Bulletin Daily Paper 01-30-14

Page 1

Serving Central Oregon since190375

THURSDAY January 30,2014

O O NS OnSee a nea Prep wresting SPORTS • C1

HEALTH• D1

bendbulletin.com OSU-CASCADES

TODAY'S READERBOARD

Drought starving farms in

Perfect exercise? — The search for that elusive perfect exercise — onethat's fun and all-encompassing — is adeadend quest.D1

California

r I

By Elizabeth Campbell and Megan Durisin Bloomberg News

Online oatmeal —Straw

Near the confluence of the Merced

• The university and the city have agreedon away forward for the first parcel of land as well aswhat roles eachwill play on development, transportation and other issues

and San Joaquin rivers, the heart of the

California farmbelt,

Propeller, a Redmondoatmeal company, is nowoffering its products online through Amazon.com.C6

Bob Kelley watches

the driest year ever erode water supplies and prospects for the

c

Plus: Bankers' hoursJunior bankers at Citigroup now share a privilege already enjoyed by many of their Wall Street peers — Saturdays off.C6

5; =~ M '

dairy business his family began in 1910.

0

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'1s

Knott LandfillDeschutes Countycommissioners approve firm's proposal to convert landfill waste into diesel fuel.B1

EDITOR'5CHOICE

Obesity takes root eary in ife, study finds By Gina Kolete New York Times News Service

For many obese adults, the die was cast bythe time

they were 5 years old. A major new study of more than 7,000 children has

found that a third of children who were overweight in kindergarten were obese by eighth grade. And almost every child who was

veryobese remained that way. Some obese or over-

weight kindergartners lost their excess weight, and some children of nor-

mal weight got fat over the years. But every year, the chances that a child

would slide into or out of being overweight or obese diminished. By age 11, there were few additional changes: Those who were obese or overweight stayed that way, and those whose weights were normal did not become fat. "The main message is

o

r 17'

' ij

Phase1

PRESENTATION

Skeptical public gets glimpse of transit plan By Tyler Leeds

This rendering, presentedduring OregonStateUniversity-Cascades'Decemberopenhouse,showsa development plan for afour-year campus in southwest Bend.Thoughthe university hasn't yet submitted a final plandetailing howtheland will be used, OSU-Cascadeshassigned an agreement with the city of Bend outlining what each will dofor thefirst, smaller project: developingthe10.4-acre eastern parcel. Rendenng courtesy OSU-Cascades

By Hillary Borrude The Bulletin

Officials with the city of Bend and Oregon State University-Cascades Campus say a new agreement

instructor gave apresentation Wednesday

development of the first phase of the new campus

cades Campus officials have hit a financial snag in their efforts to expand

on the university's plans to minimize the impact

over the next 18 months.

to a four-year university. And without a fix this

of its planned four-year, west-side campus on

Bend's transportation. The presentation, which was held in a completely full Brooks Room at the Downtown

Bend Public Library, was organizedbythe League of Women Voters and Central Oregon LandWatch. A noticeable portion of the audience

was audibly skeptical of the university's selection of 56 acres near the intersection of Southwest

Chandler and Southwest Century Drives. The

presentation was led by

Will OSU-Cascades make a payment to the city for law enforcement and other services'? Related • Gauging attitudes toward population growth,B1

President Becky Johnson

city will hold OSU-Cascades to the same land use

standards and application process as other developers. It calls for the city and university to each identify a project manager who will handle most

New York Times News Service

campus expansion." Here's the gist:

WASHINGTON — The United States informed its NATO allies this month that Russia had tested a new ground-

like to get out of its lease on the Cascades Hall building, which is owned by Central Oregon Community College and on the COCC campus.

garding development issues. SeeOSU-Cascades/A5

launched cruise missile, raising concerns

That's fine with

of the communication between the two entities re-

about Moscow's

COCC. The community college would like to renovate the building

land for a4-year campus

compliance with a landmark arms control accord.

U.S. officials believe that Russia began conducting flight tests of the missile as early as

and useitform ore class-

room space and student services.

Sim sonAve

But in order to retire

Phase 1: 10.4 acres

Site of old pumice mi 46acres

By Michael R. Gordon

said, "it throws a real wrench into the whole OSU-Cascades would

The memorandum of understanding states the

Matt Shinderman, an instructor in the school's

sustainabilityprogram and the co-chair of the Campus Expansion and Advisory Committee, which advises the university on planning for the campus. Representing the city were Brian Rankin, Bend's principal planner; Nick Arnis, transportation manager;

sion, OSU-Cascades Vice

address one question coming up in the community:

San Francisco. SeeDrought/A5

missile

upcoming legislative ses-

But the memorandum between the two does not

from Newman, about 83 miles southeast of

Russia tested

State University-Cas-

they recently signed will help guide the rapid

drop as much as twothirds, so fewer crops will be planted and some animals will be sold to avoid the expense ofbuying grain, he saidbytelephone

U.S. says

SALEM — Oregon

ty-Cascades Campus

the debt still owedby OSU-Cascades, COCC said it would need $5.26

2008. Such tests are

prohibited by the treaty banning medium-range missiles that was signed in

million. And how it

receives the money matters.

COCC is hopingfor $3.63 million in the form of a matchingbond from the state, which would needtobem atched dol-

the Soviet leader at the time, and is

and Colin Stephens, cur-

lar-for-dollar in order to

viewed as one of the

rent planning manager. SeeTransit/A5

be tapped. See Salem /A4

bedrock accords that ended the Cold War.

I

@hiqg

gro

The Bulletin

1987 by President

Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev,

SeeTesting/A6

FortheChinese,New Year' sisa source Ofstress By Stuart Leavenworth

is the word the govern-

and friends. Given that hun-

ment-controlled media often use in regard to the Lunar

dreds of millions have moved

adolescence to adulthood,"

BEIJING — For many Americans, Chinese New

said Ruth Loos, a professor of preventive medicine at

Year conjures up images of colorful parades and

the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New York, who was not involved in the study.

fireworks in celebrations at

New Year festival, which starts Friday. The holiday is when Chinese workers are expected to return to their home villages and share time

SeeObesity/A4

What Salem might do for the campus this session The Bulletin

Cityofficials and an Oregon State Universi-

McClatchy Foreign Staff

children's body weights for years, from kindergarten through eighth grade.

LEGISLATURE

By Lauren Dake

The Bulletin

very early in life, and that it basically tracks through

a rare study that tracked

than 6,500 cows may

n

~ ov.r

that obesity is established

These results, surprising to manyexperts,arosefrom

and alfalfa Kelley grows to feedmore

IV

ls 4

And a Wed exclusiveWith recession-friendly prices, McDonald' sisbecoming a sort of Everyman's Starbucks. beetibulletie.cem/extras

2,800 acres of corn

5.

e

i„'e+.

— A program that turned 20,000 Russian warheads into electricity comes to anend.A3

water available for the

I

~e "-.

Megatons to Megawatts

The amount of

lU

e o

quaint Chinatowns across the United States.

In China, "bittersweet"

TODAY'S WEATHER Mostlycloudy High 42, Low 26 Page B6

and gifts with their families

from rural areas to cities in recent decades, Chinese New Year has become a frenzied time of travel across the

largest human migration." During the New Year's festivities — known as "Spring Festival" in China — government transportation officials estimate, people will make

world's most populous coun-

3.6 billion trips. As of late December, more than 154 million

try. Some call it "the world's

train tickets had been sold for

INDEX Business Calendar Classified

D1-6 Obituaries B5 C5 - 6 C omics/Puzzles E3-4 Health Ct-4 B2 Crosswords E 4 H o roscope D6 Sp orts E 1 - 6Dear Abby D6 Lo cal/State B 1-6 N '/Movies 06

The Bulletin AnIndependent

the 40-day period that surrounds the Lunar New Year. For the past week, train

stations in Beijing have been mobbed, and until a few days ago subways were crowded with passengers carrying bags and gifts. SeeChina/A6

Q i/i/e use recycled newsprint

Vol. 112, No. 30,

30 pages,

s sections

0

88 267 0 23 29

1


A2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

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ouse asses arm I By Ron Nixon

all be proud of because it expected to take up the bill lat- fulfills the expectations the WASHINGTON The er this week. American people have of us," House of Representatives on Compared with e a rlier, said Rep. Frank Lucas, R-OkWednesday passed a bill au- more contentious votes on the la., who led House efforts to thorizing nearly $1 trillion in farm bill, Wednesday's vote pass the farm bill. spending on farm subsidies was largely bipartisan. Many House leaders are now exand nutrition programs, set- Democrats who had opposed pected to turn their attention to ting the stage for final passage it because of cuts to the food other issues, including the Afof a new five-year Farm Bill stamp program supported it fordable Care Act, before the that has been stalled for over Wednesday. 2014 midterm elections. two years. A number of Republicans, I t i s u n clear w h ere t h e Negotiators from the House including many who wanted Obama administration stands and Senate spent several deeper cuts to the food stamps, on the new Farm Bill. Obama weeks working out their dif- also voted for the bill's passage. had signaled his opposition to ferences on issues in the legHouse Speaker John Boeh- any bill that cut food stamps islation, including cuts to food ner and the majority lead- and expanded crop insurance. stamps, income caps on farm er, Eric Cantor, R-Va., had The new Farm Bill, which subsidies and a price support endorsed the bill and urged had been mired in partisan program for dairyfarmers. Republicans to support it, gridlock, cuts the food stamp The bill is expected to save even though they said they program by $8 billion, and about $16.6 billion over the would have liked to see more about 850,000 households will next 10 years. changes. lose about $90 in monthly ben"This is legislation we can efits under the change. The bill passed the House by a vote of 251-166. The Senate is

New York Times News Service

WINTER STORM SLAMS THE SOUTH

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All Bulletinpaymentsareaccepted at the drop boxat City Hall. Checkpayments may be converted toanelectronic funds transfer.TheBulletin, USPS A552-520, ispublished daily byWestern CommunicationsInc.,1777S.W.Chandler Ave., Bend,OR97702.Periodicalspostage paid atBend,OR.Postmaster: Send addresschangesto TheBulletin circulation depart ment,Po.Box6020,Bend,OR 97706.TheBulletin retainsownershipand copyright protection ofall staff-prepared news copy,advertising copyandnews or ad illustrations.Theymay not be reproduced withoutexplicit priorapproval.

Oregon Lottery results As listed at www.oregonlottery.org and individual lottery websites

POWERBALL The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

4v©i Q »QaQzsQ szQ The estimated jackpot is now $194 million.

MEGABUCKS The numbers drawn Wednesday night are:

Q8Q21Q 25Q 33Q 44Q48 The estimated jackpot is now $1.2 million.

WeSt Virginia Spill —Tests on the water supply in Charleston, WVa., a week after a chemical spill tainted the city's water system turned up traces of formaldehyde, suggesting that "there's a lot more we don't know" about the consequences of thespill, an environmental expert told a state legislative committee Wednesday.That expert, Scott Simonton, a member of thestate's Environmental Quality Board, told the panel that hecould guaranteethat some West Virginians were breathing formaldehydegas whenthey showered, news reports stated.

— From wire reports

Ben Gray/Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Traffic is at astandstill on the southbound lanesasthe northbound side is aempty sheet of ice in Atlanta onWednesday.After a rare snowstorm stoppedAtlanta-area commuters in their tracks — forcing many tohunkerdown in their cars overnight or seekother shelter, theNational Guardwas sending military Humveesonto the city's snarled freewaysystem inan attempt to movestranded school buses andgetfood andwater to

students on them,Gov. NathanDeal said early Wednesday. The forecast for theAtlanta area showed little hope ofany widespread melting of thesnowand ice in the short-term. Temperatures didn't get abovefreezing Wednesday, though awarmup wasexpected in the nextfewdays. Still, temperatures wereexpected to be inthe teens overnight soany moisture on the roads will turn to iceagain. — 77reAssociated Press

Tensionbuilds in Israeli coalition over peacetalks

One mOnth: $17 <Prinonl t y:$16)

Bymail in Deschutes County: One month: $14.50 By mail outside Deschutes County: Onemonth: $18 E-Editien only: Onemonth: $13

II'en nIIkeS —U.N. nuclear inspectors began avisit Wednesday to a uranium mine in southern Iran, state media reported, describing Tehran's readiness for the scrutiny as agood-will gesture to demonstrate peaceful intent. The inspection followed atemporary international agreement aimed atresolving a longstanding dispute over the Iranian nuclear program, which Iran says is for energy andmedical use but which Western nations andIsrael suspect is a cloak for developing the ability to makebombs.

to see EdwardSnowden clapped in irons andbound tothe U.S. for a criminal trial. TwoNorwegian politicians have adifferent fate in mind for Snowden: theNobel PeacePrize. Norwegian parliamentarians Snorre Valenand BaardVegar Solhjell nominated Snowdenfor the award — the samehonor Obamahimself won in 2009 — for his disclosures about National Security Agency spying. Theideathat the Nobel committee would bestow its most prestigious prize on aman some in the United States consider atraitor drew a dismissive response from aWhite House official, who said Snowdeninstead should be tried as afelon.

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list of executive actions President BarackObamaannounced in his State of the Unionaddresswas marred by afew glaring omissions. Gay rights advocates areseething over Obama'srefusal to grant employment discrimination protections to gaysandlesbians working for federal contractors, safeguards they havebeenseeking for years. And some immigration overhaul supporters were disappointed that hedid not act on his own to halt deportations, which havesoared during his presidency andangeredmanyHispanics.

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Obama allieS angry —ForsomeWhite Houseallies, thelong

Health Care laW —Maybe the health care lawwas about wealth transfer, after all. Newresearch shows that the Affordable CareAct will significantly boost the economic fortunes of those in thebottom one-fifth of the incomeladder while slightly reducing averageincomes on the rungs above.Economists at the nonpartisan Brookings Institution, a Washington public policy center, found an average increase of about 6 percent in the incomes of thepoorest 20 percent of the United States, meaning thosemaking below approximately $20,600 ayear.

OUR ADDRESS Street ........... 1777S.W.Chandler Ave. Bend, OR97702 Mailing......... P.O.Box6020 Bend, OR97706

Syria talkS —Syrian President BasharAssad's adviser on Wednesday rejected the opposition's call for a transitional governing bodyand suggested for the first time that a presidential election scheduled to be held later this year maynot take placeamidthe raging violence. The comments by BouthainaShaaban in aninterview with The Associated Press came asU.N.mediator Lakhdar Brahimi announced that the first phase of the Syria peacetalks in Genevawill end on Friday, asscheduled, and that the gapbetweenthe government andthe opposition remains "quite large."

By Jodi Rudoren New York Times News Service

TEL AVIV, Israel — Simmering tension between Prime

needed. Thatismyduly." He added, "Imposing Palestinian sovereignty over Israeli

summer. Bennett has said that

repeated, blistering denuncia- he will quit the coalition if Israel tions over the past few days of signs a document that calls for a suggestion by the prime min- a Palestinian state to be estabister's office that some Jews in lished along the 1967 lines with far-flung settlements might live East Jerusalem as its capital, as under Palestinian sovereignty it is expectedto do. in a future peace deal. Hours But two other coalition partafter Netanyahu's office issued ners — Tzipi Livni, the justice its ultimatum, Bennett said, "If minister, who is leading the the prime minister was offend- negotiations, and Yair Lapid, ed, that was not my intention."

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Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was my dutyto remove this idea of Israel and one of his right- immediately from our agenda, wing political partners boiled and it has been removed." into open hostility Wednesday, The prime minister's office threatening to reshape Israel's did not immediately respond governing coalition at a critical to inquiries about whether that juncture of the U.S.-brokered statement would suffice. peace talks with the PalestinThe flap highlights political ians. The prime ~ er ' s of- dynamics in Israel that many fice issued a warning Wednes- analysts see as a potentially faday morning to Naftali Bennett, tal obstacle to any peace deal. the leader of the religious-na- Netanyahu's coalition partners tionalist Jewish Home party, have profound differences rethat if Bennett did not apologize garding the establishment of a for his harsh critidsm of ¹ Palestinian state, and the prime tanyahu's positions in recent minister's willingness to comdays, he could lose his seat in promise on issues like the futhe Cabinet. tureofJerusalem and the fate of "There is a n e x pectation Palestinian refugees is an open that he will apologize," said an question. official in Netanyahu's office, The cracks in the coalition who spoke on the condition of came asU.S.Secretary ofState anonymity because he was not John Kerry prepared to present authorized to talk to reporters. a "framework" laying out core "The prime minister has coali- principles for continuing the tion alternatives." negotiations, which began last Bennett, 41, had delivered

k

the centrist finance minister-

But he stood by the substance are likely to leave the governof his statements and did not ment if Israel does not continue apologize. to support Kerry's initiative. "I respect Prime Minister Lapid warned in a speech here Benjamin Netanyahu and his Wednesday that if the talks leadership in not-simple con- failed, a E u ropean boycott ditions," Bennett said at a con- could ensue that would cost Isference of religious-nationalist rael about $5.7 billion, threatenleaders near the Dead Sea. "I ing 9,800 jobs, and"substantialsupport him when it is needed, ly hurt the checkbook of every and I criticize him when it is Israeli."

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

A3

TART TODAY

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

It's Thursday, Jan. 30, the 30th day of 2014. Thereare335 days left in the year.

MILESTONE

SCIENCE QS.A

Finding the best position

HAPPENINGS Fallen astronautsNASA will remember the 17 astronauts who havedied in the American spaceprogram with a public ceremony at the U.S. Space 8 RocketCenter in Huntsville, Ala.

Megatons to Megawatts, a post-Cold War program to bring nuclear material from Russia to the U.S. to be usedforelectricity,hasbeen completed after20 years.

Crude Oil —TheSenate Energy and Natural Resources subcommittee will hold a hearing to discuss lifting the banon U.S. crude oil exports.

HISTORY Highlight:In1964, the United States launchedRanger6, an unmannedspacecraft carrying television camerasthat crash-landed onthe moon, but failed to sendbackimages. In1649, England's KingCharles I was executedfor treason. In1862,the ironclad USS Monitor was launchedfrom the Continental IronWorks in Greenpoint, N.Y.,during the Civil War. In1882, the 32ndpresident of the United States, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, wasborn in Hyde Park, N.Y. In1933,Adolf Hitler became chancellor of Germany.Thefirst episode of the"LoneRanger" radio programwasbroadcast on station WXYZin Detroit. In1948, Indian political and spiritual leaderMohandasK. Gandhi, 78,wasshot andkilled in New Delhi byNathuram Godse, aHinduextremist. (Godse andaco-conspirator were later executed.) In1968,the TetOffensive began during the VietnamWaras Communist forces launched surprise attacks against South Vietnameseprovincial capitals. In1972, 13 RomanCatholic civil rights marcherswereshot to death byBritish soldiers in Northern Ireland onwhat became knownas"Bloody Sunday." In1974, President RichardNixon deliveredwhat would behis last State of theUnionaddress; Nixon pledged torein in rising prices without the "harsh medicine of recession" andestablish a national health careplanthat every Americancould afford. In1981,anestimated 2 milion New Yorkers turnedout for a ticker-tape paradehonoring the freed Americanhostages from Iran. In1993, Los Angelesinaugurated its Metro RedLine, thecity's first modern subway. Ten years agn:Former French Prime Minister Alain Juppewas found guilty in connection with a party financing scandaland declared ineligible for public office for10 years (later reduced to one year onappeal). Five yearsagn:Michael Steele was elected thefirst black chairman of theRepublicanNational Committee. President Barack Obamasignedaseriesofexecutive orders that hesaid should "level the playing field" for labor unions in their struggles with management. One yearagn: In adramatic appeal before theSenateJudiciary Committee, wounded former Rep.Gabrielle Giffords urged Congress toenact tougher curbs onguns, saying, mtoo manychildren aredying" without them. Israel conducted a rare airstrike on a military target inside Syriaamidfears President BasharAssad's regime could providepowerful weapons to theIslamic militant group Hezbollah.

BIRTHDAYS Actress Dorothy Malone is89. Producer-director Harold Prince is 86. Actor GeneHackman is 84. ActressTammyGrimesis 80. Country singerJeannePruett is 77.Country singer Norma Jean is 76.FormerVice President Dick Cheneyis 73. Singer Phil Collins is 63.Actor Charles S. Dutton is 63.Actress-comedian Brett Butler is 56.TheKingof Jordan, Abdullah II, is52. Actor Christian Bale is40. Rockmusician Carl Broemel(My Morning Jacket) is 40.Pop-country singer-songwriter JoshKelley is 34. Actor WilmerValderrama is34. Actor JakeThomasis 24. — From wire reports

for sleep

By William J. Broad New York Times News Service

As the Cold War ended in

the late 1980s and early '90s, a new fear arose amid the

, "

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New York Times News Service

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• Is it best to sleep on • your back, side or

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The jitters intensified in late

1991 as Moscow announced plans to store thousands of

F/!

".

"

stomach?

• if you have sleep apnea, which is often worse on your back" said Dr. Carl Bazil, director of the

division of epilepsy and sleep at NewYork-Presby-

j

terian/Columbia Universi-

'JP'r ,

ty Medical Center. "Snoring is often worse as well,

tists worried. Few knew what

as many bed partners can attest."

to do.

Otherwise, for adults,

Megatonsto Megawatts

it is much more important what position is most

"io, ':

That is when Thomas Neff,

a physicist at the Massachu-

comfortable, Bazil said. Even in a favored position, though, nerve compression can occur if you do not move during sleep. That explains why you

setts Institute of Technology,

hit on his improbable idea: Why not let Moscow sell the uranium from its retired

weapons and dilute it into fuel for electric utilities in the United States, giving Russians desperately needed cash and Americans a cheap source of power?

USEC Inc. via New York Times NewsService

A shipment of low-enriched uranium, equivalent to10,000 warheads, that arrived at an American plant in 2005. Over two decades, the program known as Megatons to Megawatts, an idea of Thomas Neff, a physicist at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, has turned 20,000 Russian warheads into electricity that has illuminated one in 10 American light bulbs.

minutes. Fortunately, the self naturally. For infants, the advice

i d ea

achieved a major feat of nucle-

experts filed into the Diplomat

Thomas Lee Neff was born in 1943 in Oregon, the older

of two boys; his family raised chickens and grew most of its own food. He studied math

Five hundred metric tons,

and physics at Lewis & Clark College in Portland, graduat- ally had," he recalled, "I would ing with highest honors, and have said 700 tons." received his Ph.D. in physics Even so, 500 metric tons from Stanford. As a senior was a lot: 1.1 million pounds, MIT researcher, he special- heavier than a fully loaded 747 ized in energy studies, writing jetliner. books on nuclear power, solar Five days later, Neff made energy and, in 1984, the glob- his idea public in an op-ed aral uranium market. His tim-

moment in history.

Neff said, giving what he conLast month, the Russian sidered a high estimate for the Embassy in Washington held quantity of Soviet bomb fuel soon to become surplus. "If I had known how much they re-

ticle in The New York Times,

"A Grand Uranium Bargain."

is different. Since 1992,

the American Academy of Pediatrics has said that babies should sleep on their backs, even if being put down for a short nap. Although causality has not been shown, sleeping on the stomach is one of the known

r i s k f a ctors

associated with sudden infant death syndrome, or SIDS, along with general s t ress, e x posure to tobacco smoke and overheating. After th e a c ademy's widely publicized "Back to Sleep" campaign was begun in 1994, a 1998 study found that the prevalence of infants placed on their

stomachs declined by 66 percent,and the rate of SIDS fell about 38 percent.

Weekly Arts 5 Entertainment In

I ••

TheBulletin

Plars Well, Retire Well

former Soviet states to work

ar disarmament — a popular Room of the State Plaza Hotel on the original deal and its goal that is seldom achieved. in Washington. The agenda of amendments. He says a book "It's an amazing thing," said the nongovernmental meeting he is writing draws on thouFrank von Hippel, a physi- was demilitarization. A Sovi- sands of documents. cist who advised the Clinton et delegation attended, as did Thomas Cochran — a seWhite House and now teach- Neff. nior scientist at the Natural es at Princeton. The wave of Outside the c o nference Resources Defense Council in arms destruction, he said, room during a break, he ap- Washington who helped orgaeliminated up to a third of the proached a leader of the So- nize East-West interactions at planet's atomic bomb fuel, viet bomb complex, Viktor the Cold War's end, including making it "the biggest single Mikhailov, a canny apparat- the gathering where Neff met step" in the history of nuclear chik known for his love of the Soviet official — said the arms reduction. Western cigarettes. U.S. physicist deserved "99 He called Neff an underapN eff asked w h ether h e percent of the credit" for the preciated hero, adding that in would consider selling the uranium deal. Its most ima time of governmental mud- uranium in Soviet weapons. portant result, he added, was "Interesting," he said simply improving the reladle and paralysis, his success was a striking example "of Mikhailov replied, puffing tionship between the United away. "How much?" what one person can do." States and Russia at a critical

ing was propitious.

sometimes awaken with a bit of numbness for a few body tends to reposition it-

In the nuclear age, the rare The illustration showed a luted into 15,432 tons of low encame to a happy conclusion i sotope uranium 2 3 5 h a s kitchen pot and spoon float- riched uranium. The resulting as the last shipment of urani- played starring roles in war ing eerily above a counter- reactor fuel supplied half of all um from Russia arrived in the and peace. When highly pu- top and — just behind — an U.S. nuclear power plants. United States. In all, during rified, to a level of 90 percent, open window. Outside was a The total electric power, two decades, the program it fuels atom bombs; at 5 per- bomber. it said, could illuminate the "If we do not obtain the ma- whole of the U nited States known as Megatons to Mega- cent, it powers nuclear reacwatts turned 20,000 Russian tors for electric utilities. terial," he warned, shadowy (roughly 20,000 cities and 115 warheads into electricity that As the Cold War ended, agents in the former Soviet million households) for about has illuminated 1 in 10 U.S. Neff wondered whether these Union, perhaps uncontrolled two years — or Washington, light bulbs. disparate worlds might be by central authority, might D.C., for 185 years. Neff fathered the atomic able to do business togeth- seek to "sell weapons-grade The atomic sale, the brorecycling program in spite (or er. When Washington and materials t o the hig h e st chure said, "is widely held to perhaps because) of his lack of Moscow announced major bidders." symbolize the end of the era name recognition, his inexpe- unilateral arms reductions in The idea gained support in of confrontation between the rience on the world stage and late 1991, he recalled, "I said: both Washington and Mos- two major nuclear powers." his modest credentials in arms 'Wow. What's going to happen cow. Carrying it out, through a In a n i n t erview, E r nest control. Moreover, he not only to all these weapons?'" tangle of conflicting state and Moniz, the federal secrecame up with the original plan commercial interests, was an- tary of energy and a former Atomic recycling but shepherdeditfor decades. other matter. Neff was there to colleague of Neff's at MIT, "I was naive," Neff, 70, reNeff, like many experts of prod it along at almost every praised him for not only procalled in a recent interview. "I the day, worried that the So- turn. In late December 1991, posing the plan but helping thought the idea would take viet Union was ill equipped he was among the last West- guide it for more than two careofitself." to deal with thousands of dis- erners to see the Soviet ham- decades. "If he hadn't stuck with it," In fact, it required sheer carded bombs. The treaties m er andsickleflying overthe doggedness and considerable and independent actions of Kremlin. Moniz said, "it could have skill in applying nuclear sci- the Cold War allowed nucleThe first shipment of urani- very easil y been one of these ence to a global deal freighted ar arms taken from bombers um arrivedin 1995; 250 more great ideas that ends up just with technical complexities and missiles to be kept in stor- followed over the next 18 spinning its wheels." and political uncertainties. age, raising the possibility of years. Last month, a freighter Millions of i dealists have Yet in the end, Neff noted, the reuse, diversion and theft. sailing from St. Petersburg to sought a world without numission was accomplished: The beleaguered commu- Baltimore delivered the last clear weapons. Neff, despite Uranium once meant to oblit- nist state, he feared, was al- shipment. Strapped into trans- doing more than almost anyerate American cities end- ready cutting back on nucle- port pallets were giant steel one to advance that goal, is ed up endowing them with ar upkeep, workers' pay and drums, each holding about c ircumspect about what h e energy. dozens of measures meant to two bombs' worth of diluted accomplished. keep weapons safe. He also uranium. He made no mention of enA major feat of nuclear suspected that newly impovColorful signs on the drums ergy windfalls, geopolitical disarmament erished Russian nuclear sci- showed fl u ttering R u ssian realignments or the biblical Nuclear experts hail it as a entists, once a pampered elite, and United States flags, with injunction to turn swords into remarkable if poorly known might seek work elsewhere. a message in large type: plowshares. "It all sounded dangerous," "20,000 Nuclear W a rheads chapter of a t o mic h i story. The lesson of the story, he The two decades of bomb he said. Eliminated." remarked in an interview, "is recycling, they say, not only His solution wa s a tomic that private citizens can actureduced the threat of atomic recycling. The question was Shepherdingthe program ally do something." terrorism and helped stabilize how to float the idea. Neff estimates that he flew the former Soviet Union but On Oct. 19, 1991, nuclear 20 times to Russia and other L ast month, Neff's

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bombers in w hat experts viewed as decrepit bunkers, policed b y im p overished guards of dubious reliability. Many officials and scien-

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rejoice and relief: that atom-

ic security might fail in the disintegrating Soviet Union, allowing its huge stockpile of nuclear warheads to fall into unfriendly hands.

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a reception to mark the end of

the Megatons to Megawatts program. Neff was an honored guest.

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A4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

FACT CHECK:STATE OF THE UNION

Salem

Putting Obama'saddressunder the microscope

Continued fromA1 To match the $3.63 million,

the community college is lobbying for another $1.63 million in state lottery bonds, which don't

By Glenn Kessler

With many drafts

fact-check, no matter who is president. The speech is a product of many hands and is carefully vetted, so major

State of the Union

how many of the 6.3 million are in this expansion poolor whether they are simply renewing or would have qualified for Medicaid before the

The Washington Post

and many hands carefully crafting the speech, addresses are typ-

new law.Indeed, the number

errors offact are relatively rare. But State of the Union

can be difficult to fact-check. But as with all political

not accept the expansion.

speeches, context is sometimes missing.

are also open to question. The

Rep. John Huffman, R-The

troubled federal exchange counts people as enrolled if

Dalles, said he's workingto "put

A State of the Union add ress is o f ten d i f ficult t o

also includes people joining and, consequently, Medicaid in states that chose ically well-polished

addresses often are very political speeches, an argument for the president's policies, so context is sometimes nllssnlg.

Charles Dharapak The Associated Press

Here is a guide through some of President Barack

The private i n surance numbers — about 3 million-

an individual has selected a

plan, but it does not know if a person enrolled and paid a

require a match. COCC would kick in another $2 million from its own coffers. To complicate it further, the

Legislature did give COCC $5.3 million in its 2013-15 capital construction budget, but because it's in the form of a matching bond, requiring the communitycollegeto matchthe funding, it didn't help. this deal to rest." But he noted there are a lot

of people asking for capital

premium because that part of

construction money and there are no guarantees. Plus, state

lenged claims, in the order

the system has yet to be built.

lawmakers could be reticent to

in which he made them. At the end, we also examine one

Republicanresponse

fishy fact in the Republican response.

"Last month, more Americans stopped looking for a

Obama's m o r e

fa c t -chal-

7.6 million.) But the data also show that since the start of

facturing had been on a slow Still, the same study condeclineformany years. firmed that income inequality had increased in the same pe"Our deficits — cut b y riod. "Hence, the consequencmore than half." es of the 'birth lottery' — the The federal budget defi- parents to whom a child is cit has declined in half since born — are larger today than 2009, from $1.3 trillion to in the past," the paper said, about $600 billion, but that's offering the analogy of a ladnot much to brag about. The der in which the rungs have 2009 figure was not just a grown farther apart but the deficit Obama inherited from children's chances of moving his predecessor, since it also upward from one rung to anreflected the impact of deci- other had not changed. sions, such as the $800 billion Both Chetty and Saez are stimulus bill, enacted early in recent winners of the biennithe president's term. al John Bates Clark Medal, M oreover, t he defi c i t for distinguished economist soared in the first place be- under the age of 40, and it's cause of the recession, so as a mark of their esteem that the economy has improved, their paper would lead to such t he d eficit n a t u rally d e - a swift change in presidencreased. The United States tial rhetoric. Even so, some still has a deficit higher than might argue that Obama is

his presidency, about 3.2 mil-

it was in nominal terms and

lion jobs have been created

as a percentage of gross do- "stalled," since the main point mestic product than it was in of the research was that the 2008 and a debt much greater trend was constant, not that as a percentage of the overall it halted.

Stateofthe Union address "The more than eight millionnew jobs our businesses have created over the past four years." T he p r esident i s c h er-

ry-picking a number that puts the improvement in the economy in the best possible light. The low point in jobs was reached in February 2010, and there has indeed been a

gain of about 8 million jobs since then, according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data.

(Obama, saying "businesses," appears to be referring to private sector growth of

8.2 million; adding government jobs reduces the total to

— and the number of jobs in the economy still is about 1.2 million lower than when the

recession began in December economy than it was prior to 2007. the recession.

stretching the use of the term

"Today, women make up about half our workforce.

ery wage earner is paid on an hourly basis, so that statistic jobthan found one.Too many excludes salaried workers. people are falling further and In other words, since wom-

en in general work fewer hours than men in a year, the statistics used by the White

House may be less reliable for examining the key focus of legislation pending in Congress — wage discrimination. The weekly wage is more of an apples-to-apples comparison, but it does not include as many income categories. Economists at the Feder-

al Reserve Bank of St. Louis surveyed economic literature

and concluded that "research suggests that the actual gender wage gap (when female workers are compared with male workers who have similar characteristics) is much lower than the raw wage gap." They cited one survey,

December 2007. The gain in manufacturing actually has begun to stall a bit in the past year. The only reason Obama

and colleagues published a paper based on tens of millions of tax records showing that upward mobility had not

can tout a gain in manufac-

changed significantly over

turing jobs "for the first time time. The rate essentially is since the 1990s" is because, the same now as it was 20 before the recession, manu- years ago.

Obesity Continued fromA1 Experts say they may reshape approaches to combating the nation's obesity epidemic, suggesting that efforts must start much earlier and focus more on the children at

greatest risk. The findings, to be published today in The New England Journal of Medicine, do not explain why the effect occurs. Researchers say it may be a combination of genetic predispositions to being heavy and environments that encourage

overeating in those prone to it. But the results do provide a possible explanation for why efforts to help children lose weight have often had disappointing results. The steps may have aimed too broadly at all s choolchildren, rather

than

starting before children enrolled in kindergarten and concentrating on those who were

already fat at very young ages. Previous studies established how many children were fat at each age but not whether their

weight changed as they grew up. While valuable in documenting the extent of child-

hood obesity, they gave an incomplete picture of how the

condition developed, researchers said. "What is striking is the rela-

tive decrease in incidence after that initial blast" of obesity that occurs by age 5, said Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, the vice president of the Emory Global Health Institute in Atlanta. "It is almost as

if, if you can make it to kindergarten without the weight, your chances are immenselybetter."

Koplan, a former director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, was not asso-

ciated with the new study, although its lead author, Solveig Cunningham, is an assistant

disparity appear the greatest. The Bureau of L abor Sta-

are making people's lives

before we can take care of new

iar theme by Republicans, but as we have noted before, the decline in the labor participation rate is largely due to factors beyond Obama's control — namely the retirement ofthe Baby Boom generation.When Obama took

ton said he sees it as a "fiscally responsible and operationally

office in January 2009, the workforce participation rate

was 65.7 percent — and now

creative" solution.

"We're looking at using less state money, less local money; it allows OSU-Cascades to have a

single, contiguous campus, and it provides COCC with the additional building it needs," Middleton said.

certainly been a decline. But the rate had alreadybeen on a

Johnson said, OSU-Cascades' currentplans could come to a

steady downward track since it hit a high of 67.3 percent in

halt. The university would have

retirement of the baby boom-

ers. Critically, the research showed that the problem is only going to get worse in the rest of the decade, with retire-

ments accounting for twothirds of the decline of partic-

ipation rate by 2020. In other words, the rate will keep declining, no matter how well

the economy does. Barclays economists, meanwhile, say that just 15

percent of the drop in the laThe ACA expanded Med- bor force stems from people icaid to those who earn less who want a job and are of than 133 percent of the pover- prime working age (25-54). ty line — about $15,000 for an "We view the possibility of individual — to 26 states (and a large and sudden return of the District) that decided to previously discouraged job

canbe achallenge to overcome. Genetic influences tend to

mansatd. COCC President Jim Middle-

Without a way to retire the debt on the Cascades Hall lease,

the last year of Bill Clinton's partment, which concluded presidency. that when such differences The Federal Reserve Bank are accounted for, much of of Chicago in 2012 concludthe hourly wage gap dwin- ed that just over half of the dled, to about 5 cents on the post-1999 decline in the pardollar. ticipation rate comes from the

ics on obesity, something that

'asks' and new issues," Huff-

it is 62.8 percent. So there has

tistics, for instance, shows that the gap is 19 cents when looking at weekly wages. The gap is even smaller when you look at hourly wages — it is embrace that element of the seekers tothe labor force as 14 cents — but then not ev- law. But no one really knows remote," they wrote.

"It is almost as if, if you can make it to kindergarten without the weight, your chances are immensely better."

community college to help with building costs at a time when state money is in short supply and community colleges and universities across the state are vying for limited resources. "My opinion is we need to settle old financing things like this

harder." — Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgers, R-Wash. Thts has become a fam11-

prepared for the Labor De-

"Inequality ha s de e p - But they still make 77cents ened. Upward mobility has for every dollar a man earns. "More than nine m i llion time since the 1990s." stalled." That is wrong, and in 2014, The low point for manuClose readers of the pres- it'san embarrassment." Americans have signed up facturing jobs was reached ident's speeches might have There is clearly a wage for private health insurance in January 2010, and there noticed an interesting shift gap, but differences in the or Medicaid coverage." has been a gain of 570,000 in the p resident's rhetoric. life choices of men and womObama carefully does not j obs since then. But B L S Just in December the pres- en — such as women tending say these numbers are the d ata show t hat t h e n u m - ident gave a speech on eco- to leave the workforce when result of the Affordable Care ber of manufacturing jobs nomic mobility in which he they have children — make Act, but he certainly leaves is still 500,000 fewer than three times asserted that it it difficult to m ake simple that impression. But the Medwhen Obama took office in was "declining" in the Unit- comparisons. icaid part o f t h i s n u mber the depths of the recession ed States. But earlier this Obama is using a figure — 6.3 million from October — and 1.7 million fewer than month, renowned economists (annual wages, from the Cen- through December — is very when the recession began in Raj Chetty, Emmanuel Saez sus Bureau) that makes the fuzzy. "A manufacturing sector

that's adding jobs for the first

further behind because, right now, the president's policies

givecash free and clear to one

versity in St. Louis.

"We can effectively treat these children," Wilfley said.

to stay in the old building and expanding elsewhere would be very difficult, if not impossible. OSU-Cascades officials are also asking the state for $3.85 million to go toward buildingits first academic building. But if it can't get out of the debt first, "all

betsareoff,"Johnsonsaid. Cascades officials are no stranger to the legislative process or traveling to Salem to lobby lawmakers. The campus went from facing possible dosure in 2009, to being singled out in 2012 by Gov. John Kitzhaber as a campus deserv-

ing of funds to become a fouryear university. A nd Johnson said i f

all

goes well, the university will be expanding, reaching 5,000 students by 2025, and will con-

tinue logging miles to the state Capitol. "If we grow at the rate we

want, we're goingto need something everybiennium," she said. — Reporter:541-554-1162, ldake@bendbulletin.com

hasbeen fat since she was atoddler, but, Wilfley said, "the provider told her mom she would

show up early in life, said Dr. Butotherthanenteringchildren outgrow it." — Dr. Jeffrey Koplan, the vice president Stephen O'Rahilly, an obesity in researchstudies,parentscan of the Emory Global Health Institute in Atlanta researcher who is a professor get help only by paying out of Aseaaa. Range of clinical biochemistry and their pocket — about $1,500 to medicine at the University of $3,000 for an intervention that professor in the School of Pub- and others said, "help focus Cambridge. usually lasts ayear. "We have known for 50 years lic Health at Emory. interventions." Advice offered by a family Limitedquantities Most efforts to reduce child- that BMI is highly heritable," he doctor — if it is given at allThestuQ hood obesity concentrate on said. "Surprise, surprise, if you is usually ineffective, Wilfley Large oven The study i nvolved 7,738 school-age children and apply tend to be fat, you tend to be fat said. All too often, parents tell Easy Touch controls children from a nationally rep- the steps indiscriminately to at an early age." her, their worries about a child's sACR4530BAW resentative sample. Research- all children, fat and thinBody mass index is not quite weight are dismissed. "I just saw a mom who was ers measured the children's improving meals in schools, as heritable as height, Loos heights and weights seven teaching nutrition and the im- said. But genes are not neces- in tears because her little girl, times between kindergarten portance of physical activity, sarily destiny. Exercise and a who is 11 years old, weighs 212 TV.APPLIANCE and eighth grade. getting rid of soda machines. healthy diet can often reduce, pounds," Wilfley said. The child "This suggests that maybe but not completely overcome, When the children entered kindergarten, 12.4percent were one reason it didn't work so the effects of genes. obese — defined as having a well is that by the time kids are Steven Gortmaker, a profesbody mass index at or above 5, the horse is out of the barn," sor of the practice of health sothe 95th percentile — and 14.9 said Leann Birch, a professor ciology at the Harvard School percent were overweight, with in the department of foods and of Public Health, said he saw a BMI at or above the 85th per- nutrition at the University of a bright side to the findings. ECHO Pew'sss centile. By eighth grade, 20.8 Georgia, who was not involved Young children, he said, can percent were obese, and 17 per- with the study. cross a line between being fat cent were overweight. or normal weight by gaining Please1om us and celebrate by Half of the obese kinder- Previous findings or losing just a few pounds. For gartners were obese when they The most rigorous studies adults, it can be 20-30 pounds, were in eighth grade, and near- of eff orts for school-age chil- or even 40-50pounds. "It can take a long time to ly three-quarters of the very dren, conducted in the 1990s, Saturday February 1, 2014 obese kindergartners were randomly assigned thousands turn that around," said Gort4:30pm- 9pm at the Boysand Girls Club obesein eighth grade.The risk of children to either participate maker, who wrote an editorial 500 NW Watt Street, Bend, Oregon that fat kindergartners would in intensive programs that en- accompanyingthe new study. be obese in eighth grade was couragedthem toexercise and And, he said, a number of Live Music four to five times that of their improve their diets, or go on as randomized studies involving Chinese Martial Arts Performance thinner classmates, the study usual. young children have shown Lion Dance - Crafts and Demos found. One study involved 1,704 that it is possible to stop or reFood, Beer and Wine Race, ethnicity and family third-graders in 41 elementary verse excess weight gain. One, Great Family Fun! income mattered in younger schools in the Southwest, where for example, had some fat chilchildren, but by the time the most of the students were ¹ dren ages4-7 reduce their teleoverweight children were 5 tive Americans, a group that is vision and computer viewing Order tickets on-line attNtNtN.echoinchina.org years old, those factors no lon- at high risk for obesity. A sec- time, and had others keep theirs Adulc$15 Seniort$12 Student:$'12 Fantily:1140 ger affected their risk of being ond study induded 5,106 chil- the same. Children in the infat in later years. dren in 96 schools in Califor- tervention group — especially Call 541-815-2899 for Questions The study did not track the nia, Louisiana, Minnesota and those from poorer familieschildren before kindergarten, Texas. consumed fewer calories,and P KAN but the researchers had their Neither study found any ef- theirbodymass index fell. avssa Gtephlcs I. ADJIKI birth weights. Overweight fect on children's weights. But effective programs for REALEsTATE or obesechildren often were Some obesity researchers young children involve time h eavy babies, at l e ast 8 .8 said the new study following and eff ort,andthecostsarenot pounds, something other stud- kindergartners over the years reimbursed by health insurers, ies have also found. also hinted at another factor: said Denise Wilfley, an obesity The study's results, Koplan the powerful influence of genet- researcher at Washington Uni-

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THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

Transit Continued fromA1 Shinderman began by acknowledging that "we don't have a lot of details yet, but they are coming together as we speak." The bulk of the presentation dealt with discussing the areas

of best practice the university is researching and the different stages the univer-

sity's growth will proceed through. "We

r ecognized

t hat

wherever we located the campus, there would be an impact on t r ansportation,"

Shinderman said. "Our goal is to find ways to reduce that impact."

Shinderman said the university is looking into how to attract a high percentage of students to stay on campus and incentivize alternative

modes of t r ansportation. He alsosaid the success of OSU-Cascades in minimizing its impact on traffic lies in part with the university's ability to partner with the

city, county and Cascades East Transit. "An upgrade to the tran-

sit system is necessary, and we've recognized from the beginning that we will have to make this a regional process that includes everyone, especially Cascades East Transit," he said.

Drought

Who'sdoing the work

Continued fromA1

OSU-Cascadeshashired the following firms to design the first phase of its campus development. This phase will occur on a10-acre plot and will includeoneacademic building and one totwo residence halls.

CONTRACTORS

• Boora Architects, Inc. (Portland), lead architect SUBCONTRACTORS • BBT Architects (Bend), local architect • Froelich Engineers (Bend), structural engineer • PAE (Portland), MEP/ energy/ technology/ lighting • WH Pacific (Bendj, civil engineering • Walker Macy (Portland), landscape architecture • Sparling (Portland), acoustical • Rider Levett Bucknall (Portland), cost estimating • Shalleck Collaboratve (San Francisco), audio/ visual

the topic of transportation. West Bend resident Kathy

The Bend officials spoke to the city's role in studying Graham asked what would transportation demand and happen if t r a nsportation the university's application studies found t h a t 1 , 000 process for development. Ac- students wouldn't impact cording to Arnis, in 2014 the

traffic, but a student pop-

city will begin developing a ulation of 5,000, which the plan for the future of Bend's university hopes to hit by transportation system on 2025, would overwhelm local the entire west side. Rankin, streets. She ended by asking meanwhile, discussed the whether before such a study different public input oppor- were complete, if "the train tunities for the university's had already left the station" initial development and later on the site selection. master plan development. Shinderman responded The u n iversity's i n i tial by explaining how the west development, consisting of Bend site best met a set of two to three buildings, will criteria, including price, acbe on a 10-acre wooded plot. cess to amenities, size and Rankin described the public attractability. When multiple input session for this site's audience members began plan as "relatively light, the loudly reiterating Graham's same you would have for question, "Has the train left a new theater or commer- the station?" Shinderman cial development." Howev- said, "For all intents and purer, Rankin did note that an poses, yes." appeal could lengthen the Bill Eddie, who said he process. lives by the proposed cam"For the university's mas- pus, expressed skepticism ter plan for the entire 56 about students being able acres, there will be a much to find nearby affordable more significant process," housing. "We're right now doing Rankin said. "It's a project looking at needs 20 years research on campuses that into the future, and there have achieved having a high will be more opportunities to percent of students live on bring in people's input." campus, and we're looking During a question-and-an- into which mechanisms we swer session, roughly half of can duplicate here," Shinderthe questions were outright man responded. critical of the university, on After t h e p r e sentation, issues including transparen- Graham said she felt the cy, a lack of specific propos- lack of specificity in the als and the west-side campus proposals to minimize traflocation. The event's moder- fic was "patronizing and ator, local attorney Bill Bu- condescending." chanan, reminded the audi— Reporter: 541-633-216o, ence multiple times to stay on

OSU-Cascades Continued fromA1 Additionally, the memorandum describes the team OSU will recruit and hire for the

project: a traffic engineer, land use planner or attorney, civil

engineer, projectm anager and someone to provide architect and design services. OSU-Cascades o ff i cials plan to open this phase of the new campus in fall 2015. "A

clear definition of roles and rules of engagement are critical elements in meeting the

aggressive timelines identified above," according to the memorandum.

The memorandum that Bend City M anager Eric King and OSU Vice President Becky Johnson signed covers only the first, 10-acre

phase of the new college campus in southwest Bend. Officials said they will negotiate a separate memorandum of understanding to cover the process of master planning for the remainder of the 56-acre

campus. The memorandum does not

address money for OSU-Cascades' impacts on law enforcement and other services. Most

of the money for the city to pay for police, fire, emergency medical and some infrastruc-

tleeds@bendbulletin.com

"It would impact us for not just 2014, but all of 2015," said

Kelley, 60, who runs a local water district that will cut out-

put by at least half. "I'm anticipating a very difficult time, and I'm probably the best off of anybody I know." The drought in California, the top U.S. agricultural producer at $44.7 billion, is depriving the state of water needed to produce everything from milk, beef and wine to some of the nation's largest fruit and vegetable crops, including avocados, strawberries and almonds. Lost revenue in 2014 from farming and related

businesses such as trucking and processing could reach $5 billion, according to estimates

by the 300-member California Farm Water Coalition, an in-

MarcioJose Sanchez IThe Associated Press

Cattle are displayed during an auction at the101 Livestock Market in Aromas, Calif., earlier this month. California's worsening drought is forcing many ranchers to sell their cattle and other livestock because their pastures are too dry to feed them and it's getting too expensive to buy hay and other

dustrygroup. supplemental feed. The state was the driest ever in 2013, a third straight year of little moisture. California

in years past, they won't get Gov. Jerry Brown, D, declared "any preferential treatment" a drought emergency on Jan. over uses by municipalities, he 17 as arid conditions he called SBld. "unprecedented" continued well into the annual rainy season that runs from October

Weirdness worldwide

through March. Reservoirs on

world is wreaking havoc with farmers and threatening global

Jan. 27 were at 61 percent of

Extreme weather around the

average, while the mountain food production. Dry weathsnow-pack as of Dec. 30 that er in China turned the world's supplies most of the state's wa- second-biggest corn grower ter was at 20 percent of normal into a net importer of the grain for that time of year, data show. in 2010, and ranchers in Texas Average rainfall in Califor- have yet to recover from a renia was 7 inches (18 centime- cord dry spell three years ago. ters) last year, the lowest on One in eightpeople inthe world record going back to 1895, said go hungry, some of which can Michael Anderson, the state be blamed on drought, accordclimatologist with the Depart- ingto the United Nations. ment of Water Resources in U.S. retail prices for beef, baSacramento. Dry weather and con, lettuce and broccoli postdrought will persist through ed double-digit gains last year, 2014, predicted Drew Lerner,

the president of World Weather

and tomatoes are the most-expensive since May 2011, even as

overall food inflation advanced Fresno, the biggest city in just 1.4 percent, government the fertile San Joaquin Valley, data show. got a record-low 3.01 inches California gets most of its last year, compared with an rain in D e cember, January annual average of 11.5 inches, and February, when crops are according to data from Accu- dormant or yet to be planted. A weather in State College, Penn. prolonged drought may change Salinas, a city known as "the the waywater is used. Salad Bowl of the World" for Growers of lower-value seaits production of lettuce, broc- sonal crops, including melons, coli, mushrooms and straw- tomatoes and alfalfa, may berries, recorded 3.27 inches, make more money selling their in Overland Park, Kansas.

compared with 15.46 inches

water, said Jay Lund, director

normally. Los Angeles got less of the Center for Watershed than 4 inches, compared with Sciences at the University of 15 normally. California-Davis. Farmers with Farmers in the state prob- higher-valuecrops from perably will leave as much as manent vine or tree orchards 500,000 acres unplanted, or including grapes or nuts may about 12 percent of last year's be willing to pay a premium, principal crops, because they Lund said. won't have enough water to Many of the state's 4,600 produce a harvest, which will wine-grape growers are irrigatmean fewer choices and high- ing sooner than normal to fend er pricesfor consumers, said against failing cover crops and Mike Wade, executive director the possibility of lower yields, of the California Farm Water said Ron Lopp,communicaCoalition, a Sacramento-based tions manager for the Califorgroup of farmers, water district nia Association of Winegrape managers and farm-related Growers. Farmers produced businesses. $4.45 billion of grapes in 2012, "Any job that's associated data show. "A lot of the groundwater is with agriculture is hurting," Wade said. While some farm- being depleted to the point that ers were able to conserve water it's tough to pump the water out

"I think it's a really important thing for us to be

clear for both parties what are our roles and responsibilities. This isa really important project for the community, and for us to be on the same page will give us the best opportunity to be successful."

of the ground," Lopp said by telephone from Sacramento.

of rain," to get water levels back to normal, he said.

Economic impact In 2009, a prolonged drought caused $340 million in revenue losses in the San Joaquin Valley, the center of the state's agricultural production, said Steve Lyle, a spokesman for the California Department of Food and Agriculture, citing University of California data. About 285,000acres were left fallow in the valley and 9,800

travel, such as bicycles and

"I think it's a really import-

ant thing for us to be clear

and the need for all types of transportation to have access

for both parties what are our

to the site.

ly important project for the

community, and for us to be — Kelly Sparks, OSU's associate vice president on the same page will give for finance and strategic planning us the best opportunity to be successful." Skidmore said the memobeginning to raise questions Skidmore said city employees randum will help the city and about it. are researching the issue and university avoid the disorga"I don't know if payment- looking into questions such nization that can result when in-lieu-of-taxes is an avenue as whether a private business engineers, attorneys and othwe will a ggressively pur- that leases space from the uni- er employees on a developsue," King said Wednesday. versity must pay property tax- er's team all call the city with "All I know is we are getting es. "I think a lot of it depends questions. "It's an easy way for things questions from the commu- on what their strategy is for nity. They know a significant building out that campus," to get uncoordinated in a hurry," Skidmore said on Wednesamount of property will come Skidmore said. off the tax rolls, and (ask) Christine Coffin, director of day. "By having a point person 'What will the city do about communications and outreach on each side, that will be the that'?'" for the campus, wrote in an conduit for information." King said the city will prob- email that "OSU Cascades is Skidmore said state law reably start a larger discussion similar to other not-for-prof- quires the city to complete a about the need for tax reform it entities in Bend — like St. final land use decision within in Oregon and how to han- Charles, COCC, Bend Recre- 120 days,so it is feasible for dle lost property taxes from ation & Parks and state agen- O SU-Cascades to build t h e all entities that are exempt cies — that do not pay proper- first phase of the campus in a from them. He added that the ty taxes, and should be treated year. city has not determined the equally." The memorandum states amount of tax revenue it might Kelly Sparks, OSU's associ- the 10-acre development projlose when the university purate vice president for finance ect will cause transportation chases land for the new cam- and strategic planning, said impacts the university and pus, which is currently a mine the school has hired some of city must address, including and a vacant lot. the members of its develop- on-site and off-site parking, Assistant City Manager Jon ment team and is in the pro- safety for different types of

university will not pay property taxes on the new campus. King said he talked to Johnson

once about the issue, but the two only acknowledged that people in the community were

Fin It AII

feed costs surged to a record two years ago, outpacing milk prices, according to Michael Marsh, the Chief Executive Of-

ficer of Western United Dairymen, a Modesto-based trade

association. Cows usually produce less milk during a drought, according to New York-based broker INTL FCStone, and concern

for reduced supply from California have contributed to a rally in prices on the Chicago Mercantil eExchange.

' NQRTHWEsT

pedestrians, traffic congestion

CROSSING Aauard-aeinning neighborhood on Bend's

"The city and OSU-Cascades will work closely to identify progressive approaches toaddress these issues, "the agreement says.

teestside. www.northwestcrossing.com

— Reporter: 541-617-7829, hborrud@bendbuIIetin.com

J

• • •

nline

bendbulletin.com

with losses or less profit as

jobs were lost, he said. "There's the potential for Class III milk futures, trackhigher economic impacts this ing a variety used to make time around based on an in- cheese,climbed to $22.98 per crease in permanent crop 100 pounds yesterday, the acreage and the water situa- highest for the most-active tion," Lyle said by telephone contract since trading began from Sacramento. "We know in January 1996. The comwhat happened the last time modity has climbed 19 percent we were in a drought-type situ- this year, the second-biggest ation. We think in 2014 it could gain among 64 commodities be worse." tracked by Bloomberg, beThe California Farm Wa- hind greenhouse gas-emission ter Coalition, founded in 1989 credits. Cheese, up 16 percent, during a six-year drought, ranks fourth. said the state underestimated Using lower-quality feed the impact in 2009. Based on during the drought may curb models used by the University milk output for another year, of California, direct losses in until cows go through a new agricultural revenue in 2014 calving and lactation cycle, could be $1.6 billion, with the according to Kelley, who has total economic impact reach- about 3,000 milking cows. ing $5 billion when farm- Buying feed from outside Calworker wages, processing and ifornia may prove too costly, transportation are included, forcing more dairies to sell or according to Wade, the group's close down, he said. executive director. Ray Souza, 67, a dairyman The dry spell is of immedi- in Tbrlock, said he sold about ateconcern forcattle ranchers a dozen of his replacement catbecause of a "severe shortage" tle at auction last week from of grazing land, and some are among the 900 Holstein cows considering reducing herds, he owns to conserve feed and Lyle said. The industry gen- water for the main milking erated $3.3 billion in 2012 rev- herd. enue. A drought in 1977 genSouza said he sold the anierated $566.5 million in agri- mals about 16 months earlier cultural losses, of which three than normal because he is inquarters was from livestock, creasingly concerned about according to a state report. the fate of the corn and oat The drought is another blow crops he grows for feed, with to dairies, by far the state's the prospect that water suplargest agricultural business plies will be cut "substantially."

cess of hiring a permanent project manager.

roles and r esponsibilities," Sparks said. "This is a real-

with 2012 revenue of $6.9 billion, producing 20 percent

"We'dneed a'maybe we should of the nation's milk output. start building an ark' amount Farmers have been struggling

ture work comes from property taxes. As a government entity, the

A5

• • f


A6

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

China

Testing

Continued fromA1

Continued fromA1 ment. During the administraBeginning in May, Rose tion of George W. Bush, Ser-

On a subway last Satur-

day, awoman with luggage dropped a box of kiwis she was carrying. As the fruits rolledaround the car,several passengers were kind enough

I

Kremlin developed second thoughts about the agree-

Gottemoeller, the State De-

. %kgrgj

gei Ivanov, the Russian de-

partment's senior arms con- fense minister, proposed that trol official, has repeatedly the two sides drop the treaty. raised the missile tests with

Although the Cold War

Russian officials, who have was over, he argued that Rus-

to pick them up and return them to her.

responded that they investi-

sia still faced threats from

gated the matter and consid- nations on it s periphery, er the case to be closed. But including China and poten-

Airports also are busy, but with a different class of cus-

Obama administration offi-

tomer. They're heavily used by wealthy Chinese who are returning home or spending the week in temperate resorts, such as Sanya in

cials are not yet ready to for- administration was reluctant mally declare the tests of the to terminate a treaty that missile, which has not been

southern China and Bali in

Indonesia. Passengers will make about 42 million air trips during the 40-day period, according to China's Civil Aviation Administration. For weeks in China, news-

papers have published reports about the stress of the

holiday. There's the hassle of obtaining train tickets and anxiety about what gifts to

take. For the young unwed, there will be inevitable ques-

Stuart Leavenworth / MCT

Passengers crowd the entrance to Beijing's mein train station on Wednesday. Chinese traditionally return to their home villages during the so-ceiled "Soring Festival" that marks the week after the Lunar New Year, which this year is celebrated on Friday. Trains end planes are crowded in whet some say is the biggest migration of people in the world.

ChineseNewYear "No matter if you have This year, ChineseNewYear begins Jan. 31

money or not,you should return home for Spring Festival."

tradition. Earlier this month, a Chi-

and ends Feb.18,2015; according to the Chinese calendar, it is the year4712.

conditions.

The survey's finding defied efforts to verify it. In the wellknown migrant community

nese woman in Guangdong province was so distraught of Pi Village in northwest with her long-lost son that Beijing, a 90-minute bus ride she purchased a front-page from the city center, nearad in the Chinese Melbourne ly everyone, it seemed, was Daily — a newspaper in Aus- traveling or had plans to. tralia, where the son is living One man estimated that 90 — urging him to visit for the percent of the migrant workholiday. ers in Pi Village had already "We hope you will come left, and many of the remainhome for Lunar New Year," der would be leaving soon. read the ad, which was reThis was backed up by a ported by the China News trio of young migrants: Wang Service. "Dad and Mom will Cun Biao, Wang Cun Xin and never again pressure you to Wang Cun Bing. All three marry." hailed from the same village in Henan province, and each Sketchy reports said he was getting ready to Relying on Chinese me- travel there the next day on dia for reports about Spring an eight-hour train ride. Festival can be tricky. A stoLike many in China, they'd ry Jan. 17 in the China Daily stand the whole way, having reported that 40 percent of saved money by getting basic Chinese migrant workers tickets instead of reserving surveyed said they wouldn't seats. return home for the holiday 'You shouldreturnhome' this year. Of those who s aid t h ey Only two people a reporter wouldn't return, nearly half spoke to said they wouldn't said they were embarrassed be returning home. because they'd earned too One was Luque Ming, who little money in the preceding was shopping with his wife year, according to the survey and son in a clothing store of 13,156 migrant w orkers along Pi Village's retail street. nationwide by a job-hunting Luque, who works as a site, daguu.com. groundskeeper at a nearby

glll

Year ofthe Horse

Dates to 2600 B.C.,when Emperor HuangTi introduced the fIrst cycle of the zodiac

The color of the 2014 Year of the Horse is green

This Year of the Horsebegins anew 12-year cycle of theChinesezodiac along with the elementwood

Source: Chinese websitea Graphic: Tim Goheen

Those born during the Year of the Wood Horse ... are the most reasonable andless impatient than the other five types of horses; horses in general are active, energetic, strong-willed and strive for freedom andhappiness; sometimes they can beextremely independent and refuse to listen to advice

have enabled the Russians to

and whose abrogation would

Obama pledging to seek increase missile forces directdeeper cuts in nuclear arms, ed at the United States' allies the State Department has

in Asia.

been trying to find a way to

Since Obama has been in office, the Russians have

resolve the compliance issue, preserve the treaty and keep

insisted that they want to

"The United States never

Russia has also mounted a

hesitates to raise treaty com-

determined effort to build up its nuclear abilities to com-

pliance concerns with Rus-

sia, andthis issue is no excep- pensate for the weakness of tion," said Jen Psaki, the State its conventional, nonnuclear Department spokeswoman. forces. "There's an ongoing review As the same time, in his process, and we wouldn't State of the Union address want to speculate or prejudge last year, Obama vowed to "seek further reductions in

the outcome."

Other officials, who asked

our nuclear arsenals," a goal

not to be identified because

that U.S. officials at one point

they were discussing inter- hoped might form part of nal deliberations, said that Obama's legacy. there was no question that the missile tests ran counter to the treaty and that the administration had already

But administration offi-

cials and experts outside government say Congress is highly unlikely to approve shown considerablepatience an agreement mandating with the Russians. And some more cuts unless the question members of Congress, who of Russian compliance with have been briefed on the tests the medium-range treaty is on aclassified basisform ore resolved. "If the Russian governthan a year, have been pressing the White House for a ment has made a considered firmer response. dedsion to field a prohibited A public dispute over the

s ystem," Franklin C. M i l l -

tests could prove to be a ma- er,a former defense official jor new irritant in the already difficult relationship between

at the White House and the Pentagon, said, "then it is the

they were due, so that they

contractor, and, most recent-

could return home for Spring Festival. Pressure on stingy

ly, the turmoil in Ukraine. The treaty banning the

and unscrupulous bosses had

testing, production and de-

recovered 10.9 billion yuan ($1.8 billion) in unpaid wag-

velopment of medium-range missiles has long been regarded as a major step toward curbing the U.S. and

es for more than 1.5 million

workers across the country, according to the Ministry of

ince who s aid sh e w a sn't Human Resources and Social

golf club, moved to the area

the 1987 treaty. With P r esident B a rack

working on efforts to help migrants receive the wages

going home because her em- Security. ing. Beijing i s r eportedly from Shanxi province only ployer hadn't paid her. When In China, there's a popular home to 8 m i l l ion m i grant a year ago, but he doesn't she was asked for her name song with a line that goes: workers, more than a third of plan to return to his village and details for a news story, "No matter if you have monits population. Most of them this year. Both his parents she got nervous and walked ey or not, you should return are young men from neigh- are dead and his immediate away. But there was some- home for Spring Festival." It's a nice sentiment, but boring or far-flung provinc- family is here, he explained. thing believable about what es who moved here to take "There is no reason to go she'd said. for millions of workers here, factory orservice jobs, often home," he said. A day earlier, Chinese offi- returning home is contingent living in squalid and crowded Luque said he planned to cials reported that they were on getting paid. It was an astounding find-

NATO nations regarded as a cornerstone ofarms control

the United States and Russia. strongest indication to date In recent months, that rela- that they are not interested in tionship has been strained pursuing any arms control, at by differences over how to least through the remainder end the fighting in Syria, the of President Obama's term." temporary asylum granted to One member of Congress Edward Snowden, the former who was said to have raised National Security Agency concerns that the suspected

© 2014 MCT

spend Spring Festival eating his favorite foods, watching television and relaxing. "For Spring Festival, we like to buy new clothes for the new year," he said, adding that Beijing has offered him better job prospects than the rural province where he was born. The other was a young woman from Sichuan prov-

deployed, to be a violation of

the door open to future arms keep the agreement. But in control accords. the view of U.S. analysts,

THE CALENDAR Eachlunaryearis governed by oneof12 animals whose characteristics are tempered by one of the five Chinese elements, metal, water, wood, fire and earth, which overlay a 5-year cycle of characteristics on the original 12-year cycle

— A popular line in e Chinese song

tions about why they haven't yet married. For those who

don't or can't return home, there'll be the guilt they bear for not following through on

tially Pakistan. But the Bush

arms control violation might

endanger future arms control efforts was John Kerry. As a senator and chairman of

the Foreign Relations Committee, he received a classi-

fied briefing on the matter in November 2012 that dealt with compliance concerns,

Russian arms race.

"The importance of this treaty transcends numbers," Reagan said during the treaty signing, adding that it underscored the value of "greater openness in military programs and forces."

according to a report in The Daily Beast. As secretaryof state,Ke r-

ry has not raised concerns overthe cruise missile tests with his Russian counter-

part, Sergey Lavrov, but he has stressedthe importance of complying with arms acthe Russian military began cords, a State Department to re-evaluate its strategy, the official said. But after President Vladimir Putin rose to power and

I

I

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I

Ir

•)

I •

I I

eI • I I

I

I I I


Calendar, B2 Obituaries, B5 Weather, B6

© www.bendbulletin.com/local

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

BRIEFING Womansentenced to 6years inprison A Prineville woman has been sentencedto nearly sixyears in prison after being convicted of several drug,forgery and burglary charges. Kristie Jeffers, 32, appeared in Deschutes County Circuit Court Wednesday to enter a guilty plea for first-degree forgery, first-degree burglary, identity theftand possession of methamphetamine charges for incidents occurring between 2011 and 2013, according to court documents. She was transported directly from court to Coffee Creek Correctional Facility in Wilsonville, where she will serve her 70-month prison sentence. Jeffers will be under a12-month period of post-prison supervision following her release.

KNOTT LANDFILL

oun a roves ener con ra By Elon Glucklich

assess the project's impact in response

The Bulletin

Deschutes County since 2011 for lease Waste to Energy also needs apermit rights to install a steam boiler and fuel from the Oregon Department of EnviDeschutes County commissioners collection system at Knott Landfill. ronmental Quality to move forward, have approved a California energy The company wants to inject steam Timm Schimke, Deschutes County firm's proposal to convert Knott Land- under the landfill surface, speeding up Solid Waste Director, said Wednesday. fill waste into diesel fuel. waste decomposition, then convert the Some neighbors have raised conBut any fuel extraction at the land- methane gas beneath the surface into cerns over noise and pollution impacts fill is still likely a year or more away, liquid fuel. from the project, which would extract since the project still needs to go Commissioners approved a contract methane gas from the landfill, located through a land use and environmental Wednesday, giving Waste to Energy near High Desert Middle School off of quality review. Group a 15-year lease to 1.5 acres at Southeast 27th Street. Irvine, Calif.-based Waste to Energy the landfill, though the terms are still Schimke said the county worked Group LLC has been negotiating with under legal review by the county. with a California engineering firm to

to those concerns.

The firm "saw no increased risk to health or the environment" after

studying the proposal, Schimke said. The county stands to receive either $240,000 a year or four percent of gross revenue from the Waste to Ener-

gy project, whichever figure is greater. Waste to Energy is paying the full cost to install a boiler and fuel collec-

tor, estimated at $20 million.

WHAT TO DO WITH THE WIND

OSU-CASCADES

Professors examine attitudes on growth

— Bulletin staff report

.

Well shot! Reader photos

• We want to see your photos of snow for another special version of Well shot!

By Tyler Leeds The Bulletin

A new Oregon State University-Cascades campus

that will run in the

Outdoors section. Submityour best work at bendbulletin.cnm /snew2014andwe'll pickthe best for publication. • Email other good photos of the great outdoors to readerpbntns© bendbulletin.cnm and tell us a bit about where and when you took them. We'll choose the best for publication.

Have a story idea or submission? Contact us!

The Bulletin Call a reporter

Bend .......................541-617-7829 Redmond..............541-548-218e

sisters...................541-548-2186 La Pine ..................541-383-0367 sunriver................54f-a83-03e7 Deschutes.............541-e17-7820 crook....................541-383-0367 Jefferson..............541-383-0367 stateprojects...... 541-410-9207 Salem ....................541-554-1162 D.c....................... 202-662-7456 Business..............541-a83-0360 Education.............541-633-2160 Health...................541-a83-0304 Public lands..........541-617-7812 Public safety.........541-383-0376

Submissinns • Letters andopinions: Mail:My Nickersworth or In MyView P.O.Boxe020 Bend, OR97708 Details on theEditorials page inside.contact: 541-a83-0358, bulletin@bendbulletin.com

• Civic Calendarnotices: Emaileventinformation to news@bendbUlletin.com, with "Civic Calendar" inthesubject, andincludeacontact name andphonenumber. Contact: 541-383-0354

• School newsandnotes: Emailnewsitemsand notices ofgeneral interest to news@bendbulletim.com. Email announcementsofteens' academic achievements toyouth@bendbulletim.com. Email college notes,military graduationsandreunion infoto bulletin@bendbulletim.com. Contact: 541-a83-0358

• Obituaries, DeathNotices: Details on theobituaries page inside.Contact: 541-617-7825, obits@bendbulletin.com

• Community events:

study found Bend residents envision major population growth as harmful to their

well-being, but the project has as much to do with how the data was measured as it does with the results.

Associate Professorof Tourism and Outdoor Leader-

Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Thad Smith and his daughter, Chloe Smith, 5, launch their kite with the help of Micha Smith, 7, while taking advantage of the windy conditions Wednesday afternoon at Pine Nursery Park.

rou see in

to assess area ome essness By Shelby R. King

funding based on the one-day

The Bulletin

Today's one-day count of

count." L aPoi n t said several other

people who are homeless or in transitional housing in

a g e ncies in the area use the numbers gathered during the

Deschutes, Crook and Jeffer-

ann u al count to justify need

son counties relies on good wh e n applying for funding. "We rely a lot on the friends turnoutsto secureasmuch federal funding as and family of people possible,accordingto Rehta" whoarehomelessto 'Agency Kenny LaPoint with let them know it's hapsearchesfor pening," he said. "The the Central Oregon horneless better and more accuHomeless Leadership vets,B3 rate c ount we get, the Coalition. "The Department of Hous-

be t t er that is for the amount

ing and Urban Development o f resources allocated to the says we have to do it during reg i on." this week, and we usually

This is the ninth year

choose Thursday, so people t h e coalition has done the remember when it's happen- h o meless count. Last year, ing," he said. "The depart2,1 9 8 people were counted. ment is one of our main fund- Of those, 1,260 had been coning sources in the region, and t i nuously homeless for more they determine the amount of than a year, according to

2013homeless countstatistics TOTAL POPULATION EXPERIENCING

HOMELESSNE SS Crook County: 135 Deschutes County: 1,519 Jefferson County: 544 Total: 2,198 Males: 1,172

Females: 1,026 Homeless continuously for more than ayear: 1,260

AGE 17 ANDUNDER Crook County: 49 Deschutes County: 672 Jefferson County: 193 Total: 914

Attending K-12 schools: 689 Continuously homeless for more than ayear: 419 Continuously homeless for more thanayear, attended K-12 schools: 304 Homeless Coalition data. LaPoint said 914 homeless

55 AND OLDER Crook County: 13 Deschutes County: 112 Jefferson County: 31 Total: 156

SURVIVORS OF DOMESTICVIOI.ENCE Crook County: 24 Deschutes County: 217 Jefferson County: 65 Total: 306 VETERANS Crook County: 14 Deschutes County: 68 Jefferson County: 22 Total: 104 DISABLEDPOPULATION Crook County: 34 Deschutes County: 293 Jefferson County: 156 Total: 483 Source: HomelessCoalition ward turn in all the numbers

were under 17 last year, and

this year," LaPoint said. "But we've seen a reduction

419 of those reported having

in service providers in the

been homeless form ore than a year. "We're hoping for a down-

region, so there's a good chance that won't happen." SeeHomeless/B2

ship Kreg Lindberg and Assistant Professor of Psychology Christopher Wolsko conducted the study with $10,000 from the Circle of Excellence, an internal research funding source for the OSU-Cascades faculty. The study was based on a survey that posed hypothetical results stemming from an expanded urban growth boundary, such as population growth, diminished trail connectivity and

lower unemployment. The UGB is the limit around a city beyond which urban development is not allowed, unless a city can prove it needs the boundary expanded. Respondents quantified how their subjective well-being, or SWB, would change in each area affected by the UGB expansion. Results are based on nearly500 completed surveys, representing a response rate of 11 percent. "People's greatest fears are

population growth, because it could forever change the character of a small town,"

Lindberg said. "But population growth is also people's greatest hope, as it can drive

job growth in an area. We wanted to take a closer look at what people here value,

whether or not having easy access to a trailhead, for example, matters."

On the surface, the study offers a window into how

residents feel about possible effects of a UGB expansion. But for Lindberg and Wolsko, the study is also a chance to evaluate the power of SWB measures. For example, do

government policies even affect SWB'? If so, does policy influence one's SWB in a way that can be anticipated?

Assault in Prineville neveroccurred, policesay By Shelby R. King

5 feet 10 inches tall with a thin

The Bulletin

build. The investigation was initially considered"very active," according to the original news release.

A female employee at Pioneer Memorial Hospital in Prineville who daimed she

she would do so. "Investigators discovered

Attorney for possible prosecution for initiating a false re-

evidence in the case that con-

port, a Class A misdemeanor.

"The Prineville Police Detradicted the reportingparty's version of events," Boyd wrote. partment takes all reports of "Further interviews resulted criminal activity, especially in an admission from the rea report in which a citizen is porting party." physically harmed, very seriThe woman's identity has ously," Boydwrote. "Considnotbeen released. Hospital erable investigatingresources spokeswoman Kayley Menwere used in this case by both

Email eventsto communitylife@ bendbulletin.comorclickon "SubmitanEvent" online at bendbulletin.com.Details onthe calendarpageinside. Contact:541-383-0351

was assaulted while on hospital grounds made the story up, accordingto anews release from Prineville Police Capt. Michael Boyd.

• Births, engagements, marriages, partnerships, anniversaries:

the 53-year-old Crook County

The investigation is said to

denhall said the woman is cur-

the Prineville Police Depart-

woman reported being accost-

have determinedthe woman had injured herself and fab-

rently on administrative leave pending an investigation.

ment and the Crook County Sheriff's Office."

ricated the story, though no

The case has been referred to the Crook County District

The Milestonespagepublishes sunday incommunity Life. contact: 54f-e83-0358

SeeLandfill /B5

Just after 12 a.m. on Jan. 12,

edby a white male wearing dark clothing with short, dark hair who stood approximately

"Detectives are currently

analyzing evidence from the scene and more evidence is

expected shortly," the original news release stated.

reason was given as to why

— Reporter: 541-383-0376 sking@bendbulletin.com

"The project is about reshaping the decision process from one that is based solely on economic cost-benefit analyses to something that is

more human," Wolsko said. "Which is not to say that money is not important, as it clearly is, but that there are other

useful lenses we can use." As an example of how de-

cisions are currently made, Lindbergdiscussed thepossible extinction of the northern

spotted owl. Typically, a government would consider the amount of money required to save the species either as a directcost orasthe resultof new limitations on commercial activity. See Study/B5







IN THE BACK BUSINESS Ee MARIKT NEWS W Scoreboard, C2 NBA, C3 Sports in brief, C2 College basketball, C3 NHL, C2 Prep sports, C4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

MULTISPORT

O www.bendbulletin.com/sports

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL

PREP WRESTLING

Sign uponline for 2014 PPP

Beavers' Co ier usts is sum

Online registration is now open for the 2014 U.S. Bank PolePedal Paddle. The38th running of Central Oregon's popular adventure race is scheduled for Saturday, May17. To register, go to pppbend.com andclick on the "REGISTER"tab for all the information needed to sign up for the race, including entry fees and deadlines. The Pole PedalPaddle is a multisport race for teams and individuals. The competition begins at Mt. Bachelor ski area with alpine and nordic skiing and continues with cycling, running and paddling (kayak or canoe) before a sprint to the finish at the Les SchwabAmphitheater in Bend's Old

By Jesse Sowa Corvallis Gazette-Times

Devon Collier played his way out of a slump — or malaise, as Oregon State men's

basketball coach Craig Robinson would describe it. Collier, a senior forward,

scored in double figures in consecutive games for the Beavers last week for the first time in almost a month.

Mill District.

The PPP isproduced by, and is abenefit for, the Mt. Bachelor Sports Education Foundation. — Bulletin staffreport

Photos by Ryan Brennecke/The Bulletin

Crook County's Brent Bannon throws Saxton Schaffner to the mat during the132-pound match of the Cowdog Classic at Crook County High School in Prineville on Wednesday night.

Chipper Jones to the rescue

I'oads.

He endured thegridlock and managedto stop for gas. But hefinally gave upafter trying to navigate anicy hill about 10 miles from wherehe lives in Roswell, about half a mile from Jones. By then, it was approaching 10p.m. Freemanwas incontact throughout his trip home with his fiancee, ChelseaGoff. Goff spent the day with Jonesand his girlfriend, Taylor Higgins, after shegot stuck trying to drive past Jones' house onthe way to take hercats to the veterinarian. Sherealized she was lockedout of the house andthat Freeman had the only key. Asshe continued to worry, so did Jones. He has anATVhe uses for yard workand decided it wastheonly way. "He was laughing his rear endoff when I pulled up," said Jones, who was deckedout in camouflageandski goggles. "It was afunny moment. I told him, 'We're going to betalking about this forever.' " — TheAtlanta Journal-Constitution

COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Wildcats hangon Stanford takes No. 1 Arizona the distance before suffering a home loss to the Wildcats,C3

earlier in a win at Washington State.

Collier has come off the bench for five straight games after starting the previous 13. He says he would prefer to

BASEBALL

ATLANTA— Freddie Freemanis a hugging man, in general. Butafter Chipper Jones, aformer Atlanta Bravesteammate, rescuedhimfrom his strandedvehicle on a snowboundTuesday night? "He huggedme the whole wayhome," Jones said. Part of that wasfor practical reasonsFreemanwasclutching to Jonesonthebackof Jones' all-terrain vehicle for an 8-mile ride to Jones' Roswell home, and he wascold. Part was out of appreciation. Freeman tried for nearly11 hours Tuesday to makehis way home from Turner Field after going on aBraves caravan visit to a local elementary school. He joined thousands of metro Atlantans stranded on snowy andicy

He had 23 points and grabbed six rebounds Saturday in a loss at Washington after scoring 10points three days

start, like anybody would, but

• Crook County takes the early leadin the annual meetbeforecruising past Culver Bulletin staff report PRINEVILLE — Crook County won nine of 10 matches that

were contested, and the Class 4A Cowboys cruised past 2A/1A I'

'(

coming off the bench that

can give you some volume of points," Robinson said during a media conference Tuesday at Gill Coliseum. "It just makes it

hard for the second team of the opponent to play against you.

Culver 73-3 in the Cowdog Classic wrestling dual meet on

Robinson later added: "But

Wednesday night. "They were a little banged up," Crook County coach Jake Huffman said, referring to the Bulldogs. "They still came over and fought hard. I respect them for that." A pair of forfeit wins sandwiched Terran Libolt's 2-0 win at

if he helps us more coming off

113 pounds and Trayton Libolt's pin at 120 to help the Cowboys

jump to an early 21-0 lead. At 132 pounds, Crook County's Brent Bannon cashed in some revenge against Culver's Saxton Schaffner. Last week at the Reser's Tournament of Champions in Hillsboro, Schaffner defeated Bannon 4-3 in the 126-pound consolaCulver's Clay McClure fights to get Cole Ovens into a hold during the145-pound match of the Cowdog Classic at Crook County HighSchool on Wednesday night.Crook County won the match 73-3.

he really wants to help the Beavers (11-8 overall, 3-4 Pac-12 Conference) win games. "I just like having a weapon

the bench, that's where I think

I'm going to keep him. But having said that, I could change my mind. Especially when we play these longer teams." See Beavers/C4

Nextup Uscat Oregon State When:Today, 6 p.m. TV:Pac-12 Radio:940-AM

tion quarterfinals.

But on Wednesday night, it was Bannon logging an 11-3 major decision over Schaffner. SeeCowdog/C4

PREP GIRLS BASKETBALL

Optimistic Aggressiveplay propels LaPine over Elmira Ducks ready for UCLA Bulletin staff report

fense. They (the Falcons) were more aggressive in the first quarter, and three points in the first quarter. Then, the we were more aggressive in the other Hawks flipped a switch. three." La Pine rebounded to grab a 16-14 Katie Mickel poured in a game-high halftime lead and outscored visiting El- 20 points for the Hawks (2-1 Sky-Em, 9-9 mira 14-8 in the fourth quarter to secure overall), McKenna Boen added 12 points a 39-32 Class 4A Sky-Em League girls and seven rebounds, and La Pine disbasketball win on Wednesday night. patched Elmira (1-2, 8-6), which entered "Really, what it was all about was we the night averaging nearly 50 points per just stepped up on the hustle," Hawks game. "It was definitely a team defensive efcoach Kim Beer said. "We got a little bitmore aggressive on offense and de- fort," Beer said. "That's the best we've LA PINE — La Pine was held to just

played all season." Holli Glenn chipped in with four

points, five assists and five steals, and

Ashley Pierce grabbed 12 boards and scored three points. "We talked about it right after the

game, that they (the Hawks) feel the difference when they're hustling hard and playing aggressi ve," Beer said. "They all agreed that it was more fun as well, as they felt like they were more effective. I'm hoping they can hold on to that

thought."

If Ken Gold can be honest

and they not only took it, they usually took it up a notch, to

for a minute, he never saw this

the point that Ken once broke

in five straight games, giving up its fewest points in a game since last year's 56-43 win over Nevada. It was the fewest points the Ducks allowed in a

conference game since a 69-43

coming. He just did not think his hand after punching a wall it was possible for his son Tay- in frustration trying to get lor and his daughter Arielle them to cut it out. rto share the same room with So no, the patriarch of snoweach other, let alone the same boarding's resident first famsport. ily, from Steamboat Springs, "Every possible opportunity Colo., did not see this coming — the day his kids would stand for them to get into a fight, it happened," he said. as the semi-stoic bookends of a Julie Jacobson I rhe Associated Press Toys. Who sat where at giddy photo of the U.S. OlymArielle Gold competes during the snowboarding superpipe final dinner. The remote. Normal pic snowboarding team. at a Dew Tour event in Breckenridge, Colo., in December. Taylor i

brother and sister stuff. Give

SeeSochi /C4

sive problems in the Palouse or just got a quick fix from Washington State. The men's basketball

of allowing at least 80 points

• Snowboarder siblings trbr'to go for gold the Goldsa chance to disagree

Oregon will find out quickly if it solved some of its defen-

saw improvement from their much-maligned defense during Sunday's 71-44 win over the Cougars that snapped a five-game losing streak. "I definitely feel like we took a step today (defensively)," Oregon senior forward Mike Moser said after the game Sunday. "We've been playing poor defense kind of consistently." Oregon snapped its streak

Sochinextstopfor brother/sister act The Associated Press

The (Eugene) Register-Guard

Ducks returned home from Pullman optimistic that they

OLYMPICS

By Will Graves

By Steve Mims

and Arielle Gold are taking their brother and sister act to Sochi.

win over WSU in 2010-11.

SeeDucks/C4

Nextup uCLAat Oregon When: Today, 6p.m. TV:ESPN2

Radio:1110AM, 100.1-FM


C2

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

ON THE AIR

COREBOARD

TODAY GOLF

PGA Tour, Phoenix Open EuropeanTour, Dubai Desert Classic

Time noon 10 p.m.

TV/Radio Golf Golf

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Cincinnati at Louisville Men's college, Florida at Mississippi State Women's college, Syracuse atNorth Carolina Men's college, Providence atMarquette Men's college, Bryant at Robert Morris NBA, Cleveland atNewYork Men's college, Purdue at Michigan Men's college, UCLAat Oregon

4 p.m. ESPN 4 p.m. ESP N 2 4 p.m. Root 4 p.m. Fox Sports 1 5 p.m. ESP N U 5 p.m. TNT 6 p.m. ESPN 6 p.m. ESP N2, 1110-AM, 100.1-FM

Men's college, USC at Oregon State 6 p.m. Pac-12, 940-AM Men's college, South Dakota State at Denver 6 p.m. Root Men's college, St. Mary's at SanDiego 7 p.m. ESP N U NBA, Los AngelesClippers at GoldenState 7:30 p.m. TNT Women's college, California at Stanford 8 p.m. Pac-12 BOXING Victor Ortiz vs. Luis Collazo 6 p.m. Fox Sports 1

FRIDAY GOLF

PGA Tour, Phoenix Open EuropeanTour, Desert Classic

Time noon 1 a.m.

TV/Radio Golf Golf

BASKETBALL

Men's college, Cleveland St. at Detroit Mercy 4 p.m. 5 p.m. NBA, OklahomaCity at Brooklyn Men's college, Manhattan at lona 6 p.m. Women's college, Washington State at USC 6 p.m. High School, Mt. View atRedmond 7 p.m. 7:30 p.m. NBA, GoldenState at Utah Women's college, Washington at UCLA 8 p.m.

ESPNU ESPN ESPNU

Pac-12 COTV ESPN

Pac-12

ON DECK Today Boysbasketball: RogueValleyAdventist atGilchrist, 7p.m. Girls baskulbalkMountainViewat CrookCounty, 7 p.m.;RogueValey Adventist atGilchrist,5:30p.m. Wrestling:Crook County at Ridgeview,7 p.m.; Redmond atBend,7 p,mcSummit at Mountain View, 7p.m. Swimming: HenleyatMadras,4:45 p.m.

Saturday Boys baskelbag: Gilchrist atNorthLake,5:30 p.m.; Redmond vs. Baker at Prairie CityHighSchool, 7 p.m. Girls basketball:Trinity Lutheranat Paisley,5:30 p.m.;Gilchrist atNorthLake, 2p.m.;Redmond vs. Bakerat PrairieCity HighSchool,1 p.m. Wrestling: Sisters,LaPine, Madrasat LaPine Invite, TBD;Redmondat Mid-Valley ClassicTournament at SouthAlbany,10a.m.; Mountain Viewat Rex Putna m Tournament,9a.m. Alpineskiing:OSSAat Mt. Bachelor, GiantSlalom, Cliffhanger,TBD Nordic skiing: OISRA skate andrelay racesat Mt. Bachelor,11:30a.m.

BASKETBALL Men's College Standings Pacific-12 Conference All times PST

Conference Overall

Listingsarethe mostaccurate available. TheBulletinis not responsible for latechanges madebyTI7'or radio stations.

SPORTS IN BRIEF NORDIC SKIING Candy Bar RaCeSet fOrSaturday at BaChelOr —TheML Bachelor Sports Education Foundation is hosting aCandy BarRace this Saturday. Thecross-country ski race, for youngsters of elementary and middle school age, begins with a massstart at the Mt. Bachelor Nordic Center. Skiers can useanytechnique they like and can choose betweendistances of1 and 2.4 kilometers. Registration is free and takes place onthe day of the racefrom 9:30 to 10:45 a.m. in the nordic center basement. Participants must have atrail pass, which can bepurchased for $9 during registration. Skiers with Mt. Bachelor season passes donot need to buy atrail pass. Candy bars will be awarded to eachfinisher. Information: MBSEFat 541-3880002.

OLYMPICS RuSSian biathleteS fail dOPing teStS — TwoRussian biathletes have beensuspended for doping violations, dealing a blow to the Olympic host country a weekbefore the opening ceremony in Sochi and casting a pall over one of Russia's signature sports. Mikhail D. Prokhorov, the owner of the Brooklyn Nets andthe president of the Russian biathlon federation, has spent millions of his fortune to prepare Russia's biathlon team for the Olympics. Cracking down ondoping was a major priority after three Russian athletes weresuspended in 2009 for doping violations. Thesuspensions were alow point for a team that had been aninternational powerhouse for decades, but had lost much of its luster in recent years.

BASEBALL 6-time All-Star Berkmanretiring frOmdaSedall — Sixtime All-Star Lance Berkman is retiring after15 seasons in the major leagues. Berkman almost left the game last offseason before signing with the TexasRangers. Hethen had another injury-plagued season that limited him to 73 games. The37-year-old Berkman was the first overall pick by Houston in1997 out of Rice, and played12 seasons for the Astros. He played1,879 career games, all but 287 of them for Houston. TheAstros said in a release Wednesday night that Berkman was one of the greatest players in team history. He finished the 2010 season with the NewYork Yankeesbefore two years in St. Louis, where hewas part of the 2011 World Series champions.

In the Bleachers © 200t Steve Moore. Dist. bv Universal Ucnck www.gocomics.com/inthebleachers

Friday Boys basketball: CrookCountyat Bend, 7p.m.; Summit atRidgeview,7 p.ms Mountain Viewat Redmond, 7 p.muSisters at CottageGrove,5:45 pm.;JunctionCityat LaPine,545 pmcGladstone at Madras, 7p.m. Girls basketball:Ridgeviewat Summit, 7 p.m.; BendatCrookCounty,7p.m4RedmondatMountain View,7 p.muSisters at CottageGrove,7:15 p.m.; JunctionCityat LaPine, 7:15p,muMadras at Gladstone,7 p.m.; Triadat Trinity Lutheran,4 p.m. Swimming: Bend, Mountain View, Summit at Bend City MeetatJuniperSwimtk FitnessCenter, TBD; SistersatSweet Home/Stayton,4 p.m. Nordic skiing:OHSNOat Mt. HoodMeadowsNight Race,Freestyle, TBD

BOXING

Blake Caparello vs. Elvir Muriqi 6 p.m. ESPN2 HOCKEY College, Boston University at Massachusetts 4:30 p.m. NBCSN WHL, Tri-City at Edmonton 6 p.m. Root SOCCER Women's friendly,USA vs.Canada 6 p.m. Fox Sports 1 English Premier League, Newcastle United vs Sunderland 4:45 a.m. NBCSN

IN THE BLEACHERS

Arizona UCLA Arizona St. California Washington Colorado Stanford Oregon St. Utah Oregon SouthernCal Washington St.

W 6 5 5 5 5 4 4 3 3 2 1 1

L 0 2 3 3 3 4 4 4 5 5 6 7

Wednesday'sGames Arizona 60, Stanford 57 ArizonaSt. 69,California 79(OT) Today'sGames UCLAatOregon,6p.m. USCatOregonSt., 6p.m. Saturday'sGames Utah atColorado, 11a.m. ArizonaSt. atStanford,1 p.m. Washington atWashingtonSt.,3 p.m. USCatOregon,5 p.m. Arizonaat California, 7:30p.m. Sunday'sGames UCLA atOregonSt.,11:30 a.m.

W L 21 0 16 4 16 5 14 7 13 6 15 6 13 7 11 6 14 6 14 5 10 10 6 12

Wednesday'sGames East Albany(NY)77,StonyBrook67 AmericanU.74, Navy52 BostonCollege76,Virginia Tech52 BostonU.66,Army61,0T Buff alo64,W.Michigan63 Butler64,Seton Hall 57 Drexel77,Hofstra74 Duquesne71, NJIT64 George Washington69, LaSalle 47 Holy Cross 60,Loyola(Md.) 51 JamesMadison 49,Northeastern46 Lehigh66,Bucknell 63 Maine 66,NewHampshire60 St. Bonaventure76,UMass65 St. Francis(NY)63, SacredHeart 76 Temple66,Rutgers62 UMBC73,Binghamton61 Vermont67, Harfford60 South Belmont 76,MoreheadSt. 73 Campbel65, l Charleston Southern 57 CoastalCarolina66, Liberty64 Delaware 69,Wiliam 6 Mary72 Gardner-W ebb62,Longwood62 Maryland74,Miami 71 Memphis69,UCF59 NC State 74, Florida St.70

NorthCarolina76, GeorgiaTech65 Radford76, Winthrop64 South Carolina60,TexasA&M 52 Syracuse 67,WakeForest57 Tennes see66,Mississippi70 VCU76, Fordham60 Vanderbilt59,Georgia54 Midwest Akron73,Ball St. 46 Bradley 64, llinois St. 46 Detroit 74,Ill.-chicago66 Drake64,Missouri St.74 E. Michigan69, Bowling Green57 Kansas 92,lowaSt.61 N. Illinois50,KentSt.49 N. Iowa 95, Evansville 61 Northwestern 65,Wisconsin56 Ohio 71,Cent.Michigan67 PennSt. 71,DhioSt.70, OT S. Illinois79,IndianaSt.60 SE Missouri91,UMKC61

g,ESERVE

/

t

Transactions BASEBAL L

Major LeagueBaseball OFFICE OFTHECOMMISSIONER— Suspended PhiladelphiaLHPChristopher O'Hare(Lakewood-SAL) "Reactivate Cooper. I need him 50 gamesafter asecondpositive test for a drug of for tonight's game." abuseundertheMinor League Drug Prevention and TreatmentProgram. AmericanLeague KANSASCITY ROYALS — AcquiredOF Carlos PeguerofromSeattle foraplayer to benamed or cash considerations.DesignatedLHPEverett Teaford for SIU-Edwa rdsville 77,Crowley'sRidge46 HomeTeamin Caps assignment. SaintJoseph's60, Dayton57 Sunday, Feb.2 LOAANGELESANGELS— AnnouncedtheaddiSaint Louis77, Richmond57 Super Bowl tions oforthopedicsurgeonsDr.Robert Grumet and Toledo63,Miami(Ohio) 70 Favorite Open Current Underdog Dr. MichaelF.Shepardto its medical staff. Valparaiso75, GreenBay60 Broncos PK 2.5 Seahawks MINNES OTATWINS— Agreedto termswith RHP Far West Matt Guerrieon r aminor leaguecontract. Arizona 60,Stanford57 N EWYO RKYANKEES—Agreedtotermswith RHP HOCKEY ArizonaSt.69, California 79, OT BruceBilings, INFRuss Canzler, RHPRobert Coello, BoiseSt.69,Air Force56 RHPBrianGordon, RHPChris Leroux,OFAntoan Fresno St.67,Wyoming62 NHL Richardson,INFScott Sizemore, INFYangervisSolarte Gonzaga 54, SantaClara52 NATIONAL H OCKEY L E AGU and INF ZelousWheeler onminorleaguecontracts. Nevada76,ColoradoSt.67 All Times PST SEATTLE MARINERS—Agreedto termswith RHP SanFrancisco64,Portland71 ScottBakeronaminor leaguecontract. UNLV 70, SanJoseSt. 46 EasternConference TEXASRANGERS— ClaimedLHPPedroFigueroa Atlantic Division off waiversfromTampaBay.DesignatedRHPChazRoe GP W L OT Pts GF GA f o r assignme nt. Women's College Boston 5 2 34 15 3 7 1 159 115 National League Wednesday'sGames Tampa Bay 5 3 31 17 5 6 7 157 131 CINCINN ATI REDS— Agreed to termswith INF East Toronto 5 5 26 21 6 6 2 156 170 Ramon Santiagoonaminorleaguecontract. Army72,BostonU.45 Montreal 5 3 26 20 5 6 1 131 134 ST. LOUIS CARDINALS— Agreedto termswith Bucknell62,Lehigh66 Detroit 53 23 19 11 57 135 149 INFDanielDescalso onaone-yearcontract. Fordham 64, RhodeIsland51 Ottawa 53 23 20 10 56 150 167 BASKETB ALL George Washington69,UMass76 Florida 5 3 21 25 7 4 9 129 164 National Basketball Association Harfford64, Vermont 51 Buffalo 5 2 14 30 6 3 6 101 152 CLEVELAND C A V AL I E R S — Assigned G/F Sergey HolyCross60, Loyola (Md.) 65 MetropolitanDivision KarasevtoCanton (NBADL). Lafayette90,Colgate75 GP W L O T PtsGF GA NEWYORKKNICKS—AssignedCCole Aldrich, Marist 66,Rider56 P ittsburgh 53 37 1 4 2 7 6 171 126 GToure'MurryandFJeremyTyler to Erie (NBADL). Navy46,American U.44 N .Y.Ran gers 55 29 23 3 6 1 141 139 FOOTBALL NewHampshire74,Maine73 P hiladelphia 54 26 22 6 5 6 147 156 National Football League Niagara 69, Canisius60 C arolina 53 2 4 2 0 9 5 7 134 150 ARIZONACARDINALS — Signed K Danny HrapRichmond 56,LaSalle39 C olumbus 53 26 23 4 5 6 154 151 manntoareserve/future contact. Saint Louis69, SaintJoseph's65 W ashington 53 24 21 6 5 6 153 156 BALTIMOR ERAVENS—NamedSteveSpagnuolo St. John's00,Xavier46 New Jersey 54 22 21 11 55 127 135 secondary coachandBrianParianitightends coach. Villanova59,Georgetown49 N .Y.Islanders 56 21 27 6 5 0 156 167 BUFFALO BILLS— Named Jim Hostler senior WestVirginia67,lowaSt.56 WesternConference offensive assistant. South CentralDivision M IAMI DO LP HINS—Announcedassistant generArkansasSt.60,Louisiana-Monroe66 GP W L O T PfsGF GA al manager Brian Gaine andthe teamhave mutually Duquesne 64,GeorgeMason 45 Chicago 56 33 10 13 79 199 156 partedways. Md.-EasternShore66,NJIT 61 St. Louis 5 2 36 11 5 7 7 160 119 NEW ENGLANDPATRIOTS — Named Brendan Memphis62, UCF53 Colorado 5 2 33 14 5 7 1 153 137 Dalydefensiveassistant coach. SouthFlorida71, Houston 53 Minnesota 5 5 29 20 6 6 4 133 135 SANFRANCISCO49ERS— NamedEthanCasson W. Kentucky 59, Texas-Arlington 46 Dallas 5 3 24 21 6 5 6 154 157 chief revenue officer. Midwest Nashvile 5 5 24 23 6 5 6 136 166 ST. LOUIS RAMS—Fireddefensive coordinator Ball St.56,W.Michigan43 Winnipeg 5 5 25 25 5 5 5 155 162 Tim Walton. DePaul91, Marquette 65 PacificDivision HOCKEY Iff.-chicago 64, Milwaukee70 GP W L OT PtsGF GA National HockeyLeague lowa64,Minnesota56 A naheim 55 3 9 1 1 5 6 3 184 134 ANAHEIMDUCKS—Agreedtotermswith DMark Kansas St.66,Oklahoma76 S an Jose 54 34 1 4 6 7 4 165 129 Fistric onathree-year contractextension. N. Illinois65,KentSt. 43 L os Angeles 55 30 19 6 6 6 133 116 DALLASSTARS— Signed FRyanGarbutttoa Nebraska 64,Michigan51 V ancou ver 55 27 19 9 6 3 139 143 three-yearcontractextension. Youngstown St.60,Detroit 71 Phoenix 53 2 5 1 8 10 60154 160 PHOENIX COYOTES—Announcedtheteamwil Southwest Calgary 5 3 1 9 2 7 7 4 5 124 169 officially change their franchisenameto theArizoBaylor92,TexasTech43 E dmonton 56 16 3 2 6 4 2 147 190 na Coyotesbeginning at thestart of the 2014-15 Oklah omaSt.49,TCU46 NOTE:Two points for a win, onepoint for overtime season. Tulane62,Rice55 loss. WINNIPEG JETS—AssignedDPaul Postmato St. Tulsa79,NorthTexas63 Wednesday'sGames John's(AHL)onaconditioning loan UALR 74, Louisiana-Lafayette60 N.Y.Rangers2, N.Y. Islanders1 SOCCER UTEP 77,Marshall 50 Edmonton 3, SanJose0 Major LeagueSoccer Far West Chicago 5, Vancouver2 LA GALAX Y — F or med LAGalaxy 0 to compete BoiseSt.77,Air Force63 Today'sGam es in USL PRO. ColoradoSt.71, Nevada64 MontrealatBoston,4 p.m. NEW YORK RED BULLS — Re-signed D Jamison UNLV90,SanJoseSt. 76 Floridaat Toronto, 4p.m. Olave. Utah56,Colorado55 WashingtonatColumbus,4p.m. P HILADE L P H IAUNION—AnnouncedtheresignaUtah St.75,NewMexico69 TampaBayat Ottawa,4:30 p.m. tion of assistantcoachBrendanBurke. Wyoming 67,FresnoSt.76 NewJerseyatDalas, 5:30p.m. COLLEGE Minnesota at Colorado,6 p.m. FLORIDA — Announced men's freshman basketSanJoseatCalgary, 6p.m. ball F Chri s W al k er wa sclearedto play bytheNCAA. FOOTBALL Buff aloatPhoenix,6p.m. FRESNO STATE—Named LouMajor football opPhiladelphiaatAnaheim,7p.m. erationscoordinator. NFL PittsburghatLosAngeles, 7:30p.m. GEORGIA SOUTHERN— NamedDougRuseofFridayrsGames NATIONALFOOTBALL LEAGUE fensivecoordinator/quarterbackscoach, Matt Barrett N.Y.Islandersat N.Y. Rangers, 4 p.m. Playoff glance w ide recei v ers coach,JohnnyJernigandefensiveends St. LouisatCarolina, 4 p.m. All TimesPST coach,MichaelMutzlinebackerscoach,Kevin Peoples Washington at Detroit,4;30 p.m. defen sivelinecoach,defensivesecondarycoachand NewJerseyatNashvile, 5 p.m. SuperBowl ChadLunsfordtight endscoach. Vancou veratWinnipeg,5:30p.m. Sunday,Feb.2 SAGE — Named Kristin Brownassistant softball At EastRutherford, N.J. coach. Denvervs.Seattle,3:25 p.m.(Fox) SYRACUSE — AnnouncedtheresignationofwomTENNIS en's tenniscoachLukeJensen. WAGNER — NamedJasonHoughtalingassociate Betting line Professional headcoach/off ensivecoordinator. NFL Gaz deFrance YESHIVA —NamedIra Miler men'stennis coach.

NHL ROUNDUP

RangeISta eC i yViCtaryOVeI ISan eIS NEW YORK — The New York Rangers

Rams fire defenSiVe COOrdinatOr — TheSt. Louis Rams fired defensive coordinator Tim Walton onWednesdayafter finishing in the middle of the pack in his oneseason. CoachJeff Fisher, who said after the seasonended that he didn't anticipate any coaching changes, announced themoveand wished Walton well. Walton spent four years as thesecondary coach in Detroit before hewas hired last year by the Rams.The Ramsdidn't have a defensive coordinator in 2012, Fisher's first season with the team,after GreggWilliams was suspended for his role in the Saints bounty scandal.

MOTOR SPORTS AnOther Petty enterS Hall Of Fame —ThePetty dynasty is now completely represented in the NASCARHall of Fame. Maurice Petty was formally inducted Wednesday night into the Hall, joining his father, brother and cousin as members of the exclusive group. Maurice Petty was the first member of the fifth class to be inducted during Wednesday night's ceremony. "The Chief" was inducted by brother Richard Petty, the seven-time NASCARchampion and member of the inaugural Hall of Fameclass. "The big deal is that it's really the end of Petty Enterprises because westarted in1949, and now that my brother is in the Hall of Fame, then that pretty well closes the book on it," Richard Petty said. Also in the Hall from the Petty Enterprise dynasty is patriarch Lee Petty, and the Petty boys' cousin and crew chief, Dale Inman. Fireball Roberts, considered the first superstar of NASCAR,was the second member inducted. — From wire reports

/,

DEALS

The Associated Press

FOOTBALL

PattayaWomen'sOpen Wednesday At Dusit Resort Pattaya, Thailand Purse: $260,000(Intl.) Surlace: Hard-Outdoor Singles SecondRound SoranaCirstea(3), Rom ania, def.Alison Riske, UnitedStates,6-3,6-4. EkaterinaMakarova(4), Russia,def. VeraZvonareva, Russia6-0, , 6-2. KarolinaPliskova,CzechRepublic, def.Alla Kudryavtseva, Russia, 4-6,6-3, 6-4.

O OO a r

/j

Wednesday At StadePierre deCouberlin Paris Purse:S710,000(Premier) Surlace: Hard-Indoor Singles First Round ElmaSvitolma,Ukrame,def. RobertaVina (6), Italy, 6-3, 0-6,7-5. KirstenFlipkens(6), Belgium,def. MonaBarthel, Germany, 6-3,4-6,6-2. Galina Voskoboe va, Kazakhstan, def. Stefanie VoegeleSw , ilzerland, 5-7, 7-5,7-6(3). Kristina Mladenovic,France,def. SimonaHalep (5), Rom ania,7-6(1), 6-4. SecondRound Maria Sharapova (1), Russia,def. DanielaHantuchova,Slovakia,6-0, 6-1. AnastasiaPavlyuchenkova, Russia, def. CarlaSuarezNavarro (7), Spain,6-2, 3-6,6-3.

have quickly warmed to the challenge of playing outside in the chill of winter. Despite being the road team in both games at frigid Yankee Stadium, the Broadway Blueshirts made themselves at home in the ballpark in the Bronx and completed a sweep of the New Jersey

Devils and New York Islanders. The Rangers rallied for the second straight game and topped the Islanders 2-1 on Wednesday night on Daniel Carcillo's tiebreaking goal 4:36 into the third perzod. On Sunday, the Rangers dug out of a 3-1 hole against the Devils and scored the final six goals. New York is an NHL-best

3-0 in games played outside.

"They're a ton of f u n," defenseman Marc Staal said. "I could play in 50 of

thesein ayear.M aybe not50.Forty." Building off Sunday's Bronx win, the Rangers took out another division rival under the lights in front of 50,027 fans. The temperature was 22 degrees when

Yankees. The only goal he allowed was a forthe scoreless deadlock to be broken by late second-period tally to Brock Nelson that gave the Islanders a short-lived 1-0

lead. The Rangers evened the season series with the Islanders 2-2. The teams willplay for the final time on Friday at Madison

the Islanders, and then 40 seconds for the

Rangers to get back even. The Islanders built a big lead in shots, but couldn't get any past LLmdqvist — de-

spite getting the first three power plays. When Islanders forward Kyle Okposo Square Garden. The Rangers improved to went off for holding, and took Rangers 17-10 on the road — including five straight forward Rick Nash with him for embel— and they have won 13 of 19 (13-5-1) lishing with 9:49 left in the second, the Isoverall. landers held a 21-10 edge in shots. Wearing a ski cap with a pompom atop By the time the period ended, the Ranghis mask, Evgeni Nabokov had 32 saves ers had cut it to 25-20. for the Islanders, who made their outdoor The Islanders grabbed a 1-0 lead with debut. Road teams are 9-1-1 in NHL out- 1:27 left in the second, using a three-way side games. passing play. Cal Clutterbuck flung the Nabokov handled the cold OK, and puck from the left circle into the middle showed no signs of the injuries that have as he fell, and connected with defensemtroubled him during this season. an MattDonovan, who quickly moved the "You never really know (about playing pass to his right to Nelson, who fired in outdoors) until you're out there and see his 10th goaL that great atmosphere," he said. "I loved Also on Wednesday: every second of it." Oilers 3, Sharks 0: EDMONTON, AlCarcillo fired in a rebound of Dominic berta — Ben Scrivensmade 59 saves in a Moore's shot for his third goal of the sea- spectacular performance that helped Edson, helping drop the Islanders to 0-3-1 in monton beat San Jose. the last four games. Blackhawks 5, Canucks 2:VANCOU-

the first puck dropped at 7:45 p.m. with a aWe're playing well enough to win, but VER, British Columbia — J o nathan single-digit wind-chill factor. we've got to find a way to win," Islanders Toews, Patrick Sharp and Brandon Saad It got progressively colder. Benoit Poubot also scored, and Henrik coach Jack Capuano said. each had a goal and an assist in the secLundqvist stopped 30 shots while again With both teams struggling to control ond period as Chicago scored in quick adorning pinstriped pads in honor of the the puck early, it took nearly 39 minutes succession to beat Vancouver.


THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

MEN'S COLLEGE BASKETBALL ROUNDUP

NBA ROUNDUP

ea can' ee • Oklahoma City, behind 18, ralliesto overtake Miami

u n er ownTop-rankedArizona survives asStanford upset bid fallsshort

The Associated Press M IAMI —

D own by 1 8

points midway through the opening quarter, Kevin Du-

The Associated Press

rant and the Oklahoma City

STANFORD, Calif. — For

Thunder looked well on their way to witnessing a rout. That's

ex a c tl y

wh at

. p~

added 22 and the Thunder

roared back from an abysmal start — they trailed 22-4 early — to embarrass the Miami

Arizona, three straight de-

Heat 112-95 on Wednesday night, erasing that big deficit out of the gate by outscor-

ing the two-time defending champions by 43 points over a 33-minute span.

Alan Diaz/The Associated Press

we didn't panic. We just tried to stay together and t h at's

what we did. Our bench was great in getting us back in that game." T he Thunder led by as many as 25, and shot 16 for

27 from 3-point range. Miami was 3 for 19 from beyond the arc.

Durant has now scored at least 30 points in 12 straight games, matching the league's longest such streak since Tracy McGrady did it in 14 consecutive outings in the 2002-03

season. The Thunder extended their winning streak to nine, inching them closer to Indiana

in the race for the league's best record.And the Oklahoma City bench outscored Miami's

reserves 39-21, with Jeremy Lamb scoring 18 and Derek Fisher going 5 for 5 from 3-point range for his 15 points. "There's no running away f rom it," H eat c oach E r i k

Miami Heat small forward LeBron James (6) puts pressure on Oklahoma City Thunder small forward Kevin Durant (35) during the fourth quarter of Wednesday night's game in Miami. The Thunder won 112-95.

Spoelstra said. "Other than the first eight minutes of the

layup at the buzzer to lift Phil-

game they outclassed us tonight. They absolutely de-

Suns 126, Bucks 117: MILWAUKEE — Goran Dragic

adelphia past Boston.

without James Harden.

Bobcats 101, Nuggets 98: DENVER — A l Je ff erson matched a season high with 35

scored 30 points, including 13 points, including a key basket LeBron James scored 34 in the fourth quarter despite in the final seconds, to lead points for Miami, his 1-on-1 sustaining an apparent injury Charlotte. duel with Durant not really to his left elbow, and Phoenix Bulls 96, Spurs 86: SAN amounting to much on a night beat Milwaukee. A NTONIO — J i m m y B u t where the Heat allowed 25 Timberwoives 88, Peiicans ler had 19 points and Carlos points off turnovers and blew 77: MINNEAPOLIS — Kevin Boozer added 16 points and 12 an 18-point lead for just the Love had 30 points and 14 re- rebounds as Chicago handed fourth time since he, Dwyane bounds to finally carry Min- injury-riddled San Antonio its Wade and Chris Bosh became nesota over the.500 mark. third straight loss. teammatesnearly four years Raptors 98, Magic 83: TOGrizzlies 99, Kings 89: SACago. RONTO — Kyle Lowry had a RAMENTON, Calif. — Mike B osh scored 1 8 po i n t s season-high 33 points and 11 Conley had 27 points and 10 and Wade added 15 for Mi- assists, Amir Johnson had 22 assists as Memphis won its ami. "We played well to start points and 11 rebounds to lead fourth straight. the game," James said. "We Toronto past Orlando for the Clippers 110, Wizards 103: played well all the way until fifth straight time. LOS ANGELES — Blake Griflike the second quarter. From Rockets 117, Mavericks 115: fin led five players in double that point on they did what DALLAS — C h andler Par- figures with 29 points, and the they wanted to do." sons scored 26 points and Los Angeles Clippers used a Also on Wednesday: Houston held on to beat Dal- 10-4 run over the final 2:48 76ers 95, Celtics 94: BOS- las, knocking off a Texas rival to beat Washington for their TON — Evan Turner sank a for the second straight day fourth win in a row. served this win."

NBA SCOREBOARD Standings All TimesPST

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

W L 35 9 32 13 24 21 23 21 23 22 22 23 20 23 20 27 18 27 18 27 16 29 15 31 I5 33 12 35 8 37

Pci GB

Oklahoma City atBrooklyn, 5p.m. Sacramento at Dallas, 5:30p.m. Torontoat Denver,6 p.m. CharlotteatLA. Lakers, 7:30p.m. GoldenStateatUtah,7:30p.m.

795

Summaries

711 3i/z

533 0'/z 523 12 511 12'/2

489 13'/z 465 14'A 426 I6'/2 400 17'/~ 400 I7'/z 356 19'/i 326 21 313 22 255 24'A 178 27'/2

Wednesday'sGames

Timberwolves 88, PelicaIIs 77

NEWORLEANS (77) Aminu8-132-218,Stiemsma0-13-43, Alinca2-5 0-0 4,Roberls 3-103-39,Gordon5-17 3-514, Evans 41535 11, Miler 03000, Rivers3922 |I, Withey 1-11-23,Morrow3-80-07. Totals29-8217-2377. MINNESOT A I88) Brewer1-41-2 3, Love11-267-9 30, Turiaf 2-5 0-04, Rubi01-43-3 5,Martin7-183-51t, Budinger 1-50-0 3,Barea4-91-210, Mbaha Moute 0-23-4 WesternConference W L Pd GB 3,Di eng0-20-00,Cunningham 6-70-012.Totals 33-8218-25 88. d-Oklahoma City 37 10 787 d-San Antonio 33 13 717 3'/2 New0rleans 16 1 9 27 15 — 77 Portland 33 13 717 3'/~ Minnesota 23 24 20 21 — 88 d-LA. Clippers 33 15 688 4'A Houston 31 I7 646 6'/2 76ers 95, Celtics 94 Phoenix 27 18 600 9 Golden State 27 I9 587 9'/z PHILADELPHIA(95) Dallas 26 21 553 u Turner6-174-6 16,Young7-14 0-4 16, Haw es Memphis 24 20 545 0'/2 7-14 2-220,Carter-Wiliams4-14 2-510, Anderson Minnesota 23 22 50 13 6-8 0-0 13,Thompson0-0 4-6 4, Allen 1-8 0-0 2, Denver 22 22 500 13'A Wroten3-6 2-2 8, Dedmon2-3 0-0 4, Wiliams1-2 NewOrleans 19 26 422 17 0-0 z Totals 37-8614-2595. Utah 16 29 356 20 BOSTON (94) LA, Lakers 16 30 348 20'/z Green 5-136-818, Bass4-83-411, Sullinger9-25 Sacramen to 15 30 333 21 6-624, Pressey1-70-0 2, Wa lace 0-1 1-21, Humd-divisionleader phries3-5 7-813, Bayless4-130-210, Johnson2-7 0-06, Olynyk4-80-09.Totals32-8723-3094. Wednesday'sGames Philadelphia 23 3 0 21 21 — 95 oklahoma city 02, Miami95 Boston 26 21 24 23 — 94 Toronto98,Orlando83 Philadelphia95,Boston 94 Detroit atAtlanta,ppd. ThuIIder112, Heat 95 Minnesota 88, NewOrleans77 phoenix126,Milwaukee07 OKULHOMA CITY(112) Houston117, Dallas05 Durant12-235-533, Ibaka10-202-2 22, Perkins 0-0 0-0 0,Jackson2-7 4-69, Sefolosha3-7 2-4 9, Charlotte101, Denver98 Chicago 96, SanAntonio86 Lamb7-100-018, Fisher 5-7 0-015, Collison1-2 Memphis 99,Sacramento89 1-2 3, PJones1-4 0-03, Adams 0-00-0 0. Totals LA, Clippers 110,Washington103 41-8014-19112.

Today'sGames Phoenixat Indiana,4 p.m. ClevelandatNewYork, 5p.m. LA. Clippers atGoldenState, 7:30p.m. Friday's Games Milwaukee atOrlando,4 p.m. Atlantaat Philadelphia, 4:30p.m. MemphisatMinnesota, 5p.m.

MIAMI I95) James12-209-934, Battier1-5 0-03, Bosh7-14

3-418, Chalmers 2-4O-I 4, Wade7-121-215, Allen 1-43-45,Andersen 4-50-08, Cole0-20-00, Beasley2-5226,Haslem 0-00-00,Douglas1-10-02, Lewis0-00-00. Totals 37-7218-22 95. OklahomaCity 21 34 36 21 — 112 Miami 30 20 25 20 — 95

Raptors 98, Magic 83 ORLANDO (83)

Afflalo 40 2210, Davis1-43 55,Vucevic612 4-416, Nelson5-15 0-013, Oladipo3-14 5-812, Moore 4-80-09,Harris2-85-59,O'Quinn2-52-2

6, Harkless 1-6 0-03, NicholsonO-I 0-0 0. Totals 28-84 21-2683. TORONTO (98) Ross4-132-212,Johnson10-201-222,ValanciUnas6-112-2 14, Lowry0-20 5-7 33, vasquez2-7 0-06,Salmons1-60-03,Hayes1-6002, Novak2-3 00 6, Stone 0 10 00, Hansbrough00 000. Totals 37-8710-13 98. Orlando 20 20 25 18 — 83 Toronto 33 22 25 18 — 98

Suns 126, Bucks117 PHOENIX (126) Tucker 0-1 3-4 3, Frye5-8 1-1 13, Plumlee4-7 0-0 8, Dragic9-138-830, Green7-13 5-523, Mark. Morris 4-85-513,Barbosa2-83-47, Len3-41-1 7, Marc.uorris 5-104-416, Smith3-6 0-0 6. Totals 42-78 30-32126. MILWAUKE E(117) Middleton6-13 3-417, llyasova7-15 to-to 27, Henson 4-81-29, Knight6-1511-1124,Antetokounmpo2-72-26,Sanders7-110-014,BUIler3-92-29, Wolters3-85-50, Ridnour0-30-00. Totals 38-89 34-36 117. Phoenix 28 34 29 35 —126 Milwaukee 19 31 34 33 — 117

Bobcats101, Nuggets98 CHARLO TTE(101) Kidd-Gilchrist 2-44-108, McRoberts 2-3 0-0 4, Jefferson13-249-1235,Sessions4-108-1016, Henderson6-173-416, Zeller0-44-44, Douglas-Roberts 2-3 0-0 6,Tolliver1-4 0-03,Biyomto1-42-2 4,Pargo2-50-05.Totals33-7830-42101. DENVER (98) Chandler3-101-1 9, Faried3-11 0-06, Hickson 3-81-2 7,Robinson0-20-00, Foye12-216-733,Q. Miller1-5 0-02,Mozgov6-103-315, Fournier8-2I 0-019, Arthur3-90-07, Hamilton 0-30-00. Totals 39-10011-1398. Charlotle 32 21 22 26 — 101 Denver 21 31 23 23 — 98

Rockets117, Mavericks115 HOUSTON (117) Parsons9-17 6-926,Jones7-102-416, How ard 6-10 9-0 21, Beverle3-8 y 2-211, Lin8-14 0-018, Motiejunas 4-54-612, Casspi1-3 0-02, Brooks3-t 3-411, Brewer 0-00-00. Totals 41-7426-36117.

J ohnson missed a

f ree

quence, the top-ranked Wild- throw with 28 seconds left cats heldStanford scoreless and Stanford called timeout. and helped preserve their Huestis missed a 3 from the perfect start to the season. left wing and Aaron Gordon This confident, unbeaten secured the rebound, but he group believes it should be also missed a free throw givdoing that all game long. For ing the Cardinal one final

i

Durant remained sizzling with 33 points, Serge Ibaka

said. "They hit some tough shots early on, a few 3's, and

it was a 3-point bucket late.

ter stop. In that critical se-

moment.

to come in and play," Durant

at the foul line or whether

nearly 9 minutes, Arizona I've watched a lot of tape of m ade defensive stop a f - them, he's done it all year."

happened. And they enjoyed every

"They were ready for us

C3

DALLAS (115) Marion 3-10 0-0 6, Nowitzki 13-21 u-u 38, Dalemberl1-20-0 2, Calderon2-122-38, Ellis 3-10 0-0 6,Blair5-9 3-313,carter 5-910-0 22, crowder O-I 0-20,Harris5-84-614, Wright3-40-06. Totals 40-86 30-36115. Houston 32 tn 28 26 — 117 Dallas 30 27 28 30 — 115

Grizzlies 99, Kings 89 MEMPHIS(99) Prince4-5 0-0 9,Randolph8-16 2-2 18,Gasol 6-10 0-2 12, Conley8-13 9-9 27, Lee2-4 0-0 4, Johnson1-3 2-24, Calathes2-40-0 4, Miler 5-11 O-t 11, Davis3-60-0 6, Koufos2-3 0-0 4. Totals 41-7513-16 99. SACRAM ENTO(89) Gay 10-162-2 23,Thompson 3-8 0-0 6, Gray 2-5 0-0 4,Thomas10-21 0-024, Thornton 1-20-0 2, Williams2-74-4 8, McLemore 2-62-26, Fredete 2-4 0-0 4,Acy2-50-04, Landry4-50-0 8. Totals 38-79 8-8 89. Memphis 25 23 21 30 — 99 Sacramento 24 22 17 26 — 89

fensive stops is called a"kill." Nick Johnson kept Arizona's unblemished record going for another game, hitting a go-ahead 3-pointer with 51 seconds remaining and two free throws with 5.8 seconds

shot.

Also on Wednesday: No. 2 Syracuse 67, Wake Forest 57: W I NSTON-SALEM, N.C. — Freshman Ty-

ler Ennis scored 16 of his 18 points in the second half and

Syracuse matchedthe best start in program history. a 60-57 victory Wednesday No. 6 Kansas 92, No. 16 night for its school-record lowa St. 81: LAWRENCE, 21st straight win. Kan. — Andrew Wiggins "We're an outstanding de- scored a c areer-high 29 fensive team. It isn't as if we points, induding six straight changed any scheme, we just late in the game, to lead Kanbuckled down and had a lot sas to its seventh straight win. of players playing very hard, Northwestern 65, No. 14 and our ability to hold them Wisconsin 56: MADISON, to what we did is abig reason Wis. — D rew C r a wford we won. Our defense won scored a season-high 30 the game tonight," Arizona points and JerShon Cobb coach Sean Miller said. "No added all 10 of his in the secquestion we have to execute ond half as Northwestern better on offense and we upset Wisconsin. have to be more confident at No. 19 Saint Louis 77, Richthe line." mond 57: ST. LOUIS — Jorleftas Arizona survived for

After Johnson hit a jumper

dair Jett had 21 points and a

in the middle of the key with career-best 10 rebounds and 2:36 remaining to make it 55- Saint Louis took a 24-point 53, Dwight Powell answered lead in the first half on the on a baseline drive with 1:21

way to a rout of Richmond.

to go before Johnson deliv-

St. Bonaventure 78, No. 21 Massachusetts 65: OLEJohnson finished with 16 AN, N.Y. — Youssou Ndoye points, five rebounds and scored 11 of his 12 points four assists and T.J. McCo- in the second half for St. nnell added 11 points, eight Bonaventure in a win over rebounds and four assists UMass. for Arizona (21-0, 8-0 PacNo. 22 Memphis 69, UCF 12), off to the program's best 59: ORLANDO, Fla. — Joe start in conference play in Jackson scored 17 points and more than a decade. Chris Crawford and Michael Arizona is one of three un- Dixon added 12 each for beaten teams left in Division Memphis as they beat CenI, joining No. 2 Syracuse, tral Florida. which also won Wednesday Penn St. 71, No. 24 Ohio night. Fourth-ranked Wichi- St. 70: COLUMBUS, Ohio ta State hasn't lost either. — D.J. Newbill hit a pull-up Powell and Josh Huestis jumper over A aron C r aft each scored 13 points for with 2 seconds left in overStanford (13-7, 4-4), which time for Penn State as the Nitoutshot Arizona 38 percent tany Lions beat Ohio State. to 36 percent. Arizona State 89, Caiiforered once more.

"For 38 minutes, I thought

we were right there," Stanford coach Johnny Dawkins said. "Credit A r izona f or making the plays they had to make atthe end. Nick John-

son stepping up, whether

nian 78: BERKELEY, Calif. — Jahii Carson scored 11 points in overtime and Arizona State got another

big game out of transfer Jermaine Marshall to help the Sun Devils beat California.

Bulls 96, Spurs 86 CHICAGO (96)

Dunleavy3-0 4-610, Boozer6-124-416, Noah 5-120-010,Augustim6-171-215, Butler7-0 4-519, Gibson6-103-415, Hinrich4-82-211, Snell0-20-0 0,Mohammed 0-00-00.Totals37-8318-2396.

SANANTONIO(86) Jeffers0-1 0-00, Duncan7-143-417, Ayres0-1

0-00, Parker8-173-320, DeColo 3-6 1-18, Belinelli 40 2211, Diaw1-4224, Joseph34228, Mills 5-110-012,Baynest-t 2-24, Bonner1-10-02. Totals 33-71 15-1686. Chicago 21 19 28 28 — 96 SanAntonio 15 21 25 25 — 86

Clippers110, Wizards103

33

WASHINGTO NI103)

Ariza 6-161-1 13,Nene7-15 0-1 14, Gortat4-4 0-0 8, Wall7-125-619, Beal8-154-6 20, Webster

3-8 0-0 9,Booker3-6 0-2 6, Seraphin 5-t 0-0 to, Templ2-40-1 e 4, PorterJr. 0-00-0 0. Totals45-88 10-17 103.

L.A. CLIPPERS (110) Barnes2-70-04, Griffin 12-205-829,Jordan4-5 6-1014, Collison5-9 6-616, Redick7-0 3-4 20, Crawford4-120-1221, Dudley2-20 05, Green0-6 0-0 0, Turkoglu0-1 1-21, Hollins0-0 0-00. Totals 36-73 32-42 110. Washington 31 2 023 29 — 103 LA. Clippers 30 3 2 19 29 — 110

MarcioJose Sanchez IThe Associated Press

Stanford forward Dwight Poweil (33) grabs a rebound next to teammate Josh Huestis (24) and Arizona forward Aaron Gordon (11) during the first half of Wednesday night's game in Stanford, Calif. Arizona held on to beat Stanford 60-57.

COLLEGE ATHLETICS

In a first, Northwestern Universi players seek unionization By Ben Strauss

been filed on behalf of Colter and his team-

New Yorh Times News Service

mates to seek union representation.

"The same medical issues that professional

ball season.

athletes face are the same medical issues colleOne week,severalplayersaround the coun"College athletes need a labor organization giate athletes face, except we're left unprotect- try, including Colter, wore wristbands with

CHICAGO — The increasingly contentious and complicated relationship between the that can give them a seat at the table," Huma NCAA and its top amateur athletes took ansaid, adding, "This ends a period of 60 years other step toward a legal showdown this week when the NCAA has knowingly established a when a group of Northwestern University foot- pay-for-play system while using terms like 'stuball players appealed to the National Labor dent-athlete' and 'amateurism' to skirt labor Relations Board with the first effort by college laws." athletes to join a labor union. Although payment of players at Football Kain Colter, Northwestern's starting quarter- Bowl Subdivision programs and Division I basback last season, was joined by Ramogi Huma, ketball universities has become a thorny issue the president of the newly formed College Ath- given the billions of dollars generated by the letes Players Association, and Leo W. Gerard, sports, Colter said medical care — particularly the president and political director of United expenses after graduation — was his biggest Steelworkers, to announce that a petition had concern.

ed," Colter said. "The NFL has the NFLPA, the NBA has the NBAPA, and now college athletes

have the College Athletes Players Association." The NCAA issued a rejoinder in a statement

by its chief legal officer, Donald Remy. "This union-backed attempt to turn student-athletes into employees undermines the

purpose of college: an education," Remy said. The labor law dispute may come down to

the initials APU, which stands for "All Players

United." During the Bowl Championship Series title game, Huma and the NCPA flew a banner over Rose Bowl Stadium that read, "Wake Up, NCAA."

The national labor board's regional Chicago office will hold a hearing and rule if Northwestern football players are employees, a decision that can be appealed to the federal board in

Washington. If they are eventually deemed emees, or some hybrid. ployees, the ruling would apply to all other FBS This week's announcement came after a se- players at private universities, according to the whether college athletes are students, employries of attention-seeking acts during the foot-

steelworkers' union.



C5 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

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4Q '12 4 Q '13

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NorthwestStocks

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based on trailing 12 months' results

NAME

Dividend: none Source: FactSet

Eye on Exxon Exxon Mobile reports fourthquarter earnings today. The company, which produces oil then refines and sells finished products such as gasoline, has been making less money refining oil into fuel. Refining margins collapsed last year as gasoline prices declined because of ample supplyand moderate demand. Wall Street anticipates Exxon's latest quarterly earnings declined from a year earlier.

Economic barometer The U.S.economy grew ata solid 4.1 percent annual rate from July through September. That was the fastest pace since late 2011, however few expect that gain to be repeated in the fourth quarter. Economists forecast that the economy grew at a 3.3 percent annual rate in the last three months of the year. The Commerce Department issues its advance report on how much the economy grew in the fourth quarter today.

Alaska Air Group Avista Corp Bank of America Barrett Business Boeing Co Cascade Baacorp ColumbiaBokg ColumbiaSportswear CostcoWholesale Craft Brew Alliance FLIR Systems Hewlett PacKard Home Federal Bocp ID Intel Corp Keycorp Kroger Co Lattice Semi LA Pacific MDU Resources Mentor Graphics Microsoft Corp Nike Ioc 8 NordstromInc Nwst Nat Gas PaccarIoc Planar Systms Plum Creek Prec Castparts Safeway Ioc Schoitzer Steel Sherwin Wms StaocorpFocl StarbucksCp Triquiot Semi Umpqua Holdings US Baocorp Washington Fedl WellsFargo & Co Weyerhaeuser

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140

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D 52-week range $28.81~

+4.6 +69 . 8 59 9 1 1 0. 8 0 +0.4 +15. 4 32 0 18 1. 2 2 +7.1 +46 . 0126196 17 0 . 04 T -12.9 +108.7 72 33 0 . 7 2f T -4.9 +87.9 11111 23 2.92f T -4.6 -29.1 46 5 T -4.7 +3 1.4 2 2 6 2 1 0 . 48f T -5.8 +5 0.3 5 0 26 1. 0 0f T -5.7 +12.8 2328 2 4 1 . 24 T -2.3 + 165.2 1 03 c c L +6.9 +36 . 7 1 0 18 21 0 . 3 6 L +3.7 +73. 7 13300 11 0 . 5 8 T -3.0 +11.4 4 6 dd 0.2 4 T -4.9 +22.6 26722 13 0 . 90 T -4.1 +43.2 13495 13 0 .22 T -7.6 +34.0 7558 1 2 0 . 66 L t 6.6 +26. 4 70 3 84 T -5.2 -13.3 291 9 10 L + 2.9 +41 . 7 54 4 4 8 0 . 71f T - 13.4 +21.7 6 3 0 2 3 0 . 1 8 T -2.0 +33.4 50942 14 1 . 12 T -8.7 +35.0 5218 2 4 0 .96f T -8.3 + 7 . 0 2 087 1 5 1 . 20 T -4.1 - 6.6 19 3 1 9 1 . 84 T -4.4 +21.4 1770 18 0.80a L +0 4 +61 1 58 dd T -7.2 -2.1 1423 32 1 . 76 T - 6.1 +36.7 9 7 3 2 2 0 . 1 2 T -3.9 +65.6 3095 1 7 0 . 80 T -16.7 - 4.3 26 1 d d 0 . 75 L t 3.1 +18. 0 99 7 2 6 2. 0 0 T -5.6 +63.1 2 9 3 1 4 1 . 10f T -8.7 +33.5 7922 3 0 1 . 04 T -0.6 +60.5 3152 dd T -5.7 +47.0 1668 20 0.60a T -1.6 +2 4.9 13864 13 0 . 9 2 T - 5.5 +32.3 3 5 8 1 5 0 . 40 L +0.4 +34. 2 20258 12 1 . 2 0 T -3.3 + 4 . 9 2 860 2 7 0 . 88

Boeing shares sank 5 percent Cempany showed that profit rose 26 percent Wednesday after the aerospace Spetiight as it delivered more commercial and defense company said airplanes. 2014 revenue and profit would be lower Boe i ng finished 2013 with a than analysts expected. fourth-quarter profit of $1.23 billion, or The company said so-called "core" $1 . 61 per share, well ahead of the earnings, which exclude certain items, e x pectations of analysts surveyed by would be $7 to $7.20 per share, on Fact S et. Profits grew in both its revenue of $87.5 billion to $90.5 billion. c o mmercial airplane and defense Analysts had been expecting a profit of b u sinesses. $7.52 per share on Revenue rose 7 percent to $23.79 revenue of $92.72 billion. b i llion. That news overshadowed For all of 2013, Boeing earned $5.96 Boeing's fourth-quarter results, which p e r share on revenue of $86.62 billion.

BA

N D 52-week range $4 3.85

$73.73~

Wednesd a y's close: $129.78

52-WEEK RANGE

J $ 144 .57

Vol.:30.9m (3.2x avg.) PE: 18.7 Volc16.0m (3.6x avg.) PE: 2 3 .1 Mkt. Cap:$54.25 b Y i e ld:2.9% Mkt.Cap:$97.52 b Yield: 2.2% TUP Close:$79.18 V-4.59 or -5.5% The seller of plastic storage containers said its fourth-quarter profit rose 20 percent, but the company issued a weak outlook. $100 90 80

Freescale Semi. FSL Close:$1755 %2.25 or 14 7% The chip maker posted an adjusted fourth-quarter profit and issued strong revenue guidance for the current quarter. $18 16 14

N

J

D

873.57 ~

52-week range $97.14

Vol.:2.5m(5.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$4.01 b

J

D

N

52-week range $12 35~

$ 18 27

PE:1 6 .6 Volc12.0m (9.2x avg.)

P E: . . . Yield: ...

Yiel d : 3 .1% Mkt. Cap: $4.21 b

American Airlines

AAL Close:$32.98L1.02 or 3.2% A RaymondJames analystupgraded the airliner's stock to "Outperform" from "Market Perform," citing the overall strength of the industry. $35

Yahoo

YHOO

Close:$34.89T-3.33 or -8.7% The Internet company's results for

the fourth quarter showed that it is still struggling to boost its advertising

revenue. $45 40

30

35

25 20

N

D

J

D

52-week range $24.41~

52-week range $33.45

Vol.: 22.7m (3.1x avg.) Mkt. Cap:$24.93b

$18.31 ~

$41.72

P E : 30.5 Vol3 67.0m (3.9x avg.) Yield:... Mkt. Cap:$35.39 b

PE: 29.1 Yield: ...

EZPW Cirrus Logic CRUS Close:$11.25 %1.90 or 20.3% Close: $17.28V-1.46 or -7.8% The pawn shop operator said its The chip maker's fiscal third-quarter first-quarter net income fell 27 pernet income fell 39 percent and it precent, but its adjusted earnings beat dicted disappointing revenue in its Wall Street expectations. January-to-March quarter. $20 $25

Ezcorp

15

20

10

N D 52-week range

Vol.:4.6m (7.0x avg.) Mkt. Cap: $577.63 m

J $22 .55

N D 52-week range $15.45~

J $ 28.88 P E:7.9

PE: 1 0.6 Vol28.8m (3.7x avg.) Yie ld: ... Mkt. Cap: $1.1 b

Yield: ...

SOURCE: Sungard

InterestRates

SU

HIS

The yield on the 10-year Treasury fell to 2.68 percent Wednesday. Yields affect rates on mortgages and other consumer loans.

AP

NET 1YR TREASURIES YEST PVS CHG WK MO QTR AGO

3 -month T-bill 6-month T-bill

. 0 4 .0 5 -0.01 L . 0 6 .06 ...

52-wk T-bill

.09

.10

2-year T-note . 3 2 .3 4 5-year T-note 1.50 1.56 10-year T-note 2.68 2.75 30-year T-bond 3.62 3.67

BONDS

T

-0.01 T

T T T

-0.02 T -0.06 T -0.07 T -0.05 T

T T T T

.28 L .88 L 2.00 T 3.19

~

.06 .11 .13

NET 1YR YEST PVS CHG WK MOQTR AGO

Barclays LongT-Bdldx 3.42 3.48 -0.06 T T Bond Buyer Muni Idx 4.89 4.89 . . . T T $73 145 Barclays USAggregate 2.36 2.38 -0.02 T T Price-earnings ratio (Based on trailing 12 month results):22 PRIME FED Barclays US High Yield 5.60 5.61 -0.01 L T Y TD return: -4% 3-Y R*: 25% 5-YR*: 30% 10-Y R*: 14% An n . dividend: $2.92 D i v. yield: 2.2% RATE FUNDS Moodys AAA Corp Idx 4.48 4.48 ... L T *Annualized AP Total returns through Jan. 29 Source: FsctSet YEST3.25 .13 Barclays CompT-Bdldx 1.72 1.77 -0.05 T T 6 MO AGO3.25 .13 Barclays US Corp 3.14 3.16 -0.02 T T 1 YRAGO3.25 .13 AmdFocus SelectedMutualFunds

Boeing (BA)

0

PCL 42.71 o — PCP 180.06 ~ S WY 18.97 ~ SCH N 23.07 ~ 3 SHW 153.94 ~ S FG 37.96 ~ SBUX 52.52 ~ TQNT 4.31 ~ UM P Q 11.45 ~ 1 U SB 31.99 ~ WA F D 15.79 ~ 2 WF C 3 4.52 ~ 4 W Y 2 6.38 ~

L L L

Boeing

Close:$129.78%-7.31 or -5.3% The aircraft maker said its fourthquarter profit rose 26 percent, but its 2014 revenue and profit forecast was lower than expected. $150

45

$3.22~

5%

3 — 2.8

N KE 53.27 ~ J WN 52.16 ~ N WN 39.96 ~ PCAR 45.81 ~ P LNR 1 52 ~

76. 7 4 - 2 .79 - 3.5 T L 28.2 9 +. 1 0 + 0 .4 T L 17.4 2 16 . 68 -.05 -0.3 L L 102.2 0 80 . 7 7-2.24 -2.7 T T 144. 5 7 12 9.78 -7.31 -5.3 T T 7.18 4.99 +.0 3 + 0.6 L T T 8.5 6 26.20 -.65 -2.4 T 0.0 4 7 4.16 -2.45 -3.2 T T 26 .12112.23 -2.15 -1.9 L T 18.70 16. 8 5 - 1 .16 - 6.7 T T 34.19 3 2. 1 8 -.51 -1.6 T L 30.13 29 .82 + . 02 +0.1 L L 6.03 14.46 -.15 -1.0 T T T 27.1 2 2 4. 6 8 -.22 -0.9 T 14.14 1 2. 8 7 -.09 -0.7 T T 43.85 3 6. 5 3 -.12 -0.3 L T L 6.07 5.85 -.04 -0.7 T 22.55 1 7.5 5 -.13 -0.7 L T 31.63 31 .45 -.14 -0.4 L L 24.31 2 0. 8 4 -.14 -0.7 T T 38.98 36. 6 6 + . 3 9 +1.1 T T 80.26 7 1.7 7 -.94 -1.3 L T 63.72 56.7 0 - 1 . 53 - 2 .6 T T 46.55 41.0 8 +. 0 4 +0 .1 T T 60.1 7 5 6. 5 4 -.26 -0.5 L T 2 93 2 55 - .06 -2 3 T L 54.6 2 43 . 16 - 1.41-3.2 L T 274. 9 6 25 2.96 -2.73 -1.1 T T 36.90 3 1. 2 9 -.33 -1.0 L T 3.3 2 27.23 -.44 -1.6 T T 198. 4 7 18 9.12 -2.56 -1.3 T L 69.11 62. 5 5 - 1 .10 - 1.7 T T 82.50 71. 5 6 - 2 .33 - 3.2 T T 9.05 8.29 -.07 -0.8 T T 9.65 1 8. 0 4 -.07 -0.4 T T 41.86 3 9. 7 6 -.78 -1.9 T T 4.3 5 22.00 -.58 -2.6 T T 6.8 4 45.59 -.37 -0.8 L L 33.24 3 0. 5 4 -.19 -0.6 L T

DividendFootnotes:a - Extra dividends werepaid, ttut are nct included. tt - Annualrate plus stock. c - Liquidating dividend. 8 -Amount declaredcr paid in last t2 months. f - Current annual rate, whichwasincreased bymost recentdividendannouncement. i —Sum cf dividends paidafter stock split, co regular rate. I —Sumcf dividends paidthis year.Most recent dividend wasomitted or deferred. k - Declared or paidthis year, acumulative issue with dividends in arrears. m — Current annualrate, which wasdecreasedbymost recentdividend announcement. p — Initial dividend, annual rate not known, yield not shown. r —Declared cr paid ic preceding t2 months plus stock dividend. t - Paid in stock, approximate cash value cn ex-distrittuticn date.PEFootnotes: q —Stock is a clcsed-end fund - nc P/E ratio shown. cc —P/Eexceeds 99. dd - Loss ic last t2 months.

O

Annualized GDP

MDU 22 .67 — o M EN T 1 3.21 ~ MSFT 2 7 .10 ~

82.08 29.26

DOW

Close: $44.73L1.67 or 3.9% The chemical maker raised its quarterly dividend to 37 cents per share from 32 cents per share and boosted its share-repurchase program. $50

Tupperware

52-WK RANGE c CLOSE Y TD 1YR V O L TICKER LO Hl C LOSE CHG%CHG WK MO QTR %CHG %RTN (Thous)P/E DIV A LK 45.77 ~ A VA 25.18 ~ BAC 10 . 98 t -t B B SI38 .15 ~ BA 7 3 .00 ~ C A C B 4 . 66 ~ COL B 19.56 ~ 2 COLM 47.75 ~ 8 COST 98.95 ~ 1 B R EW 6.33 ~ F LIR 23.00 ~ HPQ 16 . 03 — 0 HOME 10.84 ~ 1 INTC 20.10 ~ K EY 9 .14 ~ K R 2 7 .46 ~ LSCC 4.17 ~ L PX 14.51 ~

Q Q Q4

1.3660

The Standard & Poor's 500 index slumped Wednesday for the fourth time in the last five days. Stocks were down throughout the day. The declines accelerated after the Federal Reserve said it will continue to pare back its bond purchasing program, which is meant to boost the economy. Investors worry that the slowdown will mean foreign investors will pull out of emerging markets, hurting their currencies and stocks. The sharp sell-off hitting developing-world stocks has also hurt the U.S. and other developed markets. Of the 10 sectors that make up the S&P 500, nine fell Wednesday. The sharpest drops came from consumer stocks.

15,500 .

EURO/

'Q 5

Dow Jones industrials

16,000

1,700

CRUDEOIL $97.36 /

Q5

Close: 15,738.79 Change: -189.77 (-1.2%)

16,500:

.

1,750

1,650 '."

SILVER $19.53/

GOLD $1,262.20 ~

10 YR T NOTE 2.68%

1,774.20

L T L T L L L

2.76 3.99 1 90 . 5.62 3.87 1 13 . 2 81 .

AP

PERCENT RETURN Yr RANK FUND N AV CHG YTD 1YR 3YR BYR 1 3 5 AmericanFunds BalA m 23.8 5 - . 1 8 2.3 +14.2 +11.6+15.1 A A A CaplncBuA m 56.75 -.43 3.1 +8.1 +8.6+12.2 C A C CpWldGrlA m 43.88 -.42 3.2 +15.5 +9.7+15.8 C C C EurPacGrA m 47.19 -.47 3.8 +11.4 +5.9+14.6 C 8 8 FnlnvA m 49. 8 6 - .56 4.1 +19.7 +12.6+18.5 C C 8 iShEMkts 1330434 37.78 -.55 GrthAmA m 41.85 -.47 2.7 +23.9 +14.0+18.6 8 8 C BkofAm 1261963 16.68 -.05 BlackRockIatl0ppA m BREAX IncAmerA m 20.21 -.12 2.1 +11.5 +10.6+15.1 C A A 8 iPVix rs 721541 46.45 +2.90 InvCoAmA m 35.50 -.29 3.3 +21.6 +12.8+16.7 8 C 0 SiriusXM 673536 3.59 -.04 VALUE B L EN D GR OWTH NewPerspA m36.12 -.43 3.8 +16.2 +10.8+17.6 8 8 8 Facebook 671807 53.53 -1.61 WAMutlnvA m38.82 -.44 3.6 +21.0 +14.8+17.4 8 A 8 SPDR Fncl 631764 21.01 -.25 IShJapan 604001 11.62 -.01 Dodge &Cox Income 13.7 1 + .83 +1.3 + 2.0 + 4.7 +7.3 A 8 8 o p EMC Cp 600083 24.65 -.73 IntlStk 4 1.30 - . 3 0 -4.0 +15.5 +7.2+18.3 A A A iShR2K 552739 111.34 -1.63 Stock 162.9 2 -1.27 -3.5 +26.8 +15.7+20.6 A A A Fidelity Contra 92.66 -1.12 -3.6 +23.9 +14.5+18.9 8 8 C Gainers GrcwCo 116 . 82 -1.51-2.0 +29.0 +16.7+22.8 A A A NAME L AST C H G %C H G LowPriStk d 47.83 -.19 -3.3 +23.2 +15.1+22.0 8 A 8 Fidelity Spartan 500 l dxAdvtg62.92 -.64 -3.9 +20.1 +14.0+18.5 C 8 8 CSVLgNGs 41.28 + 10.05 + 3 2 .2 500ldxlostl 62 . 92 -.64 -3.9 + 20.2 N A N A C Astrotch h 3 .67 +.75 +25 . 7 «C ProSUltNG 62.70 + 11.03 + 2 1 .3 53 FraakTemp-Frank li o IncomeC m 2.41-.81 -1.3 +8.2 +8.3+14.7 A A A Vringo 4 .79 +.82 +20 . 7 IncomeA m 2. 39 . .. -0.8 +9.3 +9.0+15.5 A A A Ezcorp 1 1.25 + 1 . 9 0 +2 0 .3 Intl I 25.77 -.83 -2.1 +18.9 +11.1+22.7 A A A Co Oakmark HorizPhm 1 0.05 + 1 . 5 5 +1 8 .2 RisDivA m 18 . 75 -.19 -4.9 +14.4 +11.4+14.8 E 0 E Morhingster OwnershipZone™ Oppeoheimer TaozRy g 2 .12 +.31 +17 . 1 RisDivB m 16 . 77 -.17 -5.0 +13.4 +10.4+13.8 E E E Ku6Media 3 .47 +.47 +15 . 7 OeFund target represents weighted RisDivC m 16 . 67 -.17 -5.0 +13.5 +10.5+14.0 E E E Freescale 1 7.55 + 2 . 2 5 +1 4 .7 average of stock holdings SmMidValAm 42.85 -.44 -3.4 +24.5+10.1+18.7 8 E 0 DirGMnBull 2 4.36 + 2 . 8 7 +1 3 .4 • Represents 75% of fund's stock holdings SmMidValB m36.89 -.38 -3.5 + 23.4 +9.2+17.7 8 E E Losers CATEGORY Foreign Large Blend T Rowe Price Eqtylnc 31.6 2 - . 2 8 -3.7 +17.8 +12.6+18.4 0 C A NAME LAST CHG %CHG MORNINGSTAR GrcwStk 51.8 2 - . 74 - 2 .9 +29.6 +16.5+21.9 A A A RATING™ * ** * t y HealthSci 60.8 3 - . 51 +3.9 +45.2 +31.1+28.3 8 A A -20.96 -38.8 Galectin un 33.10 CSVlnvNG 3 . 29 -1.50 -31.3 ASSETS $809 million Vanguard 500Adml 163.68 1.67 -3.9 +20.1 +14.0+18.5 C 8 8 -1.70 -27.4 PrognicsPh 4.50 500lnv 163.67 1.67 -3.9 +20.0 +13.9+18.4 C 8 8 EXP RATIO 1.58% PrUShNG rs 37.48 -9.97 -21.0 CapOp 46.22 -.38 +0.1 +32.3 +16.0+21.5 A A A MANAGER lan Jamieson -3.04 -15.7 Corpbanca 16.35 Eqlnc 28.58 -.20 -4.0 +17.7 +15.6+18.6 0 A A SINCE 2011-12-01 IntlStkldxAdm 26.86 -.20 -4.1 +6.6 +3.6 NA E E RETURNS 3-MO +0.8 Foreign Markets StratgcEq 29.10 -.28 -3.0 +28.4 +17.6+23.1 A A A YTD -2.7 TgtRe2020 26.62 -.13 -1.8 +10.3 +8.4+13.5 A A B NAME LAST CHG %CHG 1-YR +14.6 Tgtet2025 15.40 -.10 -2.2 +11.6 +8.9+14.4 8 8 C -28.31 -.68 Paris 4,156.98 3-YR ANNL +6.1 TctBdAdml 10.69 +.82 +1.4 0.0 +3.6 +4.8 C 0 E London 6,544.28 -28.05 -.43 5-YR-ANNL +15.0 Tctlntl 16.86 -.12 -4.1 +6.5 +3.6+13.7 E E C -70.18 -.75 Frankfurt 9,336.73 TctStlAdm 44.98 -.47 -3.7 +21.3 +14.3+19.5 8 A A Hong Kong22,141.61 +1 80.97 + . 82 TOP 5HOLDINGS PCT TctStldx 44.96 -.47 -3.7 +21.1 +14.1+19.4 8 8 A Mexico 40,689.90 +28.97 + . 07 Novartis AG 2.54 Milan 19,337.42 -110.90 -.57 USGro 27.58 -.36 -3.9 +23.3 +14.8+18.8 C 8 C 2.33 Tokyo 15,383.91 +403.75 +2.70 Roche Holding AG Welltn 37.29 -.19 -1.7 +13.1 +10.6+14.3 A A B 2.32 Stockholm 1,310.13 -8.28 -.63 SOFTBANKCorp Fund Footnotes: t$Fee - covering marketcosts is paid from fund assets. d - Deferredsales charge, cr redemption 1.94 fee. f - front load (salescharges). m - Multiple feesarecharged, usually amarketing feeandeither a sales or Sydney 5,240.60 +52.60 +1.01 Anheuser-Busch InbevSA Zurich 8,135.81 -50.81 -.62 BNP Parihas 1.85 redemption fee.Source: Morningstar.

BlackRock Int'I is a top performing foreign blend fund, but MarhetSummary Morningstar says it needs to Most Active show it can overcome its above NAME VOL (80s) LAST CHG average expenses in different S&P500ETF 1829337 177.35 -1.72 market climates.

FAMILY

Commodities

FUELS

The price of natural gas surged to its highest settlement level since 2010. It was the seventh time in the last eight days that the price of gas rose. Gold and silver also rose.

Crude Oil (bbl) Ethanol (gal) Heating Oil (gal) Natural Gas (mmbtu) UnleadedGas(gal)

Foreign Exchange

MAJORS CLOSE CHG. %CHG. AGO USD per British Pound 1.6567 -.0011 -.07% 1.5759 Canadian Dollar 1.1 160 +.0009 +.08% 1.0023 USD per Euro 1.3660 -.0004 -.03% 1.3486 -.81 -.79% 9 0 .69 JapaneseYen 102.06 Mexican Peso 13. 3 713 +.1182 +.88% 12.7226 EUROPE/AFRICA/MIDDLEEAST Israeli Shekel 3.4842 -.0151 -.43% 3.7282 Norwegian Krone 6 . 1670 +.0362 +.59% 5.4948 South African Rand 11.2673 +.2238 +1.99% 9.0416 Swedish Krona 6.4 5 8 4 + .0367 +.57% 6.3689 Swiss Franc .8942 -.0036 -.40% . 9 219 ASIA/PACIFIC 1.1438 +.0037 +.32% .9556 Australian Dollar Chinese Yuan 6.0559 +.0049 +.08% 6.2290 Hong Kong Dollar 7.7641 -.0007 -.01% 7.7586 Indian Rupee 62.425 -.100 -.1 6% 53.656 Singapore Dollar 1.2764 +.0020 +.16% 1.2343 South KoreanWon 1077.54 -2.06 -.19% 1083.30 -.06 -.20% 2 9.49 Taiwan Dollar 30.30

The dollar sank against the Japanese yen but held relatively steady against the euro after the Federal Reserve said that it would continue to trim its bond-buying stimulus

program.

55Q QD

METALS

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

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD -1.1 97.36 97.41 -0.05 -4.2 1.83 1.77 +0.11 3.18 3.12 + 1.92 + 3 . 4 5.56 5.03 +1 0.41 +31.4 2.66 2.63 +1.26 -4.5

CLOSE PVS. 1262.20 1251.00 19.53 19.48 1406.40 1407.70 3.27 3.29 710.25 715.60

%CH. %YTD + 0.90 + 5 .0 + 0.26 + 1 . 0 - 0.09 + 2 . 6 -0.53 -5.0 -0.75 -1.0

AGRICULTURE Cattle (Ib)

CLOSE PVS. %CH. %YTD 1.42 1.43 - 0.34 + 5 . 6 Coffee (Ib) 1.17 1.15 + 2.14 + 5 . 8 Corn (hu) 4.28 4.32 - 1.04 + 1 . 3 Cotton (Ih) 0.86 0.84 + 1.42 + 1 . 1 Lumber (1,000 hd ft) 351.50 351.20 +0.09 -2.4 Orange Juice (Ih) 1.38 1.39 - 0.50 + 1 . 1 Soybeans (hu) 12.69 12.86 -1.26 -3.3 -8.9 Wheat(hu) 5.52 5.66 -2.56 1YR.


© www.bendbulletin.com/business

THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

BRIEFING

in u

Smartphoneshit 1 billionmilestone For the first time,

more than1 billion smartphones were shipped worldwide in a single year, according to a report this week by IDC. A total of 1.004

billion smartphones were shipped to vendors in 2013, meaning phone makers sold those devices to wireless carriers, retailers or directly to their customer. The 2013 figure is up 38.4 percent from the 725.3 million smartphones that phonemakers shipped in 2012. — From wire reports

Fed officials that the economy is finally poised for faster growth after years of false starts and setbacks.

By BinyaminAppelbaum New York Times News Service

WASHINGTON — The

Federal Reserve announced Wednesday another $10 billion cut in its monthly bond purchases in a statement that "growing underlying strength in the broader economy."

growth "picked up in recent quarters," indicating the Fed's optimism about the

in March.

strength of the economy was

The Fed did not change its forward guidance that it

2011. The Fed said it would ex-

intends to keep benchmark short-term interest rates near

zero "well past the time"

not shaken by a recent run of lackluster economic data, including the December jobs report. The statement also made no

That is causing problems in

unanimous decision since

that the unemployment rate

mention of the recent turmoil

falls below 6.5 percent. The rate stood at 6.7 percent in

in emerging markets. The Fed's pullback is contributing to a global shift in investments as people who

ing led by Ben S. Bernanke, who will step down as Fed

after a two-day meeting of the Fed's policymaking commit-

pand its holdings of Treasury and mortgage-backed securities by $65 billion in February, down from $75 billion in January and $85 billion each

tee, reflected the optimism of

month last year. It added that

The statement, published

ur

pullback, suggesting a similar cut is likely at its next meeting

It was the committee's first

attributed the decision to

n it was "likely" to continue the

December. The statement said that

chased higher returns in foreign markets look forward to the return of higher interest rates in the United States.

investment. This was the last Fed meet-

ing the central bank for eight years.

Citigroup to let junior bankers be ofI on Saturdays

REDMOND

TODAY • Sixth Annual Center for

EconomicResearchand Forecasting Business Conference:Presentation of the regional economic forecast; registration required; $85, individual; $800, table of10 people; 7-11:30 a.m.; The Riverhouse Convention Center, 2850 N.W. Rippling River Court, Bend; 541-389-3111 or www.eventbrite.

By William Alden New York Times News Service

Memo to junior bankers at Citigroup: You can soon

join your friends at other Wall Street banks in tak-

com/e/central-oregon-

ing Saturdays off. Citigroup said internally Wednesday that rt

economic-forecast-and-

business-conference-

registration-9451109523 • Project Management

was making an effort to

ProfessionalExam

• For the complete calendar, pick up Sunday'sBulletin or visit bendbugetln.com/bizcal

depend heavily on foreign

chairman Friday after lead-

BEST OFTHE BIZ CALENDAR

Preparation:Prepare to take the exam to become a certified Project Management Professional; registration required; $289; 8:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. • ReStore signunveiling: The Bend AreaHabitatfor Humanity will display the new sign for the ReStore and provide virtual tours of the new facility; registration suggested;11 a.m.; Bend AreaHabitat for Humanity ReStore, 224 N.E. Thurston Ave.; 541-385-5387 x104 or rcooper©bendhabitat.org. MONDAY • iPad forBusiness: Discover ways to useiPads to work moreefficiently; registration required; $69; 9 a.m.-noon; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. TrentonAve.,Bend; 541-383-7270. • Build YourWebsite with Dreamweaver:Learn to create awebsite with Dreamweaver; registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; COCCChandler Building, 1027 N.W.Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7270. TUESDAY • Beginning InDesign: Learn to useAdobe InDesign to create singlepage advertisements and fliers to complex multipage color publications; registration required; $89; 1-4 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.CollegeW ay,Bend; 541-383-7270. • What's Brewing?Bend's Town Hall:Building Bend: What have we learned and where are weheaded? Presented bythe Bend Chamber ofCommerce; $15 for members, $20 for nonmembers; 5 p.m.; Volcanic Theatre Pub,70 S.W. Century Drive, Bend; 541-323-1881 orwww. bendchamber.org/chamberevents/whats-brewingbends-town-hall-tbd-2/ WEDNESDAY • BusinessStart-upClass: Learn to run abusiness, reach your customers, find funding options, calculate amount needed to start and legalities involved; registration required; $29; 11 a.m.-1 p.m.; Central Oregon Community College, 2600 N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7290. • Hewto Select theRight FranchiseWorkshop: Learn whether franchise ownership is right for you, how to choose afranchise and arrange financing; registration required; free; 6-9 p.m.; COCC Chandler Building, 1027 N.W. Trenton Ave., Bend; 541-383-7290.

countries like Turkey that

improve the lives of the analysts and associates in its investment bank, the

Andy Tullis i The Bulletin

Employees fill single-serving oatmeal containers in the recently expanded Straw Propeller gourmet foods facility in Redmond.

two lowest employee levels in that division. Those junior bankers are now encouraged to stay out of the office from 10 p.m. on Friday through 10 a.m. on Sunday. Citigroup also said Wednesday that junior bankers were expected to

Local oatmealcompanynow onAmazon By Joseph Ditzler The Bulletin

REDMOND — Straw Pro-

peller is turning much faster today than it did when the gourmet oatmeal company lifted off in its founders' kitchen in September 2011. Now the company, which employs about 20, is poised to climb to higher altitudes

shops around Central Oregon. Company sales grew an-

"In terms of retail, no doubt about it," said Jim

other 500 percent in 2013 over

Kress, a business professor

the previous year, said Julie

at Central Oregon Commu-

Leutschaft, vice president of

nity College. "Amazon has changedthe marketplace.

manufacturing operations. "People are willing to spend more for good nutrition and low calories; something you don't have to take the time to prepare," she said. Bartelson said Straw Pro-

online. For about two weeks,

its Blueberry Blitz, Peaches & Berry Bramble and Cherry Chia oatmeal flavors, along with its 12 other offerings, havebeen availablethrough

peller's largest distributor is a Salem company, Spring Valley Dairy, and its products are still available in local coffee shops. Its distinctive

single-serving cups are Until June 2011, the proavailable in grocery stores ductionlinebegan and ended like Whole Foods and Ray's, in Patricia Bartelson's kitchat Harry 5 David gourmet en, where her sons, Caleb and gift stores, and elsewhere. They're also available Ethan, worked a DeWalt heat gun to seal the see-through through the company webtops of 12-ounce portable site, www.strawpropeller cups of gourmet oatmeal. gourmetfoods.com. Amazon.com.

Bartelson started off distrib-

peller, with input from its employees, also developed new products, like gluten-free oatmeal and muesli, and fur-

Amazon has made it possible

ther variations on its staple, gourmet oatmeaL

for a small company to sell their products to anybody, anywhere."

New Yorkers love this," she sard.

"We offer a curry oatmeal.

provements in online search engines. Ten years ago, an online search for oatmeal

increase its order. She said

might yield a familiar brand like Quaker Oats. But today, a search engine localizes to

the first automated line within weeks and eventually ex-

local area. "Combined with

bodes well.

said that junior bankers

should take four days off a month, on the weekends. While these guidelines might seem like punishment to workers in other

she's not sure what to expect in terms of sales, but the company is ready if they escalate the Internet service provider quickly. Plans are to install and returns results in the

industries, they are intend-

Amazon, that allowed people like Straw Propeller to play in the game against some major manufacturers, Kraft Foods, or whatever," he said. — Reporter: 541-617-7815,

nue, ships 60,000 to 90,000 12-ounce cups every month,

whenever possible, while JPMorgan Chase plans to ensure that young employees have one "protected weekend"setasideforrest Credit Suisse recently discouraged analysts and associates from working on Saturdays, while Bank of America Merrill Lynch

nesses also benefit from im-

sales take off, Amazon will

analysts take weekends off

each month.

Kress said small busi-

Straw Propeller started off with one Amazon distribution center in Chattanooga, Tenn., Bartelson said. If

pand into its entire building. The company, housed in a three-bay space in a business park on Umatilla Ave-

But a move to Amazon

uting her product to coffee

Leutschaft said. Straw Pro-

take all of their annual vacation days. The new policy follows similar moves by some of the biggest banks on Wall Street. Goldman Sachs recommended last year that

jditzler@bendbulletin.com

ed as a bit of relief for Wall Street's junior bankers, who regularly work into the wee hours and sometimes around the clock. For

these employees, weekend work is common. The potential conse-

quences of such a grueling schedule came into focus

UIC houseprices surge to highest since2008 By Emma Charlton

"It is evident that the

December to 176,491 pounds ($293,000), the most since

Bloomberg News

LONDON — U.K. house

April 2008, the Swindon,

prices rose for a 13th month in January to their highest

England-based lender said in a report Wednesday. That's

level in almost six years as the

more than the 0.6 percent in-

economy gained momentum, Nationwide Building Society

creaseforecastby economists in a Bloomberg survey. From a year earlier, prices climbed 8.8 percent, the biggest annual

sald.

The average cost of a home advanced 0.7 percent from

increase since May 2010.

the Bank of England to end

strength in house prices is spreading," said Howard Archer, an economist at IHS Global Insight in London. "This can only fuel concern that a new housingbubble could really develop in 2014." He forecasts home values will increase about 8percent this year. Surging prices prompted

support for home loans un-

der its Funding for Lending Scheme in November. BOE Markets Director Paul Fisher

said last week that sharply rising values are a potential source of financial instability

and officials "should not risk adding policy oil to that particular fire."

after the death of a 21-yearold intern in the London

office of Bank of America Merrill Lynch last year. His death was determined

to have been caused by epilepsy, and unconfirmed reports on social network forums suggested that he had worked through three consecutive nights as part of the internship. Analysts and associ-

ates should not try to get around the new rules by working from home, Citigroup said in its memo.

PERMITS City of Bend • Michael A. Hasenoehrl, 3438 N.W. Bryce CanyonLane,$272,990 •GW LandAcquisitionsLLC,2990 N.E. Dogwood Drive, $214,239 •W estBend PropertyCompanyLLC, 1889 N.W.Hartford Ave., $240,153 • Creative RealEstate Solutions, 2272 N.W. Lakeside Place,$193,954 • Peter C. Adams, 19054 Mt. McLoughlin Lane, $362,142

• High Returns LLC,61402 S.W. Sunbrook Drive, $264,564 •WestBend PropertyCompanyLLC, 2446 N.W.Drouillard Ave., $233,672 •WestBend PropertyCompanyLLC, 1875 N.W.Hartford Ave., $207,997 • ML Bend U.S.A. Limited Partnership, 20705 N.E.Comet Court, $290,669 Deschutes County • John and MeganHanson, 65675 OldBend Redmond Highway,Bend

$257,119 • Joann J. Hubbard, 63689 Scenic Drive, Bend $174,284 • Nancy G. andJohn B. Revocable Living Trust,19007 Baker Road,Bend $219,647 • Mary A. Meyer, 69350 Buckhorn Road, Redmond$223,028 • Terry and Shari Iverson, 2012 Osprey Drive, Redmond$425,280 • Ronald C. Ellson, 18738 Choctaw

Road, Bend$270,000 • Parsons Construction, 64850 Bill Martin Road, Bend$279,629 • Hank Elliot, 60140 Cinder Butte Road, Bend$204,913 • Bella Villa HomesCorporation, 56185 Sable RockLoop, Bend $439,921 • Casey Miller, 19440 Randal Court, Bend $424,200 • Ernest G. Oliver, 18802 River Woods

Drive, Bend $225,327 • Dennis A. and Mary M. Bryson 2455 Condor Drive, Redmond$320,000 •JoanneE.and Bruce R.Fournier, 18670 Macalpine Loop, Bend $612,317 City of Redmond • Hayden HomesLLC, 3383 N.W. Cedar Ave., $241,802 •HaydenHomes LLC,2403 N.W.Glen Oak Ave., $168,592


IN THE BACK ADVICE Ee ENTERTAINMENT W Health Events, D2 Fitness, D3 Nutrition, D4 THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

O www.bendbulletin.com/health

State to

Cooking up some cancer

MEDICINE Dentist Peter Yonan

help repay loans of rural docs

descrlbes how u

an oral appliance works to move the

lower jaw

• It wouldn't be crazy to giveup grilled, smoked or fried food

forward

to open a patient's airway

• Health care providers who accept Medicaid patients will haveportion of student loan forgiven

while he or

she sleeps.

• Experts warn that dentists should notdiagnoseandtreat the condition directly

By Tara Bannow

By Brian Palmer Slate

The Bulletin

Grilling meats is an

It's no secret that low-

American tradition, but it's not the healthiest thing to

income patients who rely on Medicaid don't always have an easy time getting in to see a health care provider. bursementrateproviders receive for

do. A growing body of research suggests that cooking meats over a flame is linked to cancer. Combusting wood, gas or charcoal emits chemicals known as polycyclic aromatic hydro-

treatingpa-

carbons. Exposure to these

Given the lower reim-

M ONE Y

tients covered by the program relative to

NUTRITION c alled

that of private insurance,

PAHs

not all providers agree to see Medicaidpatients.

is known to cause skin, liver, stomach and several

Those who do often place

other types of cancer in lab

limits on the number they'll see. "Even if you have an insurance card, that doesn't mean someone is going to see you," said Lisa Dodson, director oftheOregon

animals. Epidemiological studies link occupation-

Area Health Education

nitrated PAHs, or NPAHs. NPAHs are even more

al exposure to PAHs to

cancer in humans. When PAHs from a flame mingle with nitrogen, say from a slab of meat, they can form

Centers at Oregon Health & Science University.

carcinogenic than PAHs in laboratory experiments.

The reasonable conclusion is that grilling meat may be

"Even if you have an insurance card,

hazardous to your health.

The evidence linking cancerto cooking meat

that doesn't mean

someone is going to see you."

over a combustion source

Photos by Andy Tullis/The Bulletin

Oral applianms like thisone treat sleepapnea bymovingthe lowerjawforward, opening the airway sopatients canbreathe more

has been accumulating for decades. Epidemiologists

easily during sleep. Pictured is the Suad device made by Detroit-based Strong Dental, which is sold at Awbrey Dental in Bend.

— Lisa Dodson, director of the Oregon Area Health Education Centers

first noticed a connection

between the consumption of smoked foods and

By Tara BannoweThe Bulletin

stomach cancer in the

The problem could intensify once an estimated 240,000 newly eligible Oregonians are covered under the program — known here as the Oregon Health

Plan — by 2016 following its expansion, a component

ny p a t i ent who walks through the

jumping into the business of screening for and treating sleep

doors of

A w brey apnea, a medical condition, has skyrocketed in the past decade. even if just for a Many patients who don't respond cleaning — gets a to traditional treatment benefit questionnaire asking them how from oral devices dentists provide. well they're sleeping. But experts are concerned that D ental in Be nd -

Dentist Peter Yonan, who owns the clinic, screens all of his pa-

created such aprogramin anticipation of its Medic-

more often than they see their

aidexpansion,said M arc Overbeck, director of the Oregon Health Policy and Research's primarycare office. The Medicaid Primary Care Loan Repayment Program, being administered

physician," he said. "So if a den- disciplined any licensees, but it tist can participate in a patient's has made its stance clear: Dentists health in that we might screen for cannot diagnose sleep apnea, and things and make referrals to phy- they can't treat the condition unsicians, ultimately, we're taking less it was diagnosed by a medical better care of our patients." doctor. The p r oportion o f de n t ists SeeApnea/D5

Act. In preparation for the increased Medicaid population, Oregon's health care

leaders are rolling out a program that will pay off a portion of some providers'

studentloandebtifthey agree to treat Medicaid patientsin underserved areas

of the state. Oregon is the only state in the countrythat has

gastric cancer research.

Newer studies suggest that eating smoked meats may

some dentists are overstepping

their bounds in this area that blurs tients for obstructive sleep apnea, the lines between medicine and a condition that causes breathing dentistry, a trend that could ultito be interrupted during sleep, pro- mately harm patients in the long ducing gasping or snorting noises. Snoring is a common symptom. The Oregon Board of Dentistry If untreated, it can increase the has issued warnings to dentists it risk of heart attack, stroke or high has caught diagnosing and treatblood pressure. ing sleep apnea directly, a practice If Yonan's screenings show the that's outside the legal scope of patient likely has sleep apnea, he dentistry. Screenings like Yonan's sends the patient to a sleep physi- are permissible — and increasingcian for an official diagnosis. ly common — but only a medical "People may see their dentist doctor can officially diagnose the

of the Affordable Care

1960s. Japan, Russia and Eastern Europe, where smoking is a popular way to preserve meat and fish, became laboratorie sfor

lead to cancer even outside the gastrointestinal tract. A 2012 study, for example, linked smoked meat

consumption with breast cancer. In subsequent decades, '+es ttV

it has become clear that smoking isn't the only problematic cooking method. Frying bacon, for example, produces significant levels of PAHs, probably due to volatilization of carbon in the bacon itself.

An Iranian study published last year found that people

condition. The board so far hasn't Dentist Peter Yonan, of Awbrey Dental in

who develop certain kinds

Bend, describes howthe oral appliance works to movethe lower jaw forward to open

of gastrointestinal cancers are more likely to have a diet high in fried rather than boiled foods. SeeCancer/D4

a patient's airway while he or she sleeps.

Sleep apnea occurs when apatient's airway is blocked during sleep.

by OHSU'sOffice of Rural Health, includes a total of

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$4 million that will be doled out quarterly over the next

twoyears — after which point, it's up to the Legislature to determine whether

more money should be poured into the program. It was originally mandated as part of the $1.9billionthe state will receive from the

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D2 THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014

HEALTH BRIEF St. Charles wants volunteers ceive the combination study for COPDstudy drug, the long-acting beta-agSt. Charles Health Sys- onist only, the corticosteroid tem is seeking chronic ob- only or a placebo (inactive structive pulmonary disease drug). (COPD) patients to particiIndividuals may qualify for pate in a n ationwide study the study if they: that will test the long-term • Have a diagnosis of modbenefits of a new drug de- erate COPD signed to reduce heart and

lung complications. COPD, the third leading cause of death in the U.S., is

a common lung disease that makes it difficult to breathe. The drug that's being studied is designed to relax the airways in the lungs by combining a long-acting beta-ago-

• Have a history or risk of

heart disease • Are between the ages of 40 and 80

• Are a current or former cigarette smoker In addition to the medica-

tion or placebo, participants will receive medical care and

nist with a corticosteroid in an

procedures required by the study in addition to usual care.

inhaler.

The study is expected to last

Participants in th e study,

which will take place at 1,100 sites around the country, will

be randomly assigned to re-

three to four years. For more information, call Kevin Sherer at 706-3732. — Tara Bannow

HEALTH EVENTS LIVING LIFEWITHOUT FEAROF FALLING:Learn simple techniques for home safety and strengthening to decrease fall risk; free, refreshments provided, registration requested; 3-4 p.m. Thursday; High Desert Assisted Living Community, 2660 N.E. Mary Rose Place, Bend; 541312-2003 or www.prestigecare.com. YOGA ARM BALANCEWORKSHOP: A four-week series to learn the fundamentals to achieve arm balances; $45 for series or $15 per drop-in; 11:30 a.m.-12:45 p.m. Saturday; Juniper Yoga, 369 N.E. Revere Ave., Suite 104, Bend; 541-389-0125. READY, SET,REGISTER: Schedule your 2014 race and training calendar; free, registration requested; noon Saturday; FootZone, 842 N.W.Wall St., Bend; 541-317-3568 or www. footzonebend.com. "SLEEPWELL WORKSHOP": Learn proven sleep and relaxation techniques; bring pads and pillows

to lie on; $36 in district, $49 out of district; registration required; 5:30-7 p.m. Monday; Bend Senior Center, 1600 S.E. ReedMarket Road; 541-388-1133 or www. register.bendparksandrec.org. LIVING WELLWITH CHRONIC CONDITIONS:Learn a healthier way of living for people with ongoing health conditions; $10 includes the book, "Living a Healthy Life with Chronic Conditions," registration required; 2:30-5 p.m., Tuesdays Feb. 4 through March11; Deschutes County Health Building, Stan Owen Room, 2577 N.E. Courtney Drive, Bend; 541-322-7430 or www. livingwellco.org. DIGESTION: GATEWAY TO HEALTH:Part of the Healthy Living Series; $15, registration required by Feb. 7; 10:30 a.m.-noon Feb. 14; Central Oregon Community College, 2600N.W.College Way, Bend; 541-383-7270 or www.cocc.edul community-learning.

MONEY SURVEY

Nedical billsareaburdenfor morethan1 in4 families, CDCsays A crushing medical bill can causemoney problems not just for a cash-strapped patient but for his or herentire family. New data from theCenters for Disease Control and Prevention showthat more than1 in 4 U.S.families recently experienced a financial burden due tothe cost of medical care. Among Americans whoparticipated in the National Health Interview Survey in 2012, 8.9 percent said theywerecurrently having problems paying amedical bill and another 7.6 percent said they hadbeenin that situation sometime in theprevious 12 months. In addition, 21.4 percent of those surveyed said theywere inthe process of paying off a medical bill over anextended period of time. Altogether, 26.8 percent of people reached by theinterviewers said they experienced sometype of financial burden due to medical bills in the previous year, according to a report releasedTuesday

by the CDC'sNational Center for Health Statistics. Not surprisingly, the lower afamily's income, the greater the oddsthat someone in the family had trouble paying amedical bill. Among families with incomebelow 139 percent of the federal poverty level, 26 percent hadbeen inthat boat sometime in the last year; amongfamilies with incomes that were atleast 400 percent of the federal poverty level, only 6.4 percent faced that problem. Having kids also madefamilies more vulnerable to medical bills that were beyond their reach. For instance, among adults who werepart of a family with at least one child, 12.1percent had a bill they could not payand29.8 percent were paying off a bill over time. Amongsingle adults living alone, those figures were71 percent and14.7 percent, respectively. Another risk factor washaving evenone family memberwithout health insurance.

ec noo to a

Among adults in families in whichsome people wereinsured andothers werenot, 46 percent experiencedsometype of financial burdendueto the cost of medical care. Thingswereslightly better for families that werecompletely uninsured39.7 percent of adults in suchfamilies told interviewers theyhada medical-related financial burden. But even in families in which everyone had health insurance (either public or private), about 21 percent of adults surveyed suffered financially due to medical bills, according to the study. Family members often benefit by pooling their incomesand expenses, noted Robin CohenandWhitney Kirzinger, the authors of the report. "However, when one family memberexperiences a financial burden of medical care, the entire family may be at risk for financial burden," they wrote. — KarenKapian,LosAngeles iimes

er roe in care

By Marni Jameson Orlando Sentinel

It's looking to be the year of the consumer in health

care, say leaders and visionaries in the industry.

New technology, changes in the market and the Affordable Care Act will

allow more consumers to bid good-bye to some of the most frustrating parts

of a troubled health care system. Waiting hours to see the doctor, taking

How to submit Health Events:Email event information to healthevents©bend bulletin.com orclick on"Submitan Event" atwww.bendbulletin.com. Allow at least10 daysbeforethe desired date of publication. Ongoing class listings must beupdated monthly andwill appear at bendbulletin.com/healthclasses.Contact: 541-383-0358. People:Email information about local people involved in health issues to healthevents@bendbulletin.com. Contact: 541-383-0358.

hand-written p r e scriptions to th e p harmacy while sick, chasing down medical records, and being left in the dark about what care will cost are all

inconveniences that will soon go the way of the phone booth.

"The big trend is toward

c onsumerism, w i t h

DISPATCHES As of January,OregonState University Counseling Clinics in Bend and LaPinewill have morethan 30 counselors-in-training toserve clients14 and older withmentalhealth concerns. Thecounselors include practicum and internship students enrolled in the Masters of Science

in Counseling program andwill be supervised by anon-call faculty member. Theclinics are free. For more information about the clinic and clients served, contact Dr. RyanReese at 541-322-2021 or ryan.reese© osucascades.edu.

Incentive

cant pool after taking that person's county and practice site

Continued from 01 The program's rules don't specify a certain number of

through the eligibility criteria. The strength of the program, Dodson said, is that although it

recipients who can be chosen,

onlyrequiresproviders topracnor do they specify the exact tice in their designated area amount of money they'll re- for two years, it's designed to ceive. There is an award limit, allow people to work in areas however, of 20 percent of the that are a good match for them. provider's unpaid student loan Providers must designate a balance or $35,000 per year specific clinic or hospital on for three years with a possible their application that they've option of extending the pay- been employed with within ment for two additional years. the past two years or have an The first round of recipients agreement to begin practicing will be announced March 1. there within 120 days, which The formula for how they're opens the door for students chosen is based on the propor- completing their residences. tion of their patient population Unlike the 1990s TV series that relies on Medicaid, the "Northern Exposure," about a proportion of their county's fish-out-of-water New York docpopulation that's Medicaid-eli- tor forced to practice in a small gible and their county's health Alaska town to meet his student professi onal shortage area debt obligations, these providers (HPSA) score. An HPSA is an will practice in areas th~e area that's federally-designat- chosen or have aheady proven ed as having a shortage of pri- to fit well in, Dodson said. "You can't just put any old mary care medical, dental or mental health providers. Des- person down in Prineville or ignations, which include scores La Hne and make them hapthat measure the severity of py," she said. the shortage, can be among This way, the hope is that certain populations, such as providers stick around even low-income, homeless or mi- after their money runs out, she grant farm workers. HPSAs sard. have been determined to exist The financial reward for in all but two Oregon counties. providers who practice in ruMost of Deschutes County, ral or underserved areas tends for example, is not considered tobelesscompared with urban to have a medical HPSA, but areas,Overbeck said.It's also Jefferson County does. Crook well-established that physiCounty contains a medical cians who practice specialized HPSA for l o w-income resi- care — like cardiology or derdents. When it comes to men- matology — generally make tal health and dental, all three more money than those who Central Oregon counties con- go into primary care, he said. tain some form of HPSAs.

It's too early to tell whether the program will beef up services for Central Oregon's Medicaid patients, as the pro-

"Part of why this is import-

the health care workforce in

a way that gives us the best shot at ensuring population

to specific counties, Dodson

health," Overbeck said.

select providers from the appli-

Ricardo Ramirez Buxeda/Orlando Sentinel

OSPICE

where mirrors reflect resi-

benefits.

dents' health statistics and As privacy and security kitchen computers help bugs get worked out, electronthem plan smart meals.

ic medical records will deliver

Virtual care

many patient benefits, said Suhtling Wong, spokeswom-

As more t echnology an for a University of Central goes home with patients, Florida College of Medicine more can be in touch with program that is helping local health providers remotely. physicians adopt paperless reFor the Paul family of Lake cord systems. Nona, a telehealth program For instance, all of a pathrough Nemours Chil- tient's doctors can share lab dren's Hospital in Orlando results, allowing for more lets them view their son's coordinated care and less dumedical records any time

plication of testing. Because

from home. Nine-year-old pharmacists will get more preMax, who has cystic fibro- scriptions electronically, pasis, is a frequent patient of tients will be spared the hassle

ant is to provide the incentives so we're helping to distribute

gram doesn't direct the money said. Rather, its leaders will

th e

individual customer being Lori Paul, right, sits with her son Max Paul, 9, at their Orlando, Fla., home. The Paul family uses a comthe new focal point," said puter and smartphone to log into Max's health records. Max has cystic fibrosis. Technology brings Pat Geraghty, chairman them faster answers and lessens anxiety in waiting for test results. and CEO of BlueCross and BlueShield of Florida. "The big trend is toward consumerism, with "Previously, th e s y stem Nemours Children's Hospital. was built around the care Being able to see her son's the individual customer being the new focal provider. The new system test results the minute they are w ill r evolve around t h e available helps lessen Mom point. Previously, the systemwas built around the care provider. The new system will revolve consumer." Lori Paul's anxiety. Karen van Caulil, presiRemote access is also allow- around the consumer." dent of the Florida Health ing more patients to receive — Pat Geraghty, chairman and Care Coalition, agrees: care when and where it's con"All the turmoil we've gone venient for them. Programs CEO of BlueCross and BlueShield of Florida through is good news for like Microsoft's Skype and consumers," she said, re- Apple's FaceTime let patients ferring to a year when have virtual doctor's visits of taking them in and waiting quality ratings of providers, as America's health care sys- from home. for them to be filled. insurers make that data availtem underwent a historic At Orlando Regional MedIn addition, electronic re- able on their websites. That overhaul. ical Center, certain patients cords allow doctors to more knowledge will help consumHere are some improve- who once would have been easily log into patient records ers determine value and be m ents t ha t w i l l ma k e admitted are receiving hos- after hours and help patients better shoppers, while helping health care better for pital-level care at home. The who need answers on eve- to keep provider costs inline. consumers: doctors make h ouse calls, nings and weekends. Bringing care to the streets and in between, videoconferMobile apps encing and telemonitoring of A window into cost, quality Speaking of shopping, in " Mobile health is a n vital signs make more acute Transparency is another 2014, more consumers will get emerging, exploding cat- in-home care possible, said buzz word i n t h e i n dustry, their care at the corner store. egory that lets consumers hospital spokeswoman Kena thanks in part to the Afford- "Wal-Mart aspires to be the track their activity, fuel Lewis. able Care Act. Consumers leading primary-care providc onsumption an d o t h e r Patients who meet the new will increasingly be able to er in the next 10 years," Germeasurements that help program's criteria take home see more information that's aghty said. "Walgreens has improve wellness and man- a camera and computermon- eluded them, such as how started to develop primary age chronic diseases," said itor, as well as equipment to much procedures cost and the care sites." Thad Seymour, general monitor vital signs remotely. manager of health and life They avoid hospital infections, sciences for Orlando's Lake while getting convenient care Nona community, home in the comfort of their home. of the Medical City and a growing health-centric Electronic records community. Though many consumers o f Re d m o n d Wellness technology is have had concerns about the also becoming embedded sharing of electronic health Serving Bend, Redmond, Sisters & All of Central Oregon in homes, such as the Intel- records, this year patients ligent House in Lake Nona, might grow to appreciate the we are committed to the quailtyofilfefor our

— Reporter: 541-383-0304, tbannow@bendbulletin.com

clients and their families. Working closely with your doctor, we offer: t Immediate eValaetiOn & admiSSiOn uPOn

referral fifappropriateJ + A small team appraach ibrpersonalized care 4 ACCeSS24g7tO RegiStered NuaeS

t Care & supportin the comibrt ofpour home Your Hospice Team Registered Nurses Bereavement Coordinator Medical SocialWorkers Veterans' Advocate Hospice Aides SpiritualCounselor Licensed Therapists Trained Volunteers Transitions HOME Program Coordinator

Ask for us by name.

Weekly Arts Sr Entertainment ••

The B ulletinIG LGAZI5E

541.548.7483 732 SW 23rd St.Redmond OR 97756 hospiceobendcable.com vu w w hospiceofredmondorg


THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

D3

FITNESS ROAD TO FITNESS

Despite age orfitness level, yogacanbenefit everyone Cox Newspapers More than ever, yoga is capturing the interest of people of all ages, regardless of fitness level. Good for the mind, body andspirit, yoga is probably best known for its ability to help increase flexibility and reduce stress. There is noneedto be athletic or in great shape to practice yoga, and experts will tell you that it can be aseasy or asdifficult as you choose to makeit. Yoga, when practiced on aregular basis, provides asense of awareness of the body's strengths andweaknesses, which can then beaddressed at your own pace.

Proper breathing, andvarious positions, or asanas asthey are called, are used in yogafor the purpose of releasing tension and tightness throughout the body. Just as with strengthening the muscles, the idea is to build flexibility slowly over time. Yoga can be included as part of an overall fitness plan, burning an average of about 250 calories per hour. It's been said that you don't have to be spiritual to practice yoga, but if you practice yoga, you will probably end up finding yourself a little more spiritual. Yogabelongs to all religions, and it helps people to get in touch with their spiritual side.

rid the body of toxins that might have been released during class. Remember tohavefun with yoga; it should besomething youlookforward to. It has thepower to makeyou feel relaxed, yet energizedlongafter you roll up your matandgoonaboutyour day. Hot yoga offers different types of yoga classes that take place in a heated room, which in somefacilities can be close to100 degrees. Theidea is that the extra heat mayenhance flushing of toxins and promote greater flexibility by allowing for a deeper stretch. — Marjie Gilliamis a personal trainer and fitness consultant.

The 'exhalationspuat'

The hurpee

Perfect

Even the meditation side of yoga is not religious in nature. Meditation is just another way quiet to quiet the mind, reduce stress and promote self-awareness. Themoreyou practice yoga, the calmer youbecome. BASIC GUIDELINES First and foremost, always use nose breathing throughout all exercises inyoga.Yogashouldalsobe practiced on anempty stomach. Experts routinely advise drinking adequate amounts of water, and this is especially important with exercise. It is thought that consuming plenty of water after a yogasession can help

Thinkstock

Pushup

Continued from D1 "People have multiple goals that are important to t hem

individually — e ndurance, strength, muscle tone, mortality,

f u n ctional c a pacity,

competitiveness. They're all very reasonable," said Levine, whose physical activities include tennis, cycling, rowing, skiing, jumping rope and running. cYou get yourself in more

trouble worrying whether one is better than the other," he

said, "rather than how to work a variety into your life." But that doesn't mean a

committed fit person doesn't have favorites. So we asked D allas-area t r a iners

w h at

they'd deem as the most (or

at least c l osest-to) perfect exercise.

They stressed to learn proper technique; otherwise, the

exercise can do more harm than good. Plus, they agreed

The plank

that you need to make them p art — no t al l — o f y o u r

workout.

The lunge The pro: Lee Goggin, personal trainer at SWEAT gym.

The reason:It uses a large number of muscles and joints, strengthening h a mstrings, glutes, quadriceps, hip adductors, ankles, knees and hips. It can be done anywhere

Downward-facingdog Photos by Brad Loper / Dallas Morning News

Jonathan Pylant demonstrates a series of "perfect" exercises

recommended byDallas-area personal trainers.

and is one of the most versatile

exercises you can have in your toolbox, he says.

'

ei

How to do it:Stand straight,

Additionalmovements

hands on hips. Bending your right knee, take a big step for-

If you're looking for more cardio, Molly Setnick, co-owner of Crowbar Cardio of Dallas, Texas, recommends rowing. "As a full body exercise, it's one of the top calorie-burners out there, yet puts very little stress on the joints. It's a low-trauma, high-reward exercise," she said. Yolanda Alameda, of the Dallas YMCA,suggests stair-climbing for its "cardio, strength, stamina andendurance" properties. Walking, of course, almost always figures in, especially if you incorporate hills as well asvarying levels of intensity.

ward so your knee is over the

middle of your foot; do not bring your knee past your toe. Keeping your back straight and shoulder blades pulled together, lean forward. Pretend an imaginary line is connecting the dots from chest to knee to heeL When you're in position, push up on your right leg slowly into standing position, keeping your foot flat on the ground. Make the motion

smooth, stand up, repeat on the other side. Variations: Do them going up stairs. Or hold a weight or kettle bell in the opposite hand of your bent leg.

Pushup

ders); posterior chain (back, glutes, hamstrings); core (front and back); and legs, he says. Adding a push-up also helps work arms; specifically, the triceps. How to do it:Stand straight,

arms at sides. Bend your The pro: Ryan Lehman, k nees an d l e a n fo r w a r d personal trainer and Pilates slightly, putting your hands instructor at Studio 6. on the ground in front of The reason:It's an "essential you. Keeping your moves as exercise" that works the full smooth as possible, kick your body — shoulders, arms, core, legs behind you so you're in legs, he says. plank position. Add a push-up How to do it: Position your if you'd like, then kick your body on the floor so your el- legs so your knees are under bows are bent, your hands un- you. Throw your arms above der your shoulders, your legs your head and jump, returnback and your belly drawn in. ing to starting position. Slowly lower yourself to the Variation: While in plank ground and use your arms to position, with l egs either push yourself up. straight or bent, add a pushVariations: Keep elbows up. To tone it down a little, wide or t i ght; h ands w i de instead of kicking both legs or together. Or stagger your back,move one atatim e.

standing position. The exhalation squat helps open your hip flexors, which can help prevent such issues as knee and prostate problems, he says. Variations: Use a countertop or chair for balance.

boot camps. (Further support comes from theartofman l iness.com w ebsite,

w h i ch

calls burpee "the one exercise to rule them alL") The reason: It works four major areas of the body: the front region (chest and shoul-

:-=HotYoga Heal, Strengthen,Correct Relax SafelyYourMind &Body 541-383-6525 /2115 NE Hwy20

The reason: It generates core strength in the abdominals, hip flexors and back. With a few tweaks, it can be versatile. How to do it: Get in pushup

position, keeping your body in a straight line and your elbows straight. "Make sure you are pulling your belly button in and that your head and neck are in correct alignment. Hold

The burpee director of D-FW and San Antonio C a m p Gl a d i ator

knees to 90 degrees, you "turn

Keeping your hands where the legs into a strength-burnthey are, push your hips to ing furnace." Or extend one a 45-degree angle upward. leg to the sky to create a balYou're tryingto get into thepo- ance challenge. Repeat with sition of an inverted V which, other side.

sonal trainer at SWEAT.

How to do it: To do this variation on a traditional squat,

exhale completely. Then, holding your arms straight in front of you and keeping your feet shoulder-width apart, bend your knees as you lower your body. Go as deeply as you can, keeping your feet flat on the ground and knees facing forward. Then use your pelvis, not your quadriceps, to raise your body to

position with unbent elbows.

The pro: Erin Bedell, per-

other. Modify by doing them on your knees or off a countertop. Make them tougher by using only one arm or leg, or clap between each. Or pulse your arms up and down, up and down. The pro: Jonathan Pylant,

she says, "may take awhile." Variations:By bending your

The plank

for 30 seconds and build up to a minute." Variations: Bend your elThe exhalat ion squat bows, lower to your forearms Thepro:Bill Neal, professor and hold. "From there, the posof physical education at Rich- sibilities are endless: planks land College. with leg lifts, plank to pushup The reason: You're using position, planks with hip raisyour center of gravity, he says. es," she said. "That's your power source."

hands so one is lower than the

knees are bent. Howto do it: Start in plank

Downward-facingdog

The pro:Shannon Caldwell, yoga instructor. The reason: I t of fe r s strength, flexibility and balance, plus "gives a quick flush of circulation to the entire body as well as waking up the brain," she said. It strengthens the arms and shoulders,

My Friends House; Children's Grief Support Group Tuesdays, February zj - March z5, 2o1zj 5:30 to 7:00 pm Through art, music and play, children focus on feelings, coping strategies, and identifying positive support. The adult focus is on understanding the unique needs of the children and ways to help and suppOrt. FOrregistratiOn, please callEileen GrOver, 5$1-382-5882.

Community Education Series Friday, February 21

s

NOOn tO1:OO Pm •

www. partnersbend.org

opens the chest, stretches the

legs from glutes to the Achilles tendon, even when the

Panel Discussion: Home Health, Home Care, Hospice, Transitions 0 What are the differences in these programs? Partners In Care J 0 How are theyaccessed? Who pays forthem? 2075 NE Wyatt Court 6 How does Medicare, Medicaid, and even Bend, OR 97701 veteran-benefits play into the equation? 541-382-5882 For additional details and to RSVP, call(541) 38Z-5882

' •





ON PAGES 3&4: COMICS & PUZZLES M The Bulletin

Create or find Classifieds at www.bendbulletin.com THE BULLETIN • THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • •

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contact us:

hours:

Place an ad: 541-385-5809

Fax an ad: 541-322-7253

Business hours:

Place an ad with the help of a Bulletin Classified representative between the

Includeyour name, phone number and address

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1 7+

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208

208

210

242

255

262

266

267

Pets 8 Supplies

Furniture & Appliances

Exercise Equipment

Computers

Commercial/Office Equipment & Fixtures

Heating & Stoves

Fuel & Wood

Jack Russell T errierG ENERATE SOM E purebred puppies, 2 fe- EXCITEMENT in your males left! Tri-colored, neighborhood! Plan a rough coat, 1st shot, garage sale and don't avail now, $550 each. forget to advertise in 541-576-4999 / 536-4115 classified! Cockatiels, lovebirds, (Summer Lake, OR) 541-385-5809. 205 parakeets, and finch. Labradors AKC -4 left! Breeders and babies Whites & yellows, shots, Items for Free Find exactly what call for availability and wormed, health/ hip guar. you are looking for in the prices. Everything Queen bed, box spring 541-536-5385 CLASSIFIEDS must go including & mattress. You haul. www.welcomelabs.com cages! 541-279-3578 541-678-5605 Maltese-mix white male Oak Futoncouch, mat208 Dog crate double door, puppy, $450. In Ma- tress w/cover. $100. 24", new, $24 or best dras, 503-881-8541 541-420-4303 Pets & Supplies offer. 541-316-0062 POMERANIAN PIJPS Sofa beautiful Ethan The Bulletin recom- Donate deposit bottles/ tiny male & tiny female Allen 8', exc. cond. 1 black, 1 wolf/sable. $2700 new, reduced cans to local all vol., mends extra caution $995. 541-593-4099. Call 541-390-2468 when purc has- non-profit rescue, for or 541-383-3995. feral cat spay/neuter. ing products or ser212 Cans for Cats trailer QueenslandHeelers vices from out of the Antiques 8 at Bend Petco; or doarea. Sending cash, Standard & Mini, $150 nate M-F a t S mith Collectibles checks, or credit in& up. 541-280-1537 Sign, 1515 NE 2nd; or www.rightwayranch.wor f ormation may b e at CRAFT, Tumalo. subjected to fraud. dpress.com 5' Showcase, oak Call for Irg. quantity For more informapickup, 541-389-8420. Rodent control special& glass, w/slidtion about an adverwww.craftcats.org ists (barn cats) seek ing doors, $475 tiser, you may call work in exchange for the O r egon State 541-382-6773 German Shepherd safe shelter, f ood, Attorney General's pups, parents on site. water. We d e liver! Office C o nsumer wanted: tools, Ready now! $500 ea. FREE. 541-389-8420. Antiques Protection hotline at furniture, marbles,early Due to family illness 1-877-877-9392. B/W photography, we must find homes Rottweiler pups, $400 for toys, decoys, jewelry. males; $350 for fefor parents as well. The Bulletin 541-389-1578 servfngcentral oreyons/nceferr Only serious inquiries males. 541-923-2437 please. 541-280-2118 WANTED Miniature Mid-Century Unique Adopt a rescued kitten poodle puppy. Call or cat! Fixed, shots, 541-892-0933 or ID chip, tested, more! 541-891-8791 Rescue at 65480 78th Yorkie pups AKC, 2 boys, St., Bend, Thurs/Sat/ 2 girls, potty training, UTD Sun, 1-5, 389-8420. www.craftcats.org shots, health guar., $600 HAVANESE PUPPIES & up. 541-777-7743 Head 8 Footboard, Aussies, Mini AKC AKC, Dewclaws, UTD with wood-grain look, red/blue merles, blue shots/wormer, non-shed, 210 double size has no eyes, parents on site. hypoallerqenic, $850 Furniture & Appliances side rails. Could be 541-598-5314 541-4500-1277. repurposed into a garden bench, or a Border Collie/New Zeal- Heeler puppies with u nique item. U s e and Huntaway pups, great tails, 8 w k s $ 175. A1 Washers&Dryers $150 ea. Full waryour imagination! dogs, working parents, 541-390-8875 ranty. Free Del. Also Askmq $75. $350. 541-546-6171. wanted, used W/D's 541-419-6408 541-280-7355 The Bulletin reserves the right to publish all ads from The Bulletin newspaper onto The Bulletin Internet website. 280

286

Estate Sales

Sales Northeast Bend

** FREE ** Garage Sale Kit

Place an ad in The Bulletin for your garage sale and receive a Garage Sale Kit FREE! KIT INCLUDES:

• 4 Garage Sale Signs • $2.00 Off Coupon To Use Toward Your Next Ad • 10 Tips For "Garage Sale Success!"

PICK UP YOUR GARAGE SALE KIT at

Armoire for sale, Cherry/wrought iron Perfect condition, handmade, solid wood. 69"x39"x23.5". $650. kcaravelli ©gmail.com

B ar stools, 3 oak i n good cond., $75/all 541-678-5605 USE THE CLASSIFIEDS! Door-to-door selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell. The Bulletin Classified 541 485-5809

1777 SW Chandler Ave., Bend, OR 97702

The Bulletin ServingCentral Oregon since 19to

Kearney St. Boutique Closing! Final four days, a/i Sales Southwest Bend fixtures& furniture are an additional 50'/0off MOVING SALE Starting January 28-31. Queen pillow top bed, First come,first serve. Broyhill dresser 8 nite 541-382-8131 s tands, o a k de s k , 355 NE Kearney L-shape desk, four bar 292 stools, Sony 38" TV, small antique furniture Sales Other Areas pieces, Kenmore HD front load W/D s et, NOTICE kitchen items, decor, Remember to remove lots garage items, yard your Garage Sale signs 8 outdoor, collectibles, (nails, staples, etc.) plants, office i tems, after your Sale event storage cabinets, lots is over! THANKS! misc! Fri. 8 Sat., 9-4 From The Bulletin numbers Fri., 8 a.m. and your local utility Take Brookswood to companies. River Rim to I 9412Charleswood. The Bulletin servfngcentral oreyons/ncefee Attic Estates & Appraiswww.bendbulletin.com als, 541-350-6822 284

9g $0

Pets & Supplies Chihuahua 5 mo. old male, needs y ard. Free! Call anytime except Mon. mornings. 541-389-9977

Carpenter Estate Sale 2205 NE Wintergreen Dr., Bend Fri-Sat, 9-4 Sale is in gated community; no entrance until 8am. Early sign-in at front door. 3 bedroom home 8 garage. Very nice furniture, decor & household items! See descriptions & pix at farmhouseestate sales.com Household, tools, furniture, vintage. Thurs 8 Fri., Bam-4pm. 15880 Elderberry Lane, La Pine. Follow yellow signs. Just bought a new boat? Sell your old one in the classifieds! Ask about our Super Seller rates! 541-385-5809

A v e . , • B e n d • O r e gg n

76" tall, 56" wide, Oak

with 2 glass shelves on top, 3 cabinets below, 2 pull-out shelves lined in velvet for silver & other accessories. Lighted, beautiful & classic design. $500. 541-504-2623 or 541-504-3860

Rit itd,X JJCotl¹tgtl CrrrlcrJPt Dagllpt

Visit our HUGE

home decor consignment store. New items arrive daily! 930 SE Textron, Bend 541-318-1501 www.redeuxbend.com

The Bulletin

Shrviny CentralOrerron sincetSB

240

Crafts & Hobbies AGATE HUNTERS

Polishers • Saws •

h •

• •

Repalr 8r Supplles h

J

h

241

Bicycles & Accessories

T HE B U LLETIN

requires computer advertisers with multiple ad schedules or those selling multiple systems/ software, to disclose the name of the business or the term "dealer" in their ads. Private party advertisers are defined as those who sell one computer.

Life Fit R91 Recumbent BikeAbsolutely like new with new batteryoperates perfectly! Clean, always housed inside home. $2100 new; selling for $975. Great Christmas gift! 541447-2227

Craftsman Tools:

• 10" Stationary radial arm saw, Model ¹315.220100, $375. • 10" Stationary table saw w/guide rails, model ¹315.228590, $325. • 6-1/8" Jointer planer "Professional" model ¹351.227240, $250 obo. Call 541-504-6413 daytime hours.

USE THE CLASSIFIEDS!

Mason 8 Hamlin Baby Grand Piano. Beautiful black lacquer finish. Still under warranty. A great Christmas Gift! $25,000 (orig. $47,000) swingroll61 ©gmail. com 541-312-2425

The Bulletin Classified 541-365-5809 245

Golf Equipment

Mint condition upgraded senior shafts, head covers &new grips. Drivers: Ping G10 13.5 T-Made Super fast 12 degree. Hybrids: Cobra DWS 4-5-6 irons; Cleveland HB 3, 7-8-9 and P/W; Ping G156 iron green dot; Cleveland XLi S/W, I/I/edges: Ping G15, gap S/W, lobb. 951-454-2561 246

Guns, Hunting & Fishing CASHI! For Guns, Ammo & Reloading Supplies.

541-408-6900 Private party wants to buy WWII M1 carbine, 1911 pistol & accessories. 541-389-9836 Taurus PT 24/7 G2, .45 cal, $425. 30-40 Krag, $150. 541-610-6019

BULLETIN CLASSIFIEDS Search the area's most comprehensive listing of classified advertising... real estate to automotive, merchandise to sporting goods. Bulletin Classifieds appear every day in the print or on line. Call 541-385-5809 www.bendbulletin.com

264

Snow Removal Equipment

260 Misc.ltems

+Adouble depth in+ i terment

Sno!Nblower

i i

I

I

NOTICE TO Log truck loads of ADVERTISER Lodgepole Firewood, Since September 29, delivered. 1991, advertising for Call 541-815-4177 used woodstoves has been limited to mod- Pine & Juniper Split els which have been certified by the OrPROMPT DELIVERY egon Department of 541-389-9663 Environmental Quality (DEQ) and the federal E n v ironmental Well over a cord - split Protection A g e n cy seasoned lodgepole, (EPA) as having met d elivered. $195 . smoke emission stan- 541-480-5335 dards. A cer t ified w oodstove may b e 269 identified by its certifi- Gardening Supplies cation label, which is & Equipment permanently attached to the stove. The Bulletin will not knowingly accept advertis- BarkTurfSoil.com ing for the sale of uncertified PROMPT DELIVERY 541-389-9663 woodstoves. 267

270

Fuel & Wood

Lost & Found

WHEN BUYING FIREWOOD...

Found ring, approx. 7th of January, SE Bend. Call to identify and

To avoid fraud, The Bulletin recommends payment for Firewood only upon delivery and inspection. • A cord is 128 cu. ft. 4' x 4' x 8' • Receipts should include name, phone, price and kind of wood purchased. • Firewood ads MUST include

species 8 cost per

cord to better serve our customers.

265 Buying Diamonds Building Materials /Gold for Cash The Bulletin servingchnlrhl oregon since19rrr Saxon's Fine Jewelers 17' aluminum plank, max 541-389-6655 load 250 Ibs, $100. 4x8 lumber rack, like new, 1 cord dry, split Juniper, BUYING Lionel/American Flyer $175. 541-383-7603 $190/cord. Multi-cord trains, accessories. discounts, & ~/~ cords REDMOND Habitat 541-408-2191. available. Immediate RESTORE delivery! 541-408-6193 BUYING & SE LLING Building Supply Resale Quality at All gold jewelry, silver All yearDependable LOW PRICES and gold coins, bars, Firewood: Seasoned; 1242 S. Hwy 97 rounds, wedding sets, 541-548-1406 Lodgepole 1 for $195 class rings, sterling silOpen to the public. or 2 for $365. Cedar, ver, coin collect, vintage watches, dental WANTED: 24" r ound split, del. Bend: 1 for gold. Bill Fl e ming, concrete or 2 for $325. st e p ping $175 541-420-3484. 541-382-9419. stones. 541-408-0848

Fountain 4 - wheel power scooter with accessories, gently u sed, in need o f new battery (ordering info avail.) Call 5 41-389-1821 f o r details.

servingcentral oreyonsince ea NASCAR TICKETS! 2 seats, Phoenix, AZ. Two Gen 3 Glock 23's, Paid $280; will sell both one Gen 3 Glock 27- for $140. 541-504-3833 $500 each. also 1000 rds .40 practice Wanted- paying cash 2005 Maverick ML7 a mmo; Glock g u n for Hi-fi audio & stuMountain Bike, 15" light/laser; .40 to 9mm dio equip. Mclntosh, frame (small). Full conversion ba r rel; JBL, Marantz, Dysuspension, Maverick misc. spare parts 8 naco, Heathkit, Sans hock, SRAM X O d efensive a m m o . sui, Carver, NAD, etc. drivetrain & shifters, 9 503-585-5000 Call 541-261-1808 speed rear cassette, 34-11, Avid Juicy disc Wanted: Collector seeks WHEN YOU SEE THIS quality fishing items brakes. Well t aken high 8 upscale bamboo fly c are o f. $950 . rods. Call 541-678-5753, 541-788-6227. or 503-351-2746 More PixatBendbjletin.coj On a classified ad 242 247 go to Exercise Equipment Sporting Goods www.bendbulletin.com - Misc. to view additional photos of the item. Gazelle Glider Snowshoes - Canadian, Elliptical 261 55" long, 30 yrs old, $150. 541-410-4424 Medical Equipment

253

TV, Stereo 8 Video

Craftsman electric or pull-start, 29" wide, 9HP, 5 forward 2 reverse speeds. $400 cash.

gra v e space with o uter i bunal container built 541-815-6319 in, located in Meadowpark area of De- I Check out the i schutes Memorial Gardens, $ 1 000. classifieds online I Call 541-389 1821 www.bendbulletin.com Updated daily

The Bulletin

Low-impact workout Mitsubishi 60" light profor less stress and iection TV, works well, vou strain on your body. haul. $150. 541-504-9513 Folds quickly for easy storage, but we TV 46" Samsung flat screen, 1/2 yr old, w/ just don't have room Magnavox B l u-Ray forit. $99 player, all for $400 541-419-6408 obo. 541-923-8349.

263

Tools Newin box, or nearly new

257

Musical Instruments

Docr-to-dcor selling with fast results! It's the easiest way in the world to sell.

Restaurant Furniture. Tables, chairs, bar stools, misc. from the o ld Cinnabar. S a t . Feb. 1, 9-4 at North Main Business Complex, 1210 N. Main St. ¹8, Prineville.

Full size power adjustable bed w/memory foam mattress, $800. Portable wheelchair, 4 leg walker, Quadri-Poise cane, bathroom assist chair, all for $200. Call 541-526-5737

541-318-8087

L ost at east end o f Maple St. bridge area, Redmond - pure black fixed cat, heavy, 2-3 y rs. old, l e f t e a r clipped. smallish head, 541-280-4825 LOST KEYS! 1 remote, 1 Honda key, 2 silver keys on red/pink carabiner clip. REWARD 541-408-4949 Lost men's w edding ring, Tungsten & gold, in Sportsman's Warehouse, Bend. Sat., Dec. 14th. Call, REWARD! 541-408-4531

REllllEMBER:If you have lost an animal, don't forget to check The Humane Society Bend 541-382-3537 Redmond 541-923-0882 Prineville 541-447-7178; Or Crhtt CatS 541-389-8420.

=

f Down Sizing? l /'JP 'j,

, Se'll no longer needed .' p,furniture, apfpliances', . patio sets..'. Quick-B~E>asy!

cs' o Qa Item Priced af: Your Total Ad Costonl .

~B m a~ Lighrly Used washer @ dryersetoutef vacation home. ears old and rU~ ye ~eari Very Clean

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$29

• $500 to $99 9 • $1000 to $249 9 • $2500 and over

$ 39 $4 9 $ 59

Includes up to 2" in length, with border,full color photo, bold headline andprice. Your od will also appear in: • The Bulletin, • The Cent ralOregonNickelAds • Central Oregon Marketplace + bendbullelin.com

541-385-5809 *Private party merchandise only - excludes pets 8 livestock, autos, RVs, motorcycles, boats, airplanes, and garage sale categories. Some restrictions apply.


E2 THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 2014 • THE BULLETIN

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 745

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

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Homes for Sale

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Stunning Ranch on Awbrey Butte - 4 Bdrm, 3 bath home w /open great room design. Close to river, trails, downtown, NW C rossing & mo r e l 630 850 Formal dining area, 528 beautiful stone fireRooms for Rent Snowmobiles Loans & Mortgages • Real Estate Trades place o p ens to 8 Nice large room and ALASKA LAND FOR breakfast a re a 1994 Arctic Cat 580 WARNING kit c hen, b ath, W / D , $3 2 5 , SALE - 5acres Hay- gourmet EXT, in good The Bulletin recomcherry cabinets, grancondition, $1000. mends you use cau- 541-977-7479 stack Mountain on SE i te, h a rdwood & Located in La Pine. tion when you pro632 Slope, near r i ver, 6-burner gas Call 541-408-6149. vide personal great sun, hardwood stovetop. Very private information to compa- AptiMultiplex General f orest. $20,000 o r with mountain views. 860 nies offering loans or trade for land in Or- MLS ¹ 20 1 309435 ltotorcycles & Accessories CHECK YOURAD credit, especially egon. 701-580-5453 $750,000. those asking for adCall Debbie vance loan fees or McCune, Principal companies from out of Broker Commercial/Investment state. If you have ReMax Key • Properties for Sale concerns or quesProperties. tions, we suggest you on the first day it runs 541-647-0052 Cell consult your attorney to make sure it is cor- In beautiful Central Or2013 Harley 541-728-0033 or call CONSUMER rect. "Spellcheck" and egon, city of LaPine, Place a photo inyourprivate party ad Davidson Dyna PRIVATE PARTY RATES Office HOTLINE, human errors do octhis 9 unit motel is a Wide Glide, black, foronly$15.00par week. Starting at 3 lines 1-877-877-9392. cur. If this happens to great investment with only 200 miles, 748 *UNDER '500in total merchandise your ad, please con- chance to grow 8 exOVER'500 in total merchandise brand new, all stock, BANK TURNED YOU Northeast Bend Homes tact us ASAP so that pand. Beautiful mtn & plus after-market 7 days.................................................. $10.00 4 days.................................................. $18.50 DOWN? Private party corrections and any meadow views. 2 of exhaust. Has winter 14 days................................................ $16.00 will loan on real es7 days.................................................. $24.00 adjustments can be the units are bachelor Peace & Quiet in NE cover, helmet. tate equity. Credit, no *llllust state prices in ad made to your ad. u nits rented o n a Bend - $259,900. 2.26 14 days .................................................$33.50 Selling for what I problem, good equity acres, detached ga541-385-5809 weekly o r m o nthly 28 days .................................................$61.50 owe on it: $15,500. Garage Sale Special is all you need. Call The Bulletin Classified rate. Owner is in pro- rage/shop area, overCall anytime, 4 lines for 4 days ................................. $20.00 lcall for commercial line ad rates) Oregon Land Mortcess of putting in new sized l a undry/utility 541-554-0384 656 gage 541-388-4200. carpet 8 li n oleum. room, freshly painted Houses for Rent Right on the busiest throughout. New apLOCAL MONEY:Webuy hwy in Oregon. Lots pliances, large bonus Harley Davidson 2009 A Payment Drop Box is available at CLASSIFIED OFFICE HOURS: SW Bend secured trust deeds & of parking & next to all room. Super Glide Custom, Bend City Hall. CLASSIFICATIONS MON.-FRI. 7:30 a.m.- 5:00 p.m. note, some hard money A must MLS¹201310659 Stage 1 Screaming loans. Call Pat Kelley SW Bend, walk to DRT conveniences. Call Jim Hinton, BELOW M A R K E D W ITH AN (*) see for the serious inEagle performance, and Old Mill. Master 541-382-3099 ext.13. 541-420-6229 vestor. $ 1 ,250,000. too many options to on main, pool, hot tub, REQUIRE PREPAYMENT as well list, $8900. tennis. Yard m aint. MLS 2712469. Cas- Central Oregon Realty as any out-of-area ads. The Bulletin Group, LLC 541-388-8939 incl. No pets. $2,000. cade Realty, Dennis Haniford, Princ. Brobendbulletimcom bendriverwild.com reserves the right to reject any ad at ker 541-536-1731 750 any time. is located at: 693 Redmond Homes 1777 S.W. Chandler Ave. Office/Retail Space for Rent ondo/Townhomes Bend, Oregon 97702 Looking for your next for Sale emp/oyee? 500 sq.ft. upstairs a Bulletin help office on NE side of $324,900 - Beautiful Place PLEASE NOTE: Checkyour ad for accuracy the first day it appears. Please call us immediately if a correction ad today and Harley Davidson You know what town, private bath, all turnkey townhome in wanted is needed. We will gladly accept responsibility for one incorrect insertion. The publisher reserves the right 2011 Classic Limreach over 60,000 util. paid. $500 month Forest Ridge. 2 mas to accept or reject any ad at anytime, classify and index any advertising based on the policies of these they say about readers each week. ited, Loaded! 9500 plus $500 d eposit. ters, 1 on main level, newspapers. The publisher shall not be liable for any advertisement omitted for any reason. Private Party "one man's trash". miles, custom paint Your classified ad 541-480-4744 Classified ads running 7 or moredays will publish in the Central OregonMarketplace each Tuesday. both with king beds 8 "Broken Glass" by will also appear on master bath with gar Nicholas Del Drago, bendbulletin.com There's a whole pile den tub & shower, 3rd 476 476 which currently renew condition, Tick, Tock of "treasure" here! bedroom with bunks & heated handgrips, ceives over Employment Employment trundle. TiCk, Tock... 1.5 million page auto cruise control. Opportunities Opportunities MLS¹201308059 views every month $32k in bike, ...don't let time get Eagle Crest Properties, at no extra cost. only $20,000or best 541-408-4204 away. Hire a Bulletin Classifieds offer. 541-318-6049 The Bulletin Flooring Get Results! professional out Established floorThousandsof adsdaily Call 385-5809 or caution when puri ng company i n of The Bulletin's in print andonline. place your ad on-line HDFatBo 1996 chasing products or I Homes for Sale Redmond, needs "Call A Service at services from out of e licensed subconbendbuffeti n.com 308 area. Sending $ 159,000 I M ov e i n Professional" tractor with hard- l the 454 c ash, checks, o r Ready. Convenient Farm Equipment wood floor laying Directory today! Southwest Redmond Looking for Employment experience to help l credit i n f ormation 771 & Machinery location, recently rel may be subjected to install pr e engiLots FRAUD. furbished, new sinks, Personal Assistant Sales 60" Brush hog, good Professional-creative neered and solid Completely For more informa- I c ounters, ligh t s , condition, $550; and flooring in high-end Exp'd in corp world. tion about an adver- • flooring, s p r inklers.5 1881 Fordham D r . Rebuilt/Customized Independent Contractor Sales 60" adjustable blade Bookkeeping-cooking- homes. S a nding l tiser, you may call 2012/2013 Award 1279 Sq.ft., 3 bdrm, 2 $ 25 000. Ready t o We are seeking dynamic individuals. for t ractor, S OLD. build. High Lakes ReWinner the Oregon State bath. decorating? Get your experience a plus. 541-923-9758 alty & Property Man- Showroom Condition Pay DOE. l Attorney General's Janelle Christensen, household running DOES THIS SOUND LIKE YOU? agement Many Extras Office C o n sumer e Broker 541-815-9446 smoothly. Call Doug at •OUTGOING & COMPETITIVE N ew H o lland 2 5 5 0 541-536-0117 Low Miles. Local since 2006 541-410-7659. Protection hotline at l Windermere Central • PERSONABLE 8 ENTHUSIASTIC swather, 14' header Oregon Real Estate Shenanagain59@ I 1-877-877-9392. $17,000 •CONSISTENT 8 MOTIVATED with conditioner, cab SHEVLIN RIDGE 541-548-4807 yahoo.com heat/A/C, 1300 orig. Media co. seeks PubLThe Bulleting 17,000 Sq.ft. Iot, apI His t oric (775)750-4201 hrs. $29,000 obo. lisher for B2B sales in Our winning team of sales 8 promotion $339,000 Ranch On 9 AC, proved plans. More Where can you find a 1486 International, cab high end Bend magazine. professionals are making an average of details and photos on Bend. 3-4 bdrm, 2 heat/A/C, 5 4 0/1000 Residual comm., training 476 $400 - $800 per week doing special helping hand? bath, 1 95 9 s q . ft., craigslist. $149,900. Pto, 3 sets remotes, provided, autonomy. Looking for your next Employment events, trade shows, retail & grocery 36X28 3 ba y s h op 541-389-8614 From contractors to nice tractor. $18,000. Send resume to: employee? building. 24X25 Opportunities store promotions while representing 541-419-3253 afloodO Place a Bulletin help yard care, it's all here 775 equipment c a rport. bestversionmedia.com wanted ad today and THE BULLETIN newspaper in The Bulletin's Completely f e nced (no hyphens) Nlanufactured/ as an independent contractor reach over 60,000 Call a Pro CAUTION: with corals. Borders "Call A Service readers each week. Mobile Homes Ads published in MLS¹ Whether you need a BLM, yyE OFFER: Professional" Directory Office A s s istant Your classified ad "Employment Op* 201306096 fence fixed, hedges will also appear on * Solid Income Opportunity SPECIAL porlunities" include needed for growing Dave Disney, Broker FACTORY bendbulletin.com * Complete Training Program * New Home, 3 bdrm, co. in La Pine, OR. trimmed or a house employee and inde541-388-0404 * which currently Experience in Gen$46,500 finished * No Selling Door to Door pendent positions. Windermere Central built, you'll find receives over 1.5 on your site. * No Telemarketing Involved * Ads for p o sitions eral Office duties inOregon Real Estate professional help in J and M Homes cluding c u s tomer million page views * that require a fee or * Great Advancement Opportunity 541-548-5511 service. Must be proevery month at The Bulletin's "Call a upfront investment * Full and Part Time Hours * $579,900 I Powell Butte ficent in Quickbooks, no extra cost. must be stated. With Service Professional" Home On Acreage. Landscaped with lots of Excel and Internet Bulletin Classifieds any independentjob 3275 sq.ft. home. Pri- trees is where you will Triumph Daytona FOR THE CHANCE OF A Directory A pplications. A c Get Results! opportunity, please v ate 3 0 A c res. 4 find this 4 bedroom 2004, 15K m i l es, counting and shipLIFETIME, Call 385-5809 541-385-5809 i nvestigate tho r bdrm, 3 bath, 2 mas- manufactured home. perfect bike, needs ping experience a or place Call Adam Johnson oughly. Use extra ter suites. Incredible H as a Vin plus. Must have a la k e v i e w nothing. your ad on-line at 541-410-5521, TODAY! caution when ap325 outdoor living. 40X60 where you can just sit ¹201536. positive attitude, orbendbulletin.com plying for jobs onshop. 541-480-7183 $4995 ganizational s k i lls back and watch the Hay, Grain & Feed line and never proBarbara Myers, and be a team player Dream Car w ildlife. Home h as Pressroom vide personal inforBroker 541-923-4663 in a small office atAuto Sales Alfalfa Hay 1st, 2nd, 3rd mation to any source newer vinyl windows, CallThe Bulletin At Night Supervisor Windermere Central mosphere. cutting, Hay tests on you may not have in-ground w a tering 1801Division, Bend The Bulletin, located in beautiful Bend, OrOregon Real Estate Please send resume request. delivery avail. researched system, 10x12 stor- DreamcarsBend.com 541 385 5809 egon is seeking a night time press supervisor. and to:bmyers0057©aol. 541-678-0240 $200 ton. Mitchell, OR deemed to be repuWe are part of Western Communications, Inc. Downtown Investment age building 8 8x40 ft com or SMI PO Box Dlr 3665 541-462-3156 P lace You r A d O r E -M a i l cargo container. which is a small, family-owned group consisttable. Use extreme 1410, La Pine, OR P roperty - 5 un i t s $79,500. MLS ing of 7 newspapers: 5 in Oregon and 2 in c aution when r e 97739 First quality Orchard/TimAt: WW W.bendbuletin.Com California. Our ideal candidate will manage a across from the river 201305511 Cascade s ponding to A N Y othy/Blue Grass mixed on 1st St. & 1509 NW Realty, Dennis Hanismall crew of 3 and must have prior press exonline employment hay, no rain, barn stored, 2nd St. Original vin- ford, Princ. B roker perience. The candidate must be able to learn ad from out-of-state. $250/ton. Patterson Ranch General tage 1917 home re- 541-536-1731 our equipment/processes quickly. A hands-on We suggest you call Sisters, 541-549-3831 The Bulletin Mailroom is hiring for our Saturmodeled in 2007. 3 style is a requirement for our 3t/a tower KBA the State of Oregon day night shift and other shifts as needed. Bdrm, 3 bath, gourLOT MODEL Consumer Hotline press. Prior management/leadership experiWe currently have openings all nights of the met kitchen, h ardLooking for your LIQUIDATION at 1-503-378-4320 ence p referred. I n ad d i tion t o our week, everyone must work Saturday night. w ood, g r a nite & Slashed Huge next employee? 7-day-a-week newspaper, we have numerous V ictory TC 9 2 ci For Equal OpportuShifts start between 6:00 p.m. and 11:30 p.m. 4-level elevator. Main Prices Savings! 10 Year Place a Bulletin commercial print clients as well. Besides a 2002, runs great, nity Laws contact and endbetween 2:00 a.m. and 3:30 a.m. All living with v acation conditional warranty. competitive wage, we also provide potential help wanted ad Oregon Bureau of 40K mi., Stage 1 rentals which will pro- Finished positions we are hiring for work Saturday on your site. opportunity for advancement. today and Labor 8 I n dustry, nights. Starting pay is $9.10 per hour, and we Performance Kit, duce most income. ONLY 2 LEFT! Civil Rights Division, reach over pay a minimum of 3 hours per shift, as some Attached va c a tion n ew tires, r e a r Redmond, Oregon 971-673- 0764. If you provide dependability combined with a 60,000 readers shifts are short (1 1:30 - 1:30). The work conrental is 1 Bdrm, 1 brakes. $ 5 0 0 0. 541-548-5511 positive attitude, are able to manage people each week. sists of loading inserting machines or stitcher, bath, great room 8 541-771-0665 The Bulletin JandMHomes.com and schedulesand are a team player,we Your classified ad swwng censareegon sincesra stacking product onto pallets, bundling, huge deck, separate would like to hear from you. If you seek a cleanup and other tasks. For qualifying emwill also 541-385-5809 entrance, heating, etc. stable work environment that provides a great ployees we offer benefits including life insurMLS ¹ 20 1 309397. appear on place to live and raise a family, let us hear ance, short-term & long-term disability, 401(k), $1,500,000. bendbulletin.com from you. paid vacation and sick time. Drug test is reCall Ainslie which currently ACCOUNTANT quired prior to employment. Please submit reReynolds, Principal receives over Contact Al Nelson, Pressroom Manager at sumes to keldred©bendbulletin.com or comBroker 1.5 million page anelson©wescom a ers.com with yourcomFull-time ReMax Key plete and application at the front desk. No views every plete resume, r eferences an d s a l ary phone call s please. EOE. Properties. Staff Accountant Call 54 I -385-5809 month at no history/requirements. No phone calls please. 541-410-1054 Cell needed for Bend loto r o m ot e o u r service extra cost. Drug test is required prior to employment. cation. RV/auto inThe Bulletin 541-728-0033 Serving Central Oregon since 1903 EOE. Bulletin Office dustry a c counting Classifieds Building/Contracting Handyman experience a must. Get Results! Competitive pay and Call 541-385-5809 NOTICE: Oregon state ERIC REEVE HANDY benefits. Registered Nurses law requires anyone SERVICES. Home & or place your ad Please send YOVR/ID wiLL RE cE IYE cLosE 1' 0 2,00e,eee who con t racts for Commercial Repairs, on-line at resume' to: EXPOSURES FOR O NLYgSei Community Counseling Solutions is construction work to Carpentry-Painting, bendbulletin.com bcrvhireO mail.com be licensed with the recruiting for Registered Nurses to work Pressure-washing, or apply in person at Omgon ciarsifierftdverlirag Nehvorr a a service ofthe OegonNewspape~pablirhers tssockm'oa Construction Contracat Juniper Ridge Acute Care Center Honey Do's. On -time 63500 N. Hwy 97, Peek of January 27, 2014 tors Board (CCB). An promise. Senior Need to get an Bend, Oregon locatedinJohn Day, OR. active license Discount. Work guarad in ASAP? means the contractor anteed. 541-389-3361 Juniper Ridge is a S e cure Residential You can place it is bonded & insured. or 541-771-4463 Add your web address Treatment Facility providing services to Serving Central Oregon since 1903 Verify the contractor's Bonded & Insured online at: to your ad and readindividuals with a severe mental illness. CCB l i c ense at 541-385-5809 CCB¹181595 www.bendbulletin.com ers on The Bulletin's www.hirealicensedweb site, www.bendThese positions provide mental health contractor.com Landscaping/Yard Care bulletin.com, will be nursing care including medication oversight, or call 503-378-4621. 541-385-5809 able to click through medication r e lated t r e atment, f o llow The Bulletin recom- NOTICE: Oregon Landautomatically to your mends checking with scape Contractors Law physician's prescriptions and procedures, 358 website. DIVORCE $155. Complete preparation. Includes the CCB prior to con- (ORS 671) requires all measure and record patient's general Farmers Column tracting with anyone. businesses that adp hysical c ondition s uc h as pul s e , children, custody, support, property and bills Some other trades vertise t o temperature and respiration to provide daily pe r form 10X20 Storage Buildings Executive Deputy also req u ire addi- Landscape Construcinformation, educate and train staff on for protecting hay, division. N o co u r t a p p e arances. D i vorced Director tional licenses and tion which includes: medication administration, and e n sure firewood, livestock etc. The C o nfederated certifications. p lanting, deck s , documentation is kept according to policies. $1496 Installed. in 1-5 weeks possible.503-772-5295. Www. T ribes o f War m fences, arbors, (other sizes available) Springs, OR , is Debris Removal water-features, and in541-617-1133. This position works with the treatment team seeking an Execuparalegalalternatives.com legalalt©msn.com stallation, repair of irCCB ¹173684 to promote recovery from mental illness. tive Deputy Director JUNK BE GONE rigation systems to be kfjbuildersOykwc.net This position includes telephone consultato oversee the GM's l icensed w it h th e I Haul Away FREE & Directors. Report tion and crisis intervention in the facility. Landscape ContracFor Salvage. Also directly to the tors Board. This 4-digit Sell an Item Cleanups & Cleanouts Secretary/Treasurer Qualified applicants must have a v alid number is to be inDRIVERS-Whether y ou have expe r i ence or Mel, 541-389-8107 -CEO. B a c helor's Oregon Registered Professional Nurse's cluded in all adverdegree in Business n eed t r a i ning, we off e r unb e a table c a r e er tisements which indilicense at the time of hire, hold a valid Handyman A dministration o r cate the business has Oregon driver's license and pass a criminal related field. T en opportunities. Trainee, C o mpany D r iver, L EASE a bond, insurance and history background check. Wages depenI DO THAT! years' experience in workers compensadent upon education and experience, but Home/Rental repairs If it's under$500 the Tribal AdminisOPERATOR, L E AS E T R A INERS. 8 7 7 -369-7104 tion for their employSmall jobs to remodels will be between $48,000 to $72,000. ees. For your protectration inc l uding you can place it in Honest, guaranteed Excellent benefit package, including signing www.centraltruckdrivingjobs.com E nterprises, t h e i r bonus. tion call 503-378-5909 work. CCB¹151573 The Bulletin or use our website: operation Policies 8 Dennis 541-317-9768 www.lcb.state.or.us to Procedures, budget Classifieds for: Gordon Trucking, Inc. CDL-A Solos 8 Team Truck Please visit th e O regon Employment check license status and stru c t ure. Department or the Community Counseling Peopl e Loo k fo r I n f o rm a ti o n before contracting with MUST be a t r ibal Drivers. Up to $5,000 Sign-On-Bonus 8 $0.54 CPM. $10 • 3 lines, 7 days Solutions website for an application or the business. Persons member. C o ntact: A bout Pro du ct s an d contact Nina Bisson at 5 4 1-676-9161, doing lan d scape Jake Suppah/Lynn Consistent Miles, Benefits, 401k, EOE. Call, available $16 • 3 lines, 14 days ServicesEveryDaythrough maintenance do not nina.bisson©gobhi.net, or P.O. Box 469, Davis at r equire an LC B l i 541-553-3232. Heppner, OR 97836. 7 days a week 866-435-8590 (Private Party ads only) The8vlletinClassinels cense.

AD PLACEMENT DEADLINES

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Friday. • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • Noon Thurs. Saturday Real Estate.. . . . . . . . . . 1 1 :00 am Fri.

Saturday • • • Sunday. • • • •

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• • 5:00 pm Fri •

Where buyers meet sellers

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E4

TH E BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JAN 30, 2014

DAILY B R I D G E

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

NEW YORK TIMES CROSSWORD wiii shprfz

C L U B T hursday, January30,2014

Losing slam

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laundry 42 Skinny 43Targetedarea? 46 Hit with an electric bolt 49 Silents sex symbol 50 Bogged down 52Animated greetings 55Oscillates SBChaos ... or a hint to the contents of 17-, 250ne on One: 28-, 34- and 43-Across vs. Larry Bird (old video game) 62 Dubai-based airline 26 Growth on wet rocks or 63 California's the surface of National Forest stagnant water 64 Private dining 31 Pre-Susan B. area? Anthony dollar coins, informally 65 Maxim 33 Bygone Brazilian airline DOWN 34What a coiled 1 Golfer Bakerspring or charged Finch, winner of battery has, in the 1991 British physics Open

By FRANK STEWART Tribune Content Agency

''We got to a losing slam," a club player told me, "and I thought the fault lay with my partner's bidding." He displayed today's deal and the auction. '%ly partner was North. I didn't like his free raise to two hearts with such minimum values. And when I cue-bid four clubs to try for slam, I thought he should've kept right on signing off instead of cue-bidding his ace of diamonds. After all that, I couldn't bid less than six hearts, but I had two spades to lose."

What do you say? ANSWER: This is a close case, especially if your partner is apt to open light, shapely hands. If he has Q 4, A5, K Q 10 6 5 3, I 8 7, you have no makable game. Opposite s uch a p a rtner, r aise t o t h r ee diamonds. Opposite someone whose opening bids are rock-solid, bid three clubs to force. North dealer Both sides vulnerable NORTH 45652 0 K1092

MANDATORY I had to tell South that he was completely wrong. North's raise to two heartswas mandatory, and so was his cue bid of four diamonds after he had already suggested no extra strength by bidding three hearts. Moreover, six hearts was cold. South takes the ace of spades, draws trumps,cashes the ace of diamonds and ruffs a diamond. He takes the top clubs to discard a spade and leads dummy's fourth club. When East follows, South discards another spade,and East must concede a ruffsluff and the slam. DAILY QUESTION

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Seeking 8 friendly duplicate bridge? Find five gamesweekly at www.bendbridge.org. BIZARRO

2 Sedate, say 3 Using the bow, in music 4 Purity rings? 50ld iPod Nano capacity 6 More rough around the edges, perhaps 7 Partook of 6 End of a French film 9 Auto necessities 10 Discharge 11Completely tuckered out 12Site of some piercings 13 Name on a property deed, maybe 14 Brobdingnagian 16Surrealist Magritte 22 Silver Stater 23 Fastidious to a fault 2SSkinny26 1929's "Street Girl" was its first official production 27 Deep black 29"TheWay I (2007 Timbaland hit) 30 Architectural designer of New York's Museum for African Art 32 Vikings, e.g. 3SZip 36 Nickname for a junior'5 junior 37 Yesterday: It. 36 Cartoonist Chast 39 1.0 is not a good one, in brief 40 "You betcha!"

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K A D A F E B O M U P R O K OE IS S T E A U N R IN S D I Y S S N Y C C R OS I R A A N G C Y S

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57"Thepoet in my heart," per a Fleetwood Mac soflg

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61 Ship's departure?

For answers, call 1-900-285-5858, $1.49 a minute; or, with a credit card, 1-800-814-5554.

Annual subscriptions are available for the best of Sunday crosswords from the last 50 years: 1-888-7-ACROSS. ATBT users: Text NYTX to 388 to download puzzles, or visit nytimes.com/mobilexword for more information. Online subscriptions: Today's puzzle and more than 2,000 past puzzles, nytimes.com/crosswords ($39.95 a year). Share tips: nytimes.com/wordplay. Crosswords for young solvers: nytimes.com/learning/xwords.

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THE BULLETIN• THURSDAY, JANUARY 30 2014 E5

TO PLACE AN AD CALL CLASSIFIED• 541-385-5809 865

880

882

932

935

975

975

975

ATVs

Motorhomes

Fifth Wheels

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

Automobiles

Automobiles

Automobiles

r -

00 . ,

Toyota Cellca Converflble 1993

nn • ('

Honda TRX 350 FE 2006, 4 wheel drive, electric start, electric s hift, n e w tir e s , $2500, 541-980-8006.

TIFFINPHAETON QSH 2007 with 4 slides, CAT 350hp diesel engine, $125,900. 30,900 miles, new Michelin tires, great cond! Dishwasher, w/d, 870 central vac, roof satellite, Boats & Accessories aluminum wheels, 2 full slide-thru basement trays & 3 TV's. Falcon-2 towbar and Even-Brake included. Call 541-977-4150

Tioga 24' Class C Motorhome Bought new in 2000, currently under 20K miles, excellent shape, new tires, professionaly winterized every year, cutoff switch to battery, plus new RV batteries. Oven, hot water heater & air conditioning have never been used! $24,000 obo. Serious inquiries, please. Stored in Terrebonne.

18'Maxum skiboat,2000, inboard motor, great cond, well maintained, $8995obo. 541-350-7755

21' Sun Tracker Sig. series Fishin' Barge, Tracker 50hp, live well, fish fndr, new int, extras, exc cond, $7900. 541-508-0679 Ads published in the "Boats" classification include: Speed, fishing, drift, canoe, house and sail boats. For all other types of watercraft, please go to Class 875. 541-385-5809

Arctic Fox 2003 Cold Weather Model 34 5B, 908 licensed thru 2/15, exlnt Aircraft, Parts cond. 3 elec slides, solar 8 Service panel, 10 gal water htr, 14' awning, (2) 10-gal propane tanks, 2 batts, catalytic htr in addition to central heating/AC, gently used, MANV features! Must see to appreciate! $19,000. By owner (no dealer calls, please). Call 1/3 interest in Columbia or text 541425-1956. 400, $150,000 (located O Bend.) Also: Sunriver hangar available for sale at $155K, or lease, @ $400/mo. t 541-948-2963

Fleetwood Prowler 32' - 2001 2 slides, ducted heat 8 air, great condition, snowbird ready, Many upgrade options, financing available! $14,500 obo.

541-548-5174

Call Dick, 541-480-1687.

TURN THE PAGE For More Ads The Bulletin

Get your business

e ROW I N G

The Bulletin

Serv n Central Ore on smce 1903

875

Watercraft

Winnebago Aspect 2009- 32', 3 slideouts, Leather interior, Power s eat, locks, windows, Aluminum wheels. 17" Flat Screen, Surround s o u nd, camera, Queen bed, Foam mattress, Awning, Generator, Inverter, Auto Jacks, Air leveling, Moon roof, no smoking or p ets. L i k e ne w , $74,900

ds published in "Watercraft" include: Kayaks, rafts and motorIzed personal watercrafts. For "boats" please see Class 870. 541-385-5809

The Bulletin

Serving Central Oregon since 1903

880

Motorhomes

with an ad in The Bulletin's "Call A Service Professional" Directory Fleehvood Wilderness2000 model, 28', 1 slide, good condition, with awning and A/C, $7500. 541-383-8270

541-480-6900

COACHMAN Freelander 2008 32' Class C, M-3150 Pristine - just 23,390 miles! Efficient coach has Ford V10 w/Banks pwr pkg, 14' slide, ducted furn/ AC, flat screen TV, 16' awning. No pets/ smkg. 1 ownera must see! $52,500. 541-548-4969

For Sale 1990 5th Wheel

Transporter

Winnebago Suncruiser34' 2004, 35K, loaded, too much to list, ext'd warr. thru 2014, $49,900 Dennis, 541-589-3243

Low miles, EFI 460, 4-spd auto, 10-ply tires, low miles, almost new condition, $3500.

Ask for Theo,

541-260-4293

881

Travel Trailers

Fleetwood Wilderness N.W. Edition 26' 2002, 1 slide, sleeps 6, queen bed, couch, stove/oven, tub/ shower, front elec. Keystone Challenger jack, waste tank heat- 2004 CH34TLB04 34' fully S/C, w/d hookups, e rs, s t abilizers, 2 Fleetwood Bounder, prop. t a nks, no new 18' Dometic aw2000 -Great amenismoking/pets, winter- ning, 4 new tires, new 7000w marine ties! 34', special exteized, good c o n d. Kubota generator, 3 rior coating, side by $8500 OBO diesel slides, exc. cond. inside fridge, corner 541-447-3425 side & out. 27" TV china cabinet, queen dvd/cd/am/fm entertain bed, tub/shower, 1 center. Call for more large living room slide details. Only used 4 out, air leveler, warm times total in last 5~/~ & cozy interior. Ford years.. No pets, no V10 Triton 44,000 smoking. High retail miles. $25,000 $27,700. Will sell for 541-318-7473 Keystone Laredo 31' $24,000 including slidRV 20 06 w ith 1 2' ing hitch that fits in slide-out. Sleeps 6, your truck. Call 8 a.m. queen walk-around to 10 p.m. for appt to bed w/storage undersee. 541-330-5527. neath. Tub 8 shower. 2 swivel rockers. TV. Air cond. Gas stove & iaredo 2009 30' Fleetwood D i scovery refrigerator/freezer. 40' 2003, diesel mo- Microwave. Awning. torhome w/all Outside sho w er. options-3 slide outs, Slide through storsatellite, 2 TV's,W/D, a ge, E a s y Li f t . etc. 3 2,000 m i les. $29,000 new; Asking $18,600 Wintered in h eated overall length is 35' 541-4947-4805 shop. $84,900 O.B.O. has 2 slides, Arctic 541-447-8664 package, A/C, table & chairs, satellite, Arctic pkg., power j, awning, in excellent condition! More pix at bendbulletin.com •

Gulfstream S u nsport 30' Class A 1988 new f r idge, TV, solar panel, new refrigerator, wheelchair lift. 4 0 00W g enerator, G ood condition! $12,500 obo 541-447-5504

1/3 interest i n

541-548-0318 (photoabove ls of a similar model & not the actual vehicle)

GMC M ton 1971, Only $10,500! Original low mile, exceptional, 3rd owner. 760-985-4016

equipped IFR Beech Bonanza A36, new 10-550/ prop, located KBDN. $65,000. 541-419-9510

1/5th interest in 1973

Cessna 150 LLC 150hp conversion, low time on air frame and engine, hangared in Bend.Excellent performance &affordable flying! $6,000. 541-410-6007

Front & rear entry doors, bath, shower, queen bed, slide-out, oven, microwave, air conditioning, patio awning, twin propane tanks, very nice, great floor plan, $8495 541-316-1388

Providence2005 Fully loaded, 35,000 miles, 350 Cat, Very clean, non-smoker, 3 slides, side-by-side refrigerator with ice maker, Washer/Dryer, Flat screen TV's, In motion satellite. $95,000 541-480-2019

multi-disc MP3,

garaged/covered. Bose Premium Gold system. Orig. owner manual. Stock! $10,500 OBO. Retired. Must sell!

pkg., Cargo Racks, running boards, leather interior, power locks, XM satellite, OnStar

Orbit 21' 2007, used

only 8 times, A/C, oven, tub shower, micro, load leveler hitch, awning, dual batteries, sleeps 4-5, EXCELLENT CONDITION. All accessories are included. $14,511 OBO. 541-382-9441

Sprinter, 35' 2008 Rear living, large refrigerator, walk-in shower, queen bed, lots of storage inside & out, new tires, electric jack, excellent condition, only used 3 times. Call toseel 541-318-6919

Tango 29.6' 2007, Rear living, walkaround queen bed, central air, awning, 1 large slide, $12,000. 541-280-2547 or 541-815-4121

541-923-1781

Super winter car! Audi 4000CS Quattro, 1986, close ratio 5 spd fun car to drive new tires, runs great, needs paint, 187k miles. $2500. 541-771-8661.

Jeep CJ5 1979, Original owner, 87k miles, only 3k on new 258 long block. Clutch package, Warn hubs. Excellent runner, very dependable. Northman 6y2' plow, Warn 6000¹ winch. $7900 or best reasonable offer.

Find them in The Bulletin Classifieds

CLASSIC 541-410-8749

Ford 3/4 ton 1978 Lariat

541-447-5184.

Ed. w/ canopy, 89k o rig. m i les, o r i g. Lincoln owner. exc. c ond. Aviator, 2004 $2500, 541-350-3696. Light tan/gray metallic, all wheel drive, V8 engine, heated leather seats, 3rd row seat, 131K miles, very well maintained. Ford F250 Camper Spe$7777. cial 1966, AT w/limited slip rear end. A few is541-389-9829 sues but runs good. Full steel rack w/drs. $1950 firm, cash. 541-420-0156

Corvette 1979

L82- 4 speed. 85,000 miles Garaged since new. I've owned it 25 years. Never damaged or abused.

916

Trucks & Heavy Equipment

very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

Have an item to sell quick? If it's under '500you can place it in The Bulletin Classifieds for:

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

with hard 8 soft top, silver with black interior, all original, very low mileage, in premium condition. $19,900. 702-249-2567 (car is in Bend)

sport sedan, plus set of snow tires. $6000. 541-317-0324.

Lincoln MKS 2009 AWD, Nav., loaded. V olvo S40 T 5 2 0 0 5 39k miles. ¹613889. AWD, sunroof, lux/winter $23,995 541-598-3750 pkgs, new tires, more! $7775 obo.541-330-5818 WHEN YOU SEE THIS www.aaaoregonautosource.com

~O

More PixatBendbuletin.com On a classified ad go to www.bendbulletin.com to view additional photos of the item.

Mazda Miata 1997 M-edition Mica Green, 5-spd, original interior 8 exterior. All power options, leather, convertible boot, Tonneau Cover 114K miles, synthetic oils, new timing belt © 81K, & more! $5995. 541-548-5648

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 bendbulletln.com

The Bulletin To Subscribe call 541-385-5800 or go to www.bendbulletin.com

r----

$12,900.

The Bulletin recoml

extra caution l I mends when p u r chasing • Olds 98 Regency 1990 f products or servicesf exc. shape, runs as from out of the area new, one owner 20 f S ending c ash ,f mpg in town. New e checks, or credit inCORVETTE COUPE Glasstop 2010

Ford Supercab 1992, brown/tan color with m atching full s i z e c anopy, 2WD, 4 6 0 over drive, 135K mi., full bench rear seat, slide rear w indow, bucket seats, power seats w/lumbar, pw, HD receiver 8 trailer brakes, good tires. Good cond i tion. $4900. 541-389-5341

Lincoln LS 2001 4door

Dave, 541-350-4077

SuperhavvkOnly 1 Share Available

Economical flying in your own IFR equipped Cessna 172/180 HP for only $13,500! New Garmin Touchscreen avionics center stack! Exceptionally clean! Hangared at BDN. Call 541-728-0773

GT 2200 4 cyl, 5 speed, a/c, pw, pdl, nicest c o nvertible around in this price range, new t ires, wheels, clutch, timing belt, plugs, etc. 111K mi., remarkable cond. inside and out. Fun car to drive, Must S E E! $5995. R e dmond. 541-504-1993

with hard & soft top, silver with black interior, all original,

Chevy Tahoe 2001, 5.3L '10- 3 lines, 7 days V8, leather, air, heated Audi A4 2001 1.8T 4 dr seats, fully loaded, 120K, rebuilt trans, newer '16 - 3 lines, 14 days $7500 obo. 541-460-0494 clutch, brakes, mani(Private Party ads only) fold, etc. High-performance. Extras, rec eipts, exc . m p g . Jaguar XJ8 2004 4-dr $6300 obo (longer style) sedan, 541-390-6004 silver, black leather, 4.2L 541-549-6970 or V8, AT, AC, fully loaded 541-815-8105. Ford Bronco II 4x4, 1989, Buick CX2005 + moonroof. Runs great, auto, high miles, runs silver, 61,000 miles, reliable, always garaged, Volkswagen good. $1700. good condition. Ex- 116K miles; 30 mpg hwy. 541-633-6662 Touareg 2004 cellent care. $7,000 Front/side airbags, non-smoker. $7900. Meticulously mainOBO, 541-419-9669. Jeep Grand Cherokee 541-350-9938 tained. Very clean 2013 Laredo X V-6, inside and out. V6. auto., 4wd, leather, Garage Sales Recently servicedPlymouth B a r racuda camera, 11k miles 1966, original car! 300 ¹6301018. $35,995 60 point inspection Garage Sales sheet. $6,800.00 hp, 360 V8, centerlines, 541-593-2597 Call 541-480-0097 Garage Sales

Good classified ads tell the essential facts in an 1974 Bellanca interesting Manner.Write 1730A Rolls Royce 1992 Sil- from the readers view -not ver Spur II,excellent! the seller's. Convert the 541-385-5809 2180 TT, 440 SMO, Midnight Blue exterior, 180 mph, excellent Parchment leather inte- facts into benefits. Show the reader howthe item will Buick Regal CXL 2011 condition, always rior, 15-inch chrome RR help them insomeway. hangared, 1 owner 4D. Leather. 16k mi. wheels, Alpine Sirius This for 35 years. $60K. DVD/CD/AM/FM/GPS ¹005227 $ 1 7,995 advertising tip navigation system, brought toyou by 77,200 miles, dealerIn Madras, ship maintained, alcall 541-475-6302 The Bulletin ways garaged. New, Servin9Cenlrat O~n i>nCe 19IB 541-598-3750 about $250,000; sell Dramatic Price Reduc- $19,500. www.aaaoregonauto541-480-3348 tion Executive Hangar source.com at Bend Airport (KBDN) 933 60' wide x 50' deep, Pickups Cadillac Deville w/55' wide x 17' high biDHS 2000. Most fold dr. Natural gas heat, offc, bathroom. Adjacent options, exc. cond. Kia Sportage 1996 4x4, to Frontage Rd; great full power, hitch, rack, air, 93,000 rn.. New visibility for aviation busiset up for towing, runs tires. $6,500. 1966 Ford F250 ness. 541-948-2126 or reat, 4 extra snow tires. 541-233-8944. email 1jetjockoq.com 3/4 ton, 352 V8, 2WD, 3200. 541-728-1265 P/S, straight body, runs good. $2000.

Save money. Learn to fly or build hours with your own airc raft. 1968 A e r o Commander, 4 seat, 150 HP, low time, full panel. $23,000 obo. Contact Paul at

Ford Thunderbird 2004 Convertible

e

541-598-3750

Grand Sport - 4 LT loaded, clear bra hood 8 fenders. New Michelin Super Sports, G.S. floor mats, 17,000 miles, Crystal red. $42,000.

Range Rover HSE, 2011 Super clean, loaded, running boards, luxury & towing packages. Up top pod, 43,000 miles, $45,000. 541-593-9116

503-358-1164.

battery, stud snow tires $2000. 541-389-9377

I formation may be I J subject toFRAUD. For more informa-

f tion about an adver-f

tiser, you may call Porsche Carrera 911 2003 convertible with I the ' Oregon State hardtop. 50K miles, Attorney General's e new factory Porsche Office C o nsumer motor 6 mos ago with f Protection hotline at 18 mo factory war1-877-877-9392. ranty remaining. $37,500. Serving Centra/ Oregon since l903 541-322-6928

I I f

I

The Bulletin

a

$28,000

541-419-3301

Peterbilt 359 p o table t ruck, 1 9 90, Monaco Lakota 32' 2002, water gal. tank, 5hp 2 slides, AC, recliners, 3200 pump, 4-3" h oses, walk-around queen bed, camlocks, $ 2 5,000. sliding glass door closet, 541-820-3724 new tub & 10-gal water heater, good tires. Brand Just too many new 20' screen room collectibles? available. Super clean, 1 owner, n o n-smokers. $13,499. 541-447-7968 Sell them in The Bulletin Classifieds

931

200 8 ,

Sprinter chassis 25'. Mercedes Benz diesel, 24,000 miles, pristine cond., quality throughout, rear slide-out w/ queen bed, d e luxe captain swivel f ront seats, diesel generator, awning, no pets/ smoking. $77,500 or make an offer. 541-382-2430

1996, 350 auto, 135k, non-ethanol fuel/synthetic oil,

Bluetooth. Summer and new studded tires. 81,000 highbed, exlnt o r iginal way miles. $25,000 cond., runs 8 drives OBO. 541-480-8231 great. V8, new paint and tires. $4750 obo. Need help fixing stuff? 541-504-1050 Call A ServiceProfessional find the help you need. www.bendbulletin.com

MONTANA 3585 2008, exc. cond., 3 slides,

king bed, Irg LR, Arctic insulation, all options $35,000 obo. 541-420-3250

Automotive Parts, Service & Accessories

(4) Wintercat SST snow groove studded tires, 265/70R16, $360. 541-382-4144

FORD XLT 1992 3/4 ton 4x4 matching canopy, 30k original miles, possible trade for classic car, pickup, motorcycle, RV $13,500. In La Pine, call 928-581-9190

II~ fitQg I nternational Fla t Bed Pickup 1963, 1 ton dually, 4 s pd. trans., great MPG, could be exc. wood hauler, runs great, new brakes, $1950. 541-419-5480.

932

935

Antique & Classic Autos

Sport Utility Vehicles

OPEN ROAD 36' 2005 - $25,500

N avion R V

1500 LT 2009 5.3L V8 Flex fuel. 4wd Heavy Duty tow

:-. . =

Layton 27-ft, 2002

Corvette Coupe

GMC Sierra 1977 short

w e l l-

541 -385-5809 KOUNTRY AIRE 1994 37.5' motorhome, with awning, and one slide-out, Only 47k miles and good condition. $25,000.

Chevy Suburban

King bed, hide-a-bed sofa, 3 slides, glass shower, 10 gal. water heater, 10 cu.ft. fridge, central vac, s atellite dish, 2 7 " TV/stereo syst., front front power leveling jacks and s cissor stabilizer jacks, 16' awning. Like new! 541-41 9-0566

1921 Model T Delivery Truck Restored 8 Runs $9000. 541-389-8963

Look at: Bendhomes.com for Complete Listings of Area Real Estate for Sale Buick Skylark 1972

Recreation by Design 2013 Monte Carlo, 38-ft. Top living room, 2 bdrm, has 3 slideouts, 2 A/Cs, entertainment center, fireplace, W/D, garden tub/shower, in great condition.$36,000 or best offer. Call Peter, 307-221-2422,

AILL DELIV/R

AM General Hummer H1 1996; $ 48,500; pics at ebay or email bmartin029©aol.com

Please see Bend Craigslist for details and more photos. $19,900. 541-323-1898 BMW X3 2 0 07, 99K miles, premium package, heated lumbar supported seats, panoramic moo nroof, Bluetooth, ski bag, XePrice Reduced! non headlights, tan & Ford T-Bird, 1966, 390 black leather interior, engine, power every- n ew front & re a r thing, new paint, 54K brakes O 76K miles, orig. miles, runs great, one owner, all records, exc. cond.in/out.$7500 very clean, $16,900. obo. 541-480-3179 541-388-4360

1000

1000

1000

1000

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Legal Notices

cally. To "appear" you

Southwest corner of Lot 1 in Block 1 of a legal paper called a MARY K. FALLS ES"motion" or "answer." TATES, th e in i tial The "motion" or "an- point as well as the swer" must be given true point of beginJ PMorgan Ch a s e to the court clerk or ning; thence North 33'01'54" East along Bank, National Asso- administrator w i t hin ciation, successor in 30 days along with the the West line of said interest by purchase required filing fee. It Lot 1, 294.20 feet to a from the Federal De- must be i n p roper 1/2" rebar on the posit Insurance Cor- form and have proof North line of said Lot poration, as Receiver o f service o n t h e 1; thence 43.17 feet for Washington Muplaintiff's attorney or, a long the arc of a tual Bank, formerly if the plaintiff does not 185.00 foot r a dius known as Washing- have a n at t orney, curve (concave North) ton Mutual Bank, FA, proof of service on the of said North line and P laintiff, v s . LO R I plaintiff. The object of along the South right HILL, OTHER PER- t he complaint is to of way (R/W) of NW SONS OR PARTIES, foreclose a deed of Grubstake way, i ncluding OCC U - trust dated Septem- forming a cen t ral PANTS, UNKNOWN ber 10, 2007 and re- angle of 1 3 ' 22'15" CLAIMING ANY corded as Instrument and a l o n g c hord RIGHT, TITLE, LIEN, No. 2007-50018 given bearing South O R INTEREST I N by Lori Hill on prop- 63'38'30" East, 53.07 THE PRO P E RTY erty commonly known feet to a 1/2" pipe; DESCRIBED IN THE as 7070 N.W. Grub- thence South East , COMPLAINT stake Way, Redmond, 19'08'47" HEREIN, Defendants. OR 97756 and legally 152.70 feet to a 1/2" No. 12CV1154. CIVIL described as: See pipe; thence South West, SUMMONS. TO THE Legal Description at- 71'30'41" DEFENDANTS: tached and incorpo- 2 62.60 feet t o t h e Lori Hill. NOTICE TO rated hereto as Ex- point of b e ginning. DEFENDANT: READ hibit "1". EXHIBIT "A" The complaint seeks T HESE PAP E R S LEGAL DESCRIP- to foreclose and terCAREFULLY! A law- TION: PARCEL 1: Lot minate all interest of suit has been started Two (2) in Block One Lori Hill and all other a gainst you i n t h e ( 1) o f M A R Y K . interests in the propES T ATES, erty. The "motion" or above-entitled Court FALLS by JPMorgan Chase Deschutes C o unty, "answer" (or "reply") Bank, National Asso- Oregon. PARCEL 2: A must be given to the ciation, successor in parcel of land situ- court clerk or admininterest by purchase ated in a portion of Lot istrator within 30 days from the Federal De- One (1) in Block One of the date of f i rst posit Insurance Cor- ( 1) o f M A R Y K . publication specified poration, as Receiver FALLS ESTATES, a herein along with the for Washington Mu- subdivision located in required filing fee. The tual Bank, formerly the Southeast Quar- date of first publicaknown as Washing- ter (SE1/4) of Section tion of the summons ton Mutual Bank, FA, Twenty-three (23), is January 30, 2014. If Plaintiff. Pla i ntiff's Township F ourteen you have questions, claim is stated in the (14) South, Range you should see an written Complaint, a Twelve (12), East of attorney immediately. copy of which is on the Willamette Merid- If you need help in file at the Deschutes ian, Deschutes finding an attorney, County Courthouse. County, Oregon, more you may contact the Vou must "appear" in particularly described Oregon State Bar's this case or the other as f o llows: C o m- Lawyer Referral Serthe vice side will win automati- mencing a t on l i n e at LEGAL NOTICE IN T H E CI R CUIT COURT O F THE STATE OF OREGON FOR THE COUNTY OF DE S C HUTES.

must file with the court

www.oregonstatebar. org or by calling (503) 684-3763 ( in t h e Portland metropolitan area) or toll-free elsewhere in Oregon at (800) 452-7636. Attorneys for Plaintiff, SHAPIRO 8 S UTHE RLAND, LLC. B y :

J ames A .

Cra f t

¹090146

[jcraft@logs.com],

7632 S W D u r ham R oad, S uite 3 5 0 , Tigard, O R 9 7 224,

(360)260-2253; Fax (360)260-2285. LEGAL NOTICE TO INTERESTED PERSONS Kurt Schroeder has

been appointed Personal Representative of the estate of David Myron Schroeder, deceased, by the Circuit C ourt, State of O regon, Des c hutes C ounty, Case N o . 13PB0154. All persons having claims against the estate are required to p resent them, with vouchers attached, to Patricia L. H eatherman at 2 50 NW Franklin Avenue, Suite 402, Bend, Oregon 97701, within four months after the date of January 16, 2014, the first publication of this notice,

or the claims may be barred. Add i tional information may be o btained from t h e records of the court, the Personal Representative, or the lawyer for the Personal Representative, Patricia Heatherman. Patricia H e a therman 250 NW Franklin Ave nue, S u it e 4 0 2 , Bend, OR 97701.


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