold for Cash RESTORE $250 ea 541-815-3799 children. 541-420-0310 ads from The Bulletin 541-771-9902 With original box and pipes - Briars, McerSaxon's Fine Jewelers Building Supply Resale newspaper onto The shaums and smoking owners book. AproxiDachshund/Shih-tzu 4-5 local pays CASH!! 541-389-6655 Quality at LOW Pups, AKC toys. Bulletin Internet web- Bendfor accessories. mently 200 r o unds all firearms 8 mos, needs shots, free to Poodle PRICES cuddly compan- site. BUYING WANTED: RAZORSt hru g u n . $42 9 . gd home. 541-504-2248 Loving, ammo. 541-526-0617 740 NE 1st ions. 541-475-3889 Lionel/American Flyer Gillette, Gem, Schick, 541-419-9941 541-312-6709 The Bulletin Benelli M- 2 1 2 ga . Donate your d e positPoodleToy,apricot male, trains, accessories. etc. Shaving mugs Ser mg Central Oregansnce l903 Open to the public. bottles/cans to local all shotgun field grade Smith & Wesson model 541-408-2191. and accessories. 5 mos, smart 8 lovable! 411, 40 cal semi aubrand new. $ 1000. Fair prices paid. volunteer, non-profit ani- $300. 541-520-7259 215 tomatic pistol. Blued, 541-447-5546 mal rescue, to help with Call 541-390-7029 Coins & Stamps 5 hi cap magazines & WOODBURN AUCTIONCONSIGNED FARM between 10 am-3 pm. Boxer/English Bulldog cat spay/neuter vet bills. Queensland Heelers Bushmaster MOE AR-15, very c l ean. $ 5 5 0. (Valley Bulldog) puppies, See CRAFT's Cans for standard 8 mini,$150 8 MACHINERY &EQUIPMENT AUCTION Private collector buying brand new, $1800 or best (541)977-7006, Chris r Cats trailer a t E a gle i~KCR 'd,bi dl up. 541-280-1537 p ostage stamp a l - cash offer. 541-536-7924 fawns, 1st shots. $800. Crest Clubhouse, 956 rightwayranch.word2 DAY SALE Wanted: Collector Items for Free bums 8 c o llections, 541-325-3376 Niafjara Falls, 1/14-22; press.com CASH!! seeks high quality world-wide and U.S. Sat 8 Sun • Jan uary 26 & 27 at9:00 am sharp! Ray s Market, Century For Guns, Ammo & fishing items. TV 32" Toshiba (not flat Boxer Puppies! 2 boys Dr, Bend, 1/23-2/10. Or Rat, tame, really cute 573-286-4343 (local, Reloading Supplies. WOODBURN AUCTION YARD Call 541-678-5753, or screen) exc. c ond. and 2 g i rls. Superdonate O Smith Signs, female, does not bite. cell ¹) 541-408-6900. 503-351-2746 'Iz mile S. of Woodburn, OR. on HWY 99 E 541-923-8083 c ute, o n l y $45 0 . 2nd/Olney, M-F; Tumalo Free. 541-504-2248 541-610-7274 or sanctuary, anytime. Saturday, Jan. 26: 541-848-9802. www.craftcats.org or Fa- Rodent control experts regon (barn cats) seek work in cebook. 541-389-8420 Small amounts of misc. tools• Approx. 50 tracPets 8 Supplies YOUR AD WILL RECEIVE CLOSE TO 2,000,000 exchange for safe shelBoxer Puppies, pureClassified tors & forklifts of various sizes• Approx 70 cars, EXPOSURES FORONLY$2SO! ter, basic care. We debred, $650 each, 2 DO YOU HAVE liver! 541-389-8420. trucks, pickups, trailers. Customers purchasing F awn F emales, 2 Advertising oregon ciarufed AdverimngYerwoa s aservceofihe Oegonxe spaper publrslvrs Assocrarron The Bulletin recomTO Brindle Fem a l es, SOMETHING vehicles must have current proof of insurance bemends extra caution Weekof January 21, 2013 SELL Scottish Terrier puppies, Netwodt 541-420-6977 when purc h asFOR $500 OR AKC, male 8 female, 1st fore purchase of a vehicle. (No exceptions!!!!!!!!) ing products or ser- Cats 8 s o m e k i ttens shots, wormed, 8 weeks, LESS? A/I titled vehicles need to be checked in by4:00 vices from out of the available thru r e scue Non-commercial ready to go now! Call p.m. Friday, Jan. 25th with the titlesin consignor's 541-317-5624 ServingCentralOregon since 1903 area. Sending cash, advertisers may roup in Tumalo on Sat. checks, or credit inname.Dealers need an updated certificate. place an ad with Sun., 1-5 PM. Shots, 541-385-5S09 f ormation may b e our altered, ID chip, more. subjected to fraud. Map, photos of some & Sunday, Jan. 27: "QUICK CASH For more i nforma- info at www.craftcats.org. SPECIAL" Misc. farm equipment. tion about an adver- 541-389-8420. 1 week 3 lines 12 Loading facilities 8 hauling available. Some items tiser, you may call 0 2~ eeks 20i DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, support, may have a reserved bid.Consignments are acthe O r egon State C hihuahua, fawn, 1 2 Ad must include Springer Spaniel Pups property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced in 1-5 weeks Attorney General's week o l d fe m a le, price of single item cepted until 5:00 p.m., Jan. 25th. No loading out ready 2/17,Champion Office Co n s umer $250. 541-419-7188. possible.503-772-5295. Iegalalt@msn.com. of $500 or less, or lines, Now taking dep, or receiving on Tuesdays, PLEASE!!!!! Protection hotline at multiple items $500. 541-604-6232 1-877-877-9392. Notice:there is a 5% buyers fee added to terms whose total does Wolf-Husky pups, $250; not exceed $500. of sale which are - cash, checks, debit card (debit The Bulletin pure Siberian Husky pup, serving central oregon s<nce a03 card not over $500). No money orders accepted, Drivers: GORDONTRUCKING - CDL-A Drivers Needed! Dedicated and OTR $300. 541-977-7019 Call Classifieds at or Cashiers Check, Credit card checks. All personal 541-385-5809 Postions Now Open! $1000 Sign on Bonus. Consistent Miles, Time Off! Full Yorkie pups AKC, 1 girl, www.bendbulletin.com checks with ID. Notice: credit cards terms of sale: Alaskan Malamute hybrid DACHSHUND AKC Benefits, 401k, EOE, Recruiters Available 7 days/week! 866-435-8590 2 boys, potty training, pups, 4 females, 3 males female mini longhaired See below ... health guar pixs avail DRIVER: Daily or Weekly Pay. $0.01 increase per mile after 6 months and $500 ea. 541-771-9255 $600 541-598-7417 Frenchie Faux $550 8 up. 541-777-7743 9% buyers fee on all credit cards, VISA, Master12 months. $0.03 Quarterly Bonus. Requires 3 months recent experience. puppies, $400. Card 8 Discover with proper ID on the day of the BEND'S HOMELESS NEED OUR HELP! 210 800-414-9569 www.driveknight.com 541-447-021 0 sale. All bills must be paid for the day of the sale. The cold weather is upon us and sadly there are Furniture & Appliances DRIVERS - Inexpenienced/Experienced. Unbeatable Career Opportunities. still over 2,000 folks in our community without Golden Retriever AKC LUNCH ON GROUNDS. Not responsible for acpuppies, available 1/26, permanent shelter, living in cars, makeshift Trainee, Company Driver,LEASE OPERATOR, LEASE TRAINERS $400 8 $450. A1 Washers&Dryers cidents. Please no children under the age of 13 camps, getting by as best they can. (877)369-71 04 www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com. (541) 943- 3120 $150 ea. Full warThe following items are badly needed to years. Children13 or older are welcome only if acranty. Free Del. Also help them get through the winter: DRIVERS:Looking for JobSecurity? HaneyTruck Line, seeks CDL-A, hazmat/ companied by a parent at all times! wanted, used W/D's doubles required. We offer Paid Dockbumps/Benefits, Bonus program/Paid Vacation! @ CAMPING GEARof any sort: @ 541-280-7355 Auctioneers: Skip Morin New or used tents, sleeping bags, tarps, blankets. CALL NDW1-888-414-4467.wwwGOHANEYcom e WARM CLOTHING: Rain Gear, Boots, Gloves. Sale conducted by GENERATE SOME exPLEASE DROP OFF YOUR DONATIONS AT citement i n you r Woodburn Auction Yard. Inc. THE BEND COMMUNITY CENTER Havanese puppies AKC, neighborhood! Plan a 8-majl: woodburnauctjon©aol.com 1036 NE 5thSt.,Bend, Mon.-Sat.9 a.m.-5 p.m. hypo-allergenic and non garage sale and don't SAWMILLS from only $3997.00. MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own 503-981-8185 Ext. 1• fax: 503-982-7640 forget to advertise in For Special pick up please call shed, UTD shots / bandmill. Cut lumber any dimension. In stock ready to ship. FREE info/DVD: Ken @ 541-389-3296 wormer, $850. classified! www.woodburnauctjon.com www.NorwoodSawmills.com, 800-578-1363 ext. 300N. PLEASE HELP, YOU CAN MAKEA DIFFERENCE. 541-460-1277. 541-385-5809.

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The Bulletin


E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN

To PLAGE AN AD cALL CLAssIFIED• 541-385-5809

541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

358

476

Farmers Column

Employment Opportunities

10X20 STORAGE BUILDINGS for protecting hay, firewood, livestock etc. $1496 Installed. 541-617-1133. CCB ¹173684. kfjbuildersOykwc.net

Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Mon. Wednesday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • . • • • • • • . • • • • • • • • . • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate • • • • • • • • • • • 11:00 am Fri • Saturday .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3: 0 0 pm Fri. 421 Schools & Training Sunday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • TRUCK SCHOOL

fg,/F~>Jir) JI,J j Jlq tJjjJ~ jg Can be found on these pages:

CUSTOMER SERVICE

EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction Immediate opening 421 - Schools andTraining in th e C i r culation 454- Looking for Employment department for a full t ime e n tr y le v e l 470 - Domestic & In-Home Positions 476 - Employment Opportunities Customer S e rvice Representative. 486 - Independent Positions REPRESENTATIVE

Looking for someone to assist our 476 476 subscribers and deEmployment Employment livery carriers with Opportunities Opportunities subscription t ransactions, acc o unt questions and delivThe Bulletin DO YOU NEED ery concerns. EsA GREAT I Recommends extra sential: Positive atcaution when purEMPLOYEE titude, strong chasing products or I RIGHT NOW? service/team orienservices from out of Call The Bulletin tation, and problem before 11 a.m. and I the area. Sending solving skills. Must c ash, c hecks, o r get an ad in to pubhave accurate typI credit i n f o rmationI www. IITR.net lish the next day! ing, computer entry Redmond Campus I may be subjected to 541-385-5809. experience and FRAUD. Student Loans/Job VIEW the phone skills. Most For more informaWaiting Toll Free Classifieds at: w ork is d on e v i a tion about an adver1-888-387-9252 www.bendbulletin.com telephone so strong I tiser, you may call p rofessional c o m the Oregon State 470 munication skills and General's BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS I Attorney the ability to m ulti Domestic & Office Co n s umerI task in a fast paced Search the area's most Protection hotline at I In-Home Positions e nvironment i s a comprehensive listing of I 1-877-877-9392. must. I classified advertising... Female caregiver needed Work shift hours are real estate to automotive, LTl ie Bulletin for hemiplegic woman in Tuesday and Friday merchandise to sporting Alfalfa. Must be healthy & 8:00 AM to goods. Bulletin Classifieds physically a ble. No Wednesday5:00 PM. and appear every day in the Looking for your next smoking, no dog aller5:30 AM to print or on line. gies. Must have reliable Thursday employee? 2:30 PM., Saturday car & references. PosCall 541-385-5809 Place a Bulletin help 6:00 AM t o 1 2 : 00 sible live-in with room, www.bendbulletin.com wanted ad today and O c c asional board & nominal salary. PM. reach over 60,000 S unday shift a n d 541-382-5493 The Bulletin ser ng cenrrai cteqon ancefale readers each week. holidays required. Your classified ad Please send resume 476 will also appear on t o: PO B o x 6 0 2 0 Food Service - Bruno's bendbulletin.com Employment B end OR . 9 7 7 08 Grocery & U -bake is which currently attn. Cir c u lation taking apps for Cashier & Opportunities receives over 1.5 Customer S e rvice Pizza Maker. Apply in million page views Manager or e-mail: person: 1709 NE 6th, Agent ServicesRep every month at Bend. No phone calls. The Hasson Company ahustedObendbulno extra cost. letin.com is l o oking f o r a Bulletin Classifieds EOE/Drug free full-time ene r getic Remember.... Get Results! workplace A dd your we b a d Agent Services RepCall 385-5809 resentative to join our dress to your ad and or place customer ser v i ce readers on The your ad on-line at team. This p osition Where can you find a Bulletin' s web site bendbulletin.com helping hand? will provide adminiswill be able to click trative support to our From contractors to through automatically a gents as w el l a s yard care, it's all here to your site. The Bullelin's training an d a s sisin The Bulletin's "Call A Service tance on c o mpany Just too many p rovided tools a n d "Call A Service Professional" Directory t echnology. I f yo u Professional" Directory collectibles? enjoy problem solving is all about meeting and multi-tasking than Development Director Sell them in yourneeds. this position is for you. for KPOV, High Desert The Bulletin Classifieds Please visit Linkedln Community Radio Call on one of the f or the full job d epart t i me . C l o ses professionals today! scription and to sub- January 25. Details at: 541-385-5809 mit your application.

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Place a photoin your private party ad for only $15.00 perweek.

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 ed

C®X

The Bulletin bendbulletimcom

is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702

PLEASE NOTE:Check your ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies 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.

I Building Materials Sisters Habitat ReStore

269

286

Gardening Supplies & Equipment

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE **

Building Supply Resale Quality items. LOW PRICES! 150 N. Fir.

For newspaper delivery, call the Circulation Dept. at

Open to the public.

To place an ad, call

Heating & Stoves

classified@bendbulletrn com

KIT I NCLUDES:

The Bulletin

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To use Toward Your

541-549-1621

541-385-5800

541-385-5809

Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your ga-

rage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE!

or email

NOTICE TO Sewing Central Oregons>nce 1903 ADVERTISER Since September 29, 1991, advertising for USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Next Ad

• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

Hay, Grain & Feedg

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results!

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Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have

concerns or ques-

tions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.

BANK TURNED YOU

DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call now. Oregon Land Mortgage 388-4200. LOCAL MONEyrWebuy secured trustdeeds & note,some hard money loans. Call Pat Kelley 541-382-3099 ext.13. Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS I

L T

0

Mid-South Sales Promotions is seeking to hire two sales people to work fromThe Bulletin circulation offices as Independent Contractors to secure sponsorships for the Newspaper in Education program. This is not selling subscriptions or advertising, but involves having local businesses support The Bulletin's Newspaper in Education program.

This is a relaxed environment and approach involving business to business sales. Mid-South offers a brief paid training program but the ideal candidates will possess business to business sales experience. Average salesperson earns between $400 -$700 for less than 30 hours weekly. The dress code is relaxed and casual. This is not ad or subscription sales, however if you have previous experience in advertising sales, I will give you priority consideration.

I'm seeking motivated, energetic and articulate people with excellent communication skills. Please call Melanie at 541-383-0399.

C all 54/ - 3 85-5809 to r omote our service Handyman Building/Contracting

Margo Construction LLC Since 1992 NOTICE: Oregon state • Pavers• Carpentry law req u ires any- • Remodeling • Decks one who c o n tracts • Window/Door for construction work Replacement • Int/Ext to be licensed with the Paint • CCB 176121 C onstruction Con 541-480-3179

tractors Board (CCB). A n active lice n se means the contractor USE THECLASSIFIEDS! i s bonded an d i n s ured. Ver if y t h e Door-to-door selling with contractor's CCB c ense through t h e fast results! It's the easiest CCB Cons u m er way in the world to sell. Website

www.hireaticensedcontractor. com

* Supplement Your Income*

tional licenses and certifications.

Operate Your Own Business

Debris Removal

++++++++++++++++++

Newspaper Delivery Independent Contractor

® Call Today ®

JUNK BE GONE

I Haul Away FREE For Salvage. Also Cleanups & Cleanouts Mel, 541-389-8107 Handyman

We are looking for independent contractors to service home delivery routes in: Must be available 7 days a week, early morning hours. Must have reliable, insured vehicle.

I DO THAT! Home/Rental repairs Small jobs to remodels Honest, guaranteed work. CCB¹151573 Dennis 541-317-9768 ERIC REEVE HANDY

Please call 541.385.5800 or 800.503.3933 Mon.-Fri., 8-4 or apply via email at online © bendbulletin.com

The Bulletin

u . e

The Bulletin Classified

or call 503-378-4621. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin recommends checking with the CCB prior to con- Landscaping/Yard Care tracting with anyone. OTICE: O RE G O N Some other t r ades N Landscape Contracalso req u ire addi-

Independent Contractor

* Terrebonne *

SERVICES. Home & Commercial Repairs, Carpentry-Painting Pressure-washing, Honey Do's. On-time promise. Senior Discount. Work guaranteed. 541-389-3361 or 541-771-4463

Bonded & Insured CCB¹181595

o ur

tors Law (ORS 671) r equires a l l bus i nesses that advertise to p e rform L a n dscape C o nstruction which inclu d es: p lanting, dec ks , fences, arbors, w ater-features, a n d installation, repair of irrigation systems to be licensed with the Landscape Contract ors B o a rd . Th i s 4-digit number is to be included in all advertisements which indicate the business has a bond, insurance and workers compensation for their employees. For your protection call 503-378-5909

or use our website: www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status before con t racting with th e b u s iness. Persons doing landscape m a intenance do not require a LCB license.

u .

Full Color Photos For an additional GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPPIES,

and automofit/e categories,)

We are three adorable, loving puppies looking for acaring home. Please call right away. $500.

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Thank you St. Jude & Sacred H e ar t of Jesus. j.d.

In The Bulletin's print and online Classifieds.

('Special private party rates apply to merchandise

I

Daytime inside sales.

R S

The Bulletin

'15 per week * '40 for 4 weeks *

Independent Contractor position R E A

used woodstoves has been limited to mod- Door-to-door selling with FIND YOUR FUTURE els which have been fast results! It's the easiest plcK up YOUR HOME INTHE BULLETIN c ertified by the O r - way in the world to sell. GARAGE SALE KIT at egon Department of 1777 SW Chandler Your future is justa page Environmental QualThe Bulletin Classified Ave., Bend, OR 97702 away. Whetheryou're looking ity (DEQ) and the fed541-385-5809 for a hat ora place to hang it, eral En v ironmental The Bulletin The Bulletin Classified is Protection A g e ncy SUPER TOP SOIL Call 541-385-5809 your best source. (EPA) as having met www.hershe soiiandbartccom or place your ad smoke emission stan- Screened, soil & comon-line at Every daythousandsof dards. A cer t ified post m i x ed , no bendbulletin.com buyers and sellers of goods Sales Other Areas w oodstove may b e rocks/clods. High huand services do business in identified by its certifi- mus level, exc. f or these pages.Theyknow NOTICE cation label, which is flower beds, lawns, you can't beat TheBulletin Remember to remove straight permanently attached gardens, Poultry, Rabbits, Classified Section for to the stove. The Bul- s creened to p s o i l . your Garage Sale signs selection and convenience & Supplies (nails, staples, etc.) letin will no t k n ow- Bark. Clean fill. De- every item isjust a phone after your Sale event ingly accept advertis- liver/you haul. call away. Wyandotte blue-faced is over! THANKS! 541-548-3949. ing for the sale of r ooster under 1 y r . From The Bulletin The Classified Section is uncertified Free! 541-548-5516 and your local utility easy to use. Every item woodstoves. USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! companies. is categorized andevery cartegory is indexed onthe Door-to-door selling with Need to get an The Bulletin section's front page. seminscentral oregonsi ce 19re I Fu e l & Wood fast results! It's the easiest ad in ASAP? Whether youare lookingfor way in the world to sell. www.bendbunetin.com You can place it a home or need aservice, online at: WHEN BUYING your future is in the pagesof The Bulletin Classified FIREWOOD... www.bendbulletin.com The Bulletin Classified. 541-385-5809 To avoid fraud, 541-385-5809 The Bulletin The Bulletin 270 recommends payLost & Found ment for Firewood Press Supervisor only upon delivery FOUND 1 pair of skis. The Bulletin is seeking a night time press suand inspection. Call 541-390-6570 pervisor. We are part of Western Communica• A cord is 128 cu. ft. tions, Inc., which is a small, family-owned group 4' x 4' x 8' FOUND LADIES RING consisting of seven newspapers, five in Oregon • Receipts should b etween Rays a n d and two in California. Our ideal candidate will include name, Subway on Simpson manage a small crew of three and must be able phone, price and Ave. email to to learn our equipment/processes quickly. A kind of wood purIfinbend@yahoo.com hands-on style is a requirement for our 3 t/a chased. to identify. tower KBA press. Prior management/leader• Firewood ads ship experience preferred. In addition to our Found wedding band MUST include spe7-day a week newspaper, we have numerous with inscription, near Inn cies and cost per commercial print clients as well. In addition to a at the 7th Mtn. Call to cord to better serve competitive wage and benefit program, we also identify, 541-318-0581 our customers. provide potential opportunity for advancement. Lost: Dragonfly silver pin, Maschio 7-ft rotary tiller, If you provide dependability combined with a virtually new, less than 5 positive attitude, are able to manage people and The Bulletin Izzy's parking lot, Bend, Servtng Central Oregon since l903 hrs. $7500 new; asking Fri. evening 1/18. Senti- $5000. 541-421-3222 schedules and are a team player, we would like mental value - Reward to hear from you. If you seek a stable work enA-1 DRY JUNIPER offered. 541-276-4878 vironment that provides a great place to live and $200 split, or $175 rnds raise a family, let us hear from you. Contact eiREMEMBER: Ifyou Hay, Grain & Feed multi-cord discount, del. ther; Keith Foutz, Corporate Circulation & Ophave lost an animal, Call 541-977-4500 or erations Director at kfoutzOwescompapers.com don't forget to check 1st quality grass hay, 541-350-1809 or anelson@wescompapers.com with your The Humane Society 70- Ib bales, barn stored, complete resume, references and s a lary in Bend 541-382-3537 $250/ ton. Also big bales! history/requirements. Prior press room experiAll Year Dependable Patterson Ranch, Firewood: Sp lit, Del. Redmond, ence required. No phone calls please. Drug Sisters, 541-420-4567 541-923-0882 Bend. Seas o ned test is required prior to employment. EOE Lodgepole: for $180 Prineville, Wheat S t raw: s m a ll or 2 for $350. Cash, 541 -447-71 78; bales $2 bale or $65 Check or Credit Card OR Craft Cats, t on. After 6 p.m . OK. 541-420-3484. 541-389-8420. 541-546-9821 Culver.

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FINANCEAND BUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 526 - Loans and Morlgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities

QUAINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! Modern amenities and all the quiet you will need. Room to grow in your own little paradise! Call now.

FORD F150 XL 2005. This truck can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4x4,

and a tough V8 engine will get the job done on the ranch!

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 E3

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TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD w'll sh ()rtz

T h ursday,Jauu ary24,2013

ACROSS

Mad bridge party

i Hair-raising s Secretive org. s Cause of everything going up?

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Media Services

As the game at the Mad Hatter's w ent on , t h e H a tter ha d t w i c e resolved a two-way guess for the queen of hearts, and the Queen of Hearts, a kibitzer, looked ready to summon her axemen. "If it pleases Your Majesty ..." the Hatter offered nervously. "It does not," roared the Queen. "My cousin hates to be captured," the Queen of Diamonds confided to Alice. "But it can be nobler to lose a trick than to win one." In the next deal, the March Hare and the Dormouse fought each other to 3NT. The Hatter, West, led an uninspired spade. Dummy played low, and Alice's king won.

ENTRY

diamonds. What do you say? ANSWER: A few experts would deem the hand worth a bid of three clubs. Most experts would want more high-cardvalues fora so-called "high reverse" and would rebid two hearts to suggest minimum values. I would certainly rebid two hearts; I would be discouraged by th e s ingleton in partner's suit. South dealer N-S vulnerable

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Alice considered shifting to the queen of hearts, but if declarer had the jack of spades, he would win and set up d u mmy's spades. Alice decided instead to try to kill dummy's entry to the spades. But if West had the ten of diamonds, a low-diamond shift might cost a vital trick. So Alice gave the Queen of Diamonds a smile and led the queen. Dummy won, but eight tricks were South 1Q all South could muster. 24 3 ISI DAILY QUESTION 3 NT

EAST 4o K2 cJI Q 1098 OQ65 4 IK 10 8 7

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Pass 2O Pass 30 All Pass

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C U R U I T A MS E A W S I U T T I R O E A F R U L I E S S T O A

T I E I SA F S T R E L E SA I N OT P J A N E O R O I T 0 N O N

Youhold: 4 J 8 Ivt A K 6 5 2 Opening lead — 4 3 07 4 A Q 6 5 4 . You open one heart, and your partner bids two (C) 2013 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

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wrap presents sz Starting 0, maybe 63 See 57-Across

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For answers, call 1-900-285-5656, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554. Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday 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

puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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SIX CHIX

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66 Hon 67 Lang of Smallville

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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: S A D E L O WA G SS W KA R A T E N C I S H

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01/24/1 3


THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 24 2013 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809

J

e

I •

RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616- Want To Rent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomes for Rent 632 - Apt./Multiplex General 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 636 - Apt./Multiplex NWBend 638 - Apt./Multiplex SEBend 640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 648 - Houses for RentGeneral 650 - Houses for Rent NE Bend 652- Housesfor Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Housesfor Rent SWBend 658 - Houses for Rent Redmond 659 - Houses for Rent Sunriver 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 663 - Houses for Rent Madras 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 675 - RV Parking 676 Mobile/Mfd.Space

e

/ •

Snowmobiles

n

881

Watercraft

Travel Trailers

Ads published in "Wafercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorized personal watercrafts. For " boats" please s e e Class 870. 541-385-5809

Arctic Cat (2) 2005 F7; EFI Snowpro & EFI EXT, 4,000 miles each. $2400 each; 541-410-2186

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- Homes with Acreage 763- Recreational HomesandProperty 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780- Mfd. /Mobile Homes with Land

875

The Bulletin

dcnjc+cjr

880

Snowmobile trailer 2002, 25-ft Interstate & 3 sleds, $10,900. 541-480-8009

Motorhomes

Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809

932

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

Fifth Wheels

Antique & Classic Autos Chev Camaro, 1969, fully restored, factory Glacier Blue, HO-350, 4 -spd, brand n e w int e rior. $32,900. Here in Bend,

Pilgrim

Int e rnational call Scott, 406-839-1299 2005, 36' 5th Wheel, Diamond Reo Du m p Model¹M-349 RLDS-5 Truck 19 7 4, 1 2 -14 Fall price

$ 2 1,865. yard box, runs good, $6900, 541-548-6812

541-312-4466

G K E A T

R U T !

0 00

Hyster H25E, runs well, 2982 Hours, $3500, call

'rj jI

or place your ad

on-line at bendbullefin.com

Chevy C-20 Pickup 1969, all orig. Turbo 44; auto 4-spd, 396, model CST /all options, orig. owner, $22,000, 541-923-6049

541-749-0724 • Yamaha 750 1999 Mountain Max, $1750 Econoline RV 19 8 9 , • 1994 Arctic Cat 580 882 fully loaded, exc. cond, EXT, $1250. 35K m i. , R e duced Fifth Wheels • Zieman 4-place Aircraft, Parts $15,250. 541-546-6133 trailer, $1750. 8 Service All in good condition. CAN'T BEAT THIS! Peterbilt 359 p o table Chevy Wagon 1957, Located in La Pine. L ook before y o u water t ruck, 1 9 90, 4-dr., complete, Call 541-408-6149. buy, below market 3200 gal. tank, 5hp $7,000 OBO, trades, va!ue! Size & milepump, 4-3" h oses, please call 880 aqe DOES matter! camlocks, $ 2 5 ,000. 541-389-6998 Motorcycles & Accessories Cfass A 32' HurriCarri-Lite Luxury 2009 541-820-3724 by Carriage, 4 slidecane by Four Winds, Chrysler 300 C o upe outs, inverter, satelHarley Davidson Soft- 2007. 12,500 mi, all 1/3 interest in Colum1967 4 4 0 e n g ine lite sys, fireplace, 2 Tail D e luxe 2 0 0 7, amenities, Ford V10, bia 400, located at Utility Trailers • auto. trans, ps, air, white/cobalt, w / pas- Ithr, cherry, slides, flat screen TVs. Sunriver. $ 1 38,500. frame on rebuild, relike new! New low senger kit, Vance & $60,000. Call 541-647-3718 painted original blue, Hines muffler system price, $54,900. 541-480-3923 original blue interior, 541-548-5216 & kit, 1045 mi., exc. original hub caps, exc. c ond, $19,9 9 9 , Big Tex Landscapchrome, asking $9000 541-389-9188. G ulfstream Sce n i c ing/ ATV Trailer, or make offer. 648 750 Cruiser 36 ft. 1999, dual axle flatbed, 541-385-9350 Harley Heritage 7'x16', 7000 lb. Cummins 330 hp dieHouses for Redmond Homes Softail, 2003 sel, 42K, 1 owner, 13 GVW, all steel, 1 /3 interest i n w e llRent General $5 000+ in extras in. kitchen slide out, Fleetwood Wilderness equipped IFR Beech Bo$1400. $2000 paint job, Looking for your next new tires,under cover, 541-382-4115, or 36', 2005, 4 s l ides, nanza A36, new 10-550/ Rent /Own 30K mi. 1 owner, emp/oyee? 541-280-7024. Chrysler SD 4-Door hwy. miles only,4 door rear bdrm, fireplace, prop, located KBDN. For more information 3 bdrm, 2 bath homes Place a Bulletin help f ridge/freezer ice - AC, W/D hkup beau- $65,000. 541-419-9510 1930, CD S Royal please call $2500 down, $750 mo. ad today and Standard, 8-cylinder, maker, W/D combo, tiful u n it ! $ 3 0 ,500. 541-385-8090 OAC. J and M Homes wanted reach over 60,000 Inferbath t ub 8 541-815-2380 body is good, needs or 209-605-5537 AIRPORT CAFE 541-548-5511 Automotive Parts, • readers each week. some r e s toration, shower, 50 amp pro(Bend Municipal Airport) Your classified ad 830 HD Screaming Eagle runs, taking bids, pane gen & m ore! 654 Now open Saturdays! Service & Accessories will also appear on Electra Glide 2005, 541-383-3888, $55,000. • Daily Speciais Rooms for Rent Houses for Rent 001 bendbulletin.com 103" motor, two tone 541-948-2310 • New Management We Buy Junk 541-815-3318 SE Bend which currently recandy teal, new tires, Cars & Trucks! Open Mon.-Sat., 8-3 Studios & Kitcheneftes ceives over 23K miles, CD player, Cash paid for junk Call 541-318-8989 Furnished room, TV w/ Get your 1.5 million page vehicles, batteries 8 hydraulic clutch, exK omfor! 25' 2 0 06, 1 cable, micro & fridge. 3 bdrm 1 bath, appl., all views every month business elect., garage, yard. cellent condition. slide, AC, TV, awning. catalytic converter . Executive Hangar Utils 8 l i nens. New $725 mo. + dep. at no extra cost. Highest offer takes it. NEW: tires, converter, a1 Bend Airport Serving all of C.O.! ~ owners. $145-$165/wk No pets/smoking. Bulletin Classifieds 541-480-8080. batteries. Hardly used. Call 541-408-1090 • 541-382-1885 (KBDN) 541-389-7734 Get Results! a ROWI N G $15,500. 541-923-2595 60' wide x 50' deep, 634 870 Call 385-5809 or w/55' wide x 17' high FIAT 1800 1978, 5-spd, 858 Apt./Multiplex NE Bend place your ad on-line Antique & Boats & Accessories with an ad in bi-fold door. Natural door panels w/flowers at Houses for Rent gas heat, office, bath& hummingbirds, Classic Autos The Bulletin's 2-story 2 master suites, bendbuHetin.com room. Parking for 6 Redmond 13' Smokercraff '85, white soft top & hard "Call A Service all appliances, gac ars. A d jacent t o '55 Chevy 2 dr . w gn top. Just reduced to good cond., 15I-IP rage, w/s/g paid. no Eagle Crest - B ehind Frontage Rd; g reat PROJECT car, 350 Professional" $3,750. 541-317-9319 762 gas Evinrude + pets/smoking. $ 7 50 visibility for a viation or 541-647-8483 the gates. Beautiful Homes with Acreage small block w/Weiand Directory MONTANA 3585 2008, Minnkota 44 elec. mo. 541-389-7734 bus. 1jetjockoq.com dual quad tunnel ram 2100 s q . ft., 3 / 2 . 5, exc. cond., 3 slides, motor, fish finder, 2 541-948-2126 with 450 Holleys. T-10 3B/2B, range, fridge, w/d Reverse living. Large NW REDMOND king bed, Irg LR, Arc3 cable & inter n et, garageiworkshop. Hot bedroom, 2.5 b a t h. extra seats, trailer, fic insulation, all op- Piper A rcher 1 9 8 0, 4-speed, 12-bolt posi, Weld Prostar whls, fenced yard. All utili- tub. $1400/mo. Lease Built-ins, tile kitchen extra equip. $2900. tions $37,500. based in Madras, al- extra rolling chassis + ties included. $1250. option. $365 , 000. counters, gas f i r e- 541-388-9270 541-420-3250 ways hangared since extras. $6000 for all. 541-317-1879 Sec/dep.541-923-0908 place in t h e l i v ing new. New annual, auto 541-389-7669. 541-480-7863 Nuyya 297LK H i t ch17' 1984 Chris Craft room. $126,500 Ford Galaxie 500 1963, 8 GREATWINTER e pilot, IFR, one piece Hiker 2007, 3 slides, windshield. MLS¹201209508 - Scorpion, 140 HP 2 dr. hardtop,fastback, Immaculate! Fastest ArDEAL! 687 32' touring coach, left inboard/outboard, 2 390 v8,auto, pwr. steer 8 Call TRAVIS HANNAN, Beaver Coach Marquis kitchen, rear lounge, cher around. 1750 1o2 bdrm, 1 bath, Commercial for Principal Broker, depth finders, trollradio (orig),541-419-4989 40' 1987. New cover, !al t i me . $ 6 8 ,500. $530 8 $540 w/lease. 541-788-3480 ing motor, full cover, new paint (2004), new many extras, beautiful 541-475-6947, ask for Rent/Lease 1921 Model T Carpor!s included! c ond. inside 8 o u t , Ford Mustang Coupe EZ L oad t railer, Redmond RE/MAX inverter (2007). Onan Delivery Truck Rob Berg. FOX HOLLOW APTS. Spectrum professional 1966, original owner, OBO. 6300 watt gen, 111K mi, $32,900 OBO, PrinevLand & Homes $3500 Restored 8 Runs ille. 541-447-5502 days V8, automatic, great (541) 383-3152 541-382-3728. building, 3 5 0 ' -500', Real Estate parked covered $35,000 8 541-447-1641 eves. $9000. Cascade Rental Take care of shape, $9000 OBO. $1.00 per ff. total. No obo. 541-419-9859 or 541-389-8963 Management. Co. 530-515-81 99 771 541-280-2014 N NN. C a l l A nd y , your investments Lots Very Nice - $550 541-385-6732. with the help from Ford Ranchero Clean, quiet 2 bdrm w/ The Bulletin's 1 4738 Birds Eye, L a private patio, no smkg or 1979 Pine, Acre with power pets. 1000 NE Butler Mkt "Call A Service with 351 Cleveland 8 water. $45,000. Rd. Call 541-598-4877 or modified engine. 18.5' '05 Reinell 185, V-6 High Lakes Realty 8 Pilgrim 27', 2007 5th Professional" Directory 541-382-6625 Body is in Volvo Penta, 270HP, wheel, 1 s lide, AC, Property Monaco Dynasty 2004, excellent condition, 1966 GMC, 2nd owner, 636 Management low hrs., must see, loaded, 3 slides, die- TV,full awning, excelT-Hangar for rent too many extras to list, $2500 obo. $15,000, 541-330-3939 sel, Reduced - now lent shape, $23,900. Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 541-536-0117 at Bend airport. $8500 obo. Serious buy541-420-4677 541-350-8629 Call 541-382-8998. $119,000, 5 4 1-923ers only. 541-536-0123 (2) Bend City lots, 2851 Nice, quiet, upper level 2 8572 or 541-749-0037 & 2857 Huettl S!., off Bdrm, oak cabinets, DW, Butler Mkt. All utils under W/S/G/cable pd, laundry 745 20.5' 2004 Bayliner round $89,900 for both. facils. $650mo $500 dep. Homes for Sale all Ron, 541-206-7995 205 Run About, 220 No smkg. 541-383-2430 HP, V8, open bow, I 0 • Small studio close 1o li- BANK OWNED HOMES! Check out the exc. cond., very fast g,W brary, all util. pd. $550, FREE List w/Pics! classifieds online w/very low hours, $525 dep. No pets/ www. BendRepos.com www.bendbuffetfn.com Southwind 35.5' Triton, lots of extras incl. smoking. 541-330• I bend and beyond real estate tower, Bimini & 2008,V10, 2 slides, Du0 Updated daily 9769 or 541-480-7870 20967 yeoman, bend or pont UV coat, 7500 mi. custom trailer, Bought new at $19,500. 638 Fabulous mou n tainNice flat lot in Terreb$132,913; 541-389-1413 views, rural property onne, .56 a c res, Apt./Multiplex SE Bend asking $93,500. 3479 sq. ft. 3 bdrm. p aved street, a p II I' Call 541-419-4212 2 .5 baths. L ots o f proved f o r ca p -fill A STUNNING I I shop area! $495,000. septic, utilities are at / 2 BDRM/$625 MLS ¹201207007 the lot line. $42,000. 61545 Parrell Road Call Jeanne Scharlund, MLS 32 0 1 2001172 Classy new exterior. Seaswirl SpyPrincipal Broker, Pam Lester, Principal 20.5' Small quiet complex der 1989 H.O. 302, I' 0 I ' 541-420-7978 B roker, Century 2 1 completely new inte285 hrs., exc. cond., Redmond RE/MAX Gold Country Realty, rior upgraded with I I I I stored indoors for ' 0 I I I 0 I Land 8 Homes Inc. 541-504-1338 decorator touches. 30A life $11,900 OBO. Winnebago Real Estate Sightseer 2012, 31 ft., New kitchen cabinets 0 I ' 541-379-3530 0 I I 773 and granite counterall options, 2 slides, I I II I I ' ' 0 ' I 0 I Acreages 362HP V10, 10K mi., I tops, all new appli/ f / Catt a Pro Ads published in the ances, large master mint cond., $105,900. "Boats" classification I II I I I 0 I 541-330-5516 with 3 closets. Private Whether you need a / / include: Speed, fishfencefixed,hedges patio. Includes w/s/g. CHECK YOUR AD I ' 'I I 0 ing, drift, canoe, NO SMOKING/PETS. trimmed or a house Please check your ad house and sail boats. Call 541-633-0663 on the first day it runs a built, you'll find For all other types of • • to make sure it is cor- watercraft, 842 please see professional help in rect. Sometimes inClass 875. Apt./Multiplex Redmond The Bulletin's "Call a s tructions over t h e Winnebago Suncruiser34' 541-385-5809 phone are misunder2004, only 34K, loaded, Service Professional" 2 bdrm, 1 bath duplex stood and a n e r ror too much to list, ext'd Directory unit, $550 mo.+ $635 can occurin your ad. warr. thru 2014, $54,900 dep. 1326 SW O bIf this happens to your 541-385-5809 Dennis, 541-589-3243 sidian, Redmond. Call ad, please contact us for applications. Avail the first day your ad 881 Home w/ a Guest fggi~ i i i g Feb. 1. 541-728-6421. appears and we will Travel Trailers Cottage! $98,900 be happy to fix if as with o u r spe c i al Redmond's newest low Loads of character 8 i ncome hous i n g charm, 3 bd, 1398 sf s oon as w e c a n . rates for selling your I COACHMEN project has an acces- home has hard wood Deadlines are: Week- boal or wafercraff! anoatlRvshow" 1979 23' trailer s ible 3 b d r m u n i t Floors, fire p lace, days 11:00 noon for next day, Sat. 11:00 / Place an ad in The Fully equipped. available. Call built-in cabinets. 528 Bulletin w it h ou r 541-504-7786. EHO $2000. sf guest cottage w/ all a.m. for Sunday and Monday. / 3-month p ackage the comforts. Great 541-312-8879 648 541-385-5809 ~ which includes: location on dead end or 541-350-4622. Highlighting the opportunities that make Thank you! Houses for street w/ view of the ~ 0 0 00004lfdee V000Tmk00NVHunh~aww VTavel0how The Bulletin Classified ~ *5 lines of text and ~0 0 0000000000/eec: ~a e 0 0 ~ 00 ~ 00t e "0 or o"a cs valley. Rent General Central Oregon a sportsman's paradise, a photo or up to 10 Jetf Blackburn Real I0 I the activities and vendors participating [ lines with no photo. Estate, 541-573-7206 PUBLISHER'S 00000M00001 775 *Free online ad at 00100W000005 00500WH00000a db NOTICE jn the Central Oregon Sportsmen's Show

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CENTRAL OREGON SPORTSMENgs SHOW THEOFFICIALGUIDETOTHESHOW THATINSPIRESRECREATION.

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Manufactured/ I bendbulletin.com NOTICE All real estate adver*Free pick up into Mobile Homes tising in this newspa- All real estate adver~ The Central Oregon ~ tised here in is subper is subject to the F air H o using A c t ject to t h e F e deral FACTORY SPECIAL f Nickel ads. which makes it illegal F air Housing A c t , New Home, 3 bdrm, $46,500 finished I Rates start at $46. I to a d vertise "any which makes it illegal on your site. Call for details! preference, limitation to advertise any prefJ and M Homes or disc r imination erence, limitation or 541-385-5809 541-548-5511 discrimination based based on race, color, on race, color, relireligion, sex, handiLOT MODEL cap, familial status, gion, sex, handicap, LIQUIDATION familial status or namarital status or national origin, or an in- tional origin, or inten- Prices Slashed Huge GENERATE SOME extention to make any tion to make any such Savings! Full Warran- citement in your neigsuch pre f e rence, preferences, l i m ita- ties, Finished on your borhood. Plan a gasite. 541-548-5511 limitation or discrimi- tions or discrimination. rage sale and don't JandMHomes.com nation." Familial sta- We will not knowingly forget to advertise in accept any advertistus includes children your own home for classified! 385-5809. ing for r ea l e s tate Own under the age of 18 less t ha n r e n ting. living with parents or which is in violation of Centrally located in Sewing Central Oregon s>nce 0903 legal cus t o dians, this law. All persons Madras. In- h ouse pregnant women, and are hereby informed f inancing opti o ns people securing cus- that all dwellings ad- available. Call now at Used out-drive tody of children under vertised are available 541-475-2291 parts - Mercury on an equal opportu18. This newspaper OMC rebuilt manity basis. The Bullewill not knowingly acrine motors: 151 cept any advertising tin Classified $1595; 3.0 $1895; for real estate which is 4.3 (1993), $1995. 750 in violation of the law. 541-389-0435 O ur r e aders ar e Redmond Homes hereby informed that all dwellings adver- NE Redmond, 3 bdrm, tised in this newspa- 2 bath, 1360 sq. ff., Watercraft per are available on triple garage, office, an equal opportunity bay f ront w i n dow, basis. To complain of large patio, m ature 2007 SeaDoo discrimination cal l landscaping, fenced 2004 Waverunner, HUD t o l l-free at yard. $128,000. MLS excellent condition, 1-800-877-0246. The 201207127 LOW hours. Double toll f re e t e l ephonePam Lester, Principal 2007 Ski-Doo Renegade trailer, lots of extras. number for the hear- B roker, Century 2 1 600 w/513 mi, like new, $10,000 ing im p aired is Gold Country Realty, very fast! Reduced to 541-719-8444 1-800-927-9275. Inc. 541-504-1338 $5000. 541-221-5221

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are featured jn this event guide. Outdoor Springdale 2005 27', 4' slide in dining/living area, sleeps 6, low mi,$15,000 obo. 541-408-3811

PudlishingDate: Monday, March 4

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Fair and Expo Center each spring for this event.

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Springdale 29' 2 0 07, slide,Bunkhouse style, sleeps 7-8, excellent condition, $ 1 6 ,900, 541-390-2504

The Bulletin

HOME & GARD EN SHOVIP M THEGUIDETOTHEANNUAL SPRINGSHOW WITHIDEASAND INSPIR ATIONFORTHEHOME.

Sponsors

Twice a year, the Central Oregon SHOW HOURS: Builders Association (COBA) presents ~o~3 AOM0000000 the region's premier home and garden shows. The Spring Home and Garden i hc uuj0!in & 6• 2012 Show™ and Remodel, Design and pnt MAV4,5 For show information visit: www.centralore0onshow.com Outdoor Living S how™ h i ghlight builders, subcontractors and home improvement retailers for o ne-stop shopping for anyone interested in home improvement.The home show guides are published and inserted into The Bulletin are distributed at the shows. Wednesday, Saturday, April 27 00dW 10%

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Sprinter 272RLS, 2009 29', weatherized, like n ew, f u rnished & ready to go, incl Wineard S a t ellite dish, 26,995. 541-420-9964

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Weekend Warrior Toy Hauler 28' 2007,Gen, fuel station, exc cond. sleeps 8, black/gray i nterior, u se d 3X , $24,999. 541-389-9188

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E6 THURSDAY, JANUARY 24, 2013 • THE BULLETIN • s •

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Automobiles •

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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

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 5 41-385-580 9

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

Buick Lucerne CXL 2009, $12,500, low low miles; 2003 LeSabre, $4000. You'll not find nicer Buicks One look's worth a thousand words. Call Bob, 541-318-9999. for an appt. and take a drive in a 30 mpg car! Chevy Cobalt, 2 0 05, white, 4-dr, 2.2L, 108K miles, over 35mpg, auto trans, AC, CD player, dual airbags, manual locks & windows, good cond in/out, runs/drives great, non-smkr, always maintained. $4950.

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Legal Notices

Legal Notices

L e g al Notices

of $493.00 each, due of t h e Sou t heast t he f i rs t o f eac h Quarter (E 1/2 NE 1/4 month, for the months SE 1/4); ALSO EXof Au g us t 201 2 CEPT a T ract situt hrough Octo b e r ated in the East Half 2012; pl u s lat e of T he OW W U n i t t h e Nor t h east charges a n d ad- Quarter of the SouthSanitary District has available positions for vances; plus any un- east Quarter (E 1/2 paid rea l p r operty NE 1/4 SE 1/4) of the 2013-2014 BudCall 541-350-9938 get Committee. Posi- taxes or liens, plus Section 21 , f u r ther 935 935 interest. 5.AMOUNT described as follows: tions a r e for a Sport Utility Vehicles Sport Utility Vehicles DUE. T h e a m ount Beginning a t the Kia Optima EX 2004 three-year term and 2.7L V6, all power the deadline for appli- due on the Note which Southeast corner of Chevy Tahoe LS 2001 options, moonroof, i s secured b y t h e said East Half of the cations is March 7th, 4x4. 120K mi, Power v x» CERTIFIED spoiler, leather, In2013. M eetings will Trust Deed referred to Northeast Quarter of IIII IIxlllT(' seats, Tow Pkg, 3rd finity AM/FM/CD, herein is: P r i ncipal the Southeast Quarbegin the first part of row s eating, e x tra CARS-TRUCKS-SUVS alloys, Michelin & balance in the amount ter (E 1/2 NE 1/4 SE April. tires, CD, privacy tintstudded tires, of $50 200.31; plus 1/4); thence North 200 ing, upgraded rims. meticulously maint'd, interest at the rate of feet; t hence W e st, The Budget CommitFantastic cond. $7995 $7450. (in Bend) 7.750% per a nnum tee meets a t l e a st parallel to the South Contact Tim m at 760-71 5-91 23 Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 twice annually to con- from July 1 , 2 0 1 2; line of said East Half eng, power everything, 541-408-2393 for info plus late charges of sider and approve the of t h e Nor t h east new paint, 54K orig mi, or to view vehicle. b udget for th e u p - $ 221.85; p lu s a d - Quarter of the Southruns great, exlnt cond in 2004 Lexus RX330 Garage Sales coming fiscal year, vances and foreclo- east Quarter (E 1/2 & out. Asking $8,500. Very well maint, subject to final adop- sure attorney fees and NE 1/4 SE 1/4) 430 541-480-3179 Garage Sales AWD, Leather, moon costs. 6.SALE O F feet; t hence S o uth tion by the Board of roof. ¹069866 PROPERTY. The parallel to the East Directors. Garage Sales Special priced © Trustee hereby states line of said East Half $1 5,555 Applications are that the property will of t h e Nor t h east Find them Ford E xplorer X L T 2008 Mercury Mariner available at the Dis- be sold to satisfy the Quarter of the Southin 2006, 4 x 4, cle a n . ¹J37856 ... $14,895 trict Office at 55841 obligations secured by east Quarter (E 1/2 V in¹ A 1 8448. W a s 2011 Mercedes ML550 t he Trust Deed. A NE 1/4 SE 1/4) 200 Swan Rd Bend OrThe Bulletin GMC V~fon 1971, Only $12,999, Now $7,988. 9k m. ¹709224 $48,988 f eet; t h e nc e E a s t egon 97707 or on our Trustee's Notice of Classifieds $19,700! Original low Default and Election along the South line of 2011 Toyota 4Runner website mile, exceptional, 3rd 4 @ s U B A R U . to Sell Under Terms said East Half of the SR5¹042626 $31,988 www.oww2sd.com. 541-385-5809 HUBARUOFBEIIDCOM owner. 951-699-7171 For more information of Trust Deed h as Northeast Quarter of Audi A4 Quattro 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 2011 been recorded in the the Southeast QuarPrem. ¹010713 $29,988 Mitsubishi 3 00 0 G T call (541) 593-3124. 877-266-3821 O fficial Records o f ter, (E 1/2 NE 1/4 SE 1999, a uto., p e a rl LEGAL NOTICE 2011 Acura MDX • Dlr ¹0354 Deschutes C o u nty, 1/4) 430 feet to the ¹546273 ... $3 8,995 w hite, very low m i . Notice of Preliminary Oregon. 7. TIME OF POINT OF B E G INFord Freestyle S E L, $9500. 541-788-8218. Determination for SALE. Date: March NING. Said Deed of 2006, V6, AWD, AT, AC, Water Right Transfer 21, 2013. Time:11:00 Trust was assigned to Jeep Comanche, 1990, front & side airbags, 25 orcxos T-11318 a.m. Place: DesJ im Wise b y t h a t ruuu5nwrre original owner, 167K, mpg, 3rd row seating, chutes County Court- Certain Assignment of 4WD, 5-spd, tags good pwr Ithr seats, multi-CD, 541-598-3750 T-11318 f i l e d by house, 1 1 6 4 NW Deed recorded till 9/2015, $4500 obo. traction control, new tires Corner 97 & w. Empire Three Sisters Irriga- Bond Street, Bend, Trust J une 25, 2 00 9 a s 541-633-7761 & brks, maintained exwww.aaaoregonautotion District, PO Box Oregon. 8.RIGHT TO Document No. t remely well, runs & source.com 2 230, S i sters, O R Any 2009-26811 in the ofdrives exlnt,148K hwy mi, "My Little Red Corvette" 97759 and co-appli- REINSTATE. named in ORS ficial Record of Des$7200. 541-604-4166 1996 coupe. 132K, cants: City Of Sisters, person 86,753 has the right, chutes County, Or26-34 mpg. 350 auto. PO Box 39; Richard any time that is not egon. Beneficial Say "goodbuy" $12,500 541-923-1781 Morrow, P O Box at later than five days interest in the Deed of 1671; William Willitts, to that unused before the T r ustee Trust was assigned to 800 Buckaroo Trail, conducts Plymouth B a r racuda item by placing it in the sale, to Janet M. Wise, by that ALL of S isters, OR 1966, original car! 300 Nissan Armada 2007, this foreclosure certain Assignment of 97759; Sharon dhave hp, 360 V8, center- The Bulletin Classifieds 4x4, tow pkg., pw, pl. ismissed an d t h e Beneficial Interest in A mestoy, 7209 S E lines, (Original 273 V in¹ 7 0 0432. W a s Deed reinstated Trust Deed recorded Madison, Portland, Or Trust eng & wheels incl.) Now b y payment to t h e in the Official Records $17,999, 5 41-385-580 9 541-593-2597 Nissan Sentra, 20129 7215; David H e r $13,988. Beneficiary of the en- o f this C o unty o n 12,610 mi, full warranty, man, 57735 White- tire amount then due, March 14, 2012, as PROJECT CARS:Chevy PS, PB, AC, & more! h orse R a nc h Ln , 4j@sU B A R U. other such por- Instrument No. 20122-dr FB 1949-(SOLD) & $16,000. 541-788-0427 Fields, Or 97710; Jay tion ofthan the principal as 08986. Th e u n d erChevy Coupe 1950 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend R. P o u los, 43 8 9 not then be due signed was appointed rolling chassis's $1750 877-266-3821 Croisan Ridge Way S, would had no d efault ocSuccessor Trustee ea., Chevy 4-dr 1949, Dlr ¹0354 Salem, O r 97 3 0 2; curred, by curing any as by the Beneficiary by complete car, $ 1949; Bruce Rognlien, 1679 other default that is Cadillac Series 61 1950, GMC Envoy 2002 4WD an appointment dated Alta Mura Rd, Pacific c apable o f 2 dr. hard top, complete bei n g September 10, 2012 $6,450. Loaded, Palisades, Ca 90272; cured by tendering the w/spare f r ont cl i p ., and recorded on NoLeather, Heated $3950, 541-382-7391 Porsche 911 1974, low proposes to change performance required vember 16, 2012 in seats, Bose sound the points of d ivermi., complete motor/ under the obligation or the Deschutes County system. Ext. roof rack trans. rebuild, tuned sion for 7.694 cubic T rust Deed and b y Official Records as (218) 478-4469 feet per s econd of Porsche Cayenne 2004, suspension, int. & ext. Pickups paying all costs and Document No. 2012water rights u n der refurb., oil c o oling, 86k, immac, dealer expenses actually in- 046145. The adshows new in & out, Certificates 8 6 8 2 4, curred in enforcing the dress of the trustee is maint'd, loaded, now erf. m ech. c o nd. 83355, 85389, 85391, obligation and Trust 693 $17000. 503-459-1580 Chem e keta 86828, 86826, 85392, uch more! Deed, together with Street NE, Salem, OR $28,000 541-420-2715 85386, 85393, 85387 t he t r ustee's a n d 97301. Both the benand 85388, from dia ttorney's fees n o t eficiary PORSCHE 914 1974, a n d the versions on Wychus exceedingthe amount trustee GMC Envoy 2005, 4x4, have elected Roller (no engine), Creek, located within Ford 250 XLT 1990, running boards, tinted ORS to sell the said real lowered, full roll cage, Sec. 21, T15S, R10E, provided i n 6 yd. dump bed, window. Vin¹ 260943. 5-pt harnesses, rac- W.M. The a pplicant 8 6.753. Y o u ma y property to satisfy the 139k, Auto, $5500. W as $14,999 N o w reach th e O r e gon obligations secured by ing seats, 911 dash & proposes to change 541-410-9997 Toyota L a ndcruiser $12,688. instruments, decent the points of d iver- State Bar's L awyer said trust deed and a 2000, Au t o, 4x4, shape, v e r y c o ol! sion for all the rights Referral Service at notice of default has Call The Bulletin At I SUHUBARUOFBEIIDCOM BARU . © leather. Vin¹ 214783 503-684-3763 or been recorded pursu$1699. 541-678-3249 541-385-5809 downstream w i t h in toll-free in Oregon at ant Was $21,999, Now 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend to O regon RePlace Your Ad Or E-Mail Subaru Forester - 2006 Sec. 21. The Water $18,788. 800-452-7636 or you 877-266-3821 vised Statues Original owner, Resources D e p artAt: www.bendbulletin.com may visit its website 86.735(3), the default Dlr ¹0354 4j@sU B A R U. regular maintenance, ment has concluded at: w w w .osbar.org. for which the foreclolow miles (63K), that th e p r o posed Legal assist 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend ance may ure i s ma d e in asking $10,900. transfer appears to be b e available if y o u sgrantor's 877-266-3821 failure to pay 'r Call 970-629-1690 consistent with the reDlr ¹0354 have a low income when due the follow(in La Pine) q uirements of O R S meet federal pov- ing sums: The sum of Chapter 540 and OAR and e rty guidelines. F o r $25,000.00 in princi690-380-5000. Toyota Camrysr more information and pal, together with inFord F350 Super Duty GMC yukon 2001, 4x4, 1984, $1200 obo; a directory of legal aid terest and late fees. King Ranch 2 004, l oaded, must s e e . Any person may file, programs, g o 1985 SOLD; to B y reason o f s a i d Deisel, loaded. Vin¹ jointly or s e verally, V in¹ 1 8 3236. W a s http://www.oregon1986 parts car, default th e b e n efiA34788 Was $29,999, $13,999 Now with the Department a lawhelp.org. Any ciary has declared all $500. Now $23,788. protest or s t a nding questions regarding $11,488 Toyota Tacoma 2011, sums owing on the Call for details, statement within 30 4x4, lift, very clean. i 4@psU B A R U . this matter should be secured by 4@ s U BARU. 541-548-6592 days after the date of directed to Lisa Sum- obligation V in¹ 0 1 5638. W a s said trust deed imme2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend $29,999, final publication of noNow mers, Paralegal, (541) diately due and pay877-266-3821 tice in the 686-0344 877-266-3821 $26,988. (TS able, said sums being Dlr ¹0354 Department's weekly Dlr ¹0354 Tick, Tock ¹15148.30813). the following, to wit: 4@)sU BARU. notice or of this newsDATED: November 2, The FORD RANGER XLT sum of paper notice, which2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend Tick, Tock... 2012. /s/ Nancy K. $25,000.00, plus in1995 Ext. cab 2WD 5 ever is later. A pro877-266-3821 Cary. Nancy K. Cary, speed, with car alarm, terest in the amount of ...don't let time get test form and Dlr ¹0354 T r ustee, $ 210.74 thro u g h CD player, extra tires additional information Successor away. Hire a H ershner Hun t e r, September 18, 2006, on rims. Runs good. on filing protests may P.O. Box 1475, p lus interest at t h e Clean. 92,000 miles professional out be obtained by calling LLP, Eugene, OR 97440. o n m o t or . $2 6 0 0 GMC yukon D enali Vans r ate of 1 . 5 % p e r of The Bulletin's (503) 986-0883. The month from SeptemOBO. 541-771-6511. 2005, l oaded, v e r y last date of newspa"Call A Service ber 19, 2006; plus the clean. Vin¹ 1 69789. p er p u blication i s Chevy Astro GarageSales cost of foreclosure reProfessional" W as $ 16,999 N o w January 31, 2013. If Cargo I/an 2001, port, attorney's fees, $15,477 no protests are filed, Directory today! pw, pdl, great cond., and trustee's fees; tothe Department will I nternational Fla t +0 s UBAR U . business car, well gether with any other Q~ Toyota Corolla 2004, issue a f i nal o rder Bed Pickup 1963, 1 maint'd, regular oil sums due or that may auto., loaded, 204k c onsistent with t h e ton dually, 4 s pd. 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend changes, $4500. become due u nder 877-266-3821 miles. orig. owner, non preliminary d etermitrans., great MPG, Please call the Note or by reason smoker, exc. c o nd. nation. Dlr ¹0354 could be exc. wood 541-633-5149 of the d e fault, this $6500 Prin e ville LEGAL NOTICE hauler, runs great, foreclosure and any Good classified ads tell 503-358-8241 new brakes, $1950. Find them in TRUSTEE'S NOTICE further adv a nces the essential facts in an Chevy Lumina 1 9 95 541-41 9-5480. OF SALE made by Beneficiary interesting Manner. Write 7 -pass. v a n wit h TURN THE PAGE The Bulletin The Trustee under the a s allowed by t h e from the readers view - not p ower c h a i r lif t , For More Ads terms of t h e T r ust N ote and Deed o f Classifieds! the seller's. Convert the $1500; 1989 Dodge Deed desc r ibed Trust. WHEREFORE Turbo Van 7 - pass. The Bulletin facts into benefits. Show herein, at the direcnotice is hereby given the reader how the item will has new motor and WHEN YOU SEE THIS tion of the Beneficiary, that the undersigned t rans., $1500. I f i n help them in someway. hereby elects to sell trustee will on April 5, terested c a l l Jay This t he p r o perty d e 2013, at the hour of ~Oo 503-269-1057. RAM 2500 2003, 5.7L advertising tip scribed in the Trust 10:00 o'clock, a.m., in hemi V8, hd, auto, cruise, MorePixatBendbuletin.com Deed to satisfy the brought to you by LEGAL NOTICE accord with the stanam/fm/cd. $8400 obro. On a classified ad Ford Windstar 1996 obligations s e cured TRUSTEE'S NOTICE dard of time estab541-420-3634 /390-1285 The Bulletin go to Mini Van, 173K, no thereby. Pursuant to OF SALE lished by ORS www.bendbulletin.com air, 3 seats, room ORS 86.745, the folReference is made to 187.110. at the main LWa .. to view additional galore! Dependable, lowing information is a trust deed made by d oor o f t h e D e s photos of the item. road-ready to anyprovided: 1.PARTIES: House Buyers, LLC, chutes County Courtplace, even Tumalo! Grantor: JAMES ATas Grantor, to Lawhouse, 1 10 0 NW 1983, 8000-Ib Warn Looking for your All this for $1500W OOD AN D J I L L yers Title Insurance B ond Street, in t h e winch, 2 sets of tire really! 541-318-9999 next employee? ATWOOD. T r ustee: Corporation, as City of Bend, County chains, canopy, 22R Place a Bulletin help A MERITITLE. S u c - Trustee, in favor of of Deschutes, motor, 5-spd t rans- Honda Ridge l ine wanted ad today and cessor Trus t e e: Michael C. Carpenter tate of Oregon, sell at mission, $2495 obo. 2006, 4x4, pw/pl, very reach over 60,000 N ANCY K . C A R Y. and Carol E. Carpen- public auction to the 541-350-2859 clean. Vin¹ 5 12698. Automobiles readers each week. Beneficiary: WASHter, Trustees for the h ighest b idder f o r W as $18,999 N ow Your classified ad INGTON F EDERAL Michael C. Carpenter cash the interest in $15,450 will also appear on FKA W A S H INGTON and Carol E. Carpen- the real property desISport Utility Vehicles bendbulletin.com FEDERAL SAVINGS. ter Family Trusts, as cribed above which I S UBAR U . 4@ which currently re2.DESCRIPTION OF B eneficiary, dat e d the grantor had or had 8UBARUOPBEllD COM BMW 3 Series 2010, 5k ceives over 1.5 milPROPERTY: The July 21, 2004, and re- power to convey at mi., ¹474934. $37,988 2060 NE Hwy 20 • Bend lion page views real property is decorded on July 23, the t i m e of the 877-266-3821 BMW 328i, 1998, sunevery month at scribed as follows: Lot 2 004 i n t h e D e s - execution by grantor Dlr ¹0354 roof, white/grey interior, no extra cost. BulleEight (8), Block Two chutes County Offi- o f th e t r u s t d e e d all electric, auto trans, tin Classifieds (2), T ALL P IN E S cial R e c ords as t ogether w it h an y Oregon Jeep Wrangler 4x4, c lean, 1 6 8 ,131 mi , Get Results! Call FIRST ADD I T ION, Document No. 2004i nterest w hich t h e AutoSource 1997 6-cyl, soft top, $3200. 541-419-6176 385-5809 or place recorded August 16, 43622, covering the grantor or g r antor's roll bar, front tow 541-598-3750 your ad on-line at 1972, in Cab i net following d e s cribed successors in interest bar, new tires, aaaoregonautosource.com bendbullerin.com Page 572, Deschutes real property situated a cquired after t h e chrome rims, 103K County, Oregon. 3. in th e a b ove-men- execution of the trust miles, gd cond, R ECORDING. T h e t ioned c ounty a n d deed, to satisfy the $5700 obo. I The Bulletin recoml Trust Deed was res tate, t o -wit: R e a l foregoing obligations 541-504-3253 or mends extra caution t corded as f o l lows: property in the County thereby secured and 503-504-2764 BMW 740 IL 1998 orig. when p u r chasing ~Date Reco r ded: of Deschutes, State of the cos t s and o wner, e xc . c o n d .f products or services March 17, 2006. Re- Oregon, described as expenses of the sale, 101k miles, new tires, from out of the area. Buick Enclave 2008 CXL cording No.: follows: In Township including a loaded, sunroof. f S ending c ash , AWD, V-6, black, clean, L, 2006-18224 O f f icial 22, South, Range 10, reasonable charge by checks, or credit in- q R ecords o f mechanicall y sound, 82k $9500. 541-706-1897 Des - E ast o f t he Wil - the trustee. Notice is miles. $20,995. formation may be I chutes County, Orlamette Meridian, De- further given that any ~ Qo Call 541-815-1216 to FRAUD. egon. 4.DEFAULT. schutes County, Orperson named in ORS MorePixatBendbulletincom [ subject For more i nformaThe Grantor or any egon; Section 21: The 86.753 has the right, Jeep Wrangler Unlimf tion about an adverother person o b li- Southerly 2/3 of the at any time prior to ited 2008, Hard top, tiser, you may call gated on th e T rust East H al f of t he five days before the lift, S weet ! V in¹ I the Oregon Statel Deed and Promissory Northeast Quarter of date last set for the 572535 Was $26,999, Attorney General's S Note secured thereby the Southeast Quar- s ale, to h a v e t h i s Now $23,988. Office C o n sumer is in default and the ter (E 1/2 NE 1/4 SE foreclosure f Protection hotline at Beneficiary seeks to 1/4); EX C EPTING proceeding dismissed Chev Tahoe, 1999 most ) SUSUBIUtUOFBEIID BARU . 1-877-877-9392. COM foreclose the T r ust t herefrom th e E a s t and the t rust d eed options, new paint & BMW Z4 Roadster Deed for f ailure to Half of the Southerly reinstated by payment tires, runs good, 159K 2060 NE Hwy 20• Bend 2005, 62K miles, ex877-266-3821 m iles, $ 4 250. Ca l l cellent cond. $14,000. pay: M o nthly pay- 2/3 of the East Half of to the beneficiary of Serv>ng Central Oregon srnce 1903 541-233-8944 Dlr ¹0354 541-604-9064 ments in the amount the Northeast Quarter the e n tire a m o unt LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE OF BUDGET COMMITTEE VACANCY

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Legal Notices • then due (other than s uch portion of t h e principal as would not then be due had no default occurred) and by curing any other default complained of herein that is capable o f being c ured b y tendering the

performance required under the obligation or t rust deed, an d i n addition t o pa y i ng those su m s or tendering the performance necessary to cure the default by paying all costs and expenses a ctually incurred i n enforcing the obligation and t r ust deed, together with trustee and attorney fees not e x ceeding the amounts provided

Legal Notices this, you must notify your l a n dlord in writing that you want to subtract the amount of y o u r sec u rity deposit o r pr e paid rent from your rent payment. You may do this only for the rent you owe your current l andlord. If y o u d o this, you must do so before the foreclosure sale. The business or individual who buys t his property at t he foreclosure sale is not responsible to you for any deposit or prepaid rent you paid to your l andlord. A BOU T YOUR TEN A N CY AFTER THE FORECLOSURE SALE: The new owner that buys this property at the foreclosure sale may be willing to allow

by O R S 86. 7 5 3. NOTICE TO y ou to s tay a s a tenant i n s tead of RESIDENTIAL TENANTS: The requiring you to move

property in which you are living is in foreclosure. A f o r eclosure sale is scheduled for A pril 5, 2 0 13. T h e date of this sale may be postponed. Unless t he lender t hat i s f oreclosing on t h i s property is paid before t he sale d a te, t h e f oreclosure will g o through and someone n ew will o w n t h i s p roperty. After t h e sale, the new owner is required to p r ovide you w i t h con t act information and notice t hat the s al e t o o k place. The following information applies to you only if you are a bona f i d e ten a nt occupying and renting t his property a s a residential d w e lling under a le g itimate rental agreement. The information does not apply to you if you own this property or if you are not a bona fide residential tenant. If the foreclosure sale goes through, the new owner will have the right to require you to move out. Before the new o w ne r can require you to move, the new owner must p rovide y o u wit h w ritten n o tice t h a t specifies the date by which you must move o ut. If yo u d o n o t l eave b e fore th e m ove-out date, t h e new owner can have the sheriff remove you from the property after a court hearing. You will receive notice of the c o urt h e a ring. PROTECTION FROM E VICTION: IF Y O U ARE A BONA FIDE TENANT O CCUPYING A N D

out after 90 days or at the end of your fixed term lease. After the s ale, y o u sho u l d r eceive a wri t t e n notice informing you t hat th e s a l e t o o k place and giving you the n e w own e r's name and c o ntact information. You s hould contact t h e n ew owner i f y o u would like to stay. If t he n ew owne r accepts rent from you, signs a new r esidential rent a l agreement with you or does not notify you in writing within 30 days after the date of the foreclosure sale that you must move out, t he n ew owne r becomes your new l andlord an d m u s t maintain the property. Otherwise: • You do not owe rent; • Th e new owner is not your l andlord and i s n o t responsible for maintaining the p roperty o n you r behalf; and • Y o u must move out by the date the new owner specifies in a notice to you. The new owner may offer to pay your moving expenses and a ny other costs o r amounts you and the new owner agree on in exchange for your agreement to l e ave the premises in less than 9 0 d ays o r before your fixed term l ease expires. Y o u should speak with a lawyer to fully understand your rights before making any decisions r e garding your tenancy. IT IS

owner can give you w ritten n o tice a n d require you to move out after 9 0 d a ys, even though you have a fixed term lease with more than 90 days l eft. You m us t b e provided with at least 90 days' written notice after the foreclosure sale before you can be required to move. A bona fide tenant is a residential tenant who is not the borrower (property owner) or a child, s p o us e or parent of the borrower, and whose rental agreement: • Is the r e sult o f an arm's-length transaction; Requires the payment of rent that is not substantially less than fair m arket rent for t he property, unless the r ent is r e duced o r subsidized due to a federal, state or local subsidy; and • W a s entered into prior to the d a t e of the foreclosure sale. ABOUT YOUR TENANCY BETWEEN NOW

If you do not have enough money to pay a lawyer an d a r e otherwise eligible, you may b e ab l e to receive legal assistance for f r ee. For more information and a d i rectory of legal aid programs, go

UNLAWFUL FOR A NY PERSON T O TRY TO FORCE YOU RENTING T HIS T O L E AV E Y O U R D WELLING UN I T P ROPERTY AS A W ITHOUT FI R S T RESIDENTIAL DWELLING, YOU GIVING YOU HAVE TH E R I G HT WRITTEN N O T ICE G O IN G TO TO CONTI N UE A ND LIVING IN T HIS COURT TO E V I CT PROPERTY AFTER Y OU. FOR M O R E THE FORECLOSURE INFORMATION SALE FOR: • TH E ABOUT YOUR RIGHTS, YOU REMAINDER OF YOUR FIXED TERM SHOULD CONSULT LEASE, IF YOU A LAWYER. If y o u HAVE A FIX ED believe you need legal TERM LEASE; OR • assistance, you may AT LEAST 90 DAYS contact the O regon F ROM TH E D A T E State Bar and ask for YOU ARE GIVEN A the lawyer r eferral serwce at WRITTEN 503-684-3763 or TERMINATION toll-free in Oregon at NOTICE. If the new owner wants to move 800-452-7636 or you i n and u se thi s may visit its website property as a primary at: http://www.osbar.org. r esidence, the n e w

A ND

THE

to:

http://www.oregonlaw help.org. In construing this not i ce , t he singular includes the plural, t h e word "grantor" includes any successor in interest to the grantor as well

as any other person owing an obligation, the performance of which is secured by the trust deed, and the words "trustee" "beneficiary" and include

their

respective successors i n interest i f a n y . DATED: December 3, 2012. Michelle

M. Morrow, S u ccessor Trustee.

Where buyers

FOR E -

meet sellers

C LOSURE SAL E : RENT YOU SHOULD CONTINUE T O PAY R ENT T O

YOUR L A NDLORD UNTIL THE You know what PROPERTY IS SOLD they say about OR UNTIL A COURT "one man's trash". TELLS YOU OTHERWISE. IF YOU DO NOT PAY RENT, There's a whole pile YOU CAN BE of "treasure" here! EVICTED. BE SURE TO KEEP PROOF OF ANY PAY M E NTS MAKE. YOU SECURITY DEPOSIT: You may

apply your security deposit and any rent

you paid in advance against the c u rrent

rent you owe y our landlord as provided in ORS 90.367. To do

Classtfteds Thousandsofadsdaily in print andonline. •

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