Serving Central Oregon since1903 $1
THURSDAY March 26,2015
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IN HEALTH:VETERANSSEEICINGPRIVATEHEALTHCAREFIND MOREFRUSTRATION, D1
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bendbulletin.com TODAY'S READERBOARD
eSC ues ro
Healthy foods — olive oil, avocado, fruit smoothies: When too much of a good thing isn't good for your diet.O1
:S cl eS
POPULATION FIGURES • STORYON B1
DESCHUTESJAIL
Plus: What kidseat —A radical idea for getting kids to pick healthier foods at school: bring in a chef.A3
Timelineafter death: instant investigation to DA'saction
Slippery science — A company makesbottles that stuff doesn't get stuck in. It could be amoneysaver — and an Earth saver.A3
'Star Wars' sets — The latest haven for Islamic extremists: PlanetTatooine?AS
By Ciaire Withycombe The Bulletin
After Edwin Mays died in the
Lotto winnors —Balancing
Deschutes County jail the night
privacy and transparency.A4
of Dec. 14, the investigation be-
gan immediately. Under Oregon law, any death
And a Wed exclusive-
in a correctional facility must
Istheseafoodyoubuycaught by slaves? bendbulletin.cam/extras
be investigated. Bend Police and Deschutes County Sheriff's
I
deputies interviewed witnesses,
F
building an account of the incident, according to police reports of the incident released to The Bulletin on'111esday.
/',
EDITOR'SCHOICE
Mays, 31, died of a methamphetamine overdose in the book-
Fighting money in politicswith money
ing area of the jail, about four hours after Bend Police arrested him on suspicion of interfering with a police officer, menacing, giving false information to a police officer, possession of heroin
and a parole violation. Mays was in a holding cell in the jail when he became unresponsive after more than three hours of erratic behavior, according to video of the incident released by the De-
By Derek Willis New York Times News Service
Photos by Ryan Brennecke I The Bulletin
It isn't easy to reform the
Instructor Dan Smith, right, a patrol captain with the U.S. Forest Service, gets a closer look as Kenneth Worsteil, left, a Iaw enforcement officer with the Columbia River Gorge National Scenic Area, points to a suspicious piece of material during a fire investigation class Tuesday afternoon south of Bend.
campaign finance system. Ask Lawrence Lessig, the
schutes County District Attorney'sOffice on Tuesday. SeeInquiry/A5
Harvard law professor who
lastyear
ANALYSIS raised $II
By Dylan J. Darling
A small shovel
million to elect candidates who favored restrictions on un-
The Bulletin
is used to re-
Figuring out what started a wildfire can be truly dirty work.
move the deiicate charred
limited contributions and
spending only to find he'd become the issue's latest Don Quixote. But he's back with a newplan, and other groups are trying new lines of attack, hoping to change the behavior of candidates and lawmakers through re-
"You've got to get dirty," U.S. Forest
China Hat Road for emphasis. "Just do
after scandals like Water-
and detectivesas part of a new class
gate, or when incumbents
for the Deschutes National Forest. About 20 people took the five-day
feel threatened by a new
tactic (Congress quickly requireddisclosureafter
class, said Kassidy Kern, Deschutes
so-called 527 committees ran TV ads in the 2000
came from the Bend Police Department, Bend Fire Department and De-
presidential primary sea-
schutes County Sheriff's Office, as
son). Most other attempts to
well as other national forests.
Congress for a specific bill. As an election issue, money in politics is rarely a top concern of voters. The impact of would-be reformersin 2014 bears that
sald.
forts to build support within
5+
ti.
By Ashley Haisey III The Washington Post
class.
Distracted driving contrib-
utes to 58 percent of automobile crashes involving teen drivers, according to an analysis of nearly 1,700 crash videos studied by the AAA Foundation for
Some of the most high-profile recent
act cause of the fire has not been an-
wildfires in the region required inves- nounced. The U.S. Forest Service and National Forest spokeswoman. They tigations. Smith led the investigation Oregon State Police are assisting.
"It really is to get more fire investigators in the field," she said. Smith said he personally investigates the cause of about a half-dozen fires each year. Around Central Oregon there are probably about 50 wildfires investigated each year by the ForestService and other agencies,he
changecampaign finance laws have been lengthy ef-
h
for the Deschutes,Ochoco and Fremont-Winema national forests, Smith
Campaign finance laws aren't usually changed until
matchbook as students coilect evidence during the fire investigation
l
the breast stroke through the stuff." The top law enforcement officer is a fire investigator with 17 years of experience. This week he's teaching his tricks and tactics to a mixed group of firefighters, police officers, deputies
wards and punishments.
remains of a
Service Patrol Capt. Dan Smith said Tuesday, diving into burnt grass off of
Teen drivers are distracted in most crashes
of the Pole Creek Fire, which burned
nearly 27,000 acres — about 40 square miles — near Sisters in 2012. He determined isolated lightning caused the blaze. The Oregon Department of Forestry continues to lead an ongoing investigation of the 6,908-acre Two
This week students in the fire inves-
tigation class showedhowpeople from different agencies can work together. Truly working shoulder to shoulder, the students scoured burned patches of forest, looking for evidence of what causedthefire.
Bulls Fire, which burned near Bend The same investigative techniques in Juneand prompted the evacuation work for little and big wildfires, Smith of close to 200 homes. While the fire said. "There is no difference between was probably human-caused, and the something that is this small or 10,000 Deschutes County Sheriffs Office acres," he said. has called it potential arson, the ex-
SeeWildfire/A5
Traffic Safety. That number is four times higher than previous estimates
that were based on police reports, the foundation said. "Access to crash videos has
allowed us to better understand the moments leading up to a vehicle impact in a way that was
previously impossible," said Peter Kissinger, president of the AAA Foundation. "The in-depth
analysis provides indisputable evidence that teen drivers are distracted in a much greater per-
centage of crashes." See Distracted /A5
out. Lessig started Mayday, the super PAC to end super PACs, but it came up short
in its biggest races. The new plan for 2016 ditches spending millions on negative advertising in favor of trying to recruit citizens to lobby incumbents to support legislation changing the fundraising rules. Without the original idea of electing and defeating candidates, Mayday will need to refocus its
The missingpiece ondean energy: where to store it By Chris Megerian Los Angeles Times
FOLSOM, Calif. — On a quiet Sunday morning last April, power plants were pumping far more energyinto California's
energy: They asked wind and neededfortheirrefrigerators, solarplants to cutbacktheir microwaves and television sets. output. So officials made an odd For 90 minutes, dean energy
for hundreds of thousands of
request in a state that prides it-
production was slashed 1,142
self on leadership in renewable
megawatts, enough electricity
electricity grid than residents
homes, while dirtier power from less flexible sources
year, according to grid operators, and it highlights a hurdle for Gov. Jerry Brown's planto
stayed on to keep the system
increase the state's reliance on
stable. It was the largest curtailment of green energylast
renewable energy. SeeEnergy/A4
supporters on a longer timetable, because the numbers aren't there in Congress to
pass proposals the group supports (and most of the
TODAY'S WEATHER
support that exists comes
Mostly sunny
from Democrats). SeeMoney/A5
Page B6
High 71, Low41
The Bulletin
INDEX BusIness Calendar Classified
C5-6 Comics/Puzzles E3-4 Health 01-6 Obituaries B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope 06 S oI E1-6 Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B1-6 N'/Movies
B5 C1-4 D6
AnIndependent Newspaper
Vol. 113, No. 85,
30 pages, 5 sections
Q
tt/tr/ e use recyclednewsprint
': IIIIIIIIIIIII o
8 8 267 02329
A2
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son why one of the guys went France's Bureau of Investigaout," said the official, who re- tions and Analyses confirmed quested anonymity because only that human voices and the investigation was continu- other cockpit sounds had been ing. "But what is sure is that at detected and would be subjectthe very end of the flight, the ed to detailed analysis. other pilot is alone and does Asked about the new evinot open the door." dence revealed in the cockpit The data from the voice re- recordings, Martine del Bono, corder seems only to deepen a bureau spokeswoman, dethe mystery surrounding the clined to comment. " Our teams c ontinue t o crash and provides no indication of the condition or activ- work on analyzing the CVR," ity of the pilot who remained she said, referring to the cockin the cockpit. The descent pit voice recorder. "As soon from 38,000 feet over about 10 as we have accurate informaminutes was alarming but still tion we intend to hold a press gradual enough to indicate conference." that the twin-engine Airbus Meanwhile, p r osecutors A320 had not been damaged in Marseille, who have been catastrophically. At no point tasked with a separate crimduring the descent was there inal inquiry into the crash, any communication from the c ould not i m m ediately b e
New Yorh Times News Service
PARIS — As officials struggled Wednesday to explain why a jet with 150 people on board crashed amid a relatively clear sky, an investigator said evidence from a cockpit voicerecorder indicated one
N EW S R O O M AFTER HOURS AND WEEKENDS
plane's descent and was unable to get back in. A senior military official involved in the investigation described "very smooth, very cool" conversation between
the pilots during the early part of the flight from Barcelona, Spain, to Diisseldorf, Germa-
ny. Then the audio indicated that one of the pilots left the cockpit and could not re-enter.
"The guy outside is knocking lightly on the door, and
Si oil.rve.
there is no answer," the in-
vestigator said. "And then he
Dtsouies rr
hits the door stronger and no answer. There is never an
ADMINISTRATION
DEPARTMENT HEADS Advertising Jay Brandt.....541-383-0370 Circulation AdamSears...541-365-5805
cockpit to air traffic control-
reached for comment. Brice
lers or any other signal of an emergency. When the plane plowed into craggy mountains northeast
Robin, the Marseille prose-
of Nice, it was traveling with enough speed that it was all but pulverized, killing the 144
answer." Chairwoman Elizabeth C.McCool..........541-363-0374 Publisher John Costa........................ ManagingEditor Denise Costa.....................541-383-0356
Il'8g 8IIStl'lkSS —At Iraq's request, the U.S.began airstrikes in Tikrit on Wednesday in support of a stalled Iraqi ground offensive to retake the city from Islamic State fighters. The bombing markeda significant expansion of the U.S.military role in Iraq. "These strikes are intended to destroy ISIL strongholds with precision, thereby saving innocent Iraqi lives while minimizing" unintended damage to civilian structures, Lt. Gen.JamesTerry, the commander of the U.S.-led campaign to defeat the Islamic State group, said in awritten statement. "This will further enable Iraqi forces under Iraqi command to maneuver anddefeat ISIL in the vicinity of Tikrit," Terry said, using an acronym for the Islamic State group.
GERMANWINGS CRASH
He said, "You can hear he
is trying to smash the door
passengers and crew of six and leavingfew clues.
down." While the audio seemed
The French aviation author-
to give some insight into the ities have made public very litcircumstances leading to the tle, officially, about the nature Germanwings crash Tuesday of the information that has morning, it also left many been recovered from the auquestions unanswered. dio recording, and it was not "We don'tknow yetthe rea- clear whether it was complete.
cutor, was due to meet this
morning with the families of the crash victims. At the crash site, a senior
official working on the investigation said, workers found the casing of the plane's other
so-called black box, the flight data recorder, but the memory
HOuSe paSSeS dlldget —Normally quarrelsome HouseRepublic anscame togetherW ednesdaynightandpassedaboldlyconservative budget that relies on nearly $5 trillion in cuts to eliminate deficits over the next decade,calls for repealing the health care law and envisions transformations of the tax codeand Medicare. Final passage, 228-199, cameshortly after Republicans bumped uprecommended defensespending to levels proposed by President Barack Obama. Much of the budget's savings would comefrom Medicaid, food stamps andwelfare, programs that aid those with low incomes, although details were sketchy. FBI rePOrt —The FBIhas madegreat strides since the Sept.11 attacks but urgently needs to improve its intelligence capabilities, hire more linguists and elevate the stature of its analysts to counter rapidly evolving threats, according to a report releasedWednesday. The report by the FBI9/11 Review Commission said the bureauhad prevented catastrophic terrorist attacks but needed to improve its ability to collect information from people and toefficiently analyze it, contending that the bureaulags "behind markedadvances in law enforcement capabilities." Rather than arebuke, it amounts to a status-check on theFBItransformation that began in 2001.
card containing data on the
plane's altitude, speed, loca-
CalifOrnia 8nti-g8y meaSure —TheCalifornia attorney gener-
tion and condition was not in-
al, Kamala Harris, movedWednesday to block aproposed voter initiative that would mandate theexecution of sexually active gay menand women, calling it "patently unconstitutional." Harris said shewould ask the state Superior Court in Sacramento to relieve her of having to write the title and summary for the Sodomite Suppression Act, which would clear the wayfor the author, Matthew McLaughlin, a lawyer, to begin gathering signatures to get it on the ballot. The unusual announcement by Harris comes asgay groups andothers have called on her to block the measure.
side, apparently having been thrown loose or destroyed by the impact.
HumanResources Traci Donaca .....................
TALK TO AN EDITOR Business Tim Doran......... 541-383-0360 CilySheila G. Miler ..........541-617-7831 CommunityLife, Features JulieJohnson....................541-383-0308 EditorialsRichard Coe.....541-383-0353 GO! Magazin e..................541-383-0306 NewsJanJordan..............541-383-0315 PhotosDeanGuernsey.....541-383-0366 SportsBill Bigelow............541-383-0359
Yemen redelS —President Abed RabboMansour Hadi fled Yemen by seaWednesday as Shiite rebels and their allies moved onhis last refuge in the south, captured its airport and put a bounty on his head, officials said. Hours later, Saudi Arabia announced it had begun airstrikes against the Houthi rebels. Thedeparture of the close U.S. ally and the imminent fall of the southern port of Adenpushed Yemen further toward a violent collapse. It also threatened to turn the impoverished but strategic country into another proxy battle between the Middle East's Sunni powers andShiite-led Iran. Saudi ambassador to the United States Adel al-Jubeir said his country had begunairstrikes against the rebels. Hesaid his government had consulted closely with the U.S. andother allies but said the U.S. military was not involved in the operations.
AFGHAN CAR BOMB
OklahOma tOrnadOeS —Theslow start to the nation's tornado seasoncame toaviolentendWednesday,whentornadoesraked Tulsa during its evening rush hour, killing one person andinjuring others. Tulsa County Sheriff's Capt. Billy McKelvey said oneperson was killed in a mobile homepark near suburban Sand Springs that was nearly destroyed Wednesdayamid severeweather. It wasn't yet clear whether it was atornado or straight-line winds that hit the mobile home park, which McKelveysaid could accommodate 40to 50 trailers. McKelvey couldn't say exactly how manypeoplewere injured, but said there weremultiple injuries.
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RaCiSt Chant —A former University of Oklahoma student captured on video leading a racist chant apologizedWednesday, saying he wassorry for his role in the incident and ashamedthat he participated. Thewords in the chant"were mean, hateful and racist," said the former student, Levi Pettit, who wassurrounded byAfrican-American community leaders at theFairview Missionary Baptist Church in OklahomaCity.
CORRECTIONS The Bulletin's primary concern is that all stories areaccurate. If you knowof an error in a story,call us at541-383-0356.
— From wire reports
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Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites
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W ASHINGTON — In t h e
five years he was held captive by the Haqqani insurgent network, Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl recalls that he tried to escape 12 times. The first time was just
a few hours after he was captured in Afghanistan in 2009. He was quickly recaptured and beaten. But another at-
tempt, a year later, lasted close to nine days. "Without food and only putrid water to drink, my body failed on top of a short moun-
tain close to evening," Bergdahl wrote in a page-and-ahalf, single-spaced narrative provided by his lawyer to The
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Kabul, suggesting that Afghanistan's insurgency is revving up asthe traditional winter lull in the fighting approaches anend. Last week, theTaliban asserted responsibility for a suicide bombing in the capital that killed a powerful regional police commander. The attack came onthe sameday the Afghan president addressed ajoint session of Congress.
Soldier releasedbyTaliban is chargedwith desertion
New York Times, the first public description of the sergeant's
MEGABUCKS
Connect Hearing
Massoud Hossaini/The Associated Press
Afghanistan's security forces inspect the site of a suicide attack in Kabul, Afghanistan, on Wednesday. A suicide bomber killed six people andwounded more than 30 during rush hour in theAfghancapital, striking near the presidential palace andthe Finance Ministry, officials said. The blast was the secondattack in aweek in
" Some moments after
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before the enemy and desertion, raising the possibility that he could be imprisoned again, this time for life. Bergdahl is charged with misbehavior before the enemy, which carries a maximum sentence of up to life in prison, and with desertion, which
carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison. He could also face a dishonorable discharge, reduction in rank and forfeiture of the pay he was
owed while in captivity if he is tried and convicted, Army officials said during a news conference in Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
The case will now go to Fort Sam
H o uston, Texas,
for a hearing that is similar to a grand jury in a civilian
came to in the dying gray light court. After that, a military of the evening, I was found tribunal w o u l d d e t ermine by a large Taliban searching whether Bergdahl should be group," he wrote. They hit court-martialed. him, tried to tear out his beard Bergdahl's lawyer, Eugene and hair, and returned him to Fidell, said Wednesday the his captors. sergeant's legal team had On Wednesday, the Army n ot decided how i t w o u l d announced it was charging proceed.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A3
TART TODAY
• Discoveries, breakthroughs,trends, namesin the news— the things you needto know to start out your day
It's Thursday, March 26, the 85th day of 2015. Thereare 280 days left in the year.
CUTTING EDGE
W ant students to eat better? Hire a chef
HAPPENINGS 'VOte-a-rama' —Senators are preparing to pull a possible all-nighter to vote on dozensof budget amendments ranging from a call to arm Ukrainian troops against the Russians, to a bid to cover "virtual colonoscopies" under Medicare.
In1892, poet Walt Whitman
died in Camden,NewJersey. In1917,the Seattle Metropolitans becamethe first U.S. team to win the Stanley Cup as they defeated the Montreal Canadiens. In1934, Britain enacted a Road Traffic Act reimposing a 30 mile-per-hour speed limit in "built-up areas" and requiring driving tests for new motorists. In1958, the U.S.Army launched America's third successful satellite, Explorer 3. In1964, the musical play"Funny Girl," starring Barbra Streisand as FannyBrice, opened on Broadway. In1979,a peacetreaty was signed by Israeli Prime Minister MenachemBegin and Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and witnessed byPresident Jimmy Carter at theWhite House. In1982,groundbreaking ceremonies took place inWashington, D.C., for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial. In1997, the bodies of 39
members of the Heaven'sGate techno-religious cult who had committed suicide were found inside a rented mansion in Rancho Santa Fe,California. Ten years ago: German Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger stood in for Pope JohnPaul II during the Easter Vigil Mass at the Vatican. (Ratzinger later succeeded John Paul, becoming Pope Benedict XVI.) Five years ago: The U.S.and Russia sealed the first major nuclear weapons treaty in nearly two decades, agreeing to slash the former ColdWar rivals' warhead arsenals by nearly one-third. A South Korean warship exploded andsank near a disputed maritime border with North Korea, killing 46 sailors. (South Korea blamed North Korea, which denied involvement.) Oneyearago:OsamabinLaden's son-in-law, SulaimanAbu Ghaith, was convicted in New York for his role asal-Qaida's fiery chief spokesmanafter 9/11. (He waslater sentenced to life in prison.) In a ruling that stunned the college sports industry, a federal agency said football players at Northwestern University could create the nation's first union of college athletes. (Northwestern has urged the National Labor Relations Board to overturn the regional ruling.)
BIRTHDAYS Comedian BobElliott is 92. Conductor-composer Pierre Boulez is 90. Retired Supreme Court Justice SandraDay O'Connor is 85. Actor Alan Arkin is 81. Actor JamesCaan is 75. Journalist Bob Woodward is 72. Singer DianaRossis 71. Rocksinger StevenTyler (Aerosmithj is 67. Comedian Martin Short is 65. Movie composer Alan Silvestri is 65. TV personality LeezaGibbons is 58. Actress Jennifer Grey is 55. College andProFootball Hall of FamerMarcus Allen is 55. Actor Michael Imperioli is 49. Country singer Kenny Chesney is 47.Actress Keira Knightley is 30. — From wire reports
promotional posters. In the oth-
Los Angeles Times
er group, foods were displayed in typical cafeteria fashion,
This news will not blow
HISTORY Highlight:In1945, during World War II, IwoJima wasfully secured byU.S.forces following a final, desperateattack byJapanese soldiers. FormerBritish Prime Minister David Lloyd George, 82, died in TyNewydd, Llanystumdwy,Wales. In1812, an earthquakedevastated Caracas, Venezuela, causing an estimated 26,000 deaths, according to the U.S. Geological Survey. In1827, composer Ludwig van Beethoven died in Vienna. In1874, poet Robert Frost was born in SanFrancisco.
By Melissa Healy
There are major implications for sustainability. Studies show that 15-25 percent of the contents of many consumer products never leave the bottle. By Kenneth Chang New York Times News Service
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. — If a glue did not stick to the in-
side of the tube or bottle, you
Ayermanentlywet surface A new surface coating is designed to remain wet andslippery, allowing other liquids to slide across it easily. Porous solid
back any foodies' aprons, with healthier and less-healthy but it is a useful reminder options getting equalbilling. to lunch ladies and school When fruit and vegetable boards everywhere: When offerings were tastier, more it comes to making the varied and backed by good good-for-you parts of school PR and presentation, kids not lunches delicious enough to only chose them more often, actually eat, chefs really do but they ate them too. The reearn their keep. searchers were able to tell beThat finding emerged causethey carefully measured from a trial designed to what schoolchildren chose in assess the relative con- line and what they threw away tributions of two key fac-
at the end of the lunch period.
tors — taste and choice — in improving schoolchil-
At these schools, 78 percent of studentschoose a fruit offering and 76 percent chose a vegetable. Those kids ate, on
dren's lunchtime nutrition-
al choices. You need both, the re-
might think it must not be a
searchers found. But absent
average,59 percent ofthe fruits and 53 percent of the vegetables
very good glue. On the other hand, clinging glue has annoyed parents and children attempting to scoop out the remaining bits with their fingers. This is one of life's little problems. LiquiGlide, a company started by a professor
tasty food, choice alone is
they chose, according to the
doomed to fail. study. As part of h e r efforts At the schools that kept do-
Bottle, pipe or other container A thin layer of porous material is sprayed onto the inside of a container.
to combat child obesity, ing things the way they always first lady Michelle Obama had, only half of the students launched the Chefs Move
put fruit on their trays and one-
to Schools program in 2010, thirdchose a vegetable.Those and the current study set out to test whether it made a dif-
kids ate, on average, 67 percent
lished in JAMA Pediatrics. When children exercise
ers found. "After long-term exposure to
up with a solution for it: a coating that makes the inside
their small measure of in-
the enhanced meals, the chef
dependence in the school
intervention ... led to signifi-
of the bottle permanently wet
lunch line, they do respond well to choice, according to the study. So giving kids a range of options for fruits and vegetables — and presenting healthy options in attractive ways — prompts the kids to pick them more
cant increases in the amounts of fruits and vegetables con-
often, the study said.
foods, an increase inthe variety
at the Massachusetts Institute
Lubricating liquid
Food or other liquid
of Technology and one of his graduate students, has come
and slippery. The glue quickly slides to the nozzle or back down to the bottom.
The company announced this week that Elmer's Prod-
A lubricating liquid is sprayed onto the porous surface, filling the tiny gaps. The liquid is held in place bycapillary forces and creates a slippery surface for food or other liquids. New York Times News Service
Source: LiquiGlide
ucts Inc. had signed an exclusive licensing agreement for the use of such coatings in
I
glue containers. "We certainly see a chance for a competitive advantage," said A nthony Spath, associate manager for innovation and business de-
ofthosefruitsand 30percentof ference. The study was pub- those vegetables, the research-
sumed," they wrote.
The explanation for this turnabout kept coming back to the chef and his or her exper-
tise. "This was likelybecause of the increased palatability of the
But when it comes to get- of fresh fruit options, and the ting kids to not just pick but weekly presence of a profesactually eat more fruits and 1
sional chef in the lunchroom,"
vegetables over the long the researchers concluded. haul, there's no substitute The study's authors under-
velopment at Elmer's.
for arealchef,the research-
scored the importance of time
LiquiGlide, in Cambridge, has also licensed its technology to a packaging company in Australia. The idea there is to make the inside surface of paint can lids slippery so paint slides back into the can instead of sticking to the lid and drying. The dried bits fall into the paint, leading to bumpy walls and clogged painting equipment.
ers found. Presenting the chef's offerings in an appealing way worked far better than just gussying up
and patience in improving the
LiquiGlide Inc. via The New YorkTimes
Two bottles are filled with toothpaste; the interior of the one on the right is coated with LiquiGlide. The company, started by a professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and one of his graduate students, makes a coating that will prevent glue, paint, lotion and all sorts of substances from sticking to their containers.
The technology could also with LiquiGlide. e n v ironmental
The trick is to find a way
payoffs by reducing waste. around the so-called no-slip In a few years, "we expect it boundary condition. "What to be ubiquitous," said J. Da-
people have tried to do is, can
vid Smith, the graduate stu- we have something between dent turned chief executive of the solid surface and the liqLiquiGlide. uid which will help the liquid Tests by Consumer Reports slide?" Patankar said. in 2009 found that much of One example: a droplet of
separating the water from the
tion tips to cafeteria work-
surface. LiquiGlide's approach is similar, but it uses a liquid lu-
bricant, not a gas. "What could be a solution that provides sort of universal
water skittering across a hot slipperiness?" Varanasi said. out of the container — up to a pan. The droplet is riding on "The idea we had was, Why quarter of skin lotion, 16 per- a layer of steam like a hover- not think about trapping a liqcent of laundry detergent and craft, not touching the pan. uid in these features?" 15 percent of condiments like Varanasi and Smith Repelling water mustard and ketchup. worked out a theory to predict "It's pretty crazy, getting Patankar and other scien- interactions among the surmayonnaise out," said Kripa tists have been investigating face, the lubricant and air. EsVaranasi, a professor of me- superhydrophobic surfaces. sentially, the lubricant binds chanical engineering at MIT, A hydrophobic surface repels more strongly to the textured who is Smith's thesis adviser water; a superhydrophobic surface than to the liquid, and and co-founder of LiquiGlide. surface, as one might imag- that allows the liquid to slide M ayonnaise a n d to o t h - ine, really repels water. In- on a layer of lubricant instead paste are what scientists call spired in part by lotus leaves, of being pinned against the Bingham plastics. A Bingham the surface of a superhydro- surface, and the textured surplastic, named after Eugene phobic material looks rough, face keeps the lubricant from Bingham, a chemist who de- at least under a microscope. slipping out. "We're not defying physics, scribed t h e ma t h ematical Water rolls up into balls, sitproperties, is not made of ting on the tips of the rough but effectively, we are," Smith plastic; the term describes a surface, but mostly on air sald. highly viscous material that trapped between the droplet A mayonnaise bottle could does not flow without a strong and the rough surface. The be coming by early next push. droplets roll off easily. year, the founders say. East o o thpaste How to make a slippery surThat technology has had ier-to-squeeze face has been an interest for some success. Rust-Oleum, for could arrive in 2017. many scientists and engineers example, sells a superhydroLiquiGlide, with 20 employwith a v a riety o f p otential phobic treatment developed ees, just moved to a larger uses. by a company called Never- office, and this month anWhen water or other liq- Wet in Lancaster, Pennsyl- nounced a $7 million venuids flow through a pipe, the vania. But th e m i croscopic ture capital investment. The layer of liquid next to the pipe roughness can be damaged, company is also exploring wall typically sticks. Farther and then water flows in, dis- the i n dustrial a p p lications from the pipe wall, the liquid placing the pockets of air, and originally envisioned, includflows, fastest at the center. sticks to the no-longer-slip- ing coatings for petroleum "Different layers of water are pery surface. storage tanks and pipelines. sliding past one another, and Because air dissolves into That could not only reduce the therefore there is fri ction, water, superhydrophobic sur- energy needed to push materiwhich is viscosity, and that faces can also lose slipperi- als through the pipes, but also is why you need to pump it," ness when submerged for long speed cleaning of tanks, with said Neelesh Patankar, a pro- p eriods. That makes it i m fewer chemicals. "There are significant savfessor of mechanical engi- practical for ship hulls, for inneering at Northwestern Unistance. But Patankar and his ings from a sustainability perversity, who is not involved colleagues have shown that spective," Varanasi said.
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
Energy Continued fromA1 Peak demand for electricity rarely coincides with
the brightest sunshine or the strongest winds, so
finding a way to store clean power and deliver it when needed will be critical as
California relies more on renewable energy. There's going to be a lot of "green power that needs a home," said Keith Casey, a vice president at the CalEmily Rhyne / New York Times News Service
A woman plays the lottery at a gasstation in Raleigh, North Carolina. Lawmakers recently rejected a law in the state that would keep the identities of lottery winners private. At least10 states have
considered changing laws that require the winners to disclose their identities.
Lottery winners coul eawar e — wit anonymi By Alan Blinder New Yorh Times News Service
wave of entreaties, unsolicited calls and questionable busi-
RALEIGH, N.C. — If you are
ness offers. Jackson wrote the
lucky enough to win the lottery here, there is one thing you are virtually certain to lose: your privacy.
anonymity proposal here, but says his father's experience was not what motivated him.
Instead, he said, he worries about threats to winners, including violence. "There's a lot of government na considers the identities of winners of large prizes to be a records that are not published matter of public record. But this because they're sensitive in year, in which winners already nature," Jackson said. "Just have come forward more than because this isn't a state secret Like most of the 44 states with lotteries, North Caroli-
40 times to claim awards that
doesn't mean it's not import-
the state publicized, lawmak-
ant to keep someone's name confidential."
ers have considered whether
the winners should be allowed to collect their money without Transparency having their names disdosed. But Garland, the lottery ofAt the urging of lottery offi- ficial ,described Jackson'sprocials who warned anonymity posal as "a solution in search would threaten the appeal of
of a problem," and state Rep.
the games — and ultimately
D. Craig Horn, another opponent, said he worried the plan
the revenue that flows into the
state's treasury — a legislative would weaken trust in public committee rejected the propos- institutions. "What if we didn't tell anyal last week. The issue, though, has surfaced in at l east 10 body who won the lottery?" he states in recent years, and in- said. "How do I know it wasn't dustry executives believe it will one of the lottery officials? How continue to be a subject of de- do I know it wasn't an elected bate at a time when dozens of official who happened to chair state governments rely on lot- the committee that had overteries to relieve their strained sight of the lottery? How do I
know it wasn't the guy who donated a lot of money to somelottery that your name is out one's campaign?" He added, "The right of the public to know there forever," said Patrick Nowlin, who lives in southern overrides the right to privacy, Wisconsin and won a $41 mil- and I'm a big privacy guy." lion Powerball jackpot in 2007. Even among supporters of "You've always got to keep anonymity, there is no consenlooking out for a scam. Even sus about how states should after sevenyears, every once in help. Although some states, like a while I get a suspicious phone North Carolina, have considcall." eredofferingwinners nearlytotal anonymity, other approachPublic interest es have also percolated in legis-
ifornia Independent System Operator, which manages most of the state's electrical grld.
The state requires three of California's largest utilities to invest in hundreds Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times of megawatts of storage At the Ivanpah Solar Electric Generating System in California's Mojave Desert, 347,000 garage-doorover the next several years. sized mirrors generate power. California is looking for a reliable way to store green energy for when But grid operators say that customers need it. won't be enough if the Legislature approves Brown's "If you don't have a way proposal that half of the the available supply." homes for a full day. Over the state'spower come from There's more than one way course of the day, energy flows to store (clean energy), you'll renewable sources by 2030, to deal with an excess. For ex- into and out of the stacks. end up wasting renewables," up from the current target ample, officials are working to Although it's a tiny amount s aid C o m missioner C a r l a of one-third in 2020. boost cooperation among grid when compared with the tens Peterman. The governor has ac- operators throughout the West of thousands of m egawatts State officials hope the knowledged theproblem, so electricity can be sold where flowing through California's mandate shows c ompanies saying in a recent Sacra- and when it's needed, reducing electrical grid every day, that it's worth i nvesting in mento speech that "you get the need to burn dirtier fuels PG&E is monitoring the oper- storage technologies that can a lot of energy in certain around the region. ations through a partnership make renewable energy more "There could be opportu- with the California Indepen- practical. parts of the day, and you have so much electricity nities for exporting (extra) dent System Operator to see LightSail Energy, a Berkeley you can't use it. So you have power to neighboring states," how the technology could be company, is developing equipto do something with it. You said V. John White, executive applied around the state. ment that could use green "It's a drop in the bucket. But energy to pump compressed need storage." director of the Center for EnerCompanies are experi- gy Effi ciency and Renewable it helps," said Jon Eric Thal- air into storage tanks. The air menting with supersized Technologies in Sacramento. man, PG&E's director of trans- would be released through a batteries and tanks of But White and others view mission asset management motor, generating electricity. "You can think of it as any compressed air in the hunt storage as a key to ensuring and regulatory strategy. for the best way to hold an that California is making the Batteries are an expensive other battery," said Travis electrical charge and re- most of its solar and w i nd proposition because the tech- O'Guin, LightSail's business spond quickly to shifts in energy. nology is still new and not developmentmanager. power supply and demand. One experiment is taking widely available, and taxpayThe company is funded by Brown suggested that even place at a Pacific Gas and er money has been a key way private investors, attracting cars could be used to cap- Electric facility in Vacaville, to get such projects off the financial backing from Bill ture clean power — if more about 30 miles southwest of ground. PG&E received $3.3 Gates and Peter Thiel, among Californians drove elec- Sacramento. million fromthe California En- others. tric vehicles and charged A century-old building on ergy Commission for the VaEnerVault, a Sun n y vale them when supply is high the site was once used to relay caville battery experiment and firm, has built its own battery and demand is low, for power to the Bay Area, and a separate, similar installation prototype outside of Turlock. example. the state-of-the-art equipment in the San Jose area, part of Nearly half of the project's Such ideas represent a inside was such an object of the $13.8 million in grants the $10 million cost came from major shift in the energy curiosity t h a t o b s ervation agency has distributed since the U.S. Department of Enindustry, said Tom Starrs, windows were installed for 2007. ergy, and the California Envice president of market gawkers. Now the hot new Under the rule set by the ergy Commission chipped in strategy and policy at Sun- technology is outside in the Public Utilities Commission, $470,000. Power, a San Jose solar yard behind the building, in three of California's largest The equipment uses a solar company. two gray metal boxes stand- utilities will need to i n stall plant next door to charge its "Historically, we manip- ing two stories tall. 1,300 megawatts of storage battery, which stores electriciulated the supply of enerEach holds stacks of bat- capacity by 2024. The first ty in liquid, a method that Engy," he said. "Now we're tery cells, and combined, they contracts are scheduled to be erVault hopes provides better talking about shifting the can store 2 megawatts of elec- submitted for approval later endurance than lithium ion or demand to accommodate tricity, enough to power 1,400 this year. sodium sulfur batteries.
budgets.
"I think it's the curse of the
But lottery executives insist
prizes. But with sweeping secrecy offered only rarely, critics say the lotteries are exploiting winners by claiming they are merely guarding the integrity ofthegames. "Lottery officials are just more than willing to sell these people out and throw them to
the wolves by the publicizing of
A ~fMT~Y l lIINI
latures across the country.
disclosure, not just dever marThis year in Georgia, a state keting or visions of tropical get- Senate bill proposed allowing aways, is the foundation of the winners to remain anonypublic's interest and confidence mous, but only if they agreed in the games theyoffer. to donate 25 percent of their "It's the best way we have of winnings back to the lottery assuringour players that we to finance college scholaroffer honest and fair games, ships. Arizona legislators are that anyone has a chance to considering a plan that would win," said Alice Garland, the keep lottery winners' names executive director of North confidential for 90 days. And Carolina's lottery, which had in New York, a bill pending in more than $1.8 billion in sales the state Assembly would ban in fiscal 2014. "If you don't pro- the lottery from mandating that vide the winners' names, then I winners "perform any public think it becomes suspicious as actions in connection with the to whether there really are win- awarding, payment or collecners or not." tion of'prizes. A handful of lotteries, indudSo far, though, few states ing thosein Delaware, Kansas have been willing to press and Maryland, already allow ahead with any plans that winners to keep their identities could undermine the games, private. Others allow trusts, instead of individuals, to claim
2 15
A guide to Central Oregon and out-of-area camps, programs, and activities for children of all ages.
Publishes Friday, April 17, 2015
and the revenues that accom-
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panythem.
"It's not a black-and-white issue, but I think the majority of
To reserve your ad space in the Summer Youth Guide.
states at this point have leaned to the side of openness and
transparency," said Terry Rich, the chief executive of the Iowa Lottery and the president of the North American Association of State and Provincial Lotteries. Beyond c o ncerns a b out
openness, there are questions they can sell more lottery lick- about whether anonymity ets the next time around," said would evenbe effective in comAndrew Stoltmann, a lawyer munilies where news travels in Chicago who has represent- fast and word of lottery jacked lottery winners. "I think it's pots is part of the local fabric. unconscionable that they do Rich expects states to conit, but there's a real financial tinue considering anonymity incentive." polici es,but any changes are For those who do win and unlikely to offer relief to peolive in states where anonymi- ple like Nowlin, the winner ty is not an option, the lottery from Wisconsin, whose name brings not only a sudden rush would remain on the Internet of wealth, but also renown. or in newspaper archives. And Many winners move, change so thepleas he receives forcash their telephone numbers and — and the requests for more vanish from social media. unusual items, like soil from his their faces and their names so
In North
AdvertisingDeadline: Friday, April 3, 2015
L vr
•
s
7
• •
C a rolina, state yard — could continue, even
Rep. Darren Jackson is quick to recall how his father, who once won a $1 million Powerball prize, received a tidal
if they are less frequent these days. "Somebody gets lucky," he said, "and everybody thinks you're goingto share."
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since 1903
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
A5
Old 'Star Wars'sets inTunisia may be overtaken byjihadists By Ishaan Tharoor
tion for jihadists." The town of
to Libyan terror networks.
The Washington Post
Tataouine (which retrospecThe developments are furIn the "Star Wars" universe, tively gave Lucas the name for ther bad news for Tunisia's vithe barren planet of Tatooine, his desert planet) is close to the tal tourism sector, which is alilluminated by twin suns, is a 'Tunisian border with L ibya, ready reeling from last week's fringeplayer in George Lucas' where battles between a whole attack. Last year, in a bid to grand space opera of dark em- array of militias, including fac- boost flagging tourist numperors, Jedi knights and giant tions allied to the Islamic State, bers, Tunisia's government orblike weapons of planetary have led to a full-blown civil joined the YouTube trend of destructi on. That sense of re- war. making videos set to American moteness was reinforced by After last week's terrorist artist Pharrell's song "Hapthe 'Ihnisian landscape where attack on the Bardo National py." The version it sponsored the first "Star Wars" film was Museum in 'Dmis, there's far involved actors dressed up as shot in 1976 — a pock-marked greater scrutiny on networks "Star Wars" characters prancdesertrealm of dunes and a linking militants operating in ing around parts of Tunisia, few sun-baked dwellings that Libya with cells across the bor- including the sets where the made a young Luke Skywalk- der. Near Tataouine, authorities films were shot. It's not just prospective viser wistful for whatever else recently uncovered large cachwas out there. es of weaponry supposedly itors who will need far more But a C N N r e p ort s ays looted from Libyan arsenals, persuading to make the trip. the area in southern Tunisia induding 20,000 rounds of am- The "Star Wars" reboot, curwhere Lucas filmed three in- munition and rocket-propelled rently being overseen by direcstallments of his series ("Star grenade launchers. A local offi- tor J.J. Abrams, already chose Wars," "The Phantom Men- cial told CNN a number of men t o relocate Tatooine to t h e ace" in 1999 and "Attack of the from the area were arrested wealthy Persian Gulf emirate Clones" in 2002) is now part of andtaken to Tunis for question- of Abu Dhabi, far from the land a real conflict and a "way-sta- ing on suspicion ofhaving links that gave it its name.
Wildfire
grasses, brushes and trees.
Continued from A1
indicators," Smith said. The students planted col-
the ground with a powerful "They are just following the magnet before moving on to the next section of the grid
they developed around the small fires, each covering ored flags to show how the fire point of origin. The magnet a fraction of an acre, on a burned. pulls up small pieces of met"Re-creating what the fire 5-acre portion of woods along al, such as the tiny staple in a a Forest Service road near did is essentially what we are matchbook. China Hat Road, a couple of doing," said Casey Cornils, an All of the teams Tuesday miles south of Bend. He used assistant engine captain for successfully found the books one of the fires as a demon- the Fremont-Winema Nation- of matches Smith sparked the L ast week Smith set
16
stration of how to conduct an investigation and the other 15 as in-the-field tests for the
al Forest, based in Klamath Falls.
Once they isolated the class during three trips to the "point of origin," or where the woods this week. fire began, they used bright He had the class split into pink string to designate a secfive small teams, each of tion to go over, inch by inch.
fires with last week.
A law enforcement officer in the Forest Service's Colum-
bia River Gorge National Scenic Area based in Hood River, Kenneth Worstell, said the fire
investigation class this week offered very practical training. the fire. on their knees, the students He regularly responds to wildBut before they could get meticulously examined the 12 fires as part of his job. "I'm sure we'll be able to use close to determining the cause, to 18 inches of ground directly they had to identify where the in front of them. If they did not this frequently," he said. fire began. They did so by see anything that appeared — Reporter: 541-617-7812, looking closely at the burned to beevidence they went over ddarling@bendbulletin.com which had to find the cause of
Money Continued from A1 Trying to change the behavior of candidates by providing incentives during the campaign is a newer tactic (Lessig said Mayday would ask donors not to give money unless candidatessupported reform legislation, for example). CounterPAC is something like the first version of May-
day, but with a blunter approach. Funded mostly by Jim
This is the dirty work. Down
Few candidates seem eager to unilaterally disarm or penalize themselves when their political futures
are on the line, and it's debatable
whether a pledge (not to take anonymous money) is really enforceable.
Greer, a Silicon Valley entre-
preneur, the super PAC has no interest in legislation and cares mainly about e l iminating the presence of undisclosed money in elections. In 2014, it picked a House race in West
Virginia, where Nick Rahall, the Democratic incumbent, was ousted by Evan Jenkins,
a Republican state senator. CounterPAC contacted both
the question of whether it can
•
'
•
TheBulletiII
ing distracted. Distractions, especially talking with passengers and using cellphones, play s fsr
greater role in car crashes involving teen drivers than has been previously understood, according to new evidence cited by safety researchers who analyzed nearly1,700 videos that capture the actions of teen drivers in the moments before s crash.
Distracted
before and four seconds after the trigger. The system, Continued from A1 made by Lytx, also is used by The analysis counted a more than 500 commercial half-dozen types of distrac- and government fleets. tion that caused crashes, The company provided led by interacting with othresearchers 6,842 videos er passengers, which was of crashes involving drivblamed for 15 percentof ers ages 16 to 19 between crashes. Cellphone use re- August 2007 and July 2013. sulted in 12 percent of the After eliminating minor incicrashes, followed by looking dents, the number was winat something inside the car, nowed down to 1,691 modlooking at something outside erate-t o-severe crashes that other than the road ahead, were analyzed for the study. singing or moving to music, The research found that grooming and reaching for calling, texting or other mosomething. bile device use distracted "It is troubling that pas- teen drivers for an average sengers and cellphones were of 4.1 seconds in the final the most common forms of six seconds before a crash distraction given that these impact. When teen drivers factors can increase crash caused rear-end collisions, risks for teen drivers," said more than half the time, they Bob Darbelnet, chief execu- crashed without braking or tive officer of AAA. "The sit-
The study u sed
v i deos ages 16 to 19 were involved in
data on the eight seconds
Inquiry
er than just texting. In fact,
and recei ved thevideo March
pital and t hat a
illustrates how little control
called 911 about 30 minutes after Mays became unresponsive.
J ennifer C o ughlin,
John Hummel. Once the
to represent them in legal proceedings. investigation, the case was Nakahira said last week transferred to the district Coughlin received the video attorney. in mid-January. The discloIn this i n stance, after sure of the video to Coughlin reviewing the law enforce- by the sheriff's office at that sheriff's office finished its
ment investigation, Hum-
time was inadvertent, Naka-
mel requested on Monday
hira said
that the Oregon Department of Justice's District Attorney Assist Unit investigate Mays' death. Part of
Wednesday there would be no personnel changes in light of
Sheriff Larry Blanton said the incident.
the investigation included surveillance video showing the booking area of the Deschutes County jail the night Mays died.
such as the video and police reports.
portance of graduated driver licensing, which requires young drivers to develop their driving skills before they receive full d r iving privileges. "AAA r ecommends that
state laws prohibit cellphone use by teen drivers and re-
s trict passengers to o ne non-family member for the first six months of driving," Darbelnet said. Many states already have graduated driver's license programs and restrictions on mobile device use by teenagers. "These results are troubling because previous re-
use.
"There has been no dis-
had one or two people retire — Reporter: 541-383-0376, cwithycombelrbendbulletin.com
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sheriff's office to complete its investigation, at which
point it would receive the investigative
mat e r ials,
"If we never requested
High Desert Wool Growers 18th Annual
(the video) we would have gotten it at some point," Hummel said. "The first
month or tw o (after a death), you don't request because you don't expect
an investigation to be done in a month or two." Deschutes County Sher-
filesuccess — or a scandal to focus voters' attention — it
ryl Nakahira wrote in an
iff's Office counsel Dar-
email Wednesday the District Attorney's Office requested the video March 3
Enjoy Swimming Year-Round!
.w SWIISPRS «.>~ %% '
report underscored the im-
Call Today
has been waiting for the
Blue years; without a high-pro-
finance reformers tosustain their efforts.
driver, regardless of the law." Darbelnet agreed that the
of
The Deschutes County Sheriff's Office, which
tee, said that at least one Re-
will be difficult for campaign
that can ride with their new
Bend firm Brothers, Hawn 8t
Since mid-December, the District Attorney's Office
to attract attention took Act-
ing program, and for parents to limit the teen passengers
Hummel, who said he could since then, but it's unrelated to not release the video until he this issue."
d e puty and Anderson had reviewed it.
conduit organization ActBlue has become enough of a force that at a February panel of Republican digital strategists, Tom Newhouse, the digital director of the National Republican Congressional Commit-
to quickly pour money into a Democrat's campaign. That may give hope to supporters of changing campaign finance laws. But building a base of support large enough
their graduated driver licens-
dent thus far," Blanton said Wednesday. "I think w e 've
according t o De s chutes Mays, said last week that the County District Attorney family has hired Coughlin
mittee about ActBlue's ability
sengerrestrictionsaspartof
The Bulletin requested the video Feb. 2. A month later, the request was referred to
In most cases, it is the polit-
publican member of the House had complained to the com-
for statesto pass better pas-
cipline relating to that inci-
spread from one party to another, from national races to
small-dollar donors isn't new. On the Democratic side, the
lated crashes than cellphone use. This reinforces the need
6.
Coughlin LLP filed a public recordsrequest for the vido perates the jail, i s t h e eo Dec. 19, before she began lead agency on the inves- representing the Mays famtigation of Mays' death, ily. Edwin Mays' uncle, Billy
ical class that knows the law best and that is best able to defeat legislative proposals: Bills that would create a system of public financing stay bottled
led to more distraction-re-
crashes. The crashes caused search has i n dicated that 383,000 injuries and 2,865 teen passengers and celldeaths. phone use can increase the "This research is a call to crash risk for teen drivers," track of their movements and driving habits. It collects vid- action to reframe the dis- said AAA spokesman John eo, audio and acceleration tracted driving issue, espe- Townsend, one of the auto data when the driver trigcially as it relates to teens," club's M i d -Atlantic s t a ff gers the device by braking said Jonathan Adkins, direc- members who lobbied in suphard, taking a corner fast or tor of the Governors High- port of the region's graduatreceiving a hard impact. The way Safety A ssociation. ed-licenseprogram and for 12-second video provides "Distracted driving is broad- restrictions of mobile device
help attract donors, but it also donors have over the system. A clever lawyer or political operative finds the gaps in laws and regulations and exploits them. New practices
interacting with passengers
from an in-car system many families install in the vehiclesofyoung driversto keep
for bans on outside money. That outsider status may
donors already do than calling
attempting to steer to avoid
uation is made worse by the the collision, the report said. fact that young drivers have Teens have the highest spent less time behind the crash and auto i n surance wheel and cannot draw upon rates in the nation. In 2013, their previous experience to federal data shows that about manage unsafe conditions." 963,000 drivers between the
Continued from A1 The video shows sheriff's deputies m o c k ed Mays, observed he should "probably" go to a hos-
legislators is closer to what established interest groups and
have enough of an impact, but up in committee, for example. it tries to leverage citizen inter- There may be public support est inissues before Congress for restrictions on campaign rather than make campaign contributions or even for publicly funded elections, but they finance the main issue. I f.then.fund, c r eated b y are not priorities. To get the Jonathan Zucker, a campaign attention of Congress, what finance lawyer, and Joshua matters is results: winning or Tauberer, (who also created losing (or even nearly losing) GovTrack.us, a site tracking elections. congressional activity) acts Harnessing the power of
Get ATaste For Food. Home 5 Garden •
nors rewarding or penalizing
down-ballot contests. es, another group of challengers is trying to harness small donations from many people to upend the campaign finance system. It, too, will face
candidates, asking if t h ey would sign a pledge calling for groups spending undisclosed money to avoid the race (the catch being that if a candidate signed and, say, a 501c4 group spent money on his behalf, the candidate would also agree as a conduit, collecting monto donate a similar amount to ey that will then be given to charity). To encourage partici- a candidate based on h ow pation, CounterPAC promised current legislators vote. For to spend money against which- example, if a donor is interestever candidate did not sign, re- ed in a bill about privacy, she gardless of party. can pledge money to a particN either c a n didate e v e r ular lawmaker or race. If she signed the pledge, but they agrees with the incumbent's agreed to a public meeting vote, the incumbent gets the with CounterPAC. When Ra- money. If not, the money goes hall did not attend, Counter- to a challenger. PAC spent $212,000 against There are a couple of comhim in the final weeks before plicating factors: If.then.fund the election and counted his relies on the strength of agdefeat asa success.It'sunclear, gregating donations, so it will though, what role CounterPAC need to attract enough users played in the election. Multiple to make it a force that legispeople involved in West Vir- latorsneed to recognize. For ginia politics gave it little or no example,a page devoted to a credit in a race that attracted possible Senate vote to repeal national attention and $10 mil- the Affordable Care Act has, lion in outside spending. as of this writing, attracted Greer gave an additional 157 donors who have commit$300,000 to the super PAC in ted a total of $2,418. A legislaJanuary, suggesting another tor may not have an opponent try in 2016. But few candidates at the time of the vote, so the seem eager to unilaterally dis- m oney could end up going to arm or penalize themselves someone the original donor when their political futures are may not have intended to supon the line, and it's debatable port. If a Democrat is running whether a pledge is really en- unopposed, money designated forceable by the candidates, or for his opponent could instead by CounterPAC. go to the Republican National Rather than seeking pledg- Committee (and vice versa).
-
But the idea of small-dollar do-
The AAA Foundation for Traffic Safety via The Associated Press
A frame grab from a video shows a teen driver losing control of her vehicle after she was driv-
Come try one today. Since <955
Emerald HEARTH, SPA 8L PATIO
Fiber Market Day S aturday March 28, 20 I 5 9:00 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Crook County Fair Grounds Pr|neville, Oregon Demonstrations & Sales • Fiber Animal Producers Spinners e Weavers • Dyers • Knitters • Crocheters Rug Hookers • Felters For more information visit our website at: www.highdesertwoolgrowers.org
-
Ae TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
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Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6
© www.bendbulletin.com/local
THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
BRIEFING
as es - rowin in re on, e sc esu i IA • . 00
Knopp, Whisnant set town halls State Sen. Tim Knopp, R-Bend,and state Rep.GeneWhisnant, R-Sunriver, will hold joint town halls in Redmond andSunriver on Friday andSaturday. Whisnant and Knopp will talk about the 2015
legislative session and answer questions from constituents at 3 p.m. Friday at RedmondCity Hall, 716 SWEvergreen Ave., and at 9:30 a.m. Saturday in the Sunriver Public Library, 56855 Venture Lane.
Merkley will hold 3 April town halls U.S. Sen. Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., will update constituents and answer questions in town halls in Jefferson, Crook and Deschutes counties the second week ofApril. Merkley will hold a Jefferson County town hall at11 a.m. April 6 in Madras City Hall Council Chambers,125 SW E St.; a Crook County town hall at1:30 p.m. April 8 in theMeadow LakesGolf Course banquet room, 300 SW MeadowLakes Drive in Prineville; anda Deschutes County town hall at 5 p.m.April 8 at the La PineHigh School Library, 51633Coach Road.
SALEM
POPULATION GROWTH
By Ted Shorack
2013, the county grewby 2.6percent. Multnomah County, the largest counDeschutes County's population grew ty in the state, grew 1.4 percent last year. to an estimated 170,388 peoCrook and Jefferson counties . ple last year, making it the sev- lnSlde grew 1 percent and 1.7 percent, enth-fastest-growing metro area • CourltYrespectively. The Bulletin
in the country, according to new
Population Deschutes County is the fastest-growing county in Oregon.
b y - courltY Des chutes County Commis-
U.S.Census Bureau fi gures re- PGPulation sioner Tony DeBone, who also changes, s its on a steering committee for leased Thursday. The population increased by ~2 the cityof Bend'surbangrowth 2.67 percent between July 2013 boundary expansion process, and July 2014. The influx of new residents has made Deschutes County the
s a id he senses the increase in construct i o n activity and demand for workers to
fastest-growingcountyin Oregon forthe buildhomes. second year in a row. Between 2012 and
2014 PERCENTAGE POPULATION OFCHANGE ESTIMATE 2013-14
COUNTY
Deschutes 170,388 Jefferson 22,192 Crook 20,998 Oregon average 3,970,239 Source: U.S. Census Bureau
2. 6 7 % 1.67%
1% 1. 0 7 %
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
Tax-sharing
program might see changes By Taylor W.Anderson The Bulletin
SALEM — Oregon's rural counties and schools statewide can't afford a
tax-sharing program that will send $95 million to a wealthy metropolitan county over the next two
years, a Portland state senator and school and
tax reform groups said Wednesday. At issue is what's called
"gain share." It's a program in which local governments offer property tax
e I OSS Ie-eRl IVe S I'I e • Organization seekslocal blood donors in caseof a U.S.emergency (or evenone here)
breaks to land businesses and expansions. The state in return gives half the
income taxes for the new and retained jobs back to the counties that attracted them. The idea behind the 2007 bill that created the
tax-sharing program was to help counties cope with
the pressure new employees and their families put on infrastructure like
roads and schools. But some lawmakers now say the scales have
tipped out of sync, and one of the wealthiest counties in Oregon is getting more than its fair share of money they say should be used
— Bulletin staff reports
STATE NEWS
to fund K-12 education
and help struggling rural counties. "We simply cannot afford to leave the gain share program untouched," Sen. Ginny Burdick,
Salem
D-Portland, told members
of the Senate Finance
• Salem:Legislators vote to advance abill that would mandate paid sick leave,B3
and Revenue Committee
Wednesday. SeeGain share/B6
Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!
Piping of
The Bulletin Call a reporter Bend ......................541-633-2160 Redmond...............541-617-7831 Sisters....................541-617-7831 La Pine...................541-617-7831 Sunriver .................541-617-7831 Deschutes.............541-617-7820 Crook.....................541-617-7831 Jefferson...............541-617-7831 Salem ..................406-589-4347 D.C....................... 202-662-7456 Business ............... 541-617-7815 Education..............541-617-7831 Health...................541-383-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376
Submissions • Lettersand opinions: Email: letters@bendbulletin.com Mail:My Nickel's Worth or In MyView P.O. Box6020 Bend, OR97708 Details onthe Editorials page inside. Contact: 541-383-0358
Andy Tueis/The Bulletin
Red Cross phlebotomist Nicole Wood helps Daniel Duarte, of Bend, as he donates blood at the Bend Blood Donation Center on Tuesday.
With heavy storms forcing the cancellation of blood drives upand downthe East Coast, the Red Cross is looking for more donations.
List of biooddrives
By Kailey Fisicaro
manager for the Pacific North-
The Bulletin
Even though Central Oregon saw a mild winter, blood donors in the area can still do their part to potentially help
west Blood Services Region of the Red Cross, says that to his knowledge no blood from Central Oregon has been sent out of the area to help, but it's
• See a list of local blood drives in this week's Health Events,D2
other areas of the country that
important for residents to do-
sawblood drives canceled during storms.
nate now. "The local need is always
Schultzman said the nature of Red Cross work is unpre-
After severe winter storms in 27 states, the American Red
met here first," said Schultz-
man, explaining area hospi-
dictable. Unexpected emergencies could call for a great
Cross is taking precaution-
tals would receive the blood
need for blood at any time. It's
ary measures to maintain a
they need before any would be important to keep up blood sent to other places. unit levels in Central Oregon,
needed blood supply. Jared Schultzman, communications
"There's never a lack of
• Schoolnews andnotes: Email newsitemsand notices ofgeneralinterest to news@bendbulletin.com. Email announcementsofteens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletin.com. Email collegenotes, military graduationsandreunioninfo to bulletin@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358
By Ted Shorack
have been in other states.
The Bulletin
need, ever," said Schultzman.
Right now the call for donors is a "pre-emptive strike,"
along the Pilot Butte Canal
"You always have to have a
said Schultzman — there's not
hit a roadblock Wednesday
steady stream of donors."
an emergency need now, but the Red Cross aims to prevent that from happening. Bend residents can donate
before Deschutes County
and everywhere, when the
blood at the Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110. — Reporter: 541-383-0325, kfisicaro@bendbulletin.com
whether the Central Oregon Irrigation District could
amend thecountycode to allowpiping of a portion of the canal without a lengthy conditional review process.
requiredto reach a decision.
Driver in crash that killed stepdaughter violated terms of hisconditional release • William Wayne FiXhadbeen Ordered to
recklessly and believe alcohol
haVe noCOntaCtWith 2 girlS alSOin the CraSh
Deschutes County Circuit Judge Stephen Forte
By Claire Withycombe The Bulletin
A driverarrested aftera September carcrash that killed one of
Email eventsto communitylifeO bendbulletin.com orclick on "Submitan Event"onlineat bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact: 541-383-0351
The Milestonespagepublishes Sunday inCommunity Life. Contact: 541-633-2117
commissioners. The board split 1-1 on
nied the requested change because a board majority is
Details onthe Obituaries page inside. Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com
• Engagements,marriages, domestic partnerships, anniversaries, birthdays:
A proposed pipingproject
The tie vote effectively de-
• Obituaries, DeathNotices:
• Community events:
major snag
weather is mild and no drives have been canceled as they
• Civic Calendarnotices: Email eventinformation to news@bendbulletin.com,with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, and include acontact name and phone number. Contact: 541-383-0354
Pilot Butte Canal hits
his young passengers was reprimanded Wednesday in Deschutes Fix
County Circuit Court for violat-
ing his no-contact order with
two of the girls who were in the vehicle. William Wayne Fix, 33,
pleaded not guilty to manslaughter, assault and driving under the influence of intoxicants Friday in connection
with a Sept. 6 car accident on U.S. Highway 97. His 7-year-old stepdaughter, Phoenix Price, died at the scene of the crash; his
then-14-year-old daughter and another 7-year-old girl were treated and released, while two other girls, then 10 and
14, remained in more serious condition for weeks.
Police said Fix was driving
was a factor.
until then he has been conditionally released from jail. The state filed a motion to revoke Fix's conditional
County commissioners also chose unanimously not to accept an application
seeking historic designation of the canal. The proposal was submitted by a group of property owners adjacentto the waterway.
The historic designation could have disrupted the piping project because state land use laws protect histor-
ic structures. Commissioner Tammy Baneyvoted against the countycode amendment;
reminded Fix there must be no alcohol in his home. Fix's wife, Sarah Fix, was arrested this weekend on suspicion of
release because he had been in contact with one of the al-
driving under the influence of intoxicants, according to
have contact with any of the alleged victims, except for Ol-
Deputy District Attorney
ivia Jeanes, who is permitted
project sent letters to the
Katie Clason. She was arrested shortly after midnight Sunday on U.S. Highway 97,according to the Oregon State Police record log, but is no longer in county custody, according to the Deschutes County jail. William Fix is scheduled to go to trial in October, and
to write him letters and call
county's legal counsel ahead of Wednesday's
leged victims, Clason said. He has been ordered not to
him under the supervision of her mother. She must initiate the contact.
Clason said two of the girls, who live in the same neighborhood as Fix, had seen him independently of each other while riding their bikes. SeeFix/B6
Commissioner Tony DeBone voted in favor.
Opponents of the piping
meeting that questioned
Commissioner Alan Unger's abilityto be impartial when making a decision because of his involvement in other water conservation issues.
SeeCanalIB5
B2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
E VENT
ENDA R
Email events at least 10 days before publication date to communityli feibendbulletin.com or click on "Submit an Event" at tvtvM/.bendbulletin.com. Ongoing listings must be updated monthly. Contact: 541-383-0351.
THURSDAY SPRING BREAKOPEN GARDEN WORK PARTY:Joinusin the garden to help get it in shape for the spring; 10 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541.385.6908 ext. 14. "THE BREAKFASTCLUB:30TH ANNIVERSARYEDITION": A special showing of the pop culture classic featuring the brat pack; 7:30p.m.;$12.50; RegalOld Mill Stadium16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend;
www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. KENNY BLUERAYANDTHE HIGH DESERTHUSTLERS: Blues; 7:30 p.m.; Northside Bar 8 Grill, 62860 Boyd Acres Road, Bend; www.northsidebarfun.com or 541-383-0889. NARIKO OTT& DAN WEBER: Live comedy by Nariko Ott and Dan Weber; 8 p.m.;$8 plusfees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon & Stage,125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend. TOM VANDENAVOND:The Austin, Texas country-folk musician performs, with Woebegone; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatre.pub or 541-323-1881.
FRIDAY SPRING BREAKOPEN GARDEN WORK PARTY:Joinusin the garden to help get it in shape for the spring; 10 a.m.; The Environmental Center, 16 NW Kansas Ave., Bend; www. envirocenter.org or 541.385.6908 ext. 14.
Meg Roussos/Ttte Bulletin
Judi Van Houweling and Angela Lund create a scene while prepping for their "Declassified" show, which they will perform Friday at Cascades Theatrical Company. AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Valerie Geary will read from and sign her new novel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books, 252 W. Hood St., Sisters; 541-549-0866. SOFT WHITE SIXTIES:The San
Francisco rock 'n' roll soul band performs, with All You All, The Ghost And The Darkness and Don Quixote; 8 p.m.; $10; The Annex, 51 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; 541-388-1106. POLECAT: The Seattle stompgrass band performs, with the Eric Tollefson Duo; 9 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SWCentury Drive,
Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881. DECLASSIFIED:Local group Triage performs long-form improv; 9 p.m.; $5; Cascades Theatrical Company, 148 NW Greenwood Ave., Bend; www.bendimprov.com or 541-771-3189. AMB:The Hungarian electronic musician performs, with Lyfe and Oliver Klozoff; 10 p.m.; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; www.astroloungebend.com or 541-388-0116.
SATURDAY LLAMA O' RAMA:Visit baby
llamas courtesy of Central Oregon Llama Association, with baked goods;proceedsto benefit COCC Vet Tech Scholarship and llama rescue; 9 a.m.; High Desert Ranch 8 Home Store, 350 NE Addison Ave., Bend; www. centraloregonllamas.net or 541-678-5328. THE SOLOSPEAK SESSIONS "WE ALLHAVE STORIES": Join
performers as theshare personal stories from their lives, Not appropriate for children; 2 p.m.; $15 plus fees in advance, $18 at the door; Cascades Theatre, 148 NW Greenwood Ave, Bend; www. solospeak.com or 503-860-5733.
AUTHOR PRESENTATION:Valerie Geary will read from and sign her new novel "Crooked River," which is set in Terrebonne; 6 p.m.; $5; Paulina Springs Books,422 SW Sixth St., Redmond; 541-526-1491. LAST SATURDAY:Featuring local art and culture with art openings, live music, food carts, workshops and more; 6 p.m.; The Old Ironworks, 50 SE Scott St., Bend or 347-564-9080. IRIS DEMENT:The singersongwriter performs, with Pieta Brown; 8 p.m.; $30 plus fees in advance, $35 at the door; The Belfry, 302 E. Main Ave., Sisters. MOTHERS WHISKEY:The Portland rock band performs, with Shovelbelt and The Beerslayers; 9 p.m.; Third Street Pub, 314 SE Third St., Bend; 541-306-3017. LOST LANDER:The Portland band performs, with Corner Gospel Explosion; 9 p.m.; $7; The Astro Lounge, 939 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-388-0116. DEAD REMEDY:The Portland rock'n' roll duo performs, with The Hoons; 9 p.m.; $5; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub. com or 541-323-1881.
SUMDAY TIM AND MYLESTHOMPSON: The Nashville folk duo performs; 6:30 p.m.;$15-$20 suggested donation; The Glen at Newport Hills, 1019 NW Stannium Drive, Bend; 541-480-8830. NEW KINGSTON:The Brooklyn, New York reggae band performs, with Arise Roots and Realize; 8 p.m.; $10; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
TUESDAY NATURAL HISTORYPUB: "WATERMASTER:WATER HISTORY OFTHEDESCHUTES": A screening of the documentary about the history of water management in the Deschutes Basin and the legacy of Watermaster Bob Main; 5:30 p.m.; McMenamins Old St. Francis School, 700 NW Bond St., Bend; 541-382-5174. "THE BREAKFASTCLUB:30TH ANNIVERSARY EDITION": A special showing of the pop culture classic featuring the brat pack; 7:30p.m.;$12.50;RegalOld Mill Stadium 16 and IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, Bend; www.fathomevents.com or 844-462-7342. COCKTAIL CABARET:Featuring 10 voices of Bend singing selections of musical theatre; 8 p.m.; $10; Dogwood Cocktail Cabin, 147 NW Minnesota Ave., Bend.
WEDNESDAY JAKE DANIELSANDANDREW OUELLETTE:Featuring live comedy by Jake Daniels and Andrew Ouellette; 8 p.m.; $8 plus fees in advance, $10 at the door; The Summit Saloon & Stage, 125 NW Oregon Ave., Bend; www.bendcomedy.com or 541-419-0111. DEAD WINTERCARPENTERS: The Americana-roots band performs, with Honey Don't; 9
p.m.; $8plusfeesinadvance, $12 at the door; Volcanic Theatre Pub, 70 SW Century Drive, Bend; www.volcanictheatrepub.com or 541-323-1881.
1VEwsOF REcoRD POLICE LOG The Bulletin will update items in the Police Log whensuch arequest is received. Anynewinformation, such as the dismissal of charges or acquittal, must be verifiable. For more information, call 541-383-0358.
BEND POLICE DEPARTMENT Theft —Atheft was reported and an arrest made at5:25 p.m. Feb. 5, in the 600 block of NE Third Street. DUII —Robert JamesReineri, 56, was arrested on suspicion of driving under the influence of intoxicants at10:21 p.m. March 20, in thearea of Empire Avenue andNels Anderson Road. Thsft —Atheft was reported at10:19 p.m. March 23, in the 400 block of NE
Irving Avenue. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 6:05 a.m. March 24, in the 61300 block of King Jehu Way. Theft —A theft was reported at 7:56 a.m. March 24, in the area ofKing Hezekiah Wayand SE15th Street. Unlawful entry —Avehicle was reported entered at 8:31 a.m.March 24, in the 21000 block of SEGardenia Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:44 a.m. March 24, in the21000 block of SE GardeniaAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at11:52 a.m. March 24, in the21000 block of SE GardeniaAvenue. Theft —A theft was reported at12:05 p.m. March 24, in the 20800 block of King David Avenue. Theft —A theft was reported at1:27
Population Deschutes County is the fastest-growing county in Oregon. COUNTY
Deschutss Polk Clackamas Jefferson Multnomah Washington Marion Jackson Crook Clatsop Yamhill Hood River Lane Linn Union Benton Columbia
COUNTY
p.m. March 24, in the20900 block of King HezekiahWay. Theft —Atheft was reported at 3:30 p.m. March 24, in thearea ofNW Franklin AvenueandNWHarriman Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:02 p.m. March 23, in the 2600 block of NE U.S. Highway20. Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 10:11 a.m. March 24, in the800 block of Watt Way.
PRINEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT Criminal mischief —Anact of criminal mischief was reported at 5:05 a.m. March 24, in thearea of SEFifth Streetand SEBelknap Street. Criminal mischief —Anact of
2014 P ERCENTAGE POPULATION OFCHANGE ESTIMATE 2013-14
83,599 2014 P ERCENTAGE Josephine Lincoln POPULATION OFCHANGE 46,406 ESTIMATE 2013-14 Wallowa 6,820 2.67% Curry 170,388 22,335 1.69% 77,916 Wasco 25,515 1.68% Douglas 394,972 106,972 1.67 22,192 Coos 62,475 1.39% Tillamook 776,712 25,342 1.34% Lake 562,998 7,838 1.2% Umatilla 326,110 76,705 1.06% Baker 210,287 16,059 1% Gilliam 20,998 1,932 Harney 37,474 0.95% 7,126 0.91% Sherman 101,758 1,710 0.77% Klamath 22,885 65,455 0.75% Morrow 358,337 11,187 Malheur 119,356 0.6% 30,359 Grant 25,691 0.6% 7,180 0.41% Wheeler 86,316 1,375 0.41% 49,459 Oregon average 3,970,239
Source: U.S. Census Bureau
Census Continued from B1 "It's good to know that the numbers are measurable, be-
0.39% 0.23% 0. 22%
0.16% 0.16%
criminal mischief was reported at 3:19 p.m. March 24, in the area of NWFifth Street. Theft —A theft was reported at 4:49 p.m. March 24, in thearea of Timberwolf Loop. Theft —Atheft was reported at 5:17 p.m. March 24, in thearea of SWThird Street and SWDeer Street.
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"It's good to know that the numbers are measurable, because it does feel likea lot of things are happening at the same time." — Tony DeBone,Deschutes County commissioner •
same time," said DeBone.
people moved to the county last year. The increased population comes at a time when many have called the lack of affordable housing in Bend a crisis. The city was estimated in 2013 at having a population of
Friday 5:44p.m.— Brush or brush-andgrass mixture fire, area ofEdro Place. 23 —Medical aid calls. Saturday 11:47 a.m. —Natural vegetation fire,
0.15% 0.07%
Greg Cross / The Bulletin
cause it does feel like a lot of things are happening at the In 2010, the county's population was estimated to be
BEND FIRE RUNS
•I
hll.NNuNl
City leaders formed an Affordable Housing Advisory Committee and has sought a dvice f r o m
upgrades and parks — to entice developers to construct a ffordable housing. T h e
All-Natunl s
stea consot
Pet spxar'
ttea01ht
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B e n d 2 0 3 0 , committee also recommend-
an organization studying livability. The city advisory committee has recommended a break in system development charges — known as SDCs, which pay for roads, sewer
ed changing the city code to create incentives for development of smaller single-family "cottages" on a lot around a common open space. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletirt.com
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
B3
REGON
B Il cl 0
Bl SI C eBVe
8 VclllCeS IIl e By Jonathan J. Cooper The Associated Press
SALEM — Democrats on
an Oregon legislative committee voted Wednesday to advance a bill that would require nearly all employers to give workers up to five days a year of paid sick leave.
around the world, the notion of paid sick leave, it's the norm."
tries and countries around the
leave requirement.
leave, it's the norm."
"This is a bill whose time Dembrow, a Portland Democrat who heads the Senate
workers. Employees would accrue atleast one hour of sick leave for each 30 hours
Conviction in trial involving long-held witness —Oregon
of work. They could use up to five days per year and carry
jurors have convicted a man of murder in a case inwhich the defendant's father was jailed for 2~/~ years so he couldn't avoid taking the witness stand in his son's trial. Washington County jurors took about nine hours to decide EloyVasquez-Santiago wasguilty of murdering the woman whovanished after their date. A judge in the Portland suburb of Hillsboro read theverdict Tuesday afternoon. A 55-year-old mother of six, Maria Bolanos-Rivera never returned from the outing Aug. 26, 2012. The two hadmet working in the nearby berry fields. A short time later, Vasquez-Santiago andhis family moved to California and he continuedonto Mexico.
over unused time into the next
year, with a cap of 80 hours
statewide and make Oregon the fourth state with a paid-
has come," said Sen. Michael
east of Portland, has decided to abolish its police force in favor of a law enforcement contract with the MultnomahCounty Sheriff's Office. TheCity Council approved the 10-year dealTuesday bya 4-3 vote. Supporters say it meanspay increases for police officers because they'll becomedeputies, who get better pay, as well as taxpayer savings in the city of16,000. Opponents said the contract was approved too hastily. They sought a public advisory vote. Thecity employs 27 officers and support staff. Under the contract, it would pay for16. Other workers would fill county vacancies.
— Sen. Michael Dembrow, D-Portland accrued.
Workforce Committee. "If you land and Eugene to employers look at our neighboring coun-
would give an assist to low-income workers, who are much more likely to have to give up pay when they're sick or need to care for an ill child.
Trnntdale adnliSheS pOliCefOrCe —Thecity ofTroutdale,
e I S 8 LlI'e
"This is a bill whose time has come. If you look at our neighboring countries and countries
The measure would extend a mandate enacted in Port-
Democrats said their b i ll
AROUND THE STATE
world, the notion of paid sick Employees shouldn't be forced to choose between working while sick or forgoing pay, Democrats said. Republicans and business interests objected, saying it would impose a significant cost on small businesses. "I think about how some of
these businesses are barely
Small businesses with fewer than six employees would keeping their heads above wa- be required to offer an equal ter, and we're basically putting amount of unpaid leave for weights on them and telling sick workers. them to swim harder," said Employees denied a right Rep. Kim Thatcher, a Repub- to paid sick time could file a lican from Keizer. "Some of lawsuit or enter a complaint them aren't going to make it." with the Bureau of Labor and
Man aCquitted in Wife'S death —A jury hasacquitted a
researchers. Various cities
man charged with murdering his wife after what wasdescribed asa suicide pact left her deadand himwounded. ThePortland couple had left a signed suicide note outlining their reasons for wanting to die on March 2, 2013. MultnomahCounty jurors deliberated less than aday before returning their verdict Wednesday in the trial of Lloyd Erp. He and his wife, Lori, each suffered two bullet wounds to the head. Lloyd Erp testified that his wife shot herself before hetook the rifle and tried
have also adopted their own
to kill himself.
The
S e nate W o r k f orce Industries. Committee advanced the meaPaid leave mandates have sure in a party-line vote, send- been approved in Connectiing it to the Ways and Means cut, California and Massachu-
Committee. The latter panel could take it up at any time. The bill would apply to all employers with at least six
setts, according to legislative mandates.
— From wire reports
PosthumouslyMaynar , a vocates or ai -in- ying elsewhere By Judy Lin
Palliative care refers to spe-
The Associated Press
cialized medical treatment to
manage stress and pain from serious illnesses. would allow terminally ill paMaynard's husband, Dan tients to kill themselves in CalDiaz, choked back tears in in- ifornia with drugs and dosages troducing the video during a recommendedby a doctor. press conference. He said he reCalifornia advocates have spects those who disagree with said they would consider takhim and his wife, but aid-in-dy- ing the issue to voters if it fails ing should be an option for all in the Legislature. Californians. Maynard's mother, Deborah Ziegler, testified at the hearing Visit Central Oregon's
SACRAMENTO, Calif.
In a video recorded 19 days before Brittany Maynard took life-ending drugs in Oregon, she tells California lawmakers that no one should have to leave home to legally kill themselves underthe care of a doctor. "Unfortunately, California law prevented me from getting the end-of-life option I deserved," she said in the recording released Wednesday, hours ahead of the first state Senate committee hearing on the issue. Lawmakers gave initial approval, 5-2, after a moving debate before a packed Capitol
in support of SB128. She said
watching her daughter suffer made her understand that some releasedby death. "Being a good mother meant letting go when everything inside of me screamed, 'Hold on,'" Ziegler said. The practice is legal in five states, induding Oregon,where Maynard moved before she
The 29-year-old San Francisco Bay Area woman had terminal brain cancer and moved
lative efforts in California and
Rich Pedroncelli/The Associated Press
Dan Diaz, the husband of Brittany Maynard, watches a video of hls wife, recorded19 days before her assisted suicide death ln Oregon, at the California Capitol on Wednesday.
elsewhere to make it legal for terminally ill patients to kill themselves with drugs. "No one should have to leave
their home and community for peace ofmind, to escape suf-
HunterDouglas
terminal illnesses can only be
room.
with her family to Oregon before killing herself last year. Her death drew widespread attention and recharged legis-
The proposal by California state Sens. Bill Monning and Lois Wolk, both Democrats,
took her life Nov. 1. The other states are Montana, New Mexico, Vermont and Washington.
Before her death, Maynard made her case public with onsanction physician-assisted sui-
She died this month of breast
advocates for people with dis-
cide with no way to undo mistakes or abuses.
cancer. Advocates for aid-in-dying laws saylegislatorsin atleast 17 states have introduced similar
abilities fear some sick patients
"Do not mistake temporary
fering and to plan for a gentle popularity with wisdom," said death," Maynard said in the W arren Fong, president ofthe vldeo. Medical Oncology Association The bill being considered in of Southern California and an California is expected to face oncologist. a strong challenge led by medO ther terminally il l p a ical, disability and religious tients such as Kara Tippetts, a groups. Opponents see huge 38-year-old Colorado mother consequencesforallowingdoc- of four, wrote an open letter to torstoprescribe fatal drugs and Maynard in October urging her questioned the morality of the not to end her life. bill. Tippetts wrote that sufferOpponents told lawmak- ing can be "the place where ers Wednesday the bill would true beauty can be known."
measures this year. However,
proposals in at least four states have already stalled for the year and many have not yet received ahearing. Past proposals have foundered in statehouses amid emo-
tionally charged debates and strong opposition. Some medical groups say prescribing life-ending medication violates a doctor's oath to do no harm, while some
uty Pat Bond of the Skamania thorities believe the blast was County Sheriff's Office. caused by chemicalsused to When d eputies a r r ived, make exploding targets. week in an explosion along a they found Williams in the The Oregon state medical busy highway below Mount parking lot. He told them he examiner's office ruled WilHood had a r e cent mental was considering hanging liams' death a suicide. health crisis that sent him to a himself, the deputies reportW illiams' uncle, Lt. E r i c southwest Washington hospi- ed. They found a rope tied to Schober of the Portland Police tal, authorities said. a railing. Bureau, said the family hadn't The revelation surprised W illiams w a s t a k e n t o known aboutthe Skamania the family of Jeffrey Williams PeaceHealth Southwest Med- report until Tuesday and "did and shed light on the deter- ical Center i n V a n couver, not see the signs of someone mination that he committed Washington. How long he was contemplating suicide." surcrde. there hasn't been disclosed. In Washington, a police ofOn Feb. 16, the 24-year-old About a m o nth l ater, on ficer can place a psychiatric Portland man called 911 from March 19 along U.S. High- hold on a person for up to 72 Beacon Rock State Park on way 26, investigators found hours ifthere is reasonable the Washington side of the Co- a crater left by an explosion. cause to believe the person is lumbia River, said Chief Dep- The hole was 11 feet wide. Au- suffering from a mental disorPORTLAND — An Oregon man who killed himself last
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would feelpressured to end their lives to avoid being a financial burden. In the video recorded by the
right-to-die advocacy group Compassion & Choices before legislation was introduced in California, Maynard said she explored palliative care as an alternative to life-ending drugs but found that option terrifying. "I may be minimally conscious, still suffering and un-
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der and there is a high likelihood the person faces imminent serious harm. The person's family cannot be notified without the pa-
tient's consent, PeaceHealth spokesman Randy Querin said. Schober said Williams had studied computer science at a
community college, was between tech support jobs and had broken up with a girlfriend several months agoalthough that didn't seem to trouble him.
"He was a happy-go-lucky kid. He kept his personal feelings to himself," Schober said.
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B4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
EDj To
The Bulletin
s
nves i a ion ino ai ea is e ri ca
W&.M A%aP84&! IW~H&
(/ -."
~ ~Y 6
eschutes County District Attorney John Hummel did the right thing to request that the investigation into the death of Edwin Mays at the Deschutes County jail be conducted by the Oregon Department of Justice.
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If his office had done the investigation, there would be questions raisedabout the DA and sheriff's officeworking hand in handno matter what the results of the investigation. The video of the final hours of Edwin Mays in jail in December is troubling. D eputies don't seem t o d o enough soonenough tohelp him. Mays, 31, died Dec. 14. He had been booked into the jail after hav-
around. It wasn't until a half-hour after Mays became unresponsivethat deputies tried to resuscitate him. He died at the jail after paramedrcs arrlved. Could he have been saved with a swifter response? We don't know. The causeofdeath was methamphetamine overdose. Methamphetamine in the system is measured by how many milligrams of the drug ing being arrested on suspicion of are in each milliliter of blood using interfering with and providing false a 0-5 scale. Mays' tests came back information to a police officer, men- greater than 5. acing, possession of heroin and a The investigation, though, will parole violation. see if anything that was done was On the video, deputies noticed wrong, and if so, if it is prosecutable. Mays might need medical attention. That's not the same thing as the They said so. sheriffs office looking at the tape of Nobody calledthe paramedics the incident and deciding if there is for two hours. But they did find time a need for changes in policies and to watch a football game and joke procedures.
M 1Vickel's Worth Fighting poverty
more fully than they are today. Under SB 831, Oregon's coordinated care organizations, including the Pacific Source CCO that operates in Central Oregon, would be required to hire or contract with mental health professionals. SB 832, meanwhile, would provide grants for integratingthe two arms of medical care in a way that is not always done today. It would also bar CCOs from restricting patients' access to mental health care. The changes would, those testifying before the Senate committee this week said, mean better and earlier mental health care for those who need it. And that, in turn, could save the health care system money in the longrun. The two bills are in their infancy, and there will be revisions along the way. The Association of Oregon Community Mental Health Programs isconcerned about mandates, grants and other aspects of the measures, and supporters will work with them to try to resolve their concerns. But if receiving mental health care early is important to keeping Oregonians healthy, integration is likely to prove the best way to get there. The bills should be approved.
Wenee to By Dan Morse n March 20, an editorial on
O
these pages titled "Saving Oregonians from the sage grouse" concluded that creative
access into prime habitat on the
fighting poverty," we can create a upper DeschutesRiver in Wasco generation that contributes to its County. communities because it had loving The purchase, which could be and responsible parents. completed by fall, would conserve Tlm Conlon key salmon and steelhead habitat
with 2-parent families N icholas Kr istof's column i n The Bulletin on March 22 reviews
the realities that gave rise to today's problems in education, drug abuse, a large unskilled workforce and the current tension among
Bend
as well as help protect some of the
state's healthiest herds of bighorn sheep and mule deer. m inority c ommunities an d l a w The land would be managed by enforcement. the Oregon Department of Fish He w r ote, "(Daniel Patrick) What is it OSU doesn't get? We and Wildlife and would fit seamMoynihan was absolutely right to are not disputing a four-year col- lessly into vast adjacent Bureau of emphasizethe consequences for lege here in Bend, just where they Land Management lands — thus low-income children of changing want to put it. providing a l arge footprint of
Put OSU-Cascades where it can grow
family structure. Partly because
Change the delivery of mental health care T alk to mental health professionals and it's clear many would like to see Oregon's delivery of mental health care changed. Two bills now before the Oregon Legislature, Senate Bill 831 and Senate Bill 832, would do that and in the process would improve mental health care for Oregon Health Plan clients. They should be approved. Mental and physical health care are two largely separate systems. Family practitioners, orthopedic specialists and pediatricians work on one side of the health care block, while psychiatrists, psychologists and other mental health care providers work on the other. The two sides may or may not talk with one another on a regular basis. That split often means a person with mental health problems does not receive the care he or she needs. The result, Robin Henderson, chief behavioral health care officer at St. Charles Health System, toldthe Senate Human Services and Early Childhood Committee on 'Ilresday, is that about 10 percent of patients referred to mental health providers actually see those providers. The two measures would change that by integrating the two systems
line, "Families do have role in
You can't mix and match a col-
nearly 30,000 acres for the public
there is often only one income lege like a patchwork quilt. This coming into a single-parent house- just does not sit well with us. We
land-hunter/angler. The Oregon Department of Fish
hold, children of unmarried moms
and Wildlife commission will meet
will fight to the end. Is this what
are roughly five times as likely to you want, OSU? in June to make a recommendation live in poverty as children of marYou are doing a great injustice for purchase. ried couples." and putting negative feelings into From there, it goes to a legislaKristof says, "Conservatives this town. You want it your way tive committee and finally to the shouldn't chortle at the evidence and that is it. You are not listening Oregon Legislature. With funding that liberals blew it, for they did tothepeople. Shame on you. sources available, the road looks as well." In other words, there is Put the college where it can grow clear for final purchase of this enough blame across party linesand expand; if not, you will pay the land which has been a long-standas well as a cultural revolutionprice down the road. We are tired ing project headed by the Trust for why a two-parent family declined of you not listening to us. What will Public Land. in numbers across America. If you examine The Bulletin's re-
it take? I just read that Corvallis is hav-
port on agencies that help kids deal with life, you would be amazed. It's a huge "safety net" for our young. But these agencies are,
ing huge parking problems, parties
large corridor protecting the fishery along the Deschutes and will
Once completed, it will provide a
and noise. Do we want this here in
add first-class habitat for hunters.
our neighborhood? I ask, 300 parkPartially funded by the Land ing spaces, really? and Water Conservation Fund, the Irene Gillette project is another prime example Bend of the continuing need for LWCF, which is set to expire in September
in part, an outcome of f amilies that fail to meet their children's
requirements. There is another way to exam-
ine this cycle of broken families and children in need: with targeted investments today in education
and family-wage jobs, we tackle early the tragedy of "discarded" children. Keeping in mind Kristof's head-
Protectlower Deschutes River Ranch
unless Congress reauthorizes this
Using a combination of federal funding and available grants, the state of Oregon is closer to purchasing a 10,000-acre ranch that provides river and high bluff
from offshore mineral and oil ex-
50-year-old law which uses no taxpayer dollars — only fees collected ploration to help fund projects like the lower Deschutes River Ranch. Karl J. Flndllng Bend
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We welcomeyour letters. Letters should be limited to one issue, contain no more than 250words and include the writer's signature, phonenumber and address for verification. Weedit letters for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject poetry, personal attacks, form letters, letters submitted elsewhereandthose appropriate for other sections of TheBulletin. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
In My View submissions should be between 550and 650 words, signed and include the writer's phone number and address for verification. Weedit submissions for brevity, grammar, taste and legal reasons. Wereject those published elsewhere. In My View pieces run routinely in the space below, alternating withnational columnists. Writers are limited to one letter or Op-Ed pieceevery 30 days.
Please address your submission to either My Nickel's Worth or In My View and send, fax or email them to The Bulletin. Email submissions are preferred. Email: letters©bendbulletin.com Write: My Nickel's Worth / In MyView P.O. Box 6020 Bend, OR 97708 Fax: 541-385-5804
o m o retosavet esa e rouse
ed sage grouse scientists wrote an
IN MY VIEW
open letter expressing their concerns that efforts to date to protect the sage
guard the future of the bird — if we
A clear cautionary note was sounded earlier this month: A group of some of the nation's most respected sage grouse scientists wrote an open letter expressing their concerns that efforts to date to protect the sage grouse have not been sufficient.
grouse have not been sufficient. take real steps to protect it. This group of scientists, who have The Bureau ofLand Management conservationefforts are needed to made this bird and its habitat the manages the large majority of sage protectthe greater sage grouse and focus of their careers, are telling us grouse habitat here in Oregon, into ensure that there won't be a need we're not yet doing enough of the cluding the Owyhee and Hart-Shelto list the bird as an endangered right things for sage grouse. It is a don areas. This spring the BLM will species. warning that we must acknowledge, issue a final statewide plan laying We agree, in part. It will take a and we should take steps to strength- out management actions to protect the soon-to-be-released plan needs concerted effort by land managers, en our efforts. sage grouse habitat while allowing to be as strong as possible. scientists, public lands users and all Supporting some of the concepts other land uses. What elseneeds to be done? Perother stakeholders to come up with in the scientists' letter, last October The final version of the BLM plan manent protection for large, intact meaningful conservation measures. the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service needs to be much stronger than the areas of habitat like the Owyhee and And many of the measures devel- identified six of the most important previous draft and include strong Hart-Sheldon is critical to the ongooped so far can be beneficial. sage grouse regions in the West and protecti ons for sage grouse for the ing sage grouse effort. These two But more needs to be done. Sage called for the highest level of protec- species to fare better. If not, contin- areas are the best of the best in Orgrouserequirelarge,intactareasof tion for these strongholds. ued sage grouse decline is likely. egon, and by protecting them as wilhabitat where new land uses, wildOregon is fortunate to have two The state of Oregon has also been derness, national conservation areas fire, weeds and other impacts won't of these areas in our state — the working for several years with dif- or other means, we can ensure they furtherdegrade what the birdsneed O wyhee Canyonlands and t h e ferent stakeholders to develop the will continue to benefit sage grouse Hart-Sheldon Region. In these into thrive. stateplan forsage grouse conserva- in the long term. A clear cautionary note was crediblelandscapes large areas of tion on private lands. Like the BLM This administration and the Oresounded earlier this month: A group sage grouse habitat have the poten- plan, only a robust state approach gon congressional delegation should of some of the nation's most respect- tial to remain intact and help safe- can help conserve sage grouse, and work together to protect these areas.
Such protections, combined with other efforts, would go a long way toward saving sage grouse. Unlike what the headline in last week's editorial implied, these ef-
forts really aren't about saving Oregonians from the sage grouse. Instead, by saving the sage grouse, we save our public lands, way of life and economy.Oregonians know thatby saving the sage grouse we also save ourselves. — Dan Morseis theconservation director for the Oregon Natural Desert Association, a Bend-based nonprofit organization. He lives in Bend.
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
Canal
BITUARIES FEATURED OBITUARY
DEATH 1VOTIt ES Albert "AL" Leon Merritt, of Redmond Nov. 13, 1932 - Mar. 22, 2015 Arrangements: Baird Memorial Chapel of La Pine is honored to serve the family. 541-382-0903 www.bairdmortuaries.com Services: A private Memorial Gathering will be held at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Partners In Care 2075 NE Wyatt Court Bend, Oregon 97701 www.partnersbend.org
Sari Lee Gehrke,of Terrebonne Jan. 8, 1955 - Mar. 21, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of Life will take place at a later date. Contributionsmay be made to:
Hospice of Redmond 732 SW 23rd Street Redmond, OR 97756 www.hospiceofredmond.org
Jack JD Daniel Jackson, of Redmond Jan. 28, 1936 - Mar. 20, 2015 Arrangements: Redmond Memorial Chapel is honored to serve the family. Please sign our guest book at www.redmondmemorial.com 541-548-3219 Services: A Celebration of Jack's life will be held at a latter date. Contributions may be made
Rebecca Francine Stafford, of Prineville Feb. 15, 1973 - Mar. 19, 2015 Arrangements: Autumn FuneralsRedmond (541-504-9485) www.autumnfunerals.net Services: A Celebration of a Life Lived will take place at a later date.
Baird 'B J.' Lee Johnson Dec. 3, 1932- Mar. 10, 2015 Baird Lee 'B.J.' Johnson o f Bend, passed away o n Tuesday, Mar. 10, 2015, at the H o s p ic e H o u s e i n Bend. Per B . J .'s r e quest, t here w i l l be no services held. B .J. w a s b orn on Dec. 3, 1932, in Compton, California, to Marlon Baird Johnson n ice ( M c -
C oy) Johnson. H e
Bend, Oregon.
B.J. honorably served his country i n t h e U . S . N avy d uring t h e K o r e a n C o n f lict, f ought i n a c o m b a t zone.
He enjoyed fishing, golf
and flirting. H e i s s u r v i ve d b y hi s w ife, C y n d i ; t wo son s , to: M ark H i a t t a nd B ry a n Opportunity Foundation of Johnson; t w o da u g h t ers, Central Oregon, PO Box D ebra Johnson an d E r i n 430 E. HWY 126, H odges. He w as a b eRedmond, Oregon 97756, l oved g r a n d f athe r an d 541-548-2611. e at-grandfather and w i l l e missed by all. Memorial co n t r i b utions i n B . J .'s n a m e m a y b e March 24,1930- March14,2015 m ade to Partners In C a r e Romano w a s b o r n i n H ospice, 2075 N E W y a t t 9770 1 Chicago, I L M ar c h 24, Ct., B e nd , OR 1930, where h e a t t e nded www.partnersbend.org. g rade school an d h i g h Baird Funeral Home in school. He received a B.S. B end is h o n ored t o h a v e a nd a M . S . d e g ree f r o m served the Johnson family. Eastern O r e go n C o l l ege. He al s o received a M .S. d e gree from t he U ni - Jan. 4, 1913- Mar. 22, 2015 v ersity o f Julia Hirn lived a fruitful Oregon. and a c t iv e l i f e f o r 102 He was a years, and graduated into / . L i t t l e A ll the Kingdom of Heaven on American M arch 22, 2015. She w a s Football b orn J a n . Romano Player. 4, 1913 in Romani He started Astoria teaching O R, a n d a nd c o a chin g a t Nea h graduK ah-Nie S c hool i n 19 5 5 a ted h i g h and t h e n m o v e d o n t o s chool a s North Bend H i g h S c hool. valedictoH e spent 33 y e ars i n t h e r ian in classroom and 45 years as 1931. In a f o o tbal l a n d b a s e b all 1938, she coach. He served 38 years Ida Julia Hirn ~arried with the m i l itary b etween her Sunday school fr iend, b oth th e N a t i onal G u a r d T oivo John H i r n i n P o r t and Army (from Private to l and, OR . Th ey r ai s e d M ajor). R o m a n o w a s a n three children and settled a vid g o l f er , r a c quet b a l l in Central Oregon. In 2013 p layer, and l o ved t o p l a y She moved to Vale OR, to cards. l ive w i t h d a u g hter, E l l i e Romano married V alerie Duncan. She went to PioK ellogg i n 1 9 52, later d i - neer Place Center nearby vorced, and t hen m a r r i ed w here s h e f i n i s he d h e r Linda Lilly J une 18, 1981. e arthly journey. H e r c h i l He i s su r v i v e d by a d ren, Fred H ir n o f B e n d , b rother, R emo; f i v e c h i l - O R, Alice M c Gee o f R a dren, Nancy Soleim (Dick), l eigh, NC, and E l li e D u n V ikki W h i t m o r e ( J o h n ) , can of Vale, OR, 7 g r andTony Romani, Cindy Gib- children, 1 0 g r e a t-grandson (Rod) and Kevin Lilly children and many friends (O'Teaka). H e a l so had and relatives wil l r e m ems everal g r a n dchildren a s ber her l o ving an d g entle w ell a s sev e r a l g r e a t - s pirit w h i c h l e f t a gr e a t grandchildren i mpact on their lives. H e r He was a life member of M emorial Celebration wi l l t he Elks, th e L i o n s C l u b be I:30 p.m. March 28 at a nd American Legion. H e G race Fi r s t L uth e r a n h as been an E l der o f t h e Church, in Bend. Presbyteria n Ch ur ch , Board of Di rectors for th e Juniper Golf Club and Si DEATHS erra Dawn E states where he was President. ELSEWHERE He was inducted into the C ollege Football H a l l o f Fame at Eastern Oregon Deathsof note from around University in 2003. theworld: A Memorial Service wi l l Yehuda Avner, 86:A former be held 11:00 a.m. Monday, M arch 3 0 , 2 0 1 5 a t t he Israeli diplomat and aide to a Community Pr e s b yterian string of prime ministers who Church, 529 NW 1 9th St ., turned his insider stories about Redmond, OR 97756. the country's leaders into a In lieu of fl o w ers please best-selling memoir, "The send donations to Hospice of Redmond, 732 SW 23rd, Prime Ministers: An Intimate R edmond, O R 97756 ; Narrative of I sraeli LeaderBrightSide Animal Center, ship." Died Tuesday in Jerusa1 355 NE H e m l oc k A v e . , lem after a battle with cancer. Redmond, OR 97756; or to Francis Rooney Jr., 93: E astern O r e go n U n i v e r - Businessman whose leadersity Foundation, One Uniship of H.H. Brown Shoe Co. versity Blvd. La Grande, prompted Warren Buffett to OR 97850. buy the Massachusetts manuR edmond M emor i a l Chapel is honored to serve facturer in 1991 for Berkshire the Romani family. P l ease Hathaway. Died Tuesday in sign our online guestbook: Connecticut. — From wire reports www.redmondmemorial.com
Hirn, Ida Julia Koski
emphasizedevangelism By Sam Roberts
Army and who carried its banner back to Eastern Europe af-
she became the first in her family to attend a university, Queensland, majoring in English and history. She returned tothefold aftersheattended an evangelical service for young people and was invited to come
ter the fall of Communism, died
forward to what is called the
New York Times News Service
Gen. Eva Burrows, who was only the second woman to lead the i n ternational S a lvation
Fridayin Melbourne, Australia. mercy seat. She knelt, asked She was 85. God to forgive her rebelliousHer death, after a brief ill-
ness and vowed to submit to his
ness, was confirmed by Maj. will. "It was like being at an altar John Murray, communications secretary for the Salvation Ar- when you bring your gift to the my's international headquar- altar," she said in the television ters in London. In 1986, at 56, interview. "I brought myself, Burrows became the organiza-
tion's youngest commander. To many people, the Salvation Army evokes bell-ringing and red kettles for contributions at Christmas and vans that provide disaster relief.
and from that time on there was no question in my mind
that my life was to be devoted to God, and within the orbit of the Salvation Army. That's, I
suppose, what you mean by conviction."
But during her seven-year tenure, Burrows rekindled the
She considered the Salvation Army a vocation rather than a career and her commitment so
m a r - 150-year-old o r ganization's original goal of evangelism, unshakablethat she decided
r ied Cyn t h i a 'Cyndi' Herring on Oct. 4, 1974, in Lake Tahoe, Nevada. F or over 5 0 y e a rs, B . J. w as a b e l oved b a rber i n San Jose, Mountain View, M ilpitas, C a l i f ornia, a n d
Romano Romani
Salvation Armyleader
while insisting, "We don't use
not to marry.
social services as a bait to fish She attended the Salvation Army's William Booth M efor converts." She liked to recount the story morial Training College in of the skeptics who demanded, London, and she was commis"The Salvation Armyo What sioned an officer in 1951. She are you saving us from'?" To trained teachers in what is now which she would reply, "The Zimbabwe, earned a master's Salvation Army seeks by God's degree in education from Sydgrace to save people from the ney University, ran social sermesstheymake oftheirlives." vice programs for women in Her affinity for everyday in- Britain and served as territorial dividuals earned her the sobri- commander in Sri Lanka, Scotquet"the people's general." land and Southern Australia Evangeline Evelyn Bur- before the army's high council rows was born in Tighes Hill, elected her its 13th general. Newcastle, New South Wales, She was an outspoken critic Australia, on Sept. 15, 1929. of apartheid in South Africa, Her parents, Robert and Ella and she revamped the organiBurrows, were both Salvation zation's global leadership strucArmy majors. ture, imposed strict financial She seemed destined for her
controlsafter a fraud scandal
job.Her parentsnamed heraf- and conferred regularly with ter Evangeline Booth, daughter heads of state. She was so adof the Salvation Army's found-
mired that her five-year term
B5
tral Oregon Irrigation District to pipe the stretch of canal
Continued from B1 without special permits or Unger defended his impar- conditions, known as "outtialitytwicebut decided to ab- right use." stain from the decision rather Baney said the piping than hurt future discussions should not be allowed as an about water use because of outright use and should inthe perception of bias. steadbe aconditionaluseproThe piping project would cess, one that would require enciose about 4,500 feet of the the irrigation district to meet canal northeast of Bend. A certain requirements before section downstream has al- the project could be approved. ready been piped and leads to DeBone supported allowa hydropower plant. The irri- ing the district to move forgation district has argued that ward with the code change so the project will save water that it could manage the wafrom leaking out of the canal ter resource as it saw fit. "I do see it as a very high and benefit fish and wildlife. The proposal has been op- priority to be able to manposed by the Pilot Butte Ca- age that water and be able nal Preservation Alliance, a
to conserve that water," said
group made up of homeown- DeBone. ers along the canal as well as The board decided the hisother county residents. Oppo- toric designation application nents have questioned wheth- submitted by homeowners er the piping would effective- couldn't be accepted because ly conserve water and have it was received after the counraised safety concerns. ty code amendment was pro''We're disappointed the posed. They found county neighbors aren't willing to code did not allow the applimove forward and discuss cation since the COID proposthis process," said Craig Hor- al was pending. rell, manager of the irrigation The irrigation district has district. "But we'll continue to an easement, a right to use try and work with the neigh- land along the canal. Howbors. This project and proj- ever, homeowners' property ects like this that we're doing lines meet in the middle of the are too important for the com- canal. The owner of a potenmunity to walk away from." tial historic resource can reJeff Perreault, a homeown- fuse the historic designation er adjacent to the canal and process. member of the Pilot Butte Canal Preservation Alliance, said the community was be-
County commissioners determined that COID would be
would be one of the "toughest
section under consideration
considered an owner based ing put in a position of losing on its easement along the an iconic feature. canal and could deny the re"I think today the system quest madebyhomeowners. worked and it left the people Opponents of the piping with a voice, and it left our project have also attempted government in a position to national recognition of the continue to act as our repre- canal's historic significance. sentatives," Perreault said. The National Park Service is Baney remarked before expected to decide as soon as reaching a decision on the late spring whether 7,500 feet proposed code change it of the canal — inciuding the decisions" she'shadtomake. Wednesday — should be add"The opportunity for water ed to the National Register of conservation is critical for the
sustainability of our commu-
Historic Places. Meanwhile, the irrigation
nities," Baney said. But she added later she
district has hired a consultant
felt strongly about the public having the ability to participate in discussing the piping project. The proposed code change would have allowed the Cen-
analysis of its canal as part
to conduct its own historical of an agteement with the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation and the state. — Reporter: 541-617-7820, tshorack@bendbulletin.com
er and the first woman chosen was extended by two years. During that time, she engi-
to be its international commander, serving from 1934 to
1939. And when her father, an evangelical preacher, rushed home from a Sunday service the morning she was born, he lifted his baby daughter and declared, "I dedicate this child
neered the Salvation Army's return to Russia, Czechoslova-
%od, Home & Garden
kia, East Germany and Hungary, where it had been banned under Communist rule.
AT HOME
show "Australian Biography" — and steeped in the teachings
of a denomination rooted in the Methodist tradition.
She recalled playing the tambourine when she was 5 or 6 and rebelling - "flying my wings and wanting to be myself' — in high school, and
adherents of
See us for retractable awnings, exterior solar screens, shade structures. Sun fttrhen you wantit,
• • Th eBulletin
Even after she retired in 1993, she continued working
to the glory of God and the sal- with homeless youth and leadvation of the world." ing Bible studies in Melbourne. The eighth of nine children, She also served on the board of Burrows is survived by one sis- the International Bible Society. ter, Margaret Southwell. Burrows prided herself on She grew up poor - "We her vitality, her vision and her shared the life of poverty of the ability to galvanize what were people around us," she said in a then an estimated 1.5 million 1996interview forthe television
In
2 locations in Bend Main Center 2150IIEStudioRd,Suite10 NWX 2863Nortwhest CrossingDr suite 11O
shade when you needit.
IRI I Q
V CI
O >N DEMA N D
541-389-9983
541-389-9252
www.shadeondemand.com
sylvan@bendbroadband.com
t h e S a lvation
Army and 17,000 active officers in 90 nations.
"One of the big factors of leadership is to exude inspira-
OSPICE o f Re d m o n d
tion so that people want to follow," she said in the television interview. "It's a temble thing when a leader looks behind and
there's no one coming." IBIEH
EIEI
Obituary policy Death Notices are freeand willbe runfor one day,but specific guidelines must be followed. Local obituaries are paid advertisements submitted by families or funeral homes. Theymay besubmitted by phone, mail, email or fax. The Bulletin reserves the right to edit all submissions. Please include contact information in all correspondence. For information on any of these services orabout the obituary policy, contact 541-617-7825.
Deadlines:Death Notices are accepted until noon Monday through Friday for next-day publication and by4:30 p.m. Friday for Sundaypublication. Obituaries must be received by 5 p.m. Mondaythrough Thursday for publication on the second dayafter submission, by1 p.m. Friday for Sunday publication, and by 9 a.m. Monday for Tuesday publication. Deadlines for display ads vary; pleasecall for details.
Phone: 541-617-7825 Email: obits@bendbulletin.com
Mail:Obituaries P.O. Box6020
0
. goigjgH pjrIIgyg~ g,~ I
camps, programs,andactivitiesfor children of allages.
'C®~I~ 5~4<~ 3'®2 ~ @~ ~ To reserveyour ad space in e
summer Youth Guide Pubiishes Priday, APrii17 3 15 Adv riising ~eadlin:. F riday, April, 1 5
:g' ivpj~
;
•
Honoring Your Wishesfor Your
~
Llfe C... •
IiireWork Closely with Your Persona/ Doctor
~
Care in the Comfort of Your Own Home
C h 0 j ge
OrrerinfI Yott Cornfort and Sttpport PresentingYou and Your Family With Options
541. 548.7483 www.hospiceof red mo nd .o rg
Bend, OR 97708
Fax: 541-322-7254
Atffrming Life
Servlng Bend I Redmond I Slsters I Powell Butte I Prlnevllle I Crooked Rlver RanchI Terrebonne I Madras
ATTENTIONCENTRAL OREGON SUMMER CAMPS The Bulletin is in the process of compiling a list of SummerCampsin Central Oregon. Pleasefill out this form to verify information in order to be COnSidered fOr PubliCatiOn in the Summer YOuth ACtiVity Guide. Email information to: summercamps@bendbulletin.com Mgj/ fpriTi tp.
The Bulletin, Attn: Martha R0gers, PQ.B0x6020, Bend, OR97Q2 .
Cam PHOSt:
mitgtocation: website: Phone: Deadline to submit: April 3, 2015
The Bulletin ~
B6
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
W EAT H E R Forecasts andgraphics provided byAccuWeather,lnc. ©2015
i
1
i
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I
TODAY
ii
TONIGHT
HIGH 71' Mostly sunnyandwarmer
i f '1
ALMANAC
FRIDAY
SATURDAY 0
LOW
72
41'
36'
Clear
6Q
3o. Mostly sunny
Warm with plenty of sun
TEMPERATURE
EAST:Patchy fog possible early; otherwise, Seasid partly to mostly sunny 61/46 today with a mild Cannon afternoon. 60/47
/4
i
Juneau Kansas City Lansing Las Vegas Lexington Lincoln Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Madison, tM Memphis Miami
POLLEN COUNT
NATIONAL WEATHER
WATER REPORT
SKI REPORT In inches as of 5 p.m.yesterday
Ski resort New snow Base 0 47-9 4 Mt. Bachelor Mt. HoodMeadows 0 32-66 3 26-4 5 Timberline Lodge Aspen I Snowmass, CO 3 46-75 Park City Mountain, UT 2 57-57 Source: OnTheSnow.com
Gain share
46 contiguousstates) National high:92 at Thermal, CA National low: -5' at Clayton Lake, ME Precipitation: 2.36" at Quigayute,WA
Billing
73/47
d4/44
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*
*
*
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*
„
*
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*
„
„
* * vs * * .
sr
po
5
e
i
0/se Amsterdam Athens
45/43/1.49 / x xx Bosich 57/48/0.32 • 66/43 uta ' City ~ /39 Auckland 68/58/0.03 *4 2 w York Baghdad 79/55/Tr * ta cmty C h „ s cl s Bangkok 93/77/0.33 < ~ 55/3 P msh 49/2e • ., Beijing 65/40/0.00 48 6 > tktutfPhis 60/25 Beirut 68/55/0.00 ch chclicc Berlin 60/35/0.00 73/54 Ksnscs C' Bogota 68/48/0.02 63/31 at. Loui cu Budapest 61/43/0.08 • s Vcgcs 52/34 BuenosAires 70/59/0.48 x x)o 4 8 /57 vi e x x x x vN K Cabo San Lucas 89/61/0.00 O a h cme o f ty Los An les Cairo 82/59/0.00 Phoen d2 42 • Lhtfc cck 4/es Anchorage Albuque ue ei em aA Calgary 52/21/0.06 • 69/ea 45/34 II 0 63/aa x jyfdft Cancun 88P3/0.00 8 /e2 • Dsl Juneau 61 Ps Dublin 46/30/0.17 7/ Edinburgh 46/27/0.00 45/3d Geneva 50/47/0.22 + ~k ~ Harare x6Y i x p x Hcustolve • itshife x x x x x, 84/61 /0.00 rccns dy/46 ~ ~ Hong Kong 68/65/0.05 Honolulu Chihuahus Istanbul 64/37/0.00 StnO 69/39 Jerusalem 68/50/0.00 ontc. se/aas AQ gi s i s i s i Johannesburg 74/59/0.17 75/63 ' Wk k v ' c' ' Lima 85/73/0.00 Lisbon 57/46/0.00 Shown aretoday's noon positions of weather systemsand precipitation. Temperature bandsare highs for the day. London 50/34/0.00 T-storms Rain Showers Snow F l urries Ice Warm Front Sta t ionary Front Madrid Cold Front 48/37/0.00 Manila 88/75/0.03 Bois
* uke
3 /2O' * * •
,
O
45/40/sh 62/57/r 76/63/r 76/53/s 91/78/t 70/46/s 72/62/s 50/40/sh 69/45/1 69/45/sh 72/54/s 87/60/s 84/67/pc 63/37/pc 87/73/pc 50/32/pc 47/32/sh 49/38/pc 85/61/s 75/69/sh 63/49/pc 70/55/pc 72/57/t 85/70/pc 61/52/pc 54/36/sh 55/41/pc 88/75/pc
48/36/pc 65/55/r 74/63/pc 81/54/s 92/77/t 70/53/c 76/66/s 51/38/sh 70/48/sh 59/43/sh 72/56/s 87/61/s
96/72/pc 66/41/pc
88no/t
49/41/sh 48/36/c 50/35/pc 86/61/t
77ng/ic
61/50/sh 78/64/s 77/56/t
84no/pc 66/52/s 50/43/sh 66/40/pc
89n5/pc
95/66/s 98/65/s 47/28/c 41/21/pc
Palm Spdings Peoria Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh Portland, ME
UV INDEX TODAY
31/16/c
86/60/s 42/22/c 50/30/c
91/64/0.00 45/39/0.18 47/28/0.07 88/63/0.00 69/33/0.21 42/20/0.01 Providence 47/22/0.02 Raleigh 67/47/0.00 Rapid City 47/28/0.00 Reno 67/35/0.00 Richmond 62/39/0.01 Rochester, NY 49/22/0.07 Sacramento 79/51/0.00 St. Louis 60/44/0.41 Salt Lake City 51/33/0.01 San Antonio 81/62/0.00 San Diego 77/60/0.00 San Francisco 72/52/0.00 San Jose 74/50/0.00 Santa re 67/32/0.00 Savannah 73/61/0.06 Seattle 58/45/0.18 Sioux Fags 47/32/0.00 Spokane 45/34/0.11 Springfield, Mo 71/38/0.55 Tampa 82/66/0.00 Tucson 82/52/0.00 Tulsa 79/49/1.01 Washington, DC 54/35/Tr Wichita 70/48/Tr Yakima 62/44/0.04 Yuma 92/61/0.00
Omaha Orlando
•
Hi/Lo/W 47/36/r 50/33/pc
59/41/1 57/41/pc 94/63/s 94/63/s
OklahomaCity
•
Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W 50/26/0.00 46/36/r 50/39/0.01 53/31/s 48/29/0.19 44/20/c 77/64/0.00 80/57/s 73/46/0.03 60/30/r 46/37/Tr 52/23/s 81/56/0.00 84/60/0.00 75/46/0.01 46/32/0.36 78/57/0.00 89/69/0.00 43/31/0.36 38/31/0.05 77/60/0.00 77/58/0.00 49/34/0.04 47/29/0.07 65/40/0.00 84/55/0.42
Milwaukee Minneapolis Nashville New Orleans New YorkCity Newark, NJ Norfolk, YA
•
*
Yesterday Today Friday
City
•
* Bismarck *44/26
Partly sunny andmild
Yesterday Today Friday
•
Wickiup 199097 100% Crescent Lake 7 5 2 90 67% Ochoco Reservoir 32701 74vo Prinevige 116991 Bovo River flow St a tion Cu. ft./aec. Deschutes R.below CranePrairie 147 Deschutes R.below Wickiup 422 Deschutes R.below Bend 973 Deschutes R. atBenhamFalls 1010 Little Deschutes near LaPine 210 Crescent Ck. belowCrescent Lake 32 Crooked R.above Prineville Res. 606 Crooked R.below Prineville Res. 64 Crooked R. near Terrebonne 140 Ochoco Ck.below OchocoRes. 5
65' 33'
~
Mostly sunny andmild
City Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Abilene 86/59/0.00 65/44/pc 77/49/s /47 High 55 53 75' in 1960 lington 74/41 Portland Akron 63/37/0.22 43/26/r 35/19/sf Meac am Lost;ne 39' 29' 13'in 1996 Low 72/44 3 Albany 49/17/0.05 51/34/r 46/25/c • W co 65/36 Enterprise tietan 64/ he Oaa Albuquerque 69/42/0.00 63/38/s 73/44/s • • 64/35 Tigamo • • 70/ PRECIPITATION CENTRAL: Turning out andy • Anchorage 45/26/0.00 45/34/pc 46/30/sh 76/46 Mc innviff • JosePh Aganta 73/58/0.00 77/46/1 61/37/pc • He PPner Grande • 24 hours through 5 p.m. yesterday 0.00" mostly sunnytoday Gove nt • upi Condon 1/41 67 41 Atlantic City 46/23/0.11 58/45/1 49/35/pc Cam • 71 Record 0.75" in 1975 with a nice andwarm Lincoln Union Austin 80/61/0.00 67/42/c 78/47/s 65/ Month to date (normaf) 0.3 9" (0.60") afternoon. Clearto Sale 60/48 Baltimore 48/24/0.01 72/42/t 52/33/c pmy Granitec Year to date(normal) 1.50 " (3.22") partly cloudy tonight. 72/4 Billings 54/30/0.08 64/44/pc 73/49/c a 'Baker C ttewpo 62/35 Barometric pressure at 4 p.m. 30 . 3 0" • 7 41 Birmingham 79/56/0.00 76/41/1 57/35/pc 1/46 59/47 • Mitch 6 65/33 Bismarck 38/30/Tr 44/25/pc 52/32/c Camp Sh man Red WEST:Patchy low 70/41 n R SUN ANDMOON Boise 54/32/0.00 65/43/s 75/49/s 71/40 • John eU clouds or fog to start; Yach 73/45 Boston 49/28/Tr 48/31/r 60/47 • Prineville Day /35 Today Fri. tario Bridgeport, CT 43/24/0.07 51/39/sh otherwise, mostly 51/39/r 48/33/pc 74/41 • Pa lina 67 / 4 4 Sunrise 6:56 a.m. 6: 5 7 a.m. 39 73/3 Buffalo 46/26/0.03 41/28/sn 33/1 8/sf sunny today with a Floren e • Eugene • Be d Brothem 6 41 Sunset 7:24 p.m. 7: 2 6 p.m. nice, warm afternoon Valee Burlington, VT 47/18/0.03 50/29/r 39/17/sf Su iVere 71/41 • 41 Moonrise 11: 34 a.m. 1 2 :26 p.m. 67/38 Caribou, ME 40/5/0.00 45/26/r 36/12/c Nyssa • 7 6 / 9 • La plne Ham on C e Charleston, SC 78/60/Tr 80/63/sh 69/41/1 Moonset 1:41 a.m. 2 : 3 1 a.m. J untura 66/ 4 6 Grove Oakridge Charlotte 69/55/Tr 78/51/r 57/35/sh • Burns OREGON EXTREMES First Fu l l Last New 70/38 73/47 /48 Chattanooga 78/53/0.00 77/43/1 57/32/c 6 • Fort Rock Riley 68/35 YESTERDAY Cresce t • 76/39 Cheyenne 43/29/0.02 55/37/c 65/42/pc e d 68/36 66/40 Chicago 41/35/0.29 43/24/c 32/20/pc High: 72' Bandon Ro seburg • C h ristmas alley Cincinnati 70/43/0.19 47/30/r 41/23/c Jordan V gey Mar 26 Apr 6 A p r 11 A pr 16 at Roseburg 61/48 Beaver Silver 71/36 Frenchglen 76/50 Cleveland 56/28/0.17 40/25/sn 32/1 7/sf Low: 26' 63/36 Marsh Lake 67I37 ColoradoSprings 48/32/0.03 59/33/pc 67/38/s Tonight'6 stty:Hercules the Herowil 66/39 at Baker City 71/36 Gra • Burns Jun tion Columbia, Mo 60/42/0.14 52/33/s 49/31/pc • Paisley emerge fromthe northeastern horizon near a Columbia, SC 74/60/0.00 82/61/sh 62/40/sh • 70/35 • Chiloquin Columbus,GA 75/50/Tr 77/49/sh 64/38/pc midnight. Goid ach • 6 Medfo d '71 /36 Rome 0' Columbus,OH 66/40/0.22 44/27/r 38/20/c 71I37 • 49 Klamath Concord, NH 48/16/0.02 50/35/r 47/26/c Source: JimTodd,OMSI Fields • • Ashl nd Falls • Lakeview McDermi Corpus Christi 77/62/0.00 73/51/1 76/53/s Rro ings 75/ 71/36 60/ 69/33 68/35 Dallas 81/63/0.00 64/45/pc 70/48/s Dayton 61/44/0.27 43/26/r 37/19/c Denver 46/32/0.20 61/37/c 71/44/pc 10 a.m. Noon 2 p.m. 4 p .m. Yesterday Today Frlday Yesterday Today Friday Yesterday Today Friday Des Moines 50/33/0.07 49/26/pc 44/29/pc 3 1~ 5 ~ s l 3 City H i/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W C i ty Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W city Hi/Lo/Prec. Hi/Lo/W Hi/Lo/W Detroit 54/29/0.20 48/25/r 35/20/sf The highertheAccuW ealher.txtm Iiy Index number, Astoria 56/49/0.50 64/45/pc 59/47/pc L a Grande 50 / 34/0.04 67/41/pc 73/44/s Portl and 6 0 /47/0.30 73/47/s 69/48/s Duluth 37/30/0.11 34/11/sf 32/17/s the greatertheneedfor eysandskin protsdion. 0-2 Low, Baker City 47/26/Tr 65/33/s 71/40/s La Pine 55/34/0.00 69/40/s 68/36/s Prinevige 59/ 39/0.00 74/41/s 68/36/s El Paso 76/56/0.00 67/43/s 76/49/s 3-5Moderate;6-7 High;8-10 VeryHigh; 11+ Exlrsms. Brookings 62/49/0.01 60/49/s 57/47/s Me d ford 69/4 2 /0.00 77/49/s 73/46/s Redmond 58/ 40/0.00 74/38/s 75/37/s Fairbanks 43/6/0.00 43/22/pc 45/16/c Bums 55/27/0.01 68/35/s 74/37/s Ne wport 57/5 0 /0.21 59/47/s 56/47/pc Roseburg 72/ 5 1/0.00 76/50/s 70/48/s Fargo 43/33/0.01 37/16/pc 38/27/sn Eugene 67/50/0.05 72/45/s 67/46/s NorthBend 61/54/0.01 62/48/s 59/48/s Salem 64/50/0.10 72/45/s 68/47/s Flagstaff 64/35/0.00 62/26/s 68/31/s Klamath Fags 58/30/0.00 71/36/s 70/39/s O n tario 56/32/0.00 66/39/s 74/45/s Sisters 57/37/T race 73/39/s 72/38/s Grand Rapids 41/31/0.32 43/1 8/c 32/1 5/c G rasses T r ee s Wee ds Lakeview 57/30/0.00 69/33/s 70/36/s Pe ndleton 60/ 3 8/0.14 70/45/s 74/46/s The Dages 5 7 / 45/0.14 75/45/s 75/48/s Green 6ay 41 /31 /0.39 38/1 7/sf 31/1 5/s Greensboro 63/47/0.01 74/48/r 55/33/sh Weather(W):s-sunny,pc-partlycloudy, c-cloudy, sh-showers,t-thunderstorms,r-rain, sf-snowflurries, sn-snowl-ice,Tr-trace,Yesterday data asof 5 p.m. yesterday Absent M o derate Ab sent Harrisburg 43/24/0.06 68/39/t 51/30/c Source: OregonAgergyAssociates 541-683-1577 Harfford, CT 50/19/0.11 50/38/sh 51/31/pc Helena 51 /31/0.00 64/41/pc 74/43/pc Honolulu 83/68/0.05 81/70/pc 83/71/pc ~ t ge ~ 206 ~ 306 ~ 406 ~ 506 ~ 606 ~ 706 ~ 606 ~ 906 ~ 10 0 6 ~ ttc a ~ 1 06 ~ 06 ~ 06 Houston 80/56/0.00 67/48/t 75/52/s As of 7 a.m.yesterday Huntsville 78/55/0.00 72/39/t 54/31/pc Igary Indianapolis 54/41/0.66 45/29/r 39/20/c Reservoir Ac r e feet Ca pacity NATIONAL /37 5 * * * * ~~ • i n i peg T n d ur Ba& Jackson, MS 80/57/0.00 72/39/t 62/39/pc EXTREMES C rane Prairie 536 1 1 97% de/49 * * * * * Q uc c e u ~ 2d 10 Jacksonville 75/62/Tr 80/62/pc 73/45/1 * * * * * 4$/se YESTERDAY (for the
Yesterday Normal Record
"'"
TRAVEL WEATHER
Shown is today's weather.Temperatures are today's highs andtonight's lows. Umatiaa Hood 74I42 RiVer Rufus • ermiston
ria
MONDAY
63' 35'
O
OREGON WEATHER
Bend through 5 p.m.yesterday
SUNDAY
e
53/33/r 47/24/c 41/18/c 33/15/pc 61/38/r 54/35/pc 85/75/1 88/65/1 42/21/c 31/20/pc 39/20/pc 35/23/s 68/36/r 53/28/c 74/52/1 69/52/pc 62/43/r 53/32/pc 66/43/r 54/33/pc 75/49/1 51/38/sh
62/42/s 64/44/pc 46/36/Tr 50/25/s 49/31/c 82/63/0.00 86/69/pc 79/54/1
68/44/r 53/36/pc 89/62/s 92/64/s 51/30/r 40/23/c 50/36/r 49/28/r
54/41/sh 51/32/r 77/51/sh 53/34/sh 52/30/c 75/45/s 79/48/t 43/29/r 83/54/s
68/37/pc 79/46/s
52/36/sh 35/1 9/sf 84/51/s
52/34/pc 48/28/pc 62/42/pc 71/48/pc 69/44/c 77/54/s 88/62/s 86/63/s 73/54/s 67/54/s
84/54/s 77/52/s 60/31/s 70/36/s 81/60/pc 69/42/1 66/49/pc 65/49/pc 45/19/s 42/29/c 63/43/pc 68/45/s 54/34/pc 50/33/pc 84/70/pc 78/58/1 85/56/s 89/56/s 60/42/s 59/41/pc 76/47/1 54/38/c 62/34/s 60/38/pc
73/41/pc 75/45/s 92/63/s 94/63/s
I
Mecca Mexico City
98/73/0.04 78/53/0.09 Montreal 45/18/0.02 Moscow 43/30/0.02 Nairobi 81/63/0.09 Nassau 84/7 ZO.07 New Delhi 93/70/0.00 Osaka 51/36/0.03 Oslo 34/28/0.19 Ottawa 41/18/0.08 Paris 50/39/0.14 Rio de Janeiro 82/73/0.00 Rome 59/54/1.13 Santiago 77/59/0.00 Sao Paulo 79/61/0.00 Sapporo 42/34/0.04 Seoul 54/27/0.00 Shanghai 59/41/0.00 Singapore 91/80/0.00 Stockholm 34/27/0.00 Sydney 73/61/0.00 Taipei 63/57/0.42 Tel Aviv 75/50/0.00 Tokyo 55/41/0.00 Toronto 39/25/0.08 Vancouver 52/45/0.46 Vienna 61/43/Tr Warsaw 64/37/0.00
97/76/s 75/51/1 44/28/r 36/25/sf 77/61/1 87/73/sh 96/71/pc 57/36/s 40/36/sn 41/25/r 48/36/sh 87/73/s 64/50/c 78/52/pc 84/65/pc 49/35/s 57/32/s 59/49/c 89/79/sh 44/39/pc 80/59/s 71/61/sh 76/64/s 55/44/s 41/27/sn 59/45/c 62/45/sh 62/46/sh
101/76/s 68/49/t 35/15/sf 40/26/s 78/62/t 87/70/sh 96/69/s 61/42/s 43/32/c 30/8/sf 53/44/sh 87/73/pc 67/47/pc 80/53/s 82/67/c 58/39/s 59/31/s 59/49/r 89/79/c 48/34/c 77/59/s 69/61/sh 85/73/s 61/48/s 34/15/sf 58/45/r 52/42/sh 56/40/c
ability to be repaid from the
Continued from B1 Gain share reform has emerged in Salem as the legislative session's next politically divisive topic that threatens to
create rifts among lawmakers. But unlike some of the bills
passed early this session, gain share may cause divides within each party. "It's political forces. Juggernauts. Big (loud) people going at each other. Super huge,"
Senate Bill 848 —Would rework"gain share," a tax-sharing agreement whereby the state gives to counties half the income taxes from jobs created whencounties give tax breaks to land certain large-scale business investments. Chief sponsors:Sen. Ginny Burdick, D-Portland; Reps. Peter Buckley, D-Ashland;Ann Lininger,D-LakeOswego History:Burdick said the ballooning costs of the program are the result of unintended effects In the original 2007 bill. Shosaid schools are inadvertently sending millions to the primary beneficiary of the program: Washington County. What's next:No hearings scheduled. Online:Readthe bill at http:I/bit.ly/1b8p4TC
Senate President Peter Court-
ney, D-Salem, said of gain share talks. "I mean, big players involved in that one, they happen to be state senators and state (representatives), particularly. And, I m ean, they're going at it."
payments in its next budget, with 21 percent of that paying fornewly createdjobs,according to the nonpartisan Legisla-
with counties should apply to only newly created jobs or
of writing the state's budget, alongside Sen. Richard
ones counties said were retained as a result of tax breaks
Devlin, D-Tualatin.
tive Revenue Office.
Lawmakers are split over
the size and scope of the proT he debate b oil s d o w n posed changes. to whether th e s t ate's i n Rep. Peter Buckley, D-Ashcome-tax-sharing agreement land, is the co-chair Ut charge
offered to companies. Oregon is set to give out $94.9 million in gain share
Senate Bill 129 —Would also rework gaIn share by sending 10 percent of the personal incometaxes attributed to all projects that exceed $5 million to the Local Economic Opportunity Fund. Chief sponsor:Sen.Richard Devlin, D-Tualatin History:A group of lawmakers Is working on Senate BIII129, which would also changethe program that has ballooned Incosts. The bill is likely to change. What's next:Nohearingsscheduled. Online:Readthe bill at http://bit.ly/1BCZrP3
lion to Bend-La Pine Schools to," Buckley said. alone. Buckley added he didn't Devlin is leading a compet- think gain share reform would ey saved is spent. ing bill that would make more be so divisive it would interBuckley an d B u r dick's modest changes to decrease rupt the Legislature's ability to co-sponsored bill would cap the state's revenue loss but pass other bills. gain share payments to in- would otherwise keep the proSen. Mark Hass, D-Beavercome taxes for new jobs only gram largely intact. ton, put together a five-person "With all the efforts we're work group of legislators lookand would split the program's money among K-12 educa- making to try to fund educa- ing for ways to find common tion, Washington County and tion and fund it statewide and ground on gain share reform. a new economicdevelopment bring full-day kindergarten He said there is value in the fund all counties could apply statewide, this is an issue that state giving some money for for. has to get resolved as to gain retained jobs and not just newBurdick says that change share's impact on our ability to ly created ones. He added that would send more than $1 mil- reach the levels that we need any county would want the
state if they created jobs.
"If Deschutes County wanted to ... lend the tax breaks, wouldn't they want the assur-
ance that they wouldbe repaid for creating jobs in which the income taxes would be taken
by the state?" Hass said. Washington County commissionersagree lawmakers should adjust the program but continue refunding income taxes for retained jobs. "From an economic standpoint, the retention of jobs is every bit as important as the
creation of new positions," said Washington County Chairman Andy Duyck. The Finance and Revenue committee took n o a c t i on
on the gain share question Wednesday. Hass said the bills would likely head to a Ways and Means subcommittee in the next two weeks. — Reporter: 406-589-4347, tanderson@bendbulletin.com
The two are now chief sponsors of competing bills to change gain share this session and change the way the mon-
•
Fix
any of the alleged victims
Continued from B1 Jeanes reportedly waved and said "I love you, Uncle Billy!" Fix allegedly responded, telling her he loved her, too.
in-person contact.
•
pass by or attempt to make
Izzabella Robbins, the other
girl who reported seeing him outside, is reluctant to go outside for fear she will see him again, Clason said. "It's really frustrating that we're here in the first place," said Forte. He did not revoke
Fix's conditional release but
William Fix's attorney, Joel Wirtz, also sought to clari-
fy the conditions of the release agreement Wednesday. Fix was essentially placed on house arrest,and Wirtz asked that he be permitted to work outside the home as a
;=::= N:=
condition of release and that the type of monitoring equipment Fix wears at home be
4
clarified.
I
made clear that Fix must re-
Forte granted both requests. — Reporter: 541-383-0376,
main inside his house should
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IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 N FL, C3 Sports in brief, C2 NHL, C3 NBA, C3 Preps, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
PREPS
Lava Bears win in extra innings Bend High pulls off a double steal in the top of the eighth inning to win 2-1 at the CoachBob Invitational in Goodyear, Arizona. Prep roundup, C4
MEDIA A player named F--. What to de? Coach Craig Price's phone will not stop ringing. Everyone from reporters to award committee announcers want to know if it is true what they say about his star Medicine Hat(Alberta) College basketball player. No one iswondering about the kid's skill. But the thing is — his name. It's four letters — and not a kind four letters. The Brazilian's moniker — pronounced "Foo-key" elsewhere, but something quite different here — has presented media with an interesting, perhaps heretofore never encountered dilemma. Does a family newspaper publish a man's name if it is a profanity? "We get a lot of looks about his name," Price said. "I can't tell you how many times I have to confirm the spelling and the pronunciation of his name. It's a constant thing. People think it's a typo." But it's not. Welcome to the North American adventures of Guilherme Carbagiale F--. The demandsof F-- are simple: He just wants to be F--. And for a long time, he could not. And it was heartbreaking. "It's my last name," he told the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. "I'm proud of it. Doesn't matter if it meanssomethingbad." When F — firstgot to North America, he went by GuyCarbagiale, with his middle name slapped onto the backof his jersey. But the issue nagged at him. He isof German origins, and he saidhisnamemeans "fox." (In German, it's Fuchs.) He dreamedof wearing it on his jersey. "I want to have kids," he said. "I want to spread the F-- last name." He ultimately got it onto the back of his jersey this year. But that has not stopped the questions — evenwhen he is getting awards, one of which was given to him last weekto honor his basketball accolades. "I had aphone conversation with this one guy," Price said, "who wanted to make sure they had it right before they engraved F-- onto an award." — The I/Iashington Post
NBA
O www.bendbulletin.com/sports
MEN'S NCAA TOURNAMENT
osin ear means i e o ina • Six teams with 10 or more losses(and 3with 13} are themost ever to reachthe regional semis By Eric Olson
nalists have 10 or more losses,
That's becauseteams areplaying more regular-season games than ever, and top programs are trying to schedule mostly high-caliber nonconference op-
The Associated Press
including three with 13. The reac-
ponents, which can enhance their
tion around college basketball has been a collective shrug. There simply are more opportunities to lose nowadays.
resumes for NCAA tournament selection and seeding.
The NCAA tournament has
never had so many teams with so many losses make it so far.
Six of the 16 regional semifi-
"There was a time years and
years ago where you'd feel like if
• Unbeaten Kentucky has new comes down to who you schedule. challenge You may lose some games because in 'Press you're playing a difficult nonconVirginia',C4 ference schedule. And then in our league, it's tough night in and night • Updated out with 18 games in the ACC." bracket,C4 SeeSweet 16/C4 tournament," North Carolina State coach Mark Gottfried said. "Now it
BASEBALL
RUGBY
The next big name may be at Costco By Dave Campbell The Associated Press
FORT MYERS, Fla.
aa aa+ Q Q Q R I w w ~ O
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— Long before any of that major league money starts landing in their bank accounts, most professional baseball players are in a predicament similar to everyone else in the regular workforce.
Between baseball seasons there are no paychecks, and bills do not
stop for the winter. So they need to find some other income.
"Especially the guys who got picked in the 10th round and (later)," Minnesota Twins re-
liever Casey Fien said. "I signed for $500 and a plane ticket. So I had to go out and earn my money." He went to Costco. The right arm that
would eventually fetch Fien a $1.38 million salary from theTwins for
2015 was once used for stacking crates, pallets and boxes at the bulk retail giant's location in
San Luis Obispo, CalPhotos by Joe Kline i The Bulletin
Kyle Joens passes the ball during a drill in practice on Friday at Central Oregon Community College's Mazama Field. COCChosts the Pacific Coast regional of the National Small College Rugby Organization Challenge Cup this weekend.
• COCC hosts a rugby regional this weekendwith a trip to the Final Fouron the line
ifornia. Drafted in the 20th round in 2006 by
Detroit, Fien showed up for five-hour night shifts at the store during his offseasons until making his major league debut in 2009 with the Tigers.
By Mark Modcal Central Oregon Community
At MazamaField, Central OregonCommunityCollege
College is just two wins away from the Final Four. But this type of March
SATURDAY'SGAMES
Madness is about rugby, not basketball.
regional of the National Small
University of the Pacific (No. 1 NorCal) vs. COCC (No. 1 Pacific NW), noon; San Francisco (No. 2 NorCal) vs. Point Loma Nazarene(No. 1 Gold Coast), 2 p.m.
College Rugby Organization Challenge Cup on Saturday
SUNDAY'SGAMES
In just its third year of exis-
tence, the COCC rugby team will host the Pacific Coast
and Sunday. With two victories in Bend, the Bobcats
will qualify for the Challenge
Bobcats coach Woody Bennett talks to players during practice
Cup semifinals next month in
Friday. COCCopens regional play Saturday against University of the
Pittsburgh. COCC will take on the
Pacific.
Saturday at Mazama Field on San Diego, and Saturday's the COCC campus. Following winners face off Sunday for a that game, San Francisco plays bid to Pittsburgh. Point Loma Nazarene, from With the help of six assistant
Kezakhstan's Denis Ten,
shown competing at the 2014 Sochi Olympics,
could have a ca-
SeeMinors /C4
Regionalschedule
The Bulletin
University of the Pacific on
LaMarcus Aldridge scores two of his 19 points in a 92-89 win over Utah.
Inside
you had 20 wins you'd get in the
coaches, COCC coach Woody Ben n ett has built a solid club in
just three seasons. SeeRugby/X4
Third-place game, 10a.m.; championshi pgame,noon Tickets:Admission is free to the public. Next up:Thewinner of the Pacific Coast championship game will qualify for the National Semifinal Challenge Cup Game to beheld April
to make $1.38 million this year with the Minnesota Twins, but not too long
18 in Pittsburgh.
common pract ice among
The Associated Press file photo
Casey Fien is scheduled
ago he was supplementing his minor league salary with a winter job, a low draft picks.
FIGURE SKATING e
A career journey may reachboth homes
reer highlighted
Blazers snap 5-game skid
by games in his home country and his ancestral
a10-point deficit in the
home of South Korea. For now, the focus is on the present.
fourth quarter. NBA roundup,C3
New York Times News Service file photo
Damian Lillard has 23 points and12 assists, and Portland overcomes
By Christopher Clarey
But for now Ten's focus is much more short term: this week's world figure skating If the pieces and the votes all fall in place, Denis Ten just championships in Shanghai. might compete in the 2018 WinAt age 21, he already has a New York Times News Service
ter Olympics in South Korea,
surprise silver medal from the
his ancestral home, and in the
2013 world championships and abronzemedal from the2014
2022 Games in Almaty, Kazakhstan, his home city.
Sochi Games.
But this sensitive, curious,
border-blurring talent — who can both feel the music and
land quadruple jump after quadruple jump — is now in fine position to fly higher and secure his first gold at a major global event. SeeTen /C4
Inside • Canadian duo takes big lead after first round at worlds, C4
C2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
ON THE AIR
CORKBOARD
TODAY GOLF
EuropeanTour, TropheeHassanII PGA Tour,TexasOpen LPGA Tour, KiaClassic EuropeanTour, TropheeHassanII
Time TV/Radio 7:30 a.m. Golf noon Golf 3 p.m. Golf 4 a.m. (Fri.) Golf
TENNIS
Miami Open,men's1st round, women's2nd round 8 a.m.
Tennis
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Baltimore at Detroit MLB preseason, KansasCity at Seattle MLB preseason, L.A.AngelsatChicagoCubs College, Alabama atFlorida College, Mississippi at Arkansas MLB preseason, OaklandatSan Francisco SOCCER Int'I friendly, Francevs. Brazil
10 a.m.
MLB
1 p.m. MLB, Root 4 p.m. E S PN 4 p.m. SEC 4:30 p.m. ESPNU 7 p.m. MLB 12:55 p.m. ESPN2
BEACH VOLLEYBALI.
College, CSBakersfield at Southern Cal College, St. Mary's (Calif.) at Southern Cal
3 p.m. Pac-12 4:30 p.m. Pac-12
BASKETBALL
Men's NCAAtournament, Wichita St. vs. Notre Dame Men's NCAAtournament, North Carolina vs. Wisconsin Men's NCAAtournament, West Virginia vs. Kentucky Men's NCAAtournament, Xavier vs. Arizona
4 p.m.
CBS
4 :30 p.m. T BS 6:30 p.m. 7 p.m.
CBS TBS
LACROSSE
Women's college, Maryland at Northwestern
4 p.m. B i g Ten
BOXING
Friday Night Fights HOCKEY NHL, Colorado atVancouver
6 p.m.
E SPN2
7 p.m. CSNNW
MOTOR SPORTS
Formula One,Malaysian GrandPrix, practice
11 p.m. NBCSN
FRIDAY MOTOR SPORTS
NASCAR Truck Series, Martinsville, practice NASCAR Sprint Cup, Martinsville, practice NASCAR Truck Series, Martinsville, practice NASCAR Truck Series, Martinsville, final practice NASCAR Sprint Cup, Martinsville, qualifying Formula One,Malaysian GrandPrix, qualifying
7 a.m. 9 a.m.
FS1 FS1
1 0:30 a.m. F S 1 noon FS1
1 :30 p.m. F S 1 2 a.m. N BCSN
GOLF
EuropeanTour, TropheeHassanII 7:30 a.m. Champions Tour, Mississippi Gulf Resort Classic 9 a.m. PGA Tour,TexasOpen noon LPGA Tour, KiaClassic 3 p.m.
Golf Golf Golf Golf
TENNIS
Miami Open, men's andwomen's 2nd round Men's college, Oregon atUCLA
8 a.m. TENNIS 1 p.m. P a c-12
BASEBALL
MLB preseason, Boston at Atlanta MLB preseason, Arizona at L.A. Angels College, Mississippi at Arkansas College, Southern Miss at Rice College, CalPoly at OregonSt. MLB preseason, Seattle at KansasCity College, Oregon atArizona
10 a.m. ESPN 1 p.m. MLB 4 p.m. SEC 4 p.m. FS2 5:30 p.m. KICE 6 p.m. 7 p.m.
940-AM MLB
Pac-12
HOCKEY
Men's NCAA tournament,Yalevs.BostonU. Men's NCAAtournament, Minnesota vs. Minn.-Duluth Men's NCAAtournament, Quinnipiac vs. North Dakota SOCCER Euro 2016 qualifier, Spain vs. Ukraine Euro 2016 qualifier, England vs. Lithuania
11 a.m. ESPNU 2:30 p.m. ESPNU 5 p.m. E SPNU 12:30p.m. ESPN2 12:30 p.m. FS2
SOFTBALL
College, Rutgers at Purdue College, Washington at Oregon College, Arizona St. at Arizona
2 p.m. B i g Ten 3 p.m. P a c-12 5 p.m. P a c-12
BASKETBALL
Men's NCAA tournament,UCLA vs.Gonzaga 4 p.m. CBS Women's NCAA tournament, North Carolina vs. South Carolina 4 p.m. E S PN Women's NCAA tournament, lowa vs. Baylor 4:30 p.m. ESPN2 Men's NCAA tournament, N.C. State vs. Louisvil le 4:30 p.m. T BS Men's NCAAtournament, Utah vs. Duke 6:30 p.m. CBS Women's NCAA tournament, Stanford vs. Notre Dame 6:30 p.m. ESPN Women's NCAA tournament, Arizona St. vs. Florida St. 6:30 p.m. ESPN2 NBA, Portland at Phoenix 7 p.m. CSNNW, KBND 1110-AM, 100.1-FM; KRCO 690-AM, 96.9-FM
Men's NCAAtournament, Michigan St. vs. Oklahoma
7 p.m.
TBS
GYMNASTICS
Men's college,BigTenchampionships
4 p.m. B i g Ten
Listingsarethemostaccurate available. The Bulletinis notresponsible forlate changesmadeby TVor radio stations.
ON DECK Today Baseball: Bendvs. Silver Creek(Colo.) at Coach Bob Invitational inPhoenix, Ariz., 9 a,mcMadras vs. Tillamookat Madras Tournament, 11:30a.m.; CrookCounty, LaPine atMadrasTournament, TBD; Sisters atArizonaChandler PrepTournament, TBD; Summitvs. Reynolds at Salem -Keizer Volcanoes Tournam ent, 2 p.m.; Culvervs.JoseplVEnterprise at LesSchwabIcebreaker Tournament inJohnDay, 1:30p.m. Friday Baseball: Bend vs.BoulderCreek(Ariz.) atCoachBob Invitational inPhoenix,Ariz., 3:30p.m.; Dallasat Mountain View,11a.m.;DallasatRidgeview,4p.m.; Redmond at South Medford(DH), noon;Summit vs. SouthEugeneat Salem-Keizer VolcanoesTournament,11:30amcSummitvs. Maristat Salem-Keizer Volca noesTournament,4: 30 p.m.;CrookCounty, Madras, LaPineatMadrasTournament, TBD;Sisters at ArizonaChandler PrepTournament, TBD;Culver ys. Estacada at Les Schwab Icebreaker Tournament in JohnDay,1:30 p.m. SoflbaN: La PineatSisters, noon Track and field: Decathlon/Heptathlonat Summit, 11a.m. Equeslrian:OH SETCentral District meetatDeschutes Countyfairgrounds, Redmond,8:30a.m.
HOCKEY
IN THE BLEACHERS
NHL NATIONALHOCKEY LEAGUE AN TimesPDT
In the Bleachers O 20t5 Steve Moore. Dist. by Universal Ucuck www.gocomrcs.com/inthebleachers
EaslernConlerence Montreal TampaBay Detroit Ottawa Boston Florida Toronto Buffalo
k R'Uz
Metropolitan Division
GP W L OT Pls GFGA N.Y.Rangers 72 46 19 7 9 9 219 167 N.Y.lslanders 74 44 25 5 93 226 205 Pittsburgh 73 40 22 11 91 202 181 Washington 73 39 24 10 88 212 180 Philadelphia 75 30 29 16 76 196 216 NewJersey 73 31 31 11 73 164 186 Columbus 73 3 4 35 4 7 2 198 228 Carolina 7 2 2 6 36 10 62 165 199
IFPDYI a PolgoNDus r rt'EJ t/r 7/Qh)5HIP RUNIYIEF6
Saturday Baseball: The Dalles atRidgeview(DH),noon; Sisters at Arizona ChandlerPrepTournament, TBD;Summit at Salem-Ke izerVolcanoesTournament, TBD;Culver vs. Umpqua Valley Christian at LesSchwab Icebreaker Tournament inJohnDay,11 a.m. SoflbaN: SouthMedfordat Ridgeview,2:30 p.m.; South MedfordatRedmond,noon Track andfield: Decathlon/Hept athlon at Summ it, 11a.m. Boys lacrosse:Wes t Albanyat MountainView,1p.m. Equeslrian:OHSETCentral District meetatDeschutes Countyfairgrounds,Redmond, 8:30a.m.
Atlantic Oivision GP W L OT Pls GFGA 74 46 20 8 100 195 162 74 46 21 7 99 242 191 72 39 21 12 90 208 195 72 37 24 11 85 212 190 73 36 25 12 84 193 190 73 33 26 14 80 180 201 74 27 41 6 60 193 237 73 20 46 7 47 138 245
To YOO R~5„
HU%YI
St. Louis Nashville Chicago Minnesota Winnipeg Dallas Colorado Anaheim Vancouver Calgary LosAngeles SanJose Edmonton Arizona
Sunday Equeslrian:OH SETCentral District meetatDeschutes Countyfairgrounds, Redmond,8:30a.m.
WeslernConference Central Division GP W L OT Pls GF GA
74 46 21 7 99 226 182 74 45 21 8 9 8 211 178 73 44 23 6 94 207 167 74 42 25 7 91 211 183 74 38 24 12 88 207 195 74 36 28 10 82 232 236 73 33 28 12 78 196 205
Pacific Oivision GP W L OT Pls GFGA 75 46 22 7 99 219 211 73 43 26 4 90 211 195
74 40 27 7 87 217 195 73 36 23 14 86 196 182 73 35 30 8 78 201 206 74 21 40 13 55 177 254 74 22 44 8 52 154 246
Wednesday'sGames
TENNIS
College
Men's college
Professional
Pac-12 AN TimesPDT
NCAAtournament AN TimesPDT
Miami Open Wednesday atKeyBiscayne,Fla. Men Firsl Round DonaldYoung,UnitedStates,def. Yen-hsunLu, Taiwan,5-1,retired. Jan-Lennard Struff, Germany, def. Benjamin Becker, Germ any,3-6, 7-6(10),6-4. CarlosBerlocq,Argentina, def.Thanasi Kokkinakis,
UCLA
Conference Overall W L Pct. W L Pct. 5 5 4 2 4 4 2 2 1 1 0
1 1 2 1 2 2 4 4 5 5 3
.833 18 5 .783 .833 18 6 .750 .667 20 5 .800 .667 20 5 .800 .667 19 6 .760 .667 15 7 .682 .333 17 8 .680 .333 8 15 .348 .167 14 10 .583 .167 12 11 .522 .000 10 11 .476
California OregonSt. SouthernCal Arizona ArizonaSt. Australia, 6-4,3-6r 6-2. Oregon JackSock,UnitedStates,def.GoSoeda,Japan, Utah 6-3,6-4. Washington ChungHyeon,SouthKorea,def. MarcelGranoffers, WashingtonSt Spain,6-0,4-6,6-4. Stanford NicolasAlmagro,Spain, def. SergiyStakhovsky, Ukraine,6-3,6-7(3), 6-4. Wednesday'sGames RobinHaase, Netherlands, def.KyleEdmund,BritOregon12,UCRiverside3 ain, 6-2,6-2. Washington atGonzaga,ccd., rain JarkkoNieminen, Finland,def. MarinkoMatosevic, OregonSt.8, SanJoseSt. 2 Australia,6-3,6-3. a2 Filip Krajinovic,Serbia,def. DusanLajovic, Serbia, FresnoSt.7, Californi Friday's Games 2-6, 7-6(5), 4-2, retired. C aliforni a at Ut a h, 5 p.m JamesDuckworth, Australia, def.DamirDzumhur, SouthernCalatWashingt.on, 5 p.m. Bosnia-Herzegovina, 6-3, 3-6, 6-3. al PolyatOregonSt., 5:35p.m. Albert Ram os-vinolas, Spain,def. JoaoSousa, C UCLA at Washington St., 6p.m. Portugal6-2, , 6-2. S anford atArizonaSt., 6:30 p.m. Women O regon atArizona,7p.m. Firsl Round Saturday'sGames BelindaBencic,Switzerland,def. DanielaHan- Cal PolyatOregon St.,1:35 p.m. tuchova,Slovakia,6-1, 7-6(5). outhernCalatWashington, 2 p.m. Christina McHale,United States, def. Sorana S UCLA at W as hi n gton St., 2p.m. Cirstea,Romania, 7-5,6-4. aliforniaatUtah,4p.m. AnnikaBeck,Germany, def. ZhangShuai, China, C StanfordatArionaSt., 6:30p.m. 6-4,4-6,6-4. OregonatArizona, 7p.m. AlisonRiske,UnitedStates,def. MirjanaLucic-BarSunday'sGames oni, Croatia,6-4,6-0. regonatArizona, 11a.m. Tsvetana Pironkova,Bulgaria, def. Kateryna Kozlo- O UCLA at Washington St., noon va, Ukraine,6-4,6-3. DariaGavrilova,Russia, def.MarinaErakovic, New StanfordatArizonaSt.,12:30 p.m. SouthernCalatWashington, 1p.m. Zealand,5-1,retired. ElenaVesnina, Russia,def. AlexandraDulgheru, Cal PolyatOregonSt.,1:05 p.m. CaliforniaatUtah,2p.m. Romania6-4, , 6-2. HeatherWatson,Britain, def. EvgeiniyaRodina, Russia,3-6,6-1,7-5. UrszulaRadwanska, Poland, def. CocoVandeweBASKETBALL ghe, United States,6-4, 6-7(2), 6-3. StefanieVoegele,Switzerland,def. Kirsten FlipWo m e n's college kens,Belgium,6-2,6-2. PaulineParmentier, France,def.Kiki Bertens,NethNCAAtournament erlands,4-6,6-2,6-3. AN TimesPDT TatjanaMaria,Germany, def. RobertaVinci, Italy, 7-6 (9),6-3. ALBANY REGIONAL NicoleVaidisova,CzechRepublic, def.TimeaBaRegionalSemifinals bos, Hunga ry, 6-1,7-6(4). Saturday'sGames VictoriaAzarenka, Belarus, def. SilviaSoler-Espi- Uconn(34-1)vs.Texas(24-10), 9a.m. nosa,Spain,6-1, 6-3. Julia Goerges,Germany, def. JanaCepelova, Slo- Dayton(27-6)vs.Louisvile(27-6),11:30am. vakia, 6-1,6-0. SPOKANEREGIONAL Alison VanUytvanck, Belgium, def. Magdalena RegionalSemifinals Rybarikova, Slovakia,7-5,2-6, 6-0. Saturday'sGames Maryland (32-2) vs.Duke(23-10),1:30 p.m. Gonzaga(26-7)vs.Tennessee(29-5), 4 p.m. BASEBALL
MLB preseason MAJORLEAGUEBASEBALL AN TimesPDT
Wednesday'sGames
Detroit 8,Miami4 N.Y.Mets7,N.Y.Yankees2 Houston 7, Philadelphia1
TampaBay2,Minnesota1 Toronto5, Baltimore 2 St. Loui1, s Washington 0 Milwaukee 9, Oakland9, tie LA. Dodgers 9, San Diego5 Colorado 5,SanFrancisco2 LA. Angels4,Cleveland3 Chicago White Sox6, KansasCity 0 Seattle 3,ChicagoCubs2 Cincinnati 5, Texas0 Today'sGames N.Y.Yankeesvs. Tampa Bay at Port Charlotte, Fla., 10:05a.m. Miamivs.St.LouisatJupiter, Fla.,10:05a.m. Baltimorevs.Detroit atLakeland, Fla.,10:05a.m. Minnesota vs. Boston atFort Myers, Fla.,10:05a.m. Atlantavs.PittsburghatBradenton, Fla.,10:05a.m. Philadelphiavs.Toronto atDunedin, Fla., 10:07a.m. LA. Dodgers vs. ChicagoWhite Soxat Glendale, Ariz., 1:05 p.m. Cincinnativs.ClevelandatGoodyear, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Kansas Cityvs. Seattle (ss)at Peoria, Ariz.,1:05 p.m. Seattle(ss)vs. Milwaukeeat Phoenix, 1:05p.m. San Diego vs.Arizonaat Scottsdale, Ariz.,1:10 p.m. N.Y.Metsvs. Washington atViera, Fla.,2:05p.m. LA,Angelsvs.ChicagoCubsatMesa,Ariz.,4:05p.m. Colorado vs.Texasat Surprise, Ariz., 6:05p.m. Oakland vs.SanFranciscoatScottsdale,Ariz.,7:05 p.m.
OKLAHOMA CITY REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Friday's Games lowa(26-7)vs.Baylor (32-3), 4:30p.m. NotreDam e(33-2) vs.Stanford (26-9), 7 p.m. GREENSBOROREGIONAL Regional Semifinals
Friday's Games SouthCarolina (32-2)vs.North Carolina(26-8), 4p.m. Arizona St.(29-5) vs.FloridaSt. (31-4),6:30p.m. National Invitation Tournament AN TimesPDT Third Round Wednesday'sGame SouthernMiss76,E.Michigan65 Today'sGames St. John's(23-10)atVilanova(21-13), 4p.m. N.C.State(18-14) atTemple(18-16),4 p.m. Missouri(19-13)at Michigan(18-14), 4p.m. Duquesne (23-10) atWest Virginia (20-14),4 p.m. Mississippi(19-13) atMiddleTennessee(239),5p m. N. Colorado (22-12) at UCLA(15-18),7 p.m. SaintMary's(Calif.) (22-10)atSacramentoSt. (18-15), 10p.m.
Women'sBasketball Invitational AN TimesPDT Semifinals Wednesday'sGame Siena65,Mercer54 Today'sGame OralRoberts(18-15)at La.-Lafayette (21-12), 4 p.m.
EASTREGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Friday's Games N.C.State(22-13) vs. Louisville (26-8),4:37p.m. MichiganSt.(25-11)vs.Oklahoma(24-10), 7:07p.m SOUTHREGIONAL Regional Semifinals Friday's Games UCLA(22-13) vs.Gonzaga(34-2),4:15 p.m. Duke(31-4) vs.Utah(26-8), 6:45p.m. MIOWESTREGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Today'sGames
WichitaSt.(30-4)vs.NotreDame(31-5), 4:15p.m. Kentucky(36-0)vs.West Virginia (29-6),6:45p.m. WEST REGIONAL
Regional Semifinals Today'sGames Wisconsin (33-3)vs.North Carolina(26-11),4:47 p.m Arizona(33-3)vs.Xavier (23-13),7:17p.m. National Invitation Tournament AN TimesPDT
Ouarlerlinals Wednesday'sGames Old Dominion 72,MurraySt. 69 Temple77,LouisianaTech59 Semfinals Tuesday'sGames Stanford(2213)vs. OldDominion(27 7), 4or630pm. Miami(24-12)vs.Temple(26-10), 4or6:30p.m. CollegeBasketballInvitational AN TimesPDT
Semifinals Wednesday'sGames Loyola of Chicago63,Seatle 48 La.-Monroe 71,Vermont 65
ChampionshipSeries (Best-of-3) Monday: Loyolaof Chicago(22-13)vs. La.-Monroe (24-12),TBA Wednesday, April1:LoyolaofChicagovs.Louisiana-Monroe, TBA Friday, April 3: Loyolaof Chicagovs. Louisiana-Monroe, TBA, if necessary CoNegelnsider.com Tournament AN TimesPOT
Ouarlerlinals Wednesday'sGame UT-Martin70,E.Kentucky69 Today'sGame Evansville(21-12)at La.-Lafayette(22-13), 5:30p.m. Friday's Game KentSt,(23-11)at N,Arizona (21-14), 6 p.m. Saturday'sGame Canisius(18-14)at NJIT(20-11),4:30 p.m.
SOCCER MLS MAJORLEAGUESOCCER AN TimesPDT
Saturday'sGames SanJoseatNewEngland, noon OrlandoCityatMontreal, 1 p.m. Los AngelesatD.C, United, 4 p.m. SportingKansasCityat NewYorkCity FC,4p.m. NewYorkatColumbus,4:30 p.m. Portlandat Vancouver, 5 p.m. Seattle atFCDallas, 5:30p.m. Colorado at Houston,5:30 p.m. Sunday'sGames Philadelphiaat Chicago,2p.m. TorontoFCat Real Salt Lake,4 p.m.
MOTOR SPORTS NASCAR Sprint Cup Leaders Wins:KevinHarvick, 2. JimmieJohnson,1. Brad Keselowski,1.JoeyLogano,1 Points: 1, KevinHarvick,225. 2,Joey Logano, 197. 3, MartinTruexJr., 192.4, DaleEarnhardt Jr., 164. 5,BradKeselowski, 163.6, RyanNewman, 162. 7,JimmieJohnson,159.8,KaseyKahne,159.9,Paul Menard,152.10,AricAlmirola,138.
Dallas 4,Calgary3, SO Philadelphia4,Chicago1 Edmonton 4, Colorado3
Today'sGames
AnaheimatBoston, 4 p.m. ArizonaatBuffalo,4 p.m. Los Angeleat s N.Y.Islanders, 4p.m. NewJerseyat Washington, 4p.m. Pittsburgh at Carolina,4 p.m. FloridaatToronto, 4:30p.m. N.Y.Rangersat Ottawa,4:30p.m. SanJoseat Detroit, 4:30p.m. Nashvi lleatTampaBay,4:30p.m. MontrealatWinnipeg,5 p.m.
ColoradoatVancouver7 pm Friday's Games Calgaryat Minnesota, 5p.m. Columbus atChicago,5:30p.m. Dallas atEdmonton, 6:30p.m. Leaders ThroughTuesday's Games Scoring
GP G JohnTavares,NYI 7 4 34 SidneyCrosby,Pit 6 8 24 Alex Ovechkin,Was 72 47 26 JakubVoracek,Phi 7 4 21 NicklasBackstrom,Was 73 18
A PT S 40 74 50 74 73 52 73 5 4 72
Goalies GP MINS GA AVG 60 3605 113 1.88 51 2927 101 2.07 58 3485 121 2.08
DEALS Transactions BASEBALL
AmericanLeague CHICAGO WHITESOX— OptionedCRobBrantly to Charlotte(IL). Reassigned INFJuan Diaz andOF CourtneyHawkinsto minor leaguecamp. CLEVEL AND INDIANS — Released18 Jerrud Sabourin. OAKLANDATHLETICS — Optioned RHP Ryan Cook toNashvile (PCL). TEXASRANGERS— ReleasedLHPEfrainNieves. Traded18MikeMcDadeto Baltimore for future considerations. TORONTOBLUEJAYS— Optioned RHPsChad JenkinsandBoSchultzto Buffalo(IL) National League COLORADOROCKIES— Optioned RHP Tommy Kahnleto Albuquerque(PCL). WASHIN GTON NATIONALS — Reassigned RHP BruceBilingsto minor leaguecamp. BASKETB ALL National Basketball Association ATLANTA HAWKS— Signed FAustin Dayeto a second10-day contract. Italian League PALLACANESTROCANTU — Signed F Metta WorldPeacefor the remainderoftheseason. FOOTBA LL National Football League CHICAGOBEARS— SignedLBMasonFosterto aone-yearcontract. GREENBAYPACKERS— SignedDBKyleSebetic. NEWYORKJETS— SignedTEKellenDavis. SEATTLE SEAHAWKS — Named Dwaine Board assistantdefensiveline coach,Chris Cashassistant secondary/cornerbacks coachandAndreCurtis assistant second ary/safeties coach. TAMPABA YBUCCANEERS—WaivedLBBrandon Magee. National HockeyLeague CAROLINA HURRICANES— Assigned FCarter SandlakfromCharlotte (AHL)to Florida (ECHL). NEW YORKISLANDERS— Reassigned G Kent SimpsonfromBridgeport (AHL)to Stockton(ECHL). NEWYORKRANGERS—ReassignedGMackenzie SkapskitoHarfford(AHL). SOCCER Major LeagueSoccer MLS —Awardedanexpansionfranchiseto Minnesota tobeginplayin 2018. Suspended PhiladelphiaM ZachPfefferasecondgamefor violent conductwhich endang eredthesafety ofan opponent.Suspended VancouverFKekuta Mannehonegamefor seriousfoul play thatendangeredthesafetyof anopponent. VANCOUVERWHITECAPS — Signed F Robert Earnshaw . COLLEGE INDIANA — Announcedmens' basketball G Stanford Robinson wil transfer. IOWA — Granted areleaseto QBJakeRudockto transfer. LSU —Sophomore FJarell Martinannouncedhe is enteringtheNBAdraft. NEVADA — Named Eric Musselmanmen's basketballcoach.
SPORTS IN BRIEF SOFTBALL DuCkS' Win Streak uP to12 —Karissa Hovinga andJasmine Smithson-Willet combined to pitch a six-hit shutout in a 3-0 win over Utah Valley in the secondhalf of a doubleheader Wednesday night in Eugene. Earlier, the Duckswon9-1. Hovinga (7-1) struck out four in five innings before Smithson-Willet came in to earn her first save of the season. Janelle Lindvall had apair of RBls in thesecond gamefor the Ducks (28-3), who havewon12 straight. In the opener, Hailey Decker hit a grand slam in the bottom of the sixth to force the mercy rule. Aylssa Gillespie andGeri Ann Glasco hadhome runs, and Glasco (6-0) struck out10 in a complete gametwo-hitter.
BASEBALL Grand Slam leads DuCkS OVer UCRiVerSide — Josh Graham hit a grand slam to highlight a seven-run third inning asOregonwon12-3 at UC Riverside onWednesday afternoon for the two-game sweep. It was the first home run of the seasonfor Graham, who hadthree hits and six RBls in the Ducks' third straight win. ShaunChaseadde atwo-run single in the third. Jacob Corn (2-0) allowed three runs onnine hits in five innings while striking out four.
BeaVerS COme baCk to beat San JOSe State — OregonState used a six-run seventh inning to comebackagainst San Jose State for an 8-2 win Wednesdayand atwo-game sweep in Corvallis. Jeff Hendrix and Trever Morrison hadback-to-back RBIsingles to give the Beavers a 3-2 lead before GabeClark hit a three-run home run and Michael Howard followed it with a solo shot. John Pomeroy (2-0) pitched 1'/ innings of no-hit relief after starter Kevin Flemerstruck out five in 6'/ innings. The Beavers (20-5) havewon five straight.
SKIING Duffy, MCKennis Win natiOnal SuPer-G titleS —DrewDuffy turned in a speedyrun from a late starting position to win the men's super-G onWednesday at the U.S.Alpine Championships in Maine. Earlier in the day, Alice McKennis cappedoff a comeback seasonwith her first national title in the women's super-G.Against a field that included Olympic medalists and World Cupwinners, the19-year-old Duffy had a run he described as a"little out of control" to finish in an unofficial time of 1 minute, 19.73 seconds. TommyFord, of Bend, placed 18th. McKennis returned to the World Cupcircuit this season after a crash in March 2013 shattered the top of her shinbonenear her kneeinto 30 pieces. Laurenne Ross, of Bend, placed sixth.
SOCCER Pair Of late gOalSSendSlj.S. to lOSS—Nicklas Bendtnercompleted his first international hat trick with an injury-time winner asDenmark beat visiting United States 3-2 in afriendly Wednesday in Aarhus. Bendtner hadequalized twice to cancel out Jozy Altidore's opener in the 19th minute andAron Johannsson's strike in the second half before driving home thewinning goal. Ahead of thematch, U.S. coach Klinsmannhad ruled out teamcaptain Clint Dempsey, who hasa right hamstring strain.
FOOTBALL SeahaWks add 3 defenSiVe aSSiStant COaCheS — TheSeatle Seahawks announcedthe additions of three assistant coaches to the defensive staff Wednesday.Assistant defensive line coach DwaineBoard is returning to Seattle, where hespent six seasons as the defensive line coach in the mid-2000s on coachMike Holmgren's staff. Seattle also added Chris CashandAndre Curtis as assistant secondary coaches. Cash will work with cornerbacks andCurtis will work with safeties. Cash played for Seattle coachPeteCarroll at Southern California. Curtis was an assistant secondary coach with NewOrleans the past three seasons. — From staffand wire reports
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 20t5 • THE BULLETIN
NBAROUNDUP
ral
C3
NFL ROUNDUP
azerscome ac rom own, sna - ames I
Chip I(ellyopensup about Eagles'moves Bulletin wire reports
the Seahawks' division ri-
P HOENIX —
val s , Ji m T omsula of t h e
M a ybe i t
game Wednesdaynight.They were on the verge of exactly that, trailing by 10 points in the fourth quarter, when the third-year point guard from
was a coincidence, but on San Francisco 49ers, might Wednesday Philadelphia Ea- take note. Speaking with a gles coach Chip Kelly sat in smaller group of reporters the same chair that New En- Wednesday, Tomsula said glandPatriotscoachBillBeli- he was still getting used to chick did Tuesday. the extra attention of being But Belichick and Kelly a head coach instead of a decould not be more different. fensive line coach, his former Belichick showed up 15 min- job. "I understand the job you utes late to the AFC coaches' roundtable Tuesday and was guys have to do," he said
nearby Weber Statedecided
as curt and dismissive as
to attack the basket again and again and again. points, 12 assists and eight rebounds and the Blazers beat
ever. Kelly arrived on time to "This is me. I can't fake it." the NFC segment Wednesday and was expansive on a range of topics, engaging re changing extra points porters who lobbed question T h e N F L i nstructed its
the Utah Jazz 92-89.
after question his way.
The Associated Press SALT LAKE CITY — Damian Lillard refused to let the
reeling Portland Trail Blazers lose their sixth consecutive
L illard f i nished w it h
23
"I don't think it's a big win like we just beat Golden State a big win because of the fivegame losing streak," Lillard said. "It came down to the last
few minutes of the game and we haven't been great in that
timeframe, closing games the last month or so. "But with the losing streak,
on the road, against a team that's been playing well, it's a big win in that way." Lillard scored eight points in the third quarter and 13 points in the fourth. LaMarcus Al-
dridge added 19 points and
Rick Bowmer/The Associated Press
Portland's LaMarcus Aldridge, left, and Damian Lillard celebrate in the fourth quarter of their 92-89 victory over Utah on Wednesday night in Salt Lake City.
Nextup
had 18 and Chicago moved I'/2
nine rebounds.
Portland "We needed a win and there at Phoenix was satisfaction we found When: 7 p.m. Friday a way to win even after we didn't shoot the ball well for TV:CSNNW most of the game," Blazers Radio:KBND1110-AM, 100.1-FM; coach Terry Stotts said. "For KRCO690-AM, 96.9-FM us, it was a gritty win and we did it a little unconventionally and Houston handed New Orand I think it's satisfying." leans its fourth straight loss. Also on Wednesday: Spurs 130, Thunder 91: SAN Cavaliers 111, Grizzlies 89: ANTONIO — T ony P arker MEMPHIS, Tenn. — Kyrie Ir- had 21 points and six assists ving scored 24 points, Kevin and San A n t onio s topped Love added 22 points and 10 Oklahoma City's four-game rebounds, and Cleveland won winning streak. its fourth straight and eighth Hawks 95, Magic 83: ORin nine. LANDO, Fla. — Paul Millsap Rockets 95, Pelicans 93: had 25 points and 11 rebounds NEW ORLEANS — J ames Harden had 25 points and 10 assists, Dwight Howard had seven rebounds in his return
c ompetition committee t o
Surrounded formulate a proby a s e micirposal to modify the extr a p o int. cle of television /f yPU gUt cameras, Kelly yp U f.Sg/f fpi The own e rs are explained t h e Oi l 6 6 8I ' to consider that flurry of moves proposal and pothe Eagles have OAt-' gUy, tentially vote on made this offsea- pp l/OSppp/C8//y it a t t h e ir next son, i n d uding / d p i i.~ ~~>ii/f meet i ng ™ y t rading a w ay in San Francisrunning back Le- fl 78f.S PIIB I'Igtlf. c o. The new forSean McCoy and (/ Iliig fp dp " mat for the extra acquiring injured point, if ratified
or something like that, but it's
After a two-point first half,
as Atlanta snapped a three-
LOTTE, N.C. — Brook Lo-
games ahead of the Raptors pez had 34 points and 10 refor third place in the Eastern bounds, and Brooklyn handed Conference. Charlotte its fifth loss in six Clippers 111, Knicks 80: games. N EW Y ORK — De A n d r e Lakers 101, Timberwolves
quarterback Sam
— Philadelphia then, w ould
the Eagles were able to sign
99: MINNEAPOLIS — Jordan
shooting percentage above 71 percent by making all seven shots and scoring 14 points for Los Angeles. Pacers 103 Wizards 101: WASHINGTON — George Hill made a driving layup with
Clarkson hit two free throws
season. Kelly said he expect- N F L kickers.
with 0.3 seconds left in over-
ed Bradford's knee to be fully O n e possibility is to give a healed but had not seen him team the option of snapping play yet. Drafting Mariota the ball from the 15-yard line would be nice, Kelly said, f or anextrapointorfromthe but he would be unwilling to I~/2-yard line for a two-point
time to lift Los Angeles past Minnesota. Clarkson scored eight points in overtime and finished with 20 as the Lakers
snapped a five-game road losing streak. and snap the Pacers' six-game 76ers 99, Nuggets 85: DENlosing streak. Hill scored 29 VER — Rookie Robert Covpoints, including 12 in the ington tied a career high with fourth quarter as Indiana ral- 25 points to lead Philadelphia. lied from a 10-point deficit. Kings 108, Suns 99: PHOE2.7 seconds left to lift Indiana
Heat 93, Celtics 86: BOS-
NIX —
D e M arcus Cousins
scored 24 points, all but four coming in the first three quarters, and grabbed 11 rebounds to lead Sacramento.
trade many draft picks to get c o nversion attempt. Currenthim. ly, the ball is snapped from
"If you gut yourself for one the 2-yard line for both. year, one guy, philosophicalAtl a nta Falcons President ly, I don't thinkthat'sthe right Rich McKay said there also thingto do," said Kelly, who is was talk of narrowing the entering his third season as
Cavaliers111, Grizzlies 89
PORTULND (92) CLEVEL AND(rn) EasternConference Crabbe3-6 0-0 8, Aldridge7-18 5-6 19, Lopez James7-153-4 20, Love10-130-0 22, Mozgov W L Pct GB 2-6 0-0 4, Lillard6-1610-1023,Afflalo 3-81-2 7, 5-74-414, Irving 9-214-5 24,J.Smith 5-100-013, y-Atlanta 54 17 761 Freeland 3-30-06, McCollum3-61-27, Wright6-14 Perki ns1-2 0-0 2,Shumpert2-8 0-0 5,Thompson x-Cleveland 47 26 644 8 0-015, Blake1-40-03.Totals 34-8117-2092. 1-1 0-0 2,Dellavedova3-5 0-09, Jones0-2 0-0 0, x-Chicago 44 29 603 u UTAH(89) Miller 0-0 0-0 0,Marion0-0 0-0 0. Totals 43-84 x-Toronto 42 30 583 12'/2 11-13111. Millsap4-100-49,Favors9-198-926,Gobert5-8 Washington 40 32 556 14'I~ 2-412, Burke9-194-4 22,Exum1-5 0-0 3, Ingles MEMPHIS (89) Milwaukee 35 36 493 19 4-101-210,Clark1-40-03, Booker1-40-02,CoolAllen 3-110-07, Randolph2-81-2 5, Gasol 1-15 Miami 33 38 465 21 ey1-1 0-02.Totals35-8015-2389. 4-618, Conley4-70-010, Lee0-3 0-1 0, Je.Green Boston 31 40 437 23 0-20-00, Koufos4-40-08, Udrih Porlland 12 25 18 37 — 92 4-0 3-4u, Carter Indiana 31 40 437 23 Utah 21 18 26 24 — 89 7-10 1-1 15,Calathes3-7 0-06, Adams2-5 0-0 5, Brooklyn 30 40 429 23'/z 3-PointGoals—Portland7-27(Wright3-7, Crabbe Ja.Green 1-22-2 4, Leuer0-0 0-0 0. Totals 37-85 Charlotte 30 40 429 23i/z 2-4, Blake1-4, Lillard 1-6, McCollum0-1, Aldridge 11-16 89. Detroit 27 44 380 27 0-2, Afflalo0-3), Utah4-16 (Clark 1-3, Exum1-3, Cleveland 22 33 36 20 — 111 Orlando 22 51 301 33 Millsap1-3,Ingles1-4,Burke0-1, Favors0-1, Booker Memphis 19 23 24 23 — 89 Philadelphia 18 54 250 36'/z 0-1). FouledOut—None. Rebounds—Portland 54 NewYork 14 58 194 40'/2 (Aldridge9), Utah49(Favors13). Assists—Portland WesternConference 19 (Lillard12),Utah12(Burke3). Total Fouls—Port- Clippers111, Knicks 80 W L Pct GB land 18, Utah 20. Technicals—Booker. A—19,9u y-Golden State LA. CLIPPERS (111) 58 13 817 (19,90). x-Memphis Barnes4-10 0-0 u, Griffin 3-88-0 14, Jordan 50 22 694 8i/~ 7-70-214, Redi c k 7-111-1 17, Paul5-80-0u, RivHouston 48 23 676 10 d-Portland ers 9-102-2 21,Hawes3-6 0-0 7, Turkoglu0-40-0 45 25 643 12'/z Bulls116, Raptors103 0, Hamilton1-40-03,Jones1-20-02, Davis2-31-2 LA. Clippers 47 25 653 u'/z CHICAGO (116) 5,Wilcox2-4 0-06,Udoh0-10-0 0.Totals44-78 SanAntonio 45 26 634 13 Dunleavy 4-5 0-0 9, G a sol 7-17 4-418, Noah 4-4 12-18111. Dallas 45 27 625 13'Iz NEWYORK(80) Oklahoma City 41 31 569 17'/z 1-29, Brooks6-140-016, Butler7-87-923, Gibson Amundson0-3 0-0 0, Thomas6-15 2-2 14, Phoenix 38 34 528 20'/z 1-1 0-0 2, Hinrich3-5 0-0 7,Mirotic 6-112-215, Snell7-90-017.Totals 45-7414-17116. Bargnani 2-72-2 6, Larkin1-20-0 2, Galloway5-13 NewOrleans 37 34 521 21 1-1 11,Aldrich0-41-21, Smith2-84-48, Early5-12 Utah 31 40 437 27 TORONTO(103) 6-618, Ledo 5-140-012, Acy3-41-2 8. Totals 29Denver 27 45 375 31'/~ RossT-u 0-016, AJohnson3-6 2-58, valanci8217-19 80. Sacramen to 26 45 366 32 Unas4-9 0-08, Vasquez7-15 2-222, DeRozan7-19 LA. Lakers 19 51 271 38'/2 6-6 20, Patterson1-3 1-1 3, J.Johnson2-5 4-4 8, LA. Clippers 28 3 5 27 21 — 111 Minnesota 16 55 225 42 Williams8-131-1 18,Hansbrough0-20-0 0.Totals New York 17 16 21 26 — 80 d-diyisionleader 39-83 16-19103. x-clinched playoffspot Chicago 20 30 27 39 — 116 y-clinched division Toronto 29 25 28 21 — 103 Hawks 95, Magic 83 ATLANTA (95) Wednesday'sGames Lakers101, Timberwolves99(OT) Carroll 5-121-311, Millsap 9-205-5 25,Horford Indiana103, Washington101 5-12 0-0 10,Teague 7 -12 0-0 16, Korver5-120-013, Chicago116, Toronto103 LA. LAKERS (101) Antic 2-4 0-0 5,Bazemore 2-3 0-0 4, Schroder4-13 Atlanta95, Orlando83 Johnson3-6 0-06, Kelly4-13 2-211, Black5-6 1-211,Sefolosha0-10-00, Brand0-10-00, Muscala Brooklyn91,Charlotte 88 1-211, Lin6-146-619, Clarkson6-168-820, Davis 0-00-00. Totals 39-907-1095. LA. clippers u1, NewYork80 7-9 0-0 14,Ellington3-19 0-0 7, Sacre2-5 0-04, ORULNDQ l83) Miami93,Boston86 J.Brown 3-40-09. Totals 39-9217-18101. Harris 6-141-2 14,Dedmon0-1 0-0 0, Vucevic Houston95, NewOrleans93 MINNESOT A (99) 8-15 0-016,Payjon7-195-719, Oladipo4-108-9 Cleveland111, Memphis 89 Wiggins8-1610-0 27, Payne2-61-2 5, Dieng 16, Green 2-40-05, Ridnour0-40-00, Nicholson4-7 LA. Lakers101, Minnesota99, OT 4-6 2-210, L Brown 4-9 0-08, LaVi n e 5-187-818, 2-211,A.Gordon 0-10-00, Frye1-30-Oz Totals Philadelphia 99, Denver 85 Budinger 9-141-1 22, Ki l p atrick 1-7 2-2 5, Ha m i l t on 32-7816-20 83. Portland92, Utah89 0-24-44. Totals 33-7827-30 99. Atlanta 23 24 21 27 — 95 SanAntonio130,OklahomaCity 91 LA. Lakers 2 4 25 24 17 11 — 101 Orlando 31 21 19 12 — 83 Sacramento108, Phoenix 99 Minnesota 1 5 2 8 23 24 9 — 99 Today'sGame Indiana at Milwaukee,8 p.m. Nets 91, Hornets 88 Friday's Games Heat 93, Celtics 86 LA. ClippersatPhiladelphia, 4p.m. BROOKLYN (91) CharlotteatWashington,4 p.m. MIAMI (93) Johnson2-90-1 5, Young5-121-1 11,Lopez16Detroit atOrlando,4 p.m. Deng5-154-515, Walker4-80-012, Haslem5-9 26 2-2 34,D.Wiliams2-9 5-510, Brown2-5 0-04, Miami atAtlanta,4:30p.m. 2-312, G.Dragic8-16 4-6 22,Chalmers 3-8 0-16, Bogdanvoic2-60-04,Plumlee2-40-04,Jack2-8 LA. Lakers at Toronto,4:30p.m. Johnson581-212,Ennis1-43 46, Beasley2 52 2 2-2 6, C.Jefferson 0-20-0 0, Anderson6-10 0-013. Cleveland atBrooklyn,4:30 p.m. 6, Napier1-40-0 zTotals 34-77 16-2393. Totals 39-9110-1191. Bostonat NewYork, 4:30p.m. BOSTON (86) GHARL0TTE l88) Sacramento atNewOrleans, 5p.m. Turner1-52-24,Bass3-63-69, Zeller4-52-210, Kidd-Gilchrist 3-80-0 6, Ma.Wiliams3-8 0-0 8, Minnesotaat Houston, 5p.m. Smart1-83-46, Bradley4-92-312, Thomas2-7 0-3 A.Jefferson11-191-2 23,Walker4-13 3-511, HenGoldenStateat Memphis, 5p.m. 4, Olynyk1-3 2 24, Crowder 410 80 16, Jerebko derson10-19 3-4 23,M.Wiliams2-104-6 9, SteDallasatSanAntonio, 5:30p.m. 2-7 0-0 4,Wallace0-0 0-0 0, Pressey4-6 3-4 11, phenson1-81-2 3,Biyombo2-51-1 5, Maxiel 0-1 Utah atDenver,6p.m. 0-00. Totals 36-9113-2088. Datome 2-30-06.Totals28-6925-3786. Portlandat Phoenix, 7p.m. Miami 27 30 25 11 — 93 Brooklyn 23 19 26 23 — 91 Boston 20 20 22 24 — 86 Charlotte 26 20 18 24 — 88
Summaries
Rockets 95, Pelicans 93 HOUSTON (95)
Ariza 9-131-122, Motiejunas10-160-021,Howard 2-30-0 4,Harden9-20 6-925, Terry 0-32-2 2, Dorsey4-50-08, Prigioni1-40-0 2, Brewert-r 0-0 2, Smith4-100-09.Totals 40-819-1295.
INDIANA (103)
S.Hill 3-85-613,West5-90-210, Hibbert0-60-0 0, G.Hill 12-245-529, Miles5-103-416, Rudez4-9 0-011, Mahinmi1-11-43, Wa tson4-0 2-311,Scola 0-22-42,Allen4-50-08.Totals38-8518-28103.
WASHINGTO N(101) Pierce1-41-24, Nene 3-84-610, Gortat7-102-2 16, Wall 0-2110-1134,Beal2-50-05, Web ster1-6 4-66,Sessions1-55-67,Gooden2-40-04,Butler 3-63-410,Seraphin2-61-1 5, Porter0-00-00. Totals 33-75 30-38101. Indiana 14 28 28 33 — 103 34 1 8 18 23 — 93 Washington 20 24 32 25 — 101
NEWORLEANS(93)
Pondexter4-101-210, Davis9-18 6-1424, Asik 3-5 0-0 6,Gordon0-5 6-8 6, Evans10-164-4 28, Ajinc a3-52-28,Cunningham 3-71-27,Cole2-90 0 4. Totals 34-7520-32 93. Houston 19 30 29 17 — 95
Newerleans
Pacers103,Wizards101
76ers 99, Nuggets 85 PHILADELPHIA (99) Sampson 2-41-26,Grant2-51-26,Noel5-84-7 14, Smith4-90-09, Richardson3-131-2 8,Robinson 2-4 0-0 4,Aldemir 2-40-0 4, Canaan4-115-615, Covin gton8-173 325,Thompson3 90 08,Robinson III0-00-00. Totals35-8415-22 99.
g o al posts. But that, he said,
theEagles'coach. would affect field goals as Kelly even cracked a joke well as extra points. Acor two. Asked what it was like c o r ding t o
M c K ay, some
to call the Rams to make the coaches advocated doing tradeforBradford,Kellysaid:
a w a y w ith the extra point
"It was scary. I didn't know altogether and having the howto operate thephone." ba l l snapped from the 2-yard Sitting at another table, l i n e f o r a t w o -point conSeattle Seahawks coach Pete v ersion attempt after every
Carroll described how he had touchdown. trusted his gut in the Super
Trail Blazers 92, Jazz89
w a n t to infuse some uncer-
Jordan raised the NBA's best
NBA SCOREBOARD All Times PDT
be
Bradford, and he coach Chip Kelly put into effect for also d i scussed o n the possibility of the up c oming the possibility of t r a ding up to select season. drafting Oregon Marc us Mariota T h e N F L e xquarterback Marperimented with cus Mariota. a longer extra McCoy, he said, had asked point during the preseason for too much money, and l ast year. League leaders DeMarco Murray and Ryan tainty into a play that has beMathews for less money this come virtually automatic for
game losing streak. TON — Goran Dragic had Bulls 116, Raptors 103: TO- 22 points and seven assists to RONTO — J i m m y B u t l er lead Miami. from a two-month absence, scored 23 points, Pau Gasol Nets 91. Hornets 88: CHAR-
Standings
w i t h a p parent earnestness.
Tea m s w ant the defense
Bowl when he called a pass to be permitted to score if it play that was intercepted by blocks a kick or generates
Spurs130, Thunder 91 OKLAHOMA CITY (91)
Singler1-21-2 3,Kanter714 2216, Adams2 5
0 0 4, westbrook5-166 616, waiters5-u 2 214, Morrow 3-40-06,McGary3-62-28,Augustin2-7 0-06, Novak1-50-03, Jones3-130-06, Lamb4-7 0-09. Totals 36-9013-1491. SAN ANTONIO (130) Leonard5-9 3-414, Duncan5-9 5-616, Splitter 3-6 3-4 9, Parker10-14 0-0 21, Green4-7 0-0 10, Diaw 9-150-0 19,Belinelli 2-4 0-0 6, Ginobili 1-3 4-4 7, Bonner2-30-05, Mills 4-60-011, Ayres5-6 0-1 10,Joseph1-40-02, Wiliams 0-20-00. Totals 51-8815-1 9130. OklahomaCit y 2 8 2 2 24 17 — 91 SanAntonio 32 3 929 30 — 130
the Patriots and cost his team a t u r n over on a t w o-point a chance at consecutive titles. c o nversion and returns the
"I coach the way I coach," ball to the opposite goal line,
Carroll said, in what sounded M c Kay said.
l ikeawell-rehearseddefense I n o n e c hange to t he ofhis decision."That'sbased rules, the owners Wedneson years of experience and day approved a proposal to extraordinary preparation. I r equire an eligible receiver don't have all the answers; I who reports as ineligible (a have my answers, I have the t a ctic used by New England
answers of mystaff. Wetryto against Baltimore during stick to that as best we can." t h e AFC playoffs) to line up Carroll could not escape
Kings108, Suns99 SACRAME NTO(108) casspi4-100-010, Gay3-78-914, cousinsu-
19 2-3 24, McCallum6-11 2-2 14,McLemore 5-9 0-012, Williams4-8 3-412, Stauskas5-71-1 13, Thompson1-50-02, Miller1-54-4 7,Evans0-00-0 0. Totals 40-8120-23108. PHOENIX (99)
Marc.uorris 7-0 2-219, Mark.Morris9-165-6 24, Len2-7 2-26, Bledsoe7-153-519, Tucker1-11 1-43, Goodwi6-123415, n Warren2-20-04, Wright 2-51-3 5, Price0-2 0-00, Green2-6 0-04. Totals 38-87 17-2699. Sacramento 31 2 7 25 25 — 108 Phoenix 26 27 17 29 — 99
Leaders
w i t h i n t hetacklebox. Thatis
questions about the Super designed to make the use of Bowl, but he appeared as such a tactic less confusing jovial and energetic as ever, t o the defense.
a nd as comfortable with reChi c ago's proposal t o porters as any coach in the guarantee each team at least room. one possession in overtime The new coach of one of wasrejectedbytheowners.
NHL ROUNDUP
roughTuesday'sGames Westbrook, OKC Harden,HOU James,CLE Davis,NOR Cousins,SAC Aldridge,PO R Curry,GO L Griffin, LAC Irving,CLE Thompson, GOL Wade,MIA Lillard,POR Gay,SAC Butler,CHI Hayward,UTA Vucevic,ORL
Scoring G FG FT PTS AVG
FG Percentage FG FGA PCT
Jordan,LAC Plumlee,Bro A.Johnson,TOR Valanciunas,TOR Gortat,WAS Jordan,LAC Drummond,DET CousinsSAC Gasol,CHI Chandler,DAL Vucevic,ORL Randolph,MEM Aldridge,PO R Monroe,DET Davis,NOR
Paul, LAC Wall, WAS Lawson,DEN DENVER (85) WestbrookOKC Chandler4-144-416,Gallinari 3-101-28, Faried3-9 Rondo,DAL 3-4 9, lawson 6-165-619, Foye2-7 0-0 5, Barton 2-6 Curry,GO L 22 6,Hickson3 62 58, Nurkic 002-4 2,Nelson6-16 James,CLE 0-012,HarrisH 0-00. Totals 29-8419-2785. Teague,ATL Philadelphia 22 2 7 23 27 — 99 Harden,HOU Denver 21 25 30 9 — 85 Lowry,TOR
56 5 1 0455 1540 27.5 69 548 606 1875 27.2 61 564 345 1580 25.9 56 537 304 1379 24.6 54 440 402 1284 23.8 61 567 267 1432 23.5 69 555 275 1618 23.4 56 487 261 1243 22.2 67 520 284 1463 21.8 66 5 1 5198 1428 21.6 52 433 237 1125 21.6 69 500 305 1474 21.4 64 479 311 1343 21.0 56 367 336 1129 20.2 68 443 334 1330 19.6 64 543 152 1240 19.4 321 258 273 316 369
453 .709 443 .582 475 .575 557 .567 660 .559
Rebounds G OFFDEF TOTAVG 71 341 71 381 54 166 68 191 66 263 64 208 60 201 61 158 64 216 56 147
712 1053 14.8 570 951 13.4
497 663 1z3
621 812 11.9 487 750 0.4 502 710 11.1 453 654 10.9 479 637 10.4 451 667 10.4 436 583 10.4
Assl8t8
G
71 71 66 56 59 69 61 64 69 66
AST AVG 716 10.1 701 9.9 643 9.7 489 472 544 446 448 481 454
8.7 8.0 7.9 7.3 7.0 7.0 6.9
Failed comebackhurts Avs' small playoff hopes The Associated Press EDMONTON, Alberta-
Derek Roy helped the Edmonton Oilers recover after giving up an early three-goal lead. Roy scored the tiebreaking goal midway through the third period as the Oilers beat the Colorado Avalanche 4-3 on Wednesday night. Martin Marincin, Jordan
Eberle and Taylor Hall all scored in the first 9:36 of
"We needed these points
and it is disappointing not to get them," Colorado defenseman Nick Holden said. "It
was a big game for us to stay up in the standings. Not getting those points is killer. We still have nine games left and you never know. We need to keep pushing right to the end and hopefully we get some luck." Also on Wednesday night: Flyers 4, Blackhawks 1:
the game for the Oilers, who PHILADELPHIA — Claude have won two of their last Giroux had his 22nd goal of three games. the season — his first evenScrivens finished with 31 strength score at homesaves. and Steve Mason stopped 34 Jarome Iginla and Alex shots to lead Philadelphia. Tanguay scored in the secStars 4, Flames 3: CALond period, and Ryan O'Reil- GARY, A l berta — Ales ly tied it early in the third for
H emsky scored t w ice
the Avalanche, who have
regulation, Tyler Seguin had the only goal in the shootout,
lost three in a row and are
in
10 points out of a playoff and Dallas won for the sevspot with just nine games enth time in its past eight remaining. games.
C4
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
Rugby
PREP ROUNDUP
Lava Bearsnotch 8-inning win in Arizona Bulletin staff report GOODYEAR, Ariz. — Ja-
PREP SCOREBOARD
cob Parsons scored the tieBaseball breaking run on a double steal CoachBohInvitational (Ariz.) in the top of the eighth inning, (5 innings) and Brian Blasquez held Bend 001 000 01 — 2 5 3 BreenMountain 000 001 00 — 1 3 2 Green Mountain (Colorado) scoreless in the bottom half
of the inning as Bend High claimed a 2-1 win on the second day of the Coach Bob Invi-
tational baseball tournament. Blasquez, who was the second half of the go-ahead double steal, struck out four batters and stranded five runners in three scoreless innings for the win. Starting pitcher Kota Carter struck out 10 in five 11111111gs.
Also on Wednesday:
Banks 13, Madras 2: MADRAS — The White Buffaloes
Baseball
(0-3) rallied to score two runs La Pine 12, Crook County 2: in the bottom of the fifth inning
MADRAS — La Pine scored eight runs in the bottom of the
but could not close the 11-run
deficit any further, and the 10fifth inning to down Crook run ruleended thecontestafter County in five innings on the five innings on the opening day MadrasTournament (5 innings) first day of the Madras Tourna- of the Madras Tournament. CrookCounty 10010 —26 7 ment. Tyler Ashcraft had two Madras pitchers Aaron Win— 127 0 LaPine 121 00 hits, including a double, and ishut, Austin R auschenburg (5 innings) Banks — 139 3 Angelo Roes had three RBIs to and Chad Thurby allowed a 331 60 lead the Hawks (3-1) offensive- combined nine hits in five in— 23 6 Madras 000 02 ly. Jake Farnsworth pitched nings of work. Justin Parsons gave the four innings for the victory, North Marion 6, Rtdgeview 5: Bears (4-1) a 1-0 lead in the and John Malsom finished PORTLAND — The Ravens third inning, scoring on a sac- with a scoreless inning of relief. slipped to 1-4 with the one-run rifice fly after reaching base Chase McCall, Trevor Slawter loss on the second day of the and then stealing second and and Spencer Copeland each hit North Marion Tournament. No third. a double for the Cowboys (2-2). game details were reported.
Continued from C1 The Bobcats (8-1) won the Pacific Northwest Rug-
by Union Small College League. Their only loss was to Oregon State. "Our goalfor three years has been to get 30 guys so we can scrimmage," Bennett said. "That's the beautiful thing about rugby, you can be a track star, wrestler, baseball player ... good high
that has returned the past
s chool athletes wh o j u s t didn't have that one next
that first spring in 2012." The COCC roster includes a number of players with local roots, including Alex
level." Bennett, 72, said he helped
start Oregon State's first rugby club as a student and player in Corvallis in 1962. He later coached the university's rugby team from 1971-84 while working as an educator at Philomath High School. After serving as the football coach at Crook
County from 2008 to 2010, Bennett started the COCC rugby club in 2012 with the
Minors
was like, 'Oh, nice to see you."'
Continued from C1 First-round draft picks re-
shius, who spent six seasons in the San Francisco Giants sys-
ceive
tem, dabbled in personal train-
Former pitcher Garrett Bro-
multimillion-dollar
signing bonuses, but by the 10th round, players get about $140,000 in guarantees. The bonuses drop sharply farther down the board. Minor league living is hardly large. Meal money, for one, is tough to stretch beyond Pizza
ing while makingminor league money, and spent a couple of winters with a cognitive psychologist on memory research. His ballplayer friends varied widely on work. One sold women's shoes at Macy's over the holidays. Another worked for a dog-walking service. Then there was the Jimmy John's sandwich delivery guy. "On abike he bought offof Craigslist," Broshius said. "Ap-
Hut and pales in comparison
to the majors. The minimum salary for a player in Class A is $1,100 per month over a fivemonth season. In Triple-A, it is
$2,150 per month. Prospects on
parently the brakes didn't work too well, so it didn't seem too
the 40-man roster make at least
$41,400 annually while they
safe."
Tony Guuerrez/The Associated press
are still in the minors, but that
Minnesota prospect Taylor Rogers, an11th-round draft pick out of
is a category that covers only up to 15 of the 150-plus minor leaguers in most organizations. Unglamorous jobs outside the game can be important, humbling reminders for aspiring major leaguers to appreciate their athletic talent and op-
Kentucky who played Double-A ball last year, considered working
Sometimes, staying in the sport is best. Fien dabbled in
in the offseason as a carpenter or firefighter.
pitching lessons to supplement
portunity. After all, this place-
holder work can be a career for others. Twins bullpen coach Eddie Guardado gained that perspective at a bait shop in his Stockton, C a lifornia, h o metown duringthe 1994-95 strike, when
his majorleague career was just beginning. "Springtrainingdrags, absolutely, but guess what? It beats coming to the bait shop and
shelling dams," Guardado said. Being hired can be another matter, though. Players are typically available only from October through February, if they are not invited to instructional
league or Latin American winter ball. They need time to train, too, so hours can be tricky.
"I interviewed about 15 plac-
the warehouse work, for ex-
ample. Others try to plant the es and heard back from one," firefighters and carpenters, but seeds ofa sustainable second said 7wins prospect Taylor the occupations are not ideal career. Rogers, recalling his 2013-14 for a guy trying to stay healthy Miami Marlins p itching offseason with a D enver-ar- and fit for baseball. prospect Pat Urckfitz started "That kind of takes down the his own hunting-calls business ea substance-abuse counseling servicefor off enders on percentage of jobs you can find three years ago. Yep, just like probation. where you're not going to wear the bearded Robertson famiAn internship was offered, yourself out or risk putting a ly on the reality show "Duck but he could not make himself nail into your finger," Rogers Dynasty." available enough. So he was as- sald. Beaver Creek Game Calls signed to supervise urinalysis There is less risk at the gro- sells handmade (by Urckfitz testing instead. cery store, but it makes for himself), hand-tuned callers for "To make sure they weren't amusing encounters. Work- duck, goose, deer and turkey doing any drugs. So I would ing one winter at the Rainbow hunters. The shop is open four watch them do that. I didn't Foods in his hometown of Shor- months a year between basehave to handle the samples. eview, Minnesota, 7wins pitch- ball seasons. His partners take I just made sure they weren't ing prospect Mark Hamburg- the calls to trade shows around tampering with it," Rogers said. er noticed the team's minor the country. "It just kind of happened where league director in the next line. "At first I started making "I was wearing my apron them for my friends. Then the I couldn't find anything else. It's tough to get a seasonal part- and everything," Hamburg- word got out about them, so time job." er said, smiling. "He was like, then I started selling them to Rogers, an 11th-round pick 'Mark Hamburger! What are people," Urckfitz said. "If I was in 2012 out of Kentucky who you doing here'?' Then I said, doing it year-round I would be pitched last year for Minneso- 'Well, you know I didn't really all right." ta's Double-A affiliate, consid- get too big of a signing bonus, Baseball will not last forever, ered joining relatives who are so I've got to do stuff,' and he after all.
support of Bill Douglass, the longtime COCC director of sports and recreation. Goal posts were added to
Continued from C1 Gottfried's Wolfpack, Xavi-
5 West Virginia (29-6)
er and UCLA all have 13 loss-
3 Notre Dame (31-5)
es heading into this week's games. Michigan State and
8 N.C. State(22-13) D. E
4 Louisville (26-8)
NIDWEST~ g
EAST
Atsyracu se,N.Y. 3 Oklahoma (24-10)
Arciweland
3 CD
7 Wichita St. (30-4)
7 MichiganSI. (25-11)
North Carolina have 11 each
and Oklahoma has 10. The previous record for
1 Wisconsin (33-3)
number of Sweet 16 teams with
4 North Carolina (26-11) ~ =..
double-digit losses was five, last year and in 1985 and '86,
according to STATS. The only
6 Xavier (23-13)
Nationalchampionshipgame April 6,TBA
At LosAngeles
Asked what has led to the
Ten Continued from C1 "I think he's definitely ready," said Evan Lysacek,
other time there were even two 2 Arizona(33-3j 13-loss teams was 2000. The NCAA h a s a l l owed
teams to play as many as 31 regular-season games since 2006-07. Before that the maxi-
mum was 28. With conference tournaments, some teams now
play34 or35games beforethe NCAA tournament. As of this
week, 58 teams had played at least35 games. A decade
ago, only 13 teams played that many. Other factors, ESPN analyst
Jay Bilas said, are that high majorteams arebeating each other up in conference play, and premier programs are sought out for
m ade-for-TV
nonconference games. Beating a heavyweight can help a lot, and losing to one might hurt only a little in the
eyes of the NCAA selection
Kentuckypreparedtoface 'PressVirginia' Nothing has rattled Kentucky to this point. Unbeatenand unblemished, the Wildcats havehandled every challenge this season. They're 36 for 36 in their run at hoops immortality, but an interesting test awaits. Big Blue is about to face something it hasn't seen — arelentless, choking West Virginia press that has buckled teamsand forced them to tap out. TheMountaineers are in your face for 40 minutes; they are nicknamed"Press Virginia" for good reason. "They're creating havoc,they're taking you out of your offense, they're creating opportunities for toughshots or turnovars," KBntucky coachJohn Calipari said. "They're playing very physical, they're coming inand letting you know it's going to bebody to body." That's the wayBob Huggins likes it. West Virginia's no-nonsense coach hascreated a five-headed defensive monster in his Mountaineers. Theydouble-team, harass, push, disrupt and do everything possible within the rules to get the ball back. They don't stop, and just whenyou think it's safe, here they comeagain. The Mountaineers havenever tried their calling card on Kentucky's lengthy guards, who might beable to throw the ball over the top. If that happens, the Wildcats could turn the matchup into a dunk drill. Huggins understands there is no Plan B iWest f Virginia doesn't force Kentucky into mistakes. "It's going to be along day for us if we can't," he said.
one game in the tournament since 1997.
Double-digit loss t eams meet in Syracuse on Friday when Michigan State (25-11) takes on Oklahoma (24-10). The Spartans lost to heavy-
weights Duke, Kansas and Notre Dame before they were beaten six times in the Big Ten. Oklahoma wouldn't have 10
bubble in 2012 and 2014. This
losses if it weren't for, as Bilas said, "slipping on banana peels" against Creighton and Washington. As for North Carolina (2611), which plays Wisconsin (33-3) in Los Angeles tonight,
season the Wolfpack played
there is no shame in what it
committee.
N.C. State (22-13), which plays Louisville (26-8) in Syracuse, New York, on Friday,
used strong nonconference schedules to get off the NCAA
— The Associated Press
tournament teams Boise State, Wofford, Cincinnati and Pur-
Arizona (33-3) in Los Angeles with some really tough teams,"
due before losing twice to Virginia, splitting meetings with
Big East. That conference sent
North Carolina and beating
Duke and Louisville in Atlantic Coast Conference play. Xavier (23-13), which plays
tonight, lost nine games in the six teams to the tournament, and Xavier is the only one still
standing. "I think it's great that the Big East has been able to test us
center Matt Stainbrook said, "and I think the fact that we've grown as a team together has
did against the nation's second-toughest schedule. "They played Kentucky, they played Virginia twice they played Duke twice, they played
made us really special at this point." Notre Dame twice. That's why UCLA (22-13), which plays they have 11losses," Bilas said. Gonzaga (34-2) in Houston "It's not because they (stink)."
ter from La Pine; Hayden Czmowski from M ountain View; and Merlin Tom from Madras.
The Bobcats typically practice twice a week and play games on Saturdays. In th e
P acific N o rthwest
league, they play against small universities, including Willamette, Southern Ore-
mmorical@bendbulletin.com
Canadianstake lead atworlds
becomejustthesecond American duo to win a
in it, and he's always there
world title after taking the
for you. But most of all he's
lead in the short dance.
coach who once helped the
driven Lysacek and t he graceful Michelle Kwan become the best in the world.
"He works too much," Ten
said of the 76-year-old Carroll in a r e cent interview.
a talented coach. As Evan says all the time, Frank is
a genius, and I think that's true." Like many a modern figure skater, Ten had to travel far from his beginnings to explore the boundaries of his talent. Born in Almaty
into a family that is part of K azakhstan's sizable K o -
rean minority, he started to skate while bundled up moved to Russia to train in the Moscow area at age 10
— The Associated Press
the London Olympics, but I'm sure that if we win the
Winter Olympic Games, then people will be more m otivated t o do w i n t e r sports and they will be more interested." It is far from certain that
he will still be competing in 2022. He would be 28 during the Olympics in a discipline in which the years add up quickly when it comes to quadruple jumps. But Ten
with his mother, Oksana, does plan to skate until at leaving his father and broth- least 2018 and the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang, er behind in Almaty. Dissatisfied with his prog- South Korea. ress, Ten shifted his training Clearly, performing in base to Southern Califor- what he calls his "second nia in 2010 after he and his home country" agrees with
11 UCLA(22-13)
14th-seeded UAB team coming off an upset of Iowa State. A No. 14 hasn't won more than
T revor Prater, both f r o m Redmond High; Levi Pen-
Bates will attempt to
Frank Carroll, the same enduring California-based
roll knew that Lysacek was about to retire. Ten asked for
ment opener over SMU thanks to a 3-point goaltending call on the final play, and in their second game they drew a
Kenny Dailey, all from Bend High; Travis Skyles and
such a fan of figure skating. He puts so much effort
ence at this stage remains
ships in Turin, Italy. Car-
The Bruins won their tourna-
Esselstrom, Kyle Joens and
a day off. But I think he's
been one of Ten's measuring sticks and mentors. But Ten's primary influ-
5 Utah (26-8)
on Friday, might be the most charmed of the 13-loss teams.
that's kind of fun. I've had a nucleus stay with me since
"He's on the ice from 7 a.m. until like 5 p.m. That's crazy for his age, and I always ask him if maybe he should take
pic men's champion from the United States who has
mother met with Carroll at the 2010 world champion-
2 Gonzaga(34-2)
All TimesPDT
young people to have that experience. Kids are coming and askingaboutrugby,and
SHANGHAI —Meagan Duhameland Eric Radford skated aflawless short program to take a commanding IBadin the pairs at the world figure skating championships on the opening day Wednesday.The Canadian duo, undefeated in five international competitions this season, scored 76.98 points to take a four-point IBadover Chinese veterans Pang Qing and TongJ(an, who came out of retirement to competeonhome icein their16th world championships. In ice dancing, Madison Chockand Evan
the former world and Olym-
1 Duke (31-4)
E
and I know what I w ant," Bennett said. "I want these
gon, Oregon Tech,Seattle, of shorts, jerseys and socks Puget Sound and Gonzaga. were provided. — Reporter: 541-383-0318,
of expert coaching, he later 1 Kentucky(36-0)
two seasons. "I'm a good organizer,
Mazama Field, and uniforms
at an outdoor rink. In need
Sweet16
club's success in just three years, Bennett attributes his knack for organization, his numerousassistant coaches, and a core group of players
him. Last month in Seoul, he won the Four Continents
Figure Skating Championships, his first International Skating Union A-level title,
his help before others had a in grand style. His combined chance to do so, but Carroll total from his short program and free skate was 289.46 was well aware of his gifts. Ten's English, halting points, the t h i rd-highest mark in men's history. at first, has begun to flow "Just a h uge statement nearly as smoothly as his skating. He answers que- to make," Lysacek said in a ries in l ong paragraphs, telephone interview Tuesnot clipped sentences, and day. "Not to put added prestakes particular delight in sure on him, but that's such discussing his m a ternal a difficult score to even great-great-grandfather match. If he can match that Min Geung-ho, a Korean at the worlds, I doubt anygeneral and war hero who one is going to challenge died in 1908 while fighting him." But Ten, routinely a slow the Japanese. Ten said his ancestors had starter in the season, apbeen forcedto flee Korea, pears to have acquired a first to China, then to Rus- new layer of polish and a sia, where they and others of
new level of confidence, al-
Korean descent were even- though there still have been tually uprooted en masse obstacles: visa issues and from the east in the 1930s the usual struggles with his by the Soviet authorities skates and equipment exacand made to relocate to pres- erbated by his unusual feet. ent-day Kazakhstan — then ("They do not sit flat on the a Soviet republic — in often ground like normal feet," Carroll said.) There also harsh conditions. Ten, the first Kazakh to
win a world or Olympic medal in figure skating, is part of the Almaty 2022 bid
have been concerns about Ten's father's health, which,
according to Carroll, has required Ten to return to Al-
compact plan and enthusi-
maty more frequently than expected this season.
Asian Winter Games.
little bit of timidity," Carroll
team and praises his city's
"I think he's a very sensiasm. He has already won a gold medal in Almaty, tak- tive boy, and with that sening the title there at the 2011 sitivity comes sometimes a
"Our people, they love sport," he said. "They are more into summer sports, and we were quite good at
said. "I just hope that he'll be on fire when he competes and that he will be impres-
sive and not hold back."
C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
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%CHG. WK MO -1.62% -2.03% -1.15% -1.11% -2.37% -1.46% -1.67% -1.53% -2.34%
M
QTR YTD T -0.59% -4.51% T T -5.84% T + 0.54% +2.97% T + 0.10% +3.64% T + 0.75% L +2 .42%
NorthwestStocks
based on trailing 12-month results
Dividend: $1.44 Div. yield:3.6% NAME
Alaska Air Group A LK 40.69 ~ 71.40 64. 6 0 - 2 .38 - 3.6 T Avista Corp AVA 29.71 ty— 38. 3 4 33 . 4 3 -.45 -1.3 T Tough quarter? Bank of America BAC 14 . 37 ~ 18.21 1 5. 4 1 -.20 -1.3 T BarrettBusiness B BS I 1 8 .25 ~ 63.45 4 1. 8 7 -1.94 -4.4 T Wall Street anticipates that Boeing Co BA 116.32 ~ 158. 8 3 14 8.23 -3.42 -2.3 T ConAgra Foods' latest quarterly Cascade Bancorp CA C B 4 . 11~ 5.82 4.77 -.05 -1.0 T earnings declined versus a year ColumbiaBnkg COL B 23.59 ~ 3 0.0 2 28.35 - .66 -2.3 T earlier. The food company, which owns Columbia Sportswear COLM 34.25 — o 60.59 58.92 -.87 -1.5 T CostcoWholesale COST 110.36 ~ 1 56 .85151.89 -2.05 -1.3 T brands such as Chef Boyardee Craft Brew Alliance BR EW 10.07 ~ 17.89 1 3. 2 4 -.34 -2.5 T and Hebrew National, is due to FLIR Systems F LIR 28.32 ~ 37.42 3 0. 8 8 -.51 -1.6 T report fiscal third-quarter financial Hewlett Packard H PQ 31. 21 ~ 41.10 32. 2 0 - 1 .11 -3.3 T results today. Last month, the Intel Corp I NTC 24.92 ~ 37.90 2 9. 8 9 -.90 -2.9 T company reduced its outlook for Keycorp K EY 11.55 ~ 14.74 1 4.0 3 -.28 -2.0 T the year, citing the impact from the Kroger Co K R 4 3 .02 ~ 77.74 75. 9 2 - 1 .25 - 1.6 T strong dollar on its profits and the Lattice Semi LSCC 5.87 ~ 9.19 6.43 -.29 -4.3 T fallout from the West Coast ports LA Pacific L PX 12.46 ~ 17.76 1 6. 6 5 -.29 -1.7 L labor dispute. MDU Resources MDU 20 . 01 o — 36.0 5 21 . 5 9 -.22 -1.0 T Mentor Grap hics ME N T 18.25 ~ 2 5.4 3 23.16 -.84 -3.5 T CAG $34.94 Microsoft Corp M SFT 38.51 ~ 50.05 41.4 6 - 1 . 44 -3.4 T $40 $30.11 Nike Inc B NKE 70.60 ~ 103. 7 9 98. 99 - 1 .66 - 1.6 T 35 Nordstrom Inc J WN 59.97 ~ 83.16 7 9. 8 7 - 1.76 -2.2 T Nwst Nat Gas NWN 41.81 ~ 52.5 7 4 7. 1 6 -.49 -1.0 T 30 PaccarInc PCAR 55.34 ty— 71. 15 62 . 63 - 1 .48 - 2.3 T '15 Planar Systms P LNR 1.93 ~ 9.17 6.82 -.24 -3.8 T 25 Plum Creek P CL 38.70 ~ 45.45 4 3. 2 0 -.63 -1.4 T Operating I e Prec Castparts PCP 186.17 ~ 275. 0 9 28 9.44 -.31 -0.1 T I EPS Schnitzer Steel SCHN 1 5.38 o — 30.0 4 15 . 5 4 -.06 -0.4 T 3Q '13 S Q' 14 Sherwin Wms SHW 188.25 ~ 291. 2 7 28 1.35 -4.51 -1.6 T StancorpFncl S FG 57.77 ~ 71.80 6 6. 9 7 -1.01 -1.5 T Price-earnings ratio: 36 based on trailing 12-month results StarbucksCp SBUX 67.93 ~ 99.20 95. 7 7 - 2 .15 - 2.2 T Umpqua Holdings UMP Q 14.70 ty 19.50 16 .98 -.26 -1.5 T Dividend: $1.00 Div. yield:2.9L US Bancorp U SB 38.10 ~ 46.10 4 3. 4 2 -.78 -1.8 T Source: FectSet Washington Fedl
WAF O19.52
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Spotlight on lululemon Yoga gear retailer Lululemon Athletica entered 2015 on a positive note. The company raised its fourth-quarter earnings outlook, noting it enjoyed strong demand during the holiday shopping season. Did the trend translate into improved quarterly financial results? Find out today, when Lululemon reports its latest earnings report card.
ed n esday's close: $31.86 P r Price-earnings ratio:14
52-WEEK RANGE
99
AmdFocus
SelectedMutualFunds
Vanguard Mid Cap Growth is subadvised by two firms, each Marhetsummary manages half of the porffolio. Most Active Morningstar says the fund offers NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG low-cost exposure to two growth S&P500ETF 1391136 205.76 -3.06 strategies.
8 iPVixST
Apple Inc s iShEMkts Microsoft RiteAid
VanguardMidcapGr VALUE
VMGRX
B L EN D GR OWTH
Gainers NAME L AST CHG Kofax Ltd 1 0.95 + 3 .4 5 KraftFGp 8 3.17 t 2 1 .85 VascuBio n 7 .22 +1 . 6 4 ModSys 2 .84 +.56 LimeEngy 3 .35 +.60 LevyAc wt 2 .66 +.46 Stamps.cm 6 7.78 +9 . 4 8 DoverMot 2 .51 +.35 FusionT rs 4 .30 +.50 Gordmans 6 .20 +.70
Losers
%C H G +4 6 .0 +3 5 .6 ocC +2 9 .3 $$ +24 . 6 +21 . 8 co +20 . 9 Morhingstar OwnershipZone™ +1 6 . 3 e Fund target represents weighted +16 . 2 Q +13 . 1 average of stock holdings +12 . 7 • Represents 75% of fuhd's stock holdings
CATEGORY Mid-Cap Growth C H G %C H G MORNINGSTAR RATING™ * ** * t y -7.95 -28.4 ApolloEdu Lpath -.75 -22.9 ASSETS $3,805 million -1.81 -22.6 Affimed n EXP RATIO 0.46% Fibrocell -1.19 -22.5 MANAGER David Ricci -1.52 -19.1 OramedPh SINCE 2006-06-08 RETURNS3-MO +4.3 Foreign Markets YTD +5.2 NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +14.6 -67.29 -1.32 Paris 5,020.99 3-YR ANNL +16.2 London 6,990.97 -28.71 -.41 5-YR-ANNL +16.5 Frankfurt 11,865.32 -1 40.37 -1.17 Hong Kong24,528.23 +1 28.63 + . 53 TOP 5HOLDINGS -.95 SBA Communications Corp Mexico 43,630.97 -420.25 Milan 23,145.10 -1 88.10 -.81 -24.44 -.12 Vantiv Inc Tokyo 19,746.20 Stockholm 1,694.39 -6.90 -.41 Akamai Technologies Inc Sydney 5,937.10 +2.60 + . 04 Synovus Financial Corp Zurich 9,188.25 -104.43 -1.12 MattpowerGroup NAME
L AST 20.04 2.52 6.19 4.10 6.45
-66 7 0/
*annualized
AP
15.41 -.20 2.43 +.22 83.17 t21.85 6.03 + . 15 26.27 +1.12 123.38 -3.31 39.72 -.64 41.46 -1.44 8.36 + . 15
i c e change1-yr
(B a sed on past 12-month results)
AP
869059 708983 622312 538187 521394 499277 454054 424308 411567
D
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U)ISER UQQIDA TOl@
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$2$.$4 ~
$32.87
L Close:$31.86%3.03 or 10.5% The U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission is investigating the safety of the company's laminate flooring made in China. $80 60 40
Kraft Foods KRFT Close:$83.17%21.84 or 35.6% H.J. Heinz is buying the maker of Cheez Wiz, Jell-0 and Velveeta, creating one of the world's largest food and beverage companies. $90 80 70
D
J
F
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52-week range $27.1$~
$96.75
Vol.:17.7m (3.9x avg.) Mkt.Cap:$862.42 m
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52-week range $5$.$$~
$ $7.$$
PE: 1 3 .8 Vol.:99.8m (21.7x avg.) PE :47.7 Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap:$48.91 b Yie l d: 2.6%
Apollo Education
APOL Francesca's Holdings FRAN Close:$20.04T-7.95 or -28.4% Close:$15.93T-0.91 or -5.4% The for-profit education company The clothing retailer reported betreported better-than-expected fiscal ter-than-expected fourth-quarter fisecond-quarter profit, but its revenancial results but provided a weaknue fell short. er-than-expected outlook. $40 $18 16
30
14
D
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52-week range $$$.$2~
$35.23
Vol.:15.8m (11.3x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$2.16 b
J
F
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52-week range $1L02~
$1$$7
PE : 1 4.9 Vol.:2.5m (4.0x avg.) P Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$673.81 m
5-yr*
MDLZ Stamps.com STMP Close:$35.81 L0.80 or 2.3% Close:$67.78 L9.48 or 16.3% The food and beverage company's The Internet-based postage compastock gained ground as its competiny will buy Newell Rubbermaid's tors H. J. Heinz and Kraft Foods shipping technologies unit Endicia Group announcedplans to merge. for $215 million in cash. $38 $70 60 50
36 J F 52-week range
Mkt. Cap:$59.06 b
M $$ $.$4
Vol.:23.7m (2.5x avg.)
D
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$27.1$~
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PE: 2 8.0 Vol.:916.8k (5.2x avg.)
PE: 30.2
Yie l d: 1.7% Mkt. Cap:$1.11 b
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SOURCE: Sungard
SU HS
The yield on the 10-year Treasury rose to 1.93 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on consumer loans, including mortgages.
PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 Commodities American Funds AmBalA m 24 . 74 -.27+0.7 +8.5 +12.2+11.5 8 A A CaplncBuA m 59.87 -.34 +1.3 +7.3 +9.8 +9.1 A A A The price of oil CpWldGrlA m 47.46 -.49 +3.3 +7.2 +13.0+10.0 8 8 C rose as EurPacGrA m 50.26 -.36 +6.6 +5.2 +9.9 +7.3 8 8 C concerns about FnlnvA m 52. 1 3 - .81 +1.6 +10.6 +15.4+13.0 C C C political GrthAmA m 44.80 -.73 +3.1 +11.7 +16.9+13.4 C 8 D instability in the IncAmerA m 21.67 -.20 +1.2 +7.9 +11.4+10.9 8 A A Middle East InvCoAmA m 36.85 -.42 +0.5 +11.0 +16.0+12.8 C 8 C spread after NewPerspA m38.81 -.58 +4.8 +8.8 +13.6+11.2 8 A 8 Saudi Arabia WAMutlnvA m40.86 -.57 +0.2 +10.1 +15.7+14.2 8 6 A reportedly began Dodge &Cox Income 13.94 -.82 +1.2 + 4.5 +4.1 +5.0 D 8 8 amassing troops IntlStk 44.48 -.38 +5.6 + 5.2 +12.9 +8.7A A A Stock 178.66 -2.68 -1.3 +7 .2 +18.3+14.0D A A near its border Fidelity Contra 100. 8 3 -1.90+3.9 +12.7 +15.9+15.0 C 8 8 with Yemen. ContraK 100 . 7 8-1.89+3.9 +12.8 +16.1+15.2 C 8 8 LowPriStk d 51.34 -.53 +2.2 + 8 .8 +15.6+14.4 C D C Fideli S artan 500 l dxAdvtg 73.27 -1.88+0.6 +12.7 +16.2+14.4 A 8 A FrankTemp-Frankli n IncomeC m 2.42 -.81+0.7 +1.1 +8.4 +8.5 E A A IncomeA m 2. 3 9 - .81+0.8 + 1 .6 + 8.9 +9.0 E A A Oakmark Intl I 25.37 -.14 +8.7 + 4 .4 +13.6+10.7 8 A A Oppenheimer RisDivA m 19 . 86 -.31 -0.4 +9.8 +12.7+12.1 D E D RisDivB m 17 . 56 -.27 -0.6 +9.0 +11.7+11.1 D E E RisDivC m 17 . 43 -.28 -0.6 +9.0 +11.8+11.3 D E E SmMidValA m49.56 -.78 +1.8 +9.9 +16.1+12.4 8 D E SmMidValB m41.66 -.66 +1.6 +9.1 +15.2+11.5 C D E Foreign T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 32.2 6 - . 3 7 -1.6 +5 .0 +13.3+11.7 E D D Exchange GrowStk 55.8 7 -1.11+6.0 +15.6 +17.4+16.4 8 A A The U.S. dollar HealthSci 76.8 0 -2.86+13.0 +39.9 +36.8+28.6 A A A weakened Newlncome 9. 6 9 - .82+ 1.7 + 5 .6 + 3.3 +4.5 8 C D against the Vanguard 500Adml 190.80 2.80 +0.6 +12.7 +16.3+14.4 A 8 A pound and the 500lnv 190.81 2.80 +0.5 +12.6 +16.1+14.3 8 8 8 euro. The ICE CapOp 54.66 1.50 +3.6 +16.9 +23.7+15.7 A A A U.S. Dollar Eqlnc 31.85 -.26 -0.5 +9.4 +15.1+14.8 8 C A index — which IntlStkldxAdm 27.36 -.18 +5.6 +2.5 +7.2 NA C D measures the StratgcEq 33.45 -.67 +3.9 +13.7 +20.4+17.9 A A A dollar against a TgtRe2020 29.88 -.25 +2.2 +8.2 +9.8 +9.4 A A A basket of major TgtRe2035 18.26 -.20 +2.4 +8.7 +12.0+10.9 A 6 8 currenciesTgtet2025 16.90 -.16 +2.2 +8.4 +10.5 +9.9 A 6 8 declined. TotBdAdml 10.98 -.83 +1.6 +5.7 +3.0 +4.4 8 D D Totlntl 16.36 -.11 +5.5 +2.4 +7.1 +5.6 C D D TotStlAdm 51.98 -.81 +1.2 +12.1 +16.5+14.7 8 6 A TotStldx 51.96 -.82 +1.2 +11.9 +16.3+14.6 8 6 A USGro 31.11 -.61 +4.0 +16.5 +17.0+15.3 A A B FAMILY
PCT 2.16 1.9 1.72 Fund Footnotes: b -Feecovering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.69 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales cr 1.65 redemption fee.Source: Mcrnirgstar.
E: 18.4 Yield : ...
Mondelez Int'I
AP
NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO 3-month T-bill 6 -month T-bill 52-wk T-bill
. 0 3 .01 + 0 .02 T L . 1 1 .11 ... T L .23 .21 +0 . 0 2 T L
2-year T-note . 61 .56 5-year T-note 1.42 1.37 10-year T-note 1.93 1.88 30-year T-bond 2.51 2.47
BONDS
+ 0 .05 L +0.05 L T +0.05 L T +0.04 T
h5Q HS
FUELS
Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal) METALS
Gold (oz) Silver (oz) Platinum (oz) Copper (Ib) Palladium (oz)
L L ~
.05 .07 .11
T .43 T 1.73 T 2.75 T 3.59
NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO
Barclays LongT-Bdldx 2.38 2.35 +0.03 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.20 4.20 . . . T T 9.5 3.6 Barclays USAggregate 2.05 2.08 -0.03 T T PRIME FED Barcl aysUS HighYield 6.23 6.26 -0.03 T L RATE FUNDS M oodys AAA Corp Idx 3.50 3.54 -0.04 T T Source: FactSet YEST3.25 .13 B arclays CompT-Bdldx 1.68 1.66 +0.02 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 B arclays US Corp 2.90 2.93 -0.03 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13
3-yr*
M
Vol.:4.4m (4.5x avg.) P E: 34.6 Vol.: 24.1m (28.7x avg.) PE : 42.1 Mkt. Cap:$2.65 b Yie l d : 3.3% Mkt. Cap:$6.01 b Yie l d : 6.1%
Lumber Liquidators faces investigationInterestRates The U.S. Consumer Product Safety QOmpauy Lumber Liquidators said that it Commission is investigating Lumber Spotiight wants to reassure consumers that its Liquidators over concerns about flooring is safe, and that it is fully possible formaldehyde in its Chinese-made c o operating with the agency. laminate flooring. The discount hardwood flooring retailer Lumber Liquidators was the subject of a h a s criticized the show, saying it distorted report earlier this month on CBS' "60 the facts and used an inappropriate test for Minutes" that said the flooring contains high its report. levels of formaldehyde, a carcinogen. Some Lum ber Liquidators' shares have lost lawmakers called for investigations following more than half their value since it announced the broadcast. the segment would air.
EnLink Midstream
Close:$24.50 V-2.42 or -9.0% The energy company priced an offering of units sold by a Devon Energy subsidiary at $25.71 a unit, below the prior day's closing price. $35 30 25
$$1.$$~ DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, but arenot included. b -Annual rate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. e -Amount declaredor paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum of dividends paidafterstock split, ro regular rate. I —Sumof dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted cr deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate nct known, yield nct shown. r —Declared or paid ic preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximatecash value on ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - no P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last t2 months.
$27
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LXK
Close:$43.27L2.48 or 6.1% The printer maker will buy software developer Kofax Ltd. for about $1 billion, doubling the size of its software business. $45
Lumber Liquidators
52-WK RANGE o CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV
Source: FactSet
EURO 1.0958
) '70
StoryStocks
17,000.
1 840
+
The stock market sank Wednesday as investors reacted to a negative report on durable goods orders. The major indexes had their third day of losses, with tech companies and financial firms among the biggest decliners. The Commerce Department said U.S. orders for long-lasting manufactured goods fell in February for the third time in four months — a sign that the U.S. economic growth is still sluggish. Data from China showed similar issues as a report from HSBC showed manufacturing fell to its lowest level in 11 months. Trading is generally quiet, however, as investors wait for the start of earnings season next month.
17,500 ":"
16,500"
$49.21
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CRUDEOIL
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Close: 17,718.54 Change: -292.60 (-1.6%)
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Vol. (in mil.) 3,401 2,103 Pvs. Volume 3,114 1,576 Advanced 8 30 5 0 2 Declined 2292 2237 New Highs 85 69 New Lows 14 38
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S8tP 500
Thursday, March 26, 2015
GME
30 45
2,061.05
T 3.39 T 4.79 T 2.42 T 5.29 T 4.3 5 T 1.9 2 T 3.1 4
CLOSE PVS. 49.21 47.51 1.49 1.51 1.73 1.71 2.72 2.79 1.84 1.80
%CH. %YTD -7.6 +3.58 -8.2 -0.46 +1.28 -6.4 -2.26 -5.8 +2.04 +28.0
CLOSE PVS. 1197.30 1191.70 16.98 16.96 1146.50 1141.50 2.81 2.82 765.05 763.35
%CH. %YTD + 0.47 + 1 . 1 + 0.10 + 9 . 1 -5.2 +0.44 -0.36 -1.2 +0.22 -4.2
AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)
CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -2.4 1.62 1.62 -0.17 Coffee (Ib) 1.40 1.37 +1.93 -16.0 -0.5 Corn (bu) 3.95 3.93 +0.45 Cotton (Ib) 0.63 0.64 - 1.17 + 4 . 8 Lumber (1,000 bd ft) 287.60 285.80 +0.63 -13.1 -17.8 Orange Juice (Ib) 1.15 1.15 Soybeans (bu) 9.79 9.82 -0.31 -4.0 Wheat(bu) 5.19 5.24 -0.86 -12.0 1YR.
MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.4865 +.0019 +.13% 1.6532 Canadian Dollar 1.2 521 +.0024 +.19% 1.1167 USD per Euro 1.0958 +.0033 +.30% 1.3826 -.03 -.03% 102.27 JapaneseYen 119.63 Mexican Peso 14. 9 920 +.0906 +.60% 13.1354 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.9462 +.0279 +.71% 3.4820 Norwegian Krone 7 . 8435 -.0117 -.15% 6.0275 South African Rand 11.8585 +.0757 +.64% 10.7469 Swedish Krona 8.4 9 80 -.0072 -.08% 6.4019 Swiss Franc .9616 +.0040 +.42% . 8 828 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.2762 +.0056 +.44% 1.0911 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.2136 +.0108 +.17% 6.2015 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7563 +.001 0 +.01% 7.7561 Indian Rupee 62.450 +.100 +.1 6% 60.270 Singapore Dollar 1.3711 +.0047 +.34% 1.2676 South KoreanWon 1102.09 -2.20 -.20% 1076.87 Taiwan Dollar 3 1.26 + . 0 2 +.06% 30.52
IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Medicine, D2 Nutrition, D3 Fitness, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
O www.bendbulletin.com/health
MEDICINE
Pis'eff ectsoncancer
may dependon DNA By Karen Kaplan
American Cancer Societyin
Los Angeles Times
Atlanta. "The ability to translate
For most people, a regular dose of aspirin, Advil, Vomrsne
VA
us bepartment
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orkhm ransntratm
Oholoe Card
rsmporatypmpmm
Name: KENNETH MILLER Member ID:1176774716 Date of Iaauanoat November 2014
preventive care plans for in-
over-the-counter painkillers can reduce the risk of
dividuals is still years away,"
colorectal cancer by about one-third. But for some
Call 1-8 - battbtnataa for tntormsrion orto make an appolntment
thrs osrd doee not pnwide pnwppa vsl. Velernnemsy be ltebre de tho oostor osrs plllr a Ilorpreerppm
Andy Tullis l Ttte Bulletin
Ken Miller holds his Choice Program card at his home in Bend last week. The card, given out by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs, is supposed to allow veterans to get private care if they face long waits or travel times, but many local veterans say the program has been difficult to navigate.
genetic profiling into tailored
Aleve or certain other
Wender wrote in an editorial that accompanies the JAMA
people, these same pills
report. But the analysis gives scientists a clearer picture of
make colorectal cancer
how to get there from here, he
more likely. Now researchers have figured out a way to tell these two groups apart by looking at three specific
added. Lots of research had already linked nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugsthe painkillers better known
spots in the vast human
as NSAIDs — with a reduced
genome. After combing through
risk of the colorectal growths
the DNA of more than
that can lead to cancer. But doctors aren't sure why this
17,000 people in four
is, and they've been reluctant
countries, the researchers
to use NSAIDs for cancer prevention without a better un-
identified a few genetic variants that appear to influence whether drugs like aspirin increase or decrease one's risk of colorectal cancer. Their findings were published recently by the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The study is an example
derstanding of why the drugs seem to work.
So an international group of researchers mined data from 10 long-term studies
thattracked people who were diagnosed with colorectal cancer, along with healthy volunteers who were matched
of how ubig science" can untangle the influence
according to age, gender and other demographic fac-
of genetics and the envi-
tors. All of the volunteers
ronment and show how the two interact to cause
answered questions about their use of NSAIDs (including aspirin, ibuprofen and naproxen) and DNA samples
Wender,the chief cancer
to researchers. See Painkillers/D2
— or prevent — diseases, according to Dr. Richard control officer for the
alk to enough veterans about trying to use
An active ifestye makes ife and death better
the cards that are supposed to let them get
By James Fell
89? The "body falls apart to let
Chicago Tribune
health care at private clinics, and a theme
Any day above ground is a good one. Or is it? People are living much longer than they did a century ago, but in many cases this comes despite terrible lifestyles; it's medical ad-
you know death is looming so make your peace" messaging
By Tara Bannow» The Bulletin
emerges. After enough phone calls, enough hours on hold, enough being tossed from operator to operator, they give up. "I will never use the Choice Program again. Never," said 68-year-old Marine Corps veteran Ken
vancements that increase
Miller, of Bend. Miller went ahead with his long-overdue colonoscopy in January, but — even after about six hours on the phone — he still doesn't know whether the VA will foot the bill. That's further than Ron Gordon, a 66-year-old veteran from La Pine, got. He hasn't
aI think a lot of veterans just w a i t times, was looked to as a s w e eping solution. give up,n he said. "They say, 'I don't need this."' The excitement around the
evenbeen able to make an appointment. He probably
The U.S. Department of Cho i ce Program has more Veterans Affairs began mail- t h an fallen flat. Among some ing out cards for the so-called C entral Oregon veterans, it's Veterans Choice Progenerating downright gram last August, and M O N E Y o u trage. Many cite the program officially breakdowns in com-
tempted to get care through
launched in November. It's yet m u n ication between the VA,
more than 905,000 outpatient
visits last year, has only cov-
46-year-ol dIraqWar veteran
another VAprogramdesigned the contractorsleadingthe to allow veterans to get private program and private health care if they face long waits careproviders. Simplyput,
Mark Webb, of Redmond,
ortraveltime. But this one,
who says his care was first approved and then denied.
carriedbythe momentumof a obtainthe care doesn'tmakeit
never will.
"After getting shuttled
around, kicked around the
barn a couple times, I do exactly what they want," he said. "I give up.n It's a similar story with
nationwide scandal over long
Chicago Tribune
Nutritionists are continu-
theprogram, but none successfully. Data from the VA Portland Health Care System
quickly showed whythat was. The system, which provided ered about 1,000 appointments
under the Choice Program, said Portland VA spokesman Daniel Herrigstad.
the i n f ormationnecessaryto t ot he providers.
oomuc o a oo By Danielle Braff
Conversations with local
veterans groups turned up many people who had at-
SeeVA/D5
Here are some ways to find
and nutrition consultant. "But
risk for heart disease and
calories count."
metabolic syndrome, and it is converted into belly fat faster.
Stick to this:Giancoli recommends sticking to 1
tablespoon daily, which is 120 calories. If you want more
these healthy foods actually
than 1 tablespoon, you should
major component of the healthful Mediterranean diet,
cut calories in other areas of your diet that day.
"Even nutritious food can
mix of nutrients."
prevents acute pancreatitis
about the big "D" here, and it's
i n m a a r m our ie
the right balance so you don't eat too much of a good thing.
it lowers the risk of heart be too much of a good thing if disease, stroke and high you eat it in too large a quan- blood pressure because it tity or too contains monounsaturated NUTRITION often," said fatty acids (as opposed to Elisa Zied, saturated fats or trans fats). New York-based dietitian, A study published in Neurolnutritionist and author of ogy found that older people "Younger Next Week." "For who regularly consume olive one, anything that has calooil have a 41 percent lower ries — even if they're quality risk of stroke compared with calories — can add up if your those who never consume portion gets too big. Also, if it. Other studies have found you overdo any one food, you that it helps maintain healthy will leave less room for other cholesterol levels, protects foods that provide a different against Alzheimer's disease,
of liiiifffffeeee — and it rules us aaaaalllll. Perhaps that sounds less than awesome; we're talking
longevity for those disincoming for you. It's coming clined to help themselves. for us all. But for many, it's not Conversely, the physically the rainbows and puppy hugs active don't just live compressed-morbidity longer, they live bet- F I T NESS version. They're dying ter; plus they have younger after an un"compressedmorbidity." pleasant and lengthy period of Compressed morbidity? disability. "People get into middle That doesn't sound good. Actually, it is good. Yes, age, and their health begins studies show exercise to ratchet down, often due increases longevity, but to specific diseases that freguess what else happens'? quently occur due to poor lifeWhen you finally go down- style: hypertension, diabetes, hill, you go fast. The periobesity and coronary artery od of sickness is shorter. disease," said Dr. Mike Joyner, Hooray! a physician-researcher and Seriously, hooray! This expert in exercise physiology is good news. Think about at the Mayo Clinic in Rochesit: Sayyoulive tobe 90, ter, Minn. Being sedentary is almost all the while in awe- a common cause for a lot of some shape. Wouldn't you these diseases. rather be spry right up to SeeActive/D4
ally spouting the benefits of foods like tomatoes, avocados Olive oil Why it's good for you: A and fish, but overdoing it on can be harmfuL
is brief; then you're fertilizer. Cue Elton John: It's the circle
Agave syrup
and protects the liver from oxidative stress, in addition to
upon as a healthy fat, people
other diseases. Too muchofagoodthing:
cerned about calories," said Andrea Giancoli, a Los Ange-
Why it's good for you:Agave was promoted as being on the low-glycemic index and doesn't spike your blood sugar like regular sugar does — so it's a good alternative for diabetics. It's also natural. Too muchofa good thing: Agave is mostly fructose, and it has more calories than sugar (I teaspoon of sugar has 16 calories while 1 teaspoon of agave has 21), Giancoli said.
"Because olive oil is looked
les-based registered dietitian
Fructose may increase your
Anne Cusack/ Chicago Tribune
Keep servings of olive oil to a tablespoon aday.
think they should not be con-
Stick to this:The American Heart Association recom-
mends limiting sweets to 6 teaspoons daily for women and 9 teaspoons for men. Giancoli suggests treating agave like sugar. aIf you're not going
to put a tablespoon of sugar intoyour coffee,then don'tdo this for agave," she said.
Avocado Why it's good for you: It's highinmonounsaturated fat, which reduces bad cholesterol, lowers your risk of stroke, heart
disease and cancer — and may promote a healthybodyweight. It also contains about 4 grams
of protein and is high in vitamins K, B, C and E.
SeeToo much/D3
D2
TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
MEDrCjNE HEALTH EVENTS
THURSDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
FRIDAY AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Redmond GrangeHall,707 SW Kalama Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
Bac pain treatments eep ients movin By David Templeton PittsburghPost-Gazette
After he had battled lower back pain for three months with hot showers,
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110,
Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or
analgesic heat rubs and heating pads, it finally hap- tient-Centered Outcomes Repened. Chris Roth awoke search Institute has awarded one morning barely able to the University of Pittsburgh move. $14 million over five years This was a huge problem to lead a national trial to test for Roth. As owner of Steel whether a more aggressive
versity of Pittsburgh Medical
City Ballroom in a Pitts-
European treatment can better
burgh suburb, he teaches the trademark hip-shaking and body-twisting steps of ballroom dancing. "I canceled my lessons," said
prevent acute lower back pain from becoming a chronic con-
less than half the time and for less than six months. Re-
Roth, 44. "I'd had back pain
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 9 a.m.; St. Joseph Catholic Church, 150 SE First St., Prineville; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 10 a.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. SOCIAL SECURITY AND HEALTHCARE:Learn about
Participants in the trial in-
ways to prevent lower back pain.
lated medical procedures each
•I
Th e Bulletin
patient has experienced. A World Health OrganizaIntense lower back pain can stab like a knife when a person picks up a dropped pencil or lifts a child. Or it could be the swing of a golf club or a slip on
The Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute is a
tion report on lower back pain
says riskfactors include "ocnonprofit, nongovernmental cupational posture, depressive organization created through moods, obesity, body height the Affordable Care Act of and age," while noting that its
and Rehabilitation Sciences
the ice.
2010. Its mandate is to improve
causes and onsets "remain ob-
But once it occurs, acute low- health care by helping pa"Certain patients are more er back pain can flash periodi- tients, caregivers, clinicians, inclined to worry that when cally throughout the day and employers, insurers and policy their back hurts they are fur- continue for weeks, months makers make more informed ther harming it, causing them and even longer. If it extends health decisions. It funds projto become inactive," he said. beyond six months, the pain ects that compare the costs "That can seriously impede re- couldbecome chronic.About and effectiveness of treatment covery and cause further dam- 10 percentof those experienc- options. age, leading to chronic back ing lower back pain end up In that context, the Pittburgh-based trial will compain." with a chronic condition. Lower back pain, especially T he annual h ealth c a r e pare the "usual care" approach with no signs of a fracture or cost of lower back pain in the against the European strategy, musde damage, makes it im- United States is $86 billion, a w hichinvolves aprimary care perative that the person stay Journal of the American Med- physician and a physical theractive, in shape and on the job. ical Association study reports, apist. Cognitive behavior ther"Chronic lower back pain is making it one of the costli- apy can help the patient put clearly something we would est conditions in A m erican back pain in perspective and like to avoid," Delitto said. medicine. persuade the patient to contin-
scure and diagnosis difficult to make." Timothy Carey, director of the Cecil G. Sheps Center for Health Services Research at
colorectal cancer. rin and NSAIDs, the other 9 might be f ighting colorecThe first of these SNPs is percent had the same colorectal tal cancer, the study authors Continued from D1 known as rs2965667, and it cancerriskregardlessofwheth- wrote. For i nstance, they The human genome con- sits on chromosome 12. In the er they tookthe painkillers. named several genes near the tains about 3 billion base study, 96 percent of the volunThe locations of these SNPs SNPs that are thought to play pairs of the DNA letters A teers had two copies of "T" at give researchers some dues a role in other kinds of cancers, (adenine), T (thymine), G that location. Among the 4 per- about how the painkillers or that promote the kind of in(guanine) and C (cytosine). cent of people who had other In some places along the ge- combinations of letters there, nome, there are spots where those who took aspirin and/or some people have one par- NSAIDs were almost twice as ticular letter an d o t hers likely to be diagnosed with colhave another. The research- orectalcancer compared with ers induded about 2.7 mil- those who didn't.
flammation that can lead to colorectal cancer.
offered to help. how he walked to figure out the potential source of his pain. Then he had him lie down on his back and cross his legs in a figure-four position. Then he p ounced
on him and rocked him back and forth a few times. They heard a pop. The pain vanished. The hip was realigned. Back to the tinue dancing throughout the pain actually represents
which the doctor decides on treatment.
Painkillers
University of North Carolina
Chapel Hill, has conducted several back pain studies over the past 25 years. He said he's familiar with the Pittsburgh
project. "Chronic back pain is tre-
mendously disabling, with high costs in terms of medical expenses and time off work, as
well as the burden of chronic pain and reduced function by patients," he said.
About 136,830 Americans were diagnosed with colorectal cancer in 2014, and 50,310 died
of the disease, according to the National Cancer Institute.
Enj™oy
lion of these places — which
The story was nearly the
are called single nucleotide polymorphisms — in their analysis. After crunching a ton of data, the researchers identified three intriguing SNPs. When peoplehad the com-
same with a second SNP, rsl0505806, which is also lothe study, 95 percent of people
mon versions of these SNPs,
were 56 percent more likely to
cated on chromosome 12. In had two copies of "A" in that location. For the other 5 percent,
those who took the painkillers,
You~riNext l
<Advle~ntu~re j/N S~tyglle~
taking the painkillers was get colorectalcancerthanthose associated with a 34percent who didn't. cancer. But when people had uncommon versions drugs offered no benefitor els e increased therisk of
The third relevant SNP was rsl6973225, on chromosome 15,
I
and 91 percent of the study participants had two "A" copies in that location. While this group
saw an upside by taking aspi-
4
++ , -~
I
o
FITNESS EVENTS
SATURDAY
WEDNESDAY
DANCE WORKSHOPS:Eric and Jenlca Zimmer will be coming from Portland to teach workshops for Argentine Tango, West Coast Swing, Blues Fusion, Burlesque and Men's Technique; 10 a.m.; $10 for spectators
EQUIPMENT CLASS: Joinstudent instructor Emma Maaranen for
per class, $18 for participants
pilates equipmentclasses;12 p.m.; $5, registration requested; Bend Pllates, 155 SWCentury Drive, Suite 104, Bend; 541-647-0876.
APRIL 2
per class; Black Cat Ballroom, 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-233-6490.
YOGA FIVE-WEEKRESTORATIVE COURSE:Restore your sense of well-being, soothe your nerves and feel deeply rested with this skillfully supported, restorative practice SUNDAY taughtby Robyn Castano;4 p.m .; $65 for five weeks; lyengar Yoga DANCE WORKSHOPS:Eric of Bend, 660 NEThird St., Bend; and Jenlca Zimmer will be 541-318-1186. coming from Portland to teach DISTANCE: Bringing workshops for Argentine Tango, GOING THE West Coast Swing, Blues Fusion, out the Best in Distance Runners: Burlesque and Men's Technique; Join Carol and Jim McLatchle, Summit High's track coaches, for a 11 a.m.; $10 for spectators talk on how to bring out the best in per class, $18 for participants distance runners at any level; 7 p.m.; per class; Black Cat Ballroom, free; FootZone, 842 NWWall St., 600 NE Savannah Drive No. 3, Bend; www.footzonebend.com or Bend; www.blackcat.dance or 541-317-3568. 541-233-6490.
How to submit
Real Estate
will document the number of X-rays, surgeries and other re-
dent. The chairman of the Carolina. University of Pittsburgh deDelitto will lead the trial partment of physical thera- to test the European treatpy in the School of Health ment against "usual care" in
of these SNPs, taking the
Dream Home In
pain and their predisposition to avoiding pain out of fear of
System in Baltimore, the Bos-
reduced risk of colorectal
Find Your
Robin Rombach I Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Hopkins Hospital and Health
security, part of the Baby Boomer Financial, Health and Wellness Series; 5 p.m.; BMC Old Mill District Clinic, Bend; 541-905-9064.
• Joe Sluka has joined the St. Charles Foundation board. Sluka is the president and CEO of St. Charles Health System. • Dr. Norwyn Newbyhas joined the St. Charles Foundation board. Newby was a neurosurgeon at St. Charles until 2002 when he retired. • Evle Lernerhas joined the St. Charles Foundation board. Lerner is aformer realtor and is now a real estate investor. • Connie Newporthas joined the St. Charles Foundation board. Newport ls a past chair of the BendParks 8 Recreation Foundation. • Jennifer Welander has joined the St. Charles Foundation board. Welander is the chief financial officer at St. Charles. • David Otto,DC, has joined The Center for Integrative Medicine as a chiropractor. Otto specializes in pain management, sports medicine and nutrition for chronic disease. • Ellie Meyrowitz,DPT, OCS, hasloined Rebound Physical Therapy's REP Lab. Meyrowitz was previously Director of Running and Women's Health at KOR PTin Portland.
based on their response to
magnifies and is more difficult and expensive to treat.
through it."
retirement planning andsocial
PEOPLE
searchers will evaluate them
dition in which the level of pain
That's when I couldn't push
ballroom. But Roth's efforts to con-
WEDNESDAY
Delitto said the trial will in-
dude 2,640 patients with acute lower back pain experienced
further injury. The team also
asthma in children and discuss naturopathic modalities of healing; 6 p.m.; Hawthorn Healing Arts Center, 39 Louisiana Ave., Bend; www.hawthorncenter.com or 541-330-0334.
AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 12:30 p.m.; Bend Blood Donation Center, 815 SW Bond St., Suite 110, Bend; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS.
assigned to follow one of the two protocols.
Dance instructor Chris Roth, owner of Steel City Ballroom in Mt. Lebanon,Pennsylvania,teaches salsa dancing to a student,Becky Stern. Roth is part of a University of Pittsburgh study to find better
In his office, Delitto analyzed Roth's posture and
TUESDAY
Center. Each will be randomly
but not like that. This was clude Intermountain Healththe most extreme pain. care in Salt Lake City, Johns
800-RED-CROSS. AMERICAN REDCROSS BLOOD DRIVE:Identification required, call for appointment; 1 p.m.; Desert Song Community Church,640 SW Evergreen Ave., Redmond; www.redcrossblood.org or 800-RED-CROSS. ALLERGIES,ECZEMA 5 ASTHMATHE NATUROPATHICAPPROACH FOR CHILDREN:Josh Phillips, ND, will speak on the underlying
causes of allergies, eczemaand
clinics affiliated with the five medical centers including Uni-
become chronic. To study that concept, Pa-
F ortunately f o r R o t h , ton Medical Center and the Anthony Delitto was a stu- Medical University of South
MONDAY
ue doing everyday activities. Called "Target," the project will recruit 60 primary care
a new approach to treating lower back pain. Don't shut down. Remain active. Push through the pain so it doesn't
Events:Emailevent information to healthevents@bendbulletin.com or click on "Submit anEvent" at bendbulletin.com. Allow at least 10 days before thedesired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly andwill appear onlineat bendbulletin.com/healthclasses. Contact: 541-383-0358. Announcements:Email information about local people or organizations involved in health issues to healthevents©bend bulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.
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THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
N
D3
TjoN
earntocrac t eco e Cuttingtot eessenceo ats
onconusin e
The Washington Post Dietitian
"There are two kinds of polyunsaturated fats: omega-6 (corn, soybean and grapeseed oil) and omega-3 (fish, flax, walnuts). Omega-6 and omega-3 are both essential fats, which mean you need to get them in your diet to prevent deficiency. Most Americans get plenty of omega-6 andtend to notgetenough omega-3 and monounsaturated fat."
a n d h e a l th-
ful-eating columnist Ellie Krieger answered ques-
By Ellie Krieger
tions in a recent Post on-
Special to The Washington Post
line chat. Here is an edited
Eggs have long been a symbol of new beginnings. Now they are celebrating a new
excerpt.
Q
• What's the d iffer• ence (nutritionally)
chapter of their own, with the Scientific Report of the 2015
between polyunsaturated
Dietary Guidelines Advisory
fat and monounsaturated
Committee's r e c ommendation to lift the long-held limit
fat? I t h ink I r e member that one raises HDL cho-
on dietary cholesterol. It turns
lesterol, but I don't remem-
of certain cancers, Parkin-
out that for the vast majority of
ber which one. Are there
son's disease and gallstones. I
people, the cholesterol we eat doesn't significantly raise our
Deb Lindsey/The Washington Post
blood cholesterol; rather, sat-
With so much language andvarying information, it can beconfus-
urated fat does. So foods that are relatively low in saturated fat but high in cholesterol, primarily shellfish and eggs, have been freedfrom the yoke of restriction (pardon the pun; I couldn't help myself). Eggs have a lot going for
ing to try to decipher the labels on egg cartons at the market.
them. For just 70 calories, a
outdoors. And pasture-raised
choline, which is important for brain health, and lutein and zeaxanthin, which p r omote eye health. Plus they are fast,
is that there is no mandatory regulation of these terms for
easy to cook and very economical, running between 25 and 45 cents each, depending on which kind you buy. Actually, deciding which carton of eggs to grab at the
that someone is literally watch-
ficult thing about them. The confusing claims on the shelf are nothing short of mind-boggling. Now that there's a green light to eat eggs more freely, here's some information to make the retail egg hunt a bit
egg production. To ensure that these claims are verifiableing the hen house — look for products with third-party certifications, such as "certified
humane" or "animal welfare approved." • Organic: Eggs with the USDA Organic seal come from hensthatareraisedon organic feed (grown without synthetic pesticides, fungicides or fertilizers) and are free-range (uncaged with outdoor access). Facilities are checked by accredited inspectors. • Hormone-free or antibiotic-free: Hormones or antibiotics are not used in egg produc-
temperature at which they co-
agulate so they can be used in recipes that call for r aw
eggs, such as many Caesar dressings. • Omega-3: Eggs enhanced with this good-for-you fat come from hens whose feed is spiked with omega-3-rich ingredients such as flaxseed, marine algae or canola. The eggs contain anywhere from 100 mg to600 mg omega-3 each, whereas a regular egg has about 30 mg.Although this may offer some benefit, it's worth noting that the predominant type of omega-3 in eggs is a form that is the considerably less potent (ALA) than that found in fish (DHA and EPA). • Grade: There are three grades bestowed upon eggs by
But because the bird's natu-
housed in barns where they
are heated until just below the
I got one of those pasta- and I use them in salads, dips, • string-type shredders chilis, pasta sauces, etc. I alfor Christmas. Besides zuc- ways buy low-sodium or nochini and yellow squash, what salt-added, and I drain and else can I shred? Then do I eat rinse them before using.
for saturated or trans fat.
it raw or cook the shreds'?
Monounsaturates come from olive oil, canola oil,
• These shredders are so A • much fun. Pretty much Q• terness in b any firm vegetable or fruit
n uts an d
Q•
more of those.
Grade AA is best, with thick,
of chatter about Q •• Lots coffee and caffeine
flavor or nutrition.
• I can
example. There are two should work. And you can eat kinds of polyunsaturated them raw in salads, or cook fats: omega-6 (corn, soy- them up. They will cook realbean and grapeseed oil) ly quickly because there is so and omega-3 (fish, flax, much surface area. Try carwalnuts). Omega-6 and rots, sweet potatoes, white poomega-3 are both essential tato, beet root (I like shredded fats, which mean you need beet in salads) cucumbers, apto get them in your diet to ples and turnips. prevent deficiency. Most Americans get plenty of I love baking and have omega-6 and tend to not • a lways wanted to t r y get enough omega-3 and using yogurt to supplement/ monounsaturated fat. So complement fatty butter, etc. it is best to focus on eating
have a certain healthful visual
Q•
a v o cado, f o r
ment as part of a voluntary quality program: AA, A and B.
• Cage-free, f r e e-rangeral behavior is to forage for appeal, and blue eggs (which or pasture-raised: These la- insects, it also implies they have been popping up in more bels pertain to the way the did not spend time feeding markets) are fun to bring home egg-laying hens are treated. outdoors. to wow the kids, they are no Cage-free means the birds are • Pasteurized: These eggs different from white in quality,
convenience foods a round,
choices, and studies show protective health effects for both. They can improve your cholesterol profile when you swap them
the U.S. Agriculture Depart-
firm whites, high, round yolks easier. and clean, unbroken shells. • Farm-fresh or all-natural: Grade A eggs, most commonly These are marketing terms; found in stores, have the same they have no official meaning qualities as AA but with slightwhatsoever. They ar e u sed tion, so these claims are irrele- ly less firm whites. Grade B, to conjure a wholesome im- vant, akin to seeing a"fat-free" rarely sold retail, are primarily pressionofthe productforthe sticker on a banana. used in prepared egg products. consumer, like the picture of • Vegetarian-fed: This • Color: Different breeds a farm might. Disregard these means the chicken's feed con- of hens lay different colors of words — and any images of tained no animal byproducts. eggs, so although brown eggs bucolic fields, for that matter.
A
unsaturated fats are good
can walk freely, rather than being confined to cages. Freerange means they are not only uncaged, but they also have at least some access to the
largeegg provides 6 grams of hens are kept outdoors for satisfying protein, vitamin D, a most of the year and brought variety of B vitamins, essential indoors at night for protection. minerals such as iron and zinc, The issue of confusion here
market can be the most dif-
the soup base. But I have just about every type of canned benefits or d r a wbacks recommend keeping it to two bean in my cupboard as well to favoring one over the cups a day, skipping it in the — black beans, pinto, cannelother? afternoon/evening if you have lini, black-eyed peas, garban• Both polyunsaturat- trouble sleeping, and keeping zos — you name it! I think • ed fats and mono- an eye on the calories. they are one of the healthiest
have too much. Are there
any other health concerns? • Besides giving the • jitters, too much caffeine can affect sleep qual-
A
c ause intestinal
distress. Plus, if your caffeine is a double caramel latte, you could be sipping lots of calories. That said, coffeeis notas bad for us fact, it has real health benefits. Studies have shown thatcoffee reduces the risk
and vegetables for their nutrients and water content but to
service."
lactating women, it's not good
for anyone to ingest too much mercury, Parker said.
Stick to this:1 cup of spin-
also choose other options in those categories (for example Stick to this: No more than hard, crunchy fruits like ap- 6 ounces of large fish weekly. ples, carrots and celery that
.5
/
Stick to this: t/2 to I cup of
ach, half of a banana and t/2 cup assorted frozen berries.
You may also add milk or yogurt to increase the protein and provide some added calcium, Parker said.
Fruit smoothie
Why it's good for you:This is a great way to get in an ex-
WINDOW TREATS
said. "If you wouldn't eat them
Why they're good for you: all together in one sitting, conMost nuts boast a good dose sider modifying your recipe to
A • stop worrying. It never really helps! Besides, it • First of a l l , d e finitely
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of monounsaturated fat that,
when used to replace saturated fats and trans fats, can reduce
blood cholesterol and lower heartdisease and stroke risk, Zied said. "Nuts also provide polyunsaturated fats, which are essential fats our bodies need from the diet since it can't
make them," Zied said. Too much ofa good thing: They're easy to overdo because they're a concentrated source of calories (a lot of calories in a small portion), Zied sard. Stick to this:1 ounce of nuts
•
•
P
per day — or up to I '/2 ounces
if you can afford the calories. Mix the types of nuts so you get a different mix of nutrients Chris Walker / Chicago Tribune
With fruit smoothies, it's important to not drink more than you'd normally eat.
Too much
Tomato and orange
Continued from 01 Too much ofa good thing: "Each one also contains 322 calories and 29 grams of fat," said Allison Parker, registered and licensed dietitian for
Tomatoes are high in vitamins A, B6, E and K, and they're
Mariano's, a Roundy's brand
grocery story. Stick to this: Parker has t/4 to '/s of a medium avocado as
Why they're good for you: also a good source of copper, potassium, fiber and phosphorus. Oranges are packed with vitamin C, phytochemicals and flavonoids, which have anti-inflammatory properties — and they are only about 80 calories.
and flavors in your diet. An ounce of almonds is 24 whole almonds or
Large fish(suchastuna, swordfish or mackerel)
mayonnaise.
thing that comes to mind is
Free classes open to the public: BEND — Thursday, April 2, 4:30 p.m. Bend Senior Center 1600 SE Reed Market Road
Why it's good for you: It's lean protein and high in B12, vitamin D, calcium and iron. It
also has high amounts of omega-3 fatty acids, which have been associated with everything from reducing inflammation and heart disease to
a service of fat in her meals Too much ofa good thing: warding off depression. or snacks — essentially using "If you overdose on them, one Too much ofa good thing: the avocado asa replacement for another fat, like butter or
Come learn the ABC's and D's of Medicare and the often confusing process of the Medicare system. You'll find the information you need to make the right decisions about Medicare health insurance.
4 ta b l espoons
chopped. An ounce of walnuts is 14 halves or 4 tablespoons chopped. An ounce of pistachios is 48 pistachios.
These types of fish contain rel-
tooth enamel," Zied said. "Too atively high levels of mercury, much acidity can wear it away, and while this is particularly
I'm
missing? Should I just stop worrying and eat the green veggies I do like?
tra dose of fruits, vegetables
tomatoes, an orange or a clem- and possibly low-fat dairy. entine is great per day. Too much ofa good thing: The calories add up, Parker
Nuts
B russels sprouts t ha t
A
as we once thought. In
incorporate a more realistic
foods that can erode enamel)."
I'd like to eat more veggies (such as spinach, green beans and peas). Is there a way to like broccoli and kale and
Q•
so it's good to eat acidic fruits concerning in pregnant and
stimulate the flow of saliva and neutralize the acids in
r o c coli,
kale and similar foods. I don't think I can get past that, but
sounds like there are many green vegetables you do like Does it work well in certain and you are probably getting recipes'? Any tips? the basic vegetable nutrition • I have had success sub- you need from those. But don't • stituting '/4 cup of melted stop trying new ones. You butter or oil in baking with might find that you don't like /4 to /3 cup of plain, regular them cooked butyou enjoy yogurt (not Greek, which is them raw. Brussels sprouts, thicker). This works best in for example, are much mildrecipes such as quick breads, er tasting when raw, thinly muffins and pancakes that sliced in salads. Also, build on don't rely on creaming butter what you already like. Since and sugar to incorporate air. you like spinach, maybe try mixing a few kale leaves in Do you buy canned your spinach dishes, so they • beans, or do you cook blend in more seamlessly. your own? Also, while you don't want • I do both. If I am mak- to add too much salt to your • ing a big pot of soup, I food, salt does counter bitwill use dried beans because terness, so sprinkle some on I like to simmer them with and see if you like the taste garlic and onions and use the better. It may be worth the liquid they cook in to form trade-off.
recently. I know it c an make you jittery if you
ity and
t a s te t h e b i t -
Sponsored by:
For more information call 541-241-6927
www.Medicare.Pacificsource.com Paa j i C S O ur Ce Medicare This event is only for educational purposes. Noplan-specific benefits or details will be shared. PacificSourceCommunity Health Plans is anHMO/PPOplan with a Medicare contract. Enrollment in PacificSource Medicare depends oncontract renewal. Y0021 MRK2699 CMSAccepted
D4 TH E BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
FjTNEss
e a e u ons rin i n ess a ers a in o w i ner aze By Leslle Barker
How to getyourspouse to join you inexercising By Gretchen Reynolds
tionnaire, each husband or
New >orh Times News Service
wife had met the standar'd rec
Spouses influence each ommendation for exercise to other's exercise habits, for improve health, or 30 minutes
The Dallas Morning News
better and w o rse, more of moderate exercise at least
Spring has officially begun, and everywhere are reminders of renewal, of hope, of possibility: Tiny buds on seemingly lifeless branches. Sprinklers watering inches-high stalks. The tennis court you've avoided for weeks. The running shorts with price tags still attached. The gym cardyou can'tfind,
than is often recognized, five times a week. according to a new study of Then the scientists deterthe workout habits of midspouse's routine tend to be r
" s.
but can't quite muster the
oomph to look for. With renewal, alas, comes
mined whether either spouse
dle-aged couples. The study had altered his or her exerfound that changes in one cise habits between ques-
'sj-'~y „.:,4i .:-
4,'I
:i/~.
the harsh truth. Namely, that
tionnaires, and whether the
echoed in the other's, high- couple's exercise routines had lighting the extent to which converged or grown more difour exercise behavior is ferent during those years. shaped not just by our perWhat they found was that sonal intentions but by the theolder couples'exerciseroupeople around us as well. tines tended to become strikIn studying why people ingly similar at this point in opt to exercise or not, scien- their lives. tists often and understand-
If a woman met the standard
you don't quite remember the last time you exercised. Maybe you stopped because of an injury, but by the
ably focus on individual psychology and situations. But increasingly, exercise scientists are also looking
recommendation for exercise during her first questionnaire
time it healed, you'd lost interest. Maybe once you ran
into broader factors that
be meetingthose recommen-
can have a bearing, induding our social relationships and whether being single, married, childless or employed is likely to affect ex-
dations six years later than were men whose spouses did
that half-marathon, you never wanted to see a shoelace
again. Maybe you're just flat.1„5ip out bored with exercise. "For most people, you get to a point where you go through the motions and don't have the fire on a daily basis like Smiley N.Pool /Dallas Morning News when you first started," says Personal trainer Nadla Christian, right, works out with Michele Renault-Rutt at the Trophy Club ln AdJeremy Allen, a p ersonal dlson, Texas. Slnce it may have been a lengthy amount of time slnce your last workout, find a balance trainer at Baylor Tom Landry when starting back up again. If your old workout wasn't successful, try switching lt up for a fresh Fitness Center i n Da l l a s, approach. Texas. "There are those who are the exception, but for the most part you go through pe- "You'll risk injury if you don't fake-it-till-you-make-it man- not a chore." riods when you get burned t ake breaks. Mentally it i s tra. Better yet, since your old Here are some more tips
out in general." And while those first few
hours or days or weeks or (ahem) months may have left you almost giddy, looking surreptitiously over your shoulder for the truant offi-
cer, maybe now you're ready to get back into it. Or you're not, but you know you should. Well, you can return to the fitness groove. First, though, a few things to keep in mind: Lack of balance leads to burnout. "Anytime you get stressed, something's miss-
ing," says Nadia Christian, a Plano personal trainer who
has a master's degree in professional counseling. "Maybe you don't have enough rest. When you get to the point where you think, 'Oh, I don't want to go work out,' that's
feedback (that) you're probably overtraining. You need something else to complete
balance in your life." Putting your workout on pause can be good. "The body has limits," says Dan Krawczyk (say KRAW-zik), a ssociate professor a t t h e Center for BrainHealth at the University of Texas at Dallas.
Active
good to take a break. It's like
routine or workout caused to getting back your workout mojo. The longer you go without switch it up. Set goals. Sign up for a "Don't just stay in the gym race, Allen says. "Do someexercising, the harder it will be to start back up. and do weight workouts and thing that reignites the body Y our br ain w o n' t m a k e get on the treadmill," Allen and mind to get going and you relearn the skills all over says. "Force yourself to get start training again. Someagain. outside, to get on the bike, times people have nothing "The belief is that if you've to go to yoga classes. Go to to shoot for. They're doing established a habit, you'll Zumba. Do anything where something just to do it." know the movements again," you're still getting the workWhen Christian began says Krawczyk, who has a out in, but it's different." signing up for triathlons, the doctorate in cognitive neuroA new routine makes you time she put in on the treadscience. "Habits do basically focus in a way you haven't be- mill began to have a purpose, get imprinted in th e brain. fore, thus engaging the brain she says. "That made it fun When you fall out of the hab- in a new way. That's good in for me. I look forward to it beit, your brain still has that as many ways, Krawczyk says. cause I have a goal." part of its makeup. It's like a There's a catch, though. Surround yourself with ac"You have a process where tive people. Don't know any? memory savings. If you can re-create t h ose c o nditions it's awkward," h e s a ys. Sign up for a group fitness that made you faithful to ex- "You're doing poorly." class, Christian says. "Whethercise all along, it's one way Here, one of two outcomes er it's resistance training or to tap into that mind-set." can occur: You get frustrat- core or kickboxing, you end Think about riding a bike. ed and ditch the exercise up making friends there who Even if you haven't done so in because you justcan't seem have the same goaL" decades, you still know how. to grasp it. Or you feel slight Be accountable. "Get someThat type of memory is called satisfaction, so you p ush one else willing to take this implicit; you learned how through till t hat s l iver be- road with you," Allen says, at one time and your brain comes a slab.As a trainer, "whether a trainer or friend hasn't forgotten. Allen says, he walks a fine or family member. Lots of Memory abilities aside, line: "You want to push them times, accountability partthough, often just finding (clients) but not to a point ners are great for getting that passion to reignite can where they're going to quit. I you overthat hump and give be daunting. This may be one get things they can tolerate, you the extra push when you of those times to take up the then, as they get better, it's don't want to." taking a vacation from work."
cise delays — but death.
"Exercise adds 16 years in terms of postponing morbidity and nine years postponing mortality," Fries said, referenc-
Continued from 01 "Then what happens is that their physiological function goes down and they get pro- ing a 2012 research article he gressively more d isabled," wrote for Current Gerontology Joyner said. " By the t i m e and Geriatrics Research. they're in their 60s and 70s, Excuse me while I go for a they'vebecome frailand have this long period of reduced Fries is a fan of running befunctionality prior to death. cause it trains the entire body Seventypercent of70-year-olds and keeps organ function high. can't get up off the floor with- It's also good for preventing out grabbing onto something." cognitive dedine. He is cauHe said the biggest predictors tious, however, about commitof five-year life expectancy ting to any specific prescription were things like grip strength, of exercise in terms of type, self-selected walking speed time or intensity, saying there and how fast you get out of a isn't enough research to supchair. Weak and slow equal port "fine-grain" recommenget your affairs in order. dations. Instead, he advises, "How early you start and "Start as early as you can and how many years you keep ex- do as much as you can. Also, ercising is probably more im- do something you like." Sound portant than amount," Dr. Jim advice. Fries, professor emeritus at If you want to live long and Stanford University told me of live well, Joyner recommends how to "delay aging." Fries is a mimicking the lifestyle of SevBoston Marathon qualifier and enth-day A d ventists, r efermade it to just below Camp 4 on encing a 2001 study of 34,192 Everest, just 3,000 feet beneath followers published in the Arthe summit. As a pioneer in the chives of Internal Medicine. subject of staying spry, he prac- They have "optimal behavtices what he preaches. "More iors," such as regular exercise, exercise is better, but there are healthy diet and body weight, diminishing returns. And start- and abstinence from smoking, ing young is better than start- and this affords them up to 10 ing at 50, but starting at 50 is years longer life expectancy, better than nothing." along with a significantly deJoyner, who once ran a light- layed onset of aging. ning-fast marathon (2 hours Joyner was more prescripand 25 minutes), was more opti- tive in his exercise recommenmistic about the later-life start. dations, suggesting a combiHe explained that a solid effort nation of aerobic exercise, like in middle age could change running or cycling, but also yourphysiologyto make it akin advocating that which builds to a lifetime exerciser. strength, like lifting weights. It's not just aging that exer- "You've got to do both," he
you to lose the exercise spark,
said. "Aerobic is more important in young and middle age, but older people don't need a lot of aerobic capacity
compared with the population at large, they were staying young on the inside. I don't like the idea of wastto go about their daily tasks. ing away in a bed, tubes in oriSeniors are more limited by fices, perhaps foryears.Whi le musculoskeletal frailty." I've I'm on the right side of the dirt, shown previously that resis- I want to enjoy life, so I'll keep tance training improves bone exercising. And the compresstrength and prevents falls, sion of my disabled period but it also makes it easier to
means the nosedive into death
look after yourself and stay out should be mercifully brief. of the nursing home by being able to carry your own groceries and laundry basket or open your own jars. •
and her husband did not, he
was 70 percent more likely to
not exercise much, so long as
The results of past studies on this subject have
the woman was still exercising regularly. Similarly, if a husband met the recommendations during his first questionnaire and his
been alternately predictable
wife did not, she was about 40
and startling. Single men and women, for instance, generally exercise far more than married people, although divorce can change
percent more likely to be meeting those recommendations
ing of the American Heart Association in Baltimore,
as retirement or a move, could be influential. (The scientists
ercise behavior.
a few years later than were
women whose husbands were and remained sedentary. that. Men typically exercise Less encouraging: If one more afte ram arriageends; spouse eased off or eschewed women in t ha t s i tuation exercise during the years befrequently exercise less. tween questionnaires, his or Employedmen, even those her spouse usually followed with desk jobs, usually ex- suit. ercise more than men who The implication, says Lauare unemployed. ra Cobb, a graduate student There has been surpris- at Johns Hopkins who led the ingly l i t tl e e x amination, study, is that "spouses can play however, of how marriage an outsized role" in exercise affects exercise in the years behavior in middle age. after a couple's children Of course, the study relied have grown, and especially on selfreported, prospective whether and how chang- information, she says, so it es in one spouse's exercise "can't prove" that one spouse's routine at that point affect exercise habits directly affect the other spouse. the other's. "It's equally posSo for the new study, pre- sible," she says, "that other sented this month at a meet- shared lifestyle factors," such researchers from Johns Hopkins University and
controlled for health problems by excluding couples if one other institutions turned to spouse had a major disease.) data from the AtheroscleBut the neat alignment rosis Risk in Communities between one middle-aged Study, which includes an- spouse's workouts and, after a swers to health question- fewyears, the other's does sugnaires from thousands of
gest, Cobb says, that to inspire
middle-aged Americans. Most participants responded multiple times, beginning in the late 1980s. The researchers looked
your spouse to work out more, you should probably begin by ramping up your own routine. And if you hope to maintain that regimen, nudge a sedenfor data related to exercise tary spouse to join you. 0thfrom 3,261 healthy, mar- erwise, it can be sorely temptried couples with an aver- ing to settle onto the couch age age of about 55, each yourself. of whom had filled out the q uestionnaires a t lea s t twice, with about six years between their answers. As a benchmark, the research-
ers focused on whether, according to their first ques-
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"Resistance training is not
just for those meathead guys," said Dr. Spencer Nadolsky, a bodybuilding family physician in Suffolk, Virginia. "My older patients who lift weights do a lot better at being independent."
Traumatic Loss Group
"People are making fitness way too complicated," Joyner said. "I don't have a snowblower fora reason. Mother nature gives you a free workout." It sure does for my 71-yearold father, who has no running
Losses by suicide, homicide, accident and other forms of trauma shme common bonds that bring pmticipants together for eight weeks of sharing, comfort, and support towards healing. Registration required by calling (541) 382-5882.
water, heats with wood, and shovels snow in t h e w i nter
All Partners In Care support groups are open to the community, take place at our Wyatt Court opces in Bend — and are ogered at no cost to participants.
and gardens in the summer in northern British Columbia.
Inspiring news regarding the efficacy of exercise to delay aging was just published in the Journal of Physiology. It compared old cyclists to really old cyclists, using 125 subjects ranging from 55 to 79 years, and a researcher looking solely at the collected data of their
Tuesdays 1:30-3:00pm (Start date to be determined when registration for this class is full.)
at Partners In Care, 2075 NE Wyatt Court, Bend Lunch included RSVP to (541)-382-5882
•
various physical capabilities would not be able to tell how old these studies' participants
were. Yes, the oldest subjects didn't perform as well as their less senior counterparts, but
(541) 382-5882 PaltnerSbend.Or9 - PBrtnerS
In Care
Hospice i Home Health-f-Hospice House i Transitions i Palliative Care
THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
D5
MoNEY
s a mae nursewort
more t an a emae nurse?
By Karen Kaplan
they support — are being shortchanged by the gen- "Given the large numbers of women employed Registered nurses w ho der-based pay difference, say in nursing, gender pay differences affect are male earn nearly $11,000 the researchers who conducta sizable part of the population. We hope more per year than RNs who ed the study. "Given the large numbers that our results will bring awareness to this are female, new research shows. Only about half of of women employed in nurs- important topic." that difference can be ex- ing, gender pay differences — Study leader Ulrike Muench, a nurse practitioner plained by factors like edu- a ffect a sizable part of t h e cation, work experience and population," said study leadwith a Pho from Yale clinical specialty. er Ulrike Muench, a nurse That leaves a $5,148 an- practitioner w i t h a PhD nual salary gap that effec- from Yale who studies nurs- in 2008, it collected data once back to 1988. Though the gap tively discriminates against ing, health policy and health everyfour years from more a ppeared to narrow i n t h e women, who make up the care economics at UC San than 30,000 RNs across the middle and late 1990s, it widvast majority of the nursing Francisco. country. Altogether, the study ened again after 2000. "We hope that our results sample included responses workforce, according to a Even after th e r esearchstudy published Tuesday in will bring awareness to this from 87,903 full-time RNs, ers accounted for things like the Journal of the American important topic," she said in a 93 percent of whom were location, hours worked per Medical Association. statement. women. week, years of experience With nurses earning an Muench and her colleagues In the raw analysis, the av- and type of nursing degree, average of $66,973 per year, examined t w o de c ades' erage salaries for men were men still earned $5,148 more that $5,148 amounts to an 8 worth of salary information $10,775 higher than for wom- than women, on average. percent bump in pay for men. from th e N a tional Sample en, the researchers found. For some nursing specialApproximately 2.5 million Survey of Registered Nurs- That discrepancy can be seen ties, the gap was even greater. women — and the families es. Before the survey ended in every survey year going In cardiology, for instance, Los Angeles Times
VA Continued from 01 Nationally, 8. 6 m i l l ion Choice cards were sent out, but only about 24,300 veterans received appointments as
of Feb.5.
'Irritates us to no end' A nyone enrolled i n
VA
care received a Choice card in the mail, despite the fact
that many are not eligible for care through the program. To be eligible, veterans must
have been given a wait time of more than 30 days by their local VA facility and they must
live more than 40 miles from the nearest VA facility. That creates a tricky sit-
uation in Central Oregon, where most veterans live well within 40 miles of the Bend VA clinic. But the clin-
ic provides only outpatient services, including primary careand some specialty care, such as urology, audiology and mental health. For the
bigger stuff, many veterans still have to travel more than 160 miles to the Portland VA
Medical Center. "That I live here in Bend
and I have to put rural guys on the bus to send them to the Portland VA irritates us to no
end," said JW Terry, board president for Central Oregon Veterans Outreach.
A group of U.S. senators, including Oregon Democrats Ron Wyden and JeffMerkley, took issue with the fact that the VA's eligibility for the
male RNs earned $6,034 bigger paychecks than their more than their female coun- male counterparts. (This terparts. Only one specialty difference was too small to — orthopedics — had a pay be considered st atistically gap too small to be statistical- significant.) ly significant, meaning that To see whether the situathe difference might have tionhad improved since 2008, been due to chance. the researchers compared the Workplace mattered too. salaries of more than 200,000 Nurses who cared for hospi- RNs who took part in the U.S. tal patients took home $3,873 Census Bureau's American more per year if they were Community Surveybetween men, according to the study. In outpatient settings, men
10 percent of the nurses were men — and they averaged women. $9,562 more per year than the The researchers also found women, based on the unadsignificant differences ac- justed analysis. cording to job type. The most The gender pay gap for extreme disparity was seen nurses "is similar in magniamong nurse anesthetists, tude to the salary differencwho were paid $17,290 more es found for physicians," the earned $7,678 more than
if they were men than if they were women. However, women who were in senior aca-
demic positions had slightly
EXERCISE
are ou
sider the type of care available within 40 miles. "In many areas across the nation, the effect is that those
who need services only available at a VA medical center, are preventedfrom using the
Choice Care to access specialty care in their local community," the senators wrote in a Feb. 25 letter to the VA secretary. The problems aren't unique
DON'T SMOKE
SHORTNESS OFBREATH JAW,THROAT 8 ABDOMINAL PAIN
NUMBiIESS IN LEGS
WEAKNESS
OUI'
CHEST
to Central Oregon. Eighty percent of veterans who said they live more than 40 miles
from a VA facility and could not be seen within 30 days were not given the choice to
receive non-VA care, according to a Veterans of Foreign W ars report released earlier
•
g •
this month.
The VFW identified a lag f a cilities
a result, people could n ot
schedule appointments with providers. Another issue has
Complete cardiovascular care:
b een confusion over w h at
•
healthcare service isneeded. If the VA doesn't clearly iden-
•
tify the service, the contractor, TriWest, can't schedule
• • • • •
the appointment.
'Absolutely a nightmare' Miller, who lives on Bend's
east side less than a block from Vince Genna Stadium, said he retired from the Ma-
rine Corps with full disability in 1967. He started getting care through the VA the
following year. In close to 50 years, he said, he thought he had experienced VA dysfunction at its worst.
"But I have never gone
Over a 30-year career, the pay gap adds up to a $155,000 bonus for men, Muench noted.
GET SCREENEB
is enin o
but who live near a Community-Based Outpatient Clinic,
approving people into the program and that information being relayed to the program's contractors. As
researchers wrote in JAMA.
"They still treated me like gram comes up at just about that choice." t hrough a n y t hing lik e diverted to others within the this," he said of the Choice I was a piece of nothing," he every meeting at a PTSD supRodney Hines, a 27-year- VA. But several veterans who Program. said. "It was a joke." port group that meets at the old Marine C orps v eteran were interviewed for this stoA fter he got the card i n M iller u l t i m ately w e n t Vet Center near Lava Lanes who lives in Bend, said it can ry said the low utilization is the mail in November, Mill- ahead with the colonoscopy on Bend's east side. sometimes be uncomfortable not because people don't want er — already two months Jan. 28, signing off to pay for Zin Watford, a 77-year-old to get care in non-VA facili- to use the program but bebacklogged for an overdue it in case the Choice Program retired Marine, attends the ties. When Hines, who suf- cause they were turned away colonoscopy at the Portland didn't come through. He still weekly meetings. He doesn't fers from PTSD, goes to The or gave up. VA — called thenumber on hasn't been able to get an an- need to use the Choice Pro- Center: Orthopedic & N e uThen there's people such the card. An operator gave swer from TriWest, although gram becausehishealth care rosurgical Care & Research as Steve Kompir, a 73-yearhim an authorization number. someone from the company is covered under a diff erent in Bend, for example, he said old Army veteran who lives Not long after, the Bend Sur- did call him recently to report VA program, but he feels for he's "constantly on edge." The in Bend. After hearing about gery Center, where he was to that his right knee replace- veterans who have no other chairs are so close togeth- his friends' struggles trying er he's elbow-to-elbow with to enroll in Choice, he's not receive the colonoscopy, told ment had been approved. options. "They give you the Choice strangers. him the number was incom- Miller's right knee was reeven going to bother. Last plete. Miller called TriWest, placed in 2009 and he had not card and then they put so At the Bend VA clinic, how- week, he spent a half-hour on the contractor for the Choice asked for that procedure. many damn restrictions on us- ever, the chairs are wider and hold with the VA just to make "I just laughed and hung ing it that they can't use it," he have their backs to the wall. an appointment to have his Program, to get the full authorization number. That ended up," he said. said, "and so they really, really And the doctors and staff hearing aids cleaned and reup beinga2/-hour call. Now, he waits. are complaining about it." there understand him, he paired. When it comes to the "It's the anxiety part of it," "It was absolutely a nightsard. VA, everything is a source of "I don't have to w orry frustration, he said. m are," h e s a i d . "I w e nt he said. "You're waiting for Uncertain future "I've heard two people that through nine people." the hammer to fall." The Choice Program is about them judging me," Eventually, he got the numMiller, who said he badly different from another that Hines said. I trust say that the program is ber. All seemed well, until the needs his left knee replaced, lets veterans ge t n o n -VA T he VF W c o n t inues t o so faulted at this point — uncenter called back and said it plans to use Medicare for fu- care, called Patient-Centered monitor the Choice Program less you want to put in some was still wrong. He called Tri- ture procedures, and whatev- C ommunity Care, or t h e and plans to release another more frustrating times and West again and an operator er supplemental insurance he PC3, which the VA rolled out report later this year. In its calls, get stuck on hold, you promised to fax the informa- can find — that or he'll pay in September 2013. Choice March report, the VFW said might as well stick with what tion to the provider immedi- out of pocket. has clearly defined eligibili- the 40-mile rule should not be you've got or use private inately. An hour later, staffers Miller said he doesn't want ty rules, while PC3 left those measured in a straight-line, surance," he said. That's why Kompir has at the center said they had not to discourage other veterans decisions up to individual VA "as the crow flies" fashion as received it. from using the Choice Pro- clinics, said Carlos Fuentes, it is currently and should in- commercial insurance and "They were livid," he said. gram. Those who received the senior legislative associate stead be driving miles. relies on private providers (The Surgery Center's busi- cards should call and learn with the VFW. The VA announced Tues- for much of his care, includness office manager said she whether they're eligible, he Fuentes said it's good to day it plans to change the 40- ing much of his treatment for was not authorized to talk sard. have both programs, because mile rule to driving distance. prostate cancer. "If you went through what some veteranschoose to stay "I have enough frustration about the situation.) F ollowing news o f t h e T hen things took a t u r n . I went through and what I'm in the VA system even if they Choice Program's low utili- just getting the basic stuff The operators who until now sure a lot of vets have gone have to travel. zation rate, President Barack done," he said. "All I need is "It should be the veteran's Obama's fiscal-year 2016 bud- another layer of frustration." had been polite and apologet- through, you wouldn't want to ic, Miller said, got rude. He do it anymore," he said. choice," he said, "but they get calls for money to be re— Reporter: 541-383-0304, said he tried to remain polite. These days, the Choice Pro- should know when they have moved from the program and tbannow@bendbulletin.com
Choice Program doesn't con-
time between VA
2001 and 2013. In this sample,
•
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TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015
ADVICE EeENTERTAINMENT
utton oster as o owe erown at TV SPOTLIGHT
was like a place where I fit in,
situations. But I'm better with that. I still sort of deal with
where I belonged, that made s ense. I w a sn't r eally i n to
"Younger" 10 p.m. Tuesdays,TVLand
it. It's in my family. If I had to change anything, I wish I were more of a social butterfly. My husband's really great about asking people questions. He's incredibly gracious
sports. I wasn't a huge brainiac in school, but theater and acting — it just was where I fit
By Luaine Lee
in," she says.
Tribune News Service
PASADENA, Calif. — At
"I was a
t h eater geek. I
wasn't popular at all. I went through the awkwardest of
some time in our lives, most of us pretend to be something
we're not. Maybe we lie about our age or fib about our job or glorify our deeds.
and very interested. I think I tend to be a bit of a wallflower
and wait for someone to come was 12 or 13 and I shot up to to me. It usually takes me a litawkwardest phases when I
5-foot-9 when I was 14, and
tle bit." She met writer Ted Griffin on a blind date. "It worked because I didn't care. I was com-
eventually grew into my teeth.
In TV L and's new series,
"Younger," actress Sutton Fos-
And I'm still working on it,"
she laughs.
ter plays a woman convinced
she'd do better if she just filed a few years off her birth date and joined a younger age group. Foster, herself, has done
"When I s t a rted g etting pletely happy and content and older in high school, theater wasn't looking. I thought, 'Oh, became more popular, and I he's nice,'" she shrugs. wasn't as so much of a theater "Then he kept calling and nerd. But I didn't really care. It was persistent, really sweet, was really the only place that and one thing led to another. made sense to me." I thought he was really handHer mom had been a beau- some and really nice when
that. But it wasn't all in fun,
as it is in the show which premieres Tuesday. "After my divorce, I became
someone I wasn't," she says, seated on the beige couch in a dimly lit hotel suite.
Tribune News Service
ty from a small town in North
I first met him. And he was
Carolina who longed to be a model. But her father had for-
different from anyone I'd ever
Nivo Tortorella, left, plays a possible admirer to Sutton Foster's "Because how do you cope? "older" woman who pretends to be younger to make it in the busiHow do you deal? I was act- nessworld onTV Land's "Younger,"premiering Tuesday.
bidden it. As a result, Foster
ing out trying to overcome a difficult situation. 'That didn't work, so I'm going to Borle, are still f r iends, and try THIS.' For two years it was she's happily remarried. "But crazy town," she says. I feel that was a v ery i m "I became a different per- portant time of my life," says son during that time. What Foster, who's wearing a mareally calmed me down, I had roon dress printed with black
ing until she was cast in the
dated." Her mother, her most enthusiastic fan, didn't live to witness Foster's heady success. "My
says, she was encouraged by her mother to pursue perform-
mom and Ihad a very comtouring company of "Grease" plicated relationship which is dumped everywhere. And I on four days' notice. a whole other story. The day "At 19, I w a s t r a veling she died, it changed my relahad to put all the pieces back, but had an opportunity to re- around the country in a na- tionship with my father — my build in a new way." tional tour. I feel that life had whole, my entire life. In many She's rebuilt her life sev- helped me out there," she says, ways it was heartbreaking and eral times. When she w as crossing her legs. one of the hardest things I've one relationship after I got di- flowers. little, she was a warehouse Foster, 40, had always suf- ever had to go through. And "But it needed to end and vorced that was substantial. of energy. "I was a bit of a fered from anxiety, so the life there havebeen some beautiful Then that ended and I went, needed to unravel me so I spaz, and my mom put me in of a roving thespian wasn't things that have come my way. 'Offfffff.' could rebuild myself in a new dance classes when I was 4, the easiest choice. "I used to It's made me very appreciative She was starring in TV's way. When that happened, and I loved that, so it all sort struggle with anxiety," she of life and how precious and "Bunheads" at the time. She I felt like my life had been of started there. Then I start- nods. "I used to be afraid of how finite it is. It made me apand her ex, actor Christian t urned u p side d ow n a n d ed doing local theater and it flying and driving and social preciate everything more."
Wi e worries a out ac o coo in
MOVIE TIMESTODAY • There may be an additional fee for 3-0and IMAXmovies. • Movie times are subject to change after press time. e
Dear Abby: I am a full-time working woman, part-time student and new wife to an incredible husband. We're in our mid-20s
I'm hurt because I believe mar-
vegetables; you fix the chicken/ fish/chops on the grill.") The prob- riage is about committing to the lem with prepackaged meals is person you love. I also realize that many of them contain more
you can't live on love alone. Am
and have been living together for a year, but I have a problem that
sodium and/or other additives that nutritionists say are bad for
I'm still unsure about.
one's health when consumed on
I overly sensitive about this'? Is Gary's request reasonable, or do you think he's just looking for an excuse not to get married?
Growing up, I never learned to cook. The first meal I ever ma ewasspag e i when my husband (then fiance) and
a regular basis, so I think you do have cause for c oncern.
DEP,R
— Love Above All in New York
The most important ingredient in a lasting marriage is I moved i nt o o u r a partner who lasts, home. My issue is, I HATE cook- so if you want yours to last, be vig-
Dear Love Above All:Pay attention to what your fiance said be-
ing. I don't have the patience for it
ilant about what you put in your
me than a demand. Open your
and neither does my husband. Should I be ashamed that I in-
stomachs. Dear Abby: I'm a 29-year-old
eyes and keep talking with him. Did he specify whether your
dulge in "box" dinners that take
woman and I have been with my
name will be on the deed to the
ABBY
little time to prepare'? Naturally, fiance, "Gary," for three years. I cook meat and vegetables to go We became engagedsixmonths along with them, but is it shame- ago. ful when a wife doesn't cook evWhen I brought up wedding erything from scratch? My hus- ideas recently,Gary responded
cause it appears he has unilateral-
ly mapped out your future for you. This sounds less like a request to
house you will contribute to renovating? (I hope so.) I also hope you will be lucky enough to find a higher-paying job with a shorter commute, because not everyone is
band doesn't mind, but I worry.
with, "There are things that have
able to do that.
Shouldn't a wife cook real meals
to beresolved before I can even think about getting married." In
Dear New Wife:Because many couples both work, many hus-
said I need to get a better-paying job so I can contribute to the reno-
bands and wives take turns cook-
vations on the house, buy my own
Because I believe in both love and practicality, I think it's important you and Gary have premarital counseling together to clarify whether you're on the same page regarding finances.
ing or preparedinner together. personal items and have a shorter ("Honey, I'll do the salad and commute.
— Write toDear Abby at dearabby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA90069
for her husband? — New Wife in North Carolina
the discussion that followed, he
HAPPY BIRTHDAYFORTHURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015:This year you are like a ball of energy. At times you might seem a bit out of control, but you'll remain determined to accomplish what
you want. Youhaveastrong senseof direction. Be careful, as your words could become sharp or sarcastic when dealing with others. Take frequent breaks. If you are single, many people express interest in you. Take the Btsfs showthe klod time to evaluate of dsy yos 8 hsve who would be best ** * * * D ynamic for you. If you are ** * * Positive attached, your ** * Average swe e tie probably has seen you ** So-so through periods * Difficult like this. Nevertheless, make a concerted effort to spend quality one-onone time together. CANCER tends to drag
** * You might want to give some more thought to how you want to present yourself in public. Sometimes it's important to evaluate your presentation and see whether it reflects your inner self. Be more authentic, and others will respond well to this change. Tonight: Out with the
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McMenamins OldSt. Francis School, 700 NWBond St., 541-330-8562 • INHERENTVICE(R) 9 • INTO THEWOODS(PG) 6 • PADDINGTON (PG) 11:30 a.m. • STRANGE MAGIC (PG)2:30 • Youngerthan2t mayattendaiiscreeningsif accompanied byalegalguardian.
SCORPIO (Dct. 23-Nov.21)
YOURHOROSCOPE By Jacqueline Bigar
up with you. You simply are motivated and social. You'll have to maintain a healthy lifestyle in order to accomplish whatyou want. Tonight: Buy a couple of spring items for your wardrobe.
CANCER (June21-July 22) ** * * You'll pick up and feel more engaged in the afternoon. As of late, you havebeendragging and handling more than your fair share of tension. Your mental outlook could suddenly change and help you to see the possibilities. Be open to feedback, too. Tonight: As you like it.
LEO (July23-Aug.22)
** * * You'll move through a meeting like lightning; however, sometime later in you down. the afternoon, you might decide to slow down and reflect on your choices. Speak ARIES (March21-April 19) ** * * Anger and frustration could be to a friend whose judgment you trust, close to the surface. Why not take a walk and air your concerns. Tonight: Not to be to calm down? You could be very effective found. when dealing with others, asyou'll excel VIRGO (Aug.23-Sept. 22) in your communication. Tonight: Answer ** * * You might feel as if you have to
phonecalls,andcatchuponaneighbor's news. TAURUS (April 20-May20)
I
Regal Old Mill Stadium16 & IMAX, 680 SW Powerhouse Drive, 800-326-3264 • AMERICAN SNIPER(R) 11:40 a.m., 2:50, 8, 9:15 • THE BREAKFAST CLUB(R) 7:30 • CHAPPIE(R)12:05, 3:05, 6:50, 10:05 • CINDERELLA(PG) l2:10, 12:40, 3:15, 3:40, 6:45, 7: l5, 9:45, 9:55 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 11a.m., 2:30, 6:30, 9:30 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT3-D (PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 3, 7,10 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT IMAX3-D (PG13) noon, 3:30, 7:30, 10:30 • DO YOUBELIEVE?(PG-13) 11:45 a.m., 2:45, 6:05, 9 • FIFTY SHADESOFGREY (R) 12:50 • FOCUS(R) I2:30, 3:10, 6:25, 9:05 • GETHARD(R)7,10:30 • THE GUNMAN (R) 11:35 a.m., 3:20, 6:20, 9:40 • KINGSMAN:THE SECRET SERVICE (R)12:15,3:45,7:35, 10:35 • THE LAZARUSEFFECT(PG-13) 3:50 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG)12:45, 3:55, 7:40, 10:40 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) 11:25 a.m., 2:15, 5, 7:45,10:25 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 11:15 a.m., 2:40, 6:15, 9:10 • SELMA(PG-13)9:35 • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER (PG) 11:10a.m. • THE SPONGEBOB MOVIE:SPONGE OUT OF WATER 3-D(PG) 2:05 • Accessibility devices are available forsome movies.
respond tonearly everyoneright now. Prioritize in order to stay on top of what you must be. Meet a friend or business associate for an early dinner. Outside of a pressured situation, both of you will be more open. Tonight: Head home early.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-Dct. 22)
gang. GEMINI (May 21-June 28) *** * Your energy seemsendless to
** * * You see situations from a broader perspective than your contemporaries do. You might not choose to share what you see at present. You have some research to do, and you'll need to check out some facts. Tonight: A must
many people, especially if they try to keep
appearance.
** * * Relate to others individually in order to get the results you seek. A discussion could drop some juicy pieces of gossip on you, which you might want to keep to yourself. Use good sense with your finances, especially if you feel a little tight. Tonight: Follow your imagination.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov.22-Dec. 21) ** * * * O thers will express interest in what you are doing. Still, you might feel a disconnect that makes you rather uptight. How you deal with this uneasiness is up toyou.An open discussion could help more than you realize. Tonight: Dinner with a dear friend or loved one.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.19) ** * All work and no play might not work for you right now. You recently have realized the importance of having a well-balanced life. You could feel pushed by someonewho demands to havethings his or her way. Laugh, and let this go for now. Tonight: Be available.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 28-Feb.18) ** * * * You seem to be in the position of being everyone's adviser. Yes, you are resourceful, and will be all day, but being so needed might hinder your desire for freedom. Today you can juggle everything, but you won't be able to sustain this pace every day. Tonight: Take apersonal night.
PISCES (Feb.19-March20) ** * * Hopefully you have decided to slow your pace, even if you initially believed it was impossible. Everyone needs some time away from work and demandingpeople.Wh ywould you be any different? Relax and do only what you must. Tonight: Get into the moment. © King Features Syndicate
Tin Pan Theater, 869 NWTin PanAlley, 541-241-2271 • FOXCATCHER (R) 8:30 • MR. TURNER (R) 5:30 • SONG OFTHE SEA (PG)3:30 I
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Redmond Cinemas,1535 SWOdemMedo Road, 541-548-8777 • CINDERELLA (PG)1:30, 4, 6:30, 9 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT (PG-13)2:30, 3:15, 5:15, 8:05, 8, 8:45 • RUNALLNIGHT(R)2,4:30,7,9:30 Sisters Movie House,720 DesperadoCourt, 541-549-8800 • CINDERELLA (PG)4:15, 6:45 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 4:15, 7 • MCFARLAND,USA(PG) 6:15 • THESECOND BEST EXOTIC MARIGOLD HOTEL (PG) 3:45, 6:30 • STILL ALICE (PG-13) 4 Madras Cinema 5,1101SWU.S. Highway 97, 541-475-3505 • CHAPPIE(R)1:45, 4:25, 7:05, 9:35 • CINDERELLA (PG)11:35 a.m., 2, 4:30, 7, 9:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 11:30 a.m., 4:35, 7:10 • THEDIVERGENT SERIES:INSURGENT3-D (PG-13)2, 9:50 • THE GUNMAN (R) 11:50 a.m., 2:15, 4:50, 7:25, 9:55 • RUN ALLNIGHT(R) 11:40 a.m., 2:05, 4:45, 7:15, 9:45 •
TV TODAY • More TV listingsinside Sports 8 p.m. on10, "Bones" — Cyndi Lauper reprises her recurring guest role asAvalon Harmonia,
Angela's (MichaelaConlon)
psychic friend, as the forensic mystery series returns with new
episodes.Thespring premiere,
"The Psychic in the Soup," opens with the discovery of a psychic's body decomposing in a tree trunk. Elsewhere, Booth and Brennan (David Boreanaz, Emily Deschanel) debate how to handle little Christine's (Sunnie Pelant) new imaginary friend and the
Jeffersonianteamremembers the late Sweets on his birthday. 8 p.m. on CW, "The Vampire Diaries" —Elena (Nina Dobrev) convinces Jeremy (Steven R.
McQueen)that Bonnie(Kat Graham) would want them to celebrate her birthday. Thetwo of them, along with Damon (lan
Somerhalder),makeasobering discovery, however, when they try to contact Bonnie. Enzo(Michael Malarkey) recruits Matt (Zach Roerig) to meddle in the life of Sarah Salvatore (guest star Tristin Mays). Jeremy considers leaving Mystic Falls for good in "The DayI Tried to Live." 8 p.m.on DIS,"Liv5 Maddie" — In the newepisode "Neighborsa-Rooney," Liv (DoveCameron) rekindles her old friendship with Holden Dippledorf (gueststar
Jordan Fisher,"TeenBeach2") in the midst of a neighborhood feud.
Meanwhile,Joey(JoeyBragg)becomes fascinated with someone newat his Intergalactic Council meeting. Kali Rochaalso stars. 9 p.m. on 2, 9, "Scandal" —After Michael (guest star Matthew Del Negro) gets himself in a jam, the Gladiators spring into damage-control mode andtry to per-
suadeCyrus(Jeff Perry) tomove up the wedding date in the new episode "Put a Ring on It." David (Joshua Malina), meanwhile, takes the first step in executing his plan to take down B613once and for all. Portia de Rossi, Kate Burton, Dan Bucatinsky, Paul Adelstein and GeorgeNewbern also guest star.
9:3D p.m. onHIST, "Pawn Stars" —In the newepisode "Mystery Caller," Coreyassesses a Supermanvs. Muhammad Ali comic book, while Rick examines acharcoalpieceby artist EdwardHopper. Later, Rick starts to suspect that all the office phonesare broken. Another newepisode immediately follows. cr zep2it
'
NQRTHWEsT CROSSING
Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com
Pure. &m/6 Co.
aj. B~ du Bend Redmond
John Day Burns Lakeview
La Pine 541.382.6447
bendurology.com
TOUCHMARK slrrcs 1980
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Pine Theater, 214 N.MainSt., 541-416-1014 • CINDERELLA (Upstairs — PG) 4:10, 7:15 • THE DIVERGENT SERIES: INSURGENT(PG-13) 4, 7 • Theupstairsscreening room has limitedaccessibility.
O
Find a week'sworth of movie times plus film reviews in Friday's 0 GD! Magazine
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C om p l e m e n t s
H o me I n t e ri o r s
541.322.7337 w ww . c o m p l e m e n r s h o m e . c o m
ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin
Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 •
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Moving, must sell, 9 cu. ft. Kenmore upright China cabinet, o a k; freezer, $100. 16.7 trunk; 2 chairs, oak, cu. ft. Kenmore refrig- upholstery no arms; erator, $100; or both small drop front desk, $150. 541-385-5297 oak; redwood burl
Whoodle Pups, 10 weeks, 1st shots, dewormed. Hypoallergenic Refrigerator /noshed, 4males left O Frigidaire brand $1000 ea. Health new side-by-side guarantee. 541-410-1581 with icemaker. Paid $1200 Yorkie AKC pups 3 M, selling for $850. 1F, adorable, UDT 541-410-5956 shots, health guar., pix, $500/up. 541-777-7743
end table; bookcase mahogany.Must Seel 541-388-3532
The Bulletin
210
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table 4x t/g'x3t/g'; round
recommends extra
I ceot
o e pc - I
chasing products or • services from out of I the area. Sending II cash, checks, or l credit i n f ormation may be subjected to
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Old Gas Pumps/Soda Vending Machines WANTED! Will pay cash. Kyle, 541-504-1050 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website.
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geretngCentral ttregenttnce fggg
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on the first day it runs to make sure it is corn rect. Spellcheck" and human errors do occur. If this happens to your ad, please contact us ASAP so that corrections and any adjustments can be made to your ad. 541-385-5809 The Bulletin Classified 246
Guns, Hunting 8 Fishing
l 500 rds .223 55 gr, $160. 215 scope mount rail, l Coins & Stamps AR15 new, $25. 44 rds .44 S& W special, 246 gr, $20. 3 l FRAUD. For morel Private collector buying boxes (100 ct) Nosler information about an c stamp albums & Ballistic tip, .338 200 gr, I advertiser, you may I postage collections, world-wide $200 all. 208-255-2407
For Sale: Piano Technician tools & supplies, with rolls of piano string, $725. Call 971-219-9122 in Redmond
Gun & Knife Show March 28-29 Deschutes County Fair/Expo Center $5.00 Admission (under 14 FREE!) Sat. 9-5; Sun. 9-3 Info: 541-610-3717
LOP tags for big game hunting; access m Con-
PLAYER PIANO Electric
don, OTI. 541-384-5381
with bench and R emington 700 3 0 0 some scrolls. RUM cerakoted 2 $1100. Call Deryl stocks leupold mounts 541-536-7505 $900 / Remington 870 Express sy n t hetic 260 s tock $300 / 10 0 rounds Nosler 300 Misc. Items RUM brass new $150 541-280-9457 Buying Dlemonds /Gold for Cash Wanted: Collector seeks Saxon's Fine Jewelers high quality fishing items 541-389-6655 & upscale fly rods. 541-678-5753, or Need to get an 503-351-2746 ad in ASAP? 251 You can place it Hot Tubs & Spas online at: www.bendbulletin.com Marquis 2005 S i lver Anniv. Hot Tub, gray 541-385-5809 and black, 6-8 person seating, new circuit BUYING board. Delivery availFlyer able, $2500. Lionel/American trains, accessories. 541-815-2505 541-408-2191.
(2) 90-inch Couches Cane bamboo with silk upholstery,$1000 each,obo. I call t h e Ore g onI U.S. 573-286-4343 ' State Atto r ney 'and (local, cell phone). People Lookfor Information l General's O f f i ce About Products and Consumer Protec- • 242 tion h o t line at I Exercise Equipment Services Every Daythrough The Bulletin Clnesifieds i 1-877-877-9392. Mahogany Media Bend local pays CASH!! Armoire,2 drawers, 2 I TheBulletin I Power Plate Sereng Cenrrel Oregon rrnre l903 for firearms 8 ammo. shelves,$500 oho. machine 541-526-0617 619-884-4785(Bend) Vibrational exer208 208 cises for muscleCASH!! Pets & Supplies • P ets & Supplies 212 strengthening, For Guns, Ammo & A1 Washers&Dryers Antiques & 267 BUYING & SE LLING stretching, massage Reloading Supplies. Donate deposit bottles/ Full warranty, FREE & relaxation $500 541-408-6900. Collectibles Musical Instruments All gold jewelry, silver cans to local all vol., delivery! Also, used and gold coins, bars, 541-504-3869 non-profit cat rescue washers/dryers wanted. Christiansen Arms 300 Drum Kits:Specializing rounds, wedding sets, Antiques Wanted: 541-280-7355 trailer: Jake's Diner, L H , VX- 3 in High Quality New & class rings, sterling silTools, furniture, marbles, Just bought a new boat? RUM, Hwy 20 E & Petco in Leopold Scope 4x14, ver, coin collect, vinsports equipment, beer Sell your old one in the Used Drum Sets! Redmond; donate at Antique waterfall vanity cans, pre-'40s B/W pho- classifiedsi Ask about our B &C Reticle. N ew Kevin, tage watches, dental 541-420-2323 SAINT BERNARDS Smith Sign, 1515 NE set, small dining table, $5500, asking $3300. gold. Bill Fl e ming, Super Seller rates! tography. 541-389-1578 The Drum Shop Brandy & Bruno's beau202 2nd, Bend; or CRAFT 7' brown sofa, com541-382-9419. 541-815-2505. 541-385-5809 tiful full-mask puppiesin Tumalo. Can pick desk & chair. Want to Buy or Rent fem. left! Born Jan. 11; puter up Ig. amts, 389-8420. 2ready now (photo taken 541-279-1977 www.craftcats.org Wanted: $Cash paid for 2/27). Dew claws reGrandmas old/newer jew- Labrador pups,black, moved, 1st shots. $500. G ENERATE SOM E elry. Top $ paid for gold/ 8 wks, 3 males left, $400 For appointment, call EXCITEMENT in your silver. I buy by the es541-548-3520 neighborhood! Plan a ea. 541-408-8880 tate/load. Honest Artist garage sale and don't Elizabeth, 541-633-7006. Purebred Lab p u ps, Schnoodle minispayed forget to advertise in champ bloodlines. 10 mos, smart, classified! Wanted- paying cash 7F, 1M, blacks & yel- fem, 541-385-5809. for Hi-fi audio 8 stu- lows. Avail. in May. hypo-allergenic, all shots, $300. Terreb280 280 286 286 288 dio equip. Mclntosh, Come meet your new chipped, onne, call 503-440-1857 Hammock JBL, Marantz, DyEstate Sales Estate Sales Sales Northeast Bend Sales Northeast Bend Sales Southeast Bend companion! S i sters Free-Standing. Metal naco, Heathkit, San- (503) 459-1580 Wheaten Terrier female frame and fabric in sui, Carver, NAD, etc. Moving Sale! Furniture, Fri-Sat, 3/27-3/28, 9-4, ESTATE SALE c o ndition. Call 541-261-1808 Queensland Heelers purebred, 9 wks, soft no- excellent household items, etc. ** FREE ** 61188 Brookhollow Dr. House/garage/shop See Bend craigslist shed coat, tail docked, Standard & Mini, $150 Household, windows, Friday-Saturday, 9-5, Garage Sale Kit full: Antiques include dewclaws, shots, doggy ¹4937976588 for pix, WANTEDwood dressi & up. 541-280-1537 2785 NE Faith Dr. Place an ad in The $95. oak hall tree, dressers, ers; dead washers. www.rightwayranch.wor door trained. Family pet details. clocks, Indian baskets, Bulletin for your ga541-420-5640 only! $875. 541-447-8970 541-504-6435 dpress.com glassware & china, silrage sale and reCall a Pro ver 8 jewelry, watches, Want to buy ADT yard ceive a Garage Sale books, & more. PLUS signs. Please c a ll Kit FREE! Whether you need 8 Fri Sat Sun 9-5 Maytag SxS r e frig, 541-408-0846 A beautiful home vouRAD WILL RECEIVECLOSETo 2,000,000 fence fixed, hedges 61450 Little John Maytag Neptune W/D; KIT INCLUDES: filled w/ antiques, o ~ e d l ExposuREsFoR oNLY$2$0! • 4 Garage Sale Slgns Lane off 15th. Furn., 208 Kubota L 185 tractor 8 collectibles, deprestrimmed or a house large glass table, Adw~aS ~ c l yM t ~ ce n l t Vre 0 t N n t p n t I t • $2.00 Off Coupon To attachments, flat bed sion glass, furniture Pets & Supplies Use Toward Your dining set, queen trailer, John D eere and appliances all built, you'll find Weekof March 23, 2015 NIettfge@. Next Ad bed, computer desk, I weed eater/brush cutlooking for a new professional help in • 10 Tlps For "Garage The Bulletin recomter, hand & power tools house to help make Sale Success!" mends extra caution of all kinds, commer- a home. Come look The Bulletin's "Call a when purc hasServing Central Oregon since 1903 cial rolling shelving. 3/28 8 29, 8 a.m. at Service Professional" ing products or serBBQ, full kitchen,Long1029 Birch Lane, 541-385-5809 PICK UP YOUR vices from out of the arm quilter, Janome Madras, OR. Directory GARAGE SALE KIT at 541-777-0324 area. Sending cash, Memory Craft sewing 1777 SW Chandler Reach thousands of readernl 541.385-5809 checks, or credit inmachine, professional C ggII 541- 3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 Ave., Bend, OR 97702 The Bulletin classiueds f ormation may be sewing table, quilting, subjected to fraud. DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes children, custody, loads of crafts & sup- Roberta nBobbie n Kelley The Bulletin 290 Serving Centret Oregon rrnce tgpg For more i nformaplies. Yard & garden, support, property and bills division. No court appearances. Divorced MOVING SALE Sales Redmond Area tion about an advertreadmill, sofa, garage 20737 Will Scarlett Lane in 1-5 weeks possible. 503-772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives. tiser, you may call items, food & supplies, 288 Nottingham Square. Fri-Sat 3/27 - 3/28, com legalalt©msn.com the O regon State lots misc. Fri 8 Sat, FRIDAY 8E SATURDAY, MARCH 27 & 28th Sales Southeast Bend 8am-3pm. 2821 SW Attorney General's 9-4, numbers 8am Fri9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cascade Ave. CamOffice C o n sumer day. Take Bailey Rd. CROWD CONTROL NUMBERS at 8 a.m. Friday 2 Garage Sales eras, clothing, books, Protection hotline at behind Tumalo Feed Parking is difficult -Please be considerate! MEDICAL BILLING TRAINEES NEEDED! Train at home to process Friday 8:30-3:00 framed art, furniture 1-877-877-9392. Co., 1 mile, turn on Parking only on one side ofstreet! Saturday 9:00-2:00 Medical Billing & Insurance Claims! NO EXPERIENCE NEEDED! and so much more! Coyote Run to 64461. • 21699 Stud Ct. The Bulletin Online training at Bryan University!! HS Diploma/GED & Computer/ 541-350-6822 • HOME ALSO FOR SALE • Yard Sale - old 8 new! Serving Central Oregonsince tgttp Moving to retirement www.atticestatesand Side-by-side Refrigerator; Maple Dining set-6 Internet needed! 1-877-259-3880 Furniture, generator, home; everything c~ ra sals.com chairs; 2 couches; Recliner and swivel rocker; kids thlnqs, fishing/ must go. Furniture, Adopt a rescued cat or hunting. Fn.,8am-3pm, Dish sets include-Friendly Village; Haviland organ, kitchen items, kitten! Altered, vacciEstate Sale, Fri. & Sat., 2441 NW 22nd St. and Corning and others; Evening star silverlinens, bedding, RN's up to $45/hr; LPN' s up to $37.50/hr; CNA' s up to $22.50/hr. Free nated, ID chip, tested, 9-3, 2603 NW Logplate set; 3 maple dressers; Queen and double lamps, heaters, car, 292 morel CRAFT, 65480 gas/weekly pay$2,000 bonus.AACO NursingAgency 800-656-4414. g an C t . , Ben d . beds and frames; Oak dresser and nightstands; tools, misc. garage 78th, Bend, Sat/Sun, Craftsman ch e sts/ Juniper table and lamps; Marantz receiver and Sales Other Areas items. Cash only. 1-5. 541 - 389-8420 EXPERIENCED DRIVEROR RECENT GRAD? With Swift,you cangrow tools, China Crystal, other Electronic items; Panasonic record player • 21729 Old Red Rd. www.craftcats.org paintings, desks, ap- and receiver; 3 vacuums; Lots of kitchen items; Furniture, household to be an award-winning Class A CDLdriver. We help you achieve DiaNOTICE pli., games 8 plants. Lovely cedar chest; Chest Freezer; Shoes and mond Driver status with the best support there is. As aDiamond Driver, Remember to remove items, and clothes. Boots-size 6-7; Metal cabinets; 70's Wall clock; your Garage Sale signs you earn additional pay on top of all the competitive incentives we ofCleaning supplies; Picnic t able; O utdoor Downsizing and lots of (nails, staples, etc.) Take care of fer. The very best, choose Swift. Great Miles= Great Pay; Late-Model ood stuff must goi chairs-macrame; Lots of Linens and sheets and after your Sale event at., 7am - 5pm. Equipment Available; Regional Opportunities; Great Career Path; Paid embroidered items; 1930's small wardrobe; your investments is over! THANKS! 61394 SE King Jehu Older suitcases; few hand tools; Barbecue; From The Bulletin Vacation; Excellent Benefits. Please Call: (866)315-9763 with the help from Small metal desk; office items; shredder; Misc. Way, Bend OR. Boston Terrier Puppies. and your local utility Shots, ve t ch e ck, GTI- NOW HIRING! Top Pay for CDL A Drivers! Dry Van or Reefer clocks and radios; LOTS of other small items; companies. The Bulletin's See youthisweekend!! Deedy, Norm 8 Ken. TURN THE PAGE puppy package. $750. you choose! Frequent time at home. Well-appointed trucks. EOE. "Call A Service chrisandcyndi©yaHandled by Deedy's EstateSales Co. The Bulletin For More Ads 866-435-8590 GordonCareers.com gerctng Central Oregent/nce fgtg hoo.com. Info Call 541-419-4742 Professional" Directory The Bulletin 541-279-3588. estatesales.net for pictures and info www.bendbulletln.com
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E2 THURSDAY, MARCH 26, 2015 • THE BULLETIN
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
541-385-5809 or go to www.bendbulletin.com
AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES Monday • • • • • • • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri • Tuesday.••• • • • • • • • • • .Noon Mon. Wednesday •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Tues. Thursday • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Wed. Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.
Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •
•... . . . .
Place a photo inyourprivate party ad foronly$15.00par week.
Starting at 3 lines
*UNDER '500in total merchandise
OVER '500 in total merchandise
7 days.................................................. $10.00 14 days................................................ $16.00
Garage Sale Special
4 days.................................................. $18.50 7 days.................................................. $24.00 14 days .................................................$33.50 28 days .................................................$61.50
4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00
icall for commercial line ad rates)
*llllust state prices in ad
476
Employment Opportunities
Employment Opportunities
Sales We are looking for
experienced Sales professional to J oin Centr a l Oregon's largest new car d e aler Subaru of Bend. O ffering 401 k , profit sha r ing, medical plan, split s hifts, and p a id training. P l ease apply at 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
3 :00pm Fri. TELEFUNDRAISING
• • • • • • • • 5:00 pm Fri •
PRIVATE PARTY RATES
476
Tele-funding for •Meals On Wheels •Defeat Diabetes Foundation •Veterans (OPVA) Seniors and a/l others welcome. Mon-Thur. 4:30 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. $9.25/hour. Call 541-382-8672
A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin The Bulletin bendbulletin.com reserves the right to reject any ad at any time. is located at: 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Bend, Oregon 97702
MX
PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based oo the policies of these newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. 260
476
Misc. Items
Employment Opportunities
pg ~ 0 0 s
Chainsaw-carved Momma and Baby Bear. Momma is over 5-ft tall; baby is 23" tall. May consider selling separately; both $850. Can be seen in Prineville. Call 541-447-7820 Dansko P r ofessional, size 39, black/brown $80. 541-280-8913
316
421
Irrigation Equipment
Schools & Training
FOR SALE Tumalo Irrigation Water $4,500 per acre Call 541-41 9<440
HTR Truck School
325
REDMOND CAMPUS
Our Grads Get Jobs! 1-888-438-2235 WWW.HTR.EDU Check out the
classifieds online vvvvw.bendbulletin.com First Quality, 2nd cutting Updated daily grass hay, no rain, 476 barn stored, $225/ton. Call 541-549-3831 Employment Patterson Ranch, Sisters Opportunities Orchard grass hay clean, barn stored, no weeds, no rain, 75¹ AddiCtionS bales, $250 ton. Counselor Hay, Grain & Feed
New Dansko Professional, size 39, brown. $80. 541-280-8913 New in b oxes, Joe N amath outd o o r 541-416-0106 i nfrared g r il l w i t h Wheat Straw for Sale. folding table & case. Also, weaner pigs. Retails over $500; 1st 541-546-617'I $200 tak e s it. 310-916-6716 Find exactly what 261 you are looking for in the Medical Equipment CLASSIFIEDS Medical knee walker by Drive, $50. 54'I -382-6379
Manufacture Tech & SalesExecutive position available. Bend, OR manufacturing company has two full time job opportunities available. P ay is DO E a n d qualifications. Pre-employment & subsequent random F AA DO T dru g screening required. Please visit www.preciseflight.co m/job-opportunities for full details and to submit a resume.
341
Plumber, Journeymen Needed for new construction. Start immediately! Good pay/benefits Can Gary, 541-410-1655
at Serenity Lane
For complete job descriptions and application process, visit and click on Employment Opportunities.
Horses & Equipment Drug Free Workplace. EOE. Black ba y M o r gan 265 mare, flashy, 13-yr-old Building Materials show, trail & harness, Add your web address i ntermediate rid e r , to your ad and readREDMOND Habitat granddaughter in col- ers on The Bulietin's RESTORE lege. $500 best offer or web site, www.bendBuilding Supply Resale trade. 541-546-7909 bulletin.com, will be Quality at able to click through LOW PRICES automatically to your 1242 S. Hwy 97 website. 541-548-1406 •Lead Climber position Open to the public. open. ISA c ertified preferred or able to 267 Deluxe showman obtain. Fuel & Wood 3-horse trailer Sil- •Groundsman/Laborer verado 2001 29'x8' position open All yearDependable 5th wheel with semi i mmediately. E x p . Firewood: Seasoned; living quarters, lots of referred bu t no t Lodgepole, split, del, extras. Beautiful con- p required. Will train the B end, 1 f o r $ 1 9 5 dition. $21,900. OBO right person. or 2 cords for $365.
Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale
Get your business
:> Qfy J~;QJI)t ~
r.=.-"-,.— .a
Can be found on these pages:
EMPLOYMENT 410 - Private Instruction products or I I chasing services from out of e 421 - Schools andTraining I the area. SendingI 454- Looking Ior Employment 470- Domestic & In-HomePositions c ash, checks, o r I credit i n f ormationI 476 - EmploymentOpportunities I may be subjected to 486 - IndependentPositions FRAUD. I more informaI For tion about an adver- I I tiser, you may call I the Oregon State I Attorney General'sI c Office C o n s umer c
I Protection hotline atI
I 1-877-877-9392.
LThe Bulletin g Sell an Item
FAST! If it's under$500 you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:
$10- 3 lines, 7 days $16 • 3 lines, 14 days
I
Looking for your next employee? Place a Bulletin help wanted ad today and reach over 60,000 readers each week. Your classified ad will also appear on bendbulletin.com which currently receives over 1.5 million page views every month at no extra cost. Bulletin Classifieds Get Results! Call 385-5809 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com Need help fixing stuff?
Call A ServiceProfessional (Private Parly ads only) find the help you need.
528
Rm(ii)(83
® Dz@zrm
528
Loans & Mortgages BANK TURNED YOU DOWN? Private party will loan on real estate equity. Credit, no problem, good equity is all you need. Call Oregon Land Mortgage 541-388-4200.
LOCAL MONEyrWebuy secured trust deeds & note, some hard money loans. Call Pat Kellev 541-382-3099 ext.13.
www.bendbulletin.com
CAUTION: Ads published in "Employment Opportunities" include employee and independent positions. Ads for p o sitions that require a fee or upfront investment must be stated. With any independentjob opportunity, please i nvestigate tho r oughly. Use extra caution when applying for jobs online and never provide personal information to any source you may not have researched and deemed to be reputable. Use extreme c aution when r e s ponding to A N Y online employment ad from out-of-state. We suggest you call the State of Oregon Consumer Hotline at 1-503-378-4320 For Equal Opportunity Laws contact Oregon Bureau of Labor & I n dustry, Civil Rights Division, 971-673- 0764.
The Bulletin 541-385-5809
Digital Advertising Sales Manager The Bulletin is seeking a goal-oriented Digital Advertising Sales Manager to drive online advertising revenue growth. This position will manage the department's digital projects, and will: • Study the local market and make recommendations on best opportunities for online revenue growth. • Work in collaboration with department management in the ongoing training and coaching of Bulletin advertising salespeople. • Contribute to building local digital revenue by regularly going on joint sales calls with advertising staff. • Direct Digital Advertising Coordinator to ensure that the online ad scheduling, trafficking, and customer reporting functions are performed in a timely and accurate fashion. • Assist in the development of online and cross/sell advertising packages and attendant sales collateral.
FINANCEANDBUSINESS 507- Real Estate Contracts 514 - Insurance 528- Loans andMortgages 543- Stocks andBonds 558- Business Investments 573 - BusinessOpportunities
476
Employment Opportunities
a ROW I N G with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory
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Loans & Mortgages WARNING The Bulletin recommends you use caution when you provide personal information to companies offering loans or credit, especially those asking for advance loan fees or companies from out of state. If you have concerns or questions, we suggest you consult your attorney or call CONSUMER HOTLINE, 1-877-877-9392.
FIND IT! BUY IT! SELL IT!
The BulletinClassifieds
Newsroom Assistant
The Bulletin is seeking a resourceful and self-motivated full-time employee to assist a large staff and write daily clerical reports. This person should like working in a fast-paced environment and be able to meet tight deadlines on a daily basis. Prior writing or editorial experience preferred.
General The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturday night shift and other shifts as needed. We currently have openings all nights of the week. Everyone must work Saturday night. Shifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. and end between2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. AllpoOrganization, flexibility, and a high level of sitions we are hiring for, work Saturday nights. computer proficiency are essential. A solid Starting pay is $9.25 per hour, and we pay a knowledge of keyboard short-cuts and a typminimum of 3 hours per shift, as some shifts ing speed of at least 50 WPM is required. are short (11:30 - 1:30). The work consists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, stackAbility to work for long periods doing detail-oriing product onto pallets, bundling, cleanup ented work is necessary. This person must and other tasks. For qualifying employees we offer benefits i ncluding life i n surance, understand the importance of accuracy and thoroughness in all duties. short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is required Excellent customer service and interpersonal prior to employment. skills are required. Must enjoy working with the public. College degree or previous office exPlease submit a completed application attenperience preferred. The Bulletin is a drug-free tion Kevin Eldred. Applications are available workplace and equal opportunity employer. at The Bulletin front desk (1777 S.W. ChanPre-employment drug screening is required dler Blvd.), or an electronic application may be prior to hiring. obtained upon request by contacting Kevin Eldred via email (keldred©bendbulletin.com). To apply, please send a resume and any writNo phone calls please. Only completed appliing samples to: nolsonObendbulletin.com. cations will be considered for this position. No No phone inquiries please. resumes will be accepted. Drug test is required prior to employment. EOE.
The Bulletin
The Bulletin
Serving Central Oregon since i903
servinscenrrar oreron since r903
Pressman The Bulletin is seeking a Pressman with experience in the Printing industry. Two years of prior web press experience is beneficial, but training can be provided. At The Bulletin you can put your skills to work and make our products and services jump off the page! In addition to printing our 7-day a week newspaper, we also print a variety of other products for numerous clients. The Bulletin utilizes a 3 /2 tower KBA Comet press that a Pressman must become knowledgeable and familiar working with. We put a premium on dependability, timeliness, having a positive attitude and being a team player. We offer a competitive compensation plan and career growth opportunities. This position primarily works nights, with a 10-hour shift, 4 days per week. If you are interested in fostering your talent as a pressman in beautiful Bend, OR we encourage you to apply. Please contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager, at
anelson©wescom a ers.com
with your resume, references and salary history/requirements. No phone calls please. Drug testing is required prior to employment. The Bulletin is a drug free work place and EOE.
Circulation The Bulletin Circulation department is looking for a District Representative to join our Single Copy team. This is a full time, 40-hour per week position. Overall focus is the representation, sales and presentation of The Bulletin newspaper. These apply to news rack locations, hotels, special events and news dealer outlets. Daily responsibilities include driving a company vehicle to service a defined district, ensuring newspaper locations are serviced and supplied, managing newspaper counts for the district, building relationships with our current news dealer locations and growing those locations with new outlets. Position requires total ownership of and accountability of all single copy elements within that district. Work schedule will be Thursday through Monday with Tuesday and Wednesday off. Requires good communication skills, a strong attention to detail, the ability to lift 45 pounds, flexibility of motion and the ability to multi task. Essential: Positive attitude, strong service/team orientation, sales and problem solving skills. Must be insurable to drive company vehicle. Send resume to: mewingObendbulletin.com Applications are available at the front desk. 1777 SW Chandler, Bend, OR 97702 No phone inquiries please.
The Bulletin
servrng cenrral oregon since19D3
The Bulletin
Pre-employment drug testing required. EOE/Drug Free Workplace
ser~ins centraloregonsince f9IB
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Call 54I-385-5809to promote your service• Advertise for 28 days starting at t l40 pait spsoalpsrkagtir not srsilsbleonour wtbsite)
Qualifications include a bachelor's degree, at least 3 years' experience and a proven track Handyman LandscapingNard Care Landscapingfvard Care record of success in selling multi-platform or Building/Contracting Multi-cord discounts! digital advertising to major accounts and 541-420-3484. BULLETINCLASSIFIEDS Garage Sales I DO THAT! NOTICE: Oregon Landagencies. Managementexperi ence a plus, NOTICE: Oregon state Search the area's most law requires anyone Home/Rental repairs scape Contractors Law with the ideal candidate being able to demonPine 8c Juniper Split comprehensive listing of Garage Sales who con t racts for Small jobs to remodels (ORS 671) requires all strate a history of success in implementing inclassified advertising... construction work to Honest, guaranteed businesses that adnovative ideas and developing the skills level Serving Central real estate to automotive, Garage Sales be licensed with the vertise t o pe r form PROMPT DELIVERY work. CCB¹151573 of sales team members. The Bulletin is a drug Oregon Since 2003 merchandise to sporting Construction Contrac- Dennis 541-317-9768 Landscape Construc541N89-9663 free workplace and pre-employment drug Residental/Commercial Find them goods. Bulletin Classifieds tors Board (CCB). An tion which includes: testing is required. appear every day in the active license CallThe Bulletin At l anting, deck s , in Sprinkler 269 print or on line. means the contractor ences, arbors, Please email your resume to: Activation/Repair Gardening Supplies The Bulletin is bonded & insured. water-features, and inCall 541-385-5809 541.385.5809 jbrandtGbendbulletin.com BackFlow Testing Verify the contractor's stallation, repair of ir& Equipment www.bendbunetin.com Classifieds No phone calls please. CCB l i c ense at PlaceYourAdOr E-M ail rigation systems to be Maintenance www.hirealicensedlicensed w i t h the The Bulletin Craftsman push mower, 541-385-5809 ~Thatch & Aerate At: www.bend b ul l e ti n .com strving central o~n sinct sts serving cenrav oreeon since r903 contractor.com Landscape Contrac18", good cond., $40. • Spring Clean up or call 503-378-4621. tors Board. This 4-digit 541-382-6379 The Bulletin is an equal opportunity employer The Bulletin recom- Landscapinlyyard Care ~Weekly Mowing number is to be inAccounting 8 Edging mends checking with cluded in all adverGas lawn edger 3.5 hp, • Bi-Monthly & Monthly ACCOUNTING the CCB prior to contisements which indilike brand new. $80. Maintenance tracting with anyone. cate the business has staff Accountant 541-317-2890 •Bark, Rock, Etc. Some other t rades a bond, insurance and Husqvarna hedge trimThe Staff Accountant is responsible for maintain- also req u ire addirtSFp workers compensa0~ Landsca in ~ tion for their employmer comm. grade. ing multiple aspects of the general ledger to en- tional licenses and ~ttatrg P~ •Landscape ees. For your protecused 1 t i me. N ew sure accurate and timely reporting. This posi- certifications. Inventory Accounting Analyst Construction ii Seryice tion call 503-378-5909 $459, asking, $200. tion will be responsible for the preparation of ~Water Feature andscape or use our website: 541-410-1483 financials, journal entries, balance Installation/Maint. Les Schwab is looking for a n I nventory monthly Computer/Cabling Install www.lcb.state.or.us to sheet reconciliations, bank reconciliations and Management •Pavers Neuton CE5.2 mower, Accounting Analyst to work closely with store check license status month end accruals. •Renovations id e ntify a n d a n a lyze We seek a motivated individual that will bring a Computer training, set battery powered, 14" management t o before contracting with Spring Clean Up • Irrigations Installation & repair from the good cond., $ 100. variances within their inventory and gross the business. Persons fresh perspective to our systems and proce- up •Leaves margin results. Th e Inventory Accounting comfort of your own 541-408-2535 doing land scape dures. An ideal candidate will learn current pro- home.Dirk (541) 647•Cones Senior Discounts Analyst performs month-end financial close maintenance do not cedures, while taking a proactive approach to 1341 or 619-997-8291 •Needles Bonded & Insured 270 duties including account reconciliations and r equire an LC B l i efficiencies, as well as assist the CFO with •Debris Hauling 541-815-4458 journal e ntries a n d pr e pares m o nthly find cense. Lost 8 Found financial analysis. LCB¹8759 inventory reports. This position also provides The position requires a detail-oriented individual Debris Removal Weed Free Bark Aerate I Thatching FOUND coin purse on assistance to store personnel on their daily strong general accounting, organizational, & Flower Beds Weekly Service and p o sting/receiving with FIND YOUR FUTURE March 7 i n E a g le responsibilities such a s communication, and time management skills. Spring Clean-ups! JUNK BE GONE HOME INTHE BULLETIN Crest. Call to identify. purchase orders, maintaining store inventory, We seek a positive individual that enjoys workFreeestimates! and analyzing and correcting certain system I Haul Away FREE Lawn Renovation 541-52601876 ing in a fast-paced team environment in beautiCOLLINS Lawn Maint. Aeration - Dethatching Your future is just a page transactions. For Salvage. Also ful Bend, OR. Call 541-480-9714 Overseed away. Whether you're looking Cleanups & Cleanouts Lost: Grandma's hearCompost for a hat or a place to hangit, CPR LANDSCAPING ing aid, St. Francis Qualifications: Mel, 541-389-8107 Essential job functions & responsibilities Top Dressing The Bulletin Classified is Weekly maintenance, Church E, side, Sat., • Ability to both work independently and • General ledger maintenance: detailed underyour best source. 3/21. 541-382-0114 cleanups. Lawn recontribute to overall team performance standing of each account and proper posting Landscape • Demonstrated proficiency with Microsoft Courier Service pairs. Quality at an Every day thousandsof • Month end accruals, journal entries, bank and Lost white d o mestic Excel a ffordable pric e . Maintenance buyers andsellers of goods balance sheet reconciliations Dove in Sunset Mobile • Prior accounting coursework or experience 978-413-2487 Full or Partial Service and services do busi n ess in • Fixed Asset additions, disposals & depreciation Home Park; mate is very Preferred: We will distribute •Mowing ~Edging these pages.Theyknow aboveanlawnservice.com • Cost reporting and forecasting lonesome. 541-382-2194 • Four-year degree in accounting, finance, locally in C.O. •Pruning ~Weeding you can't beat TheBulletin (541) 383-1997 or do line hauls business administration or equivalent Water Management Classified Section for FREE & skills betweenC.O. and • Experience using large-scale accounting/ERP •Experience selection and conveni e nce De-thatching General ledger accounting required PDX area. every item is just a phone systems Fertilizer included Aeration, Fertilizer • 4-year degree in Accounting Looking for loads for with monthly program REMEMBER:If you • Experience working in teams that call away. On Weekly Service! • Advanced Excel and data entry skills our 26' Freightliner have lost an animal, implemented new accounting systems • Experience with SBS Financial Systems a plus The Classified Section is don't forget to check Box truck (26,000 Weekly,monthly Painting/Wall Covering easy to use. Everyitem GVW) with 4K l i ft The Humane Society Les Schwab has a reputation of excellent • Newspaper experience preferred or one time service. is categorizedandevery ate. Lic. & Bonded. Bend customer service, with over 450 stores and cartegory is indexed onthe KC WHITE 54'I-382-3537 apply, please submit both a cover letter and ontact Bill at 7,000 employees in the western United States. 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The Bulletin
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DAILY BRI DG E C LU B
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFED• 541-385-5809
NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wjll Shprtz
Thursday, March26,2015
Out-of-the-blue double
ACROSS a Put a coat on sloppily, say s City that supplied granite for Egyptian monuments aoTheater deg. aaHyatt alternative
By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency I w a s t o d ay's W es t i n my occasional game in B i r mingham, Alabama, with three old friends. When North-South got to f o ur spades (North's passed-hand four clubs was a " s p linter" r esponse s howing a s p ade f i t a n d c l u b shortness), my partner, Doug Levene, found agood penalty double. When a player doubles "out of the blue" after the opponents have voluntarily bid to game, he shows the ability to get a ruff. I was actually ready to lead the ace of diamonds anyway: North had implied diamond length, and South hadn't cue-bid four diamonds so rated not to have a singleton there.
and your partner responds 2NT, an artificial forcing raise. The opponents pass. What do you say? ANSWER: If y our values were minimum and you were content to stop at game, you would bid four spades. As it i s , yo u have extra strength, and slam is possible. Bid three spades, inviting him to cue-bid and l e aving r o o m for sl a m investigation. North dealer Both sides vulnerable
a4Shot
aslllegal motion penalty? ar Former Washington heavyweight as"I'm off!" ao"Casta diva," e.g. aoHors d'oeuvre staple aa m at e r (brain part) a4 Reaction to an saWhat the exorbitant bill, paths of three maybe answers in this puzzle include asTurkey dressing ingredient ss con verter
NORTH 41 A65 QK75 2
O QJ 7 5 3
44 DOWN ONE After Doug discarded on my ace, I led the ten as suit-preference: a high diamond to suggest that he return a heart, the high-ranking side suit. AfterDoug ruffed,he trusted me and led the ace and a low heart, and I ruffed for down one. The final laugh was on us. If I lead or shift to my singleton heart, we do better: I get two heart ruffs. A heart o ening lead might have been wrong ' East had a different holding. I think I could have found the shift.
WEST 41 972
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ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE CCC ULN BAB ENC
P A Y A B EVE L SOR E UE S SSS A BLA M L I L T AF T ZE E ERR
SOUTH
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DAILY QUESTION
Eas t Pass Pass Dbl( ! )
Sou t h Wes t 1 41 Pass 44 Pass A l l Pass
Opening lead — Choose it Y ouhold: 4IK Q J 8 4 Q Q 1 0 8 3 0 K9 4 A J. Y ou open one spade, (C) 2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
Seeking a friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO
as Classroom projectile aoLisa Presley aoMandela's org. aaGrope clumsily aa"Game of Thrones" patriarch Stark a4 Dlsgust as"Isn't she cu-u-ute?!" SBEuropean border 4a Thirst 4a Gets inspiration? 4s E.R. test 4s Plant used in herbal remedies 4BAmerica del
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sr Bebe's milk ssAnd on and on ss Rustic expanse soTheme park part sa It may be on the tip of the tongue S4 100-eyed giant of myth ss Plague sr -worth ss Looks ss Riyer through Bristol ro "Silent Spring" topic, for short ra Exercise option ra Igloo, essentially DOWN a Kind of bubble aArchaeological site along the Nile a Biased 4 Digital currency sVaulted recess s Worker in peak physical condition? r Heartache s Anomalous BAsphyxiation cause aoN.Y.C. rail org. aa "I'll take your questions now" aa Drive off as Resta bit aaSomething to make a proposal on? aa Many games nowadays
1
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No. 0219
8
9
10
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17
18
19
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36 3 7
33
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40 45
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PUZZLE BY JASONPLINN
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Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 7,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Readaboutand comment on each puzzle:nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/studentcrosswords.
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process 37 Good thing to have before a meal 36 Dinero
ANSWER TO PREVIOUSPUZZLE: S T 0 P S A T S O U R C E S W A T E R R E S C P I O S O A P B U B B HO S I E R Y A N T E B A R G A S R A G D G O N E A S PO O K AR O D B U C T I M L O R D S P R I N G C M A U M E E S H E E T S xwordeditor@aol.com 5
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29
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2 1 Co r k's location
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Print your answer here: (Anowero tomorrow) SLANT S T ENCH I M M UNE Yeoteda 6 ~ Ju mbles:While WAGER Answer. trying to get the huge fish into the boat, the fisherman wao — SENT REELING
magazines Highroads and
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55 Fixer-upper, perhaps, and a hint to the answers to
starred clues
41
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51
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By Frank Virzi
©2015 Tribune content Agency, LLc
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03/26/15
THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, MARCH 26 2015 E5
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
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Watercraft
Motorhomes
'!:glt Duplex - NE Bend, Powell Butte FSBO, 3 Single level - 3 bdrm, bdrm/2 bath, 1 8 00 2 bath, & 2 bdrm, 2 sq.ft., 4 . 7 fe n c ed bath. Fenced yards acres, Cascade view, RENTALS 682- Farms, RanchesandAcreage and 2 car tandem ga- shop, fu l RV 687- Commercial for Rent/Lease 603 - Rental Alternatives rages. hookups, $369,000. 693- Office/Retail Space for Rent Polaris Sportsman 2010 604 - Storage Rentals 541-419-2753 16' Cata Raft www.johnlscott.com Fleetwood D i scovery 850XP EPS, /4402 850 2 Ouffitter oars, 2 40' 2003, diesel, w/all 605- RoommateWanted REALESTATE fully loaded, $6950. Cataract oars, 3 NRS Kellie Cook, Broker options - 3 slide outs, 616- Want ToRent 705 - Real Estate Services Snowmobiles Looking for your next 541-318-0210 8" Outfitter blades and satellite, 2 TV's, W/D, 541-408-0463 627-Vacation Rentals& Exchanges 713 - Real Estate Wanted emp/oyee? John L. Scott lots of gear, all inn etc., 34,000 m iles. Place a Bulletin help People Lookfor Information 630- Rooms for Rent 719 -Real Estate Trades "very good to exc. Real Estate, Bend Wintered in h e ated wanted ad today and About Products and 631 - Condos &Townhomesfor Rent 726- Timeshares for Sale condition plus custom shop. $78,995 obo. johnlscottbend.com reach over 60,000 Services Every Day through camp/river tables and 541-447-8664 632 - Apt./MultiplexGeneral 730 - NewListings readers each week. 745 The Bulletin Clnssifiede bags, more!. $2,700 634 - Apt./Multiplex NEBend 732- Commercial Properties for Sale Your classified ad 541 318 1322. Homes for Sale will also appear on 636 - Apt./Multiplex NW Bend 738 - MultiplexesforSale 870 4-place enclosed InterAdditional information bendbulletin.com 638 - Apt./Multiplex SE Bend 740- Condos &Townhomes for Sale and photos on state snowmobile trailer Boats & Accessories 26 a c res B o rdering which currently re640 - Apt./Multiplex SWBend 744- Open Houses w/ RockyMountain pkg, request, too! BLM with Timber - 4 ceives over 642 - Apt./Multiplex Redmond 745- Homes for Sale $8500. 541-379-3530 14' Vaco aluminum ds published in eWabdrm, 2 bath, 2464 sq 1.5 million page boat, 8 hp mercury tercraft" include: Kayft home with 4-car ga646 - Apt./Multiplex Furnished 746-Northwest Bend Homes views every month YAMAHA 700 2000 Four Winds 32' motor, w / tra i ler. aks, rafts and motorrage. $415 , 000. 648- Houses for RentGeneral 747 - Southwest BendHomes at no extra cost. 3 cyl., 2300 mi.; 2006 2010 $1150. 541-388-3833. MLS201208278 Bulletin Classifieds Ized personal Polaris Fusion 900, 650- Houses for Rent NE Bend 748-Northeast Bend Homes Triton V-10 with Call Duke Warner watercrafts. For Get Results! only 788 mi., new mir652- Houses for Rent NWBend 749- Southeast BendHomes 13,000 miles. Large Realty Dayville at "boats" please see Call 385-5809 or rors, covers, custom slide, Sleeps 7. Lots 654- Houses for Rent SEBend 750- RedmondHomes 541-987-2363 Class 870. place your ad on-line skis, n e w rid e -on of storage. 5000lb 656- Houses for Rent SW Bend 753 - Sisters Homes at r ide-off t r a iler w i t h 541-385-5809 hitch. Like new. Bank owned 3 bdrm, 2 658- Houses for Rent Redmond 755 - Sunriver/La Pine Homes bendbulletin.com spare, + much more. $51,900 bath, 1090 sq. ft., tile $6,995. Call for d e659 - Houses for RentSunriver 756- Jefferson County Homes 541-325-6813 entry, kitchen pantry, Serving Central Oregon since1903 17.5' Seaswirl 2002 tails. 541-420-6215 660 - Houses for Rent LaPine 757- Crook CountyHomes oak cabinets, fenced 771 Wakeboard Boat 880 661 - Houses for Rent Prineville 762- Homes with Acreage yard. Move-in ready. 860 Lots I/O 4.3L Volvo Penta, $59,900. MLS Illlotorhomes 662 - Houses for Rent Sisters 763- Recreational HomesandProperty II!lotorcycles & Accessories tons of extras, low hrs. 201410945 Call Pam 173 Highland Meadow Full wakeboard tower, 663- Houses for Rent Madras 764- Farms andRanches Lester, Princ. Broker, Lp. Eagle Crest Relight bars, Polk audio 664 - Houses for Rent Furnished 771 - Lots C entury 2 1 Gol d sort. 2 southeasterly speakers throughout, 671 - Mobile/Mfd. for Rent 773 - Acreages Country Realty, Inc. Smith Rock views! .30 completely wired for 541-504-1338 675 - RVParking 775 - Manufactured/Mobile Homes amps/subwoofers, una cre lot b acks t o Freightliner 1994 derwater lights, fish 676 - Mobile/Mfd. Space 780 - Mfd. /Mobile Homeswith Land common area, gently Custom finder, 2 batteries cussloped lot. $99,500 Find It in Motorhome tom black paint job. 2007 Winnebago 687 Lynn Johns, Princ, Harley Dyna Wide Glide The Bulletin Classifiedsl Broker, 541-408-2944, Will haul small SUV Outlook Class "C" $1 2,500 541-815-2523 o. P 2003 custom paint, Commercial for or toys, and pull a 31', clean, non541 -385-5809 Wes Johns, Broker extras, 13,000 orig Rent/Lease trailer! Powered by smoking exc. cond. 541-408-2945, Cenmiles, like new, health ~a ~ [j=.) 8.3 Cummins with 6 More info.$49,900 tral Oregon Resort forces sale. Sacrifice NOTICE speed Allison auto PUBLISHER'S 541-447-9268 Realty $10,000 obo. All real estate advertrans, 2nd o wner. NOTICE 541-633-7856. tised here in is sub- 5 2764 a n d 527 7 8 Very nice! $53,000. All real estate adverject to th e F ederal Bridge. 541-350-4077 tising in this newspa$4 2 5,000. HD Fat Bo 1996 F air Housing A c t , per is subject to the Gorgeous 6.49 Riverwhich makes it illegal F air H o using A c t ront a c res. H i g h 2007 Bennington to advertise any pref- fLakes PINNACLE 1990 which makes it illegal Realty & PropPontoon Boat erence, limitation or 632 "any 30', clean. to a d vertise Commercial/Investment erty Ma n agement 2275 GL, 150hp 24' Mercedes Benz discrimination based Rear walk-around Apt./Multiplex General preference, limitation • Properties for Sale 541-536-0117 Honda VTEC, less Prism, 2015 Model G, on race, color, relibed. No smokers, or disc r imination than 110 hours, Mercedes Diesel engine, gion, sex, handicap, 8.54 acres, with well, no mildew, no based on race, color, CHECK yOUR AD original owner, lots 18+ mpg, auto trans, familial status or na- cleared sites. $59,900 leaks. $8500. religion, sex, handiHIGH PROFILE Completely of extras; Tennesfully loaded with tional origin, or intenLOCATION IN Rebuilt/Customized 541-306-7268 cap, familial status, 15002 Robert Rd, La see tandem axle double-expando, tion to make any such marital status or naDOWNTOWN Pine. High Lakes Re2012/2013 Award and only 5200 miles. trailer. Excellent preferences, l i mitaREDMOND Winner tional origin, or an inalty & Property ManPerfect condition condition,$23,500 tions or discrimination. agement tention to make any Showroom Cond. only$92/f. RV 503-646-1804 We will not knowingly 541-536-0117 Many Extras such pre f erence, Call 541-526-1201 CONSIGNMENTS on the first day it runs limitation or discrimiaccept any advertisLow Miles. or see at: WANTED to make sure it is cor- nation." Familial staing for r eal e state 773 $15,000 ds published in the 3404 Dogwood Ave., We Do The Work ... rect. oSpellcheckn and which is in violation of 541-548-4807 tus includes children "Boats" classification in Redmond. Acreages You Keep The Cash! human errors do octhis law. All persons under the age of 18 include: Speed, fishOn-site credit cur. If this happens to living with parents or are hereby informed Hard-to-find 5-acre flat ing, drift, canoe, This commercial approval team, your ad, please conthat all dwellings adlegal cus t odians, building offers exhouse and sail boats. corner lot web site presence. tact us ASAP so that ver!ised are available buildable pregnant women, and For all other types of cellent exposure located in Lake Park We Take Trade-Ins! corrections and any on an equal opportupeople securing cus- along desirable NW watercraft, please go with mature adjustments can be nity basis. The Bulle- Estates tody of children under to Class 875. 6th Street. landscaping. MLS¹ BIG COUNTRY RV made to your ad. tin Classified 18. This newspaper Currently housing 541-385-5809 Allegro 32' 2007, hke Bend: 541-330-2495 201406959 541 -385-5809 will not knowingly acThe Redmond $135,500. Call Pam new, only 12,600 miles. Redmond: HD Fat Boy 2002 The Bulletin Classified cept any advertising 748 Spokesman newsChev 8.1L with Allison 60 541-548-5254 Lester, Principal Bro14,000 orig. miles. Servtng Central Oregon since lg03 for real estate which is Northeast Bend Homes ker, Century 21 Gold Exc. paper offices, the transmission, dual excond. Vance 8, in violation of the law. 2,748 sq. ft. space is Bayliner 185 2006 haust. Loaded! Auto-levCountry Realty, Inc. Hines exhaust, 5 687 O ur r e aders a r e Big .20 acre lot, 3/2.5, 541-504-1338 perfect for owner/ open bow. 2nd owner eling system, 5kw gen, The Bulletin is your spoke HD rims. DeCommercial for 1692 sq.ft., RV parkhereby informed that user. Two private power mirrors w/defrost, luggage rack — low engine hrs. all dwellings adveri ng, m t n vie w s , Just bought a new boat? tachable 2 slide-outs with awEmployment offices and gener— fuel injected V6 Rent/Lease with back rest. Many nings, rear c a mera, tised in this newspaous open spaces. $259,900. P r incipal Sell your old one in the — Radio & Tower. other extras. Must traifer hitch, driyer door per are available on B roker @ J ohn L classifieds! Ask about our Marketplace Three parking 4700 sq. ft. shop and Great family boat see to appreciate. Super Seller rates! w/power window, cruise, Scott, 541-480-3393. an equal opportunity places in back+ Priced to sell. 2500 sq. ft. office on $10,500. Iocated in 541-385-5809 exhaust brake, central basis. To complain of street parking. Call 1.53 acres for lease $11,590. Crooked River Ranch. vac, satellite sys. Asking 762 d iscrimination ca l l in NW Bend, quiet 541-548-0345. $259,000. Call 530-957-1865 775 $67,500. 503-781-8812 HUD t o l l-free at area, excellent conHomes with Acreage 5 41-3 8 5 - 5 8 0 9 Call Graham Dent 1-800-877-0246. The Manufactured/ struction, perfect for 541-383-2444 Where can you find a KAYAKS Just too many toll f ree t e lephone electronic assembly 2278 sq. ft. home with Mobile Homes to advertise. Two Wilderness helping hand? number for the hear- CDMT ASS,~„„, collectibles? work shops on 5.41 plant. Lots of parkPongo kayaks, ing im p aired is From contractors to ing. Was auto shop. tterlgatlng veer aeeeeae acres. $24 9 ,900. List Your Home 12' and 10', like new www.bendbulletin.com 1-800-927-9275. Call 702-526-0353. 151628 Hackamore, JandN/Homes.com yard care, it's all here Sell them in + 2 Werner paddles Shop can be leased La Pine. High Lakes We Have Buyers Check out the Retail $1808, in The Bulletin's The Bulletin Classifieds TURN THE PAGE separate from office Realty & P r o perty Get Top Dollar classifieds online now $950. "Call A Service For More Ads space. Management Financing Available. www.fgendbulletigLcom 541-306-4181 Serving Central Oregon since tggg 541-536-0117 541-548-5511 T he Bu l l e t i n Professional" Directory 541 -385-5809 Updated daily •
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havein a sweet car likethis! $12,500 547 -000-000
(whichever comes first!) Includes up to 40 words of text, 2" in length, with border, full color photo, bold headline and price. • Daily publication in The Bulletin, an audience of over 70,000. • Weekly publication in Central Oregon Marketplace —DELIVERED to over 30,000 households. • Weekly publication in The Central Oregon Nickel Ads with an audience of over 30,000 in Central and Eastern Oregon • Continuous listing with photo on Bendbulletin.com
541-385-5809 * A $290 value based on an ad with the same extra features, publishing 28-ad days in the above publications. Private party ads only.
E6 THURSDAY MARCH 26 2015 • THE BULLETIN
•(~ •
•
TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809
• •
AUTOS80TRANSPORTATION 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
880
881
Motorhomes
Travel Trailers
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 365-5609 or place your ad on-line at bendbulletin.com
RV PACKAGE-2006
Monaco Monarch, 31 ', Ford V10, 28,900 miles, auto-level, 2 slides, queen bed 8 hide-a-bed sofa, 4k gen, conv microwave, 2 TV's, tow package,$66,000. OPTION - 2003 Jeep Wranglertow car, 84K miles, hard & soft top, 5 speed manual,$1 1,000 541-815-6319 Find exactly what you are looking for in the CLASSIFIEDS
662
Fifth Wheels
CHECKYOURAD
Tioga 24' Class C Bought new in 2000, currently under 21K miles, exc. shape, new tires, professionally winterized on the first day it runs every year, cut-off sure it is corswitch to b a ttery, to make rect. 0Spellchecku and plus new RV bathuman errors do octeries. Oven, h ot cur. If this happens to water heater & air cond., seldom used; your ad, please contact us ASAP so that just add water and it's r eady to g o! corrections and any adjustments can be $22,000 obo. Serious inquiries, only. made to your ad. Stored in T erreb541-385-5809 onne. 541-546-5174 The Bulletin Classified
Keystone Everest 5th Wheel, 2004 Model 323P - 3 slides, rear island-kitchen, fireplace, 2 TV's, CD/DVR/VCR/Tuner w/surround sound, A/C, custom bed, ceiling fan, W/D ready, many extras. New awning & tires. Excellent condition. $19,750.More pics available.541-923-6408
Laredo 31'2006, 5th wheel, fully S/C one slide-out. Awning. Like new,
661
Travel Trailers
hardly used. Must sell $20,000 or take over payments. Call 541-410-5649
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 $26,800 Loaded. Must see to appreciate. Redmond, OR.
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do the Work,
You Keep the Cash! On-site credit approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
54'I -604-5993
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495
Pe()asus 27' 2005 FQS, 14 slide, lots of extras and plenty of storage inside 8 out. Pantry next to frig. Always stored in heated garage when not in use. $15,750. 541-526-1361
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approval team, web site presence. We Take Trade-Ins!
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
Automobiles
908
Aircraft, Parts & Service
Buick Electra 225 1964 Classic cruiser with rare 401CI V6. Runs good, needs interior work, 166K miles. $7,995. Donated to Equine Outreach. Call Gary 541-460-6130
1/3 interest in
Honda Accord2005 9 h
BMW X3 35i 2010
Exc cond., 65K miles w/100K mile transferable warranty. Very clean; loaded - cold 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
Columbia 400,
Financing available.
$125,000
(located © Bend)
Honda CRV 2007, (exp. 3/29/1 5) Vin ¹064947 Stock ¹44696A
$ 2000 down 72 mo 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in payment.
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1/3 interest in wellequipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510 www.N4972M.com HANGAR FOR SALE. 30x40 end unit T hanger in Prineville. Dry walled, insulated, and painted. $23,500.
Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1966 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time,
full panel. $21,000 obo. Contact Paul at 541-447-5164.
Superhawk N7745G Owners' Group LLC Cessna 172/1 80 hp, full IFR, new avionics, GTN 750, touchscreen center stack, exceptionally clean. Healthy engine reserve fund. Hangared at KBDN. One share available,$13,000. Call 541-706-1780
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
oncorde 00
16,977 ROBBERSON
SubaruLegacy
mama
541-312-3986
LL Bean 2006, (exp. 3/29/1 5) Vin ¹203053 Stock ¹62770
Scion TCcoupe 2007,
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
Stock ¹44193B
payment.
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DodgeAvenger 2013, (exp. 3/29/1 5)
ROBBERSON ~m
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541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
Suzuki SX42011
SuaARU uuumuouumauou
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend.
Vin ¹535474 Stock ¹63015
go to
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
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 bendbuiietin.com
SuaARU
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3821 Dlr¹0354
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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Subaru Outback XT 2006,
Scion XB2013, (exp. 3/29/f 5) Vin ¹034131 Stock ¹63065
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
(exp. 3/29/1 5)
VIN ¹313066 Stock ¹44631A
$15,979 or $199/mo., $11,999 or $149/mo., $2000 down 64 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
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Fiat 5002012, in good
condition with good gas mileage, front wheel drive, automatic, 45,694 miles asking $10,000.
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Honda Accord
2003 inspected 8 ready Vin 026759 $7,977
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Stock ¹63205
Toyota Corolla2013, (exp. 3/29/1 5) Vin ¹053527 Stock ¹63072
General's I I Attorney I Office C o nsumer f Protection hotline atf 1-877-677-9392. The Bulletin Serving Centra/ Oregon sincel909
$20,358 or $249/mo., $15,979 or $199 mo., $2600 down, 64 mo., 4 .49% APR o n ap -
$2000 down, 64 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title included in payment.
Want to impress the relatives? Remodel and title i ncluded in your home with the payment. help of a professional SuaARU SuaARll uuuhuuoluuuu.oou from The Bulletin's cuuhuuouuuco uou "Call A Service 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 877-266-3621 Professional" Directory Dlr ¹0354 Dlr ¹0354 proved credit. License
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$19,977 ROBBERSON
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Utility Trailers
665
Canopies & Campers Covered utility trailer. 4'x6'. Street legal. Adventurer 2013 66 FB truck camper, Spare tire. $450. $16,600. 2205 d IY obo. 541-260-0514 weight, 44 gallons f resh w ater. 3 1 0 F latbed t r ailer w i t h ramps, 7000 lb. cawatts rooftop solar, 2 pacity, 26' long, 6'6 deep cycle batteries, wide, ideal for hauling LED lights, full size q ueen bed. n i c e hay, materials, cars, exc. cond. $2800. floorplan. Also available 2010 C hevy 541-420-3766 Silverado HD, 931 $15,000. Automotive Parts, 360-774-2747 No text messages! Service 8 Accessories 0
ToyotaRA V4 2003
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541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
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ChevyPickup 1978, long bed, 4x4, frame up restoration. 500 Cadillac eng i ne, fresh R4 transmission w/overdrive, low mi., no rust, custom interior and carpet, n ew wheels a n d tires, You must see itl $25,000 invested. $12,000 OBO. 541-536-3669 or
cleanest in town, seriously, ¹066315 only $9,998 ROBBERSON ~
aama a
541-312-3986
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5 975
Automobiles
541-420-6215.
(4) 17u dress mags for Nissan '07 Titan truck, Buick LeSabre 2005
custom, exc. cond.,
tires 40%, 3800 Series II 3.6 V-6, 69,300 mi., F ord Ranger X L T 2nd owner. $7700 obo 1997, 4x4, 5 spd., 4 cyl, 541-430-7400 or tow pkg, runs great, 541-615-6467 $5200. 541-385-4790.
1000 Legal Notices
1000 Legal Notices
LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEARING NOTICE CITY OF BEND CITY COUNCIL P ROJECT N U M BER: P Z 15-0037; APPLICANT: CITY O F BEND. N A TURE OF THE APPLICATION: Amend
the Bend Development Code Chapters 2 and 3 to provide incentives for developing affordable housing and Chapter 4 to a dd Cottage Housing as a housing type and an infill d evelopment option. APPLICABLE CRITERIA: Sta t e wide Planning Goals 10, Bend Development C ode Sect i o n 4 .6.200, an d t h e applicable plan policies of the Bend
1000 Legal Notices
Area General Plan. DATE TIME P LACE AND L O C ATION OF T H E HEARING: April 15, 2015, 7:00 p.m. at 710 NW Wall Street, Bend, OR, in City Hall Council Chambers. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: The application, all documents and evidence su b mitted and the applicable criteria are a vailable for inspection at City Hall at no cost and will be provided at a reasonable cost. S even d ays prior to t h e hearing a copy of the staff report will be similarly available. CONTACT PERSON: Wendy Robinson at (541)-386-5596, wrobinson@ben-
1000 Legal Notices
doregon.gov. Send PUBLIC NOTICE written testimony to AUCTION NOTICE: the City Council c/o ON APRIL 6, 2015 AT GMD, 710 NW Wall 12:00 PM, T H ERE St. 97701, or attend WILL BE A F O R Ethe meeting a nd CLOSURE SALE OF state your v iews. PERSONAL PROPThe hearing will be ERTY, AT SOUTHconducted in accorSIDE STO R AGE, d ance with B D C 2 0205 BADG E R Section 4.1 . 500. ROAD, BEND, ORAny party is entitled EGON, 97702. THE t o a h e a ring o r CONTENTS OF record continuance. THESE UNITS WILL Failure of an issue BE SOLD UNLESS to be raised at the PAYMENTS IN FULL hearing, in person IS MADE PRIOR TO or by letter, or failTHE TIME OF SALE. ure t o pro v ide C ASH ONLY - N O statements or eviCHECK - NO CREDIT dence sufficient to CARDS. UNITS TO afford the decision BE SOLD: ¹56 - Sumaker an opportuchomski. nity to respond precludes appeal to the The Bulletin Land Use Board of To Subscribe call Appeals on that issue. 541-385-5800 or go to
www.bendbulletln.com
1000
1000
1000
1000
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
Legal Notices
NOTICE OF SUPPLEMENTAL BUDGET HEARING • For uupplumeulal budgets propuulug 0 uihanau10any iund'0 uupuuditucuuby mom than 10 pucuuaa
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A pualm hearing on a propouuci uupplamuchlal budget for iauullcl NemeP f or the ouuaut auuai year Wifl aa held at
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Buy 8 Sell Safely In TheBulletin Classifieds Unlike unregulated lnternet advertising, we make every attemPt to enSure that PrOduCtS SOld in our ClaSSifiedS are
from a valid source.
Call 541-385-5808 toplaceyour adtoday.
A uopy of the uupplemenlal budget dooumeca mar icu Inuiceoiad or oamined on oc attur JgiaahZiLSiuo at X
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4x4 with great gas mileage ¹301651 $11,977
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$2600 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p - The Bulletin recoml proved credit. License mends extra caution t when p u r chasing • and title i ncluded in payment. f products or services
Hwy 20, Bend. q checks, or credit in2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 2060 NE I formation may be I 877-266-3621 677-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354 J subject toFRAUD. Dlr ¹0354 For more informa-
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$2000 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
Subaru Impreza 2013,
541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 3/31/1 5
Looking for your next employee?
Dlr ¹0354
(exp. 3/29/1 5) Vin ¹027174
2005 crew cab great looking! Vin¹972932
On a classified ad
proved credit. License and title included in payment.
677-266-3821
Bargain Corral price $4,998
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www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item. $16,977 or $199/mo.,
(exp. 3/29/1 5) Vin ¹196120
4 .49% APR o n ap proved credit. License and title included in
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Tent Trailer Rockwood 2 012 12' b ox , 2 7 ' open, 1.9 c.u. 3-way fridge, furnace. 48" front ATV rack; 1 5 Mud Rover tires HD w/spare. Dry weight 2275. Extras. $10,500 541-536-3045
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WHEN YOU SEE THIS
Vin ¹J20929
541-546-5254
The Bulletin
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ROBBERSON 4 ~
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541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru 03/31/15
The Bulletin
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4x4 and ready for fun! Vin ¹J26963
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brought to you by
$6,977!
2010. Only 56k mi..
BIG COUNTRY RV Bend: 541-330-2495 Redmond:
Your future is just apage away. Whetheryou're looking for a hat or aplace tohangit, The Bulletin Classified is your best source. Every daythousandsof buyers andsellers ofgoods and services dobusinessin these pages.Theyknow you can't beatThe Bulletin Classified Section for selection andconvenience - every item isjust a phone call away. The Classified Section is easy to use. Eyeiy item is categorizedandevery cartegoiy is indexed on the section's front page. Whether youarelookingfor a home orneeda service, your future is inthe pagesof The Bulletin Classified.
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down 64 mo at $10,379 or $149/mo., $2600 4 .49% APR o n a p $2600 down, 60 mo.,
Mountaineer 1999 Mercedes 380SL 1982 Roadster, black on black, soft & hard top, excellent condition, always garaged. 155K m i les, $11,500. 541-549-6407
Chev Siiverado
$5,977 ROBBERSON y
Vin¹133699
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Fully restored Vin ¹359402
This advertising tip
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/1 5
A Lof of car for
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VM/BUG 1971
Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an interesting Manner.Write from the readers view - not the seller's. Convert the facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will help them in someway.
541-312-3966
payment.
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2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
ROBBERSON oI ~
ways garaged, all
maintenance up to date, excellent cond. A STEAL AT$13,900. 541-223-2218
payment.
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1995. auto., 4 cyl 2.2L, dark blue Vin061167$4,977
541-385-5809
and title i ncluded in
3/31/1 5
Pickups
T-Hangar for rent at Bend airport. Call 541-362-6996.
$3600 down, 84 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p proved credit. License and title i ncluded in
Say ugoodbuy"
541-312-3986
top, cream colored interior & black dash. This little beauty runs and looks great and turns heads wherever it goes. Mi: 131,902. Phone 541-382-0023
$21,979 or $259/mo.,
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541-312-3986 www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Price good thru 03/31/15
proved credit. License
www.robberson.com Dlr ¹0205. Good thru
V W CONV. 1 9 78 $8999 -1600cc, fuel injected, classic 1976 Volkswaqen Convertible. Cobalt blue with a black convertible
Vin ¹207281 Stock ¹62547
ROBBERSON co ~
VOLVO XC90 2007 AWD, 6-cyl 3.2L, power everything, grey on grey, leather heated lumbar seats, 3rd row seat, moonroof, new tires, al-
(exp. 3/29/1 5)
¹018626 $1 1,977
$13,979 or $195/mo.,
$2900 down, 72 mo., 4 .49% APR o n a p -
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Hard top, 6-cylinder, auto trans, power brakes, power steering, garaged, well maintained, engine runs strong. 74K mi., great condition. $12,500. Must see! 541-598-7940
Gorgeous and Priced to se//!
VIN ¹292213 Stock ¹63014
$13,999 or $175/mo.,
1965 Mustang ~4
(exp. 3/29/1 5)
to that unused item by placing it in The Bulletin Classifieds
Mercur Mariner
541-286-3333
SubaruLegacy 3.0R Limited 2008,
Chrysler 200 LX 2012,
2060 NE Hwy 20, Bend. 877-266-3621 Dlr ¹0354
$100 each. Door-to-door selling with 541-615-0666 fast results! It's the easiest GW3 Ultra way in the world to sell. Goodyear Grip snow tires (4), 235/50R16, 1300 The Bulletin Classified miles. Pd $650, sell 541-385-5809 $400. 541-362-2463
RV CONSIGNMENTS WANTED We Do The Work ... You Keep The Cash! On-site credit
975
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 541-362-8036
541-546-5254
USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!
975
Automotive Parts, Service & Accessorie
A Private Collection
Redmond:
Heartland P rowler 2012, 29PRKS, 33', like new, 2 slides-livi ng area & la r ge closet. Large enough to live in, but easy to tow! 15' power awning, power hitch & stabilizers, full s i ze queen bed, l a rge shower, porcelain sink & toilet. $26,500. 541-999-2571
975
Antique & Classic Autos
Tom, 541.766.5546
Ready to make memories! Top-selling Winnebago 31 J, original owners, nonsmokers, garaged, only 18,800 miles, auto-leveling jacks, (2) slides, upgraded queen bed, bunk beds, micro, (3) TVs, sleeps 10! Lots of storage, maintained, very clean!Only $67,995!Extended warranty and/or financing avail to qualified buyers! 541-388-7179
975
932
0 0
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935
MGB front 8 rear axles for wire wheels, $50 each. 541-337-9023
•
BOATS 8 RVs 805- Misc. Items 850 - Snowmobiles 860 - Motorcycles And Accessories 865 - ATVs 870 - Boats & Accessories 875 - Watercraft 880 - Motorbomes 881 - Travel Trailers 882 - Fifth Wheels 885- Canopies and Campers 890- RVs for Rent
931
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