Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1.5Q
SUNDAY January25,2015
'220
IN COUPONS INSIDE
COMMUNITY LIFE• C1
bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
TRAGEDY ON MIDDLE SISTER: NEW DETAILS
HODSing — Foreclosures are down in Deschutes County.E1
"Burton stated they were very aware of the predicted
r
MEDICAID BACKLOG
«g;-
. 43,000 still wait for OHP answer
storm and wanted to push themselves to reach the
summit and begin descending before the storm hit.
A closer look — If aconventional microscope isn't enough, why not makewhat you're looking at bigger? It worked for these scientists. A3
Burton explained they had the experience, equipment,
-
'
,
; .
and fitness ... even if they got stuck in the storm."
1
— Deschutes County sheriff's report, obtained by The Bulletin -~««t«s;" -4
«W
Super BOWI —Seahawksgo
'
trademark crazy; the Patriots and their footballs.D1, D5
,~ ~
« «~ u t t „ .
By Tara Bannow
1
,«..
'
The Bulletin
For most of 2014,
60-year-old Marianne Fellner enjoyed a private health insurance policy for which she paid $126
Plus: Wing day — Americans are expected to eatover a billion wings next Sunday.A7
a month thanks to
tax credits through Cover Oregon. She got tests done. She got to keep her
And a Webexclusive-
"I paid $25 for an Invisible Boyfriend, and I think I might be in love." buudbulletiu.cum/extras
doctol'.
Then in early December, when the Tumalo resident
learned she was eligible for the Oregon Health Plan, the state's version of Medicaid, she mailed her application. When she didn't hear
EDITOR'5CHOICE
Soap operas: illicit love in North I<orea By Choe Sung-Hun
By Dylan J. Darlinga The Bulletin • •
efore his fatal fall near the
SEOUL, South Korea
be safe. In an interview
man told his climbing partner he was "bonking" — dizzy and
relatively privileged classes; he got to sit in special seats in restaurants and on
and he told me that Newkirk was dizzy. He said that
waiting to be ap-
important in a country
said, "but I live in the
country, and anybody can get in a car accident." See Medicaid /A6
Story inside • Ben Newkirk's friends and family are planning a memorial with a view of the Three Sisters. Also: some insight into who Newkirk was, AS
weekend — took a break so Newkirk could
ernment food rations. Then
he risked it all — for a soap opera from South Korea.
regain his bearings. "... Newkirk wanted to stay on the summit for a lit-
The temptation in this
case was "Scent of a Man," an 18-episode drama about
tle bit to rest so they hunkered down behind a rock for
the forbidden love between
iff's Office report. "(Burton) said that they ate some food, took some pictures and drank water while they
Photos inside
about 15 minutes," according to a Lane County Sher-
an ex-convict and his stepsister. A graduate student
sat behind the rock."
The fact that Newkirk felt fatigued as he summited Middle Sister is one of many new details about how
had offered him the bundle
of banned CDs smuggled into the North and, too curious to resist, Jang and
• The rescue effort, A4
and Deschutes counties sheriff's offices, as well as in recordings of calls to Deschutes County 911, following a public records request by The Bulletin. The county line runs north-to-south right over Middle Sister.
Plus: Climbing terms defined, A4
research
They summited Middle Sister at 9A2 p.m. There Newkirk told Burton he was 'bonking.'
Newkirk fell on the Lane County side so its search See Fall /A4
TIMELINE: WHAT HAPPENED THAT DAY, AND AFTERWARD Y
TODAY'S WEATHER Mostly sunny High 63, Low37 Page B6
Timeline of Middle Sister climb
4NORTH SISTER
MIDDLE SISTER
Four or five days before, Newkirk andBurton,both of Bend, plan to climb
10,047 ft."
Middle Sister latein
<10,085 fl.
ObsidianTrai/
:
,
,~~=
-
INDEX Milestones C2 Obituaries B4 Opinion F1-6 Puzzles C6 Sports D1-6
ik 'h
climber'sfall,~roafe,
.r
6,952 fl.
The Bulletin
An Independent Newspaper
"Burton said that they were using it
Voi. 113, No. 25,
as a training experience because the
4e pages, 7 sections
Camp Lake Trail
'' Ci/mbing
SOUTH SISTERM 10,358 ft.'tn,.
Middle Sister is an easy hike and they felt
comfortable being in bad weather there."
Q I/I/e userecycled newsprint
: 'IIIIIIIIIII I
7
— Lane County report (Lane led the search mission)
Source: Lane County Sheriff I Map data: U.S. ForestService, USGS, Oregon
Andy Zeigert and GregCrossIrhe Bulletin
By Robert Pear The New York Times
WASHINGTON — President Barack
Obama will seek hundreds of millions
Y MAP: THECLIMBERS' ROUTEONlilov. 12
and rescue team led the search for him.
Funding custom dILlg
Jonathan Newkirk i Submitted photo
Ben Newkirk, pictured during a 2014 climb near Bend.
he died contained in reports released by the Lane
five other professors huddled in one of their homes binge watching until dawn. See Korea /A7
8 8 2 6 7 0 2 33 0
I'm healthy," she
— Lane County sheriff's report
the high country together almost every
where many go hungry, was given priority for gov-
0
proved under OHP. "Thank heavens
— a pair of climbing buddies who took to
crowded trains, and more
Business E1-6 Calendar B2 Classified G1-6 Comm. LifeC1-8 Local/State B1-6
maker said she's still
can be disorienting and that he thinks thatis what Burton was talking about."
close to 9:45 p.m. on Nov. 12, Benjamin "Ben" Newkirk, 39, and Ryan Burton, 25,
was among the nation's
"(Arescuer later) asked Burton what bonking was
Friday, the self-employed leather clothing and furniture
walking up the mountain in the dark with a headlamp
Atop the 10,047-foot mountain in the dark
— As a math professor in North Korea, Jang Se-yul
back, she filled out another one online to
summit of Middle Sister, a Bend
running out of energy.
New York Times News Service
•
•
of Middle Sister where«Benjamin "Ben" Newkirk, of Bend, fell to his death Nov. 12.
the day on ...
of dollars fora new initiative to develop medical treatments tailored to genetic and other character-
istics of individual patients, administra-
tion officials say. The proposal, mentioned briefly in his State of the Union
Nov.12 3:30 p.m.: Arrive at Camp Lake after 7-mile hike in from Pole Creek Trailhead. Thenset up camp andboil water, readying for climb. 6:30 p.m.: Leave Camp Lake, climbing up the southeast ridge of Middle Sister. See Nov. 12/A4
address, will be described in greater detail in his budget in the coming weeks. The effort is likely to
receive support from members ofboth parties, lawmakers
sard. "This is an incredible area of promise," said Sen. Bill Cassidy, R-La., a gastroenterologist. "There
will be bipartisan support. See Drug /A7
The urorld could always use more Ducks. E nter Pathwa y Q r e g o n .
A CCES S M AKE S P ER F E C T
W e c r e a t e d a p r o g r a m t c tg i v e f u l l t u i t i o n t c t P e l l - e l i g i b l e s t u d e n t s g rad u a t i n g w it h a 3 . r 4 0 G p A . Ge t o n t h e p a t h t o o n e o f t h e t o p p ubli c u n i v e r s it i es i n t h e n a t i on .
.I
p a t h w a y o r e g o n .u o r e g o n .e d u EO/AA/ADA institut ion committed to cultural diversity.
'la~
•
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•
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • T HE BULLETIN A 3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Sunday, Jan. 25, the 25th
day of 2015. Thereare 340 days left in the year.
Study arguesfor earlier capacity for tool making
CUTTING EDGE
HAPPENINGS Odama in India —The president will arrive in the country to discuss issues ranging from security to climate change.
bones that boxers fracture when punching, or soldiers Our ape-l ikeancestorsm ay crack when doing fist pushhave stopped dragging their ups. They no longer are built knuckles and started making for sustaining such force. That's wh y t h e s u b tle tools a half million years earlier than previously thought, changes in metacarpal accordingto a new study. bones, particularly the lowThe study, published on- er part of the thumb, hint at line in the journal Science, whether our ancestors still suggests that the art of tool largely swung from trees or making may not be exdusive had freedtheirforelimbs for to the genus Homo, which led more delicate work. to modern Homo sapiens. At The fossil record, however, least one species in the dead- is incomplete. The oldest eviend genus Australopithecus dence of tools coinciding with appears to have enough of fossilized hand bones sugthe hand characteristics that gests H. habilis was crafting would have made tool craft- tools about 2.4 million years ing possible, the study found. ago, though there is some T hat would m ean t h at evidence of tool-like stones a the credit for tool use would few hundred thousand years now be shared between earlier. By Geoff reyMohan Los Angeles Times
HISTORY Highlight: In1915, America's first official transcontinental telephone call took placeas Alexander GrahamBell, who was in NewYork, spoke to his former assistant, ThomasWatson, who was inSan Francisco, over a line set up byAmerican Telephone &Telegraph. In1533, England's King Henry Vlll secretly married his second wife, AnneBoleyn, who
A technique that gives scientists a closer look at biological material,
expansion microscopy, works by making the object being viewed larger, and uses conventional microscopes.
later gave birth to Elizabeth I.
In1890, reporter Nellie Bly (Elizabeth Cochrane) of the New York World completed a round-the-world journey in 72 days, 6 hours and11 minutes. The United MineWorkers of America was founded inColumbus, Ohio. In1915, the U.S.Supreme Court, in Coppage v.Kansas, upheld the right of employers to bar employees from belonging to labor unions by making them sign a"yellow dog con-
BIRTHDAYS Actor Gregg Palmer is 88. Actor DeanJones is 84. Movie director TobeHooper is 72. Actress Leigh Taylor-Young is 70. Actress Jenifer Lewis is 58. Actress ChinaKantner is 44. Actress AnaOrtiz is 44. Actress Mia Kirshner is 40. Actress Christine Lakin is 36. Rhythm-and-blues singer Alicia Keys is 34. Popmusician Calum Hood is19. — From wire reports
But hominins didn't dis-
play the full suite of hand features to enable a power-
— and Australopithecus af-
fuland precise grasp oftools ricanus, a species that wan- until the emergence of Neandered around southern Afri- derthals about 200,000 years ca about 2 million to 3 million ago, although fragmentary years ago. evidence suggests the modSincethen,modern Homo ern hand arose among Homo sapiens has used a lot of his erectus, about 1.4 million tool-making ability to type years ago. out arguments over which They found that the heads ancestor first flaked a stone and bases of the metainto a sharp-edged tool. So carpal bones became less it's unlikely that one study dense among more modern will settle the matter. hominins, and that density But a research team led by shifted toward the palm — an the University of Kent makes indication that the hand bea compelling case for a spe- came fortified for the types cial kind of handiness in A. of forcesassociated with preafricanus. cise squeezing of the thumb The researchers compared toward the fingers. the density and shape of That doesn't mean A. afhand bones across multiple ricanus had a modern hand. species spanning several mil- It didn't. Like a lot of early lion years. They were partic- hominins, much of its hand ularly interested in the meta- structure and bone density carpal bones, which span the was still suited for curling palm, connecting the digits to around tree limbs, the au-
tract."
In1924, the first Winter OlympicGames opened inChamonix, France. In 1945, the World War II Battle of the Bulgeended as German forces werepushed back to their original positions. In 1947, American gangster Al Capone died in Miami Beach, Florida, at age48. In1955, the Soviet Union formally ended its state of war with Germany. In 1961, President John F.Kennedy held the first presidential news conference to becarried live on radio andtelevision. In1971, Charles Mansonand three womenfollowers were convicted in Los Angelesof murder and conspiracy in the 1969 slayings of sevenpeople, including actress SharonTate. In1981, the 52Americans held hostage by Iran for 444 days arrived in the United States. In1990, an AviancaBoeing 707 ran out of fuel and crashed in Cove Neck, Long Island, New York; 73 of the 158people aboard were killed. Actress Ava Gardner died in Londonat age 67. In1995, the U.S.andNorway launched aBlack Brant rocket carrying equipment to study the aurora borealis, startling Russian officials who wondered at first if the rocket was an incoming Trident missile. (Russian President Boris Yeltsin reportedly was given his "nuclear briefcase" for possible retaliation before realizing there was nothreat.) Ten years ago: A videotape showed RoyHallums, an American kidnapped in Baghdad the previous November, pleading for his life. (Hallums was rescued bycoalition troops on Sept. 7,2005.) A stampede during a Hindufestival in western India killed some 300 people. Five years age: Iraq hanged Ali Hassan al-Majid, known as "Chemical Ali" for his role in gassing 5,000 people in a Kurdish village. AnEthiopian Airlines Boeing 737 crashed into the Mediterraneanafter taking off from Beirut in a fierce thunderstorm; all 90 people aboard were killed. One year age: A gunman opened fire at a shopping mall in suburban Baltimore, killing two skateshopemployees, 21-year-old Brianna Benlolo and 25-year-old Tyler Johnson; shooter Darion Aguilar then killed himself.
Homo habilis — most often
thought to be the progenitor of tool-making hominins
MIT via The New YorkTimes
An image of neurons in a mouse hippocampus was taken with expansion microscopy. In a paper published in the journal Science, researchers at MIT said they used a technique they call expansion
microscopy to capture the image.
By John Markoff
ized it might be feasible af- might be possible to expand ter exploring the work of the tissues by 10 times or even A ne w l a b oratory t e ch- MIT physicist Toyoichi Tana- more. nique enables researchers ka, who in the 1970s discovAlthough the imaging techto see minuscule biological ered a class of "intelligent" nique will not directly capNew York Times News Service
features, such as i n dividu-
al neurons and synapses, at a nearly molecular scale through conventional optical
microscopes. In a paper published in the journal Science, researchers
gels that respond to stimuli such as water.
ture dynamic processes in the
brain, it should be possible to One of those materials is a gain insight into brain funcpolymer widely used today in tion by taking samples before diapers, which absorbs 200 to and after events, he said.
the wrist area. These are the
thors noted.
300 times its mass in water. The researchers realized it
at MIT said they were able to was perfectfor forcing bioincrease the physical size of logical tissue to swell. cultured cells and tissue by
Eventually, the r esearch-
as much as five times while still preserving their struc-
ers perfected an unusual procedure. First, they apply
ture. The scientists call the
fluorescent dye to the tissue
new technique expansion sample. The molecules attach microscopy. to particular structures, such The idea of making objects as nerves and synapses, that larger to make them more the scientists will want to see. visible is a r adical solution Then they infuse the tissue to a vexing challenge. By ex- with the chemical building tending the resolving power blocks of the polymer, makof conventional microscopes, ing sure they evenly permescientists are able to glimpse ate the sample. The blocks such biological mysteries as come together to form the the protein structures that polymer inside the tissue, form ion channels and the which is t hen chemically outline of the membrane that "chopped up" so it can be holds the genome within a enlarged. cell. Then, just add water. The The researchers have ex- tissue expands in all direca mined minute neural c i r tions uniformly and becomes cuits, gaining new insights transparent, an d s u ddenly into local connections in the the tiny structures limned in brain and a
) r'
i4
ifl'I
b e t ter u nder- fluorescence burst into view. Relative to one another, their
standing of larger networks. The maximum resolving
positions do not change. Expansion mi c r oscopy cal microscopes is about 200 may permit scientists to crenanometers, about half the ate three-dimensional models wavelength of visible light. of largeareas in thebrains of (By contrast, a human hair is animals, making it possible about 500 times wider.) In re- to map biological processes power of conventional opti-
cent decades, scientists have
from one region to the next.
struggled to push past these And the techniquemay relimits. veal the structures of individLast year, three scientists
ual proteins, structural detail
receiveda Nobel Prize for a technique in which fluores-
inside cells and other biological features in near-molecu-
cent molecules are used to
lar detaiL
extend the resolving power of
One o f t h e re s earch groups that has begun us-
optical microscopes. But the
technique requires specialized equipment and is costly.
ing the new technique is the
With expansion microsco-
OpenWorm project, an effort to create a complete digital
py, Edward Boyden, a co-di-
simulation of the C. elegans
rector of the MIT Center for
nematode. " We are hopeful it w i ll
Neurobiological Engineering, and his colleagues were able to observe objects originally measuring just 70 nanometers in cultured cells and
brain tissue through an optical microscope. They were also able to produce super-resolution an-
ATTEND AFREESEMINARTOLEARN HOW TOFUNDACOLLEGEEQUCATION
a llow b etter
r e solution o f
structural aspects of C. elegans like ion-channel type and density on a cell-by-cell basis," said Stephen Larson, a neuroscientist who is a
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co-founder of the OpenWorm
project, in an email. imations in which the viewThe new approach also er "flies" through a detailed could bring s uper-resoluthree-dimensional image of a tion microscopy into wide mouse hippocampus. use, because itrequires less "We hope we have a tech- expensive equipment and is nology that will allow you to based on simpler laboratory scan the nervous system of procedures. entire animals," Boyden said. The technique has been The idea began as a joke perfected to enlarge tissue during a brainstorming ses- samples by about 4~/z to 5 sion several years ago, ac- times, but that is not an ulticording to Boyden. But he mate limit, Boyden said. By and graduate students Fei
tuning th e
Chen and Paul Tillberg real-
the procedure, he believes it
c h emicals and
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A4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
Nov. 12 Continued fromA1 9:42 p.m.:Arrive at summit of Middle Sister.
10 p.m.:Start descent of Middle Sister. Minutes after10 p.m.: Newkirk falls.
the search andcall teams back from the field, including the team that planned to stay at Camp Lake. A tentstocked with emergency supplies is left at the camp.
Nov. 14 Heavy snowfall keepssearch postponed.
Nov. 13
Nov. 15
3 a.m.:A Deschutes County Search andRescueteam starts hiking toward CampLake from the Pole CreekTrailhead. 4 a.m.:A LaneCounty Search and Rescueteam is notified of Newkirk's fall and responds to the Obsidian Trailhead off state Highway 242. 8 a.m.:Lane County Search and Rescueconfirms with Deschutes County Searchand Rescue that LaneCounty's team will be leading the search for Newkirk. 9 a.m.:A second Deschutes County Search andRescue team leaves from PoleCreek Trailhead for CampLake, with plans to camp there that night in case Newkirk returns. 11 a.m.:Severe winter weather prompts rescuers to postpone
5 a.m.:A break in the weather allows a Deschutes County Search and Rescueteam to access CampLakeand check for signs of activity. They did not find any and removetent and supplies.
'•
s
Nov. 16 8:08 a.m.:Clear skies allow an Oregon National Guard Chinook helicopter to fly toward Middle Sister with a Lane County Search andRescue team on board. 9:26 a.m.:The helicopter team reports it has spotted a person on the mountain. 10:54a.m.:The helicopter team confirms the person is Newkirk and he isdead.
J
Submitted photos
Lane County Search and Rescue teams were hampered by snowy weather during the search for Benjamin "Ben" Newkirk in November.
Source: Lane County and Deschutes County sheriff's offices' reports
Forecasts called for a snowstorm to hit Middle Sister and the Cascades in Central Oregon early the day after Burton and Newkirk planned their climb. "Burton told me that they knew what they were doing and that they hiked the
mountain at that time because they knew some weather was coming in," according to the Lane County report.
s»
ment and fitness to feel comfortable under the predicted
and crampons (traction device attached to the feet
conditions even if they got
which are used in mountaineering to walk on snow and Their climbing trip started ice)," according to the Defrom Pole Creek Trailhead, schutes County report. "They about 10 miles southwest of were both carrying packs Sisters, and they hiked in 7 with sleeping bags, food, wamiles to reach Camp Lake by ter, sleeping pad and some 3:30 p.m. There they set up additional clothing." camp and boiled water from They did not expect to enthe lake to prep for their up- counter any crevasses, or coming climb.They headed deep, narrow cracks in ice, up the southeast ridge of Mid- along their climbing route so dle at 6:30 p.m. they did not string a rope be"They were both equipped tween each other. w ith a h elmet, an ic e a x e Continued next page stuck in the storm."
Helicopter and other search crews looked for Newkirk, a Bendman who fell from Middle Sister.
Despite spotty cellphone
"Burton stated they were
connections, Burton was able
very aware of the predicted
to relay information about
storm and wanted to push
Newkirk's fall to Deschutes
themselves to reach the summit and begin descending be-
County 911 through his parents, according to emergency call recordings from the agency. He also spoke with disp atchers himself
fore the storm hit," according
to the Deschutes County report. "Burton explained they had the experience, equip-
and t h e
Deschutes County Sheriff's sergeant initially leading the rescue r esponse, b etween
calling out Ben's name and Trailhead during the search. (The Deschutes-Lane county line runs trying to find his friend. "I am just inching my way over Middle Sister; Newkirk fell on the Lane side, so Lane Search and Rescue led the search effort.) down the ridge, yelling for my friend," Burton told a De-
//
The LaneCounty Search and Rescue team huddles atObsi dian
Fall Continued fromA1 In the reports it is apparent
ahead of N ewkirk, B u rton
stopped to bang away some s uspicious-looking ice. A s he worked he heard ice fall
Newkirk was likely unconscious when he fell and did
above him on the route,and at first thought Newkirk must
not attempt to stop his slide;
also be chipping away at ice.
he and Burton, also of Bend, were experienced climbers equipped with mountaineering gear. The pair had intentionally gone up the mountain late in the day knowing a snowstorm was expected soon, hoping to experience
"However, a few seconds
later, Burton saw Newkirk
schutes County 911 dispatcher. "I don't know what else to do, ma'am." Burton left an the activat-
ed emergency beacon near where Newkirk fell and dispatchers pinged Burton's cellphone several times to determine where on the mountain to search for him.
The calls i n dicate the ing on his back," according to weather was worsening rapthe Deschutes County report. idly. Worried he may have "Newkirk had his ice axe in two missing climbers to hand and the head lamp was search for,the sergeant told functioning on his helmet. Burton to go back to his base bad weather on a r e lative- In a brief couple seconds, camp and wait there to meet ly easy mountain, although Newkirk disappeared from up with searchers. weather does not appear to sight." be a factor in the fall.
sail past him, feet first, slid-
Burton l ater
t ol d r e scu-
Newkirk was familiar with ers Newkirk did not make a self-arresting techniques, us- sound, before or during his ing an ice ax to stop a slide fall. "He just looked like a kid down a slope, and Burton had seen him use them on other going down a slide at the climbs. He did not on Middle playground," Burton told a Sister. Deschutes County rescuer. "I just d o n't u n derstand Burton told rescuers he was why Ben didn't self-arrest his sure Newkirk w a s u n confall," Burton later told a De- scious when he fell. schutes County rescuer.
The fall Newkirk and Burton start-
//
Plan for bad weather
Forecasts called for a snowstorm to hit Middle Sis-
ter and the Cascades in Central Oregon when Burton and
Newkirk planned to be on the mountain. "Burton told me that they
/
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': "S
\
I
eoe/
knew what they were doing and that they hiked the mountain at that time because they
After the fall, Burton tried t o f o llow N e w k i rk's p a t h d own t h e m o u n tain, b u t
knew some weather was coming in," according to the
Membership Benefits Include:
Lane County report. "Burton
could not find a discernible
said that they were using it as a training experience be-
• Online Directory Listing at www.VisitRedmondOregon.com
ed their descent from Middle trail over the ice. He called Sister at 10 p.m. About 200 out for Newkirk but never feet down from the top they heard back. "(Burton) said that he was came to a narrow spot where only one of them could pass only able to make it about at a time with a long drop 100 feet before he came to below. a cliff and was unable to go A r oc k f o r m ation t h ere any further," according to the was the hardest part of the Lane County report. He then climbing route, according turned on his rescue beacon to the reports. About 30 feet and put in a call for help.
Cllmdlngterms The LaneCounty and Deschutes County sheriff's offices' reports about Benjamin Newkirk's fatal fall on Middle Sister include many terms used by climbers. Benking:Running out of energy. Crampsns:Traction devices attached to climbing boots to allow for walking on snowand ice. Crevasse:Deep,narrow crack in ice. Crux:Hardest section of a climbing route. Headlamp:Bright flashlight on an elastic headband. ice ax:Multipurpose mountaineering tool, with a pick, adzeand a spiked handle. Rime ice:Coating of ice caused by rapid freezing of supercooled water droplets on impact with an object. Self-arrest:Mountaineering maneuver to stop a slide down a slope using an iceax. Styrofoamsnow:Goodsnow forcrampon use. Sources: Lane and Deschutes County sheriff's offices, National Weather Service
cause the Middle Sister is an
• Dynamic Networking Opportunities
easy hike and they felt comfortable being in bad weather
• New Member Profile in Redmond Chamber Business News
there. He said that they want-
ed to experience the weather
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on an easy mountain in case they everencountered iton a
• Primary Referrals to Visitors 8 Residents
more technical climb." The pair planned the trip about four or five days prior to hiking into the Three Sis-
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ters Wilderness Area on the Deschutes National Forest.
"They pair had been con-
s idering an
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k I
k
a scent o f M t .
Washington but decided the technical climbing on t he summit pinnacle, in the dark, with the icy conditions, and
a storm approaching was too risky," according to the Deschutes County report. "So they decided to climb the non-technical South East
ridge route up Middle Sister instead. They had considered the Hayden Glacier route but
had heard conditions on the Hayden were very icy." Burton told a
D e schutes
County rescuer they had been ready for i n clement weather.
Thursday, April 23, 2015• 1 - 5 p.m. Deschutes County Fair & Expo
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
NEWKIRK MEMORIAL
Marker will beplacedat a3 Sistersoverlook By Dylan J. Darling
w
The Bulletin
A spot where trails merge
in the still-under-design Riley Ranch Nature Reserve offers
His eyes would light up when he would talk about his next climb ... Wewanted something to represent
a view of the Three Sisters.
This overlook is where the lasting memorial for Benja-
District is still designing the 184-acre regional park on land along the Deschutes Rivhim in the outdoors." er off of O.B. Riley Road. The — Cheri Helt, Zydeco owner park should be completed in and Benjamin Newkirk's employer and friend spring 2016, according to the park district.
m in "Ben" Newkirk w il l b e t hanks t o d o n ations f r o m most days of the week, before
The total cost of the menext climb," she said. And he
friends and regular custom- work and on his days off," his was glad to share his expee rs of th e Bend man w h o brother, Tim Newkirk, 36, of riences from the trails and worked at Zydeco Kitchen 5 Bellevue, Washington, wrote mountains with others. "Everyone who hiked with Cocktails in downtown Bend. in an email. "He repeated"We already have raised ly hiked or ran some trails him knows how skilled he $10,000 for that," said Jon while always trying new and was," Jon Newkirk said. Newkirk, his 70-year-old fa- more challenging ones." Looking for a special outther in Spokane, Washington. Before he got into long-haul door place to have a memorial Ben Newkirk died after a hiking and mountain climb- for Newkirk, his friends and Nov. 12 fall while climbing ing, Ben Newkirk built up his family found Riley Ranch. down from Middle Sister. A fitness level by going on selflong-haul hiker and a Zydeco timed trails wearing a backserver for five years, Newkirk pack, his brother wrote. "Ben never told me specifhad severalclose circles— of family and friends — from ically, but he began hiking/ the Pacific Crest Trail to the climbing to get exercise in kitchen.
an outdoor environment and
His Bend memorial service at Aspen Hall on Nov. 23 drew between 300 and
to physically push himself," his brother wrote. "It always was, or quickly became, an
400 people, said Cheri Helt,
athletic endeavor that chal-
owner of the downtown Bend restaurant. She said mem-
lenged him more andcame with the most freedom of any
bers of the more than 50-per- previous athletic activity." son restaurant staff are still
grieving his death. People who knew Newkirk knew how m uch h e
B en
Ne w k i r k
sta r t e d
climbing mountains 12 or 14
years ago and went to a twol o ved week alpine climbing school,
mountains, hiking through them and climbing up them.
his father said. His love for
peaks in the far Western
from scaling peaks to trekking across several states in a single journey. He hiked
"He'd been up the tallest
states," said Jon Newkirk.
Those include Washington's Mount Rainier — which
The Bend Park ll't: Recreation
the outdoors also extended
t he 2,650-mile PC T
morial will be $12,000, so his friends and family still have about $2,000 to r aise. The
memorial is set to go in a serene place, with a view of the
Three Sisters on a clear day. "We wanted something to represent him in the out-
doors," Helt said.
Jonathan Newkirk/Submitted photo
— Reporter: 541-617-7812, ddarling@bendbulletin.com
Ben Newkirk, right, stands with his father, Jon Newkirk, at Onion Valley, California, in 2013.
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t w ice
— once south-to-north and
he topped four times, and had again north-to-south — and attempted more but t u rned
the 3,100-mile Continental
back due to poor conditions Divide TraiL — California's Mount Whit-
ney and Oregon's Mount Hood. "He went hiking/climbing
From previous page
His passion was mountain
climbing, Helt said. "His eyes would light up when he would talk about his
Newkirk died of injuries to
Burton led the way up the
his head and chest from the
mountain, according to the
fall, according to Kat Korth, r e p ort, i nvestigator fo r t h e L a n e
Deschutes County
with Newkirk walking about County medical examiner. 30 feet behind him. Weather She said she could not comwas good on the way up, with ment further on his medical 15 mph winds and good vis- condition when he fell. ibility, and so was the snow Burton first gave the details for most of the climb. Burton of the climb and Newkirk's said it was Styrofoam snow, fall to a Deschutes County or snow that was good for rescuer he met at Sisters Cow crampons. As they got high- Camp, where Burton's parer up the mountain they en- ents were also waiting. He sat countered rime ice, a coating in the passenger seat of the covering the rocks. rescuer's patrol vehicle and They summited Middle told his story after spending a Sister at 9:42 p.m. There few minutes with his parents. Newkirk told Burton he was Days later, after Newkirk was bonking. found, Burton again gave "(A Lane County rescu- the details to a Lane County er later) asked Burton what rescuer. bonking was and he told me Burton was at the Eugene that Newkirk was dizzy," ac-
A irport o n
cording to the Lane County report. "He said that walking
the Oregon National Guard brought Newkirk's b o dy
up the mountain in the dark
down f ro m
with a headlamp can be disorienting and that he thinks
Burton wanted to help unload
t hat i s
w h a t B u r to n w a s
talking about." While the wind picked up and light snow caused visibility to decrease, Burton told the rescuer that weather was
N ov. 16 w hen t h e m o u ntain.
Newkirk from the helicopter. "Burton told me Newkirk
was the more experienced mountaineer and was essen-
tially his 'mentor,'" according to the Deschutes County report. "The most challenging
still good as they began their climb down from the top of Middle Sister.
climb the two had done to-
Snow stalled search
who both worked at Zydeco
While N e w kirk's
gether was a winter ascent of Mt. Hood." Burton an d
N e w ki r k -
h e alth
Kitchen & Cocktails in down-
appears to be more a factor
town Bend— had been climbing and hiking together for
than the weather in his fall,
w eather did affectsearch and rescue efforts to find him.
®>s
about five years.
"They havecli mbed many of the local mountains and rolled into Central Oregon, done many long distance blanketing the Three Sisters backpacking trips together," Wilderness Area, the Cas- according to the Deschutes cades and Bend. County report. "Burton statOn Middle Sister, the wind- ed the two would be out most swirled snowfall prompted weekends together on some search and rescue teams sort of adventure." from Lane and Deschutes Days after Newkirk's death c ounties t o c a l l o f f t h e i r Burton declined to speak searches midday Nov. 13. with The Bulletin, saying he Earlier in the day, the De- was still shaken. He also did As predicted, the snowstorm
schutes County team met up
with Burton at Camp Lake and then hiked with him out to the Pole Creek Trailhead.
one
not comment for this story. His statements to the Lane
County and Deschutes County sheriff's offices show the
The weather broke two
shock of his friend's fatal fall. "I kept expecting to see Ben's light or something but, 16, with the help of an Oregon he was just gone ..." Burton National Guard Chinook heli- told the Deschutes County copter, a Lane County search rescuer. and rescue team found and — Reporter: 541-617-7812, recovered his body. ddarling@bendbulletin.com days laterand the search for Newkirk resumed. On Nov.
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A6 T H E BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
Medicaid
GOP primaryprocessuno icia y ic so
HealthCare.gov t e l l ing them they're eligible for Continued from A1 coverage under OHP as About 43,000 Oregonians proof of coverage to obtain are currently waiting to be en- services or medications, rolled in OHP, according to the even if they aren't officialOregon Health Authority. Al- ly enrolled yet, Tripp said. though the program pays for Whether all providers or costs incurred while a mem- pharmacies accept those ber was waiting to be enrolled, letters is up to them, she people must pay for medica- sald. tions or services out of pocket Knobbs said some local in the meantime, although not pharmacies have not aceveryone can afford to do so. cepted those letters as proof The Oregon Health Plan is a of coverage. "When theycheck in the program for low-income individuals that, since its expan- computer system, they're sion at the beginning of 2014, not in t h e s y stem even covers adults with annual in- though they have the apcomes of up to around $16,000. proval letter in their hand," Mosaic Medical, which sees she said. a largenumber of OHP paOnce people get covtients in Central Oregon, has erage, they'll still have to s everal patients waiting t o
wait to see a doctor. That's
be approved under OHP, and some of them are putting off seeing doctors or getting medications, said Elaine Knobbs, Mosaic's directorofprograms
because OHP assigns bene-
By Ashiey Parker end Trip Gabriel New Yorh Times News Service
.g(~ i,' U
ican-born workers, and he praised laws of the 1920s that ended the great wave of Euro-
pean immigration. "We need to stand for an immigration
of the p arty's conservative
base here Saturday, implicitly rejecting more moderate
policy that puts A mericans
first and American workers first," he said.
choices like Jeb Bush and Mitt Romney, who did not attend.
The daylong forum, billed as
Gov. Scott Walker of Wis-
consin, who has given fewer signs than others that he might run, strolled the stage in rolled-up shirt-sleeves and, in an energetic speech, flat-
an informal kickoff to the 2016
nominating contest, sharply etched a divide between the party's a ctivist,
p assionate
base — which had nearly 1,000 people in attendance — and its center-right wing. Several potential candidates aimed criticism at Bush and Romney — mostly in veiled swipes, rather than by name
ficiaries to one of the state's
coordinated care organizations, local entities that oversees their care. The
Jabin Botsford/ New York Times News Service
Rep. Steve King, R-lowa, co-host of the lowa Freedom Summit,
tered Iowa's activists like a
speaks during the forum Saturday in Des Moines, lowa. More than
practiced caucus contender. He acknowledged a "woman
half e dozen likely Republican presidential candidates gathered there, navigating the challenge of competing for the conservative
in Waterloo" who had donated
base while still emerging es a credible general election candidate.
three times to his campaign and thanked Iowans for their
— over the Common Core educational standards and im-
prayers during "the dark days" when he and his family
overhaul. "We need to find
Washington, and for padlock-
migration reform, which Bush ing the Internal Revenue Ser- a path to legalized status for in particular supports. vice and then redeploying its those who have come here and With the exception of Gov. agentsto secure the Southern have languished in the shadows," Bush said. Chris Christie of New Jersey, border. "If you said you opposed who is still seeking traction Former Gov. Rick Perry of in Iowa and was scheduled to the president's unconstitution- Texas, whose 2012 campaign speak in the evening, the more al executive amnesty, show foundered in Iowa partly becentrist wing of the party was me where you stood up and cause opponents portrayed largely unrepresented in the fought," Cruz said, referring him as soft on illegal immiaudience and on stage. Bush, to President Barack Obama's gration, struck a more militant the former governor of Florexecutive actions on i m m istance Saturday. He referred ida, and Romney, the party's gration. Cruz paced the stage, to "brother Steve King." And 2012 nominee, declined invi- pointing his finger, pounding he recalled Obama's refusal tations. Two other well-known his fists, sometimes clapping to take a helicopter ride with absentees were Sen. Marco for himself. "If you said you him to the Rio Grande Valley Rubio of Florida, who hud- oppose Common Core," he last year to see thousands of dled with donors Saturday in said, "show me where you unaccompanied minors crossMiami, and Sen. Rand Paul of stood up and fought." ing the border, for which Perry Kentucky. With speaker after speaker blamed White House policies. "For the sake of the nation, Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas, a tossing juicy rhetorical tidbits Tea Party hero, challenged ac- to an appreciative crowd, the we did not stand idle against tivists to demand that Republi- gathering emphasized the this threat," Perry said. "So cans prove their conservative challenges that the party's less here is what I say: If Washingbona fides. "In a Republican conservative candidates can ton refusesto secure the borprimary, every candidate is expect to face in states with der, Texas will." going to say, 'I'm the most con- early caucuses and primaries, Rick Santorum, the winner servative guy who ever lived,'" like Iowa and South Carolina. of the 2012 Iowa caucus and he said. "You know w hat? Bush, who spoke Friday in 10 other nominating contests, Talk is cheap." San Francisco, seemed to crit- called for an i m migration Rising to his own challenge, icize the co-host of the forum, overhaul that would not just Cruz called for "the locusts" Rep. Steve King of Iowa, who secure the Southern border, of the Environmental Protec- is his party's most prominent but also reduce the level of letion Agency to be sent back to opponent of an immigration gal immigration.
tients have had to wait two to three months before they
can see primary care proknows of families in which the viders, even after waiting parents have been approved at least three weeks to get but the children have not, and approved under OHP. vice versa. In some cases, parDespite the current backents have had to cancel their log, Knobbs said there are children's d e ntal a p p oint- thousands more previousments. One patient recently ly uninsured patients who diagnosed with multiple mood have received coverage undisorders and prescribed an- der OHP and are now able ti-psychotic medications has to see specialists, dentists been unable to get his medi- and getcarethey've putoff cations or see a counselor be- for years. cause of the delay in OHP apKaufmann said Oregon proval, Knobbs said. has done a "phenomenal" Part of the reason the state's job of getting people enbacklog is so big is because rolled in OHP. As of Jan. many of the new OHP bene- 1, the program had about ficiaries who came on board 590,000 members. "Despite what happened underthe expansion lastyear did so through what's called on the exchange side, the Fast Track enrollment. That Medicaid enrollment story means people received eligibil- is an incredible success stoity notices if they were already ry in Oregon," she said. receivingfood assistance or — Reporter: 541-383-0304, other public assistance that tbannow@bendbulletin.com Of those, Knobbs said she
u n skilled
rized to work in the United States take jobs from Amer-
publican presidential candidatesscrapped forthe hearts
CCOs then assign them to "They just know how much primary care providers. it's going to cost and they Stacey Durden, the comknow they don't want to pay munications manager for out of pocket so they're delay- Volunteers in M e dicine ing care," she said. "That has Clinic of the Cascades in lots of ramifications for the pa- Bend, said her clinic's paevenourcommunity."
. '
DES MOINES, Iowa — A crowded field of potential Re-
and development.
tient and for their family and
Santorum said
immigrants who are autho-
received threats because of
his showdown with public employees' unions. Walker offered a preview of a national campaign built on his record of defying teachers' unions, as well as tens of
thousands of protesters. "The Occupy movement started in Madison, Wisconsin, four
years ago and then went to Wall Street," he said. "So my apologies for that." In an interview earlier in the week, Sen. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz., called the attention lavished
on Iowa because it hosts the first presidential caucus "an unfortunate part of our elec-
toral calendar." Flake did not attend the forum. "Too many Republicans
have for too many years, for too many cycles, tried to appeal to a small group that does not help us in general elections," Flake said. "If you can go to Iowa and not take Steve
King's position, more power to you, but if you're tempted to appeal to a small demographic, then it doesn't help us in the general."
allowed them to easily enroll
in OHP by filling out a small postcard. Those people had to reapply at the end of 2014 to keep their
coverage into this year, which required filling out an application that's several pages long and can take about an hour. Cathy Kaufmann, enroll-
ment program director for the Washington, D.C.-based consumer group Families USA and former directorof the
•
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OHA's Transformation Center, a group that supports entities
that provide care under the Oregon Health Plan, said the system is struggling to keep up with its expanded population. "The size of theprogramhas grown incredibly and that's good news," she said. "Oregon
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sion, and Kaufmann said she would be concerned if that's not happening. Stephanie Tripp, an OHA s pokeswoman, sai d sh e d oesn't believe any o f
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the plaintiffs in that case said her son died of a pulmonary embolism in April 2014 while waiting to be enrolled in the program. Of the Oregon applications in limbo, about 30,000 came in through the federal marketplace, H e a lthCare.gov, and were missing necessary
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the applicants through letters or phone calls to get the information, she said.
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The good news for those people, however, is the OHA allows them to use the letter or email they received from
BEND RIVER PROMENADE, BEND • 5 4 1 . 3 1 7 . 6 000
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A7
Super Bowl wings:Americans are set to eat over a billion
Korea Continued fromA1 They were careful to pull the curtains to escape the prying eyes of neighbors taught to turn in their fellow citizens for seditious activities. But
By Lydia MuivanyeBloomberg News
they were caught anyway and demoted to manual labor at a
power plant. Jang said they most likely escaped prison only because they paid bribes, but facing a lifetime of social stigma — and having had a glimpse of the comforts of South Korea in Jean Chung / New York Times News Service "Scentofa M an" — he decided Jang Se-yui, who defected from North Korea after viewing a South to defect. He now leads a defec- Korean drama, sends DVDs ofsoap operas back to the North. tors' group that sends soap operas and other entertainment to the North to try to empower
leg copies of "The Interview," people to demand an end to au- the comedy that North Korea thoritarian rule. viewed as an "act of war," is "I am sure these soaps have another.) an impact on North Koreans, Since he came to power in and I am the proof," he said. "In 2011, Kim has struggled to the future,if they spread,they open the North just enough to can even help foster anti-gov- keep his top loyalists happy, ernment movements. That's plying them with imported why the North Korean author- goods, while maintaining conities are so desperate to stop trol in a country where government-installed intercoms in evthem from spreading." The decidedly lowbrow dra- ery home still blare reminders mas — with names like "Bad of required ideological educaHousewife" and eRed Bean tion classes. He allowed an esBread" — have, in fact, become timated 2 million people, close something of a cultural Trojan to 10 percent of the population, horse, sneaking visions of the to own cellphones, but ensured bustling South into the tightly they could not call abroad. controlled, impoverished North And, despite a crackdown, the alongside the usual sudsy fare country has seemed unwilling, of betrayals, bouts of ill-timed or unable, to fully dismantle amnesia and, at least once, a the smuggling networks that love affair with an alien. bring in not only banned soap North Korea's leader, Kim operas, movies and K-pop Jong Un, has issued increas- videos, but also much-needed ingly pointed warnings to his trade. subjects about the "poisonDefectors say t h e s o aps ous elements of capitalism" have had an outsize impact, crossing China's border with less for their often outlandish the North, tempting even his plots than their portrayals of communist elite. Defectors say the creature comforts of South there has been a severe crack- Korea — a direct contradiction down on smugglers, and in the to decades of indoctrination fall, South Korean intelligence about the inferiority of the reported hearing that Kim was South, and capitalism. It was so shaken by the spread of the those portraits of wealth, Jeon soaps that he ordered the exe- Hyo Jin said, that inspired her cution of 10 Worker's Party of- to make the dangerous decificial s accused of succumbing sion to flee in 2013 at the age of
widespread appeal are not entirelydear. Some people credit their emotionally charged plots; others the enviable fashions that are part of the "Kore-
to the shows' allure, according
home.
18.
"The kitchens with hot and to lawmakers who had been briefed on the matter at a par- cold tap water, people datliamentary hearing. ing in a cafe, cars clogging Few people outside North streets, women wearing difKorea think the TV adventures ferent dothes each day — unof the lust-driven and lovelorn like us who wore the same could lead to the overthrow of padded jacket, day in day the Kim family dynasty, which out," said Jeon, who lives in has survived for decades de- Seoul. "Through the dramas, I spite international i solation learned how strange my own and sanctions. But the infiltra- country was, how full of lies." tion of the dramas into even North Korea is one of the elite circles, despite the threat last frontiers for South Korea's of prison or worse, is a potent soap operas, which have found indication of the challeng- growing audiences worldwide, es Kim faces in a globalized including in the United States world. (The swift arrival in the and in such unlikely places North of at least some boot- as Cuba. The reasons for the
anWave." But in North Korea, defec-
tors say, the reasons are obvi-
CHICAGO — On Super Bowl Sunday, expect two things when your order of chicken wings arrives: They'll be fat, and they'll be pricey. First the fat part. Amer-
ican farmers are giving their chickens extra feed,
taking advantage of plunging corn and soybean costs to help lift poultry production — as measured by weight — to a record. B ut each c h icken, of
course, still only has two wings, regardless of its size. And the number of
ous. The two Koreas share an
actual chickens slaughtered last year fell, causing
ancient culture and language.
a drop of about 50 million
And what counts as entertainment north of the border is se-
wings, government data show. That smaller supply is what's triggering the pricey part of the equa-
verely limited, especially since all TVs and radios are preset to receive only state broadcasts. "In North Korean movies," said Jeon, "it's all about loyalty to the leader and the party; the
tion. The cost of wholesale
Continued fromA1 Obama called it precision medicine, but the terms "per-
sonalized medicine" and "individualized medicine" are also widely used to describe the evolving field in which, for
wings on Super BowlSunday.
the contraband material to be
consumption also high for the National Collegiate Athletic birds slaughtered means that Association basketball tourw holesalewing prices are up nament games. more than 30 percent from a An increase in restaurants year earlier. serving wings is also supportAmericans paid 9.2 per- ing prices. The number of U.S. cent more for meat last year, chicken-wing franchises grew That estimate, provided the biggest jump of any food 7 percentto more than 2,000 by th e N a tional C h ick- group, USDA data show. The restaurants in the five years en Council, is unchanged gains were led by increases for through 2013, according to Arfrom last year's Super beef and veal amid shrinking lington, Virginia-based fran-
smuggled into the North.
Bowl.
The flow of entertainment began in the 1990s with the first real fissures in the North's
helped support prices for other Demand for the meat is also menus," Darren Tristano, proteinsas consumers sought rising as pizza chains includexecutive vice president at cheaper alternatives to record ing Pizza Hut and Little Caesar's serve wings, Technomic's Chicago-based research costs for steaks. "It's a good thing the Su- Tristano said. firm Technomic Inc., said "You've seen an increase of in a t elephone interview per Bowl pastime is chicken last week. Demand for wings and not hamburgers," all these different companies wings remains "very high said Andy Wiederhorn, chief popping up that have wings
state before love. You shouldbe ready to die for the leader, blah blah. In South Korean dramas, it was different. I found a whole new world there." Most of the border trade is
driven by money, defectors said, not ideology, but some defectors and pro-democracy groups also help arrange for
almost impregnable information blockade. In the face of a
devastating famine, desperate North Korean authorities began turning a blind eye to people crossing into China to seek food and other goods to sell at Foreign video tapes, CDs and DVDs, as well as cheap Chinese devices to play them,
quiddy became black market best-sellers.
Recognizing the danger, Kim's father, Kim Jong Il, who died in 2011, set up swat teams
thatbarged into homes, cutting off the electricity before entering to prevent viewers from removing discs from their DVD players. But defectors say the suppliers have worked hard to foil inspectors, importing battery-powered DVD players as well as more easily hidden flash drives.
year, they said they were draft- uals in whom it will work," he ing a bill to encourage biomed- said. "You can avoid wasting ical i n novations, i n cluding money on people who won't personalized medicine. respond or will have an adAs a senator in 2006 and verse reaction." 2 007, Obama offered a b i l l
Buffalo, New York. Americans will consume1.25 billion chicken
wings sold by processors in Georgia, which sets the benchmark for the nation,
has surged 8.2 percent this month to $1.715 a pound, the biggest jump to start a year since 2012. Americans will consume 1.25 billion wings when game day arrives Feb. 1.
"Wings are just all over
year, the Department of Agriculture estimates. Still, fewer
cattle herds, and that advance
with consumers because
executive officer of the Bever-
of 3 percentin November,
will pit the Seattle Seahawks
Chief Operating Officer
against the New England
Jim Schmidt said in telephone interview Jan. 21.
Patriots this year, marks the
chise researcher FRANdata.
on their menu, and it's causing
they're cus t omizable," ly Hills, California-based Buf- the market to react accordinghe said. "There's a health falo's Cafe, where a pound of ly," Michael O'Shaugnessy, halo around it, because it's wings costs about 5 percent to senior vice president of Urner chicken. There are a lot of 10 percent more than this time Barry, a food-industry pubflavor profiles, and it's a last year at its 50 locations in lisher in Bayville, New Jersey, fun finger food." the U.S. and Canada. "The said in a telephone interview Buffalo Wil d W i n gs prices have been generally last week. "It's just grown in Inc., a Minneapolis-based reasonable, unlike beef prices, popularity, and it's a comfort restaurant chain with more which have skyrocketed to re- food: people like to chew on a than 1,000 stores, raised cord highs." bone." menu prices by an average The Super Bowl, which
country's No. 1 wing-eating The company normally day. Demand peaks in the would have raised prices first quarter of the year, with
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increases earlier partly because of higher wing costs, he said. Chicken output will rise 2.7 percent from 2014's re-
Drug
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The new techniques can
to do just that — the Genom- alsohelp prevent disease by ics and Personalized Medi- predicting patients' suscepticine Act. Sen. Richard Burr, bility, Snyderman said. "If an example,a doctorprescribes a R-N.C., was a co-sponsor of individual has a much greater medication that targets a spe- the 2007 bilL likelihood of developing colon "Personalized m e d icine cancer, a genetically based cific mutation in a patient's genes. represents a revoluti onary disease," he said, "you can The money would support and exciting change in the begin screening ata much biomedical research at the fundamental approach and younger age, 30 rather than National Institutes of Health practice of medicine," Obama 50, for example." and the regulation of diagnos- said then. He cited the drug Dr. Margaret Hamburg, the tic tests by the Food and Drug Herceptin, for the treatment FDA commissioner, has reorAdministration, officials at the of a particularly aggressive ganized her agency to speed two agencies said. form of breast cancer, as an the review of drugs and diagThe tests analyze the DNA example. nostic tests used in personalin normal or diseased tissue. Scientists said they now ized medicine. Doctors use that information viewed breast cancer not as But Cassidy said he was to identify patients with can- a single disease, but rather as s till skeptical. To fulfill t h e cer or other diseases who are a group of several subtypes, promise of personalized medmost likely to benefit from a each with a distinct molecu- icine, he said, will require "a particular treatment — and lar signature. This, they said, much more n i mble federal those who would be harmed helps explain why some tu- bureaucracy." or not respond at all. mors respond betterthan othOn Friday, federal officials "In some patients with cys- ers to specific cancer-fighting released a proposal under tic fibrosis, this approach drugs. which Medicarewould cov"Most medical treatments er genetic tests of tumors in has reversed a disease once thought unstoppable," Obama have been designed for the some people with advanced said in his address to Con- average patient," said Jo Han- lung cancer. The tests could gress last week. delsman, associate director of help identify Medicare beneThe gene responsible for the White House Office of Sci- ficiaries who would respond cystic fibrosis was discovered ence and Technology Policy. favorably to particular cancer by a team that included Dr. "In too many cases, this one- drugs. size-fits-all approach is not "This is a watershed event," Francis Collins, who is now director of the National Insti- effective." said Dr. Bruce Quinn, a health tutes of Health and an archiDr. Ralph Snyderman, a for- policy specialist at the law tect of the new initiative. The mer chancellor for health af- firm Foley Hoag. "It means FDA has approved a drug for fairs at Duke University, often that policymakers now believe patients with a genetic muta- describedas the fatherofper- these tests are worth paying tionresponsiblefor some cases sonalized medicine, said he for." of the disease, which clogs the was excited by the president's Obama's budget will also lungs with thick, sticky mucus. initiative. propose increased federal "Personalized m e dicine spending to combat antibioticA patient taking that drug, William Elder, a 27-year-old has the potential to transform resistant bacteria. The plan medical student in Ohio, was our health care system, which would nearly double spending a guest of Michelle Obama at consumes almost $3 trillion a from its current level of $450 the State of the Union speech. year, 80percent of it for pre- million a year. Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., ventable diseases," SnyderWhite House officials dechairman of the Energy and man sald. scribed antibiotic resistance Commerce Committee, and Although the new tests and as a threat to public health and Rep. Diana DeGette, D-Co- treatments are often expen- national security. They said lo., who is on the committee, sive, he added, personalized at least 23,000 people in the welcomed Obama's proposal. medicine can save money United States die each year as After holding hearings and while producing better results. a result of infections caused by round-table discussions last "It focuses therapy on individ- such drug-resistant germs.
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
BRIEFING Vehicle break-ins reported Reports of thefts and burglaries from vehicles in the NorthWest Crossing neighborhood are being investigated by Bend Police. The incidents occurred between 7 p.m. Friday and 7a.m. Saturday, according to a news release from the police department. No one has beenarrested in connection with the break-ins. Victims reported that
items had beenstolen from their vehicles parked in garagesand from the garages themselves. During several of the incidents, garage doors and pet doors were left unlocked, allowing intruders access to the garages, police said. Items also were taken from cars parked outside, including a firearm stolen from an unlocked vehicle, police
DESCHUTES COUNTY
WASHINGTON WEEK
Priorities for Legislature to be evaluated administrator. • Bills pertaining to recreational marijuana, County More than adozen marijuana-related bills were intromental health andlanduseof interest duced on Jan. 12 during an
By Ted Shorack The Bulletin
More than 1,400 bills have
are looking closely at bills in the upcoming Oregon legisla-
alreadybeen introduced for the upcoming session, which begins Feb. 2 and ends in July. Some of the bills likely to
tive session that would affect
get attention from county ad-
Deschutes County officials
the county. On Tuesday, Deschutes County commissioners and
department directors will meet and prioritize which bills they would like county lobbyists from the Public AffairsCounsel toadvocatefor and see passed.
organizational period for the Oregon Senate and House.
State lawmakers have set up a joint committee to review how Measure 91 will work.
when used by pregnant women and ban home production of oil extracts derived from
marijuana such as butane hash oil without certification from the Oregon Health Authority. Deschutes County and Oregon's other 35 counties will
The ballot measure, which ministration and departments passed in November, will are proposed changes to state make recreational marijuana land use development, mental legal on July 1. health funding and state poliStatelawmakers have
also be paying attention to
cy on recreational marijuana.
planning goals that provide policies for natural resource
"Anything having to do with recreational marijuana will be of interest to us," said Tom Anderson, Deschutes
proposed bills that would ex-
clude retail sales of marijuana within 1 mile of schools, require retailers to post the
harmful effects of marijuana
House Bill 2633, which looks
at statewide land use planning and natural hazards. The state has 19 statewide conservation, urbanization
and other land use issues. SeeBills /B5
WASHINGTON-
The Housepasseda bil Thursday thatwould make it illegal touse governmentfunds topay for abortions. Republican leaders hadalso hopedto pass moreexpansive anti-abortion legislation but pulled thebill backafter multiple womenlawmakers objected tothe rape exemption, whichwould only be allowableafter the 20th week ofpregnancy if the sexualassault had been reported topolice. The funding bill passed easily, 242-179,with 239 Republicansandthree Democrats voting for the measure. OneRepublican joined178 Democrats in voting against thebill. U.S. HOUSE VOTE Greg Walden (R).................. Y EahBlumenauer(D)............N SuzanneBonamici (D).........N Peter DePazio (D).................N Kurt Schrader(D) ................N
sald.
On Wednesday,the House approvedabil designedto speedupthe application processfor natural gaspipelines.The bill would requirethe Federal EnergyRegulatory Commission tocomplete its environmental review within 12months, and other agencieswould have toactwithin 90 days of FERC'sruling. Thebil passed 253-169,with14 Democrats joining 239 Republicans insupporting it. All of the no votes were cast byDemocrats.
Only one vehicle that was victimized was locked; a large rock was used to breakthe side window, police said. A backpack in plain view was taken from the vehicle. Otherwise, unlocked vehicles were targeted, police said. The investigation is continuing, and anyone with information about the break-ins is askedto call Bend Police at 541693-6911.
Two dogsmissing from crash Two dogs ejected from a single-vehicle crash nearly 40 miles southeast of Prineville on Saturday morning are missing, according to the Crook County Sheriff's Office. At around 7:40 a.m., a Ford F350 driven by Amber Blasdell, 26, of Prineville, nearly slid off state Highway 380and rolled, apparently due to icy road conditions. Deputies arrived to find passersby attending to Blasdell, providing her with blankets and coats to keep her warm. Three dogs riding with Blasdell were ejected from her truck. One was with her at the crash scene, while witnesses spotted the other two dogs running west down the highway toward Post, the sheriff's office said. Blasdell was taken by ambulance to St. Charles Prineville with unknown injuries. People living in or passing through the area of the crash are asked to be on the lookout for the missing dogs, a chocolate Lab namedGriz and a red and white heeler named Sam. Anyone with information about the dogs is asked to call the sheriff's office at 541447-6398. Nore briefing, B2
U.S. HOUSE VOTE Greg Walden (R)................. Y EahBlumenauer(D)............N SuzanneBonamici (D).........N Peter DePazio (D).................N Kurt Schrader(D) ................ Y
dii ...
Photos by Joe Kline/The Bulletin
Carter Pierce, 10, right, and his sister, A'riana, 8, of Terrebonne, look inside as a 3-0 printer makes a replica head-and-shoulder model of them during a High Desert Makers event Saturday at the Redmond Public Library.
By Scott Hammers The Bulletin
REDMOND — Jared Bruns
crouchedbeside a foldingtable Saturday, watching closely as a humming 3-D printer churned out an inch-high, plastic replica of his head and shoulders. Jared, 12, from Redmond, said he'd been intrigued by 3-D printers since seeing videos of the machines in action
Send us your best outdoor photos at Q bendbulletin.com/ readerphotos.Your entries will appear online, and we'll choose the best for publication in the Outdoors section. Submission requirements: Include as much detail as possible — when and where you took a photo, any special technique used — as well as your name, hometown and contact info. Photos selected for print must be high resolution (at least 6 inches wide and 300 dpi) and cannot be altered.
put down layer after layer of plastic, Jared said he didn't know what he could do with
the sculpture but set it on a shelf in his room. "You can't do much with a
torso," he said.
on YouTube. Saturday, he and
Scot Brees, president of the High Desert Makers, said
other curious locals came to the library to learn more at a
there's no telling what kinds of things people will make
demonstration hosted by the
with 3-D printers in the future,
High Desert Makers.
as the technology becomes
Exciting as it was to watch his shoulders, neck and chin
more and more accessible to
come into view as the printer
everyone. See3-0 printerIB2
U.S. SENATEVOTE JeffMerkley(D)................... Y Ron Itltjden (D)................... Y
A 3-0 printer puts down layers of plastic to make a model scanned from an attendee. High Desert Markers ls working to establish a Central Oregon 3-D printing hub, a network of hobbyist 3-0 printer owners who can fabricate parts for their neighbors.
—AndrewClevenger, The Bulletin
YESTERDAY
Bend lacksjail accommodations for female prisoners in 1940 Compiled by Don Hoiness Bulletin at the Des Chutes Historical Museum.
Reader photos
See video coverage on The Bulletin's website: bendbulletin.com/3dprinter
o
at theRedmond Library on
from archived copiesofThe
Well shot!
I
The Senatebegan debate on the Keystone XL Pipeline lastweekand took up severalamendments to thelegislation that wouldauthorize the pipeline, whichwould transport oil from the tar sands ofCanadato refineries inthe Gulf of Mexico. One amendment, introduced bySen. Ron Wyden, D-Ore.,would specifythat the materials derived fromthetar sands are crudeoil, andtherefore subject to thefederal excise taxon petroleum. Needing 60votes topass, the amendmentfailed 5047. FiveRepublicansand 45 Democratsvotedfor the amendment,while all 47ofthenovotescame from Republicans.
100 YEARSAGO For the week ending Jan.24, 1915
Shevlin purchase means mills
most important problem is to arrange satisfactory rates with the railroads. If we get the con-
cessions which we feel entitled to, milling will start within the year and there is every reason to believe our requests will be granted. The Shevlins mean business. We believe that the
worst of the dull times are past, and we want to be ready for the good lumber market
intends on going ahead with the project rapidly despite what other deem the present unfavorable conditions. The purchase gives the Shevlins 180,000 acres of yellow pine in the country south
Bachelors of Desert Springs gave adance atthe home of Bingham McAndrew last Friday evening. The Bachelorsproved themselves to be excellent entertainers.
In addition to their large holdings in Oregon, the Shev-
Hampton — A.S. Fogg, on going to the barn Monday morning to do his feeding, noticed his lambs out of their accustomed place and in a
of Bend with a total cruise of some 4,000,000,000 feet. lins own extensive timber
short time he heard a cat
(Special to The Bulletin)"Bend will have lumber mills mighty soon now," so said John E. Ryan, who was here today. Almost without qualifi-
which we feel sure is coming,
tracts and operate mills in
in other words, we want to be ready to cater to that market."
Montana, Minnesota and
cation Mr. Ryan stated that the
at a time of depressions, and the economies that can be secured. He paid a high tribute to the courage and foresight
growl, so he went around to see what the trouble was and espied a large bobcat. The cat and one of the lambs had a severe fight, the lamb whipping the cat. Mr. Fogg got his gun and killed the cat. The lamb seemed very sore
Shevlin purchase of the Johnson-Price timber means a mill for Bend within the year. "A
Mr. Ryan also pointed out the advantage of construction
big deal like starting a mill has of T.L. Shevlin, who is the many details," said Ryan. "We moving spirit in the Deschutes are working on them now. The enterprise and who evidently
Canada. In addition to this sale, there are other large deals under way in Central Oregon. These probably will be closed in the early part of this year.
Central Oregon neighborhood news Cloverdale — The Jolly
Gus McClouth got in from Bend Saturday.
Paul Brookings was over at Stauffer Saturday. James Smith started to
Bend Monday after a load of groceries. WT. Cowan was a visitor
at the post office Monday. Johnnie Pratt lost three horses recently. Press DeWitt was transact-
ing business at Stauffer last week.
B.T. Kasspohl is recovering from a sprained wrist he received by a fall last Sunday. V.D. Davis has been having some trouble with sick
after his fight with the cat but
horses. C.J. Stauffer and T.C. Ew-
otherwise was alright.
ing are cutting posts in the
Stauffer — Jack Smith and wife started to Bend Friday.
Buttes.
SeeYesterdayIB5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
E VENT TODAY TOUR FORTHEHEARTSK:An all-ages cross-country ski or snowshoe to raise women's heart health awareness with food, drinks, prizes for best costumes, raffles and more to benefit the American Heart Association; $25, registration required, includes trail pass; 11 a.m. race begins, 9:30 a.m. registration; Mt. Bachelor, Nordic Center, 13000 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. tourfortheheart.org, jd@xcoregon. org or 541-317-0217. "BOLSHOIBALLET:SWAN LAKE": The classic ballet is performed, with Tchaikovsky's famous score; $18, $15 for seniors and children; 12:55 p.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium 16 8 IMAX, 680 SWPowerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901. FRIENDS OFBEND LIBRARIES WINTER BOOKSALE:Grocery bag booksale to benefit Bend area libraries; free admission for members, $10 for annual membership, $5 per grocery bag, $6 and up for large totes; 1-4 p.m.; Deschutes Library Administration Building, 507 NWWall St.; www. dpls.lib.or.us, foblibraryegmail.com or 541-617-7047. ROCK FORRICK BENEFIT: Featuring eight bands, a raffle, prizes and more to benefit Rick Ham, a local photographer battling cancer; $5 suggested donation; 1-7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. "LILLY'S PURPLEPLASTIC PURSE":A play about a little girl who loses her favorite purse and finds a mysterious note, by the Omaha Theater Company; $23, $13 for children12 and younger; 2 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org or 541-317-0700. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of TennesseeWilliams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 2 p.m.; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. CASCADEHORIZON BAND CONCERT: The band will perform
3-D printer Contlnued from B1 Brees said his group is actively working to set up a Central Oregon 3-D printing hub, a network of hobbyist 3-D printer owners who can
fabricateparts for their neighbors. In cooperation with the Deschutes Public
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
marches, show tunes and other favorites; free, donations accepted; 2 p.m.; Ridgeview High School, 4555 SW Elkhorn Ave, Redmond; www.cascadehorizonband.org or 541-815-3767. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT I WORE":A play by Nora and Delia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors; 3 p.m.; 2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater.com or 541-312-9626. "ALADDIN":A production of the Disney classic by Bend Experimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students 18 and younger; 4 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. DAVID MCGRAWAND MANDY FER:The folk singer-songwriters perform, with Brad Tisdel; $15-$20 suggested donation, registration requested; 6:30 p.m., potluck starts at 5:30 p.m.; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NWStannium Drive,
WEDMESDAY
bendbroadband.com or 541-480-8830.
AUTHORPRESENTATION:Sara Rishforth will present on "After We Met"; free; 4:30-6 p.m.; Bluebird Coffee Company,550 NW Franklin Ave., Bend; www.sararishforth.com or 541-330-2100. LIBRARYBOOKCLUB:Read and discuss"RavenStolethe Moon" by Garth Stein; 6:30 p.m.; Sisters Public Library,110 N. Cedar St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/sisters or 541-312-1070. NATURE NIGHTS— GEOLOGY OF CENTRALOREGON'SCASCADES: Learn about volcanic activity in Central Oregon for the past 40 million years with the Deschutes LandTrustand Daniele McKay; free, registration required; 7-8:30 p.m.; Tower Theatre, 835 NWWall St., Bend; www.towertheatre.org, event©deschuteslandtrust.org or 541-330-0017. TURKUAZ:The New York City funk band performs; $8 plus fees in advance, $10atthe door; 9 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
MONDAY
THURSDAY
Bend; houseconcertsintheglen©
OUTLAWS TOGETHERBINGO AND COMMUNITY DINNER:Familyfriendly bingo, dinner and silent auction to benefit Sisters High School Outlaws Together Athletics; $15 for11 games of bingo, $2 for dinner; 5:30-6:30 p.m. dinner, 6:30 p.m. bingo starts, doors open at 5 p.m.; Sisters High School, 1700 W. McKinney Butte Road; www. outlawnet.com, tim.roth@sisters. k12.or.us or 541-549-4050. "HANNAH FREE":Screening of a film about two women maintaining a love affair despite numerous obstacles, presented by LGBTStars and Rainbows; $5;7 p.m .;Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY POET PRESENTATION: Richard Blanco, Cuban-American poet,
"MY SO-CALLEDENEMY": Showing of a film about six Palestinian and Israeli teenagers who attend a
Andy Tullis/The Bulletin
peace conference,followed by a
Kathryn Foreman, from left, LIIII Ann Llnford-Foreman and John Kish star in Cascade Theatrical Co.'s productlon of Tennessee Williams' "The Glass Menagerie." Catch the show at 2 p.m. today
discussion; free; 4-6 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Hitchcock Auditorium, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-383-7412. SOLDIERSSONGS AND VOICES BENEFIT:Featuring Bill Valenti, The Quons and Paul Eddy; free, donations accepted; 7-9 p.m.; Kelly D's,1012 SECleveland Ave., Bend; 541-389-5625. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT IW ORE": A play by Nora andDelia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships, wardrobes and more; $19, $16 for students and seniors;7:30 p.m.;2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE":
and 7:30 p.m. on Wednesdayand Friday atCascadesTheatre. will present "Until We Could"; free; noon-1:30 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW College Way,Bend; www.cocc. edu or 541-383-7412. CLASSICSBOOKCLUB: Read and discuss "Dead Souls" by Nikolai Gogol; 6 p.m.;Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NWWall St.; www.deschuteslibrary.org/bend, kevinb©deschuteslibrary.org or 541-617-7092. POET PRESENTATION:Richard Blanco, Cuban-American poet, will present"Finding My Place at the American Table: An Immigrant's
Journey"; free; 6:30-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, Wille Hall, 2600 NW CollegeWay, Bend; www.cocc.edu or 541-383-7412. HISTORY PUB:Nate Pedersen, community librarian with Deschutes Public Library and vice president of the board for the Des Chutes Historical Museum, will discuss "The Many Lives of Klondike Kate"; free; 7 p.m., doors open at 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School,700 NW Bond St., Bend; www.mcmenamins.com or 541-382-5174.
Performance of TennesseeWilliams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. HOPELESSJACKAND THE HANDSOME DEVIL: ThePortland blues-punk band performs, with Urban Pioneers and Harley Bourbon; $10, plus fees in advance; 8 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www. volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY "ALADDIN":A production of the Disneyclassic by BendExperimental Art Theatre; $15, $10 for students 18 and younger; 7 p.m.; Summit High School, 2855 NWClearwater Drive, Bend; www.tickettails.com or 541-419-5558. "LOVE,LOSS, AND WHAT IW ORE": A play by Nora andDelia Ephron featuring a series of monologues by five women about relationships,
wardrobesandmore;$19, $16for students and seniors;7:30 p.m.;2nd Street Theater, 220 NELafayette Ave., Bend; www.2ndstreettheater. com or 541-312-9626. "THE GLASSMENAGERIE": Performance of TennesseeWilliams' autobiographical play; $20, $16 for seniors, $13 for students; 7:30 p.m.; CascadesTheatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.cascadestheatrical.org or 541-389-0803. 100 WATTMIND:The Ashland rock'n' roll band performs, with
Patrimony; $5; 9p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
SATURDAY "THE METROPOLITANOPERA: LES CONTESD'HOFFMANN": A performance of Offenbach's opera featuring a poet, three heroines and four villains; $24, $22 for seniors, $18 for children; 9:55 a.m.; Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; 541-312-2901.
"You won't even think
of this as something special or cool, it'll just
be a part of your life." — Scot Brees, president of Hlgh Desert Makers, on 3-D prlntlng
Lib r a ry,
the High Desert Makers have has since used 3-D printing arranged to have design soft- to tackle a variety of similar ware put on to several com- problems. "With prototyping, it's all puters in the library system. Usingthe software, local res- about the speed you can get at idents will be able to design it," Walkersaid. whatever it is they may desire, Deborah Slade came to Satthen forward the plans to a lo- urday's event to learn more cal 3-D printer owner to fabri- about the machines. She said cate the item from a variety of she's toyed with the idea of materials. getting her own 3-D printer "You won't even think o f and using it to build her own this as something special or tools an d har d - to-replace cool,it'll just be a part of your household items like missing life,"hesaid. dresser knobs. Mike Walker, aboard memSlade said she never exber with the makers group pected to seesomething like and a 3-D printing enthusiast a 3-D printer in her lifetime, forthe past three years orso, recalling how when she was said he was first exposed to in school, calculators were rethetechnology through his job gardedas almost magic. "Today, everything's possiat Jeld-Wen. A few years ago, the win- ble, mostly,"shesaid. dow and door maker was Brian Kanski, of Redmond, having difficulty getting good a 3-D pr i n ter o w n er w h o welds where different pieces brought his machine to the liof a metalwindow frame were brary Saturday,said he wasn't joined. He and others at the looking to make anything in company envisioned a simple particular when he bought the tool they could useto clean up device a few years ago. Since the welding, only no such tool then he's created a range of existed. mostly small plastic products Rather t han spe nding such as bookmarks, chip bag weeks working with an out- clips and cellphone holders, side engineering company simple items he said take on that might not quite graspthe greater meaning when built problemthey were looking to from scratch. "It's just kind of fun to be solve, Jeld-Wen turned to 3-D printing to quickly produce able to design things and say, plastic prototypes, followed 'hey, I made that,'" he said. by metal tools that did t h e
job. Walker said the company
I II '
r
— Reporter: 541-383-0387, shammersibendbulletin.com
Prineville WOman
arrested in crash A Prineville womanwasarrested on suspicion of DUIIearly Saturday after her vehicle left the road,went through a fenceandstruckan unoccupie dmotorhome,according to the CrookCounty Sheriff's Office. Law enforcementwas dispatched atabout 2:50a.m. to the crash on LamontaRoadnear Grass
Lane, according to anews release from the sheriff's office. Ashley Hixon, 26, hadbeendriving a 2006 Ford F150northbound onLamonta Road andlost control of thevehicle. Hixon wasfound trapped in the passenger seat, anddeputies extricated her.Shedeclined medical treatment. A live power line inconduit was lying on the truck andCrookCounty Fire & Rescuedisconnected the power. Hixon wastaken to theCrook County jail, the sheriff's office said. — Bulletin staff reports
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Open enrollment ends Feb. 15. Enroll now to be covered in 2015. www.ProvidenceHealthPlan.com/takecare Call 877-406-1714 (TTY: 711} 8 a.m. to 8 p.m., seven days a week.
PROVIDENCE Health Plan
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
o oex an
u ncon ro
By Jeff Bamard
opened fire on the cafeteria, ~
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off a victory in Washington state, a leading gun control group backed by billionaire Michael Bloomberg is hoping to make Oregon its next prize in a campaign to require gun sales to go through universal background checks.
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killing two and wounding 25. In 2012, three days before
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the deadly Newtown, Con-
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j~aWVOeei! ~~if 'r
ty backed a voter-approved initiative in Washington last
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year that made the state the 17th in the country to expand
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background checks past the federal standard applying only to licensed gun dealers. "This is our top priority," Kobbi R. Blair/(Salem) Statesman Journal via TheAssociated Press file photo said the group's spokeswom- Gun control supporters join together for an OregonAlliance to Prean Erika Soto Lamb. vent Gun Violence Day of Action rally at the Capitol steps in Salem The organization came
out of a merger last year between Bloomberg's Mayors Against Illegal Guns and M oms Demand A ction f o r
Gun Sense in America. It has been spending tens of millions of dollars on political operations. Now its attention is on Ore-
gon, where the state Legislature narrowly failed to pass legislation two years running to require background checks for private gun sales. According to state records,
Everytown s pent n e arly $600,000 on the 2014 election — $450,000 in contributions
to candidates and committees, and $110,000 on other grassroots efforts. Part of that was devoted to
strengthening the Democratic majority in the state Sen-
ate, the key battleground. Democrats ended up expanding their majority by two seats to 18-12 in the Sen-
ate. The party holds a stronger majority in the House. Gov. John Kitzhaber, a Dem-
ocrat, is a longtime supporter and is expected to sign the
bill if it passes. "There's a loophole there
that can be closed,"Lamb sard. e x tended
background checks to re-
judge sentenced acouple to prison for their roles in thedeath of achild who drowned inabathtub.RebeccaWatkinsandCodeyCampbell,both 26, pleadedguilty to criminally negligent homicide in thedeath of 2-yearold NoelleWatkins. Theyavoided atrial on manslaughter charges. Watkins, the child's mother,wassentenced to 36 months in prison. Campbell will serve18 months. Thejudge said Watkins received amore severe sentencebecausesheknewher daughter suffered fromseizures and should not to beleft alone in a bathtub.
stolen semi-automatic AR-15
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SentenCing in dathtud death — APolk County Circuit Court
necticut, school shooting, Jacob Tyler Roberts took a
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Everytown for Gun Safe-
Oregon voters
Mall shooting —Portland Police areinvestigating a shooting outside LloydCenterMall; officials said there are noknown injuries. The Portland Police Bureausaid officers responded Saturday just before 5 p.m. to the report of gunshots heard inthe LloydCenter Mall parking lot. Officers did not locateany suspects or victims at thescene. Investigators said it appearsthere is no immediate risk to mall patrons. Police did locate evidence ofgunfire nearthe Barnes 8 Noblestore onthe side of the mall, including adamagedwindow.
to teach him to shoot. He
The Associated Press
GRANTS PASS — Fresh
AROUND THE STATE
rifle to the Clackamas Town Center mall outside Portland, where he killed two people and wounded one before killing himself. Last June, high school freshman Jared Michael Padgett took his brother's as-
HOtel attaCk —Authorities in eastern Oregonsaid amanis in critical condition after a brutal attackat a motel room.Thevictim suffered a gunshot wound totheupper bodyandmultiple stab wounds. Police officials said noarrests havebeenmadeand the attacker hasnot been identified. Ontario PoliceChiefMark Alexander said theinitial assault happened in aroom atthe OregonTrail Motel. The manthen fled the motel on foot, but theattacker followed him andcontinued the assault. A passing motorist observedtheattack. After the suspect fled the scene, themotorist called 911andwaited with the victim for emergency responders to arrive. The victim was transported to Saint Alphonsus Regional MedicalCenter inBoise.
sault-style rifle to school. He
killed a student and wounded a teacher before killing himself. None of those shootings would have been stopped ln April 2013. With a stronger Democratic majority ln the Oregon by background checks, said Legislature, gun safety advocates are hoping the third time will be Johnson, the key opponent of the charm on a bill to expand the use of background checks for last year's bill. "It puts law-abiding citigun sales. zens at a significant disadvantage," she said. "And it quire them for sales at gun from out of state gun con- does not touch the problem, shows in 2000. trol groups funded by New which in most cases involves Senate Judiciary Chair- York b i l l i onaire Mi c h ael severely mentally ill, disafman Sen. Floyd Prozanski, Bloomberg," NRA spokes- fected, alienated young peoD-Eugene, plans to introduce woman Jennifer Baker said ple causing mayhem." legislation to expand that to in a s t atement. "They are State police conduct about private gun sales. The bill pushing an extreme anti-gun 19,000 background checks a would require anyone sell- agenda that seeks to curtail month and deny about 190 of ing a gun privately to call Oregonians' constitutional them, Prozanski said. While private transactions state police for a background right to self-defense." check on criminal history Under federal law, back- don'trequire a check, sellers and mental illness. It would ground checks through the have an incentive to do them. exclude sales among family National I n stant C r i m inal If a gun they sell is used in members, inheritances and Background Check System a crime, they can be liable antique guns. are required for sales by li- if no check was done. They "I want to put closure on censed gun dealers, but not are protected if a check was the only loophole we have at gun shows or private trans- done. on the background check actions. The checks target Prozanski said he hopes law," said Prozanksi, a native convicted felons, people un- that, with the increased numTexan who owns a few guns. der indictment, the mentally ber of Democrats favoring "Most all of us gun owners, ill, drug users, people under gun control i n t h e S enate, as well as the general public, restraining orders, dishon- he can overcome Johnson's believe we should take rea- orably discharged veterans opposition. The gun control sonable steps to stop felons and people in the country ille- group contributed $75,000 from getting easy access to gally. But not all states report last year to Democratic Sen. guns. This will do that." mental health records to the Chuck Riley of H i llsboro, Opponents include Demo- system. who defeated a Republican cratic state Sen. Betsy JohnAbout 40 percent of Oregon incumbent opposed to exson of Scappoose and the Na- households have guns. And panded background checks, tional Rifle Association. the state has had its share of and $250,000 to the governor. "The NRA is not privy to horrifying shootings. State records show the the specifics of the legislaIn 1998, Kip Kinkel went to NRA made no contributions tion, but Oregonians should his high school in Springfield in the race, though it gave not be fooled by the rhetoric with guns his parents bought $21,700 to candidates overall.
White SupremaCiStS Charged —Threemembers ofan eastern Oregon white supremacist ganghave beencharged in connection with a murder plot andother crimes. Jeremiah Mauer,Gregory Tinnell and Warren GeraldBrowning arefacing onecount eachof racketeering and two counts of conspiracy to commit murder inconnection with a shooting in aPendleton home.Theyalso facesecond-degree assault, riot and felon in possession of firearmscharges. Thecharges werefiled during anarraignment Friday atthe Umatilla County Courthouse.They are based on secret grandjury indictments handed downThursday. Prosecutors said 30-year-old Mauer isthefounder of the United Aryan Empire, awhite supremacist gang. Forty-three-year-old Tinnell and 35-year-old Browningaremembers. Policearrested thetrio this month following avehicle shooting. Bar staddillg —Authorities said two people wereinjuredin an overnight stabbing at aPortland neighborhood bar. Police officers responded to TheStreet Bar onSaturday at about 2:30a.m. onthe report of a stabbing. Theyfoundtwo stabbing victims. Both weretransported to a Portland hospital for treatment, but their injuries did notappear to be life-threatening. Policesaidthesuspect, described asanAsian male in his 30s, fled thesceneprior to police arriving. Witnesses told police the stabbing occurred onthe porch ofthe bar nearclosing time. Feet maSSagef —A manwho talked a Portland State University student into afoot massageat the campus library andrefused to end it has beensentencedto180 days in jail. A Multnomah County Circuit Court jury this month found25-year-old ThomasMatthew Jonasguilty of harassment. Joneswascaught after he offered tomassagea 21-yearold student last June. Hetold her hewasin massage school and needed practice, andsheagreed. Butsheasked him to stop whenJonas put his nose within aninch of hertoes. Whenshetried to wiggle free,court records showJonas pulled herfeet back tohis face andwassexually aroused. It turns out Jonaswasconvicted of harassment for a nearly identical incident at aUniversity of Oregon library. — From wire reports
State contributing 400,000 toSpringfield mill for post-fire rebuild By Christian Hill
agreement.
The (Eugene) Register-Guard
S PRINGFIELD — S t eve Swanson, the president and
chief executive officer of Swanson Group Inc., picked up his ringing phone the day aftera massive fire destroyed his company's plywood and veneer mill in Springfield. On the other end was Gov. John Kitzhaber, offering his help.
1ws ~
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On Thursday, more than six months after the July 17 fire, Kitzhaber and state and
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local officials made good on that pledge, announcing an offer of a forgivable loan of up
ds; 5
to $400,000, tax breaks and
other assistance to help the company rebuild at its South
' -4
F Street location and hire 190
:
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=-
workers. The announcement came as Kitzhaber toured the mill site
during a daylong visit to the Brian Davis/The (Eugene)Register Guard via The Associated Press Eugene-Springfield area. The Oregon Gov. John Kltzhaber, center, speaks to the media after touring the Swanson Group's Springgovernor said he is delighted field Plywood & Veneer mill with Springfield Mayor Christine Lundberg, left, and Swanson Mill CEO that the mill's owners have de- Steve Swanson on Thursday in Springfield. cided to stay put.
"This is an incredibly important company for Oregon come our way that has made and obviously for the com- this very possible for us," he munity here," Kitzhaber said said. while flanked by Swanson Earlier, Swanson gave the and Springfield Mayor Chris- governor and high-level city tine Lundberg. officials a look at the plans for Earlier in the day, Kitzhaber the new mill during a private visited Two Rivers-Dos Rios
meeting. He then led them on
Elementary School in Springfield and Churchill H i gh School in Eugene. He ended his Lane County visit with a guest lecture at the University of Oregon Law School. Swanson said the local and
a tour of the site where the fire
state assistance has and will
destroyed the mill, which was
subsequently cleaned up. The governor'svisit came one week after the Swanson
Group, a family-owned company based in Southern Oregon, announced its intention to rebuild the mill at the same
continue to be invaluable. "We're very, very happy
location instead of acquiring a
with the outcome, and there's
The company has declined to say how much it will spend
been a lot of help that has
Find It All Online bendbulletin.com
and city officials an up-close look at the two remaining vewill create more jobs at com- neer dryers during the tour. p anies that cut d ow n a n d One of the dryers has been transport the mill's logs and removed. finished projects, and provide In the weeks after the fire, parts for its equipment. the company paid tohave The chief executive officer more than two dozen propsaid he also expects state of- erties cleaned up after debris ficials will help the company contaminated with insulating meet permit and environmen- asbestos from the mill's pipes tal regulations before and and roof rained down on them during the new mill's con- from the burning mill. struction. "Delay costs monThe fire is also believed to ey," he said, "and I think they'll have killed fish swimming in help us get up and running the neighboring millrace. City substantially quicker," he said. officials and others celebrated Springfield city o fficials the restoration of the wateralready announced the com- way several days after the fire. pany's intention to apply to Lundberg thanked all the exempt its new construction partners who worked to help and equipment from property keep Swanson, which actaxes for up to five years, un- quired the mill in 2007, in the der therural enterprise zone community. "We're enormously excited program that city officials manage in partnership with that Swanson has been able Swanson said the new mill
mill elsewhere.
SAVE UP TO 70/o ORIGINAL PRICES
to rebuild the mill.
Steve Swanson also divulged a few more details
ployees displaced by the fire called after hearing of the announcement and said they're
eend s ss~ - 8 8 $ I sss NE 2nd ss.
ating with Union Pacific Rail-
Swanson said 100 mill em-
PRo-l»E
company and state finalize an
UTILITYTRAILERS •CUSTOM wORK
had been a potential roadblock for redevelopment on the site.
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for them to rebuild," she said.
road to buy the roadway prop- wood products in Springfield." erty it has been leasing so it can access the mill site, which
"ready and willing" to come The fire, believed to have measure 330,000 square feet back. started in one of th e m i ll's and be built of steel construcThose employees who are three massive veneer dryers, tion. Construction will begin hired back will r etain their sent a large column of black this summer, with the f irst length of service, Swanson smoke into the clear summer plywood panels going out the sard. sky that residents could see "They won't be new employ- for miles. Fire officials briefly door in the fall of 2016. The mill will hire about 95 ees to us so I think it's a good evacuated the area around the employees when it starts op- incentive for them," he said. milL No serious injuries were eration, Swanson said, and it Business Oregon, the state's reported. will take a year to bring on its economic developmentagenSwanson gave Kitzhaber full workforce. cy, will offer a loan of up to The old mill employed 250 $ 400,000 that w i l l b e f o r workers, but the new mill will given if Swanson hires an need fewer employees because agreed-upon number of em4 s a s a. of increased automation, the ployees. The exact amount w on't be k n ow n u n ti l t h e company has said. 30"Range
Redmond
sss-sss-41$$ ssss $.Hwy ss
to see that this is the best site
The company also is negoti-
a bout the new mi ll. It w i l l
.
PamttareWarl use
the state.
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BRIGHTSIDE ANIMAL CENTER 1355 NEHEMLOCKAVE., REDMOND, OR
(541) 923-0882
B4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTICES Laurel Maxine Ross, of Bend
Ralph Hiram Smith, of Bend
Jean Lillian Ostrem, of Redmond
Sept. 30, 1946 - Jan. 20, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Service to be held at a later date in Hawaii.
Oct. 27, 1933 - Jan. 12, 2015 Arrangements: Niswonger-Reynolds Funeral Home is honored to serve the family. 541-382-2471 Please visit the online registry for the family at
Mar. 27, 1921 - Jan. 22, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsREDMOND www.autumnfunerals.net 541-504-9485
www.nlswonger-reynolds.com
Jack N. Morris, of Grants Pass (Formerly
of Redmond, OR) April 6, 1953 - Jan. 19, 2015
Arrangements: Hull 8 Hull Funeral Directors of Grants Pass, 541-476-4453 Services: Services will be held in Summer 2015.
James Elden Clark, of Bend July 6, 1930 - Dec. 31, 2014
Arrangements: Autumn Funerals, Bend 541-318-0842 www.autumnfunerals.net Services: Private family services were held at Willamette National Cemetery in Portland, Oregon.
Wilmer Robertson, of Bend Mar. 17, 1927 - Jan. 17, 2015 Arrangements: Deschutes Memorial Chapel 541-382-5592 www.deschutesmemorialchapel.com
Services: A Celebration of Life will be held on Saturday, January 31 at 1:00 PM at the Discovery Christian Church, 334 NW Newport Avenue, Bend, OR.
Wayne Charles Peterson, of Redmond Nov. 9, 1948 - Jan. 20, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: No Services will be held. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care Hospice 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, OR 97701 www.partnersbend.org
James "Jim" Lawrence Freeman, of Redmond June 17, 1930 - Jan. 12, 2015
Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place on Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 2:00-5:00 PM at the Clubhouse at the Summer Creek Clubhouse, located at 3660 SW 29th Street in Redmond, OR. Contributionsmay be made to:
Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd Street, Redmond, OR 97756, www.hospiceofredmond.o rg or Alzheimer's Association, 777 NW Wall Street, Suite 104, Bend, Oregon 97701, www.alz.org.
Services: A memorial service for invited family & friends will be held Saturday, April 11, 2015 at the Hollinshead Barn in Bend. Contributions may be made to:
Bethlehem lnn, P.O. Box 8540, Bend, OR 97708.
CSNYdrummer became drugcounselor ByBruceWeber
Nnv. 13, 1925- Jnn. 15, 2015 R obert B e n i a mi n Hu n tington, 89, of U n i on, OR, p assed away a t h o m e o n Thursday, Ja n u ar y 15 , 2015. No service is planned at this time. Robert was born Novemb er 13 , 1925, in La Grande, OR, to (~ Thomas and So lome
(Sias)
Huntingt on. He Robert B. resided in Hulltlngtoll Ro C reek, F o s sil , P o r t l a n d, Coquille, a n d Pr i n e v i lle. He attended T w i ckenham and F ossil g r a d e s c h o ol thru high school. He then attended Eastern O r e gon College and Bend Central O regon C o m m unit y C o l -
lege.
Robert served our c o untry w h i l e i n th e A r my d uring W W I I w h e r e h e earned a sh ar p s h ooter a ward. Before joining t h e a rmy R o bert w o r k e d o n various ranches and in the shipyards. He retired as a grader at a plywood mill. Robert w as hi s g randchildren' s nu mb e r one sports fan. He was an assistant boxing coach and was instrumental in s t arti ng t h e Cr o o k Cou n t y Boxing Club. A g i fted stor yteller, h e s h a red m a n y adventures an d c o m edies
of his unique upbringing
surrounding a r emot e h omestead i n W hee l e r County. Robert is survived by his three children: sons, Robert B. and his wife, Jovie of La Grande, OR, Steve W. and his wife, Beth of Union O R; d a u ghter, J u n e M . Thornton (w i d o w ed ) of Redmond OR; nine grandchildren, sev e n g re a t grandchildren and numerous nieces and n e phews. He was preceded in death b y w i v es , B e t t y ( D u n n ) H untington a nd Hu el l a
(McDaniel)
when he i mmersed himself
said in an interview with Peo-
Dallas Taylor, a rock 'n' roll drummer who played behind David Crosby, Stephen Stills and Graham Nash, among other big names, and who overcame desperate addictions to drugs and alcohol to become a counselorfor other addicts, died Jan. 18 in Los Angeles. He
John Patrick
Higgins
Qec.2,1939- Jnn.8,2015 J ohn Patrick H i g g ins o f Redmond, Oregon, passed away on January 8, 2015. He was 75. John wa s b o r n D e c ember 2, 1939 in Watertown, Wisconsin to C h arles and
Margaret (Hauer) Higgins.
Robert Benjamin Huntington
nia andkidney disease. Taylor was still a teenager
on as a session drummer — he He dropped out of high played with Van Morrison and school to become a musician Paul Butterfield, among oth- and moved to Los Angeles, ers — and he was a member of where he met Sebastian and Stills' own band, Manassas. Stills and wound up playing As Taylor grew increasing- with Clear Light. ly dependent on alcohol and Taylor was married six drugs, including cocaine and times. Four of his marriages heroin, his mental and phys- ended in divorce and one in an ical health dedined. In 1984 annulment, according to his he made an attempt at suicide, wife, whom he met through stabbing himself in the stom- friends in Alcoholics Anonyach with a butcher knife. That m ous and married in 2000.She was when he committed to donated a kidney to her hussobriety. band in 2007. In addition to her, "I was more famous as a he is survived by a son, Dallas junkie than a drummer," he Troy Taylor, and two daughters,
New York Times News Service
One of five children, all of whom were Wisconsinites, John graduated from Jefferson High School in Jefferson, WI in 1957. Shortly thereafter, he served in the U.S. Air F orce until 1961. He then attended the Univ ersity of W i sco n s i n S tevens Point, w h er e h e received a Bachelor ofScie nce i n C o n s ervation i n 1967. H e l a ter w en t t o graduate s c h oo l a t t he University o f W i s c o nsinMadison, where he earned a Master's degree in W a ter R e s o urces M a n a g ement i n 1 9 68. A l i f e l ong learner, h e a l s o a t t ended t he theology p r o g ram a t the University of Portland. He worked with the U.S. Soil Conservation Service and the Bonneville Power A dministration. A f t e r r e tiring in 1999 from federal sernce, he briefly r e sided i n T e n nessee a n d N e w Mexico, b efore r e t u r ning to Oregon. J ohn is s u r vived b y h i s t hree c h i l d r en : a son , Michael Higgins of N a shville, TN ; a n d d a u g hters, M ichelle D o r r i c ot t an d C olleen H i g g in s b o t h o f Crooked River Ranch, OR. Other survivors include his sister, Kathy Kelln of W i sconsin; an d t h r e e g r a n dchildren, Gavin Higgins of Nashville TN, Tanner and Spencer D or r i c ot t of Crooked River Ranch, OR. He was preceded in death b y b o t h p ar e n t s ; tw o b rothers, Peter an d N e i l ; and a sister, Mary. A utumn Fun e r a l s of R edmond h a s b e e n e n trusted wit h t h e a r r a ngements, (541) 5 0 4 - 9485. www.autumnfunerals.net
was 66. His wife, Patti McGovern
Taylor, said the causes were complications of viral pneumo-
in the rock subculture. In the ple magazine in 1990 as he pre-Woodstock 1960s he played waited for a liver transplant with John Sebastian, and he made necessaryby his years of recorded an album with the substance abuse. short-lived psychedelic band Although Taylor continued Clear Light. to play after his recovery, tourThen he caught on with a ing with the Bandaloo Doctors, trio of folk-rock singers known he devoted much of his time to for their songwriting and vocal a new career as a drug and alharmonies. Their 1969 album, cohol counselor, working with "Crosby, Stills & Nash," was a treatment centers in the Los colossal hit that soon became Angeles area and conducting acknowledged as a rock classic, interventions. and after adding Neil Young Dallas Woodrow Taylor Jr. to the mix, they went on tour, was born in Denver on April playing one of their first con- 7, 1948, and grew up mostly in
Wilmer Robertson March 17, 1927—January 17, 2015
drug addiction, wrote about the
pitfalls for a young musician arriving in Los Angeles for the first time.
"There are a whole list of
mistakes, peripheral traps that
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand will be run for one day, but specific guidelines must befollowed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. They may be submitted by phone, mail, email or fax. TheBulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of theseservices or about the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825. Phone: 541-617-7825
Email: obits@bendbulletin.com Fax: 541-322-7254
Deaths ofnote from around
Africa's first black national
the world:
police commissioner, who in
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR 97708
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Mondaythrough Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Monday through Thursday for publication on the seconddayafter submission, by1 p.m. Fridayfor Sundaypublication,andby9a.m. Monday for Tuesdaypublication. Deadlines for display adsvary; please call for details.
STEVEN JOHN NEFF 1951-2014
2010 was convicted of taking
bribes from a drug trafficker the 1974 world championships in a trial that drew immense an figure skater won bronze at and 1976 Olympics. Died Sat-
international attention. Died
urday at his home in Mexico. Friday in a Pretoria hospital. Jackie Selebi, 64: South — From wire reports R
June as, xg88 - December 28, 2ox4
Kyndra Nicole Papernik, a6, passed a w a y u n e x pectedly Sunday, December as in Santa Monica, California.
Wilmer was a native Oregonian born In Medford, Oregon to Paul and Nora Robertson. They lived in Prospect, Oregon until he was in the 5th grade, moving then to Medford where he graduated from Medford High School in 1945. He met Lois Hoffman while in high school marrying her on March 27, 1949. He was very proud of serving in the US Army 11th Airborne as a paratrooper during World War II ln occupied Japan. He was a life member of the Elks, Odd Fellows and Moose. He was active ln Bend Snowmobile Club search and rescue. He belonged to the Elks RV Club, traveled in many countries, enjoyed deer and elk hunting and meeting friends for coffee at the Moose lodge.
Kyndra was born June 28, i.988 in Vista, California, and moved to Bend in 1990. She attended local schools and graduatedfrom Summit in 2oo6. Kyndra attended Chico Statethen came back to Bend and graduated from the culinary program at COCC. She then moved to Seattle to further her passion in health and nutrition where she spent three of her more memorable years.
Wllmer and his family lived in Medford, Klamath Falls, and then Bend while working 35 years for the State of Oregon Highway Department asa civil engineer. Wllmer ls survived by hls wife Lols, daughter Kay Wallace (sonin-law Willard) of Salem, son Dale of Bend, son Mark (wife Diane) of Turnll, 6 grandchildren: Amy, Ryan, Derek, Dylan, Mike, and Tracie, and 7 great grandchildren: McKayla, Jordyn, Skylor, Taylor, Kaleo, Annabella, and Sloan, and son-ln-law Mike Churches of Prineville. He was preceded in death by his youngest daughter Janet Churches. He was loved by his family andman . friends and will be truly missed. A Celebration of Life will be held Saturday, January 31 at 1:00 PM at the Discovery Christian Church 334 NW Newport Ave. Bend, OR.
Kyndra loved people and lit up a room with her presence. She lovedhaving fun, cooking and eating good food, and exploring the Pacific Northwest. She was a beautiful soul and will be missed by all whose lives she touched.
'I
of Woodstock," his bandmate Crosby, who also survived
Hu n t i ngton;
brother, Thomas C.; son-in - law, R i c h ar d Th o r n t o n and three nephews. Online condolences may b e made to th e f a m ily a t www.lovelandfuneralchapel.com.
„Deschutes II IIemorial Chapel ls entrustedpvith Wilmer's arrangements.
In an introduction to Taylor's 1994 memoir, "Prisoner
pull you away from the central and only important concern — music," he wrote. "Money, glory, fame, sex, adulation, peer group approval, competition certs together at the Woodstock San Antonio and Phoenix. His and one's own emotional bagfestival. father, a pilot who had flown in gage all distract you from your Taylor also played on Cros- World War II, was later killed original purpose. As far as I by, Stills, Nash & Young's first performing stunts in an air know, Dallas didn't miss any of album, "Deja Vu" (1970); he and show. His parents had been di- these mistakes. They crept up the bass player Greg Reeves vorced years earlier. on him, and jerked the rug out are shown in a group portrait It was his mother, the for- from under him, and derailed on thealbum cover,and both mer Violet Cantu, who set him him and almostkilled him." their names appear prominent- on his career path: When he Crosby also wrote: "I use ly there, too. By then, however, was 10, she took him to see the Dallas as an example when I'm Taylor's drinking and drug use movie "The Gene Krupa Story," speaking to people about surhad become dangerous and about the legendary drummer. viving the drug experience. I disruptive, and he was tossed She died of a heart attack when think he has wound up being a from the band. He continued he was 13. hell of a good example."
DEATHS ELSEWHERE
Toller Craneton, 65:Canadi-
Sharlotte Birkland Taylor and
Lisa Carter.
She recently finished her nutrition certification at the Institute for Integrative Nutrition in Health Coaching, and had recently moved to San Diego.
Kyndra issurvived by her mom, Alison; grandmother, Celeste; sister, Sunshine; brother, Joe; all her wonderful nieces and nephews, aunts and uncles, the best cousins a nyone could h a ve ; h e r boyfriend, Chris, the whole Luersenfamily andher beloved "boys" Bailey and Tucker. A celebration oflife will be held Sunday, February 8th at uam in Aspen Hall, Bend, Oregon. Thank you everyone for your prayers and support.
Beloved son of Charles and Lillian Neff of Bend. Steven was born in Prineville, and passed away at the age of 63 in Portland where he lived most of his adult life. A family gathering and memorial celebration of his life was held in Bend. As a teenager, like his father, Steven became an avid horseman. He loved his horse Dandy and owned several others. He rode often with friends and enthusiasts. He rode deep into the Cascade Mountains on long pack trips with his father and brother. He was a member of the FFA, participating as a judge on a state champion livestock judging team. He graduated from Bend Senior High class of 1969, and attended Central Oregon Community College. Steven was a classically trained musician. He was a featured performer with the Valley Youth Symphony in Santa Maria, California as a pianist, cellist and guest conductor. He was also a proud member of the Musician's Union Local in Bend while he was keyboardist for Variety Pak, one of the longest running 70s rock bands in Central Oregon. aying music always brought him such peace and joy. He taught hims o ai l d own ed a sailboat which he kept moored on e Colu bi r. A n other joy was sailing as often as his sc edule woyld al ver inspired by nature, he made a traditio of campiriti an i i d t h e lakes in the Cascades every yearPe happily r bruite I w a mpers to join in. H ~was a lover f the a d rtl a nd Theater, working behind s ge to provid suppo ' I d Ope ra Company productions. rofessionally, Steven o k h way u p t hrough our local ransportation i dustry. t d driv i ng bus for Trailways out f Bend, later ovingt o I d I Nhn', heworkedindispatch, then n to big freigh. He o n is~ i c d f o r driving semi trucks. A ewyearslater epur a e h a tr c k " Big Red"andstarted Is own busines with i . Hht was also co- ne i t h s si ter enee, of the highly successful farhily business, a r c ra C I n e i n Be d for a few years. He was'ngraduateof ll DryC an rsln titutei Washington, D.C.. Steven~zwas a very as i o n te pqrson, o w ould dive into adversityto help those iq nee . was g true fri)d who was always ready to join,in aM thi s f ln. He(really enjoyed people, and
saw the good in eI ~l pfyone'.H " w aI kin~entleg<and courageous soulwhoisgreatl issedby ve pn w okiiewAjm.
Steven is survive motl r, ilt' ~ „.R < od Neff; two sisters, Michelle Rlemer, and Renee Imler; five nieces'ar'ld-his faithful ukie.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
NORTHWEST NEWS
e aoa rotestersre ort
B5
Large hop COAtaCt harvest The Associated Press
The Associated Press
"We honestly don't know
SPOKANE, Wash. — Ac-
the shipment of equipment to Canada's tar sands oil fields.
tivists who oppose the transport of giant oil-field equip-
The group also oppos-
what they're up to, or why, and that concerns us," Hil-
es rail shipments of crude
des said. "Nobody associated
ment through parts of Idaho
oil and coal through the
with any of the groups has ever done anything danger-
and Washington say they Northwest. "We don't see ourselves as have been contacted by FBI agents. posing any threat," said Yost, Helen Yost, of Moscow, who refused to talk to the Idaho, said she recently re- agent. "We see the FBI conceived a text message that tact as being unwarranted." unsettled her. Yost is one of a dozen ac"I need to speak with you," tivists in Idaho, Washington the December message said. and Oregon who say they've "Please give me a call. I am been contacted by the FBI in
activities related to tar sands. tified herself as an FBI agent Ayn Di e t r i ch-Williams, contacted him in October. an FBI spokeswoman in SeThey asked if he would
attle, said she couldn't answer questions about any contacts with protesters. In
answer questions, but he declined. "It's actually pretty spooky
most instances, the agency to have the FBI show up at neither confirms nor denies your door, ask one question civil disobedience, but that's that investigations are taking and leave," Goodwin said. "I not a federal issue." place or that specific individ- think they were there to put The complaints f ollow uals have been contacted for me on notice that I was being demonstrations last summer questioning. watched." "We don't investigate anyagainst oil trains in Oregon Goodwin w a s i n v o lved and Western Washington, one for F i rst A m endment in the Occupy Bellingham where some protesters were activities," Dietrich-Williams movement, and was one of 12 an FBI agent." recent months, said L arry arrested for blocking the sard. Bellingham residents arrestThe S p o kesman-Review Hildes, a Bellingham, Wash- rails. The actions targeted Investigations occur when ed in 2011 for blocking tracks reported Friday that Yost, ington, civil r ights attor- the Everett rail yard, an Ana- the agency has reasonable to delay a coal train's pas57, is a co-founder of Wild ney. Agents have shown up cortes refinery and two Ore- grounds to believe someone sage. He's also taken part in Idaho Rising Tide, a cli- on their doorsteps, at their gon oil terminals. is engaged in illegal activity megaload protests with Wild mate-change action group w orkplace or contactedthem With the Keystone Pipe- or planning it, she said. Idaho Rising Tide. that opposes the megaload by phone, he said. line headed for a vote in ConHerb Goodwin, 65, of BellBut all of his activism has shipments. Yost has been arHildes said he's told his cli- gress, Hildes said he suspects ingham, said a city police of- been peaceful, he said. "I'm rested twice while protesting ents not to talk to FBI agents. the FBI is monitoring protest ficer and a woman who iden- not a saboteur."
Yesterday Continued from B1
of Schools R.E. Jewell today
ties for women prisoners until the new Deschutes County building is completed, and
which will be effective March
yetbeen started.
For the week ending Jan. 24, 1940
Also, officers point out, the
city having inadequate facilities for women cannot be critClean-up drive finds no icized for ordering certain unjail in Bend for women desirables to leave town. prisoners Until quarters are secured, Deschutes County and Bend the city will probably adopt officials, right in the midst of a a modified parole system for vice crusade resulting in cor- women arrested. This will respondence from the office of
make it necessary for women
Governor Charles A. Sprague, under sentence, but unconhave discovered they have finedbecause of a lack ofcell no jail accommodations for
space, to report at the police
women. This discovery was made
station at frequent intervals.
"Ladies" jail at Redmond found arrested a local woman on a
when city officials this week
disorderly conduct charge. Formerly, city and county women prisoners were kept at the Lesh home, but this is
Local officers, seeking a place in which to retain their
women prisoners, learned today that Redmond, possessor now under new management. of a new jail, can probably proWhen officers took their wom- vide accommodations. an prisoner tothe quartersforThe new Redmond jail is dimerly used they were emphat- vided into two parts. Because ically told that the new man- Redmond is a law abiding agementhas entirely changed town, the entire jail is usuthe policies of the home and ally available for either men that prisoners are not to be or women prisoners, but the accommodated. concrete division provides Women prisoners could be separate quarters if cells for kept in the new city jail, but prisoners of different sexes are this arrangement would not required. be desirable, as was pointed The question of f inding out here today. The city cells quarters for Bend prisoners are all in one block, as a "pent came up this week when several women were held here.
house"structure atop the new
city building. If a woman prisoner were placed in the city
50 YEARSAGO
jail, a matron would have to be provided. For the week ending In an emergency, a neigh- Jan. 24, 1965 boring county might be asked to provide cell space, officers Coachathigh schoolleaves pointed out. It is surmised that
local position
the nearest accommodations
Tom Winbigler, head football coach and dean of students at Bend Senior High
would be in Klamath Falls. Unless some arrangements
folks have been involved in
have to do without cell facili-
work on that structure has not
75 YEARS AGO
ous or violent. Some of the
can be made, Bend and De- School, submitted his resignaschutes County will probably tion to Bend Superintendent
citizens
Major awards for communi1. ty service in Bend in 1964 were W inbigler will j oi n t h e presented Thursday night to health, physical education and Phil F. Brogan, Llyman C. Johnathletic staff at the University son and Ivan J. Thompson. The of Oregon's Job Corps Center occasion was the annual distinat Tongue Point. guished service awards dinner Winbigler said he was giv- sponsored by the Bend Jaycees. ing up his position with the It was held in the basement of Bend School District because the Elks Temple. he felt his position with the Job Others receiving awards Corps was a professional ad- induded Robert W. Chandler, vancement opportunity which named "bossofthe year,"M rs. he could not pass up. Eugene E. Wegner, outstand" Additional centers of t h e ing JayceeAuxiliary member. type now underway at Tongue Numerous appreciation awards Point are planned for the fu- were presented. ture," he said. "Because of this, Brogan, whose best selling I also feel there may be an op- non-fiction book, "East of the portunity for further advance- Cascades," was published last ment within the Job Corps
system." Winbigler joined the Bend High School faculty in the fall of 1955 as instructor in physical education, head football coach
and head wrestling coach. He came to Bend from the Universit yofOregon,wherehe had just completed work on his master's degree. He was freshman football coach while he
was at the university. Winbigler played college football for the College of Idaho where he was named to Little All-American honors. In 1950 he played one season with the
Los Angeles Rams. Since that time he has served eight years as head wrestling coach, his teams finished second each year. Winbigler's football teams during his 10 years as head coach compileda 52-36-3 winloss record. This induded a
A new report from the Hop
Growers of A merica also shows a 10 percent increase in acres harvested between 2013 and2014.
The Yakima Valley produces about77 percent of the
nation's hops. In 2014, nearly 29,000 acres of hops were harvested in Washington state,
representing about t h reefourths of the country's total. In Oregon, about 5,400 acres
were harvested last year, up about 12 percent from 2013. Idaho also saw a 12 percent
increase in acres of hops harvested. T he country's crop
was
worth about $272 million.
Rajneesh said Saturday that
Oregonbefore being deported
state and federal officials in Oregon were responsible for
from the United States more
the death of the guru, who for
than four years ago, died of fouryears led a controversial heart failure today, his spokes- commune in Central Oregon. man sald.
Swami Prem N i ren said
The 58-year-old Rajneesh, who called himself "Bhagwan" or "god" before dropping the Hindu honorific in favor of the Buddhist term Osho, a
g overnment officials a nd prosecutors in Oregon misused the legal system to deport Rajneesh after the collapse of the commune amid Buddhist term that means "on charges of criminal wrongwhom the heavens shower doing. Rajneesh claimed he flowers," died at his commune was poisoned while in federal in the south Indian city of custody following his arrest. "The hostile statements of Pune, a spokesman said. Rajneesh founded a com- former Oregon Governor Vic mune in Pune, India, in 1974
Atiyeh and U.S. Attorney for
and abandoned it to go to the Oregon Charles Turner reUnited States. The guru's fol- garding Soho reflect the mo-
year, received the outstanding
lowers purchased the 64,000
fall promotion barbecue in
country.
tives and attitudes of those
senior citizen award. He has
acre Big Muddy Ranch and U.S. politicians who killed been a member of The Bulletin began moving there in 1981. him," Niren said. staff since 1923, the same year Thousands of followers lived After word of Rajneesh's he completed his education at there, working long days death reached the United the University of Oregon. tending crops, then meditatStates, Atiyeh called him a Johnson has been a member ing with the guru in a huge "charlatan and evil person." of a local law firm since 1957. hall. Turner, who prosecuted RaHe has been active in numerous T he commune began t o jneesh and several of his folcommunity projects, particu- unravel in September 1985, lowers on federal criminal larly the Mirror Pone Water when the guru's pistol-pack- charges, said Rajneesh left a Pageant and th e successful ing, acid-tongued personal legacy of "crime and corrupefforts of the Bend Industrial secretary, Ma Anand Sheela, tion, fraud and deceit." Development Corp., which has abruptly left Rajneeshpuram The guru's doctor quoted brought several new business- with her staff. In October of Rajneesh as saying in the es to Bend. that year, Rajneesh and Shee- hours before his death, "My Thompson received the key la were arrested. The guru crippled body is the work man award given to the out- u ltimately plead guilty t o of the Christian fundamenstanding Jaycee. His activities two charges of immigration talists in th e U nited States included chairmanship of the fraud and agreed to leave the government." The guru's last downtown Bend. He headed the committee for the 1964concert of the Portland Symphony
words were shared with disci-
Guru's aide lashes out A lawyer for Osho Shree
ples in India as they gathered after his death to watch a final video-taped discourse.
Orchestra, which will perform in Bend again on March 24.
co-championship in 1960 and a 25 YEARSAGO second place finish in 1961. No mention of Winbigler's For the week ending successor has been made to Jan. 24, 1990 date.
guru who once ran a controversial commune in Central
YAKIMA, Wash. — A thirst
for craft beer helped hop growersproduce their largestcrop of hops in five years.
Deported guruRajneesh
Brogan, johnsonnamed dies Bend'stop 1964senior, junior Osho Shree Rajneesh, the
Richard "Dick" Elmer Marr hpril lo, 1943 - January 9, 20l5 Richard "Dick" ElmerMarr entered his Heavenly Home January 9, 20I5 with his wife and children byhisside, having fought a courageousbattle with cancer. Born in Corwith, lowa on April I0, I943, Dick graduated fromCorwith-Wesiey High School in l959 and William PennCollege Oskaloosa, lowa, In I963 where hemet and married hiswife of 5I years, Dianne (Mosteiler) Marr. He taught junior high math before beinghired byWilliam Penn in l965 as AdmissionsCounselor. Over the next 22 years, he served as Director of Admissions, then Director of Financial Aid, retiring in l98T.
')
Bills Continued from B1
ards such as w i ldfires and
The bill being proposed in the Legislature would direct the Department of Land Con-
floods. Counties will also be eager to advocate for proposed legislation that would provide state
servation and Development to funding to counties to treat establish a program or modi- mental illness. "We'll be looking at that one fy an existing one that would guide local governments when closely," Anderson said. considering development in — Reporter: 541-617-7820, areas prone to natural haztshorack@bendbulletin.com
'
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n E LEPI YAKCO SKOWPI October 18. 1918- January 15. 2015
Helen VarcoBrownwas born October 18, 1918 to E.E. Varco andLaura (Bishop)Varco. Shelived in Deschutes County 96yearsin Plainview,Bendand Redmond. She i$' «,"p,',," g r ew UP on a ranch of 3,500acres In Plainview with ;I four brothers where they attended a one roomschool until high school. Sheloved to ride horsesand cross country skiing, and was involved in 4-H andGrange. Shegraduated from RUHS.Shetook accounting classesandworkedfor a CPAin Bend. Helenmarried HomerBrownIn1940 and continued to farm onthefamily ranch. Whenfarming was nolonger profitable they andtheir three children'moved to Redmond. Helen started working at the RedmondHotel office for a short time and then started a longcareer intheoffice of the Central OregonDistrict Hospital, retiring ' in1981.
She was amemberof Grangefor 82 years starting at age14. Sheheld several offices at the local and state levels. She was a former member of D.A.R., past president of the Hospital Auxiliary, member since 1958 of Community Presbyterian Church and the Deschutes Pioneers' Association. She was honored to bethe Queenof Deschutes Pioneers' In 2007. Helen was involved in her children's activities which included Camp Fire Girls, 4-H leader, BandBoosters, baseball mom, Jobs Daughters momand RHS Panther Boosters. Sheenjoyed games, pinochle, annual family reunions, camping, fishingandtravel. She was preceded indeath byher husband, of 66 years, Homer;her brothers, Charles, Bob, Burtonand Erwin; son-in-law, Robert; granddaughter,Deborah; and great niece,Becca.
She is survived byher children, Marilyn Redmond, Roger(Donna)Brownand Geri (Wayne)Van Matre; grandchildren, Doug Redmond, Amy Lees, Tracy Frisbee, Carrie Elliott, Shane VanMatre, Toni Minick and Kelly Van Matre; twelve great-grandchildren; one great-great grandchild; and numerousnieces and nephews.
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Private burial washeld January21, 2015atthe RedmondCemetery. AMemorial Service will be held Saturday January 31, 2015 at 12 noon at the Redmond Community Presbyteiian Church.
Donati ons may be made to the Deschutes Pioneers' Association Scholarship Program, 2861 NWPolarstar, Bend, OR 97701.
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Inspiredby hisbeekeeping hobby and asenseofadventure, Dick and Diannemoved toproperty near Sisters, Oregonwhere Dick went into businesswith his brother-in-law as a beekeeper, pollinating cropsfrom Wenatchee, Wh to Chico, Ch. His "homegrown"honey was enjoyed by many.Dickalso worked in Financial hid at COCC and In Circulation for the BendBulletin. He Q and Dianne grew flowersandherbs for Schiiiing's Solar Gardensfor' aSO.I ~ many years. lowa friends rememberDick asan avid hunter, fisherman, golfer, football referee andumpire. Oregon friendsknew him asan "".4 enthusiastic gardener filling hiscommercial sized greenhouses with organic vegetablesandcolorful blooms,which hedelighted In giving away to family and friends. h servant of God, Dickwastreasurer and a boardmemberof Sisters, Church of the Nazarene, alsovolunteering asgroundskeeper and f building custodian. He andDianne sangmanyduets for morning worship. A loving "Grampie" full of fun andmischief, Dick took great pride y in his grandchildren, attending asmany school andsporting events as possible. Family time includedcamping, fishing, popping corn and playing cardgamesuntil midnight. His recipes for apple danish and homemadebread willbe passed down forgenerations,and no . one will ever make abetter breakfast! .: Preceded indeath byhis parents ElmerandPauline (Brown) Marr, Dick is survived byhiswife Dianne of Bend,sonJeff Ouiie) Marr( and granddaughter Nicoie, of Corvaliis, OR, daughter Kristin ..'I (Greg) Kiecker andgrandchildren Karson and Mckenzie of Bend,~ ' OR, brother Gene(Barbara) Marr of hilegan, Mi and nephew Kevin 4;i Marr.
u
"
~
(I
-
.J A Celebration of Ufe will be held atl0:30 a.m., February Tth at Sisters Church of the Nazarene, 6T I 30Harrington EoopRoad, Bend, OL There will be a private internment at Deschutes Memorial Garden inBend. Memorial contributionsmay bedirected to Franklin Graham'ssamaritan's pursewww.samaritanspurse.org ) or The Shepherd's House, l854 Northeast Division Street, Bend,% OR9TTOI.
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TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather, lnc. ©2015
I
i
i
'
I
TODAY
iI
TONIGHT
HIGH S3. I f '
ALMANAC
TUESDAY
59
37'
34.
WEDNESDAY
""
54'
0
LOW
Clear
Mostly sunnyandwarm
I
MONDAY
Mild with periods of clouds and sunshine
Mostly sunny andmild
51'
•
•
•
•
•
Jan 2B Feb 3
• Fort Rock Cresce t • 57/29
YESTERDAY
F e b 1 1 F e b 1B
Touight's ulty:Anhour before sunrise, the stars that appearduring early evening in summer also appearjust before dawn in winter.
High: Gg' at Brookings Low: 24' at Klamath Fags
Bandon
64/48
Po 0 63/ Gold
0'
Source: JimTodd,OMSI
10 a.m. Noon
1 I~
2
I
0
The highertheAccuWealher.rxrmiiv Index number, the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protscgun.0-2 Low, 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms.
ROAD CONDITONS For webcameras of ourpasses, goto www.bendbugetin.com/webcams I-G4 at Cabbage Hill: Partly to mostly sunny
today; areas offog this moming. US 20 at SantiamPass:Goodtravel today with sunshinemost of the time. US 26 atGov'tCamp:Partly to mostly sunny today with goodtravel. US 26 atOchocoDivide:Mostly sunny today with good travel. Staying drytonight. ORE Ba at Wigamette Pass:Partly to mostly sunny todaywith drytravel. Remainingdry tonight. ORE13G atDiamondLake: Goodtravel today with plenty of sunshine.
SKI REPORT ln inches ss of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base Anthony LakesMtn 0 49-4 9 B-e Hoodoo SkiArea 0 Mt. Ashland 0 16-2 S 0 46-7 4 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 34-70 0 6-14 Mt. Hood Ski Bowl Timberline Lodge 0 2B-4 2 Willamette Pass:est. opening TBA Aspen / Snowmass, CO 0 2B-5 0 Vail, CO 0 41-41 Mammoth Mtn. Ski, CA 0 20-40 Squaw Valley,CA 0 1B-3 2 ParkcityMountain,UT 0 4B-4B Sun Valley, ID 0 4B- e 7 Source: OnTheSnow.com
• Silver Lake 60/32 59/29 Chiloquin
70 43 Medfo d
Riley 51/28 52/26
Ch ristmas alley
•
Beaver Marsh
Gra a
66/3
• Paisley
• Lakeview e0/28
60/32
Yesterday Today Monday
44/28
• Burns Jun tion • 52/31 Rome 52/28 McDermi
5 7 / 31
• Ashl nd Falls
64/
Jordan V gey
Frenchglen 57/32
Klamath
Bro ings
2 p.m. 4 p.m.
~ 1
Roseburg
62/
UV INDEX TODAY
•
61/33
65/45
Fields •
54/26
Yesterday Today Monday
H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 58/48/0.53 62/44/pc60/47/s La Grande 50/37/0.00 50/37/pc 51/31/s 41/28/0.00 41/28/pc 42/26/pc La Pine 62/28/0.01 59/34/s 57/33/s Brookings 69/46/0.00 64/48/pc 61/47/s M e dford 59/3 5 /0.00 63/40/s 61/40/s Bums 56/26/0.00 51/28/pc 47/27/s N e wport 59/4 5 /0.00 63/49/s 62/49/s Eugene 68/39/0.00 58/41/pc 61/43/s N o rth Bend 6 3 / 45/0.00 65/46/s 64/48/s Klamath Falls 57/24/0.00 60/32/s 59/30/s O n tario 42/29/0.00 37/29/pc 40/29/s Lskeview 57/25/0.00 60/28/s 59/28/s Pendleton 64/35/0.00 55/37/pc52/36/s
City Astoris Baker City
Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Portland 60/4 3/0.0160/41/pc 59/43/s Prinevige 64/ 32/0.0061/33/s 57/34/s Redmond 67 / 33/Tr 65/37/s 62/33/s Roseburg 64 / 41/0.00 65/45/s 63/45/s Salem 64/46/Tr 60/42/pc 62/44/ s Sisters 65/30/0.01 63/34/s 62/32/s The Dages 6 2 /34/Tr 55/39/pc 56/38/ s
Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-psrffycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trsce,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday
NATIONAL WEATHER ~ 108 ~ g s
~ gs
NATIONAL
~ t ea
9
EXTREMES YESTERDAY (for the 4B contiguous states) National high: 85 at Fullerton, CA National low: -13' atGunnison,CO Precipitation: 2.52" at Jacksonville, NC
~ 208
~ 308 Cstus
~ 408 '
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Yesterday Today Monday City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 58/32/0.00 63/36/s 68/43/pc Akron 34/22/0.01 35/21/sn 28/17/c Albany 34/21/0.06 28/5/pc 21/8/pc Albuquerque 51/23/0.00 51/26/s 56/33/pc Anchorage 18/15/0.07 3/-7/pc 6/1/s Atlanta 49/38/0.02 56/40/s 49/33/pc Atlantic City 39/33/1.15 45/31/s 37/28/c Austin 62/27/0.00 68/37/s 66/44/pc Baltimore 40/33/1.02 46/28/s 31/23/sn Billings 56/22/0.00 57/42/c 62/40/c Birmingham 49/34/0.02 57/37/pc 45/31/pc Bismarck 42/26/0.19 40/34/c 48/27/s Boise 40/29/0.00 41/30/pc 45/30/s Boston 34/31/0.67 36/13/pc 26/21/c Bridgeport, CT 37/32/0.75 38/17/s 28/16/sn Buffalo 30/23/0.07 20/9/c 22/16/sn Burlington, YT 37/25/0.00 17/-2/pc 15/1/pc Caribou, ME 30/23/0.02 18/-8/sn 6/-7/s Charleston, SC 57/50/1.37 59/43/s 59/36/c Charlotte 53/36/0.26 56/35/s 54/30/sh Chattanooga 48/35/0.07 55/38/sh 44/32/pc Cheyenne 47/30/0.02 52/40/pc 63/38/s Chicago 43/29/0.00 34/20/sn 29/25/sn Cincinnati 43/26/0.00 43/24/r 34/26/c Cleveland 32/23/Tr 31/17/sn 25/16/c ColoradoSprings 54/23/0.00 47/30/s 61/37/s Columbia, MO 55/29/0.00 44/25/sh 52/32/s Columbia, SC 58/41/0.23 60/41/s 57/33/sh Columbus,GA 53/41/0.07 60/42/s 52/32/pc Columbus,OH 37/26/Tr 39/21/sn 29/22/c Concord, NH 30/17/0.24 28/0/pc 20/10/c Corpus Christi 63/35/0.00 70/43/s 67/44/pc Dallas 60/33/0.00 65/36/s 67/44/s Dayton 39/27/0.00 40/18/sn 29/21/c Denver 53/30/0.00 55/35/s 68/41/s Des Moines 53/28/0.00 38/25/sn 51/33/s Detroit 35/24/Tr 26/7/sn 21/1 3/c Duluth 36/33/0.02 20/1 6/c 34/27/sn El Paso 54/27/0.00 59/33/c 60/40/sh -6/-25/0.38 -13/-32/c -24/-39/s Fairbanks Fargo 35/25/0.00 25/22/c 43/27/c Flagstaff 48/28/0.00 52/24/s 48/32/sh Grand Rapids 38/29/Tr 24/9/sn 25/20/c Green Bay 39/30/0.00 21/11/c 27/23/sn Greensboro 48/33/0.39 54/36/s 49/30/r Harrisburg 41/32/0.14 40/22/pc 26/21/sn Harfford, CT 34/30/0.39 34/9/pc 24/15/c Helena 50/35/0.00 52/32/c 47/26/pc Honolulu 79/67/0.09 77/67/pc 78/68/pc Houston 62/35/0.00 67/42/s 62/46/pc Huntsville 50/33/0.05 54/35/sh 42/31/pc Indianapolis 39/20/0.00 38/17/sn 30/25/pc Jackson, MS 55/31/0.02 62/38/s 52/39/s Jacksonville 62/55/0.13 61/44/s 57/36/s
slifsx 7/12
ron /7
O
•
43/39/pc 61/47/r 78/62/pc 71/51/pc 91/71/s 41/23/s 70/56/pc 37/29/pc 67/43/c 38/30/sn 91/73/s 71/64/r 73/56/c 53/36/c 78/59/s 52/39/c 50/37/sh 38/26/sf 79/59/sh 71/62/pc
56/45/pc 66/50/pc 83/60/1
47/38/r 59/48/r 78/63/s 71/50/pc 92/71/s 41/15/c 67/54/pc 38/34/c 68/43/c 37/22/pc 93/76/pc 77/63/r 71/53/s 47/28/pc 78/59/s 47/37/pc 44/38/c 38/32/r 83/62/pc 71/61/pc 52/44/pc 60/44/pc 83/62/pc 80/69/c 59/45/s 50/36/r 54/27/s
80/69/c 60/44/s 46/39/c 53/25/s 87/72/c 87n2/pc
Yesterday Today Monday
City
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Litue Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, Wl Memphis
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W 45/42/0.54 45/35/sh 38/25/sn 59/27/0.00 45/27/pc 58/34/s 37/24/0.00 24/8/sn 23/16/c 68/46/0.00 71/46/s 64/48/pc 35/23/0.25 45/26/sh 35/26/c 57/27/0.04 45/27/pc 64/30/s 63/30/0.00 82/49/0.00 44/27/0.01 35/30/0.00 56/29/0.00 78/68/0.00
59/34/s 57/40/s 78/57/s 72/55/c
50/28/0.08 58/37/Tr 39/33/0.72 38/32/0.63 42/37/0.97 OklahomaCity 63/31/0.00 Omaha 55/25/0.00 Orlando 71/62/0.37 Palm Springs 79/53/0.00 Peoria 49/28/0.00 Philadelphia 39/33/0.71 Phoenix 77/50/0.00 Pittsburgh 30/27/0.12 Portland, ME 32/25/0.28 Providence 34/30/0.70 Raleigh 49/35/0.22 Rapid City 57/28/Tr Reno 59/25/0.00 Richmond 44/35/0.62 Rochester, NY 31/17/Tr Sacramento 51/45/0.00 Si. Louis 55/29/0.00 Salt Lake City 42/23/0.00 San Antonio 64/33/0.00 San Diego 79/50/0.00 Ssn Francisco 64/49/0.00 Ssn Jose 70/39/0.00 Santa re 45/17/0.00 Savannah 58/51/1.03 Seattle 58/51/0.13
51/32/sh 41/32/sf 64/44/s 57/42/s
Miami
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA
56/35/sh 49/36/s
39/24/s 28/21/sn 37/21/s 27/18/sn 51/38/s 48/33/r 58/33/s 70/42/s
43/29/pc 59/33/s 64/48/s 65/40/pc 80/55/s 68/51/sh 40/22/sn 37/31/c
42/25/s 29/24/sn 79/56/pc 65/56/sh 37/23/sn 30/18/sn 30/4/pc 21/11/pc
36/11/s 27/21/c 55/37/s 50/32/r 49/40/c 64/39/pc 61/30/s 59/34/s 53/36/s 43/31/r 2277/c 21/15/sn 59/41/pc 66/49/pc 45/25/sh 46/33/s 45/28/pc 47/30/pc 69/40/s 69/47/pc 76/58/pc 70/55/c 66/48/s 65/52/pc
71/43/s 68/49/pc 48/22/s 56/30/s 60/43/s 58/36/s 58/43/pc 58/46/s
35/28/c 49/29/s 48/33/pc 47/34/pc 47/26/sh 55/34/s 64/55/s 65/48/pc
75/54/pc 61/49/sh 58/30/s 65/38/s
50/35/s 35/30/sn 66/30/Tr 53/30/s 69/36/s 57/33/0.00 54/34/pc 53/32/s 75/50/0.00 77/54/pc 63/50/r
Wichita
Yskima Yuma 8
48/28/sh 39/31/pc 26/13/sn 30/27/sn
71/54/s 75/51/pc 42/30/Tr 29/20/sn 29/26/sn 42/29/0.00 27/19/c 40/27/c
Sioux Falls 42/28/Tr Spokane 41/34/0.01 Springfield, MO 57/25/0.00 Tampa 66/62/1.19 Tucson 71/45/0.00 Tulsa 62/24/0.00 Washington, DC 45/37/0.70
i
Amsterdam Athens
45/28/0.70 * * 2 1% * Boston 54/45/0.30 • 41/30 * uke „*„ /13 Auckland 74/64/0.00 *** / w York Baghdad 70/39/0.00 s* 9/24 Che n Bangkok 91/72/0.00 /2 * 52/4 I 9 0 ilsdelphis Beijing 37/27/0.04 w * * Sslt Lske ity 25 Beirut 72/55/0.00 h e hclvco L,.g,. 35/ Omah • Den 45/28 * * * Berlin 33/29/0.04 de/48 ingion 88 * 55/3 Lss V ss 50 Bogota 64/48/0.20 4oui 71/4 Kansas City Budapest 39/38/1.09 45/27 BuenosAires 88/64/0.00 Chsrlo Los An lss ~~etessh ' Csbo Ssn Lucss 68/58/0.00 5 • • L' Cairo 68/59/0.00 Phoen I'ea * Albuque ue k l shoms • At Calgary 52/39/0.00 • 79/56 5 34 3/-7 * „ „* II 0 51/ae 5 ae/40 Cancun 7592/0.30 uir inuhs 7 /58 • Daffs Dublin 45/33/0.00 57 7 I ea/3 Edinburgh 43/34/0.01 59/as +45/3 Geneva 39/36/0.32 • dsndu Harare 79/54/0.02 w Orleans 7/42 48 Hong Kong 68/59/0.01 Honolulu»M i Chihuahua 64/44 Istanbul 57/50/0.02 77/57 M'sm' 62/38 Jerusalem 68/52/0.00 Monte y 71/us 71/45 Johannesburg 83/58/0.08 Lima 79/69/0.08 Lisbon 57/48/0.00 Shown are today's noonpositions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 45/38/0.04 T-storms Rain S h owers S now F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 52/25/0.00 Manila 84/73/0.00 oe
~
TRAVEL WEATHER
OREGON WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. EAST:Clouds and ria some sun north of the Seasid umatiga TEMPERATURE Hood 55/35 BlueMountainstoday 60/46 Yesterday Normal Record RiVer Rufus • ermiston with patchy, morning Cannon High e4 42 B4' i n 2015 lington 55/38 portland 56/38 Meac am Losti ne 61/48 32' 25' -20'in 1949 fog; mostly partly Low 1 • W co 5 /36 di Q 51 / 49/ 2 9 EnterPrise sunny south. he Oaa • 49/30 Tigamo • • 55/ 7 PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Turning andy • 55/39 Mc innvig JosePh 9/40 Govee n t • u p i • He ppner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" out mostly sunnyand Condon /36 • 5 50 37 Record 2.00" in 1903 unusually mild today. Lincoln union 60/ Month to date (normal) 0.2 5" (1.25") Clear to partly cloudy 63/50 Sale •• pmy Granitee Year to date(normal) 0.25 " (1.25") tonight. 60/4 /37 'Baker C Newpo 49/27 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 31 " 8/42 63/49 • Mitch il 41/28 CamP Sh man Red n WEST:Areasof low 59/36 R SUN ANDMOON eu Yach 62/34 • John clouds and fog to 58/42 62/50 • Prineville Day 25 Today tario start; otherwise, 61/33 • Pa lina 55 / 3 3 7:30 a.m. 37 29 mostly sunny and Floren e • Eugene e Re d Brothers 56 32 5:05 p.m. Valee unusually mild today. Lq/49 Su iVere 63/37 10:26 a.m. 37/28 Nyssa • 60/ Ham ton 11:52 p.m. La plne J untura 37/ 2 8 Grove Oakridge • Burns OREGON EXTREMES F ull Las t 45/27 S
~
Mostly cloudy and mild
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
e
TH U RSDAY
I
Mecca Mexico City Montreal
Moscow Nairobi Nassau
New Delhi
Osaka Oslo
93/68/0.00 73/49/0.00 30/27/0.00 32/25/0.74 82/63/0.00 84/69/0.00 63/51/0.00 50/34/0.00 33/12/0.30 29/25/0.13 45/28/0.13
Ottawa Paris Rio de Janeiro 97ne/0.08 Rome 57/48/0.00 Santiago 90/55/0.00 Ssu Paulo 84/66/0.15 Sspporo 32/20/0.05 Seoul 45/20/0.00 Shanghai 61/43/0.00 Singapore 86/76/0'.00 Stockholm 30/14/0.15 Sydney 84/73/0.02 Taipei 75/50/0.00 Tel Aviv 76/47/0.00 Tokyo 46/39/0.00 Toronto 32/21/0.02 Vancouver 54/50/Tr Vienna 37/36/0.27 Warsaw 32/32/0.21
93/69/s 71/47/pc 9/-10/s 21/8/c 82/55/pc 78/63/s 64/44/c 51/41/pc 35/32/pc 9/-13/pc 42/35/pc 90/78/pc 54/38/c 88/57/s 86/69/1 34/26/pc 39/33/r 60/43/pc 8605/c 32/22/pc 93/68/s 73/61/pc 70/58/pc 52/44/pc 18/7/c 54/40/c 37/28/sn 34/27/sn
92/70/s 70/43/pc 7/0/pc 20/19/sf 83/54/c 78/61/pc 64/45/pc 56/46/r 47/32/r 6/-3/pc 46/35/r 93/78/t 52/36/s 89/58/s 87/69/1 39/31/c 47/24/c 53/41/sh 87/75/c 37/34/sn 74/67/sh 74/61/pc 67/54/pc 56/46/pc 19/8/c 52/44/pc 38/28/pc 32/22/pc
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IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Milestones, C2 Travel, C2-5 Puzzles, C6 THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/community
SPOTLIGHT
Presentations address suicide The Central Oregon Association of Psychologists, the Central Oregon Mental Health Promotion Grant Task Force and OSU-Cascades are holding suicide prevention presentations in Bendand Redmond on Monday and Tuesday. The presentations discuss the risk factors related to suicide, recognizing signs and getting help, and how a community can work together to help prevent suicide and suicide attempts. All community members, including mature young adults, are welcome to attend. The presentations are free. Registration is required. The Bend presentation will be at BendHigh School (230 NE6th St.) from 5:30to 7 p.m. Monday. TheRedmond presentation will be at Redmond High School (675 SW Rimrock Way) from 5:30 to 7 p.m. Tuesday. To register, go to www.suicidepreventiontrainings.eventbrite. com. For more information, email david. visiko©deschutes.org or call 541-388-6606.
• Introducing native milkweed plants could be the answerto saving this winged migrant By Tara Bannow The ~ Bulletin he way Tom Landis sees
als just can't do much about. "Like climate change. What are you going to do about it'? You can worry," said Landis,
Deschutes County is seeking applications for grants to local nonprofit organizations that promote or provide spay and neuter services; $12,500 is available for multiple awards to help Deschutes County pet owners who are unable to afford or access spay and neuter services. Applicants must be from an organization located in Deschutes County, designated by the IRS as a501(c)(3) tax-exempt organization and able to certify that grant funding will be used to benefit Deschutes County residents. Organizational stability, grant-funding objectives and the ability to access other financial support with grant funds will be used to evaluate applicants. Applications must be received in the Deschutes County Department of Administrative Services before 5 p.m. Friday. Grants are expected to beawarded by the end of February. To learn more email iudithu@deschutes.org or visit www.deschutes. Ol'g.
— From staff reports
eEII,
-'
it
e~
ing as a nursery specialist for theU.S.ForestServiceforthree decades. But there is one issue Landis
office, 50 NW Bond St., Suite 4
has found he can have an impact on, and it happens to
Cost:Free Contact:www.onda.org
be one he holds dear: the dis-
appearing monarch butterfly. For roughly the past decade,
first event of the ONDA's High Desert Lecture Series.
scientist s have observed de-
clines in the insect's population,
Landis' work is already hav-
particularly in the past three years. They attribute much of
Submitted photo
theblame to the powerful herbicides farmers spray on their
Tom Landis, retired U.S. Forest Service nursery specialist, will present on the biology of the monarch butterfly at the Oregon
fields to cut down on milkweed,
Natural Desert Association on Monday.
ing an impact in Southern Or-
egon. In the first year he built his way station, several monarchs passed
the monarch's food source, hab-
life Service recently announced
Grants for pet nonprofits
What:Tom Landis, retired nursery specialist with the U.S. Forest Service, will talk about monarch butterflies and how the public can help ensure their survival When:7 p.m., Monday Where:Oregon Natural Desert Association's Bend
who retired in 2004 after work-
Central Oregon Community College is screening the film "My So-Called Enemy" from 4 to 6 p.m. Thursday. The film is about six Palestinian and Israeli teenagers who attended a women's leadership program called Building Bridges for Peace in New York, and how they reconciled their experience during the program with their realities backat home in the Middle East. Jessica Hammerman, an assistant professor of history at COCC, will lead a discussion after
call 541-383-7412.
Ifyougo
the world that individu-
Film explores peace efforts
The screening is free, is open to the public, and will be held in Hitchcock Auditorium in Pioneer Hall on the Bend COCC Campus (2600 NWCollege Way). For information,
r'
ronmental problems in
itat and breeding area.
the film.
~
it, there are a lot of envi-
The problem has become so severe, the U.S. Fish and Wildit's considering a reviewthat might land the black-and-orangewinged butterfl y on the endangered species list. Lots of nature enthusi-
through, and he even found a arebestbecause they're adapted
requests for seeds.
to the environment.
"Even seed from the Medford area would notbe suitable for
Monday, Landis will speak at the Oregon Natural
Bendbecause the climate is so
Desert Association's
much different," he said. So he did it the hard way: He
headquarters about
went out-
asts in the U.S. have fought
back against the insect's decline by planting their own so-called milkweed way stations for monarchs to stop at as they fly south for the winstde
near
south for the winter, with some
flying more than 3,000 miles from Canada and parts of the
February, found some dried up milkweed plants and dug up
U.S. to Mexico.
the rhizomes beneath them.
his backyard after readingup on the subject. Most of his career was in reforestation efforts
, >', ...
caterpillar of
the species, Landis said. Before that,
he had never seen one near his home. See Monarch /C5
I
why the monarch
population is declining and how people can build be the
known forbeingone of the only species ofbutterfly that flies
Landis, who lives in Medford, startedbuilding way stations in
'i'tIW.:
their own way stations to help. It will
ter and return. Monarchs are
Shortly after he retired,
.P
' '
his house in
Rhizomes are underground stems that produce plants'
's $
root systems. He then planted the rhizomes in his backyard
(
and waited for the milkweed
to grow. Now, he's growing and growingnativeplants, so he milkweed and collecting local had some experience growing milkweed seeds to distribute milkweed. Unfortunately, findto others who wish to do the inglocal milkweed seeds wasn't same. After the local paper easy. Landis knew from his For- ran an article on his project, est Service days thatlocal seeds Landis said he got about 200
A monarch butterfly on native milkweed near John Day Fossible Beds National Monument in June 2004. Sue Anderson / Submitted photo
"Even (milkweed)seed from the Medford area would not be suitable for Bend because the climate ts so much different." — Tom Landis, retired U.S. Forest Service nursery specialist on the need for native milkweed seeds
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Getting in rh hm with Nashville g y . ! • Grand Ole Opry:spiritual shrine to music By Alice Short
a hot August night.
Los Angeles Times
I came to this city in north-central Tennessee for
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — This city is blanketed with churches. Downtown Presbyterian, Cross Point, First Baptist, Mid-
town Fellowship. But many of those who come here seek a different kind of spiritual kin-
a conference and figured I'd better take advantage of some
of the local offerings during my four days here. Although my personal playlist doesn't include much country music, I thought it
ship that can be found only at local shrines devoted to music: would be disrespectful to
backstage tours and dinner. The Grand Ole Opry House, which opened in 1974, is about a 20-minute drive from downtown Nashville. It's just
down the road from the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center, a sprawling complex that includes several restaurants and bars, a spa, the General Jackson Show-
from the Opry Mills shopping mall, where, before a show,
Grand Ole Opry House, the Country Music Hall of Fame
Opry, a live radio show and
you can catch a movie in Imax
musical extravaganza that
or check out hunting gear at
started nine decades ago as
Bass Pro. "Subtlety" is not a word that
in order of importance, purists
the "WSM Barn Dance" and has featuredentertainers as diverse as the Fruit Jar Drink-
might point to the Ryman,
ers and Bill Monroe and his
which was built in 1892 and
Blue Grass Boys, Boxcar Wil-
housed the Grand Ole Opry
lie and Carrie Underwood. I bought tickets for the show to the Ryman from November only, although you can buy through January.) package deals that include See Nashville/C6
from 1943 until 1974. But it was the relatively new Opry House that beckoned on
'lt 0N.
tel rooms. It's across the street
visit and not experience the
If these places were ranked
.,-. j .'e ~i
boat and more than 2,700 ho-
Ryman Auditorium and the and Museum, and the Historic RCA Studio B.
0l-
comes to mind as you make your way to the performance hall. (Shows are staged at the Opry House from February through October; they move
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C2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
M IQESTONr
~
s+ L7
Forms f o r e ngagementw,eddinga,nniversaryorbirthdayannouncementsareavailableatTheBulletint,yyysytrChandlerttve .s,endo,rby emai l i ng milestones®bendbulletin.com. Forms and photos must be submitted within one month of the celebration. Contact: 541-633-2117.
is e ears,ma e rien s
ANNIVERSARIES
We are not meant to be alone, though there will always be misanthropes who don't like
By Barton Goldsmith Tribune News Service
on some subjects.
relate to or bond with is human nature and rooted deeply in our DNA. When we long for friendships with others gen- contact with others and have little or none at erally live longer and fuller
To make or be a good friend, you have to keep your values high and extend yourself if someone you know is in need. By just answering a simple question or helping a person lift a box, you can
lives. However, sometimes
start a conversation and cre-
The energy you get from all the people who care about you is a gift. People who
other people. The desire to have someone to
have close relationships and
all, it can make for a very depressing life.
it can be very scary to try to make a friend. It's important t o r e a lize make a friend is to be one, how very much we need one and I agree. When people another to get along in this do nice things for each othworld. And I firmly believe er, everyone feels good, and that we are meant to interact trust begins to develop. Most and have relationships with friendships start off slowly one another. If not, then why and grow over time. A relaare there so many people on tionship or friendship that the planet? fires up too quickly may tend W e are not meant to b e to burn out at the same pace. alone, though there will alWorkplaces can be a great ways be misanthropes who place to start, as most people don't like other people. The want to grab a bite or have a desire to have someone to re- drink after their day is done,
s
John and Norma Brenton
Brenton
Brenton, of Tualatin; and two
grandchildren.
John and Norma Brenton,
of Redmond, will celebrate their 50th wedding anniversary Feb. 1. The couple were married Feb. 1, 1965,
Mr. Brenton retired from
sales at Sysco Food Service in 2009. Mrs. Brenton owned
and operated Blue Sky Mailing and retired in 2008. They in El Paso, Texas. They have enjoy camping, hiking and two children, Jill (and Jason) spending time with their Strandquist, of Chandler, Ar- grandchildren. They have izona, and Scott (and Leslie) lived in Redmond for 20years.
late to or bond with is human
so it can be an easy way to
nature and rooted deeply in our DNA. When we long for
find someone to hang with. It will be easy for you to make
contact with others and have l ittle or none at all, it c a n
c onversation b e cause y o u
— Dr. Barton Goldsmith, a psychotherapist in Westlahe Village, California, is the author of "The Happy Couple: How to Mahe Happiness a Habit One Little Loving Thing at a Time."
opinioncan make for a much
more interesting conversation, but remember never
If you feel jaded or insecure, when you get to
"I'm trying to get into some
that date, it's still important that you exude
new activities, but for now,
The future groom is the son of Alan and Carie Mace, of Bend. He is a 2008 graduate of Mountain View High School and a 2012 graduate
back out there. Some of us
sX.
ver Resort. A reception will follow. The future bride is the daughter of Ron and Judy
results will be beneficial to
If you're looking for a con- both of you. It's also importversational topic that's less ant to remember that when personal, you can talk about you feel the need, you can w hat's happening i n t h e always reach out to someone world. There's always plenty you know who cares about to talk about. And being in you. By pushing past your agreement isn't necessary. fears, you will develop great In fact, not being of the same relationships.
In high school, when the ofconfidence. entire calculus class looked some level clueless about the necessity of integrals in our everyday lives,our teacher, Mr. Opre, anything here sounds as if it not driven by a psychologtold us to "talk the talk and might be true, then I'm going ical boost that could come walk the walk" until we start- to give the same advice that from the treatment's cosmetic ed to actually understand the sage Mr. Opre gave: Talk nature. how this strange new way of the talk and walk the walk. If smiling ca n a c tualcalculating the area actually Eventually, things will start ly make you happier, can worked. What ever happened to catch up with you. talking the talk and walkto length t i mes w i dth? At T here was an a r t icle i n ingthe walk make you more first, I didn't know what he Scientific American in 2011 confident in your dating life? was talking about, but what called, "Smile! It Could Make I'd venture to say yes. Most he meant was that we need- You Happier." Doesn't this things in life are all about ed to go through the motions seem counterintuitive? Don't framing. Let's say someone (as in, just follow the mathe- you smilebecause you feel asks, "What do you like to matical steps) until it started happy, not the other way do for fun?" You have two to feel as if we knew what we around? Maybe not. Psychol- o ptions: Yo u c o u l d l o o k were doing. And slowly but ogists at the University of down on yourself, saying surely, his advice worked, Cardiff in Wales found that something like, "Oh, I don't and I w a s c a lculating th e people whose ability to frown know. I guess I like to do my area under a curve as if it is diminished by cosmetic bo- crossword puzzle every day were my job. tox injections are happier, on and play lots of Words with What does all of this have average, than people who can F riends. That's a b out i t . " to do with dating? Some of us frown. The researchers gave Or, you could own it, even if are jaded by the dating pro- a questionnaire to 25 women, you're not feeling it quite yet. cess, and some of us are feel- half of whom had received ing insecure about getting frown-inhibiting botox injec-
Hayden Maceand Katie Paradis
Katie Paradis and Hayden Mace, both of Seattle, plan to marry Sept. 6, 2015, at Sunri-
for some of your coworkers?
Online dating: Gofrom cluelessto confident Tribune News Service
ENGAGEMENTS
mend you make it your entire little. interchange. People get to So the next time you see know each other by asking someone you'd like to get questions and sharing sto- to know better, look for an ries about their lives. Have o pportunity to say so b y you told your story to others? lending a hand or sharing What questions do you have something meaningful. The
already have work in commake for a very depressing mon. Office gossip is always to put other people down or life. available to get a chat start- write them off just because They say the best way to ed, though I don't recom- they have a different outlook
By Erika Ettin
Paradis — Mace
ate a friendship, but you have to put yourself out there a
earned a bachelor's degree in accounting. She is a CPA for Deloitte Accounting Firm in Seattle.
of Linfield College in Mc2007 graduate of Mountain Minnville, where he earned a View High School and a 2011 bachelor' sdegree in finance. graduate of Linfield College He is a marketing manager in McMinnville, where she for Amazon.com. Paradis, of Bend. She is a
tions. The botox r ecipients
may feel as if we lost a sense reported that the chief result of ourselves in our last rela- was feeling happier, beyond tionship, so we need to get any increase in attractiveback into the things we love ness, suggesting that t he to do. but what were they? If
main emotional effects were
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I've rediscovered my love for crossword puzzles and word games!" Which person would you rather date? If you feel jaded or insecure, when you get to that date, i t ' s s t i l l i mp o r t ant
that you exude some level of confidence. Rather than
the person across the table thinking, "Ugh — she really doesn't think very highly of herself," or "She must have been on one too many bad dates recently," he'll instead think, "Wow — I c an't be-
lieve she made time for me tonight!" So, talk the talk, walk the
walk, and calculate some integrals. (OK, that last one is optional.) Thanks, Mr. Opre! — Eriha Ettin is the founder of A Little Nudge, where she helps others navigate the often intimidating world of online dating.
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• Hotel packages to celebrateboth weekendholidays
The Bulletin NI
yst
By Shivani Vora New Yorh Times News Service
V alentine's-themed g e t aways are all about romance; Presidents
Day
f~n
(, tt
wee k e nd
f orward. But t hi s year t h e
holidays fall on the same weekend, and hotels around the country ar e o f fering packages that celebrate both
occasions. The Park Hyatt New York, for example, has "I Love You
IAartba 'i,
X 57," which includes suite ac,I commodations, seats at Carnegie Hall for a Valentine's Day performance of musical theater classics (Jessye Norman is among the singers), a couples massage, a dinner at in Syria, Virginia, has a twoits restaurant, a champagne night package (Feb. 13 and tasting and a personalized 14) with breakfast, dinners dessert class (from $2,500 for on both evenings — includa night). ing one highlighting SouthW illiamsburg Lodge i n ern comfort food — and a Williamsburg, Virg i n ia, guided horseback trail ride has a "Couples Getaway (from $295). Package" with breakfast, a A more extravagant expecarriage ride, admission to rience is offered at the Omni the Revolutionary City and Bedford Springs Resort in Art M u seums o f C o l onial Bedford Springs, PennsylWilliamsburg, a jazz per- vania, with the "Treat Your formance and champagne First Lady" package that inand chocolates (from $250 a cludes private jet service to night). and from Washington area Graves Mountain Lodge
airports,four spa services, a
INBS
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tends to be more straight-
MI LESTONE G UI
• L
' rwn
AAA Travel
Awbrey Glen Golf Club v
New York Times News Service
golf lesson and a tour via a
the resident historian; and
ride in a horse-drawn carresort's 2,200 acres of forest riage around the 10,000-acre (from $10,000 for two nights). grounds (from $85,000). Even more is the "PresidenThe two holidays coincidtial Romance at the Green- ing means that the already utility terrain vehicle of the
brier" at the West Virginia
travel-heavy Presidents Day
resort, where couples stay three nights in the two-floor
weekend will be busier, according to Adam WeissenPresidential Suite, which has berg,the head of travel, hoshosted numerous presidents. pitality and leisure at Deloitte These guests are served a &Touche. dinner cooked by the exec-
"Hotels will see an uptick,
utive chef, Bryan Skelding; taste chocolate desserts; get
but instead of packages being more family-focused as they usually are, they will emphasize romance," he said.
a tour covering the resort's p residential h i s t or y wit h
Bend Metro park st Recreation District
The BendTrolley Bend Wedding & Formal Black Butte Ranch The DD Ranch DeschutesCounty Fair St Expo Center Faith Hope Charity Vinyards & Events
Idas Cupcake Cafe LakeCreek Lodge
M. Jacobs McMenamins Old St. Francis School
Northwest Medi Spa Salon Je Danae SocaillyYours Taps Mobile Pub rIM Dress The Soap Box Widgi Creek Golf Club
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C3
ius i ar en:ma ica mixo c aos,or er By Doug Oster Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
VERONA, Italy — A huge angry stone face looks down on visitors through giant spires of cypress trees at Giusti Garden. The intimidating
mascherone was originally designedtobreathe fire,probably the only thing that could make it more foreboding. It was just one of the surprises I
and 32 other gardeners found on a 10-day trip in September to visit gardens of Northern
Italy. Gently sloping trails led to a grotto at the top of the
mascherone. On the way, we saw an array of beautiful plants, some of which I'd
never seen before. A hummingbird moth danced from flower to flower, gathering nectar fro m l o w-growing blue plumbago that softens the trail's edges. Pale pink begonias grew wild along an ancient rock wall next to
a stone bench amid swaying white windflowers. After the short trek, we were rewarded
by stunning views of the main garden path and Verona itself.Shakespeare setthree of
his plays in the city, including "Romeo and Juliet." The Guisti family has owned the palace since the 16th century, and the gardens were created in 1580.
Photos by Doug Oster/ Pittsburgh Post-Gazette /TNS
ABOVE: In one corner of the Giusti Garden, rows of old, clay pots are planted with beautiful lantana. TOP: The view of Verona, Italy, from the top of the Giusti Garden is breathtaking. This little grotto overlooks the city.
We reached the s ummit at just the r ight t i me. The
cheerful, high-pitched songs h ave been e l i minated b eof birds hidden in the thick cause they aren't a cultivated green foliage joined at noon species. with those of church bells, Our descent offered ancreating a lovely symphony. o ther different view of t h e As we worked our way down- center garden. Cypress trees hill along a winding stone reached for th e sky, creatpath, we caught another bit of ing axis points for the long music — the sounds of a piano paths. Neatly trimmed topidrifting out of the windows ary, a maze and huge, beauof an adjoining school. It was tifully planted containers are magical. all things expected in a great One thing I
l o v e a b out Italian garden such as this
pots filled with different col-
ored lantana blooms, perched single file on a weathered rock wall. The simple beauty of the presentation was spellbinding. The fact that some of the pots were cracked only
added to the effect. As our tour ended, I looked over to see common orange
lantana mingling with statuesque white anemone that danced in the breeze. Behind
many European gardeners is one. We could get a close look them, some pink hibiscus the way they embrace weeds, at the many statues or take a swayed in consort. l etting them b loom i n
seat and listen to the cascad-
This combination embod-
right spots. The tiny flowers ing water of the fountains. of wild yellow mustard were As we kept walking, we
the
ied the feeling of this placechaos and order living togeth-
the perfect foil for the blue
er. In this garden, the first big
were greeted with a n other
blossoms of the plumbago. In surprise: Only in Italy could a formal garden, they would you find a long line of clay
one we visited, it was the perfect mix.
A view from on top of the mascherone at the Giusti Garden.
Family travelfive: Heedcall of thewild By Lynn O'Rourke Hayes The Dallas Morning News
Whoa! (That's a real musher term.) Take time to learn
about the animals and commands that are part of a dog-sled adventure in a scenic location. Here are five to consider. 1. Paradise Valley, Montana: Lead dogs Thunder and Quila will pull your sled through the snowy wonderland of the Absaroka Mountain wilderness east of Montana's scenic Paradise Valley.
Layer up and choose a half- or full-day adventure. Your family will learn how to encourage these Alaskan huskies along the traiL A three-day mushing school isalso offered. Later,
relax in the steamy waters at Chico Hot Springs Resort or take a horse-drawn carriage from the historic inn.
ness of Michigan's Upper Pen- ing for a sled team above the insula. Spend a few hours or Arctic Circle. In the summer, overnight with your team for helicopter in to the majestic a star-filled adventure. Add Chugach Mountains and onto to the winter adventure with Punch Bowl Glacier to enjoy snow tubing, skiing or snow- a scenic ride powered by sled shoeing to the ice caves in dogs. nearby Marquette. All-incluContact: a l askarailroad. sive packages are available. com; travelalaska.com Contact: n a t ureskennel. 5. Troy, New Hampshire: com Meet the sled dogs from the 3. Quebec, Canada: Dog Muddy Paw Kennel while sledding is popular through- staying at th e In n a t E a st out the snowy regions of Que- Hill Farm, a working farm in bec. Choose a tour that lasts southern New Hampshire. several hours or one that lasts With Mount Monadnock as several nights. A guided, sev- your backdrop, help harness en-night adventure will give the team ahead of a 30-minute you the chance to sleep in a ride into the woods. Throughteepee, in a rustic cabin or in out your stay, hang out with more luxurious digs. For those the animals and collect eggs, ready to expend a little more groom the pony, and help energy, try ski pulka, a com- milk the cow and goat. The bination of dog sledding and all-inclusive experience incross-country skiing. cludes three meals and an exContact: b o n j ourquebec. tensive list of family-friendly com activities. 4. Fairbanks, Alaska: JourContact: 800- 2 42-6495; ney aboard Alaska Railroad's east-hill-farm.com
Contact: Chicohotsprings. com; absarokadogsledtreks. com 2. McMillan, M ichigan: Aurora Winter Train to see Meet seven-time Iditarod fin-
the snow-covered Last Fron-
isher Ed Stielstra, his wife,
tier and embark on a dog-sledding voyage. Travel from Fairbanks to Coldfoot, near
Tasha, and their team of 135 A laskan huskies. D r iv e a
dog team or relax in the sled the Gates of the Arctic Nationthrough the pristine wilder- al Park, to learn about car-
SOLUTION To TODAY'SLAT CROSSWORD E O P U A B O S G G I N G E R C A R 0 T H A T L G OO G L E E R R S A I N G E A R B G A G G L EO F M 0 I L L E MA T H I S H A Y H I N T O X E Y ES R I G 0 R S L D O G M A N A EMO G U E S N E T T V A L F A T H E R E A D M E G C A V I A R A S P A R E S S C E D A U R B R A SOB
S H R I L L
A R I G RO A T E S
E B G E 0 I N B A O R LA T B S N O R M I E A
N A T A G U H T S S K H E U G G L I E R A V E E S E V S E C L N OA I G A N D E L E I N L O G G A G O R E P R G E O U E O N R F E
L I B O R R A E S S S H H A E G R B A S R A I N P A O S G T O E T
CROSSWORD IS ON C6
A L A L A V 0 T E D A R R I E N A A N S E T G P A 0 B O E S N U G L E R A L D H N A E E N0 N AM E G G A G E E A GA L T O D O G G S N L E S LOAN E O R G E S E E S HOS T
1/25/15
— Lynn O'Rourke Hayes is the editor of FamilyTravebeom.
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S JUMBLE
3'95BX4X Answer: ALPACA D E FACE L O P PED BREACH H I GHLY RE V ERT When the librarian gave her new
employee instructions, she gave her an-
ALPHABETICAL ORDER JUMBLE IS ON C6
SOLUTION TO TODAY'S SUDOKU 9 43 2 8 1 7 6 5 8 1 78 6 3 5 9 4 2 5 62 7 9 4 8 1 3 3 57 9 1 8 6 2 4 I
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C4
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
ro,no a o , owar renewa in exin on By Andrew Simmons
(opidells.com), and Kentucky Mudworks (kentuckymudResidents of M e ntelle, a works.com), a ceramics stuneighborhood on the east dio and supply store. side of Lexington, Kentucky, A big new draw is National once drove right past Nation- Provisions, a culinary comal Avenue, a half-mile street plex housed in a former bothemmed in by railroad tracks tling factory. The vibe is equal and the hum of traffic on U.S. parts industrial and r u stic, 60. appointed with midcentury Now they can leave their furniture finds. cars at home. Owned by a Lexington naIn recent years, this city tive, Andrea Sims, and her of 309,000 has seen the area French husband, Krim Bousurrounding National Ave- g halem, restaurateurs who nue undergo a revitalization left New York City for KenNew York Times News Service
that has transformed it into
tucky in 2008, National Provi-
the kind of walkable, shop- sions opened in late 2013 and pable district that is not com- is growing into its location mon in a Southern city of this incrementally. On one end of size. Adjacent to downtown, the vast building is National the once rundown area now Provisions Beer Hall, decois a vibrant corridor that is
rated with mounted antlers
home to a 16,000-square-foot and featuring an expansive, food emporium with a bou- well-organized list of brews langerie, beer hall and bras- and a communal, refurbished serie. The area also has a factory table surrounded by gluten-free juice bar, a yoga shelves of beer. On the other studio and a barbecue spot. side of the building, National The rise of National Ave- Boulangerie, striking with its nue can largely be attributed black-and-gold diamond-patto one community-minded t erned floor an d r e d t r i m , developer, Greg Walker, who sells macarons, mini-eclairs is the landlord for a number and baguettes. Stacks of Parof the establishments. Walk-
er Properties has purchased
is Match magazines sit in the b athroom. C u stomers f i n -
Photos by Luke Sharrett 1 The New York Times
Deer antlers adorn taps in the beer hall inside National Provisions, on National Avenue in Lexington, Kentucky. In recent years, the area surrounding a revitalized National Avenue has been transformed into a walkable, shoppable district uncommon for a Southern city of
ished with their snacks can 300,000. lots using its own funds and browse a few rows of regional refurbished the aging build- specialties. ings once dedicated to light Occupying the heart of the Lexington is well-known for its thoroughbred industry. space, Bluegrass Brasserie racetrack, Keeneland; centuries-old mansions; Among the newcomers to opened inDecember, featurthe corridor are Dry Art hair ing fresh oysters and dishes and the University of Kentucky's storied salon (dryartlex.com), an in- informed by the horse coun- basketball program. dustrial space with futuristic try landscape: duck confit, shampoo stations; the yoga but with dumplings. Charstudio Centered (centeredlex. cuterie, cheese and fish count- University o f Ken t u cky's right. "We take great responsibilcom); an acclaimed quarter- ers will follow, along with a storied basketball program. ly, Story Magazine (storythe- small wine store and a gro- Here, as in the making of its ity in changing the landscape magazine.com) and Latitude cery offering local produce signature bourbon and barbe- forever," Walker said. "This (latitudelex.com), a Medic- and artisanal products. cue, urban renewal happens organic growth may have aid-funded work and display Lexington is well-known on a small scale and more taken us 10 years, but the life space for artists with disabil- for it s t h oroughbred race- slowly than some residents span of these buildings is 150. ities. They joined Opidell's, a track, K eeneland; centu- would like. But Walker is bid- Ayear is aspeckof sand. We Duck confit with dumplings, served in the Bluegrass Brasserie at 2-year-old vintage boutique ries-old mansions; and the ing his time to get the mix just don't mind waiting." National Provisions. many of the street's empty
The art, challengesof building asnow hotel,,"-,::...,CRC Inside
••
By Elaine Glusac
TheBulletin
By their very nature, snow
www.AgateBeaehMotel.eom Private,vintage,oceanfront~getaway N wport, O~R 1 0' ' 755-- 7 4
the logistics in building, furnishing and operating a hotel made of snow, staying at one can be expensive. This winter, the Four Seasons Resort
CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's
New York Times News Service
hotels are ephemeral. Given
' NORTHWEST
M AG A Z QIE
teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
;tite SeiKmotel
and Residences Whistler in
British Columbia will offer "winter glamping," a night in
Spectacular Ocean Views
a custom-made snow hotel
From Every Room.
near the Pemberton Ice Cap in the Coast Mountains. The fee,
$79,000 for up to four people, indudes activities, meals and round-trip helicopter transportation. (Most guests stay for one night, but longer stays are an option.) Doug Washer, president and chief executive of Head-Line
• o
• •
e e
•
• iiI Ms/
Mountain Holidays, and his colleagues will create the hotel,
drawing on 15 years' experience building snow structures in the backcountry near Whis-
tler. (It is scheduled to open this month.) Private clients have
, C. The New York Times / Submitted photo
Receive 20% off room raMewhen you bring this ad and donate two cans of food for each night of your stay.
Visitors in an ice cave near the Pemberfon Ice Cap in British Columbia. This winfer, the Four Seasons Resort and Residences Whistler in British Columbia will offer "winter glamping," a night in a custom-made snow hotel near the Pemberton Ice Cap, for a fee of $79,000.
Valid Sun-Thurs, Now - Feb 12, 2015.*
included the musician Seal, for
Yachats, Oregon
whom Washer built a snow vil-
la in which the singer proposed way that the top of the door is to the model Heidi Klum in 2004.
Following are edited excerpts from a conversation with Washer.
always lower than the bed in-
• We have to c ut t h e m
artistry we've put into them, • down or they would stay but the fun part is you get to
side. That creates a cold sink so standing a long, long time. that the cold air gets trapped in We use chain saws to cut the the doorway, and warm air gets roofs, which cave in. It is a trapped inside where people little sad, given the work and
OvERLEAI=LoDGE s 3PA
redesign it every year with new ideas, and people have suggestions, which makes it fun for us.
800-338-0507 overleaflodge.com o verleafspa.com (*Offer a not vslid with other discounts.)
sleep. So that means we aren't
Q
• How do you build a hotel putting people in minus-30 to• from snow and make it 40-deyee mummy bags where comfortable? you sleep alone. That's not the • The structures are very point of the romantic snow ho• small and intimate; small tel. We prewarm the bed with from ahotelresident'sperspec- down duvets and flannel sheets.
A
tive, not from a backcountry
perspecti ve.There are igloos, which everyone is familiar with. There are quinzees-
We call it a snow hotel. It's
• Do you build bathrooms? always get a giggle A •• We from people when it's
as good as it is. Sometimes we
fly in facilities with flush toilets and running water based on request. On a general basis, they are portables and have to be lightweight enough to fly.
until we get it at a consisten-
I I98h C OSme C S 8au d e P~ 0
do you build your Q •• Where snow structures?
Fragrantly yours,
structural integrity, plus insula-
like t o A•• Wpicke typically a spot higher in the
Sherry
insulation value, but snow has
mountains that has an over-
a great deal of insulation qual- view of the entire ice cap so ity. We get snow to the point you have this ice field with where we can build, decorate mountains jutting out of it. and shape it and yet design it in We like to be not so much on such a way that the chambers the ice cap, but overviewing it. are very comfortable. It's a full dome and looks a
Q • What happens when the
little like an igloo but it's much • season is over? Do the larger and designed in such a rooms just melt away?
~
fllaca u e
J
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cy we like and can build with. The buildings have enormous tion by trapping air. Ice has no
er a
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• What about basic needs?
made from hollowed-out snow piles — which no one is famil- time to go to the washroom iar with, and then there are ice because they are always surhotels. We fall into the middle prised that the quality of the category. facilities in the backcountry is the most comfortable, warm and elaborate snow structure you can spend an evening in. You can't engineer snow, but we play with it and process it
It's time to think about Valentine's Day!
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Expiration 2/14/2015
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C5
Luxury goes tosea: Suite costs$5,000 per person a night I
By Hannah Sampson
•
of luxury," said Osinski, who splits her time between Regent Seven Seas Cruis- Coral Springs, Florida, and es has unveiled plans for Bath, Maine. what it is calling the "most Osinski said she doesn't luxurious ship ever built." expect the price point of the One of the key features Regent Suite to scare cruisof the Seven Seas Explor- ers away. "I think we're going to er, launching in summer of 2016, is a massive two-bed- have the opposite problem," room suite w i t h b u i l t-in she said. "I'm anticipating spa and eye-popping price: having clients call, and what $5,000 per person per night. I'll be looking for is not even There will be one suite the itinerary so much as in the new "Regent Suite" trying to find time with the category. suite available." "There's nothing else like P assengers wil l h a v e this in the cruise industry at three restaurantsto choose all," said Jason Montague, from: steakhouse Prime 7, president and chief operat- main dining room Compass ing officer of Doral, Flori- Rose and La Veranda, with da-based Regent Seven Seas a buffet for breakfast and Cruises, who referred to the lunch and fine-dining expe3,875-square-f oot offering rience for dinner. as "over the top." The vessel will be the first Miami Herald
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Tom Landis developedthis monarch way station in Central Point between March and April 2014. It contains two species of native milkweed and nectar plants. Landis said he found several monarch caterpillars there last fall.
In addition to the in-room
Monarchs
spa area and u nlimited
new ship since 2003 for Regent Seven Seas Cruises,
Continued from C1 Last year, he said, he found more than30 monarch cater-
which was acquired late last a glass-enclosed sitting area year by Norwegian Cruise with 270-degree views. L ine Holdings. Wh ile i t s By comparison, the larg- three other ships have got-
pillars, saw monarchs almost
est suite Regent currently
daily in August and September and released around 20 mon-
offers is the 2,002-square- since 2008, Regent has been f oot Master Suite on t h e facing demand for a new Seven Seas Mariner, which build — especially as comis selling for nearly $1,650 petitors such as Seabourn a night per person for a sev- have added tonnage at a en-night sailing in Alaska. much faster pace. The smallest suites on SevMontague said the decien Seas Explorer are 356 sion to build a ship wasn't square feet. driven by competition but On Regent, fares include by customer feedback. " We follow ou r o w n round-trip air, al l r e staurants, wine and liquor, shore march," he said. "It was our excursions at every port and guests who were telling us gratuities. they were ready for a new Also adding to the luxu- build." ry experience, the company The ship is under consaid: Passengers will have struction at the Fincantieri plenty of room. Regent said shipyard in Italy. that the 56,000-ton ship will It is scheduled to launch carry 750 guests, giving it in July 2016 with a 14-day the highest space ratio in the voyage from Monte Carcruise industry. lo to Venice and remain in C ruise specialist J u l i e Europe for its first sailing Osinski, who owns a Cruise season. Planners-American ExWhen Regent announced press franchiseand sails the ship order in 2013, the frequently on Regent, said company said the contract she and other fans of the price was about $450 milline have been waiting "for a lion, but Montague said the long time" to see the newest final tally would be known offering. in 2016. "We're looking forward to "It's going to be an interwhat's supposed to be just esting number at the end," an incredible new standard he said.
treatments, the suite boasts
arch butterflies from enclo-
sures he had built when they were caterpillars to protect them from predators.
He now hopes to grow the same movement in
C entral
Oregon. "We're trying to take what I've learned here and kind of
ii>t Itii iiii iiii iiil IIII IIII IIII IIII lll
mimic the same thing there,"
Landis said. The way stations provide
MM
food, shelter and water. Mon-
arch caterpillars eat the milkweed plants, whereas adult monarchs feed on nectar plants
Submitted photo
such as gray rabbit brush, gold- Monarch caterpillars feed only on milkweed plants. The caterpillar shown is among 25 monarch catenrod and aster, according erpillars and eggs Tom Landis found in his backyard way station. He raised most of the caterpillars to to an article Landis and two
become butterflies and released them.
co-authors wrote last year in Forest Nursery Notes. To pro-
vide water, people should bury the milkweed they found that a shallow bird bath basin or the they're storing until they're saucerfrom a large pot.They ready to do restoration plantshould also be sure not to have ing in the area. Unlike Landis, any pesticides in or around the Horning said the Forest Serway station, as they're deadly to vice can't distribute seeds to pollinating insects, Landis and the public. Central Oregonians his team wrote.
interested in building their own
Landis has been partnering way stations should contact with local organizations to cre- local nurseries to see ifthey ate way stations along a drain- have locally sourced milkweed age and a bike trail that run seeds. He doesn't recommend from Ashland through Med- taking seeds from existing ford to Grants Pass. But he'll milkweed plants, as they're also encourage people to build already small in number and them in their ownbackyards. are located along roadsides, Here in Central Oregonwhere collecting them could be heeding the call last summer dangerous. from President Obama to proAlthough milkweed seeds mote the health of pollinating canbe purchased online, Horninsects, induding monarchsing said non-native milkweed Matt Horning, a geneticist with species might not survive in the the U.S. Forest Service based in local environment if they're naBend, traveled around the re- tive to, say, Pennsylvania. gion to survey where milkweed In some cases, planting grows naturally. Central Ore- non-native milkweed spegon isn't known for being an cies can even be harmful, as area with much milkweed, but demonstratedin a recent case Horning said he and his team in southern Texas and on the found more than 30 patches U.S. Gulf Coast that a team of of varying sizes, mostly a spe- scientists wrote about in the cies called Asdepias speciosa, journal Proceedings of the Royor showy milkweed, and one al Society B. People in those called Asdepias fascicularis, areas planted milkweed in an or narrowleaf milkweed. Last effort to boost monarch popusummer, he said, they even lations. The problem was, they found a caterpillar on one of the used a tropical milkweed variplants, proving that monarchs ety that survives year-round, are breeding here. which ultimately caused more "It' snotsuper-common here, monarchs tobecome infected but there's more out there than with a parasite known to shortwe think," he said, "and peo- en their lifespan. ple are really passionate about That wouldn't be an issue in trying to help out and find the Oregon, where the milkweed milkweed. It's a project people would freeze during the wincan really getbehind." ter and the monarchs would Horning and his team col- head south anyway, Landis lectedthousands ofseedsfrom said. If it's all that's available,
ten $150 milhon in upgrades
"We're looking forward to what's supposed to be just an incredible new standard of luxury."
®ggg
— Julie Osinski, a frequent guest on Regent Seven Seas Cruises
Tina Shaw/ U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service/Submitted photo
A monarch butterfly.
Landis said, Central Orego- ly known for being a major minians could buy non-native gration pathway for monarchs milkweed seeds for their per- — and historicalrecords show sonal gardens, but non-native
there is even less milkweed in
species should not be planted the area today than in the past in wildlands. Organizations in the U.S.
— but Horning said that doesn't
meanthat couldn't change. "We know there are mondedicated to restoringmonarch populations, Monarch Watch archs here," he said. "We have and Save Our Monarchs, sell a breedingrecord as of last milkweed seeds on their web- summer, so it seems like it's sites, but only Monarch Watch worthwhile to try to re-estabsells species native to the West- lish these populations or plant ern U.S., induding showy milk- more milkweed.... Milkweed weed and narrowloaf milk- is incredibly important to the weed. Still, Landis said he's species, and when there is skeptical that showy milkweed milkweed around, it's going to from another state would adapt attract monarchs." well to the Bend ciimate.
Find It All
TOUCHMARK tlNCE 1980
Online bendbulletin.com •3
•
•
— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletirt.com
Central Oregon isn't typical-
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After all, many of us can't afford it. A coast-to-coast busi-
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DIFFICULTYRATING:*** *
By StephanieRosenbloom New York Times News Service
ACDEEF
4
Business classtoo cost ? Cheaper alternatives exist ness fare can run about $2,000
or more. But let's say you can spend around half that. That's enough to buy certain comforts thanks to premium economy and new products such as Mint, JetBlue's more afford-
able stab at business class. I recently conducted an
* JUMBLE SOLUTION IS ON C3
SUDOKU SOLUTION IS ON C3
unscientific test to see how to
get the most deluxe domestic experience for around $1,000, traveling round trip between
DAILY BRIDGECLUB
New York and Los Angeles. On one leg I flew JetBlue's
Sunday, January 25, 2015
Mint; on th e
Louie's fish story By FRANK STEWART
jetBlue's Mint
Tribune Content Agency C)
Unlucky Louie strode into the club lounge and thrust today's deal in front of Cy the Cynic and me. Louie said he had bid and made six spades. "Are you telling the truth?" Cy demanded, "or is this another tall tale like that fish story you handed us last summer?" Louie fancies himself an expert fisherman. He had returned from a fishing trip and had told us he had caught one fish that was too small to bother with. "I got a couple of guys to help me throw it back," Louie said blandly. L ouie's s p ade s l a m lo o k ed hopeless on the surface of the water: He had only 11 tricks. Before you read on,decide how Louie made the contract.
L ouie m anaged t o k e e p h i s composure when he saw dummy. Maybe he told himself that it was normal enough to reach a slam with 32 points, and unlucky when seven of the missing points happened to be an A-K in the same suit. He took the ace of diamonds and stoically led a heart to his queen. West took the ace and unsupectingly led another diamond. Louie won and cashed five spades, pitching dummy's last two hearts. When he took his queen of diamonds at the ninth trick, East was finished. He had room for four cards and couldn't keep his king of hearts plus a guard to the jack of clubs.
If eitherdefender had held four clubs plus both high hearts, Louie could have succeeded by cashing his s pade a n d diam o n d tric k s immediately. But Louie knew West didn't have the A-K of hearts. If each defender had one high heart, a swindle plus a squeeze was the best chance. North dealer N-S vulnerable
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CROSSWORD SOLUTION ISON C3
to opt for these seats. As with all Virgin coach seats, there's television, mov-
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC.
Zagat, 7x7, New York magazine Fight Club: Top Chef Meets Popand more. Currently available Up in Chicago. Also available: for Chicago, New York City, upcoming events by the week San Francisco, Seattle and and social sharing. What's not: It asks you upWashington, D.C. What's hot: The app goes front if you're living in one of way beyond the usual guide- its destinations. So I lied to get book recommendations to sug- past this velvet rope and start gest unique things to do such exploring. After all, the chances as eat at a pop-up restaurant, of me traveling to visit family discover the city's best artis- in eitherSan Francisco orNew anal cocktails or speak-easies,
York are high. When I started
shop at a sample sale and more. I found a sushi-making and sake-pairing workshop in San Francisco on Valentine's Day under "Date Nights," Stargaz-
looking at other cities, I could say I'm "just browsing" or let them know uI've moved there."
Why do they care? Seems a lit-
websites such as Thrillit, Eater,
asts in Seattle, and Culinary
vote on a new city?
Nashville
Eventually uall the pieces of tion bemoaning an acquainAmerican folk music came to- tance who remained ua staunch gethertom ake countrymusic." Democrat." That's what our show was Among the other performers all about — the pieces of coun- on the bill was Holly Williams try music. That and the show's (besides being a granddaugh"proud sponsors." ter of Hank, she's a daughter of The Opry started as a radio Hank Jr), who has been comshow in 1925 and continues pared to singersongwriters to be broadcast on WSM-AM John Prine and Bruce Spring(650) and on www.opry.com, steen. She sang a lovely song, w wwwsmonline.com, Si r i - "Waiting on June," about her usXM satellite radio and on an maternal grandparents. Opry mobile app (for iOS and The show also featured the Android). At various points, Willis Clan, a family of 12 sibfour announcers stood on the lings with shiny hair and big side of the large stage and smiles who competed in 2014 took turns reading their lines on "America's Got Talent," and in praise of Dollar General or Jesse McReynolds, the octogeCracker Barrel Old Country narian mandolin master, who, Store or the Humana health accordingto PeterCooper,forcare company. All in the spirit merly of the Nashville Tennesof old-time radio? Mostly. Gran- sean, uhas long been known diloquent? Absolutely. for tweaking the boundaries of The first performing host of bluegrass." the evening, 68-year-old John When the show conduded, Conlee, took the stage to sing the audience sauntered out of
Continued from C1 The theater, which seats 4,400, is reminiscent of a mega-
church. Visitors sit side by side inpews. Standingat thebackof the auditorium, looking at how
the spotlights bring out the jewellike colors of the stage backdrop, you may find yourself thinkingof a stained-glass window. And on this night, more
with aperformer/host and a series of musical acts, including an 85-year-old mandolin player as well as Holly Williams, a granddaughterof country music legend Hank Williams. There were solo performers and big bands with backup singers and dancers, as well as pop tunes, country ballads and
"Common Man n and, later,
the auditorium just ahead of
another era, which, in a way, it
"Backside of Thirty," and the audience members sang along. They were enthusiastic but respectful (for the most part),
was.
dressedin ensembles as varied
a serious downpour, many of them dutching bags from the Opry gift store or remnants from the Opry concession stands.
as Sunday-go-to-meeting and six-pack-by-a-pool.
An out-of-towner might be tempted to conclude that an
evening felt like a throwback to
today didn't exist," Colin Escott wrote in the 2006 book "The of an American Icon."
79 LettersOII the
back of ajersey 81 Certaindaisies
ence and is the primary reason
tle nitpicky to me. How about an option instead to request or
Grand Ole Opry: The Making
106
113
cabin. That makes a big differ-
ing with Astronomy Enthusi-
"One hundred years ago, country music as we know it
94
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I04
IIB
86
92 93
110
Cost: Free What it does: Acts as a city guide to fun things to do and see (you choose your interests and neighborhood preferences) curated by real people gathering info from local weekly magazines, newspapers and niche
century North Carolina. The
80
85
88
107 108 109
Available: iOS
music that sounded as though it was first played in early 20th
73
78
90 95
67
72
83 84
87
It's as if your coolest cousin gave you the scoop on the hippest things to do in her city and put it in this app. Quick, give her a large tip before she thinks you're not worthy of it. Name: Sosh — City Guide
four 30-minutesegments, each
36
flat and the firmness of the air
es — that's 6 inches more than the rest of the seats in the main
cushions is adjustable. I was ies and music, and you can ortures: two outlets alongside able to stretch out on my back, der food and drinks from your a wide workspace; an illu- side, even my stomach. And touch-screen. None of the food minated water bottle holder with my door closed, no one options were warm. I could say and a reading light; a 15-inch could see. the same about the service. monitor and a "glove comMy only quibble was with Flying Mint felt like being partment n below it to stash the Internet, or Fly-Fi as Jet- courted. Virgin's Main Cabin glasses and books; a coat Blue calls it, which the airline's Select felt like a waning longhook; the control panel from website notes is in a Beta test- term relationship. That said, which I could convert the seat ing phase. I was not able to get Mint is a newer contender. Let's into a bed; and an indicator to online. hope the romance lasts.
higherpower. The show was divided into
thattries Io
finish your thought 44 Coll. transcript
were boarding, an attendant showed me the suite's fea-
than one performer invoked a 26
25
27
e4 Spiritedhorses II Yogaposture ee Tesla Motors
dOOIS
ff
ganicspiced apple cider sortendant offered a "Refresh- bet (meh) from Blue Marble Mint" a honey-infused Ice Cream in Brooklyn came limeade with a sprig of mint. the food coma. Time to test While other passengers the bed. The seats truly lie
Los Angeles Times
ee CItyoft I-I5 MIchaels 4e private remark 91 Rembrandt's Ie Hair removal 48 Aqua: gold home: Abbr. brand dissolver 93 Comeback I 17 nWSII, guess 52 Roughcass 97 States ycu don't know 54 EXtremely hoI 98 Minnesota,YISeverything se Locker room a-YIS Nebraska about women 99 Arch Insome problem 57 'eos yet"speaker Gothic 18 YemenIport counterculture architecture 24 PIrate's brew event 100 Vanish 25 Wrath, Ina 58 Commoncrime 101 club hymn drama theme 103 It's the pits 30 Tram loads 59 Plush carpet 10e Play In thetub 33 Manager with e1 Kenof 107 Lob paths e "thIIIysomethIng four World 108 Bound Serieswins es On theskIds 109 Bean variety 35 Expressive ee sage, say I I I Alaskan gold dances es Badreception? rush town 37 Salisbury Plain 7I Shade of black 113 Mysterious letter monument 73 Pester 115 Snack 38 Irreverent 74 Large crowd sometimesfried sacha Baron 75 Geometry 11e Longstretches Cohen alter ego basic I17 Place Io find 39 Break hr. 78 Hydrocarbon eggs 40 Kellogg's suffix I Is West In e product slogan eo Ohmy pictures 42 Talky getgoodness!" 121 Coastal inlet together 82 Kippur 122 Figured out 9
After the fruit and the or-
Before takeoff a flight at-
By Jen Leo
% Hightail II
natiOnS
cabin.
App givesinsider's view of cool thingsto do
ed by Rich Norrisand Joyce Nichols LeWts 13 Some fall
door! It was the same price as any other seat in the Mint
C/)
(C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
83 completely 123 BIInI topper By C.C. BURNIKEL 87 Trials and 124 Sweetie,In tribulations Tahi ACROSS es Rhine temptress125 In the know I GIYSUp 89 "UnderSIege" about 5 27for star 12e Glimpses Beethoven's 90 Church doctline 127 Alley pIckups "Moonlight 91 KIara's mother 128 Scorch Sonata," e.g. In "The Lion 129 Reflexology 9 BodyscI. King" targets Is Fingers-in92 Org. promoting 130 Throw, as a one's-ears hunter safety party syllables 94 Fuss I9 SubtleYIbe 95 ComIcPhIIIIys DOWN 20 "Hogwash!" se Wayto I Train station 2I Rao's generatefresh waiters competitor websItecontent 2 Vatican City 22 Polling place 102 Airer of "Family coin sticker Feud" reruns, 3 Lackluster 23 What winners briefly 4 Champingat eam 103 HUIUservice the bII 2e pan creator 104 Palm starch 5 Kimonodoser 27 Like a 105 Besties e wet weather designated 107 II canprecede wear driver Bravo 7 org. that tests 28 Coptic Museum I IO 'If that's true ..." balls and city II2 Dupe clubs 29 Toffeebar with I I4 Onlinesavings 8 Piercing a crownIn Its accountsofferer 9 specialized logo 118 Text file with IdIoms 31 Bread 10 "Pass" instructions SOmetimeS 120 Flamboyant 11 NSA figures prepared with '40s-'50s 12 Rosa Parks' chutney wrestler birth city 32 Bowler Mark 5 6 7 8 who was four- I 2 3 4 time PBA Player of the Year 20 34 Trellis piece
or two seats. The single seats are "suites" with doors. A
CLr CLr
West Pass A l l Pass
Opening lead — 0 10
u4-G NETWORK"
$ 5 99
each way and include expedited screening, priority boarding, Wi-Fi, dozens of channels including DirecTV an amenity kit and lie-flat (up to 6 feet, 8 inches long) seats.
NORTH 4bK93 9 108 4
OAK3 4AQ73
Mint seats start at
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LOS ANGELESTIMES SUNDAY CROSSWORD
se wipe clean
o t her, Virgin
America's Main Cabin Select.
press if I wanted to be woken Virgin America's Main Cabin Select formeal service. Given JetBlue's emphasis It isn't fair to compare a doon low prices I did not ex- mestic premium economy expect high-caliber amenities perience with Mint, a competior servicebut Iwas surprised tor to business class. For a less again and again. At one point, costly alternative, I turned to the flight attendant asked if Virgin America's Main Cabin I wanted anything from my Select because, although not bag in the overhead compart- new or cheap, it's from an airment. She brought a hot towel line that trades on its particular and a "snooze kit,n as well as brand of sex appeal. an amenity kit by Birchbox. The company's slick adverNext came the food. uI have tising is alluring, so the key to a tasting for you,n said an at- not being disappointed is to tendant. "It's a feta cheese frit- manage your expectations: tata," she added as she placed What you are fundamentally it on a shelf along with a cup paying for in Main Cabin Seof Rishi jasmine green tea. lect is more legroom and priThe courgette and feta frit- ority security and boarding. tata with harissa aioli was I originally found a one-way wonderfully spicy. How nice fare for $398.10, which dropped not to be served a bland dish as the departuretim eneared. at 36,000 feet. Just as I was As the n ame suggests, scraping the little bowl clean Main Cabin Select comprises the attendant returned. uMay a few rows in coach. My seat I set up your tray table?" had an overhead bin but no Meals on Mint are tapas- additional workspace, handy s tyle. T h e b r u nc h m e n u compartments or amenity kit. n features Wi-Fi was extra, but it worked. (uNourishmint ) small plates by the Manhat- Seats reclined but did not lie tan restaurant Saxon & Paflat (again, this is not business role. My favorites: the Santa class), and there were three Barbara smoked salmon with across, so there was little pridill sour cream and confit vacy and a lot of dimbing over shallots, and the spicy egg- others or being dimbed over. I plant shakshuka with feta missed my door. cheese. The seat pitch is 38 inch-
"Depending on where you were, you'd hear Gaelic fiddle tunes, old English ballads, new American ballads, bawdy cowboy songs, hymns or minstrel songs. Undocumented and ig-
Conlee's sole guest for the
evening at the Opry is just an-
first segment was Caitlin Rose, a 27-yearold whom Spinmagazine praised as "something of a foil for Taylor Swift." Her
other excursion into a land that
does not feel it necessary to detox from the branding of America. But amid the commercials
and the chicken tenders and yet assured. The crowd loved the refrigerator magnets, there her, but the crowd seemed to were moments that brought Eslove every performer. They cott's words to mind. "Country music venerates were here to be entertained, nored, it was called folk music and almost everyone was en- tradition," he wrote. It's hard because it was the music that gaged, except for the woman to imagine that anyone could thepeople ofAmericasang and behind me who indulged in a have left the auditorium withplayed for themselves." lengthy cell phone conversa- out feeling a little richer. dress and manner were modest
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
C7
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
o o ra er ives mos o os s TV SPOTLIGHT
easygoing pro, instantly as
"Saturday Night Live"
comfortable with her as she was with him.
with brainstorming and other
Taking his place in front of the lights, he quoted a fellow country singer as declaring, "I
11:30 p.m. Saturdays, NBC
ByFrazier Moore The Associated Press
NEW YORK —
telecast. That concluded a busy week that began on Monday
sion with the musical guest
(not needed last week, since Shelton pulled double duty). On Friday, Matthews applies session stretched for nearly enhanced color and other digtwo hours,through dozens of ital sorcery to the handful of poses and several wardrobe images she has chosen (her changes. neutral shooting background, For a full-figure shot, Mat- for instance, can be transthews asked him to deliver formed into any hue, design or a little kick with one of his location). got one hour" and laughed at such bullheadedness. His
music superstar Blake Shelton was poised on a mid-Manhat-
tan sidewalk, looking right at home beside a split-rail fence while he toyed with a lariat.
It was pretty cold, and curious passersby were starting to crowd, but Shelton seemed
Dana Edelson / NBC /The Associate Press
to be enjoying himself while a Country music singer and TV personality Blake Shelton, right, photographer fired away. poses for promotional photos for "Saturday Night Live," with phoShelton, guest host of "Sat- tographer Mary Ellen Matthews in New York on Tuesday. Shelton, urday Night Live," was en- a guest host last week, posed for a portfolio of images usedas gaging in a rite that reaches "bumper Ios" before and after each commercial break. back to the birth of this NBC
institution: lending himself for a portfolio of images aired as
Since 1999, they have been
"bumper IDs" before and after
the weekly creation of Mary
each commercial break. "I've had Nashville people say, just jokingly, 'Hey man, don't make us look stupid,'"
Ellen Matthews, who on Tues-
said Shelton as he scuffled a boot in the hay strewn on the
day, for something like the 300th time, was doing it again, keeping it fresh and making it look easy. Until this final setup out-
sidewalk and chuckled at this side Rockefeller Center — a kountry-kousins tableau he
l ast-minute i n spiration
by
was part of. It won't look stupid. "SNL"
Matthews for which Shelton was game and stagehands
host portraits — some zany,
swiftly toted the fence-prop
some smart, some downright out to 49th Street — the sessuave — exhibit a consistent sion had taken place indoors, track record of c ool a r tistry, and with their blink-and-
they're-goneimpact they have
in Studio 8H. " So THIS is where it a l l happens! Look at this!" Shel-
On a stage to the right of "home base" (from where Shelton five days hence would deliver his opening routine), M atthews' lights w er e
ar-
ranged against a neutral-colored seamless background. Her goal: "Staying loose, loose, loose, then understanding when That Moment hitsor when you FIND it." Her challenge: "For each
image to jump off the screen. It's only up for like three seconds."
Shelton reigns as Country Music Association male vocalist of the year and as a
s h ow's ton had marveled as he strode
boots. His first try was tentative. "MEAN it," she teased, and the next kick looked just
Matthews joined "SNL" 22 years ago as assistant to Edie
Baskin, the show's original photographer. Matthews calls her "myhero and my mentor."
right. A rope around Shelton's w aist was tugged by a n When Baskin left in 1999, Matoff-camera assistant while he thews took over. m ugged at the camera in hogGrowing up in New Jersey, tied bemusement. Matthews was hooked on phoAt Matthew's request, he tography from childhood. "My father had a darkroom tossed a cowboy hat in the air and caught it on his head, and I was in there 24/7," she all the better for its landing recalled when the Shelton sesslightly askew. sion had ended. "Good, good, good," Mat"He used to have little conthews cheered him on. t ests between me an d m y Clad in jeans and a velvet brotherand three sisters:We' d jacket, she was coltish but each shoot one frame and pass deliberate, capturing Shelton the camera around, and he'd with her Canon IDX. (She judge which frame was the went digital a decade ago but best." still misses her Hasselblad's A s she spoke, with t i me "analog feel and the magic of fleeting, thousands of frames not knowing what you've got now demanded her own disuntil it's processed.") cerning eye. "I'm real excited to jump From T uesday's n o -wait
coach on NBC's music-comsense of downtown elan. They into the show's fabled home to petition series "The Voice." harvest, Matthews would have into that," Matthews told her are part of what makes "SNL" start the five-day whirl that But more important for Mat- to cull a total of nine images interviewer, "as soon as we're aSNL awaited him. thews' purposes, he was an for possible use on Saturday's done." always served t h e fP
Dollhousebuilt as gift by grandma isn't good enough tokeep inhome Dear Abby:My 7-year-old granddaughter, "Kelly," wanted a doll-
how to get past it. Any advice?
house for Christmas. I had a friend
Dear Hurt: You appear to be a loving grandparent. Sometimes people say things without weighing the effect it will have on the person they're talking to. What your daughter said may have been honest, but
build a basic frame, shingled roof, chimney and shutters, then I decorated it.
DFP,R
ABBY I did everything by hand. I wallpapered each room, made little rugs and crocheted lace cur-
tains. There were even little win-
dow shades. Kelly's room was a perfect princess bedroom. It took weeks, but I loved working on it.
The family came for five days over the holidays. Kelly loved her dollhouse and played with it every day. When it came time to leave, my daughter told Kelly she couldn't
— Hurt Grandma
it was extremely insensitive in light of the time, effort and love that went into that gift.
life. What is sad to me is that she
The trouble is, all of t h e other
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORSUNDAY, JAN. 25,2015:Thisyearyouare openingup to many new experiences.
You might beseenmore frequently on the social scene. You tend not to be judgmental, and as resultyou will draw a variety of personalities toward you. If you are single, you open up to dating many different types of people. However, this year someone Stars sltow tlts klud sPecial most likely of dayyou'llhave will mosey on into ** * * * D ynamic your life. You will ** * * Positive kn o w when this
space foreveryone to sit,and a
basement for all the kids to play in while we're occupied. I'd love to host, but I'm afraid having all those
peoplein my house would be an embarrassment. No one has asked why I haven't
hosted yet, but I'm getting worried about what to say if someone does. Should I just say I don't have the
space? I feel it's rude of me to not take a turn. — Tiny House Dweller in Kansas
Your daughter appears to be m ore xated fi on appearances rathDear T.H.D.:Not being able to acer than what's really important in commodate a large group is noth-
may pass along her skewed sense of values to your granddaughter. take it with her. She had to leave it Dear Abby: I joined a weekly at Grandma's "so she would have prayer group with women from my something to play with when she church. As a young mom, I apprecame to visit." Kelly was heartbro- ciate having the opportunity to get ken. So was I. out of the house and socialize with Then my daughter told me (in other adults, and all the women are private) the dollhouse was "too nice. amateurish," which was why she We use an online sign-up to didn't want it in her home. I think schedule who will host each week. about it all the time and don't know
members have much larger, nicer homes than mine. There's always
ing to be embarrassed about. It's a
fact of life for many people. If you are asked about why you haven't hosted, tell the truth. Offer to host
the gathering at the church — or outside when the weather permits. If that doesn't work, volunteer to
bring food to some of the events so you'll feel as if you're contributing your share and no one will feel you are ducking a responsibility. — Write to Dear Abby at dearabby.com or P.o. Box 69440, LosAngeles, CA90069
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
** * You might want to put a halt on weekendindulgences and head to the
• There may bean additional fee for3-Oand IMAXmovies • Movie times are subject to change after p/ess time. I
I
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21)
** * Take responsibility and deal with ** * * Don't hold back or let a financial someone who often rains on your parade. matter trip you up. Your caring will make Express more understanding or ask for all the difference to a child or new friend. some insi ghtastow hy he orshe behaves Remember not to get twisted up in life's way. Anopendiscussion could mundane details so much. Tonight: Be *** Average pe r son appears. If acertain provide you with a fresh perspective. ** Bo-so you are attached, happy, and others will followyour lead. Tonight: In the limelight. * Difficult the two ofyou CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) might expand LEO (July 23-Aug.22) ** * Devote more quality time to a ** * * Reach out to someone at a your immediate circle of friends. A new roommate or family member. Your mutual hobby is also likely. ARIES can be distance this morning. In fact, you might attention and caring will be returned want to make a round of calls to those provocative. tenfold, but don't let that be the reason you typically don't have time to check in ARIES (March21-April 19) you choose to indulge this person today. with. Enjoy a lively exchange of news. ** * * * A power play involving a Tonight: Invite a friend over for a casual Encourage a visit in the near future. respected elder or boss could backfire. dinner. Strong feelings are likely to emerge from Tonight: Whatever you choose, let it be distracting. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.18) the experience. Make a point of getting ** * * * M ake an effort toward a child together with a loved one, or make time VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) for a special child in your life. Tonight: ** * * One-on-one relating will take you or loved onewho perhaps doesn't feel Beam in more of what you want. down a unique path. You are likely to gain as upbeat as you might. Your friendship tends to help this person gain perspective an unusual understanding of a special TAURUS (April 20-May20) on his or her life. Tonight: Say what you ** * You might prefer to take a backseat person in your life, which will allowyou feel and what you think, but know that to bypass a hassle in the near future. inwhatseems to be happening around you might get some mixed reactions. Demonstrate your caring through a kind you. By being an observer, you could disgesture. Tonight: Keep it intimate. cover a new side of a loved one. Indulge PISCES (Feb. 19-March20) yourself and buy that special item you ** * Make it a day of indulgence. For LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 22) have been coveting for a while. Tonight: ** * * A partner or loved one could be some of you, you might decide just to Get some extra R and R. stay in bed, whereas others might choose unusually challenging right now. Your caring will evolve to a new level once you to dine at a favorite restaurant or pick up GEMINI (May 21-June20) ** * * * D on't hesitate to reach out to understand where this person is coming a few items at a favorite store. Just do from. Several friends might want to draw whatever will make you smile. Tonight: your friends. Join them in whatever activity they seem to be involved with. For you into a happening later in the evening. Togetherness is the theme. some, it might be a spectator sport; for Go for it! Tonight: Defer to others. © King Features Syndicate
I I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Rl 11:35a.m., 2:40, 6:30, 9:45 • AMERICAN SNIPER IMAX (R) 12:10, 3:10, 7:10, 10:15 • BLACKHAT (R) 10 • BOLSHOIBALLET:SWANLAKE(no MPAArating) 12:55 • THE BOYNEXTDOOR(R) 4:50, 7:45, 10:20 • CAKE(Rl 11:55 a.m., 3, 6:20,9:35 • THEHOBBIT:THEBATTLE OFTHE FIVE ARMIES (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 2:45, 6, 9:15 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-13) 12:55, 4, 7:05, 10:05 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) l2:40, 4:05, 7:20, 10:10 • MORTDECAI(R)12:45, 4:15, 7:30, I0 • NIGHTAT THEMUSEUM: SECRET OF THETOMB (PGl 11:45 a.m., 2:20, 6:20, 9:15 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:40a.m., 2, 4:20, 6:40, 9:10 • SELMA(PG-13l 12:30,3:40, 7,9:55 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG-13l 12:15, 3:30, 7:15, 9:30 • TAKEN 3(PG-13) 12:20, 3:15, 6:15, 10:10 • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 12:05, 3:30, 6:50 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 12:45, /I:25,7:/I5, 10:20 • WILD(R) 12:50, 3:50, 6:45, 9:30 • Accessibility devices are available for some movies.
awards presented by theProducers Guild of America aren't televised, but they have agood track record of picking the best picture winner at the Oscars. I
• MOTION PICTURE: "Birdman" • DOCUMENTARY: "Life Itself" • ANIMATED:"The LEGOMovie" I
• DRAMA:"Breaking Bad" • COMEDY:"Orange is the New Black"
See a list of all winners at www.producersguild.org.
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 5 p.m. on TBS, "21st Annual Screen Actors GuildAwards" — Debbie Reynolds receives her union's Life Achievement Award during this year's ceremonies honoring outstanding performances in films and TV. Among the film categories, the ensembles of "Birdman," "Boyhood," "The Grand Budapest Hotel," "The Imitation Game" and "The Theory of Everything" are up for outstanding performance by a cast in a motion picture. 7 p.m. on10, "Mulaney" —Lou
(Martin Short) advisesJohn (John Mulaney) on a supposedly surefire way to get his way with his roommates in the new episode "Power Moves." Of course, what works for Lou might not work for everyone, as John soon discovers. Jane (Nasim Pedrad) gets assistance from Motif (Seaton Smith) as she tries to adjust to her new cat. 8 p.m. on 5, 8, "The 63rd Annual Miss Universe Pageant"Who's the world's top beauty? One of them will be determined, anyway, as entrants from all over the globe vie for the title as the yearly event is presented from Florida International University in Miami-Doral, Florida. Natalie Morales ("Today") and MSNBC's Thomas Roberts are the hosts. 9 p.m.on10, "FamilyGuy" — She didn't envision becoming a model, but Meg (voice of Mila Kunis) is enlisted for that pursuit in the new episode "This Little Piggy." Some of the excitement wears off when she realizes what she's wanted for specifically: her feet. Stewie (voice of Seth MacFarlane) wants to experience the great outdoors, so Brian (also
voiced byMacFarlane)takes him on a trek. © Zap2it
I
McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • BIG HERO6(PG)11a.m., 2 • INTERSTELLAR (PG-13l 5:30 • NIGRTCRAWLER(Rl9:30 • Younger than 2t may attend all screeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian. Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FORCEMAJEURE(R) 4:30 • THE GREAT INVISIBLE (PG-13) 7 • THETALE OF PRINCESS KAGUYA (PG)1:30
gym or start someotherform of exercise.
As a result, you will reduce your stress, others, it could be an interactive activity. feel better and make a better impression. You'll recharge your batteries in the proA friend or loved one will cheer you along. cess. Tonight: Forget tomorrow, live it up! Tonight: Be good to yourself.
CANCER (June21-July 22)
MOVIE TIMESTODAY
•
ProducersGuild —The
preparations. Thursday typically requires a photo ses-
have two poses and YOU'VE C o untry
AWARDS
I
I
I
Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • AMERICANSNIPER (Rlnoon,3,6:05,9 • BLACKHAT (R) 7 • MORTDECAI(R)12:15, 2:30, 4:45, 7, 9:15 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG-13l 11:30a.m.,1:45, 4, 6:15, 8:30 • TAKEN 3(PG-13) noon, 2:20, 4:40, 9:40 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • AMERICANSNIPER (Rl 1, 3:45, 6:30 • THE IMITATIONGAME(PG-I3) 1:30, 4, 6:30 • PADDINGTON (PG) I:15, 3:30, 5:30 • SELMA (PG-13l1,3:30, 6
Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 5/I1-475-3505 • AMERICAN SNIPER(Rl 12:/IO, 3:35, 6:30 • BLACKHAT (R) 4:15 • PADDINGTON(PG) 12:10, 2:20, 4:35, 6:50 • STRANGEMAGIC(PG-13l 12:05, 2:30, 4:50, 7:10 • TAKEN 3(PG-l3) 1:50, 7 • THE WEDDING RINGER(R) 12:30, 2:50, 5: IO, 7:20 Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-/I16-101/I • AMERICAN SNIPER(Upstairs — R) 1:30, /I:30, 7:30 • UNBROKEN (PG-13) 1, 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GO! Magazine
•
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CS TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
NBA Aldridge to put surgery onhold PORTLAND — The
Portland Trail Blazers said Saturday that forward LaMarcus Aldridge has decided to put off thumb surgery. Aldridge hadsaid on Thursday that he needed surgery to repair a ligament in his left thumb and wasexpected to miss from six to eight weeks. But just hours before Saturday night's 103-96 win over Washington, the Blazers announced that the three-time All-Star would play. "We don't know if it's going to go good or bad but I think at the least I'm going to try," Aldridge said before the game. Aldridge hurt his thumb when his hand came down onthe knee of Sacramento's DeMarcus Cousins in the second quarter of the Blazers' 98-95 victory on Monday night. The 6-foot-11 power forward leads Portland with averages of 23.2 points and10.2 rebounds and 1.18blocks per game. He's oneof just three NBAplayers averaging at least 23 points and 10 rebounds. Coach Terry Stotts said he wasinformed of Aldridge's decision just after shootaround on Saturday. "I'm glad he's here," Stotts said. "Obviously we're a better team with him playing." Aldridge said his doctors told him there was "no harm in giving it a shot." "My idea now is to play the rest of the season," he said. "But if it gets too much where I can't handle it or I'm not playing at a very good level then I'll stop. But hopefully it goes well for us." If he gets through the season, he'll have the surgery in the offseason, he said.
PREP WRESTLING
owos omina e or win a e ser's ournamen Inside
Bulletin staff report HILLSBORO — As Jake Huffman will tell you, it was
a great weekend for Crook County wrestling. Of their 14 wrestlers, the
Cowboys placed 13 in the top six at Liberty High on Saturday, including three individual champions, and racked up 303 points to beat runner-up Roseburg for their second straight title at the Reser's Tournament
• Lava Bears girls win at alpine skiing meet. Prep roundup,B4 • Prep scoreboard,D4
Roseburg's pretty good.' But these kids always rise to the occasion and battle. They're
a great group of young
Robirts, the No. 2 seed, quickly jumped ahead 4-0 and built a 9-3 lead heading into the third round before securing a
men, and it's a lot of fun to
10-5win overthetop-seeded
By Mike Baker
be around them and coach
The Seattle Times
premier wrestling tournament in Oregon. "These kids always impress me," Crook County coach Jake Huffman said. "As a coach, you always have doubt, like, 'Oh, I don't know.
them." Gunnar Robirts booked the
Colbray. "He was definitely the highlight of the tournament," Huff-
"boom" have been married for decades, long before someone nicknamed Seattle Seahawks defenders the"LegionofBoom."Way
performance of the two-day tournament in the 195-pound championship. Facing Hermiston's Samuel Colbray, who is ranked No. 3 nationally,
man said of his 195-pound champ, who was named the tourney's Most Outstanding Wrestler.
See Wrestling /D4
as "BoomBoom" for his
PREP NORDIC SKIING
The NHL intends to host it every four years. To begin with, the
2016 tournament will feature eight teams with all games played in Toronto. The tournament will start Sept. 17 andend with a best-of-three final series, with the last possible date set for Oct. 1. The leaguealso announced the Bruins and Canadiens will play in the Winter Classic next year on Jan. 1 atGillette Stadium, home of the NFL's NewEngland Patriots. Bettman provided updates on other topics: • The NHL expects billionaire businessman Bill Foley to launch a season-ticket drive next month to determine whether there is enough interest to establish a franchise in LasVegas. • Seattle Mayor Ed Murray met with Bettman last weekto discuss the possibility of establishing a team there. Bettman called it "a nice chat," but noted Seattle lacks a feasible facility for an NHLteam. — The Associated Press
inslde • More on
stmtlariy pun-
h t.„
ishmgstyle. Ex-coach
footballs',
John Madden
bellowed"boom" during play-by-play TV broadcasts so often that, by the 1990s,
it became his personal catchword, used in com-
mercials featuring the popular pitchman. And in the AFC title
game last week, the Indianapolis Colts relied on Daniel "Boom" Herron at
running back. See Trademarks/D5
Nextup
Super BowlXLIX: Seattle vs. NewEngland Where: Glendale, Arizona When:3 p.m. Feb.1 TV:NBCRadio:KRCO-AM 690, FM-96.9
MLB
Photos by Joe Kiine 1 The Bulletin
Summit's Emily Hyde skis up a hill on her way to winning the XC Oregon High School Invitational on Saturday at Mount Bachelor.
2016.
back in the 1960s, MinneBill Brown was known
• Trail Blazers come back to beat Wizards. NBA roundup,03
COLUMBUS,OhioThe World Cup ofHockey is making a return in
Football and the word
sota Vikings running back
Inside
World Cupto return in 2016
Seabawks seeking to trademark fandom
of Champions, considered the
— The Associated Pess
NHL
SUPER BOWL XLIX
• Summit's EmilHyde, y CaseyShannon pick upXCOregon Invitational wins
Commish envisions move to young fans By Tyler Kepner New York Times News Service
At the foot of the desk of Bulletin staff report MOUNT BACHELOR — Central Ore-
ly, in the Division 1 girls race, and Bend
the new baseball commis-
Hi g h 's Olivia Colton rounded out the top
sioner, in a frame waiting to be hung on his office wall, is an original roster
gon's strong nordic skiing programs were 10. on full display Saturday at the XC Oregon Invitational.
About 200 skiers flocked to the Oval representing schools
g
In D i v i sion 2 competition, Sisters'
..
" .,"" .
Shayla Curtis placed first, Ridgeview's Kaily Fineran was
from the Rome American
third, and Crook County's Abby
New York, dated April 27, 1969. In the No. 10 slot is a
Little League in upstate
f rom the Oregon Interscholastic p h Dalton placed sixth. Ski Racing Association and Or- Bulletin's website: Summit's A and B ffnished " " ' ' l-2 in the girls 3K relay, while egon High School Nordic, and P Summit showcased its prowess. Mountain View took third. Emily Hyde, Olivia Moehl Teddy Winter finished fourth and Alexandra Heisler went 1-2-3 for the
10-year-old from Van Buren Avenue named Robert
Manfred. He never played organized baseball past
fo r Bend in the Division 1 boys race,
Little League, but today he
Storm girls in the Division 1 4.8-kilometer while Hunter Hassell (seventh), Adi race, and Summit's Casey Shannon, Alex Wolfenden (eighth) and Dakota Thornton Martin and Zebediah Millslagle followed (10th) each cracked the top 10. suit in the Division 1 boys competition. Redmond High's Clayton Aas won the The invitational was a state qualifying D i v ision 2 race, followed by teammate competition for both ski leagues.
Manfred, known as
Remington Williams. Summit won the
Mountain View's Sage Hassell and Tia t eam relay, and Bend finished third beHatton took eighth and ninth, respective-
will ascend to the top of the game.
h i n d Hood River Valley.
Mountain View's Dakota Thornton finished 11th in the boys race.
Rob, is taking over for Bud Selig, who was in office for 22 years while maintaining his base in Milwaukee. See Manfred /D4
TENNIS: AUSTRALIAN OPEN • "\
Yeung American has Keys to the future By Christopher Clarey New York Times News Service
MELBOURNE, Australia
— It was well past midnight this morning at the Australian
Open. Madison Keys, a young, unseeded American, had just upset Petra Kvitova, a two-
time Wimbledon champion, Lee Jin-man l The Associated Press
Madison Keys celebrates after defeating Petra Kvitova in the third round of the Australian
Open this morning.
walked into the cool of the late evening, she was talking about the burden ofbeing told you are going to be a great player before you are able to beat a great player. one is kind of telling you it will
finally having that happen, it feels great, and it makes you really, really realize that people are telling you the truth, and it makes your confidence and your belief in yourself just skyrocket." The prospect of Keys brimming with self-belief should
work out and things like that,"
be a scary one to her compet-
"It's tough sometimes in those moments, where every-
Keys said. "You don't always round on the biggest court this believe them, and it's one of Grand Slam tennis tournathose things where you're like, ment has to offer. And as Keys 'Maybe it won't happen.' But in straight sets in the third
itors. Though she is still just 19 years old, her potential has long been evident. SeeKeys/D5
Inside • Nadal sweeps Anderson to reach quarterfinals, BS
• Scores from this morning's early action. Scoreboard, B2
D2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY AUTO RACING
Rolex 24 atDaytona SOCCER England, Bristol City vs WestHamUnited England, Brighton & HoveAlbion vs Arsenal
Time TV/Radio 4 a.m. FS1 5 :55 a.m. F S 2 7 :55 a.m. F S 2
BASKETBALL
Women's college, Arkansas atFlorida NBA, Miami at Chicago Men's college, Boston College atGeorgiaTech Men's college, Indiana atOhio State Men's college,DukeatSt.John's Women's college, Central Florida at SMU Women's college, Utah atWashington Women's college,GeorgiaatTennessee Women's college, Butler at Xavier Women's college, Maryland at Indiana Women's college, Connecticut at Cincinnati Men's college, Seton Hall at Butler NBA, OklahomaCity at Cleveland Men's college, Louisville at Pittsburgh Men's college, Northern lowa at lllinois State Women's college, OregonState atArizona State Women's college, Kentucky at Missouri Women's college, lowa State atTexas Women's college, Duke at North Carolina Women's college, Miami at Louisville Women's college, Minnesota at Rutgers Women's college, California at UCLA Men's college, Notre Dameat N.C.State Men's college, Creighton at Villanova Men's college, Northwestern at Maryland Women's college, Stanford at USC Men's college, Washington at Utah GOLF PGA Tour, Humana Challenge Champions Tour, Mitsubishi Championship
9 a.m. E SPNU 1 0 a.m. AB C 1 0 a.m. R o ot 10:30 a.m. CBS 11 a.m. Fox 11 a.m. ESPNU 11 a.m. Pac-12 1 1 a.m. SE C 1 1:30 a.m. F S 1
noon B i g Ten noon E S P N2 noon Root 12:30 p.m. ABC 1 p.m. CBS 1 p.m. E SPNU 1 p.m. P a c-12 1 p.m. SEC 1 :30 p.m. F S 1 2 p.m. E SPN2 2 p.m. Roo t 2:15 p.m. Big Ten 3 p.m. P a c-12 3:30 p.m. ESPNU 4 p.m. FS1 4:30 p.m. Big Ten 5 p.m. P a c-12 5:30 p.m. ESPNU noon 4 p.m.
Golf Golf
2 p.m. 5 p.m.
NBCSN CSNNW
HOCKEY
NHL, All-Star Game AHL, All-Star Skills Competition TENNIS
Australian Open, round of16 Australian Open, round of16 Australian Open, round of16
4 p.m. Tennis 6 p.m. ESPN2 midnight ESPN2
FOOTBALL
NFL, Pro Bowl
5 p.m.
E S PN
MONDAY SOCCER FA Cup, RochdalevsStokeCity
11:55 a.m. FS2
BASKETBALL
Women's college, lllinois at Michigan Men's college, Syracuse atNorth Carolina Women's college, TexasA&M at South Carolina Men's college, DelawareSt. at North Carolina A&T NBA, Portland at Brooklyn Women's college, Nebraska at lowa Men's college, Texas at lowaState Men's college, Prairie View A8 Mat Ark.-Pine Bluff Women's college, Mississippi State at Auburn
4 p.m. Big Ten 4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESPN2 4 p.m. ESPNU 4:30 p.m. CSNNW 6 p.m. Big Ten 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESPNU 6 p.m. SEC
TENNIS
Australian Open,men'sand women's quarters Australian Open,men'sand women's quarters Australian Open,quarterfinal BOXING RockyJuarezvs.RobinsonCastellanos
4 p.m. 6 p.m. midnight
Tennis ESPN2 ESPN2
7 p.m.
FS1
Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletin is not responsible for latechangesmadeby TVor radio stations.
SPORTS IN BRIEF
SOUTH Alabama 57, Auburn55 Alabama St . 84, Al c orn St.60 Monday Boys basketball: CentralChristianat Rogue Valley ArkansasSt.64,Troy55 CharlestonSouthern 93,Gardner-Webb80 Adventist,7:30p.m. 81, UNCGreensboro 72 Girls basketball:Central Christianat RogueValley Chattanooga Clemson 59,WakeForest57 Adventist, 6p.m. CoastalCarolina63, Presbyterian 52 David son80,GeorgeMason73,OT Tuesday Boysbasketball:BendatRidgeview,7p.mcRed- DelawareSt.67,NCA&T52 E lon 94,Delaware82 mond atSummit, 7 p.m.;Sistersat Elmira,5:45 p.m.; Crook Countyat Madras,7p.m.; LaPineat FloridaGulf Coast54, KennesawSt. 48 82, Allen46 Cresweff,7:30p.mc Central Christianat Paisley, Furman Georgia72,Mississippi St.66 6p.m. Georgi a Southern57, Louisiana-Monroe53 Girls basketball:RidgeviewatBend, 7p.m.; Summit at Redmo nd, 7 p.m.; Sistersat Elmira,7:15p.m.; GeorgiaSt.75, Louisiana-Lafayette64 High Poin72, t UNCAshevile 51 Madras atCrookCounty,7p.m.; LaPineat Creswel, Howard59, FloridaA&M50 6p.m.;Central Christianat Paisley, 4:30p.m. Jackson St. 74,Grambling St.63 Kentucky 58, SouthCarolina 43 Wednesday Wrestling: CrookCounty, Culverat Cowdog Classic LSU79,Vanderbilt 75,OT Marshall78,UTE P71 in Culver, 7p.m. Md.-E asternShore74,Bethune-Cookman70 Memphis 5 7 , T u l a ne55 Thursday Wrestling: Bend atRedmond,7 p.mcElmiraatSisters, MiddleTennessee72,Charlotte 69 Mississippi72,Florida71 6:30p.m. Morehead St.66,Jacksonville St.63 N. Kentucky 81,Jacksonville 59 Friday Boys basketball:MountainViewat Redm ond, 7 NC Central79,CoppinSt.77 p.m.; Ridgeview at Summit, 7 p.m.; Sutherlin at NorfolkSt.76,SCState63 Sisters,5:45p.m.;Madrasat Molaga,7 p.m.;Crook NorthCarolina78,Florida St.74 Countyat Corbe tt, 7 p.m.;Glideat LaPine, 7:30 NorthFlorida75,Lipscomb66 p.m.; CulveratIrrigon, 7:30p.m.;Gilchrist atTriad, NorthwesternSt.93, McNeeseSt. 67 PrairieView72,MVSU65 7:30p.m. Radford84,Liberty 76 Girls basketball: RedmondatMountainView,7p.m.; Summiat t Ridgeview, 7 p.m.; Sutherlin at Sisters, SC-Upstate91,Stetson67 7:15 p.m.;Molalla at Madras,7 p.m.;Corbettat Samford78,W.Carolina 72 CrookCounty, 7p.m.; GlideatLaPine,6p.m4Cul- SavannahSt.68, Hampton 66 ver atIrrigon,6p.mcProspect atTrinity Lutheran,4 SouthernU.65,AlabamaA&M58 Tennessee Tech 83,E. Kentucky81,OT p.m.;GilchristatTriad,6p.m. Swimming:Bend, Mountain View,Summit at Bend TexasA&M67, Tennessee61 City MeetatJuniperSwim8 FitnessCenter, TBD; TexasA&M-CC71,NewOrleans67, OT Tulsa66,East Carolina64 Sisters,StaytonatSweetHome,4 p.m. UAB81,OldDominion 68 Nordic skiing:OHSNOnight skateatTeacup UNCWilmington69,Towson 65 UT-Martin70,SEMissouri 53 Saturday VMI 85,TheCitadel75 Boys basketball: Gilchrist atNorthLake,6:30p.m. Girls basketball: Gilchrist at NorthLake, 5p.m.; W. Kentucky83, UTSA74 William &Mary78, Northeastern 62 McKenzieatTrinity Lutheran,6p.m. Swimming: Redmondat Baker City Meet, TBD;Sisters Winthrop71,Campbell 63 U64 at Blanchet Invite inSalem,1p.m.; Henleyat Madras, Wofford72, ETS MIDWEST 10arm. Wrestling: MountainViewat Hood River ElksInvita- Akron71,W.Michigan 69 tional, TBD; Bend, Redmond at Panther 4-Wayin Arkansas 61,Missouri 60 Redmond ,10a.m.;CrookCountyatRoseburg,6; 30 AustinPeay56, E.Illinois 52 Bradley61, MissouriSt. 59 p.m.;CulveratCrater Classic, TBD Alpine skiing:OSS Aat Hoodoo,Slalom, TBD CS Bakersfield57,ChicagoSt.41 Nordic skiing: OISRA skate and relay racesatWilaCent.Michigan65, E.Michigan51 Dayton63,Richmond60 mettePass,11:30a.m. Evansville75,S.Illinois 66 Georgetown 95,Marquette 85,OT FOOTBALL IPFW77, N.Dakota St.71 IUPUI 65, SouthDakota50 Indiana St.72, Loyolaof Chicago61 NFL playoffs K ansas St.63,OklahomaSt.53 NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE Kent St. 63,Ball St.52 AH TimesPST Miami(Ohio)60, N.Illinois 55 Minnesota 79,llinois 71 SuperBowl MurraySt. 60,SIU-Edwardsviffe54 Sunday, Feb.1at Glendale, Ariz. Nebraska 79, MichiganSt. 77 NewEnglandvs.Seattle,3:30p.m. Nebraska-O maha80, Denver 69 Ohio63,Buffalo61 Purdue67, lowa63 America's Line Toledo71, Bowling Green67 Favorite Open Current 0/U Underdog UMKC 75, Seattle 55 Home teams inCAPS Wisconsin69,Michigan64, OT Xavier89,DePaul76 NFL Youngs townSt.77,Rl.-chicago64 Super Bowl, Feh.1 SOUTHWE ST Patriots PK 1 4 8 H Se ahawksAppal achianSt.64,TexasSt.58 Ark.-PineBluff66,TexasSouthern62 Baylo r69,Oklahoma58 BASKETBALL HoustonBaptist 79,Lamar 77 Incarnate Word 77,Abilene Christian 61 Men's colle Kansas75,Texas62 LouisianaTech58, Rice 45 Pac-12 NichollsSt.71,Cent.Arkansas61 AH TimesPST S. DakotaSt.76,Oral Roberts 72 SMU80,Houston59 Conference Overall W L Pct. W L Pct. SouthernMiss.75, North Texas71,OT nF.Austin79,Sam HoustonSt.68 Arizona 6 1 .857 18 2 .900 Stephe Tech78, lowaSt. 73 Utah 5 1 .833 15 3 .833 Texas O regon St. 5 2 .7 1 4 14 5 .736 Texas-Arlington75, UALR68 Stanford 5 2 .714 14 5 .736 Texas-PanAmerican73, GrandCanyon72 FARWEST Oregon 4 3 .571 14 6 .700 73,California 50 W ashington 3 3 .5 0 0 14 4 .777 Arizona UCLA 3 4 .428 11 9 .550 BoiseSt.77, AirForce68 Colorado 3 4 .428 10 9 .526 Cal Poly68, UCRiverside49 Washington St. 3 4 . 428 9 10 .473 Colorado90,Washington St.58 A rizona St. 2 5 .28 5 10 10 .500 ColoradoSt.79, SanDiegoSt.73 California 1 6 .142 11 9 .550 E. Washington102,NorthDakota80 Southern Cal 1 6 . 1 42 9 10 .473 FresnoSt.66,Nevada62 Gonzaga 91, Pacific 60 Idaho83,N. Colorado79 Saturday'sGames IdahoSt.80, PortlandSt. 76 Oregon82, UCLA64 LongBeachSt. 64,CSNorthridge 58 OregonSt.59, SouthernCal55 Loyol aMarymount70,SanFrancisco69 Colorado 90, Washington State 58 Montana58,S.Utah 56 Arizona73, California 50 N. Arizona 71, MontanaSt. 64 Stanford89,ArizonaState70 Today'sGame NewMexicoSt.69,UtahValey 44 Oregon82,UCLA64 Washingtonat Utah,5:30 p.m. OregonSt.59,Southern Cal55 Sacramento St. 78,Weber St.71 Saturday'sSummaries SaintMary's(Cal)74,Portland 64 SanDiego77, BYU74 Oregon 82, UCLA 64 SantaClara60,Pepperdine57 Stanford89,ArizonaState70 UCLA(11-9) UC Santa Barbara68, CalSt.-Fullerton 49 Looney 7-90-015,Welsh2-80-04,Powell7-14 UNLV79, UtahSt. 77, OT 9-11 23,Hamilton1-70-2 2, B. Alford6-16 0-015, Wyoming63,NewMexico 62, OT Goloman 2-5 0-0 5,Allen0-2 0-0 0.Totals 26-61 9-13 64.
ON DECK
OREGO(N 14-6)
WINTER SPORTS JanSrud winS Shartened WOrld Cupdawnhill — Norwegian skier Kjetil Jansrud won ashortened version of the classic men's World Cup downhill on the Streif course Saturday in Kitzbuehel, Austria. Fog onthe upper part of the course forced organizers to delay the race bytwo hours, and then significantly lower the start gate as conditions failed to improve. Jansrud clocked 58.16seconds — half the time usually needed onthe 3.3-kilometer (2-mile) course — to edge Dominik Paris by 0.02. The Italian won thesuper-G on the same course Friday.
GUt SCOreS WOrld Cup dOWnhill ViCtOry —Lara Gutof Switzerland won aWorld Cupdownhill on Saturday in St. Moritz, Switzerland, while LindseyVonn missed achance to extend her wins record as shealmost skied out and finished well behind. Gut raced down the newEngiadina course in 1 minute, 43.82 seconds in the final downhill before the world championships next month. Anna Fenninger of Austria was 0.32 behindGut, and nowhas six runner-up finishes and novictories in defense of her overall World Cup title. Bend's LaurenneRossfinished12th overall at1:45.14. A super-G is scheduled for today.
Wagner winS3rd U.S. title —AshleyWagnerwonherthird U.S. figure skating title, bouncing backbetter than everfrom last year's miserable performance. Knowing sheneededto up the difficulty of her jumps to competewith the world's best, Wagner addedtwo newcombinations to her long program, andshelanded both of themSaturday for a total of seventriples. Her148.98 points for the free skate and 221.02 overall were U.S.Championships records, beating defending champ GracieGold by awhopping 15.48. When Wagner nailed her final triple lutz, she threw anarm in the air in celebration as herskate hit the ice. Fifteen-year-old KarenChenwasthird Saturday at her first senior U.S. Championships but is too youngfor the senior world championships. Polina Edmunds, the third American in Sochi, was fourth.
FOOTBALL NOrth takeS 34-13 win OverSouth in Seniar BOwl —Nebraska's AmeerAbdullah wanted to leave animpression on morethan just the NFLwatchers at the Senior Bowl. Abdullah rushedfor 73yards and added 40receiving while leading the North to a34-13 victory over the South onSaturday in theSenior Bowl, punctuating his college career in his homestate. The Cornhuskers' No. 2 career rusher won MVP honors in a gamethat showcasessenior NFLprospects. Abdullah made the most of his11 touches, including four catches. Hesaid being ready for quarterbacks to checkdown to the backswasemphasized. Oregon State quarterback SeanMannion was9-for-14 passing with 79 yards. Also competing for the Beaversweredefensive back Steven Nelson. Punter KyleLoomis from Portland State also competed. — From wire reports
Bell 3-4 0-1 6,Cook4-93-411, Young7-11 0-0 16, Rorie4-40-010, Abdul-Bassit 4-90-010, Benjamin 6-60-115, Benson0-2 0-00, Brooks3-4 2-28, Chandler1-32-2 4, Sorkin1-1 0-02. Totals 33-53 7-10 82. Halftime—Oregon 46-31. 3-Point Goals—UCLA 5-17 (B.Alford3-10,Looney1-1, Goloman1-3, Pow-
ell 0-1, Hamilton0-2), Oregon9-13 (Benjamin 3-3, Rorie 2-2,Abdul-Bassit2-3,Young2-3,Benson0-2). FouledOut—Looney. Rebounds—UCLA28(Looney 8), Oregon 31(Bell 7). Assists—UCLA8 (Alen 3), Oregon16(Bell 5). TotalFouls—UCLA 15, Oregon 14. A —7,301.
Oregon St. 59, SouthernCal 55 SOUTHERN CAL(9-10) Reinhardt6-131-1 17,McLaughlin 2-114-49, Jacobs1-7 0-0 2,Marquetti0-3 0-00, Jovanovic5-10 3-413, Clark0-18-88, Martin0-00-0 0,Dukes0-0 0-00, Gavrilovic2-20-1 4,Stewart1-30-02. Totals 17-8016-18 58. OREGON ST. (14-8) Payton 87-135-7 21, Duvivier 3-11 3-49, Morris-Walker 1-4 0-0 2, Gomis 0-42-2 2, Schaftenaar 4-80-011, N'diaye 0-00-0 0, Reid5-113-514. Totale 20-8118-1889. Halftime —Oregon St. 29-27. 3-Point GoalsSouthernCal5-18 (Reinhardt 4-7, McLaughlin 1-7, Stewart0-1, Marquetti 0-1,Jacobs0-2), OregonSt. 6-19 (Schaftenaar 3-6, Payton8 2-5, Reid1-2, Duvivier 0-3, Morris-Walker0-3). FouledOut—None. Rebounds —Southern Cal36(Clark8), OregonSt.32 (PaytonII10).Assists—SouthernCal12 (McLaughlin 7), Oregon St.14(Duvivier 5). Total Fouls—Southern Cal17,OregonSt.16. A—8,877. Saturday'sGames TOP 25 No.1Kentucky 58, SouthCarolina43 No. 3Gonzaga91, Pacific 60 No.6Wisconsin69,Michigan64 No. 7Arizona73,California 50 TexasTech78, No.9lowaState73 No.11Kansas75, No.17Texas62 No.15 NorthCarolina78, Florida State74 No.18WestVirginia86, TCU85 No. 21Baylor 69, No.190klahoma58 No. 22Dayton 63,Richmond60 Purdue67,No.25lowa63 EAST Bucknel92, l BostonU. 77 CCSU53,Wagner 50 Colgate59,Loyola(Md.) 58 Cornell57,Columbia47 Dartmouth 70, Harvard61 Drexel53,Coll. ofCharleston51 George Washington74,Duquesne59 HolyCross76,Navy65 JamesMadison 69,Hofstra63 LIU Brooklyn80,Fairleigh Dickinson76 Lehigh75,Lafayette 71 Miami66,Syracuse62 MountSt.Mary's52,St.Francis (Pa.)40 Penn56,SaintJoseph's52 PennSt. 79,Rutgers51 Rider59,Canisius46 RobertMorris67,St.Francis (NY)65 Sacred Heart 83, Bryant66 WestVirginia86, TCU85,OT Yale69,Brown65
Women's college
Saturday'sGames TDP 25 No. 3Baylor68,KansasState46 No.6NotreDame74,Clemson36 UTSA64, No.24Western Kentucky63 EAST Army68,American U.60 Bryant71,SacredHeart 67 Bucknel72, l BostonU.56 Buffalo47,N. Illinois 43 CCSU 77, Wagner 61 Colgate72,Loyola (Md.) 45 Cornell46,Columbia42 Duquesne 83,Davidson47 George Washington 67, LaSalle 48 Harvard75,Dartmouth 69 Holy Cross60, Navy44 LIU Brooklyn79, Fairleigh Dickinson75 Marist 77,St.Peter's 51 MountSt. Mary's74, St.Francis(Pa.) 64, OT Penn59,NJIT29 Pittsburgh78, Boston College 70 RobertMorris 69,St. Francis(NY)64 SaintJoseph's66, St.Bonaventure 48 Siena59,Manhatan 51 SOUTH Alabama St. 54,Alcorn St.45 ArkansasSt.82,Troy76 Belmont64,TennesseeSt. 62 Bethu ne-Cookman75,Md.-EasternShore65 Chattanooga 67, Furman45 Dayton75,VCU56 E. Kentucky 97,TennesseeTech93,20T ETSU69,Wofford 47 FAU77,FIU63 FloridaA&M65,Howard51 FloridaGulfCoast61,KennesawSt. 47 Jackson St. 64,Grambling St.55 JacksonvilleSt.72,MoreheadSt. 64 Liberty64,Campbell 40 Lipscomb 71, North Florida 62 Longwood79,Charleston Southern 71 LouisianaTech88, Rice 71 Louisiana-Lafayette 63, GeorgiaSt.56 Louisiana-Monroe 72, GeorgiaSouthern66, OT Memphis 84,Houston49 MiddleTennessee84,Charlotte 54 N.Kentucky70,Jacksonville59 NC A&T79,DelawareSt. 38 NC Central59,Coppin St.58 NorthwesternSt.75, McNeeseSt. 54 Notre Dame74,Clemson36 OldDominion58,UAB46 PrairieView78,MVSU61 Radford61,HighPoint 58 RhodeIsland57,GeorgeMason45 Richmond64, UMass44 SC State 79, Norfolk St. 75 SavannahSt.61, Hampton55 SouthernMiss.67, NorthTexas55 SouthernU.77,AlabamaA&M55 Stetson67,SC-Upstate44 TexasA&M-CC58,NewOrleans46 Tulsa74,EastCarolina63 UNCAsheville 68,Coastal Carolina 61 UT-Martin96,SEMissouri 55 W. Carolina70, UNC-Greensboro 49 Winthrop54,Presbyterian51 MIDWEST Akron74,Cent. Michigan72 AustinPeay66, E.Illinois 63
BowlingGreen66, Miami(Ohio) 53 Denver82,IPFW 75 E. Michigan 75, Toledo 61 Green Bay75,Detroit 58 IUPUI68,SouthDakota43 Kansas 65,West Virginia 59 Milwaukee64,Ill.-chicago63, OT NorthDakota96,E.Washington82 Oaklan d85,YoungstownSt.82 Ohio 60,Ball St.53 SIU-Edwardsville78,MurraySt. 52 Saint Louis54,Fordham50 W. Illinois88,N. DakotaSt.66 W. Michigan 78,Kent St.55 WrightSt.82,ClevelandSt.65 SOUTHWE ST Baylor68,KansasSt.46 Lamar80,HoustonBaptist 64 Marshall76,UTE P71 NichoffsSt. 75,Cent. Arkansas72, OT Oklahoma70,TexasTech64 Oral Roberts74, Nebraska-Omaha53 SamHoustonSt.65,StephenF.Austin64 TCU71,OklahomaSt. 62 Texas Southern 74,Ark.-PineBluff45 Texas St.67,AppalachianSt.58 UTSA64,W.Kentucky63 FARWEST BYU54,SanDiego50 BoiseSt. 81,Air Force54 CS Bakersfield83, ChicagoSt.58 CS Northridge 67, LongBeachSt. 52 Cal St.-Fullerton54, UCSantaBarbara50 Colorado St. 49,SanDiegoSt.36 FresnoSt.62, Nevada44 Gonzag a73 Pacific63 GrandCanyon69, Texas-PanAmerican54 Hawai85, i UCIrvine 50 Montana59, S.Utah37 N. Arizona 79,MontanaSt.64 N. Colorado70,Idaho52 NewMexico 60,Wyoming54 NewMexicoSt.68, UtahValley 58 Sacramento St.108, Weber St.65 SaintMary's(Cal)66, Portland53 SanFrancisco74,LoyolaMarymount65 Santa Clara65, Pepperdine54 Seattle60,UMKC46 UC Riverside 82,CalPoly78 UtahSt. 85,UNLV72
GA Tour
manaChallenge Saturday p-PGAWest, Arnold PalmerPrivate Course: 6,960; par 72 n-PGAWest, Jack NicklausPrivate Course: 6,924; par 72 q-La Quinta ountry 0 Club:7,060; par72 LaOuinta, Calif. Pura e: $8.7 million Third Round Erik Comp ton 66p-66q-67n—199 Bill Haas 67p-63q-69n—199 68q-63n-68p—199 Justin Thom as MichaelPutnam 63n-67p-69q—199 RyanPalmer 71q-61n-68p—200 Scott Pinckney 64q-67n-69p—200 65p-67q-68n—200 SteveWheatcroft 65q-64n-71p—200 Matt Kuchar 68q-64n-70p—202 AlexCejka RorySabba tini 71p-68q-63n—202 Francesco Molinari 64p-71q-67n—202 PatrickReed 65q-70n-67p—202 67q-64n-71p—202 NickWatney 68n-66p-68q—202 Martin Laird SungJoonPark 68n-67p-67q—202 JasonKokrak 65n-68p-70q—203 BooWeekley 70p-66q-67n—203 Billy Horschel 71q-67n-65p—203 68n-66p-69q—203 StevenAlker 64n-70p-69q—203 JohnPeterson BrendanSteele 67q-68n-68p—203 CharleyHoffman 71q-63n-69p—203 LucasGlover 68n-69p-66q—203 67n-69p-68q—204 BrianDavis 68q-71n-65p—204 DavidTom s WebbSimpson 70p-66q-68n—204 HarrisEnglish 67n-68p-69q—204 George McNeiff 68q-68n-68p—204 Martin Flores 68p-65q-71n—204 68n-70p-66q—204 Graham DeLaet Pat Perez 66q-68n-70p—204 Shawn Stefani 75p-66q-63n—204 TonyFinau 71q-65n-68p—204 Billy Hurleyffl 68q-69n-68p—205 69p-65q-71n—205 BrendondeJonge 67n-72p-66q—205 JasonBohn MarkHubbard 69p-69q-67n—205 Phil Mickelson 71q-66n-68p—205 DavidLingmerth 68p-72q-65n—205 TENNIS KevinStreelman 71q-69n-66p—206 64n-73p-69q—206 MarkWilson 71p-67q-68n—206 Colt Knost Australian Open J.J. Henry 67n-67p-72q—206 At Melbourne,Auatraoa HeathSlocum 66n-72p-68q—206 Men Scott Stallings 68q-67n-71p—206 Late Saturday 69q-70n-67p—206 Scott Piercy Third Round 69p-68q-69n—206 Na Kei Nishikori(5),Japan,def. SteveJohnson,United Kevin P atrick Rod g er s 70q-67n-69p—206 States,6-7(7), 6-1,6-2, 6-3. 70p-68q-69n—207 Gilles Muller,Luxembourg, def. JohnIsner(19), Chris Kirk JohnHuh 69n-68p-70q—207 United States,7-6 (4), 7-6(6), 6-4. 68q-69n-70p—207 NovakDjokovic(1), Serbia,def. FernandoVerdas- DannyLee 68p-72q-67n—207 ChadCoffins co (31)rSpain,7-6(8), 6-3,6-4. 67q-67n-73p—207 James H ah n David Ferrer(9), Spain,def.Giles Simon(18), ScottVerplank 70q-65n-72p—207 France,6-2,5-7,7-5, 7-6(4). Keegan Bradley 68q-70n-69p—207 Today CharlesHowell ffl 67q-68n-72p—207 Fourth Round 76n-67p-64q—207 RafaelNadal(3), Spain,def. Kevin Anderson(14), Matt Jones 69q-70n-68p—207 SouthAfrica,7-5, 6-1,6-4. Cameron Tringale Tomas Berdych(7), CzechRepublic, def.Bernard Jeff Overton 68p-73q-66n—207 Tomic, Australia, 6-2,7-6(3), 6-2. GonzaloFdez-Castano 69p-72q-66n—207 RetiefGoosen 68p-70q-69n—207 Women 70p-70q-67n—207 AlexPrugh Late Saturday 72p-69q-67n—208 BillLunde Third Round BriceGarnett 69n-69p-70q—208 VictoriaAzarenka,Belarus, def. BarboraZahlavova TroyMerritt 71p-69q-68n—208 Strycova (25), CzechRepublic, 6-4,6-4. RobertGarrigus 71n-69p-68q—208 Madison Keys, UnitedStates, def.Petra Kvitova(4), SeanO'Hair 68q-67n-73p—208 Czech Republic,6-4,7-5. 69q-68n-71p—208 F abian G om e z Today 69n-72p-67q—208 layneBarber Eugenie Bouchard(7), Canada, def. Irina-Camelia B NicholasThompson 72p-67q-69n—208 Begu,Romania, 6-1, 5-7,6-2. D.J. Traha n 68p-71q-69n—208 EkaterinaMakarova(10), Russia,def.Julia Goerges, AdamHadwin 72q-70n-66p—208 Germany,6-3,6-2. Failed1 o makethe cut MariaSharapova(2), Russia, def.Peng Shuai(21), 70q-67n-72p—209 Jerry Kelly China,6-3,6-0. 66p-74q-69n—209 Eric Axley BryceMolder 67n-73p-69q—209 P aul Case y 70q-69n-70p—209 HOCKEY JohnRollins 71p-68q-70n—209 68n-69p-72q—209 Carl Pettersson NHL 72p-66q-71n—209 Zac Blair NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE ZachJohnson 69n-70p-70q—209 AH TimesPST HudsonSwafford 74q-66n-69p—209 JonathanRandolph 70n-71p-68q—209 EasternConference DanielSummerhays 70n-70p-69q—209 Atlantic Division 70n-72p-67q—209 BrandonHagy GP W L OT PIB GF GA RyoIshikawa 71p-69q-70n—210 Tampa Bay 48 30 14 4 6 4 156 127 JasonGore 73q-68n-69p—210 Detroit 47 27 11 9 63 139 119 JasonDufner 76q-65n-69p—210 Montreal 45 29 13 3 6 1 123 106 BrandtSnedeker 71p-67q-72n—210 Boston 48 25 16 7 5 7 126 121 CarlosOrtiz 69q-72n-69p—210 Florida 44 20 14 10 50 107 122 DanielBerge 70q-68n-72p—210 r Ottawa 46 19 18 9 47 126 128 ScottBrown 72p-68q-70n—210 Toronto 48 22 23 3 4 7 142 150 StuartAppleby 71n-70p-69q—210 Buffalo 47 14 30 3 3 1 89 167 KevinKisner 68n-71p-71q—210 Metropolitan Division JohnMerrick 72p-70q-68n—210 GP W L OT Pts GF GA NickTaylor 66p-67q-77n—210 N.Y.lslanders 46 31 14 1 63 151 129 SpencerLevin 71p-68q-72n—211 Pittsburgh 46 26 12 8 6 0 138 117 RussellKnox 69q-70n-72p—211 N.Y.Rangers 44 27 13 4 58 134 106 WheeKim 72q-70n-69p—211 Washington 46 24 13 9 5 7 137 120 Jon Curran 71p-69q-71n—211 Philadelphia 48 19 22 7 4 5 130 146 71p-70q-70n—211 axHom a Columbus 45 20 22 3 4 3 113 142 M 72q-71n-69p—212 Freddi e Jacobson New Jersey 47 17 22 8 4 2 107 134 73p-69q-70n—212 Carolina 4 6 1 6 2 5 5 3 7 98 120 JarrodLyle ChezReavie 71n-69p-72q—212 WesternConference BrianStuard 67p-72q-73n—212 Central Division 68n-71p-73q—212 GP W L OT Pts GFGA Justin Hicks 71p-67q-74n—212 William McGi r t Nashville 45 30 10 5 65 137 104 68n-74p-70q—212 St. Louis 46 29 13 4 62 148 111 JonasBlixt 64p-79q-69n—212 Chicago 47 30 15 2 6 2 148 108 BlakeAdams 67n-73p-72q—212 Winnipeg 48 26 14 8 6 0 135 117 HarrisonFrazar B o Van P e l t 74q-68n-71p—213 Colorado 48 20 18 10 50 125 137 68q-73n-72p—213 B rendon T odd Dallas 46 21 18 7 4 9 144 151 73q-70n-70p—213 Minnesota 46 20 20 6 4 6 128 137 ScottMccarron DudleyHart 72p-70q-71n—213 PacificDivision 77n-68p-68q—213 GP W L OT Pts GF GA DerekFathauer R icky Barne s 69q-72n-72p—213 Anaheim 4 7 3 1 1 0 6 6 8 139 124 73q-73n-67p—213 SanJose 4 8 2 5 1 7 6 5 6 131 132 Steven Bowditch 72p-74q-67n—213 Vancouver 45 26 16 3 5 5 124 114 Jhonattan Vegas 72p-73q-68n—213 Calgary 47 2 5 1 9 3 5 3 136 125 BenCrane Los Angeles 47 20 15 12 52 129 126 WoodyAustin 70p-73q-71n—214 Jim Renne r 72q-69n-73p—214 Arizona 46 1 6 2 5 5 3 7 105 156 71p-70q-73n—214 Edmonton 47 12 26 9 3 3 109 158 ScottLangley 70p-71q-73n—214 Saturday'sGames KyleReifers 68n-73p-73q—214 No games scheduled ChadCampbell Today'sGame LukeDonald 75n-69p-70q—214 All-StarGam eat Columbus, Ohio, 2p.m. AndresGonzales 68n-75p-71q—214 Monday'sGames RogerSloan 74n-69p-71q—214 No games scheduled 72q-69n-74p—215 RyanArmour 71n-73p-71q—215 TroyKelly MarkBrooks 74n-70p-71q—215 GOLF 77n-67p-71q—215 AndrewPutnam 70n-74p-71q—215 StewartCink Champions Tour CarlosSainzJr 72q-73n-70p—215 ByronSmith 77p-73q-65n—215 Mitsubishi Electrtc Championship Justin Leonard 72q-69n-75p—216 Saturday 74n-70p-72q—216 Luke Gut h ri e At Hualalai GolfCourse 71n-73p-72q—216 Lee Kaupulehu-Kona,Hawaii 72n-75p-70q—217 Purse: $1.8million 75p-71q-71n—217 Yardage: 7,107;Par72 73n-72p-72q—217 SecondRound 69q-74n-75p—218 69-64—133 Miguel A.Jimenez 73p-71q-74n—218 66-67 — 133 RoccoMediate 77n-73p-68q—218 Olin Browne 68-67—135 72-64 —136 71n-73p-74q—218 FredCouples 74n-73p-71q—218 Colin Montgom erie 70-66—136 69-67 — 136 69n-73p-78q—220 MarkO'Meara 71p-73q-76n—220 BernhardLanger 72-65—137 72p-77q-71n—220 Bart Bryant 68-69—137 EstebanToledo 68-69—137 67q-73n-82p—222 Kirk Triplett 73-65—138 74n-71p-77q—222 TomLehman 73-65—138 74n-74p-77q—225 KennyPerry 69-69—138 70n-Bgp-76q—226 WesShort, Jr. 68-70—138 77q-69n-80p—226 MarkWiebe 69-69—138 80n-75p-74q—229 DayisLoveIII 70-69—139 73p-82q-75n—230 CraigStadler 70-69—139 Scott Dunlap 69-70—139 DEALS PaulGoydos 68-71—139 CoreyPavin 67-72—139 DavidFrost 71-69—140 Transactions FredFunk 74-67—141 BASEBAL L JohnRiegger 74-67—141 AmericanLeague MichaelAllen 73-68—141 C HICAG O W H ITE S O X — N amed VinceColeman TomPerniceJr. 70-71—141 baserunning instructor. 69-72 —141 Jay Haas MINNES OTATWINS—Agreed totermswith LHP 69-73—142 RussCochran JohnCook 68-74—142 BrianDuensing onaone-year contract. BASKETB ALL TomWatson 68-74—142 National Basketball Association 75-68—143 LorenRoberts L OS ANGELE S CL I P P E R S — SignedG Dahntay 71-72 — 143 Jeff Magge rt Jones to asecond10-day contract. 70-73—143 RogerChapman 73-71 —144 NEWORLEANSPELICANS— SignedG NateWoltJoe Daley 72-72—144 ers to asecond10-daycontract. Jeff Sluman 7 2-72 — 144 FOOTBA LL Nick Price 74-71—145 National Football League PeterJacobsen 74-71—145 CHICAGOBEARS— NamedBoHardegreeoff enCurtisStrange 71-74—145 sive assistant BradFaxon coach. 73-74—147 Hale Irwin CanadianFootball League Kohkildoki
BenCrenshaw
77-71—148 85-85—170
SASKATCHEWANROUGHRIDERS— Acquired LB SheaEmryfromToronto forDERickyFoley.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
MEN'SCOLLEGE BASKETBALL
D3
NBAROUNDUP
a on aces eavers ast roans Bazersta e By Jim Beseda
Malik Marquetti, Jordan McLaughlin and Jacobs shot a combined 3 for 21 from the field, including 1 for 10 from 3-point range. "If you ask me what the difference in the game was, our guards have got to step up and make some shots," Enfield said. "That's being said, they played really hard, they played excellent defense, and unfortunately, we came out on the short end of the stick." There were seven lead changes and one tie in the first eight minutes of play.
The Associated Press
CORVALLIS — Oregon State had an answer for everything Southern Cal threw its way in crunch time Saturday.
k%Q X a%% % ,. Qlll'
Gary Payton II recorded his sixth double-double of the season with 21 points
and 10 rebounds to lead Oregon State to a 59-55 victory over USC.
Jarmal Reid added 14 points, including the goahead basket with 10:02
NeXtuP
to play, as the Beavers (14-5, 5-2 Pac-12) won
Katin Reinhardt's 3-pointer to open
the second half gave USC a 30-29 lead, but then OSU's Olaf Schaftenaar hit
t heir thirdin a r o w i n a
three-consecutive 3-pointers in a span of 1:34 to put the Beavers on top 38-30.
Pregon State at game that featured 12 Arizona State lead changes and four ties. When:5P™, «Our g ys showed incredible r e siliency again, which is really Radio:KICE k i n d o f becoming the 940-AM; hallmark of this group,"
USC responded with a 15-2 run that ended with Reinhardt stealing the ball
near center court and skipping a pass to a streaking Elijah Stewart for a breakaway dunk that gave the Trojans a 45-40 lead with about 12'/2 minutes to play.
KRCO 690-AM, sai d B e avers c o ach 96.9-FM Wayne Tinkle, whose team improved to 12-0 Greg Wahl-Stephens/The Associated Press USC's Strahinja Gavriiovic (14) tries to at Gill Coliseum. "Just pretty darn good toughness defend Oregon State's Malcolm Duvivier there and finding ways." during the first half of Saturday's game in Trailing 58-55, the Trojans had the Corvailis. The Beavers held on for a 59-55 ball with a chance to tie, but Payton in- win over the Trojans. tercepted a Julian Jacobs' pass that was intended for Nikola Jovanovic at the top
of the 3-point arc with eight seconds to play. Payton was fouled and made one of two free throws with six seconds left to seal the win and send the Trojans (9-10,
1-6) to their fourth straight loss. K atin Reinhardt led USC w it h
The Beavers regained the lead when Reid's layup made it 46-45 with 10:02 to
play. "This group understands," Tinkle said.
17
lamented the fact that starting guards
The Associated Press
The Wizards, coming off a 105-103 overtime loss to Okla-
PORTLAND — Each time that LaMarcus Aldridge went to the free-throw line late in
homa City on Wednesday, led by as many as 14 points in the
the game against the Wash-
first half.
ington Wizards, the Portland
"In the third quarter they re-
Trail Blazers' forward was showered with a chant of
ally started to make their shots and we didn't. It started to
"MVP, MVP," from the home-
look a lot like the OKC game," Wall said. "We gave ourselves opportunities, we just didn't close out possessions."
town fans. Just two days before, Aldridge had announced he was going to have surgery to repair a ligament in his left thumb
The Blazers had lost five of
and would miss the next six to
their past six, including Thursday night's last-second 90-89
eight weeks.
loss to the Boston Celtics.
But in a dramatic turn, he announced Saturday that he
It was Aldridge's night after he surprised many by deciding to play despite his procla-
would play through the pain. And hours later, he had 26 points and nine rebounds in
mation 48 hours earlier that
he was planning to undergo surgery. He hurt his thumb on Monday against the Sacramento Kings and missed two
"They respond. Sometimes we have to
the Blazers' 103-96 victory
turn up the heat a little bit during some timeouts, but right now they're starting
overtheWizards. Even the public address an-
to learn and they've gotten to understand
nouncer at the Moda Center games, both Portland losses. beckoned the crowd to cheer Now, he'll take it a game at a
what we need to do as a team." OSU led 53-52 with less than four minutes to play when Payton padded the
points and Jovanovic finished with 13 points, but Trojans coach Andy Enfield
out Wizar sas Al ri e returns
lead with a baseline jumper as the shot clock was about to expire, followed by a
him for a curtain call as he fi-
nally left the court.
"I'm not into the r ah-rah
time, he said. Despite the emotional boost
from his return, the Blazers
runner in the lane that gave OSU a 57-52
story," Aldridge said. "I just wanted to come back and
didn't hit a shot from the floor in the first 4 minutes of the
lead with 2:40 to go.
play. I wanted to test it out at
game. Then Aldridgemade his first two jumpers.
home, and versus these guys because I felt they were a physical team, and if I could play against these guys then that would be good. And I was OK."
Oregon's Jalil Abdui-Bassit,
Damian Lillard added 20
center, goes
The Wizards took advan-
tage of the slow start and led 32-20 after the first quarter.
Nene paced Washington with 11 points.
points and seven assists as the Also on Saturday: Blazers snapped a two-game Grizzlies 101, 76ers 83: losing streak. MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Zach Tied at 79 midway through Randolph had 17 points and the fourth quarter, Wesley 14 rebounds and Jeff Green Matthews made two 3-point- scored18asMemphis coasted ers that gave Portland an 87- to a win over Philadelphia.
to the basket between UCLA's Thomas Welsh, left, and Norman Poweli during the first half
of Saturday's game in
85 lead with 3:28 left. Lillard's 3 extended the lead 92-85.
Bucks101, Pistons 86: MILWAUKEE — O.J. Mayo scored 20 points, and Milwaukee re-
W izards t o 9 4 -91, but h e m issed a f r e e t h row t h en
lied on perimeter shooting and
Nene's layup closed the
Eugene. The Ducks took a 82-64 victory over the BruIns.
fouled Meyers Leonard on a 3-point attempt on the other
@P,t
defense in a win over Detroit. H ornets 76 , K n i cks 7 1 : CHARLOTTE, N.C. — Brian
Roberts scored 17 points, and free throws to put Portland up Charlotte beat New York for end. Leonard made all three
Chris Pietsch/The
Associated Press
97-91 with I:07 left and Washington couldn't catch up.
its ninth victory in the past 11
John Wall, this week named
Jazz 108, Nets 73: SALT LAKE CITY — Gordon Hay-
an Eastern Conference starter for the All-Star game, led the Wizards with 25 points and nine assists.
games. ward scored 24points and Trey Burke had 19 as Utah rolled to
a win over reeling Brooklyn.
NBA SCOREBOARD Grizzlies101, 76ers 83
Standings AllTimesPST
EasternConference
O S 00 in 0 I Vl 0 The Associated Press
ecl S LlC S
over ruins ROUNDUP
EUGENE — D a n a A l t man's stop
sign went up and Oregon senior Joseph Benjamin added 15 points while going Young promptly blew right through it on 6 of 6, including 3 of 3 beyond the arc. his way to the rim. Elgin Cook had 11 points, and Jalil AbThat's how in sync the Ducks felt dul-Bassit and Ahmaad Rorie scored 10 during their 82-64 rout of UCLA on each for the Ducks, who top the conferSaturday. ence in 3-point attempts but tried just 13 Midway through the second half a and made nine in the rout. rare, hasty 3-point try had Altman with Also on Saturday: both hands in the air on the Ducks' next possession pleading for more ball Pac-12 movement. No. 7 Arizona 73, California 50: A m o m en t la t e r, BERKELEY, Calif. — Stanley Johnson Y oung sped by h i s had 19 points and nine rebounds, Ducoach along the side- san Ristic scored 12 points and Arizona line for a driving layup avenged last season's loss in Berkeley by that put Oregon up by crushing California. 19 and forced a UCLA Colorado 90, Washington State 58: NSXt up time out. BOULDER, Colo. — Askia Booker It was that kind of
scored 21 points and Colorado snapped
game for the Ducks a four-game skid by routing Washington (14-6, 4-3 Pac-12), who State. left the undermanned
Bruins (11-9, 3-4) in the dust more often than not when they weren't
working for the best possible shot. "We really talked the
past couple of days about if we didn't like what we got in transition, make them guard a little bit more," Altman said. "I
Stanford 89, Arizona State 70: STANFORD, Calif. — Chasson Randle, Anthony Brown and Stefan Nastic each recorded at least 20 points and Stanford
36 games. No. 6 Wisconsin 69, Michigan 64: ANN ARBOR, Mich. — Frank Kaminsky scored eight of his 22 points in overtime,
and Wisconsin held off Michigan. Texas Tech 78, No. 9 Iowa St. 73: LUBBOCK, Texas — Devaugntah Williams
scored a career-high 22 points and Toddrick Gotcher added 17, leading Texas Tech over Iowa State for its first Big 12 wm.
No. 11 Kansas 75, No. 17 Texas 62: AUSTIN, Texas — Cliff Alexander had
15 points and nine rebounds, and Kansas beat Texas for a key road win in the
rugged Big 12. No. 15 North Carolina 78, Florida St. 74: CHAPEL HILL, N.C. — Brice Johnson
had 18 points and 14 rebounds to help North Carolina beat Florida State. No. 18 West Virginia 86, TCU 85: MORGANTOWN, WVa. — Jevon Carter
sank two free throws with 1 second left in overtime to lift West Virginia past TCU.
No. 21 Bayior 69, No. 19 Oklahoma 58: WACO, Texas — Lester Medford had
ran away from Arizona State.
17 points, Rico Gathers provided the rim-rocking highlight in a game-clinchTOP 25 ing run and Baylor went on to a victory No. 1 Kentucky 58, South Carolina over Oklahoma. 43: COLUMBIA, S.C. — Devin Booker No. 22 Dayton 63, Richmond 60: DAYscored 18 points, Aaron Harrison added
TON, Ohio — Dyshawn Pierre scored
likedsome ofourpossessions. 13 and Kentucky matched its best start "They went longer and I thought we under coach John Calipari with a victory got better shots because of it." over South Carolina. Young led five scorers in double figNo. 3 Gonzaga91,Pacific 60: SPO-
21 points, and Dayton led a double-digit lead slip away before rallying to beat
ures with 16 points as Oregon rode 75
Purdue 67, No. 25 lowa 63: WEST LAFAYETTE, Ind. — Rapheal Davis scored
KANE, Wash. — Przemek Karnowski and Gary Bell Jr. each scored 13 points
percent shooting from the field in the first half and Dwayne Benjamin's per- as Gonzaga routed Pacific, extendingthe fect game off the bench to the victory. nation's longest home winning streak to
R ichmond, r emaining
u n beaten a t
home. 16 of his 24 points in the first half to lead Purdue past Iowa.
d-Atlanta Washington d-Toronto d-Chicago Cleveland Milwaukee Miami Charlotte Brooklyn Detroit Boston Indiana Orlando Philadelphia NewYork
W L 36 8 29 15 28 15 29 16 24 20 22 21 19 24 19 26 18 26 17 27 15 26 15 30 15 31 8 36 8 37
Western Conference W L d-Golden State 35 6 d-Memphis 31 I2 d-Portland 32 13 Houston 30 14 Dallas 30 I4 LA. Clippers 29 14 San Antonio 28 17 Phoenix 26 I9 NewOrleans 22 21 Oklahoma City 22 21 Denver 18 25 Sacramen to 16 27 Utah 16 28 LA. Lakers I2 32 Minnesota 7 35 d-divisionleader
Pst GB 818
659 7 651 7~/z 644 7'/z 545 12 512 13'I~ 442 16'/z 422 17'/z 409 18 386 19 366 19'/z 333 21'/~ 326 22 182 28 178 28'/~
Pct GB 854
721 5 711 5 682 6'/z 682 6'/z 674 7 622 9 578 11 512 14 512 14 419 18 372 20 364 20'/z 273 24'/2 167 28'/i
Saturday'sGames Charlotte76,NewYork71 Milwaukee101, Detroit 86 Memphis101,Philadelphia83 Utah108,Brooklyn73 PortlandI03, Washington96 Today'sGames Miami atChicago,10a.m. Oklahoma City at Cleveland,12:30p.m. LA. Clippers atPhoenix, 3p.m. DallasatNewOrleans,3 p.m. Minnesota atAtlanta 3 p.m. Indiana at Orlando,3p.m. Milwaukee atSanAntonio,4 p.m. DetroitatToronto,4 p.m. Boston at GoldenState,5 p.m. Washingtonat Denver, 5 p.m. Houston at LA. Lakers, 6:30p.m.
Summaries
Blazers103, Wizards 96 WASHINGTO N(96)
Pierce7-102-219, Nene7-111-315, Gortat2-7 0-0 4, Wall10-175-5 25,Beal7-151-216, Butler 0-20-00,Humphries2-60-04,Webster1-52-25, Miller 2-40-04, Seraphin 2-50-04, Tem ple0-00-0 0. Totals 40-8211-1496.
PORTLAND (103) Crabbe0-00-0 0, Aldridge9-22 8-8 26,Kaman 3-90-06, Lillard5-138-820,Matthews7-190-019, Robinson1-20-0 2,Blake2-60-04, Barton2-60-0 4, Wright3-51-1 10,Leonard2-33-3 9, McCollum 1-20-03. Totals 35-8720-20103. Washington 32 23 15 26 — 96 Porlland 20 25 24 34 — 103 3-Point Goal— sWashington 5-15 (Pierce 3-4, Webster 1-4,Beal1-4, Gortat 0-1,Wall 0-1,Butler O-I), Portland13-31(Mslthews5-11, Wright 3-5, Leonard 2-3, Lillard2-6,McCollum1-1, AldridgeO-I, Barton0-1, Blak e0-3).FouledOut— Nene.Rebounds— Washington 46 (Gortat 7),Portland51(Kaman 10). Assists—Washington 24(Wall 9),Portland22(Lilard 7).Total FoulsWashington 19,Portland 14.A—19,775(19,980).
PHILADELPHIA (83) MbahaMoute3-91-27,Covimgton2-6 2-38, Noel 3-61-27,Carter-Wiliams3-122-210, McDaniels 2-9 1-4 6,Grant5-10 4-8 16,Sims1-2 0-02, DrewII461-19,Thompson28005,Sampson49 009,Aldemir24004,M Thomas00000.Totals 31-81 12-2283. MEMPHIS I101)
Green 6-u 4-418,Randolph8-u 0-017,Gasol
3-53-59, Conle3-82-29, y Lee1-55-68, Leuer2-5 2-2 6, Allen2-5 0-04, Udrih3-9 0-06, Koufos1-4 5-6 7,Carter6-140-013, Calathes2-20-0 4.Totals 37-7921-25 101. Philadelphia 21 2 0 20 22 — 83 Memphis 27 33 21 20 — 101
Bucks101, Pistons 86 DETROIT (86) Single r2-92-27,Monroe3-72-28,Drummond 5-9 0-4 10, Jennings6-14 3-4 16, Caldwell-Pope 2-12 0-04,Tolliver 3-35-612, Meeks2-3 0-04, 6utler 2-94-410,Augustin1-70-02,Jerebko3-60-1 7, Anthony1-10-02, C.Martin0-30-00, Dinwiddie1-3 2-2 4.Totals 31-8618-2586. MILWAUKEE (101) Antet okounmpo3-90-26,Ilyasova4-80-09,Pachulia 4-100 08,Knight512 2214, Middleton7 9 0-016, Dudley5-60-012, Henson5-62-212, Mayo 8-14 0-020,Bayless0-34-4 4, O'Bryant0-3 0-00, K.Martin0-10-0 0.Totals 41-818-10 101. Detroit 28 21 18 19 — 86 Milwaukee 23 40 28 10 — 101
Bobcats 76, Knicks 71 NEWYORK(71) Amundson 2-53-87,Thomas7-142-416,Smith 2-81-2 5, Galloway 5-130-011, HardawayJt 9-17 22 25, Larkin1-5 00 2, Stoudemire 051-21, Acy 0-1 0-00,Aldrich1-50-02, WearI-40-02,Prigioni 0-2 0-0 0.Totals 28-799-1871.
CHARLOlTE(76) Kidd-Gilchrist2-106-910, aeller2-54-5 8, Biyombo 0-20-00, Robe rts5-96-617, Hend erson5-12 4-414, Jefferson 4-141-49, Stephenson3-100-1 6, Williams1-21-4 3,Neal0-60-0 0, Hairston 2-30-0 5, Maxiell 1-32-44. Totals 25-7624-37 76. New York 23 14 17 17 — 71 Charlotte 16 20 21 19 — 76
Jazz108, Nets 73 BROOKLYN (73)
Johnson 3-7 0-0 6, plumlee5-61-311, Garnett 4-7 0-0 8,Jack5-145-716, Bogdanovic 3-7 2-29, Lopez2-9 2-46, Anderson0-2 0-0 0, Jefferson1-4 0-0 2, Jordan 2-4 0-0 4, Karasev2-5 0-0 6, Morris 2-80-05, Brown 0-20-00. Totals29-7510-1673.
UTAH (108)
HaywardIO-I4 3-4 24,Favors3-7 3-49, Kanter 5-12 0-010, Exum 5-7 0-013, Ingles 4-84-416, Booker250 04, Burke7131-219, Gobert340 0 6, Millsap 25 00 5,Clark1-2 002, EWiliams01 0-00, Evans 0-10-00. Totals 42-7911-14108. Brooklyn 21 16 22 14 — 73 Utah 25 33 23 27 — 108
Leaders Through JAN.24
Scoring
Harden,HOU James,CLE Davis,NOR Cousins, SAC Anthony,NYK Aldridge,PO R Griffin, LAC Curry,GO L
G FG FT PTS AVG 44 363 359 1203 27.3 35 319 211 909 26.0 39 368 208 944 24.2 31 263 222 749 24.2 34 302 163 818 24.1 39 360 166 907 23.3 43 383 216 990 23.0 41 330 153 936 2z8
D4
TH E BULLETiN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
PREP ROUNDUP
Manfred
Lava Bears ir ss a omtovicto Bulletin staff report
ern Oregon University. Also
MOUNT BA CHELOR
With six skiers placing in the top seven Saturday, the Bend High girls coasted to a team time of 2 minutes, 52.98 seconds to win an Oregon School Ski Association's alpine sla-
lom meet on Cliffhanger. Shelby Cutter claimed her third individual win of the sea-
son for the Lava Bears, posted a combined time of 54.69 seconds to best runner-up Paget
Rathbun of Summit by less than a half-second. The Storm
Boys basketball
cob Blood chipped in 10 points Heppner 61, Cuiver 39:CUL- for Gilchrist. Emily Touchette (100 free) and VER — Facing one of Class Mikayla Grover (100 breast- 2A's highest-ranked teams for Girls basketball stroke). For the Summit boys the second time in as many Heppner 38, Cuiver 32: CUL— who beat Ashland (116-49), days, Culver stayed dose with VER — Trailing just 18-16 at Cascade Christian (128-5), No. 4 Heppner until the visiting the half, the Bulldogs came St. Mary's (109-40) and Cra- Mustangs took command late out cold in the third quarter ter (126-19) — Jeremy Moon in the first half of the Columbia and scored just four points to led a 1-2-3 Storm finish in Basin Conference game. The Heppner's 11. Culver could not the 200 and the 100 freestyle Bulldogs were within 20-17 in make up the difference in the races. Ben Griswold finished the second quarter before Hep- final period and suffered a Cofirst in the 200 IM and the pner went on a 12-0 run to close lumbia Basin Conference setwith wins for the Storm were
100 backstroke for Summit, and Tristan Todd won the 100 butterfly.
the period and take a 32-17 lead into halftime. Tristan Bo-
back. Hannah Lewis scored a
game-high 17 points for Culver gart led Culver with 11 points. (1-4 CBC, 9-9 overall). w ere second w it h a ti m e Chance Mueller added eight Prospect 48, Central Chrisof 3:00.86. Cammi Benson Wrestling points, Adam Knepp had eight tien 27: REDMOND — Abigail placed ninth for Sisters, which Storm third at tourney: MA- rebounds, and Eli Rumbarger Hannay scored 17 points and rounded out t h e
f o ur-team DRAS — Jacob Thompson
standings. T homas Wimberly a n d
placed first at 170 pounds, Quinton McCoy (113 pounds) Walter Lafky f i n ished first and Grant Leiphart (145) and third, respectively, in the each took second, and Sumboys race, helping Summit mit finished with 129 points post a team time of 2:37.93
to win the boys meet. Brody Swisher was second for run-
ner-up Bend High. Also on Saturday:
had seven assists for the Bull-
H eatherFunk added eight,but
dogs (0-5 CBC, 2-16 overall), the Tigerscould notkeep pace who fell 66-27 to No. 2 Stanfield in the Mountain Valley League on Friday night and play at top- home contest. Central Chrisranked Irrigon on Friday. tian (0-7 MVL, 1-9 overall) Prospect 58, Central Chris- made a run in the fourth quar-
to take second at the Madras tien 38: REDMOND — Cen- ter, when Hannay scored 10 of White B u ffalo I n v itational. tral Christian built a 2 9 -21 her team's 14points. Brent Yeakey was first at 195 lead by halftime but ran out of Hosanna Christian 50, pounds for Ridgeview, which gas in the second half in the Gilchnst 25: GILCHRIST was sixth w it h 122 points. Mountain Valley League loss The Grizzlies fell to 1-7 in
Jacob Dupuis (152) and Juan to the visiting Cougars. Caleb Mountain Valley League play Gregorio (285) each claimed Reynolds scored 13 points and and 4-13 overall. Storm girls, boys sweep: titles for eighth-place Bend, Bryson Eells scored 11 for the Trinity Lutheran 63, Rogue ASHLAND Mackenzie and David Kerr was first at Tigers (0-6 MVL, 1-9 overall), Valley Adventist 27:Emily EiHalligan claimed wins in the 106 for La Pine, which placed who made just one of their 10 dler and Katie Murphy scored 200-yard individual medley ninth. Michael Bauman won free-throw attempts in the sec- 17 points apiece to lead sevand the 100 butterfly while at 182 for 10th-place Madras, ondhalf. enth-ranked Trinity Lutheran swimming legs in the first- 138-pounder Holden Kingery Hosanna Christian 78, to a dominating Mountain Valplace 200 medley and 400 was third to highlight 11th- Gilchrist 46: GILCHRIST ley League victory. Eidler tied freestylerelay races,and the p lace Mountain V iew, a nd Hunter Nelsonposted 17points, her own school single-game re-
Swimming
Summit girls defeated Crater
Clayton Darst finished second
but the Grizzlies dropped to 3-4
cord with five 3-pointers. Mur-
(108-34), Cascade Christian at 160 for 13th-place Sisters. in Mountain Valley League phy added five blocked shots (109-22), Ashland (116-29) and South Albany won th e 14- play and 7-10 overall with a loss and seven assists for Trinity St. Mary's (113-12) at South- team meet with 162 points. to No. 8 Hosanna Christian. Ja- (7-1 MVL, 15-2 overall).
PREP SCOREBOARD
skews older, as reflected in the annually sluggish Nielsen
Continued from 01 ratings for the All-Star Game Manfred, a labor lawyer, and the World Series. But, he is at home on Park Avenue in said, 5.7 million people open Manhattan. Three of his four the AtBat app every day, and grown children live close by, the users' average age is 30. and another is not far away Ma n f red said he is conattending Colgate Universi- vinced that young fans are ty. He saw his first game at hungry for baseball and the Yankee Stadium, and Mickey daily drama other sports Mantlehittwohomeruns.
coul d n o t o ff er. But those
"And then I was a big Bob- fans consume the game difby Murcer fan during the f erently from the way older down years," Manfred said, fans do, and in Manfred, the smiling. "The Jerry Kenney, owners believe they have a HoraceClarkeyears." leader to capitalize on that Manfred, 56, has worked
i n t erest.
"We're in the middle of a for Major League Baseball since 1998, most recently as technology age, a media age, the chief operating officer t hat's different than it used to who negotiated three collec- b e," said Lew Wolff, the Oak-
tive bargaining agreements land Athletics' owner and with the union. He led the
l o n gtime Selig ally. "I think
Biogenesis investigation and there's room for growth, and was Selig's top lieutenant on Rob is very sensitive to that. almost everything. A small One of these days, maybe replica of Dodger Stadium long after I'm out of it, people sits beside Manwill say, 'Look at fred's c o mputer, what Rob added YOU hear a to bas e ball,' just a gift from the bankrup cy 1 w /p f g 5 p L lt pUr lik h y y b Bud." yers baseball used when the Los An-
As that techno-
geles D o dgers' SPClep ... Brld log i cal revolution owners were in / S ggSegg/ / unfo l ds, there are peril. other issues, perU+ P 8 h aps more tangiThe room holds other artifacts — COnSOnant ble, t h at Manfred family ph o tos, ~jgQ pUy could a d d ress. framed degrees, T he A l l-S t a r a signed photo of' SPClep / h hlrik Ga me will be in Muhammad Ali it ' S r eally Cincinn a ti in July, glowering o v er jm p p r f g r l~ meani n g that Pete Rose's status will Sonny Liston, an / E isenhower b i become a s t ory. ography — but te C h nOIOgy Manf r e d has not that Little League gp mg/fe ~he rev i ewed the case lineup card might involving R ose, " who was barred mean the m o st. ~ I Unlike Sel i g, fI ' i erld/g Irl from ba s eball for Manfred is taking gQe bg//pgi/f life i n 19 89 for over in peacetime. gambling on the 8 Reds as their manThere has not been a work stoppage /ÃPBdCBSPS ager , b ut he o fsince the s t r i ke fered opinions on that canceled the other topics. • The desig1994 World Series. P -
~
Boys basketball Class2A ColumbiaBasinConference
Heppner 61, Culver 39 Heppner(61) — PatrickCollins 22,Grieb14, Kindle 7,Cutsforth6, Corbin5, Tulma5, Currin 2. Totals 2312-1561. Culver (39) —TristanBogart 11, Mueller8, Sledge6, Rumbarger6, Knepp4, Reyes2, Jiminez2. Totals162-3 39. Heppner 17 15 15 14 — 61 Culver 9 8 11 11 — 39 Three-pointgoals—Heppner: Tulma, Grieb, Corbin; Culver;Rumbarger2, Bogart 2, Sledge. Class1A Mountain Valley League
Prospect 58, Central Christian 38 Prospect (58) —JarredGaines 18, Driskell13, Raines12,May7, Stilwagon 5, Derr 3. Totals 22 9-15 58. Central Christian(38) — CalebReynolds13, Eells 11, Biever 6,Hannay4,Roberts 4.Toials14 9-2438. Prospect 10 11 13 24 — 58 C entral Christian 16 13 4 5 — 3 8 Three-poingoal t s — Prospect: Driskell 3, Gaines, Stillwagon;Central Christian: C.Reynolds.
HosannaChristian 78, Gilchrist46
Three-poingoal t s—HosannaChristian:Sanchas3,M. Cole 2,Elliott; Gilchrist: Nelson3,Jensen,Metzler.
6irls basketball Class 2A ColumbiaBasinConterence
Heppner 38, Culver 32
2, sorg zTotals3110-1478. Gilchrist (46) —HunterNelson17, Blood10, Metzler 6,Jensen5,Alexander 2,Wright 2, Newton2, Archer zTotals177-11 46. HosannaChristian 29 13 22 14 — 78 Gilchrist 9 15 12 10 — 46
Nordic Skiing OISRA/OHSNO XC OregonInvitational at Mi. Bachelor 4,800 meters Freesiyle
Heppner (38) — KellyWilson13,M. Limdsay 12, Kempken 5, correa3, Grieb3, Grantz Totals 11 10-20 38. Culver (32) — HannahLewis 17,Freeman 6, Beeler 3,Slaght2, Frilz 2, Hokez Totals 10 6-18 32. Heppner 14 4 11 9 — 38 8 8 4 1 2 — 32 Culver Three-pointgoals—Culver: Lewis,Beeler; Heppner: Wilson,Grieb.
CatlinGable,HoodRiverValley, Mountain View,North Eugene,Pleasant Hil, SouthEugene,Summit. Top 10 individuals — i, Emily Hyde,Sum, u:47. 2,olivia Moehl,sum,13:03.3, Alexandra Heisler,Sum,13:04. 4, PhaceliaCram er, SE,13:37.
Class1A Mountain ValleyLeague
5,SadIeAnnGorman,Sum,13:57.6,RebeccaChristensen, Sum,1406. 7,ClaraHonsinger, Ash,14:07. 8, SageHassell, MV,14:08.9,TiaHatton, MV,14:28.10,
Prospect 48, Central Christian 27 Prospect (48) —LakotaSizemore16,Raines 9, B. VanW ormer8, Latona6, Breiholz 4, H.VanWormer 3, Bliss zTotals 215-848. Central Christian (27) — AbigaiHannay17, l Funk 8, Strain z Totals11 5-11 27. Prospect 14 14 14 6 — 48 censalchristian 4 7 2 1 4 — 27 Three-poingoal t s— Prospect: H.VanWormer; Culver: none.
HosannaChrislian (78) —SilasSanchas19,
M. Cole16,Bustam ante14, Staunton7,W.Cole5, Hamilton 4,Elliott 3, Nickel2, Drost 2,Yuan2, Staub
221-2 63. RogueValley 5 9 5 8 — 27 Trinity Lutheran 1 9 11 19 4 — 63 Three-pointgoals —RogueValey: Petray,Wood; Trinity Lutheran:Eidler 5,M.Murphy2,K.Murphy.
Trinity Lutheran 63, Rogue Valley Adventist 27 RogueValley (27) —Carli Zamora8, Petray 7, Pardy 4, Wood4, Tovar4.Totals10 5-1227.
Trinity Lutheran (63) — EmilyEIdler 17,K. Murphy15,M.Murphy9, Cowan6, Martin 6.Totals
Girls
Division i
Teams(no team scoring)— Ashland,Bend,
Olivia Colton,Bend,14:53.
Division2 Teams(noteamscoring) — Sisters, St Mary's (Portlandj,Ridgeview,Corvallis, CrookCounty,Sheldon, RedmondProficiencyAcademy. Top 10 individuals — 1, ShaylaCurtis, Sis, 16:58. 2,Emily Sunerland,SM,17:05. 3, Kaily Fineran,RV,17:27. 4, Emm a Place, SM,17:34. 5, Malia Becker,Cor, 17:56. 6, AbbyDalton, CC,18:33. 7, ClaireShapton, SM,18:59. 8, HelenEldred,Cor, 18:44. 9,AnnaTassia, SM, 19:14. 10, IsabellaStorniolo, Cor,19:38. Team relay (topthree) —1, Summit A,12:09. 2, SummiB,12:21. t 3, MountainView,12;58.
zebediahMilslagle, sum,u:05. 4, Teddywidmer, B, 11:14. 5, Nils Engbersen,HRV , 11:4z 6, Jesse wiley, HRv,12:01.7,Hunter Hassell, Mv,12:u. 8, Adi Wolfenden, MV,12:25. 9,SageFox, SE,12:29.10, DakotaThornton,MV,12:30. Division 2 Teams(no teamscoring) — Redmond, Corvallis, Ashland, CrookCounty, Sheldon, North Eugene. Top 10 individuals — 1, ClaytonAas, Red, 12;16. 2,Remington Wiliams, Red,13:14. 3, Benton Spirek,Cor,13:28.4, GavinBomber, Cor,13:33. 5, PaulBome br, Cor,13:37.6, SethJavorsky, Cor,14:04. 7, BenjaminMerritt, Cor,14:37.8,EliasLawson, Ash, 14:38. 9,ThomasHowe, Cor, 15:04. 10,Erik Oline, Ash,15:I9.
Alpine skiing OSSA at Mt. Bachelor, Cliffhanger Slalom
Boys Teamti mes — Summit2:37.93,Bend2;43.64, Lakeview3:11.13, Sisters 3:31.27, MountainView 4:17.65. Top 10 — 1, Thomas Wimberly, Sum,:51.35.
2, Brodyswisher,B,:5z17. 3, walter Lafky,sum, :5z33. 4,NateOdegaard,Lv,:52.93.5,sam Nelson, B,:55.03. 6, KevinPanton,Sum,:55.34. 7, Coren Odegaa rd,LV,:55.99.8,RyanDeCastilhos,B,:57.17. 9, lanLafky,Sum,:58.04.10, Giovanni,Ricci, B,:58.4. Girls Team times — Bend 2:5z98, summit3:00.86, Lakeview 3;23.9,sisters 3;24.5z Top 10 — 1,ShelbyCutter,B,:54.69. 2, Page t Rathbun ,Sum,:55.08.3,LuciaCharlton,B,:58.75. 4, KierstenRowles, B,:59.54.5, ShannonBrennan,B, 1:00.83. 6,IsabelAbt, B, 1:00.84. 7,SydneyLevine, Boys Division1 B,i:01.58.8,KeyleeFloyd,sum,1:oz86.9,camTeams (no teamscoring) — Sum mit, Bend, mi Benson,Sis,1:03.07.10, ParkerCampbell, Sum, 1:03.2z HoodRiverValey, Mountain View,SouthEugene. Top10individuals— 1,CaseyShannon,Sum, Team relay(iop three) —1,Summit,10:21. 2, 10:4z 2, AlexMartin, sum(Independent), 10:54.3, HoodRiverValley, u:03. 3, Bend,11:08.
He can afford to thM l o n g t e rm
when asked for his priorities.
"I Incoming MLB nated hitter: commissioner have never expeRob Menfred rrenced one moment o f m e n tal
"The one that dissonance over I'm most excited about, and I t h e f act that the American
thinkmaybemostimportant League has it and the Nafor the game over the long tional League doesn't. I just haul, is a focus on kids," Man- never have. It's interesting, fred said. "We have to have right now, given where ofmore kids, period, playingthe fense is in our game. I can't game. Wehavetohavemore see the American League of the best athletes playing clubs giving it up, and right the game in order to keep our now, given the composition product compelling on the o f o urNationalLeagueownfield. Even putting the elite ers, I don't see them buying guys to one side, if you play, into it. So I think we're staythe chances you're going to ing where we are." • Day games in the World be a fan go up dramatically. All the research shows that." Manfred said he wanted
S e r i es: "I don't rule that out, a n d the reason is not that I
MLB to be more of a pres- really foresee it in our curence in the amateur game,
r e nt situation, but the media
from Little League through landscape is changing so theNCAA,toencouragepar- quickly that to say, 'We're ticipation. He also hinted at never going to do that,' I programs that would draw t h ink, would be foolhardy. younger fans to major league And I do see the appeal of parks, before pivoting to an- that, particularly on the issue other objective, symbolized of youth." • Advertisements on uniright there on his windowsill: a personal charging station forms: " There was m o r e f ortwoiPadsandaniPhone.
ch a t ter about t hat i n t h e
u n i f orms look. I don't fore-
"I am the original plugged- game 10 years ago than there in guy," Manfred said. "I hate is now. It's just not a hot issue for us. I think people have to admit it, but I am." Selig was the right man g reat respect for the way our
Wrestling
pionship, and Brendan Har-
mances by our younger kids
December), I told hi m t h at
to lead the owners out of the
key won at 160 pounds. Ter-
that just made us smile. Just
he needs to start going on a
Continued from 01 "His (Colbray's) resume is
ran Libolt (120), Brent Bannon (132), Hayden Bates (138) and Trevor Rasmussen (220) each placed second. A year after finishing last here, Redmond High, behind Mitch Willett, racked up 141.5
positive stuff all th e w ay
run and start winning tournaments. He's done that. His
strike, unifyingtheminaway see that one; I really don't." • Expansion: "I don't see it perhaps no one else could. His decades in baseball gave in the immediate future. At a him historical perspective, minimum, it's a ways down and he advanced his initia- the road. I just don't see any tives by combining the home- immediate push for it."
about 50 feet long. He's ridiculous. I don't know if he's lost
a high school match until tonight — already a two-time state champion. It's not like
Gunnar caught him. He shot
around." Willett, the No. 1 seed at
145 pounds, edged Crater's Nate Walters 2-1 to claim the
championship, highlighting Redmond's five placers. "He's taken to heart win-
confidence has just grown day by day." Bunker Parrish was fifth at
195 for Redmond, and Austin Doescher (113), Austin Rystedt (126) and Marion Nonato (220) each placed sixth. Clay McClure finished fifth
in on him, turned him, threw
points to place fourth in the 24-team field.
him. It was a dominating performance."
"Our kids just got better,"
ning tournaments for this program," Davis said of the
Panthers coach Kris D avis
sophomore Willett. "When I had that conversation with
at 160 for Culver, which was
him before the Adrian Irwin (Memorial Tournament in
took sixth at 138, and Joshua Hendrix followed suit at 285.
said. "That made us so much won at 126 pounds to claim tougher, mentally and physhis third straight TOC cham- ically. We saw great perforTop-seeded Trayton Libolt
14th as a team. Tucker Davis
GOLF ROUNDUP
Kuchar stumbles, givesaway Challenge lead
spun personal touch of a born
mands a more streamlined
approach. The Associated Press LA QUINTA, Calif. — Matt
Palmer Private Course. That left him a shot behind Erik
Compton, Bill Haas, Justin rocks at the foot of the Santa Thomas and Michael Putnam. Rosa Mountains and shot sideThe highest-ranked player ways into the All-American in the field at No. 11, Kuchar Kuchar's ball crashed into the
Canal. More rocks and water gob-
lost a shot on the par-3 15th when he drove to the right,
bled up another ball — and with it, his third-round lead
sent his second to the back edge and missed a 14-footer. "Just nearly an impossible up-and-down if you miss the green right," Kuchar said. He bogeyed the par-3 17th after his tee shot went right,
on Saturday in the Humana
Challenge.
"It's too bad, but it's what
happened," Kuchar said. "I still got one more day left to try to make some birdies and still pull this thing out." Two strokes ahead after a birdie on the par-5 14th, Kuchar bogeyed three of the final four holes for a 1-under 71 on PGA
bounced off
t h e m o untain
rocks and raced across the green into the canaL "With a pitching wedge, you're looking to hit a good shot," Kuchar said. "Unfortu-
W est's Arnold nately, I let it hang too much
and it caught a rock and went in the water." The seven-time tour winner closed with another rocky bo-
Also on Saturday: Jimenez, Mediate share lead in Champions Tour opener: K AUPULEHU-KONA,
Ha -
gey, ending his birdie-eagle waii — Miguel Angel Jimenez string on the par 5s. On the shot an 8-under 64 for a share first 12 pars 5 of the week, he of the lead with Rocco Mediate had an eagle and 11 birdies. in the Champions Tour's seaOn No. 18, his 235-yard son-opening Mitsubishi Elecapproach sailed long and tric Championship. Jimenez left into the rocks and water. had nine birdies and a closing After his ball rolled away on bogey to match Mediate at a penalty drop, he placed it 11-under 133 at Hualalai. Medeep in the dormant grass, diate, the first-round leader b lasted out t o 8 f e e t a n d after a 66, had a bogey-free 67. two-putted. Grace wins Qatar Masters "I hit a great drive and was by one stroke: DOHA, Qain between a 3- and 4-hybrid," Kuchar said. "I went with a
tar — South African Branden
Graceshota decisiveeagleon 3-hybrid, trying to get it back the 16th to win the Qatar Masto the hole and hit a solid shot tersby one stroke and clinch that just didn't fade." his sixth European Tour title.
• Montreal: "Look, I think
salesman with the dogged Montreal helped itself as a persistenceof aseasonedpol- candidate for Major League itician. Selig was willing to B aseball with the Toronto wait for most changes, andby games that they had up there the end, he had a long list of last year. It's hard to miss accomplishments. Manfred how many people showed up said he would lean on Selig, for those exhibition games. It now the commissioner emer- was a strong showing. Montreal's a great city. I think itus, for guidance. But Selig was also famous with the right set of circumfor not owning a desktop stances and the right facility, computer. He still presid- i t's possible." • TheA11-StarGameresult ed over the development of baseball's thriving advanced determining home-field admedia company, but it is no vantage for the World Series: secret that Manfred is bet- "I'm in favor of it staying. I ter suited for an age that de- understand people have dif"You hear a lot about our
f e r ent theories about why it doesn't make sense. I think t h e o n e t h ing t hat's very,
game, our society — how do very difficult to argue with is the two fit together? — and
w h e n we went to the home-
is baseball and its pacing f i eld advantage rule, the consonant with our society," way the game was played Manfred said. "I think it's b y the players, how seriousreally important that we use ly they took it, changed and technology to make the game changed for the better. Why as user-friendly in the ball- y ou'd want to go backwards park and during broadcasts on that issue is something as we possibly can. You can that really escapes me." • International draft: "Inenhance and provide real fans with information via e v itable. It's going to come technology that makes the someday. When? It's going game movefasterand keeps to be a product of negotiapeople engaged during the t ion with the players. I think game, without distracting there is a natural appeal to a from what's the core, what's single vehicle for entry into the game, no matter where out there on the field." It i s
a c cepted w isdom, y o u h ail from. It's the most
Manfred said, that baseball's efficient way t o p romote national television audience competitive balance."
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
SUPER BOWL XLIX
Keys Continued from 01 She has the fluid service action and easy power to be a
o o as — we,sic,co an si e — are air amea arios' racices By Peter May FOXBOROUGH, Mass.
chick wasted no time owning
up to altering footballs. Does he deflate them? No, he said. He added that he had
no knowledge of who does. Does he deface them'? Yes, he said. Every chance he gets. One of the revelations from Belichick's news conference
about the "football issue" on Thursday, when he said he had no knowledge that his Patriots might have used underinflated footballs against the Indianapolis Colts in the
AFC championship game, was a quick sidestep to his obvious pride in m aking practice footballs borderline unusable. He opened the sec-
ond paragraph of his statement — just after he said he was shocked by the deflation
accusations against his team — by reversing course. He went from the deflation topic, which had led him to the lec-
tern in the first place, to the defacement matter.
He was more than happy to offer minute details of what happens to footballs at
Patriots practices as a way of reminding the uninitiated that his players will never use the conditions of a football as an excuse. That's becausethey experience daily the absolute worst. "Let me just say that my personal coaching philosophy and my mentality has always been to make things as difficult as possible for players in practice," he said. He added: "With footballs, I'm sure that any current or
past player of mine would tell you that the balls we practice with are as bad as they can
Few sports issues candisrupt the hype to a Super Bowl quite like cheating. And while fans are along way from knowing what mischief led to the NewEngland Patriots winning the AFCtitle with underinflated footballs, it's already becomethe latest episode in avast history of rule-breaking in the wide world of sports. So while NFL investigators sort that one out, here's a look at some other episodes illustrating a drop in the bucket of the range of cheating accusations in sports. BLACK SOXSCAHDAL Almost every sport has struggled with the worst elements of illegal gambling. Themost scandalous intersection for baseball waswhen eight players werebannedfrom the gameafter being accused of throwing the1919World Series. Chicago White Soxpitchers EddieCicotte and Claude "Lefty" Williams, first basemanChick Gandil, shortstop Charles "Swede" Risberg, third baseman BuckWeaver, outfielders "Shoeless" Joe Jackson andHappy Felshandinfielder Fred McMullen weresuspended for life by Commissioner KenesawMountain Landis. The "Black Sox" wereacquitted of criminal charges in1921 but bannedfrom the gamethe next day. LOADING UP No, those bulky boxing gloves aren't just there for tradition or to protect a fighter's hands. They're crucial protection for opponents looking to dodge cheats and minimize serious injury. That's why corners get so persnickety about brands, specifications and padding levels. While the fuss can sometimes seemcircus-like, it has very legitimate roots. Trainer Carlos "Panama" Lewis and junior middleweight fighter Luis Resto were jailed for removing half the padding from Resto's gloves for a fight against Billy RayCollins Jr. in1983. Collins suffered permanent damage to his right eye in the fight, plus contusions and cuts. His career ended andless than a year later, he died after driving his car into a ditch in what his father said was a suicide. Collins' father, who wasalso his trainer and manager, discoveredtheunderpadded gloves when he shook handswith Resto after the fight and "felt nothing but fingers and knuckles." SLASHED FROM WORLD CUP In a story that sounds scripted because part of it was, Chile was disqualified from the 1990 World Cupand banned from the1994 tournament after a plot to make it past Brazil in qualifying that almost worked if not for a single
be — wet, sticky, cold, slip- but inside the New England pery. However bad we can locker room, it was common make them, I make them." knowledge. "I don't know anything That may have constituted news to the outside world, about what's going on," run-
All of which led to this statement from Shara-
pova: "I believe, at theendof theday, personally, my life is not about abanana."
He continued, "Bill comes
the past two seasons for Keys,
and there were plenty more after a second-round loss to Alek-
tions of the practice balls. Belichick has a stock response:
Like the deflated footballs flap, sometimes it
and pours water on the balls
There have been a lot of tears and doubts after losses in
useless to protest the condi-
only takes seemingly small differences to raise suspicions. Maria Sharapovafaced those suspicions when she won the 2006U.S. Open. After beating Justine Henin in the final, Sharapova got into a bit of atesty exchange with reporters who askedabout the apparent signals sent by her father andcoach aboutwhen to eat bananas or sip drinks at changeovers. Thesignals included holding up four fingers or waving abanana.
terrible balls."
ed now than in earlier eras.
learned early on that it was
photographer catching a conspiracy on camera. With Brazil leading Chile during the1989 game, a flare was thrown onto the field from a heavy Brazil-fan section of MaracanaStadium in Rio de Janeiro. Chile's goalie Roberto Rojas fell to the pitch in pain, blood dripping from his head, and Chile's players refused to continue playing. But one photographer shooting Rojas while the action was on theother side of the pitch caught Rojas sneaking a razor from oneof his gloves and cutting his own head. Rojas was bannedfor life from soccer. A 25-MILE HEADSTART Can't win straight up? That's what shortcuts are for. Rosie Ruiz pretended to win the1980 Boston Marathon by coming out of the crowd about one mile before the finish line. Shetook the cheers and the winner's wreath, but immediately drew suspicio nbecauseshewasunknown anddidn't appear assweatyandfatiguedassomeonewho just ran 26.2 miles. Race officials deliberated for weeks while studying videotapes andother checkpoint evidence, thenconcluded shehad notruntherace. Theyalsoconcludedthatshetookthesubway during the1979 NewYork Marathon, which she Used as her qualifying time for Boston. 'NOT ABOUT ABANANA'
ning back LeGarrette Blount said. "But we practice with
for tennis prodigies becoming world-beatersis m ore extend-
team usesfor games. The ve t e ra n Pat r i o ts
-
New England coach Bill Beli-
major force, but the timeline
Belichick waters at practice could be the same ones the
Alook atwideworld ofcheatingacrosssporls
New Yorh Times News Service
D5
— The Associated Press
He makes them worse and, as he said, "that stops the
complaining." He continued: "I want the
players to deal with a harder situation in practice than they'll ever have to deal with
in the game. Maybe that's part of our whole ball-secu-
rity philosophy. I'm trying to coach the team, and that's what I want to do."
His approach seems to be working. The Patriots lost only four fumbles this season, the second fewest in the NFL, and had the second-best turnover differential. That is one reason they
are headed to Super Bowl XLIX next Sunday against Seattle in Glendale, Arizona. Brandon LaFell, in his first
season with New England, made the mistake of asking Belichick if he could get new gloves during practice because of the slippery ball. Belichick simply walked over to the football and doused it with water.
" We practice with
Patriots quarterback Tom Brady, in his 30-minute session with th e news media Thursday, said the balls that
lastyear's U.S. Open. But experience and the decision to work with a new coach,
Lindsay Davenport, in the offseason have helped her mature more quickly, and th e out-
come was there for everyone to see Saturday night in Rod Laver Arena, including the fourth-seeded Kvitova. Keys played a poised, controlled and forcefulmatch, one she served out at love to win, 6-4, 7-5. She is now into the fourth round of a Grand Slam tournament for the first time.
"Twenty years ago, everyone was a lotyounger who was breaking through," Keys said. "Now champions are getting older, and you know some people are peaking when they are 24 or 26. So I think that's been a little bit of an aspect of it for
me, getting older and maturing a little bit. But on top of that,
having Lindsay, who's gone through it, who knows how to deal with it, having that in my corner has really helped." Keys spent much of the past t wo seasons working w i t h
coaches from the U.S. Tennis Association, but in October, she met with her agent, Max
Eisenbud, who has also managed the careersof Maria Sharapova and Li Na, and told
the
him she wanted to create her
worst balls ever made,"
ownteam. Eisenbud had not expected
LaFell said. Belichick said he hears comments during
p r actice
"from time to time," usually from the ballhandlers and kickers who do not like the
balls' condition.
"They're a lot more sensitive to it than I am," he said.
"But I can tell you, and they will tell you, that there is nev-
er any sympathy whatsoever from me on that subject. Zero." He added: "That has never
that we practice on."
sandra Krunic, a qualifier, at
the request so soon and quickly contacted Davenport, whom he saw as an ideal fit in terms
of game and temperament, to help Keys in the offseason while he looked for a full-time
coach. "It was about their games,
but also Madison doesn't do well with yellers," Eisenbud said. "She shuts down, so I thought Lindsay would be soft-spoken and everything." D avenport and
her h us-
been a priority for me. We play with whatever, or kick
band, Jon Leach, have four young children, which meant,
with whatever we have to
in Eisenbud's mind, that she
use. And that's the way it is."
could not possibly take on a role beyond the offseason. But Eisenbud, who was then busy
coming to an agreement with
Trademarks Continued from 01 Despite that long history of onomatopoeia in the sport, the
Seahawks are now trying to trademark the word "boom" and use it for the team's own
purposes. The effort is part of a quiet legal strategy in which the team has filed some two dozen trademark applications sinceOctober 2013 forphrases
such as "Go Hawks" and the number "12." The Seahawks' aggressive quest for new revenue has led both the NBA and the NHL to try to slow one of the trade-
mark applications. And while Seattle's owners were once sued over the use of "12th
Seahawksgotrademark crazy Sampling efSeahawkstratiemarks: Thedesign of the "12" flag, "Legion of Boom," "Spirit of 12," "Bring on the 12"; "Blitz," the name of mascot; ThenUmber12 in astyle that resembles a cheering fan. Things theSeahawks havetried, er are trying, te trademark: The number12 in no particular color or style, the nUmber12 in the font featured on theteam's jerseys, "Boom," "Go Hawks," "We are12," "The12s." ThingstheSeahawks haveopposed erconsideredopposing:
has been surprised by the
team already owns. Heritage lengths the team has gone to Distilling Company in Gig control a simple number. Harbor, Washington, which Seahawks officials declined produces vodka and whiskey to comment for this story.
'Boom'time T he Seahawks' effort t o trademark "Go Hawks" has
has sought to trademark that
and I want to do more,'" Eisen-
name. A likeness of the label
bud said. "I said: 'What do you mean you want to do more? You have four kids under the age of 8.' And she's like: 'I'm really enjoying this. She's bet-
uses a font and color scheme
from the NBA, which has the Atlanta Hawks, and from the
The team has challenged it, saying consumers will mis-
NHL's Chicago Blackhawks. takenly associate the booze Blend," "Beware of Hawks." Attorneys from both the NBA with the Seahawks. and NHL in the past couple of Justin Stiefel, who runs Source:U.S. Patent and Trademark Office months have asked the U.S. Heritage Distilling with his Patent and Trademark Office wife, said they used the name Seahawks agreed to pay an- trademark variations of the for more time to submit docu- Batch No. 12 because they nual licensing fees of $5,000 to "12th Man," Seahawks offi- ments opposingthe Seahawks' needed 12 attempts to perfect use the "12th Man" in limited cials pitted themselves against request. the recipes. He sells Batch No. circumstances. longtime Seahawks fan Chris The team's request for 12li quor in TraderJoe's,som e "Batch No. 12," "Lady12s," "12 Nation," "District12," "12th
The Seahawks cannot sell
Johnson, who filed for a trade-
" boom"
mark for "12's" with Washing- disrupted.
to seize control of many other variations of the term.
term. The team is allowed to
ton state.
raise a flag at the beginning of Johnson, a former vice presIn the process, the Sea- each game and call it the "12th ident of publicity for the Seahawks organization has bat- Man" flag, but the flag is al- hawkers, the team's booster tled fans, local businesses and lowed to have only the number club, daims to have coined "12" on it, no "man." even a former player. the term and said in his state That "12" flag has become a trademark registration that he Scott Andresen, a sports entertainment attorney in Chi- bannerforthefranchise,hang- began using the phrase eight cago, said the Seahawks' pur- ing on buildings and homes all years ago. (He declined to suit of so many different trade- over the Seattle area. Many comment for this story) He has marks contrasts with conduct businesses have embraced the promoted T-shirts and other by other teams, even those number, offering menu items, products with that brand. with a national brand such as products a n d pro m otions The Seahawks applied for the Dallas Cowboys. based on 12. the federal trademark for the "They've always been a lit"term, among other One week after winning the same "12's tle aggressive about securing Super Bowl last season, the variations, in November 2013 intellectual property for them- team filed to trademark the — a request that could superselves," said Andresen, who design of the "12" flag, an ap- sede the trademark owned by
has
al s o
bee n
In 2013, the team won con-
trol of "Legion of Boom" for items such as towels, and it wants to expand that trademark to other products. But
Safeway stores and in other states.
Seahawks attorneys have also challenged trademark applications for "Beware of Hawks," "Lady 12s" and "Le-
'12'steps One of the Seahawks' ongoing trademark sagas began in 2006, when Texas A8 M sued the team over its use of the
phrase "12th Man" to describe its boisterous fans. The university has owned
that trademark for a quarter of a century. In a settlement, the
to the idea. Jordan Johnson,
26, said he did not expect the "12" in the team's jersey font, team to challenge his idea and which has some similarities to he does not have the resources other NFL jerseys, such as the to take on the Seahawks' legal "12" worn by New England Pa- team, so he is abandoning the triots quarterback Tom Brady. effort. "It just seems like they are A Texas A&M official said the school is OK with the Sea- trying to bully a lot of entreprehawks' trademarking efforts, neurs," Jordan Johnson said. and the two have worked toNorm Johnson, who played gether to challenge potential nine seasons with the Seainfringers. But, in seeking hawks through 1990, said he
standout who is also part of
Keys' team, will be available or be able to do. But they are both in Melbourne, and as Keys dosed out the biggest victory of her career Saturday, Davenport was growing emotional in the stands.
"She got teary," said Pam Shriver, a former U.S. Open fi-
nation is divided into 13 districts, with District 12 being
court. You know it's not that
the poor, coal-mining region that is home to protagonist Katniss, played by Jennifer
made it look easy, because of
books and movies, District
other brand names. The team has not yet filed additional documents to sup-
port this request. Andresen, the sports attor-
Marshawn Lynch's famous
Officials with the New En-
"Beast Quake" run against gland Patriots, the upcoming New Orleans in the 2011 play- Super Bowl opponents for the offs, he applied for and later Seahawks, have requested successfully tra demarked two trademarks since Octo"Beast Mode." ber 2013. One was for a motto of head coach Bill Belichick:
Challenges
Along with zealous efforts
to collect more trademarks, Seahawks lawyers have forcefully defended potential infringement of trademarks the
easy, but somehow Madison herpower, because of the game plan that was pretty clear."
Lawrence in the movies.
In the meantime, the team has also pursued trademark of
In just the past few months, the Seahawks have petitioned the U.S. Patent and Trademark
It remains unclear just how
much more she and Leach, a former junior and collegiate
mark could be confused with
"boom," the federal examin-
buster "Hunger Games" books and movies: "District 12."
more intellectual property, the better."
do more.'"
ing attorney suspended the 12 does not appear to have request last month due to con- anything to do with the Seacernsthat the proposed trade- hawks. The series' dystopian
gion of 12." In "The Hunger Games"
Office for a chance to oppose a film company's application to trademark a geographical name featured in the block-
sional franchises. "They've really taken the position that the
ter than I thought. She's coachable. My kids like her. I want to
nalist who is an ESPN analyst. "It looked like an expression of pride and happiness, and you know what it is when you've played that kind of match so many times yourself on a big
after the team applied for
ney from Chicago, agrees with the Seahawks' ambitious strat- How Seahawks compare plication the U.S. Patent and Johnson. Johnson has filed for egy. Trademark applications While the Seahawks' team Trademark Office approved in time to challenge the effort. cost little in the overall budget owners have submitted 24 September. Then there is the case of for- of a pro sports team, he said, trademark applications in the The team has gone further, mer Seahawks kicker Norm and owning the trademarks past 15 months, officials with filing two trademark applica- Johnson and his son. The son, related to the team could help the Green Bay Packers, last tions for the number "12" in Jordan, said he came up with owners monetize its brand. weekend's opponent, have "You do it to build assets," filed just 36 applications in general. The federal agency the idea of a "12 Nation" brand turned down one application to representfans in the area, Andresen said. "Why do you the past 40 or so years, acdue to a previous trademark so he worked with his father to have assets? To generate reve- cordingtofederalrecords. for a NASCAR team. Another file a trademark request. nues. If you don't do it, someMost have been related to was refused due to a previous In October, Seahawks law- one else sure as heck will." the team's name, logos and its trademark for a hotel. yers filed formal opposition More than two years before stadium, Lambeau Field.
has worked with other profes-
for two weeks.
"She says, 'You are going to kill me, but I'm enjoying this,
similar to what the Seahawks have used.
merchandise featuring the
him after working with Keys
under the label "Batch No. 12,"
been stalled due to filings
Man," the team is now trying
the veteran coach Wim Fissette, said Davenport called
"Do Your Job." Documents
describing how the trademark would be applied made no mention of job duties con-
nected with footballs and air pressure.
Nadalmoveson to faceBerdych MELBOURNE, Australia — Rafael Nadal stayed in contention for his second Australian Opentitle six years after his first with a 7-5, 6-1, 6-4 fourth-round
win this morning over Kevin Anderson. The 2009 Australian
Open winner turned around the first set — and ulti-
mately the match — in the 11th and 12th games.
The third-seeded Nadal, who lost lastyear's final to Stan Wawrinka, will play No. 7Tomas Berdych in the quarterfinals. Berdych beat local hope BernardTomic 6-2, 7-6 (3), 6-2. — The Associated Press
D6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
ASK A CENTRAL OREGON HEALTH PROFESSIONAL
• •
QUEsTIDN: I have developed a turkey neck look and can't stand how old i t makes me l ook. W ha t a r e t h e alternatives to getting neck lift surgery? ANswER: It is possible to obtain short term results with creams and lotions but the benefit does not last. There Adam P Angeles, ' are no m i racle treatments. None of ooardcertified the non surgical options for neck lift Plastic Surgeon are aseffective as surgery. To improve the appearance of the neck it is necessary to induce a healing response to an injury. A " l aser neck lift" is a good option for patients that are unhappy with the appearance oftheir necks but are not ready for a traditional neck lift. The Precison TX L aser is a minimally invasive procedure and can be very effective in getting results patients are looking for with very little down time. BEND P LASTI C SURGERY
Q UES rioN: W ha t
i s L ED
lig h t
therapy? Answer: Light emitting diode, or LED li g ht t h e rapy w as c reated by NASA and works by sending energy producing light into deeper l ayers o f
t h e s k i n t o st i m u l a t e
fibroblasts to p r o duce collagen, reduce redness, fade dark spots and kill acne bacteria. LED is beneficial after facials and other skin treatments because it's scientifically proven to regulate cellular function and restore the body's natural ability to heal itself. The treatment
costs $32-$48, takes from 20-30 minutes, is very relaxing and requires no recovery time. I have successfully treated skin irritation from medication
side effects, wind and sunburns, eczema, psoriasis, redness from rosacea, dermatitis, acne and allergic reactions. I recommend paring LED wi t h f a cials,
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A dam P. A n g e l e s , M . D . M edica l D i r e c t o r , B end Pl a s t i c df R e c o n s t r u c t i v e S u r g e r y
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Dr. Azure Karli sz~smezevm ~ ~
lh
•
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QUEsrtoN:Colonoscopy preparation: why is it important? ANswER: The colonoscopy preparation must be done correctly to ensure a clean colon during a colonoscopy examination. Following the prep instructions is very important for the best visualization of I'"' m "" ' g t h e colon. This involves a combination M.D., FACS of fasting, hydrating, and taking a bowel preparation at the right time to ensure that the colon will be at its cleanest just prior to the colonoscopy. Most preparations are taken the evening before or the morning of the colonoscopy. Taking the prescribed preparation plus restricting food the day prior to the procedure ensures a clean colon. The prescribed preparation also decreases mucus production within the colon. A proper bowel preparation is the single most important step of a colonoscopy. Be prepared, follow the instructions, and consult your physician if you have any questions before going in for your colonoscopy. It is estimated that over 20% of patients have a poor bowel preparation and of those nearly 40% of adenomas (polyps) are missed. If the preparation is not done right, the colon will not be clean and polyps may be missed. Colonoscopies save lives. Your Health Your Choice Our Expertise
J ana M . V a n A m b u r g , M D , F A C S V anAm b ur g S u r g e r y C a r e
R evive S k i n S e r v i c e s , l l c 2100 NE Neff Rd ¹B • Bend
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541-410-2897 www.reviveskinservices.com
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Question: I'm in my late40s and starting to have a Iot of vaginal discomfort and dryness off and on. Is there something Ican do about this naturally? A swen The term for what you ~e experiencmg is vulvovaginitis (VV). There are many causes of this but the most common are either infection or atrophic changes. Vaginal atrophy is common in women as N.D. we age. The local amount of estrogen feeding the mucosal layer decreases and this causes a thinning and drying of the tissue. Local use of estriol or estradiol in the forms of creams or suppositories is the preferred treatment for atrophy in my office. I often get these compounded at a compounding pharmacy or specific dosing of estradiol cream can be ordered at any conventional pharmacy. Coconut oil or other vaginal lubricants can be useful for comfort, but rarely have a lasting effect. If left untreated many times urinary tract infections, overactive bladder symptoms and sometimes urinary incontinence can also occur as a result. Candida and gardnerella are the two most common organisms that can cause VV. These are confirmed at your provider's office with a vaginal sample looked at under a microscope and/or a culture that is confirmed within 72 hours at the laboratory. These can be treated conventionally or naturally. Sometimesboth treatments are necessary. There are female specific probiotics that should always be taken orally with any type of vaginal infections. This is especially true if the infections continue to come back after treatment.
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QuEsrtoN: What areas can be treated with CoolSculptlug? Answer:CoolSculpting is FDA approved in the United States to treat the abdomen, hips and love handles, muffin top region, and thighs. Upper arms are also treated. The procedureisFD A cleared,safeand ef fective 'Dr Linda J with Permanent results. CoolSculPting uses controlled cooling and freezing to Leffet permanently destroy unwanted fat cells without surgery or downtime. Over I million CoolSculpting treatmentshave been safely performed worldwide.If you are considering CoolSculpting, please be evaluated by a Board Certified Plastic Surgeon or surgeon who has completed a residencyin cosmetic surgery and body contouring. Before any office procedure you should have a consultation and exam by the treating physician, to thoroughly assess your generalhealth and if you are a candidate for the procedure. CoolSculpting is a m edical treatment and should be performed in a doctor's office. Don't settle for anyone but a plastic surgeon for CoolSculpting for the best results.
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Answer:There was a article in Ageless by a local eye specialist mentioning one type....evaporative dry eye which is a blockage of the eyelid glands Women are at a higher percentage of dry eyes then men. Eyeliner, in particular clogs the ducts under each eyelid that produces oils to keep eyes lubricated. Permanent makeup not only looks good all day but is also recommended by many optometrists. Topical cosmetics have to be applied and removed daily which is damaging to the thin skin around your eyes. Dry eyes cannot be eliminated by permanent makeup but could make a difference. Plus...think about all the time you will save by uot even thinking about it. certified pennanent
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THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
How advertisers use Twitter effectively
Typewriters are back in style and in demand
By Eilene Zimmerman
By Rick Romell
New York Times News Service
Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Is
WEST ALLIS, Wis.
M ore than fouryearsafter introducing advertising
-
To Ed Skibba, 83, nothing
on its platform,7witter has
sounds sweeter than ham-
4
changed the waybusiness-
mering out a rhythm on a well-tuned QWERTY keyboard. For the 50 years since he
es create ads. And as with
anygame in which the rules have shifted, players adapt by developing new strategies. Since August, advertisers have started by choosing an objective, which canbe followers, dicks, retweets, replies or being designated
opened Ace Business Machines Inc. in this Milwau-
kee suburb, Skibba has been repairing typewriters — Depression-era Royals heavy enough to anchor boats, IBM Selectrics with
a"favorite" tweet. Orthe
the once-revolutionary golf-ball element, trans-
goal can be measured by conversions — that is, tak-
parent Swintecs used by
ing an advertiser's desired action, like producing a sale
prison inmates. Age and brand make no difference. He loves digging into any machine with his dental tools, tiny spring
. es
or a website visit, installing
an app or generating alead. The pricing changed,
Photos by Marcus Yaml LosAngeles Times
too. Now Twitter charges
New developments are underway near the Collective campus in the Playa Vista neighborhood of LosAngeles where tech firms are
hooks and wire brushes,
advertisers onlywhentheir
continuing to grow.
and restoring the steady
ad produces the objective
tap-tap-tap that marks a
theyhave set, enabling smallbusinesses to design their ads more purposefully. But some saythis canmake
healthy typewriter. "It's like having your first ice cream," Skibba said as
he worked on an old Royal to the sound of light classics
Twittermore expensive than
other digital platforms, like Facebook, in cost per conversion or per click-through.
from the portable cassette
player on his bench. He doesn't have to. A revival of interest in type-
Ads on 7witter look like
regular tweets, except for a yellow arrow and the words tweet. They canbe shown to users according to their
writers among millennials who grew up in the digital age,combined with continuing need for the old machines in certain niche
"promoted by" under the
interests, whom they follow,
markets, has meant plenty
who follows them, location, gender, language, the device
of business for Skibba and others who know their way
they use, and television
around a Smith-Corona. "We still do quite a bit,"
shows and films they watch.
said Skibba's son, Rick. He
Advertisers can use a Twitter "card," a tool that lets
took over Ace in the '90s.
• LA's Playa Vista neighborhood gains new neighbors as Silicon Valleycompaniesexpandtheir reach to Southern California
them attachphotos, videos or a short-form Vine video to their ads and indudes a
dickable callto action like "read more" or "shop now."
His father remains the goto typewriter repairer. He fixes machines that
customers bring in, and those that Rick hunts down
at rummage sales and Goodwill stores, figuring they can be brought back
Debra Aho Williamson,
principal social media ana-
By Andrea ChangandPeter Jamison «Los Angeles Times
lyst at the digital market research firm eMarketer, said Twitter dominated real-time marketing tied to news
LOSANGELES-
companies now use 7witter for marketing. The platform has been popular among advertisers because the objective-based model means they pay only when there is engagement, Williamson said. "That means there is little to no wasted
spending." 7witter had 284 million average monthly
"We had a waiting list at
Christmastime (in 2013)," he said. "We could not get enough typewriters in.
the high-tech cluster that has sprouted in Playa
Could not."
Then he lucked out, hit-
Vista.
ting an estate sale where a woman had 12.
The burgeoning neighborhood on Los Angeles' west side is fast becoming the Southern California hub of Silicon Valley, with
"She goes, 'Which one
Yahoo Inc., the Sunnyvale, California, Internet company, signed a long-term lease for about130,000 square feet at the new Collective campus, which is still under construction, in the Playa Vista neighborhood of Los Angeles.
Centering tech's biggest
the relatively undeveloped area as their gateway players in one spot is bringto the region's entertainment and media offerings. As digital entertainment takes off,
and eMarketer estimated Twitter's 2014ad revenue at
tech companies say close ties with Hollywood are more important than ever.
ing a cohesion to the LA tech
The Bulletin
Foreclosure filingsdropped 58 percent in Deschutes County last year, according to figures from the county. Total filings in Deschutes County fell from 942 in 2013
to 391 last year, according to figures from the circuit court
earlier this month. He expects about 600 new foreclosures
to be filed monthly in the first
nonjudicial foreclosure process — known as advertisement and sale — and switch to
ties tracked by Gorilla, which buys foreclosed homes, rede-
judicial, sending their foreclosures into state courts. It also
velops and sells them. New filings will start to de-
resulted in few face-to-face
cline in the second half of this
homeowners. So in 2013 the state changed
and clerk's office.
In 20 of the state's 36 counties tracked by Eugene real estate company Gorilla Capital, total filings dropped 47
will complete foreclosure and get listed for sale. Changes made to state foreclosure laws over two legisla-
percent, from 13,446 in 2013 to 7,075lastyear,figuresfrom
tive sessions led to the delayed
CEO, said in a news release
to essentially abandon the
half of this year in the coun-
year, he said in an interview last month, and more homes
the company show. Oregon's foreclosure processhas delayed afullrecovery in the housing market, John Helmick, Gorilla Capital
take 'em all.' She was happy to get rid of them and I was happy to find them." At Blue & Koepsell Co. Inc. also in suburban Mil-
meetings between lenders and the law again to ensure more financial institutions would come to the table.
on again." The changes in state law were public policy decisions, Helmick said, not characterizing them as good or bad. But
waukee, the story is much
the same. Customers are bringing in five to 10 type-
complexes, restaurants and
writers a week for repairs,
and demand for restored machines is strong, said Chuck Krall, who handles salesand serviceforthe firm. SeeTypewriters/E5
DeschutesCountyforeclosure filings Judicial and nonjudicial, 2013 compared to 2014 1,000 • 2013 • 2 0 14 800
they lengthened the foreclosure
process andprevented the market from recovering as fast.
600
In Deschutes County, non-
judicial foreclosure filings — called notices of defaultdoubled year over year, from
400
67 in 2013 to 134 last year.
Default notices are filed in the
meet with homeowners facing
Each change, however, brought the foreclosure process to a crawL As the housing industry adapted to the new rules, the process ramped up again, Helmick said in the
foreclosure, thestatepassed a law in 2012 requiring lenders
interview. "It's like resetting the ceil-
County Circuit Court, compared with 875 in 2013, ac-
to mediate with homeowners.
ing fan," he said. "Tbrn it off.
But the law prompted lenders
Wait for it to stop. Then start it
cording to court figures. SeeForeclosures/E3
recovery, he said. To get banks and lenders to
6,500 residents. Already, new housing and office
scene that entrepreneurs had co-working spaces have long worried wouldn't be opened, and more develattainable in the sprawling opments — including an metropolis. 11-acre retail, residential It's also fueling rapid and off icecenter— are change to the self-contained underway. neighborhood of more than SeeTech firms/E2
Foreclosuresdip in DeschutesCou By Tim Doran
do you want?' I said, 'I'll
a growing number of tech companies choosing
30,accordingtothecompany's third-quarter results,
SeeTwitter /E5
year ago, Rick Skibba said.
way. And now Yahoo, too, is joining
users on its site as of Sept.
more than $1 billion.
ably a little more than a
Microsoft moved in. Google is on its
"Twitter is where con-
61 percent of American
for old but working manual typewriters jumped notice-
irst came Facebook and YouTube. Then
events, television shows and movies. sumers generally go for breaking news or to talk about what's happening aroundthem," she said. According to eMarketer,
to life and resold. Demand
county clerk's office, and not
200
all end in foreclosure. The big drop came in judicial foreclosures, with 257
filed last year in Deschutes
67 0
JUDICIAL NONJUDICIAL
T O TAL
Source: Deschutes County Circuit Court, Deschutes County Clerk's Office Greg Cross/The Bulletin
E2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
B USI1VESS
E1 V D AR
MONDAY
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/
Construction Safety Conference: Safe work practices and OSHA rule updates; $45 pre-conference Jan. 26, $75 conference Jan. 27, registration required;; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 503-947-7428, melanie.l.mesaros©state.or.us or
TUESDAY
Photoshop, Beginning: Learn Photoshop CS5.5, class runs through Feb. 2; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-3837270, ceinfo©cocc.edu or www. cocc.edu/conti nuinged. Pinterest Business: How to set up a Pinterest business account, class runs through Feb. 9; $75, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo@
melanie.l.mesaros©state.or.us or www.orosha.org/conferences.
www.orosha.org/conferences.
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/
continuinged. Video Editing with Premier Elements: Learn to edit movies with Premier Elements program, class runs through Feb. 9; $99, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo@
continuinged.
Construction Safety Conference: Safe work practices and OSHA rule updates; $45 pre-conference Jan. 26, $75 conference Jan. 27, registration required;; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 503-947-7428,
SCORE free business counseling: SCORE business counselors conduct free 30-minute one-
on-one conferences with local
entrepreneurs; check in at the library desk on the second floor; 5:30-7 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; www.scorecentraloregon.org.
Linux Essentials: Beginner class to understanding the essentials of Linux, class runs through Mar. 3; $299, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo@ cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.
THURSDAY Annual Business Conference: Entrepreneurship Through
Email events at least 10days before publication date to businessibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at www.bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0323.
Innovation: Seventh annual
our Chamber, including vacant
economic forecast for central Oregon; $125, register online or call by Jan. 28; 7a.m.11:30 p.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 NW Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-388-0404 or www.
involvement; 1 p.m.; Crooked River Ranch Senior Center, 6710 S.W. Ranch House Road;541923-2679, info@crrchamber.com or www.crrchamber.com.
business conference and
board openings and member
centraloregoneconomicforecast. com.
Feb. 3 SCORE free business counseling
Tom Hacker Creative Award Presentation 8 mingling: Join AdFed to celebrate exemplary talent in our Creative Community; free; 5 p.m.; Cascade Lakes Brewing Company — The Lodge, 1441 S.W. Chandler Ave., Suite 100, Bend; 541-388-4998, director©adfedco.org or www. adfedco.org.
www.scorecentraloregon.org. QuickBooks Pro 2014, Beginning: Two-day class: learn to set up new customer
Feb. 5
and vendor accounts, create invoices, record sales andenter payments. Includes textbook; $89, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270, ceinfo©
cocc.edu or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged.
Feb.4
SATURDAY Crooked River Ranch-Terrebonne Chamber Meeting: Topics of the meeting will include normal business and the "condition" of
www.scorecentraloregon.org.
What's Hot in Franchising: Find out about the top trends, the best industries and 'What's Hot' in franchising for 2015; $29, registration required; 6-8 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-3837290, sbdc©cocc.edu or www.
SCORE business counselors Green Drinks: Learn about other conduct free 30-minute onebusinesses, sustainability efforts on-one conferences with local and network; free; 5-7 p.m.; entrepreneurs; check in at the Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 library desk on the second floor; NW Louisiana Ave., Bend; 541p.m.; Downtown Bend 385-6908, sara©envirocenter.org 5:30-7 Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; or www.envirocenter.org.
FRIDAY
Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290 or www.cocc.edu/sbdc. SCORE free business workshop: Financial fundamentals of running a business; free, registration required; 5:30-7:30 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-617-7080 or
Business Start-Up Class: Cover the basics in this two-hour class and decide if running a business is for you; $29, registration required; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; COCC
cocc.edu/sbdc.
Holding Employees tk Others Accountable: Help each person on your team do their job well. Part of the Essential Leadership Series; $95, registration required; 8 a.m.-noon; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/continuinged. First Thursday Luncheon: League of Women Voters of Deschutes County present "Training for First Responders" featuring guest speaker Eilene Flory, Crisis Intervention Team coordinator; free; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Black Bear
Diner, 1465 NE Third St., Bend; 541-382-2660.
Project Management Information Meeting: Information session to learn about gaining project
management skills and
whether you might benefit from certification; free, registration recommended; 5:30-6:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 NW Trenton Ave., Bend; 541383-7270 or www.cocc.edu/ continuinged. 3D Modeling with SketchUp I: Learn how to navigate in 3D space, create interesting and detailed models in minutes, construct a scene containing shadows,sunlight,and fog,and import ready-made models from around the globe. Class goes until Feb. 19; $79, registration required; 6-9 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 NW College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270
or www.cocc. edu/continuinged.
Feb. 7 Free Tax Preparation Sessions: Offered by the AARP Foundation Tax-Aide and United Way of Deschutes County, walk-ins available; free; noon-5 p.m.; Downtown Bend Public Library, 601 NW Wall St.; 541-323-8482
or www.cashoregon.org/taxprep. html.
DEEDS Deschutes County • Margaret E. Pickett to Lori-Ann L. and Ryan A.Stock, Greensat Redmond Phases 4and 5, Lot 30, $370,000 • Lucas Nelson to Melissa M. McAlexander, Deschutes River Woods, Lot 36, Block J, $150,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Marc R. Holt, Stonegate P.U.D.Phase1, Lot 35, $306,000 • Wade R. andMisty Luckman to Gerald R. andJan L. Hearing, Ahern Acres, Lot 9, Block 4, $238,000 • Frank S. Rogers Sr. andMaureen A. Rogers, trustees of the FrankS. Rogers Sr. & Maureen A.Rogers Trust, to Timothy J. andShirley D. MacGillivray, Stonebrook Phase4, Lot 3, $436,000 • David Glose to Matthew V. Henderson andCora L.Johnson, Diamond BarRanchPhase1, Lot24, $218,000 • Sarah E. Platt, trustee of the Sarah E. Platt Revocable Living Trust, to Richard K. andSusan J. Butler, Buckner Addition, Lot11, Block1, $220,000 • Karina R. Wesleyto Angelica Rivera, Obsidian Meadows,Lot33,$155,000 • Timothy J. and Lahrae M.Adamsto Darcy K. Allen andKimberly Ullmann, La Casa Mia,Lot2,Block4,$219,900 •MeganE.and StevenGleason to Benjamin J. Iverson andMarissa Ticus, Woodridge Phase1, Lot1, $201,500 •Pahli sch HomesInc.toJonah R. Miller, McCall Landing Phase1, Lot 87, $266,000 • Stephen M. Floyd and Julie A. Turner Floyd to Jonathan D.Williams and Nicole Amato, AlpenviewEstates Phase 2, Lot 40, $241,000 • Karen J. and Dale E. Collier to David and SharleneChurchill, Bluffs at River Bend Phase3and4, Lot45, $370,000 • Mark E. andKimberly A. Brogleyto Keith J. and Lori K. Murphy, City View Subdivision Phase1, Lot16, Block1, $499,000 • Karen A. Heigel to Julie A. Cross, NorthWest Crossing Phase 9and10, Lot 4, 38 and438, $405,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to Andrew Reevesand Courtney Buccola,Shevlin
Ridge Phase 5,Lot 95, $825,000 • Sandra R. Ellisto Kenneth and MeaganSwartwout,Tanglewood Phase 2, Lot 52, Block 7,$265,000 • Patricia A. Moore andCheryl D. Powers to Daniel J. Puffinburger and Cheri A. VanBebber, Township18, Range12, Section 26, $700,000 • Eric K. and Jodi K. Barnhart to Shirley Alessio, PonderosaCascade, Lot 2, Block 6, $316,500 • Vickey S. andJon R.Jurgens, trustee of the Vickey S.Jurgens Revocable Trust, to Gordon andSandra M. Wicher, Ridge atEagleCrest55, Lot 70, $265,000 • Thomas E. andStephanie L. Krewson to AdamG.and Gretchen M. Honda, Vandevert Acres South, Lot 2, Block17, $210,000 • Hayden HomesLLCtoJerald L. and Dolores Sheldon, MeganParkPhase 1, Lot 29, $236,940 • Carolyn and Ted S. Priborskyto Patricia A. Moore, First Addition to Whispering PinesEstates, Lot31, Block 2, $339,000 • US Bank National Association to Marc Niebergall, Westbrook Village Phase 2, Lot11, $213,000 • Harold R. and Mary I. Daley, trustees of the Harold & Mary DaleyRevocable Trust, to 9th St. BendLLC,Township 18, Range12, Section 4, $2,540,000 • Robert H. and Joyce P. Kirkpatrick, NancyM. Knop Phillips,Todd H.Knop and JoannCason to9th St. Bend LLC, Township18, Range12, Section 4, $2,540,000 • Stefanie Bradley to Michael D. and Audrey L. Doyal, Ni-Lah-ShaPhases2 and 3, Lot 45, $250,000 • D. Scott Platko to Larry L. and Laurie D. Beach, Whispering PinesEstates Second Addition, Lot 20, Block 21, $355,000 • Greg Welch Construction Inc. to Edmund C. andShannon H. Stilp, NorthWest Crossing Phase20-22, Lot 808, $475,000 • Deborah J. Vaughanto Linda K. Collins-McNutt, Township18, Range 12, Section 24, $325,000 • Lawrence L. Roppto Nathan R. and Trista D. Deane,Deschutes River Woods, Lot10, Block SS,$237,800 • Wanda F.Brownlee to Daniel W. and
Tamara J. Kuehn,Fairhaven Phase3, Lot 2, $196,500 • Kevin Gower to Ritchie and Nancy Hail, Winchester, Lot7, Block1, $195,000 • Michael J. and SusanL. Newmanto Christian Gunn, trustee of theChristian Gunn Separate Property Trust, Awbrey Butte Homesites Phase12, Lot 22, Block 5, $589,000 • Anthony V. Albertazzi, trustee of the Albertazzi Property Trust, to Louise E. Morris, trustee of the Louise E.Morris Living Trust, River CanyonEstates, Lot 53, $335,000 • Dan C. RuhlandDerron 0. Moreland to Taissa N.Cherry, Glenshire Phase1 and 2, Lot 26, $268,000 • Erick C. Petersen to Owen and Gail Herzberg, YeomanPark, Lot 2, $215,000 • Stanley Skeento Benjamin A. and Carline W.Jones, Bend Cascade View Estates Tract 2 Unit 3, Lot 26, $287,000 •MaxBentleyLLC to BryanC.and Miracle Fields, DiamondBar Ranch Phase1, Lot 21, $190,000 • Harry Stumpf and Patricia Rodgers to Buddy L and Nancy J.Barr, trustees of the Buddy &Nancy Barr 2007 Trust, Enchantment on theDeschutes, Lot 8, $635,000 • Faythe E. Goldsmith, trustee of the Faythe E.Goldsmith Revocable Family Trust, to Jerimiah C.Butts, Ayres Acres, Lot 8, $160,500 • Myra Esterman, trustee of the Esterman Family Trust, to Stephen A. and Kea M.Crandall, Tollgate First Addition, Lot 49, $221,000 •HaydenHomes LLCtoValerieA. Vanblaricum Skelton, Gleneden 2,Lot 17, $235,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Bjorn F.and Ellen M. Gullholm, Gleneden 3,Lot 20, $260,444 • Robert E. Tennantand Michael J. Tennant Charitable Fund toStephen M. Leary and Lisa M.Kennedy-Leary, McKay Townhomes, Lot 2, $339,900 • Sophia Hill to Peter J. Schrock, Vista Dorado, Lot 48, $152,500 • Gordon C. andLillian M. Wittrock to Ronald and Susan Olsen,Greens at Redmond Phase and 4 5, Lot 49, $342,500
• Richard J. and Rosalie E. Knutsen to Michael A. andBarbi J. Milichichi, Township 15, Range12, Section 10, $160,000 • Bradley A. and Mindy S. Slayton to Michael D. andMarti F. Layton, Ridge at Eagle Crest 2, Lot 60, $205,000 •DKSLLC to Pahlisch HomesInc., Lava Ridges Phase4, Lot110, $156,810 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Jennifer M. and Scott W. Boettcher, LavaRidges Phase 4, Lot110, $608,500 • Jimmy R. Crowand Caroline Stratton to Randolph H.Ruffin, Township16, Range11, Section 4, Lot3, $740,000 • William B. andChristine L. Thier to Anita P.Walker, Gardenside PUD Phase1, Lot 41, $208,500 • David A. and Jennifer A. Boise to Dustin M.Jacobson,BuenaVentura, Lot10, Block 3, $250,000 • We-Be Construction Inc. to Calvin E. and Laura J. Jenness, Ridge atEagle Crest 38, Lot 84, $523,000 • DeeDee Ashe to Michael J. O'Connor, Davis First Addition, Lot1, Block 7, $267,500 •SFICascade HighlandsLLCto Michael D. andRobin G.Meiners, Tetherow Phase 3,Lot120, $300,000 • Triad Homes Inc. to RogueBuilders LLC, Traditions East, Lot1, 6, 8,15and 16, $285,000 • Tomas and Nickila L. Robertsson to Joseph R.andPatricia S. O'Neill, Parks at BrokenTop, Lot 26, $535,000 • George L. Hermann, trustee of the UCH 401KPlan to Richard W.and Joann Spoon, Forest Hills Phase 4,Lot 72, $450,000 • Robin C. Engle, formerly known as Robin Cooper to Paul J.and Danielle R.M. Filipowicz, Partition Plat199622, Parcel 2, $280,000 • Pahlisch HomesInc. to Bernard Gateau andDina C. Bennett, 8th Street Cottages, Lot 5, $259,000 • Selco Credit Union to Kaye A. LeFrancq, ViewRidge, Lot 9, $223,000 • Victor H. and SarahJ. Parker, trustees of the Victor H. Parker & Sarah J. Parker 2001Trust,to Jay S. Blank andMelanie A. Butler, Deschutes River Recreation Homesites Unit 8 Part 2, Lot 2, Block 112, $239,900.
Tech firms
large enough — until discovering Playa Vista, said Liam Collins, head of Y o uTube Space LA, which opened in
hoo, which announced last
attract and grow local fund-
week that it would move its Santa Monica operations to
ing sources," Garcetti wrote in
Continued from E1 Tech firms point to a number of reasons for opening
late 2012.
Playa Vista. He has been aggressively pushing for the city
The YouTube hangar has quickly become a gathering place for the business community there. It began hosting regular happy hours two years ago, with some 25 people showing up. Now 400 people swing by "and many are just walking over," Collins
to become a tech-entertain-
and aboon for enormoustech companies anticipating future workforce growth. Now there's something more. The rise of Playa Vis-
sald. "We found what we needed
beyond Santa Monica, where
ta tech has created a vibrant
ed companies and people to
community of young, ambi-
come," he said. "Our model is really built on the idea that
outposts in Playa Vista. At
first, proximity playeda major role: The neighborhood is close to major freeways, the beach and Los Angeles International Ai rport. M oreover,
there were vast expanses of land yet to be developed,a rarity in Southern California
tious employees, and that's attracting related firms and or-
ganizations to thefold. Along
logistically in this neighborhood, and now we hope to be a catalyst for more like-mind-
bringing creative people together will enhance the work
product of everyone involved. can find mediacompanies, ad Having a c r eative, vibrant agencies, university-affiliated community is critical for our institutes and startups work- success, and it's heartening to ing alongside the established see that grow in the last coutech juggernauts. ple of years." "There's a herd mentality Tech companies and their to the tech industry, so when typically well-paid, highly one guy does something, ev- educated employees are plum eryone elsefollows," said Mi- tenants for the city and for chael Pachter, a tech analyst commercial real estate broat Wedbush Securities in Los kers, who have been pulling Angeles. out all the stops to get leases When Youlttbe began Slg116d. looking for a facility in LA, it Los Angeles Mayor Eric struggled to find a complex Garcetti heavily wooed Yaa mile-and-a-half stretch, you
ment powerhouse and has been enticing companies over the Santa Monica border with
attractive perks. The plan to lure Yahoo began last year, when the Sunnyvale, California, Internet company started looking it had been for adecade, for a bigger office complex. Yahoo considered and passed over several other potential sites, according to city o fficials familiar w i t h t h e
process. In November, Garcetti sent a letter to Yahoo Chief Exec-
utiveMarissa Mayer off ering a "menu of
i n centives and
resources," including a threeyear business tax exemption and "white glove service" to ensure that the build-out of
the campus would proceed quickly and that the company's dealings with the city would be fast-tracked. "The consolidation of your
employees into one singular campus in the city would help elevate LA as (a) tech leader, ensuring that we're able to retain quality engineers and
• Elizabeth Bradyto Victoria Warner, Township15, Range10, Section 25, $232,000 • Mathew L. and Brittany A. Lorensen, who acquired title as Brittany A. Wheeler, to Bradley C. and Bree N. Hamlin, Evansville, Lot 16, $223,000 • Robert L. and Connie M. Horn to Mathew L. andBrittany A. Lorensen, Hillman, Lot 25-32, Block 38, $259,000 • James P. andHeather Campbell to Christopher andKaren K.Neibauer, Coulter, Lot 25, $234,000 • NNP IV-NCR LLCto Roderick J. and Lori A. Ray,trustees of the Ray Revocable Trust, Township17, Range 12, Section 24, $2,241,000 • Michael A. and Nicole M. Hasenoehrl to Teri L. McKinnon, Awbrey Park Phase 3, Lot111, $598,000 • Deutsche BankNational Trust CompanytoAustinJ.andAnthonyJ. Fletcher, Wishing Well Phase 4,Lot 21, $162,000 • Steve D. Mores andNancy L. Pfeiffer toToddandLaura Kloss,W estBend Village Phase3-5, Lot 81, $375,000 •JamesT.Houtsand LaniJensento Jonathan B.Sharpe, Township16, Range11, Section 24, $187000 • Combined Resources LLC to Barry S. and Lettie E.Weinmann, trustees of the Barry & Lettie WeinmannFamily Revocable Trust, Highland Addition, Lot13, Block 24, $430,000 • Pahlisch Homes Inc. to William J. and Anne M.Salter, McCall Landing Phase1, Lot 86, $267,310 • Pacwest II LLC to LandenM. and Julissa Goodnight, Northcrest Subdivision, Lot 35, $245,785 • Jon D. and Kathryn S. Fournier to Keith I. Taylor, Ridge atEagleCrest 43, Lot19, $290,000 • Dale D. Nielsen to Glen M. and Kellie A. Mickel, Glacier RidgePhase1, Lot 20, $242,500 • Verna M. VanCalcar, trustee of the Hudson Family Trust, to Angelica and Lance Ayres,Taylors Addition, Lot 5 and 6, Block4, $150,000 • Janet R. Kellyto Richard J. and Patricia A. Hellner, DeerPark1, Lot 7, Block 2, $228,000 •HaydenHomes LLCtoPaulS.Rigez,
Emily Estates, Lot 20, $239,990 • Robbie L. and Daniele M. Mountain to Markand SandraNowlin, Diamond Bar Ranch Phase 2,Lot 56, $187,000 • Julie A. Guidry and Jerry P. Guidry Jr. to Ryanand Mary Hangartner, Tamarack Park, Lot 29, Block 3, $294,000 • Deirdre Kasberger to Tracy Bayne and Jason Crain, NorthwestTownsite Company's FirstAddition Redmond, Block A, $236,500 • Theresa S. Dwyer, trustee of the Theresa S.DwyerTrust, to David B. and Helen L.Edwards, Rivers Edge Village Phase1, Lot8, Block1, $325,000 • Rex and DonnaHarris to Daniel S. and Heidi R. Harris, RedHawk Unit1, Lot 71, $178,000 • Pacwest II LLC to Richard J. and Kim M. Jacobe, Southcrest Subdivision, Lot 9, $253,312 • Deborah Marti, trustee of the Deborah Marti Revocable Living Trust, to Andrew W.and Cindy L. Dahlgren, Oregon WaterWonderland Unit 2, Lot 12, Block 21, $450,000 • Terry L. and Darla J. Fournier to Peggy A. Clarke, TrapClub Road Estates, Lot7,Block2,$309,950 • David L. and NancyA. Jennings to Paul R. andRamonaV. Boggess, Tollgate Fourth Addition, Lot155, $238,000 • Affordable Homesof Oregon Inc. to Carol M. Suckow,CanyonRimVillage Phase 5, Lot113, $199,000 • Gene H. andSusanC. Nesbitt, trustees of the Nesbitt Living Trust, to Carolyn S. Nesbitt and the Nesbitt Living Trust, Pheasant Hill, Lot12, Block 2, $155,000 • Hayden HomesLLCto Alisia Verdoorn, trustee of the Silver Lining Revocable Trust, Gleneden 2,Lot48, $284,823 • Charles W. Anderson to SueD. Porter, trustee of the Sue D. Porter Trust, River Ridge 2Condominiums of Mt Bachelor Village Stage B,Unit 614, $540,000 • Rick Irwin to Mollie A. Broadbent, Deschutes River Crossing Phase 2, Lot 60, $280,100 • Donald F. Harker to AimeeKirkendol, Lavacrest, Lot 5, $280,000
company wrote in ablog post The Los Angeles County announcing that it would re- Economic Development Corp. the Nov. 20 letter, obtained by locate to West LA this spring. recently released a report the Los Angeles Times. "Per- "As we've grown, we've showing that the area has sonally, I view this move as squeezed ourselves into ev- more high-tech jobs (368,600) Bos t on-Cambridge, paramount to our continued ery cranny and we've spread than success." across multiple floors and Santa Clara County and New The pitch worked. Yahoo buildings." York City. The direct highsigned a long-term lease for The short migration from tech workforce generated $32 about 130,000 square feet at Santa Monica into LA has led billion in wages in 2013, acthe soon-to-open Collective to a rivalry between the two counting for 16.8 percent of all campus in Playa Vista. The cities, with each jostling to wages paid in LA County, the move, expected this fall, will become the premiere place for report said. bring at least 400 jobs from tech. As m or e s t a rtups h a ve Yahoo's current lo c ation, Los Angeles "is just taking emergedin the area,venture with space to accommodate our overflow," Santa Monica capitalists havefollowed. growth. Internet companies Mayor Kevin McKeown said. In the Los Angeles metro generally setaside200 square "The excitement is in Santa region, the total amount of feet per employee, so Yahoo's Monica." equity financings for vencomp a n i es PlayaVistapresencecouldexMcKeown is confident that ture-backed pand to 650 employees. the space vacated by Yahoo jumped sharply last year, Yahoo Chief Financial Of- will soonbe grabbed by an- up 44 percent to $2.3 billion ficer Ken Goldman said the othercompany, and noted that across 146 deals, according to new office better matched the city was willing to work Dow Jones VentureSoUrce. the company's space require- with businesses seeking to exAn ever-expanding tech ments and would enable it to pand. Still, he acknowledged force in Playa Vista — Goobe closer to the "ambience of that Santa M onica doesn't gle last month spent nearly this area" and its talent pooL have the space like Playa Vis- $120 million on 12 acres that The deal was ablow to San- ta to accommodate largecon- it will developin the coming ta Monica,which had been centrations of workers. years — will further bolster poised to be the region's tech Garcetti, meanwhile, said the region's tech environment epicenter. But entrepreneurs he was tired of watching his and the economy overall, said there have long complained city lose out to its next-door Wedbush's Pachter. "Anything t hat d i versiof traffic congestion, high of- neighbors. "LA city will get its fair fies the economy is great for fice rents and cramped quarters with little to no room for share," he said. "That abso- LA, anything that creates high-paying jobs is great for growth. lutely is important to me." "Things have gotten a little Whether it's LA or Sa nta LA and anything that hires too cozy at Riot HQ in San- Monica, the region's tech sec- educated people is great for LA" ta Monica," the video games tor is thriving.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
E3
Pro rams oster ea ers i ormi ennia eneration By DanielMoore e Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
needs an immediate, typed answer, Olar said. As she typed,another prompt popped up on the screen, then another,
PITTSBURGHmanda Olarhad an abundance of
then another. During t h e as s essment,
empathy for others. She'd earned an
which is all computer-based, "you're always responding" to scripted corporate scenari-
undergraduate degree in neuroscience
os such as "disgruntled team members, sudden and impending problems with supply chain, different priorities for individual team members," she said. "It gives you all of these
and spent more than two years working at Children's Hospital of Pittsburgh. But she discovered quick- of Business — almost all of ly, after enrolling in business whom are members of the school at Carnegie Mellon millennial generation — need with aspirations of working additional leadership training in health care administration, before entering the profesthat some of the skills she used sional world, said Laura Maxin dealing with patients don't well, the program's executive always translate well to being director. a leader in the business world. The program is so person"Giving direct f eedback alized and gushing with feed— very candid, honest, some- back and encouragement — the times not-so-positive feedback term "growth areas" has come — was something I needed to to replace "weaknesses" — that work on," Olar said. "I identi- CMU officials hesitate to comDarrell Sapp / Pittsburgh Post-Gazette fied at the very beginning that, pare it to anything seen in lead- Amanda Olar is a student in the Accelerate Leadership Center, designed to groom the nextCEO. OK, I need to get more com- ership developmentbefore. fortable with this."
CMU faculty discovered this about her i n
t h e f i r st
month of classes using the
"I don't know if we use the word 'training' at all," Max-
well said. "We focus so much on the individual."
A culinary analogy comes to Jim Delaney's mind whenCenter, a program started two ever he thinks of grooming years ago to complement the the next generation of corposchool's masters of business rate leaders: "We have to bake administration c u rriculum. it in, not frost it on." When she finishes in May, In 2010, Delaney founded the 27-year-old second-year EngineFor Good, a Minneapgraduate student will join 740 olis-based service that designs students who have used Accel- customized leadership proerate to hone their leadership grams to identify "high potenskills. tial professionals" in nonprofManaging the millennial its and corporations who have generationcommands much not yet reached a managerial of thefocus and fretoftoday's role. corporate leaders. Programs Companies spend 17 perlike Accelerate are among cent of their leadership dethose working a step ahead to velopment budgets to t r a in harness the tendencies of what such employees, according to experts call the most "cared- a report in May from Bersin for" generation and translate by Deloitte, a research firm them into leadership skills. in Oakland, California. In the The program was born report, Bersin by Deloitte calls out of a recognition that stu- that "a healthy dose of funddents in CMU's Tepper School ing" for millennials; Delaney entrance assessment d o ne by the AccelerateLeadership
"You've got to be able to
thinks it's not enough. He thinks vice presidents
and above typically receive the most leadership training. "They're already leaders," he sard. Engine For Good programs issue a challenge to up-andcoming employees to solve. Generally they are given three problems common for
D el-
aney's nonprofit and corporate clients: generate earned income; develop metrics to
prove the group is effective; and provide the next generation with real leadership ex-
perience, not a hypothetical scenario. "I think a lot of millennials
say, 'I can be a leader'" based on their skills with technology and social media, Delaney said. "But I think there are foundational, f u ndamental things everyone needs to be a leader.... You know a lot, but just knowing it isn't enough.
teach others what you know."
Then, of course, there are the actual tendencies of the
By Patrick May San Jose Mercury News
SAN JOSE, Calif. — Look-
ing at a painting no longer means simply looking at a painting. As I walked through the Keith Haring exhibit at the de Young Museum in San Fran-
cisco recently, a borrowed pairof Google Glass perched
viding a smorgasbord of ex-
Museums around the world are increasingly opening themselves Up to virtual visits by
anyone anywhere on the planet. At the same time, the brick-and-mortar versions are getting tricked out with the latest tech wizardry to
enrich the viewing process and teach visitors about the artist and their work.
on my nose, the virtual docent
inside the device was serving up audio narratives and visu- active displays, technology is be about Keith and include al cues that brought the late turning the concept of art and the people who knew him American street artist to life in science exhibits inside out. personally," said Christine the most remarkable way. The de Young Museum's Murray,the content designer The museum-going experi- partnership with Google, and who worked with G uidiGO ence, I realized as the voices the exhibit-tour app created to produce the app. "I wanted of Haring and others filled specifically for Glass, is one of the guide to bring him to life my mono ear bud with artis- the most thrilling experiments and use his paintings to tell tic context and illuminating yet. Billed by French app-mak- his story. And I didn't want it storytelling, is in the midst of er GuidiGO as the first-ever to be all scholars, but to talk a mind-blowing and revolu- tour of a complete exhibition with friends and colleagues tionary redesign. Museums on Glass, the augmented-reali- of Keith and focus on the around the world are increas- ty effects unfolding within my personal." ingly opening themselves up wearable device made me feel While the Google Glass to virtual visits by anyone less like a detached specta- app offers perhaps the most anywhere on the planet. At tor and more like a privileged dramatic view into the future the same time, the brick-and- guest at an intimate salon. of museum science, it's only mortar versions are getting With one eye on the actual available to official Glass "extricked out with the latest tech painting before me, I could tap plorers" now test-driving the wizardry to enrich the view- and slide my finger along the technology, so the general ing process and teach visi- Glass stem and call up text or public will have to wait awhile tors about the artist and their images or an audio interpre- before trying out the Glass work. tation of the piece by Haring's app. Other venues in the Bay "We're trying to make going sister, Karen, who teaches his- Area and beyond are busy to a physical building more tory of science and technology tweaking their exhibits with like going to a website," says at Stanford University. the latest technology, howevLath Carlson, the San Jose The Glass made each paint- er, and much of it is designed Tech Museum's top exhibit ing come alive, though. A se- to work seamlessly with the designerand a veteran ofthe ries of drawings Haring did smartphones and tablets visiinteractive-immersion move- in the New York City subway tors are increasingly bringing ment that has been changing were augmented on the tiny along with them to shows. "We foundthat 65 percent of museums in recent years. screen by a Charles Osgood The Tech also uses bar-cod- newsreel from the 1980s. A our visitors are accessing their ed tickets that let visitors tap painting entitled "Untitled mobile devices while they're directly into exhibits. One, for (Apartheid), 1984" came with in the museum," says The example, will record you inter- a voice-over from chief curator Tech's Carlson. "We realized acting with a robot and then Julian Cox about Haring's ha- we can't stop them from using post the video to The Tech's tred of bigotry and racism and their phones so we're giving online space, my.thetech.org. how he took on these subjects them stuff on their phones to "The idea is to personalize in his work. help enrich their experience." " We wanted the t our t o a visitor's museum experience The Tech does that by pro-
hibit information that visitors
The image ofa corporate executive with these tendenciescan perplex those tasked
Foreclosures
recorded 310 default notices in 2005 and 221 in 2006.
But foreclosures in 2014 levels reached in 2009 and 2010, when Deschutes
slew of tech tools that visitors,
County r e corded
3 , 507
and 3,762 default notices filed, respectively. Lynne McConnell, associate director of HomeSource at N eighborImpact, said her agency continues to see homeowners seeking foreclosure counseling. "I believe there were
especiallyyoung ones, can use to add a virtual layer to a physical entity. Olivia Ting's 3-D projectionof sea creatures, for example, fills the walls of a
eight new cases the week
small room and places visitors at the bottom of Cordell Bank National Marine Sanctuary, an underwaterwonderland off
ty filings overall to rising
the California coast. The feeling of being immersed deep
may now sell their homes at a price that allows them to satisfy that debt. That
below the ocean's surface is
exhilarating.
Another exhibit lets visitors paint their own portrait on
a screen and then see it displayed on a wall of professional portraits done by various California artists. More than 50,000 visitor-portraits have been completed since 2010
and the interactive nature of
with a post-assessment feedback session with Maxwell to
review the results and myriad opportunities for individualized coaching sessions. For Brigid Johnson, who led a small technology team at JPMorgan Chase & Co. before heading to CMU for business school, productivity often re"It was difficult to motivate. It was difficult to communi-
cate urgency," Johnson said. "I could not get work done
through others, and I ended up doing it all. And I knew that wasn't the right answer."
Maxwell coached her to ask more open-ended questions at meetings to elicit collaboration and, from there, motivation.
Johnson, who graduated last May and now works in Seattle
as a senior product manager for Amazon, said the millennial generation will boost in-
novation by giving more time to hear input from everyone at the table — all without sacri-
ficing the core objective to get stuff out the door. "I took those skills of build-
i ng relationships and i n volving others, and I applied them," she said. "I was able to gain information and earn their trust."
advantage, she said, has yet to reach beyond the city.
"That's very localized to Bend," she said. "It hasn't still tops the number of fil- reached the outlying areas, ings in Deschutes County which are still under water. in the years before the real The banks are still catching estate crash. The county up on their filings, I think."
that's built to look like an app but doesn't require visitors to actually download one. "A lot of museums out there are
load it, especially if they're just coming in for one visit." The Oakland Museum of California has created a whole
their "growth areas," starting
Last year's total, 391,
r emained far b elow t h e
you'll find that most visitors won't take that step and down-
Students can then build a foundation for how to work on
Continued from E1
can access on their devices
building apps," says Carlson, "but if you do the research
— Reporter: 541-383-0360, tdoran@bendbulletitt.com — Joseph Ditzler of The Bulletin staff contributed to this report.
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the site has made it one of the
most popular spaces in the building. "We have three main galleries where we tell the story
of California through art, history and science," spokeswoman Kelly Koski told me during a recent visit to the museum. "When we renovated in 2010, we actually built
in a lot of interactive features because we knew they'd in-
creasingly be a part of the way visitors would be experiencing our exhibits."
and then couple that with a
Web portal," says Carlson. "So once you've gone through the museum, you can later share
your experiences online with others and together build upon them over time."
From cutting-edge Glass apps to i n teraction with smartphones or tablets to in-
creasingly sophisticated inter-
Find Your Dream Home In Real Estate •
••
TheBulletin
on
where you are at in your leadership journey," Olar said.
quires the ability to motivate others.
retirement waves."
generation. with training the new generaAccording to a Pricewater- tion of leaders, she said. "Hierarchy i s ne a r ing houseCoopers survey of millennials recently hired, pay an end and collaboration is scale ranked fourth among emerging in its place," Sladek the aspects of the job that led said. The millennial generathem to accept an offer. More tion has "been raised to do it, than three times as import- cycle times will demand it, ant? "The opportunity for per- and technology will continue sonal development." to enable it." Collaboration, a work-life Ronald P l acone, f a culty balance, meaning and pur- lead on CMU's Accelerate propose in work tasks — all these gram, said the millennial chief characteristics in a l e ader executive will place greater means the workplace envi- value on proven progress than ronment will become more an employee's title. "They relaxed and more mobile, think about leadership in gensaid Sarah Sladek, CEO of eral. They're more drawn to XYZ University, a Minneap- the practice of leadership than olis-based generational train- the concept of leadership." ing and management conPart of Accelerate's 2-hour sulting firm whose Facebook entrance assessment involves description claims it has the receiving a simulated email "antidote for brain drains and from a troubled employee who
GoogleGlass,appsand interactive exhibits changeupthemuseum-goingexperience
c omprehensive r e sults
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SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Typewriters
Continued from E1 The office supply shop has
Continued from E1
children earn points toward re-
typewriters that date as far
7wltter's own r esearch shows that the most effec-
back as 1912.
tive ads use images or vid-
"The older machines are
eos, or are relatively short
becoming very popular," Krall said. "A lot of the kids like the
— fewer than 100 characters. Small-business owners
concept of having the tablet or
using7witter ads have some
laptop sitting on their desk and then having a 50- or 60-year-
other suggestions for what works and what doesn't.
old typewriter ... Even some of
Check I'm Here, a startup in St. Petersburg, Florida, that sells software for
colleges and universities to manage organizations,
out their prescriptions on it." At least two other Milwau-
events and activities on
kee-area shops also repair
campus and track student
typewriters — Todd Hoskins
response, uses Twitter ads
Service Specialists Inc. and
Mark Hoffman / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
90-year-old Teeter-Warsh Co. Inc.
Ed Skibba cleans a Remington typewriter after repairing it et Ace
ly on business customers with IBM machines,for decades the
the business increase the last few years. Young adults in particular
Business Machines in WestAllis, Wisconsin. Ace is among ehandTeeter-Warshfocuses large- fui of Milwaukee-area shops that repair typewriters and have seen
office standard. "It's surprising how many IBM Selectric and IBM Wheel-
seem to be interested in old manual typewriters. They get them from parents or at rummagesales and bring them to places such them cleaned up endrestored to working condition.
writers are out there, and we're servicing a lot of them,"
chines Teeter-Warsh repairs, except that "it's still a number that has been worthwhile to work with."
Many businesses keep a typewriter around for small jobs, such as filling out forms and labels and addressing envelopes, that sometimes are more easily done on the old
machines than on a computer, Rick Skibba said. Another source of r epair
work: prisoners. Ace gets a handful of typewriters a year from Wisconsin inmates — Ed
Skibba just received an electronic Nakajima — that arrive with a special anti-contraband
seal that isn't allowed to be broken. It's a small part of A ce's
business, but the prison trade goes a long way toward supporting New Jersey's Swintec Corp. About 12 years ago, owner Dominic Vespia figured there was a market in offering typewriters with transparent cases — look war-
den, no drugs or weapons — to inmates. "It's a big part of our business these days," said Vespia, who sells to prisoners in almost every state. "Probably had this niche not come up we'd be a lot smaller than we
call to action like "request
more information" or "request a demo," and ads are
that wind on a drum and pull
the carriage — also are hard to locate, Skibba said. He gets latest machine, but the most around that problem by taking common typewriter ailments broken bands to a cobbler and involve plain old dirt. 7ype- having him sew them together. writers have lots of small parts While old typewriters inevmoving at c lose tolerances, itably need attention, Krall is and dirt can build up and gum struck by how well they were made — a characteristic that the works. Skibba attacks with gear may help explain their consuch as a high-speed rotary tinuing appeal. "I have machines a hundred tool and, for Royals, a curved metal pick specially designed years old that still work," he to clean the tight slots where said. "And I tell people go find the dozens of typebars cluster something new today that's tightly together. electronic that'll be working in "You can't buy them any- a hundred years." more," he said of the Royal One reason century-old tooL "I think I've got two and I typewriters are still operatreasure them." ble, of course, is that people G etting parts ca n b e a such as Krall and Skibba are challenge. Years ago, Blue & around to fix them. Both are Koepsell bought out the inven- enthusiastic about the craft. tory of the former Smith-CoroKrall spends 60 percent to na service center in Milwau- 70 percent of his time on typekee, and it still draws on the writers, because a lot of other stash. office machines, such as lowSkibba hangs onto ma- end copiers and shredders, chines that can't be repaired, are so cheap that they aren't stores them in the basement at worth fixing. Ace and cannibalizes as needSkibba more than once has ed. He has a cardboard box dreamed about a particular full of ribbon spools and two typewriter-repair problem and drawers loaded with screws. come up with a solution while Difficult-to-find sho u lder he slept. After decades at the screws a r e pa r t icularly bench, the job still satisfies prlzed. and challenges. "I never get tired of going to Replacement drawbands — the heavy strips of fabric work," he said. nosed the situation with the
ChoreMonster, which offers
COMPANY
T ICKER
based company that offers
come to rent or buy here." He
education in social media, uses Twitter ads to get email
finds them by guessing what calls placed through the app and whom they are following, to the nearest responder, uses
addresses of potential cus-
whether Bloomberg, Forbes or
tomers. The company's ads Bill Gates. contain a call to action, for Suitey spends $30 to $50 a example: "Get our week- day on 7witter. The average ly Social Fresh Tip, social click-through rate is 2 to 4 permarketing tactics that save cent, with each click costing you time and make you about 80 cents, much higher money. Sign up below." than the 32 cents the company "Twitter is great for that pays, on average, for a click on because it can pre-popu- a Facebook ad. Even so, Bradlate email addresses on the ley said, the company feels the sign-up page," said Jason ads are worth it. "There are users on 7witter
Keath, the company's chief
executive. Each email lead that aren't on Facebook," he is worth about $20 to the said. "It might take a little more company; the acquisition money to acquire them, but the cost on Twitter is less than acquisition is still valuable." $5, he said.
Netflix Inc NFLX Swst Airlines L UV Phillips 66 PSX Marathon Petroleum MP C Tesoro Corp TSO American Airlines Gp A AL United Contl Hldgs U AL Valero Energy VLO Delta Air Lines D AL Alaska Air Group ALK Skyworks Solution SWKS Starbucks Cp SBUX Sony Corp S NE Pharmacyclics PCYC Contl Resources C LR
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NRG
25.04
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AGI
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Seoul Composite Singapore Straits Times -69.3 Sydney All Ordinaries -47.9 Taipei Taiex -27.2 Shanghai Composite
AAMC
223.81
-76.20
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6.35
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4.65
-1.27
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INWK
5.43
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-31.3
-28.0
up.retail Title:Co-president of A&G Realty Partners His outlook: Retailers need to adapt quickly
AndrewGraiser
Retailers are scrutinizing their brick-and-mortar needs as they grapple with the ongoing shift In how shoppers make purchases. As the holiday shopping season proved, stores had to discount heavily to entice customers to spend. Moreover, they're grappling with declining in-store traffic as consumers move toward mobile devices. Analysts also bemoan that there's an oversupply of mall real estate. Already, post-Christmas casualties have started. Teen retailer Wet Seal filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy and struggling Radio Shack could be next. Andrew Graiser, co-president of A&G Realty Partners, a real estate, advisory and investment group based in Melville, N.Y. Is on the front lines. Here's his take:
website traffic for about two
days. The median cost per app installation was $1.80. Perhaps as important for an
- 3.0
What's your outlook for spending? Consumers are starting to feel better, but you still have low wages, underemployment and unemployment coloring the picture. When you look at gateway cities like New York and Los Angeles, Boston, Dallas, Philadelphia, San Francisco — you'll see retailers doing well. But if you look at middle America, there are big problems. Retailers in those parts of the country are going to tell you their customers are broke — Irs not an optimistic picture. Who are the winners and losers? Of course, the struggling brands are the ones who get a lot of attention in the media, so the marketplace predicts fallout that I don't think will be as bad as the speculation. Yes, there are
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I s'der
San Jose State University communityread: "Did you know half of the blue Emergency Call boxes at San Jose State arebroken?" It also included a link to install the app. BlueLight spent $115 on the campaign and receiveda 30 percent bump in
SOUTHAMERICA/CANADA
34.3 Amsterdam 0.0 Brussels Madrid -25.1 Zurich -25.3 Milan 90.5 Johannesburg Stockholm
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EGLT
HK
7witter ads to promote safety awareness, which leads to installatton of tts app. A recent tweet aimed at the
Globalmarkets
28.4 Egalet Corp 109.3 Array BIDPharma -10.2 Cambium Learning Grp 0.3 USMD Holdings Inc 47.3 Agile Therapeutics
SWHC
lege campuses that routes 911
emerging brand, it got people talking. AaluiYing followers "We had a lot of people Increasing sales Promoted accounts are ads tweetingbackto us, sayingthis and downloads aimed at increasing followers is such useful info and what a Small-business owners and can be displayed in the great promoted tweet," Anand say setting specific, narrow "Who to Follow" box, in the said. "That was awesome, betargets is crucial on 7wit- timeline and in search results. cause right now, our biggest ter. ChoreMonster, a Web Michael Kleinman, a co-found- form of advertising is word of and mobile app that lets er of Mason Eyewear, a Mimouth."
15 BEST SMALL-CAP STOCKS
FRIDAY C LOS E
ment rates from ads that have
a free app and derives adver- an image and very specific incompany's followers. tising revenue from it, spends formation, such as: "There are Reuben Pressman, the $5,000 a month on 7witter ads. 438 one-bedroom apts. on the company's founder and It says it quadrupled its user Upper East Side for $2,800." chief executive, said every base in the last year. (Bowman Without an image, Bradley dollar he spent on Twitter left ChoreMonster to start his said, the drop in the clickconverted to $10 in sales. own company.) through rate is significant. "It works because our Suitey, an online real estate Pressman at Check I'm Here market is on 7witter," he brokerage based in Manhat- promotes the company's blog said, and because he choos- tan, uses Twitter to advertise posts in ads, and uses hashtags es his targets very narrow- properties and attract traffic and keywords that are relely. Check I'm Here finds that to the company's website. Its vant to the content of the blog its ads produce an 11 per- marketing manager, Austin post. cent rate of engagementBradley, aims the ads at peoPreet Anand, founder and actions like clicks, retweets ple "in their early 30s that are chief executive of Silicon Valor replies. working in New York City ley-based BlueLight, a phone Social Fresh, a New York- and have the disposable in- app especially for those on col-
Wmhly Stock Winners and Losers 15 BEST LARGE-CAP STOCKS
the Mason brand. "It worked,"
handles similar to the ones we he added. "We got 193 new listed as our target and they followers." are surprisingly spot-on," BowP ressman of C h eck I ' m man satd. Here, however, said he didn't In choosing targets, he use promoted accounts. He has avoids followers of accounts found that followers acquired with an enormous audience, that way aren't as engaged like Oprah Winfrey. "You lose as followers who come to the the tight targeting that 7wit- company in other ways. ter can provide," Bowman said. "Following those with a What to tweet smaller audience gives a better Suitey sees its highest cusreturn." tomer conversion and engage-
aimed at users similar to the
es Ace in West Allis, or Blue & Koepseii in Wauwatosa, to have
owner Tony Skarvan said. He are today." wouldn't say how many maSkibba hasn't yet d iag-
largely for lead generation. Each promoted tweet has a
ami-based online store that
al-life rewards for completing sells eyeglass lenses and vinchores,usesTwitter ads to en- tage-st yle frames, created an courage app downloads. ad with a Memorial Day theme A lex Bowman, u ntil r e - last May to acquire followers. "It was an American flag cently head of marketing and operations for the Cincinnati and a beautiful guy and girl company, identifies accounts wearing our sunglasses," he whose tweets are largely about said. The ad wasn't selling anybeing a parent, like bloggers, thing specifically, Kleinman book authors and magazines, said, but was aimed at getting and aims to reach their follow- people interested in following ers. "7witter also recommends
Getting leads
the professional people — we just had a doctor about a year ago spend about $500 rehabbing a 1948 IBM electric typewriter because he liked filling
E5
3411.50 +41.21 5468.20 +77.70 9470.94 +101.43 3351.76 + 8 .42
+0.25% v
+1.07% +1.38% +1.48% +1.76% +3.62%
Quotable "Though customers enjoyed high quality service, it came at a cost to UPS." — David Abney,cEQ of Ups, as the delivery company lowered its full-year outlook, explaining that the cost of ensuring timely holiday deliveries cut into earnings
bankruptcies like ALCO and Wet Seal, maybe a couple more, but there's a ton of opportunity, and you have a lot of success stories in every category. Look at the dollar store category; specialty stores like the Gap, the Limited — even restaurants and furniture stores are showing growth for 2015. The reality: retail Is moving at warp speed — they have to take a hard look at their real estate porffolios and make sure the numbers line up, look at where they can extend their entire porffolio. They have to take action. Regional supermarkets are really exposed because you have these competitors growing into their space, and it's just not possible for them to invest the kind of capital that can compete with the bigger national chains and the experienc-
es they offer. They can't invest in their stores — they're vulnerable.
What Is the future of the malls? The most interesting thing thars happening ... Is the creative ways landlords are using empty spacespecifically in the B- and C-level malls. You are now seeing non-tradItional retailers getting those leases — from urgent care centers to law practices and education. You're even seeing grocery stores like Whole Foods and Fairways. This will get worse before it gets better, but what we're seeing are businesses that would normally be in a strip mall, then turn up in a B- or C-mall. Interviewed by Anne D'Innocenzio. Answers edited for clarity and length. AP
Index closing andweekly net changesfor the week ending Friday, January 23, 2015
I7 67260
+
+1 61 03
NASDAQ ~123 gP 4,757.88
S&P500
+
2,051.82
32 4Q
RUSSELL2000 I,188.93
+
+12 27
WILSHIRE5000
+
21,588.01
343 33
E6
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
UNDAY D
R
un, ac -roa s 0 se r By Terry Box The Dallas Morning News
Use warmair when defrosting windows
Every time I slid into the Subaru BRZ, I wondered whether
By Brad Bergholdt
ies are coated with Teflon, and
Tribune News Service
a harsh cleaner can damage
I had left my backpack on my
Q
it. For this reason, it's best to use a product that is compatible with coated throttles. Your
Does it depend on the out-
injectors also have Teflon coat-
side temperature'? What about Florida versus up
ed tips, and these should receive the same consideration.
north? Everyone we ask
I'm at a l oss to understand
has a different idea.
how a carefully applied and wiped throttle cleaning pro-
• What is the best way • to use your defrost-
mom's kitchen table.
Or could it be at my girlfriend's dinky, o verpriced efficiency?
er to clear a foggy windshield? Hot air or cold air? friend is correct that some fuel
Or, wait a minute. I don't
even own an iPhone, much less a backpack for all the dopey electronic devices that Zippies stuff into them.
— Tom Hury
A nd
if
A
I'm
• A ir-conditioned a i r , • the warmer the better! Believe it or not, vir-
REVIEW skateboarding to wor k i n a tight sports coat and stovepipe
cess would allow much of the
cleaner, if any, to reach the fuel injector tips.
Q
jeans, I darn sure don't want a bunch of digital i-debris clinging to my back. If you ever see me in a tight sports coat and stovepipe jeans, please call the
!
authorities.
Tim Damon/ Courtesy Subaru
But regardless of your age, The 2015 Subaru BRZ boasts quick handling and fun looks but lacks power and speed.
tually all modern vehicles • I have an issue with my engagetheairconditioning • 2011 Honda Pilot. The compressor when the de- auxiliary ports blow the fuse. frost mode is selected. The My garage charges $25 to cold evaporator, a cigar- change the fuse, so instead, I, box-sized heat exchanger a 65-year-old female, bought a deep within the instrument box of 15 fuses for $4 and have panel, wrings moisture out been changing the fuses my-
a frisky Subaru BRZ — even
of the ventilated air and
in refrigerator white — can whisk you back to those halcyon, dark-haired days of peanut-butter crackers and cheap apple wine.
also cools it. This dry air is fuse blows almost, not always, then heated by the heater every time I plug in my phone core and directed to the de- to charge it.
Nothing in the auto industry
feels younger than the Breeze, which is entering its third year of production. Feed the BRZ a fast, twisty
road, and it responds with a surgical, magical, grin-inducing blast that few cars can match.
2015 SudaruBRZ Base price: $25,595 As tested: $30,285 Type: Front engine, rearwheel-drive coupewith 2+2 seating Engine: Two-liter, horizontally opposed four cylinder with direct and port fuel injection, 200 horsepower and151 pound-feet of torque Mileage: 22 mpg city, 30 mpg highway
The front-engine, rear-wheeldrive BRZ was developed more or less jointlyby quirky Subaru and tightly wrapped Toyota. The resulting Subayota — or Toybaru, if you prefer — is sold the BRZ's styling because it by Subaru as the BRZ and by mostly put function over form. Toyota's oddball Scion division The long hood, for example, as the FR-S. Born to run, the BRZ/FR-S
allows the flat-four engine in
the Subayota to be mounted rides on a stiff, light platform, behind the front wheels, conpropelled by a 2-liter flat four tributing to its excellent weight mostly from Subaru that mus- distribution. ters 200horsepower. But it's not a car that takes Mine was a 2015 BRZ Series your breath away. Blue Edition, which, as far as I The engine won't leave you cantell, is a longname for some breathless, either. Let's give it trim and aero packages. high marks, though, for quickThe exterior looks just like it ness, willingness to rev to its did two years ago, which is sort 7,000-rpmredlineandcompact of a mixed blessing. size. Scowling projector headAs one of Subaru's horizonlamps and a blacked-out grille tally opposed motors, the BRZ abut an unusually long, lightly engine features two cylinders sculpted hood. on the left and two on the right The front fenders and long- that lie parallel to the ground.
torque, which peaks at a high 6,400rpm. From the engine's odd thwock-thwock idle to about 4,000 rpm, the Breeze felt alive and pretty spirited. But, as many of us know, the pleasures of youth can be fleeting. Although the 2-liter engine will wind to 7,300 rpm, it lacks much grunt beyond 4,000, generating more noise than real surge. Fortunately, the Breeze I had
ride, which is fine with me. But
the result is a car that is fidgety and a bit anxious on smooth surfaces and can be harsh in
the rough, hitting big bumps hard enough to induce creaks in the interior. Moreover, the $30,000 BRZ
doesn't swaddle or coddle you much inside.
Again, function gets the priority. The black plastic dashboard, for instance, is old-school with one hood over the instrument
came equipped with a slightly panel and another over a small, notchy six-speed manual and really austere-looking display light, positive dutch, so I could panel. at least find the right revs when Likewise, the plastic door I needed them. panels were slightly padded The Subayota — the prodigy at their tops, with perforated of two ever-green automak- centers. ers — will also get 22 miles per Blue bolsters on the highgallon in town and 30 on the ly supportive seats and blue highway. stitching on the door panels I just wanted it to wake up provided some relief to the dark and snap me at some point. interior as part of the Blue EdiDespite how it felt in daily tion package. driving, the BRZ is actually Technically, the Breeze has pretty quick, sprinting to 60 in a miniature back seat. If you one of Car and Driver's tests in have friends in the circus, they a respectable 6.4 seconds.
self. I want to know why the
froster ducts. I remember
a few decades back when some cars didn't do this a utomatically, an d
d riv-
ers would complain about wimpy defrosting. After being advised to engage the little blue A/C button along with th e
d efroster, they
— Patsy Smith
A
• Patsy, have you tried any • other plug-in accessories besides your phone charger in this particular port? The reason I ask is perhaps your cell phone charging device has a loose or unusual terminal at the tip of its plug and it is accidentally bridging the very close clearance within the charge port's positive and
were pleased as punch. Humid regions make both air conditioning and defrosting more difficult. ground tabs. Also, does the • My service man at phone charger work OK in a • Toyota wants to ser- different vehicle? If the charvice the throttle body on my ger has an injured cord, this 2009 Toyota Venza, which could also lead to a blown has about 60,000 miles on fuse. If you plug in the charger it. A friend of mine who is before turning on the key (outa servicemanager ata GM let is not yet active on the Pidealer says that they don't Iot), and this resolves the prob-
Q
advise doing that as it wears
lem, I'm thinking it's a socket/
off the coating on the fuel plug issue. If it's OK but you injectors. Who is right, and find it blows the fuse while what do you recommend? — Ron M.
• It's true that some if • not most throttle bod-
A
moving thecord around, then
the chargercord is defective. Perhaps you can try another charger?
might fit. Otherwise, view it as
It just never seemed that fast. strictly a package shelf. So here's the solution, aside Look, the BRZ remains a from bolting on some hot tuner good car with greatness in turbo and a bees-in-a-coffee- reach. Mostly, it needs an addican exhaust system: Stay on tional 50 horsepower, and that curvy roads. could happen with the quick The BRZ's steering was addition of a turbocharger. The interior could also use ish doors are either lean and The l a yout, s i m ilar to amazing — quick, well-weightspare or kind of plain — and I'm Porsche's engines, contributes ed and twitching with road feel. some refinement. going with cleanly functional. to the car's low center of gravWith its light weight and But leave that platform and Unfortunately, a sad, ity, which of course helps with great balance, the coupe de- suspension — the backbone of fake-plastic vent on the top of handling. voured curves and corners the Breeze — alone, please, and the front fender is still the most But it's often tough to sum- like a 16-year-old attacking don't jack with its swagger or prominent feature on the side of mon all the thin ponies that a Big Mac, only with less of a attitude. If I can't stay young, at least the Breeze, giving it a Pep Boys reside in the little motor. Part of mess. flavor at times. the problem is the four-banger Toyota and Subaru clearly let me drive something that's On one level, I appreciated produces 151 pound-feet of placed handling well above proudly, fiercely immature.
ra e issue mu e no issue at a By Paul Brand
releases just enough hydraulic pressure to affect only the • While searching the wheels that are locking up. By • Web to try to figure out keeping all the wheels/tires at what's wrong with my '03 the edge of lockup, the ABS Subaru Baja's brakes, I came maximizes the stopping powacross your article on brak- er of the vehicle in those coning issues and wonder if you ditions. ABS cannot overcome couldhelp me. Under cold or the laws of physics, meaning wet conditions, my brakes the car will decelerate only as Star Tribune (Minneapolis)
Q
buzz and vibrateand affect
well as the traction between
ed it and three balls floated, meaning it is good to 10-below. Should I worry about freezing and potential engine block
es and collects moisture over time. This produces sludge
cracking'? If it gets to this tem-
— Brand is an automotive troubleshooter and former race car driver. Email questions to paulbrand@startribune.com. 1nclude a daytime phone number.
perature or below, should I add a magnetic engine block heater? As it i s stored now it would be difficult to try to
not the ABS system. In fact,
Q•
• • •
I
•
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protection.
A•
greater issue'? the ABS is likely maximiz• I'm not sure there is an ing stopping power in this • issue. You've described low-traction scenario. exactly what happens when S hould you b l eed t h e the ABS engages. Antilock brakes'? I suggest — as do brake systems consist of sen- many carmakers today — that sors that monitor the rotation- the brake fluid be exchanged al speed of each wheel. Under e very on e t o two ye a r s braking, the ABS control mod- through brake bleeding to reule compares the rotational move any moisture-contamispeeds, and if one or more nated fluid that could degrade wheels are slowing more rap- brake performance. idly than others, recognizes Even just emptying and rethis as impending brake lock- filling the brake fluid master up.The module cycleselectro- cylinder reservoir once per magnetic "dump" valves open/ year with a turkey baster-type closed rapidly to release just siphoning device — without enough hydraulic pressure to bleeding the brakes — exkeep the wheels rotating at the changes a high percentage of edge of lockup. old fluid with fresh fluid. This Remember the "good old isn't as good as fully bleeding days" before ABS'? Drivers the brakes, but it's certainly were advised to pump the better than doing nothing. brake pedal as rapidly as possible when the wheels locked I have an old car in storup in slippery conditions. ABS • age, and I'm concerned does this for you far faster and about the level of antifreeze more effectively. Its cyclic rate protection it might have with is exponentially higher and it the very cold weather. I test-
tal to engines.
•
drain and increase the coolant
stopping ability. I s uspect tireand road surface allows. Assuming your vehicle it's an ABS issue as it occurs In your case, it would ap• is stored in some sort only when there's some sort pear that available traction of structure, the unheated air of loss of traction to one or — "cold or wet conditions"will usually be roughly 10 detwo wheels. Should I bleed the are affecting stopping power, greesabove the outdoor tembrakes, or do you think it's a
and varnish that are detrimen-
I
perature. Moreover, a car in
air below minus-10 degrees would have to be subjected to that cold for some time be-
fore any solid freezing would occur. Yes, any type of coolant heating system, even an incandescent light bulb or heat lamp safely placed under the hood, would add additional protection. You could also increase the antifreezeprotec-
tion level by simply siphoning a half-gallon directly from the radiator and topping it up with 100 percent antifreeze. have a 2 0 0 8 M e r Q •• Icedes C300 with 5,000 miles. Last time I had the oil
changed, around 3,500 miles, was 18 months ago. Do you think I should change the oil now? Does time also matter? • Change the oil and filter
A• once per year. Consider itcheap insurance. Time does matter in the sense that oil, as
a petroleum product, oxidiz-
The Linehan Institute
Suicide Prevention Presentations: Bend & Redmond January 26 and 27 Suicide Prewention Presentations Participants willlearn therisk factors related to suicide, the importance of recognizing signs and gettinghelp, as well as how acommunity can worktogether to help prevent suicideand suicide attempts. Resourcesfor help will also be available. All community members andmature youngadults are welcometo attend. BEND PRESENTATION REDMOND PRESENTATION DATE: Monday,January 26 DATE:Tuesday,January 27 TIME: 5:30to 7:00 p.m. TIME: 5:30to 7:00 p.m. PLACE:Bend High School,230 NE 6th St. PLACE: Redmond HighSchool, 675 SWRimrock Way THERE IS NOCOSTto attend, howeverregistration is required (seebelow for details).
TO REGISTER:www.suic1depreventiontra|nings.eventbrite.com. For more information please call (54I) 388-6606 or email david.visiko@deschutes.org. These quality trainings are brought to you through a partnership of the Central Oregon itssociation of Psychologists, The Central Oregon Mental Health Promotion Grant Task Force, and OSU Cascades. o1ES o
Deschutes County HealthServices is an equal opportunity service provider. If you needaccommodationsto make participation possible, or if youneedthis documentin an alternate format, please call (541) 388-6606 or (541) 330-4632. Ceaesdea
oc
INSIDE BOOKS W Editorials, F2 Commentary, F3
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/opinion
JOHN COSTA
Free speech and Charlie Hebdo •
T
i
By Susanne Craig New York Times News Service
he issues raised when Muslim terrorists murdered staff members of the Parisian satirical
GREECE, NY.
journalCharlieHebdo aremany, frightening and sad. The horrific loss of innocent life is, of course, the most immediate and
-
o obvious traces remain of the fire that killed
cruelest. Next is the mounting evidence that
10 people here in 1978,
terrorist saretraveling abroad for training, then going home to impose a capital sentence on anyone who disagrees with their religious views.
no monument to remind local residents of the arson at the Holiday
How nations committed to open
Inn that left an entire town in tears.
societies can defend against that is a huge challenge.
A Red Lobster now occupies the
There are also daunting issues of
free speech, underlined by the fact that these murderers would allow no
spot on a busy road where the
expression that contradicted their
motel stood.
warped sense of righteousness. Not that it isn't threatening to the cultures of other Western nations,
but free speech is the bedrock of our republic. As described, Charlie Hebdo is a journal that spreads heat, butnot light, believing instead in the literature of
the unnecessary, gratuitous insult. Apparently, it takes pride in offending everyone. Nothing is out of bounds, which is fine, if inane, in many contexts. But publishing insulting parodies of the historic religious founder Muhammed on the cover is heresy for Islamists and in very bad taste for
many of the rest of us. Granted, most of the faithful are not driven to extreme and violent
responses, but some are. And they are prepared to die in the effort to strip from us our right to be
insulting, however much any of us are personally repelled by the insult. The responses in American news-
papers to this outrageous attack have been varied. Most, including The Bulletin, have
described in words but not images the presentations of Charlie Hebdo. Some decidedtoreproduce the
offensive illustrations from Charlie Hebdo out of solidarity with the
rights of the journal. The Bulletin did not, which was consistent with our standards of publication.
Make no mistake about it. We believe firmly in the right of publications to publish offensive caricatures, whether it was Charlie Hebdo or those who printed in support of the principle of free speech after the murders. Given the potential for violent re-
percussions, that took courage. Andthere is a news rationale: The illustrations were central to a huge
event, and the readers who sawthem got to formtheir own reactions to the offensive illustrations.
Though def I endthatapproach on principle, I disagree with it in practice. I simply don't believe that running unnecessarilyinsultingimages leads to anygood end. It certainly doesn't contribute to any understanding of radical Islam. In fact, it exacerbates it.
I feel the same way about the assaults on Christian, Hindu or any im-
ages important to otherpeople. In the 1970s, American Nazis decid-
ed to march through Skokie, Illinois, a Chicago suburb with a large number
But what Greece, New York, lacks in permanent memorials it makes up for in coffee-shop conversations, and opinions, about who set the fire and why justice as never been served. h-..
of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust. ~d ictably,there was an uproar,
Thirty-six years later, the blaze — one of the deadliest hotel fires in the state's histo-
whichtorturedthe souls of free-
ry — is still under active investigation. Law
speechstalwarts.
enforcement officials say they are close to~
Many editorialpages agreedwith the right of the Nazis to march and supported the American Civil Liberties Union's court fight to support that march. I agreed with both, but I
seeking an indictment; the prime suspect says he is innocent. Yet for people in this
detested the march. Inthe 1980s, the artist Andres Ser-
rano created the "Piss Christ," which
working-class town outside Rochester, the
story is as much one of local political intrigue as of law and order. The twist'? According to officials briefed
on the case, that suspect — who was also
our culture, but one that I supported
the first firefighter to arrive at the sceneis the current fire chief. "We need to get to the bottom of this," said Laurie Kingsley-Henry, who was 14 when the Holiday Inn burned. Like many
in myprofound regard for the First
people in Greece, she has a connection to
Amendment. Over the years, many readers have
the fire: Her father was among the firefighters who fought it; she herself was a
objectedto what they see as support of First Amendment permissiveness.
member of a fire department youth Explor-
presented a plastic crucifix in a beaker of urine.
It was an appalling commentary on
I understand their discomfort, but
I would ask, "Who gets to drawthe line?" Is it the Parisian killers? — John Costais editor-in-chief of The Bulletin. Contact: 541-383-0337, jcosta®bendbulletin.com
er post at the time. See Fire /F5
New YorkTimes photo
"We need to get to the bottom of this." — Laurie Kingsiey-Henry, who was on the scene in1978; the site of the fire, behind her, is now a Red Lobster
F2
TH E BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
OFmu a OF OUSII1 ai IS in 0 en UA II1
Lk&T )Bl1W'NXHB 'HoTTHT oM pscoRp...
„.AND THG u6 Hhr .GIAm SO
.". NIOR'& NESIIHOUSE6lhCVr... l'
I.g •
t would be crazy if the federal government had an afford-
u lnvw.w~ ngf g~ M plc/~+ 4
able housing program skewed so it gives less money to
CouNgPy.
communities that may need it more. That would be almost unbelievable. Well, believe it. The federal government's formula for an affordable housing program called HOME is shortchanging Bend and perhaps other newer communities across the country. The website for HOME says it provides grants based on a formula to states and communities to use to build/buy/redo affordable housing or provide rental assistance. It's the biggest federal block program aimed at creating affordable housing for low-income households. That sounds good, so far. But dig into the details. The funding formula for HOME includes this criteria: "Rental units built before 1950 occupied by poor households." That criteria has a 20 percent weight. Bend has virtually no housing like that, city staff told us. And in Bend, older housing can be the more desirable. It can cost more. Lower-income residents tend to live in newer housing. So even though Bend's need for affordable housing may be greater, it has a reduced likelihood of getting money for affordable housing. And it's not just the HOME program that skews its funding this
eeS~ N>WS a olle
THLM KNYOTHER
way. There's a similar bias in the funding processfor the government's Community Development Block Grants. How does this formula hurt Bend? Compare Bend and Corvallis. Corvallis has about 30,000 fewer peoplethan Bend. The median family income for a family of four in Bend is$62,400, according to federal housing data. In Corvallis, it's $69,400. Corvallis does have some rental housing built before 1950. It's about 14 percent of its rental housing, according to the
city. Corvallis gets about $300,000 in HOME funds. Bend gets zero. It would be a mistake to conclude just from that information that Bend loses and Corvallis wins simply because of the age of rental housing. It does help illustrate, though, the funding foul-up for Bend. The bigger issue is that as you move away from the East Coast, fewer and fewer cities are going to have older rental housing. Bend's c hallenges with a f fordable housing are bad enough without the federal government skewing funding against it. Could Oregon's Congressional delegation please fix this?
rg~
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•
•
•
•
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M 1Vickel's Worth Safer motorcycle riders
a two-bedroom, one-and-a-half -bath
unit. This is more than half the cost
Your front-page headline and re- of the land! And the parks and recrelated article in the Jan. 9 paper, "If
ation district is getting $12,000 of that
Simple instructions to avoid trouble Recently, I read an i nteresting
you're aboomer on abike, read this," fee. Do we really need more parks in Yahoo "news" story. It was about and "The thrill of the ride comes at a an area that is abundant in natural Spike Lee's production compacost," was disingenuous fear-mon- outdoor recreation? ny facility posting "large banners gering. Implied in the headline and Untilthe city expedites the expan- commemorating the deaths of Eric article title is that motorcycle riders sion of its urban growth boundary Garner,Michael Brown and severin the 55-plus age category are suf- and seriously considers significant al otherblack men who have died fering from disproportionately high reduction of its SDC fees in conjunc- in the last year during altercations accident rates. tion with the park and recreation with the police." While it is very imContrary to your premise, the district, the service working class portant that we (the public) be made facts paint a picture quite the oppo- will continue to be forced to com- aware again of these tragedies that site. Careful reading of your article mute from more affordable Red- are seeminglyoccurring on a reggleans this fact: 55-plus riders make mond, Prineville, Madras and La ular basis, posting banners is not up 54 percent of all motorcycle rid- Pine in order to live, work and play going to prevent it from happening ers,but only suffer 36.4 percent of in our awesome Central Oregon. again. all fatalities in that sport. Wouldn't a Phil McCage I propose that activists like Spike better headlinebe, "Good job, boomBend Lee, and the Rev. Jesse Jackson and ers,you ride saferthan allriderage the Rev. Al Sharpton, preach the categories younger than you!" following simple instruction list: 1. Byron Knapp If a policeman tells you to stop, then Sunrtver A recent editorial in The Bulletin stop.2. If a policeman tells you to put stated that the Western Juniper Alli- your hands up, then put your hands ance is hoping that the Oregon Leg- up. 3. While not mandatory, remainSDC fees are too high islature will support a new attempt ing quiet during steps 1 and 2 will Regarding Workers feel hous- at using junipers as lumber prod- make the process smoother and reing crunch" in The Bulletin, Jan. 18: ucts. It may also be helpful to note duce the likelihood of injury. Affordable housing for the workers that a 1997 study by the Texas A&M It should be noted that these steps won't be available realistically in Research and Extension Center dis- are even more important if you have Bend until two significant things oc- covered that a 15-foot-tall juniper just committed a crime or are suscur. One is the supply of buildable drinks as much as 35 gallons of wa- pected of committing a crime. They land, which must be increased, and ter per day. At a time when ground- may be difficult to remember if you secondly, a substantial reduction in water is an increasing concern for happen to be under the influence of the system development fees being everyone,incl uding farmers and mind-altering substances, so they charged to builders that are merely ranchers, it might b e a p o sitive should be taught repeatedly. These passedontotheeventualconsumeror point worth emphasizing. Other, recommendations apply to everyrenter. Cheaper land and lower build- less thirsty indigenous trees such as one regardlessof race, religion, ing costs can equate to lower housing pine might replace junipers to better country of origin, sexual preference and rental rates. Other considerations advantage,and much of the wood or gender identification. such as allowing higher density cot- might be donated to wood lots benIt is my belief that following these tage housing or additional vocational efiting those who rely on wood fires simple steps would prevent more rentals are both ineffective as well as for heat during cold months. As a deaths at the hands of the police being most unpopular. The current footnote: In Sweden, juniper beer is than posting banners, and perhaps SDC fee of $27,701 for a two-unit du- an extremely popular beverage. even more than rioting and looting. plex is prohibitive, adding more than Don Senecal Chris Tolke
Saw awayatjunipers
Bonusescould speed road andbridge work hould the city of Bend hand out bonuses to contractors for finishing road or bridge contracts early? The issue came up at Wednesday's Bend City Council meeting. It's something the city should explore. But if there are incentives for early completion, it seems onlyfairtohave disincentives for late completion. Federal and state contracts can have completion incentives. In general, they exist because when a road orbridge isbeingworked on to improve a traffic problem, the constructionand road closures can create traffic problems of their own. It can be more than just delays. It can createsafety issuesfortheconstruction workers as well as the drivers. There can also be costs to nearby businesses that lose customers during construction. Just imagine what it would be like to get a project, such as the Reed Market Road improvements in Bend, done a month or even a week
early. The key issue with completion incentives is, of course, gettingthem right. If they are too low, the con-
tractors won't bother. If they are too high, contractors might be thinking too much about speed and not enough about quality. The federal government tries to standardize the values it sets for incentives and disincentives. It sets out to use established "construction engineering inspection costs, state related traffic control and maintenance costs, detour costs and road user costs." It can all get very tricky with the season of the year, weather days and holidays. The federal government specifically does not include any calculation of the disruption to adjacent businesses. We'd argue that it's worth thinking about but would be very difficult to calculate. The federal government also recommends thata cap of 5 percent be the maximum incentive for getting a project done early. Before Bend experiments with incentives/ disincentives, it should know that 50 percent of federal projects with incentives were completed in time to earn the maximum incentive. Bend should ensure that the bonuses it may pay are worth it.
T eannua
$12 per square foot to the cost to build
Bend
Redmond
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sica: It'sa ear e aseon i e
By AlexBeam
measuring the additional screenings
The Boston Globe
and follow-up tests."
erial inveigher Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, one of a troublesome trio Emanuel — I'll explain in a mo- of brothers (Rahm runs Chicago; Ari ment — has set off yet another Emmanuel is a famously disputatious hoo-ha with his provocative sugges- and successful Hollywood agent),
S
IN MY VIEW and I'm no longer their patient. But a perfectly competent physician's assistant palpates me and so on. The ever-rotating cast of phlebotomist-vampires smile politely as my
tion that Americans ditch their annu-
loves to stir the pot. He recently wrote
al physical exams. Forty-five million of us get an annualphysical, he writes in a New York Times op-ed, but we shouldn't bother: "The annual physical exam is basically worthless." Emanuel, an oncologist at the Uni-
a lengthy provocation for the Atlantic blood swirls into their vials. What magazine, titled, "Why I Hope to Die fun! at 75." He doesn't really want to die at 75, but never mind that.
We all have an interest in this subject, and I will declare mine: I love my versity of Pennsylvania, says that a annual physical. Of course, I never study of annual physical exams from bothered with this until about age 30, 1963 to 1999 reveals that the tests "did but now I enjoy it. I regard it as my not reduce mortality overall or for yearly new lease on life, as long as specifi c causes ofdeath from cancer the lease can be renewed, I guess. It's true that my primary care phyor heart disease." What's more, "the checkups consume billions, although sicians haven't bothered to show up no one is sure exactly how many to my physical in the past few years; billions because of the challenge of they'vebecome "concierge doctors,"
It's an
a n nual encounter from
which I retain literally every word. The docs used to ask me leading questions about my mood (always negative, I assured them) and my sex life (no further comment). I figured they wanted me to reach into
the Magic Formulary that Cures All Ills — e.g., Lunesta, Viagra — but I wasn't interested. I tried to direct the
conversation to my grape-sized sebaceous cyst, but it has failed to capture
their interest lo these many years.
When I whined about what is now
nual. Dr. Claudio Burstein, assistant
called overweight, I remember my
area medicaldirector of Kaiser Permanente, California's massive and
doctor saying: "Eat less fat." When I
started experiencing hip pain a few generallywell-regarded insurance years ago, my then-doctor mumbled, and health care provider, agreed. "Well, we want to keep you out of the "Our policy isn't about eliminating a hands of the surgeons." Pretty funny service," he said, "it's about finding line, albeit easier said than done. a better one. We honor any patient's The American Medical Associa- request for a physical exam," but Kaition agrees with Emanuel. It emailed ser turns every visit into what they me a statement of Talmudic complex- call a "proactive office encounter," ity, which said, in part: I) "The peri- with the aim of teaching patients to odic evaluation of healthy individuals monitor many of their own vital data. "We'd like to see a cultural change is important for the early detection of disease," but 2), "The optimal fre- in this relationship," he added, "but it quency of the periodic evaluation and can't be done overnight." theproceduresto be performed vary Should you skip your annual physwith the patient's age, socioeconomic ical?Let your conscience be your status, heredity, and other individual guide. I've already made my appointfactors." ment for next year. In English: Yes to periodic health — Alex Beam is a columnist checks, but they don't have to be anfor The Boston Globe.
SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
F3
OMMENTARY
ins on ifty years ago, former British
F chill died at age 90.
e as ion
Ul'C
er on either side of the war to fight
VICTOR
continuously the entire six years,
Churchill is remembered for his
DAVIS
ber 2, 1945. Britain was the only nation of the alliance to have fought
multiple nonstop careers as a statesman, cabinet minister, politician,
HANSON
journalist, Nobel laureate historian
and combat veteran. He began his Some of the British elite wished to career serving the British military cut a peace deal with Hitler to save as a Victorian-era mounted lancer their empire and keep Britain from and ended it as custodian of Britain's being bombed or invaded. They unnuclear deterrent. derstandably argued that Britain But he is most-renowned for an could hardly hold out when Poland, astounding five-year tenure as Brit- Denmark, Norway, the Netherlands, ain's wartime prime minister, from Belgium and France all had not. May 10, 1940, to June 26, 1945, when Yet Churchill voiced defiance and he was voted out of office not long af- vowed to keep on fighting. ter the surrender of Nazi Germany. After the fall of France, Churchill Churchill took over the day Hitler readied Britain's defenses against a invaded Western Europe. Within six Nazi bombing blitz and then went weeks, an isolated Great Britain was
on the offensive against Italy in the
He ensured that the Mediterranean
stayed open from Gibraltar to Suez. from September 3, 1939, to Septem- Churchill partnered with America
Prime Minister Winston Chur-
from North Africa to Normandy, and
he helped to supply Russia — even as Nazi Germany alone without allies. Britain was broke and its manpower Churchill's defiant wartime rheto- exhausted. ric anchored the entire moral case
In the mid-1930s, Churchill first-
against the Third Reich.
and loudest — had damned appease-
Unlike the Soviet Union or the United States, Britain entered the
ment and warned Europe and the
United States about the dangers of an war without being attacked, on the aggressive Nazi Germany. For that principle of protecting independent prescience, he was labeled a warmonPoland from Hitler. Unlike America, ger who wished to revisit the horrors Britain fought Germany from the of World War I. first day of the war to its surrender. After the end of World War II, the Unlike Russia, it fought the Japa- lone voice of Churchill cautioned the nese from the moment Japan started West that its former wartime ally, the the Pacific War to the Japanese general surrender.
Soviet Union, was creating an "Iron
Curtain" and was as ruthless as HitChurchill's Britain had a far small- ler's Germany had been. Again, he er population and economy than ei- w as branded aparanoidwhounfairly ther the Soviet Union or the United demonized communists. States. Its industry and army were The wisdom and spirit of Winston
THOMAS
FRIEDMAN
Tiptoeing around extremism
t
've never been a fan of global conferences to solve problems, but when I read that the Obama ad-
ministration is organizing a Summit on Countering Violent Extremism
for Feb. 18, in response to the Paris killings, I had a visceral reaction: Is there a box on my tax returns that I
can check so my tax dollars won't go to pay for this'? When you don't call things by their real name, you always get in trouble.
left alone facing the Third Reich. Mediterranean. What is now the European Union As much of London went up in was then either under Nazi occupa- flames, Churchill neverflinched,detion, allied with Germany or ostensi- spite the deaths of more than 40,000 smaller than Germany's. bly neutral while favoring Hitler. British civilians. Defeat would have meant the end
Churchill saved not only Britain from
And this administration, so fearful
the Third Reich, but also Western civ-
The United States was not just neutral. It had no intention of enter-
ilization from a Nazi Dark Ages when there was no other nation willing to
of being accused of Islamophobia, is refusing to make any link to radical
By some estimates, the Soviet Red
Army eventually killed three out of ing another European war — at least four German soldiers who died in
of British civilization. But victory would ensure the end of the British
Pearl Harbor a year and half later. nomic colossus built more military From August 1939 to June 1941, ships, aircraft, vehicles and tanks the Soviet Union was an accomplice than did any other country during
Empire and a future world dominat- take up that defense. ed by the victorious and all-powerful Churchill was the greatest military, United States and Soviet Union. political and spiritual leader of the It was Churchill's decision that Brit- 20th century. The United States has ain would fight on all fronts of both never owed more to a foreign citizen
of the Third Reich. Russian leader
the European and Pacific theaters.
not until after the surprise attack on
Josef Stalin was supplying Hitler
World War II. The American eco-
World War II. In comparison to such later huge
He ordered strategic bombing over human and material sacrifices, the occupied Europe, a naval war against original, crucial British role in win- the German submarine and surface cle in Germany's path of European ning World War II is often forgotten. fleets and a full-blownland campaign domination. But Britain was the only major pow- in Burma.
with critical resources to help finish off Great Britain, the last obsta-
than to Winston Churchill, a mon-
umentalpresence 50 years after his death. — Victor Davis Hanson is a classicist and historian at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University.
Islam from the recent explosions of
violence against civilians (most of them Muslims) by Boko Haram in Nigeria, by the Taliban in Pakistan, by al-Qaida in Paris and by jihadists in Yemen and Iraq. We've entered the theater of the absurd.
This month, the conservative columnist Rich Lowry wrote an essay in Politico Magazine that contained
quotes from White House spokesman Josh Earnest that I could not be-
lieve. I was sure they were made up. But I checked the transcript: 100 percent correct. I can't say it better than
How Venezuela has ruined its emnomy
Lowry did: "The administration has lapsed into unselfconscious ridiculousness. Asked why the administration won't
say (after the Paris attacks) we are at
ByMatt O'BrIen
trouble is that while it's tried to help
The Washington Post
the poor, which is commendable, it's is. And then it can decide who gets to also spent much more than it can af- m ake money, and how much, by dolford, which is not. Indeed, Venezue- ing out dollars to importers at this la's government is running a deficit artificially low rate, provided they of 14 percent of its gross domestic charge what the government says. product right now, a fiscal hole so This might sound complicated, big that there's only one way to fill it: but it really isn't. Venezuela's gov-
'Iliesday explained the administration's first concern 'is accuracy. We
much as a poorly-run oil exporting business that isn't enough to subsi-
the printing press. But that just trad-
Islam and their own deviant view of it.'
dize everything else. And that was
money — for the opposite one. After
he problem with socialism isn't that you eventually run out of
T you eventually run out of oil money.
other people's money. It's that
Well, at least in V enezuela. It doesn't have an economy, you see, so
ed one economic problem — too little
true even when oil was over $100 a barrel. So now that it's under $50 a barrel, Venezuela's government has
gone from defaulting on its own people, as former minister Ricardo Hausmann put it, in the form of
rampant inflation and shortages, to really doing so, to the point that it might have to start defaulting on its
debt, too. It shouldn't be this way. Venezuela, after all, has the largest oil re-
coming.Venezuela, you see,hasthe most oil reserves, but not the most oil production. That's, in part, because
its currency is really stronger than it
ernment wants to wish away the inflation it's created, so it tells stores
what prices they're allowed to sell at. all, paying people with newly print- These bureaucrat-approved prices, ed money onlymakes that money however, are too low to be profitable, lose value and prices go parabolic. which is why the government has to It's no wonder then that Venezuela's give companies subsidies to make inflation rate — officially 64 percent them worthwhile. Now when these — is really something like 179 per- price controls work, the result is cent, and could get up to 1,000 per- shortages, and when they don't, it's cent, according to Bank of America, even worse ones. Think about it like if Venezuela doesn't change its byz- this. Companies that don't get cheap antine currency controls. dollars at the official exchange rate Venezuela's government, in oth- would lose money selling at the offier words, is playing Whac-A-Mole cial prices, so they leave their stores with economic reality. And its ex- empty. But the ones that are lucky, change-rate system is the hammer. It or connected, enough to get cheap goes something like this. The Mad- dollars might prefer to sell them for a uro regime wants to throttle the pri- quick buck, and maybe bigger profit,
the Bolivarian regime, first under Chavez and now Maduro, has scared But it isn't, and it's getting poorer off foreign investment and bungled now, because of economic misman- its state-owned oil company so much agement on a world-historical scale. that production has fallen 25 percent The problem is simple: Venezuela's since they took power in 1999. Even vate sector but spend money like it in the black currency market than to government thinks it can have an worse, oil exports have fallen by hasn't. Then it wants to print what it use them for what they're supposed economy by just pretending it does. half. Why? Well, a lot of Venezuela's needs but keep prices the same like to. So, as I've put it before, it's not That it can print as much money as crude stays home, where it's subsi- it hasn't. And finally, it wants to keep profitable for the unsubsidized comit wants without stoking inflation by dized to the tune of 1.5 U.S. cents per its stores stocked, but, going back to panies to stock their shelves, and not just saying it won't. And that it can gallon. (Yes, really). Some gets sent step one, keep the private sector in profitable enough for the subsidized end shortages just by kicking people to friendly governments, such as Cu- check like it hasn't. This is where its ones to do so, either. out of line. It's a triumph of magi- ba's, in return for medical care. And currencysystem comes in.The govAnd, remember, this was a probcal thinking that's not much of one another chunk goes to China as pay- ernment,you see,hassetup a three- lem even when Venezuelahad dolwhen it turns grocery shopping into ment in kind for the $45 billion it's tiered exchange rate to try to control lars. Now it doesn't. Not when 95 a dayslong ordeal that might not ac- borrowed from them. everything — prices, profits and percent of its exports come from oil, tually turn up things such as food or That doesn't leave enough oil production— in the economy. The and its price has fallen by half. toilet paper. money to pay their bills. Again, the idea, if you want to call it that, is that — Matt O'Brien writes This reality has been a long time Bolivarian regime is to blame. The it can keep prices low by pretending for The Washington Post. serves in the world. It should be rich.
war with radical Islam, Earnest on
want to describe exactly what hap-
pened. These are individuals who carried out an act of terrorism, and they later tried to justify that act of
terrorism by invoking the religion of "This makes it sound as if the Charlie Hebdo terrorists set out to commit a random act of violent ex-
tremism and only subsequently, when they realized that they needed some justification, did they reach for
Islam. "The day b efore, Earnest had conceded that there are lists of re-
cent 'examples of individuals who have cited Islam as they've carried out acts of violence.' Cited Islam?
According to the Earnest theory ... purposeless violent extremists rum-
mage through the scriptures of great faiths, looking for some verses to cite to support their mayhem and often
happen to settle on the holy texts of Islam." President Barack Obama knows better. I am all for restraint on the
issue, and would never hold every Muslim accountable for the acts of
a few. But it is not good for us or the Muslim world to pretend that this spreading jihadist violence isn't coming out of their faith community. It is coming mostly, but not exclusively, from angry young men and preachers on the fringe of the Sunni Arab and Pakistani communities in the Middle East and Europe. If W estern i n t erventions help
foster violent Islamic reactions, we should reduce them. To the extent
Avoiding taxes can actually be quite expensive
that Muslim immigrants in European countries feel marginalized, they
By Justin Fox
on absorption. But both efforts will take you only so far.
tent or comprehensible. That's mainBloomberg News ly because what Hand was trying to ou've probably seen this do was hard. He thought companies quote from Judge Learned shouldbe freeto m ake business deHand about tax avoidance: cisions, including business decisions "Any one may so arrange his af- that reduced their tax burdens. He fairs that his taxes shall be as low as just didn't want them organizing possible; he is not bound to choose and reorganizingthemselves purely that pattern which will best pay the to avoid taxes. Treasury; there is not even a patriotThis is of course quite the topical ic duty to increase one's taxes." issue. In the U.S. the talk is all about Less often discussed is the rest "inversions," in w h ich A m erican of the 1934 appeals court ruling in companies use mergersto move Helvering v. Gregory, in which the their legal domiciles overseas (even most influential judge never to serve if their headquarters and most of on the Supreme Court wrote those their business stays in the U.S.), thus words. In it, Hand actually ruled reducing their tax bills. Past Conagainst a company owner, Evelyn gresses surely didn't intend for comGregory, who had used a tempo- panies to do what they've been dorarycorporate reorganization to re- ing lately, but the current Congress
Y
Southern California law professor Ed Kleinbard calls "stateless in-
Google andother U.S. companies actually make their money, though, didn't set out to exempt them from
come" — profits that are routed from the countrywhere they are generat- income taxes. And now they're kind ed to one where they almost entire- of ticked off. ly escape taxation. The classic case It can't be a coincidence that in is probably Google's "Double Irish" recent years European authorities plus "Dutch Sandwich," which, as have turned increasingly hostile to described in a much-cited 2010 ar- Google, targeting it with antitrust inticle by Bloomberg News reporter vestigations, punitive laws and pos-
and theirhosts should worker harder Something else is also at work,
and it needs to be discussed. It is the struggle within Arab and Pakistani Sunni Islam over whether and how
to embrace modernity, pluralism and women's rights. That struggle drives, and is driven by, the dysfunctionality of so many Arab states and Pakistan. It has left these societies
Jesse Drucker, involved a stop in Bermuda, too, and kept the tax rate
sibly a continent-wide Internet tax.
They have also been cracking down
withtoo many young men who have never held a job or a girl's hand, who
on the company's overseas profits in the low single digits. Google has probably caught more flak for this than any other compa-
on other companies' tax strategies.
then seek to overcome their humilia-
The latest is Amazon.com, which gets tax breaks in Luxembourg that
tion at being left behind — and seek to find identity, by "purifying" their
the European Commission, in a let-
worlds of other Muslims who are not
ter made public Jan. 16, described as dard response has been that he and impermissible "state aid." The Orga-
sufficiently pious and of Westerners whom they perceive to be putting
his fellow executives had "a fiducia-
Muslims down. But you don't see this in the two giant Muslim communities in Indonesia or India. Only Sunni Arabs and Pakistanis
ny. Chairman Eric Schmidt's stan-
ry responsibility to our shareholders" to pay as little in taxes as the duce her tax bill, and in favor of IRS won't stop them, because many Commissioner Guy Helvering. In lawmakers think U.S. corporate law allows. That's in keeping with the same paragraph as the famous tax rates are too high and the U.S. Hand's assurance that "any one may practice of taxing corporations on so arrange his affairs that his taxes quote, Hand concluded: "To dodge the s hareholders' their worldwide income unfair. The shall be as low as possible." taxes is not one of the transac- Obama Treasury Department anWhat about the second part of tions contemplated as c o rporate nounced some rule changes last fall Hand's argument, though'? Did lawreorganizations." that seem to have slowed the flow, makers in the countries where GooThere may not be a patriotic duty but don't underestimate the inven- gle makes its profits intend for it to to pay taxes, Hand's reasoning went, tiveness of our nation's tax lawyers. get away with paying almost no taxbut neither do you get to avoid them The even bigger drama, though, es on them'? Well, it depends which unless Congress meant for you to. might be in Europe, where Amer- lawmakers. The Irish definitely did Or something like that — I've read ican firms have for years been ex- mean togiveGoogle and othercoma couple of law review articles on ploiting the combination of a single panies a big tax break in order to Hand's tax jurisprudence, and they market and multiple tax jurisdic- bring jobs to the country. Authorities don't depict it as especially consis- tions to generate what University of in the big European markets where
nization for Economic Cooperation
and Development, the club of the world's wealthy nations, is also at work on a "Base Erosion and Profit
Shifting" initiative aimed at cutting down on such behavior.
can get inside their narrative and remediate it. But reformers can only
Now, maybe the giant tax savings will prove to be worth all the ensuing hassle and bad publicity. It's con-
political space. If we're not going to help create space for that internal
ceivable, though, that executives at
dialogue, let's just be quiet. Don't
Google and elsewhere will discov-
say stupid stuff. And don't hold airy fairy conferences that dodge
er over the coming years that they
do that if they have a free, secure
would have served their shareholders better by listening to both halves
the real issues, which many main-
of Learned Hand's argument instead
en — know and are actually starved to discuss.
of just the first. — Justin Fox is a columnist for Bloomberg.
stream Muslims — especially wom— Thomas Friedmanis a columnist for The New Yorh Times.
© www.bendbulletin.com/books
THE BULLETIN • SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
BEST-SELLERS Publishers Weekly ranks the best-sellers for the weekthat ended Jan. 18. HARDCOVERFICTION 1. "Saint Odd" by Dean Koontz (Bantam) 2. "The Girl on theTrain" by Paula Hawkins (Riverhead) 3. "All the Light WeCannot See" by Anthony Doerr (Scrib-
ner) 4."GrayMountain"byJohn Grisham (Doubleday) 5. "Cold Cold Heart" by Tami Hoag (Dutton) 6. "Insatiable Appetites" by Stuart Woods (Putnam) 7."Hope to Die" by James Patterson (Little, Brown) 8. "The Escape" byDavid Baldacci (GrandCentral) 9. "Agenda 21: Into the Shadows" by GlennBeck (Threshold Editions) 10. "The Third Target" by Joel C. Rosenberg (Tyndale) HARDCOVER NONFICTION 1. "The 20/20 Diet" by Phil
McGraw (Bird Street) 2. "Zero Belly Diet" by David Zinczenko (Ballantine) 3. "Killing Patton" by Bill O'Reilly and Martin Dugard (Henry Hold) 4. "The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up" by Marie Kondo (Ten Speed) 5. "Money: Master the Game" by Tony Robbins(Simon 8 Schuster) 6. "Yes Please" byAmy Poehler (HarperCollins/Dey Street) 7. "Being Mortal" by Atul Gawande (Metropolitan) 8. "Make It Ahead" by Ina Garten (Clarkson Potter) 9."Thug Kitchen" by Thug Kitchen (Rodale) 10. "41: APortrait of My Father" by George W.Bush (Crown) — Tribune NewsService
manoro ami an By Julie Lasky
it wasn't until you Q •• But w ere w e ll i n t o y o u r
New York Times News Service
Andrea Chapin, an actress turned book editor, spent more than a decade helping writers publish their fiction before she embarked on a novel of
book thatyou made the con-
nection between your Norman houses. Why? • In my draft, I kept call-
A accessed in my mind Lufan• ing it "the hall." I hadn't
her own. Due out next month from Riverhead Books, "The
wal at all. All of a sudden it jumped out at me. It almost
Tutor" is the story of Katharine de L'Isle, muse of a gifted, honey-tongued young writer. With her guidance, Katharine's protege produces several sonnets and his first narrative poem and goes on to
sounds like it could be Gaelic.
I called my sister and said, "I can't believe it's been staring me in the face." I guess you can go home again, in your fiction.
wright we all know as William Shakespeare. Chapin, 55 , im a gined Shakespeare as a tutor hired
Q •• al research take you Did your
for Book Critics prizes By Hillel Italie The Associated Press
NEW YORK — Novelist
Marilynne Robinson, economist Thomas Piketty and cartoonist Roz Chast are
among the finalists for ¹ tional Book Critics Circle
prizes. Nobel laureate Toni Morrison will receive a lifetime
a r chitectur-
elsewhere'? • Hoghton Tower in Lan-
A • cashire, where they think Shakespeare might have been
t o educate the boys of t h e
sprawling de L'Isle family, Catholics who live in a Norcashire, England. She had almost completed her first draft before she gave the house a
employed, definitely i nfluenced how I created the house. It was originally built in 1109 and added to and renovated many times over the years.
name. She called it Lufanw-
When I was there, they showed
al Hall, which sounds like an
me the cellars where witches who were being brought to tri-
m an manor house in L a n -
authentic British heap occu-
pied since the time of William the Conqueror. But the name
al at the assizes, or traveling
courts, had to stay overnight.
was borrowed from a house
that was briefly in Chapin's family: a Norman castle-style building her g r eat-grandfather commissioned on a RobertWright/New YorkTimes NewsService bluff overlooking the Hudson Andrea Chapin, the author of "The Tutor," visits Lufanwal, a home River.
built by her great-grandfather on a bluff overlooking the river in
have just such a Q •• You scene in your n ovel,
whenthree witches are stashed in the cellar of Lufanwal.
the three A• Shakespeare,"Macbeth." • witches, How perfect is that'?
Speaking to a reporter this Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. Her ancestors later lost their month in her Upper West Side fortune and sold Lufanwal, but she borrowed the name for the living room, Chapin explained sprawling Lancashire manor house where her first novel is set. You also have a strong how the two Lufanwals came • y et s e n sitive, w a v y together and why Benedict haired architect as a main Cumberbatch ought to brush built Lufanwal in 1910. It was • My father and one of character. up on his drafting skills. (This named after his father, Lucius; • my cousins had gone • I was trying to figure interview has been condensed his mother, Fanny; and he was looking for it once. They had • out a co u n terbalance and edited.) Wallace, so "LuFanWal." He been told that a house like to Shakespeare. I wanted
Q•
that had been torn down recently. Then, in the late 1980s,
was a professorat Princeton
So you're a book doc- and then left academia and • tor whose character is a started investing in different book doctor with a knack for things, and I think had Elizabethan poetry. done pretty well to • I had worked with s o build a "castle" like • many authors on their this. They were very first books where I was part eccentric and into muse, part psychiatrist, part the turn-of-the-ceneditor, part coach. I wondered, tury mysticism. The "What if you created a char- main design element acter who did that for Shake- that runs through the speare, for the first book he house is heptagons. published?" I thought ShakeThen within eight speare, like anyone, need- years — this is the ed people to read his work. I family lore — they inhardly doubt he wrote "Venus vested all their money in dyes and Adonis" — the poem he in Germany. The boat was and Katharine are working on coming over with the dyes, — and just finished it and sent and it got sunk in the First it to the publisher. World War. They had to sell the house.We had pictures, Tell us about the house but never knew exactly where • that inspired your main it was. setting. • My g r e at-grandfather It, too, was a house of • Wallace Torrey Chapin • the imagination?
when my father was dying of lung cancer, my sister, who's living in Hastings-on-Hud-
pgs., $16) By Brian Thomas Gallagher
— while many Americans took to Google to find out who he is — several publishing houses began planning editions of his work With more than 30 books
in France, Modiano is relatively unknown outside his homeland and virtually unheard of, and until now unpublished in the U.S. The prize, as much a political and cultural branding exercise as an honor for great writing, will surely guarantee a spike in sales, and with dozens of works yet to translate, we
can count on a deluge of translations. But what of the work? Of the few Modiano titles available stateside is "Suspended
Sentences," a triptych of interrelatednovellas setin and around Paris.
Recently pub l i shed in English by Margellos
s omeone who w o rk s w i t h
a division of Yale University Press, the work is a series of
his hands. And then I found Robert Smythson, who was a real person, a stonemason. He built houses in the north
of England at exactly the right time. His Elizabethan houses
up, saying: "I think
w ere spectacular and so different from what had come before. They had ribbons of
utes away." She had wlndows. found it with the help
World Republic of Letters, mnemonic detective stories in which — due to the fleet-
ing nature of circumstance and memory — the mystery remains alwaysunsolved, unsolvable. The opening story, "Afterimage," follows the recollections of a writer in later life as he looks back on a
Q•
youthful apprenticeship to a mercurial photographer.
should be cast in the movie? • Tom Hiddleston would
• It was poignant. We
A • be perfect to play Shakespeare. Of course, I believe
In "Suspended Sentences," the title story, two castoff elementary school children
• went to have tea with the
that Benedict Cumberbatch
board with a ragged crew of their parents' ne'er-do-well friends.
of the local historical
society.
Q•
So you finally saw it.
A family that owned it, a really
interesting African-American family. Dr. Albion Chance, a physician, and his wife, Lucille, an attorney and real estate agent, bought it in 1939, and their descendants still live
Q•
When Patrick Modiano won the 2014 Nobel Prize for Literature in O ctober
A
son, New York, calls I've found Lufanwal. It's literally 10 min-
Q•
A
"Suspended Sentences" by Patrick Modiano, translated by Mark Polizzotti (Yale University Press,215
The Seattle Times
a career as the actor and play-
Q•
Finalists announced
jog A Nobel laureate's novellas fall short
there.
So here's the really im• portant question: Who
should be Smythson, because of his hair. I keep going back and forth with Katharine.
The last of
t h e t h ree,
"Flowers of Ruin," again
finds an older narrator re-
Q•
Rosamund Pike?
A• That's a really good idea. • Put her in.
calling a college friendship with a shadowy character, this time a possible concentration-camp survivor with
a criminal past.
achievement award, and
Quoted in the foreword to
National Book Award winner Phil Klay has won the John Leonard Prize for the
the book, Modiano says the stories "form a single work
best debut release of 2014, the short story collection
"Redeployment." Leonard, who died in
'Crystal City': purgatory at home inwartime
but often the same faces, the
"The Train to Crystal City: FDR's Secret Prisoner Exchange Program and America's Only Family Internment Camp During World War II"
discoveries. Robinson, whose "Lila"
By Janet Maslin
The Germans loom large in w h o identified as Germany's this book, but the Italians play enemies; to Japanese housevirtually no role. holds who could not find any Over time she learned that of the staples of their diet in here were also people of Jap- this snake- and scorpion-rich anese descent who had been Texas region. Even the plan to secretly kidnapped. enable tofu-making in —. At the request of the Texas, at atime it was TRNN, R oosevelt a d m i n- ~lil'L hardly possible to or-
New York Times News Service
istration, the Japa-
completed an award-winning trilogy, set in rural
The U.S. government made no secret of the fact it had spirited away from
Iowa, which includes "Gil-
rounded up Japanese residents
2008, was a reviewer for The New York Times and other publications and a founder of the book critics
circle known for championing new writers. Morrison, a rising star in the 1970s, was among his
ead" and "Home," was one of two National Book Award fiction finalists to
be selected for fiction by the book critics. Also cited
for both awards was Rabih Alameddine for the Beirut-based novel "An Unnec-
essary Woman." The other fiction nominees were Jamaican novel-
ist Marlon James' 700-page "A Brief History of Seven Killings," Lily King's "Euphoria" and C hang-rae Lee's "On Such a Full Sea." The critics bypassed last
year's top-selling literary novel and a National Book Award runner-up, Anthony
Doerr's World War IIdrama, "All the Light We Cannot See."
Piketty's "Capital in the Twenty-First Century," a
surprise best-seller translated from French to English by Arthur Goldhammer, is a nonfiction finalist.
... I thought I'd written them
discontinuously, in successive bouts of forgetfulness,
by Jan Jarboe Russell (Scrib-
ner,393 pgs., $30)
cooperating
'
•
-
-
L a t i n ,~; ~ ~ <,.~
same names, the same places, the same sentences recur
guarded. Nobody quite knew
from one to the other."
where to send them.
Modiano's writing can be lovely, as in the description of an impromptu curbside cocktail party, complete with armchairs and glass
The book gives abundant credit to such U.S. officials as Earl Harrison, a former commissioner of the Immigration
and Naturalization Service. He was in charge of overseeder supplies from Ja- ing Crystal City and underp an , provides Russell stood the superfluous cruelty
, grs Qr (;. nese had also been . ' ~ j alIaseh.oill
continued to be policed and
.:.
with an i nteresting little story.
that came with this postwar treatment.
'. '.:, I She got much of of this country, even if they had American countries, But the unyielding anti-imbeen born here, and kept them with an especially , her i n formation from migrant attitude that the Unitin detention camps during large contingent from . mor et han 50 surviv- ed States applied to many World War II. At first glance, Peru. Many spoke ing Crystal Citypris- Jews freed from concentration „ - oners whose mem- camps also applied to Crystal "The Train to Crystal City" ap- neither Jap a nese pears to be about some version nor English and had ories she tapped. City's unwanted population. of that story, since the people no connection to the United T h i s was a place for families, Among Russell's best sourcdepicted on its cover are Asian States. They were being held after all. And even though the es: Harrison's diary and the and some are being transport- not as spies but for a more co- primary detainee was usually personnel file of Joseph O'Roed somewhere. But the facts vert purpose: to be used as a m a n , his wife and children urke, the officer in Crystal City Jan Jarboe Russell has un- chits in a hostage exchange willingly went with him — if who dealt with the day-to-day veiledare much thornier,more program once thewar was they could even learn where problems there. Given the ofcomplex and terrible. The tale over. he had been taken. The book ficiousness with which both they tell is almost more than Perhaps Russell's j a w te l ls of men who were seized men might h ave d istanced her mind-boggling but awk- dropped asshe got wind of in the days afterthe Japanese themselves from the tough iswardly organized book can each new part ofthis.Yours attack on Pearl Harbor and sues that came their way, these handle. certainly will. But she has t he long months and years it documents are surprisingly Forty years ago, as an un- doggedly captured the awful t ook for their families to find honest and pained about the dergraduate at the University intricacies that such a plan out if they were dead or alive, injustices being done. O'Roof Texas, Austin, she was first wrought, not only on the peo- let alone learn where they had urke wrote of watching "typtold by a Japanese-American ple who were uprooted but also been relocated. ical American boys and girls professor about the family in- on the officials charged with Alt h ough they had no way ofdevelop deep feelings of beternment camp at Crystal City, handling them. No one had k nowingitat thetime, forthese trayal by their government." in southwestern Texas. During given much thought to how p eople Crystal City would be- After all, in a s ituation rife and after the war, it housed Crystal City would mix such come the closest thing many of with absurdities, they were benot only Japanese "detainees," different population groups; them had to a home for a long ing taught the Bill of Rights in who were for all practical pur- to how p r o-Nazi Germans t i m e. The camp operated until schools at Crystal City, where poses prisoners, but also many would get along with U.S. 1948 — three years after the those rights had been taken Germans and a few Italians. citizens of German descent w a r ended — and its residents away from them. "
~
"
"
,
-
tumblers. But the presiding
mood music in the stories is a diffuse longing — bordering on nostalgia — for the poignancy of things past. There is little so elegiac as the recollection from a
distance of many years the feeling of life's early potential. Such sentiments can
be cheaply evocative, and unless done subtly and ele-
gantly, they can venture toward maudlin. To wit, with a fair regularitythe reader runs across
gauzy sentences such as, "It called to mind a part of my life so distant that I could
barely relate it to the present. I ended up wondering if I was really the child who used to come here with his father."
If you're thinking, "Decent, but he's no Proust," Peter Englund, the permanent
secretary of the Swedish Academy, would disagree. In fact, in awarding the
prize, he called Modiano "a Marcel Proust of our time." At leastas far as "Suspend-
ed Sentences" goes, that's an encomium too far.
F6 THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015
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We have the I credit i n f o rmation mano 105 pedals) FOR $500 OR may be subjected to best rates from top 54'I -480-2483 QUALIFY FOR YOUR LESS? I FRAUD. For more companies! Call Now! CONCEALED Non-commercial 877-649-6195. information about an I j HANDGUN PERMIT! 242 advertisers may (PNDC) advertiser, you may I Sat. Jan. 31, 10 a.m. place an ad / call t h e Or e gon / Exercise Equipment Redmond Airport 253 1981 Yamaha with our ' State Atto r ney ' Comfort Suites. "QUICK CASH Console Piano I General's O f f i ce TV, Stereo & Video Permit Classes $50 for SPECIAL" with bench, Consumer Protec- • Oregon, Utah or Ari- DISH T V 1 week3lines 12 1 owner, rich tone, Ret a i ler. tion h o t line at I ot' zona; $140 for all 3! excellent condition, Starting ai i 1-877-877-9392. NRA discount. Carry currently tuned ~ee eke 2 N $19.99/month (for 12 concealed in 35 states. mos.) & High Speed by Jana. Ad must I TheBulletin I Servin9Central Orerton since f903 32 years of firearms inLike new h i gh-end include price of I nternet starting a t struction exp., National $14.95/month (where $1700 obo. nn le kem ot kenn quality Sole F80 mo- ~ Champion Team 541-389-1966 or less, or multiple torized treadmill, 3.0 available.) SAVE! Ask 212 Shooting coach. Call H P motor. Wi d e , items whose total About SAME DAY InLanny Fujishin at Antiques & does not exceed quiet deck. LED disstallation! CALL Now! 541-281-GUNS (4867) Drum Kits:Specializing $500. Collectibles plays include speed, 1-800-308-1563 infoOpistolCraft.com in High Qualtty New & adj. incline, fan, dis(PNDC) www.pistolcraft.com Used Drum Sets! tance and more. Easy Call Classifieds at Advertise your car! Kevin, 541-420-2323 How to avoid scam 541-385-5809 folding an d li f ting Add A Picture! The Drum Shop and fraud attempts d eck. $ 9 50. C a l l www.bendbullet!nrcom Remington 11 00 Reach thousands of readers! YBe aware of inter54'I -410-8849 semi- auto 12 ga., Call 541-385-5809 national fraud. Deal 3" shells. PurGUN SHOW The Bulletin Classifieds ProForm XL locally wh e never Treadmill chasedin 1980s. Sat. Feb. 7, 9am-5pm Crosswalk $200 obo. possible. Present condition is Get The Big Deal from Sun. Feb. 8, 9am-3pm 541-548-8826 DirecTV! Act N o wY Watch for buyers like new. Asking Douglas County Fair$19.99/mo. Free who offer more than grounds • 541-530-4570 $750. 541-410-4066 243 3-Months of HBO, your asking price E-flat Alto Sax, Ski Equipment starz, SHOWTIME 8, Yamaha and who ask to have 1977, excellent cond, Get your C INEMAX. FRE E m oney wired o r Smith & Wesson played senior year in Packasportskibox, GENIE HD/DVR Up- only h anded back t o business M&P15-22 with college, $1000 obo.AND 82nx22 nx9", $75. g rade! 2 01 4 N F L them. Fake cashier 4x16x44 BSA Cats 541-280-0514 S unday Ticket. I n checks and money Eye scope, Fieldline cluded with S e lect orders are common. Snow ski pants, new, e ROW I N G Tactical carrying Packages. New CusY N ever give o u t mens/womens L, red, case. Excellent contomers Only. IV Suppersonal f i nancial $20. 541-617-7486 dition, was used in with an ad in port Holdings LLC- An information. National Finals The Bulletin's authorized D i recTV King Trombone,1941 245 Y T rust y o ur in Rodeo for target Dealer. Some exclu- HN White, 7-1/2" bell, "Call A Service stincts and be wary Golf Equipment competition. Comes sions apply - Call for $500, obo. 541-388-2045 of someone using an with original sights Professional" details escrow service or or 541-280-1912 eves CHECK YOUR AD and 25-round magaDirectory 1-800-410-2572 agent to pick up your zine.$850 obo. (PNDC) merchandise. 541-410-0841 260 Kel-Tec P11 9mm, 3 ex 255 mags, ankle holster. Misc. Items The Bulletin Serelntt CentralOregon since fatt Computers $275. 541-771-0665. Wanted: Collector seeks high quality fishing items ADCO 24-26' RV cover, on the first day it runs Leupold 3x9 scope with & upscale bamboo fly Computer APC back-up, $100 obo. Good classified adstell to make sure it is cor- rings & bases, Reminq- rods. Call 541-678-5753, exc cond, need battery, 541 280 0514 the essential facts in an rect. eSpellchecke and ton, $200. 541-419-5126 or 503-351-2746 $10. 541-617-7486 interesting Manner.Write human errors do ocfrom the readers view not cur. If this happens to the seller's. Convert the your ad, please contact us ASAP so that facts into benefits. Show corrections and any the reader howthe item will adjustments can be help them ln someway. made to your ad. This 541-385-5809 advertising tlp The BulletinClassified brought to you by clubs, Pederson The Bulletin Golf Ser ks Cental Orenon sekefntn full set w/case, exlnt, $45. 541-617-7486 Antiques Wanted: Tools, furniture, marbles, E RKE A T coin-op machines, beer I %%3% ! cans, pre-'40s B/W phoNEW tography. 541-389-1578
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Adopt a rescued cat or POODLE or POMAPOO Collectible doll, Popeye's 4-5 HB, 6-PW, still in kitten! Altered, vacci- puppies, toy. Adorable! Baby Desdemona, $40. plastic,$350! 541-475-3889 nated, ID chip, tested, 541-389-3314 951-454-2561 more! CRAFT, 65480 Queensland Heelers (in Redmond) 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Standard 8 Mini, $150 The Bulletin reserves 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 8 up. 541-280-1537 the right to publish all 246 www.craftcats.org ads from The Bulletin www.rightwayranch.wor Guns, Hunting newspaper onto The dpress.com Leather designer Bulletin Internet web& Fishing couch;and brown Siberian Husky purebred site. microfiber chair pups! & Husky-Wolf pups! Bend local pays CASH!! with matching $400. 541-977-7019 for all firearms 8 The Bulletin ottoman, Servlntt Centrel Oregon sinceSta s .,' ammo. 541-526-0617 a// like new! Yorkie pups AKC baby Chihuahua mix, tiny, cute! dolls! Shots, potty trained, $1375. 240 Bolquartsen 17 HMR 1st shots, dewormed, health guar., ready now! 541488-4324 auto, 6x5x20 Leupold Crafts & Hobbies $250. 541-771-0956 $600 & up. 541-777-7743 $1500. Ruger 77 .22 NEED TO CANCEL mag, Leupold 2.5x8 Chocolate Labrador 210 k YOUR AD? $800. Ruger 77 17 AKC reg. puppies, $800, Furniture & Appliances The Bulletin HMR 6x1 8 Leupold $300 dep. b. 12/16 ready Ponshers • Saws Classifieds has an $850. Ruger 77 .22 w/ to go 2/1. 541-408-8880 "After Hours" Line 2x7 Redfield $600. A1 Washerse Dryers Call 541-383-2371 Repair & Supplies Ruger 77 Mark II 223 $150 ea. Full war24 hrs. to cancel r r cal. w/ Weaver Grand i ranty. Free Del. Also your ad! Slam scope 6x20. wanted, used W/D's 541-280-7355 Oak round dining room Just bought a new boat? $825. 541-410-6845 table, ball & claw foot Sell your old one in the Browning Citori 12Ga. w ith 6 c h airs a n d classifieds! Ask about our over-under shotgun, Dachshundsminilong- Burnt orange recliner, haired AKC. $500 & up nice condition, $85. hutch, exc . c o n d. Super Seller rates! 28", $1000. 541-598-7417 541-548-7200 Call 503-320-3008 $650. 541-318-8797 541-385-5809
Buy 8 Sell Safely In The Bulletin ClaSSifieIIS
Unlike unregulated Internet advertising, we make every attempt to ensure that products sold in our classifieds are from a valid source.
Call 541-385-5809 toplaceyour adtoday.
BSSl 1C
G2 SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED •541-385-5809
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PUZZLE ANSWER ON PAGE G3
5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 AD PLACEINENT DEADLINES
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
Monday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri. Tuesday... . . . . . . . ... . Noon Mon. Wednesday.. . . . . . . ... Noon Tues. Thursday.. . . . . . . . . ... Noon Wed. Friday.. . . . . . . . . . . Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate .. ... 11:00am Fri. Saturday.. . . . . . . . . ... 3:00 pm Fri. Sunday.. . . . . . . . . . ... 5:00 pm Fri.
Starting at 3 lines *UNDER '500in total merchandise
or go to w w w . b e n dbulletin.com
Place8 photoin your private party ed for only $15.00 per week.
OVER '500in total merchandise 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 0 .00 4 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 8 .50 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 1 6.00 7 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 2 4 .00 *Must state prices in ad 14 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 3 3 .50 28 days.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 6 1 .50
Garage Sale Special
4 lines for 4 days .. . . . . . . . . . $ 2 0.00 (call for commercial line ad rates)
A Payment Drop Box i s CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: available at Bend City Hall. MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. CLASSIFICATIONS BELOW MARKED WITH AN*() REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin ServingCentralOregon since 1903 reserves the right to reject any ad is located at: at any time. 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave., Bend, Oregon 97702
The Bulletin
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour adfor accuracythe first day it appears. Pleasecall us immediately if a correction is needed. Wewil gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. Thepublisher reservesthe right to accept or reject anyadat anytime, classify and index anyadvertising basedon the policies of these newspapers. Thepublisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for anyreason. Private Party Classified adsrunning 7 or moredayswill publish in the Central OregonMarketplace eachTuesday. 260
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Building Materials
Fuel & Wood
Fuel & Wood
Lost & Found
Sales Northeast Bend
Are you in BIG trouble DID YOU KNOW 7 IN Jeans! 16 pairs @ $10 Wanted- paying cash REDMOND Habitat Pine at Juniper Split WHEN BUYING with the IRS? Stop 10 Americans or 158 ea. exlnt cond, M/W for Hi-fi audio 8 stuRESTORE wage 8 bank levies, million U.S. A d ults sizes, 541-61 7-7486 Building Supply Resale FIREWOOD... dio equip. Mclntosh, liens & audits, unfiled r ead content f r om M en'sgenuine goat skin JBL, Marantz, DyQuality at PROMPT DELIVERY To avoid fraud, 541-389-9663 tax returns, payroll is- n ewspaper m e dia LOW PRICES naco, Heathkit, SanThe Bulletin sues, & resolve tax each week? Discover leather jacket, sz 50 L, 1242 S. Hwy 97 sui, Carver, NAD, etc. recommends pay54f -548-1406 debt FAST. Seen on the Power of the Pa- $f75. 541-548-7200 Call 54f -261-1 808 ment for Firewood CNN. A B BB . C a ll cific Northwest News- Reduce Your Past Tax Open to the public. 269 only upon delivery 1 -800-989-1278. paper Advertising. For Bill by as much as 75 Gardening Supplies Look at: and inspection. People Look for Information (PNDC) a free brochure call Percent. Stop Levies, • A cord is 1 28 cu. ft. Bendhomee.com & Equipment About Products and 9f 6-288-60f 1 or Liens and Wage Gar4' x 4' x 8' Where can you find a email nishments. Call The for Complete Listings of Services Every Daythrough • Receipts should cecelia©cnpa.com Tax DR Now to see if Area Real Estate for Sale The Bvllefin Claseifiede helping hand? include name, BarkTurfSoil.com (PNDC) you Qualify phone, price and From contractors to 260 1 -800-791 -2099. kind of wood 262 PROMPT DELIVERY yard care, it's all here (PNDC) Heating & Stoves purchased. How to avoid scam 54iD89-9883 Commercial/Office in The Bulletin's • Firewood ads and fraud attempts SOCIAL S E C URITYEquipment & Fixtures NOTICE TO "Call A Service MUST include s/Be aware of internaD ISABILITY BEN ADVERTISER species & cost per Professional" Directory tional fraud. Deal loE FITS. Unable t o Since September 29, cord to better serve For newspaper work? Denied bencally whenever pos1991, advertising for our customers. delivery, call the sible. efits? We Can Help! Buylng Dfamonde used woodstoves has Circulation Dept. at av'Watch for buyers WIN or Pay Nothing! /Gofd for Cash been limited to mod- The Bulletin 541-385-5800 Contact Bill Gordon & who offer more than Saxon's Fine Jewelers els which have been sarvina central cveeensincesate To place an ad, call at 541-389-6655 your asking price and Associates certified by the Or541 -385-5809 1 -800-879-331 2 t o who ask to have egon Department of 5-drawer Hon or email Afl Year Dependable start your application BUYING money wired or oleeeified@bendbulletin.oom Environmental QualFirewood: Seasoned; Industries Lionel/American Flyer handed back to them. today! (PNDC) ity (DEQ) and the fedLodgepole, split, del, commercial file trains, accessories. Fake cashier checks Bulletin eral E n v ironmental B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 The The Bulletin Offers servine cantrasoregon since sses 54f -408-21 91. cabinet, and money orders Protection A g e ncy Free PrivateParty Ads 43" wide, 66" high. or 2 cords for $365. are common. (EPA) as having met Multi-cord discounts! lines - 3 days BUYING a S E LLING Originally $1000; give out per- •• 3Private smoke emission stan- 541 -420-3484. Party Only All gold jewelry, silver YNever Prompt Delivery asking $450. sonal financial infordards. A cer t ified • Total of items adverand gold coins, bars, mation. Rock, Sand & Gravel 541-948-1824 woodstove may be Call The Bulletin At rounds, wedding sets, YTrust your instincts tised must equal $200 Multiple Colors, Sizes identified by its certifi541-385-5809 class rings, sterling silor Less Instant Landscaping Co. and be wary of cation label, which is ver, coin collect, vin$41-309-9663 FOR DETAILS or to Place Your Ad Or E-Mail someone using an 263 permanently attached AI: www.bendbulletin.com tage watches, dental PLACE AN AD, to the stove. The Bulgold. Bill Fl e ming, escrow service or Tools Call 541-305-5009 The Bulletin agent to pick up your letin will not k now541-382-9419. Dry, split Juniper, Fax 541-305-5002 merchandise. To Subscribe call Air Compressor, never ingly accept advertis- 521 0/cord. Multi-cord Crystal parfait qlasses, cable chains, new, used, fhp, 12 gallon, ing for the sale of discounts available. 541 -385-5800 or go to The Bulletin Tire set of 11, $50. 14 e-15e call for sizes, uncertified Serving Central Oregon since190S $165. 541-389-5017 Immediate delivery! www.bendbulletin.com 54f -548-7200 $25. 54'I -617-7486 wooclsloves. 541-408-61 93
FOUND dented tailgate in the bed of mytruck Jan. 18. WANT to get my tailgate back that belongs to the Chevy Silverado crewcab parked on Greenwood Ave. It is metallic pewter. Offering reward for info leading to the return of t his i tem. 541-388-2032
** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:
• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To
use Toward Your Next Ad
• 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"
Lost Remington 870 1 mile south of D eschutes Jct. on Hwy 97
PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE Kn at
1/17. 541-548-3707
1 777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702
Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLJISSIFJEDS
REMEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537
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FIND IT! SUY IT! SELL IT! The Bulletin Claeeifiede
Need to get an ad in ASAP? You can place it online at: www.bendbulletin.com
541 -447-7178
or Craft Cats
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541 -389-8420.
A dd color photos and sell your stuff fa s t . In print clnd online with The BLilletin's Clcissifieds. A dd color photos for pets, real e s t a te , a ut o 8
more! I I
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GOLDENRETRIEVERPUPPIES,we Q U AINT CABIN ON 10 ACRES! FORD F150 XL 2005. Thistruck
are three adorable, loving puppies Modern amenities and all the quiet can haul it all! Extra Cab, 4X4, and looking for a caring home. Please youwillneed. RDomtogrowinyour a to ugh V8 engine will get the job Dwn little paradise! Call now. call right away. $500 done on the ranch.
BSSl 1C S
*Special private party rates apply to merchandise and automotive categories.
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To place your photo ad, visit us online atwwnv.bendbulleti n. com
or call with questions, 5 41 -38 5 - 5 8
09
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 G3 THE NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD PUZZLE ANSWER
To PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
Ar+: ~fggr)5 rgyf
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Irrigation Equipment FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $5,000/acre Call 541-419-4440 325
Hay, Grain & Feed 1st Quality, 2nd cutting grass hay, no rain, barn stored, $250/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Patterson Ranch, Sisters
Call a Pro Whether you need a fence fixed, hedges trimmed or a house built, you'll find professional help in The Bulletin's "Call a Service Professional" Directory 541 -385-5809 ALFALFA HAY
2nd cutting, 3x3 bales, no rain, no weeds. Madras Oregon. Call 541-221-2358 Premium orchard grass, barn stored no rain, 1st & 2nd cutting. Del. avail. 5 4 1-420-9158 or 541-948-7010. Quality orchard mixed grass hay, $190-$235 ton, small bales. Deliv. avail.541-280-7781 betwn Bend/Redmond Wheat Straw for Sale. Also, weaner pigs. 541-546-6171
Mechanic II — Public Works Department $3,366.00to $3,788 per month — DOQ Open Until Filled — First Review Date02/20/2015
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 Classifiede Get Results! Call 541-385-5809
or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 341
Horses & Equipment
• ., • S„ 3-horse Silverado 2001 29'x8' 5th wheel trailer. Deluxe show-
man/semi living quarters,lots of extras. Beautiful condition. $21,900. OBO 541-420-3277
Find It in
The Bulletin Classifieds! 541-385-5809
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507 - Real Estate Contracts 514 -Insurance 528 - Loans andMortgages 543 - StocksandBonds 558 - Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741.
476
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
CAUTION: Ads published in
Add your web address to your ad and readers on The Bullet/n's web site, www.bendbulletin.com, will be able to click through automatically to your website.
"Employment O p portunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions What are you that require a fee or upfront investment looking for? must be stated. With You'll find it in any independentjob opportunity, please The Bulletin Classifieds i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when ap541-385-5809 plying for jobs online and never pro- AVON - Earn extra invide personal inforcome with a new camation to any source reer! Sell from home, you may not have w ork, o n line. $ 1 5 researched and startup. For informadeemed to be repution, call: table. Use extreme 877-751-0285 c aution when r e (PNDC) s ponding to A N Y online employment Caregivers ad from out-of-state. w anted t o j o i n We suggest you call the State of Oregon our caring Consumer H otline memory car e at 1-503-378-4320 c ommunity. A l l For Equal Opportushifts a v ailable. nity Laws contact Must be reliable. Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Also needed part Civil Rights Division, t ime c hef. F o r 971-673- 0764. more in f o rma-
The BuIletin 541-385-5809
tion, or questions,
a ny
call 541-385-4717
please
421
Schools 8 Training IirR Truck School
REDMOND CAMPUS Our Grads Get JoAs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.DTR.EDU
JeffersonCounty is an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Networking Technician
QRoseburg Controls/Networking Technician
Trainee
Dillard Lumber Roseburg is a family owned progressive company that is considered a leader in the wood products industry. This person will support plant by troubleshooting control systems and improve processes, provide support for manufacturing network and other control system components. The responsibilities are provide technical support and upgrades of network (servers, switches, etc.), PLCs, HMls, and other components; stay current with technology; work closely with engineering and participate in training; troubleshooting of network, PLCs, HMls and other components; documentation, and training personnel on systems.
The minimum qualifications are basic knowledge of servers, switches, and other network components; basic understanding of design and development ofHMI screens and PLC code, and become proficient in proper training; basic understanding of Rockwell automation's family of PLCs and software; basic understanding of network design/distribution and programming; must be able to be on call that includes nights, weekends, holidays, etc. and computer competency in Microsoft Word, Excel, Outlook. For more job information go to Roseburga.iapplicants.com and attach your resume.
An Equal Opportunity Employer including Disability and Veterans
Jefferson Count Job 0 ortunities Deputy District Attorney I - $3,941.00 to $4,570.00PER MONTH - DOQ First Review Date — February 6th, 2015 For complete job description and application form go to www.co.'efferson.or.us click on Human Resources, then Job Opportunities; or call 541-325-5002. Mail completed Jefferson County Application forms to Jefferson County Human Resources, 66 SE D Street, Suite E, Madras, OR 97741. JeffersonCountyis an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer
Technician
g Roseburg A Farsst Ptottnots Company
QUALITY ASSURANCE TECHNICIAN Riddle Engineered Wood Products Roseburg is a family owned progressive company that is considered a leader in the wood products industry. We are currently seeking a highly motivated individual to join our Quality Control team. This person will demonstrate Roseburg core values; have a reputation of integrity. Will comply with safety requirements and set example of safe practices. Inspect quality of raw materials. Audit processes to specifications. Identify nonconformance and root cause analysis and corrective action. Communicate and document quality observations and resolutions. Use proper measurement techniques and testing procedures to determine conformance to specifications. Perform data entry and maintain filing system. Assist with third-party audits, testing and calibration. Complete assigned projects. Work with the team in optimizing processes. Act as first responder in emergency situation. Fill-in for supervisory absences. The minimum requirements are: High school diploma or equivalent required, 2-4 yr. college degree preferred; three yrs experience in QA or in EWP manufacturing. Lean manufacturing experience is preferred; able to be certified in CPR/First Aid; must have professional appearanceand behavior;must have excellent verbal and written communication skills; ability to type 30-50 wpm; ten-key preferred.
We offer competitive benefit package including family insurance, matching 401k and company paid retirement plan. For more job information go to Roseburga.iapplicants.com and attach your resume.
An Equal Opportunity Employer including Disability and Veterans
Manufacturing - (2) Openings: Mold Buildposition opening due to retirement of long-term employee. Regular Duties: • Build cardboard molds to exacting specifications from mechanical drawings by hand using tape measure and utility knife. • Lay cloth on cardboard molds in preparation for spreading. • Apply coatings to cardboard molds manually by hand. • Assist in other departments as needed. Requirements: • Ability to work in a room heated to 90 degrees for extended periods of time. • Must be able to wear a respirator and tyvek style coverall when applying coatings. • No allergies to nitrile rubber or latex gloves. • Ability to lift up to 40 lbs. Other Requirements: • Attention to detail. • Ability to read and follow work instructions. • One year experience in a production, construction or manufacturing environment.
Set-u /Cloth la in position involves adhering cloth patterns onto cardboard molds and assisting with other production work. Upholstery experience is a plus. Qualifications include: Attention to detail, reliability, ability to read and follow written work instructions with drawings. Physical Requirements: • Must be able to wear a respirator and work in a room heated to 90 degrees. • Must be able to wear nitrile rubber or latex gloves. Hours: 7:00 — 3:30 Mon.-Fri. We have a stable work environment, and are not a seasonal employer. Pay rate is depending on experience. Excellent benefit package includes health insurance, life and 401(k) Plan. Pre-employment drug screen required. E.O.E.
Applyin person, or email resume to hr@fuefsafe.com, or fax resume to: 541-923-6015. Aircraft Rubber Manufacturing, lnc. dba FuelSafe Systems 1550 NE K/ngwood Ave. Redmond, OR 97756 541-923-6005
DID
YOU
B O S S
KNO W O A T H
Newspaper-genera ted content is s o T valuable it's taken and H repeated, condensed, broadcast, t weeted, discussed, p o sted, M copied, edited, and emailed c o u ntless I times throughout the S day by others? Discover the Power of C Newspaper Advertising in SIX STATES with just one phone call. For free Pacific Northwest Newspa- K per Association Net- O work brochures call 916-288-6011 or N email G cecelia©cnpa.com
H A I U G E L A I D S L C O T A N A P A L E I D S D I E E D A S P (PNDC) L O U L EDUCATION W I L Preschool Teacher Redmond - Full Time H A N O AA in Early Childhood Ed. or equivalent plus O N C U exp. working in similar settinq. 10-month salary, P E A T $2,0000 DOE. We are a co-op preschool where children learn through play. Check us out at: starthere reschool.or For fullj ob description, or to apply, email: starthere reschool
joasss mail.aom
Send cover letter and resume with references to apply.
L O S
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T U N G O I L
C L S E P A R A S K I S D Y A L D L O U A U T W I I S E C S K
The Associate Planner position requires professional planning work of r outine to moderate difficulty. Under general supervision, the Associate Planner conducts reviews on current development applications and sign permits; works on long-range land-use plans; writes findings, notices and reports; and conducts weed abatement. The Associate Planner will have frequent and direct interaction with the City Council and Planning Commission and other advisory groups and the general public. The Associate Planner is expectedto possess knowledge ofplanning specialties such as Oregon Statutes and land use laws, current and long-range planning practices, economic development and/or environmental planning. Compensation starts at $20.83/hour depending on experience for this fully benefited position. Please submit a City employment application, cover letter, resume, and three references to Human ResourcesP.O. Box 39, Sisters,OR 97759. Closing date is January 30, 2015 at 5 p.m. or until filled. An application and detailed job description are available at City Hall, 520 E Cascade Ave or o n t h e C ity's website www.ci.sisters.or.us. The City of Sisters is an equal opportunity employer. Financial Planner Valentine Ventures, a fee-only investment adviser, is hiring a Financial Planner, responsible for creating, delivering, and updating financial plans, providing personal finance advice, and overall client servicing Requirements: •CFP® designation •Minimum three years experience creating and delivering financial plans •Experience with financial planning software •Bachelor's degree •Strong interpersonal skills sAbility to work autonomously •Exceptional attention to detail Ideal candidateshave: •Expertise with Money Guide Pro •Passed the Series 65 •CFA designation •Experience in sales •Leadership skills and prior experience managing employees Compensationincludessalary, HSA, 401(k). Send resume to: resume@valentineventures.com
Customer Service Rep Crestview Cable Communications seeks a Customer Service Representative to join our friendly, knowledgeable and stable team. Position is full time to work in our very busy Prineville office. Continuous contact with our customers on the phone or in person is the norm. Must have good oral communications skills, solid computer skills and be interested in new technology. Candidates who are bilingual in English/Spanish are desirable, but this is not a requirement of the position. Cash handling, 10 key skills and the desire to work in a busy office are required. Benefits include: health insurance option, vacation, sick, holiday pay.
C H L U O L G S L I E N D S S A V A R I B A S S T E S SM 0 A L Y N O N O S T T A I L L T E O A S N
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P U N G E A N N T N A L L A S O S N O E A M L A C F U A S K E E R
A D U S L A T K S I D S C S B E S I L E N T
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N O O A S S L E A M M O S O N I A D D E T C A A O L F U F O I M N O
E P N E O R S K U N I S
R E F S
T O I L S
N E S T
E X A M
L Y M E
QRoseburg A Fassst Ptodnots Company
Employment Marketplace Call
Garage Sales Garage Sales
541-385-5809
Garage Sales
to advertise.
Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds
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The Bulletin Serving Csndsl Oregonsince 19N
541-385-5809
Prep Sports Assistant
The City of Sisters currently has an opening for a full-time Associate Planner position.
M O D U L D S A E A T C E E A N L S P R S M I N A M A D O F A U T L E L L F E A T A M I H A N
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Central Oregon Community College has lis t e d bel o w . Go to The Bulletin is seeking a sports-minded journal- openings ist to join our sports staff as a part-time preps https://jobs.cocc.edu to view details & apply assistant. This position is ideal for a journalism online. Human Resources, Newberry Hall, student with interest in a broad range of sports. 2600 NW College Way, Bend OR 97701; Duties include taking phone and email informa- (541)383 7216. For hearing/speech impaired, tion from sources and generating accurate, con- Oregon Relay Services number is 7-1-1. cise accounts of local high school sports events. COCC is an AA/EO employer. Hours vary; most work shifts are weeknights End User Support Coordinator and Saturdays. Interpersonal skills and profes- Serve as lead technician for EUS team. Resional-level writing ability are essential, as are a sports background and a working knowledge of sponsible for project planning, implementation, troubleshooting, installations, train and assist traditional high school sports. campus technologyusers.Associates + 2-yrs The Bulletin is a drug-free workplace and an exp. A+, MCDST and MCSA Certifications. equal opportunity employer. Pre-employment $3,285-$3813/mo. Closes Feb 6. drug screen required. Part-Time information Systems Specialist Provide database support for all facets of the To apply, please emailresume and any student module information system. Resolve relevant writing samples to: processing questions and issues, strong s ortsassistant©bendbuffetin.com phone support, and maintain user documentation for processes and workflow. Associates + No phone inquiries please. 2 -yrs t e chnical e x p . $14.47-$17.23/hr. 20hrs/wk. Closes Feb 8.
Associate Planner
A B E L
Supervisor
Part-time
The Bulletin
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General
NEWSPAPER General
Work with minimal supervision; good math skills including college level algebra and statistics; proficiency in office software: spreadsheets, database, word processing and presentations; programming experience is a plus; able and willing to lead and coach; be able and willing to advance to higher levels of responsibility.
s s
Employment Opportunities
Jefferson Coun Job 0 o rtunities
Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction 421 - Schools andTraining 454- Looking for Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions 476 - EmploymentOpportunities 486- Independent Positions
476
General
AssistantProfessor i, Sociology Provide classroom instruction in Sociology. Provide student advising and assistance. Master's degree + college-level teaching exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 26. Assistant Professor i, Health lnformation Technology Provide classroom and lab instruction in the HIT Program. Provide student advising and assistance. Bachelor Degree + 2-yrs exp. in HIT profession. Certified RHIT or RHIA required. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Jan 27. Assistant Professor I, ForestryResourcesTechnology Provide instruction in Forest Resources Tech program. Provide student advising and assistance. Bachelor degree in Forestry + 3-yrs field exp. + 1-yr. post-secondary teaching exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Feb 2.
Assistant Professor I, Manufacturing Technology Provide instruction in Manufacturing Technology on the Redmond Campus. Associates + 5-yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Closes Feb 9. Assistant Professor I, Nondestructive Test/nq Provide classroom and lab instruction and program leadership in the NDT Program, on the Redmond Campus. AAS + Level II Certification in RT and PT + 5 -yrs industry exp. $42,722-$49,202 for 9mo contract. Open Until Filled.
Part-Time instructor Positions NEW! Business, Speech Looking for talented individuals to t each part-time in a variety of disciplines. Check our employment Web site at https://jobs.cocc.edu. Positions pay $543 per load unit (1 LU = 1 class credit), with additional perks. Electrical
g Roseburg Electrical Supervisor Dillard Lumber Roseburg is a leader in the wood products industry. We are growing and looking for individuals to grow with our company. This person will provide leadership in safety and quality; sets expectations for crewmembers; identify and implement continuous improvement; maintain focus on customer needs; strive t o inc r ease qu a lity/efficiency; interpret/enforce company policies and procedures; development and enforcement of safety work rules including NFPA 70E Electrical Safe Work Practices; supervise shift electricians, project planning and repairs; be involved in procurement of electrical components; monitor parts inventories/supplies; work closely with Engineering and controls group with new components and technology; daily coordinating of work activities, monitoring department performance, responsibility for decisions, setting strategic goals and training employees; on call for emergency breakdowns and assist when needed.
Applications are available at 350 NE Dunham St., P r ineville o r ema i l re s ume to agautney@crestviewcable.com. M a ndatory pre-employment drug testing, criminal background check, and a good driving record are required.
The Minimum Qualifications are: proven track record of machinery troubleshooting, repair and installation; skills to train or get training in technology to keep in forefront of industry; strong PLC skills, and extensive knowledge of relay logic; five years supervisory experience a plus; working knowledge of all sawmill operations and associated equipment is desirable; PC operation and experience; ability to coach and lead a diverse workforce, with emphasis on leadership. For more job information go to Roseburga.iapplicants.com and attach your resume.
Crestview Cable Communications is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
An Equal Opportunity Employer including Disability and Veterans
LVL Supervisor Riddle Engineered Wood Roseburg a leader in the wood products industry. This person will: drive safety improvement; provide leadership in safety, quality, and production; maintain high morale; set clear expectations; support core values; identify and implement improvement; maintain focus on internal and external customer needs; maintain quality and efficiencies; interpret/enforce policies and procedures; coordinate production activities, reporting activities and production; manage employee time and attendance with Kronos system; assist in moving Lean process forward and monitor costs.
The minimum qualifications are: prefer college degree or p r ior s upervisory experience; knowledge of machine centers; problem solving and communication skills; multi-tasking; organizational skills and shift work availability; PC operation (Word, Excel, etc.); ability to coach and lead workforce; ability and desire to advance to higher levels of supervision. We offer a competitive salary and comprehensive benefits package. For more job details go to Roseburga.iapplicants.com. and attach resume to your application. An Equal Opportunity Employer including Disability and Veterans ~SEs o
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4 DE SCHijTES COUNTY ' CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT, Property and Facilities (2015-00004). Full-time position. Deadline:SUNDAY,01/25/2015. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II, Bridge Program (2014-00110). Full-time positi on. Deadline EXTENDED: MONDAY, 02/02/15. BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST II, Older Adult (2014-00119). Full-time position. Deadline:OPENUMTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTHSPECIALIST II, Child jj Family Program (2015-00001), Parttime.OPENUNTIL FILLED. BEHAVIORAL HEALTH SPECIALIST II,
Access Team, Child & Family Program (2014-00126) Full-time, limited duration. OPEN UIITIL FILLED. DEPUTY SHERIFF AND CORRECTIONS DEPUTY (2015-00005j D e adline: THURSDAY,02/12/15. FIELD LAW ENFORCEMENT TECHNICIAN, Sheriff'5 Office (2015-00009) Deadline: THURSDAY,02/12/15. PEER SUPPORT SPECIALIST (201500011). Deadline:FRIDAY,02/06/15. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE I OR II (PHNIIj (2014-00040). Will consider full or parttime equivalent, two positions available. Deadline:OPENUMTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIC NURSE PRACTITIONER (2014-00001). Will consider full or parttime equivalent, two positions available. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. PSYCHIATRIST (2014-00101). Full-time position. Deadline:OPENUNTIL FILLED. RESERVEDEPUTYSHERIFF (2015-00008) Deadline:THURSDAY,02/12/15. TELECOMMUIIICATOR I (2015-00010). Full-time position. Deadline: THURSDAY, 02/05/1 S. VOLUNTEEROPPORTUNITY EXTERN — LAW STUDENT (2014-00120). Volunteer position, nobenefits. Deadline: OPEN UNTILFILLED. DESCHUTES COUNTY ONLY ACCEPTS APPLICATIONSONLINE. TO APPLY FOR THE ABOVE LISTEDPOSITIONS, PLEASE VISIT OUR IEBSITEAT www.deschutes.org/jods. All candidates will receive an email response regarding their application status after the recruitment has closed andapplications have been reviewed. Notifications to candidates are sent via emailonly. If you need assistance, please contact the Deschutes County Personnel Dept., 1300 NWWall Street, Suite 201, Bend, OR 97701, (541) 617-4722. Deschutes County encourages qualified persons with disabilities to participate jn its programs and activities. To request information in an alternate format, pleasecall (541 j 617-4747, fax to (541) 385-3202 or send email to accessjbjljty©deschutes.org. EQUAL OPPORTUNITYEMPLOYER Women, minorities, and the disadled are
encouraged toapply.
G4 SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
fyfedicaf-Service Rep TRUCK DRIVER Lincare, leading naWANTED Must have doubles tional res p iratory company seeks carendorsement. Local run. ing Service RepreTruck is parked in sentative. Service patients in their home for Madras.541-475-4221 oxygen and equipment needs. Warm personalities, age Welder/Fabricator 21+, who can lift up to 120 Ibs should apply. KEITH Mfg. Co. has CDL w/DOT a plus or the following openobtainable. G r owth ing: opportunities are exWelder/Fabricator cellent. Dru g -free •Responsible for setworkplace. EOE. ting up and operatFax resumes to ing manual or semi916-941-9075 automatic welding or email to machines, welds cyIdepalma CX lincare.com lindrical or irregular parts that may be Need help fixing stuff? clamped or otherCall A Service Professional wise positioned find the help you need. •Proficient in using Press Brake, Shear, www.bendbulletin.com Saws and Grinders •Minimum of 3 years previous experience.
Independent Positions
ATTENTION!!! You need work. We need you! Interview today Start Tomorrow $400/week per agreement.
Cal 541-549-8472
627
658
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Vacation Rentals & Exchanges
Houses for Rent Redmond
Homes for Sale
Available Soon! SW :) Ocean fronthouse 3 bdrm, 2 bath beach walk from town, Redmond home, 2-car garage, 2 bdrm/2 bath, TV, fenced backyard w/extra fireplace, BBQ. $95 parking. No smoking. per night, 3 night Min. $800/mo. + security dep. Gift? 208-369-3144 Taking applications. Call 541-419-1917
630
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® UGRlili9KQ
Rooms for Rent 675 RV Parking Furn. room in quiet home, no drugs, alcohol Complete RV hook-up or smoking. $450/mo. near trails & shops in 1st & last. 541-408-0846 Bend. Winter rates! Call 541-408-0846 for 632 more info. AptANultiplex General
528
Loans & Mortgages
'- 9 R@RnRs
CHECKyOUR AD
Vca Mks
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
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. "Spellcheck" and 736 human errors do occur. If this happens to Multiplexes for Sale caution when purApply at your ad, please conchasing products or y keithwalkingfloor tact us ASAP so that services from out of ~ .comlkeith/about/ corrections and any f the area. Sending adjustments can be careers concerns or quesc ash, checks, o r made to your ad. tions, we suggest you / credit i n formation 541-385-5809 consult your attorney v may be subjected to The Bulletin Classified or call CONSUMER I FRAUD. TURN THE PAGE DUPLEX BY OWNER HOTLINE, For more informa- y Senior ApartmentFor More Ads $219,900 2 bdrm, 1.5 1-877-877-9392. Independent Living tion about an adver- • bath ea.,2 story, gaThe Bulletin BANK TURNED YOU ALL-INCLUSIVE f tiser, you may call rages 14yrs old Bend DOWN? Private party with 3 meals daily the Oregon State karenmichellen Cb hotwill loan on real es- Month-to-month lease, mail.com 541-815-7707 f Attorney General's tate equity. Credit, no check it out! Office C o n sumer v Looking for your next Protection hotline at I problem, good equity Call 541-233-9914 744 employee? is all you need. Call i 1-877-877-9392. Place a Bulletin help Open Houses Oregon Land Mort634 ad today and LThe Bulletin g wanted gage 541-388-4200. Apt./Multiplex NE Bend reach over 60,000 readers each week. Check out the Call for Specials! Your classified ad Truck Driver classifieds online will also appear on www.bendbuffeffn.com Limited numbers avail. FedEx Ground 1,2&3 bdrms bendbulletin.com Line Haul Driver Updated daily which currently w/d hookups, Requirements: Current patios or decks. receives over 1.5 LOCAL li/IONEyrWe buy Class A CDL with 1 yr 20991 Miramar Dr. million page views Mountain Glen secured trust deeds & experience; medical ( 5beds,3baths,3,643 every month at 541 -383-931 3 note,some hard money card, doubles experisq ft., media room, no extra cost. loans. Call Pat Kellev Professionally managed by exercise ence preferred. Must room, 6 yrs. I 541-382-3099 ext.13. Norris & Stevens, Inc. Bulletin Classifieds pass drug test, backold, 3-car garage, .34 Get Results! ground check, have acres, mountain view, 573 648 Call 385-5809 clean driving record. $599,000. or place Business Opportunities Houses for Night run, full time. Open House Sat., your ad on-line at Rent General If interested please I 1/ 2 4 11am-4pm. WARNING The Bulletin bendbulletin.com 541-350-3998 or visit contact Perry at recommends that you PUBLISHER'S www.8endOre on.hou se 541-420-9863. i nvestigate eve r y NOTICE phase of investment All real estate adverMaintenance opportunities, espe- tising in this newspaOpen 12-3 c ially t h os e fr o m per is subject to the out-of-state or offered F air H o using A c t 1820 NW Hartford Ave. by a person doing which makes it illegal New Contemporary business out of a lo- to a d vertise "any In NorthWest cal motel or hotel. In- preference, limitation Crossing vestment o ff erings or disc r imination Janis Grout, must be r egistered based on race, color, Broker with the Oregon De- religion, sex, handiMaintenance Supervisor 541-948-0140 partment of Finance. cap, familial status, Theeamereroup.com Responsible fo r a l l Pr o duction C enter We suggest you con- marital status or nasult your attorney or tional origin, or an in(Retread Plant) machinery and equipment, CON S UMER tention to make any maintenance a n d rep a ir . Su p ervises call I: ~ a ~ HOTLINE, maintenance and storeroom staff and works such pre f erence, 1-503-378-4320, with management to troubleshoot and resolve limitation or discrimiissues, including nights and w eekends. 8:30-noon, Mon.-Fri. nation." Familial staHave an item to Requires High School Diploma or GED along DID YOU KNOW that tus includes children sell quick? with two y ears' experience in g eneral not only does news- under the age of 18 maintenance and the ability to recognize If it's under living with parents or paper media reach a electrical, p l u mbing a n d mec h anical HUGE Audience, they legal cus t odians, '500 you can place it in malfunctions or equipment failures. Formal also reach an ENpregnant women, and training in related field is a plus. Requires The Bulletin GAGED AUDIENCE. people securing cusexperience managing crew a n d s t rong Discover the Power of tody of children under Classifieds for: maintenance background. Newspaper Advertis- 18. This newspaper ing in six states - AK, will not knowingly ac'10- 3 lines, 7 days Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent cept any advertising ID, MT, OR, UT,WA. customer service and over 400 stores in the For a free rate bro- for real estate which is '16 - 3 lines, 14 days western United States. We offer competitive chure call in violation of the law. (Private Party ads only) pay, excellent benefits, retirement and cash 918-288-8011 or O ur r e aders a r e bonus.Please go to www.lesschwab.com to hereby informed that email apply. No phone calls please. cecelia@cnpa.com all dwellings adverOpen 12-3 tised in this newspa(PNDC) 19165 Park Les Schwab is proud to be an per are available on Commons Dr. Free Products. equal opportunity employer. equal opportunity Large Family Home Freee-book.Sales staff an basis. To complain of With Beautiful does all presenting and d iscrimination ca l l Finishes General data entry for your HUD t o l l-free at Shelley Griffin, MLM business. The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Satur1-800-877-0248. The Broker Call 541-728-1945 for day night shift and other shifts as needed. We f ree t e lephone 541-280-3804 currently have openings all nights of the week. product delivery & e-book toll number for the hearTheearnereroup.com Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts ing im p aired is start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and 1-800-927-9275. end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoBnoaRnlh sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. 650 Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we pay a Houses for Rent minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts Open 12-3 are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work consists of NE Bend 700 NE Isabella loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackLn. ing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup 3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1700 sq. ft. gated home Traditional Style and other tasks. For qualifying employees we In Midtown Setting offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, $1300 month. Sandy Garner, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid 1870 NE Northview Dr. Broker vacation and sick time. Drug test is required • Wa n t To Rent • 541-810 - 9589 541-383-4360 prior to employment. Just bought a new boat? Theearnereroup.com C lean l i ving, n o n Sell your old one in the Please submit a completed application attensmoker, nondrinker, classifieds! Ask about our tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available nonpartier, nondrugSuper Seller rates! at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. Chanuser, with stable in541-385-5809 dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be come seeking studio obtained upon request by contacting Kevin or one-bdrm. apt. with 656 745 Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). kitchen, prefer washer Houses for Rent Homes for Sale No phone calls please. Only completed appli8 dryer. Availability of SW Bend cations will be considered for this position. No internet & phone serIT'S TIME! resumes will be accepted. Drug test is revice required. Very Move-in Ready, quired prior to employment. EOE. good rental history 1000 sf Elkhorn Estates New Appliances, and excellent refer- 2-story, all appls, dbl gafi r eplace,3 bdrm, 2 bath, 1400 sq. ft ences. Please call rage, ga s The Bulletin ServingCenrral aregon since tSm FSBO - $205K. S tephen Green a t $1200/mo. No smoking or pets. 541-389-141 6 541-279-8783 541-514-9704.
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Redmond Homes Custom 3 bdrm, 2.5 bath on 1.48 ac with canal & Mtn view!2450 SF home has bonus rm & shop; on rivate setting. 1075 NW ewell Ave., Terrebonne. By owner, $359,000. Call 541-923-4995 to see. Looking for your next emp/oyee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 80,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com 771
units. ideal location. For information call 541-505-0286. 775
Manufactured/ Mobile Homes
List Your Home JandMHomes.com We Have Buyers Get Top Dollar Financing Available.
541-548-5511 NEW Marlette Special 1404 sq.ft., 4/12 roof, a rch shingles, d b l dormer, 9 lite door, glamour bath, appliance pkg, $89,900 finished on site PRICE GUARANTEED TILL MARCH JandMHomes.com 541-548-5511
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel your home with the help of a professional from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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682 - Farms, RanchesandAcreage 687 - Commercial for Rent/Lease 693 - Office/Retail Space for Rent REALESTATE 705 - Real Estate Services 713 - Real Estate Wanted 719 - Real Estate Trades 726- Timeshares for Sale 730- New Listings 732- Commercial Properties for Sale 738- Multiplexes for Sale 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale 744- Open Houses 745- Homes for Sale 746- Northwest BendHomes 747- Southwest BendHomes 748-Northeast Bend Homes 749 - Southeast BendHomes 750- RedmondHomes 753 - Sisters Homes 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes 756- Jefferson CountyHomes 757 -Crook County Homes 762 - Homeswith Acreage 763- Recreational Homesand Property 764- Farms andRanches 771 - Lots 773 - Acreages 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land
RENTALS 603 - Rental Alternatives 604 - Storage Rentals 605 - RoommateWanted 616 - Want ToRent 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 630- Rooms for Rent 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 632 - Apt./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 RentNEBend 652- Houses for Rent NWBend 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 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 - RVParking 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 860
Motorcycles & Accessories
''I Harlev Davidson 2001 FXSTD, twin cam 88, fuel injected, Vance & Hines short shot exhaust, Stage I with Vance 8 Hines fuel management system, custom parts, extra seat. $1 0,500OBO. Call Today 541-518-8684
I Call 54 I-385-5809
to promote your service Landscaping/Yard Care
Adoption
PREGNANT? CON NOTICE: Oregon LandSIDERING AD O P scape Contractors Law TION? Call us first. (ORS 671) requires all Living exp e nses, businesses that ad-
vertise t o pe r form Landscape Construction which includes: l anting, deck s , Advertise your car! ences, arbors, Add A Picture! Reach thousands of readers! 855-970-2106 water-features, and installation, repair of irCall 541-385-5809 (PNDC) rigation systems to be The Bulletin Classifieds l icensed w it h th e Building/Contracting Landscape Contractors Board. This 4-digit Harley Davidson NOTICE: Oregon state law requires anyone number is to be in883 SPortster who con t racts for cluded in all adver1998, 20,200 miles, construction work to tisements which indiexc. cond., be licensed with the cate the business has $3,500. Construction Contrac- a bond, insurance and 541-548-2872. tors Board (CCB). An workers compensaactive license tion for their employmeans the contractor ees. For your protecis bonded & insured. tion call 503-378-5909 Harle Fat Bo 2002 Verify the contractor's or use our website: CCB l i c ense at www.lcb.state.or.us to check license status www.hirealicensedbefore contracting with contractor.com or call 503-378-4621. the business. Persons land scape The Bulletin recom- doing mends checking with maintenance do not 14k orig miles Exr equire an LC B l i the CCB prior to concellent cond. Vance & tracting with anyone. cense. Hines exhaust, 5 Some other trades spoke HD rims, wind also req u ire addi-Painting/Wall Covering vest, 12" rise handle tional licenses and bars, detachable lugcertifications. gage rack w/ back rest, hwy pegs & many Debris Removal All American chrome accents. Must see to appreciate! Fainting $10,500. /n CRRarea • Interior andExterior
housing, medical, and continued support af terwards. Ch o o se a doptive family o f your choice. Call 24/7.
call 530-957-1865
HD Fat Bo 1996
Will Haul Away
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NOTICE
All real estate advertised here in is subject to the Federal F air Housing A c t , which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, reliion, sex, handicap, amilial status or national origin, or intention to make any such preferences, l i mitations or discrimination. We will not knowingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of this law. All persons are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised are available on an equal opportunity basis. The Bulletin Classified
Lots .I ACRES zoned RM, J .47min. 3 units, max. 10
II gs808146
J
Completely Rebuilt/Customized 2012/2013 Award
Winner Showroom Cond. Many Extras Low Miles. $15,000
For Salvage Ax",' Any Locakton .:4 Removal Also Cleanups g,, 48l Cteanoutsf i> ' ,
541-548-4807
Handyman 2000 Yamaha 700 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 Polaris Fusion 9 0 0, I DO THAT! only 788 mi., new mirrors, covers, custom skis, n e w rid e -onAs of January 1, 2015, r ide-off t r ailer w i t h I, Elsie F. Marshall, spare, + much more. am no longer responsible for any debts in$ 6,995. Call for d e tails. 541-420-8215 curred except mine Handyman/Remodeling alone. Residential/Commercial Meet singles right now! Small Jobs to No paid o perators, Earire RoomRemodels just real people like Garage oraanrxarioa you. Browse greetings, exchange mes- Home Imspectron Repairs 4-place enclosed Inter- sages and connect Quality, Honest Work state snowmobile trailer live. Try it free. Call w/ RockyMountain pkg, now: 877-955-5505. Dennis 541-317.9788 ccsnsig7s Bovdednnmmd $8500. 541-379-3530 (PNDC)
• Family-Owned • Residential a Commercial • 40 years experience • Senior Discounts • 5-year Warranties Ask about orrr HOLlDAY SPECIAL?
Call 541.337-6149 cca¹wz96o
MARTIN JAMES European Professional Painter Repaint Specialist! Oregon License ¹1 861 47 LLC
541-815-2888 TURN THE PAGE
For More Ads The Bulletin
SAT R SUN 1PM - 3PM Craftsmanship & quality mark th>s exccpuonal signature home on the 6th hole at Widgi Creek. 3 bed, 3 bath, den/office, theatre/family room & 400 60715 Golf Village Lp. sq. ft. bonus room makes Directions: C entury D r . this home over 4100 sq. ft. towarb /e. Bachelor. Left into of spacious living. A short %'idgi Creek 6 follou the signs. walk to the Deschutes River, National Forest & 15 min to Mt. Bachelor.
$895,000
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
MARA STEIN Principal Broker
4 ~
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541-420-3400 •v
s' I SAT - SUN 12PM - 3PM
I I
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THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
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THUR - SUN 12PM - 4PM
THURS - SUN 12PM - 4PM
I sa
Homes starting ia the Iow
This brand new Pahlisch Home in SE Bend features 1865 SF, 3 bedroom, 2.5 baths, open greatroom and a large loft. Home has 61237 Brock IaaeLot 14 laminate fiooring, quartz Directions: From 3rd, head east counters, a built-in desk on Badger Road, turn righr onto and a cozy gas fireplace. Brock Lane.
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
RHIANNA KUNKLER
Popular Pahlisch Homes community featuring resort-like amenities: pools, clubhouse, gym, hot tub, sports center, 5 miles 20878SE Golden GatePlace,Bend of walking trails. Tour a Dfrections:From theparkuay, eur varlety of single level and on ReedNarker, south on 15th, then 2 story plans. follonr srgrrr.
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
$265,000
TEAM DELAY
Homes Starting Mid-$200s
Recently finished Pahlisch Home in NE Bend on beautiful Iot w/Boyd Park on one side and mature trees aII around. This home is 1810 SF w/ 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths and a 20698 NEComet Ct, pocket den with built-ins Home feat uresquartz counters, Directions:North on Boyd Acres, laminate flooring, large covered right on Sierra, le ft on B/ack Powder,
$200,000s. Brand new homes m Bend with the quatay Pahlisch is known for stainless steel appliances, laminate wood floors, solid surface Chroma quartz counters (even in baths) with
deck and aII the quality left on Cometlane lookfor signs. Pahlisch Homes is known for.
given ro allow for tons or right on Sierra, left on B/ackPowder,
Now selling Phase Two - stop by for more information.
HOSted & LiSted byr
Principal Broker
HOSted 6 LiSted byr
541-306-0939
EDIE DELAY
RHIANXA KUNKLER
541-420-24y50
Broker
54$ $06 09$$
natural light and much more. r/ght on Cometlane.Lookforsigns. Came by the model home fcr Now Selling PhaseYwo more information and plans. Statting tn the tow
$535,000
Broker
Pa llltschHomes
20781 NE Comet I,ane
undermount stainless steel sink in kitchen, extra attention Directioas:North on Boyd Acres,
Q
$200 000g
RHIANNA KUNKLER Broker
541-30(j-093 4 y Pahlis&Homes,, „„. . . ,
THE BULLETIN• SUNDAY, JANUARY 25 2015 G5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
•fj
I
•
•
BOATS 8 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- RVs for Rent
• •
•
AUTOS8tTRANSPORTATION 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
870
880
881
Boats 8 Accessories
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
17.5' Seaswirl 2002
Wakeboard Boat I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, tons of extras, low hrs. Full wakeboard tower, light bars, Polk audio speakers throughout, completely wired for amps/subwoofers, underwater lights, fish finder, 2 batteries custom black paint job. $12,500 541-815-2523
Fleetwood D i scovery 40' 2003, diesel, w/all options - 3 slide outs, satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, etc., 32,000 m iles. Wintered in h eated shop. $79,995 obo. 541-447-8664
The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory is all about meeting yourneeds.
Call on one of the professionals today!
2007 Bennington Pontoon Boat 2275 GL, 150hp
Honda VTEC, less than 110 hours, original owner, lots of extras; Tennessee tandem axle trailer. Excellent condition, $23,500 503-646-1804 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-365-5609
The Bulletin Sernn Central Ore on since lgte
Look at:
Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Bayliner 185 2006 open bow. 2nd owner — low engine hrs. — fuel injected V6 — Radio 8 Tower. Great family boat Priced to sell. $11,590. 541-546-0345.
Tick, Tock Tick, Tock... ...don't let time get away. Hire a professional out of The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory today! 875
L nreignttner tgnn Custom Motorhome Will haul small SUV or toys, and pull a trailer! Powered by 8.3 Cummins with 6 speed Allison auto trans, 2nd owner. Very nice! $53,000. 541-350-4077
Take care of your investments with the help from The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
Dutchman Denali 32' 2011 travel trailer. 2 slides Everything goes, all kitchen ware, linens etc. Hitch, sway bars, water & sewer hoses. List price $34,500 - asking $26,800Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR. 541-604-5993
933
975
975
Fifth Wheels
Antique & Classic Autos
Pickups
Automobiles
Automobiles
Laredo 2006 31' Fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
541-092-3789 Snowbird Special! Open Road 36' 2005 model is like new w/3 slides!! King bed, hide-a-bed, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, satellite dish, 27" TV /stereo system, front power leveling jacks & scissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. 2005 model is like new! $25,995 541-419-0566 885
Adventurer 2013 86 (I.~ FB truck camper, $19,800. 2205 cliy 44 gallons Heartland P rowler weight, f resh water. 3 1 0 2012, 29PRKS, 33', watts rooftop solar, 2 like new, 2 slides-liv- deep cycle batteries, i ng area & l a r ge LED lights, full size closet. Large enough q ueen bed. n i c e to live in, but easy to floorplan. Also availtow! 15' power awable 2010 Chevy ning, power hitch & Silverado HD, stabilizers, full s ize $15,000. queen bed, l a rge 360-774-2747 shower, porcelain sink No text messages! & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571 n
fsimilar to photo) 4x4 Vin¹ 535339 only $12,977
Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.
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 385-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
The Bulletin Classified 541-385-5809
Say ngoodbuy"
HOLIDAY RAMBLER VACATIONER 2003 8.1L V8 Gas, 340 hp, workhorse, Allison 1000 5 speed trans., 39K, NEyt/ TIRES, 2 slides, Onan 5.5w gen., ABS brakes, steel cage cockpit, washer/dryer, firelace, mw/conv. oven, ree standing dinette, was $121,060 new; now, $35,900. 541-536-1008 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
aks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For RV PACKAGE-2006 "boats" please see Monaco Monarch, 31', Class 670. Ford V10, 28,900 miles, 541-385-5809 auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed & hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv miSerrrng Central Oregon since 790i crowave, 2 TV's, tow package,$66,000. 880 OPTION - 2003 Jeep Motorhomes Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319 tn~
541-385-5809 882
Fifth Wheels
The Bulletin
•
Winnebago 22' 2002 - $28,500 Chevy 454, heavy duty chassis, new batteries 8 tires, cab & roof A/C, tow hitch w /brake, 21k m i ., more! 541-280-3251
908
& Service
1/3interestin
Columbia400,
(located O Bend) 541-288-3333
1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15 935
A Private Collection
COLLECTORCAR AUCTION Sat., Jan. 31, 2015
Oregon State Fairgrounds in Salem. Call now to Consign 541-669-6624
BMW X3 35i 2010 Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - coid weather pkg, premium pkg & technology pkg. Keyless access, sunroof, navigation, satellite radio, extra snow tires. (Car top carrier not included.)$22,500. 541-915-9170
petersencollectorcars.com
1965 Mustang
Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K ri., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
4x4 ready for adventure! Vin ¹D11893. Bargain Corral priced O $6,977 ROBBERSON nncocn ~
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541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15
miles, mud & snow tires, 1 owner, well maintained, $7850. 541-389-3316 Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent Good classified ads tell condition, always gathe essential facts in an raged. 1 55 K m i l es, interesting Manner. Write $11,500. 541-549-6407 from the readers view -not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them insomeway.
gnrsgs'
1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1978 Volkswagen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-504-8399 933
Pickups
The Bulletin Srnlnll Crnlral Oregon sincerttn
Ne e d to sell a Vehicle?
Honda CRV 2007, (exp. 1/25/1 5) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A
Gorgeous, low miles
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
$9,977 ROBBERSON I I n cc0II ~
It teg e e
Subaru Legacy LL Bean 2006,
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/1 5
(exp. 1/25/1 5) Vin ¹203053. Stock ¹82770
Chrysler Pacifica 2005, (exp. 1/25/1 5) Vin ¹315969 Stock ¹44375A
®
(exp. 1/25/1 5)
$13,999 or $150/mo.,
$2800 down, 84 mo., 4 49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
enncnnornnnnnnn
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
What are you looking for? You'll find it in
Jeep Patriot 2008, Vin ¹693843 Stock ¹44853A
®
S UBA RU. SUMRnntnnnn nnn
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr¹0354
The Bulletin Classifieds
541-385-5809
Subaru Outback Limited 2014, (exp. 1/25/1 5) VIN ¹219928 Stock ¹82924
cr II C 0 cII ~
People Look for Information About Products and Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Class/ffeds 929
Il le m e
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15
Dodge Avenger2013, (exp. 1/25/1 5)
2008 Sport, 3rd row, and lots more! Vin¹024803 $19,977
Para mas informacion y traduccion al espanol por favor llame a 541-923-7721. PUBLISH: Bend Bulletin Sunday, January 25, 2015
Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹83015
®
GIJBARLL
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 Dlr ¹0354
and title included in payment.
©
s U B ARU
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3821 $13,979 or $195/mo., Dlr ¹0354 $ 2000 down 7 2 m o 4 .49% APR
o n ap proved credit. License and title included in payment.
LEGAL NOTICE Housing Works will hold a Regular Board Meeting on Wednesday, January 28th, 2015 at 3:00 p.m. at Housing Works, located at 405 SW 6th Street, Redmond, OR 97756 and with electronic communication with Board members.
Principal subjects anticipated to be considered include general b usiness. A dra f t $27,979 or $339/rn., agenda for the meet$3900 down, 84 mo., ing will be posted un4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License der Legal Notices on the Housing Works and title included in web site www.houspayment. ingworks.org.
Chevy Pickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame Toyota Camry 2004 Trucks & up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, © Heavy Equipment s u a aau fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. PT Cruiser 2007, 5spd, mi., no rust, custom 877-266-3621 Sg n 32 mpg hwy, 80K miles, interior and carpet, Dlr ¹0354 new tires + mounted n ew wheels a n d Loaded, runs and studded snow tires, tires, You must see looks great! it! $25,000 invested. Toyota FJ Cruiser $7250. 541-433-2026 Vin¹ 155032 M.F. 230 DIESEL $12,000 OBO. 2012, 4WD, w/trac- DID YOU KNOW 144 $10,977 541-536-3889 or tion control, alloy CASE 200 GAS million U.S. A d ults wheels, mud 8 snow FORD 2N GAS 541-420-6215. read a N ewspaper ROBBERSON t ires, tow pkg. + BEND 541-362-6038 c lllcocn ~ It tag g e print copy each week? trailer break, back Call The Bulletin At Discover the Power of up camera, r oof 541-312-3986 PRINT N e wspaper 541-385-5809 925 Dlr ¹0205. Price rack, ABS breaks + Advertising in Alaska, Place Your Ad Or E-Mail independent system, Utility Trailers good thru 01/31/1 5 Idaho, Montana, OrAt: www.bendbulletin.com blue tooth connecegon, U t a h and tion, hands free cell Washington with just phone c a p ability, one phone call. For a DodgeRam 2003 compass, o u tside FREE adv e rtising temp, inclinometer, network brochure call 32K mi., p r istine 916-286-6011 or condition, $29,900. email Toyota Corolla2013, 541-549-1736 or CargoMate tr a i ler cecelia©cnpa.com 541-647-0061. (exp. 1/25/1 5) 8'x12' with large rear (PNDC) Vin ¹053527 door and extra side Good runner Stock ¹83072 door, additional Vin¹ 672057 $15,979 or $199 mo., hauling rack on top, Toyota Highlander $3,977 $2000 down, 84 mo., very good condition. 4 .49% APR o n a p $3800. Call Stan Hto proved credit. License ROBBERSON see 541-420-1916 916
To obtain a Request for Proposals, please contact Chelsea Dickens or call the City Community Development Department at 541-923-7721.
$3500 down 84 mo at 4 .49% APR o n a p - Redmond Spokesman proved credit. License Wednesday, and title included in January 28, 201 payment.
s u a aau
Dlr ¹0354
LEGAL NOTICE
City of Redmond CDBG Program Notice of Funding Availability
Vin¹689655
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541-385-5609
payment.
ROBBERSON 541-312-3986
Serving Central Oregon sincefglB
1000
Legal Notices
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$ 2900 down 72 mo 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License $12,979 or $169/mo., and title i ncluded in $ 2500 down 7 2 m o 4 .49% APR o n ap payment. proved credit. License and title i ncluded in nnnnrnnrnnnn.nnn 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. payment. 877-266-3621 S UBA R U ,
2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932
Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/15
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The City of Redmond is now accepting proScion XB2013, posals fo r f u nding Buick LeSabre2005 through th e C i t y's (exp. 1/25/1 5) super clean, senior Vin ¹034131 Community Develowned, always gaStock ¹83065 opment Block Grant raged. 74 000 miles. $15,979 or $199/mo., (CDBG) Program. $7,000. $2000 down, 84 mo., Through this program, 360-774-2747 4 .49% APR o n a p - approximately No text messages! proved credit. License $190,000 w i l l be and title i ncluded in a vailable t o fun d payment. housing and community dev e lopment nnnnrnotnnnn.nnn projects in the City of CHECK YOUR AD 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. R edmond for P r oon the first day of pub877-266-3821 g ram Year July 1 , lication. If a n e rror 2015 thru June 30, Dlr ¹0354 may occur in your ad, 2016. This funding is p lease contact u s restricted to s t rictly and we will be happy Subaru Legacy '09 program eligible to fix it as soon as we projects and non-profit can. Deadlines are: agency applicants. Weekdays 12:00 noon for next d ay, S a t. The Request for Pro11:00 a.m. for Sunposals will be availday; Sat. 12:00 for able beginning JanuClean and very nice. Monday. a ry 16, 2015 . Vin¹211545 541-385-5809 Proposals for funding Only$11,977 The Bulletin Classified will be due by 4:00pm ROBBERSON at City Hall on Friday, February 20, metttta ~ ~ 2015. 541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Federal r egulations Price good thru require that 01/31/2015 CDBG-funded Chrysler 200 LX2012, "eligible projects be (exp. 1/25/1 5) activities" under VIN ¹292213 C DBG Prog r a m Stock ¹83014 regulations, and that $13,979 or $195/mo., they be c o nsistent $2000 down, 72 mo., with the housing and 4 .49% APR o n a p community developproved credit. License Subaru Legacy 3.0R and title included in ment goals outlined in Limited 2008, payment. the City of Redmond (exp. 1/25/1 5) Consolidated P l a n. ® s u a ARU. Vin ¹207281 For more information Stock ¹82547 on eligible activities, 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. $21,979 or $259/rn., please contact 677-266-3821 $3600 down, 84 mo., Chelsea Dickens at Dlr ¹0354 4 .49% APR o n a p - 541-923-7757 or proved credit License chelsea.dickens©ci.r Ch sler 300C2005 a nd title i n cluded i n edmond.or.us.
$13,999 or $175/mo.,
©
~
and place an ad today! Ask about our 'Wheel Deal"! I f o r private party advertisers J
$17,979 or $199/mo.,
$22,998 Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat,
I
541-312-3986 Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 01/31/1 5
This advertising tip brought to youby
V W CONV.
HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500 Tom, 541.768.5546
541-447-5184.
on the first day it runs to make sure it is correct. nSpellcheckn and human errors do occur. If this happens to Allegro 32' 2007, like new, only 12,600 miles. your ad, please conChev 8.1L with Allison 60 Fax it to 541-322-7253 tact us ASAP so that transmission, dual excorrections and any haust. Loaded! Auto-lev- The Bulletin Classifieds adjustments can be eling system, 5kw gen, made to your ad. power mirrors w/defrost, 541-385-5809 2 slide-outs with awThe Bulletin Classified nings, rear c a mera, trailer hitch, driyer door Just too many w/power window, cruise, exhaust brake, central collectibles? vac, satellite sys. Asking $67,500. 503-781-8812 Ready to make memories! Sell them in Top-selling Winnebago BULLETINCLASSIFIEOS 31 J, original owners, non- The Bulletin Classifieds smokers, garaged, only Search the area's most comprehensive listing of 18,800 miles, auto-level541-385-5809 ing jacks, (2) slides, upclassified advertising... queen bed, bunk real estate to automotive, graded beds, micro, (3) TVs, merchandise to sporting 10! Lots of storgoods. Bulletin Classifieds sleeps age, maintained, very appear every day in the clean! Only $67,995! Exprint or on line. tended warranty and/or fiCall 541-385-5809 nancing avail to qualified www.bendbulletin.com buyers! 541488-7179 Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 881 The Bulletin Model 323P - 3 slides, Serving Crnlral Oregon sinceein Travel Trailers rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVRNCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. Beaver Marquis, 2007 Jayco Jay Flight $18,900.More pics 29 FBS with slide out & available.541-923-6408 1993 awning - Turn-key ready 40-ft, Brunswick to use, less than 50 to- Where can you find a floor plan. Many tal days used by current extras, well main- owner. Never smoked in, helping hand? tained, fire supno indoor pets, excellent From contractors to pression behind cond., very clean. Lots of refrig, Stow Master bonus features; many yard care, it's all here have never been used. in The Bulletin's 5000 tow bar, Asking $16,500. C a l l $21,995. "Call A Service Lisa, 541-420-0794 fo r 541-383-3503 more info / more photos. Professional" Directory Need to get an ad in ASAP?
$125,000
full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at
CHECKYOUR AD
n
GMC 2004 Yukon
150 HP, low time,
Alpenlite 28 ft. 1987, New stove, fridge. Good furnace, AC. Stereo, DVD player. Queen bed WITH bedding. 20 ft. awning. Good shape. $4500 541-977-5587
RQBBERSQN
n
Sport Utility Vehicles
1956 Ford pickup 1932 DeSoto 2dr 1930 Ford A Coupe 1929 Ford A Coupe 1923 Ford T Run. All good to excellent. Inside heated shop BEND 541-382-8038
Convertible, seasonal special Vin¹U96242 $7,977
ROBBERSON 4
4x4, silver, 5.3L, 120K
Aircraft, Parts
BMM/ 330c 2003
Call The Bulletin
restoration, beautiful! Call for details. $35,500 or best offer.
I"= ~ ~
Keystone Laredo31' RV 2006 w ith 1 2 ' slide-out. Sleeps 6, queen walk-around bed w/storage underneath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & refrigerator/freezer. Microwave. Awning. Outside sho w er. Slide-through stora ge. E a s y Li f t . $29,000 new; Asking $13,600
Jeep Gr. Cherokee 2007 Overland
1950 Mercury 4-dr Sedan Ground-up
M(I H(IIINC@
Financing available.
ds published in nWatercraft" include: Kay-
2007 Winnebago Outlook ClassnC" 31', solar panel, catalytic heater, excellent condition, more extras. Asking$55K. Ph. 541-447-9268
932
Canopies & Campers
541-447-4805
Watercraft
.
882
If you have any questions or need special accommodations, please contact Sandy Goldapp at (541) 923-1018. For special assistance due to motion, vision, speech and hearing disabilities, the toll free number of CenturyLink's services for customers with disabilities is 1-800-223-3131.
Tom Kemper, Executive Director Housing Works (abn Central Oregon Regional Housing Authority) PUBLIC NOTICE AUCTION NOTICE On Saturday, February 7, 2015 at 10:00 A.M., there will be a f oreclosure sale o f personal property at Storage S o l utions, 2669 NE Twin Knolls Dr., Suite 109, Bend, OR 97701. The contents of these units will be sold unless p ayment in f ul l i s made prior to the time of the sale. CASH ONLY - NO CHECKS NO CR E D IT CARDS. Units to be sold are: Sanders Unit 547, Hilsenbeck Unit 551.
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G6 SUNDAY, JANUARY 25, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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The Bulletin
To receive your FREE CLASSIFIED AD, call 541-385-5809 or visit The Bulletin office at: 1777 SW Chandler Ave. (On Bend's west side) *Offer allows for 3 lines oftext only. Excludesall service, hay,wood, pets/animals, plants, tickets, weapons, rentals andemployment advertising, andall commercial accounts. Must bean individual item under$200.00 and price of individual itemmust beincluded in the ad. Askyour Bulletin SalesRepresentative about special pricing, longer runschedules andadditional features. Limit 1 ad peritem per30days to besold.